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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<HTML>
+<HEAD>
+
+<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+<TITLE>
+The Project Gutenberg E-text of Two Expeditions in the Interior of Southern Australia, Volume I,
+by Charles Sturt
+</TITLE>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia, Volume I, by Charles Sturt
+
+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: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia, Volume I
+
+Author: Charles Sturt
+
+Posting Date: June 29, 2009 [EBook #4328]
+Release Date: August, 2003
+First Posted: January 8, 2002
+Last Updated: July 28, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TWO EXPEDITIONS--SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Col Choat. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR <BR>
+OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA,
+<BR>
+VOLUME I
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+by
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CHARLES STURT
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA DURING THE<BR>
+YEARS 1828,1829,1830,1831 WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOIL, CLIMATE AND<BR>
+GENERAL RESOURCES OF THE COLONY OF NEW SOUTH WALES.
+<BR><BR>
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+VOLUME I.
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+"For though most men are contented only to see a river as it runs by
+them, and talk of the changes in it as they happen; when it is
+troubled, or when clear; when it drowns the country in a flood, or
+forsakes it in a drought: yet he that would know the nature of the
+water, and the causes of those accidents (so as to guess at their
+continuance or return), must find out its source, and observe with what
+strength it rises, what length it runs, and how many small streams fall
+in, and feed it to such a height, as make it either delightful or
+terrible to the eye, and useful or dangerous to the country about
+it."...SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S NETHERLANDS.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+TO THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF RIPON, VISCOUNT GODERICH, Lord Privy Seal
+&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+MY LORD,
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+The completion of this Work affords me the opportunity I have long
+desired of thanking your Lordship thus publicly, for the kindness with
+which you acceded to my request to be permitted to dedicate it to you.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+The encouragement your Lordship was pleased to give me has served to
+stimulate me in the prosecution of a task, which would, I fear, have
+been too great for me to have accomplished in my present condition,
+under any ordinary views of ambition. Indeed, labouring as I have been
+for many months past, under an almost total deprivation of sight, (the
+effect of exposure and anxiety of mind in the prosecution of
+geographical researches,) I owe it to the casual assistance of some of
+my friends, that I am at length enabled to lay these results before
+your Lordship and the public.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+While I feel a painful conviction that many errors must necessarily
+pervade a work produced under such unfavourable circumstances, it
+affords me no small consolation to reflect that Your Lordship has been
+aware of my situation, and will be disposed to grant me every
+reasonable indulgence.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+I have the honor to be, With the highest respect, My Lord, Your
+Lordship's Very obedient and humble servant,
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+CHARLES STURT <BR>London, June, 1833.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+<A HREF="#prelim">PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Purpose of this Chapter&mdash;Name of Australia&mdash;Impressions of its early
+Visitors&mdash;Character of the Australian rivers&mdash;Author's first view of
+Port Jackson&mdash;Extent of the Colony of New South Wales&mdash;its rapid
+advances in prosperity&mdash;Erroneous impressions&mdash;Commercial importance of
+Sydney&mdash;Growth of fine wool&mdash;Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious
+exertions&mdash;Whale-fishery&mdash;Other exports&mdash;Geographical features&mdash;Causes
+of the large proportion of bad soil&mdash;Connection between the geology and
+vegetation&mdash;Geological features&mdash;Character of the soil connected with
+the geological formation&mdash;County of Cumberland&mdash;Country westward of the
+Blue Mountains&mdash;Disadvantages of the remote settlers&mdash;Character of the
+Eastern coast&mdash;Rich tracts in the interior&mdash;Periodical droughts&mdash;The
+seasons apparently affected by the interior
+marshes&mdash;Temperature&mdash;Fruits&mdash;Emigrants: Causes of their success or
+failure&mdash;Moral disadvantages&mdash;System of emigration recommended&mdash;Hints
+to emigrants&mdash;Progress of inland discovery&mdash;Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains&mdash;Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others&mdash;Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE MACQUARIE RIVER, <BR>
+AND INTO THE WESTERN INTERIOR IN<BR>
+1828 AND 1829.
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+State of the Colony in 1828-29&mdash;Objects of the Expedition&mdash;Departure
+from Sydney&mdash;Wellington Valley&mdash;Progress down the Macquarie&mdash;Arrival at
+Mount Harris&mdash;Stopped by the marshes&mdash;Encamp amidst reeds&mdash;Excursions
+down the river&mdash;Its termination&mdash;Appearance of the marshes&mdash;Opthalmic
+affection of the men&mdash;Mr. Hume's successful journey to the
+northward&mdash;Journey across the plain&mdash;Second great
+marsh&mdash;Perplexities&mdash;Situation of the exploring party&mdash;Consequent
+resolutions.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Prosecution of our course into the interior&mdash;Mosquito Brush&mdash;Aspect and
+productions of the country&mdash;Hunting party of natives&mdash;Courageous
+conduct of one of them&mdash;Mosquitoes&mdash;A man missing&mdash;Group of hills
+called New-Year's Range&mdash;Journey down New-Year's Creek&mdash;Tormenting
+attack of the kangaroo fly&mdash;Dreariness and desolation of the
+country&mdash;Oxley's Table Land&mdash;D'Urban's Group&mdash;Continue our journey down
+New-Year's Creek&mdash;Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt&mdash;Fall in
+with a tribe of natives&mdash;Our course arrested by the want of fresh
+water&mdash;Extraordinary sound&mdash;Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Intercourse with the natives&mdash;Their appearance and condition&mdash;Remarks
+on the Salt or Darling River&mdash;Appearance of the marshes on our
+return&mdash;Alarm for safety of the provision party&mdash;Return to Mount
+Harris&mdash;Miserable condition of the natives&mdash;Circumstances attending the
+slaughter of two Irish runaways&mdash;Bend our course towards the
+Castlereagh&mdash;Wallis's Ponds&mdash;Find the famished natives feeding on
+gum&mdash;Channel of the Castlereagh&mdash;Character of the country in its
+vicinity&mdash;Another tribe of natives&mdash;Amicable intercourse with
+them&mdash;Morrisset's chain of Ponds&mdash;Again reach the Darling River ninety
+miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Perplexity&mdash;Trait of honesty in the natives&mdash;Excursion on horseback
+across the Darling&mdash;Forced to return&mdash;Desolating effects of the
+drought&mdash;Retreat towards the colony&mdash;Connection between the Macquarie
+and the Darling&mdash;Return up the banks of the Macquarie&mdash;Starving
+condition of the natives.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap05">CHAPTER V.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+General remarks&mdash;Result of the expedition&mdash;Previous anticipations&mdash;Mr.
+Oxley's remarks&mdash;Character of the Rivers flowing westerly&mdash;Mr.
+Cunningham's remarks&mdash;Fall of the Macquarie&mdash;Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally
+inferred from the state in which he found the country&mdash;The marsh of the
+Macquarie merely a marsh of the ordinary character&mdash;Captain King's
+observations&mdash;Course of the Darling&mdash;Character of the low interior
+plain&mdash;The convict Barber's report of rivers traversing the
+interior&mdash;Surveyor-General Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap06">CHAPTER VI.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Concluding Remarks&mdash;Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior
+of Australia&mdash;Difficulty of carrying supplies&mdash;Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates&mdash;Danger from the natives&mdash;Number of men
+requisite,&mdash;and of cattle and carriages&mdash;Provisions&mdash;Other
+arrangements&mdash;Treatment of the natives&mdash;Dimensions of the boat used in
+the second expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX.
+</H3>
+
+<H4>
+ No. I. <A HREF="#append1">Letter of Instructions</A><BR>
+ No. II. <A HREF="#append2">List of Stores supplied for the Expedition</A><BR>
+ No. III. <A HREF="#append3">Sheep-farming Returns</A><BR>
+ No. IV. <A HREF="#append4">List of Geological Specimens</A><BR>
+ No. V. <A HREF="#append5">Official Report to the Colonial Government, (Jan. 1829.)</A><BR>
+ No. VI. Ditto &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (April 1829.)<BR>
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE FIRST VOLUME
+</H2>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+(Not included in this etext)
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ Native Burial Place near Budda<BR>
+ Vice Admiral Arthur Phillip<BR>
+ Cataract of the Macquarie<BR>
+ A Selenite<BR>
+ Chrystallized Sulphate of Lime<BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="prelim"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Purpose of this Chapter&mdash;Name of Australia&mdash;Impressions of its early
+Visitors&mdash;Character of the Australian rivers&mdash;Author's first view of
+Port Jackson&mdash;Extent of the Colony of New South Wales&mdash;its rapid
+advances in prosperity&mdash;Erroneous impressions&mdash;Commercial importance of
+Sydney&mdash;Growth of fine wool&mdash;Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious
+exertions&mdash;Whale-fishery&mdash;Other exports&mdash;Geographical features&mdash;Causes
+of the large proportion of bad soil&mdash;Connection between the geology and
+vegetation&mdash;Geological features&mdash;Character of the soil connected with
+the geological formation&mdash;County of Cumberland&mdash;Country westward of the
+Blue Mountains&mdash;Disadvantages of the remote settlers&mdash;Character of the
+Eastern coast&mdash;Rich tracts in the interior&mdash;Periodical droughts&mdash;The
+seasons apparently affected by the interior
+marshes&mdash;Temperature&mdash;Fruits&mdash;Emigrants: Causes of their success or
+failure&mdash;Moral disadvantages&mdash;System of emigration recommended&mdash;Hints
+to emigrants&mdash;Progress of inland discovery&mdash;Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains&mdash;Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others&mdash;Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PURPOSE OF THIS PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+When I first determined on committing to the press a detailed account
+of the two expeditions, which I conducted into the interior of the
+Australian continent, pursuant to the orders of Lieutenant General
+Darling, the late Governor of the Colony of New South Wales, it was
+simply with a view of laying their results before the geographical
+world, and of correcting the opinions that prevailed with regard to the
+unexplored country to the westward of the Blue Mountains. I did not
+feel myself equal either to the task or the responsibility of venturing
+any remarks on the Colony of New South Wales itself. I had had little
+time for inquiry, amidst the various duties that fell to my lot in the
+ordinary routine of the service to which I belonged, when unemployed by
+the Colonial Government in the prosecution of inland discoveries. My
+observations had been in a great measure confined to those points which
+curiosity, or a desire of personal information, had prompted me to
+investigate. I did not, therefore, venture to flatter myself that I had
+collected materials of sufficient importance on general topics to
+enable me to write for the information of others. Since my return to
+England, however, I have been strenuously urged to give a short
+description of the colony before entering upon my personal narrative;
+and I have conversed with so many individuals whose ideas of Australia
+are totally at variance with its actual state, that I am encouraged to
+indulge the hope that my observations, desultory as they are, may be of
+some interest to the public. I am strengthened in this hope by the
+consideration that some kind friends have enabled me to add much
+valuable matter to that which I had myself collected. It is not my
+intention, however, to enter at any length on the commercial or
+agricultural interests of New South Wales. It may be necessary for me
+to touch lightly on those important subjects, but it is my wish to
+connect this preliminary chapter, as much as possible with the subjects
+treated of in the body of the work, and chiefly to notice the physical
+structure, the soil, climate, and productions of the colony, in order
+to convey to the reader general information on these points, before I
+lead him into the remote interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NAME OF AUSTRALIA.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It may be worthy of remark that the name "Australia," has of late years
+been affixed to that extensive tract of land which Great Britain
+possesses in the Southern Seas, and which, having been a discovery of
+the early Dutch navigators, was previously termed "New Holland." The
+change of name was, I believe, introduced by the celebrated French
+geographer, Malte Brun, who, in his division of the globe, gave the
+appellation of Austral Asia and Polynesia to the new discovered lands
+in the southern ocean; in which division he meant to include the
+numerous insular groups scattered over the Pacific.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+IMPRESSIONS OF ITS EARLY VISITORS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Australia is properly speaking an island, but it is so much larger than
+every other island on the face of the globe, that it is classed as a
+continent in order to convey to the mind a just idea of its magnitude.
+Stretching from the 115th to the 153rd degree of east longitude, and
+from the 10th to the 37th of south latitude, it averages 2700 miles in
+length by 1800 in breadth; and balanced, as it were, upon the tropic of
+that hemisphere in which it is situated, it receives the fiery heat of
+the equator at one extremity, while it enjoys the refreshing coolness
+of the temperate zone at the other. On a first view we should be led to
+expect that this extensive tract of land possessed more than ordinary
+advantages; that its rivers would be in proportion to its size; and
+that it would abound in the richest productions of the inter-tropical
+and temperate regions. Such, indeed, was the impression of those who
+first touched upon its southern shores, but who remained no longer than
+to be dazzled by the splendour and variety of its botanical
+productions, and to enjoy for a few days the delightful mildness of its
+climate. But the very spot which had appeared to Captain Cook and Sir
+Joseph Banks an earthly paradise, was abandoned by the early settlers
+as unfit for occupation; nor has the country generally been fount to
+realize the sanguine expectations of those distinguished individuals,
+so far as it has hitherto been explored.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CHARACTER OF AUSTRALIAN RIVERS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Rivers which have the widest mouths or the most practicable entrances,
+are, in Europe or America, usually of impetuous current, or else
+contain such a body of water as to bear down all opposition to their
+free course; whilst on the other hand, rivers whose force is expended
+ere they reach the sea, have almost invariably a bar at their
+embouchure, or where they mingle their waters with those of the ocean.
+This last feature unfortunately appears to characterize all rivers of
+Australia, or such of them at least as are sufficiently known to us.
+Falling rapidly from the mountains in which they originate into a level
+and extremely depressed country; having weak and inconsiderable
+sources, and being almost wholly unaided by tributaries of any kind;
+they naturally fail before they reach the coast, and exhaust themselves
+in marshes or lakes or reach it so weakened as to be unable to preserve
+clear or navigable months, or to remove the sand banks that the tides
+throw up before them. On the other hand the productions of this
+singular region seem to be peculiar to it, and unlike those of any
+other part of the world; nor have any indigenous fruits of any value as
+yet been found either in its forests or on its plains.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He who has never looked on any other than the well-cultured fields of
+England, can have little idea of a country that Nature has covered with
+an interminable forest. Still less can he estimate the feelings with
+which the adventurer approaches a shore that has never (or perhaps only
+lately) been trodden by civilized man.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FIRST VIEW OF PORT JACKSON.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It was with feelings peculiar to the occasion, that I gazed for the
+first time on the bold cliffs at the entrance of Port Jackson, as our
+vessel neared them, and speculated on the probable character of the
+landscape they hid; and I am free to confess, that I did not anticipate
+anything equal to the scene which presented itself both to my sight and
+my judgment, as we sailed up the noble and extensive basin we had
+entered, towards the seat of government. A single glance was sufficient
+to tell me that the hills upon the southern shore of the port, the
+outlines of which were broken by houses and spires, must once have been
+covered with the same dense and gloomy wood which abounded every where
+else. The contrast was indeed very great&mdash;the improvement singularly
+striking. The labour and patience required, and the difficulties which
+the first settlers encountered effecting these improvements, must have
+been incalculable. But their success has been complete: it is the very
+triumph of human skill and industry over Nature herself. The cornfield
+and the orchard have supplanted the wild grass and the brush; a
+flourishing town stands over the ruins of the forest; the lowing of
+herds has succeeded the wild whoop of the savage; and the stillness of
+that once desert shore is now broken by the sound of the bugle and the
+busy hum of commerce.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXTENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES AND DIVISIONS OF THE COLONY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The Colony of New South Wales is situated upon the eastern coast of
+Australia; and the districts within which land has been granted to
+settlers, extends from the 36th parallel of latitude to the 32nd, that
+is say, from the Moroyo River to the south of Sydney on the one hand,
+and to the Manning River on the other, including Wellington Valley
+within its limits to the westward. Thus it will appear that the
+boundaries of the located parts of the colony have been considerably
+enlarged, and some fine districts of country included within them. In
+consequence of its extent and increasing population, it has been found
+convenient to divide it into counties, parishes, and townships; and
+indeed, every measure of the Colonial Government of late years, has had
+for its object to assimilate its internal arrangements as nearly as
+possible, to those of the mother country. Whether we are to attribute
+the present flourishing state of the colony to the beneficial influence
+of that system of government which has been exercised over it for the
+last seven years it is not for me to say. That the prosperity of a
+country depends, however, in a great measure, on the wisdom of its
+legislature, is as undoubted, as that within the period I have
+mentioned the colony of N. S. Wales has risen unprecedentedly in
+importance and in wealth, and has advanced to a state of improvement at
+which it could not have arrived had its energies been cramped or its
+interests neglected.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ITS ADVANCES IN PROSPERITY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+There is a period in the history of every country, during which it will
+appear to have been more prosperous than at any other. I allude not to
+the period of great martial achievements, should any such adorn its
+pages, but to that in which the enterprise of its merchants was roused
+into action, and when all classes of its community seem to have put
+forth their strength towards the attainment of wealth and power.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ERRONEOUS IMPRESSIONS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In this eventful period the colony of New South Wales is already far
+advanced. The conduct of its merchants is marked by the boldest
+speculations and the most gigantic projects. Their storehouses are
+built on the most magnificent scale, and with the best and most
+substantial materials. Few persons in England have even a remote idea
+of its present flourishing condition, or of the improvements that are
+daily taking place both in its commerce and in its agriculture. I am
+aware that many object to it as a place of residence, and I can easily
+enter into their feelings from the recollection of what my own were
+before I visited it. I cannot but remark, however, that I found my
+prejudices had arisen from a natural objection to the character of a
+part of its population; from the circumstance of its being a penal
+colony, and from my total ignorance of its actual state, and not from
+any substantial or permanent cause. On the contrary I speedily became
+convinced of the exaggerated nature of the reports I had heard in
+England, on some of the points just adverted to; nor did any thing fall
+under my observation during a residence in it of more than six years to
+justify the opinion I had been previously led to entertain of it. I
+embarked for New South Wales, with strong prejudices against it: I left
+it with strong feelings in its favour, and with a deep feeling of
+interest in its prosperity. It is a pleasing task to me, therefore, to
+write of it thus, and to have it in my power to contribute to the
+removal of any erroneous impressions with regard to its condition at
+the present moment.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COMMERCIAL IMPORTANCE OF SYDNEY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I have already remarked, that I was not prepared for the scene that met
+my view when I first saw Sydney. The fact was, I had not pictured to
+myself; nor conceived from any thing that I had ever read or heard in
+England, that so extensive a town could have been reared in that remote
+region, in so brief a period as that which had elapsed since its
+foundation. It is not, however, a distant or cursory glance that will
+give the observer a just idea of the mercantile importance of this busy
+capital. In order to form an accurate estimate of it, he should take a
+boat and proceed from Sydney Cove to Darling Harbour. He would then be
+satisfied, that it is not upon the first alone that Australian commerce
+has raised its storehouse and wharfs, but that the whole extent of the
+eastern shore of the last more capacious basin, is equally crowded with
+warehouses, stores, dockyards, mills, and wharfs, the appearance and
+solidity of which would do credit even to Liverpool. Where, thirty
+years ago, the people flocked to the beach to hail an arrival, it is
+not now unusual to see from thirty to forty vessels riding at anchor at
+one time, collected there from every quarter of the globe. In 1832, one
+hundred and fifty vessels entered the harbour of Port Jackson, from
+foreign parts, the amount of their tonnage being 31,259 tons.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The increasing importance of Sydney must in some measure be attributed
+to the flourishing condition of the colony itself, to the industry of
+its farmers, to the successful enterprise of its merchants, and to
+particular local causes. It is foreign to my purpose, however, to enter
+largely into an investigation of these important points. To do so would
+require more space than I can afford for the purpose, and might justly
+be considered as irrelevant in a work of this kind. Without attempting
+any lengthened detail, it may be considered sufficient if I endeavour
+merely to point out the principal causes of the present prosperity
+(and, as they may very probably prove) of the eventual progress of our
+great southern colony to power and independence.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+STAPLE OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The staple of our Australian colonies, but more particularly of New
+South Wales, the climate and the soil of which are peculiarly suited to
+its production,&mdash;is fine wool. There can be no doubt that the growth of
+this article has mainly contributed to the prosperity of the above
+mentioned colony and of Van Diemen's Land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the close of the last century, wool was imported into England from
+Spain and Germany only, and but a few years previously from Spain
+alone. Indeed, long after its introduction from the latter country,
+German wool, obtained but little consideration in the London market;
+and in like manner, it may be presumed that many years will not have
+elapsed before the increased importation of wool from our own
+possessions in the southern hemisphere, will render us, in respect to
+this commodity, independent of every other part of the world. The great
+improvements in modern navigation are such, that the expense of sending
+the fleece to market from New South Wales is less than from any part of
+Europe. The charges for instance on Spanish and German wool, are from
+fourpence to fourpence three farthings per pound; whereas the entire
+charge, after shipment from New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land,
+does not exceed threepence three farthings,&mdash;and in this the dock and
+landing charges, freight, insurance, brokerage, and commission, are
+included.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GROWTH OF FINE WOOL. MR. M'ARTHUR'S EXERTIONS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As some particulars respecting the introduction of this source of
+national wealth into Australia may prove interesting to the public, I
+have put together the following details of it, upon the authenticity of
+which they may rely. The person who foresaw the advantage to be derived
+from the growth of fine wool in New South Wales, and who commenced the
+culture of it in that colony, was Mr. John M'Arthur. So far back, I
+believe, as the year 1793, not long after the establishment of the
+first settlement at Sydney, this gentleman commenced sheep-farming, and
+about two years afterwards he obtained a ram and two ewes from Captain
+Kent, of the royal navy, who had brought them, with some other stock
+for the supply of the settlement, from the Cape of Good Hope, to which
+place a flock of these sheep had been originally sent by the Dutch
+government. Sensible of the importance of the acquisition, Mr. M'Arthur
+began to cross his coarse-fleeced sheep with Merino blood; and,
+proceeding upon a system, he effected a considerable improvement in the
+course of a few years. So prolific was the mixed breed, that in ten
+years, a flock which originally consisted of not more than seventy
+Bengal sheep, had increased in number to 4,000 head, although the
+wethers had been killed as they became fit for slaughter. It appears,
+however, that as the sheep approached to greater purity of blood, their
+extreme fecundity diminished.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+TO REAR MERINO FLOCKS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In 1803, Mr. M'Arthur revisited England; and there happening at the
+time to be a committee of manufacturers in London from the clothing
+districts, he exhibited before them samples of his wool, which were so
+much approved, that the committee represented to their constituents the
+advantages which would result from the growth of fine wool, in one of
+the southern dependencies of the empire. In consequence of this a
+memorial was transmitted to His Majesty's government, and Mr.
+M'Arthur's plans having been investigated by a Privy Council, at which
+he was present, they were recommended to the government as worthy of
+its protection. With such encouragement Mr. M'Arthur purchased two ewes
+and three rams, from the Merino flock of His Majesty King George the
+Third. He embarked with them on his return to New South Wales in 1806,
+on board a vessel named by him "the Argo," in reference to the golden
+treasure with which she was freighted. On reaching the colony he
+removed his sheep to a grant of land which the Home Government had
+directed he should receive in the Cow Pastures. To commemorate the
+transaction, and to transmit to a grateful posterity the recollection
+of the nobleman who then presided over the colonies, the estate,
+together with the district in which it is situated, was honoured by the
+name of Camden.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXPORT OF WOOL TO ENGLAND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Since that time the value of New South Wales wool has been constantly
+on the increase, and the colony are indebted to Mr. M'Arthur for the
+possession of an exportable commodity which has contributed very
+materially to its present wealth and importance. Such general attention
+is now paid to this interesting branch of rural economy, that the
+importation of wool into England from our Australian colonies,
+amounted, in 1832, to 10,633 bales, or 2,500,000 lbs. It has been sold
+at as high a price as 10s. per lb.; but the average price of wool of
+the best flocks vary from 1s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. at the present moment. The
+number of sheep in New South Wales alone was calculated in the last
+census at 536,891 head. The ordinary profits on this kind of stock may
+be extracted from the Table given in the Appendix to the first volume
+of this work.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WHALE FISHERY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Among the various speculations undertaken by the merchants of Sydney,
+there is not one into which they have entered with so much spirit as in
+the South Sea Fishery. The local situation of Port Jackson gives them
+an advantage over the English and the American merchants, since the
+distance of both these from the field of their gains, must necessarily
+impede them greatly; whereas the ships that leave Sydney on a whaling
+excursion, arrive without loss of time upon their ground, and return
+either for fresh supplies or to repair damages with equal facility. The
+spirit with which the colonial youth have engaged in this adventurous
+and hardy service, is highly to their credit. The profits arising from
+it may not be (indeed I have every reason to think are not) so great as
+might be supposed, or such as might reasonably be expected; but the
+extensive scale on which it is conducted, speaks equally for the energy
+and perseverance of the parties concerned, in the prosecution of their
+commercial enterprises. It has enabled them to equip a creditable
+colonial marine, and given great importance to their mercantile
+interests in the mother country.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the year 1831, the quantity of sperm and black oil, the produce of
+the fisheries exported from New South Wales, amounted to 2,307 tons,
+and was estimated, together with skins and whalebone, to be worth
+107,971 pounds sterling. The gross amount of all other exports during
+that year, did not exceed 107,697 pounds sterling. Of these exports,
+the following were the most considerable:
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ Timber 7,410 pounds
+ Butter and Cheese 2,376
+ Mimosa bark 40
+ Hides 7,333
+ Horses 7,302
+ Salt provisions 5,184
+ Wool 66,112
+</PRE>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The above is exclusive of 61,000 pounds value of British manufactures
+re-exported to the various ports and islands in the Southern Seas.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+OTHER EXPORTS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In this scale, moreover, tobacco is not mentioned; but that plant is
+now raised for the supply of every private establishment, and will
+assuredly form an article of export, as soon as its manufacture shall
+be well understood. Neither can it be doubted but that the vine and the
+olive will, in a short time, be abundantly cultivated; and that a
+greater knowledge of the climate and soil of the more northern parts of
+the colony, will lead to the introduction of fresh sources of wealth.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Having taken this hasty review of the commercial interests of the
+colony, we may now turn to a brief examination of its internal
+structure and principal natural features.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have already given a cursory sketch of the geographical features of
+the whole continent. Of the vast area which its coasts embrace, the
+east part alone has been fully explored.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A range of hills runs along the eastern coast, from north to south,
+which, in different quarters, vary in their distance from the sea; at
+one place approaching it pretty nearly, at another, receding from it to
+a distance of forty miles. It is a singular fact, that there is no pass
+or break in these mountains, by which any of the rivers of the interior
+can escape in an easterly direction. Their spine is unbroken. The
+consequence is, that there is a complete division of the eastern and
+western waters, and that streams, the heads of which are close to each
+other, flow away in opposite directions; the one to pursue a short
+course to the sea; the other to fall into a level and depressed
+interior, the character of which will be noticed in its proper place.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GREAT PROPORTION OF BAD SOIL.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The proportion of bad soil to that which is good in New South Wales, is
+certainly very great: I mean the proportion of inferior soil to such as
+is fit for the higher purposes of agriculture. Mr. Dawson, the late
+superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company's possessions,
+has observed, as a singular fact, that the best soil generally prevails
+on the summits of the hills, more especially where they are at all
+level. He accounts for so unusual a circumstance by the fact, that
+elevated positions are less subject to the effects of fire or floods
+than their valleys or flanks, and attributes the general want of
+vegetable mould over the colony chiefly to the ravages of the former
+element, whereby the growth of underwood, so favourable in other
+countries to the formation of soil, is wholly prevented. Undoubtedly
+this is a principal cause for the deficiency in question. There is no
+part of the world in which fires create such havoc as in New South
+Wales and indeed in Australia generally. The climate, on the one hand,
+which dries up vegetation, and the wandering habits of the natives on
+the other, which induce them to clear the country before them by
+conflagration, operate equally against the growth of timber and
+underwood.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CAUSE OF THIS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+But there is another circumstance that appears to have escaped Mr.
+Dawson's observation; which is the actual property of the trees
+themselves, as to the quantity of vegetable matter they produce in
+decay. Being a military man, I cannot be supposed to have devoted much
+of my time to agricultural pursuits; but it has been obvious to me, as
+it must have been to many others, that in New South Wales, the fall of
+leaves and the decay of timber, so far from adding to the richness of
+its soil, actually destroy minor vegetation. This fact was brought more
+home to me in consequence of its having been my lot to spend some
+months upon Norfolk Island, a distant penal settlement attached to the
+Government of Sydney. There the abundance of vegetable decay was as
+remarkable as the want of it on the Australian Continent. I have
+frequently sunk up to my knees in a bed of leaves when walking through
+its woods; and, often when I placed my foot on what appeared externally
+to be the solid trunk of a tree, I have found it yield to the pressure,
+in consequence of its decomposition into absolute rottenness. But such
+is not the case in New South Wales. There, no such accumulations of
+vegetable matter are to be met with; but where the loftiest tree of the
+forest falls to the ground, its figure and length are marked out by the
+total want of vegetation within a certain distance of it, and a small
+elevation of earth, resembling more the refuse or scoria of burnt
+bricks than any thing else, is all that ultimately remains of the
+immense body which time or accident had prostrated. Thus it would
+appear, that it is not less to the character of its woods than to the
+ravages of fire that New South Wales owes its general sterility.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GEOLOGY AND VEGETATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Whilst prosecuting my researches in the interior of the colony, I could
+not but be struck with the apparent connection between its geology and
+vegetation; so strong, indeed, was this connection, that I had little
+difficulty, after a short experience, in judging of the rock that
+formed the basis of the country over which I was travelling, from the
+kind of tree or herbage that flourished in the soil above it. The
+eucalyptus pulv., a species of eucalyptus having a glaucus-coloured
+leaf, of dwarfish habits and growing mostly in scrub, betrayed the
+sandstone formation, wherever it existed, This was the case in many
+parts of the County of Cumberland, in some parts of Wombat Brush, at
+the two passes on the great south road, over a great extent of country
+to the N.W. of Yass Plains, and at Blackheath on the summit of the Blue
+Mountains. On the other hand, those open grassy and park-like tracts,
+of which so much has been said, characterise the secondary ranges of
+granite and porphyry. The trees most usual on these tracts, were the
+box, an unnamed species of eucalyptus, and the grass chiefly of that
+kind, called the oat or forest grass, which grows in tufts at
+considerable distances from each other, and which generally affords
+good pasturage. On the richer grounds the angophora lanceolata, and the
+eucalyptus mammifera more frequently point out the quality of the soil
+on which they grow. The first are abundant on the alluvial flats of the
+Nepean, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter; the latter on the limestone
+formation of Wellington Valley and in the better portions of Argyle;
+whilst the cupressus calytris seems to occupy sandy ridges with the
+casuarina. It was impossible that these broad features should have
+escaped observation: it was naturally inferred from this, that the
+trees of New South Wales are gregarious; and in fact they may, in a
+great measure, be considered so. The strong line that occasionally
+separates different species, and the sudden manner in which several
+species are lost at one point, to re-appear at another more distant,
+without any visible cause for the break that has taken place, will
+furnish a number of interesting facts in the botany of New South Wales.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was observed both on the Macquarie river and the Morumbidgee, that
+the casuarinae ceased at a particular point. On the Macquarie
+particularly, these trees which had often excited our admiration from
+Wellington Valley downwards, ceased to occupy its banks below the
+cataract, nor were they again noticed until we arrived on the banks of
+the Castlereagh. The blue-gum trees, again, were never observed to
+extend beyond the secondary embankments of the rivers, occupying that
+ground alone which was subject to flood and covered with reeds. These
+trees waved over the marshes of the Macquarie, but were not observed to
+the westward of them for many miles; yet they re-appeared upon the
+banks of New-Year's Creek as suddenly as they had disappeared after we
+left the marshes, and grew along the line of the Darling to unusual
+size. But it is remarkable, that, even in the midst of the marshes, the
+blue-gum trees were strictly confined to the immediate flooded spaces
+on which the reeds prevailed, or to the very beds of the water-courses.
+Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach of flood, the box
+(unnamed) alone occupied it; and, though the branches of these trees
+might be interwoven together, the one never left its wet and reedy bed,
+the other never descended from its more elevated position. The same
+singular distinction marked the acacia pendula, when it ceased to cover
+the interior plains of light earth, and was succeeded by another shrub
+of the same species. It continued to the banks of New-Year's Creek, a
+part of which it thickly lined. To the westward of the creek, another
+species of acacia was remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like
+the blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together, but the creek
+formed the line of separation between them. The acacia pendula was not
+afterwards seen, but that which had taken its place, as it were, was
+found to cover large tracts of country and to form extensive brushes.
+Many other peculiarities in the vegetation of the interior are noticed
+in the body of this work, but I have thought that these more striking
+ones deserved to be particularly remarked upon.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GEOLOGICAL FEATURES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington Valley, we
+shall find that little change takes place in the geological features of
+the country. The sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges is
+composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York, and at Cox's River is
+succeeded by grey granite. The secondary ranges to the N.W. of
+Bathurst, are wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are
+partial changes of strata between Bathurst and Moulong Plains, granite
+is undoubtedly the rock upon which the whole are based: but at Moulong
+Plains, a military station intermediate between Bathurst and Wellington
+Valley, limestone appears in the bed of a small clear stream, and with
+little interruption continues to some distance below the last-mentioned
+place. The accidental discovery of some caves at Moulong Plains, led to
+the more critical examination of the whole formation, and cavities of
+considerable size were subsequently found in various parts of it, but
+more particularly in the neighbourhood of Wellington Valley. The local
+interest which has of late years been taken in the prosecution of
+geological investigations, led many gentlemen to examine the contents
+of these caverns; and among the most forward, Major Mitchell, the
+Surveyor-General, must justly be considered, to whose indefatigable
+perseverance the scientific world is already so much indebted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The caves into which I penetrated, did not present anything particular
+to my observation; they differed little from caves of a similar
+description into which I had penetrated in Europe. Large masses of
+stalactites hung from their roofs, and a corresponding formation
+encrusted their floors. They comprised various chambers or
+compartments, the most remote of which terminated at a deep chasm that
+was full of water. A close examination of these caves has led to the
+discovery of some organic remains, bones of various animals embedded in
+a light red soil; but I am not aware that the remains of any extinct
+species have been found, or that any fossils have been met with in the
+limestone itself. There can, however, be little doubt but that the same
+causes operated in depositing these mouldering remains in the caves of
+Kirkdale and those of Wellington Valley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+About twenty miles below the junction of the Bell with the Macquarie,
+free-stone supersedes the limestone, but as the country falls rapidly
+from that point, it soon disappears, and the traveller enters upon a
+flat country of successive terraces. A schorl rock, of a blue colour
+and fine grain, composed of tourmaline and quartz, forms the bed of the
+Macquarie at the Cataract; and, in immediate contact with it, a mass of
+mica slate of alternate rose, pink, and white, was observed, which must
+have been covered by the waters of the river when Mr. Oxley descended
+it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the Cataract of the Macquarie, a flat extends to the marshes in
+which that river exhausts itself. From the midst of this flat Mount
+Foster and Mount Harris rise, both of which are porphyritic: but as I
+have been particular in describing these heights in their proper place,
+any minute notice of them here may be considered unnecessary. We will
+rather extend our enquiries to those parts of the colony upon which we
+shall not be called upon to remark in the succeeding pages.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Returning to the coast, we may mark the geological changes in a line to
+the S.W. of Sydney; and as my object is to extend the information of my
+readers, I shall notice any particular district on either side of the
+line I propose to touch upon, which may be worthy of notice. It would
+appear that the first decided break in the sandstone formation which
+penetrates into the county of Camden, is at Mittagong Range. It is
+there traversed by a dike of whinstone, of which that range is wholly
+composed. The change of soil and of vegetation are equally remarkable
+at this place; the one being a rich, greasy, chocolate-coloured earth,
+the other partaking greatly of the intertropical character. In
+wandering over them, I noticed the wild fig and the cherry-tree,
+growing to a much larger size than I had seen them in any other part of
+the colony. Upon their branches, the satin bird, the gangan, and
+various kinds of pigeons were feeding. Birds unknown to the eastward of
+the Blue Mountains, were numerous in the valleys; and there was an
+unusual appearance of freshness and moisture in the vegetation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These signs of improvement, however, vanish the moment Mittagong range
+is crossed, and sand-stone again forms the basis of the country to a
+considerable distance beyond Bong-bong. At a small farm called the
+Ploughed Ground, it is again traversed by a dike of whinstone, and a
+rich but isolated spot is thus passed over. With occasional and partial
+interruption, however, the sand-stone formation continues to an abrupt
+pass, from which the traveller descends to the county of Argyle. This
+pass is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I
+have noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. A small but lively
+stream, called Paddy's River, runs at the bottom of this pass, and
+immediately to the S.W. of it, an open forest country of granite base
+extends for many miles, on which the eucalyptus manifera is prevalent,
+and which affords the best grazing tracts in Argyle. At Goulburn
+Plains, however, a vein of limestone occurs, which is evidently
+connected with that forming the ShoalHaven Gully, which is perhaps the
+most remarkable geological feature in the colony of New South Wales. It
+is a deep chasm of about a quarter of a mile in breadth, and 1200 feet
+in depth. The country on either side is perfectly level, so much so
+that the traveller approaches almost to its very brink before he is
+aware of his being near so singular an abyss. A small rivulet flows
+through the Gully, and discharges itself into the sea at ShoalHaven;
+but this river is hardly perceptible, from the summit of the cliffs
+forming the sides of the Gully, which are of the boldest and most
+precipitous character. The ground on the summit is full of caves of
+great depth, but there has been a difficulty in examining them, in
+consequence of the violent wind that rushes up them, and extinguishes
+every torch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The open and grassy forests of Argyle are terminated by another of
+those abrupt sand-stone passes I have just described, and the traveller
+again falls considerably from his former level, previously to his
+entering on Yass Plains, to which this pass is the only inlet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From Yass Plains the view to the S. and S.W. is over a lofty and broken
+country: mountains with rounded summits, others with towering peaks,
+and others again of lengthened form but sharp spine, characterise the
+various rocks of which they are composed. The ranges decline rapidly
+from east to west, and while on the one hand the country has all the
+appearance of increasing height, on the other it sinks to a dead level;
+nor on the distant horizon to the N. W. is there a hill or an
+inequality to be seen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From Yass Plains to the very commencement of the level interior, every
+range I crossed presented a new rock-formation; serpentine quartz in
+huge white masses, granite, chlorite, micaceous schist, sandstone,
+chalcedony, quartz, and red jasper, and conglomerate rocks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was however, out of my power, in so hurried a journey as that which
+I performed down the banks of the Morumbidgee River, to examine with
+the accuracy I could have wished, either the immediate connection
+between these rocks or their gradual change from the one to the other.
+I was content to ascertain their actual succession, and to note the
+general outlines of the ranges; but the defect of vision under which I
+labour, prevents me from laying them before the public.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CHARACTER OF THE SOIL CONNECTED WITH GEOLOGICAL FORMATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+From what has been advanced, however, it will appear that the physical
+structure of the southern parts of the colony is as varied, as that of
+the western interior is monotonous, and we may now pursue our original
+observations on the soil of the colony with greater confidence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In endeavouring to account for the poverty of the soil in New South
+Wales, and in attributing it in a great degree to the causes already
+mentioned, it appears necessary to estimate more specifically the
+influence which the geological formation of a country exercises on its
+soil, and how much the quality of the latter partakes of the character
+of the rock on which it reposes. And although I find it extremely
+difficult to explain myself as I should wish to do, in the critical
+discussion on which I have thus entered, yet as it is material to the
+elucidation of an important subject in the body of the work, I feel it
+incumbent on me to proceed to the best of my ability.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have said that the soil of a country depends much upon its geological
+formation. This appears to be particularly the case in those parts of
+the colony with which I am acquainted, or those lying between the
+parallels of 30 degrees and 35 degrees south. Sandstone, porphyry, and
+granite, succeed each other from the coast to a very considerable
+distance into the interior, on a N. W. line. The light ferruginous dust
+that is distributed over the county of Cumberland, and which annoys the
+traveller by its extreme minuteness, to the eastward of the Blue
+Mountains, is as different from the coarse gravelly soil on the
+secondary ranges to the westward of them, as the barren scrubs and
+thickly-wooded tracts of the former district are to the grassy and open
+forests of the latter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As soon as I began to descend to the westward it became necessary to
+pay strict and earnest attention to the features of the country through
+which I passed, in order to determine more accurately the different
+appearances which, as I was led to expect, the rivers would assume. In
+the course of my examination I found, first, that the broken country
+through which I travelled, was generally covered with a loose, coarse,
+and sandy soil; and, secondly, that the ranges were wholly deficient in
+that peat formation which fills the valleys, or covers the flat summits
+of the hills or mountains, in the northern hemisphere. The peculiar
+property of this formation is to retain water like a sponge; and to
+this property the regular and constant flow of the rivers descending
+from such hills, may, in a great measure, be attributed. In New South
+Wales on the contrary, the rains that fall upon the mountains drain
+rapidly through a coarse and superficial soil, and pour down their
+sides without a moment's interruption. The consequence is that on such
+occasions the rivers are subject to great and sudden rises, whereas
+they have scarcely water enough to support a current in ordinary
+seasons. At one time the traveller will find it impracticable to cross
+them: at another he may do so with ease; and only from the remains of
+debris in the branches of the trees high above, can he judge of the
+furious torrent they must occasionally contain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This seeming deviation on the part of Nature from her usual laws will
+no longer appear such, if we consider its results for a moment. The
+very floods which swell the rivers to overflowing, are followed by the
+most beneficent effects; and, rude and violent as the means are by
+which she accomplishes her purpose, they form, no doubt, a part of that
+process by which she preserves the balance of good and evil. Vast
+quantities of the best soil have been thus washed down from the
+mountains to accumulate in more accessible places. From frequent
+depositions, a great extent of country along the banks of every river
+and creek has risen high above the influence of the floods, and
+constitutes the richest tracts in the colony. The alluvial flats of the
+Nepean, the Hawkesbury, and the Hunter, are striking instances of the
+truth of these observations; to which the plains of O'Connell and
+Bathurst must be added. The only good soil upon the two latter, is in
+the immediate neighbourhood of the Macquarie River: but, even close to
+its banks, the depositions are of little depth, lying on a coarse
+gravelly soil, the decomposition of the nearer ranges. The former is
+found to diminish in thickness, according to the concavity of the
+valley through which the Macquarie flows, and at length becomes mixed
+with the coarser soil. This deposit is alone fit for agricultural
+purposes; but it does not necessarily follow that the distant country
+is unavailable since it is admitted, that the best grazing tracts are
+upon the secondary ranges of granite and porphyry. These ranges
+generally have the appearance of open forest, and are covered with
+several kinds of grasses, among which the long oat-grass is the most
+abundant.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+If we except the valley of the Nepean, the banks of the South Creek,
+the Pennant Hills near Parramatta, and a few other places, the general
+soil of the county of Cumberland, is of the poorest description. It is
+superficial in most places, resting either upon a cold clay, or upon
+sandstone; and is, as I have already remarked, a ferruginous compound
+of the finest dust. Yet there are many places upon its surface,
+(hollows for instance,) in which vegetable decay has accumulated, or
+valleys, into which it has been washed, that are well adapted for the
+usual purposes of agriculture, and would, if the country was more
+generally cleared, be found to exist to a much greater extent than is
+at present imagined. I have frequently observed the isolated patches of
+better land, when wandering through the woods, both on the Parramatta
+River, and at a greater distance from the coast. And I cannot but
+think, that it would be highly advantageous to those who possess large
+properties in the County of Cumberland to let Portions of them. The
+concentration of people round their capital, promotes more than
+anything else the prosperity of a colony, by creating a reciprocal
+demand for the produce both of the country and the town, since the one
+would necessarily stimulate the energy of the farmer, as the other
+would rouse the enterprise of the merchant. The consideration, however,
+of such a subject is foreign to my present purpose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It must not be supposed, that because I have given a somewhat
+particular description of the County of Cumberland, I have done so with
+a view to bring it forward as a specimen of the other counties, or to
+found upon it a general description of the colony. It is, in fact,
+poorer in every respect than any tract of land of similar extent in the
+interior, and is still covered with dense forests of heavy timber,
+excepting when the trees have been felled by dint of manual labour, and
+the ground cleared at an expense that nothing but its proximity to the
+seat of government could have justified. But experience has proved,
+that neither the labour nor the the expense have been thrown away. Many
+valuable farms and extensive gardens chequer the face of the country,
+from which the proprietors derive a very efficient income.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COUNTRY WEST OF BLUE MOUNTAINS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+To the westward of the Blue Mountains, the country differs in many
+respects from that lying between those ranges and the coast; and
+although, its aspect varies in different places, three principal
+features appear more immediately to characterise it. These are, first,
+plains of considerable extent wholly destitute of timber; secondly,
+open undulating woodlands; and, thirdly, barren unprofitable tracts.
+The first almost invariably occur in the immediate neighbourhood of
+some river, as the Plains of Bathurst, which are divided by the
+Macquarie; Goulburn Plains, through which the Wallandilly flows; and
+Yass Plains, which are watered by a river of the same name. The open
+forests, through which the horseman may gallop in perfect safety, seem
+to prevail over the whole secondary ranges of granite, and are
+generally considered as excellent grazing tracts. Such is the country
+in Argyleshire on either side of the Lachlan, where that river crosses
+the great southern road near Mr. Hume's station; such also are many
+parts of Goulburn and the whole extent of country lying between
+Underaliga and the Morumbidgee River. The barren tracts, on the other
+hand, may be said to occupy the central spaces between all the
+principal streams. With regard to the proportion that these different
+kinds of country bear to each other, there can be no doubt of the undue
+preponderance of the last over the first two; but there are
+nevertheless many extensive available tracts in every part of the
+colony.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MEANS OF INLAND TRANSPORT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The greatest disadvantage under which New South Wales labours, is the
+want of means for conveying inland produce to the market, or to the
+coast. The Blue Mountains are in this respect a serious bar to the
+internal prosperity of the colony. By this time, however, a magnificent
+road will have been completed across them to the westward, over parts
+of which I travelled in 1831. Indeed the efforts of the colonial
+government have been wisely directed, not only to the construction of
+this road, which the late Governor, General Darling commenced, but also
+in facilitating the communication to the southern districts, by an
+almost equally fine road over the Razor Back Range, near the Cow
+Pastures; so that as far as it is possible for human efforts to
+overcome natural obstacles, the wisdom and foresight of the executive
+have ere this been successful.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISADVANTAGES OF DISTANT SETTLERS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The majority of the settlers in the Bathurst country, and in the more
+remote interior, are woolgrowers; and as they send their produce to the
+market only once a year, receiving supplies for home consumption, on
+the return of their drays or carts from thence, the inconvenience of
+bad roads is not so much felt by them. But to an agriculturist a
+residence to the westward of the Blue Mountains is decidedly
+objectionable, unless he possess the means with which to procure the
+more immediate necessaries of life, otherwise than by the sale of his
+grain or other produce, and can be satisfied to cultivate his property
+for home consumption, or for the casual wants of his neighbours. Under
+such circumstances, a man with a small private income would enjoy every
+rational comfort. But of course, not only in consequence of the loss of
+labour, but the chance of accidents during a long journey, the more the
+distance is increased from Sydney, as the only place at which the
+absolute necessaries of life can be purchased, the greater becomes the
+objection to a residence in such a part of the country; and on this
+account it is, that although some beautiful locations both as to extent
+and richness, are to be found to the westward of Bathurst, equally on
+the Bell, the Macquarie and the Lachlan, it is not probable they will
+be taken up for many years, or will only be occupied as distant stock
+stations.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CHARACTER OF EASTERN COAST.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Since, therefore, it appears from what has been advanced, that it is
+not to the westward the views of any settlers should be directed,
+excepting under particular circumstances, it remains for us to consider
+what other parts of the colony hold out, or appear to hold out, greater
+advantages. The eye naturally turns to the south on the one hand, and
+to Port Macquarie northerly on the other. It is to be remarked that the
+eastern shores of Australia partake of the same barren character that
+marks the other three. It is generally bounded to a certain extent by a
+sandy and sterile tract. There are, however, breaks in so prolonged a
+line, as might have been expected, where, from particular local causes,
+both the soil and vegetation are of a superior kind. At Illawarra for
+instance, the contiguity of the mountains to the coast leaves no room
+for the sandy belt we have noticed, but the debris from them reaches to
+the very shore. Whether from reflected heat, or from some other
+peculiarity of situation, the vegetation of Illawarra is of an
+intertropical character, and birds that are strangers to the county of
+Cumberland frequent its thickets. There is no part of Australia where
+the feathered race are more beautiful, or more diversified. The most
+splendid pigeon, perhaps, that the world produces, and the satin bird,
+with its lovely eye, feed there upon the berries of the ficus (wild
+fig,) and other trees: and a numerous tribe of the accipitrine class
+soar over its dense and spacious forests.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PORT MACQUARIE AND FIVE ISLANDS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We again see a break in the sandy line of the coast at Broken Bay, at
+Newcastle, and still further north at Port Macquarie; at which places
+the Hawkesbury, the Hunter, and the Hastings severally debouche. Of
+Port Macquarie, as a place of settlement, I entertain a very high
+opinion, in consequence of its being situated under a most favourable
+parallel latitude. I am convinced it holds out many substantial
+advantages. One of the most important of these is the circumstance of
+its having been much improved when occupied as a penal settlement. And
+since the shores of the colony are how navigated by steam-boats, the
+facility of water communication would be proportionably great.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I believe the Five Islands or Illawarr district is considered
+peculiarly eligible for small settlers. The great drawback to this
+place is the heavy character of its timber and the closeness of its
+thickets, which vie almost with the American woods in those respects.
+The return, however, is adequate to the labour required in clearing the
+ground. Between the Five Islands and Sydney, a constant intercourse is
+kept up by numerous small craft; and a communication with the interior,
+by branch roads from the great southern line to the coast, would
+necessarily be thrown open, if the more distant parts of it were
+sufficiently peopled.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RICH TRACTS IN THE INTERIOR.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Recent surveys have discovered to us rich and extensive tracts in the
+remote interior between Jervis Bay and Bateman's Bay, and southwards
+upon the western slope of the dividing range. The account given by
+Messrs. Hovel and Hume is sufficient to prove that every valley they
+crossed was worthy of notice, and that the several rivers they forded
+were flanked by rich and extensive flats.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The distance of Moneroo Plains, and of the Doomot and Morumbidgee
+Rivers from Sydney, alarms the settler, who knows not the value of
+those localities; but men whose experience has taught them to set this
+obstacle at nought, have long depastured their herds on the banks of
+the last two. The fattest cattle that supply the Sydney market are fed
+upon the rich flats, and in the grassy valleys of the Morumbidgee; and
+there are several beautiful farms upon those of the Doomot. Generally
+speaking, the persons who reside in those distant parts, pay little
+attention to the comfort of their dwellings, or to the raising of more
+grain than their establishments may require; but there can be no doubt
+this part of the interior ought to be the granary of New South Wales;
+its climate and greater humidity being more favourable than that of
+Sydney for the production of wheat.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PERIODICAL DROUGHTS; THE SEASONS AFFECTED BY THE MARSHES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The most serious disadvantages under which the colony of New South
+Wales labours, is in the drought to which it is periodically subject.
+Its climate may be said to be too dry; in other respects it is one of
+the most delightful under heaven; and experience of the certainty of
+the recurrence of the trying seasons to which I allude, should teach
+men to provide against their effects. Those seasons, during which no
+rain falls, appear, from the observations of former writers, to occur
+every ten or twelve years; and it is somewhat singular that no cause
+has been assigned for such periodical visitations. Whether the state of
+the interior has anything to do with them, and whether the wet or dry
+condition of the marshes at all regulate the seasons, is a question
+upon which I will not venture to give my decisive opinion. But most
+assuredly, when the interior is dry, the seasons are dry, and VICE
+VERSA. Indeed, not only is this the case, but rains, from excessive
+duration in the first year after a drought, decrease gradually year
+after year, until they wholly cease for a time. It seems not
+improbable, therefore, that the state of the interior does, in some
+measure, regulate the fall of rain upon the eastern ranges, which
+appears to decrease in quantity yearly as the marshes become exhausted,
+and cease altogether, when they no longer contain any water. A drought
+will naturally follow until such time as the air becomes surcharged
+with clouds or vapour from the ocean, which being no longer able to
+sustain their own weight, descend upon the mountains, and being
+conveyed by hundreds of streams into the western lowlands, again fill
+the marshes, and cause the recurrence of regular seasons.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+TEMPERATURE OF THE CLIMATE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The thermometer ranges during the summer months, that is, from
+September to March, from 36 degrees to 106 degrees of Fahrenheit, but
+the mean of the temperature during the above period is 70 degrees. The
+instrument in the winter months ranges from 27 degrees to 98 degrees,
+with a mean of 66 degrees. However great the summer heat may appear, it
+is certain that the climate of New South Wales has not the relaxing and
+enfeebling effect upon the constitution, which renders a residence in
+India or other parts of the south so intolerable. Neither are any of
+the ordinary occupations of business or of pleasure laid aside at noon,
+or during the hottest part of the day. The traveller may cast himself
+at length under the first tree that invites him, and repose there as
+safely as if he were in a palace. Fearless of damps, and unmolested by
+noxious insects, his sleep is as sound as it is refreshing, and he
+rises with renewed spirits to pursue his journey. Equally so may the
+ploughman or the labourer seek repose beside his team, and allow them
+to graze quietly around him. The delicious coolness of the morning and
+the mild temperature of the evening air, in that luxurious climate, are
+beyond the power of description. It appears to have an influence on the
+very animals, the horses and the cattle being particularly docile; and
+I cannot but think it is is some degree the same happy effect upon some
+of the hardened human beings who are sent thither from the old world.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FRUITS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As I have before observed, it has not yet been discovered whether there
+are any indigenous fruits of any value in Australia. In the colony of
+New South Wales there certainly are none; yet the climate is peculiarly
+adapted for the growth of every European and of many tropical
+productions. The orange, the fig, the citron, the pomegranate, the
+peach, the apple, the guava, the nectarine, the pear, and the loquette,
+grow side by side together. The plantain throws its broad leaves over
+the water, the vine encircles the cottages, and the market of Sydney is
+abundantly supplied with every culinary vegetable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a climate, therefore, so soft that man scarcely requires a dwelling,
+and so enchanting that few have left it but with regret, the spirits
+must necessarily be acted upon,&mdash;and the heart feel lighter. Such,
+indeed, I have myself found to be the case; nor have I ever been
+happier than when roving through the woods or wandering along one of
+the silent and beautiful bays for which the harbour of Port Jackson is
+so celebrated. I went to New South Wales as I have already remarked,
+highly prejudiced against it, both from the nature of the service, and
+the character of the great body of its inhabitants. My regiment has
+since quitted its shores, but I am aware there are few of them who
+would not gladly return. The feeling I have in its favour arises not,
+therefore, from the services in which I was employed, but from
+circumstances in the colony itself; and I yet hope to form one of its
+community and to join a number of valuable and warm-hearted friends
+whom I left in that distant part of the world.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REMARKS ON EMIGRATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any
+length. My object in these preliminary remarks has been to give the
+reader a general idea of the country, in the interior recesses of which
+I am about to lead him. Still, however, it may be useful to offer a few
+general observations on a topic which has, of late years, become so
+interesting to the British public.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The main consideration with those who, possessing some capital, propose
+to emigrate as the means of improving their condition, is, the society
+likely to be found in the land fixed on for their future residence. One
+of the first questions I have been asked, when conversing on the
+subject of emigration, has consequently related to this important
+matter. I had only then to observe in reply, that the civil and
+military establishments in New South Wales, form the elements of as
+good society as it is the lot of the majority to command in Great
+Britain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The houses of the settlers are not scattered over a greater surface
+than the residences of country gentlemen here, and if they cannot vie
+with them in size, they most assuredly do in many other more important
+respects; and if a substantial cottage of brick or stone has any claim
+to the rank of a tenantable mansion, there are few of them which do not
+posses all the means of exercising that hospitality for which young
+communities are remarkable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But to sever the links of kindred, and to abandon the homes of our
+fathers after years of happy tranquillity, is a sacrifice the magnitude
+of which is unquestionable. The feelings by which men are influenced
+under such circumstances have a claim to our respect. Indeed, no class
+of persons can have a stronger hold upon our sympathies than those whom
+unmerited adverse fortune obliges to seek a home in a distant country.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Far, therefore, be it from me to dispute a single expression of regret
+to which they may give utterance. It must, however, he remembered that
+the deepest feelings of anguish are providentially alleviated in time.
+Our heaviest misfortunes are frequently repaired by industry and
+caution. The sky clears up, as it were: new interests engage the
+attention, and the cares of a family or the improvement of a newly
+acquired property engross those moments which would otherwise be spent
+in vain and unprofitable regrets.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DESCRIPTION OF IMMIGRANTS; MOST LIKELY TO PROSPER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It cannot be doubted that persons such as I have described, whose
+conduct has hitherto been regulated by prudence, and whose main object
+is to provide for their children, are the most valuable members of
+every community, whether young or old. To such men few countries hold
+out greater prospects of success than New South Wales; for the more we
+extend our enquiries, the more we shall find that the success of the
+emigrant in that colony depends upon his prudence and foresight rather
+than on any collateral circumstance of climate or soil; and to him who
+can be satisfied with the gradual acquirement of competency, it is the
+land of promise. Blessed with a climate of unparalleled serenity, and
+of unusual freedom from disease, the settler has little external cause
+of anxiety, little apprehension of sickness among his family or
+domestics, and little else to do than to attend to his own immediate
+interests. I should wish to illustrate the observations by two or three
+instances of their practical bearing and tendency.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CASES OF EMIGRANTS; CAUSES OF SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It was on my return from my second expedition, that I visited Lieut.
+****** who resides in the southern parts of the colony. The day after
+my arrival, he took me round his property, and explained the various
+improvements he had made, considering the small means with which he had
+commenced. At this part of our conversation, we came within view of his
+house, a substantial weather-board cottage. "I trust," said I, turning
+to him, "you will excuse the question I am about to ask; for your
+frankness emboldens me to propose it, and on your answer much of the
+effect of what you have been saying will depend. In effecting these
+various improvements, and in the building of that house, have you been
+obliged to embarrass yourself, or are they free from
+incumbrance?"&mdash;"Your question," he said, "is a reasonable one, and I
+will answer it with the frankness you are kind enough to ascribe to me.
+I have ever made it a rule not to exceed my income. Mrs. ****** bore
+our first trials with so much cheerfulness, and contributed so much to
+my happiness and my prosperity, that I felt myself bound to build her a
+good house with the first money I had to spare." I confess this answer
+raised my host in my estimation, and it was a gratifying proof to me of
+the success that attends industry and perseverance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But let us look at another case. Mr. *** had a property to the N.W. of
+Sydney, and having considerable funded means when he arrived in the
+colony, he soon put his property into a state of progressive
+improvement, and being in truth an excellent practical farmer, it
+assumed the appearance of regularity and order. Had Mr. *** stopped at
+this moment, he would have been in the enjoyment of affluence and of
+every rational comfort. But instead of exercising prudent rules of
+hospitality, he gave way to the natural generosity of his disposition,
+entered into expenses he could not afford, and was ultimately obliged
+to part with his estate. Now it is deeply to be regretted, that one
+whose energies and abilities particularly fitted him for the life he
+had chosen, should have failed through such conduct; and it is more
+than probable, that if he had commenced with smaller means, and had
+gradually improved his property, his fate would have been very
+different.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I shall leave these cases without any further comment, convinced as I
+am, that each of them furnishes matter for serious consideration, and
+that they are practical illustrations of the causes of success or
+failure of those who emigrate to the colony of New South Wales. And
+although I do not mean to affirm, that the majority follow Mr. ***'s
+example, I must venture to assert that thoughtlessness&mdash;useless
+expenditure in the first instance&mdash;waste of time and other
+circumstances, lead to equally ruinous consequences.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MORAL OBJECTIONS TO THE COLONY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+One of the greatest objections which families have to New South Wales,
+is their apprehension of the moral effects that are likely to overwhelm
+them by bad example, and for which no success in life could compensate.
+In a colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of
+crime must of course be great. Yet it falls less under the notice of
+private families than one might at first sight have been led to
+suppose. Drunkenness, as in the mother country, is the besetting sin;
+but it is confined chiefly to the large towns in consequence of the
+difficulty of procuring spirits in the country. There are, no doubt,
+many incorrigible characters sent to settle in the interior, and it is
+an evil to have these men, even for a single day, to break the harmony
+of a previously well regulated establishment, or to injure its future
+prospects by the influence of evil example. They are men who are sent
+upon trial, from on board a newly arrived ship, and they generally
+terminate their misconduct either on the roads or at a penal
+settlement, being thus happily removed from the mass of the prisoners.
+Frequently, however, men remain for years under the same master. They
+become attached to their occupations, their hearts become softened by
+kindness, and they atone as much as they possibly can for previous
+error.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SYSTEM OF IMMIGRATION RECOMMENDED; ENCOURAGEMENT FOR EMIGRATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Still there can be no doubt, but that the evil complained of is
+considerable. It is from this reason, and from my personal knowledge of
+the southern parts of the colony, that I should rejoice to see its
+flats and its valleys filled with an industrious population of a better
+description of farmers. A hope might then be reasonably indulged, that
+the Home Government would not be backward in recognising, and in acting
+upon a principle, the soundness of which has been felt and acknowledged
+in all ages, but the chief difficulty of which rests in its judicious
+application. I allude to a system of emigration. Sure I am that if it
+were well organized, and care were taken to profit by the experience of
+the past in similar attempts, it could not fail to be attended with
+ultimate success. The evils resulting from a surplus population in an
+old community, were never more seriously felt than in Great Britain at
+the present moment. Assuming that the amount of surplus population is
+2,000,000, the excess of labour and competition thus occasioned by
+diminishing profits and wages, creates, it has been said, an indirect
+tax to the enormous extent of 20,000,000 pounds per annum. It has
+appeared to many experienced persons, that it is in emigration, we
+should best find the means of relief from this heavy pressure;
+particularly if the individuals encouraged to go out to the colonies
+were young persons of both sexes, from the industrious classes of the
+community. Even if no more than three couples were induced to emigrate
+from each parish in England in ten years, the relief to the springs of
+industry would be very great. Besides, the funds necessary for this
+purpose would revert to the country by a thousand indirect channels.
+Persons unacquainted with our Australian colonies, whether Van Dieman's
+Land or New South Wales, can form little idea of the increasing demand
+for, and consumption in them of every species of British manufacture.
+The liberal encouragement given by government to every practicable
+scheme of emigration, and the sum advanced by it towards the expenses
+of the voyage to the labouring classes, sufficiently indicate the light
+in which the subject is viewed by the legislature; and the fact that no
+private family taking out servants to Sydney, has in any one instance
+been able to retain them, on account of offers more advantageous from
+other quarters, shows clearly the great demand for labour in the
+colony. If I might judge of the feelings of the majority of respectable
+individuals there, from the assurances of the few, they would willingly
+defray any parochial expenses attendant on the voyage, provided the
+services of such individuals could be secured to them for a time
+sufficiently long to remunerate them for such pavement. The tide of
+emigration should be directed to Sydney, Van Dieman's Land, or Western
+Australia, upon condition of the labourer's receiving a certain sum in
+wages, and his daily subsistence from his employer, with an
+understanding, however, that he must consider himself bound for two
+years to such employer. Surely there are hundreds of our indigent
+countrymen, who would gladly seek a land of such plenty, and cast away
+the natural, but unavailing regret of leaving home to secure to
+themselves and their families, the substantial comforts of life on such
+easy conditions.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COMMITTEE FOUND AT SYDNEY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It is not, perhaps, generally known that a committee has been formed in
+Sydney, to advise settlers as to the best mode of proceeding on arrival
+there. Such a plan is one of obvious utility; and if those who may find
+themselves at a loss for information would apply to this committee for
+advice, rather than to individuals with whom they may become casually
+acquainted, they would further their own interests, and in all
+probability ensure success. Still there are some broad rules upon which
+every man ought to act, which I shall endeavour to point out, and it
+will give me no ordinary satisfaction, if I should be the means of
+directing any one to the road of prosperity and comfort.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+HINTS TO EMIGRANTS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It is to be feared that those who emigrate to New South Wales,
+generally anticipate too great facility in their future operations and
+certainty of success in conducting them; but they should recollect that
+competency cannot be obtained without labour. Every trade&mdash;every
+profession in this respect, is subject to the same law&mdash;the lawyer, the
+physician, the tradesman, and the mechanic. This labour is required at
+our hands, even in an old community; how much more then is it called
+for in a new, where the ingenuity of men is put to trial to secure
+those means of accomplishing their ends which here are abundant. Now,
+it appears to me but consistent, that he who is obliged to leave his
+native country from want of means to hold his station there, can hardly
+expect to find, or rather to secure, abundance elsewhere without some
+exertion. Every man who emigrates should proceed with a conviction on
+his mind, that he is about to encounter years of labour and privation.
+He will not then be disappointed at partial reverses, and will be more
+thankful for unexpected prosperity. I feel persuaded the tone of mind
+has a great deal to do with success, because it influences the conduct
+of the individual. Supposing, however, that an emigrant has taken this
+rational view of his situation, he should determine on his pursuits,
+and allow nothing but absolute certainty of better fortune to turn him
+aside. Men, however, landing at Sydney, in their eagerness for
+information get bewildered, give up their original plans, adopt new and
+uncertain speculations, trifle away both their time and their money,
+and ultimately ruin themselves. An individual who goes to New South
+Wales for the purpose of settling, should not remain in Sydney a day
+longer than is necessary for the arrangement of his affairs. Every
+shilling spent there is thrown away. The greatest facility is given by
+the different departments of the Colonial Government to the settlers;
+and it is entirely his own fault if he trifles away his time in search
+of information elsewhere than at the fountainhead, or if he trusts to
+any other opinion than his own, supposing him experienced as to the
+quality of the land he may fix upon. Let him be speedy in his
+selection, and fix himself upon his allotment as soon as possible.
+Instead of overstocking his farm, or employing more labourers than he
+can afford to keep, let him be satisfied with a gradual increase of his
+stock, and wait patiently till he can better afford to employ labour;
+above all, let him avoid embarrassing himself by the purchase of any
+superfluous or unnecessary comfort. I consider that man has already
+failed, who runs into debt in the first instance, or who exhausts his
+means in the purchase of large herds, from the vain expectation that
+their increase will clear him. The time was when those idle
+speculations were occasionally attended with success, but such is not
+now the case. The energies of the agriculturist are directed to their
+proper channel, and if the few are unable to make rapid fortunes, the
+many have escaped inevitable ruin. No farm in a state of nature can be
+expected to yield any return of consequence for the first year. It is
+incumbent on a settler to provide for his establishment, or to retain
+the means of providing for it as circumstances may require.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Farming implements are as cheap in Sydney as in England. Horses and
+cattle are cheaper. It requires little, therefore, to stock a farm in a
+reasonable manner. On the other hand, the climate is so mild that the
+want of a house is scarcely felt, and a temporary residence easily
+constructed. On the whole I am convinced, that a man who regulates his
+conduct by prudence, and who perseveringly follows up his occupations,
+who behaves with kindness to those around him, and performs his social
+and moral duties with punctuality, will ultimately secure to himself a
+home that will make up for the one he has quitted in the land of his
+fathers, and place him in as respectable and as happy a situation as
+that which he there enjoyed.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PROGRESS OF INLAND DISCOVERY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Having thrown out the foregoing remarks for the information of the
+general reader, and of persons who look to Australia with the more
+earnest views of selecting a colonial home, I now return to the
+immediate object of these volumes; but before entering on the narrative
+of my own expeditions, I think it necessary to advert cursorily to the
+discoveries previously accomplished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The journeys of Mr. Oxley, far into the western interior of Australia,
+gave rise to various and conflicting opinions as to the character of
+the more central parts of that extensive continent, of which the colony
+of New South Wales forms but a small portion. I feel, therefore, called
+upon briefly to advert to the conclusions which that able and
+intelligent officer drew from his personal observation of the country
+into which he penetrated, as an acquaintance with his opinions will not
+only tend to throw a clearer light on the following details, but will,
+also, convey much necessary information to those of my readers who may
+not have perused his journals. It is necessary, however, in order to
+divest the subject of all obscureness, to trace, in the first instance,
+the progress of inland discovery, in New South Wales, from the first
+foundation of the colony to the period when Mr. Oxley's exertions
+attracted the public attention.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the year 1788, the British Government took formal possession of the
+eastern coast of Australia, by the establishment of a penal colony at
+Port Jackson. The first settlers, under Governor Phillips, had too many
+difficulties to contend with to submit themselves to be thwarted from
+pursuits essential to their immediate safety and comfort, by the
+prospect of remote and uncertain advantages. It was by perseverance and
+toil alone that they first established and ultimately spread themselves
+over that part of the territory, which, flanked by the ocean on the one
+hand, and embraced as it were by the Nepean River on the other, is now
+entitled the County Of Cumberland. For many years, this single district
+supplied the wants of the settlers. Upon it they found ample pasture
+for their herds, and sufficient employment for themselves. Nor was it
+until a succession of untoward seasons, and the rapid increase of their
+stock pointed out to them the necessity of seeking for more extensive
+pasturage, that they contemplated surmounting that dark and rugged
+chain of mountains, which, like the natural ramparts of Spain and
+Italy, rose high over the nether forest, and broke the line of the
+western horizon.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. CALEY'S ATTEMPT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+A Mr. Caley is said to have been the first who attempted to scale the
+Blue Mountains: but he did not long persevere in struggling with
+difficulties too great for ordinary resolution to overcome. It appears
+that he retraced his steps, after having penetrated about sixteen miles
+into their dark and precipitous recesses; and a heap of stones, which
+the traveller passes about that distance from Erne Ford, on the road to
+Bathurst, marks the extreme point reached by the first expedition to
+the westward of the Nepean river.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+LIEUT. LAWSON'S EXPEDITION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Shortly after the failure of this expedition, the sad effects of a long
+protracted drought called forth a more general spirit of enterprise and
+exertion among the settlers; and Mr. Oxley makes honorable mention of
+the perseverance and resolution with which Lieut. Lawson, of the 104th
+regiment, accompanied by Messrs. Blaxland and Wentworth, conducted an
+expedition into the Blue Mountains. Their efforts were successful: and
+the objects of their enterprise would have been completely attained,
+but for the failure of their provisions at a moment when their view of
+the distant interior was such as to convince them that they had
+overcome the most formidable obstacles to their advance, and that in
+their further progress few impediments would have presented themselves.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. EVANS' DISCOVERIES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The success of this undertaking induced Governor Macquarie to further
+the prosecution of inland discovery, and of attempts to ascertain the
+nature of the country of which Mr. Lawson only obtained a glimpse. An
+expedition was accordingly dispatched under Mr. Evans, the Deputy
+Surveyor-General, to follow the route taken by the former one, and to
+penetrate as far as practicable into the western interior. The result
+was the discovery of the Macquarie river, and of Bathurst Plains. The
+report of Mr. Evans was so favourable, that orders were immediately
+issued for the construction of a line of road across the mountains.
+When that was completed, the Governor went in person to fix the site of
+a future town on Bathurst Plains. From thence Mr. Evans, who
+accompanied the Governor on the occasion, was directed to proceed to
+the southward and westward, to ascertain the nature of the country in
+that direction. He discovered another considerable river, flowing, like
+the Macquarie, to the west, to which he gave the name of the Lachlan.
+The promising appearance of these two streams, and the expectation of
+all parties that they would be found to water rich and extensive tracts
+of country, led to the fitting out of a more important expedition than
+any which had before been contemplated.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. OXLEY'S DISCOVERIES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Oxley, the Surveyor-General of the Colony, was appointed chief of
+this expedition, and was directed to trace the Lachlan and Macquarie
+rivers, as far as practicable, with a view to ascertain their
+capabilities and the nature of the country they watered. In 1817, Mr.
+Oxley directed his attention to the former river, and continued to
+follow its windings, until it appeared that its waters were lost in
+successive marshes and it ceased to be a river. In the following year
+he turned towards the Macquarie, and traced it, in like manner, until
+he was checked by high reeds that covered an extensive plain before
+him, amidst which the channel of the river was lost.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From what he observed of the country, on both these occasions, he was
+led to infer that beyond the limits of his advance the interior had a
+uniform level, and was, for the most part, uninhabitable and under
+water. Its features must have been strongly marked to have confirmed
+such an opinion in the mind of the late Surveyor-General. It stands
+recorded on the pages of his journal, that he travelled over a country
+of many miles in extent, after clearing the mountains, which so far
+from presenting any rise of ground to the eye, bore unequivocal marks
+of frequent and extensive inundation. He traced two rivers of
+considerable size, and found that, at a great distance from each other,
+they apparently terminated in marshes, and that the country beyond them
+was low and unbroken. In his progress eastward, he crossed a third
+stream (the Castlereagh), about forty-five miles from the Macquarie,
+seemingly not inferior to it in size, originating in the mountains for
+which he was making, and flowing nearly parallel to the other rivers
+into a level country like that which he had just quitted.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISCOVERIES OF MESSRS. MECHAN, HUME, HOVEL AND CUNNINGHAM.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Evans, moreover, who accompanied Mr. Oxley on these journeys, and
+who had been detached by his principal from Mount Harris, to ascertain
+the nature of the country in the line which the expedition was next to
+pursue, having crossed the Castlereagh considerably below the place at
+which the party afterwards effected a passage, reported that the river
+was then running through high reeds. The inference naturally drawn by
+Mr. Oxley, was, that it terminated as the Lachlan and the Macquarie had
+done; and that their united waters formed an inland sea or basin. It is
+evident that Mr. Oxley had this impression on his mind, when he turned
+towards the coast; but the wet state of the lowlands prevented him from
+ascertaining its correctness or error. Doubt, consequently, still
+existed as to the nature of the country he had left behind him; a
+question in which the best interests of the colony were apparently
+involved. Subsequently to these discoveries, Mr. Surveyor Mechan,
+accompanied by Mr. Hamilton Hume, a colonist of considerable
+experience, explored the country more to the southward and westward of
+Sydney, and discovered most of the new country called Argyle, and also
+Lake Bathurst.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume was afterwards associated with a Mr. Hovel, in an excursion to
+the south coast, under the auspices of Sir Thomas Brisbane. After a
+most persevering and laborious journey, they reached the sea; but it is
+uncertain whether they made Port Philips, or Western Port. Mr. Hume,
+whose practical experience will yield to that of no man, entertains a
+conviction that it was to the former they descended from the
+neighbouring ranges; but Mr. Hovel, I believe supports a contrary
+opinion. In the early stage of their journey, they passed over York or
+Yass Plains; and, after crossing the Morumbidgee, were generally
+entangled among mountain ranges that increased in height to the east
+and south-east. They crossed three considerable rivers, falling
+westerly, which they named the Goulburn, the Hume, and the Ovens; and
+found a beautiful and well-watered country in the vicinity of the coast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In 1826, Mr. Allan Cunningham, Botanical Collector to his late Majesty,
+traversed a considerable portion of the interior to the north of
+Bathurst, and, with a laudable zeal, devoted his labours to the
+acquisition of general information, as well as to his more immediate
+professional pursuits. In 1827, this gentleman again bent his steps
+towards the northward, and succeeded in gaining the 28th parallel of
+latitude; and, on a subsequent occasion, having taken his departure
+from Moreton Bay, he connected his former journey with that settlement,
+and thus contributed largely to our knowledge of the mountain country
+between it and the capital. Mr. Cunningham, who, independently of his
+individual excursions, had not only circumnavigated the Australian
+Continent with Capt. King, but had formed also one of the party with
+Mr. Oxley, in the journeys before noticed, had adopted this gentleman's
+opinion with regard to the swampy and inhospitable character of the
+distant interior. Its depressed appearance from the high ground on
+which Mr. Cunningham subsequently moved, tended to confirm this
+opinion, which was moreover daily gaining strength from the reports of
+the natives, who became more frequent in their intercourse with the
+whites, and who reported that there were large waters to the westward,
+on which the natives had canoes, and in which there were fish of great
+size.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It became, therefore, a current opinion, that the western interior of
+New Holland comprehended an extensive basin, of which the ocean of
+reeds which had proved so formidable to Mr. Oxley, formed most probably
+the outskirts; and it was generally thought that an expedition
+proceeding into the interior, would encounter marshes of vast extent,
+which would be extremely difficult to turn, and no less dangerous to
+enter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It remained to be proved, however, whether these conjectures were
+founded in fact. The chief difficulty lay in the character of the
+country, and in providing the necessary means to ensure success. Those
+which were resorted to will be found in the succeeding chapter. Whether
+they would have been found sufficient and applicable had the interior
+been wholly under water, is doubtful; and my impression on this point
+induced me to make more efficient arrangements on the second expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE BANKS OF THE <BR>
+MACQUARIE RIVER in 1828 and 1829.
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER I.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+State of the Colony in 1828-29&mdash;Objects of the Expedition&mdash;Departure
+from Sydney&mdash;Wellington Valley&mdash;Progress down the Macquarie&mdash;Arrival at
+Mount Harris&mdash;Stopped by the marshes&mdash;Encamp amidst reeds&mdash;Excursions
+down the river&mdash;Its termination&mdash;Appearance of the marshes&mdash;Opthalmic
+affection of the men&mdash;Mr. Hume's successful journey to the
+northward&mdash;Journey across the plain&mdash;Second great
+marsh&mdash;Perplexities&mdash;Situation of the exploring party&mdash;Consequent
+resolutions.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The year 1826 was remarkable for the commencement of one of those
+fearful droughts to which we have reason to believe the climate of New
+South Wales is periodically subject. It continued during the two
+following years with unabated severity. The surface of the earth became
+so parched up that minor vegetation ceased upon it. Culinary herbs were
+raised with difficulty, and crops failed even in the most favourable
+situations. Settlers drove their flocks and herds to distant tracts for
+pasture and water, neither remaining for them in the located districts.
+The interior suffered equally with the coast, and men, at length, began
+to despond under so alarming a visitation. It almost appeared as if the
+Australian sky were never again to be traversed by a cloud.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+But, however severe for the colony the seasons had proved, or were
+likely to prove, it was borne in mind at this critical moment, that the
+wet and swampy state of the interior had alone prevented Mr. Oxley from
+penetrating further into it, in 1818. Each successive report from
+Wellington Valley, the most distant settlement to the N. W., confirmed
+the news of the unusually dry state of the lowlands, and of the
+exhausted appearance of the streams falling into them. It was,
+consequently, hoped that an expedition, pursuing the line of the
+Macquarie, would have a greater chance of success than the late
+Surveyor General had; and that the difficulties he had to contend
+against would be found to be greatly diminished, if not altogether
+removed. The immediate fitting out of an expedition was therefore
+decided upon, for the express purpose of ascertaining the nature and
+extent of that basin into which the Macquarie was supposed to fall, and
+whether any connection existed between it and the streams falling
+westerly. As I had early taken a great interest in the geography of New
+South Wales, the Governor was pleased to appoint me to the command of
+this expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+JOURNEY FROM SYDNEY TO EMU PLAINS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In the month of September, 1828, I received his Excellency's commands
+to prepare for my journey; and by the commencement of November, had
+organised my party, and completed the necessary arrangements. On the
+9th of that month, I waited on the Governor, at Parramatta, to receive
+his definitive instructions. As the establishments at Sydney had been
+unable to supply me with the necessary number of horses and oxen,
+instructions had been forwarded to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of
+Wellington Valley, to train a certain number for my use; and I was now
+directed to push for that settlement without loss of time. I returned
+to Sydney in the afternoon of the 9th, and on the 10th took leave of my
+brother officers, to commence a journey of very dubious issue; and, in
+company with my friend, Staff-surgeon M'Leod, who had obtained
+permission to accompany me to the limits of the colony, followed my men
+along the great western road. We moved leisurely over the level
+country, between the coast and the Nepean River, and availed ourselves
+of the kind hospitality of those of our friends whose property lay
+along that line of road, to secure more comfortable places of rest than
+the inns would have afforded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We reached Sheane, the residence of Dr. Harris, on the 11th, and were
+received by him with the characteristic kindness with which friends or
+strangers are ever welcomed by that gentleman, He had accompanied Mr.
+Oxley as a volunteer in 1818, and his name was then given to the mount
+which formed the extreme point to which the main body of the first
+expedition down the banks of the Macquarie penetrated, in a westerly
+direction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The general appearance of the property of Dr. Harris, showed how much
+perseverance and labour had effected towards its improvement. Many
+acres of ground bore a promising crop, over which a gloomy forest had
+once waved. The Doctor's farming establishment was as complete as his
+husbandry seemed to be prosperous; but he did not appear to be
+satisfied with the extent of his dwelling, to which he was making
+considerable additions, although I should have thought it large enough
+for all ordinary purposes of residence or hospitality. The rewards of
+successful industry were everywhere visible.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FROM EMU PLAINS TO WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 13th, we gained Regent's Ville, the more splendid mansion of Sir
+John Jamieson, which overlooks the Nepean River, and commands the most
+beautiful and extensive views of the Blue Mountains. Crossing the ford
+on the 14th, we overtook the men as they were toiling up the first
+ascent of those rugged bulwarks, which certainly gave no favourable
+earnest of the road before us; and, as we could scarcely hope to reach
+the level country to the westward without the occurrence of some
+accident, I determined to keep near the drays, that I might be on hand
+should my presence be required. We gained O'Connell's plains on the
+20th November, and arrived at Bathurst on the 22nd, with no other
+damage than the loss of one of the props supporting the boat which
+snapped in two as we descended Mount York. On examination, it was found
+that the boat had also received a slight contusion, but it admitted of
+easy repair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was detained at Bathurst longer than I intended, in consequence of
+indisposition, and during my stay there experienced many proofs of the
+kind hospitality of the settlers of that promising district: nor was I
+ever more impressed with the importance of the service upon which I was
+employed, or more anxious as to the issue, than while contemplating the
+rapid advance of agriculture upon its plains, and the formidable bar to
+its prosperity which I had left behind me, in the dark and gloomy
+ranges which I had crossed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 27th, Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose experience well qualified him for
+the task, and who had been associated with me in the expedition, having
+joined me, we proceeded on our journey, and reached Wellington Valley
+about the end of the month.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I wished to push into the interior without any delay, or at least, so
+soon as we should have completed our arrangements and organized the
+party; but, although Mr. Maxwell had paid every attention to the
+training of the cattle, he was of opinion that they could not yet be
+wholly relied upon, and strongly recommended that they should be kept
+at practice for another week. As we could not have left the settlement
+under the most favourable circumstances in less than four days, the
+further delay attendant on this measure was considered immaterial, and
+it was, accordingly, determined upon. Mr. Hume undertook to superintend
+the training of the animals, and this left me at leisure to gather such
+information as would be of use to us in our progress down the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his description of Wellington Valley, Mr. Oxley has not done it more
+than justice. It is certainly a beautiful and fertile spot, and it was
+now abundant in pasturage, notwithstanding the unfavourable season that
+had passed over it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The settlement stands upon the right bank of the Bell, about two miles
+above the junction of that stream with the Macquarie. Its whitewashed
+buildings bore outward testimony to the cleanliness and regularity of
+the inhabitants; and the respectful conduct of the prisoners under his
+charge, showed that Mr. Maxwell had maintained that discipline by which
+alone he could have secured respect to himself and success to his
+exertions, at such a distance from the seat of government.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The weather was so exceedingly hot, during our stay, that it was
+impossible to take exercise at noon; but in the evening, or at an early
+hour in the morning, we were enabled to make short excursions in the
+neighbourhood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Maxwell informed me that there were three stations below the
+settlement, the first of which, called Gobawlin, belonging to Mr.
+Wylde, was not more than five miles from it; the other two, occupied by
+Mr. Palmer, were at a greater distance, one being nineteen, the other
+thirty-four miles below the junction of the Bell. He was good enough to
+send for the stockman (or chief herdsman), in charge of the last, to
+give me such information of the nature of the country below him, as he
+could furnish from personal knowledge or from the accounts of the
+natives.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+LOW STATE OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Maxwell pointed out to me the spot on which Mr. Oxley's boats had
+been built, close upon the bank of the Macquarie; and I could not but
+reflect with some degree of apprehension on the singularly diminished
+state of the river from what it must then have been to allow a boat to
+pass down it. Instead of a broad stream and a rapid current, the stream
+was confined to a narrow space in the centre of the channel, and it ran
+so feebly amidst frequent shallows that it was often scarcely
+perceptible. The Bell, also, which Mr. Oxley describes as dashing and
+rippling along its pebbly bed, had ceased to flow, and consisted merely
+of a chain of ponds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 3rd of Dec, the stockman from below arrived; but the only
+information we gathered from him was the existence of a lake to the
+left of the river, about three days' journey below the run of his
+herds, on the banks of which he assured us, the native companions, a
+species of stork, stood in rows like companies of soldiers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He brought up a nest of small paroquets of the most beautiful plumage,
+as a present to Mr. Maxwell, and affirmed that they were common about
+his part of the river. The peculiarity of the seasons had also brought
+a parrot into the valley which had never before visited it. This
+delicate bird was noticed by Captain Cook upon the coast, and is called
+PSITTACUS NOVAE HOLLANDIAE, or New Holland Parrot, by Mr. Brown. It had
+not, however, been subsequently seen until the summer of 1828, when it
+made its appearance at Wellington Valley in considerable numbers,
+together with a species of merops or mountain bee-eater.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DEPARTURE FOR THE INTERIOR.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 5th, our preparations being wholly completed, and the loads
+arranged, the party was mustered, and was found to consist of myself
+and Mr. Hume, two soldiers and eight prisoners of the crown, two of
+whom were to return with dispatches. Our animals numbered two riding,
+and seven pack, horses, two draft, and eight pack, bullocks, exclusive
+of two horses of my own, and two for the men to be sent back.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The morning of the 7th December, the day upon which we were to leave
+the valley, was ushered in by a cloudless sky, and that heated
+appearance in the atmosphere which foretells an oppressively sultry
+day. I therefore put off the moment of our departure to the evening,
+and determined to proceed no further than Gobawlin. I was the more
+readily induced to order this short journey because the animals had not
+been practised to their full loads, and I thought they might have given
+some trouble at starting with an unusual weight. They moved off however
+very quietly, and as if they had been accustomed to their work by a
+long course of training. We took our departure from the settlement at 3
+p.m. and, crossing to the right bank of the Macquarie, a little above
+its junction with the Bell, reached Mr Wylde's station about half-past
+five. Thus we commenced our journey under circumstances as favorable as
+could have been wished. In disengaging ourselves on the following day
+from the hills by which Wellington Valley is encompassed on the
+westward, with a view to approach Mr. Palmer's first station, we kept
+rather wide of the river, and only occasionally touched on its more
+projecting angles. The soil at a distance from the stream was by no
+means so good as that in its immediate vicinity, nor was the timber of
+the same description. On the rich and picturesque grounds near the
+river the angophora prevailed with the flooded gum, and the scenery
+upon its banks was improved by the casuarinae that overhung them. On
+the latter, inferior eucalypti and cypresses were mixed together. The
+country was broken and undulating, and the hills stony, notwithstanding
+which, they appeared to have an abundance of pasture upon them. Mr.
+Hume rode with me to the summit of a limestone elevation, from which I
+thought it probable we might have obtained such a view as would have
+enabled us to form some idea of the country into which we were about to
+descend. But in following the river line, the eye wandered over a dark
+and unbroken forest alone. The ranges from which we were fast receding
+formed an irregular and beautiful landscape to the southward; and
+contrasted strongly with the appearance of the country to the N. W., in
+which direction it was rapidly assuming a level.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We reached Mr. Palmer's at a late hour in the afternoon, in consequence
+of a delay we experienced in crossing a gully, and encamped upon a high
+bank immediately opposite to the mouth of Molle's rivulet which here
+joins the Macquarie from the southward. The cattle had consumed all the
+food, and the ground on both sides of the river looked bare and arid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No doubt, however, the face of the country in ordinary seasons wears a
+very different appearance. Its general elevation continued high; nor
+did the Macquarie assume any change of aspect. Mountain debris and
+rounded pebbles of various kinds formed its bed, which was much
+encumbered with timber.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DIBILAMBLE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We had been unable to persuade any of the natives of Wellington Valley
+to accompany us as guides, on our leaving that settlement. Even Mr.
+Maxwell's influence failed; for, notwithstanding the promises of
+several, when they saw that we were ready to depart, they either
+feigned sickness or stated that they were afraid of the more distant
+natives. The fact is, that they were too lazy to wander far from their
+own district, and too fond of Maxwell's beef to leave it for a
+precarious bush subsistence. Fortunately we found several natives with
+Mr. Palmer's stockmen, who readily undertook to conduct us by the
+nearest route to the cataract, which we considered to be midway between
+Wellington Valley and Mount Harris. We started under their guidance for
+Dibilamble, Mr. Palmer's second station, and reached it about half-past
+4 p.m. The distance between the two is sixteen miles. The country for
+some miles differs in no material point from that through which we had
+already passed. The same rich tracts of soil near the river and the
+same inferiority in the tracks remote from it. Near Dibilamble,
+however, the limestone formation terminates, and gives place to barren
+stony ridges, upon which the cypress callities is of close and stunted
+growth. The ridges themselves were formed of a coarse kind of freestone
+in a state of rapid decomposition. The Tabragar (the Erskine of Mr.
+Oxley) falls into the Macquarie at Dibilamble. It had long ceased to
+flow, being a small mountain torrent whose source, if we judge from the
+shingly nature of its bed, cannot be very distant. Our descent was
+considerable during the day; the rapids were frequent in the river, but
+it underwent no change in its general appearance. Its waters were hard
+and transparent, and its banks, in many places, extremely lofty; with a
+red sandy loam and gravel under the alluvial deposits. It generally
+happened that where the bank was high on the one side it was low and
+subject to flood, to a limited extent at least, on the other. Upon
+these low grounds the blue-gum trees were of lofty growth, but on the
+upper levels box prevailed.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SCENERY NEAR THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The views upon the river were really beautiful, and varied at every
+turn; nor is it possible for any tree to exceed the casuarina in the
+graceful manner in which it bends over the stream, or clings to some
+solitary rock in its centre.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It here became necessary for us to cross to the left bank of the river,
+not only to avoid its numerous windings, and thus to preserve as much
+as possible the direct line to Mount Harris; but also, because the
+travelling was much better on the south side. We therefore availed
+ourselves of a ford opposite to the ground on which the tents had
+stood; and then pursued our journey, in a south-westerly course, over a
+country of a description very inferior to that of any we had previously
+noticed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Iron-bark and cypresses generally prevailed along our line of route on
+a poor and sandy soil, which improved after we passed Elizabeth Burn, a
+small creek mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+TAYLOR'S RIVULET.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We approached the river again early in the day, and pitched our tent on
+the summit of a sloping bank that overlooked one of its long still
+reaches. We were protected from the sun by the angophora trees, which
+formed a hanging wood around us, and, with its bright green foliage,
+gave a cheerfulness to the scene that was altogether unusual. The
+opposite side of the river was rather undulated, and the soil appeared
+to be of the finest description. The grass, although growing in tufts,
+afforded abundance of pasture for the cattle; and, on the whole, this
+struck me as a most eligible spot for a station, and I found it
+occupied as such on the return of the expedition. We had encamped about
+a quarter of a mile from Taylor's Rivulet, which discharges itself into
+the Macquarie from the N. E., and is the first stream, upon the right
+bank, below the Wellington Valley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Immediately after receiving it the river sweeps away to the southward,
+in consequence of which it became again necessary for us to cross it.
+Our guides, who were intelligent lads, led the cattle to a ford, a
+little below the junction of Taylor's Rivulet, at which we effected a
+passage with some difficulty; the opposite bank being very steep, and
+we were obliged to force our way up a gully for some eighty or a
+hundred yards before we could extricate the team. Pursuing our journey,
+in a N. W. direction, we soon left the rich and undulating grounds
+bordering the river behind us. A poor, level, and open country,
+succeeded them. The soil changed to a light red, sandy loam, on which
+eucalypti, cypresses, and casuarinae, were intermixed with minor
+shrubs; of which latter, the cherry tree (exocarpus cupressiformis) was
+the most prevalent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At about seven miles from the river we passed some barren freestone
+ridges, near which Mr. Hume killed the first kangaroo we had seen. At
+mid-day we passed a small creek, at which the cattle were watered; and
+afterwards continued our journey through a country similar to that over
+which we had already made our way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As we neared the stream we noticed the acacia pendula for the first
+time,&mdash;an indication of our approach to the marshes. The weather still
+continued extremely hot. Our journey this day was unusually long, and
+our cattle suffered so much, and moved so slowly, that it was late when
+we struck upon the Macquarie, at a part where its banks were so high
+that we had some difficulty in finding a good watering place.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SURPRISE SOME NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Being considerably in front of the party, with one of our guides, when
+we neared the river, I came suddenly upon a family of natives. They
+were much terrified, and finding that they could not escape, called
+vehemently to some of their companions, who were in the distance. By
+the time Mr. Hume came up, they had in some measure recovered their
+presence of mind, but availed themselves of the first favourable moment
+to leave us. I was particular in not imposing any restraint on these
+men, in consequence of which they afterwards mustered sufficient
+resolution to visit us in our camp. We now judged that we were about
+ten miles from the cataract, and that, according to the accounts of the
+stockman, we could not be very distant from the lake he had mentioned.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NATIVE BURIAL PLACE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As I was unwilling to pass any important feature of the country without
+enquiry or examination, I requested Mr. Hume to interrogate the
+strangers on the subject. They stated that they belonged to the lake
+tribe, that the lake was a short day's journey to the eastward, and
+that they would guide us to it if we wished. The matter was accordingly
+arranged. They left us at dusk, but returned to the camp at the
+earliest dawn; when we once more crossed the river, and, after
+traversing a very level country for about nine miles, arrived at our
+destination. We passed over the dried beds of lagoons, and through
+coppices of cypresses and acacia pendula, or open forest, but did not
+observe any of the barren stony ridges so common to the N.E. About a
+mile, or a mile and a half, from the lake we examined a solitary grave
+that had recently been constructed. It consisted of an oblong mound,
+with three semicircular seats. A walk encompassed the whole, from which
+three others branched off for a few yards only, into the forest.
+Several cypresses, overhanging the grave, were fancifully carved on the
+inner side, and on one the shape of a heart was deeply engraved.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BUDDAH LAKE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We were sadly disappointed in the appearance of the lake, which the
+natives call the Buddah. It is a serpentine sheet of fresh water, of
+rather more than a mile in length, and from three to four hundred yards
+in breadth. Its depth was four fathoms; but it seemed as if it were now
+five or six feet below the ordinary level. No stream either runs into
+it or flows from it; yet it abounds in fish; from which circumstance I
+should imagine that it originally owed its supply to the river during
+some extensive inundation. Notwithstanding that we had crossed some
+rich tracts of land in our way to it, the neighbourhood of the lake was
+by no means fertile. The trees around it were in rapid decay, and the
+little vegetation to be seen appeared to derive but little advantage
+from its proximity to water.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXTREME HEAT OF THE WEATHER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We had started at early dawn; and the heat had become intolerable long
+ere the sun had gained the meridian. It was rendered still more
+oppressive from the want of air in the dense bushes through which we
+occasionally moved. At 2 p.m. the thermometer stood at 129 degrees of
+Fahrenheit, in the shade; and at 149 degrees in the sun; the difference
+being exactly 20 degrees. It is not to be wondered at that the cattle
+suffered, although the journey was so short. The sun's rays were too
+powerful even for the natives, who kept as much as possible in the
+shade. In the evening, when the atmosphere was somewhat cooler, we
+launched the boat upon the lake, in order to get some wild fowl and
+fish; but although we were tolerably successful with our guns, we did
+not take anything with our hooks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The natives had, in the course of the afternoon, been joined by the
+rest of the tribe, and they now numbered about three and twenty. They
+were rather distant in their manner, and gazed with apparent
+astonishment at the scene that was passing before them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If there had been other proof wanting, of the lamentably parched and
+exhausted state of the interior, we had on this occasion ample evidence
+of it, and of the fearful severity of the drought under which the
+country was suffering. As soon as the sun dipped under the horizon,
+hundreds of birds came crowding to the border of the lake, to quench
+the thirst they had been unable to allay in the forest. Some were
+gasping, others almost too weak to avoid us, and all were indifferent
+to the reports of our guns.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CATARACT OF THE MACQUARIE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On leaving the Buddah, eleven only of the natives accompanied us. We
+reached the river again about noon, on a north-half-east course, where
+it had a rocky bed, and continued to journey along it, until we reached
+the cataract at which we halted. We travelled over soil generally
+inferior to that which we had seen on the preceding day, but rich in
+many places. The same kind of timber was observed, but the acacia
+pendula was more prevalent than any other, although near the river the
+flooded gum and Australian apple-tree were of beautiful growth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had appeared to me that the waters of the Macquarie had been
+diminishing in volume since our departure from Wellington Valley, and I
+had a favourable opportunity of judging as to the correctness of this
+conclusion at the cataract, where its channel, at all times much
+contracted, was particularly so on the present occasion. So little
+force was there in the current, that I began to entertain doubts how
+long it would continue, more especially when I reflected on the level
+character of the country we had entered, and the fact of the Macquarie
+not receiving any tributary between this point and the marshes. I was
+in consequence led to infer that result, which, though not immediately,
+eventually took place.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As they were treated with kindness, the natives who accompanied us soon
+threw off all reserve, and in the afternoon assembled at the pool below
+the fall to take fish. They went very systematically to work, with
+short spears in their hands that tapered gradually to a point, and sank
+at once under water without splash or noise at a given signal from an
+elderly man. In a short time, one or two rose with the fish they had
+transfixed; the others remained about a minute under water, and then
+made their appearance near the same rock into the crevices of which
+they had driven their prey. Seven fine bream were taken, the whole of
+which they insisted on giving to our men, although I am not aware that
+any of themselves had broken their fast that day. They soon, however,
+procured a quantity of muscles, with which they sat down very
+contentedly at a fire. My barometrical admeasurement gave the cataract
+an elevation of 680 feet above the level of the sea; and my
+observations placed it in east longitude 148 degrees 3 minutes and in
+latitude 31 degrees 50 minutes south.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It became an object with us to gain the right bank of the Macquarie as
+soon as possible; for it was evident that the country to the southward
+of it was much more swampy than it was to the north: but for some
+distance below the cataract, we found it impossible to effect our
+purpose. The rocks composing the bed of the river at the cataract,
+which are of trapp formation, disappeared at about eight miles below
+it, when the river immediately assumed another character. Its banks
+became of equal height, which had not before been the case, and
+averaged from fifteen to eighteen feet. They were composed entirely of
+alluvial soil, and were higher than the highest flood-marks. Its waters
+appeared to be turbid and deep, and its bed was a mixture of sand and
+clay. The casuarina, which had so often been admired by us, entirely
+disappeared and the channel in many places became so narrow as to be
+completely arched over by gum-trees.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 16th, we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives who joined our
+train after the very necessary ceremonies of an introduction had
+passed, and when added to those who still accompanied us, amounted to
+fifty-three. On this occasion I was riding somewhat in front of the
+party, when I came upon them. They were very different in appearance
+from those whom we had surprised at the river; and from the manner in
+which I was received, I was led to infer that they had been informed of
+our arrival, and had purposely assembled to meet us. I was saluted by
+an old man, who had stationed himself in front of his tribe, and who
+was their chief. Behind him the young men stood in a line, and behind
+them the warriors were seated on the ground.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONDUCT OF THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I had a young native with me who had attached himself to our party, and
+who, from his extreme good nature and superior intelligence, was
+considered by us as a first-rate kind of fellow. He explained who and
+what we were, and I was glad to observe that the old chief seemed
+perfectly reconciled to my presence, although he cast many an anxious
+glance at the long train of animals that were approaching. The
+warriors, I remarked, never lifted their eyes from the ground. They
+were hideously painted with red and yellow ochre, and had their weapons
+at their sides, while their countenances were fixed, sullen, and
+determined. In order to overcome this mood, I rode up to them, and,
+taking a spear from the nearest, gave him my gun to examine; a mark of
+confidence that was not lost upon them, for they immediately relaxed
+from their gravity, and as soon as my party arrived, rose up and
+followed us. That which appeared most to excite their surprise, was the
+motion of the wheels of the boat carriage. The young native whom I have
+noticed above, acted as interpreter, and, by his facetious manner,
+contrived to keep the whole of us in a fit of laughter as we moved
+along. He had been named Botheri by some stockman.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+In consequence of our wish to cross the river, we kept near it, and
+experienced considerable delay from the frequent marshes that opposed
+themselves to our progress. In one of these we saw a number of ibises
+and spoonbills; and the natives succeeded in killing two or three
+snakes. Our view to the westward was extremely limited; but to the
+eastward the country appeared in some places to expand into plains.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CROSSING OF THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+After travelling some miles down the banks of the river, finding that
+they still retained their steep character, we turned back to a place
+which Mr. Hume had observed, and at which he thought we might, with
+some little trouble, cross to the opposite side. And, however
+objectionable the attempt was, we found ourselves obliged to make it.
+We descended, therefore, into the channel of the river, and unloaded
+the animals and boat-carriage. In order to facilitate the ascent of the
+right bank, some of the men were directed to cut steps up it. I was
+amused to see the natives voluntarily assist them; and was surprised
+when they took up bags of flour weighing 100 pounds each, and carried
+them across the river. We were not long in getting the whole of the
+stores over. The boat was then hoisted on the shoulders of the
+strongest, and deposited on the top of the opposite bank; and ropes
+being afterwards attached to the carriage, it was soon drawn up to a
+place of safety. The natives worked as hard as our own people, and
+that, too, with a cheerfulness for which I was altogether unprepared,
+and which is certainly foreign to their natural habits. We pitched our
+tents as soon as we had effected the passage of the river; after which,
+the men went to bathe, and blacks and whites were mingled promiscuously
+in the stream. I did not observe that the former differed in any
+respect from the natives who frequent the located districts. They were
+generally clean limbed and stout, and some of the young men had
+pleasing intelligent countenances. They lacerate their bodies,
+inflicting deep wounds to raise the flesh, and extract the front teeth
+like the Bathurst tribes; and their weapons are precisely the same.
+They are certainly a merry people, and sit up laughing and talking more
+than half the night.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BAROMETER BROKEN.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+During the removal of the stores my barometer was unfortunately broken,
+and I had often, in the subsequent stages of the journey, occasion to
+regret the accident. I apprehend that the corks in the instrument,
+placed to steady the tube, are too distant from each other in most
+cases; and indeed I fear that barometers as at present constructed,
+will seldom be carried with safety in overland expeditions.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DESERTED BY THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Nine only of the natives accompanied us on the morning succeeding the
+day in which we crossed the river. Botheri was, however, at the head of
+them; and, as we journeyed along, he informed me that he had been
+promised a wife on his return from acting as our guide, by the chief of
+the last tribe. The excessive heat of the weather obliged us to shorten
+our journey, and we encamped about noon in some scrub after having
+traversed a level country for about eleven miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Several considerable plains were noticed to our right, stretching east
+and west, which were generally rich in point of soil; but we passed
+through much brushy land during the day. It was lamentable to see the
+state of vegetation upon the plains from want of moisture. Although the
+country had assumed a level character, and was more open than on the
+higher branches of the Macquarie, the small freestone elevations,
+backing the alluvial tracts near the river, still continued upon our
+right, though much diminished in height, and at a great distance from
+the banks. They seemed to be covered with cypresses and beef-wood, but
+dwarf-box and the acacia pendula prevailed along the plains; while
+flooded-gum alone occupied the lands in the immediate neighbourhood of
+the stream, which was evidently fast diminishing, both in volume and
+rapidity; its bed, however, still continuing to be a mixture of sand
+and clay.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cattle found such poor feed around the camp that they strayed away
+in search of better during the night. On such an occasion Botheri and
+his fraternity would have been of real service; but he had decamped at
+an early hour, and had carried off an axe, a tomahawk, and some bacon,
+although I had made him several presents. I was not at all surprised at
+this piece of roguery, since cunning is the natural attribute of a
+savage; but I was provoked at their running away at a moment when I so
+much required their assistance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Left to ourselves, I found Mr. Hume of the most essential service in
+tracking the animals, and to his perseverance we were indebted for
+their speedy recovery, They had managed to find tolerable feed near a
+serpentine sheet of water, which Mr. Hume thought it would be advisable
+to examine. We directed our course to it as soon as the cattle were
+loaded, moving through bush, and found it to be a very considerable
+creek that receives a part of the superfluous waters of the Macquarie,
+and distributes them, most probably, over the level country to the
+north. It was much wider than the river, being from fifty to sixty
+yards across, and is resorted to by the natives, who procure muscles
+from its bed in great abundance. We were obliged to traverse its
+eastern bank to its junction with the river, at which it fortunately
+happened to be dry. We had, however, to cut roads down both its banks
+before we could cross it; and, consequently, made but a short day's
+journey. The soil passed over was inferior to the generality of soil
+near the river, but we encamped on a tongue of land on which both the
+flooded-gum and the grass were of luxuriant height. We found a quantity
+of a substance like pipe-clay in the bed of the river, similar to that
+mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GREAT HEAT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The heat, which had been excessive at Wellington Valley, increased upon
+us as we advanced into the interior. The thermometer was seldom under
+114 degrees at noon, and rose still higher at 2 p.m. We had no dews at
+night, and consequently the range of the instrument was trifling in the
+twenty-four hours. The country looked bare and scorched, and the plains
+over which we journeyed had large fissures traversing them, so that the
+earth may literally be said to have gasped for moisture. The country,
+which above the cataract had borne the character of open forest,
+excepting on the immediate banks of the river, where its undulations
+and openness gave it a park-like appearance, or where the barren stony
+ridges prevailed below that point, generally exhibited alternately
+plain and brush, the soil on both of which was good. On the former,
+crested pigeons were numerous, several of which were shot. We had
+likewise procured some of the rose-coloured and grey parrots, mentioned
+by Mr. Oxley, and a small paroquet of beautiful plumage; but there was
+less of variety in the feathered race than I expected to find, and most
+of the other birds we had seen were recognised by me as similar to
+specimens I had procured from Melville Island, and were, therefore,
+most probably birds of passage.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AND THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As we neared Mount Harris, the Macquarie became more sluggish in its
+flow, and fell off so much as scarcely to deserve the name of a river.
+In breadth, it averaged from thirty-five to forty-five yards, and in
+the height of its banks, from fifteen to eighteen. Mr. Hume had
+succeeded in taking some fish at one of the stock stations; but if I
+except those speared by the natives, we had since been altogether
+unsuccessful with the hook, a circumstance which I attribute to the
+lowness of the river itself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+About thirty miles from the cataract the country declines to the north
+as a medium point, and again changes somewhat in its general
+appearance. To the S. and S.W. it appeared level and wooded, while to
+the N. the plains became more frequent, but smaller, and travelling
+over them was extremely dangerous, in consequence of the large fissures
+by which they were traversed. The only trees to be observed were
+dwarf-box and the acacia pendula, both of stunted growth, although
+flooded-gum still prevailed upon the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 20th we travelled on a N.W. course, and in the early part of the
+day passed over tolerably good soil. It was succeeded by a barren
+scrub, through which we penetrated in the direction of Welcome Rock, a
+point we had seen from one of the Plains and had mistaken for Mount
+Harris.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ARRIVAL AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On a nearer approach, however, we observed our error, and corrected it
+by turning more to the left; and we ultimately encamped about a mile to
+the W.S.W. of the latter eminence. On issuing from the scrub we found
+ourselves among reeds and coarse water-grass; and, from the appearance
+of the country, we were led to conclude that we had arrived at a part
+of the interior more than ordinarily subject to overflow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As soon as the camp was fixed, Mr. Hume and I rode to Mount Harris,
+over ground subject to flood and covered for the most part by the
+polygonum, being too anxious to defer our examination of its
+neighbourhood even for a few hours.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+VESTIGES OF MR. OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Nearly ten years had elapsed since Mr. Oxley pitched his tents under
+the smallest of the two hills into which Mount Harris is broken. There
+was no difficulty in hitting upon his position. The trenches that had
+been cut round the tents were still perfect, and the marks of the
+fire-places distinguishable; while the trees in the neighbourhood had
+been felled, and round about them the staves of some casks and a few
+tent-pegs were scattered. Mr. Oxley had selected a place at some
+distance from the river, in consequence of its then swollen state. I
+looked upon it from the same ground, and could not discern the waters
+in its channel; so much had they fallen below their ordinary level. He
+saw the river when it was overflowing its banks; on the present
+occasion it had scarcely sufficient water to support a current. On the
+summit of the greater eminence, which we ascended, there remained the
+half-burnt planks of a boat, some clenched and rusty nails, and an old
+trunk; but my search for the bottle Mr. Oxley had left was unsuccessful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A reflection naturally arose to my mind on examining these decaying
+vestiges of a former expedition, whether I should be more fortunate
+than the leader of it, and how far I should be enabled to penetrate
+beyond the point which had conquered his perseverance. Only a week
+before I left Sydney I had followed Mr. Oxley to the tomb. A man of
+uncommon quickness, and of great ability, the task of following up his
+discoveries was not less enviable than arduous; but, arrived at that
+point at which his journey may be said to have terminated and mine only
+to commence, I knew not how soon I should be obliged, like him, to
+retreat from the marshes and exhalations of so depressed a country. My
+eye instinctively turned to the North-West, and the view extended over
+an apparently endless forest. I could trace the river line of trees by
+their superior height; but saw no appearance of reeds, save the few
+that grew on the banks of the stream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mount Foster, somewhat higher than Mount Harris, on the opposite side
+of the river, alone broke the line of the horizon to the North N.W. at
+a distance of five miles. From that point all round the compass, the
+low lands spread, like a dark sea, before me; except where a large
+plain stretching from E. to W., and lying to the S.E. broke their
+monotony; and if there was nothing discouraging, there certainly was
+nothing cheering, in the prospect.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ILLNESS OF TWO OF THE MEN.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On our return to the camp, I was vexed to find two of the men, Henwood
+and Williams, with increased inflammation of the eyes, of which they
+had previously been complaining, and I thought it advisable to bleed
+the latter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In consequence of the indisposition of these men, we remained
+stationary on the 21st, which enabled me to pay a second visit to Mount
+Harris. On ascending the smaller hill, I was surprised to find similar
+vestiges on its summit to those I had noticed on the larger one; in
+addition to which, the rollers still continued on the side of the hill,
+which had been used to get the boat up it. [Mr. Oxley had two boats;
+one of which he dragged to the top of each of these hills, and left
+them turned bottom upwards, burying a bottle under the head of the
+larger boat, which was conveyed to the more distant hill.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mount Harris is of basaltic formation, but I could not observe any
+columnar regularity in it, although large blocks are exposed above the
+ground. The rock is extremely hard and sonorous.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MOUNT FOSTER AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We moved leisurely towards Mount Foster, on the 22nd, and arrived
+opposite to it a little before sunset. The country between the two is
+mostly open, or covered only with the acacia pendula and dwarf-box. The
+soil, although an alluvial deposit, is not of the best; nor was
+vegetation either fresh or close upon it. As soon as the party stopped,
+I crossed the river, and lost no time in ascending the hill, being
+anxious to ascertain if any fresh object was visible from its summit, I
+thought that from an eminence so much above the level of the
+surrounding objects, I might obtain a view of the marshes, or of water;
+but I was wholly disappointed. The view was certainly extensive, but it
+was otherwise unsatisfactory. Again to the N.W. the lowlands spread in
+darkness before me; there were some considerable plains beyond the near
+wood; but the country at the foot of the hill appeared open and
+promising. Although the river line was lost in the distance, it was as
+truly pointed out by the fires of the natives, which rose in upright
+columns into the sky, as if it had been marked by the trees upon its
+banks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the eastward, Arbuthnot's range rose high above the line of the
+horizon, bearing nearly due East, distant seventy miles. The following
+sketch of its outlines will convey a better idea of its appearance from
+Mount Foster than any written description.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[small sketch here&mdash;not shown in etext]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I stayed on the mount until after sunset, but I could not make out any
+space that at all resembled the formidable barrier I knew we were so
+rapidly approaching. I saw nothing to check our advance, and I
+therefore returned to the camp, to advise with Mr. Hume upon the
+subject. Not having been with me on Mount Foster, he took the
+opportunity to ascend it on the following morning; and on his return
+concurred with me in opinion, that there was no apparent obstacle to
+our moving onwards. As the men were considerably better, I had the less
+hesitation in closing with the marshes. We left our position, intending
+to travel slowly, and to halt early.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The first part of our journey was over rich flats, timbered
+sufficiently to afford a shade, on which the grass was luxuriant; but
+we were obliged to seek more open ground, in consequence of the
+frequent stumbling of the cattle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We issued, at length, upon a plain, the view across which was as dreary
+as can be imagined; in many places without a tree, save a few old
+stumps left by the natives when they fired the timber, some of which
+were still smoking in different parts of it. Observing some lofty trees
+at the extremity of the plain, we moved towards them, under an
+impression that they indicated the river line. But on this exposed spot
+the sun's rays fell with intense power upon us, and the dust was so
+minute and penetrating, that I soon regretted having left the shady
+banks of the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+About 2.p.m. we neared the trees for which we had been making, over
+ground evidently formed by alluvial deposition, and were astonished to
+find that reeds alone were growing under the trees as far as the eye
+could penetrate. It appeared that we were still some distance from the
+river, and it was very doubtful how far we might be from water, for
+which the men were anxiously calling. I therefore halted, and sent
+Fraser into the reeds towards some dead trees, on which a number of
+spoonbills were sitting. He found that there was a small lake in the
+centre of the reeds, the resort of numerous wild fowl; but although the
+men were enabled to quench their thirst, we found it impossible to
+water the animals. We were obliged, therefore, to continue our course
+along the edge of the reeds; which in a short time appeared in large
+masses in front of us, stretching into a vast plain upon our right; and
+it became evident that the whole neighbourhood was subject to extensive
+inundation.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ENCAMP AMIDST REEDS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I was fearful that the reeds would have checked us; but there was a
+passage between the patches, through which we managed to force our way
+into a deep bight, and fortunately gained the river at the bottom of it
+much sooner than we expected. We were obliged to clear away a space for
+the tents; and thus, although there had been no such appearance from
+Mount Foster, we found ourselves in less than seven hours after leaving
+it, encamped pretty far in that marsh for which we had so anxiously
+looked from its summit, and now trusting to circumstances for safety,
+upon ground on which, in any ordinary state of the river, it would have
+been dangerous to have ventured. Indeed, as it was, our situation was
+sufficiently critical, and would not admit of hesitation on my part.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NATURE OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+After the cattle had been turned out, Mr. Hume and I again mounted our
+horses, and proceeded to the westward, with a view to examine the
+nature of the country before us, and to ascertain if it was still
+practicable to move along the river side. For, although it was evident
+that we had arrived at what might strictly be called the marshes of the
+Macquarie, I still thought we might be at some distance from the place
+where Mr. Oxley terminated his journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no indication in the river to encourage an idea that it would
+speedily terminate; nor, although we were on ground subject to
+extensive inundation, could we be said to have reached the heart of the
+marshes, as the reeds still continued in detached bodies only. We
+forced a path through various portions of them, and passed over ground
+wholly subject to flood, to a distance of about six miles. We then
+crossed a small rise of ground, sufficiently high to have afforded a
+retreat, had necessity obliged us to seek for one; and we shortly
+afterwards descended on the river, unaltered in its appearance, and
+rather increased than diminished in size. A vast plain extended to the
+N.W., the extremity of which we could not discern; though a thick
+forest formed its northern boundary.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was evident that this plain had been frequently under water, but it
+was difficult to judge from the marks on the trees to what height the
+floods had risen. The soil was an alluvial deposit, superficially
+sandy; and many shells were scattered over its surface. To the south,
+the country appeared close and low; nor do I think we could have
+approached the river from that side, by reason of the huge belts of
+reeds that appeared to extend as far as the the eye could reach.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MEN ATTACKED WITH OPHTHALMIA.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The approach of night obliged us to return to the camp. On our arrival,
+we found that the state of Henwood and Williams would prevent our
+stirring for a day or two. Not only had they a return of inflammation,
+but several other of the men complained of a painful irritation of the
+eyes, which were dreadfully blood-shot and weak. I was in some measure
+prepared for a relapse in Henwood, as the exposure which he necessarily
+underwent on the plain was sufficient to produce that effect; but I now
+became apprehensive that the affection would run through the party.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Considering our situation in its different bearings, it struck me that
+the men who were to return to Wellington Valley with an account our our
+proceedings for the Governor's information, had been brought as far as
+prudence warranted. There was no fear of their going astray, as long as
+they had the river to guide them; but in the open country which we were
+to all appearance approaching, or amidst fields of reeds, they might
+wander from the track, and irrecoverably lose themselves. I determined,
+therefore, not to risk their safety, but to prepare my dispatches for
+Sydney, and I hoped most anxiously, that ere they were closed, all
+symptoms of disease would have terminated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the course of the day, however, Spencer, who was to return with
+Riley to Wellington Valley, became seriously indisposed, and I feared
+that he was attacked with dysentery. Indeed, I should have attributed
+his illness to our situation, but I did not notice any unusual moisture
+in the atmosphere, nor did any fogs rise from the river. I therefore
+the rather attributed it to exposure and change of diet, and treated
+him accordingly. To my satisfaction, when I visited the men late in the
+evening, I found a general improvement in the whole of them. Spencer
+was considerably relieved, and those of the party who had inflammation
+of the eyes no longer felt that painful irritation of which they had
+before complained. I determined, therefore, unless untoward
+circumstances should prevent it, to send Riley and his companion
+homewards, and to move the party without loss of time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had not seen any natives for many days, but a few passed the camp on
+the opposite side of the river on the evening of the 25th. They would
+not, however, come to us; but fled into the interior in great apparent
+alarm.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DEPARTURE OF TWO MEN FOR WELLINGTON.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the morning of the 26th, the men were sufficiently recovered to
+pursue their journey. Riley and Spencer left us at an early hour; and
+about 7 a.m. we pursued a N.N.W. course along the great plain I have
+noticed, starting numberless quails, and many wild turkeys, by the way.
+Leaving that part of the river on which Mr. Hume and I had touched
+considerably to the left, we made for the point of a wood, projecting
+from the river line of trees into the plain. The ground under us was an
+alluvial deposit, and bore all the marks of frequent inundation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The soil was yielding, blistered, and uneven; and the claws of
+cray-fish, together with numerous small shells, were every where
+collected in the hollows made by the subsiding of the waters, between
+broad belts of reeds and scrubs of polygonum.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONSULTATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On gaining the point of the wood, we found an absolute check put to our
+further progress. We had been moving directly on the great body of the
+marsh, and from the wood it spread in boundless extent before us. It
+was evidently lower than the ground on which we stood; we had
+therefore, a complete view over the whole expanse; and there was a
+dreariness and desolation pervading the scene that strengthened as we
+gazed upon it. Under existing circumstances, it only remained for us
+either to skirt the reeds to the northward, or to turn in again upon
+the river; and as I considered it important to ascertain the direction
+of the Macquarie at so critical and interesting a point, I thought it
+better to adopt the latter measure. We, accordingly, made for the
+river, and pitched our tents, as at the last station, in the midst of
+reeds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were two points at this time, upon which I was extremely anxious.
+The first was as to the course of the river; the second, as to the
+extent of the marshes by which we had been checked, and the
+practicability of the country to the northward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In advising with Mr. Hume, I proposed launching the boat, as the surest
+means of ascertaining the former, and he, on his part, most readily
+volunteered to examine the marshes, in any direction I should point
+out. It was therefore, arranged, that I should take two men, and a
+week's provision with me in the boat down the river; and that he should
+proceed with a like number of men on an excursion to the northward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After having given directions as to the regulations of camp during our
+absence, we separated, on the morning of the 26th for the first time,
+in furtherance of the objects each had in view.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BOAT EXCURSION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In pulling down the river, I found that its channel was at first
+extremely tortuous and irregular, but that it held a general N.W.
+course, and bore much the same appearance as it had done since our
+descent from Mount Foster.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had a laborious task in lifting the boat over the trunks of trees
+that had fallen into the channel of the river or that had been left by
+the floods, and at length we stove her in upon a sunken log. The injury
+she received was too serious not to require immediate repair; and we,
+therefore, patched her up with a tin plate. This accident occasioned
+some delay, and the morning was consumed without our having made any
+considerable progress. At length, however, we got into a more open
+channel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The river suddenly increased in breadth to thirty-five or forty-five
+yards, with a depth of from twelve to twenty feet of water. Its banks
+shelved perpendicularly down, and were almost on a level with the
+surface of the stream; and the flood mark was not more than two feet
+high on the reeds by which they were lined. We had hitherto passed
+under the shade of the flooded gum, which still continued on the
+immediate banks of the river; but, the farther we advanced, the more
+did we find these trees in a state of decay, until at length they
+ceased, or were only rarely met with.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+TERMINATION OF THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+About 2 p.m. I brought up under a solitary tree, in consequence of
+heavy rain: this was upon the left bank. In the afternoon, however, we
+again pushed forward, and soon lost sight of every other object amidst
+reeds of great height. The channel of the river continued as broad and
+as deep as ever, but the flood mark did not show more than a foot above
+the banks, which were now almost on a level with the water; and the
+current was so sluggish as to be scarcely perceptible. These general
+appearances continued for about three miles, when our course was
+suddenly, and most unexpectedly, checked. The channel, which had
+promised so well, without any change in its breadth or depth, ceased
+altogether; and whilst we were yet lost in astonishment at so abrupt a
+termination of it, the boat grounded. It only remained for us to
+examine the banks, which we did with particular attention. Two creeks
+were then discovered, so small as scarcely to deserve the name, and
+which would, under ordinary circumstances, have been overlooked. The
+one branched off to the north&mdash;the other to the west. We were obliged
+to get out of the boat to push up the former, the leeches sticking in
+numbers to our legs. The creek continued for about thirty yards, when
+it was terminated; and, in order fully to satisfy myself of the fact, I
+walked round the head of it by pushing through the reeds. Night coming
+on, we returned to the tree at which we had stopped during the rain,
+and slept under it. The men cut away the reeds, or we should not have
+had room to move. At 2 a.m. it commenced raining, with a heavy storm of
+thunder and lightning; the boat was consequently hauled ashore, and
+turned over to afford us a temporary shelter. The lightning was
+extremely vivid, and frequently played upon the ground, near the
+firelocks, for more than a quarter of a minute at a time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is singular, that Mr. Oxley should, under similar circumstances,
+have experienced an equally stormy night, and most probably within a
+few yards of the place on which I had posted myself. Notwithstanding
+that the elements were raging around me, as if to warn me of the danger
+of my situation, my mind turned solely on the singular failure of the
+river. I could not but encourage hopes that this second channel that
+remained to be explored would lead us into an open space again; and as
+soon as the morning dawned we pursued our way to it. In passing some
+dead trees upon the right bank, I stopped to ascend one, that, from an
+elevation, I might survey the marsh, but I found it impossible to trace
+the river through it. The country to the westward was covered with
+reeds, apparently to the distance of seven miles; to the N.W. to a
+still greater distance; and to the north they bounded the horizon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The whole expanse was level and unbroken, but here and there the reeds
+were higher and darker than at other places, as if they grew near
+constant moisture; but I could see no appearance of water in any body,
+or of high lands beyond the distant forest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As soon as we arrived at the end of the main channel, we again got out
+of the boat, and in pushing up the smaller one, soon found ourselves
+under a dark arch of reeds. It did not, however, continue more than
+twenty yards when it ceased, and I walked round the head of it as I had
+done round that of the other. We then examined the space between the
+creeks, where the bank receives the force of the current, which I did
+not doubt had formed them by the separation of its eddies. Observing
+water among the reeds, I pushed through them with infinite labour to a
+considerable distance. The soil proved to be a stiff clay; the reeds
+were closely embodied, and from ten to twelve feet high; the waters
+were in some places ankle deep, and in others scarcely covered the
+surface. They were flowing in different points, with greater speed than
+those of the river, which at once convinced me that they were not
+permanent, but must have lodged in the night during which so much rain
+had fallen. They ultimately appeared to flow to the northward, but I
+found it impossible to follow them, and it was not without difficulty
+that, after having wandered about at every point of the compass, I
+again reached the boat.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CAUSES OF THE FAILURE OF THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The care with which I had noted every change that took place in the
+Macquarie, from Wellington Valley downwards, enabled me, in some
+measure, to account for its present features. I was led to conclude
+that the waters of the river being so small in body, excepting in times
+of flood, and flowing for so many miles through a level country without
+receiving any tributary to support their first impulse, became too
+sluggish, long ere they reached the marshes, to cleave through so
+formidable a barrier; and consequently spread over the surrounding
+country&mdash;whether again to take up the character of a river, we had
+still to determine. Unless, however, a decline of country should favour
+its assuming its original shape, it was evident that the Macquarie
+would not be found to exist beyond this marsh, of the nature and extent
+of which we were still ignorant. The loss of my barometer was at this
+time severely felt by me, since I could only guess at our probable
+height above the ocean; and I found that my only course was to
+endeavour to force my way to the northward, to ascertain, if I could,
+from the bottom of the marshes; then penetrate in a westerly direction
+beyond them, in order to commence my survey of the S.W. interior. I was
+aware of Mr. Hume's perseverance, and determined, therefore, to wait
+the result of his report ere I again moved the camp, to which we
+returned late in the afternoon of the second day of our departure. We
+found it unsufferably hot and suffocating in the reeds, and were
+tormented by myriads of mosquitoes, but the waters were perfectly sweet
+to the taste, nor did the slightest smell, as of stagnation, proceed
+from them. I may add that the birds, whose sanctuary we had invaded, as
+the bittern and various tribes of the galinule, together with the
+frogs, made incessant noises around us, There were, however, but few
+water-fowl on the river; which was an additional proof to me that we
+were not near any very extensive lake.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. HUME'S REPORT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume had returned before me to the camp, and had succeeded in
+finding a serpentine sheet of water, about twelve miles to the
+northward; which he did not doubt to be the channel of the river. He
+had pushed on after this success, in the hope of gaining a further
+knowledge of the country; but another still more extensive marsh
+checked him, and obliged him to retrace his steps. He was no less
+surprised at the account I gave of the termination of the river, than I
+was at its so speedily re-forming, and it was determined to lose no
+time in the further examination of so singular a region.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FALSE CHANNEL; PERPLEXITIES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the morning of the 28th therefore we broke up the camp, and
+proceeded to the northward, under Mr. Hume's guidance, moving over
+ground wholly subject to flood, and extensively covered with reeds; the
+great body of the marsh lying upon our left. After passing the angle of
+a wood, upon our right, from which Mount Foster was distant about
+fourteen miles, we got upon a small plain, on which there was a new
+species of tortuous box. This plain was clear of reeds, and the soil
+upon it was very rich. Crossing in a westerly direction we arrived at
+the channel found by Mr. Hume, who must naturally have concluded that
+it was a continuation of the river. The boat was immediately prepared,
+and I went up it in order to ascertain the nature of its formation. For
+two miles it preserved a pretty general width of from twenty to thirty
+yards; but at that distance began to narrow, and at length it became
+quite shallow and covered with weeds. We were ultimately obliged to
+abandon the boat, and to walk along a native path. The country to the
+westward was more open than I had expected. About a quarter of a mile
+from where we had left the boat, the channel separated into two
+branches; to which I perceived it owed its formation, coming, as they
+evidently did, direct from the heart of the marsh. The wood through
+which I had entered it on the first occasion bore south of me, to which
+one of the branches inclined; as the other did to the S.W. An almost
+imperceptible rise of ground was before me, which, by giving an impetus
+to the waters of the marsh, accounted to me for the formation of the
+main channel. It was too late, on my return to the camp, to prosecute
+any further examination of it downwards; but in the morning, Mr. Hume
+accompanied me in the boat, to ascertain to what point it led; and we
+found that at about a mile it began to diminish in breadth, until at
+length it was completely lost in a second expanse of reeds. We passed a
+singular scaffolding erected by the natives, on the side of the
+channel, to take fish; and also found a weir at the termination of it
+for the like purpose so that it was evident the natives occasionally
+ventured into the marshes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a small wood to our left which Mr. Hume endeavoured to gain,
+but he failed in the attempt. He did, however, reach a tree that was
+sufficiently high to give him a full view of the marsh, which appeared
+to extend in every direction, but more particularly to the north, for
+many miles. We were, however, at fault, and I really felt at a loss
+what step to take. I should have been led to believe from the extreme
+flatness of the country, that the Macquarie would never assume its
+natural shape, but from the direction of the marshes I could not but
+indulge a hope that it would meet the Castlereagh, and that their
+united waters might form a stream of some importance. Under this
+impression I determined on again sending Mr. Hume to the N.E. in order
+to ascertain the nature of the country in that direction.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXCURSION TO THE NORTH-WEST.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The weather was excessively hot, and as my men were but slowly
+recovering, I was anxious while those who were in health continued
+active, to give the others a few days of rest. I proposed, therefore,
+to cross the river, and to make an excursion into the interior, during
+the probable time of Mr. Hume's absence; since if, as I imagined, the
+Macquarie had taken a permanent northerly course, I should not have an
+opportunity of examining the distant western country. Mr. Hume's
+experience rendered it unnecessary for me to give him other than
+general directions.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+A PLAIN ON FIRE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the last day of the year we left the camp, each accompanied by two
+men. I had the evening previously ordered the horses I intended taking
+with me across the channel, and at an early hour of the morning I
+followed them. Getting on a plain, immediately after I had disengaged
+myself from the reeds on the opposite side of the river, which was full
+of holes and exceedingly treacherous for the animals, I pushed on for a
+part of the wood Mr. Hume had endeavoured to gain from the boat, with
+the intention of keeping near the marsh. On entering it, I found myself
+in a thick brush of eucalypti, casuarinae and minor trees; the soil
+under them being mixed with sand. I kept a N.N.W. course through it,
+and at the distance of three miles from its commencement, ascended a
+tree, to ascertain if I was near the marshes; when I found that I was
+fast receding from them. I concluded, therefore, that my conjecture as
+to their direction was right, and altered my course to N.W., a
+direction in which I had observed a dense smoke arising, which I
+supposed had been made by some natives near water. At the termination
+of the brush I crossed a barren sandy plain, and from it saw the smoke
+ascending at a few miles' distance from me. Passing through a wood, at
+the extremity of the plain, I found myself at the outskirts of an open
+space of great extent, almost wholly enveloped in flames. The fire was
+running with incredible rapidity through the rhagodia shrubs with which
+it was covered. Passing quickly over it, I continued my journey to the
+N.W. over barren plains of red sandy loam of even surface, and bushes
+of cypresses skirted by acacia pendula. It was not until after sunset
+that we struck upon a creek, in which the water was excellent; and we
+halted on its banks for the night, calculating our distance at
+twenty-nine miles from the camp. The creek was of considerable size,
+leading northerly. Several huts were observed by us, and from the heaps
+of muscle-shells that were scattered about, there could be no doubt of
+its being much frequented by the natives. The grass being fairly burnt
+up, our animals found but little to eat, but they had a tolerable
+journey, and did not attempt to wander in search of better food. I shot
+a snipe near the creek, much resembling the painted snipe of India; but
+I had not the means with me of preserving it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Continuing our journey on the following morning, we at first kept on
+the banks of the creek, and at about a quarter of a mile from where we
+had slept, came upon a numerous tribe of natives. A young girl sitting
+by the fire was the first to observe us as we were slowly approaching
+her. She was so excessively alarmed, that she had not the power to run
+away; but threw herself on the ground and screamed violently. We now
+observed a number of huts, out of which the natives issued, little
+dreaming of the spectacle they were to behold. But the moment they saw
+us, they started back; their huts were in a moment in flames, and each
+with a fire-brand ran to and fro with hideous yells, thrusting them
+into every bush they passed. I walked my horse quietly towards an old
+man who stood more forward than the rest, as if he intended to devote
+himself for the preservation of his tribe. I had intended speaking to
+him, but on a nearer approach I remarked that he trembled so violently
+that it was impossible to expect that I could obtain any information
+from him, and as I had not time for explanations, I left him to form
+his own conjectures as to what we were, and continued to move towards a
+thick brush, into which they did not venture to follow us.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONTINUE OUR JOURNEY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+After a ride of about eighteen miles, through a country of alternate
+plain and brush, we struck upon a second creek leading like the first
+to the northward. The water in it was very bitter and muddy, and it was
+much inferior in appearance to that at which we had slept. After
+stopping for half-an-hour upon its banks, to rest our animals, we again
+pushed forward. We had not as yet risen any perceptible height above
+the level of the marshes, but had left the country subject to overflow
+for a considerable space behind us. The brushes through which we had
+passed were too sandy to retain water long, but the plains were of such
+an even surface, that they could not but continue wet for a
+considerable period after any fall of rain. They were covered with
+salsolaceous plants, without a blade of grass; and their soil was
+generally a red sandy loam. There were occasional patches that appeared
+moist, in which the calystemma was abundant, and these patches must, I
+should imagine, form quagmires in the wet season.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On leaving the last-mentioned creek, we found a gently rising country
+before us; and about three or four miles from it we crossed some stony
+ridges, covered with a new species of acacia so thickly as to prevent
+our obtaining any view from them. As the sun declined, we got into open
+forest ground; and travelled forwards in momentary expectation, from
+appearances, of coming in sight of water; but we were obliged to pull
+up at sunset on the outskirts of a larger plain without having our
+expectation realized. The day had been extremely warm, and our animals
+were as thirsty as ourselves. Hope never forsakes the human breast; and
+thence it was that, after we had secured the horses, we began to wander
+round our lonely bivouac. It was almost dark, when one of my men came
+to inform me that he had found a small puddle of water, to which he had
+been led by a pigeon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was, indeed, small enough, probably the remains of a passing shower;
+it was, however, sufficient for our necessities, and I thanked
+Providence for its bounty to us. We were now about sixty miles from the
+Macquarie, in a N.W. by W. direction, and the country had proved so
+extremely discouraging, that I intimated to my men my intention of
+retracing my steps, should I not discover any change in it before noon
+on the morrow. A dense brush of acacia succeeded to the plain on which
+we had slept, which we entered, and shortly afterwards found ourselves
+in an open space, of oblong shape, at the extremity of which there was
+a shallow lake. The brush completely encircled it, and a few huts were
+upon its banks. About 10 p.m. we got into an open forest track of
+better appearance than any over which we had recently travelled.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ISOLATED HILL.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+There was a visible change in the country, and the soil, although red,
+was extremely rich and free from sand. A short time afterwards we rose
+to the summit of a round hill, from which we obtained an extensive view
+on most points of the compass. We had imperceptibly risen considerably
+above the general level of the interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+VIEW FROM THE SUMMIT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Beneath us, to the westward, I observed a broad and thinly wooded
+valley; and W. by S., distant apparently about twenty miles, an
+isolated mountain, whose sides seemed almost perpendicular, broke the
+otherwise even line of the horizon; but the country in every other
+direction looked as if it was darkly wooded. Anticipating that I should
+find a stream in the valley, I did not for a moment hesitate in
+striking down into it. Disappointed, however, in this expectation, I
+continued onwards to the mountain, which I reached just before the sun
+set. Indeed, he was barely visible when I gained its summit; but my
+eyes, from exposure to his glare, became so weak, my face was so
+blistered, and my lips cracked in so many places, that I was unable to
+look towards the west, and was actually obliged to sit down behind a
+rock until he had set.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Perhaps no time is so favourable for a view along the horizon as the
+sunset hour; and here, at an elevation of from five to six hundred feet
+above the plain, the visible line of it could not have been less than
+from thirty-five to forty-five miles. The hill upon which I stood was
+broken into two points; the one was a bold rocky elevation; the other
+had its rear face also perpendicular, but gradually declined to the
+north, and at a distance of from four to five miles was lost in an
+extensive and open plain in that direction. In the S.E. quarter, two
+wooded hills were visible, which before had appeared to be nothing more
+than swells in the general level of the country. A small hill, similar
+to the above, bore N.E. by compass; and again, to the west, a more
+considerable mountain than that I had ascended, and evidently much
+higher, reflected the last beams of the sun as he sunk behind them. I
+looked, however, in vain for water. I could not trace either the
+windings of a stream, or the course of a mountain torrent; and, as we
+had passed a swamp about a mile from the hill, we descended to it for
+the night, during which we were grievously tormented by the mosquitoes.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RESULTS OF THE EXCURSION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I had no inducement to proceed further into the interior. I had been
+sufficiently disappointed in the termination of this excursion, and the
+track before me was still less inviting. Nothing but a dense forest,
+and a level country, existed between me and the distant hill. I had
+learnt, by experience, that it was impossible to form any opinion of
+the probable features of so singular a region as that in which I was
+wandering, from previous appearances, or to expect the same result, as
+in other countries, from similar causes. In a geographical point of
+view, my journey had been more successful, and had enabled me to put to
+rest for ever a question of much previous doubt. Of whatever extent the
+marshes of the Macquarie might be, it was evident they were not
+connected with those of the Lachlan. I had gained knowledge of more
+than 100 miles of the western interior, and had ascertained that no
+sea, indeed that little water, existed on its surface; and that,
+although it is generally flat, it still has elevations of considerable
+magnitude upon it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although I had passed over much barren ground, I had likewise noticed
+soil that was far from poor, and the vegetation upon which in ordinary
+seasons would, I am convinced, have borne a very different aspect.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the
+haunt of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a
+chain of connection to a more fertile country; if such a country exist
+to the westward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The hill which thus became the extreme of my journey, is of sandstone
+formation, and is bold and precipitous. Its summit is level and lightly
+timbered. As a tribute of respect to the late Surveyor-General, I
+called it Oxley's Table Land, and I named the distant hills D'Urban's
+Group, after Sir Benjamin D'Urban, in compliance with a previous
+request of my friend Lieut. De la Condamine, that I would so name any
+prominent feature of the interior that I might happen to come upon.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RETURN TO THE CAMP.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In returning to the camp, I made a circuit to the N.E., and reached the
+Macquarie late on the evening of the 5th of January; having been absent
+six days, during which we could not have ridden less than 200 miles.
+Yet the horses were not so fatigued as it was natural to expect they
+would have been.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My servant informed me that a party of natives had visited the camp on
+the 3rd, but that they retired precipitately on seeing the animals. I
+regretted to find the men but little better than when I left them.
+Several still complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, and of
+great weakness of sight. Attributing their continued indisposition in
+some measure to our situation, I was anxious to have moved from it; but
+as Mr. Hume was still absent, I could not decide upon the measure. He
+made his appearance, however, on the 6th, having ridden the greater
+part of the day through rain, which commenced to fall in the morning.
+Soon after his arrival, Dawber, my overseer of animals, who had
+accompanied him, was taken suddenly ill. During the night he became
+much worse, with shivering and spasms, and on the following morning he
+was extremely weak and feverish. To add to my anxiety, Mr. Hume also
+complained of indisposition. His state of health made me the more
+anxious to quit a position which I fancied unwholesome, and in which,
+if there was no apparent, there was certainly some secret, exciting
+cause; and as Mr. Hume reported having crossed a chain of ponds about
+four miles to the eastward, and out of the immediate precincts of the
+marshes, I ordered the tents to be struck, and placing Dawber on my
+horse, we all moved quietly over to them.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. HUME'S EXCURSION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The result of Mr. Hume's journey perplexed me exceedingly. He stated,
+that on setting out from the Macquarie his intention was to have
+proceeded to the N.E., to ascertain how far the reeds existed in that
+direction, and, if at all practicable, to reach the Castlereagh; but in
+case of failure, to regain the Macquarie by a westerly course. At first
+he travelled nearly four miles east, to clear the marshes, when he came
+on the chain of ponds to which we had removed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He travelled over good soil for two miles after crossing this chain of
+ponds, but afterwards got on a red sandy loam, and found it difficult
+to proceed, by reason of the thickness of the brush, and the swampy
+state of the ground in consequence of the late rain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The timber in the brushes was of various kinds, and he saw numerous
+kangaroos and emus. On issuing from this brush, he crossed a creek,
+leading northerly, the banks of which were from ten to twelve feet
+high. Whatever the body of water usually in it is, it now only afforded
+a few shallow puddles. Mr. Hume travelled through brushes until he came
+upon a third creek, similar to the one he had left behind him, at which
+he halted for the night. The water in it was bad, and the feed for the
+animals extremely poor. The brush lined the creek thickly, and
+consisted chiefly of acacia pendula and box. The country preserved an
+uniform level, nor did Mr. Hume, from the highest trees, observe any
+break on the horizon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 2nd of January, Mr. Hume kept more northerly, being unable to
+penetrate the brushes he encountered. At two miles he crossed a creek
+leading to the N.W., between which and the place at which he had slept,
+he passed a native burial ground, containing eight graves. The earth
+was piled up in a conical shape, but the trees were not carved over as
+he had seen them in most other places.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The country became more open after he had passed the last mentioned
+creek, which he again struck upon at the distance of eight miles, and
+as it was then leading to the N.N.E. he followed it down for eighteen
+or twenty miles, and crossed it frequently during the day. The creek
+was dry in most places, and where he stopped for the night the water
+was bad, and the cattle feed indifferent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume saw many huts, but none of them had been recently occupied,
+although large quantities of muscle-shells were scattered about. He
+computed that he had travelled about thirty miles, in a N.N.W.
+direction, and the whole of the land he passed over was, generally
+speaking, bad, nor did it appear to be subject to overflow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 3rd, Mr. Hume proceeded down the creek on which he had slept, on
+a northern course, under an impression that it would have joined the
+Castlereagh, but it took a N.W. direction after he had ridden about
+four miles, and then turned again to the eastward of north. In
+consequence of this, he left it, and proceeded to the westward, being
+of opinion that the river just mentioned must have taken a more
+northerly course than Mr. Oxley supposed it to have done.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A short time after Mr. Hume turned towards the Macquarie, the country
+assumed a more pleasing appearance. He soon cleared the brushes, and at
+two miles came upon a chain of ponds, again running northerly in times
+of flood. Shortly after crossing these, he found himself on an
+extensive plain, apparently subject to overflow. The timber on it was
+chiefly of the blue-gum kind, and the ground was covered with shells.
+He then thought he was approaching the Macquarie, and proceeded due
+west across the flat for about two miles. At the extremity of it there
+was a hollow, which he searched in vain for water. Ascending about
+thirty feet, he entered a thick brush of box and acacia pendula, which
+continued for fourteen miles, when it terminated abruptly, and
+extensive plains of good soil commenced, stretching from N. to S. as
+far as the eye could reach, on which there were many kangaroos.
+Continuing to journey over them, he reached a creek at 5 p.m. on which
+the wild fowl were numerous, running nearly north and south, and he
+rested on its banks for the night. The timber consisted both of blue
+and rough gum, and the soil was a light earth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume expected in the course of the day to have reached the
+Macquarie, but on arriving at the creek, he began to doubt whether it
+any longer existed, or whether it had not taken a more westerly
+direction. On the following morning, therefore, he crossed the creek,
+and travelled W.S.W., for about two miles over good plains; then
+through light brushes of swamp-oak, cypress, box, and acacia pendula,
+for about twelve miles, to another creek leading northerly. He shortly
+afterwards ascended a range of hills stretching W.N.W. to which he gave
+the name of New Year's Range. From these hills, he had an extensive
+view, although not upon the highest part, but the only break he could
+see in the horizon was caused by some hills bearing by compass W. by S.
+distant about twenty-five miles. There was, however, an appearance as
+of high land to the northward, although Mr. Hume thought it might have
+been an atmospheric deception. From the range he looked in vain for the
+Macquarie, or other waters, and, as his provisions were nearly
+consumed, he was obliged to give up all further pursuit, and to retrace
+his steps. He fell in with two parties of natives, which, taken
+collectively, amounted to thirty-five in number, but had no
+communication with them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was evident, from the above account, that supposing a line to have
+been drawn from the camp northerly, Mr. Hume must have travelled
+considerably to the westward of it, and as I had run on a N.W. course
+from the marshes, it necessarily followed that our lines of route must
+have intersected each other, or that want of extension could alone have
+prevented them from having done so; but that, under any circumstances,
+they could not have been very far apart. This was too important a point
+to be left undecided, as upon it the question of the Macquarie's
+termination seemed to depend.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both Mr. Hume and myself were of opinion, that a medium course would be
+the most satisfactory for us to pursue, to decide this point; and it
+appeared that we could not do better than, by availing ourselves of the
+creek on which we were, and skirting the reeds, to take the first
+opportunity of dashing through them in a westerly direction.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DOUBTS OF THE FURTHER EXTENSION OF THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I entertained great doubts as to the longer existence of the river, and
+as I foresaw that, in the event of its having terminated we should
+strike at once into the heart of the interior, I became anxious for the
+arrival of supplies at Mount Harris; and although I could hardly expect
+that they had yet reached it, I determined to proceed thither. Mr. Hume
+was too unwell for me to think of imposing additional fatigue upon him;
+I left him, therefore, to conduct the party, by easy stages, to the
+northward, until such time as I should overtake them. Even in one day
+there was a visible improvement in the men, and Dawber's attack seemed
+to be rather the effects of cold than of any thing else. A death,
+however, under our circumstances, would have been so truly deplorable
+an event, that the least illness was sufficient to create alarm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I can hardly say that I was disappointed on my arrival at Mount Harris,
+to find its neighbourhood silent and deserted. I remained, however,
+under it for the greater part of the next day, and, prior to leaving
+it, placed a sheet of paper with written instructions against a tree,
+though almost without a hope that it would remain untouched.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PERPLEXING SITUATION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+A little after sun-set we reached the first small marsh, at which we
+slept; and on the following morning I crossed the plains of the
+Macquarie, and joined the party at about fifteen miles from the creek
+at which I had left it. I found it in a condition that was as unlooked
+for by Mr. Hume as it was unexpected by me, and really in a most
+perplexing situation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the day I left him, Mr. Hume only advanced about two miles, in
+consequence of some derangement in the loads. Having crossed the creek,
+he, the next morning, proceeded down its right bank, until it entered
+the marshes and was lost. He then continued to move on the outskirts of
+the latter, and having performed a journey or about eight miles, was
+anxious to have stopped, but there was no water at hand. The men,
+however, were so fatigued, in consequence of previous illness, that he
+felt it necessary to halt after travelling about eleven miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No water could be procured even here, notwithstanding that Mr. Hume,
+who was quite unfit for great exertion, underwent considerable bodily
+fatigue in his anxiety to find some. He was, therefore, obliged to move
+early on the following morning, but neither men nor animals were in a
+condition to travel; and he had scarcely made three miles' progress,
+when he stopped and endeavoured to obtain a supply or water by digging
+pits among the reeds. From these he had drawn sufficient for the wants
+of the people when I arrived. Some rain had fallen on the 6th and 7th
+of the month, or it is more than probable the expedient to which he
+resorted would have failed of success. Mr. Hume, I was sorry to
+observe, looked very unwell; but nothing could prevent him from further
+endeavours to extricate the party from its present embarrassment.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+JOURNEY CONTINUED.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As soon as I had taken a little refreshment, therefore, I mounted a
+fresh horse; and he accompanied me across a small plain, immediately in
+front of the camp, which was subject to overflow and covered with
+polygonum, having a considerable extent of reeds to its right.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the plain we entered a wood of blue-gum, in which reeds, grass,
+and brush formed a thick coppice. We at length passed into an open
+space, surrounded on every side by weeds in dense bodies. The great
+marsh bore south of us, and was clear and open, but behind us the
+blue-gum trees formed a thick wood above the weeds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+About two hundred yards from the outskirts of the marsh there was a
+line of saplings that had perished, and round about them a number of
+the tern tribe (sea swallow) were flying, one of which Mr. Hume had
+followed a considerable way into the reeds the evening before, in the
+hope that it would have led him to water. The circumstance of their
+being in such numbers led us to penetrate towards them, when we found a
+serpentine sheet of water of some length, over which they were playing.
+We had scarcely time to examine it before night closed in upon us, and
+it was after nine when we returned to the tents.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the general appearance of the country to the northward, and from
+the circumstance of our having got to the bottom of the great marsh,
+which but a few days before had threatened to be so formidable, I
+thought it probable that the reeds would not again prove so extensive
+as they had been, and I determined, if I could do so, to push through
+them in a westerly direction from our position.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SECOND GREAT MARSH.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The pits yielded us so abundant a supply during the night, that in the
+morning we found it unnecessary to take the animals to water at the
+channel we had succeeded in finding the evening before; but pursuing a
+westerly course we passed it, and struck deep into the reeds. At
+mid-day we were hemmed in by them on every side, and had crossed over
+numerous channels, by means of which the waters of the marshes are
+equally and generally distributed over the space subject to their
+influence. Coming to a second sheet of water, narrower, but longer, as
+well as we could judge, than the first, we stopped to dine at it; and,
+while the men were resting themselves, Mr. Hume rode with me in a
+westerly direction, to ascertain what obstacles we still had to contend
+with. Forcing our way through bodies of reeds, we at length got on a
+plain, stretching from S.E. to N.W., bounded on the right by a wood of
+blue-gum, under which the reeds still extended, and on the left by a
+wood in which they did not appear to exist. Certain that there was no
+serious obstacle in our way, we returned to the men; and as soon as
+they had finished their meal, led them over the plain in a N.W. by W.
+direction. It was covered with shells, and was full of holes from the
+effects of flood.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONCLUSIONS IN REGARD TO THE MACQUARIE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As we were journeying over it, I requested Mr. Hume to ride into the
+wood upon our left, to ascertain if it concealed any channel. On his
+return he informed me that he descended from the plain into a hollow,
+the bottom of which was covered with small shells and bulrushes. He
+observed a new species of eucalypti, on the trunks of which the
+water-mark was three feet high. After crossing this hollow, which was
+about a quarter of a mile in breadth, he gained an open forest of box,
+having good grass under it; and, judging from the appearance of the
+country that no other channel could exist beyond him, and that he had
+ascertained sufficient for the object I had in view, he turned back to
+the plain. We stopped for the night under a wood of box, where the
+grass, which had been burnt down, was then springing up most
+beautifully green, and was relished exceedingly by the animals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was in consequence of our not having crossed any channel, while
+penetrating through the reeds, that could by any possible exaggeration
+have been laid down as the bed of the river, that I detached Mr. Hume;
+and the account he brought me at once confirmed my opinion in regard to
+the Macquarie, and I thenceforth gave up every hope of ever seeing it
+in its characteristic shape again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Independently however of all circumstantial evidence, it was clear that
+the river had not re-formed at a distance of twenty-five miles to the
+north of us, since Mr. Hume had gone to the westward of that point, at
+about the same distance on his late journey, without having observed
+the least appearance of reeds or of a river. He had, indeed, noticed a
+hollow, which occasionally contained water, but he saw nothing like the
+bed of a permanent stream. I became convinced, also, from observation
+of the country through which we had passed, that the sources of the
+Macquarie could not be of such magnitude as to give a constant flow to
+it as a river, and at the same time to supply with water the vast
+concavity into which it falls. In very heavy rains only could the
+marshes and adjacent lands be laid wholly under water, since the
+evaporation alone would be equal to the supply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great plains stretching for so many miles to the westward of Mount
+Harris, even where they were clear of reeds, were covered with shells
+and the claws of cray-fish and their soil, although an alluvial
+deposit, was superficially sandy. They bore the appearance not only of
+frequent inundation, but of the floods having eventually subsided upon
+them. This was particularly observable at the bottom of the marshes. We
+did not find any accumulation of rubbish to indicate a rush of water to
+any one point; but numerous minor channels existed to distribute the
+floods equally and generally over every part of the area subject to
+them, and the marks of inundation and subsidence were everywhere the
+same. The plain we had last crossed, was, in like manner, covered with
+shells, so that we could not yet be said to be out of the influence of
+the marshes; besides which we had not crossed the hollow noticed by Mr.
+Hume, which it was clear we should do, sooner or later.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SITUATION OF THE PARTY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+To have remained in our position would have been impossible, as there
+was no water either for ourselves or the animals; to have descended
+into the reeds again, for the purpose of carrying on a minute survey,
+would, under existing circumstances, have been imprudent. Our
+provisions were running short, and if a knowledge of the distant
+interior was to be gained, we had no time to lose. It was determined,
+therefore, to defer our further examination of the marshes to the
+period of our return; and to pursue such a course as would soonest and
+most effectually enable us to determine the character of the western
+interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER II.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Prosecution of our course into the interior&mdash;Mosquito Brush&mdash;Aspect and
+productions of the country&mdash;Hunting party of natives&mdash;Courageous
+conduct of one of them&mdash;Mosquitoes&mdash;A man missing&mdash;Group of hills
+called New-Year's Range&mdash;Journey down New-Year's Creek&mdash;Tormenting
+attack of the kangaroo fly&mdash;Dreariness and desolation of the
+country&mdash;Oxley's Table Land&mdash;D'Urban's Group&mdash;Continue our journey down
+New-Year's Creek&mdash;Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt&mdash;Fall in
+with a tribe of natives&mdash;Our course arrested by the want of fresh
+water&mdash;Extraordinary sound&mdash;Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+We left our position at the head of the plain early on the 13th of
+January, and, ere the sun dipped, had entered a very different country
+from that in which we had been labouring for the last three weeks. We
+had, as yet, passed over little other than an alluvial soil, but found
+that it changed to a red loam in the brushes immediately backing the
+camp. An open forest track succeeded this, over which the vegetation
+had an unusual freshness, indicating that the waters had not long
+subsided from its surface. We shortly afterwards crossed a hollow,
+similar to that Mr. Hume had described, in which bulrushes had taken
+the place of reeds. Flooded-gum trees, of large size, were also growing
+in it, but on either side box alone prevailed, under which the forest
+grass grew to a considerable height. We crossed the hollow two or three
+times, and as often remarked the line of separation between those
+trees. The last time we crossed it the country rose a few feet, and we
+journeyed for the remainder of the day, at one time over good plains,
+at another through brushes, until we found water and feed, at which we
+stopped for the night, after having travelling about thirteen miles on
+a W. by N. course. The mosquitoes were so extremely troublesome at this
+place that we called it Mosquito Brush. At this time my men were
+improving rapidly, and Mr. Hume complained less, and looked better. I
+hoped, therefore, that our progress would be rapid into the interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CREEK LEADING NORTHERLY; PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 14th we took up a westerly course, and in the first instance
+traversed a plain of great extent; the soil of which was for the most
+part a red sandy loam, but having patches of light earth upon it. The
+former was covered with plants of the chenopedia kind; the latter had
+evidently been quagmires, and bore even then the appearance of
+moisture. At about seven miles from Mosquito Brush we struck upon a
+creek of excellent water, upon which the wild fowl were numerous. Some
+natives was seen, but they were only women, and seemed so alarmed that
+I purposely avoided them. As the creek was leading northerly, we traced
+it down on that course for about seven miles, and then halted upon its
+banks, which were composed of a light tenacious earth. Brushes of
+casuarina existed near it, but a tortuous box was the prevailing tree,
+which, excepting for the knees of small vessels, could not have been
+applied to any use, while the flooded-gum had entirely disappeared.
+Some ducks were shot in the afternoon, which proved a great treat, as
+we had been living for some time on salt provisions. Our animals fared
+worse than ourselves, as the bed of the creek was occupied by coarse
+rushes, and but little vegetation was elsewhere to be seen. I here
+killed a beautiful snake, of about four feet in length, and of a bright
+yellow colour: I had not, however, the means of preserving it. Fraser
+collected numerous botanical specimens, and among them two kinds of
+caparis. Indeed a great alteration had taken place in the minor shrubs,
+and few of those now prevalent had been observed to the eastward of the
+marshes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the creek, which both I and Mr. Hume must have crossed on our
+respective journeys, we held a westerly course for about fifteen miles,
+through a country of alternate plain and brush, the latter
+predominating, and in its general character differing but little from
+that we had traversed the day previous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The acacia pendula still continued to exist on the plains backed by
+dark rows of cypresses (Cupressus callitris). In the brushes, box and
+casuarina (Casuarina tortuosa), with several other kinds of eucalypti,
+prevailed; but none of them were sufficiently large to be of use. The
+plains were so extremely level that a meridian altitude could have been
+taken without any material error; and I doubt much whether it would
+have been possible to have traversed them had the season been wet.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+HUNTING PARTY OF NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As we were travelling through a forest we surprised a hunting party of
+natives. Mr. Hume and I were considerably in front of our party at the
+time, and he only had his gun with him. We had been moving along so
+quietly that we were not for some time observed by them. Three were
+seated on the ground, under a tree, and two others were busily employed
+on one of the lower branches cutting out honey. As soon as they saw us,
+four of them ran away; but the fifth, who wore a cap of emu feathers,
+stood for a moment looking at us, and then very deliberately dropped
+out of the tree to the ground. I then advanced towards him, but before
+I got round a bush that intervened, he had darted away. I was fearful
+that he was gone to collect his tribe, and, under this impression, rode
+quickly back for my gun to support Mr. Hume. On my arrival I found the
+native was before me. He stood about twenty paces from Mr. Hume, who
+was endeavouring to explain what he was; but seeing me approach he
+immediately poised his spear at him, as being the nearest. Mr. Hume
+then unslung his carbine, and presented it; but, as it was evident my
+re-appearance had startled the savage, I pulled up; and he immediately
+lowered his weapon. His coolness and courage surprised me, and
+increased my desire to communicate with him. He had evidently taken
+both man and horse for one animal, and as long as Mr. Hume kept his
+seat, the native remained upon his guard; but when he saw him dismount,
+after the first astonishment had subsided, he stuck his spear into the
+ground, and walked fearlessly up to him. We easily made him comprehend
+that we were in search of water; when he pointed to the west, as
+indicating that we should supply our wants there. He gave his
+information in a frank and manly way, without the least embarrassment,
+and when the party passed, he stepped back to avoid the animals,
+without the smallest confusion. I am sure he was a very brave man; and
+I left him with the most favourable impressions, and not without hope
+that he would follow us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From a more open forest, we entered a dense scrub, the soil in which
+was of a bright-red colour and extremely sandy, and the timber of
+various kinds. A leafless species of stenochylus aphylta, which, from
+the resemblance, I at first thought one of the polygonum tribe, was
+very abundant in the open spaces, and the young cypresses were
+occasionally so close as to turn us from the direction in which we had
+been moving. In the scrub we crossed Mr. Hume's tract, and, from the
+appearance of the ground, I was led to believe mine could not be very
+distant.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FATE OF THE MACQUARIE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We struck upon a creek late in the afternoon, at which we stopped; New
+Year's Range bearing nearly due west at about four miles' distance. Had
+we struck upon my track, the question about which we were so anxious
+would still have been undecided; but the circumstance of our having
+crossed Mr. Hume's, which, from its direction, could not be mistaken,
+convinced me of the fate of the Macquarie, and I felt assured that,
+whatever channels it might have for the distribution of its waters, to
+the north of our line of route, the equality of surface of the interior
+would never permit it again to form a river; and that it only required
+an examination of the lower parts of the marshes to confirm the theory
+of the ultimate evaporation and absorption of its waters, instead of
+their contributing to the permanence of an inland sea, as Mr. Oxley had
+supposed.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 17th of January we encamped under New Year's Range, which is the
+first elevation in the interior of Eastern Australia to the westward of
+Mount Harris. Yet when at its base, I do not think that we had ascended
+above forty feet higher than the plains in the neighbourhood of that
+last mentioned eminence. There certainly is a partial rise of country,
+where the change of soil takes place from the alluvial deposits of the
+marshes, to the sandy loam so prevalent on the plains we had lately
+traversed; but I had to regret that I was unable to decide so
+interesting a question by other than bare conjecture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Notwithstanding that Mr. Hume had already been on them, I encouraged
+hopes that a second survey of the country from the highest point of New
+Year's Range would enable us to form some opinion of it, by which to
+direct our future movements; but I was disappointed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The two wooded hills I had seen from Oxley's Table Land were visible
+from the range, bearing south; and other eminences bore by compass S.W.
+and W. by S.; but in every other direction the horizon was unbroken. To
+the westward, there appeared to be a valley of considerable extent,
+stretching N. and S., in which latter direction there was a long strip
+of cleared ground, that looked very like the sandy bed of a broad and
+rapid river. The bare possibility of the reality determined me to
+ascertain by inspection, whether my conjecture was right, and Mr. Hume
+accompanied me on this excursion. After we left the camp we crossed a
+part of the range, and travelled for some time through open forest land
+that would afford excellent grazing in most seasons. We passed some
+hollows, and noticed many huts that had been occupied near them; but
+the hollows were now quite dry, and the huts had been long deserted.
+After about ten miles' ride we reached a plain of white sand, from
+which New Year's Range was distinctly visible; and this no doubt was
+the spot that had attracted my attention. Pools of water continued on
+it, from which circumstance it would appear that the sand had a
+substratum of clay or marl. From this plain we proceeded southerly
+through acacia scrub, bounding gently undulating forest land, and at
+length ascended some small elevations that scarcely deserved the name
+of hills. They had fragments of quartz profusely scattered over them;
+and the soil, which was sandy, contained particles of mica.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MOSQUITOES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The view from them was confused, nor did any fresh object meet our
+observation. We had, however, considerably neared the two wooded hills,
+and the elevations that from the range were to the S.W., now bore N.W.
+of us. We had wandered too far from the camp to admit of our returning
+to it to sleep; we therefore commenced a search for water, and having
+found some, we tethered our horses near it for the night, and should
+have been tolerably comfortable, had not the mosquitoes been so
+extremely troublesome. They defied the power of smoke, and annoyed me
+so much, that, hot as it was, I rolled myself in my boat cloak, and
+perspired in consequence to such a degree, that my clothes were wet
+through, and I had to stand at the fire in the morning to dry them. Mr.
+Hume, who could not bear such confinement, suffered the penalty, and
+was most unmercifully bitten.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+A MAN MISSING.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We reached the camp about noon the following day, and learnt, to our
+vexation, that one of the men, Norman, had lost himself shortly after
+we started, and had not since been heard of. Dawber, my overseer, was
+out in search of him. I awaited his return, therefore, before I took
+any measures for the man's recovery; nor was I without hopes that
+Dawber would have found him, as it appeared he had taken one of the
+horses with him, and Dawber, by keeping his tracks, might eventually
+have overtaken him. He returned, however, about 3 p.m. unsuccessful,
+when Mr. Hume and I mounted our horses, and proceeded in different
+directions in quest of him, but were equally disappointed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We met at the creek in the dark, and returned to the camp together,
+when I ordered the cypresses on the range to be set on fire, and thus
+illuminated the country round for many miles. In the morning, however,
+as Norman had not made his appearance, we again started in search of
+the poor fellow, on whose account I was now most uneasy; for his horse,
+it appeared, had escaped him, and was found with the others at watering
+time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I did not return to the camp until after sunset, more fatigued than I
+recollect ever having been before. I was, however, rejoiced on being
+informed that the object of my anxiety was safe in his tent; that he
+had caught sight of the hill the evening before, and that he had
+reached the camp shortly after I left it. He had been absent three
+nights and two days, and had not tasted water or food of any kind
+during that time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To my enquiries he replied, that, being on horseback, he thought he
+could have overtaken a kangaroo, which passed him whilst waiting at the
+creek for the cattle, and that in the attempt, he lost himself. It
+would appear that he crossed the creek in the dark, and his horse
+escaped from him on the first night. He complained more of thirst than
+of hunger, although he had drunk at the watering-place to such an
+excess, on his return, as to make him vomit; but, though not a little
+exhausted, he had escaped better than I should have expected.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COUNTRY AROUND NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+New Year's Range consists of a principal group of five hills, the
+loftiest of which does not measure 300 feet in height. It has lateral
+ridges, extending to the N.N.W. on the one hand, and bending in to the
+creek on the other. The former have a few cypresses, sterculia, and
+iron bark upon them; the latter are generally covered with brush, under
+box; the brush for the most part consisting of two distinct species of
+stenochylus, and a new acacia. The whole range is of quartz formation,
+small fragments of which are profusely scattered over the ridges, and
+are abundantly incrusted with oxide of iron. The soil in the
+neighbourhood of New Year's Range is a red loam, with a slight mixture
+of sand. An open forest country lies between it and the creek, and it
+is not at all deficient in pasture.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+That a change of soil takes place to the westward of the creek, is
+obvious, from the change of vegetation, the most remarkable feature of
+which is the sudden check given to the further extension of the acacia
+pendula, which is not to be found beyond it, it being succeeded by
+another acacia of the same species and habits; neither do the plants of
+the chenopedia class exist in the immediate vicinity of the range.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I place these hills, as far as my observations will allow, in east lon.
+146 degrees 32 minutes 15 seconds, and in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes
+south; the variation of the compass being 6 degrees 40 minutes easterly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As New Year's Creek was leading northerly, it had been determined to
+trace it down as long as it should keep that course, or one to the
+westward of it. We broke up the camp, therefore, under the range, on
+the evening of the 18th, and moved to the creek, about two miles north
+of the place at which we had before crossed it, with the intention of
+prosecuting our journey on the morrow. But both Mr. Hume and I were so
+fatigued that we were glad of an opportunity to rest, even for a single
+day. We remained stationary, therefore, on the 19th; nor was I without
+hope that the natives whom we had surprised in the woods, would have
+paid us a visit, since Mr. Hume had met them in his search for Norman,
+and they had promised not only to come to us, but to do all in their
+power to find the man, whose footsteps some of them had crossed. They
+did not, however, venture near us; and I rather attribute their having
+kept aloof, to the circumstance of Mr. Hume's having fired a shot,
+shortly after he left them, as a signal to Norman, in the event of his
+being within hearing of the report. They must have been alarmed at so
+unusual a sound; but I am sure nothing was further from Mr. Hume's
+intention than to intimidate them; his knowledge of their manners and
+customs, as well as his partiality to the natives, being equally
+remarkable. The circumstance is, however, a proof of the great caution
+that is necessary in communicating with them.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ANNOYED BY KANGAROO FLIES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I have said that we remained stationary the day after we left the
+range, with a view to enjoy a little rest; it would, however, have been
+infinitely better if we had moved forward. Our camp was infested by the
+kangaroo fly, which settled upon us in thousands. They appeared to rise
+from the ground, and as fast as they were swept off were succeeded by
+fresh numbers. It was utterly impossible to avoid their persecution,
+penetrating as they did into the very tents.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The men were obliged to put handkerchiefs over their faces, and
+stockings upon their hands; but they bit through every thing. It was to
+no purpose that I myself shifted from place to place; they still
+followed, or were equally numerous everywhere. To add to our
+discomfort, the animals were driven almost to madness, and galloped to
+and fro in so furious a manner that I was apprehensive some of them
+would have been lost. I never experienced such a day of torment; and
+only when the sun set, did these little creatures cease from their
+attacks.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SUDDENLY RELIEVED.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It will be supposed that we did not stay to subject ourselves to
+another trial; indeed it was with some degree of horror that the men
+saw the first light of morning streak the horizon. They got up
+immediately, and we moved down the creek, on a northerly course,
+without breakfasting as usual. We found that dense brushes of casuarina
+lined the creek on both sides, beyond which, to our left, there was
+open rising ground, on which eucalypti, cypresses, and the acacia
+longifolia, prevailed; whilst to the east, plains seemed to predominate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although we had left the immediate spot at which the kangaroo flies
+(cabarus) seemed to be collected, I did not expect that we should have
+got rid of them so completely as we did. None of them were seen during
+the day; a proof that they were entirely local. They were about half
+the size of a common house fly, had flat brown bodies, and their bite,
+although sharp and piercing, left no irritation after it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+About noon we stopped at the creek side to take some refreshment. The
+country bore an improved appearance around us, and the cattle found
+abundance of pasture. It was evident that the creek had been numerously
+frequented by the natives, although no recent traces of them could be
+found. It had a bed of coarse red granite, of the fragments of which
+the natives had constructed a weir for the purpose of taking fish. The
+appearance of this rock in so isolated a situation, is worthy of the
+consideration of geologists.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DESOLATION OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The promise of improvement I have noticed, gradually disappeared as we
+proceeded on our day's journey, and we at length found ourselves once
+more among brushes, and on the edge of plains, over which the rhagodia
+prevailed. Nothing could exceed in dreariness the appearance of the
+tracks through which we journeyed, on this and the two following days.
+The creek on which we depended for a supply of water, gave such
+alarming indications of a total failure, that I at one time, had
+serious thoughts of abandoning my pursuit of it. We passed hollow after
+hollow that had successively dried up, although originally of
+considerable depth; and, when we at length found water, it was doubtful
+how far we could make use of it. Sometimes in boiling it left a
+sediment nearly equal to half its body; at other times it was so bitter
+as to be quite unpalatable. That on which we subsisted was scraped up
+from small puddles, heated by the sun's rays; and so uncertain were we
+of finding water at the end of the day's journey, that we were obliged
+to carry a supply on one of the bullocks. There was scarcely a living
+creature, even of the feathered race, to be seen to break the stillness
+of the forest. The native dogs alone wandered about, though they had
+scarcely strength to avoid us; and their melancholy howl, breaking in
+upon the ear at the dead of the night, only served to impress more
+fully on the mind the absolute loneliness of the desert.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It appeared, from their traces that the natives had lingered on this
+ground, on which they had perhaps been born, as long as it continued to
+afford them a scanty though precarious subsistence; but that they had
+at length been forced from it. Neither fish nor muscles remained in the
+creek, nor emus nor kangaroos on the plains. How then could an European
+expect to find food in deserts through which the savage wandered in
+vain? There is no doubt of the fate that would have overtaken any one
+of the party who might have strayed away, and I was happy to find that
+Norman's narrow escape had made a due impression on the minds of his
+comrades.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SANDY PLAINS; LEAVE THE CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We passed some considerable plains, lying to the eastward of the creek,
+on parts of which the grass, though growing in tufts, was of luxuriant
+growth. They were, however, more generally covered with salsola and
+rhagodia, and totally destitute of other vegetation, the soil upon them
+being a red sandy loam. The paths across the plains, which varied in
+breadth from three to eight miles, were numerous; but they had not been
+recently trodden. The creek continued to have a thick brush of
+casuarina and acacia near it, to the westward of which there was a
+rising open forest track; the timber upon it being chiefly box,
+cypress, and the acacia longifolia. It was most probably connected with
+New Year's Range, those elevations being about thirty miles distant. It
+terminated in some gentle hills which, though covered in places with
+acacia shrub, were sufficiently open to afford an extensive view. From
+their summit Oxley's Table Land, towards which we had been gradually
+working our way, was distinctly visible, distant about twenty miles,
+and bearing by compass W. by S. On descending from these hills (called
+the Pink Hills, from the colour of a flower upon them) which were
+scattered over with fragments of slaty quartz, we traversed a box flat,
+apparently subject to overflow, having a barren sandy scrub to its
+left. I had desired the men to preserve a W.N.W. direction, on leaving
+them, supposing that that course would have kept them near the creek;
+but, on overtaking the party, I found that they had wandered completely
+away from it. The fact was, that the creek had taken a sudden bend to
+the eastward of N. and had thus thrown them out. It was with some
+difficulty that we regained it before sunset; and we were at length
+obliged to stop for the night at a small plain, about a quarter of a
+mile short of it, but we had the satisfaction of having excellent feed
+for the animals.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Fearful that New Year's Creek would take us too far to the eastward,
+and being anxious to keep westward as much as possible, it struck me
+that we could not, under existing circumstances, do better than make
+for Oxley's Table Land. Water, I knew, we should find in a swamp at
+it's base, and we might discover some more encouraging feature than I
+had observed on my hasty visit to it. We left the creek, therefore on
+the 23rd, and once more took up a westerly course. Passing through a
+generally open country, we stopped at noon to rest the animals; and
+afterwards got on an excellent grazing forest track, which continued to
+the brush, through another part of which I had penetrated to the marsh
+more to the south. While making our way through it, we came upon a
+small pond of water, and must have alarmed some natives, as there was a
+fresh made fire close to it. Our journey had been unusually long, and
+the cattle had felt the heat so much, that the moment they saw water
+they rushed into it; and, as this created some confusion, I thought it
+best to stop where we were for the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the morning, Mr. Hume walked with me to the hill, a distance of
+about a mile. It is not high enough to deserve the name of a mountain,
+although a beautiful feature in the country, and showing well from any
+point of view. We ascended it with an anxiety that may well be
+imagined, but were wholly disappointed in our most sanguine
+expectations. Our chief object, in this second visit to Oxley's Table
+Land, had been to examine, more at leisure, the face of the country
+around it, and to discover, if possible, some fixed point on which to
+move.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If the rivers of the interior had already exhausted themselves, what
+had we to expect from a creek whose diminished appearance where we left
+it made us apprehend its speedy termination, and whose banks we
+traversed under constant apprehension? In any other country I should
+have followed such a water course, in hopes of its ultimately leading
+to some reservoir; but here I could encourage no such favourable
+anticipation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The only new object that struck our sight was a remarkable and distant
+hill of conical shape, bearing by compass S. 10 E. To the southward and
+westward, in the direction of D'Urban's Group, a dense and apparently
+low brush extended; but to the N. and N.W., there was a regular
+alternation of wood and plain. I left Mr. Hume upon the hill, that he
+might the more readily notice any smoke made by the natives; and
+returned myself to the camp about one o'clock, to move the party to the
+swamp. Mr. Hume's perseverance was of little avail. The region he had
+been overlooking was, to all appearance, uninhabited, nor did a single
+fire indicate that there was even a solitary wanderer upon its surface.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXCURSION TO D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Our situation, at this time, was extremely embarrassing, and the only
+circumstance on which we had to congratulate ourselves was, the
+improved condition of our men; for several of the cattle and horses
+were in a sad plight. The weather had been so extremely oppressive,
+that we had found it impossible to keep them free from eruptions. I
+proposed to Mr. Hume, therefore, to give them a few days' rest, and to
+make an excursion, with such of them as were serviceable, to D'Urban's
+Group. We were both of us unwilling to return to the creek, but we
+foresaw that a blind reliance upon fortune, in our next movements,
+might involve us in inextricable difficulty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the other hand, there was a very great risk in delay. It was more
+than probable, from the continued drought, that our retreat would be
+cut off from the want of water, or that we should only be enabled to
+effect our retreat with loss of most of the animals. The hope, however,
+of our intersecting some stream, or of falling upon a better country,
+prevailed over other considerations; and the excursion was,
+consequently, determined upon.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISTRESS FROM WANT OF WATER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We left the camp on the 25th, accompanied by Hopkinson and the tinker;
+and, almost immediately after, entered an acacia scrub of the most
+sterile description, and one, through which it would have been
+impossible to have found a passage for the boat carriage. The soil was
+almost a pure sand, and the lower branches of the trees were decayed so
+generally as to give the whole an indescribable appearance of
+desolation. About mid-day, we crossed a light sandy plain, on which
+there were some dirty puddles of water. They were so shallow as to
+leave the backs of the frogs in them exposed, and they had, in
+consequence, been destroyed by solar heat, and were in a state of
+putrefaction. Our horses refused to drink, but it was evident that some
+natives must have partaken of this sickening beverage only a few hours
+before our arrival. Indeed, it was clear that a wandering family must
+have slept near this spot, as we observed a fresh made gunneah (or
+native hut), and their foot-prints were so fresh along the line we were
+pursuing, that we momentarily expected to have overtaken them. It was
+late in the evening when we got out of this brush into better and more
+open ground, where, in ordinary seasons we should, no doubt, have found
+abundance of water. But we now searched in vain for it, and were
+contented to be enabled to give our wearied animals better food than
+they had tasted for many days, the forest grass, though in tufts, being
+abundant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We brought up for the night at the edge of a scrub, having travelled
+from thirty-two to thirty-five miles, judging the distance from the
+mountains still to be about twelve.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BEARINGS FROM OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In the morning we started at an early hour, and immediately entered the
+brush, beneath which we had slept; pursuing a westerly course through
+it. After a short ride, we found ourselves upon a plain, that was
+crowded with flocks of cockatoos. Here we got a supply of water, such
+as it was&mdash;so mixed with slime as to hang in strings between the
+fingers; and, after a hasty breakfast, we proceeded on our journey,
+mostly through a barren sandy scrub that was a perfect burrow from the
+number of wombats in it, to within a mile of the hill group, where the
+country appeared like one continuous meadow to the very base of them. I
+never saw anything like the luxuriance of the grass on this tract of
+country, waving as it did higher than our horses' middles as we rode
+through it. We ascended the S.W. face of the mountain to an elevation
+of at least 800 feet above the level of the plain, and had some
+difficulty in scaling the masses of rock that opposed themselves to our
+progress. But on gaining the summit, we were amply repaid for our
+trouble. The view extended far and wide, but we were again disappointed
+in the main object that had induced us to undertake the journey. I took
+the following bearings by compass. Oxley's Table Land bore N. 40 E.
+distant forty-five miles; small and distant hill due E.; conical peak
+seen from Oxley's Table Land S. 60 E., very distant; long ridge of high
+land, S.E., distant thirty-five miles; high land, S. 30 E., distant
+thirty miles; long range, S. 25 W.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the westward, as a medium point, the horizon was unbroken, and the
+eye wandered over an apparently endless succession of wood and plain. A
+brighter green than usual marked the course of the mountain torrents in
+several places, but there was no glittering light among the trees, no
+smoke to betray a water hole, or to tell that a single inhabitant was
+traversing the extensive region we were overlooking. We were obliged to
+return to the plain on which we had breakfasted, and to sleep upon it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+D'Urban's Group is of compact sandstone formation. Its extreme length
+is from E.S.E. to W.N.W., and cannot be more than from seven to nine
+miles, whilst its breadth is from two to four. The central space forms
+a large basin, in which there are stunted pines and eucalyptus scrub,
+amid huge fragments of rocks. It rises like an island from the midst of
+the ocean, and as I looked upon it from the plains below, I could
+without any great stretch of the imagination, picture to myself that it
+really was such. Bold and precipitous, it only wanted the sea to lave
+its base; and I cannot but think that such must at no very remote
+period have been the case, and that the immense flat we had been
+traversing, is of comparatively recent formation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We reached the camp on the 28th of the month, by nearly the same route;
+and were happy to find that, after the few days' rest they had enjoyed,
+there was a considerable improvement in the animals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our experience of the nature of the country to the southward, and the
+westward, was such as to deter us from risking anything, by taking such
+a direction as was most agreeable to our views. Nothing remained to us
+but to follow the creek, or to retreat; and as we could only be induced
+to adopt the last measure when every other expedient should have
+failed, we determined on pursuing our original plan, of tracing New
+Year's Creek as far as practicable.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DESCRIPTION OF OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Oxley's Table Land is situated in lat. 29 degrees 57 minutes 30
+seconds, and in E. long. 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds, the mean
+variation being 6.32 easterly. It consists of two hills that appear to
+have been rent asunder by some convulsion of nature, since the passage
+between them is narrow and their inner faces are equally perpendicular.
+The hill which I have named after the late Surveyor-general, is steep
+on all sides; but the other gradually declines from the south, and at
+length loses itself in a large plain that extends to the north. It is
+from four to five miles in length, and is picturesque in appearance,
+and lightly wooded. A few cypresses were growing on Oxley's Table Land;
+but it had, otherwise, very little timber upon its summit. Both hills
+are of sandstone formation, and there are some hollows upon the last
+that deserve particular notice. They have the appearance of having been
+formed by eddies of water, being deeper in the centre than at any other
+part, and contain fragments and slabs of sandstone of various size and
+breadth, without a particle of soil or of sand between them. It is to
+be observed that the edges of these slabs, which were perfect
+parallelograms, were unbroken, and that they were as clean as if they
+had only just been turned out of the hand of the mason. We counted
+thirteen of these hollows in one spot about twenty-five feet in
+diameter, but they are without doubt of periodical formation, since a
+single hollow was observed lower than the summit of the hill upon its
+south extremity, that had evidently long been exposed to the action of
+the atmosphere, and had a general coating of moss over it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONTINUE THE JOURNEY; DOWN NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We left Oxley's Table Land on the morning of the 31st of January,
+pursuing a northern course through the brush and across a large plain,
+moving parallel to the smaller hill, and keeping it upon our left. The
+soil upon this plain differed in character from that on the plains to
+the eastward, and was much freer from sand. We stopped to dine at a
+spot, whence Oxley's Table Land bore by compass, S. by W., distant
+about twelve miles. Continuing our journey, at 2 p.m. we cleared the
+plain, and entered a tract covered with the polygonum junceum, on a
+soil evidently the deposit of floods. Box-trees were thinly scattered
+over it, and among the polygonum, the crested pigeons were numerous.
+These general appearances, together with a dip of country to the
+N.N.W., made us conclude that we were approaching the creek, and we
+accordingly intersected it on a N.N.E. course, at about three miles'
+distance from where we had dined. It had, however, undergone so
+complete a change, and had increased so much in size and in the height
+of its banks, that we were at a loss to recognize it. Still, with all
+these favourable symptoms, there was not a drop of water in it. But
+small shells lay in heaps in its bed, or were abundantly scattered over
+it; and we remarked that they differed from those on the plains of the
+Macquarie. A circumstance that surprised us much, was the re-appearance
+of the flooded-gum upon its banks, and that too of a large size. We had
+not seen any to the westward of the marshes, and we were, consequently,
+led to indulge in more sanguine expectation as to our ultimate success
+than we had ever ventured to do before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The party crossed to the right bank of the creek, and then moved in a
+westerly direction along it in search of water. A brush extended to our
+right, and some broken stony ground, rather elevated, was visible, to
+which Mr. Hume rode; nor did he join me again until after I had halted
+the party for the night.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISTRESSED FOR WATER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+My search for water had been unsuccessful, and the sun had set, when I
+came upon a broad part of the creek that appeared very favourable for
+an encampment, as it was encompassed by high banks, and would afford
+the men a greater facility of watching the cattle, that I knew would
+stray away if they could.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My anxiety for them led me to wander down the bed of the creek, when,
+to my joy, I found a pond of water within a hundred yards of the tents.
+It is impossible for me to describe the relief I felt at this success,
+or the gladness it spread among the men. Mr. Hume joined me at dusk,
+and informed me that he had made a circuit, and had struck upon the
+creek about three miles below us but that, in tracing it up, he had not
+found a drop of water until he came to the pond near which we had so
+providentially encamped. On the following morning, we held a westerly
+course over an open country for about eight miles and a half. The
+prevailing timber appeared to be a species of eucalypti, with rough
+bark, of small size, and evidently languishing from the want of
+moisture. The soil over which we travelled was far from bad, but there
+was a total absence of water upon it. At 6 p.m. Oxley's Table Land was
+distant from us about fifteen miles, bearing S. 20 E. by compass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had not touched upon the creek from the time we left it in the
+morning, having wandered from it in a northerly direction, along a
+native path that we intersected, and that seemed to have been recently
+trodden, since footsteps were fresh upon it. At sunset, we crossed a
+broad dry creek that puzzled us extremely, and were shortly afterwards
+obliged to stop for the night upon a plain beyond it. We had, during
+the afternoon, bent down to the S.W. in hopes that we should again have
+struck upon New Year's Creek; and, under an impression that we could
+not be far from it, Mr. Hume and I walked across the plain, to
+ascertain if it was sufficiently near to be of any service to us. We
+came upon a creek, but could not decide whether it was the one for
+which we had been searching, or another.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Its bed was so perfectly even that it was impossible to say to what
+point it flowed, more especially as all remains of debris had mouldered
+away. It was, however, extremely broad, and evidently, at times, held a
+furious torrent. In the centre of it, at one of the angles, we
+discovered a pole erected, and at first thought, from the manner in
+which it was propped up, that some unfortunate European must have
+placed it there as a mark to tell of his wanderings, but we afterwards
+concluded that it might be some superstitious rite of the natives, in
+consequence of the untowardness of the season, as it seemed almost
+inconceivable that an European could have wandered to such a distance
+from the located districts in safety.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REACH A LARGE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The creek had flooded-gum growing upon its banks, and, on places
+apparently subject to flood, a number of tall straight saplings were
+observed by us. We returned to the camp, after a vain search for water,
+and were really at a loss what direction next to pursue. The men kept
+the cattle pretty well together, and, as we were not delayed by any
+preparations for breakfast, they were saddled and loaded at an early
+hour. The circumstance of there having been natives in the
+neighbourhood, of whom we had seen so few traces of late, assured me
+that water was at hand, but in what direction it was impossible to
+guess. As the path we had observed was leading northerly, we took up
+that course, and had not proceeded more than a mile upon it, when we
+suddenly found ourselves on the banks of a noble river. Such it might
+in truth be called, where water was scarcely to be found. The party
+drew up upon a bank that was from forty to forty-five feet above the
+level of the stream. The channel of the river was front seventy to
+eighty yards broad, and enclosed an unbroken sheet of water, evidently
+very deep, and literally covered with pelicans and other wild fowl. Our
+surprise and delight may better be imagined than described. Our
+difficulties seemed to be at an end, for here was a river that promised
+to reward all our exertions, and which appeared every moment to
+increase in importance to our imagination. Coming from the N.E., and
+flowing to the S.W., it had a capacity of channel that proved that we
+were as far from its source as from its termination. The paths of the
+natives on either side of it were like well trodden roads; and the
+trees that overhung it were of beautiful and gigantic growth.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISAPPOINTMENT ON FINDING THE RIVER SALT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Its banks were too precipitous to allow of our watering the cattle, but
+the men eagerly descended to quench their thirst, which a powerful sun
+had contributed to increase; nor shall I ever forget the cry of
+amazement that followed their doing so, or the looks of terror and
+disappointment with which they called out to inform me that the water
+was so salt as to be unfit to drink! This was, indeed, too true: on
+tasting it, I found it extremely nauseous, and strongly impregnated
+with salt, being apparently a mixture of sea and fresh water. Whence
+this arose, whether from local causes, or from a communication with
+some inland sea, I knew not, but the discovery was certainly a blow for
+which I was not prepared. Our hopes were annihilated at the moment of
+their apparent realization. The cup of joy was dashed out of our hands
+before we had time to raise it to our lips. Notwithstanding this
+disappointment, we proceeded down the river, and halted at about five
+miles, being influenced by the goodness of the feed to provide for the
+cattle as well as circumstances would permit. They would not drink of
+the river water, but stood covered in it for many hours, having their
+noses alone exposed above the stream. Their condition gave me great
+uneasiness. It was evident they could not long hold out under their
+excessive thirst, and unless we should procure some fresh water, it
+would impossible for us to continue our journey. On a closer
+examination, the river appeared to me much below its ordinary level,
+and its current was scarcely perceptible. We placed sticks to ascertain
+if there was a rise or fall of tide, but could arrive at no
+satisfactory conclusion, although there was undoubtedly a current in
+it. Yet, as I stood upon its banks at sunset, when not a breath of air
+existed to break the stillness of the waters below me, and saw their
+surface kept in constant agitation by the leaping of fish, I doubted
+whether the river could supply itself so abundantly, and the rather
+imagined, that it owed such abundance, which the pelicans seemed to
+indicate was constant, to some mediterranean sea or other. Where,
+however, were the human inhabitants of this distant and singular
+region? The signs of a numerous population were around us, but we had
+not seen even a solitary wanderer. The water of the river was not, by
+any means, so salt as that of the ocean, but its taste was precisely
+similar. Could it be that its unnatural state had driven its
+inhabitants from its banks?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One would have imagined that our perplexities would have been
+sufficient for one day, but ere night closed, they increased upon us,
+although our anxiety, with regard to the cattle, was happily removed.
+Mr. Hume with his usual perseverance, walked out when the camp was
+formed; and, at a little distance from it, ascended a ridge of pure
+sand, crowned with cypresses. From this, he descended to the westward,
+and, at length, struck upon the river, where a reef of rocks creased
+its channel, and formed a dry passage from one side to the other; but
+the bend, which the river must have taken, appeared to him so singular,
+that he doubted whether it was the same beside which we had been
+travelling during the day. Curiosity led him to cross it, when he found
+a small pond of fresh water on a tongue of land, and, immediately
+afterwards, returned to acquaint me with the welcome tidings. It was
+too late to move, but we had, at least, the prospect of a comfortable
+breakfast in the morning.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+JUNCTION OF NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In consequence of the doubts that hung upon Mr. Hume's mind, as to the
+course of the river, we arranged that the animals should precede us to
+the fresh water; and that we should keep close in upon the stream, to
+ascertain that point. After traversing a deep bight, we arrived nearly
+as soon as the party, at the appointed rendezvous. The rocks composing
+the channel of the river at the crossing place, were of indurated clay.
+In the course of an hour, the animals appearing quite refreshed, we
+proceeded on our journey, and at about four miles crossed New Year's
+Creek, at its junction with the salt river. We passed several parts of
+the main channel that were perfectly dry, and were altogether at a loss
+to account for the current we undoubtedly had observed in the river
+when we first came upon it. At midday D'Urban's Group bore S. 65 E.
+distant about 32 miles. We made a little westing in the afternoon. The
+river continued to maintain its character and appearance, its lofty
+banks, and its long still reaches: while, however, the blue-gum trees
+upon its banks were of magnificent size, the soil had but little
+vegetation upon it, although an alluvial deposit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We passed over vast spaces covered with the polygonum junceum, that
+bore all the appearance of the flooded tracks in the neighbourhood of
+the marshes, and on which the travelling was equally distressing to the
+animals. Indeed, it had been sufficiently evident to us that the waters
+of this river were not always confined to its channel, capacious as it
+was, but that they inundated a belt of barren land, that varied in
+width from a quarter of a mile to a mile, when they were checked by an
+outer embankment that prevented them from spreading generally over the
+country, and upon the neighbouring plains. At our halting place, the
+cattle drank sparingly of the water, but it acted as a violent
+purgative both on them and the men who partook of it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NATIVE VILLAGE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 5th, the river led us to the southward and westward. Early in
+the day, we passed a group of seventy huts, capable of holding from
+twelve to fifteen men each. They appeared to be permanent habitations,
+and all of them fronted the same point of the compass. In searching
+amongst them we observed two beautifully made nets, of about ninety
+yards in length. The one had much larger meshes than the other, and
+was, most probably, intended to take kangaroos; but the other was
+evidently a fishing net.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In one hut, the floor of which was swept with particular care, a number
+of white balls, as of pulverised shells or lime, had been
+deposited&mdash;the use of which we could not divine. A trench was formed
+round the hut to prevent the rain from running under it, and the whole
+was arranged with more than ordinary attention.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+TERROR OF THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We had not proceeded very far when we came suddenly upon the tribe to
+which this village, as it might be called, belonged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In breaking through some brush to an open space that was bounded on one
+side by the river, we observed three or four natives, seated on a bank
+at a considerable distance from us; and directly in the line on which
+we were moving. The nature of the ground so completely favoured our
+approach, that they did not become aware of it until we were within a
+few yards of them, and had ascended a little ridge, which, as we
+afterwards discovered, ended in an abrupt precipice upon the river, not
+more than thirty yards to our right. The crack of the drayman's whip
+was the first thing that aroused their attention. They gazed upon us
+for a moment, and then started up and assumed an attitude of horror and
+amazement; their terror apparently increasing upon them. We stood
+perfectly immovable, until at length they gave a fearful yell, and
+darted out of sight.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+THEY FIRE THE BUSH.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Their cry brought about a dozen more natives from the river, whom we
+had not before observed, but who now ran after their comrades with
+surprising activity, and without once venturing to look behind them. As
+our position was a good one, we determined to remain upon it, until we
+should ascertain the number and disposition of the natives. We had not
+been long stationary, when we heard a crackling noise in the distance,
+and it soon became evident that the bush had been fired. It was,
+however, impossible that we could receive any injury on the narrow
+ridge upon which we stood, so that we waited very patiently to see the
+end of this affair.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES; DISEASE AMONG THEM.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In a short time the fire approached pretty near to us, and dense
+columns of smoke rose into the air over our heads. One of the natives,
+who had been on the bank, now came out of the bush, exactly from the
+spot into which he had retreated. He advanced a few paces towards us,
+and bending his body so that his hands rested on his knees, he fixed
+his gaze upon us for some time; but, seeing that we remained immovable,
+he began to throw himself into the most extravagant attitudes, shaking
+his foot from time to time. When he found that all his violence had no
+effect, he turned his rear to us in a most laughable manner, and
+absolutely groaned in spirit when he found that this last insult failed
+of success.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stood perplexed and not knowing what next to do, which gave Mr. Hume
+an opportunity to call out to him, and with considerable address he at
+length got the savage to approach close up to him; Mr. Hume himself
+having advanced a short distance from the animals in the first
+instance. As soon as I thought the savage had sufficiently recovered
+from his alarm, I went up to him with a tomahawk, the use of which he
+immediately guessed. We now observed that the natives who had fled from
+the river, had been employed in setting a net. They had placed it in a
+semicircle, with either end to the shore, and rude pieces of wood were
+attached to it to keep the upper part perpendicular. It was in fact a
+sein, only that the materials, with the exception of the net-work, were
+simpler and rougher than cork or lead&mdash;for which last, we afterwards
+discovered stones had been substituted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had on this occasion a remarkable instance of the docility of the
+natives of the interior, or of the power they have of subduing their
+apprehensions; manifesting the opposite extremes of fear and
+confidence. These men whom we had thus surprised, and who, no doubt,
+imagined that we were about to destroy them, having apparently never
+seen nor heard of white men before, must have taken us for something
+preternatural; yet from the extremity of fear that had prompted them to
+set their woods in flames, they in a brief space so completely subdued
+those fears as to approach the very beings who had so strongly excited
+their alarm. The savage who had been the principal actor in the scene,
+was an elderly man, rather descending to the vale of years than what
+might be strictly called aged. I know not how it was, but I regarded
+him with peculiar interest. Mr. Hume's manners had in a great measure
+contributed to allay his evident agitation; but, from the moment I
+approached him, I thought there was a shade of anxiety upon his brow,
+and an expression of sorrow over his features, the cause of which did
+not originate with us. I could see in a moment, that his bosom was full
+even to bursting, and he seemed to claim at once our sympathy and our
+protection, although we were ignorant of that which oppressed him. We
+had not long been seated together, when some of his tribe mustered
+sufficient courage to join him. Both Mr. Hume and I were desirous of
+seeing the net drawn, but the old man raised some objection, by
+pointing to the heavens and towards the sun. After a little more
+solicitation, however, he gave a whistle, and, four or five natives
+having obeyed the summons, he directed them to draw the net, but they
+were unfortunate, and our wish to ascertain the kind of fish contained
+in the river was disappointed. As his tribe gathered round him, the old
+chief threw a melancholy glance upon them, and endeavoured, as much as
+he could, to explain the cause of that affliction which, as I had
+rightly judged, weighed heavily upon him. It appeared, then, that a
+violent cutaneous disease raged throughout the tribe, that was sweeping
+them off in great numbers. He called several young men to Mr. Hume and
+myself, who had been attacked by this singular malady. Nothing could
+exceed the anxiety of his explanations, or the mild and soothing tone
+in which he addressed his people, and it really pained me that I could
+not assist him in his distress. We now discovered the use to which the
+conical substance that had been deposited with such unusual care in one
+of the huts, was applied. There were few of the natives present who
+were not more or less marked with it, and it was no doubt, indicative
+of mourning.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DEPARTURE OF THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Some of the men, however, were painted with red and yellow ochre, with
+which it was evident to me they had besmeared themselves since our
+appearance, most likely in preparing for the combat in which they
+fancied they would be engaged. We distributed such presents as we had
+to those around us, and when we pursued our journey, the majority
+accompanied us, nor did they wholly leave us until we had passed the
+place to which their women had retired. They might have left us when
+they pleased, for we intended them no harm; as it was, however, they
+struck into the brushes to join their families, and we pushed on to
+make up for lost time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The travelling near the river had been so bad, not only in consequence
+of the nature of the soil and brush, but from the numerous gullies that
+had been formed by torrents, as they poured into its channel after
+heavy rains and floods, that it was thought advisable to keep at a
+greater distance from it. We turned away, therefore, to the plains, and
+found them of much firmer surface. They partook, however, of the same
+general character as the plains we had traversed more to the eastward.
+Their soil was a light sandy loam, and the same succulent plants still
+continued to prevail upon them, which we have already noticed as
+existing upon the other plains. Both emus and kangaroos were seen,
+though not in any considerable numbers, but our dogs were not in a
+condition to run, and were all but killed by the extreme heat of the
+weather. We had fallen on a small pool of water shortly after we
+started in the morning, but we could do no more than refresh ourselves
+and the animals at it. In the afternoon, we again turned towards the
+river, and found it unaltered. Its water was still salt, and from the
+increased number of wild fowl and pelicans upon it, as well as from the
+general flatness of the country, I certainly thought we were rapidly
+approaching some inland sea. It was, however, uncertain how long we
+should be enabled to continue on the river. The animals were all of
+them extremely weak, and every day increased the probable difficulty of
+our return. There was not the least appearance of a break-up of the
+drought, the heavens were without a cloud, and the atmosphere was so
+clear that the outline of the moon could be distinctly seen, although
+she was far in her wane.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BRINE SPRINGS IN THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 6th, we journeyed again through a barren scrub, although on
+firmer ground, and passed numerous groups of huts. At about eight miles
+from our last encampment, we came upon the river, where its banks were
+of considerable height. In riding along them, Mr. Hume thought he
+observed a current running, and he called to inform me of the
+circumstance. On a closer examination, we discovered some springs in
+the very bed of the river, from which a considerable stream was
+gushing, and from the incrustation around them, we had no difficulty in
+guessing at their nature: in fact, they were brine springs, and I
+collected a quantity of salt from the brink of them.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISTRESS FOR WANT OF FRESH WATER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+After such a discovery, we could not hope to keep our position. No
+doubt the current we had observed on first reaching the river, was
+caused by springs that had either escaped our notice or were under
+water. Here was at length a local cause for its saltness that destroyed
+at once the anticipation and hope of our being near its termination,
+and, consequently, the ardour with which we should have pressed on to
+decide so interesting a point.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our retreat would have been a measure of absolute necessity ere this,
+had we not found occasional supplies of fresh water, the last pond of
+which was now about eighteen miles behind us.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+OUR COURSE ARRESTED.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Whether we should again find any, was a doubtful question, and I
+hesitated to run the risk. The animals were already, from bad food, and
+from the effects of the river water, so weak, that they could scarcely
+carry their loads, and I was aware, if any of the bullocks once fell,
+he would never rise again. Under such circumstances, I thought it
+better to halt the party at the edge of the scrub, though the feed was
+poor, and the water not drinkable. Our situation required most serious
+consideration. It was necessary that we should move either backward or
+forward in the morning. Yet we could not adopt either measure with
+satisfaction to ourselves, under such unfavorable circumstances. I
+determined to relieve my own mind by getting the animals into a place
+of safety, as soon as possible; and, as the only effectual way of doing
+this was to retire upon the nearest fresh water, I resolved at once to
+do so. The party turned back on the morning of the 6th; nor do I think
+the cattle would ever have reached their destination had we not found a
+few buckets of rain water in the cleft of a rock, to refresh them. Thus
+it will appear that under our most trying circumstances, we received
+aid from Providence, and that the bounty of Heaven was extended towards
+us, when we had least reason to expect it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Notwithstanding we had been thus forced to a partial retreat, both Mr.
+Hume and myself were unwilling to quit the pursuit of the river, in so
+unsatisfactory a manner. There was no difference in the appearance of
+the country to the westward of it; but a seeming interminable flat
+stretched away in that direction. A journey across it was not likely,
+therefore, to be attended with any favorable results, since it was
+improbable that any other leading feature was within our reach. I
+proposed, therefore, to take the most serviceable of the horses with me
+down the river, that, in the event of our finding fresh water, we might
+again push forward. Mr. Hume requesting to be permitted to accompany
+me, it was arranged that we should start on the 8th, thereby giving the
+animals a day's rest. We had not seen any natives since our parting
+with the chief horde; and as we were stationed at some little distance
+from the river, I hoped that they would not visit the camp during my
+absence. This was the only circumstance that gave me uneasiness, but
+the men had generally been behaving so well that I relied a great deal
+upon them.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXTRAORDINARY SOUND.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+About 3 p.m. on the 7th, Mr. Hume and I were occupied tracing the chart
+upon the ground. The day had been remarkably fine, not a cloud was
+there in the heavens, nor a breath of air to be felt. On a sudden we
+heard what seemed to be the report of a gun fired at the distance of
+between five and six miles. It was not the hollow sound of an earthly
+explosion, or the sharp cracking noise of falling timber, but in every
+way resembled a discharge of a heavy piece of ordnance. On this all
+were agreed, but no one was certain whence the sound proceeded. Both
+Mr. Hume and myself had been too attentive to our occupation to form a
+satisfactory opinion; but we both thought it came from the N.W. I sent
+one of the men immediately up a tree, but he could observe nothing
+unusual. The country around him appeared to be equally flat on all
+sides, and to be thickly wooded: whatever occasioned the report, it
+made a strong impression on all of us; and to this day, the singularity
+of such a sound, in such a situation, is a matter of mystery to me.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FURTHER ATTEMPT TO EXPLORE THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 8th, we commenced our journey down the river, accompanied by two
+men, and a pack-horse, carrying our provisions on one side and a bucket
+of water on the other. Keeping in general near the stream, but making
+occasional turns into the plains, we got to the brush from which the
+party had turned back, about 3 p.m. Passing through, we crossed a small
+plain, of better soil and vegetation than usual; but it soon gave place
+to the sandy loam of the interior; nor did we observe any material
+alteration, either in the country or the river, as we rode along. The
+flooded-gum trees on the banks of the latter, were of beautiful growth,
+but in the brushes dividing the plains, box and other eucalypti, with
+cypresses and many minor shrubs, prevailed. We slept on the river side,
+and calculated our distance from the camp at about twenty-six or
+twenty-eight miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horses would not drink the river water, so that we were obliged to
+give them a pint each from our own supply. On the following morning we
+continued our journey. The country was generally open to the eastward,
+and we had fine views of D'Urban's Group, distant from twenty to
+twenty-five miles. About noon, turning towards the river to rest, both
+ourselves and the horses, we passed through brush land for about a mile
+and a half. When we came upon its banks, we found them composed of a
+red loam with sandy superficies. We had, in the course of the day,
+crossed several creeks, but in none of them could we find water,
+although their channels were of great depth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day had been extremely warm, and from shaking in the barrel our
+supply of water had diminished to a little more than a pint; it
+consequently became a matter of serious consideration, how far it would
+be prudent to proceed farther; for, however capable we were of bearing
+additional fatigue, it was evident our animals would soon fail, since
+they trembled exceedingly, and had the look of total exhaustion. We
+calculated that we were forty miles from the camp, in a S.W. direction,
+a fearful distance under our circumstances, since we could not hope to
+obtain relief for two days. Independently however, of the state of the
+animals, our spirits were damped by the nature of the country, and the
+change which had taken place on the soil, upon which it was impossible
+that water could rest; while the general appearance of the interior
+showed how much it had suffered from drought. On the other hand,
+although the waters of the river had become worse to the taste, the
+river itself had increased in size, and stretched away to the westward,
+with all the uniformity of a magnificent canal, and gave every promise
+of increasing importance; while the pelicans were in such numbers upon
+it as to be quite dazzling to the eye. Considering, however, that
+perseverance would only involve us in inextricable difficulties, and
+that it would also be useless to risk the horses, since we had gained a
+distance to which the bullocks could not have been brought, I intimated
+my intention of giving up the further pursuit of the river, though it
+was with extreme reluctance that I did so.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CALLED IT THE "DARLING".
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+As soon as we had bathed and finished our scanty meal, I took the
+bearings of D'Urban's Group, and found them to be S. 58 E. about
+thirty-three miles distant; and as we mounted our horses, I named the
+river the "Darling," as a lasting memorial of the respect I bear the
+governor.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ABANDON THE ATTEMPT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I should be doing injustice to Mr. Hume and my men, if I did not
+express my conviction that they were extremely unwilling to yield to
+circumstances, and that, had I determined on continuing the journey,
+they would have followed me with cheerfulness, whatever the
+consequences might have been.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER III.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Intercourse with the natives&mdash;Their appearance and condition&mdash;Remarks
+on the Salt or Darling River&mdash;Appearance of the marshes on our
+return&mdash;Alarm for safety of the provision party&mdash;Return to Mount
+Harris&mdash;Miserable condition of the natives&mdash;Circumstances attending the
+slaughter of two Irish runaways&mdash;Bend our course towards the
+Castlereagh&mdash;Wallis's Ponds&mdash;Find the famished natives feeding on
+gum&mdash;Channel of the Castlereagh&mdash;Character of the country in its
+vicinity&mdash;Another tribe of natives&mdash;Amicable intercourse with
+them&mdash;Morrisset's chain of Ponds&mdash;Again reach the Darling River ninety
+miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+We kept near the river as we journeyed homewards, and in striking
+across a plain, found an isolated rock of quartz and jasper, just
+showing itself partially above the surface of the ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We were anxious to get to the small plain I have mentioned, if
+possible, for the sake of the animals, and pushed on rapidly for it.
+About 4 p.m. we had reached our sleeping place of the previous evening,
+and being overpowered by thirst, we stopped in hopes that by making our
+tea strong we might destroy, in some measure, the nauseous taste of the
+water. The horses were spancelled and a fire lit. Whilst we were
+sitting patiently for the boiling of the tins, Mr. Hume observed at a
+considerable distance above us, a large body of natives under some gum
+trees. They were not near enough for us to observe them distinctly, but
+it was evident that they were watching our motions. We did not take any
+notice of them for some time, but at last I thought it better to call
+out to them, and accordingly requested Mr. Hume to do so. In a moment
+the whole of them ran forward and dashed into the river, having been on
+the opposite side, with an uproar I had never witnessed on any former
+occasion.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+INTERCOURSE WITH NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume thought they intended an attack, and the horses had taken
+fright and galloped away. I determined, therefore, to fire at once upon
+them if they pressed up the bank on which we were posted. Mr. Hume went
+with me to the crest of it, and we rather angrily beckoned to the
+foremost of the natives to stop. They mistook our meaning, but laid all
+their spears in a heap as they came up. We then sat down on the bank
+and they immediately did the same; nor did they stir until we beckoned
+to them after the horses had been secured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As they conducted themselves so inoffensively, we gave them everything
+we had to spare. My gun seemed to excite their curiosity, as they had
+seen Mr. Hume shoot a cockatoo with it; they must consequently have
+been close to us for the greater part of the day, as the bird was
+killed in the morning. It was of a species new to me, being smaller
+than the common white cockatoo, and having a large scarlet-and-yellow
+instead of a pine-yellow top-knot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having stayed about half an hour with them, we remounted our horses,
+and struck away from the river into the plains, while the natives went
+up its banks to join their hordes. Those whom we saw were about
+twenty-seven in number and the most of them were strangers.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DISTRESS FROM THIRST.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It was some time after sunset before we reached the little plain on
+which we had arranged to sleep, and when we dismounted we were in a
+truly pitiable state. I had been unable to refrain from drinking
+copiously at the river, and now became extremely sick. Mr. Hume had
+been scarcely more prudent than myself, but on him the water had a
+contrary effect, as well as upon Hopkinson. The tinker was the only man
+fit for duty, and it was well for us that such was the case, as the
+horses made frequent attempts to stray, and would have left us in a
+pretty plight had they succeeded. We reached the camp on the following
+day a little before sunset, nor was I more rejoiced to dismount from my
+wearied horse than to learn that everything in the camp had been
+regular during our absence and that the men had kept on the best terms
+with the natives who had paid them frequent visits.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The bullocks had improved, but were still extremely weak, and as the
+horses we had employed on the last journey required a day or two's
+rest, it was arranged that we should not break up our camp until the
+12th, beyond which period we could not stop, in consequence of the low
+state of our salt provisions, we having barely sufficient to last to
+Mount Harris, at the rate of two pounds per week.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The morning after we returned from our excursion, a large party of
+natives, about seventy in number, visited the camp. On this occasion,
+the women and children passed behind the tents, but did not venture to
+stop. Most of the men had spears, and were unusually inquisitive and
+forward. Several of them carried fire-sticks under the influence of the
+disease I have already noticed, whilst others were remarked to have
+violent cutaneous eruptions all over the body. We were pretty well on
+the alert; notwithstanding which, every minor article was seized with a
+quickness that would have done credit to a most finished juggler. One
+of the natives thus picked up my comb and toothbrush, but as he did not
+attempt to conceal them, they were fortunately recovered. After staying
+with us a short time the men followed the women. They appeared to be
+strangers who had come from a distance.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CUSTOMS OF THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The natives of the Darling are a clean-limbed, well-conditioned race,
+generally speaking. They seemingly occupy permanent huts, but their
+tribe did not bear any proportion to the size or number of their
+habitations. It was evident their population had been thinned. The
+customs of these distant tribes, as far as we could judge, were similar
+to those of the mountain blacks, and they are essentially the same
+people, although their language differs. They lacerate their bodies,
+but do not extract the front teeth. We saw but few cloaks among them,
+since the opossum does not inhabit the interior. Those that were
+noticed, were made of the red kangaroo skin. In appearance, these men
+are stouter in the bust than at the lower extremities; they have broad
+noses, sunken eyes, overhanging eyebrows, and thick lips. The men are
+much better looking than the women. Both go perfectly naked, if I
+except the former, who wear nets over the loins and across the
+forehead, and bones through the cartilages of the nose. Their chief
+food is fish, of which they have great supplies in the river; still
+they have their seasons for hunting their emus and kangaroos. The nets
+they use for this purpose, as well as for fishing, are of great length,
+and are made upon large frames. These people do not appear to have
+warlike habits nor do they take any pride in their arms, which differ
+little from those used by the inland tribes, and are assimilated to
+them as far as the materials will allow. One powerful man, however, had
+a regular trident, for which Mr. Hume offered many things without
+success. He plainly intimated to us that he had a use for it, but
+whether against an enemy or to secure prey, we could not understand. I
+was most anxious to have ascertained if any religious ceremonies
+obtained among them, but the difficulty of making them comprehend our
+meaning was insurmountable; and to the same cause may be attributed the
+circumstance of my being unable to collect any satisfactory vocabulary
+of their language. They evinced a strange perversity, or obstinacy
+rather, in repeating words, although it was evident that they knew they
+were meant as questions. The pole we observed in the creek, on the
+evening previously to our making the Darling, was not the only one that
+fell under our notice; our impression therefore, that they were fixed
+by the natives to propitiate some deity, was confirmed. It would appear
+that the white pigment was an indication of mourning. Whether these
+people have an idea of a superintending Providence I doubt, but they
+evidently dread evil agency. On the whole I should say they are a
+people, at present, at the very bottom of the scale of humanity.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REMARKS ON THE DARLING RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We struck the Darling River in lat. 29 degrees 37 minutes S. and in E.
+long. 145 degrees 33 minutes, and traced it down for about sixty-six
+miles in a direct line to the S.W. If I might hazard an opinion from
+appearance, to whatever part of the interior it leads, its source must
+be far to the N.E. or N. The capacity of its channel, and the terrific
+floods that must sometimes rage in it, would argue that it is
+influenced by tropical rains, which alone would cause such floods. It
+is likely that it seldom arrives at so reduced a state as that in which
+we found it, and that, generally speaking, it has a sufficient depth of
+water for the purposes of inland navigation: in such case its future
+importance cannot be questioned, since it most probably receives the
+chief streams falling westerly from the coast ranges. But, with every
+anticipation of the benefit that may at some time or other be derived
+from this remarkable and central stream, it is incumbent on me to state
+that the country, through which it flows, holds out but little prospect
+of advantage. Certainly the portion we know of it, is far from
+encouraging. The extent of alluvial soil, between the inner and outer
+banks of the river, is extremely limited, and, instead of being covered
+with sward, is in most places over-run by the polygonum. Beyond this
+the plains of the interior stretch away, whose character and soil must
+change, ere they can be available to any good purpose. But there is a
+singular want of vegetable decay in the interior of New Holland, and
+that powerfully argues its recent origin.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REMARKS ON THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+There is no life upon its surface, if I may so express myself; but the
+stillness of death reigns in its brushes, and over its plains. It
+cannot, however, be doubted that we visited the interior during a most
+unfavorable season. Probably in ordinary ones it wears a different
+appearance, but its deserts are of great extent, and its productions
+are of little value.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Agreeably to our arrangements, we broke up our camp at an early hour on
+the morning of the 12th, and proceeded up the river to the junction of
+New Year's Creek. We then struck away in an easterly direction from it,
+detaching a man to trace the creek up, lest we should pass any water;
+and we should certainly have been without it had we not taken this
+precaution.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the following day, we again passed to the eastward, through an open
+country, having picturesque views of Oxley's Table Land. We crossed our
+track about noon, and struck on the creek at about five miles beyond
+it, and we were fortunate enough to procure both water and grass. The
+timber upon the plains, between us and the Darling, we found to be a
+rough gum, but box prevailed in the neighbourhood of the creek at this
+part of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 14th, we changed our direction more to the southward, but made a
+short journey, in consequence of being obliged to make some slight
+repairs on the boat carriage.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REGAIN OUR OLD ROUTE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 15th, we kept an E.S.E. course, and, crossing the creek at an
+early hour, got upon our old track, which we kept. We had the lateral
+ridge of the Pink Hills upon our right, and travelled through a good
+deal of brush. Four or five natives joined us, and two followed us to
+the end of our day's journey. In the course of the evening, they
+endeavoured to pilfer whatever was in their reach, but were detected
+putting a tin into a bush, and soon took to their heels. This was the
+first instance we had of open theft among the natives of the interior.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We passed Mosquito Brush on the 18th, but found the ponds quite dry, we
+were, therefore, under the necessity of pushing on, to shorten the next
+day's journey, as we could not expect to get water nearer than the
+marshes. At noon, on the 19th, we entered the plain, and once more saw
+them spreading in dreariness before us. While the party was crossing to
+the first channel, I rode to the left, in order to examine the
+appearance of the country in the direction of the wood, and as far as I
+skirted the reeds had my impressions confirmed as to their partial
+extension. I was obliged, however, to join the men without completing
+the circuit of the marshes. They had found the first channel dry, and
+had passed on to the other, in which, fortunately, a small quantity of
+water still remained. It was, however, so shallow as to expose the
+backs of the fish in it, and a number of crows had congregated, and
+were pecking at them. Wishing to satisfy my mind as to the distance to
+which the river extended to the northward, Mr. Hume rode with me on the
+following day, to examine the country in that direction, leaving the
+men stationary. We found that the reeds gradually decreased in body,
+until, at length, they ceased, or gave place to bulrushes. There were
+general appearances of inundation, and of the subsidence of waters, but
+none that led us to suppose that any channel existed beyond the flooded
+lands.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ALARM FOR THE SAFETY OF THE PROVISION PARTY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On our return to the camp, we observed dense masses of smoke rising at
+the head of the marshes, and immediately under Mount Foster. This
+excited our alarm for the safety of the party we hoped to find at Mount
+Harris, and obliged us to make forced marches, to relieve it if
+threatened by the natives.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 22nd, we crossed the plains of the Macquarie, and surprised a
+numerous tribe on the banks of the river; and the difficulty we found
+in getting any of them to approach us, their evident timidity, and the
+circumstance of one of them having on a jacket, tended to increase our
+apprehensions. When two or three came to us, they intimated that white
+men either had been or were under Mount Harris, but we were left in
+uncertainty and passed a most anxious night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The body of reeds was still on fire; and the light embers were carried
+to an amazing distance by the wind, falling like a black-shower around
+us. As we knew that the natives never made such extensive
+conflagration, unless they had some mischievous object in view, our
+apprehension for the safety of Riley, with his supplies, was increased.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the earliest dawn, we pushed for the hill. In passing that part of
+the meadows under Mount Foster, we observed that the grass had also
+been consumed, and we scarcely recognized the ground from its altered
+appearance. As we approached Mount Harris, we saw recent traces of
+cattle, but none were visible on the plains. Under the hill, however,
+we could distinctly see that a hut of some kind had been erected, and
+it is impossible for me to describe the relief we felt when a soldier
+came forward to reconnoitre us. I could no longer doubt the safety of
+the party, and this was confirmed by the rest of the men turning out to
+welcome us. It appeared that our suspicions with regard to the natives
+had not been without foundation, since they attempted to surprise the
+camp, and it was supposed the firing of the marshes was done with a
+view to collect the distant tribes, to make a second attack; so that
+our arrival was most opportune.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The party I found awaiting our arrival at Mount Harris consisted of one
+soldier, Riley, who had the charge of the supplies, and a drayman. They
+had found the paper I had fixed against the tree, and also the letters
+I had hid, and had forwarded them to Sydney, by another soldier and a
+prisoner; which had weakened their party a good deal. Riley informed
+me, that he had been between a month and three weeks at the station,
+and that knowing our provisions must have run short he had expected us
+much earlier than we had made our appearance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My dispatches stated, that additional supplies had been forwarded for
+my use, together with horses and bullocks, in the event of my requiring
+them. On examination, the former were found to be in excellent order;
+and, as it would take some time to carry any changes I might
+contemplate, or find it necessary to make, into effect, I determined to
+give the men who had been with me a week's rest.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ENCAMP AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The camp was made snug; and as the weather had become much cooler I
+thought it a good opportunity to slaughter one of the bullocks, in
+order to guard against any bad effects of our having been living for
+some weeks exclusively on salt provisions. I was also induced to this
+measure, from a wish to preserve my supplies as much as possible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These matters having been arranged, I had a temporary awning erected
+near the river, and was for three or four days busily employed writing
+an account of our journey for the Governor's information.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having closed my despatches, and answered the numerous friendly letters
+I had received, my attention was next turned to the changes that had
+taken place at Mount Harris during our absence. The Macquarie, I found,
+had wholly ceased to flow, and now consisted of a chain of ponds. Such
+of the minor vegetation as had escaped the fires of the natives, had
+perished under the extreme heat of the season. The acacia pendula stood
+leafless upon the plains, and the polygonum junceum appeared to be the
+only plant that had withstood the effects of the drought. Yet,
+notwithstanding this general depression of the vegetable kingdom, the
+animals that had been brought from Wellington Valley were in the best
+condition, and were, indeed, too fat for effective labour; it might,
+therefore, be reasonably presumed, that herbage affording such
+nourishment in so unfavourable a season, would be of the richest
+quality, if fresh and vigorous under the influence of seasonable, and
+not excessive, rains.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+FIRING OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The appearance of the country was, however, truly melancholy; there was
+not a flower in bloom, nor a green object to be seen. Whether our
+arrival had increased their alarm, is uncertain, but the natives
+continued to fire the great marshes, and as the element raged amongst
+them, large bodies of smoke rose over the horizon like storm clouds,
+and had the effect of giving additional dreariness to the scene. I am
+inclined to think that they made these conflagrations to procure food,
+by seizing whatsoever might issue from the flames, as snakes, birds, or
+other animals; for they had taken every fish in the river, and the low
+state of its waters had enabled them to procure an abundance of muscles
+from its bed, which they had consumed with their characteristic
+improvidence. They were, consequently, in a starving condition, and so
+pitiable were their indications of it, that I was induced to feed such
+of them as visited the camp, notwithstanding their late misconduct;
+being likewise anxious to bring about a good understanding, as the best
+means of ensuring the safety of the smaller party when we should
+separate, of which I had reason to be doubtful. These people had killed
+two white men not long before my arrival among them, and as the
+circumstances attending the slaughter are singular, I shall relate them.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SLAUGHTER OF TWO IRISH RUNAWAYS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The parties were two Irish runaways, who thought they could make their
+way to Timor. They escaped from Wellington Valley with a fortnight's
+provision each, and a couple of dogs, and proceeded down the Macquarie.
+About the cataract, they fell in with the Mount Harris tribe, and
+remained with them for some days, when they determined on pursuing
+their journey. The blacks, however, wanted to get possession of their
+dogs, and a resistance on the part of the Europeans brought on a
+quarrel. It appears, that before the blacks proceeded to extremities,
+they furnished the Irishmen, who were unarmed, with weapons, and then
+told them to defend themselves, but whether against equal or inferior
+numbers, I am uninformed. One of them soon fell, which the other
+observing, he took his knife out, and cut the throats of both the dogs
+before the blacks had time to put him to death. He was, however,
+sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe generally. I
+questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the most sullen
+silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid
+his compass on a large rock, near to which Mr. Oxley's boat had been
+burnt. To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings
+were all wrong. I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the
+error produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr. Hume noticed.
+When I placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N. by
+W., the true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W. My
+placing my notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did
+the card move until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the
+stone, when it first became violently agitated, and then settled
+correctly; and my bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range,
+and of its centre, were as follows:
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ Mount Exmouth to the N ...... N. 86 E.
+ Centre....................... N. 85 E.
+ Vernon's Peak................ N. 89 E.
+ Distance 70 miles.<BR>
+</PRE>
+
+<P>
+Having finished my reports and letters, it became necessary to consider
+the best point on which to move, and to fix a day for our departure
+from Mount Harris. It struck me that having found so important a
+feature as the Darling River, the Governor would approve my
+endeavouring to regain it more to the southward, in order to trace it
+down. I, therefore, detached Mr. Hume to survey the country in that
+direction, and to ascertain if a descent upon the Bogen district would
+be practicable, through which I had been informed a considerable river
+forced itself. The report he made on his return was such as to deter me
+from that attempt, but he stated that the country for 30 miles from the
+Macquarie was well watered, and superior to any he had passed over
+during the journey; beyond that distance, it took up the character of
+the remote interior, and alternated with plains and brush, the soil
+being too sandy to retain water on its surface. He saw some hills from
+the extremity of his journey, bearing by compass W.S.W. We consequently
+determined to make for the Castlereagh, agreeably to our instructions.
+Preparations were made for breaking up the camp, all the various
+arrangements in the change of animals were completed, the boat carriage
+was exchanged for a dray, and I took Boyle in the place of Norman,
+whose timidity in the bush rendered him unfit for service.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CIRCUIT OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+There is a small hill on the opposite side of the river, and
+immediately facing Mount Harris, and to the S.E. of it there is a small
+lagoon, the head of a creek, by means of which its superfluous waters
+are carried off. This creek runs parallel to the river for about ten
+miles, and enters the marshes at the S.E. angle. This I ascertained one
+day in riding to carry on my survey of the southern extremity of the
+marshes, and to join my line of route by making the circuit of that
+part of them. I found that the river was turned to its northerly course
+by a rising ground of forest land, which checks its further progress
+westerly. I proceeded round the S.W. angle, and then, taking a
+northerly course, got down to the bottom of the first great marsh, thus
+completing the circuit of them. I did not return to the camp until
+after 10 p.m., having crossed the river at day-light, nor did we
+procure any water from the time we left the stream to the moment of our
+recrossing it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WALLIS'S PONDS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Having completed our various arrangements, and closed our letters, we
+struck our tents on the morning of the 7th March; we remained, however,
+to witness the departure of Riley's party for Wellington Valley, and
+then left the Macquarie on an E.N.E. course for Wallis's Ponds, and
+made them at about 14 miles. They undoubtedly empty themselves into the
+marshes, and are a continuation of that chain of ponds on which I left
+the party in Mr. Hume's charge. About a mile from Mount Harris, we
+passed a small dry creek, that evidently lays the country under water
+in the wet seasons. There was a blue-gum flat to the eastward of it,
+which we crossed, and then entered a brush of acacia pendula and box.
+The soil upon the plain was an alluvial deposit; that in the brushes
+was sandy. From the extremity of the plain, Mount Harris bore, by
+compass, S.W. by W.; Mount Foster due west. The scrub through which we
+were penetrating, at length became so dense, that we found it
+impossible to travel in a direct line through it, and frequent ridges
+of cypresses growing closely together, turned us repeatedly from our
+course. The country at length became clearer, and we travelled over
+open forest of box, casuarina, and cypresses, on a sandy soil; the
+first predominating. For about two miles before we made the creek, the
+country was not heavily timbered, the acacia pendula succeeding the
+larger trees. The ground had a good covering of grass upon it, and
+there were few of the salsolaceous plants, so abundant on the western
+plains, to be found. The rough-gum abounded near the creek, with a
+small tree bearing a hard round nut, and we had the luxury of plenty of
+water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We remained stationary on the 8th, in hopes that Riley would have met
+the soldier who had been sent back to Wellington Valley, and that he
+would have forwarded any letters to us, of which he might have been the
+bearer. The day, however, passed over without realizing our
+expectations; and we started once more for the interior, and cut
+ourselves off from all communication with society.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MORRISSET'S PONDS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We made for Morrisset's chain of ponds, and travelled over rich and
+extensive plains, divided by plantations of cypress, box, and
+casuarina, in the early and latter period of the day. About noon we
+entered a dense forest of cypresses, which continued for three miles,
+when the cypresses became mixed with casuarina, box, and mountain-gum,
+a tree we had not remarked before in so low a situation. We struck upon
+the creek after a journey of about 15 miles. It had a sandy bed, and
+was extremely tortuous in its course, nor was it until after a
+considerable search, that we at length succeeded in finding water, at
+which a party of natives were encamped. The moment they saw us, they
+fled, and left all their utensils, &amp;c. behind them. Among other things,
+we found a number of bark troughs, filled with the gum of the mimosa,
+and vast quantities of gum made into cakes upon the ground. From this
+it would appear these unfortunate creatures were reduced to the last
+extremity, and, being unable to procure any other nourishment, had been
+obliged to collect this mucilaginous food.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The plains we traversed, were of uniform equality of surface. Water
+evidently lodges and continues on them long after a fall of rain, and
+in wet seasons they must, I should imagine, be full of quagmires, and
+almost impassable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 10th, we passed through a country that differed in no material
+point from that already described. We stopped at 10 a.m. under some
+brush, in the centre of a large plain, from which Arbuthnot's range
+bore S. 84 E. distant from 50 to 55 miles, and afterwards traversed or
+rather crossed, those extensive tracts described by Mr. Evans as being
+under water and covered with reeds, in 1817. They now bore a very
+different appearance, being firm and dry. The soil was in general good,
+and covered with forest grass and a species of oxalia. We did not
+observe any reeds, or the signs of inundation, but, as is invariably
+the case with plains in the interior, they were of too even surface, as
+I have so lately remarked, to admit of the waters running quickly off
+them; and no doubt, when they became saturated, many quagmires are
+formed, that would very much impede the movements of an expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REACH THE CASTLEREAGH RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We reached the Castlereagh about 4 p.m., and although its channel could
+not have been less than 130 yards in breadth, there was apparently not
+a drop of water in it. Its bed consisted of pure sand and reeds; amid
+the latter, we found a small pond of 15 yards circumference, after a
+long search. There is a considerable dip in the country towards the
+river, at about two miles from it; and the intervening brush was full
+of kangaroo, which, I fancy, had congregated to a spot where there was
+abundance of food for them. The soil covering the space was of the
+richest quality, and the timber upon it consisted of box, mountain gum,
+and the angophora lanceolata, a tree that is never found except on rich
+ground.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WANT OF WATER; CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It appeared that our troubles were to recommence, and that in order to
+continue on the Castlereagh, it would be necessary for Mr. Hume and
+myself to undertake those fatiguing journeys in search of water that
+had so exhausted us already: and after all, it was doubtful how soon we
+might be forced back. I had certainly expected that, on our gaining the
+banks of the river, we should have had a constant supply of water, but
+the circumstance of the Castlereagh having not only ceased to flow, but
+being absolutely dry, while it afforded the best and clearest proof of
+the severity and continuance of the drought in the interior, at the
+same time damped the spirits and ardour of the men. We kept the left
+bank of the river as we proceeded down it, and passed two or three
+larger ponds about a mile below where we had slept, but there they
+ceased. The bed of the river became one of pure sand, nor did there
+appear to be any chance of our finding any water in it. I stopped the
+party at about eight miles, and desired the men to get their dinners,
+to give Mr. Hume and myself time to search for a supply upon the
+plains. Disappointed to the left, we crossed the channel of the
+Castlereagh, and struck over a small plain upon the right bank, and at
+the extremity of it, came upon a swamp, from which we immediately
+returned for the cattle, and got them unloaded by seven o'clock. As
+there was sufficient pasture around us, I proposed to Mr. Hume on the
+following day, to leave the party stationary, and to ride down the
+river to see how far its present appearances continued. Like the
+generality of rivers of the interior, it had, where we struck upon it,
+outer banks to confine its waters during floods, and to prevent them
+from spreading generally over the country; the space between the two
+banks being of the richest soil, and the timber chiefly of the
+angophora kind. Flooded-gum overhung the inner banks of the river, or
+grew upon the many islands, with casuarina. It became evident, however,
+that the outer banks declined in height as we proceeded down the river,
+nor was it long before they ceased altogether. As we rode along, we
+found that the inner ones were fast decreasing in height also. Riding
+under a hanging wood of the angophora, which had ceased for a time, we
+were induced to break off to our right, to examine some large
+flooded-gum trees about a couple of miles to the N.W. of us. On
+arriving near them, we were astonished to find that they concealed a
+serpentine lagoon that had a belt of reeds round it. Keeping this
+lagoon upon our right, we at length came to the head of it, past which
+the river sweeps. Crossing the channel of the river, we continued to
+ride in an easterly direction to examine the country. In doing this,
+we struck on a second branch of the Castlereagh, leading W. by N. into
+a plain, which it of course inundates at times, and running up it, we
+found its bed at the point of separation, to be considerably higher
+than that of the main channel, which still continued of pure sand&mdash;and
+was stamped all over with the prints of the feet of natives, kangaroos,
+emus, and wild dogs, We then turned again to the head of the lagoon,
+and took the following bearings of Arbuthnot's range:
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ Mount Exmouth .......... E. 90 S.
+ Centre Range ........... E. 35 E.
+ Vernon's Peak .......... E. 20 S.
+</PRE>
+
+<P>
+From the head of the lagoon, the river appeared to enter a reedy
+hollow, shaded by a long line of flooded gum trees, and on proceeding
+to it, we found the banks ceased here altogether; and that a very
+considerable plain extended both to the right and the left, which
+cannot fail of being frequently laid under water.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+LAGOONS AND CREEKS OF THE CASTLEREAGH.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the following morning we moved the party to the lagoon, and, passing
+its head, encamped to the north of it; after which we again rode down
+the river in search of water. It continued to hold a straight and
+northerly course for about five miles, having a plain on either side.
+The reeds that had previously covered the channel then suddenly ceased,
+and the channel, contracting in breadth, gained in depth: it became
+extremely serpentine, and at length lost all the character and
+appearance of a river. It had many back channels, as large as the main
+one, serving to overflow the neighbouring country. We succeeded in
+finding a small pond of water in one of the former, hardly large enough
+to supply our necessities, but as it enabled us to push so much further
+on, we turned towards the lagoon, making a circuitous journey to the
+right, across a large plain, bounded to the north by low acacia brush
+and box. We struck upon a creek at the further extremity of the plain,
+in which there was a tolerably sized pond. It appeared from the traces
+of men, that some natives had been there the day before; but we did not
+see any of them. The water was extremely muddy and unfit for use. The
+lagoon at which we had encamped, was of less importance than we had
+imagined.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+JOURNEY DOWN THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Whilst Mr. Hume led the party down the river, I rode up its northward
+bank, to examine it more closely. I found it to be a serpentine sheet
+of about three miles in length, gradually decreasing in depth until it
+separated into two small creeks. In following one of them up, I
+observed that they re-united at the distance of about two miles, and
+that the lagoon was filled from the eastward, and not by the river as I
+had at first supposed. The waters at the head of the lagoon were
+putrid, nor was there a fish in, or a wild fowl upon it. The only bird
+we saw was a beautiful eagle, of the osprey kind, with plumage like a
+sea gull, which had a nest in the tree over the tents.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In turning to overtake the party I rode through a great deal of acacia
+scrub, and on arriving at the place at which I expected to have
+overtaken them, I found they had pushed on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Castlereagh, as I rode down it, diminished in size considerably,
+and became quite choked up with rushes and brambles. Rough-gum again
+made its appearance, with swamp-oak and a miserable acacia scrub
+outside. The country on both sides of the river seemed to be an
+interminable flat, and the soil of an inferior description.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WRETCHED APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I came up with with Mr. Hume about 1 o'clock and we again pushed
+forward at 3, and halted for the night without water, the want of which
+the cattle did not feel. The river held a general westerly course, and
+the country in its neighbourhood became extremely depressed and low. On
+the following day we moved forward a distance of not more than nine
+miles, through a country on which, at first, the acacia pendula alone
+was growing on a light alluvial soil. The river had many back drains,
+by means of which, in wet seasons, it inundates the adjacent plains. It
+was evident, however, that they had not been flooded for many years;
+and, notwithstanding that the country was low, the line of inundation
+did not appear to be very extensive, nor were there any reeds growing
+beyond the immediate banks of the river. Swamp-oak and rough-gum again
+prevailed near the stream at our halting place, and the improvement
+that had taken place, both in the country and in the Castlereagh, had
+induced us to make so short a journey; for not only was there abundance
+of the grass for the animals, but large ponds of water in the river.
+Some natives had only just preceded us down it: we came upon their
+fires that were still smoking; and upon them were the remains of some
+fish they had taken, near which they had left a cumbrous spear. The
+circumstances cheered us with hopes that an improvement would take
+place in the country, and that some new feature would soon open upon
+us. In the course of the following day, however, every favorable
+change, both in the river and in the country, disappeared. The latter
+continued extremely depressed, and in general open, or lightly covered
+with acacia pendula; the former dwindled into a mere ditch, choked up
+with brambles and reeds, and having only here and there a stagnant pool
+of water. We travelled on a N.W. 1/2 W. course for about ten miles, and
+again stopped for the night without water. In the course of the
+afternoon, we traversed several flats, on which the rough-gum alone was
+growing. These flats were evidently subject to flood; and contained an
+alluvial soil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They became more frequent as we travelled down the river, and the work
+was so heavy for the animals, that I was obliged to keep wide of them,
+in doing which we struck upon a creek of large size, coming from the
+N.E. and, having crossed, we traversed its right bank to its junction
+with the Castlereagh, and stopped close to it at a pond of water,
+though the feed for the animals was bad. The country to the left of the
+river, though somewhat high, was the same, in essential points, as that
+to the right.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Castlereagh seemed to have increased in size below the creek, but
+still it had no resemblance to a river. We had not proceeded very far
+down its banks, on the 18th, when we crossed a broad footpath leading
+to it from the interior. I turned my horse to the left, and struck upon
+a long sheet of water, from which I startled a number of pelicans. It
+was evident that the natives had recently been in the neighbourhood,
+but we thought it probable they might have been a hunting party, who
+had returned again to the plains. The whole track we passed over during
+the day was miserably poor and bare of vegetation, nor did the
+appearance of the country to the N.E. indicate any improvement. We lost
+the traces of the natives immediately after crossing their path or
+beat, and again found the bed of the river dry, after we had passed the
+sheet of water to which it led. The soil was so rotten and yielding,
+that the team knocked up early; indeed, it was a matter of surprise to
+me that they should not have failed before. The river made somewhat to
+the westward with little promise of improvement. The wretched
+appearance of the country as we penetrated into it, damped our spirits;
+we pressed on, however, with difficulty, over ground that was totally
+destitute of vegetation. Instead of lofty timber and a living stream,
+we wandered along the banks of an insignificant watercourse, and under
+trees of stunted size and scanty foliage. We stopped on the 20th at the
+angle of a creek, in which there was some dry grass, in consequence of
+the animals being almost in a starving state, but even here they had
+but little to eat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A violent thunder-storm passed over us in the afternoon, but it made no
+change in the temperature of the air. The weather, although it had been
+hot and sultry, had fallen far short of the intense heat we experienced
+in crossing the marshes of the Macquarie, when it was such as to melt
+the sugar in the canisters, and to destroy all our dogs; and our nights
+were now become agreeably cool.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+A PARTY OF NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We still, however, continued to travel over a dead level, nor was a
+height or break visible from the loftiest trees we ascended. A little
+before we stopped at the creek, we surprised a party of natives; old
+men, women, and children. They were preparing dinners of fish in much
+larger quantities than they could have devoured&mdash;probably for a part of
+the tribe that were absent; but the moment they saw us they fled, and
+left every thing at our mercy. On examining the fish, we found them
+totally different from any in the Macquarie, and took two of the most
+perfect to preserve. In the afternoon one of the men came to inform me
+that the tribe was coming down upon us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume and I, therefore, went to meet them. They were at this time
+about 150 yards from the tent, but seeing us advance, they stopped, and
+forming two deep, they marched to and fro, to a war song I suppose,
+crouching with their spears. We had not, however, any difficulty in
+communicating with them, and I shall detail the manner in which this
+was brought about, in hopes that it may help to guide others. When the
+natives saw us advance, they stopped, and we did the same. Mr. Hume
+then walked to a tree, and broke off a short branch. It is singular
+that this should, even with these rude people, be a token of peace. As
+soon as they saw the branch, the natives laid aside their spears, and
+two of them advanced about twenty paces in front of the rest, who sat
+down. Mr. Hume then went forward and sat down, when the two natives
+again advanced and seated themselves close to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every
+people is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with
+patience and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the
+interior. It is not to avoid alarming their natural timidity that a
+gradual approach is so necessary. They preserve the same ceremony among
+themselves. These men, who were eighteen in number, came with us to the
+tents, and received such presents as we had for them. They conducted
+themselves very quietly, and, after a short time, left us with every
+token of friendship.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+LARGE CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+On the 21st we proceeded down the river on a N.N.W. course, and at
+about five miles struck upon a very large creek, apparently coming from
+the E.N.E.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although the Castlereagh had increased in size, this creek was
+infinitely larger; it was, however, perfectly dry. Lofty flooded-gum
+trees were upon its banks, and it appeared so much superior to the
+river that I was induced to halt the party at the junction, in order to
+examine it more closely. Mr. Hume, therefore, rode with me up the right
+bank. We had not proceeded very far, when some natives called out to us
+from the opposite scrub. Thinking that they belonged to the tribe we
+had left behind us, we pointed to the junction, and motioned them to go
+there, but one of the party continued to follow and call to us for some
+time. On our return to the men, we found that the natives had joined
+them, and they now gave us to understand that we were going away from
+water. This had indeed been apparent to us. The creek was perfectly
+dry, as far as we traced it up; and seemed to have been totally
+deserted by the natives.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We were about to proceed on our journey, when from twenty to thirty
+natives approached us from down the river. We sent two of those who had
+been with us to them, and the whole accompanied us for some miles,
+talking incessantly to the men, but keeping at a very respectful
+distance from the animals. We at length got opposite to their camp,
+near which there was a very fine pool of water, and they were earnest
+in persuading us to stop at it. We were, however, too anxious to get
+forward to comply; under the improved appearance of the river since it
+had received the creeks from the eastward, little anticipating what was
+before us.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NATIVE ARMOURY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The natives did not follow us beyond their own encampment. Within sight
+of it, we came upon their armoury, if I may so term it. Numerous spears
+were reared against the trees, and heaps of boomerangs were lying on
+the ground. The spears were very heavy, and half barbed; and it is
+singular that three of them were marked with a broad arrow. We saw the
+natives watching us, fearful, I imagine, that we should help ourselves;
+but I would not permit any of their weapons to be touched.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXAMINATION OF CREEKS NEAR THE CASTLEREAGH.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Pursuing our journey, we reached another creek, at about five miles,
+similar to the last in appearance and size, and we crossed it
+repeatedly during the afternoon. We had been induced to keep along a
+native path in the hope that it would have led us to the river by a
+short cut; but it eventually led us to this creek, and away from the
+Castlereagh; for, notwithstanding that we subsequently changed our
+course to the S.W., we failed, as we supposed, again to strike upon the
+latter, and were obliged to stop for the night on the banks of what
+appeared to be a third large dry creek, which we intersected nearly at
+right angles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We travelled through a good deal of brush during the day, nor did the
+country change from the miserable and barren character it had assumed
+for the last thirty or forty miles. The Castlereagh had so frequently
+changed, that both Mr. Hume and myself were puzzled as to the identity
+of the creek upon which we had halted. We searched its bed in vain for
+water, although it was most capacious. Under an impression that the
+river was still to the south, and that we were at a point to which many
+watercourses from the high lands tended, I crossed the creek early in
+the morning, and held a S.W. course, over an open forest country. At
+about eight miles, we came upon a large space over-run by the polygonum
+junceum, a certain indication of flooded ground, and of our consequent
+proximity to some stream. Accordingly, after pushing through it, we
+struck upon a small creek with abundance of water in it. Whether this
+creek was the Castlereagh, which it resembled much more than the one we
+had left in the morning, was doubtful; but it was a great source of
+comfort to us to have so unexpected a supply of water as that which was
+now at our disposal. Whatever channel this was, whether a river or a
+creek, our tracing it down would lead us in the direction we wished to
+go, and probably to some junction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The neighbourhood of the creek was well clothed with vegetation, and
+the cattle found good feed; but the only trees near it were rough-gum
+and casuarinae; the flooded-gum had again disappeared. The soil of the
+forest land over which we journeyed was a light sandy loam; and its
+timber consisted chiefly of eucalypti, acacia pendula, and the
+angophora.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some natives visited us in the afternoon, and among them, both Mr. Hume
+and I recognized one of those we had seen on the Darling. He also knew
+us again, but we could not make out from him how far we were from that
+river. They stayed with us till sunset, and then went down the creek,
+leaving their spears against a tree, for which they said they would
+return.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 23rd we took up a W.N.W. course, and when we again touched on
+the creek it was dry. This was at a distance of about five miles from
+where we had slept. As the animals had not recovered from their late
+privations, I deemed it better to halt the party and to examine the
+creek for a few miles below us, that in case it should prove destitute
+of water, we might return to that we had left. Mr. Hume accordingly
+rode down it for about three miles, without success; and on his
+rejoining the men, we returned with them to our last camp, or to within
+a short distance of it. Wishing to examine the creek above our
+position, I requested Mr. Hume to take two men with him, and to trace
+it down in search of water, while I should proceed in the opposite
+direction. I went from the camp at an early hour, and as I wandered
+along the creek, I passed a regular chain of ponds. The country on both
+sides of the creek was evidently subject to flood, but more extensively
+to the south than to the north. From the creek, I struck away to my
+left, and after penetrating through a belt of swamp-oak and minor
+shrubs, got on a small plain, which I crossed N.E. and, to my
+annoyance, found it covered with rhagodia and salsolae. As I had not
+started with the intention of sleeping, I turned to the S.W. a little
+before sunset, and reached the tents between ten and eleven. I found
+Mr. Hume awaiting me. He informed me that at about nine miles from
+where we had turned back with the party, he had struck upon a junction;
+and that as the junction was much larger than the channel he had been
+tracing, he thought it better to follow it up for a few miles. He found
+that it narrowed in width, and that its banks became steep, with a fine
+avenue of flooded-gum trees overhanging them. At four miles, he came
+upon another junction, and at four miles more, found himself opposite
+to the ground on which we had slept on the previous Saturday. From this
+point he retraced the channel, but not finding any water for three
+miles below the lower junction, he returned to the camp, with a view of
+prosecuting a longer journey on the morrow. Mr. Hume had become
+impressed with an opinion, that the junction up which we had slept was
+no other than the Castlereagh itself; and that our position was on a
+creek, probably Morrisset's chain of ponds, flowing into it. As the
+cattle wanted a few days' rest, Mr. Hume and I determined to ride,
+unattended, along our track to our camp of the 21st, and then to follow
+the channel upwards, until we should arrive at the station of the
+natives, or until we should have ridden to such a distance as would set
+our conjectures at rest. In the morning, however, instead of running
+upon our old track, we followed that of Mr. Hume to the junction,
+giving up our first intention, with a view to ascertain if there
+existed any water which we could, by an effort, gain, below where Mr.
+Hume had been. The channel was very broad, with a considerable fall in
+its bed, and, in appearance, more resembled the slope of a lawn than
+the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees in the centre of its channel,
+in one of which the floods had left the trunk of a large tree. We could
+discover where it narrowed and its banks rose, but, as we intended to
+make a closer examination before we left the neighbourhood, we
+continued our journey down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
+an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood, but the distant
+country was miserably poor and bare. At about three miles, we came upon
+the fresh traces of some natives, which led us to the channel again,
+from which we had wandered unintentionally. In it we found there had
+been water very lately, and it appeared that the natives had dug holes
+at the bottom to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted, but
+still retained the appearance of moisture. At a mile and a half beyond
+these, we were led to some similar holes, by observing a number of
+birds flying about them. The water was too muddy for us to drink, but
+the horses emptied them successively. We now kept sufficiently near the
+channel to insure our seeing any pool that might still remain in it,
+but rode for about seven miles before we again saw water, and even
+here, although it was a spring, we were obliged to dig holes, and await
+their filling, before we could get sufficient for our use. Having
+dined, we again pursued our journey, and almost immediately came upon a
+long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined by bulrushes. The creek or
+river had for some time kept the centre of a deep alluvial valley, in
+which there was plenty of food for the cattle, and which, at this
+place, was apparently broader than anywhere else. The situation being
+favourable, we returned to the camp, and reached it late.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DEPRESSION OF THE MEN.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture, but I fancied,
+about this time, that the men generally were desponding. Whether it was
+that the constant fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our
+constant absence, or the consequent exhaustion it produced, had any
+effect on their minds, or that they feared the result of our
+perseverance, is difficult to say; but certainly, they all had a
+depression of spirits, and looked, I thought, altered in appearance;
+nor did they evince any satisfaction at our success&mdash;at least, not the
+satisfaction they would have shown at an earlier period of our journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain if the channel
+from the junction was the Castlereagh, or only a creek. The
+intersection of so many channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so
+much alike, made it essentially necessary that we should satisfy
+ourselves on this point. Mr. Hume, therefore, accompanied me, as had at
+first been intended the morning of our return to the place at which we
+had slept. We took fresh horses, but dispensed with any other
+attendants, and indeed went wholly unarmed.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CAMP OF NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+After following our old track to its termination, we kept up the right
+bank of the channel, and at length arrived at the camp of the natives;
+thus satisfying ourselves that we had been journeying on the
+Castlereagh, and that we were still following it down. By this ride we
+ascertained that there was a distance of five-and-forty miles in its
+bed without a drop of water. Few of the natives were in the camp. The
+women avoided us, but not as if they were under any apprehension.
+Crossing at the head of the pool, we again got on our old track, but
+seeing two or three men coming towards us we alighted, and, tying our
+horses to a tree, went to meet them. One poor fellow had two ducks in
+his hand, which he had just taken off the fire; these he offered to us,
+and on our declining to accept of them, he called to a boy, who soon
+appeared with a large trough of honey, of which we partook. One of the
+men had an ulcer in the arm, and asked me what he should do to heal it;
+indeed, I believe Fraser had promised him some ointment, but not having
+any with me, I signified to him that he should wash it often, and
+stooping down, made as if I was taking up water in my hand. The poor
+fellow mistook me, and, also stooping down, took up a handful of dust
+which he threw over the sore. This gave me the trouble of explaining
+matters again, and by pointing to the water, I believe I at length made
+him understand me.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DRY CHANNEL OF THE RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+These good natured people asked us where we had slept the day we
+passed, and when informed of the direction, shook their heads,
+motioning at the same time, that we must have been without water. We
+informed them where the party was, and asked them to come and see us,
+but I fancy the distance was too great, or else we were in the beat of
+another tribe. On mentioning these facts to the men, they said that two
+of the natives had followed us for some miles, calling out loudly to
+us, but Mr. Hume and I both being in front, we did not hear them,
+although, evidently, they wished to save us distress.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Since the result of our excursion proved that the channel, about which
+I had been so doubtful, was the Castlereagh, it necessarily followed,
+that the creek at which we were encamped was one of those (most
+probably Morrisset's chain of ponds,) which we had already crossed
+nearer its source, and which Mr. Hume must have struck upon when
+endeavouring to gain the Castlereagh from the marshes of the Macquarie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A perusal of these sheets will ere this have impressed on the reader's
+mind, the peculiarity of that fortune which led us from the Castlereagh
+to the creek, at which alone our wants could have been supplied. Had we
+wandered down the river, as we undoubtedly should have done had we
+recognised it as such, the loss of many of our animals would have been
+the inevitable consequence, and very probably a final issue would have
+been put to our journey. It is only to those who are placed in
+situations that baffle their own exertions or foresight, that the
+singular guidance of Providence becomes fully apparent.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+NATIVES PERISHING FROM FAMINE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It would appear that the natives were dying fast, not from any disease,
+but from the scarcity of food; and, should the drought continue, it
+seemed probable they may became extinct.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The men found the body of a woman covered with leaves near the tents,
+and very properly buried it. We made Friday a day of rest for
+ourselves, as indeed was necessary; and on the following morning
+proceeded down the river, and encamped on a high bank above it, at the
+base of which, our cattle both fed and watered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At this spot one of the largest gum-trees I had ever seen had fallen,
+having died for want of moisture; indeed, the state of the vegetable
+kingdom was such as to threaten its total extinction, unless a change
+of seasons should take place.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It may be worthy of remark that, from our first arrival on the banks of
+the Castlereagh, to our arrival at the present camp, we never picked up
+a stone, or a pebble, in its bed.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+JUNCTION OF THE CASTLEREAGH WITH THE DARLING.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In the hope that we should fall on some detached pond, we pursued our
+journey on the 29th. The Castlereagh gave singular proofs of its
+violence, as if its waters, confined in the valley, had a difficulty in
+escaping from it. We had not travelled two miles, when in crossing, as
+we imagined, one of its bights, we found ourselves checked by a broad
+river. A single glimpse of it was sufficient to tell us it was the
+Darling. At a distance of more than ninety miles nearer its source,
+this singular river still preserved its character, so strikingly, that
+it was impossible not to have recognised it in a moment. The same steep
+banks and lofty timber, the same deep reaches, alive with fish, were
+here visible as when we left it. A hope naturally arose to our minds,
+that if it was unchanged in other respects, it might have lost the
+saltness that rendered its waters unfit for use; but in this we were
+disappointed&mdash;even its waters continued the same. As it was impossible
+for us to cross the Darling, I determined on falling back upon our last
+encampment, which was at a most Convenient distance, and of concerting
+measures there for our future movements. Prior to doing so, however, I
+rode to the junction of the Castlereagh with the Darling, accompanied
+by Mr. Hume, a distance of about half a mile. Upon the point formed by
+the two streams, there were a number of huts, and on the opposite bank
+of the Darling, about twenty natives had collected. We called out to
+them, but they would not join us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the junction, the Castlereagh, with whatever impetuosity it rushes
+from its confinement, makes not apparently the least impression on the
+Darling River. The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a
+tributary.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IV.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Perplexity&mdash;Trait of honesty in the natives&mdash;Excursion on horseback
+across the Darling&mdash;Forced to return&mdash;Desolating effects of the
+drought&mdash;Retreat towards the colony&mdash;Connection between the Macquarie
+and the Darling&mdash;Return up the banks of the Macquarie&mdash;Starving
+condition of the natives.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+On our return to the party, we found them surrounded by the natives,
+who were looking with an eye of wonder on the cattle and horses. We
+pointed out to them the direction in which we were going, and invited
+them to visit us; and nothing appeared to astonish them so much as the
+management of the team by a single man. We got back to our position
+early, and again fixed ourselves upon it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It now only remained for us to consider what we should do under
+circumstances of certainly more than ordinary perplexity. We had
+nothing to hope for from travelling in a southerly direction, while to
+the E. and N.E., the state of the country was worse than that by which
+we had penetrated to the Darling. It was evident, that the large creeks
+joining the Castlereagh in that direction were dry, since the natives
+not only intimated this to us, but it was unquestionable that they
+themselves had deserted them, and had crowded to such places as still
+contained a supply of water. Even in retreating, we could not hope to
+retrace our steps. Experience had proved to us, that the dry state of
+the interior was as injurious to the movements of an expedition as a
+too wet season would have been. Taking everything, therefore, into
+consideration, I determined on leaving the party stationary, and on
+crossing the Darling to the N.W., and, if any encouraging feature
+presented itself, to return for the party, and persevere in an
+examination of the distant interior. Such, at least, appeared to me the
+most judicious plan: indeed, an attempt to have moved in any other
+direction would have been fruitless. And, as the result of this journey
+would be decisive, and would either fix or determine our advance or
+retreat, I was anxious for Mr. Hume's attendance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The natives followed to the camp, and in the course of the afternoon,
+were joined by their women. The latter however, would not approach
+nearer than the top of a little hillock on which they sat. The men did
+not come round the tents, but stood in a row at a short distance. At
+sunset, they gained a little courage, and wandered about a little more;
+at length they went off to the Darling.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+HONESTY OF A NATIVE.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It was quite dark, when I heard a native call from the hill on which
+the women had been, and I desired Hopkinson to take his firelock and
+ascertain what the man wanted. He soon after returned, and brought a
+blanket, which he said the man had returned to him. The native was
+alone, and when he offered the blanket, kept his spear poised in his
+right hand; but, seeing that no violence was intended him, he lowered
+his weapon, and walked away.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+REWARD THE MAN FOR HIS CONDUCT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I was extremely pleased at this trait of honesty, and determined to
+reward it. On inquiry, I found that the men had availed themselves of
+the day to wash their blankets and that one of them had been flung over
+a bush hanging over the bank of the river, and it was supposed that one
+of the natives must have pulled it down with him. In the morning, the
+tribe went away from their encampment before day-light as we judged
+from the cry of their dogs, than which nothing could be more
+melancholy; but about eight, the men made their appearance on the hill
+occupied by the women the evening previously, and seemed to be doubtful
+whether to approach nearer. I went out to them, and, with a downward
+motion of my hand, beckoned for them to come to me: they mistook the
+signal, but laid all their spears on the ground, and it was not until
+after the sign had been reversed that they stirred or moved towards me.
+I then got them in a row, and desired Hopkinson to single out the man
+who had given him the blanket. It was, however, with great difficulty
+that he recognised him, as the man stood firm and motionless. At
+length, after walking two or three times along the line, he stopped
+before one man, and put his hand on his shoulder, upon which the manner
+of the native testified as to the correctness of his guess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The blanket being produced, I explained to the savage, with Mr. Hume's
+assistance, that I was highly pleased with him, and forthwith presented
+him with a tomahawk and a clasp-knife. The tribe were perfectly aware
+of the reason of my conduct, and all of them seemed highly delighted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was happy in having such an opportunity of showing the natives of the
+interior that I came among them with a determination to maintain
+justice in my communication with them, and to impress them, at the same
+time, with a sense of our love of it in them. That they appreciated my
+apparent lenity in not calling for the defaulter, I am sure, and I feel
+perfectly conscious that I should have failed in my duty had I acted
+otherwise than I did.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EFFECT OF FIRING A GUN.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Although the natives had shown so good a disposition, as they were
+numerous, I thought it as well, since I was about to leave the camp, to
+show them that I had a power they little dreamt of about me. I
+therefore called for my gun and fired a ball into a tree. The effect of
+the report upon the natives, was truly ridiculous. Some stood and
+stared at me, others fell down, and others ran away; and it was with
+some difficulty we collected them again. At last, however, we did so,
+and, leaving them to pick out the ball, mounted our horses and struck
+away for the Darling. We crossed the river a little above where we
+struck it, and then proceeded N.W. into the interior.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+EXCURSION ACROSS THE DARLING.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It is impossible for me to describe the nature of the country over
+which we passed, for the first eight miles. We rode through brushes of
+polygonum, under rough-gum, without a blade of vegetation, the whole
+space being subject to inundation. We then got on small plains of
+firmer surface, and red soil, but these soon changed again for the
+former; and at 4 p.m. we found ourselves advanced about two miles on a
+plain that stretched away before us, and bounded the horizon. It was
+dismally brown; a few trees only served to mark the distance. Up one of
+the highest I sent Hopkinson, who reported that he could not see the
+end of it, and that all around looked blank and desolate. It is a
+singular fact, that during the whole day, we had not seen a drop of
+water or a blade of grass.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DESOLATING EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+To have stopped where we were, would, therefore, have been impossible;
+to have advanced, would probably have been ruin. Had there been one
+favorable circumstance to have encouraged me with the hope of success,
+I would have proceeded. Had we picked up a stone as indicating our
+approach to high land, I would have gone on; or had there been a break
+in the level of the country, or even a change in the vegetation. But we
+had left all traces of the natives far behind us; and this seemed a
+desert they never entered&mdash;that not even a bird inhabited. I could not
+encourage a hope of success, and, therefore, gave up the point; not
+from want of means, but a conviction of the inutility of any further
+efforts. If there is any blame to be attached to the measure, it is I
+who am in fault, but none who had not like me traversed the interior at
+such a season, would believe the state of the country over which I had
+wandered. During the short interval I had been out, I had seen rivers
+cease to flow before me, and sheets of water disappear; and had it not
+been for a merciful Providence, should, ere reaching the Darling, have
+been overwhelmed by misfortune.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am giving no false picture of the reality. So long had the drought
+continued, that the vegetable kingdom was almost annihilated, and minor
+vegetation had disappeared. In the creeks, weeds had grown and
+withered, and grown again; and young saplings were now rising in their
+beds, nourished by the moisture that still remained; but the largest
+forest trees were drooping, and many were dead. The emus, with
+outstretched necks, gasping for breath, searched the channels of the
+rivers for water, in vain; and the native dog, so thin that it could
+hardly walk, seemed to implore some merciful hand to despatch it. How
+the natives subsisted it was difficult to say, but there was no doubt
+of the scarcity of food among them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We arrived in camp at a late hour, and having nothing to detain us
+longer, prepared for our retreat in the morning. The natives had
+remained with the party during the greater part of the day, and had
+only left them a short time prior to our arrival.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When examining the creek on which we had been encamped for some days,
+Mr. Hume observed a small junction; and as we knew we were almost due
+N. of the marshes of the Macquarie, both of us were anxious to
+ascertain whence it originated. To return to Mount Harris, by retracing
+our steps up the Castlereagh, would have entailed the severest distress
+upon us; we the rather preferred proceeding up this creek, and taking
+our chance for a supply of water. We therefore crossed Morrisset's
+chain of ponds, and encamped in the angle formed by the junction of the
+two creeks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before we left this position, we were visited by a party of natives,
+twelve in number, but not of the Darling tribe. They accompanied us a
+short way, and then struck off to the right. At about a mile and a
+half, we crossed Mr. Hume's track, leading westerly, which still
+remained observable. The creek was, no doubt, the hollow he stated that
+he crossed on that excursion, and its appearance certainly justified
+his opinion of it. Its bed was choked up with bulrushes or the
+polygonum, and its banks were level with the country on either side, or
+nearly so. We passed over extremely rich soil the whole day, on a S.W.
+and by W. course, though the timber upon it was dwarfish, and
+principally of the rough-gum kind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 2nd of April, we stopped in order to make some repairs upon the
+dray; the wheels of which had failed us. Clayton put in four new
+spokes, and we heated the tyres over again, by which means we got it
+once more serviceable.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WILD MELON.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The soil in the creek was of the richest quality, and was found to
+produce a dwarf melon, having all the habits and character of the
+cucumber. The fruit was not larger than a pigeon's egg, but was
+extremely sweet. There were not, however, many ripe, although the
+runners were covered with flowers, and had an abundance of fruit upon
+them. In the morning, we sent the tinker on horseback up the creek, to
+ascertain how far the next water was from us, desiring him to keep the
+creek upon his right, and to follow his own track back again. He
+thought fit, however, considering himself a good bushman, to wander
+away to his left, and the consequence was, that he soon lost himself.
+It would appear that he doubled and passed through some thick brush at
+the back of the camp, and at length found himself at dark on the banks
+of a considerable creek. In wandering along it, he luckily struck upon
+the natives we had last seen, who, good-naturedly, led him to the track
+of the dray, which his horse would not afterwards desert, and the
+tinker sneaked into the tent about 3 o'clock in the morning, having
+failed in his errand, and made himself the butt of the whole party.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RETURN UP THE CREEK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The day succeeding this adventure, we moved up the creek, which was,
+for the most part, even with the plain. The country continued the same
+as that we had passed over from the junction, being subject to flood,
+and having patches of bulrushes and reeds upon it. No change took place
+in the timber, but the line of acacia pendula, which forms the line of
+inundation, approached neater to us; nor was the mark of flood so high
+on the trunks of trees as below. We halted, with abominable water, but
+excellent food for the animals in the plains behind us. In continuing
+our journey, we found several changes take place in the appearance of
+the creek and its neighbourhood. The former diminished in size, and at
+length separated into two distinct channels, choked up, for the most
+part, with dead bulrushes, but having a few green reeds in patches
+along it. The flats on either side became slightly timbered, and blue
+gum was the prevailing tree. Crossing one of the channels, we observed
+every appearance of our near approach to the marshes, the flats being
+intersected by many little water-runs, such as we had noticed at the
+bottom of them. About noon we struck upon a body of reeds under the
+wood of eucalypti, below the second great morass, and keeping a little
+to our right to avoid them, fell shortly afterwards into our old track
+on the plain, upon which we continued to move, making the best of our
+way to the channel which had supplied our wants on our first return
+from the Darling. It was now, however, quite dry, and we were obliged
+to push on further, to shorten the journey of the morrow.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CONNECTION OF MACQUARIE AND DARLING.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The result of our journey up the creek was particularly satisfactory,
+both to myself and Mr. Hume; since it cleared up every doubt that might
+have existed regarding the actual termination of the Macquarie, and
+enabled us to connect the flow of waters at so interesting and
+particular a point. It will be seen by a reference to the chart, that
+the waters of the marshes, after trickling through the reeds, form a
+small creek, which carries off the superfluous part of them into
+Morrisset's chain of ponds, which latter again falls into the
+Castlereagh, at about eight miles to the W.N.W. and all three join the
+Darling in a W. by N. direction, in lat. 30 degrees 52 minutes south
+and E. lon. 147 degrees 8 minutes at about 90 miles to the N.N.W. of
+Mount Harris, and about an equal distance to the E.S.E. of where we
+struck upon the last-mentioned river. Thus it is evident that the
+Darling had considerably neared the eastern ranges, although it was
+still more than 150 miles from their base. It was apparently coming
+from the N.E., and whether it has its sources in the mountains behind
+our distant settlements, or still farther to the northwards, is a
+question of curious speculation, although, as I have already stated, I
+am of opinion that none but tropical rains could supply the furious
+torrent that must sometimes rage in it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It would be presumptuous to hazard any opinion as to the nature of the
+interior to the westward of that remarkable river. Its course is
+involved in equal mystery, and it is a matter of equal doubt whether it
+makes its way to the south coast, or ultimately exhausts itself in
+feeding a succession of swamps, or falls into a large reservoir in the
+centre of the island.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RETURN TO MOUNT HARRIS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We reached Mount Harris on the 7th of the month, and moving leisurely
+up the banks of the Macquarie, gained Mr. Palmer's first station on the
+14th, and Wellington Valley on the 21st, having been absent from that
+settlement four months and two weeks. The waters of the Macquarie had
+diminished so much, that its bed was dry for more than half a mile at a
+stretch, nor did we observe the least appearance of a current in it,
+until after we had ascended the ranges. The lower tribes were actually
+starving, and brought their children to us to implore something to eat.
+The men attempted to surprise the camp, but I believe they were urged
+from absolute necessity to procure subsistence for themselves, and that
+they intended robbery rather than personal violence.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DEPLORABLE STATE OF THE COUNTRY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+We left the interior in a still more deplorable state than that in
+which we found it; but it is more than probable that under other
+circumstances, we should have found it impossible to traverse its
+distant plains, as it is certain that unless rain fell in less than
+three weeks, all communication with the Darling would have been cut off:
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER V.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+General remarks&mdash;Result of the expedition&mdash;Previous anticipations&mdash;Mr.
+Oxley's remarks&mdash;Character of the Rivers flowing westerly&mdash;Mr.
+Cunningham's remarks&mdash;Fall of the Macquarie&mdash;Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally
+inferred from the state in which he found the country&mdash;The marsh of the
+Macquarie merely a marsh of the ordinary character&mdash;Captain King's
+observations&mdash;Course of the Darling&mdash;Character of the low interior
+plain&mdash;The convict Barber's report of rivers traversing the
+interior&mdash;Surveyor-General Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+RESULT OF THE EXPEDITION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Whether the discoveries that have been made during this expedition,
+will ultimately prove of advantage to the colony of New South Wales, is
+a question that time alone can answer. We have in the meanwhile to
+regret that no beneficial consequences will immediately follow them.
+The further knowledge that has been gained of the interior is but as a
+gleam of sunshine over an extensive landscape. A stronger light has
+fallen upon the nearer ground, but the distant horizon is still
+enveloped in clouds. The veil has only as it were been withdrawn from
+the marshes of the Macquarie to be spread over the channel of the
+Darling. Unsatisfactory, however, as the discoveries may as yet be
+considered in a commercial point of view, the objects for which the
+expedition had been fitted out were happily attained. The marsh it had
+been directed to examine, was traversed on every side, and the rivers
+it had been ordered to trace, were followed down to their terminations
+to a distance far beyond where they had ceased to exist as living
+streams. To many who may cast their eyes over the accompanying chart,
+the extent of newly discovered country may appear trifling; but when
+they are told, that there is not a mile of that ground that was not
+traversed over and over again, either by Mr. Hume or by myself, that we
+wandered over upwards of 600 miles more than the main body of the
+expedition, on different occasions, in our constant and anxious search
+for water, and that we seldom dismounted from our horses, until long
+after sunset, they will acknowledge the difficulties with which we had
+to contend, and will make a generous allowance for them; for, however
+unsuccessful in some respects the expedition may have been, it
+accomplished as much, it is to be hoped, as under such trying
+circumstances could have been accomplished. It now only remains for me
+to sum up the result of my own observations, and to point out to the
+reader, how far the actual state of the interior, has been found to
+correspond with the opinions that were entertained of it.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. OXLEY'S REMARKS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I have already stated, in the introduction to this work, that the
+general impression on the minds of those best qualified to judge was,
+that the western streams discharged themselves into a central shoal
+sea. Mr. Oxley thus expresses himself on the subject:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+"July 3rd. Towards morning the storm abated, and at day-light, we
+proceeded on our voyage. The main bed of the river was much contracted,
+but very deep; the waters spreading to the depth of a foot or eighteen
+inches over the banks, but all running on the same point of bearing. We
+met with considerable interruptions from fallen timber, which in places
+nearly choked up the channel. After going about twenty miles, we lost
+the land and trees; the channel of the river, which lay through reeds,
+and was from one to three feet deep, ran northerly.&mdash;This continued for
+three or four miles farther, when, although there had been no previous
+change in the breadth, depth, or rapidity of the stream for several
+miles, and I was sanguine in my expectations of soon entering the
+long-sought-for Australian sea, it all at once eluded our farther
+pursuit, by spreading on every point from N.W. to N.E. among the ocean
+of reeds which surrounded us, still running with the same rapidity as
+before. There was no channel whatever among those reeds, and the depth
+varied from three to five feet. This astonishing change (for I cannot
+call it a termination of the river) of course left me no alternative
+but to endeavour to return to some spot on which we could effect a
+landing before dark. I estimated, that during the day, we had gone
+about twenty-four miles, on nearly the same point of bearing as
+yesterday. To assert, positively, that we were on the margin of the
+lake, or sea, into which this great body of water is discharged, might
+reasonably be deemed a conclusion, which has nothing but conjecture for
+its basis. But if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from
+actual appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the
+immediate vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal
+one, and gradually filling up by numerous depositions from the high
+lands, left by the waters which flow into it. It is most singular, that
+the high lands on this continent seem to be confined to the sea-coast,
+and not to extend to any distance from it."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. CUNNINGHAM'S REMARKS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In a work published at Sydney, containing an account of Mr. Allan
+Cunningham's journey towards Moreton Bay, in 1828, the following
+remarks occur, from which it is evident Mr. Cunningham entertained Mr.
+Oxley's views of the character and nature of the Western interior.
+Towards the conclusion of the narrative, the author thus observes:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+"Of the probable character of the distant unexplored interior, into
+which it has been ascertained ALL the rivers falling westerly from the
+dividing ranges flow, some inference may be drawn from the following
+data.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Viewing, between the parallels of 34 degrees and 27 degrees, a vast
+area of depressed interior, subjected in seasons of prolonged rains to
+partial inundation, by a dispersion of the several waters that flow
+upon it from the eastern mountains whence they originate; and bearing
+in mind at the same time, that the declension of the country within the
+above parallels, as most decidedly shown by the dip of its several
+rivers, is uniformly to the N.N.W. and N.W., it would appear very
+conclusive, that either a portion of our distant interior is occupied
+by a lake of considerable magnitude, or that the confluence of those
+large streams, the Macquarie, Castlereagh, Gwydir, and the Dumaresq,
+with the many minor interfluent waters, which doubtless takes place
+upon those low levels, forms one or more noble rivers, which may flow
+across the continent by an almost imperceptible declivity of country to
+the north of north-west coasts, on certain parts of which, recent
+surveys have discovered to us extensive openings, by which the largest
+accumulations of waters might escape to the sea."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CHARACTER OF THE RIVERS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+It is the characteristic of the streams falling westerly from the
+eastern, or coast ranges, to maintain a breadth of channel and a
+rapidity of current more immediately near their sources, that ill
+accords with their diminished size, and the sluggish flow of their
+waters in the more depressed interior. In truth, neither the Macquarie
+nor the Castlereagh can strictly be considered as permanent rivers. The
+last particularly is nothing more than a mountain torrent. The
+Macquarie, although it at length ceased to run, kept up the appearance
+of a river to the very marshes; but the bed of the Castlereagh might
+have been crossed in many places without being noticed, nor did its
+channel contain so much water as was to be found on the neighbouring
+plains.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There are two circumstances upon which the magnitude, and velocity of a
+river, more immediately depend. The first is the abundance of its
+sources, the other the dip of its bed. If a stream has constant
+fountains at its head, and numerous tributaries joining it in its
+course, and flows withal through a country of gradual descent, such a
+stream will never fail; but if the supplies do not exceed the
+evaporation and absorption, to which every river is subject, if a river
+dependant on its head alone, falls rapidly into a level country,
+without receiving a single addition to its waters to assist the first
+impulse acquired in their descent, it must necessarily cease to flow at
+one point or other. Such is the case with the Lachlan, the Macquarie,
+the Castlereagh, and the Darling. Whence the latter originates, still
+remains to be ascertained; but most undoubtedly its sources have been
+influenced by the same drought that has exhausted the fountains of the
+three first mentioned streams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In supporting his opinion of the probable discharge of the interior
+waters of Australia upon its north-west coast, Mr. Cunningham thus
+remarks in the publication from which I have already made an extract.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+"To those remarkable parts of the north-west coast above referred to in
+the parallel of 16 degrees south, the Macquarie river, which rises in
+lat. 33 degrees, and under the meridian of 150 degrees east, would have
+a course of 2045 statute miles throughout, while the elevation of its
+source, being 3500 feet above the level of the sea as shown by the
+barometer, would give its waters an average descent of twenty inches to
+the mile, supposing the bed of the river to be an inclined plane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Gwydir originating in elevated land, lying in 31 degrees south,
+and long. 151 degrees east, at a mean height of 3000 feet, would have
+to flow 2020 miles, its elevated sources giving to each a mean fall of
+seventeen inches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dumaresq's river falling 2970 feet from granite mountains, in 28 1/4
+degrees under the meridian of 152 degrees, would have to pursue its
+course for 2969 miles, its average fall being eighteen inches to a
+mile."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As I have never been upon the banks either of the Gwydir or the
+Dumaresq, I cannot speak of those two rivers; but in estimating the
+sources of the Macquarie at 3500 feet above the level of the sea, Mr.
+Cunningham has lost sight of, or overlooked the fact, that the fall of
+its bed in the first two hundred miles, is more than 2800 feet, since
+the cataract, which is midway between Wellington Valley and the
+marshes, was ascertained by barometrical admeasurement, to be 680 feet
+only above the ocean. The country, therefore, through which the
+Macquarie would have to flow during the remainder of its course of 1700
+miles, in order to gain the N.W. coast, would not be a gradually
+inclined plain, but for the most part a dead level, and the fact of its
+failure is a sufficient proof in itself how short the course of a river
+so circumstanced must necessarily be.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MR. OXLEY'S OPINIONS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Having conversed frequently with Mr. Oxley on the subject of his
+expeditions, I went into the interior prepossessed in favour of his
+opinions, nor do I think he could have drawn any other conclusion than
+that which he did, from his experience of the terminations of the
+rivers whose courses he explored. Had Mr. Oxley advanced forty, or even
+thirty miles, farther than he did, to the westward of Mount Harris;
+nay, had he proceeded eight miles in the above direction beyond the
+actual spot from which he turned back, he would have formed other and
+very different opinions of the probable character of the distant
+interior. But I am aware that Mr. Oxley performed all that enterprise,
+and perseverance, and talent could have performed, and that it would
+have been impracticable in him to have attempted to force its marshes
+in the state in which he found them. It was from his want of knowledge
+of their nature and extent, that he inferred the swampy and
+inhospitable character of the more remote country, a state in which
+subsequent investigation has found it not to be. The marsh of the
+Macquarie is nothing more than an ordinary marsh or swamp in another
+country. However large a space it covers, it is no more than a
+concavity or basin for the reception of the waters of the river itself,
+nor has it any influence whatever on the country to the westward of it,
+in respect to inundation; the general features of the latter being a
+regular alternation of plain and brush. These facts are in themselves
+sufficient to give a fresh interest to the interior of the Australian
+continent, and to increase its importance.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CAPT. KING'S OPINIONS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+With respect to that part of its coast at which the rivers falling from
+the eastern mountains, discharge themselves, it is a question of very
+great doubt. It seems that Capt. King, in consequence of some
+peculiarities in the currents at its N.W. angle, supports Mr.
+Cunningham's opinion as to their probable discharge in that quarter.
+But I fear the internal structure of the continent is so low, as to
+preclude the hopes of any river reaching from one extremity of it to
+the other. A variety of local circumstances, as the contraction of a
+channel, a shoal sea, or numerous islands, influence currents
+generally, but more especially round so extensive a continent as that
+of which we are treating; nor does it strike me that any observations
+made by Capt. King during his survey, can be held to bear any
+connection with the eastern ranges, or their western waters. It may,
+however, be said, that as the course of the Darling is still involved
+in uncertainty, the question remains undecided; but it appears to me,
+the discovery of that river has set aside every conjecture (founded on
+previous observation) respecting the main features of the interior
+lying to the westward of the Blue Mountains. Both Mr. Oxley and Mr.
+Cunningham drew their conclusions from the appearances of the country
+they severally explored. The ground on which those theories were built,
+has been travelled over, and has not been found to realise them, but
+subsequent investigation has discovered to us a river, the dip of whose
+bed is to the S.W. We have every reason to believe that the sources of
+this river must be far to the northward of the most distant northerly
+point to which any survey has been made, as we are certain that it is
+far beyond the stretch of vision from the loftiest and most westerly of
+the barrier ranges; from which circumstance, it is evident that
+whatever disposition the streams descending from those ranges to the
+westward may show to hold a N.W. course more immediately at the base,
+the whole of the interior streams, from the Macquarie to the Dumaresq,
+are tributaries to the principal channel which conveys their united
+waters at right angles, if not still more opposite to the direction
+they were supposed to take, as far as is yet known.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+COURSE OF THE DARLING.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The Darling River must be considered as the boundary line to all inland
+discoveries from the eastward. Any judgment or opinion of the interior
+to the westward of that stream, would be extremely premature and
+uncertain. There is not a single feature over it to guide or to
+strengthen either the one or the other.
+</P>
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+CHARACTER OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+My impression, when travelling the country to the west and N.W. of the
+marshes of the Macquarie, was, that I was traversing a country of
+comparatively recent formation. The sandy nature of its soil, the great
+want of vegetable decay, the salsolaceous character of its plants, the
+appearance of its isolated hills and flooded tracts, and its trifling
+elevations above the sea, severally contributed to strengthen these
+impressions on my mind. My knowledge of the interior is, however, too
+limited to justify me in any conclusion with regard to the central
+parts of Australia. An ample field is open to enterprise and to
+ambition, and it is to be hoped that some more decisive measures will
+be carried into effect, both for the sake of the colony and of
+geography, to fill up the blank upon the face of the chart of
+Australia, and remove from us the reproach of indifference and inaction.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+BARBER'S STATEMENT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Since the above pages were written, an expedition was undertaken by
+Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, to ascertain the truth of a
+report brought in by a runaway convict of the name of Barber, or
+Clarke, who had been at large for five years, at different times, among
+the natives to the northward of Port Macquarie. This man stated that a
+large river, originating in the high lands near Liverpool Plains, and
+the mountains to the north of them, pursued a N.W. course to the sea.
+His story ran thus: Having learnt from the natives the existence of
+this river, he determined to follow it down, in hopes that he might
+ultimately be enabled to make his escape from the colony. He
+accordingly started from Liverpool Plains, and kept on a river called
+the Gnamoi, for some time, which took him N.W. After a few days'
+journey, he left this river, traversed the country northwards, and
+crossed some lofty ranges. Descending to the N.E. he came to another
+large river, the Keindur, which again took him N.W. He travelled 400
+miles down it, when he observed a large stream joining it upon its left
+bank, which he supposed to be the Gnamoi. The river he was upon was
+broad and navigable. It flowed through a level country with a dead
+current and muddy water, and spread into frequent lakes. He found that
+it ultimately discharged itself into the sea, but was uncertain at what
+distance from its sources. He was positive he never travelled to the
+SOUTHWARD OF WEST. He ascended a hill near the sea, and observed an
+island in the distance, from which, the natives informed him, a race of
+light-coloured men came in large canoes for a scented wood; but having
+failed in the immediate object of his journey, he was eventually
+obliged to return.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+MAJOR MITCHELL'S REPORT.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The following official report of Major Mitchell will sufficiently point
+out the incorrectness of the preceding statement. It is most probable
+that Barber merely told that which he had heard from the natives, and
+that having a more than ordinary share of cunning, he made up a story
+upon their vague and uncertain accounts, in hopes that it would benefit
+him, as in truth it did.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ Bullabalakit, on the River Nammoy,<BR>
+ in lat. 30 degrees 38 minutes 21 seconds S.,<BR>
+ long. 149 degrees 30 minutes 20 seconds E.<BR>
+ 23d December, 1831.<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+SIR,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have the honour to state, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, the progress I have made in exploring the course of the
+interior waters to the northward of the Colony, with reference to the
+letter which I had the honour to address to Col. Lindesay, on this
+subject, on the 19th ult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On crossing Liverpool Range my object was to proceed northward, so as
+to avoid the plains and head the streams which water them, and avoiding
+also the mountain ranges on the east.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I arrived accordingly, by a tolerably straight and level line, at
+Walamoul, on Peel's River; this place (a cattle station of Mr. Brown)
+being nearly due north from the common pass across Liverpool Range, and
+about a mile-and-a-half above the spot where Mr. Oxley crossed this
+river.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PEEL'S RIVER.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I found the general course of the Peel below Walamoul to be nearly
+west; and after tracing this river downwards twenty-two miles (in
+direct distance), I crossed it at an excellent ford, named Wallamburra.
+I then traversed the extensive plain of Mulluba; and leaving that of
+Coonil on the right, extending far to the north-east, we passed through
+a favourable interval of what I considered Hardwicke's Range, the
+general direction of this range being two points west of north.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On passing through this gorge, which, from the name of a hill on the
+south side, may be named Ydire, I crossed a very extensive tract of
+flat country, on which the wood consisted of iron-bark and acacia
+pendula; this tract being part of a valley evidently declining to the
+north-west, which is bounded on the south by the Liverpool Range, and
+on the south-west by the extremities from the same. On the west, at a
+distance of twenty-two miles from Hardwicke's Range, there stands a
+remarkable isolated hill named Bounalla; and towards the lowest part of
+the country, and in the direction in which all the waters tend, there
+is a rocky peak named Tangulda. On the north, a low range (named Wowa),
+branching westerly from Hardwicke's Range, bounds on that side this
+extensive basin, which includes Liverpool Plains. Peel's River is the
+principal stream, and receives, in its course, all the waters of these
+plains below the junction of Connadilly,&mdash;which I take to be York's
+River, of Oxley.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+THE RIVER NAMMOY.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The stream is well known to the natives by the name Nammoy; and six
+miles below Tangulda, the low extremities from the surrounding ranges
+close on the river, and separate this extensive vale from the
+unexplored country which extends beyond to an horizon which is unbroken
+between W.N.W. and N.N.W.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The impracticable appearance of the mountains to the northward, induced
+me to proceed thus far to the west; and on examining the country thirty
+miles N.E. by N. from Tangulda, I ascended a lofty range extending
+westward from the coast chain, and on which the perpendicular sides of
+masses of trachyte (a volcanic rock) were opposed to my further
+progress even with horses: it was therefore evident that the river
+supposed to rise about the latitude of 28 degrees would not be
+accessible, or at least available to the Colony, in that direction, and
+that in the event of the discovery of a river beyond that range flowing
+to the northern or north-western shores, it would become of importance
+to ascertain whether it was joined by the Nammoy, the head of this
+river being so accessible that I have brought my heavily laden drays to
+where it is navigable for boats, my present encampment being on its
+banks six miles below Tangulda. From this station I can perceive the
+western termination of the Trachytic range, and I am now about to
+explore the country between it and the Nammoy, and the further course
+of this river; and in the event of its continuance in a favourable
+direction, I shall fix my depot on its right bank, whence I now write,
+and descend the stream in the portable boats.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,<BR>
+ Your most obedient servant,<BR>
+ T. L. MITCHELL,<BR>
+ SURVEYOR-GENERAL<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+The Hon. The Colonial Secretary.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+Peel's River, 29th February, 1832.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+SIR,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have the honour to inform you, for the information of His Excellency
+the Governor, that I have reached the left bank of this River with my
+whole party on my return from the northern interior, having explored
+the course of the river referred to in my letter of 22nd December last,
+and others within the 29th parallel of latitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was so much fallen timber in the Nammoy, and its waters were so
+low, that the portable boats could not be used on that river with
+advantage, and I proceeded by land in a north-west direction, until
+convinced by its course turning more to the westward that this river
+joined the river Darling. I therefore quitted its banks with the
+intention of exploring the country further northward, by moving round
+the western extremities of the mountains mentioned in my former letter,
+and which I have since distinguished in my map by the name of the
+Lindesay Range. These mountains terminate abruptly on the west, and I
+entered a fine open country at their base, from whence plains (or
+rather open ground of gentle undulation) extended westward as far as
+could be seen. On turning these mountains I directed my course
+northward, and to the eastward of north, into the country beyond them,
+in search of the river KINDUR; and I reached a river flowing westward,
+the bed of which was deep, broad, and permanent, but in which there was
+not then much water.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+THE RIVER KARAULA.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The marks of inundation on trees, and on the adjoining high ground,
+proved that its floods rose to an extraordinary height; and from the
+latitude, and also from the general direction of its course, I
+considered this to be the river which Mr. Cunningham named the Gwydir,
+on crossing it sixty miles higher, on his route to Moreton Bay. I
+descended this river, and explored the country on its left bank for
+about eighty miles to the westward, when I found that its general
+course was somewhat to the southward of west. This river received no
+addition from the mountains over that part of its left bank traversed
+by me; and the heat being intense, the stream was at length so reduced
+that I could step across it. The banks had become low, and the bed much
+contracted, being no longer gravelly, but muddy. I therefore crossed
+this river and travelled northward, on a meridian line, until, in the
+latitude of 29 degrees 2 minutes, I came upon the largest river I had
+yet seen. The banks were earthy and broken, the soil being loose, and
+the water of a white muddy colour. Trees, washed out by the roots from
+the soft soil, filled the bed of this river in many places. There was
+abundance of cod-fish of a small size, as well as of the two other
+kinds of fish which we had caught in the Peel, the Nammoy, and the
+Gwydir. The name of this river, as well as we could make it out from
+the natives, was Karaula. Having made fast one tree to top of another
+tall tree, I obtained a view of the horizon, which appeared perfectly
+level, and I was in hopes that we had at length found a river which
+would flow to the northward and avoid the Darling. I accordingly
+ordered the boat to be put together, and sent Mr. White with a party
+some miles down to clear away any trees in the way. Mr. White came upon
+a rocky fall, and found besides the channel so much obstructed by
+trees, and the course so tortuous, that I determined to ascertain
+before embarking upon it, whether the general course was in the desired
+direction. Leaving Mr. White with half the party, I accordingly traced
+the Karaula downwards, and found that its course changed to south, a
+few miles below where I had made it, and that it was joined by the
+Gwydir only eight miles below where I had crossed that river.
+Immediately below the junction of the Gwydir (which is in latitude 29
+degrees 30 minutes 27 seconds, longitude 148 degrees 13 minutes 20
+seconds) the course of the river continues southward of west, directly
+towards where Captain Sturt discovered the River Darling; and I could
+no longer doubt that this was the same river. I therefore returned to
+the party, determined to explore the country further northward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The results of my progress thus far were sufficient, I considered, to
+prove that the division of the waters falling towards the northern and
+southern shores of Australia is not, as has been supposed, in the
+direction of the Liverpool and Warrabangle range, but extends between
+Cape Byron on the eastern shore, towards Dick Hartog's Island on the
+west; the greater elongation of this country being between these
+points, and intermediate between the lines of its northern and southern
+coasts. The basin of the streams I have been upon must be bounded on
+the north by this dividing ground or water-shed, and although no rise
+was perceptible in the northern horizon, the river was traversed by
+several rocky dykes, over which it fell southward; their direction
+being oblique to the course, and nearly parallel to this division of
+the waters. I beg leave to state, that I should not feel certain on
+this point without having seen more, were it not evident from Mr.
+Cunningham's observations, made on crossing this division on his way to
+Moreton Bay. Mr. Cunningham, on crossing the head of this river, nearly
+in the same latitude, but much nearer its sources, found the height of
+its bed above the sea to be 840 feet; at about forty-five miles further
+northward the ground rose to upwards of 1700 feet, but immediately
+beyond, he reached a river flowing north-west, the height of which was
+only 1400 feet above the sea. He had thus crossed this dividing higher
+ground, between the parallels of 29 degrees and 28 degrees. It appears,
+therefore, that all the interior rivers we know of to the northward of
+the Morumbidgee, belong to the basin of the Karaula; this stream
+flowing southward, and hence the disappearance of the Macquarie and
+other lower rivers may be understood, for all along the banks of the
+Karaula, the Gwydir, and the Nammoy, the country, though not swampy,
+bears marks of frequent inundation; thus the floods occasioned by these
+rivers united, cover the low country, and receive the Macquarie so that
+no channel marks its further course.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That a basin may be found to the northward receiving the waters of the
+northern part of the coast range in a similar manner is extremely
+probable, and that they form a better river, because the angle is more
+acute between the high ground, which must bound it on the N.E. and the
+watershed on the south. I therefore prepared to cross the Karaula, in
+hopes of seeing the head at least of such a river, and to explore the
+country two degrees further northward, but moving in a N.W. direction.
+My tent was struck, and I had just launched my portable boat for the
+purpose of crossing the river, when Mr. Surveyor Finch, whom I had
+instructed to bring up a supply of flour, arrived with the distressing
+intelligence, that two of his men had been killed by the natives, who
+had taken the flour, and were in possession of everything he had
+brought&mdash;all the cattle, including his horse, being also dispersed or
+lost. I therefore determined not to extend my excursion further, as the
+party were already on reduced rations, and on the 8th instant I retired
+from the Karaula, returning by the marked line, which being cut through
+thick scrubs in various places, is now open, forming a tolerably direct
+line of communication in a N.W. direction from Sydney, to a river,
+beyond which the survey may be extended whenever His Excellency the
+Governor thinks fit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The natives had never troubled my party on our advance; indeed I only
+saw them when I came upon them by surprise, and then they always ran
+off. Their first visit was received at my camp on the Karaula, during
+my absence down that river, when they were very friendly, but much
+disposed to steal. Various tribes followed us on coming back, but never
+with any show of hostility, although moving in tribes of a hundred or
+more parallel to our marked line, or in our rear; it was necessary to
+be ever on our guard, and to encamp in strong positions only, arranging
+the drays for defence during the night: three men were always under
+arms, and I have much pleasure in stating, that throughout the whole
+excursion, and under circumstances of hardship and privation, the
+conduct of the men was very good. I took an armed party to the scene of
+pillage, and buried the bodies of the two men, who appeared to have
+been treacherously murdered while asleep by the blacks during the
+absence of Mr. Finch: no natives were to be found when I visited the
+spot, although it appeared from columns of smoke on hills which
+overlooked if, that they were watching our movements.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The party has now arrived within a day's journey of Brown's station,
+and I have instructed Assistant-Surveyor White (from whom I have
+received great assistance during the whole journey) to conduct it
+homewards, being desirous to proceed without delay to Sydney, and to
+receive the instructions of His Excellency the Governor.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,<BR>
+ Your most obedient Servant,<BR>
+ T. L. MITCHELL,<BR>
+ SURVEYOR-GENERAL.<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY, "&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VI.
+</H3>
+
+<H4>
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+</H4>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior of
+Australia&mdash;Difficulty of carrying supplies&mdash;Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates&mdash;Danger from the natives&mdash;Number of men
+requisite,&mdash;and of cattle and carriages&mdash;Provisions&mdash;Other
+arrangements&mdash;Treatment of the natives&mdash;Dimensions of the boat used in
+the second expedition.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Having now had considerable experience in the fitting out and
+management of expeditions in New South Wales, I cannot refrain from
+making some few observations on the subject. And without presuming to
+lay dawn any fixed rules, I shall only refer to those by which I have
+best succeeded, in hopes that some of my remarks may prove of use to
+future travellers who may venture to penetrate into the trackless
+deserts over so small a portion of which I wandered.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DIFFICULTIES OF EXPLORING AUSTRALIA.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The great difficulty of examining the interior of Australia, is that of
+carrying supplies; for increasing the number of individuals composing
+an expedition is of no avail, since an additional number of men must
+necessarily increase the consumption of food. In order to meet this
+difficulty it has been proposed to establish depots upon which an
+expedition could fall back to recruit its supplies, and in ordinary
+cases this plan might answer; but I am decidedly of opinion that no
+party could long remain stationary in the distant interior without some
+fatal collision with the natives, which would be attended with the most
+deplorable consequences; and I do think, considering all things, that
+the experiment is too dangerous to be tried; for when I reached Mount
+Harris, on my first retreat from the Darling, I found the party who
+were awaiting me, with a supply of provisions, under very great alarm,
+in consequence of the hostile proceedings of the Mount Harris tribe.
+The men had been obliged to put the camp into a state of defence. The
+blacks had attempted to surprise them, and would, had I not returned,
+have combined in some general attack. It appears to me that the most
+judicious plan would be to send a supply of provisions, with an
+expedition, to a distant point, under the charge of a minor party.
+These provisions could replace those already expended, and the animals
+that carried them could be taken back.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+SELECTION OF SUBORDINATES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+The number of individuals of which the expedition down the banks of the
+Macquarie was composed, was fourteen: that is to say, myself, Mr. Hume,
+two soldiers, one free man, and seven prisoners of the crown. The
+latter behaved, on all occasions, as steadily as it was possible for
+men to do. Yet the circumstance of the two soldiers being with me
+increased my confidence in the whole, for I was aware that their
+example would influence the rest. However well disposed the prisoners
+of the crown may be, (as in this instance they certainly were,) the
+beneficial example of steady discipline cannot be denied. I should not
+have considered myself justified in leaving the camp as I did for a
+week, and in detaching Mr. Hume at the same time when at the bottom of
+the marshes, or in making the last effort to maintain our position on
+the banks of the Darling, if I had not reposed every confidence in the
+man to whom I entrusted the safety of the camp during my absence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Experience, therefore, of the value of the two soldiers, whom General
+Darling was good enough to permit me to take on the strength of the
+party, fully bears me out in recommending that one man, at least, of
+general responsibility shall be attached to all future expeditions. The
+success of an expedition depends so much on the conduct of the persons
+of whom it is composed, that too much attention cannot be given to the
+selection even of the most subordinate. Men of active intelligent
+minds, of persevering habits, and of even temper, should be preferred
+to mechanics who do not possess these most requisite qualities. On the
+other hand, it is impossible to do without a good carpenter, however
+defective he may be in other respects. I was indebted to Mr. Maxwell,
+the superintendent of Wellington Valley, for some excellent men, both
+on my first and on my second journey, because he understood the nature
+of the service for which they were required, and the characters of
+those whom he recommended. But however well selected the party, or the
+men rather, might be, I still consider a man of general responsibility
+necessary for its complete organisation. I would have him somewhat
+superior to the rest in his station in life. Him I would hold
+answerable for the immediate discipline of the camp, whilst I was
+present, and for its safety when absent. The assistant to the leader I
+would put entirely out of the question. He has other and most important
+duties to perform. I would rate this man wholly independent of him.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+DANGER OF COLLISION WITH THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In reference to what I have already said with regard to the natives, it
+was supposed that they were so little to be apprehended, that when I
+went on the first occasion into the interior, I applied for a limited
+number of men only, under an impression that with a few men I could
+carry provisions equal to a consumption of a greater number, and by
+this means be enabled to keep the field for a greater length of time.
+But I do not think it would be safe to penetrate into the distant
+country with fewer than fifteen men, for although, happily, no rupture
+has as yet taken place with the natives, yet, there is no security
+against their treachery, and it is very certain that a slight cause
+might involve an expedition in inextricable difficulty, and oblige the
+leader to throw himself on the defensive, when far away from other
+resources than those with which he should have provided himself, and
+that, perhaps, when navigating a close and intricate river, with all
+the dangers and perplexities attendant on such a situation. It is
+absolutely necessary to establish nightly guards, not only for the
+security of the camp, but of the cattle, and at the same time to have a
+force strong enough to maintain an obstinate resistance against any
+number of savages, where no mercy is to be expected. It will be borne
+in mind, that there is a wide difference between penetrating into a
+country in the midst of its population, and landing from ships for the
+purpose of communication or traffic. Yet, how few voyages of discovery
+have terminated without bloodshed! Boats while landing are covered by
+their ships, and have succour within view; but not so parties that go
+into unknown tracts. They must depend on their immediate resources and
+individual courage alone.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+PACK-OXEN, HORSES, WHEEL-CARRIAGES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+With regard to the animals, I should recommend an equal number of
+horses as of bullocks; since it has been found that the latter, though
+slow, travel better over swampy ground than horses, which, on the other
+hand, are preferable for expeditious journeys, to which bullocks would
+never be equal. One of the colonial pack-saddles weighs fifty pounds
+complete, and is preferable to those sent out from England. This, with
+a load of 250 lbs. is sufficient for any animal, since it enables the
+men to place a part of their provisions with the general loads. The
+difficulty of keeping the backs of the animals free from injury, more
+especially where any blemish has before existed, is exceedingly great.
+They should undergo an examination twice a-day, that is, in the morning
+prior to moving off, and in the afternoon before they are turned out to
+feed; and measures should then be taken to ease them as circumstances
+require. I never suffered the saddles to be removed from the backs of
+the animals under my charge for twenty minutes after the termination of
+the journey for the day, in order to guard against the effects of the
+sun; and where the least swelling appeared the saddle was altered and
+the place dressed. Yet, notwithstanding all this care and attention,
+several both of the horses and bullocks were at one time in a sad
+condition, during the first journey,&mdash;so much so as almost to paralyse
+our efforts. It would be advisable that such animals as are entirely
+free from blemish should be chosen for the service of expeditions, for,
+with proper management they might be kept in order. The anxiety of mind
+attendant on a bad state of the animals is really quite embarrassing,
+for it not only causes a delay in the movements, but a derangement in
+the loads. Other animals are overburdened, and there is no knowing
+where the evil will stop.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In addition to the pack-animals, I would recommend the employment of a
+dray or cart under any practicable circumstances. It serves to carry
+necessary comforts, gives an expedition greater facility for securing
+its collections, and is of inconceivable advantage in many other
+respects.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+ISSUE OF PROVISIONS.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Constant and most earnest attention should be paid to the issue of
+provisions, on the discreet management of which so much depends, and
+the charge of them should be committed to the second in command. The
+most important articles are flour, tea, sugar, and tobacco. All should
+be husbanded with extreme care, and weighed from time to time. The
+flour is best carried in canvass bags, containing 100 pounds each, and
+should at the termination of each day's journey, be regularly piled up
+and covered with a tarpaulin. Tea, sugar and tobacco lose considerably
+in weight, so that it is necessary to estimate for somewhat more than
+the bare supply. With regard to the salt meat, the best mode of
+conveying it appears to be in small barrels of equal weight with the
+bags of flour. Salt pork is better than beef. It should be deprived of
+all bones and be of the very best quality. I have heard spirits
+recommended, but I do not approve their use. Tea is much more relished
+by the men; indeed they could not do well without it. A small quantity
+of spirits would, however, of course be necessary in the event of its
+being required.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+LIVE STOCK.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Cornelius O'Brien, an enterprising and long-established settler,
+who has pushed his flocks and herds to the banks of the Morumbidgee,
+was good enough to present me with eight wethers as I passed his
+station. It may be some gratification to Mr. O'Brien to know, that they
+contributed very materially to our comforts, and he will, perhaps,
+accept my acknowledgements in this place, not only for so liberal a
+present to myself, but for his attention and kindness to my men as long
+as they remained in his neighbourhood. It was found that the sheep gave
+but little additional trouble, requiring only to be penned at night, as
+much to secure them from the native dogs as to prevent them from
+straying away. They followed the other animals very quietly, and soon
+became accustomed to daily movements. They proved a most available
+stock; no waste attended their slaughter, and they admitted of a
+necessary and wholesome change of fresh food from the general salt
+diet, on which the men would otherwise have had to subsist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The provisions should, if possible, be issued weekly, and their
+diminution should be so regulated as to give an equal relief to the
+animals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For general information I have annexed a list of the supplies I took
+with me on my first expedition. It may appear long, but the articles
+were packed in a small compass, and their value immaterial.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As a precautionary measure I should advise, that one of the pack
+animals be kept apart for the purpose of carrying water. Two casks of
+equal weight are the best for such a purpose. In long and hot marches,
+the men experience great relief from having water at hand.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+INTERCOURSE WITH THE NATIVES.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+In reference to the natives, I hope sufficient has been said of the
+manner of communicating with them to prevent the necessity of a
+repetition here. The great point is not to alarm their natural
+timidity: to exercise patience in your intercourse with them; to treat
+them kindly; and to watch them with suspicion, especially at night.
+Never permit the men to steal away from the camp, but keep them as
+compact as possible; and at every station so arrange your drays and
+provisions that they may serve as a defence in case of your being
+attacked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The natives appeared to me to be indifferent to our presents, in most
+cases. Tomahawks, knives, pieces of iron, and different coloured
+ribbons for the forehead, were most esteemed by them. They will barter
+and exchange their fish for articles, and readily acquire confidence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I believe I have now touched on all the more important points: on minor
+ones no observation I can make will be of use; men must, in many
+things, be guided by circumstances.
+</P>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WHALE BOAT EMPLOYED ON THE SECOND EXPEDITION.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+I may here notice that, in my second expedition, as it was anticipated
+that I should require adequate provision for water conveyance, at one
+stage or other of my journey down the Morumbidgee, I was furnished with
+a whale-boat, the dimensions of which are given below. She was built by
+Mr. Egan, the master builder of the dock-yard and a native of the
+colony, and did great credit to his judgment. She carried two tons and
+a half of provisions, independently of a locker, which I appropriated
+for the security of the arms, occupying the space between the
+after-seat and the stern. She was in the first instance put together
+loosely, her planks and timbers marked, and her ring bolts, &amp;c. fitted.
+She was then taken to pieces, carefully packed up, and thus conveyed in
+plank into the interior, to a distance of four hundred and forty miles,
+without injury. She was admirably adapted for the service, and rose as
+well as could have been expected over the seas in the lake. It was
+evident, however, that she would have been much safer if she had had
+another plank, for she was undoubtedly too low. The following were her
+dimensions:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ Breadth across 7th timber aft, 5 ft. 1/2 an inch outside.
+ Across 12th timber, 5 ft. 11 1/4 in.
+ Across 17th timber forward, 5 ft.
+ 25 ft. 8 in. in length inside.
+ Curve of the keel No. 1, from the after side of each apron, 3 ft. 3 3/4in.
+ No. 2, from head to head of the dead wood, 13 1/2 in.
+ No. 3, from one end of keel to the other inner side, 3 in.
+ No. 4, round of keel from the toe of each dead wood, 7/8 1/16th.
+ The timbers were marked, beginning from the stern to the bow on the
+ starboard side, and from bow to stern on the larboard.
+</PRE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="append1"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX No. I.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+By His Excellency Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, Commanding His
+Majesty's Forces, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales, and its dependencies, and Vice Admiral of
+the same, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+TO CHARLES STURT, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE 39TH REGIMENT OF FOOT.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereas it has been judged expedient to fit out an expedition for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of New Holland, and the present dry
+season affords a reasonable prospect of an opportunity of ascertaining
+the nature and extent of the large marsh or marshes which stopped the
+progress of the late John Oxley Esq, Surveyor General, in following the
+courses of the rivers Lachlan and Macquarie in the years 1817 and 1818.
+And whereas I repose full confidence in your abilities and zeal for
+conducting such an expedition, I do hereby constitute and appoint you
+to command and take charge of the expedition now preparing for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of the country, and for ascertaining,
+if practicable, the nature and extent of the marsh or marshes above
+mentioned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the prosecution of this service, you will be guided generally by the
+following instructions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+1. You will be accompanied on this expedition by Mr. Hamilton Hume,
+whose great experience in travelling through the remote parts of the
+Colony, cannot fail to be highly useful to you. You will also be
+attended by two soldiers and six convicts, of whom one is to understand
+the shoeing of horses, one to be a carpenter, one a harness-maker and
+three stock-men, and you will be provided with six horses and twelve
+bullocks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+2. A small boat has been built here for the use of the expedition, and
+for its conveyance, there is provided a light four-wheeled carriage to
+be drawn by two bullocks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The deputy Commissary General has received orders for supplying the
+expedition with provisions of the best quality sufficient for six
+months' consumption, together with tents, blankets, clothing,
+pack-saddles, utensils, instruments, tools, and necessaries of all
+kinds of which you are likely to stand in need. Orders are also given
+for providing you with arms and ammunition, with rockets for signals,
+and an ample supply of simple medicines&mdash;You are to consider it an
+important duty to attend to the providing of all these supplies, and to
+take care that not only every article is of the best quality that can
+be procured, but also that no article be wanting with which you may
+desire to be provided.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+3. Orders are given for forwarding without delay all your provisions,
+stores and supplies of every kind to Wellington Valley, at which place,
+you, Mr. Hume, and all your men are to rendezvous as soon as possible.
+Mr Maxwell, the superintendent, will furnish you with well-trained
+bullocks, and afford you all the assistance you may require in
+arranging every thing for your departure from that station.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+4. After you shall have completed all your arrangements, you are to
+lose no time in finally departing from Wellington Valley in prosecution
+of the immediate objects of the expedition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+5. You are first to proceed to Mount Harris, where you are to form a
+temporary depot, by means of which you will have an opportunity of more
+readily communicating with Mr. Maxwell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+6. You are then to endeavour to determine the fate of the Macquarie
+River, by tracing it as far as possible beyond the point to which Mr.
+Oxley went, and by pushing westward, you are to ascertain if there be
+any high lands in that direction, or if the country be, as it is
+supposed, an unbroken level and under water. If you should fail in
+these objects, you will traverse the plains lying behind our north-west
+boundaries, with a view to skirt any waters by which you may have been
+checked to the westward; and if you should succeed in skirting them,
+you are to explore the country westward and southward as far as
+possible, endeavouring to discover the Macquarie beyond the marsh of
+Mr. Oxley, and following it to its mouth if at all practicable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+7. There is some reason to believe that the over-flowing of the
+Macquarie when visited by Mr. Oxley, was occasioned by heavy rains
+falling in the mountains to the eastward, and that as you are to visit
+the same spot at a different season of the year, you may escape such
+embarrassment; but although you should get beyond the point at which
+Mr. Oxley stopped, it would not be prudent to risk your own health or
+that of your men, by continuing long in a swampy country. Therefore it
+may be advisable for you in the first instance to leave the greater
+part of your men, bullocks, and baggage, at Mount Harris, and if you
+should see a probability of your being able to cross into the interior,
+you will then return to Mount Harris for such additional supplies as
+you may judge necessary. You can there communicate with Mr. Maxwell
+respecting any ulterior arrangements which you may be desirous of
+making.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+8. The success of the expedition is so desirable an object, that I
+cannot too strongly impress upon you the importance of perseverance in
+endeavouring to skirt any waters or marshes which may check your course
+as long as you have provisions sufficient for your return; but you must
+be cautious not to proceed a single day's journey further than where
+you find that your provisions will be barely sufficient to enable you
+to reach the nearest place at which you can depend upon getting
+supplies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+9. If after every endeavour you should find it totally impracticable to
+get to the westward, you are still to proceed northward, keeping as
+westerly a direction as possible; and when the state of your provisions
+will oblige you to retreat, you will be guided by your latitude, as to
+the place to which you are to make the best of your way, but you are
+not to make for any place on the coast, if Wellington valley should
+still be nearer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10. You must be aware that the success of the expedition will greatly
+depend upon the time for which your provisions will hold out, and
+therefore you will see the great importance of observing every possible
+economy in the expenditure of provisions, and preventing waste of every
+kind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+11. You are to keep a detailed account of your proceedings in a
+journal, in which all observations and occurrences of every kind, with
+all their circumstances, however minute, are to be carefully noted
+down. You are to be particular in describing the general face of all
+the country through which you pass, the direction and shape of the
+mountains, whether detached or in ranges, together with the bearings
+and estimated distances of the several mountains, hills, or eminences
+from each other. You are likewise to note the nature of the climate, as
+to heat, cold, moisture, winds, rains, &amp;c., and to keep a register of
+the temperature from Fahrenheit's thermometer, as observed at two or
+three periods of each day. The rivers, with their several branches,
+their direction, velocity, breadth, and depth, are carefully to be
+noted. It is further expected that you will, as far as may be in your
+power, attend to the animal, vegetable, and mineral productions of the
+country, noting down every thing that may occur to you, and preserving
+specimens as far as your means will admit, especially some of all the
+ripe seeds which you may discover; when the preservation of specimens
+is impossible, drawings or detailed accounts of them, are very
+desirable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+12. You will note the description of the several people whom you may
+meet, the extent of the population, their means of subsistence, their
+genius and disposition, the nature of their amusements, their diseases
+and remedies, their objects of worship, religious ceremonies, and a
+vocabulary of their language.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lastly. On your return from your journey, you are to cause all the
+journals or other written documents belonging to, and curiosities
+collected by the several individuals composing the expedition, to be
+carefully sealed up with your own seal and kept in that state until you
+shall have made your report to me in writing of the result of the
+expedition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Given at Sydney, this eighteenth day of November, 1828. By Command of
+His Excellency the Governor, ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="append2"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX No. II.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+LIST OF STORES SUPPLIED FOR THE EXPEDITION.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+List of Articles delivered from His Majesty's Stores, in charge of D.
+A. C. Goodsir, to Captain Sturt, viz.&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ 1 Hack saddle. 9 Harness casks.
+ 1 Bridle. 23 Canvas bags.
+ 2 Tents. 4 Tin cases.
+ 14 Pack saddles. 16 Padlocks.
+ 14 Pair hobbles. 6 Tarpaulens.
+ 24 Sets horse shoes. 10 Haversacks.
+ 2000 Horse nails. 113 Fathom one-inch rope.
+ 113 Fathoms 1 1/2 inch rope. 1 Boat compass.
+ 1 Hammer, (Blacksmith's) 1 Telescope.
+ 1 Paring knife. 1 Spare glass for ditto.
+ 2 Chipping do. 1 Tin case (for charts.)
+ 2 Rasps. 100 Fish-hooks, (large.)
+ 1 Pair pincers. 12 Fishing-lines.
+ 1 Cutter. 10 Knives.
+ 2lb. Pack thread. 10 Forks.
+ 24 Needles. 10 Spoons.
+ 1/4lb. Bristles. 2 Frying-pans.
+ 7lbs. Leather. 2 Tinder-boxes.
+ 1/2lb. Thread. 1 Tea-kettle, (tin.)
+ 1 Pair of steelyards. 10 Tin dishes.
+ 10 Tin pots. 8 Jackets.
+ 1 Flour seive. 8 Duck frocks.
+ 2 Felling-axes. 8 Shirts.
+ 4 Tomahawks. 16 Trousers.
+ 2 Hammers. 24 Pair shoes.
+ 1 Hand-saw. 16 Blankets.
+ 3 Bill-hooks. 16 Pair stockings.
+ 3 Awls. 2 Bullock collars.
+ 3 Broad hoes. 2 Do. back-bands and pipes.
+ 4 Razors. 2 Leading cruppers.
+ 4 Brushes. 1 Boat with sail and oars.
+ 4 Combs. 1 Do. carriage.
+ 3 Iron pots, (camp kettles.) 1 Canvass boat-cover.
+ 1 Pair scissors. 3 Water breaker.
+
+ COMMISSARIAT OFFICE, SYDNEY, NOV. 10TH, 1828.
+
+ P.S.&mdash;l Tarpaulin.
+ Large Fish-hook.
+ 1 Tin tea-kettle.
+ 1 Camp kettle.
+ Pitch and oil.
+ Hemp or twine.
+</PRE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="append3"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX No. III.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+SHEEP-FARMING RETURNS, SHOWING THE INCREASE IN FOUR YEARS, from two
+Breeding Flocks, consisting of 670 Ewes in Lamb.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<PRE>
+ (A.)&mdash;1st JUNE, 1828.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Flocks. Breeding Ewes. Lambs. Total. Remarks.
+
+ 2 yrs. old. 3 yrs. old. Male.-Female.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Lambs.
+ No. 1 330 148 149 627 Deaths 6. Incr.297
+ No. 2 330 154 154 638 4 308
+ &mdash;&mdash; &mdash; &mdash;-
+ * 1265 10 605
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+ * The increase throughout these returns is calculated at from 270 to 290
+ Lambs, to 300 Ewes, which is the usual average in N.S.W.
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Purchased two Flocks of Ewes, at 84s.............................670 Ewes.
+ Increase of Lambs.......................................... 605
+ Casual Deaths............................................... 10
+ 595
+ &mdash;-
+ Total as per Return............................................ 1265
+
+
+
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ (B.)&mdash;1st JUNE, 1829.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 3-yr. 327 154 154 635 Deaths 3 Incr.308
+ 2 4-yr. 326 155 155 636 4 310
+ 3 1-yr. 302 302 1 &mdash;-
+ 4 1-yr. 302 18 320 &mdash; 618
+ &mdash;&mdash; 8
+ 1893
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (A) Total...............................................1265
+ Increase by Lambing....................................618
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ &mdash;-
+ 636
+ Casual Deaths......................................... 8 628
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ Total as per return............................................1893
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ (C.)&mdash;1st JUNE, 1830.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 296 133 154 562 Deaths 6 Incr.266
+ 2 4-yr. 325 150 155 625 2 300
+ 3 5-yr. 326 160 646 320
+ 4 2-yr. 302 27 329 &mdash;-
+ 5 1-yr. 309 309 886
+ 6 1-yr. 309 309 &mdash;-
+ &mdash;&mdash; 3 Rams died
+ 2780 12 ditto purchased
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (B) Total............................................ 1893
+ Increase by Lambing....................................886
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................12
+ &mdash;-
+ 898
+ Deaths............................................... 11 887
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ Total as per return......................................... 2780
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ (D.)&mdash;1st JUNE, 1831.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 304 136 136 576 Deaths 5 Incr.272
+ 2 3-yr. 293 135 136 564 3 271
+ 3 5-yr. 324 156 156 636 1 312
+ 4 6-yr. 320 156 156 632 2 312
+ Killed 4 &mdash;-
+ 5 3-yr. 300 300 Deaths 2 1167
+ 6 2-yr. 308 308 1
+ 7 1-yr 443 443
+ 8 1-yr 442 442 1
+ 9 40 40 5
+ &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;
+ 3941 20
+ Purchased 12
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (C) Total............................................ 2780
+ Increase by Lambing...................................1167
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ &mdash;-
+ 1185
+ Casual deaths 20 ...Killed for use 4 ................. 24 1161
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ Total as per return.......................................... 3941
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ (E.)&mdash;1st JUNE, 1832.
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 344 154 154 652 Deaths 6 Incr.308
+ 2 3-yr. 344 162 161 667 4 323
+ 4 3-yr. 342 164 165 671 3 329
+ 5 6-yr. 320 155 155 630 2 310
+ 6 7-yr. 300 145 145 590 2 290
+ 7 4-yr. 300 300 &mdash;&mdash;
+ 1560
+ 8 3-yr 302 302 2
+ 9 2-yr 440 440 1
+ 10 1-yr 583 583
+ 11 1-yr 584 584
+ 12 45 45 5 Purch. 10
+ &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;- &mdash;- &mdash;- &mdash;&mdash;
+ 1650 584 1625 45 780 780 5464
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (D) Total............................................ 3941
+ Increase by Lambing...................................1560
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................10
+ &mdash;-
+ 1570
+ Decrease by casual death .............................. 25
+ Decrease by slaughter for use ......................... 22
+ &mdash;-
+ 1523
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ Grand Total .............................. 5464 as above
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+
+
+ MEMORANDUM,&mdash;The deaths have been calculated at the lowest rate under the
+ best management. It may be safer to assume a rate of four or five per
+ cent. per annum.
+
+
+ Account of Expenditure and Income upon Sheep Stock in Australia,
+ appended to Returns A. B. C. D. and E.
+ 1st YEAR, (RETURN A.) JUNE, 1829.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 11265 fleeces, average weight 2 1/4 lbs. 284 lbs
+ wool at 1s. 6d. per lb. 213 9 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 1 Watchman at 20 20 0 O PROFIT.
+ To Hurdles, &amp;c. 10 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 90 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 123 9 0
+
+ 2nd YEAR, (B.) JUNE, 1830.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 1893 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 4259lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 319 8 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 20 40 0 0
+ To 1 Watchman 20 0 0
+ To Hurdles &amp;c. 5 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 125 0 0
+ To 18 Rams at 10 pounds* 180 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 305 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 14 8 6
+ *The price of rams will probably fall to 5 pounds
+
+ 3rd YEAR, (C.) JUNE, 1831.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 2780 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 6255lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 469 2 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 25 25 0 0
+ To 3 Ditto 20 60 0 0
+ To 2 Watchman 20 40 0 0
+ To Hurdles &amp;c. 10 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 195 0 0
+ To 12 Rams at 10 pounds 120 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 315 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 154 2 6
+
+ 4th YEAR, (D.) JUNE, 1832.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 3941 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 8867lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 665 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 25 50 0 0
+ To 4 Ditto 20 80 0 0
+ To 3 Watchman &amp;c. 60 0 0
+ (one to take charge of rams)
+ To Hurdles &amp;c. 10 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 260 0 0
+ To 18 Rams at 10 pounds 180 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 440 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 225 0 0
+
+ 5th YEAR, (E.) JUNE, 1833.*
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 5464 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 12,294 lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 922 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 3 Ditto 25 75 0 0
+ To 5 Ditto 20 100 0 0
+ To 3 Watchman 20 60 0 0
+ To Hurdles &amp;c. 20 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 315 0 0
+ To 10 Rams at 10 pounds 100 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 415 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 507 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Net profit by sales of wool in 5 years 1024 0 0
+
+ 1024 0 0 divided by 5 gives 204 8 0 for annual interest on the
+ original capital of 2814 0 0, (about 7 1/4 percent per annum)
+ in addition to the accumulation of capital itself, shown by the
+ valuation of stock.
+
+ *These accounts are a year in advance of the sheep returns, in order to
+ bring them to the time at which the wool would be sold.
+
+
+ VALUATION OF SHEEP, JUNE, 1832&mdash;&mdash;(RETURN E.)
+
+ 1614 Ewes from 1 to 4 years old at 3 pounds each 4842 0 O
+ 620 Do. 4 to 7 years old 2 1240 0 0
+ 780 Female Lambs 2 1560 0 0
+ 2405 Wethers and Male Lambs 15s. 1803 0 0
+ 45 Rams (original cost, 450l.) 400 0 0
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ 9845 0 0
+</PRE>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+Note.&mdash;About 500 pounds would be added to the Income on the fifth year,
+by the sale of wethers of 3 and 4 years old.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cost of rams ought, strictly speaking, to be added to capital, and
+not deducted from Income; but these returns were made out in their
+present form at the request of a gentleman proceeding to the Colony
+with a limited capital, and who wished to know how much he might safely
+invest in sheep.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="append4"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX No. IV.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+LIST OF GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS, COLLECTED IN THE DISTANT INTERIOR DURING
+THE FIRST EXPEDITION, WITH THEIR LOCALITIES AND THEIR RELATIVE
+DISTANCES FROM EACH OTHER.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+It may be necessary to observe that the height of the Cataract of the
+Macquarie River above the sea, was ascertained by barometrical
+admeasurement to be 650 feet. The country subsequently traversed is
+considerably lower. The specimens refer only to the geological
+formation of the distant interior.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Schorl Rock.&mdash;Colour blueish grey, fine grained, extremely hard.
+Composed of Tourmaline and Quartz. Forms the bed of the Macquarie at
+the Cataract, 75 miles to the N.W. of Wellington Valley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Decomposed Mica Slate.&mdash;Colour white; yields to the knife; adheres
+strongly to the tongue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Decomposed Feldspar.&mdash;Colour pale rose-pink; very fine grained; easily
+scratched with the knife; adheres strongly to the tongue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both specimens immediately succeed the Schorl rock at the Cataract, in
+large smooth-sided masses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This formation may be said to terminate the rocks connected with the
+dividing ranges, since it is the last that occurs at their western base.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little below the Cataract, the county undergoes a remarkable change,
+and becomes extremely depressed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Porphyry with Feldspar.&mdash;Colour dull red, with white spots, or grey
+with red spots; very hard, compact, sonorous, magnetic. [See pp. 27 and
+115.] Composition of Mount Harris, a hill called by Mr. Oxley, elevated
+about 170 feet above the level of the plains. It lies 65 miles to the
+N.N.W. of the Cataract, and is about 16 miles distant from the first of
+the marshes of the Macquarie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Porphyry with Feldspar.&mdash;Colour grey with red spots, similar to the
+last. Was not observed to affect the needle. Formation of Mount Foster.
+Mount Foster is more than 200 feet in height, and lies about 5 miles to
+the N.N.W. of Mount Harris. From the summit of both, Arbuthnot's range
+is visible, bearing nearly due east, distant 70 miles. [See page 28.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Quartz Rock varieties&mdash;Slaty Quartz varieties.&mdash;Composition of the
+first elevations to the Westward of the marshes of the Macquarie,
+called New Year's Range, a group of five hills. The loftiest about 200
+feet in elevation; distant about 80 miles to the N.W. of Mount Harris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Granite.&mdash;Colour red, coarse-grained. Composed of Quartz, Feldspar, and
+Mica.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+ Granite, Porphyritic.&mdash;Colour light red. Both occurring in the bed of<BR>
+New Year's Creek, traversing it obliquely, and are visible for a few
+hundred yards only. This granite occurs about 16 miles from the Range
+in a N. by E. direction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Old Red Sandstone.&mdash;Composition of Oxley's Table Land, 500 feet above
+the level of the plains. It is broken into two hills, that appear to
+have been separated by some convulsion. [See page 81.] It bears N.W. by
+W. from New Year's Range, distant 50 miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Old Red Sandstone.&mdash;Composition of D'Urban's group. The highest
+elevation ascended during the expedition, being nearly 600 feet above
+the level of the plain in which it rises. It lies to the S.S.W. of
+Oxley's Table Land, distant 40 miles, and the rock of which it is
+composed is much harder and closer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Breccia.&mdash;Colour pale yellow, silicious cement. Composition of some
+trifling elevations to the North of New-Year's range, with which it is
+doubtful whether they are connected.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Crystallized Sulphate of Lime.&mdash;Found imbedded in the alluvial soil
+forming the banks of the Darling river. Occurring in a regular vein.
+Soft, yielding to the nail; not acted on by acids.&mdash;See Plate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Breccia.&mdash;Pale ochre colour, silicious cement, extremely hard.
+Cellular, and sharp edges to the fractured pebbles. Has apparently
+undergone fusion. Occurs in the bed of the Darling in one place only.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sandstone Varieties.&mdash;Colour dull red and muddy white; appears like
+burnt bricks; light, easily frangible; adheres to the tongue; occurs in
+large masses in the bed of the Darling; probably in connection with the
+rock-salt of the neighbourhood, which, from the number of brine springs
+discovered feeding the river, must necessarily exist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Variety of the same description of rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jasper and Quartz.&mdash;Showing itself above the surface of a plain, from
+which D'Urban's group bore S. 40 E. distant 33 miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is a remarkable fact, that not a pebble or a stone was picked up
+during the progress of the expedition, on any one of the plains; and
+that after it again left Mount Harris for the Castlereagh, the only
+rock-formation discovered was a small Freestone tract near the Darling
+river. There was not a pebble of any kind either in the bed of the
+Castlereagh, or in the creeks falling into it.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="append5"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+APPENDIX No. V.
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="intro">
+OFFICIAL REPORTS TO THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GOVERNMENT ORDER
+</H4>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 23RD JANUARY, 1829.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His Excellency the Governor has been pleased to order, that the
+following communication, dated the 25th of December last, from Captain
+Sturt, of the 39th Regiment, who is employed in an exploring expedition
+into the interior of the country, be published for general information.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+By his Excellency's Command,<BR>
+ ALEXANDER M'LEAY.<BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+WESTERN MARSHES, 25TH DECEMBER, 1828.
+</H4>
+
+<P>
+SIR,&mdash;I do myself the honor to forward, for the Governor's perusal, a
+copy of my journal up to the date of my arrival at Mount Harris. I
+should not have directed the messenger to return so soon, had I not
+subsequently advanced to Mount Foster, and surveyed the country from
+that eminence. I could distinctly see Arbuthnot's Range to the
+eastward. From that point the horizon appeared to me unbroken, but the
+country to the northward and westward seemed to favour an attempt to
+penetrate into it. I did not observe any sheet of water, and the course
+of the Macquarie was lost in the woodlands below.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hume ascended the hill at sun-rise, and thought he could see
+mountains to the north east, but at such a distance as to make it quite
+a matter of uncertainty. Agreeing, however, in the prudence of an
+immediate descent, we left our encampment on the morning of the 23rd,
+under Mount Foster, to which we had removed from Mount Harris, and
+pursued a north-north-west course to the spot on which we rest at
+present. We passed some fine meadow land near the river, and were
+obliged to keep wide of it in consequence of fissures in the ground.
+Traversing a large and blasted plain, on which the sun's rays fell with
+intense heat, and on which there was but little vegetation, we skirted
+the first great morass, and made the river immediately beyond it. It is
+of very considerable extent, the channel of the river passing through
+it. We are encompassed on every side by high reeds, which exist in the
+woods as well as in the plains. Mr. Hume and myself rode forward
+yesterday through the second morass, and made the river on slightly
+elevated ground, at a distance of about five miles; the country beyond
+appeared to favour our object, and we, to-morrow, proceed with the
+party to the north-west. The river seems to bend to the north-east; but
+in this level country it is impossible to speak with certainty, or to
+give any decided opinion of the nature of it, beyond the flats on which
+we are travelling. The reeds to the north-east and northward extend
+over a circumference of fifty miles; but if Mr. Hume really saw
+mountains or rising ground in the former point, the apparent course of
+the Macquarie is at once accounted for. The country, however, seems to
+dip to the north, though generally speaking it is level, and I am
+inclined to think that the state of the atmosphere caused a deception
+in this appearance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I regret to add, that the effects of the sun on the plain over which we
+passed on the 23rd produced a return of inflammation in the eyes of the
+men, I have named in my journals, and caused the same in the eyes of
+several others of my party. I halted, therefore, to expedite their
+recovery. They are doing well now, and we can proceed in the cool of
+the morning without any fear of their receiving injury by it. One of
+the men, who were to return to Wellington Valley, was attacked slightly
+with dysentery, but the medicines I gave him carried it off in the
+course of a day or two. I have taken every precaution with regard to
+the health of the men, in preparing them for the country into which
+they are going; and I have to request that you will inform the governor
+that the conduct of the whole party merits my approbation, and that I
+have no fault to find. The men from Sydney are not so sharp as those
+from Wellington Valley, but are equally well disposed. The animals,
+both horses and bullocks, are in good order, and I find the two
+soldiers of infinite service to me. The boat has received some damage
+from exposure to intense heat, but is otherwise uninjured. We still
+retain the carriage and have every prospect of dragging it on with us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His Excellency, having been good enough to order a fresh supply of
+provisions to Wellington Valley, I have to beg they may be forwarded to
+Mount Harris, and that the person in charge thereof be instructed to
+remain at that station for one month. We shall, during the interval,
+have examined the country to the north-west; and, in case we are forced
+back, shall require a supply to enable us to proceed to the northward,
+in furtherance of the views I have already had the honor to submit for
+the Governor's approval.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+I have the honor to be, Sir,<BR>
+ Your most obedient and humble Servant,<BR>
+ CHARLES STURT,<BR>
+ Captain, 39th Regt.<BR>
+<BR><BR>
+THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4>
+GOVERNMENT ORDER.
+</H4>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 6TH APRIL, 1829.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His Excellency the Governor is pleased to direct that the following
+interesting Report which has been received from Captain Sturt, 39th
+Regiment, who has been employed for some months past, (as will be seen
+on reference to the Government Order, No. 4, published with Captain
+Sturt's First Report in the Sydney Gazette, of the 24th of January
+last) in exploring the interior, be communicated for the information of
+the public.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It appears that the river Macquarie ceases to exist near the spot where
+the expedition under the late Mr. Oxley terminated, which, from the
+state of country at the time, being then flooded, could not be
+ascertained; and that another river of no inconsiderable magnitude, fed
+by salt springs, was discovered by Captain Sturt on the 2nd February
+last, about 100 miles to the westward of the Macquarie, running to the
+southward and westward.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+By His Excellency's Command,<BR>
+ ALEXANDER M'LEAY.<BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+MOUNT HARRIS, 4TH MARCH, 1829.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+SIR,&mdash;I do myself the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His
+Excellency the Governor, that I returned to this eminence on Monday,
+the 23rd ult. having been driven from the interior, in consequence of
+the extreme drought which prevails there.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am to state, in reference to my former communication, that agreeably
+to what I then reported, I moved, on the 26th December last, lower down
+the plains of the Macquarie, but encountered a barrier of reeds, formed
+by the marshes of that river, through which we in vain endeavoured to
+force our way. I was in consequence obliged to make the nearest part of
+the river to my left, and to take such measures as the nature of my
+situation required. Here, for the first time, I set the boat afloat,
+deeming it essential to trace the river, as I could not move upon its
+banks, and wishing also to ascertain where it again issued from the
+marshes, I requested Mr. Hume to proceed northerly, with a view to
+skirt them, and to descend westerly, wherever he saw an open space. He
+was fortunate enough to strike upon the channel about twelve miles
+north of our position, but was obstructed in his further progress by
+another marsh, in consequence of which he returned to the camp the next
+day; in the mean time, I had taken the boat, and proceeded down the
+Macquarie, my way being at first considerably obstructed by fallen
+timber: clearing this obstacle, however, I got into a deeper channel,
+with fine broad reaches, and a depth of from twelve to fifteen feet
+water. I had a short time previously cleared all woods and trees, and
+was now in the midst of reeds of great height. After proceeding onwards
+for about eight miles from the place whence I started, my course was
+suddenly and unexpectedly checked; I saw reeds before me, and expected
+I was about to turn an angle of the river, but I found that I had got
+to the end of the channel, and that the river itself had ceased to
+exist. Confounded at such a termination to a stream, whose appearance
+justified the expectation that it would have led me through the heart
+of the marsh to join Mr. Hume, I commenced a most minute examination of
+the place, and discovered two creeks, if they deserve the name,
+branching, the one to the north-west, and the other to the north-east;
+after tracing the former a short distance, I reached its termination,
+and in order to assure myself that such was the case, I walked round
+the head of it by pushing through the reeds; it being then too dark to
+continue where I was, I returned to a place on the river, at which I
+had rested during a shower, and slept there. In the morning I again
+went to the spot to examine the north-eastern branch, when I was
+equally disappointed. I then examined the space between the two creeks,
+opposite to the main channel of the river, and where the bank receives
+the force of the current. Here I saw water in the reeds, but it was
+scarcely ankle deep, and was running off to the north-west quicker than
+the waters of the river, which had almost an imperceptible motion, I
+was therefore at once convinced that it was not permanent, but had
+lodged there in the night, during which much rain had fallen. I next
+pushed my way through the reeds into the marsh, and at length clearly
+perceived that the waters which were perfectly sweet, after running
+several courses, flowed off to the north, towards which point there was
+an apparent declination or dip. Finding it impossible to proceed
+further, I regained the boat, and thence returned to the camp, under a
+conviction that I had reached the very spot, at which Mr. Oxley lost
+the channel of the river in 1818.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day I moved to the place where Mr. Hume had struck upon the
+channel of the river, but was again doubtful in what direction to
+proceed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The marsh, at the commencement of which we now found ourselves, being
+the third from Mount Foster, but the second great one, seemed to extend
+beyond us to the north for many miles, but varying in breadth. In the
+evening I went in the boat up the channel, and found it at first, deep
+and sullen, as that of the river above. It soon however, narrowed, and
+the weeds formed over its surface, so that I abandoned the boat and
+walked along a path up it. I had not gone far when the channel divided;
+two smaller channels came, the one from the southern, and the other
+from the western parts of the marsh into it. There was an evident
+declination where they were, and it was at their junction the river
+again rallied and formed. On my return to the camp, Mr. Hume and I went
+down the river, but found that about a mile it lost itself, and spread
+its waters ever the extensive marsh before it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this extremity, I knew not what movement to make, as Mr. Hume had
+been checked in his progress north. I therefore determined to ascertain
+the nature of the country to the eastward and to the westward, that I
+might move accordingly; I proposed to Mr. Hume, to take a week's
+provisions, with two attendants, and go to the north-east, in order
+again to turn the marsh, but with the expectation that the angle formed
+by the junction of the Castlereagh with the Macquarie would arrest its
+progress, as the last was fast approaching the former.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I myself determined to cross the river, and to skirt the marshes on the
+left, and in case they turned off to the north east, as they appeared
+to do, it was my intention to pursue a N.W. course into the interior,
+to learn the nature of it. With these views I left the camp on the 31st
+of December, and did not return until the 5th of January. Having found
+early in my journey, from the change of soil and of timber, that I was
+leaving the neighbourhood of the Macquarie, I followed a N.W. course,
+from a more northerly one, and struck at once across the country, under
+an impression that Mr. Hume would have made the river again long before
+my return. I found, after travelling between twenty and thirty miles,
+the country began to rise; and at the end of my journey, I made a hill
+of considerable elevation, from the summit of which I had a view of
+other high lands; one to the S.W. being a very fine mountain. As I had
+not found any water excepting in two creeks, which I had left far
+behind me, and as I had got on a soil which appeared incapable of
+holding it, I made this the termination of my journey, having exceeded
+100 miles in distance from the camp, on my return to which I found Mr.
+Hume still absent. When he joined, he stated to me, that not making the
+Castlereagh as soon as he expected, he had bent down westerly for the
+Macquarie, and that he ended his journey at some gentle hills he had
+made; so that it appeared we must either have crossed each other's line
+of route, or that they were very near, and that want of length must
+alone have prevented them from crossing; but as such all assumption led
+to the conclusion that the Macquarie no longer existed, I determined to
+pursue a middle course round the swamps, to ascertain the point; as in
+case the river had ended, a westerly course was the one which my
+instructions directed me to pursue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the marshes we were obliged to sink
+wells for water, and it was thus early that we began to feel the want
+of a regular supply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having made a creek about four miles from our position by cutting
+through the reeds where there was a narrow space, we pursued a westerly
+course over a plain, having every appearance of frequent inundation,
+and for four or five days held nearly the same direction; in the course
+of which we crossed both our tracks on the excursions we had made,
+which had intersected each other in a dense oak brush; thus renewing
+the few doubts, or rather the doubt we had as to the fate of the
+Macquarie, whose course we had been sent to trace. Indeed, had I not
+felt convinced that that river had ceased, I should not have moved
+westward without further examination, but we had passed through a very
+narrow part of the marshes, and round the greater part of them, and had
+not seen any hollow that could by any possible exaggeration be
+construed into or mistaken for the channel of a river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It appears, then, that the Macquarie, flowing as it does for so many
+miles, through a bed, and not a declining country, and having little
+water in it, except in times of flood, loses its impetus long ere it
+reaches the formidable barrier that opposes its progress northwards;
+the soil in which the reeds grow being a stiff clay. Its waters
+consequently spread, until a slight declivity giving them fresh
+impulse, they form a channel again, but soon gaining a level, they lose
+their force and their motion together, and spread not only over the
+second great marsh, but over a vast extent of the surrounding country,
+the breadth of ground thus subject to inundation being more than twenty
+miles, and its length considerably greater; around this space there is
+a gentle rise which confines the waters, while small hollows in various
+directions lead them out of the marshes over the adjacent plains, on
+which they eventually subside. On my return from the interior, I
+examined those parts round which I had not been, with particular
+attention, partly in company with Mr. Hume, and this statement was
+confirmed by what we saw. Thus, at a distance of about twenty-five
+miles from Mount Foster to the N.N.W. the river Macquarie ceases to
+exist, in any shape as a river, and at a distance of between fifty and
+sixty, the marshes terminate, though the country subject to inundation
+from the river is of a very considerable extent, as shown by the
+withered bulrushes, wet reeds, and shells, that are scattered over its
+surface.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having executed the first part of the instructions with which I had
+been honoured, I determined on pursuing a west, or north-west course
+into the interior, to ascertain the nature of it, in fulfilment of the
+second, but in doing this I was obliged to follow creeks, and even on
+their banks had to carry a supply of water, so uncertain was it that we
+should meet with any at the termination of our day's journey, and that
+what we did find would be fit to drink. Our course led us over plains
+immediately bordering the lower lands of the Macquarie, alternating
+with swamp oak, acacia pendula, pine, box, eucalyptus, and many other
+trees of minor growth, the soil being inclined to a red loam, while the
+plains were generally covered with a black scrub, though in some places
+they had good grass upon them. We crossed two creeks before we made the
+hills Mr. Hume had ascended, and which he called New Year's Range.
+Around these hills the country appeared better&mdash;they are gentle,
+picturesque elevations, and are for the most part, covered with
+verdure, and have, I fancy, a whinstone base, the rock of which they
+are composed being of various substances. I place New Year's Range in
+lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes, long. 146 degrees 3 minutes 30 seconds. Our
+course next lying north-west along a creek, led us to within twenty
+miles of the hill that had terminated my excursion, and as I hoped that
+a more leisurely survey of the country from its summit would open
+something favourable to our view, I struck over for it, though
+eventually obliged to return. From it Mr. Hume and I rode to the S.W.
+mountain, a distance of about forty miles, without crossing a brook or
+a creek, our way leading through dense acacia brushes, and for the most
+part over a desert. We saw high lands from this mountain, which exceeds
+1,300 feet in elevation, and is of sandstone formation, and thickly
+covered with stunted pine, in eight different points&mdash;the bearings of
+which are as follows:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ Oxley's Table Land, N. 40 E., distant 40 miles.
+ Kengall Hill, due E. very distant.
+ Conical Hill, S. 60 E.
+ Highland, S.E. distance 30 miles.
+ Highland, S. 30 E. distance 25 miles.
+ Long Range, S. 16 E. distance 60 miles.
+ Long Range, S. 72 W. distance 60 miles.
+ Distant Range, S. 25 W. supposed.
+</PRE>
+
+<P>
+It was in vain, however, that we looked for water. The country to the
+north-west, was low and unbroken, and alternated with wood and plain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The country from New Year's Range to the hill I had made, and which I
+called Oxley's Table Land, had been very fair, with good soil in many
+places, but with a total want of water, except in the creeks, wherein
+the supply was both bad and uncertain; on our second day's journey from
+the former, we came to the creek on which we were moving, where it had
+a coarse granite bottom. The country around it improved very much in
+appearance, and there was abundance of good grass on the surface of it,
+in spite of the drought. On the right of this creek, a large plain
+stretches parallel to it for many miles, varying in quality of soil.
+Near Oxley's Table Land, we passed over open forest, the prevailing
+timber of which was box. I have placed Oxley's Table Land in latitude
+29 degrees 57 minutes 30 seconds, longitude 145 degrees 43 minutes 30
+seconds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Finding it impracticable to move westward from the hill I again
+descended on the creek, whose general course was to the north-west, in
+which direction we at length struck upon a river whose appearance
+raised our most sanguine expectations. It flowed round an angle from
+the north-east to the north-west, and extended in longitude five
+reaches as far as we could see. At that place it was about sixty yards
+broad, with banks of from thirty to forty feet high, and it had
+numerous wild fowl and many pelicans on its bosom, and seemed to be
+full of fish, while the paths of the natives on both sides, like
+well-trodden roads, showed how numerous they were about it. On tasting
+its waters, however, we found them perfectly salt, and useless to us,
+and as our animals had been without water the night before, this
+circumstance distressed us much; our first day's journey led us past
+between sixty and seventy huts in one place, and on our second we fell
+in with a numerous tribe of natives, having previously seen some
+between two creeks before we made New-Year's Range. At some places the
+water proved less salt than at others; our animals drank of it
+sparingly: we found two small fresh-water holes, which served us as we
+passed. After tracing the river for a considerable distance, we came on
+brine springs in the bed of it, the banks having been encrusted with
+salt from the first; and as the difficulty of getting fresh water was
+so great, I here foresaw an end to our wanderings. And as I was
+resolved not to involve my party in greater distress, I halted it, on
+overtaking the animals, and the next morning turned back to the nearest
+fresh-water, at a distance of eighteen miles from us. Unwilling,
+however, to give up our pursuit, Mr. Hume and I started with two men on
+horseback, to trace the river as far as we could, and to ascertain what
+course it took; in the hopes also that we should fall on some creek, or
+get a more certain supply of drinkable water. We went a distance to
+which the bullocks could not have been brought, and then got on a red
+sandy soil, which at once destroyed our hopes; and on tasting the river
+water we found it salter than ever, our supply being diminished to two
+pints. Our animals being weak and purged, and having proceeded at least
+forty miles from the camp, I thought it best to yield to circumstances,
+and to return, though I trust I shall be believed when I add, it was
+with extreme reluctance I did so; and had I followed the wishes of my
+party, should still have continued onwards. Making a part of the river
+where we had slept, we stayed to refresh, and in consequence of the
+heat of the weather were obliged to drink the water in it, which made
+us sick. While here, a tribe of blacks came to us and behaved
+remarkably well. At night we slept on a plain without water, and the
+next day we regained the camp, which had been visited by the natives
+during our absence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We found the river held a south-west course, and appeared to be making
+for the central space between a high land, which I called Dunlop's
+Range, at Mr. Hume's request, and a lofty range to the westward. It
+still continued its important appearance, having gained in breadth and
+in the height of its banks, while there were hundreds of pelicans and
+wild-fowl on it. Flowing through a level country with such a channel,
+it may be presumed that this river ultimately assumes either a greater
+character, or that it adds considerably to the importance of some other
+stream. It had a clay bottom, generally speaking, in many places
+semi-indurated and fast forming into sandstone, while there was
+crystallized sulphate of lime running in veins through the soil which
+composed the bank.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This river differs from most in the colony, in having a belt of barren
+land of from a quarter of a mile to two miles in breadth in its
+immediate neighbourhood, and which is subject to overflow. This belt
+runs to the inland plains, where a small elevation checks the further
+progress of the flood. There is magnificent blue gum on both sides the
+river, but the right bank is evidently the most fertile, and I am
+mistaken greatly if there is not a beautiful country north of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of the country over which we have passed, it is impossible for me to
+have formed a correct opinion under its present melancholy
+circumstances. It has borne the appearance of barrenness, where in even
+moderate rain, it might have shown very differently, though no doubt we
+passed over much of both good and bad land; our animals on the whole,
+have thrived on the food they have had, which would argue favourably
+for the herbage. Generally speaking, I fear the timber is bad&mdash;the
+rough-gum may be used for knees, and such purposes, and we may have
+seen wood for the wheelwright and cabinet-maker, specimens of which I
+have procured, but none for general or household purposes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The creeks we have traced are different in character from those in the
+settled districts, inasmuch as that, like the river, they have a belt
+of barren land near then and but little grass&mdash;they have all of them
+been numerously frequented by the natives, as appeared from the number
+of muscle-shells on their banks, but now having scarcely any water in
+them, the fish having either been taken, or are dead, and the tribes
+gone elsewhere for food, while the badness of the river water has
+introduced a cutaneous disease among the natives of that district,
+which is fast carrying them off. Our intercourse with these people was
+incessant from the time we first met them, and on all occasions they
+behaved remarkably well, nor could we have seen less than than two
+hundred and fifty of them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our return is to be attributable to the want of water alone, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the effects of the drought on animal as
+well as vegetable nature. The natives are wandering in the desert, and
+it is melancholy to reflect on the necessity which obliges them to
+drink the stinking and loathsome water they do&mdash;birds sit gasping in
+the trees and are quite thin&mdash;the wild dog prowls about in the day-time
+unable to avoid us, and is as lean as he can be in a living state,
+while minor vegetation is dead, and the very trees are drooping. I have
+noticed all these things in my Journal I shall have the honour of
+submitting through you, for the Governor's perusal and information, on
+my return. Finally, I fear our expedition will not pave the way to any
+ultimate benefit; although it has been the means by which two very
+doubtful questions,&mdash;the course of the Macquarie, and the nature of the
+interior, have been solved; for it is beyond doubt, that the interior
+for 250 miles beyond its former known limits to the W.N.W., so far from
+being a shoal sea, has been ascertained not only to have considerable
+elevations upon it, but is in itself a table land to all intents and
+purposes, and has scarcely water on its surface to support its
+inhabitants.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I beg you will inform His Excellency the Governor, that I have on all
+occasions received the most ready and valuable assistance from Mr.
+Hume. His intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs of the
+natives, enabled him to enter into intercourse with them, and chiefly
+contributed to the peaceable manner in which we have journeyed, while
+his previous experience put it in his power to be of real use to me. I
+cannot but say he has done an essential service to future travellers,
+and to the colony at large, by his conduct on all occasions since he
+has been with me; nor should I be doing him justice, if I did not avail
+myself of the first opportunity of laying my sentiments before the
+Governor, through you. I am happy to add that every individual of the
+party deserves my warmest approbation, and that they have, one and all,
+borne their distresses, trifling certainly, but still unusual, with
+cheerfulness, and that they have at all times been attentive to their
+duty, and obedient to their orders. The whole are in good health, and
+are eager again to start.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+I have the honor to be,<BR>
+ Sir<BR>
+ Your most obedient and most humble servant,<BR>
+ CHARLES STURT,<BR>
+ Capt. 39th Regt.<BR>
+<BR>
+THE HONORABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+MOUNT HARRIS, 5TH MARCH, 1829.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+SIR,&mdash;It having appeared to me, that after discovering such a river as
+the one I have described in my letter of yesterday, His Excellency the
+Governor would approve of my endeavouring to regain it. There being a
+probability that it ultimately joins the Southern Waters, I thought of
+turning my steps to the southward and westward; and with a view to
+learn the nature of the country, I despatched Mr. Hume in that
+direction on Saturday last. He returned in three days, after having
+gone above forty miles from the river, and states, that he crossed two
+creeks, the one about twenty-five miles, the other about thirty-two
+distance, evidently the heads of the creeks we passed westward of the
+marshes of the Macquarie. He adds, that, to the second creek the land
+was excellent, but that on crossing it, he got onto red soil, on which
+he travelled some miles further, until he saw a range of high land,
+bearing from him S.W.. by W., when, knowing from the nature of the
+country around him, and from the experience of our late journey, that
+he could not hope to find a regular supply of water in advance, and
+that in the present dry state of the low lands, a movement such as I
+had contemplated would be impracticable, he returned home. I do myself
+the honour, therefore, to report to you, for His Excellency's
+information, that I shall proceed on Saturday next in a N.E. direction
+towards the Castlereagh, intending to trace that river down, and
+afterwards to penetrate as far to the northward and westward as
+possible; it being my wish to get into the country north of the more
+distant river, where I have expectations that there is an extensive and
+valuable track of country, but that in failure of the above, I shall
+examine the low country behind our N.W. boundaries, if I can find a
+sufficiency of water to enable me to do so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am to inform you that in this neighbourhood the Macquarie has ceased
+to flow, and that it is now a chain of shallow ponds. The water is fast
+diminishing in it, and unless rain descends in a few weeks it will be
+perfectly dry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am also to report, that the natives attempted the camp with the
+supplies before my arrival at Mount Harris, but that on the soldier
+with the party firing a shot, after they had thrown a stone and other
+of the weapons, they fled. It was in consequence of their fires, which
+I saw at a distance of forty miles, and which they never make on so
+extensive a scale, except as signals when they want to collect, and are
+inclined to be mischievous, that I made forced marches up, and I am led
+to believe my arrival was very opportune. The natives have visited us
+since, and I do not think they will now attempt to molest either party
+when we separate.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+I have the honour to be,<BR>
+ Sir,<BR>
+ Your most obedient and most humble servant,<BR>
+ CHARLES STURT,<BR>
+ Capt. 39th Regt.<BR>
+<BR>
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P CLASS="finis">
+END OF VOLUME I
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia, Volume I, by Charles Sturt
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia, Volume I, by Charles Sturt
+
+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: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia, Volume I
+
+Author: Charles Sturt
+
+Posting Date: June 29, 2009 [EBook #4328]
+Release Date: August, 2003
+First Posted: January 8, 2002
+Last Updated: July 28, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TWO EXPEDITIONS--SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Col Choat. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA,
+
+VOLUME I
+
+
+by
+
+CHARLES STURT
+
+
+
+
+
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA DURING THE
+YEARS 1828,1829,1830,1831 WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOIL, CLIMATE AND
+GENERAL RESOURCES OF THE COLONY OF NEW SOUTH WALES.
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+
+"For though most men are contented only to see a river as it runs by
+them, and talk of the changes in it as they happen; when it is
+troubled, or when clear; when it drowns the country in a flood, or
+forsakes it in a drought: yet he that would know the nature of the
+water, and the causes of those accidents (so as to guess at their
+continuance or return), must find out its source, and observe with what
+strength it rises, what length it runs, and how many small streams fall
+in, and feed it to such a height, as make it either delightful or
+terrible to the eye, and useful or dangerous to the country about
+it."...SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S NETHERLANDS.
+
+
+
+TO THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF RIPON, VISCOUNT GODERICH, Lord Privy Seal
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+
+
+MY LORD,
+
+The completion of this Work affords me the opportunity I have long
+desired of thanking your Lordship thus publicly, for the kindness with
+which you acceded to my request to be permitted to dedicate it to you.
+
+The encouragement your Lordship was pleased to give me has served to
+stimulate me in the prosecution of a task, which would, I fear, have
+been too great for me to have accomplished in my present condition,
+under any ordinary views of ambition. Indeed, labouring as I have been
+for many months past, under an almost total deprivation of sight, (the
+effect of exposure and anxiety of mind in the prosecution of
+geographical researches,) I owe it to the casual assistance of some of
+my friends, that I am at length enabled to lay these results before
+your Lordship and the public.
+
+While I feel a painful conviction that many errors must necessarily
+pervade a work produced under such unfavourable circumstances, it
+affords me no small consolation to reflect that Your Lordship has been
+aware of my situation, and will be disposed to grant me every
+reasonable indulgence.
+
+I have the honor to be, With the highest respect, My Lord, Your
+Lordship's Very obedient and humble servant,
+
+CHARLES STURT
+ London, June, 1833.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of
+Port Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid
+advances in prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of
+Sydney--Growth of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious
+exertions--Whale-fishery--Other exports--Geographical features--Causes
+of the large proportion of bad soil--Connection between the geology and
+vegetation--Geological features--Character of the soil connected with
+the geological formation--County of Cumberland--Country westward of the
+Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the remote settlers--Character of the
+Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the interior--Periodical droughts--The
+seasons apparently affected by the interior
+marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success or
+failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE MACQUARIE RIVER, AND INTO THE WESTERN INTERIOR IN
+1828 AND 1829.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions
+down the river--Its termination--Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the
+northward--Journey across the plain--Second great
+marsh--Perplexities--Situation of the exploring party--Consequent
+resolutions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous
+conduct of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills
+called New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting
+attack of the kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the
+country--Oxley's Table Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down
+New-Year's Creek--Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in
+with a tribe of natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh
+water--Extraordinary sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks
+on the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our
+return--Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount
+Harris--Miserable condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the
+slaughter of two Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the
+Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--Find the famished natives feeding on
+gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--Character of the country in its
+vicinity--Another tribe of natives--Amicable intercourse with
+them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach the Darling River ninety
+miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback
+across the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the
+drought--Retreat towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie
+and the Darling--Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving
+condition of the natives.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--Mr.
+Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--Mr.
+Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally
+inferred from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the
+Macquarie merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's
+observations--Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior
+plain--The convict Barber's report of rivers traversing the
+interior--Surveyor-General Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Concluding Remarks--Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior
+of Australia--Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men
+requisite,--and of cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other
+arrangements--Treatment of the natives--Dimensions of the boat used in
+the second expedition.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ No. I. Letter of Instructions
+ No. II. List of Stores supplied for the Expedition
+ No. III. Sheep-farming Returns
+ No. IV. List of Geological Specimens
+ No. V. Official Report to the Colonial Government, (Jan. 1829.)
+ No. VI. Ditto (April 1829.)
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+(Not included in this etext)
+
+ Native Burial Place near Budda
+ Vice Admiral Arthur Phillip
+ Cataract of the Macquarie
+ A Selenite
+ Chrystallized Sulphate of Lime
+
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of
+Port Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid
+advances in prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of
+Sydney--Growth of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious
+exertions--Whale-fishery--Other exports--Geographical features--Causes
+of the large proportion of bad soil--Connection between the geology and
+vegetation--Geological features--Character of the soil connected with
+the geological formation--County of Cumberland--Country westward of the
+Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the remote settlers--Character of the
+Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the interior--Periodical droughts--The
+seasons apparently affected by the interior
+marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success or
+failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+PURPOSE OF THIS PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+When I first determined on committing to the press a detailed account
+of the two expeditions, which I conducted into the interior of the
+Australian continent, pursuant to the orders of Lieutenant General
+Darling, the late Governor of the Colony of New South Wales, it was
+simply with a view of laying their results before the geographical
+world, and of correcting the opinions that prevailed with regard to the
+unexplored country to the westward of the Blue Mountains. I did not
+feel myself equal either to the task or the responsibility of venturing
+any remarks on the Colony of New South Wales itself. I had had little
+time for inquiry, amidst the various duties that fell to my lot in the
+ordinary routine of the service to which I belonged, when unemployed by
+the Colonial Government in the prosecution of inland discoveries. My
+observations had been in a great measure confined to those points which
+curiosity, or a desire of personal information, had prompted me to
+investigate. I did not, therefore, venture to flatter myself that I had
+collected materials of sufficient importance on general topics to
+enable me to write for the information of others. Since my return to
+England, however, I have been strenuously urged to give a short
+description of the colony before entering upon my personal narrative;
+and I have conversed with so many individuals whose ideas of Australia
+are totally at variance with its actual state, that I am encouraged to
+indulge the hope that my observations, desultory as they are, may be of
+some interest to the public. I am strengthened in this hope by the
+consideration that some kind friends have enabled me to add much
+valuable matter to that which I had myself collected. It is not my
+intention, however, to enter at any length on the commercial or
+agricultural interests of New South Wales. It may be necessary for me
+to touch lightly on those important subjects, but it is my wish to
+connect this preliminary chapter, as much as possible with the subjects
+treated of in the body of the work, and chiefly to notice the physical
+structure, the soil, climate, and productions of the colony, in order
+to convey to the reader general information on these points, before I
+lead him into the remote interior.
+
+NAME OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that the name "Australia," has of late years
+been affixed to that extensive tract of land which Great Britain
+possesses in the Southern Seas, and which, having been a discovery of
+the early Dutch navigators, was previously termed "New Holland." The
+change of name was, I believe, introduced by the celebrated French
+geographer, Malte Brun, who, in his division of the globe, gave the
+appellation of Austral Asia and Polynesia to the new discovered lands
+in the southern ocean; in which division he meant to include the
+numerous insular groups scattered over the Pacific.
+
+IMPRESSIONS OF ITS EARLY VISITORS.
+
+Australia is properly speaking an island, but it is so much larger than
+every other island on the face of the globe, that it is classed as a
+continent in order to convey to the mind a just idea of its magnitude.
+Stretching from the 115th to the 153rd degree of east longitude, and
+from the 10th to the 37th of south latitude, it averages 2700 miles in
+length by 1800 in breadth; and balanced, as it were, upon the tropic of
+that hemisphere in which it is situated, it receives the fiery heat of
+the equator at one extremity, while it enjoys the refreshing coolness
+of the temperate zone at the other. On a first view we should be led to
+expect that this extensive tract of land possessed more than ordinary
+advantages; that its rivers would be in proportion to its size; and
+that it would abound in the richest productions of the inter-tropical
+and temperate regions. Such, indeed, was the impression of those who
+first touched upon its southern shores, but who remained no longer than
+to be dazzled by the splendour and variety of its botanical
+productions, and to enjoy for a few days the delightful mildness of its
+climate. But the very spot which had appeared to Captain Cook and Sir
+Joseph Banks an earthly paradise, was abandoned by the early settlers
+as unfit for occupation; nor has the country generally been fount to
+realize the sanguine expectations of those distinguished individuals,
+so far as it has hitherto been explored.
+
+CHARACTER OF AUSTRALIAN RIVERS.
+
+Rivers which have the widest mouths or the most practicable entrances,
+are, in Europe or America, usually of impetuous current, or else
+contain such a body of water as to bear down all opposition to their
+free course; whilst on the other hand, rivers whose force is expended
+ere they reach the sea, have almost invariably a bar at their
+embouchure, or where they mingle their waters with those of the ocean.
+This last feature unfortunately appears to characterize all rivers of
+Australia, or such of them at least as are sufficiently known to us.
+Falling rapidly from the mountains in which they originate into a level
+and extremely depressed country; having weak and inconsiderable
+sources, and being almost wholly unaided by tributaries of any kind;
+they naturally fail before they reach the coast, and exhaust themselves
+in marshes or lakes or reach it so weakened as to be unable to preserve
+clear or navigable months, or to remove the sand banks that the tides
+throw up before them. On the other hand the productions of this
+singular region seem to be peculiar to it, and unlike those of any
+other part of the world; nor have any indigenous fruits of any value as
+yet been found either in its forests or on its plains.
+
+He who has never looked on any other than the well-cultured fields of
+England, can have little idea of a country that Nature has covered with
+an interminable forest. Still less can he estimate the feelings with
+which the adventurer approaches a shore that has never (or perhaps only
+lately) been trodden by civilized man.
+
+FIRST VIEW OF PORT JACKSON.
+
+It was with feelings peculiar to the occasion, that I gazed for the
+first time on the bold cliffs at the entrance of Port Jackson, as our
+vessel neared them, and speculated on the probable character of the
+landscape they hid; and I am free to confess, that I did not anticipate
+anything equal to the scene which presented itself both to my sight and
+my judgment, as we sailed up the noble and extensive basin we had
+entered, towards the seat of government. A single glance was sufficient
+to tell me that the hills upon the southern shore of the port, the
+outlines of which were broken by houses and spires, must once have been
+covered with the same dense and gloomy wood which abounded every where
+else. The contrast was indeed very great--the improvement singularly
+striking. The labour and patience required, and the difficulties which
+the first settlers encountered effecting these improvements, must have
+been incalculable. But their success has been complete: it is the very
+triumph of human skill and industry over Nature herself. The cornfield
+and the orchard have supplanted the wild grass and the brush; a
+flourishing town stands over the ruins of the forest; the lowing of
+herds has succeeded the wild whoop of the savage; and the stillness of
+that once desert shore is now broken by the sound of the bugle and the
+busy hum of commerce.
+
+EXTENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES AND DIVISIONS OF THE COLONY.
+
+The Colony of New South Wales is situated upon the eastern coast of
+Australia; and the districts within which land has been granted to
+settlers, extends from the 36th parallel of latitude to the 32nd, that
+is say, from the Moroyo River to the south of Sydney on the one hand,
+and to the Manning River on the other, including Wellington Valley
+within its limits to the westward. Thus it will appear that the
+boundaries of the located parts of the colony have been considerably
+enlarged, and some fine districts of country included within them. In
+consequence of its extent and increasing population, it has been found
+convenient to divide it into counties, parishes, and townships; and
+indeed, every measure of the Colonial Government of late years, has had
+for its object to assimilate its internal arrangements as nearly as
+possible, to those of the mother country. Whether we are to attribute
+the present flourishing state of the colony to the beneficial influence
+of that system of government which has been exercised over it for the
+last seven years it is not for me to say. That the prosperity of a
+country depends, however, in a great measure, on the wisdom of its
+legislature, is as undoubted, as that within the period I have
+mentioned the colony of N. S. Wales has risen unprecedentedly in
+importance and in wealth, and has advanced to a state of improvement at
+which it could not have arrived had its energies been cramped or its
+interests neglected.
+
+ITS ADVANCES IN PROSPERITY.
+
+There is a period in the history of every country, during which it will
+appear to have been more prosperous than at any other. I allude not to
+the period of great martial achievements, should any such adorn its
+pages, but to that in which the enterprise of its merchants was roused
+into action, and when all classes of its community seem to have put
+forth their strength towards the attainment of wealth and power.
+
+ERRONEOUS IMPRESSIONS.
+
+In this eventful period the colony of New South Wales is already far
+advanced. The conduct of its merchants is marked by the boldest
+speculations and the most gigantic projects. Their storehouses are
+built on the most magnificent scale, and with the best and most
+substantial materials. Few persons in England have even a remote idea
+of its present flourishing condition, or of the improvements that are
+daily taking place both in its commerce and in its agriculture. I am
+aware that many object to it as a place of residence, and I can easily
+enter into their feelings from the recollection of what my own were
+before I visited it. I cannot but remark, however, that I found my
+prejudices had arisen from a natural objection to the character of a
+part of its population; from the circumstance of its being a penal
+colony, and from my total ignorance of its actual state, and not from
+any substantial or permanent cause. On the contrary I speedily became
+convinced of the exaggerated nature of the reports I had heard in
+England, on some of the points just adverted to; nor did any thing fall
+under my observation during a residence in it of more than six years to
+justify the opinion I had been previously led to entertain of it. I
+embarked for New South Wales, with strong prejudices against it: I left
+it with strong feelings in its favour, and with a deep feeling of
+interest in its prosperity. It is a pleasing task to me, therefore, to
+write of it thus, and to have it in my power to contribute to the
+removal of any erroneous impressions with regard to its condition at
+the present moment.
+
+COMMERCIAL IMPORTANCE OF SYDNEY.
+
+I have already remarked, that I was not prepared for the scene that met
+my view when I first saw Sydney. The fact was, I had not pictured to
+myself; nor conceived from any thing that I had ever read or heard in
+England, that so extensive a town could have been reared in that remote
+region, in so brief a period as that which had elapsed since its
+foundation. It is not, however, a distant or cursory glance that will
+give the observer a just idea of the mercantile importance of this busy
+capital. In order to form an accurate estimate of it, he should take a
+boat and proceed from Sydney Cove to Darling Harbour. He would then be
+satisfied, that it is not upon the first alone that Australian commerce
+has raised its storehouse and wharfs, but that the whole extent of the
+eastern shore of the last more capacious basin, is equally crowded with
+warehouses, stores, dockyards, mills, and wharfs, the appearance and
+solidity of which would do credit even to Liverpool. Where, thirty
+years ago, the people flocked to the beach to hail an arrival, it is
+not now unusual to see from thirty to forty vessels riding at anchor at
+one time, collected there from every quarter of the globe. In 1832, one
+hundred and fifty vessels entered the harbour of Port Jackson, from
+foreign parts, the amount of their tonnage being 31,259 tons.
+
+The increasing importance of Sydney must in some measure be attributed
+to the flourishing condition of the colony itself, to the industry of
+its farmers, to the successful enterprise of its merchants, and to
+particular local causes. It is foreign to my purpose, however, to enter
+largely into an investigation of these important points. To do so would
+require more space than I can afford for the purpose, and might justly
+be considered as irrelevant in a work of this kind. Without attempting
+any lengthened detail, it may be considered sufficient if I endeavour
+merely to point out the principal causes of the present prosperity
+(and, as they may very probably prove) of the eventual progress of our
+great southern colony to power and independence.
+
+STAPLE OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
+
+The staple of our Australian colonies, but more particularly of New
+South Wales, the climate and the soil of which are peculiarly suited to
+its production,--is fine wool. There can be no doubt that the growth of
+this article has mainly contributed to the prosperity of the above
+mentioned colony and of Van Diemen's Land.
+
+At the close of the last century, wool was imported into England from
+Spain and Germany only, and but a few years previously from Spain
+alone. Indeed, long after its introduction from the latter country,
+German wool, obtained but little consideration in the London market;
+and in like manner, it may be presumed that many years will not have
+elapsed before the increased importation of wool from our own
+possessions in the southern hemisphere, will render us, in respect to
+this commodity, independent of every other part of the world. The great
+improvements in modern navigation are such, that the expense of sending
+the fleece to market from New South Wales is less than from any part of
+Europe. The charges for instance on Spanish and German wool, are from
+fourpence to fourpence three farthings per pound; whereas the entire
+charge, after shipment from New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land,
+does not exceed threepence three farthings,--and in this the dock and
+landing charges, freight, insurance, brokerage, and commission, are
+included.
+
+GROWTH OF FINE WOOL. MR. M'ARTHUR'S EXERTIONS.
+
+As some particulars respecting the introduction of this source of
+national wealth into Australia may prove interesting to the public, I
+have put together the following details of it, upon the authenticity of
+which they may rely. The person who foresaw the advantage to be derived
+from the growth of fine wool in New South Wales, and who commenced the
+culture of it in that colony, was Mr. John M'Arthur. So far back, I
+believe, as the year 1793, not long after the establishment of the
+first settlement at Sydney, this gentleman commenced sheep-farming, and
+about two years afterwards he obtained a ram and two ewes from Captain
+Kent, of the royal navy, who had brought them, with some other stock
+for the supply of the settlement, from the Cape of Good Hope, to which
+place a flock of these sheep had been originally sent by the Dutch
+government. Sensible of the importance of the acquisition, Mr. M'Arthur
+began to cross his coarse-fleeced sheep with Merino blood; and,
+proceeding upon a system, he effected a considerable improvement in the
+course of a few years. So prolific was the mixed breed, that in ten
+years, a flock which originally consisted of not more than seventy
+Bengal sheep, had increased in number to 4,000 head, although the
+wethers had been killed as they became fit for slaughter. It appears,
+however, that as the sheep approached to greater purity of blood, their
+extreme fecundity diminished.
+
+TO REAR MERINO FLOCKS.
+
+In 1803, Mr. M'Arthur revisited England; and there happening at the
+time to be a committee of manufacturers in London from the clothing
+districts, he exhibited before them samples of his wool, which were so
+much approved, that the committee represented to their constituents the
+advantages which would result from the growth of fine wool, in one of
+the southern dependencies of the empire. In consequence of this a
+memorial was transmitted to His Majesty's government, and Mr.
+M'Arthur's plans having been investigated by a Privy Council, at which
+he was present, they were recommended to the government as worthy of
+its protection. With such encouragement Mr. M'Arthur purchased two ewes
+and three rams, from the Merino flock of His Majesty King George the
+Third. He embarked with them on his return to New South Wales in 1806,
+on board a vessel named by him "the Argo," in reference to the golden
+treasure with which she was freighted. On reaching the colony he
+removed his sheep to a grant of land which the Home Government had
+directed he should receive in the Cow Pastures. To commemorate the
+transaction, and to transmit to a grateful posterity the recollection
+of the nobleman who then presided over the colonies, the estate,
+together with the district in which it is situated, was honoured by the
+name of Camden.
+
+EXPORT OF WOOL TO ENGLAND.
+
+Since that time the value of New South Wales wool has been constantly
+on the increase, and the colony are indebted to Mr. M'Arthur for the
+possession of an exportable commodity which has contributed very
+materially to its present wealth and importance. Such general attention
+is now paid to this interesting branch of rural economy, that the
+importation of wool into England from our Australian colonies,
+amounted, in 1832, to 10,633 bales, or 2,500,000 lbs. It has been sold
+at as high a price as 10s. per lb.; but the average price of wool of
+the best flocks vary from 1s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. at the present moment. The
+number of sheep in New South Wales alone was calculated in the last
+census at 536,891 head. The ordinary profits on this kind of stock may
+be extracted from the Table given in the Appendix to the first volume
+of this work.
+
+WHALE FISHERY.
+
+Among the various speculations undertaken by the merchants of Sydney,
+there is not one into which they have entered with so much spirit as in
+the South Sea Fishery. The local situation of Port Jackson gives them
+an advantage over the English and the American merchants, since the
+distance of both these from the field of their gains, must necessarily
+impede them greatly; whereas the ships that leave Sydney on a whaling
+excursion, arrive without loss of time upon their ground, and return
+either for fresh supplies or to repair damages with equal facility. The
+spirit with which the colonial youth have engaged in this adventurous
+and hardy service, is highly to their credit. The profits arising from
+it may not be (indeed I have every reason to think are not) so great as
+might be supposed, or such as might reasonably be expected; but the
+extensive scale on which it is conducted, speaks equally for the energy
+and perseverance of the parties concerned, in the prosecution of their
+commercial enterprises. It has enabled them to equip a creditable
+colonial marine, and given great importance to their mercantile
+interests in the mother country.
+
+In the year 1831, the quantity of sperm and black oil, the produce of
+the fisheries exported from New South Wales, amounted to 2,307 tons,
+and was estimated, together with skins and whalebone, to be worth
+107,971 pounds sterling. The gross amount of all other exports during
+that year, did not exceed 107,697 pounds sterling. Of these exports,
+the following were the most considerable:
+
+ Timber 7,410 pounds
+ Butter and Cheese 2,376
+ Mimosa bark 40
+ Hides 7,333
+ Horses 7,302
+ Salt provisions 5,184
+ Wool 66,112
+
+
+The above is exclusive of 61,000 pounds value of British manufactures
+re-exported to the various ports and islands in the Southern Seas.
+
+OTHER EXPORTS.
+
+In this scale, moreover, tobacco is not mentioned; but that plant is
+now raised for the supply of every private establishment, and will
+assuredly form an article of export, as soon as its manufacture shall
+be well understood. Neither can it be doubted but that the vine and the
+olive will, in a short time, be abundantly cultivated; and that a
+greater knowledge of the climate and soil of the more northern parts of
+the colony, will lead to the introduction of fresh sources of wealth.
+
+GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES.
+
+Having taken this hasty review of the commercial interests of the
+colony, we may now turn to a brief examination of its internal
+structure and principal natural features.
+
+I have already given a cursory sketch of the geographical features of
+the whole continent. Of the vast area which its coasts embrace, the
+east part alone has been fully explored.
+
+A range of hills runs along the eastern coast, from north to south,
+which, in different quarters, vary in their distance from the sea; at
+one place approaching it pretty nearly, at another, receding from it to
+a distance of forty miles. It is a singular fact, that there is no pass
+or break in these mountains, by which any of the rivers of the interior
+can escape in an easterly direction. Their spine is unbroken. The
+consequence is, that there is a complete division of the eastern and
+western waters, and that streams, the heads of which are close to each
+other, flow away in opposite directions; the one to pursue a short
+course to the sea; the other to fall into a level and depressed
+interior, the character of which will be noticed in its proper place.
+
+GREAT PROPORTION OF BAD SOIL.
+
+The proportion of bad soil to that which is good in New South Wales, is
+certainly very great: I mean the proportion of inferior soil to such as
+is fit for the higher purposes of agriculture. Mr. Dawson, the late
+superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company's possessions,
+has observed, as a singular fact, that the best soil generally prevails
+on the summits of the hills, more especially where they are at all
+level. He accounts for so unusual a circumstance by the fact, that
+elevated positions are less subject to the effects of fire or floods
+than their valleys or flanks, and attributes the general want of
+vegetable mould over the colony chiefly to the ravages of the former
+element, whereby the growth of underwood, so favourable in other
+countries to the formation of soil, is wholly prevented. Undoubtedly
+this is a principal cause for the deficiency in question. There is no
+part of the world in which fires create such havoc as in New South
+Wales and indeed in Australia generally. The climate, on the one hand,
+which dries up vegetation, and the wandering habits of the natives on
+the other, which induce them to clear the country before them by
+conflagration, operate equally against the growth of timber and
+underwood.
+
+CAUSE OF THIS.
+
+But there is another circumstance that appears to have escaped Mr.
+Dawson's observation; which is the actual property of the trees
+themselves, as to the quantity of vegetable matter they produce in
+decay. Being a military man, I cannot be supposed to have devoted much
+of my time to agricultural pursuits; but it has been obvious to me, as
+it must have been to many others, that in New South Wales, the fall of
+leaves and the decay of timber, so far from adding to the richness of
+its soil, actually destroy minor vegetation. This fact was brought more
+home to me in consequence of its having been my lot to spend some
+months upon Norfolk Island, a distant penal settlement attached to the
+Government of Sydney. There the abundance of vegetable decay was as
+remarkable as the want of it on the Australian Continent. I have
+frequently sunk up to my knees in a bed of leaves when walking through
+its woods; and, often when I placed my foot on what appeared externally
+to be the solid trunk of a tree, I have found it yield to the pressure,
+in consequence of its decomposition into absolute rottenness. But such
+is not the case in New South Wales. There, no such accumulations of
+vegetable matter are to be met with; but where the loftiest tree of the
+forest falls to the ground, its figure and length are marked out by the
+total want of vegetation within a certain distance of it, and a small
+elevation of earth, resembling more the refuse or scoria of burnt
+bricks than any thing else, is all that ultimately remains of the
+immense body which time or accident had prostrated. Thus it would
+appear, that it is not less to the character of its woods than to the
+ravages of fire that New South Wales owes its general sterility.
+
+CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GEOLOGY AND VEGETATION.
+
+Whilst prosecuting my researches in the interior of the colony, I could
+not but be struck with the apparent connection between its geology and
+vegetation; so strong, indeed, was this connection, that I had little
+difficulty, after a short experience, in judging of the rock that
+formed the basis of the country over which I was travelling, from the
+kind of tree or herbage that flourished in the soil above it. The
+eucalyptus pulv., a species of eucalyptus having a glaucus-coloured
+leaf, of dwarfish habits and growing mostly in scrub, betrayed the
+sandstone formation, wherever it existed, This was the case in many
+parts of the County of Cumberland, in some parts of Wombat Brush, at
+the two passes on the great south road, over a great extent of country
+to the N.W. of Yass Plains, and at Blackheath on the summit of the Blue
+Mountains. On the other hand, those open grassy and park-like tracts,
+of which so much has been said, characterise the secondary ranges of
+granite and porphyry. The trees most usual on these tracts, were the
+box, an unnamed species of eucalyptus, and the grass chiefly of that
+kind, called the oat or forest grass, which grows in tufts at
+considerable distances from each other, and which generally affords
+good pasturage. On the richer grounds the angophora lanceolata, and the
+eucalyptus mammifera more frequently point out the quality of the soil
+on which they grow. The first are abundant on the alluvial flats of the
+Nepean, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter; the latter on the limestone
+formation of Wellington Valley and in the better portions of Argyle;
+whilst the cupressus calytris seems to occupy sandy ridges with the
+casuarina. It was impossible that these broad features should have
+escaped observation: it was naturally inferred from this, that the
+trees of New South Wales are gregarious; and in fact they may, in a
+great measure, be considered so. The strong line that occasionally
+separates different species, and the sudden manner in which several
+species are lost at one point, to re-appear at another more distant,
+without any visible cause for the break that has taken place, will
+furnish a number of interesting facts in the botany of New South Wales.
+
+It was observed both on the Macquarie river and the Morumbidgee, that
+the casuarinae ceased at a particular point. On the Macquarie
+particularly, these trees which had often excited our admiration from
+Wellington Valley downwards, ceased to occupy its banks below the
+cataract, nor were they again noticed until we arrived on the banks of
+the Castlereagh. The blue-gum trees, again, were never observed to
+extend beyond the secondary embankments of the rivers, occupying that
+ground alone which was subject to flood and covered with reeds. These
+trees waved over the marshes of the Macquarie, but were not observed to
+the westward of them for many miles; yet they re-appeared upon the
+banks of New-Year's Creek as suddenly as they had disappeared after we
+left the marshes, and grew along the line of the Darling to unusual
+size. But it is remarkable, that, even in the midst of the marshes, the
+blue-gum trees were strictly confined to the immediate flooded spaces
+on which the reeds prevailed, or to the very beds of the water-courses.
+Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach of flood, the box
+(unnamed) alone occupied it; and, though the branches of these trees
+might be interwoven together, the one never left its wet and reedy bed,
+the other never descended from its more elevated position. The same
+singular distinction marked the acacia pendula, when it ceased to cover
+the interior plains of light earth, and was succeeded by another shrub
+of the same species. It continued to the banks of New-Year's Creek, a
+part of which it thickly lined. To the westward of the creek, another
+species of acacia was remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like
+the blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together, but the creek
+formed the line of separation between them. The acacia pendula was not
+afterwards seen, but that which had taken its place, as it were, was
+found to cover large tracts of country and to form extensive brushes.
+Many other peculiarities in the vegetation of the interior are noticed
+in the body of this work, but I have thought that these more striking
+ones deserved to be particularly remarked upon.
+
+GEOLOGICAL FEATURES.
+
+If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington Valley, we
+shall find that little change takes place in the geological features of
+the country. The sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges is
+composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York, and at Cox's River is
+succeeded by grey granite. The secondary ranges to the N.W. of
+Bathurst, are wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are
+partial changes of strata between Bathurst and Moulong Plains, granite
+is undoubtedly the rock upon which the whole are based: but at Moulong
+Plains, a military station intermediate between Bathurst and Wellington
+Valley, limestone appears in the bed of a small clear stream, and with
+little interruption continues to some distance below the last-mentioned
+place. The accidental discovery of some caves at Moulong Plains, led to
+the more critical examination of the whole formation, and cavities of
+considerable size were subsequently found in various parts of it, but
+more particularly in the neighbourhood of Wellington Valley. The local
+interest which has of late years been taken in the prosecution of
+geological investigations, led many gentlemen to examine the contents
+of these caverns; and among the most forward, Major Mitchell, the
+Surveyor-General, must justly be considered, to whose indefatigable
+perseverance the scientific world is already so much indebted.
+
+The caves into which I penetrated, did not present anything particular
+to my observation; they differed little from caves of a similar
+description into which I had penetrated in Europe. Large masses of
+stalactites hung from their roofs, and a corresponding formation
+encrusted their floors. They comprised various chambers or
+compartments, the most remote of which terminated at a deep chasm that
+was full of water. A close examination of these caves has led to the
+discovery of some organic remains, bones of various animals embedded in
+a light red soil; but I am not aware that the remains of any extinct
+species have been found, or that any fossils have been met with in the
+limestone itself. There can, however, be little doubt but that the same
+causes operated in depositing these mouldering remains in the caves of
+Kirkdale and those of Wellington Valley.
+
+About twenty miles below the junction of the Bell with the Macquarie,
+free-stone supersedes the limestone, but as the country falls rapidly
+from that point, it soon disappears, and the traveller enters upon a
+flat country of successive terraces. A schorl rock, of a blue colour
+and fine grain, composed of tourmaline and quartz, forms the bed of the
+Macquarie at the Cataract; and, in immediate contact with it, a mass of
+mica slate of alternate rose, pink, and white, was observed, which must
+have been covered by the waters of the river when Mr. Oxley descended
+it.
+
+From the Cataract of the Macquarie, a flat extends to the marshes in
+which that river exhausts itself. From the midst of this flat Mount
+Foster and Mount Harris rise, both of which are porphyritic: but as I
+have been particular in describing these heights in their proper place,
+any minute notice of them here may be considered unnecessary. We will
+rather extend our enquiries to those parts of the colony upon which we
+shall not be called upon to remark in the succeeding pages.
+
+Returning to the coast, we may mark the geological changes in a line to
+the S.W. of Sydney; and as my object is to extend the information of my
+readers, I shall notice any particular district on either side of the
+line I propose to touch upon, which may be worthy of notice. It would
+appear that the first decided break in the sandstone formation which
+penetrates into the county of Camden, is at Mittagong Range. It is
+there traversed by a dike of whinstone, of which that range is wholly
+composed. The change of soil and of vegetation are equally remarkable
+at this place; the one being a rich, greasy, chocolate-coloured earth,
+the other partaking greatly of the intertropical character. In
+wandering over them, I noticed the wild fig and the cherry-tree,
+growing to a much larger size than I had seen them in any other part of
+the colony. Upon their branches, the satin bird, the gangan, and
+various kinds of pigeons were feeding. Birds unknown to the eastward of
+the Blue Mountains, were numerous in the valleys; and there was an
+unusual appearance of freshness and moisture in the vegetation.
+
+These signs of improvement, however, vanish the moment Mittagong range
+is crossed, and sand-stone again forms the basis of the country to a
+considerable distance beyond Bong-bong. At a small farm called the
+Ploughed Ground, it is again traversed by a dike of whinstone, and a
+rich but isolated spot is thus passed over. With occasional and partial
+interruption, however, the sand-stone formation continues to an abrupt
+pass, from which the traveller descends to the county of Argyle. This
+pass is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I
+have noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. A small but lively
+stream, called Paddy's River, runs at the bottom of this pass, and
+immediately to the S.W. of it, an open forest country of granite base
+extends for many miles, on which the eucalyptus manifera is prevalent,
+and which affords the best grazing tracts in Argyle. At Goulburn
+Plains, however, a vein of limestone occurs, which is evidently
+connected with that forming the ShoalHaven Gully, which is perhaps the
+most remarkable geological feature in the colony of New South Wales. It
+is a deep chasm of about a quarter of a mile in breadth, and 1200 feet
+in depth. The country on either side is perfectly level, so much so
+that the traveller approaches almost to its very brink before he is
+aware of his being near so singular an abyss. A small rivulet flows
+through the Gully, and discharges itself into the sea at ShoalHaven;
+but this river is hardly perceptible, from the summit of the cliffs
+forming the sides of the Gully, which are of the boldest and most
+precipitous character. The ground on the summit is full of caves of
+great depth, but there has been a difficulty in examining them, in
+consequence of the violent wind that rushes up them, and extinguishes
+every torch.
+
+The open and grassy forests of Argyle are terminated by another of
+those abrupt sand-stone passes I have just described, and the traveller
+again falls considerably from his former level, previously to his
+entering on Yass Plains, to which this pass is the only inlet.
+
+From Yass Plains the view to the S. and S.W. is over a lofty and broken
+country: mountains with rounded summits, others with towering peaks,
+and others again of lengthened form but sharp spine, characterise the
+various rocks of which they are composed. The ranges decline rapidly
+from east to west, and while on the one hand the country has all the
+appearance of increasing height, on the other it sinks to a dead level;
+nor on the distant horizon to the N. W. is there a hill or an
+inequality to be seen.
+
+From Yass Plains to the very commencement of the level interior, every
+range I crossed presented a new rock-formation; serpentine quartz in
+huge white masses, granite, chlorite, micaceous schist, sandstone,
+chalcedony, quartz, and red jasper, and conglomerate rocks.
+
+It was however, out of my power, in so hurried a journey as that which
+I performed down the banks of the Morumbidgee River, to examine with
+the accuracy I could have wished, either the immediate connection
+between these rocks or their gradual change from the one to the other.
+I was content to ascertain their actual succession, and to note the
+general outlines of the ranges; but the defect of vision under which I
+labour, prevents me from laying them before the public.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE SOIL CONNECTED WITH GEOLOGICAL FORMATION.
+
+From what has been advanced, however, it will appear that the physical
+structure of the southern parts of the colony is as varied, as that of
+the western interior is monotonous, and we may now pursue our original
+observations on the soil of the colony with greater confidence.
+
+In endeavouring to account for the poverty of the soil in New South
+Wales, and in attributing it in a great degree to the causes already
+mentioned, it appears necessary to estimate more specifically the
+influence which the geological formation of a country exercises on its
+soil, and how much the quality of the latter partakes of the character
+of the rock on which it reposes. And although I find it extremely
+difficult to explain myself as I should wish to do, in the critical
+discussion on which I have thus entered, yet as it is material to the
+elucidation of an important subject in the body of the work, I feel it
+incumbent on me to proceed to the best of my ability.
+
+I have said that the soil of a country depends much upon its geological
+formation. This appears to be particularly the case in those parts of
+the colony with which I am acquainted, or those lying between the
+parallels of 30 degrees and 35 degrees south. Sandstone, porphyry, and
+granite, succeed each other from the coast to a very considerable
+distance into the interior, on a N. W. line. The light ferruginous dust
+that is distributed over the county of Cumberland, and which annoys the
+traveller by its extreme minuteness, to the eastward of the Blue
+Mountains, is as different from the coarse gravelly soil on the
+secondary ranges to the westward of them, as the barren scrubs and
+thickly-wooded tracts of the former district are to the grassy and open
+forests of the latter.
+
+As soon as I began to descend to the westward it became necessary to
+pay strict and earnest attention to the features of the country through
+which I passed, in order to determine more accurately the different
+appearances which, as I was led to expect, the rivers would assume. In
+the course of my examination I found, first, that the broken country
+through which I travelled, was generally covered with a loose, coarse,
+and sandy soil; and, secondly, that the ranges were wholly deficient in
+that peat formation which fills the valleys, or covers the flat summits
+of the hills or mountains, in the northern hemisphere. The peculiar
+property of this formation is to retain water like a sponge; and to
+this property the regular and constant flow of the rivers descending
+from such hills, may, in a great measure, be attributed. In New South
+Wales on the contrary, the rains that fall upon the mountains drain
+rapidly through a coarse and superficial soil, and pour down their
+sides without a moment's interruption. The consequence is that on such
+occasions the rivers are subject to great and sudden rises, whereas
+they have scarcely water enough to support a current in ordinary
+seasons. At one time the traveller will find it impracticable to cross
+them: at another he may do so with ease; and only from the remains of
+debris in the branches of the trees high above, can he judge of the
+furious torrent they must occasionally contain.
+
+This seeming deviation on the part of Nature from her usual laws will
+no longer appear such, if we consider its results for a moment. The
+very floods which swell the rivers to overflowing, are followed by the
+most beneficent effects; and, rude and violent as the means are by
+which she accomplishes her purpose, they form, no doubt, a part of that
+process by which she preserves the balance of good and evil. Vast
+quantities of the best soil have been thus washed down from the
+mountains to accumulate in more accessible places. From frequent
+depositions, a great extent of country along the banks of every river
+and creek has risen high above the influence of the floods, and
+constitutes the richest tracts in the colony. The alluvial flats of the
+Nepean, the Hawkesbury, and the Hunter, are striking instances of the
+truth of these observations; to which the plains of O'Connell and
+Bathurst must be added. The only good soil upon the two latter, is in
+the immediate neighbourhood of the Macquarie River: but, even close to
+its banks, the depositions are of little depth, lying on a coarse
+gravelly soil, the decomposition of the nearer ranges. The former is
+found to diminish in thickness, according to the concavity of the
+valley through which the Macquarie flows, and at length becomes mixed
+with the coarser soil. This deposit is alone fit for agricultural
+purposes; but it does not necessarily follow that the distant country
+is unavailable since it is admitted, that the best grazing tracts are
+upon the secondary ranges of granite and porphyry. These ranges
+generally have the appearance of open forest, and are covered with
+several kinds of grasses, among which the long oat-grass is the most
+abundant.
+
+COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND.
+
+If we except the valley of the Nepean, the banks of the South Creek,
+the Pennant Hills near Parramatta, and a few other places, the general
+soil of the county of Cumberland, is of the poorest description. It is
+superficial in most places, resting either upon a cold clay, or upon
+sandstone; and is, as I have already remarked, a ferruginous compound
+of the finest dust. Yet there are many places upon its surface,
+(hollows for instance,) in which vegetable decay has accumulated, or
+valleys, into which it has been washed, that are well adapted for the
+usual purposes of agriculture, and would, if the country was more
+generally cleared, be found to exist to a much greater extent than is
+at present imagined. I have frequently observed the isolated patches of
+better land, when wandering through the woods, both on the Parramatta
+River, and at a greater distance from the coast. And I cannot but
+think, that it would be highly advantageous to those who possess large
+properties in the County of Cumberland to let Portions of them. The
+concentration of people round their capital, promotes more than
+anything else the prosperity of a colony, by creating a reciprocal
+demand for the produce both of the country and the town, since the one
+would necessarily stimulate the energy of the farmer, as the other
+would rouse the enterprise of the merchant. The consideration, however,
+of such a subject is foreign to my present purpose.
+
+It must not be supposed, that because I have given a somewhat
+particular description of the County of Cumberland, I have done so with
+a view to bring it forward as a specimen of the other counties, or to
+found upon it a general description of the colony. It is, in fact,
+poorer in every respect than any tract of land of similar extent in the
+interior, and is still covered with dense forests of heavy timber,
+excepting when the trees have been felled by dint of manual labour, and
+the ground cleared at an expense that nothing but its proximity to the
+seat of government could have justified. But experience has proved,
+that neither the labour nor the the expense have been thrown away. Many
+valuable farms and extensive gardens chequer the face of the country,
+from which the proprietors derive a very efficient income.
+
+COUNTRY WEST OF BLUE MOUNTAINS.
+
+To the westward of the Blue Mountains, the country differs in many
+respects from that lying between those ranges and the coast; and
+although, its aspect varies in different places, three principal
+features appear more immediately to characterise it. These are, first,
+plains of considerable extent wholly destitute of timber; secondly,
+open undulating woodlands; and, thirdly, barren unprofitable tracts.
+The first almost invariably occur in the immediate neighbourhood of
+some river, as the Plains of Bathurst, which are divided by the
+Macquarie; Goulburn Plains, through which the Wallandilly flows; and
+Yass Plains, which are watered by a river of the same name. The open
+forests, through which the horseman may gallop in perfect safety, seem
+to prevail over the whole secondary ranges of granite, and are
+generally considered as excellent grazing tracts. Such is the country
+in Argyleshire on either side of the Lachlan, where that river crosses
+the great southern road near Mr. Hume's station; such also are many
+parts of Goulburn and the whole extent of country lying between
+Underaliga and the Morumbidgee River. The barren tracts, on the other
+hand, may be said to occupy the central spaces between all the
+principal streams. With regard to the proportion that these different
+kinds of country bear to each other, there can be no doubt of the undue
+preponderance of the last over the first two; but there are
+nevertheless many extensive available tracts in every part of the
+colony.
+
+MEANS OF INLAND TRANSPORT.
+
+The greatest disadvantage under which New South Wales labours, is the
+want of means for conveying inland produce to the market, or to the
+coast. The Blue Mountains are in this respect a serious bar to the
+internal prosperity of the colony. By this time, however, a magnificent
+road will have been completed across them to the westward, over parts
+of which I travelled in 1831. Indeed the efforts of the colonial
+government have been wisely directed, not only to the construction of
+this road, which the late Governor, General Darling commenced, but also
+in facilitating the communication to the southern districts, by an
+almost equally fine road over the Razor Back Range, near the Cow
+Pastures; so that as far as it is possible for human efforts to
+overcome natural obstacles, the wisdom and foresight of the executive
+have ere this been successful.
+
+DISADVANTAGES OF DISTANT SETTLERS.
+
+The majority of the settlers in the Bathurst country, and in the more
+remote interior, are woolgrowers; and as they send their produce to the
+market only once a year, receiving supplies for home consumption, on
+the return of their drays or carts from thence, the inconvenience of
+bad roads is not so much felt by them. But to an agriculturist a
+residence to the westward of the Blue Mountains is decidedly
+objectionable, unless he possess the means with which to procure the
+more immediate necessaries of life, otherwise than by the sale of his
+grain or other produce, and can be satisfied to cultivate his property
+for home consumption, or for the casual wants of his neighbours. Under
+such circumstances, a man with a small private income would enjoy every
+rational comfort. But of course, not only in consequence of the loss of
+labour, but the chance of accidents during a long journey, the more the
+distance is increased from Sydney, as the only place at which the
+absolute necessaries of life can be purchased, the greater becomes the
+objection to a residence in such a part of the country; and on this
+account it is, that although some beautiful locations both as to extent
+and richness, are to be found to the westward of Bathurst, equally on
+the Bell, the Macquarie and the Lachlan, it is not probable they will
+be taken up for many years, or will only be occupied as distant stock
+stations.
+
+CHARACTER OF EASTERN COAST.
+
+Since, therefore, it appears from what has been advanced, that it is
+not to the westward the views of any settlers should be directed,
+excepting under particular circumstances, it remains for us to consider
+what other parts of the colony hold out, or appear to hold out, greater
+advantages. The eye naturally turns to the south on the one hand, and
+to Port Macquarie northerly on the other. It is to be remarked that the
+eastern shores of Australia partake of the same barren character that
+marks the other three. It is generally bounded to a certain extent by a
+sandy and sterile tract. There are, however, breaks in so prolonged a
+line, as might have been expected, where, from particular local causes,
+both the soil and vegetation are of a superior kind. At Illawarra for
+instance, the contiguity of the mountains to the coast leaves no room
+for the sandy belt we have noticed, but the debris from them reaches to
+the very shore. Whether from reflected heat, or from some other
+peculiarity of situation, the vegetation of Illawarra is of an
+intertropical character, and birds that are strangers to the county of
+Cumberland frequent its thickets. There is no part of Australia where
+the feathered race are more beautiful, or more diversified. The most
+splendid pigeon, perhaps, that the world produces, and the satin bird,
+with its lovely eye, feed there upon the berries of the ficus (wild
+fig,) and other trees: and a numerous tribe of the accipitrine class
+soar over its dense and spacious forests.
+
+PORT MACQUARIE AND FIVE ISLANDS.
+
+We again see a break in the sandy line of the coast at Broken Bay, at
+Newcastle, and still further north at Port Macquarie; at which places
+the Hawkesbury, the Hunter, and the Hastings severally debouche. Of
+Port Macquarie, as a place of settlement, I entertain a very high
+opinion, in consequence of its being situated under a most favourable
+parallel latitude. I am convinced it holds out many substantial
+advantages. One of the most important of these is the circumstance of
+its having been much improved when occupied as a penal settlement. And
+since the shores of the colony are how navigated by steam-boats, the
+facility of water communication would be proportionably great.
+
+I believe the Five Islands or Illawarr district is considered
+peculiarly eligible for small settlers. The great drawback to this
+place is the heavy character of its timber and the closeness of its
+thickets, which vie almost with the American woods in those respects.
+The return, however, is adequate to the labour required in clearing the
+ground. Between the Five Islands and Sydney, a constant intercourse is
+kept up by numerous small craft; and a communication with the interior,
+by branch roads from the great southern line to the coast, would
+necessarily be thrown open, if the more distant parts of it were
+sufficiently peopled.
+
+RICH TRACTS IN THE INTERIOR.
+
+Recent surveys have discovered to us rich and extensive tracts in the
+remote interior between Jervis Bay and Bateman's Bay, and southwards
+upon the western slope of the dividing range. The account given by
+Messrs. Hovel and Hume is sufficient to prove that every valley they
+crossed was worthy of notice, and that the several rivers they forded
+were flanked by rich and extensive flats.
+
+The distance of Moneroo Plains, and of the Doomot and Morumbidgee
+Rivers from Sydney, alarms the settler, who knows not the value of
+those localities; but men whose experience has taught them to set this
+obstacle at nought, have long depastured their herds on the banks of
+the last two. The fattest cattle that supply the Sydney market are fed
+upon the rich flats, and in the grassy valleys of the Morumbidgee; and
+there are several beautiful farms upon those of the Doomot. Generally
+speaking, the persons who reside in those distant parts, pay little
+attention to the comfort of their dwellings, or to the raising of more
+grain than their establishments may require; but there can be no doubt
+this part of the interior ought to be the granary of New South Wales;
+its climate and greater humidity being more favourable than that of
+Sydney for the production of wheat.
+
+PERIODICAL DROUGHTS; THE SEASONS AFFECTED BY THE MARSHES.
+
+The most serious disadvantages under which the colony of New South
+Wales labours, is in the drought to which it is periodically subject.
+Its climate may be said to be too dry; in other respects it is one of
+the most delightful under heaven; and experience of the certainty of
+the recurrence of the trying seasons to which I allude, should teach
+men to provide against their effects. Those seasons, during which no
+rain falls, appear, from the observations of former writers, to occur
+every ten or twelve years; and it is somewhat singular that no cause
+has been assigned for such periodical visitations. Whether the state of
+the interior has anything to do with them, and whether the wet or dry
+condition of the marshes at all regulate the seasons, is a question
+upon which I will not venture to give my decisive opinion. But most
+assuredly, when the interior is dry, the seasons are dry, and VICE
+VERSA. Indeed, not only is this the case, but rains, from excessive
+duration in the first year after a drought, decrease gradually year
+after year, until they wholly cease for a time. It seems not
+improbable, therefore, that the state of the interior does, in some
+measure, regulate the fall of rain upon the eastern ranges, which
+appears to decrease in quantity yearly as the marshes become exhausted,
+and cease altogether, when they no longer contain any water. A drought
+will naturally follow until such time as the air becomes surcharged
+with clouds or vapour from the ocean, which being no longer able to
+sustain their own weight, descend upon the mountains, and being
+conveyed by hundreds of streams into the western lowlands, again fill
+the marshes, and cause the recurrence of regular seasons.
+
+TEMPERATURE OF THE CLIMATE.
+
+The thermometer ranges during the summer months, that is, from
+September to March, from 36 degrees to 106 degrees of Fahrenheit, but
+the mean of the temperature during the above period is 70 degrees. The
+instrument in the winter months ranges from 27 degrees to 98 degrees,
+with a mean of 66 degrees. However great the summer heat may appear, it
+is certain that the climate of New South Wales has not the relaxing and
+enfeebling effect upon the constitution, which renders a residence in
+India or other parts of the south so intolerable. Neither are any of
+the ordinary occupations of business or of pleasure laid aside at noon,
+or during the hottest part of the day. The traveller may cast himself
+at length under the first tree that invites him, and repose there as
+safely as if he were in a palace. Fearless of damps, and unmolested by
+noxious insects, his sleep is as sound as it is refreshing, and he
+rises with renewed spirits to pursue his journey. Equally so may the
+ploughman or the labourer seek repose beside his team, and allow them
+to graze quietly around him. The delicious coolness of the morning and
+the mild temperature of the evening air, in that luxurious climate, are
+beyond the power of description. It appears to have an influence on the
+very animals, the horses and the cattle being particularly docile; and
+I cannot but think it is is some degree the same happy effect upon some
+of the hardened human beings who are sent thither from the old world.
+
+FRUITS.
+
+As I have before observed, it has not yet been discovered whether there
+are any indigenous fruits of any value in Australia. In the colony of
+New South Wales there certainly are none; yet the climate is peculiarly
+adapted for the growth of every European and of many tropical
+productions. The orange, the fig, the citron, the pomegranate, the
+peach, the apple, the guava, the nectarine, the pear, and the loquette,
+grow side by side together. The plantain throws its broad leaves over
+the water, the vine encircles the cottages, and the market of Sydney is
+abundantly supplied with every culinary vegetable.
+
+In a climate, therefore, so soft that man scarcely requires a dwelling,
+and so enchanting that few have left it but with regret, the spirits
+must necessarily be acted upon,--and the heart feel lighter. Such,
+indeed, I have myself found to be the case; nor have I ever been
+happier than when roving through the woods or wandering along one of
+the silent and beautiful bays for which the harbour of Port Jackson is
+so celebrated. I went to New South Wales as I have already remarked,
+highly prejudiced against it, both from the nature of the service, and
+the character of the great body of its inhabitants. My regiment has
+since quitted its shores, but I am aware there are few of them who
+would not gladly return. The feeling I have in its favour arises not,
+therefore, from the services in which I was employed, but from
+circumstances in the colony itself; and I yet hope to form one of its
+community and to join a number of valuable and warm-hearted friends
+whom I left in that distant part of the world.
+
+REMARKS ON EMIGRATION.
+
+On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any
+length. My object in these preliminary remarks has been to give the
+reader a general idea of the country, in the interior recesses of which
+I am about to lead him. Still, however, it may be useful to offer a few
+general observations on a topic which has, of late years, become so
+interesting to the British public.
+
+The main consideration with those who, possessing some capital, propose
+to emigrate as the means of improving their condition, is, the society
+likely to be found in the land fixed on for their future residence. One
+of the first questions I have been asked, when conversing on the
+subject of emigration, has consequently related to this important
+matter. I had only then to observe in reply, that the civil and
+military establishments in New South Wales, form the elements of as
+good society as it is the lot of the majority to command in Great
+Britain.
+
+The houses of the settlers are not scattered over a greater surface
+than the residences of country gentlemen here, and if they cannot vie
+with them in size, they most assuredly do in many other more important
+respects; and if a substantial cottage of brick or stone has any claim
+to the rank of a tenantable mansion, there are few of them which do not
+posses all the means of exercising that hospitality for which young
+communities are remarkable.
+
+But to sever the links of kindred, and to abandon the homes of our
+fathers after years of happy tranquillity, is a sacrifice the magnitude
+of which is unquestionable. The feelings by which men are influenced
+under such circumstances have a claim to our respect. Indeed, no class
+of persons can have a stronger hold upon our sympathies than those whom
+unmerited adverse fortune obliges to seek a home in a distant country.
+
+Far, therefore, be it from me to dispute a single expression of regret
+to which they may give utterance. It must, however, he remembered that
+the deepest feelings of anguish are providentially alleviated in time.
+Our heaviest misfortunes are frequently repaired by industry and
+caution. The sky clears up, as it were: new interests engage the
+attention, and the cares of a family or the improvement of a newly
+acquired property engross those moments which would otherwise be spent
+in vain and unprofitable regrets.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF IMMIGRANTS; MOST LIKELY TO PROSPER.
+
+It cannot be doubted that persons such as I have described, whose
+conduct has hitherto been regulated by prudence, and whose main object
+is to provide for their children, are the most valuable members of
+every community, whether young or old. To such men few countries hold
+out greater prospects of success than New South Wales; for the more we
+extend our enquiries, the more we shall find that the success of the
+emigrant in that colony depends upon his prudence and foresight rather
+than on any collateral circumstance of climate or soil; and to him who
+can be satisfied with the gradual acquirement of competency, it is the
+land of promise. Blessed with a climate of unparalleled serenity, and
+of unusual freedom from disease, the settler has little external cause
+of anxiety, little apprehension of sickness among his family or
+domestics, and little else to do than to attend to his own immediate
+interests. I should wish to illustrate the observations by two or three
+instances of their practical bearing and tendency.
+
+CASES OF EMIGRANTS; CAUSES OF SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
+
+It was on my return from my second expedition, that I visited Lieut.
+****** who resides in the southern parts of the colony. The day after
+my arrival, he took me round his property, and explained the various
+improvements he had made, considering the small means with which he had
+commenced. At this part of our conversation, we came within view of his
+house, a substantial weather-board cottage. "I trust," said I, turning
+to him, "you will excuse the question I am about to ask; for your
+frankness emboldens me to propose it, and on your answer much of the
+effect of what you have been saying will depend. In effecting these
+various improvements, and in the building of that house, have you been
+obliged to embarrass yourself, or are they free from
+incumbrance?"--"Your question," he said, "is a reasonable one, and I
+will answer it with the frankness you are kind enough to ascribe to me.
+I have ever made it a rule not to exceed my income. Mrs. ****** bore
+our first trials with so much cheerfulness, and contributed so much to
+my happiness and my prosperity, that I felt myself bound to build her a
+good house with the first money I had to spare." I confess this answer
+raised my host in my estimation, and it was a gratifying proof to me of
+the success that attends industry and perseverance.
+
+But let us look at another case. Mr. *** had a property to the N.W. of
+Sydney, and having considerable funded means when he arrived in the
+colony, he soon put his property into a state of progressive
+improvement, and being in truth an excellent practical farmer, it
+assumed the appearance of regularity and order. Had Mr. *** stopped at
+this moment, he would have been in the enjoyment of affluence and of
+every rational comfort. But instead of exercising prudent rules of
+hospitality, he gave way to the natural generosity of his disposition,
+entered into expenses he could not afford, and was ultimately obliged
+to part with his estate. Now it is deeply to be regretted, that one
+whose energies and abilities particularly fitted him for the life he
+had chosen, should have failed through such conduct; and it is more
+than probable, that if he had commenced with smaller means, and had
+gradually improved his property, his fate would have been very
+different.
+
+I shall leave these cases without any further comment, convinced as I
+am, that each of them furnishes matter for serious consideration, and
+that they are practical illustrations of the causes of success or
+failure of those who emigrate to the colony of New South Wales. And
+although I do not mean to affirm, that the majority follow Mr. ***'s
+example, I must venture to assert that thoughtlessness--useless
+expenditure in the first instance--waste of time and other
+circumstances, lead to equally ruinous consequences.
+
+MORAL OBJECTIONS TO THE COLONY.
+
+One of the greatest objections which families have to New South Wales,
+is their apprehension of the moral effects that are likely to overwhelm
+them by bad example, and for which no success in life could compensate.
+In a colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of
+crime must of course be great. Yet it falls less under the notice of
+private families than one might at first sight have been led to
+suppose. Drunkenness, as in the mother country, is the besetting sin;
+but it is confined chiefly to the large towns in consequence of the
+difficulty of procuring spirits in the country. There are, no doubt,
+many incorrigible characters sent to settle in the interior, and it is
+an evil to have these men, even for a single day, to break the harmony
+of a previously well regulated establishment, or to injure its future
+prospects by the influence of evil example. They are men who are sent
+upon trial, from on board a newly arrived ship, and they generally
+terminate their misconduct either on the roads or at a penal
+settlement, being thus happily removed from the mass of the prisoners.
+Frequently, however, men remain for years under the same master. They
+become attached to their occupations, their hearts become softened by
+kindness, and they atone as much as they possibly can for previous
+error.
+
+SYSTEM OF IMMIGRATION RECOMMENDED; ENCOURAGEMENT FOR EMIGRATION.
+
+Still there can be no doubt, but that the evil complained of is
+considerable. It is from this reason, and from my personal knowledge of
+the southern parts of the colony, that I should rejoice to see its
+flats and its valleys filled with an industrious population of a better
+description of farmers. A hope might then be reasonably indulged, that
+the Home Government would not be backward in recognising, and in acting
+upon a principle, the soundness of which has been felt and acknowledged
+in all ages, but the chief difficulty of which rests in its judicious
+application. I allude to a system of emigration. Sure I am that if it
+were well organized, and care were taken to profit by the experience of
+the past in similar attempts, it could not fail to be attended with
+ultimate success. The evils resulting from a surplus population in an
+old community, were never more seriously felt than in Great Britain at
+the present moment. Assuming that the amount of surplus population is
+2,000,000, the excess of labour and competition thus occasioned by
+diminishing profits and wages, creates, it has been said, an indirect
+tax to the enormous extent of 20,000,000 pounds per annum. It has
+appeared to many experienced persons, that it is in emigration, we
+should best find the means of relief from this heavy pressure;
+particularly if the individuals encouraged to go out to the colonies
+were young persons of both sexes, from the industrious classes of the
+community. Even if no more than three couples were induced to emigrate
+from each parish in England in ten years, the relief to the springs of
+industry would be very great. Besides, the funds necessary for this
+purpose would revert to the country by a thousand indirect channels.
+Persons unacquainted with our Australian colonies, whether Van Dieman's
+Land or New South Wales, can form little idea of the increasing demand
+for, and consumption in them of every species of British manufacture.
+The liberal encouragement given by government to every practicable
+scheme of emigration, and the sum advanced by it towards the expenses
+of the voyage to the labouring classes, sufficiently indicate the light
+in which the subject is viewed by the legislature; and the fact that no
+private family taking out servants to Sydney, has in any one instance
+been able to retain them, on account of offers more advantageous from
+other quarters, shows clearly the great demand for labour in the
+colony. If I might judge of the feelings of the majority of respectable
+individuals there, from the assurances of the few, they would willingly
+defray any parochial expenses attendant on the voyage, provided the
+services of such individuals could be secured to them for a time
+sufficiently long to remunerate them for such pavement. The tide of
+emigration should be directed to Sydney, Van Dieman's Land, or Western
+Australia, upon condition of the labourer's receiving a certain sum in
+wages, and his daily subsistence from his employer, with an
+understanding, however, that he must consider himself bound for two
+years to such employer. Surely there are hundreds of our indigent
+countrymen, who would gladly seek a land of such plenty, and cast away
+the natural, but unavailing regret of leaving home to secure to
+themselves and their families, the substantial comforts of life on such
+easy conditions.
+
+COMMITTEE FOUND AT SYDNEY.
+
+It is not, perhaps, generally known that a committee has been formed in
+Sydney, to advise settlers as to the best mode of proceeding on arrival
+there. Such a plan is one of obvious utility; and if those who may find
+themselves at a loss for information would apply to this committee for
+advice, rather than to individuals with whom they may become casually
+acquainted, they would further their own interests, and in all
+probability ensure success. Still there are some broad rules upon which
+every man ought to act, which I shall endeavour to point out, and it
+will give me no ordinary satisfaction, if I should be the means of
+directing any one to the road of prosperity and comfort.
+
+HINTS TO EMIGRANTS.
+
+It is to be feared that those who emigrate to New South Wales,
+generally anticipate too great facility in their future operations and
+certainty of success in conducting them; but they should recollect that
+competency cannot be obtained without labour. Every trade--every
+profession in this respect, is subject to the same law--the lawyer, the
+physician, the tradesman, and the mechanic. This labour is required at
+our hands, even in an old community; how much more then is it called
+for in a new, where the ingenuity of men is put to trial to secure
+those means of accomplishing their ends which here are abundant. Now,
+it appears to me but consistent, that he who is obliged to leave his
+native country from want of means to hold his station there, can hardly
+expect to find, or rather to secure, abundance elsewhere without some
+exertion. Every man who emigrates should proceed with a conviction on
+his mind, that he is about to encounter years of labour and privation.
+He will not then be disappointed at partial reverses, and will be more
+thankful for unexpected prosperity. I feel persuaded the tone of mind
+has a great deal to do with success, because it influences the conduct
+of the individual. Supposing, however, that an emigrant has taken this
+rational view of his situation, he should determine on his pursuits,
+and allow nothing but absolute certainty of better fortune to turn him
+aside. Men, however, landing at Sydney, in their eagerness for
+information get bewildered, give up their original plans, adopt new and
+uncertain speculations, trifle away both their time and their money,
+and ultimately ruin themselves. An individual who goes to New South
+Wales for the purpose of settling, should not remain in Sydney a day
+longer than is necessary for the arrangement of his affairs. Every
+shilling spent there is thrown away. The greatest facility is given by
+the different departments of the Colonial Government to the settlers;
+and it is entirely his own fault if he trifles away his time in search
+of information elsewhere than at the fountainhead, or if he trusts to
+any other opinion than his own, supposing him experienced as to the
+quality of the land he may fix upon. Let him be speedy in his
+selection, and fix himself upon his allotment as soon as possible.
+Instead of overstocking his farm, or employing more labourers than he
+can afford to keep, let him be satisfied with a gradual increase of his
+stock, and wait patiently till he can better afford to employ labour;
+above all, let him avoid embarrassing himself by the purchase of any
+superfluous or unnecessary comfort. I consider that man has already
+failed, who runs into debt in the first instance, or who exhausts his
+means in the purchase of large herds, from the vain expectation that
+their increase will clear him. The time was when those idle
+speculations were occasionally attended with success, but such is not
+now the case. The energies of the agriculturist are directed to their
+proper channel, and if the few are unable to make rapid fortunes, the
+many have escaped inevitable ruin. No farm in a state of nature can be
+expected to yield any return of consequence for the first year. It is
+incumbent on a settler to provide for his establishment, or to retain
+the means of providing for it as circumstances may require.
+
+Farming implements are as cheap in Sydney as in England. Horses and
+cattle are cheaper. It requires little, therefore, to stock a farm in a
+reasonable manner. On the other hand, the climate is so mild that the
+want of a house is scarcely felt, and a temporary residence easily
+constructed. On the whole I am convinced, that a man who regulates his
+conduct by prudence, and who perseveringly follows up his occupations,
+who behaves with kindness to those around him, and performs his social
+and moral duties with punctuality, will ultimately secure to himself a
+home that will make up for the one he has quitted in the land of his
+fathers, and place him in as respectable and as happy a situation as
+that which he there enjoyed.
+
+
+*****
+
+
+PROGRESS OF INLAND DISCOVERY.
+
+Having thrown out the foregoing remarks for the information of the
+general reader, and of persons who look to Australia with the more
+earnest views of selecting a colonial home, I now return to the
+immediate object of these volumes; but before entering on the narrative
+of my own expeditions, I think it necessary to advert cursorily to the
+discoveries previously accomplished.
+
+The journeys of Mr. Oxley, far into the western interior of Australia,
+gave rise to various and conflicting opinions as to the character of
+the more central parts of that extensive continent, of which the colony
+of New South Wales forms but a small portion. I feel, therefore, called
+upon briefly to advert to the conclusions which that able and
+intelligent officer drew from his personal observation of the country
+into which he penetrated, as an acquaintance with his opinions will not
+only tend to throw a clearer light on the following details, but will,
+also, convey much necessary information to those of my readers who may
+not have perused his journals. It is necessary, however, in order to
+divest the subject of all obscureness, to trace, in the first instance,
+the progress of inland discovery, in New South Wales, from the first
+foundation of the colony to the period when Mr. Oxley's exertions
+attracted the public attention.
+
+In the year 1788, the British Government took formal possession of the
+eastern coast of Australia, by the establishment of a penal colony at
+Port Jackson. The first settlers, under Governor Phillips, had too many
+difficulties to contend with to submit themselves to be thwarted from
+pursuits essential to their immediate safety and comfort, by the
+prospect of remote and uncertain advantages. It was by perseverance and
+toil alone that they first established and ultimately spread themselves
+over that part of the territory, which, flanked by the ocean on the one
+hand, and embraced as it were by the Nepean River on the other, is now
+entitled the County Of Cumberland. For many years, this single district
+supplied the wants of the settlers. Upon it they found ample pasture
+for their herds, and sufficient employment for themselves. Nor was it
+until a succession of untoward seasons, and the rapid increase of their
+stock pointed out to them the necessity of seeking for more extensive
+pasturage, that they contemplated surmounting that dark and rugged
+chain of mountains, which, like the natural ramparts of Spain and
+Italy, rose high over the nether forest, and broke the line of the
+western horizon.
+
+MR. CALEY'S ATTEMPT.
+
+A Mr. Caley is said to have been the first who attempted to scale the
+Blue Mountains: but he did not long persevere in struggling with
+difficulties too great for ordinary resolution to overcome. It appears
+that he retraced his steps, after having penetrated about sixteen miles
+into their dark and precipitous recesses; and a heap of stones, which
+the traveller passes about that distance from Erne Ford, on the road to
+Bathurst, marks the extreme point reached by the first expedition to
+the westward of the Nepean river.
+
+LIEUT. LAWSON'S EXPEDITION.
+
+Shortly after the failure of this expedition, the sad effects of a long
+protracted drought called forth a more general spirit of enterprise and
+exertion among the settlers; and Mr. Oxley makes honorable mention of
+the perseverance and resolution with which Lieut. Lawson, of the 104th
+regiment, accompanied by Messrs. Blaxland and Wentworth, conducted an
+expedition into the Blue Mountains. Their efforts were successful: and
+the objects of their enterprise would have been completely attained,
+but for the failure of their provisions at a moment when their view of
+the distant interior was such as to convince them that they had
+overcome the most formidable obstacles to their advance, and that in
+their further progress few impediments would have presented themselves.
+
+MR. EVANS' DISCOVERIES.
+
+The success of this undertaking induced Governor Macquarie to further
+the prosecution of inland discovery, and of attempts to ascertain the
+nature of the country of which Mr. Lawson only obtained a glimpse. An
+expedition was accordingly dispatched under Mr. Evans, the Deputy
+Surveyor-General, to follow the route taken by the former one, and to
+penetrate as far as practicable into the western interior. The result
+was the discovery of the Macquarie river, and of Bathurst Plains. The
+report of Mr. Evans was so favourable, that orders were immediately
+issued for the construction of a line of road across the mountains.
+When that was completed, the Governor went in person to fix the site of
+a future town on Bathurst Plains. From thence Mr. Evans, who
+accompanied the Governor on the occasion, was directed to proceed to
+the southward and westward, to ascertain the nature of the country in
+that direction. He discovered another considerable river, flowing, like
+the Macquarie, to the west, to which he gave the name of the Lachlan.
+The promising appearance of these two streams, and the expectation of
+all parties that they would be found to water rich and extensive tracts
+of country, led to the fitting out of a more important expedition than
+any which had before been contemplated.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S DISCOVERIES.
+
+Mr. Oxley, the Surveyor-General of the Colony, was appointed chief of
+this expedition, and was directed to trace the Lachlan and Macquarie
+rivers, as far as practicable, with a view to ascertain their
+capabilities and the nature of the country they watered. In 1817, Mr.
+Oxley directed his attention to the former river, and continued to
+follow its windings, until it appeared that its waters were lost in
+successive marshes and it ceased to be a river. In the following year
+he turned towards the Macquarie, and traced it, in like manner, until
+he was checked by high reeds that covered an extensive plain before
+him, amidst which the channel of the river was lost.
+
+From what he observed of the country, on both these occasions, he was
+led to infer that beyond the limits of his advance the interior had a
+uniform level, and was, for the most part, uninhabitable and under
+water. Its features must have been strongly marked to have confirmed
+such an opinion in the mind of the late Surveyor-General. It stands
+recorded on the pages of his journal, that he travelled over a country
+of many miles in extent, after clearing the mountains, which so far
+from presenting any rise of ground to the eye, bore unequivocal marks
+of frequent and extensive inundation. He traced two rivers of
+considerable size, and found that, at a great distance from each other,
+they apparently terminated in marshes, and that the country beyond them
+was low and unbroken. In his progress eastward, he crossed a third
+stream (the Castlereagh), about forty-five miles from the Macquarie,
+seemingly not inferior to it in size, originating in the mountains for
+which he was making, and flowing nearly parallel to the other rivers
+into a level country like that which he had just quitted.
+
+DISCOVERIES OF MESSRS. MECHAN, HUME, HOVEL AND CUNNINGHAM.
+
+Mr. Evans, moreover, who accompanied Mr. Oxley on these journeys, and
+who had been detached by his principal from Mount Harris, to ascertain
+the nature of the country in the line which the expedition was next to
+pursue, having crossed the Castlereagh considerably below the place at
+which the party afterwards effected a passage, reported that the river
+was then running through high reeds. The inference naturally drawn by
+Mr. Oxley, was, that it terminated as the Lachlan and the Macquarie had
+done; and that their united waters formed an inland sea or basin. It is
+evident that Mr. Oxley had this impression on his mind, when he turned
+towards the coast; but the wet state of the lowlands prevented him from
+ascertaining its correctness or error. Doubt, consequently, still
+existed as to the nature of the country he had left behind him; a
+question in which the best interests of the colony were apparently
+involved. Subsequently to these discoveries, Mr. Surveyor Mechan,
+accompanied by Mr. Hamilton Hume, a colonist of considerable
+experience, explored the country more to the southward and westward of
+Sydney, and discovered most of the new country called Argyle, and also
+Lake Bathurst.
+
+Mr. Hume was afterwards associated with a Mr. Hovel, in an excursion to
+the south coast, under the auspices of Sir Thomas Brisbane. After a
+most persevering and laborious journey, they reached the sea; but it is
+uncertain whether they made Port Philips, or Western Port. Mr. Hume,
+whose practical experience will yield to that of no man, entertains a
+conviction that it was to the former they descended from the
+neighbouring ranges; but Mr. Hovel, I believe supports a contrary
+opinion. In the early stage of their journey, they passed over York or
+Yass Plains; and, after crossing the Morumbidgee, were generally
+entangled among mountain ranges that increased in height to the east
+and south-east. They crossed three considerable rivers, falling
+westerly, which they named the Goulburn, the Hume, and the Ovens; and
+found a beautiful and well-watered country in the vicinity of the coast.
+
+In 1826, Mr. Allan Cunningham, Botanical Collector to his late Majesty,
+traversed a considerable portion of the interior to the north of
+Bathurst, and, with a laudable zeal, devoted his labours to the
+acquisition of general information, as well as to his more immediate
+professional pursuits. In 1827, this gentleman again bent his steps
+towards the northward, and succeeded in gaining the 28th parallel of
+latitude; and, on a subsequent occasion, having taken his departure
+from Moreton Bay, he connected his former journey with that settlement,
+and thus contributed largely to our knowledge of the mountain country
+between it and the capital. Mr. Cunningham, who, independently of his
+individual excursions, had not only circumnavigated the Australian
+Continent with Capt. King, but had formed also one of the party with
+Mr. Oxley, in the journeys before noticed, had adopted this gentleman's
+opinion with regard to the swampy and inhospitable character of the
+distant interior. Its depressed appearance from the high ground on
+which Mr. Cunningham subsequently moved, tended to confirm this
+opinion, which was moreover daily gaining strength from the reports of
+the natives, who became more frequent in their intercourse with the
+whites, and who reported that there were large waters to the westward,
+on which the natives had canoes, and in which there were fish of great
+size.
+
+It became, therefore, a current opinion, that the western interior of
+New Holland comprehended an extensive basin, of which the ocean of
+reeds which had proved so formidable to Mr. Oxley, formed most probably
+the outskirts; and it was generally thought that an expedition
+proceeding into the interior, would encounter marshes of vast extent,
+which would be extremely difficult to turn, and no less dangerous to
+enter.
+
+It remained to be proved, however, whether these conjectures were
+founded in fact. The chief difficulty lay in the character of the
+country, and in providing the necessary means to ensure success. Those
+which were resorted to will be found in the succeeding chapter. Whether
+they would have been found sufficient and applicable had the interior
+been wholly under water, is doubtful; and my impression on this point
+induced me to make more efficient arrangements on the second expedition.
+
+
+
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER in 1828 and 1829.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions
+down the river--Its termination--Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the
+northward--Journey across the plain--Second great
+marsh--Perplexities--Situation of the exploring party--Consequent
+resolutions.
+
+
+The year 1826 was remarkable for the commencement of one of those
+fearful droughts to which we have reason to believe the climate of New
+South Wales is periodically subject. It continued during the two
+following years with unabated severity. The surface of the earth became
+so parched up that minor vegetation ceased upon it. Culinary herbs were
+raised with difficulty, and crops failed even in the most favourable
+situations. Settlers drove their flocks and herds to distant tracts for
+pasture and water, neither remaining for them in the located districts.
+The interior suffered equally with the coast, and men, at length, began
+to despond under so alarming a visitation. It almost appeared as if the
+Australian sky were never again to be traversed by a cloud.
+
+OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+But, however severe for the colony the seasons had proved, or were
+likely to prove, it was borne in mind at this critical moment, that the
+wet and swampy state of the interior had alone prevented Mr. Oxley from
+penetrating further into it, in 1818. Each successive report from
+Wellington Valley, the most distant settlement to the N. W., confirmed
+the news of the unusually dry state of the lowlands, and of the
+exhausted appearance of the streams falling into them. It was,
+consequently, hoped that an expedition, pursuing the line of the
+Macquarie, would have a greater chance of success than the late
+Surveyor General had; and that the difficulties he had to contend
+against would be found to be greatly diminished, if not altogether
+removed. The immediate fitting out of an expedition was therefore
+decided upon, for the express purpose of ascertaining the nature and
+extent of that basin into which the Macquarie was supposed to fall, and
+whether any connection existed between it and the streams falling
+westerly. As I had early taken a great interest in the geography of New
+South Wales, the Governor was pleased to appoint me to the command of
+this expedition.
+
+JOURNEY FROM SYDNEY TO EMU PLAINS.
+
+In the month of September, 1828, I received his Excellency's commands
+to prepare for my journey; and by the commencement of November, had
+organised my party, and completed the necessary arrangements. On the
+9th of that month, I waited on the Governor, at Parramatta, to receive
+his definitive instructions. As the establishments at Sydney had been
+unable to supply me with the necessary number of horses and oxen,
+instructions had been forwarded to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of
+Wellington Valley, to train a certain number for my use; and I was now
+directed to push for that settlement without loss of time. I returned
+to Sydney in the afternoon of the 9th, and on the 10th took leave of my
+brother officers, to commence a journey of very dubious issue; and, in
+company with my friend, Staff-surgeon M'Leod, who had obtained
+permission to accompany me to the limits of the colony, followed my men
+along the great western road. We moved leisurely over the level
+country, between the coast and the Nepean River, and availed ourselves
+of the kind hospitality of those of our friends whose property lay
+along that line of road, to secure more comfortable places of rest than
+the inns would have afforded.
+
+We reached Sheane, the residence of Dr. Harris, on the 11th, and were
+received by him with the characteristic kindness with which friends or
+strangers are ever welcomed by that gentleman, He had accompanied Mr.
+Oxley as a volunteer in 1818, and his name was then given to the mount
+which formed the extreme point to which the main body of the first
+expedition down the banks of the Macquarie penetrated, in a westerly
+direction.
+
+The general appearance of the property of Dr. Harris, showed how much
+perseverance and labour had effected towards its improvement. Many
+acres of ground bore a promising crop, over which a gloomy forest had
+once waved. The Doctor's farming establishment was as complete as his
+husbandry seemed to be prosperous; but he did not appear to be
+satisfied with the extent of his dwelling, to which he was making
+considerable additions, although I should have thought it large enough
+for all ordinary purposes of residence or hospitality. The rewards of
+successful industry were everywhere visible.
+
+FROM EMU PLAINS TO WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+On the 13th, we gained Regent's Ville, the more splendid mansion of Sir
+John Jamieson, which overlooks the Nepean River, and commands the most
+beautiful and extensive views of the Blue Mountains. Crossing the ford
+on the 14th, we overtook the men as they were toiling up the first
+ascent of those rugged bulwarks, which certainly gave no favourable
+earnest of the road before us; and, as we could scarcely hope to reach
+the level country to the westward without the occurrence of some
+accident, I determined to keep near the drays, that I might be on hand
+should my presence be required. We gained O'Connell's plains on the
+20th November, and arrived at Bathurst on the 22nd, with no other
+damage than the loss of one of the props supporting the boat which
+snapped in two as we descended Mount York. On examination, it was found
+that the boat had also received a slight contusion, but it admitted of
+easy repair.
+
+I was detained at Bathurst longer than I intended, in consequence of
+indisposition, and during my stay there experienced many proofs of the
+kind hospitality of the settlers of that promising district: nor was I
+ever more impressed with the importance of the service upon which I was
+employed, or more anxious as to the issue, than while contemplating the
+rapid advance of agriculture upon its plains, and the formidable bar to
+its prosperity which I had left behind me, in the dark and gloomy
+ranges which I had crossed.
+
+On the 27th, Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose experience well qualified him for
+the task, and who had been associated with me in the expedition, having
+joined me, we proceeded on our journey, and reached Wellington Valley
+about the end of the month.
+
+WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+I wished to push into the interior without any delay, or at least, so
+soon as we should have completed our arrangements and organized the
+party; but, although Mr. Maxwell had paid every attention to the
+training of the cattle, he was of opinion that they could not yet be
+wholly relied upon, and strongly recommended that they should be kept
+at practice for another week. As we could not have left the settlement
+under the most favourable circumstances in less than four days, the
+further delay attendant on this measure was considered immaterial, and
+it was, accordingly, determined upon. Mr. Hume undertook to superintend
+the training of the animals, and this left me at leisure to gather such
+information as would be of use to us in our progress down the river.
+
+In his description of Wellington Valley, Mr. Oxley has not done it more
+than justice. It is certainly a beautiful and fertile spot, and it was
+now abundant in pasturage, notwithstanding the unfavourable season that
+had passed over it.
+
+The settlement stands upon the right bank of the Bell, about two miles
+above the junction of that stream with the Macquarie. Its whitewashed
+buildings bore outward testimony to the cleanliness and regularity of
+the inhabitants; and the respectful conduct of the prisoners under his
+charge, showed that Mr. Maxwell had maintained that discipline by which
+alone he could have secured respect to himself and success to his
+exertions, at such a distance from the seat of government.
+
+The weather was so exceedingly hot, during our stay, that it was
+impossible to take exercise at noon; but in the evening, or at an early
+hour in the morning, we were enabled to make short excursions in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+Mr. Maxwell informed me that there were three stations below the
+settlement, the first of which, called Gobawlin, belonging to Mr.
+Wylde, was not more than five miles from it; the other two, occupied by
+Mr. Palmer, were at a greater distance, one being nineteen, the other
+thirty-four miles below the junction of the Bell. He was good enough to
+send for the stockman (or chief herdsman), in charge of the last, to
+give me such information of the nature of the country below him, as he
+could furnish from personal knowledge or from the accounts of the
+natives.
+
+LOW STATE OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER.
+
+Mr. Maxwell pointed out to me the spot on which Mr. Oxley's boats had
+been built, close upon the bank of the Macquarie; and I could not but
+reflect with some degree of apprehension on the singularly diminished
+state of the river from what it must then have been to allow a boat to
+pass down it. Instead of a broad stream and a rapid current, the stream
+was confined to a narrow space in the centre of the channel, and it ran
+so feebly amidst frequent shallows that it was often scarcely
+perceptible. The Bell, also, which Mr. Oxley describes as dashing and
+rippling along its pebbly bed, had ceased to flow, and consisted merely
+of a chain of ponds.
+
+On the 3rd of Dec, the stockman from below arrived; but the only
+information we gathered from him was the existence of a lake to the
+left of the river, about three days' journey below the run of his
+herds, on the banks of which he assured us, the native companions, a
+species of stork, stood in rows like companies of soldiers.
+
+He brought up a nest of small paroquets of the most beautiful plumage,
+as a present to Mr. Maxwell, and affirmed that they were common about
+his part of the river. The peculiarity of the seasons had also brought
+a parrot into the valley which had never before visited it. This
+delicate bird was noticed by Captain Cook upon the coast, and is called
+PSITTACUS NOVAE HOLLANDIAE, or New Holland Parrot, by Mr. Brown. It had
+not, however, been subsequently seen until the summer of 1828, when it
+made its appearance at Wellington Valley in considerable numbers,
+together with a species of merops or mountain bee-eater.
+
+DEPARTURE FOR THE INTERIOR.
+
+On the 5th, our preparations being wholly completed, and the loads
+arranged, the party was mustered, and was found to consist of myself
+and Mr. Hume, two soldiers and eight prisoners of the crown, two of
+whom were to return with dispatches. Our animals numbered two riding,
+and seven pack, horses, two draft, and eight pack, bullocks, exclusive
+of two horses of my own, and two for the men to be sent back.
+
+BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+The morning of the 7th December, the day upon which we were to leave
+the valley, was ushered in by a cloudless sky, and that heated
+appearance in the atmosphere which foretells an oppressively sultry
+day. I therefore put off the moment of our departure to the evening,
+and determined to proceed no further than Gobawlin. I was the more
+readily induced to order this short journey because the animals had not
+been practised to their full loads, and I thought they might have given
+some trouble at starting with an unusual weight. They moved off however
+very quietly, and as if they had been accustomed to their work by a
+long course of training. We took our departure from the settlement at 3
+p.m. and, crossing to the right bank of the Macquarie, a little above
+its junction with the Bell, reached Mr Wylde's station about half-past
+five. Thus we commenced our journey under circumstances as favorable as
+could have been wished. In disengaging ourselves on the following day
+from the hills by which Wellington Valley is encompassed on the
+westward, with a view to approach Mr. Palmer's first station, we kept
+rather wide of the river, and only occasionally touched on its more
+projecting angles. The soil at a distance from the stream was by no
+means so good as that in its immediate vicinity, nor was the timber of
+the same description. On the rich and picturesque grounds near the
+river the angophora prevailed with the flooded gum, and the scenery
+upon its banks was improved by the casuarinae that overhung them. On
+the latter, inferior eucalypti and cypresses were mixed together. The
+country was broken and undulating, and the hills stony, notwithstanding
+which, they appeared to have an abundance of pasture upon them. Mr.
+Hume rode with me to the summit of a limestone elevation, from which I
+thought it probable we might have obtained such a view as would have
+enabled us to form some idea of the country into which we were about to
+descend. But in following the river line, the eye wandered over a dark
+and unbroken forest alone. The ranges from which we were fast receding
+formed an irregular and beautiful landscape to the southward; and
+contrasted strongly with the appearance of the country to the N. W., in
+which direction it was rapidly assuming a level.
+
+We reached Mr. Palmer's at a late hour in the afternoon, in consequence
+of a delay we experienced in crossing a gully, and encamped upon a high
+bank immediately opposite to the mouth of Molle's rivulet which here
+joins the Macquarie from the southward. The cattle had consumed all the
+food, and the ground on both sides of the river looked bare and arid.
+
+No doubt, however, the face of the country in ordinary seasons wears a
+very different appearance. Its general elevation continued high; nor
+did the Macquarie assume any change of aspect. Mountain debris and
+rounded pebbles of various kinds formed its bed, which was much
+encumbered with timber.
+
+DIBILAMBLE.
+
+We had been unable to persuade any of the natives of Wellington Valley
+to accompany us as guides, on our leaving that settlement. Even Mr.
+Maxwell's influence failed; for, notwithstanding the promises of
+several, when they saw that we were ready to depart, they either
+feigned sickness or stated that they were afraid of the more distant
+natives. The fact is, that they were too lazy to wander far from their
+own district, and too fond of Maxwell's beef to leave it for a
+precarious bush subsistence. Fortunately we found several natives with
+Mr. Palmer's stockmen, who readily undertook to conduct us by the
+nearest route to the cataract, which we considered to be midway between
+Wellington Valley and Mount Harris. We started under their guidance for
+Dibilamble, Mr. Palmer's second station, and reached it about half-past
+4 p.m. The distance between the two is sixteen miles. The country for
+some miles differs in no material point from that through which we had
+already passed. The same rich tracts of soil near the river and the
+same inferiority in the tracks remote from it. Near Dibilamble,
+however, the limestone formation terminates, and gives place to barren
+stony ridges, upon which the cypress callities is of close and stunted
+growth. The ridges themselves were formed of a coarse kind of freestone
+in a state of rapid decomposition. The Tabragar (the Erskine of Mr.
+Oxley) falls into the Macquarie at Dibilamble. It had long ceased to
+flow, being a small mountain torrent whose source, if we judge from the
+shingly nature of its bed, cannot be very distant. Our descent was
+considerable during the day; the rapids were frequent in the river, but
+it underwent no change in its general appearance. Its waters were hard
+and transparent, and its banks, in many places, extremely lofty; with a
+red sandy loam and gravel under the alluvial deposits. It generally
+happened that where the bank was high on the one side it was low and
+subject to flood, to a limited extent at least, on the other. Upon
+these low grounds the blue-gum trees were of lofty growth, but on the
+upper levels box prevailed.
+
+SCENERY NEAR THE RIVER.
+
+The views upon the river were really beautiful, and varied at every
+turn; nor is it possible for any tree to exceed the casuarina in the
+graceful manner in which it bends over the stream, or clings to some
+solitary rock in its centre.
+
+It here became necessary for us to cross to the left bank of the river,
+not only to avoid its numerous windings, and thus to preserve as much
+as possible the direct line to Mount Harris; but also, because the
+travelling was much better on the south side. We therefore availed
+ourselves of a ford opposite to the ground on which the tents had
+stood; and then pursued our journey, in a south-westerly course, over a
+country of a description very inferior to that of any we had previously
+noticed.
+
+Iron-bark and cypresses generally prevailed along our line of route on
+a poor and sandy soil, which improved after we passed Elizabeth Burn, a
+small creek mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+TAYLOR'S RIVULET.
+
+We approached the river again early in the day, and pitched our tent on
+the summit of a sloping bank that overlooked one of its long still
+reaches. We were protected from the sun by the angophora trees, which
+formed a hanging wood around us, and, with its bright green foliage,
+gave a cheerfulness to the scene that was altogether unusual. The
+opposite side of the river was rather undulated, and the soil appeared
+to be of the finest description. The grass, although growing in tufts,
+afforded abundance of pasture for the cattle; and, on the whole, this
+struck me as a most eligible spot for a station, and I found it
+occupied as such on the return of the expedition. We had encamped about
+a quarter of a mile from Taylor's Rivulet, which discharges itself into
+the Macquarie from the N. E., and is the first stream, upon the right
+bank, below the Wellington Valley.
+
+Immediately after receiving it the river sweeps away to the southward,
+in consequence of which it became again necessary for us to cross it.
+Our guides, who were intelligent lads, led the cattle to a ford, a
+little below the junction of Taylor's Rivulet, at which we effected a
+passage with some difficulty; the opposite bank being very steep, and
+we were obliged to force our way up a gully for some eighty or a
+hundred yards before we could extricate the team. Pursuing our journey,
+in a N. W. direction, we soon left the rich and undulating grounds
+bordering the river behind us. A poor, level, and open country,
+succeeded them. The soil changed to a light red, sandy loam, on which
+eucalypti, cypresses, and casuarinae, were intermixed with minor
+shrubs; of which latter, the cherry tree (exocarpus cupressiformis) was
+the most prevalent.
+
+At about seven miles from the river we passed some barren freestone
+ridges, near which Mr. Hume killed the first kangaroo we had seen. At
+mid-day we passed a small creek, at which the cattle were watered; and
+afterwards continued our journey through a country similar to that over
+which we had already made our way.
+
+As we neared the stream we noticed the acacia pendula for the first
+time,--an indication of our approach to the marshes. The weather still
+continued extremely hot. Our journey this day was unusually long, and
+our cattle suffered so much, and moved so slowly, that it was late when
+we struck upon the Macquarie, at a part where its banks were so high
+that we had some difficulty in finding a good watering place.
+
+SURPRISE SOME NATIVES.
+
+Being considerably in front of the party, with one of our guides, when
+we neared the river, I came suddenly upon a family of natives. They
+were much terrified, and finding that they could not escape, called
+vehemently to some of their companions, who were in the distance. By
+the time Mr. Hume came up, they had in some measure recovered their
+presence of mind, but availed themselves of the first favourable moment
+to leave us. I was particular in not imposing any restraint on these
+men, in consequence of which they afterwards mustered sufficient
+resolution to visit us in our camp. We now judged that we were about
+ten miles from the cataract, and that, according to the accounts of the
+stockman, we could not be very distant from the lake he had mentioned.
+
+NATIVE BURIAL PLACE.
+
+As I was unwilling to pass any important feature of the country without
+enquiry or examination, I requested Mr. Hume to interrogate the
+strangers on the subject. They stated that they belonged to the lake
+tribe, that the lake was a short day's journey to the eastward, and
+that they would guide us to it if we wished. The matter was accordingly
+arranged. They left us at dusk, but returned to the camp at the
+earliest dawn; when we once more crossed the river, and, after
+traversing a very level country for about nine miles, arrived at our
+destination. We passed over the dried beds of lagoons, and through
+coppices of cypresses and acacia pendula, or open forest, but did not
+observe any of the barren stony ridges so common to the N.E. About a
+mile, or a mile and a half, from the lake we examined a solitary grave
+that had recently been constructed. It consisted of an oblong mound,
+with three semicircular seats. A walk encompassed the whole, from which
+three others branched off for a few yards only, into the forest.
+Several cypresses, overhanging the grave, were fancifully carved on the
+inner side, and on one the shape of a heart was deeply engraved.
+
+BUDDAH LAKE.
+
+We were sadly disappointed in the appearance of the lake, which the
+natives call the Buddah. It is a serpentine sheet of fresh water, of
+rather more than a mile in length, and from three to four hundred yards
+in breadth. Its depth was four fathoms; but it seemed as if it were now
+five or six feet below the ordinary level. No stream either runs into
+it or flows from it; yet it abounds in fish; from which circumstance I
+should imagine that it originally owed its supply to the river during
+some extensive inundation. Notwithstanding that we had crossed some
+rich tracts of land in our way to it, the neighbourhood of the lake was
+by no means fertile. The trees around it were in rapid decay, and the
+little vegetation to be seen appeared to derive but little advantage
+from its proximity to water.
+
+EXTREME HEAT OF THE WEATHER.
+
+We had started at early dawn; and the heat had become intolerable long
+ere the sun had gained the meridian. It was rendered still more
+oppressive from the want of air in the dense bushes through which we
+occasionally moved. At 2 p.m. the thermometer stood at 129 degrees of
+Fahrenheit, in the shade; and at 149 degrees in the sun; the difference
+being exactly 20 degrees. It is not to be wondered at that the cattle
+suffered, although the journey was so short. The sun's rays were too
+powerful even for the natives, who kept as much as possible in the
+shade. In the evening, when the atmosphere was somewhat cooler, we
+launched the boat upon the lake, in order to get some wild fowl and
+fish; but although we were tolerably successful with our guns, we did
+not take anything with our hooks.
+
+The natives had, in the course of the afternoon, been joined by the
+rest of the tribe, and they now numbered about three and twenty. They
+were rather distant in their manner, and gazed with apparent
+astonishment at the scene that was passing before them.
+
+If there had been other proof wanting, of the lamentably parched and
+exhausted state of the interior, we had on this occasion ample evidence
+of it, and of the fearful severity of the drought under which the
+country was suffering. As soon as the sun dipped under the horizon,
+hundreds of birds came crowding to the border of the lake, to quench
+the thirst they had been unable to allay in the forest. Some were
+gasping, others almost too weak to avoid us, and all were indifferent
+to the reports of our guns.
+
+CATARACT OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+On leaving the Buddah, eleven only of the natives accompanied us. We
+reached the river again about noon, on a north-half-east course, where
+it had a rocky bed, and continued to journey along it, until we reached
+the cataract at which we halted. We travelled over soil generally
+inferior to that which we had seen on the preceding day, but rich in
+many places. The same kind of timber was observed, but the acacia
+pendula was more prevalent than any other, although near the river the
+flooded gum and Australian apple-tree were of beautiful growth.
+
+It had appeared to me that the waters of the Macquarie had been
+diminishing in volume since our departure from Wellington Valley, and I
+had a favourable opportunity of judging as to the correctness of this
+conclusion at the cataract, where its channel, at all times much
+contracted, was particularly so on the present occasion. So little
+force was there in the current, that I began to entertain doubts how
+long it would continue, more especially when I reflected on the level
+character of the country we had entered, and the fact of the Macquarie
+not receiving any tributary between this point and the marshes. I was
+in consequence led to infer that result, which, though not immediately,
+eventually took place.
+
+As they were treated with kindness, the natives who accompanied us soon
+threw off all reserve, and in the afternoon assembled at the pool below
+the fall to take fish. They went very systematically to work, with
+short spears in their hands that tapered gradually to a point, and sank
+at once under water without splash or noise at a given signal from an
+elderly man. In a short time, one or two rose with the fish they had
+transfixed; the others remained about a minute under water, and then
+made their appearance near the same rock into the crevices of which
+they had driven their prey. Seven fine bream were taken, the whole of
+which they insisted on giving to our men, although I am not aware that
+any of themselves had broken their fast that day. They soon, however,
+procured a quantity of muscles, with which they sat down very
+contentedly at a fire. My barometrical admeasurement gave the cataract
+an elevation of 680 feet above the level of the sea; and my
+observations placed it in east longitude 148 degrees 3 minutes and in
+latitude 31 degrees 50 minutes south.
+
+It became an object with us to gain the right bank of the Macquarie as
+soon as possible; for it was evident that the country to the southward
+of it was much more swampy than it was to the north: but for some
+distance below the cataract, we found it impossible to effect our
+purpose. The rocks composing the bed of the river at the cataract,
+which are of trapp formation, disappeared at about eight miles below
+it, when the river immediately assumed another character. Its banks
+became of equal height, which had not before been the case, and
+averaged from fifteen to eighteen feet. They were composed entirely of
+alluvial soil, and were higher than the highest flood-marks. Its waters
+appeared to be turbid and deep, and its bed was a mixture of sand and
+clay. The casuarina, which had so often been admired by us, entirely
+disappeared and the channel in many places became so narrow as to be
+completely arched over by gum-trees.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+On the 16th, we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives who joined our
+train after the very necessary ceremonies of an introduction had
+passed, and when added to those who still accompanied us, amounted to
+fifty-three. On this occasion I was riding somewhat in front of the
+party, when I came upon them. They were very different in appearance
+from those whom we had surprised at the river; and from the manner in
+which I was received, I was led to infer that they had been informed of
+our arrival, and had purposely assembled to meet us. I was saluted by
+an old man, who had stationed himself in front of his tribe, and who
+was their chief. Behind him the young men stood in a line, and behind
+them the warriors were seated on the ground.
+
+CONDUCT OF THE NATIVES.
+
+I had a young native with me who had attached himself to our party, and
+who, from his extreme good nature and superior intelligence, was
+considered by us as a first-rate kind of fellow. He explained who and
+what we were, and I was glad to observe that the old chief seemed
+perfectly reconciled to my presence, although he cast many an anxious
+glance at the long train of animals that were approaching. The
+warriors, I remarked, never lifted their eyes from the ground. They
+were hideously painted with red and yellow ochre, and had their weapons
+at their sides, while their countenances were fixed, sullen, and
+determined. In order to overcome this mood, I rode up to them, and,
+taking a spear from the nearest, gave him my gun to examine; a mark of
+confidence that was not lost upon them, for they immediately relaxed
+from their gravity, and as soon as my party arrived, rose up and
+followed us. That which appeared most to excite their surprise, was the
+motion of the wheels of the boat carriage. The young native whom I have
+noticed above, acted as interpreter, and, by his facetious manner,
+contrived to keep the whole of us in a fit of laughter as we moved
+along. He had been named Botheri by some stockman.
+
+
+In consequence of our wish to cross the river, we kept near it, and
+experienced considerable delay from the frequent marshes that opposed
+themselves to our progress. In one of these we saw a number of ibises
+and spoonbills; and the natives succeeded in killing two or three
+snakes. Our view to the westward was extremely limited; but to the
+eastward the country appeared in some places to expand into plains.
+
+CROSSING OF THE RIVER.
+
+After travelling some miles down the banks of the river, finding that
+they still retained their steep character, we turned back to a place
+which Mr. Hume had observed, and at which he thought we might, with
+some little trouble, cross to the opposite side. And, however
+objectionable the attempt was, we found ourselves obliged to make it.
+We descended, therefore, into the channel of the river, and unloaded
+the animals and boat-carriage. In order to facilitate the ascent of the
+right bank, some of the men were directed to cut steps up it. I was
+amused to see the natives voluntarily assist them; and was surprised
+when they took up bags of flour weighing 100 pounds each, and carried
+them across the river. We were not long in getting the whole of the
+stores over. The boat was then hoisted on the shoulders of the
+strongest, and deposited on the top of the opposite bank; and ropes
+being afterwards attached to the carriage, it was soon drawn up to a
+place of safety. The natives worked as hard as our own people, and
+that, too, with a cheerfulness for which I was altogether unprepared,
+and which is certainly foreign to their natural habits. We pitched our
+tents as soon as we had effected the passage of the river; after which,
+the men went to bathe, and blacks and whites were mingled promiscuously
+in the stream. I did not observe that the former differed in any
+respect from the natives who frequent the located districts. They were
+generally clean limbed and stout, and some of the young men had
+pleasing intelligent countenances. They lacerate their bodies,
+inflicting deep wounds to raise the flesh, and extract the front teeth
+like the Bathurst tribes; and their weapons are precisely the same.
+They are certainly a merry people, and sit up laughing and talking more
+than half the night.
+
+BAROMETER BROKEN.
+
+During the removal of the stores my barometer was unfortunately broken,
+and I had often, in the subsequent stages of the journey, occasion to
+regret the accident. I apprehend that the corks in the instrument,
+placed to steady the tube, are too distant from each other in most
+cases; and indeed I fear that barometers as at present constructed,
+will seldom be carried with safety in overland expeditions.
+
+DESERTED BY THE NATIVES.
+
+Nine only of the natives accompanied us on the morning succeeding the
+day in which we crossed the river. Botheri was, however, at the head of
+them; and, as we journeyed along, he informed me that he had been
+promised a wife on his return from acting as our guide, by the chief of
+the last tribe. The excessive heat of the weather obliged us to shorten
+our journey, and we encamped about noon in some scrub after having
+traversed a level country for about eleven miles.
+
+Several considerable plains were noticed to our right, stretching east
+and west, which were generally rich in point of soil; but we passed
+through much brushy land during the day. It was lamentable to see the
+state of vegetation upon the plains from want of moisture. Although the
+country had assumed a level character, and was more open than on the
+higher branches of the Macquarie, the small freestone elevations,
+backing the alluvial tracts near the river, still continued upon our
+right, though much diminished in height, and at a great distance from
+the banks. They seemed to be covered with cypresses and beef-wood, but
+dwarf-box and the acacia pendula prevailed along the plains; while
+flooded-gum alone occupied the lands in the immediate neighbourhood of
+the stream, which was evidently fast diminishing, both in volume and
+rapidity; its bed, however, still continuing to be a mixture of sand
+and clay.
+
+The cattle found such poor feed around the camp that they strayed away
+in search of better during the night. On such an occasion Botheri and
+his fraternity would have been of real service; but he had decamped at
+an early hour, and had carried off an axe, a tomahawk, and some bacon,
+although I had made him several presents. I was not at all surprised at
+this piece of roguery, since cunning is the natural attribute of a
+savage; but I was provoked at their running away at a moment when I so
+much required their assistance.
+
+Left to ourselves, I found Mr. Hume of the most essential service in
+tracking the animals, and to his perseverance we were indebted for
+their speedy recovery, They had managed to find tolerable feed near a
+serpentine sheet of water, which Mr. Hume thought it would be advisable
+to examine. We directed our course to it as soon as the cattle were
+loaded, moving through bush, and found it to be a very considerable
+creek that receives a part of the superfluous waters of the Macquarie,
+and distributes them, most probably, over the level country to the
+north. It was much wider than the river, being from fifty to sixty
+yards across, and is resorted to by the natives, who procure muscles
+from its bed in great abundance. We were obliged to traverse its
+eastern bank to its junction with the river, at which it fortunately
+happened to be dry. We had, however, to cut roads down both its banks
+before we could cross it; and, consequently, made but a short day's
+journey. The soil passed over was inferior to the generality of soil
+near the river, but we encamped on a tongue of land on which both the
+flooded-gum and the grass were of luxuriant height. We found a quantity
+of a substance like pipe-clay in the bed of the river, similar to that
+mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+GREAT HEAT.
+
+The heat, which had been excessive at Wellington Valley, increased upon
+us as we advanced into the interior. The thermometer was seldom under
+114 degrees at noon, and rose still higher at 2 p.m. We had no dews at
+night, and consequently the range of the instrument was trifling in the
+twenty-four hours. The country looked bare and scorched, and the plains
+over which we journeyed had large fissures traversing them, so that the
+earth may literally be said to have gasped for moisture. The country,
+which above the cataract had borne the character of open forest,
+excepting on the immediate banks of the river, where its undulations
+and openness gave it a park-like appearance, or where the barren stony
+ridges prevailed below that point, generally exhibited alternately
+plain and brush, the soil on both of which was good. On the former,
+crested pigeons were numerous, several of which were shot. We had
+likewise procured some of the rose-coloured and grey parrots, mentioned
+by Mr. Oxley, and a small paroquet of beautiful plumage; but there was
+less of variety in the feathered race than I expected to find, and most
+of the other birds we had seen were recognised by me as similar to
+specimens I had procured from Melville Island, and were, therefore,
+most probably birds of passage.
+
+ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AND THE RIVER.
+
+As we neared Mount Harris, the Macquarie became more sluggish in its
+flow, and fell off so much as scarcely to deserve the name of a river.
+In breadth, it averaged from thirty-five to forty-five yards, and in
+the height of its banks, from fifteen to eighteen. Mr. Hume had
+succeeded in taking some fish at one of the stock stations; but if I
+except those speared by the natives, we had since been altogether
+unsuccessful with the hook, a circumstance which I attribute to the
+lowness of the river itself.
+
+About thirty miles from the cataract the country declines to the north
+as a medium point, and again changes somewhat in its general
+appearance. To the S. and S.W. it appeared level and wooded, while to
+the N. the plains became more frequent, but smaller, and travelling
+over them was extremely dangerous, in consequence of the large fissures
+by which they were traversed. The only trees to be observed were
+dwarf-box and the acacia pendula, both of stunted growth, although
+flooded-gum still prevailed upon the river.
+
+On the 20th we travelled on a N.W. course, and in the early part of the
+day passed over tolerably good soil. It was succeeded by a barren
+scrub, through which we penetrated in the direction of Welcome Rock, a
+point we had seen from one of the Plains and had mistaken for Mount
+Harris.
+
+ARRIVAL AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+On a nearer approach, however, we observed our error, and corrected it
+by turning more to the left; and we ultimately encamped about a mile to
+the W.S.W. of the latter eminence. On issuing from the scrub we found
+ourselves among reeds and coarse water-grass; and, from the appearance
+of the country, we were led to conclude that we had arrived at a part
+of the interior more than ordinarily subject to overflow.
+
+As soon as the camp was fixed, Mr. Hume and I rode to Mount Harris,
+over ground subject to flood and covered for the most part by the
+polygonum, being too anxious to defer our examination of its
+neighbourhood even for a few hours.
+
+VESTIGES OF MR. OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT.
+
+Nearly ten years had elapsed since Mr. Oxley pitched his tents under
+the smallest of the two hills into which Mount Harris is broken. There
+was no difficulty in hitting upon his position. The trenches that had
+been cut round the tents were still perfect, and the marks of the
+fire-places distinguishable; while the trees in the neighbourhood had
+been felled, and round about them the staves of some casks and a few
+tent-pegs were scattered. Mr. Oxley had selected a place at some
+distance from the river, in consequence of its then swollen state. I
+looked upon it from the same ground, and could not discern the waters
+in its channel; so much had they fallen below their ordinary level. He
+saw the river when it was overflowing its banks; on the present
+occasion it had scarcely sufficient water to support a current. On the
+summit of the greater eminence, which we ascended, there remained the
+half-burnt planks of a boat, some clenched and rusty nails, and an old
+trunk; but my search for the bottle Mr. Oxley had left was unsuccessful.
+
+A reflection naturally arose to my mind on examining these decaying
+vestiges of a former expedition, whether I should be more fortunate
+than the leader of it, and how far I should be enabled to penetrate
+beyond the point which had conquered his perseverance. Only a week
+before I left Sydney I had followed Mr. Oxley to the tomb. A man of
+uncommon quickness, and of great ability, the task of following up his
+discoveries was not less enviable than arduous; but, arrived at that
+point at which his journey may be said to have terminated and mine only
+to commence, I knew not how soon I should be obliged, like him, to
+retreat from the marshes and exhalations of so depressed a country. My
+eye instinctively turned to the North-West, and the view extended over
+an apparently endless forest. I could trace the river line of trees by
+their superior height; but saw no appearance of reeds, save the few
+that grew on the banks of the stream.
+
+Mount Foster, somewhat higher than Mount Harris, on the opposite side
+of the river, alone broke the line of the horizon to the North N.W. at
+a distance of five miles. From that point all round the compass, the
+low lands spread, like a dark sea, before me; except where a large
+plain stretching from E. to W., and lying to the S.E. broke their
+monotony; and if there was nothing discouraging, there certainly was
+nothing cheering, in the prospect.
+
+ILLNESS OF TWO OF THE MEN.
+
+On our return to the camp, I was vexed to find two of the men, Henwood
+and Williams, with increased inflammation of the eyes, of which they
+had previously been complaining, and I thought it advisable to bleed
+the latter.
+
+In consequence of the indisposition of these men, we remained
+stationary on the 21st, which enabled me to pay a second visit to Mount
+Harris. On ascending the smaller hill, I was surprised to find similar
+vestiges on its summit to those I had noticed on the larger one; in
+addition to which, the rollers still continued on the side of the hill,
+which had been used to get the boat up it. [Mr. Oxley had two boats;
+one of which he dragged to the top of each of these hills, and left
+them turned bottom upwards, burying a bottle under the head of the
+larger boat, which was conveyed to the more distant hill.]
+
+Mount Harris is of basaltic formation, but I could not observe any
+columnar regularity in it, although large blocks are exposed above the
+ground. The rock is extremely hard and sonorous.
+
+MOUNT FOSTER AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
+
+We moved leisurely towards Mount Foster, on the 22nd, and arrived
+opposite to it a little before sunset. The country between the two is
+mostly open, or covered only with the acacia pendula and dwarf-box. The
+soil, although an alluvial deposit, is not of the best; nor was
+vegetation either fresh or close upon it. As soon as the party stopped,
+I crossed the river, and lost no time in ascending the hill, being
+anxious to ascertain if any fresh object was visible from its summit, I
+thought that from an eminence so much above the level of the
+surrounding objects, I might obtain a view of the marshes, or of water;
+but I was wholly disappointed. The view was certainly extensive, but it
+was otherwise unsatisfactory. Again to the N.W. the lowlands spread in
+darkness before me; there were some considerable plains beyond the near
+wood; but the country at the foot of the hill appeared open and
+promising. Although the river line was lost in the distance, it was as
+truly pointed out by the fires of the natives, which rose in upright
+columns into the sky, as if it had been marked by the trees upon its
+banks.
+
+To the eastward, Arbuthnot's range rose high above the line of the
+horizon, bearing nearly due East, distant seventy miles. The following
+sketch of its outlines will convey a better idea of its appearance from
+Mount Foster than any written description.
+
+[small sketch here--not shown in etext]
+
+I stayed on the mount until after sunset, but I could not make out any
+space that at all resembled the formidable barrier I knew we were so
+rapidly approaching. I saw nothing to check our advance, and I
+therefore returned to the camp, to advise with Mr. Hume upon the
+subject. Not having been with me on Mount Foster, he took the
+opportunity to ascend it on the following morning; and on his return
+concurred with me in opinion, that there was no apparent obstacle to
+our moving onwards. As the men were considerably better, I had the less
+hesitation in closing with the marshes. We left our position, intending
+to travel slowly, and to halt early.
+
+The first part of our journey was over rich flats, timbered
+sufficiently to afford a shade, on which the grass was luxuriant; but
+we were obliged to seek more open ground, in consequence of the
+frequent stumbling of the cattle.
+
+We issued, at length, upon a plain, the view across which was as dreary
+as can be imagined; in many places without a tree, save a few old
+stumps left by the natives when they fired the timber, some of which
+were still smoking in different parts of it. Observing some lofty trees
+at the extremity of the plain, we moved towards them, under an
+impression that they indicated the river line. But on this exposed spot
+the sun's rays fell with intense power upon us, and the dust was so
+minute and penetrating, that I soon regretted having left the shady
+banks of the river.
+
+About 2.p.m. we neared the trees for which we had been making, over
+ground evidently formed by alluvial deposition, and were astonished to
+find that reeds alone were growing under the trees as far as the eye
+could penetrate. It appeared that we were still some distance from the
+river, and it was very doubtful how far we might be from water, for
+which the men were anxiously calling. I therefore halted, and sent
+Fraser into the reeds towards some dead trees, on which a number of
+spoonbills were sitting. He found that there was a small lake in the
+centre of the reeds, the resort of numerous wild fowl; but although the
+men were enabled to quench their thirst, we found it impossible to
+water the animals. We were obliged, therefore, to continue our course
+along the edge of the reeds; which in a short time appeared in large
+masses in front of us, stretching into a vast plain upon our right; and
+it became evident that the whole neighbourhood was subject to extensive
+inundation.
+
+ENCAMP AMIDST REEDS.
+
+I was fearful that the reeds would have checked us; but there was a
+passage between the patches, through which we managed to force our way
+into a deep bight, and fortunately gained the river at the bottom of it
+much sooner than we expected. We were obliged to clear away a space for
+the tents; and thus, although there had been no such appearance from
+Mount Foster, we found ourselves in less than seven hours after leaving
+it, encamped pretty far in that marsh for which we had so anxiously
+looked from its summit, and now trusting to circumstances for safety,
+upon ground on which, in any ordinary state of the river, it would have
+been dangerous to have ventured. Indeed, as it was, our situation was
+sufficiently critical, and would not admit of hesitation on my part.
+
+NATURE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+After the cattle had been turned out, Mr. Hume and I again mounted our
+horses, and proceeded to the westward, with a view to examine the
+nature of the country before us, and to ascertain if it was still
+practicable to move along the river side. For, although it was evident
+that we had arrived at what might strictly be called the marshes of the
+Macquarie, I still thought we might be at some distance from the place
+where Mr. Oxley terminated his journey.
+
+There was no indication in the river to encourage an idea that it would
+speedily terminate; nor, although we were on ground subject to
+extensive inundation, could we be said to have reached the heart of the
+marshes, as the reeds still continued in detached bodies only. We
+forced a path through various portions of them, and passed over ground
+wholly subject to flood, to a distance of about six miles. We then
+crossed a small rise of ground, sufficiently high to have afforded a
+retreat, had necessity obliged us to seek for one; and we shortly
+afterwards descended on the river, unaltered in its appearance, and
+rather increased than diminished in size. A vast plain extended to the
+N.W., the extremity of which we could not discern; though a thick
+forest formed its northern boundary.
+
+It was evident that this plain had been frequently under water, but it
+was difficult to judge from the marks on the trees to what height the
+floods had risen. The soil was an alluvial deposit, superficially
+sandy; and many shells were scattered over its surface. To the south,
+the country appeared close and low; nor do I think we could have
+approached the river from that side, by reason of the huge belts of
+reeds that appeared to extend as far as the the eye could reach.
+
+MEN ATTACKED WITH OPHTHALMIA.
+
+The approach of night obliged us to return to the camp. On our arrival,
+we found that the state of Henwood and Williams would prevent our
+stirring for a day or two. Not only had they a return of inflammation,
+but several other of the men complained of a painful irritation of the
+eyes, which were dreadfully blood-shot and weak. I was in some measure
+prepared for a relapse in Henwood, as the exposure which he necessarily
+underwent on the plain was sufficient to produce that effect; but I now
+became apprehensive that the affection would run through the party.
+
+Considering our situation in its different bearings, it struck me that
+the men who were to return to Wellington Valley with an account our our
+proceedings for the Governor's information, had been brought as far as
+prudence warranted. There was no fear of their going astray, as long as
+they had the river to guide them; but in the open country which we were
+to all appearance approaching, or amidst fields of reeds, they might
+wander from the track, and irrecoverably lose themselves. I determined,
+therefore, not to risk their safety, but to prepare my dispatches for
+Sydney, and I hoped most anxiously, that ere they were closed, all
+symptoms of disease would have terminated.
+
+In the course of the day, however, Spencer, who was to return with
+Riley to Wellington Valley, became seriously indisposed, and I feared
+that he was attacked with dysentery. Indeed, I should have attributed
+his illness to our situation, but I did not notice any unusual moisture
+in the atmosphere, nor did any fogs rise from the river. I therefore
+the rather attributed it to exposure and change of diet, and treated
+him accordingly. To my satisfaction, when I visited the men late in the
+evening, I found a general improvement in the whole of them. Spencer
+was considerably relieved, and those of the party who had inflammation
+of the eyes no longer felt that painful irritation of which they had
+before complained. I determined, therefore, unless untoward
+circumstances should prevent it, to send Riley and his companion
+homewards, and to move the party without loss of time.
+
+We had not seen any natives for many days, but a few passed the camp on
+the opposite side of the river on the evening of the 25th. They would
+not, however, come to us; but fled into the interior in great apparent
+alarm.
+
+DEPARTURE OF TWO MEN FOR WELLINGTON.
+
+On the morning of the 26th, the men were sufficiently recovered to
+pursue their journey. Riley and Spencer left us at an early hour; and
+about 7 a.m. we pursued a N.N.W. course along the great plain I have
+noticed, starting numberless quails, and many wild turkeys, by the way.
+Leaving that part of the river on which Mr. Hume and I had touched
+considerably to the left, we made for the point of a wood, projecting
+from the river line of trees into the plain. The ground under us was an
+alluvial deposit, and bore all the marks of frequent inundation.
+
+The soil was yielding, blistered, and uneven; and the claws of
+cray-fish, together with numerous small shells, were every where
+collected in the hollows made by the subsiding of the waters, between
+broad belts of reeds and scrubs of polygonum.
+
+CONSULTATION.
+
+On gaining the point of the wood, we found an absolute check put to our
+further progress. We had been moving directly on the great body of the
+marsh, and from the wood it spread in boundless extent before us. It
+was evidently lower than the ground on which we stood; we had
+therefore, a complete view over the whole expanse; and there was a
+dreariness and desolation pervading the scene that strengthened as we
+gazed upon it. Under existing circumstances, it only remained for us
+either to skirt the reeds to the northward, or to turn in again upon
+the river; and as I considered it important to ascertain the direction
+of the Macquarie at so critical and interesting a point, I thought it
+better to adopt the latter measure. We, accordingly, made for the
+river, and pitched our tents, as at the last station, in the midst of
+reeds.
+
+There were two points at this time, upon which I was extremely anxious.
+The first was as to the course of the river; the second, as to the
+extent of the marshes by which we had been checked, and the
+practicability of the country to the northward.
+
+In advising with Mr. Hume, I proposed launching the boat, as the surest
+means of ascertaining the former, and he, on his part, most readily
+volunteered to examine the marshes, in any direction I should point
+out. It was therefore, arranged, that I should take two men, and a
+week's provision with me in the boat down the river; and that he should
+proceed with a like number of men on an excursion to the northward.
+
+After having given directions as to the regulations of camp during our
+absence, we separated, on the morning of the 26th for the first time,
+in furtherance of the objects each had in view.
+
+BOAT EXCURSION.
+
+In pulling down the river, I found that its channel was at first
+extremely tortuous and irregular, but that it held a general N.W.
+course, and bore much the same appearance as it had done since our
+descent from Mount Foster.
+
+We had a laborious task in lifting the boat over the trunks of trees
+that had fallen into the channel of the river or that had been left by
+the floods, and at length we stove her in upon a sunken log. The injury
+she received was too serious not to require immediate repair; and we,
+therefore, patched her up with a tin plate. This accident occasioned
+some delay, and the morning was consumed without our having made any
+considerable progress. At length, however, we got into a more open
+channel.
+
+The river suddenly increased in breadth to thirty-five or forty-five
+yards, with a depth of from twelve to twenty feet of water. Its banks
+shelved perpendicularly down, and were almost on a level with the
+surface of the stream; and the flood mark was not more than two feet
+high on the reeds by which they were lined. We had hitherto passed
+under the shade of the flooded gum, which still continued on the
+immediate banks of the river; but, the farther we advanced, the more
+did we find these trees in a state of decay, until at length they
+ceased, or were only rarely met with.
+
+TERMINATION OF THE RIVER.
+
+About 2 p.m. I brought up under a solitary tree, in consequence of
+heavy rain: this was upon the left bank. In the afternoon, however, we
+again pushed forward, and soon lost sight of every other object amidst
+reeds of great height. The channel of the river continued as broad and
+as deep as ever, but the flood mark did not show more than a foot above
+the banks, which were now almost on a level with the water; and the
+current was so sluggish as to be scarcely perceptible. These general
+appearances continued for about three miles, when our course was
+suddenly, and most unexpectedly, checked. The channel, which had
+promised so well, without any change in its breadth or depth, ceased
+altogether; and whilst we were yet lost in astonishment at so abrupt a
+termination of it, the boat grounded. It only remained for us to
+examine the banks, which we did with particular attention. Two creeks
+were then discovered, so small as scarcely to deserve the name, and
+which would, under ordinary circumstances, have been overlooked. The
+one branched off to the north--the other to the west. We were obliged
+to get out of the boat to push up the former, the leeches sticking in
+numbers to our legs. The creek continued for about thirty yards, when
+it was terminated; and, in order fully to satisfy myself of the fact, I
+walked round the head of it by pushing through the reeds. Night coming
+on, we returned to the tree at which we had stopped during the rain,
+and slept under it. The men cut away the reeds, or we should not have
+had room to move. At 2 a.m. it commenced raining, with a heavy storm of
+thunder and lightning; the boat was consequently hauled ashore, and
+turned over to afford us a temporary shelter. The lightning was
+extremely vivid, and frequently played upon the ground, near the
+firelocks, for more than a quarter of a minute at a time.
+
+It is singular, that Mr. Oxley should, under similar circumstances,
+have experienced an equally stormy night, and most probably within a
+few yards of the place on which I had posted myself. Notwithstanding
+that the elements were raging around me, as if to warn me of the danger
+of my situation, my mind turned solely on the singular failure of the
+river. I could not but encourage hopes that this second channel that
+remained to be explored would lead us into an open space again; and as
+soon as the morning dawned we pursued our way to it. In passing some
+dead trees upon the right bank, I stopped to ascend one, that, from an
+elevation, I might survey the marsh, but I found it impossible to trace
+the river through it. The country to the westward was covered with
+reeds, apparently to the distance of seven miles; to the N.W. to a
+still greater distance; and to the north they bounded the horizon.
+
+The whole expanse was level and unbroken, but here and there the reeds
+were higher and darker than at other places, as if they grew near
+constant moisture; but I could see no appearance of water in any body,
+or of high lands beyond the distant forest.
+
+As soon as we arrived at the end of the main channel, we again got out
+of the boat, and in pushing up the smaller one, soon found ourselves
+under a dark arch of reeds. It did not, however, continue more than
+twenty yards when it ceased, and I walked round the head of it as I had
+done round that of the other. We then examined the space between the
+creeks, where the bank receives the force of the current, which I did
+not doubt had formed them by the separation of its eddies. Observing
+water among the reeds, I pushed through them with infinite labour to a
+considerable distance. The soil proved to be a stiff clay; the reeds
+were closely embodied, and from ten to twelve feet high; the waters
+were in some places ankle deep, and in others scarcely covered the
+surface. They were flowing in different points, with greater speed than
+those of the river, which at once convinced me that they were not
+permanent, but must have lodged in the night during which so much rain
+had fallen. They ultimately appeared to flow to the northward, but I
+found it impossible to follow them, and it was not without difficulty
+that, after having wandered about at every point of the compass, I
+again reached the boat.
+
+CAUSES OF THE FAILURE OF THE RIVER.
+
+The care with which I had noted every change that took place in the
+Macquarie, from Wellington Valley downwards, enabled me, in some
+measure, to account for its present features. I was led to conclude
+that the waters of the river being so small in body, excepting in times
+of flood, and flowing for so many miles through a level country without
+receiving any tributary to support their first impulse, became too
+sluggish, long ere they reached the marshes, to cleave through so
+formidable a barrier; and consequently spread over the surrounding
+country--whether again to take up the character of a river, we had
+still to determine. Unless, however, a decline of country should favour
+its assuming its original shape, it was evident that the Macquarie
+would not be found to exist beyond this marsh, of the nature and extent
+of which we were still ignorant. The loss of my barometer was at this
+time severely felt by me, since I could only guess at our probable
+height above the ocean; and I found that my only course was to
+endeavour to force my way to the northward, to ascertain, if I could,
+from the bottom of the marshes; then penetrate in a westerly direction
+beyond them, in order to commence my survey of the S.W. interior. I was
+aware of Mr. Hume's perseverance, and determined, therefore, to wait
+the result of his report ere I again moved the camp, to which we
+returned late in the afternoon of the second day of our departure. We
+found it unsufferably hot and suffocating in the reeds, and were
+tormented by myriads of mosquitoes, but the waters were perfectly sweet
+to the taste, nor did the slightest smell, as of stagnation, proceed
+from them. I may add that the birds, whose sanctuary we had invaded, as
+the bittern and various tribes of the galinule, together with the
+frogs, made incessant noises around us, There were, however, but few
+water-fowl on the river; which was an additional proof to me that we
+were not near any very extensive lake.
+
+MR. HUME'S REPORT.
+
+Mr. Hume had returned before me to the camp, and had succeeded in
+finding a serpentine sheet of water, about twelve miles to the
+northward; which he did not doubt to be the channel of the river. He
+had pushed on after this success, in the hope of gaining a further
+knowledge of the country; but another still more extensive marsh
+checked him, and obliged him to retrace his steps. He was no less
+surprised at the account I gave of the termination of the river, than I
+was at its so speedily re-forming, and it was determined to lose no
+time in the further examination of so singular a region.
+
+FALSE CHANNEL; PERPLEXITIES.
+
+On the morning of the 28th therefore we broke up the camp, and
+proceeded to the northward, under Mr. Hume's guidance, moving over
+ground wholly subject to flood, and extensively covered with reeds; the
+great body of the marsh lying upon our left. After passing the angle of
+a wood, upon our right, from which Mount Foster was distant about
+fourteen miles, we got upon a small plain, on which there was a new
+species of tortuous box. This plain was clear of reeds, and the soil
+upon it was very rich. Crossing in a westerly direction we arrived at
+the channel found by Mr. Hume, who must naturally have concluded that
+it was a continuation of the river. The boat was immediately prepared,
+and I went up it in order to ascertain the nature of its formation. For
+two miles it preserved a pretty general width of from twenty to thirty
+yards; but at that distance began to narrow, and at length it became
+quite shallow and covered with weeds. We were ultimately obliged to
+abandon the boat, and to walk along a native path. The country to the
+westward was more open than I had expected. About a quarter of a mile
+from where we had left the boat, the channel separated into two
+branches; to which I perceived it owed its formation, coming, as they
+evidently did, direct from the heart of the marsh. The wood through
+which I had entered it on the first occasion bore south of me, to which
+one of the branches inclined; as the other did to the S.W. An almost
+imperceptible rise of ground was before me, which, by giving an impetus
+to the waters of the marsh, accounted to me for the formation of the
+main channel. It was too late, on my return to the camp, to prosecute
+any further examination of it downwards; but in the morning, Mr. Hume
+accompanied me in the boat, to ascertain to what point it led; and we
+found that at about a mile it began to diminish in breadth, until at
+length it was completely lost in a second expanse of reeds. We passed a
+singular scaffolding erected by the natives, on the side of the
+channel, to take fish; and also found a weir at the termination of it
+for the like purpose so that it was evident the natives occasionally
+ventured into the marshes.
+
+There was a small wood to our left which Mr. Hume endeavoured to gain,
+but he failed in the attempt. He did, however, reach a tree that was
+sufficiently high to give him a full view of the marsh, which appeared
+to extend in every direction, but more particularly to the north, for
+many miles. We were, however, at fault, and I really felt at a loss
+what step to take. I should have been led to believe from the extreme
+flatness of the country, that the Macquarie would never assume its
+natural shape, but from the direction of the marshes I could not but
+indulge a hope that it would meet the Castlereagh, and that their
+united waters might form a stream of some importance. Under this
+impression I determined on again sending Mr. Hume to the N.E. in order
+to ascertain the nature of the country in that direction.
+
+EXCURSION TO THE NORTH-WEST.
+
+The weather was excessively hot, and as my men were but slowly
+recovering, I was anxious while those who were in health continued
+active, to give the others a few days of rest. I proposed, therefore,
+to cross the river, and to make an excursion into the interior, during
+the probable time of Mr. Hume's absence; since if, as I imagined, the
+Macquarie had taken a permanent northerly course, I should not have an
+opportunity of examining the distant western country. Mr. Hume's
+experience rendered it unnecessary for me to give him other than
+general directions.
+
+A PLAIN ON FIRE.
+
+On the last day of the year we left the camp, each accompanied by two
+men. I had the evening previously ordered the horses I intended taking
+with me across the channel, and at an early hour of the morning I
+followed them. Getting on a plain, immediately after I had disengaged
+myself from the reeds on the opposite side of the river, which was full
+of holes and exceedingly treacherous for the animals, I pushed on for a
+part of the wood Mr. Hume had endeavoured to gain from the boat, with
+the intention of keeping near the marsh. On entering it, I found myself
+in a thick brush of eucalypti, casuarinae and minor trees; the soil
+under them being mixed with sand. I kept a N.N.W. course through it,
+and at the distance of three miles from its commencement, ascended a
+tree, to ascertain if I was near the marshes; when I found that I was
+fast receding from them. I concluded, therefore, that my conjecture as
+to their direction was right, and altered my course to N.W., a
+direction in which I had observed a dense smoke arising, which I
+supposed had been made by some natives near water. At the termination
+of the brush I crossed a barren sandy plain, and from it saw the smoke
+ascending at a few miles' distance from me. Passing through a wood, at
+the extremity of the plain, I found myself at the outskirts of an open
+space of great extent, almost wholly enveloped in flames. The fire was
+running with incredible rapidity through the rhagodia shrubs with which
+it was covered. Passing quickly over it, I continued my journey to the
+N.W. over barren plains of red sandy loam of even surface, and bushes
+of cypresses skirted by acacia pendula. It was not until after sunset
+that we struck upon a creek, in which the water was excellent; and we
+halted on its banks for the night, calculating our distance at
+twenty-nine miles from the camp. The creek was of considerable size,
+leading northerly. Several huts were observed by us, and from the heaps
+of muscle-shells that were scattered about, there could be no doubt of
+its being much frequented by the natives. The grass being fairly burnt
+up, our animals found but little to eat, but they had a tolerable
+journey, and did not attempt to wander in search of better food. I shot
+a snipe near the creek, much resembling the painted snipe of India; but
+I had not the means with me of preserving it.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+Continuing our journey on the following morning, we at first kept on
+the banks of the creek, and at about a quarter of a mile from where we
+had slept, came upon a numerous tribe of natives. A young girl sitting
+by the fire was the first to observe us as we were slowly approaching
+her. She was so excessively alarmed, that she had not the power to run
+away; but threw herself on the ground and screamed violently. We now
+observed a number of huts, out of which the natives issued, little
+dreaming of the spectacle they were to behold. But the moment they saw
+us, they started back; their huts were in a moment in flames, and each
+with a fire-brand ran to and fro with hideous yells, thrusting them
+into every bush they passed. I walked my horse quietly towards an old
+man who stood more forward than the rest, as if he intended to devote
+himself for the preservation of his tribe. I had intended speaking to
+him, but on a nearer approach I remarked that he trembled so violently
+that it was impossible to expect that I could obtain any information
+from him, and as I had not time for explanations, I left him to form
+his own conjectures as to what we were, and continued to move towards a
+thick brush, into which they did not venture to follow us.
+
+CONTINUE OUR JOURNEY.
+
+After a ride of about eighteen miles, through a country of alternate
+plain and brush, we struck upon a second creek leading like the first
+to the northward. The water in it was very bitter and muddy, and it was
+much inferior in appearance to that at which we had slept. After
+stopping for half-an-hour upon its banks, to rest our animals, we again
+pushed forward. We had not as yet risen any perceptible height above
+the level of the marshes, but had left the country subject to overflow
+for a considerable space behind us. The brushes through which we had
+passed were too sandy to retain water long, but the plains were of such
+an even surface, that they could not but continue wet for a
+considerable period after any fall of rain. They were covered with
+salsolaceous plants, without a blade of grass; and their soil was
+generally a red sandy loam. There were occasional patches that appeared
+moist, in which the calystemma was abundant, and these patches must, I
+should imagine, form quagmires in the wet season.
+
+On leaving the last-mentioned creek, we found a gently rising country
+before us; and about three or four miles from it we crossed some stony
+ridges, covered with a new species of acacia so thickly as to prevent
+our obtaining any view from them. As the sun declined, we got into open
+forest ground; and travelled forwards in momentary expectation, from
+appearances, of coming in sight of water; but we were obliged to pull
+up at sunset on the outskirts of a larger plain without having our
+expectation realized. The day had been extremely warm, and our animals
+were as thirsty as ourselves. Hope never forsakes the human breast; and
+thence it was that, after we had secured the horses, we began to wander
+round our lonely bivouac. It was almost dark, when one of my men came
+to inform me that he had found a small puddle of water, to which he had
+been led by a pigeon.
+
+It was, indeed, small enough, probably the remains of a passing shower;
+it was, however, sufficient for our necessities, and I thanked
+Providence for its bounty to us. We were now about sixty miles from the
+Macquarie, in a N.W. by W. direction, and the country had proved so
+extremely discouraging, that I intimated to my men my intention of
+retracing my steps, should I not discover any change in it before noon
+on the morrow. A dense brush of acacia succeeded to the plain on which
+we had slept, which we entered, and shortly afterwards found ourselves
+in an open space, of oblong shape, at the extremity of which there was
+a shallow lake. The brush completely encircled it, and a few huts were
+upon its banks. About 10 p.m. we got into an open forest track of
+better appearance than any over which we had recently travelled.
+
+ISOLATED HILL.
+
+There was a visible change in the country, and the soil, although red,
+was extremely rich and free from sand. A short time afterwards we rose
+to the summit of a round hill, from which we obtained an extensive view
+on most points of the compass. We had imperceptibly risen considerably
+above the general level of the interior.
+
+VIEW FROM THE SUMMIT.
+
+Beneath us, to the westward, I observed a broad and thinly wooded
+valley; and W. by S., distant apparently about twenty miles, an
+isolated mountain, whose sides seemed almost perpendicular, broke the
+otherwise even line of the horizon; but the country in every other
+direction looked as if it was darkly wooded. Anticipating that I should
+find a stream in the valley, I did not for a moment hesitate in
+striking down into it. Disappointed, however, in this expectation, I
+continued onwards to the mountain, which I reached just before the sun
+set. Indeed, he was barely visible when I gained its summit; but my
+eyes, from exposure to his glare, became so weak, my face was so
+blistered, and my lips cracked in so many places, that I was unable to
+look towards the west, and was actually obliged to sit down behind a
+rock until he had set.
+
+Perhaps no time is so favourable for a view along the horizon as the
+sunset hour; and here, at an elevation of from five to six hundred feet
+above the plain, the visible line of it could not have been less than
+from thirty-five to forty-five miles. The hill upon which I stood was
+broken into two points; the one was a bold rocky elevation; the other
+had its rear face also perpendicular, but gradually declined to the
+north, and at a distance of from four to five miles was lost in an
+extensive and open plain in that direction. In the S.E. quarter, two
+wooded hills were visible, which before had appeared to be nothing more
+than swells in the general level of the country. A small hill, similar
+to the above, bore N.E. by compass; and again, to the west, a more
+considerable mountain than that I had ascended, and evidently much
+higher, reflected the last beams of the sun as he sunk behind them. I
+looked, however, in vain for water. I could not trace either the
+windings of a stream, or the course of a mountain torrent; and, as we
+had passed a swamp about a mile from the hill, we descended to it for
+the night, during which we were grievously tormented by the mosquitoes.
+
+RESULTS OF THE EXCURSION.
+
+I had no inducement to proceed further into the interior. I had been
+sufficiently disappointed in the termination of this excursion, and the
+track before me was still less inviting. Nothing but a dense forest,
+and a level country, existed between me and the distant hill. I had
+learnt, by experience, that it was impossible to form any opinion of
+the probable features of so singular a region as that in which I was
+wandering, from previous appearances, or to expect the same result, as
+in other countries, from similar causes. In a geographical point of
+view, my journey had been more successful, and had enabled me to put to
+rest for ever a question of much previous doubt. Of whatever extent the
+marshes of the Macquarie might be, it was evident they were not
+connected with those of the Lachlan. I had gained knowledge of more
+than 100 miles of the western interior, and had ascertained that no
+sea, indeed that little water, existed on its surface; and that,
+although it is generally flat, it still has elevations of considerable
+magnitude upon it.
+
+Although I had passed over much barren ground, I had likewise noticed
+soil that was far from poor, and the vegetation upon which in ordinary
+seasons would, I am convinced, have borne a very different aspect.
+
+Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the
+haunt of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a
+chain of connection to a more fertile country; if such a country exist
+to the westward.
+
+The hill which thus became the extreme of my journey, is of sandstone
+formation, and is bold and precipitous. Its summit is level and lightly
+timbered. As a tribute of respect to the late Surveyor-General, I
+called it Oxley's Table Land, and I named the distant hills D'Urban's
+Group, after Sir Benjamin D'Urban, in compliance with a previous
+request of my friend Lieut. De la Condamine, that I would so name any
+prominent feature of the interior that I might happen to come upon.
+
+RETURN TO THE CAMP.
+
+In returning to the camp, I made a circuit to the N.E., and reached the
+Macquarie late on the evening of the 5th of January; having been absent
+six days, during which we could not have ridden less than 200 miles.
+Yet the horses were not so fatigued as it was natural to expect they
+would have been.
+
+My servant informed me that a party of natives had visited the camp on
+the 3rd, but that they retired precipitately on seeing the animals. I
+regretted to find the men but little better than when I left them.
+Several still complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, and of
+great weakness of sight. Attributing their continued indisposition in
+some measure to our situation, I was anxious to have moved from it; but
+as Mr. Hume was still absent, I could not decide upon the measure. He
+made his appearance, however, on the 6th, having ridden the greater
+part of the day through rain, which commenced to fall in the morning.
+Soon after his arrival, Dawber, my overseer of animals, who had
+accompanied him, was taken suddenly ill. During the night he became
+much worse, with shivering and spasms, and on the following morning he
+was extremely weak and feverish. To add to my anxiety, Mr. Hume also
+complained of indisposition. His state of health made me the more
+anxious to quit a position which I fancied unwholesome, and in which,
+if there was no apparent, there was certainly some secret, exciting
+cause; and as Mr. Hume reported having crossed a chain of ponds about
+four miles to the eastward, and out of the immediate precincts of the
+marshes, I ordered the tents to be struck, and placing Dawber on my
+horse, we all moved quietly over to them.
+
+MR. HUME'S EXCURSION.
+
+The result of Mr. Hume's journey perplexed me exceedingly. He stated,
+that on setting out from the Macquarie his intention was to have
+proceeded to the N.E., to ascertain how far the reeds existed in that
+direction, and, if at all practicable, to reach the Castlereagh; but in
+case of failure, to regain the Macquarie by a westerly course. At first
+he travelled nearly four miles east, to clear the marshes, when he came
+on the chain of ponds to which we had removed.
+
+He travelled over good soil for two miles after crossing this chain of
+ponds, but afterwards got on a red sandy loam, and found it difficult
+to proceed, by reason of the thickness of the brush, and the swampy
+state of the ground in consequence of the late rain.
+
+The timber in the brushes was of various kinds, and he saw numerous
+kangaroos and emus. On issuing from this brush, he crossed a creek,
+leading northerly, the banks of which were from ten to twelve feet
+high. Whatever the body of water usually in it is, it now only afforded
+a few shallow puddles. Mr. Hume travelled through brushes until he came
+upon a third creek, similar to the one he had left behind him, at which
+he halted for the night. The water in it was bad, and the feed for the
+animals extremely poor. The brush lined the creek thickly, and
+consisted chiefly of acacia pendula and box. The country preserved an
+uniform level, nor did Mr. Hume, from the highest trees, observe any
+break on the horizon.
+
+On the 2nd of January, Mr. Hume kept more northerly, being unable to
+penetrate the brushes he encountered. At two miles he crossed a creek
+leading to the N.W., between which and the place at which he had slept,
+he passed a native burial ground, containing eight graves. The earth
+was piled up in a conical shape, but the trees were not carved over as
+he had seen them in most other places.
+
+The country became more open after he had passed the last mentioned
+creek, which he again struck upon at the distance of eight miles, and
+as it was then leading to the N.N.E. he followed it down for eighteen
+or twenty miles, and crossed it frequently during the day. The creek
+was dry in most places, and where he stopped for the night the water
+was bad, and the cattle feed indifferent.
+
+Mr. Hume saw many huts, but none of them had been recently occupied,
+although large quantities of muscle-shells were scattered about. He
+computed that he had travelled about thirty miles, in a N.N.W.
+direction, and the whole of the land he passed over was, generally
+speaking, bad, nor did it appear to be subject to overflow.
+
+On the 3rd, Mr. Hume proceeded down the creek on which he had slept, on
+a northern course, under an impression that it would have joined the
+Castlereagh, but it took a N.W. direction after he had ridden about
+four miles, and then turned again to the eastward of north. In
+consequence of this, he left it, and proceeded to the westward, being
+of opinion that the river just mentioned must have taken a more
+northerly course than Mr. Oxley supposed it to have done.
+
+A short time after Mr. Hume turned towards the Macquarie, the country
+assumed a more pleasing appearance. He soon cleared the brushes, and at
+two miles came upon a chain of ponds, again running northerly in times
+of flood. Shortly after crossing these, he found himself on an
+extensive plain, apparently subject to overflow. The timber on it was
+chiefly of the blue-gum kind, and the ground was covered with shells.
+He then thought he was approaching the Macquarie, and proceeded due
+west across the flat for about two miles. At the extremity of it there
+was a hollow, which he searched in vain for water. Ascending about
+thirty feet, he entered a thick brush of box and acacia pendula, which
+continued for fourteen miles, when it terminated abruptly, and
+extensive plains of good soil commenced, stretching from N. to S. as
+far as the eye could reach, on which there were many kangaroos.
+Continuing to journey over them, he reached a creek at 5 p.m. on which
+the wild fowl were numerous, running nearly north and south, and he
+rested on its banks for the night. The timber consisted both of blue
+and rough gum, and the soil was a light earth.
+
+Mr. Hume expected in the course of the day to have reached the
+Macquarie, but on arriving at the creek, he began to doubt whether it
+any longer existed, or whether it had not taken a more westerly
+direction. On the following morning, therefore, he crossed the creek,
+and travelled W.S.W., for about two miles over good plains; then
+through light brushes of swamp-oak, cypress, box, and acacia pendula,
+for about twelve miles, to another creek leading northerly. He shortly
+afterwards ascended a range of hills stretching W.N.W. to which he gave
+the name of New Year's Range. From these hills, he had an extensive
+view, although not upon the highest part, but the only break he could
+see in the horizon was caused by some hills bearing by compass W. by S.
+distant about twenty-five miles. There was, however, an appearance as
+of high land to the northward, although Mr. Hume thought it might have
+been an atmospheric deception. From the range he looked in vain for the
+Macquarie, or other waters, and, as his provisions were nearly
+consumed, he was obliged to give up all further pursuit, and to retrace
+his steps. He fell in with two parties of natives, which, taken
+collectively, amounted to thirty-five in number, but had no
+communication with them.
+
+It was evident, from the above account, that supposing a line to have
+been drawn from the camp northerly, Mr. Hume must have travelled
+considerably to the westward of it, and as I had run on a N.W. course
+from the marshes, it necessarily followed that our lines of route must
+have intersected each other, or that want of extension could alone have
+prevented them from having done so; but that, under any circumstances,
+they could not have been very far apart. This was too important a point
+to be left undecided, as upon it the question of the Macquarie's
+termination seemed to depend.
+
+Both Mr. Hume and myself were of opinion, that a medium course would be
+the most satisfactory for us to pursue, to decide this point; and it
+appeared that we could not do better than, by availing ourselves of the
+creek on which we were, and skirting the reeds, to take the first
+opportunity of dashing through them in a westerly direction.
+
+DOUBTS OF THE FURTHER EXTENSION OF THE RIVER.
+
+I entertained great doubts as to the longer existence of the river, and
+as I foresaw that, in the event of its having terminated we should
+strike at once into the heart of the interior, I became anxious for the
+arrival of supplies at Mount Harris; and although I could hardly expect
+that they had yet reached it, I determined to proceed thither. Mr. Hume
+was too unwell for me to think of imposing additional fatigue upon him;
+I left him, therefore, to conduct the party, by easy stages, to the
+northward, until such time as I should overtake them. Even in one day
+there was a visible improvement in the men, and Dawber's attack seemed
+to be rather the effects of cold than of any thing else. A death,
+however, under our circumstances, would have been so truly deplorable
+an event, that the least illness was sufficient to create alarm.
+
+I can hardly say that I was disappointed on my arrival at Mount Harris,
+to find its neighbourhood silent and deserted. I remained, however,
+under it for the greater part of the next day, and, prior to leaving
+it, placed a sheet of paper with written instructions against a tree,
+though almost without a hope that it would remain untouched.
+
+PERPLEXING SITUATION.
+
+A little after sun-set we reached the first small marsh, at which we
+slept; and on the following morning I crossed the plains of the
+Macquarie, and joined the party at about fifteen miles from the creek
+at which I had left it. I found it in a condition that was as unlooked
+for by Mr. Hume as it was unexpected by me, and really in a most
+perplexing situation.
+
+On the day I left him, Mr. Hume only advanced about two miles, in
+consequence of some derangement in the loads. Having crossed the creek,
+he, the next morning, proceeded down its right bank, until it entered
+the marshes and was lost. He then continued to move on the outskirts of
+the latter, and having performed a journey or about eight miles, was
+anxious to have stopped, but there was no water at hand. The men,
+however, were so fatigued, in consequence of previous illness, that he
+felt it necessary to halt after travelling about eleven miles.
+
+No water could be procured even here, notwithstanding that Mr. Hume,
+who was quite unfit for great exertion, underwent considerable bodily
+fatigue in his anxiety to find some. He was, therefore, obliged to move
+early on the following morning, but neither men nor animals were in a
+condition to travel; and he had scarcely made three miles' progress,
+when he stopped and endeavoured to obtain a supply or water by digging
+pits among the reeds. From these he had drawn sufficient for the wants
+of the people when I arrived. Some rain had fallen on the 6th and 7th
+of the month, or it is more than probable the expedient to which he
+resorted would have failed of success. Mr. Hume, I was sorry to
+observe, looked very unwell; but nothing could prevent him from further
+endeavours to extricate the party from its present embarrassment.
+
+JOURNEY CONTINUED.
+
+As soon as I had taken a little refreshment, therefore, I mounted a
+fresh horse; and he accompanied me across a small plain, immediately in
+front of the camp, which was subject to overflow and covered with
+polygonum, having a considerable extent of reeds to its right.
+
+From the plain we entered a wood of blue-gum, in which reeds, grass,
+and brush formed a thick coppice. We at length passed into an open
+space, surrounded on every side by weeds in dense bodies. The great
+marsh bore south of us, and was clear and open, but behind us the
+blue-gum trees formed a thick wood above the weeds.
+
+About two hundred yards from the outskirts of the marsh there was a
+line of saplings that had perished, and round about them a number of
+the tern tribe (sea swallow) were flying, one of which Mr. Hume had
+followed a considerable way into the reeds the evening before, in the
+hope that it would have led him to water. The circumstance of their
+being in such numbers led us to penetrate towards them, when we found a
+serpentine sheet of water of some length, over which they were playing.
+We had scarcely time to examine it before night closed in upon us, and
+it was after nine when we returned to the tents.
+
+From the general appearance of the country to the northward, and from
+the circumstance of our having got to the bottom of the great marsh,
+which but a few days before had threatened to be so formidable, I
+thought it probable that the reeds would not again prove so extensive
+as they had been, and I determined, if I could do so, to push through
+them in a westerly direction from our position.
+
+SECOND GREAT MARSH.
+
+The pits yielded us so abundant a supply during the night, that in the
+morning we found it unnecessary to take the animals to water at the
+channel we had succeeded in finding the evening before; but pursuing a
+westerly course we passed it, and struck deep into the reeds. At
+mid-day we were hemmed in by them on every side, and had crossed over
+numerous channels, by means of which the waters of the marshes are
+equally and generally distributed over the space subject to their
+influence. Coming to a second sheet of water, narrower, but longer, as
+well as we could judge, than the first, we stopped to dine at it; and,
+while the men were resting themselves, Mr. Hume rode with me in a
+westerly direction, to ascertain what obstacles we still had to contend
+with. Forcing our way through bodies of reeds, we at length got on a
+plain, stretching from S.E. to N.W., bounded on the right by a wood of
+blue-gum, under which the reeds still extended, and on the left by a
+wood in which they did not appear to exist. Certain that there was no
+serious obstacle in our way, we returned to the men; and as soon as
+they had finished their meal, led them over the plain in a N.W. by W.
+direction. It was covered with shells, and was full of holes from the
+effects of flood.
+
+CONCLUSIONS IN REGARD TO THE MACQUARIE.
+
+As we were journeying over it, I requested Mr. Hume to ride into the
+wood upon our left, to ascertain if it concealed any channel. On his
+return he informed me that he descended from the plain into a hollow,
+the bottom of which was covered with small shells and bulrushes. He
+observed a new species of eucalypti, on the trunks of which the
+water-mark was three feet high. After crossing this hollow, which was
+about a quarter of a mile in breadth, he gained an open forest of box,
+having good grass under it; and, judging from the appearance of the
+country that no other channel could exist beyond him, and that he had
+ascertained sufficient for the object I had in view, he turned back to
+the plain. We stopped for the night under a wood of box, where the
+grass, which had been burnt down, was then springing up most
+beautifully green, and was relished exceedingly by the animals.
+
+It was in consequence of our not having crossed any channel, while
+penetrating through the reeds, that could by any possible exaggeration
+have been laid down as the bed of the river, that I detached Mr. Hume;
+and the account he brought me at once confirmed my opinion in regard to
+the Macquarie, and I thenceforth gave up every hope of ever seeing it
+in its characteristic shape again.
+
+Independently however of all circumstantial evidence, it was clear that
+the river had not re-formed at a distance of twenty-five miles to the
+north of us, since Mr. Hume had gone to the westward of that point, at
+about the same distance on his late journey, without having observed
+the least appearance of reeds or of a river. He had, indeed, noticed a
+hollow, which occasionally contained water, but he saw nothing like the
+bed of a permanent stream. I became convinced, also, from observation
+of the country through which we had passed, that the sources of the
+Macquarie could not be of such magnitude as to give a constant flow to
+it as a river, and at the same time to supply with water the vast
+concavity into which it falls. In very heavy rains only could the
+marshes and adjacent lands be laid wholly under water, since the
+evaporation alone would be equal to the supply.
+
+The great plains stretching for so many miles to the westward of Mount
+Harris, even where they were clear of reeds, were covered with shells
+and the claws of cray-fish and their soil, although an alluvial
+deposit, was superficially sandy. They bore the appearance not only of
+frequent inundation, but of the floods having eventually subsided upon
+them. This was particularly observable at the bottom of the marshes. We
+did not find any accumulation of rubbish to indicate a rush of water to
+any one point; but numerous minor channels existed to distribute the
+floods equally and generally over every part of the area subject to
+them, and the marks of inundation and subsidence were everywhere the
+same. The plain we had last crossed, was, in like manner, covered with
+shells, so that we could not yet be said to be out of the influence of
+the marshes; besides which we had not crossed the hollow noticed by Mr.
+Hume, which it was clear we should do, sooner or later.
+
+SITUATION OF THE PARTY.
+
+To have remained in our position would have been impossible, as there
+was no water either for ourselves or the animals; to have descended
+into the reeds again, for the purpose of carrying on a minute survey,
+would, under existing circumstances, have been imprudent. Our
+provisions were running short, and if a knowledge of the distant
+interior was to be gained, we had no time to lose. It was determined,
+therefore, to defer our further examination of the marshes to the
+period of our return; and to pursue such a course as would soonest and
+most effectually enable us to determine the character of the western
+interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous
+conduct of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills
+called New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting
+attack of the kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the
+country--Oxley's Table Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down
+New-Year's Creek--Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in
+with a tribe of natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh
+water--Extraordinary sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+We left our position at the head of the plain early on the 13th of
+January, and, ere the sun dipped, had entered a very different country
+from that in which we had been labouring for the last three weeks. We
+had, as yet, passed over little other than an alluvial soil, but found
+that it changed to a red loam in the brushes immediately backing the
+camp. An open forest track succeeded this, over which the vegetation
+had an unusual freshness, indicating that the waters had not long
+subsided from its surface. We shortly afterwards crossed a hollow,
+similar to that Mr. Hume had described, in which bulrushes had taken
+the place of reeds. Flooded-gum trees, of large size, were also growing
+in it, but on either side box alone prevailed, under which the forest
+grass grew to a considerable height. We crossed the hollow two or three
+times, and as often remarked the line of separation between those
+trees. The last time we crossed it the country rose a few feet, and we
+journeyed for the remainder of the day, at one time over good plains,
+at another through brushes, until we found water and feed, at which we
+stopped for the night, after having travelling about thirteen miles on
+a W. by N. course. The mosquitoes were so extremely troublesome at this
+place that we called it Mosquito Brush. At this time my men were
+improving rapidly, and Mr. Hume complained less, and looked better. I
+hoped, therefore, that our progress would be rapid into the interior.
+
+CREEK LEADING NORTHERLY; PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+On the 14th we took up a westerly course, and in the first instance
+traversed a plain of great extent; the soil of which was for the most
+part a red sandy loam, but having patches of light earth upon it. The
+former was covered with plants of the chenopedia kind; the latter had
+evidently been quagmires, and bore even then the appearance of
+moisture. At about seven miles from Mosquito Brush we struck upon a
+creek of excellent water, upon which the wild fowl were numerous. Some
+natives was seen, but they were only women, and seemed so alarmed that
+I purposely avoided them. As the creek was leading northerly, we traced
+it down on that course for about seven miles, and then halted upon its
+banks, which were composed of a light tenacious earth. Brushes of
+casuarina existed near it, but a tortuous box was the prevailing tree,
+which, excepting for the knees of small vessels, could not have been
+applied to any use, while the flooded-gum had entirely disappeared.
+Some ducks were shot in the afternoon, which proved a great treat, as
+we had been living for some time on salt provisions. Our animals fared
+worse than ourselves, as the bed of the creek was occupied by coarse
+rushes, and but little vegetation was elsewhere to be seen. I here
+killed a beautiful snake, of about four feet in length, and of a bright
+yellow colour: I had not, however, the means of preserving it. Fraser
+collected numerous botanical specimens, and among them two kinds of
+caparis. Indeed a great alteration had taken place in the minor shrubs,
+and few of those now prevalent had been observed to the eastward of the
+marshes.
+
+From the creek, which both I and Mr. Hume must have crossed on our
+respective journeys, we held a westerly course for about fifteen miles,
+through a country of alternate plain and brush, the latter
+predominating, and in its general character differing but little from
+that we had traversed the day previous.
+
+The acacia pendula still continued to exist on the plains backed by
+dark rows of cypresses (Cupressus callitris). In the brushes, box and
+casuarina (Casuarina tortuosa), with several other kinds of eucalypti,
+prevailed; but none of them were sufficiently large to be of use. The
+plains were so extremely level that a meridian altitude could have been
+taken without any material error; and I doubt much whether it would
+have been possible to have traversed them had the season been wet.
+
+HUNTING PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+As we were travelling through a forest we surprised a hunting party of
+natives. Mr. Hume and I were considerably in front of our party at the
+time, and he only had his gun with him. We had been moving along so
+quietly that we were not for some time observed by them. Three were
+seated on the ground, under a tree, and two others were busily employed
+on one of the lower branches cutting out honey. As soon as they saw us,
+four of them ran away; but the fifth, who wore a cap of emu feathers,
+stood for a moment looking at us, and then very deliberately dropped
+out of the tree to the ground. I then advanced towards him, but before
+I got round a bush that intervened, he had darted away. I was fearful
+that he was gone to collect his tribe, and, under this impression, rode
+quickly back for my gun to support Mr. Hume. On my arrival I found the
+native was before me. He stood about twenty paces from Mr. Hume, who
+was endeavouring to explain what he was; but seeing me approach he
+immediately poised his spear at him, as being the nearest. Mr. Hume
+then unslung his carbine, and presented it; but, as it was evident my
+re-appearance had startled the savage, I pulled up; and he immediately
+lowered his weapon. His coolness and courage surprised me, and
+increased my desire to communicate with him. He had evidently taken
+both man and horse for one animal, and as long as Mr. Hume kept his
+seat, the native remained upon his guard; but when he saw him dismount,
+after the first astonishment had subsided, he stuck his spear into the
+ground, and walked fearlessly up to him. We easily made him comprehend
+that we were in search of water; when he pointed to the west, as
+indicating that we should supply our wants there. He gave his
+information in a frank and manly way, without the least embarrassment,
+and when the party passed, he stepped back to avoid the animals,
+without the smallest confusion. I am sure he was a very brave man; and
+I left him with the most favourable impressions, and not without hope
+that he would follow us.
+
+From a more open forest, we entered a dense scrub, the soil in which
+was of a bright-red colour and extremely sandy, and the timber of
+various kinds. A leafless species of stenochylus aphylta, which, from
+the resemblance, I at first thought one of the polygonum tribe, was
+very abundant in the open spaces, and the young cypresses were
+occasionally so close as to turn us from the direction in which we had
+been moving. In the scrub we crossed Mr. Hume's tract, and, from the
+appearance of the ground, I was led to believe mine could not be very
+distant.
+
+FATE OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+We struck upon a creek late in the afternoon, at which we stopped; New
+Year's Range bearing nearly due west at about four miles' distance. Had
+we struck upon my track, the question about which we were so anxious
+would still have been undecided; but the circumstance of our having
+crossed Mr. Hume's, which, from its direction, could not be mistaken,
+convinced me of the fate of the Macquarie, and I felt assured that,
+whatever channels it might have for the distribution of its waters, to
+the north of our line of route, the equality of surface of the interior
+would never permit it again to form a river; and that it only required
+an examination of the lower parts of the marshes to confirm the theory
+of the ultimate evaporation and absorption of its waters, instead of
+their contributing to the permanence of an inland sea, as Mr. Oxley had
+supposed.
+
+NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+On the 17th of January we encamped under New Year's Range, which is the
+first elevation in the interior of Eastern Australia to the westward of
+Mount Harris. Yet when at its base, I do not think that we had ascended
+above forty feet higher than the plains in the neighbourhood of that
+last mentioned eminence. There certainly is a partial rise of country,
+where the change of soil takes place from the alluvial deposits of the
+marshes, to the sandy loam so prevalent on the plains we had lately
+traversed; but I had to regret that I was unable to decide so
+interesting a question by other than bare conjecture.
+
+Notwithstanding that Mr. Hume had already been on them, I encouraged
+hopes that a second survey of the country from the highest point of New
+Year's Range would enable us to form some opinion of it, by which to
+direct our future movements; but I was disappointed.
+
+The two wooded hills I had seen from Oxley's Table Land were visible
+from the range, bearing south; and other eminences bore by compass S.W.
+and W. by S.; but in every other direction the horizon was unbroken. To
+the westward, there appeared to be a valley of considerable extent,
+stretching N. and S., in which latter direction there was a long strip
+of cleared ground, that looked very like the sandy bed of a broad and
+rapid river. The bare possibility of the reality determined me to
+ascertain by inspection, whether my conjecture was right, and Mr. Hume
+accompanied me on this excursion. After we left the camp we crossed a
+part of the range, and travelled for some time through open forest land
+that would afford excellent grazing in most seasons. We passed some
+hollows, and noticed many huts that had been occupied near them; but
+the hollows were now quite dry, and the huts had been long deserted.
+After about ten miles' ride we reached a plain of white sand, from
+which New Year's Range was distinctly visible; and this no doubt was
+the spot that had attracted my attention. Pools of water continued on
+it, from which circumstance it would appear that the sand had a
+substratum of clay or marl. From this plain we proceeded southerly
+through acacia scrub, bounding gently undulating forest land, and at
+length ascended some small elevations that scarcely deserved the name
+of hills. They had fragments of quartz profusely scattered over them;
+and the soil, which was sandy, contained particles of mica.
+
+MOSQUITOES.
+
+The view from them was confused, nor did any fresh object meet our
+observation. We had, however, considerably neared the two wooded hills,
+and the elevations that from the range were to the S.W., now bore N.W.
+of us. We had wandered too far from the camp to admit of our returning
+to it to sleep; we therefore commenced a search for water, and having
+found some, we tethered our horses near it for the night, and should
+have been tolerably comfortable, had not the mosquitoes been so
+extremely troublesome. They defied the power of smoke, and annoyed me
+so much, that, hot as it was, I rolled myself in my boat cloak, and
+perspired in consequence to such a degree, that my clothes were wet
+through, and I had to stand at the fire in the morning to dry them. Mr.
+Hume, who could not bear such confinement, suffered the penalty, and
+was most unmercifully bitten.
+
+A MAN MISSING.
+
+We reached the camp about noon the following day, and learnt, to our
+vexation, that one of the men, Norman, had lost himself shortly after
+we started, and had not since been heard of. Dawber, my overseer, was
+out in search of him. I awaited his return, therefore, before I took
+any measures for the man's recovery; nor was I without hopes that
+Dawber would have found him, as it appeared he had taken one of the
+horses with him, and Dawber, by keeping his tracks, might eventually
+have overtaken him. He returned, however, about 3 p.m. unsuccessful,
+when Mr. Hume and I mounted our horses, and proceeded in different
+directions in quest of him, but were equally disappointed.
+
+We met at the creek in the dark, and returned to the camp together,
+when I ordered the cypresses on the range to be set on fire, and thus
+illuminated the country round for many miles. In the morning, however,
+as Norman had not made his appearance, we again started in search of
+the poor fellow, on whose account I was now most uneasy; for his horse,
+it appeared, had escaped him, and was found with the others at watering
+time.
+
+I did not return to the camp until after sunset, more fatigued than I
+recollect ever having been before. I was, however, rejoiced on being
+informed that the object of my anxiety was safe in his tent; that he
+had caught sight of the hill the evening before, and that he had
+reached the camp shortly after I left it. He had been absent three
+nights and two days, and had not tasted water or food of any kind
+during that time.
+
+To my enquiries he replied, that, being on horseback, he thought he
+could have overtaken a kangaroo, which passed him whilst waiting at the
+creek for the cattle, and that in the attempt, he lost himself. It
+would appear that he crossed the creek in the dark, and his horse
+escaped from him on the first night. He complained more of thirst than
+of hunger, although he had drunk at the watering-place to such an
+excess, on his return, as to make him vomit; but, though not a little
+exhausted, he had escaped better than I should have expected.
+
+COUNTRY AROUND NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+New Year's Range consists of a principal group of five hills, the
+loftiest of which does not measure 300 feet in height. It has lateral
+ridges, extending to the N.N.W. on the one hand, and bending in to the
+creek on the other. The former have a few cypresses, sterculia, and
+iron bark upon them; the latter are generally covered with brush, under
+box; the brush for the most part consisting of two distinct species of
+stenochylus, and a new acacia. The whole range is of quartz formation,
+small fragments of which are profusely scattered over the ridges, and
+are abundantly incrusted with oxide of iron. The soil in the
+neighbourhood of New Year's Range is a red loam, with a slight mixture
+of sand. An open forest country lies between it and the creek, and it
+is not at all deficient in pasture.
+
+NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+That a change of soil takes place to the westward of the creek, is
+obvious, from the change of vegetation, the most remarkable feature of
+which is the sudden check given to the further extension of the acacia
+pendula, which is not to be found beyond it, it being succeeded by
+another acacia of the same species and habits; neither do the plants of
+the chenopedia class exist in the immediate vicinity of the range.
+
+I place these hills, as far as my observations will allow, in east lon.
+146 degrees 32 minutes 15 seconds, and in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes
+south; the variation of the compass being 6 degrees 40 minutes easterly.
+
+As New Year's Creek was leading northerly, it had been determined to
+trace it down as long as it should keep that course, or one to the
+westward of it. We broke up the camp, therefore, under the range, on
+the evening of the 18th, and moved to the creek, about two miles north
+of the place at which we had before crossed it, with the intention of
+prosecuting our journey on the morrow. But both Mr. Hume and I were so
+fatigued that we were glad of an opportunity to rest, even for a single
+day. We remained stationary, therefore, on the 19th; nor was I without
+hope that the natives whom we had surprised in the woods, would have
+paid us a visit, since Mr. Hume had met them in his search for Norman,
+and they had promised not only to come to us, but to do all in their
+power to find the man, whose footsteps some of them had crossed. They
+did not, however, venture near us; and I rather attribute their having
+kept aloof, to the circumstance of Mr. Hume's having fired a shot,
+shortly after he left them, as a signal to Norman, in the event of his
+being within hearing of the report. They must have been alarmed at so
+unusual a sound; but I am sure nothing was further from Mr. Hume's
+intention than to intimidate them; his knowledge of their manners and
+customs, as well as his partiality to the natives, being equally
+remarkable. The circumstance is, however, a proof of the great caution
+that is necessary in communicating with them.
+
+ANNOYED BY KANGAROO FLIES.
+
+I have said that we remained stationary the day after we left the
+range, with a view to enjoy a little rest; it would, however, have been
+infinitely better if we had moved forward. Our camp was infested by the
+kangaroo fly, which settled upon us in thousands. They appeared to rise
+from the ground, and as fast as they were swept off were succeeded by
+fresh numbers. It was utterly impossible to avoid their persecution,
+penetrating as they did into the very tents.
+
+The men were obliged to put handkerchiefs over their faces, and
+stockings upon their hands; but they bit through every thing. It was to
+no purpose that I myself shifted from place to place; they still
+followed, or were equally numerous everywhere. To add to our
+discomfort, the animals were driven almost to madness, and galloped to
+and fro in so furious a manner that I was apprehensive some of them
+would have been lost. I never experienced such a day of torment; and
+only when the sun set, did these little creatures cease from their
+attacks.
+
+SUDDENLY RELIEVED.
+
+It will be supposed that we did not stay to subject ourselves to
+another trial; indeed it was with some degree of horror that the men
+saw the first light of morning streak the horizon. They got up
+immediately, and we moved down the creek, on a northerly course,
+without breakfasting as usual. We found that dense brushes of casuarina
+lined the creek on both sides, beyond which, to our left, there was
+open rising ground, on which eucalypti, cypresses, and the acacia
+longifolia, prevailed; whilst to the east, plains seemed to predominate.
+
+Although we had left the immediate spot at which the kangaroo flies
+(cabarus) seemed to be collected, I did not expect that we should have
+got rid of them so completely as we did. None of them were seen during
+the day; a proof that they were entirely local. They were about half
+the size of a common house fly, had flat brown bodies, and their bite,
+although sharp and piercing, left no irritation after it.
+
+About noon we stopped at the creek side to take some refreshment. The
+country bore an improved appearance around us, and the cattle found
+abundance of pasture. It was evident that the creek had been numerously
+frequented by the natives, although no recent traces of them could be
+found. It had a bed of coarse red granite, of the fragments of which
+the natives had constructed a weir for the purpose of taking fish. The
+appearance of this rock in so isolated a situation, is worthy of the
+consideration of geologists.
+
+DESOLATION OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+The promise of improvement I have noticed, gradually disappeared as we
+proceeded on our day's journey, and we at length found ourselves once
+more among brushes, and on the edge of plains, over which the rhagodia
+prevailed. Nothing could exceed in dreariness the appearance of the
+tracks through which we journeyed, on this and the two following days.
+The creek on which we depended for a supply of water, gave such
+alarming indications of a total failure, that I at one time, had
+serious thoughts of abandoning my pursuit of it. We passed hollow after
+hollow that had successively dried up, although originally of
+considerable depth; and, when we at length found water, it was doubtful
+how far we could make use of it. Sometimes in boiling it left a
+sediment nearly equal to half its body; at other times it was so bitter
+as to be quite unpalatable. That on which we subsisted was scraped up
+from small puddles, heated by the sun's rays; and so uncertain were we
+of finding water at the end of the day's journey, that we were obliged
+to carry a supply on one of the bullocks. There was scarcely a living
+creature, even of the feathered race, to be seen to break the stillness
+of the forest. The native dogs alone wandered about, though they had
+scarcely strength to avoid us; and their melancholy howl, breaking in
+upon the ear at the dead of the night, only served to impress more
+fully on the mind the absolute loneliness of the desert.
+
+It appeared, from their traces that the natives had lingered on this
+ground, on which they had perhaps been born, as long as it continued to
+afford them a scanty though precarious subsistence; but that they had
+at length been forced from it. Neither fish nor muscles remained in the
+creek, nor emus nor kangaroos on the plains. How then could an European
+expect to find food in deserts through which the savage wandered in
+vain? There is no doubt of the fate that would have overtaken any one
+of the party who might have strayed away, and I was happy to find that
+Norman's narrow escape had made a due impression on the minds of his
+comrades.
+
+SANDY PLAINS; LEAVE THE CREEK.
+
+We passed some considerable plains, lying to the eastward of the creek,
+on parts of which the grass, though growing in tufts, was of luxuriant
+growth. They were, however, more generally covered with salsola and
+rhagodia, and totally destitute of other vegetation, the soil upon them
+being a red sandy loam. The paths across the plains, which varied in
+breadth from three to eight miles, were numerous; but they had not been
+recently trodden. The creek continued to have a thick brush of
+casuarina and acacia near it, to the westward of which there was a
+rising open forest track; the timber upon it being chiefly box,
+cypress, and the acacia longifolia. It was most probably connected with
+New Year's Range, those elevations being about thirty miles distant. It
+terminated in some gentle hills which, though covered in places with
+acacia shrub, were sufficiently open to afford an extensive view. From
+their summit Oxley's Table Land, towards which we had been gradually
+working our way, was distinctly visible, distant about twenty miles,
+and bearing by compass W. by S. On descending from these hills (called
+the Pink Hills, from the colour of a flower upon them) which were
+scattered over with fragments of slaty quartz, we traversed a box flat,
+apparently subject to overflow, having a barren sandy scrub to its
+left. I had desired the men to preserve a W.N.W. direction, on leaving
+them, supposing that that course would have kept them near the creek;
+but, on overtaking the party, I found that they had wandered completely
+away from it. The fact was, that the creek had taken a sudden bend to
+the eastward of N. and had thus thrown them out. It was with some
+difficulty that we regained it before sunset; and we were at length
+obliged to stop for the night at a small plain, about a quarter of a
+mile short of it, but we had the satisfaction of having excellent feed
+for the animals.
+
+OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Fearful that New Year's Creek would take us too far to the eastward,
+and being anxious to keep westward as much as possible, it struck me
+that we could not, under existing circumstances, do better than make
+for Oxley's Table Land. Water, I knew, we should find in a swamp at
+it's base, and we might discover some more encouraging feature than I
+had observed on my hasty visit to it. We left the creek, therefore on
+the 23rd, and once more took up a westerly course. Passing through a
+generally open country, we stopped at noon to rest the animals; and
+afterwards got on an excellent grazing forest track, which continued to
+the brush, through another part of which I had penetrated to the marsh
+more to the south. While making our way through it, we came upon a
+small pond of water, and must have alarmed some natives, as there was a
+fresh made fire close to it. Our journey had been unusually long, and
+the cattle had felt the heat so much, that the moment they saw water
+they rushed into it; and, as this created some confusion, I thought it
+best to stop where we were for the night.
+
+In the morning, Mr. Hume walked with me to the hill, a distance of
+about a mile. It is not high enough to deserve the name of a mountain,
+although a beautiful feature in the country, and showing well from any
+point of view. We ascended it with an anxiety that may well be
+imagined, but were wholly disappointed in our most sanguine
+expectations. Our chief object, in this second visit to Oxley's Table
+Land, had been to examine, more at leisure, the face of the country
+around it, and to discover, if possible, some fixed point on which to
+move.
+
+If the rivers of the interior had already exhausted themselves, what
+had we to expect from a creek whose diminished appearance where we left
+it made us apprehend its speedy termination, and whose banks we
+traversed under constant apprehension? In any other country I should
+have followed such a water course, in hopes of its ultimately leading
+to some reservoir; but here I could encourage no such favourable
+anticipation.
+
+The only new object that struck our sight was a remarkable and distant
+hill of conical shape, bearing by compass S. 10 E. To the southward and
+westward, in the direction of D'Urban's Group, a dense and apparently
+low brush extended; but to the N. and N.W., there was a regular
+alternation of wood and plain. I left Mr. Hume upon the hill, that he
+might the more readily notice any smoke made by the natives; and
+returned myself to the camp about one o'clock, to move the party to the
+swamp. Mr. Hume's perseverance was of little avail. The region he had
+been overlooking was, to all appearance, uninhabited, nor did a single
+fire indicate that there was even a solitary wanderer upon its surface.
+
+EXCURSION TO D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+Our situation, at this time, was extremely embarrassing, and the only
+circumstance on which we had to congratulate ourselves was, the
+improved condition of our men; for several of the cattle and horses
+were in a sad plight. The weather had been so extremely oppressive,
+that we had found it impossible to keep them free from eruptions. I
+proposed to Mr. Hume, therefore, to give them a few days' rest, and to
+make an excursion, with such of them as were serviceable, to D'Urban's
+Group. We were both of us unwilling to return to the creek, but we
+foresaw that a blind reliance upon fortune, in our next movements,
+might involve us in inextricable difficulty.
+
+On the other hand, there was a very great risk in delay. It was more
+than probable, from the continued drought, that our retreat would be
+cut off from the want of water, or that we should only be enabled to
+effect our retreat with loss of most of the animals. The hope, however,
+of our intersecting some stream, or of falling upon a better country,
+prevailed over other considerations; and the excursion was,
+consequently, determined upon.
+
+DISTRESS FROM WANT OF WATER.
+
+We left the camp on the 25th, accompanied by Hopkinson and the tinker;
+and, almost immediately after, entered an acacia scrub of the most
+sterile description, and one, through which it would have been
+impossible to have found a passage for the boat carriage. The soil was
+almost a pure sand, and the lower branches of the trees were decayed so
+generally as to give the whole an indescribable appearance of
+desolation. About mid-day, we crossed a light sandy plain, on which
+there were some dirty puddles of water. They were so shallow as to
+leave the backs of the frogs in them exposed, and they had, in
+consequence, been destroyed by solar heat, and were in a state of
+putrefaction. Our horses refused to drink, but it was evident that some
+natives must have partaken of this sickening beverage only a few hours
+before our arrival. Indeed, it was clear that a wandering family must
+have slept near this spot, as we observed a fresh made gunneah (or
+native hut), and their foot-prints were so fresh along the line we were
+pursuing, that we momentarily expected to have overtaken them. It was
+late in the evening when we got out of this brush into better and more
+open ground, where, in ordinary seasons we should, no doubt, have found
+abundance of water. But we now searched in vain for it, and were
+contented to be enabled to give our wearied animals better food than
+they had tasted for many days, the forest grass, though in tufts, being
+abundant.
+
+We brought up for the night at the edge of a scrub, having travelled
+from thirty-two to thirty-five miles, judging the distance from the
+mountains still to be about twelve.
+
+BEARINGS FROM OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+In the morning we started at an early hour, and immediately entered the
+brush, beneath which we had slept; pursuing a westerly course through
+it. After a short ride, we found ourselves upon a plain, that was
+crowded with flocks of cockatoos. Here we got a supply of water, such
+as it was--so mixed with slime as to hang in strings between the
+fingers; and, after a hasty breakfast, we proceeded on our journey,
+mostly through a barren sandy scrub that was a perfect burrow from the
+number of wombats in it, to within a mile of the hill group, where the
+country appeared like one continuous meadow to the very base of them. I
+never saw anything like the luxuriance of the grass on this tract of
+country, waving as it did higher than our horses' middles as we rode
+through it. We ascended the S.W. face of the mountain to an elevation
+of at least 800 feet above the level of the plain, and had some
+difficulty in scaling the masses of rock that opposed themselves to our
+progress. But on gaining the summit, we were amply repaid for our
+trouble. The view extended far and wide, but we were again disappointed
+in the main object that had induced us to undertake the journey. I took
+the following bearings by compass. Oxley's Table Land bore N. 40 E.
+distant forty-five miles; small and distant hill due E.; conical peak
+seen from Oxley's Table Land S. 60 E., very distant; long ridge of high
+land, S.E., distant thirty-five miles; high land, S. 30 E., distant
+thirty miles; long range, S. 25 W.
+
+To the westward, as a medium point, the horizon was unbroken, and the
+eye wandered over an apparently endless succession of wood and plain. A
+brighter green than usual marked the course of the mountain torrents in
+several places, but there was no glittering light among the trees, no
+smoke to betray a water hole, or to tell that a single inhabitant was
+traversing the extensive region we were overlooking. We were obliged to
+return to the plain on which we had breakfasted, and to sleep upon it.
+
+D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+D'Urban's Group is of compact sandstone formation. Its extreme length
+is from E.S.E. to W.N.W., and cannot be more than from seven to nine
+miles, whilst its breadth is from two to four. The central space forms
+a large basin, in which there are stunted pines and eucalyptus scrub,
+amid huge fragments of rocks. It rises like an island from the midst of
+the ocean, and as I looked upon it from the plains below, I could
+without any great stretch of the imagination, picture to myself that it
+really was such. Bold and precipitous, it only wanted the sea to lave
+its base; and I cannot but think that such must at no very remote
+period have been the case, and that the immense flat we had been
+traversing, is of comparatively recent formation.
+
+We reached the camp on the 28th of the month, by nearly the same route;
+and were happy to find that, after the few days' rest they had enjoyed,
+there was a considerable improvement in the animals.
+
+Our experience of the nature of the country to the southward, and the
+westward, was such as to deter us from risking anything, by taking such
+a direction as was most agreeable to our views. Nothing remained to us
+but to follow the creek, or to retreat; and as we could only be induced
+to adopt the last measure when every other expedient should have
+failed, we determined on pursuing our original plan, of tracing New
+Year's Creek as far as practicable.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Oxley's Table Land is situated in lat. 29 degrees 57 minutes 30
+seconds, and in E. long. 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds, the mean
+variation being 6.32 easterly. It consists of two hills that appear to
+have been rent asunder by some convulsion of nature, since the passage
+between them is narrow and their inner faces are equally perpendicular.
+The hill which I have named after the late Surveyor-general, is steep
+on all sides; but the other gradually declines from the south, and at
+length loses itself in a large plain that extends to the north. It is
+from four to five miles in length, and is picturesque in appearance,
+and lightly wooded. A few cypresses were growing on Oxley's Table Land;
+but it had, otherwise, very little timber upon its summit. Both hills
+are of sandstone formation, and there are some hollows upon the last
+that deserve particular notice. They have the appearance of having been
+formed by eddies of water, being deeper in the centre than at any other
+part, and contain fragments and slabs of sandstone of various size and
+breadth, without a particle of soil or of sand between them. It is to
+be observed that the edges of these slabs, which were perfect
+parallelograms, were unbroken, and that they were as clean as if they
+had only just been turned out of the hand of the mason. We counted
+thirteen of these hollows in one spot about twenty-five feet in
+diameter, but they are without doubt of periodical formation, since a
+single hollow was observed lower than the summit of the hill upon its
+south extremity, that had evidently long been exposed to the action of
+the atmosphere, and had a general coating of moss over it.
+
+CONTINUE THE JOURNEY; DOWN NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+We left Oxley's Table Land on the morning of the 31st of January,
+pursuing a northern course through the brush and across a large plain,
+moving parallel to the smaller hill, and keeping it upon our left. The
+soil upon this plain differed in character from that on the plains to
+the eastward, and was much freer from sand. We stopped to dine at a
+spot, whence Oxley's Table Land bore by compass, S. by W., distant
+about twelve miles. Continuing our journey, at 2 p.m. we cleared the
+plain, and entered a tract covered with the polygonum junceum, on a
+soil evidently the deposit of floods. Box-trees were thinly scattered
+over it, and among the polygonum, the crested pigeons were numerous.
+These general appearances, together with a dip of country to the
+N.N.W., made us conclude that we were approaching the creek, and we
+accordingly intersected it on a N.N.E. course, at about three miles'
+distance from where we had dined. It had, however, undergone so
+complete a change, and had increased so much in size and in the height
+of its banks, that we were at a loss to recognize it. Still, with all
+these favourable symptoms, there was not a drop of water in it. But
+small shells lay in heaps in its bed, or were abundantly scattered over
+it; and we remarked that they differed from those on the plains of the
+Macquarie. A circumstance that surprised us much, was the re-appearance
+of the flooded-gum upon its banks, and that too of a large size. We had
+not seen any to the westward of the marshes, and we were, consequently,
+led to indulge in more sanguine expectation as to our ultimate success
+than we had ever ventured to do before.
+
+The party crossed to the right bank of the creek, and then moved in a
+westerly direction along it in search of water. A brush extended to our
+right, and some broken stony ground, rather elevated, was visible, to
+which Mr. Hume rode; nor did he join me again until after I had halted
+the party for the night.
+
+DISTRESSED FOR WATER.
+
+My search for water had been unsuccessful, and the sun had set, when I
+came upon a broad part of the creek that appeared very favourable for
+an encampment, as it was encompassed by high banks, and would afford
+the men a greater facility of watching the cattle, that I knew would
+stray away if they could.
+
+My anxiety for them led me to wander down the bed of the creek, when,
+to my joy, I found a pond of water within a hundred yards of the tents.
+It is impossible for me to describe the relief I felt at this success,
+or the gladness it spread among the men. Mr. Hume joined me at dusk,
+and informed me that he had made a circuit, and had struck upon the
+creek about three miles below us but that, in tracing it up, he had not
+found a drop of water until he came to the pond near which we had so
+providentially encamped. On the following morning, we held a westerly
+course over an open country for about eight miles and a half. The
+prevailing timber appeared to be a species of eucalypti, with rough
+bark, of small size, and evidently languishing from the want of
+moisture. The soil over which we travelled was far from bad, but there
+was a total absence of water upon it. At 6 p.m. Oxley's Table Land was
+distant from us about fifteen miles, bearing S. 20 E. by compass.
+
+We had not touched upon the creek from the time we left it in the
+morning, having wandered from it in a northerly direction, along a
+native path that we intersected, and that seemed to have been recently
+trodden, since footsteps were fresh upon it. At sunset, we crossed a
+broad dry creek that puzzled us extremely, and were shortly afterwards
+obliged to stop for the night upon a plain beyond it. We had, during
+the afternoon, bent down to the S.W. in hopes that we should again have
+struck upon New Year's Creek; and, under an impression that we could
+not be far from it, Mr. Hume and I walked across the plain, to
+ascertain if it was sufficiently near to be of any service to us. We
+came upon a creek, but could not decide whether it was the one for
+which we had been searching, or another.
+
+Its bed was so perfectly even that it was impossible to say to what
+point it flowed, more especially as all remains of debris had mouldered
+away. It was, however, extremely broad, and evidently, at times, held a
+furious torrent. In the centre of it, at one of the angles, we
+discovered a pole erected, and at first thought, from the manner in
+which it was propped up, that some unfortunate European must have
+placed it there as a mark to tell of his wanderings, but we afterwards
+concluded that it might be some superstitious rite of the natives, in
+consequence of the untowardness of the season, as it seemed almost
+inconceivable that an European could have wandered to such a distance
+from the located districts in safety.
+
+REACH A LARGE RIVER.
+
+The creek had flooded-gum growing upon its banks, and, on places
+apparently subject to flood, a number of tall straight saplings were
+observed by us. We returned to the camp, after a vain search for water,
+and were really at a loss what direction next to pursue. The men kept
+the cattle pretty well together, and, as we were not delayed by any
+preparations for breakfast, they were saddled and loaded at an early
+hour. The circumstance of there having been natives in the
+neighbourhood, of whom we had seen so few traces of late, assured me
+that water was at hand, but in what direction it was impossible to
+guess. As the path we had observed was leading northerly, we took up
+that course, and had not proceeded more than a mile upon it, when we
+suddenly found ourselves on the banks of a noble river. Such it might
+in truth be called, where water was scarcely to be found. The party
+drew up upon a bank that was from forty to forty-five feet above the
+level of the stream. The channel of the river was front seventy to
+eighty yards broad, and enclosed an unbroken sheet of water, evidently
+very deep, and literally covered with pelicans and other wild fowl. Our
+surprise and delight may better be imagined than described. Our
+difficulties seemed to be at an end, for here was a river that promised
+to reward all our exertions, and which appeared every moment to
+increase in importance to our imagination. Coming from the N.E., and
+flowing to the S.W., it had a capacity of channel that proved that we
+were as far from its source as from its termination. The paths of the
+natives on either side of it were like well trodden roads; and the
+trees that overhung it were of beautiful and gigantic growth.
+
+DISAPPOINTMENT ON FINDING THE RIVER SALT.
+
+Its banks were too precipitous to allow of our watering the cattle, but
+the men eagerly descended to quench their thirst, which a powerful sun
+had contributed to increase; nor shall I ever forget the cry of
+amazement that followed their doing so, or the looks of terror and
+disappointment with which they called out to inform me that the water
+was so salt as to be unfit to drink! This was, indeed, too true: on
+tasting it, I found it extremely nauseous, and strongly impregnated
+with salt, being apparently a mixture of sea and fresh water. Whence
+this arose, whether from local causes, or from a communication with
+some inland sea, I knew not, but the discovery was certainly a blow for
+which I was not prepared. Our hopes were annihilated at the moment of
+their apparent realization. The cup of joy was dashed out of our hands
+before we had time to raise it to our lips. Notwithstanding this
+disappointment, we proceeded down the river, and halted at about five
+miles, being influenced by the goodness of the feed to provide for the
+cattle as well as circumstances would permit. They would not drink of
+the river water, but stood covered in it for many hours, having their
+noses alone exposed above the stream. Their condition gave me great
+uneasiness. It was evident they could not long hold out under their
+excessive thirst, and unless we should procure some fresh water, it
+would impossible for us to continue our journey. On a closer
+examination, the river appeared to me much below its ordinary level,
+and its current was scarcely perceptible. We placed sticks to ascertain
+if there was a rise or fall of tide, but could arrive at no
+satisfactory conclusion, although there was undoubtedly a current in
+it. Yet, as I stood upon its banks at sunset, when not a breath of air
+existed to break the stillness of the waters below me, and saw their
+surface kept in constant agitation by the leaping of fish, I doubted
+whether the river could supply itself so abundantly, and the rather
+imagined, that it owed such abundance, which the pelicans seemed to
+indicate was constant, to some mediterranean sea or other. Where,
+however, were the human inhabitants of this distant and singular
+region? The signs of a numerous population were around us, but we had
+not seen even a solitary wanderer. The water of the river was not, by
+any means, so salt as that of the ocean, but its taste was precisely
+similar. Could it be that its unnatural state had driven its
+inhabitants from its banks?
+
+One would have imagined that our perplexities would have been
+sufficient for one day, but ere night closed, they increased upon us,
+although our anxiety, with regard to the cattle, was happily removed.
+Mr. Hume with his usual perseverance, walked out when the camp was
+formed; and, at a little distance from it, ascended a ridge of pure
+sand, crowned with cypresses. From this, he descended to the westward,
+and, at length, struck upon the river, where a reef of rocks creased
+its channel, and formed a dry passage from one side to the other; but
+the bend, which the river must have taken, appeared to him so singular,
+that he doubted whether it was the same beside which we had been
+travelling during the day. Curiosity led him to cross it, when he found
+a small pond of fresh water on a tongue of land, and, immediately
+afterwards, returned to acquaint me with the welcome tidings. It was
+too late to move, but we had, at least, the prospect of a comfortable
+breakfast in the morning.
+
+JUNCTION OF NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+In consequence of the doubts that hung upon Mr. Hume's mind, as to the
+course of the river, we arranged that the animals should precede us to
+the fresh water; and that we should keep close in upon the stream, to
+ascertain that point. After traversing a deep bight, we arrived nearly
+as soon as the party, at the appointed rendezvous. The rocks composing
+the channel of the river at the crossing place, were of indurated clay.
+In the course of an hour, the animals appearing quite refreshed, we
+proceeded on our journey, and at about four miles crossed New Year's
+Creek, at its junction with the salt river. We passed several parts of
+the main channel that were perfectly dry, and were altogether at a loss
+to account for the current we undoubtedly had observed in the river
+when we first came upon it. At midday D'Urban's Group bore S. 65 E.
+distant about 32 miles. We made a little westing in the afternoon. The
+river continued to maintain its character and appearance, its lofty
+banks, and its long still reaches: while, however, the blue-gum trees
+upon its banks were of magnificent size, the soil had but little
+vegetation upon it, although an alluvial deposit.
+
+We passed over vast spaces covered with the polygonum junceum, that
+bore all the appearance of the flooded tracks in the neighbourhood of
+the marshes, and on which the travelling was equally distressing to the
+animals. Indeed, it had been sufficiently evident to us that the waters
+of this river were not always confined to its channel, capacious as it
+was, but that they inundated a belt of barren land, that varied in
+width from a quarter of a mile to a mile, when they were checked by an
+outer embankment that prevented them from spreading generally over the
+country, and upon the neighbouring plains. At our halting place, the
+cattle drank sparingly of the water, but it acted as a violent
+purgative both on them and the men who partook of it.
+
+NATIVE VILLAGE.
+
+On the 5th, the river led us to the southward and westward. Early in
+the day, we passed a group of seventy huts, capable of holding from
+twelve to fifteen men each. They appeared to be permanent habitations,
+and all of them fronted the same point of the compass. In searching
+amongst them we observed two beautifully made nets, of about ninety
+yards in length. The one had much larger meshes than the other, and
+was, most probably, intended to take kangaroos; but the other was
+evidently a fishing net.
+
+In one hut, the floor of which was swept with particular care, a number
+of white balls, as of pulverised shells or lime, had been
+deposited--the use of which we could not divine. A trench was formed
+round the hut to prevent the rain from running under it, and the whole
+was arranged with more than ordinary attention.
+
+TERROR OF THE NATIVES.
+
+We had not proceeded very far when we came suddenly upon the tribe to
+which this village, as it might be called, belonged.
+
+In breaking through some brush to an open space that was bounded on one
+side by the river, we observed three or four natives, seated on a bank
+at a considerable distance from us; and directly in the line on which
+we were moving. The nature of the ground so completely favoured our
+approach, that they did not become aware of it until we were within a
+few yards of them, and had ascended a little ridge, which, as we
+afterwards discovered, ended in an abrupt precipice upon the river, not
+more than thirty yards to our right. The crack of the drayman's whip
+was the first thing that aroused their attention. They gazed upon us
+for a moment, and then started up and assumed an attitude of horror and
+amazement; their terror apparently increasing upon them. We stood
+perfectly immovable, until at length they gave a fearful yell, and
+darted out of sight.
+
+THEY FIRE THE BUSH.
+
+Their cry brought about a dozen more natives from the river, whom we
+had not before observed, but who now ran after their comrades with
+surprising activity, and without once venturing to look behind them. As
+our position was a good one, we determined to remain upon it, until we
+should ascertain the number and disposition of the natives. We had not
+been long stationary, when we heard a crackling noise in the distance,
+and it soon became evident that the bush had been fired. It was,
+however, impossible that we could receive any injury on the narrow
+ridge upon which we stood, so that we waited very patiently to see the
+end of this affair.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES; DISEASE AMONG THEM.
+
+In a short time the fire approached pretty near to us, and dense
+columns of smoke rose into the air over our heads. One of the natives,
+who had been on the bank, now came out of the bush, exactly from the
+spot into which he had retreated. He advanced a few paces towards us,
+and bending his body so that his hands rested on his knees, he fixed
+his gaze upon us for some time; but, seeing that we remained immovable,
+he began to throw himself into the most extravagant attitudes, shaking
+his foot from time to time. When he found that all his violence had no
+effect, he turned his rear to us in a most laughable manner, and
+absolutely groaned in spirit when he found that this last insult failed
+of success.
+
+He stood perplexed and not knowing what next to do, which gave Mr. Hume
+an opportunity to call out to him, and with considerable address he at
+length got the savage to approach close up to him; Mr. Hume himself
+having advanced a short distance from the animals in the first
+instance. As soon as I thought the savage had sufficiently recovered
+from his alarm, I went up to him with a tomahawk, the use of which he
+immediately guessed. We now observed that the natives who had fled from
+the river, had been employed in setting a net. They had placed it in a
+semicircle, with either end to the shore, and rude pieces of wood were
+attached to it to keep the upper part perpendicular. It was in fact a
+sein, only that the materials, with the exception of the net-work, were
+simpler and rougher than cork or lead--for which last, we afterwards
+discovered stones had been substituted.
+
+We had on this occasion a remarkable instance of the docility of the
+natives of the interior, or of the power they have of subduing their
+apprehensions; manifesting the opposite extremes of fear and
+confidence. These men whom we had thus surprised, and who, no doubt,
+imagined that we were about to destroy them, having apparently never
+seen nor heard of white men before, must have taken us for something
+preternatural; yet from the extremity of fear that had prompted them to
+set their woods in flames, they in a brief space so completely subdued
+those fears as to approach the very beings who had so strongly excited
+their alarm. The savage who had been the principal actor in the scene,
+was an elderly man, rather descending to the vale of years than what
+might be strictly called aged. I know not how it was, but I regarded
+him with peculiar interest. Mr. Hume's manners had in a great measure
+contributed to allay his evident agitation; but, from the moment I
+approached him, I thought there was a shade of anxiety upon his brow,
+and an expression of sorrow over his features, the cause of which did
+not originate with us. I could see in a moment, that his bosom was full
+even to bursting, and he seemed to claim at once our sympathy and our
+protection, although we were ignorant of that which oppressed him. We
+had not long been seated together, when some of his tribe mustered
+sufficient courage to join him. Both Mr. Hume and I were desirous of
+seeing the net drawn, but the old man raised some objection, by
+pointing to the heavens and towards the sun. After a little more
+solicitation, however, he gave a whistle, and, four or five natives
+having obeyed the summons, he directed them to draw the net, but they
+were unfortunate, and our wish to ascertain the kind of fish contained
+in the river was disappointed. As his tribe gathered round him, the old
+chief threw a melancholy glance upon them, and endeavoured, as much as
+he could, to explain the cause of that affliction which, as I had
+rightly judged, weighed heavily upon him. It appeared, then, that a
+violent cutaneous disease raged throughout the tribe, that was sweeping
+them off in great numbers. He called several young men to Mr. Hume and
+myself, who had been attacked by this singular malady. Nothing could
+exceed the anxiety of his explanations, or the mild and soothing tone
+in which he addressed his people, and it really pained me that I could
+not assist him in his distress. We now discovered the use to which the
+conical substance that had been deposited with such unusual care in one
+of the huts, was applied. There were few of the natives present who
+were not more or less marked with it, and it was no doubt, indicative
+of mourning.
+
+DEPARTURE OF THE NATIVES.
+
+Some of the men, however, were painted with red and yellow ochre, with
+which it was evident to me they had besmeared themselves since our
+appearance, most likely in preparing for the combat in which they
+fancied they would be engaged. We distributed such presents as we had
+to those around us, and when we pursued our journey, the majority
+accompanied us, nor did they wholly leave us until we had passed the
+place to which their women had retired. They might have left us when
+they pleased, for we intended them no harm; as it was, however, they
+struck into the brushes to join their families, and we pushed on to
+make up for lost time.
+
+The travelling near the river had been so bad, not only in consequence
+of the nature of the soil and brush, but from the numerous gullies that
+had been formed by torrents, as they poured into its channel after
+heavy rains and floods, that it was thought advisable to keep at a
+greater distance from it. We turned away, therefore, to the plains, and
+found them of much firmer surface. They partook, however, of the same
+general character as the plains we had traversed more to the eastward.
+Their soil was a light sandy loam, and the same succulent plants still
+continued to prevail upon them, which we have already noticed as
+existing upon the other plains. Both emus and kangaroos were seen,
+though not in any considerable numbers, but our dogs were not in a
+condition to run, and were all but killed by the extreme heat of the
+weather. We had fallen on a small pool of water shortly after we
+started in the morning, but we could do no more than refresh ourselves
+and the animals at it. In the afternoon, we again turned towards the
+river, and found it unaltered. Its water was still salt, and from the
+increased number of wild fowl and pelicans upon it, as well as from the
+general flatness of the country, I certainly thought we were rapidly
+approaching some inland sea. It was, however, uncertain how long we
+should be enabled to continue on the river. The animals were all of
+them extremely weak, and every day increased the probable difficulty of
+our return. There was not the least appearance of a break-up of the
+drought, the heavens were without a cloud, and the atmosphere was so
+clear that the outline of the moon could be distinctly seen, although
+she was far in her wane.
+
+BRINE SPRINGS IN THE RIVER.
+
+On the 6th, we journeyed again through a barren scrub, although on
+firmer ground, and passed numerous groups of huts. At about eight miles
+from our last encampment, we came upon the river, where its banks were
+of considerable height. In riding along them, Mr. Hume thought he
+observed a current running, and he called to inform me of the
+circumstance. On a closer examination, we discovered some springs in
+the very bed of the river, from which a considerable stream was
+gushing, and from the incrustation around them, we had no difficulty in
+guessing at their nature: in fact, they were brine springs, and I
+collected a quantity of salt from the brink of them.
+
+DISTRESS FOR WANT OF FRESH WATER.
+
+After such a discovery, we could not hope to keep our position. No
+doubt the current we had observed on first reaching the river, was
+caused by springs that had either escaped our notice or were under
+water. Here was at length a local cause for its saltness that destroyed
+at once the anticipation and hope of our being near its termination,
+and, consequently, the ardour with which we should have pressed on to
+decide so interesting a point.
+
+Our retreat would have been a measure of absolute necessity ere this,
+had we not found occasional supplies of fresh water, the last pond of
+which was now about eighteen miles behind us.
+
+OUR COURSE ARRESTED.
+
+Whether we should again find any, was a doubtful question, and I
+hesitated to run the risk. The animals were already, from bad food, and
+from the effects of the river water, so weak, that they could scarcely
+carry their loads, and I was aware, if any of the bullocks once fell,
+he would never rise again. Under such circumstances, I thought it
+better to halt the party at the edge of the scrub, though the feed was
+poor, and the water not drinkable. Our situation required most serious
+consideration. It was necessary that we should move either backward or
+forward in the morning. Yet we could not adopt either measure with
+satisfaction to ourselves, under such unfavorable circumstances. I
+determined to relieve my own mind by getting the animals into a place
+of safety, as soon as possible; and, as the only effectual way of doing
+this was to retire upon the nearest fresh water, I resolved at once to
+do so. The party turned back on the morning of the 6th; nor do I think
+the cattle would ever have reached their destination had we not found a
+few buckets of rain water in the cleft of a rock, to refresh them. Thus
+it will appear that under our most trying circumstances, we received
+aid from Providence, and that the bounty of Heaven was extended towards
+us, when we had least reason to expect it.
+
+Notwithstanding we had been thus forced to a partial retreat, both Mr.
+Hume and myself were unwilling to quit the pursuit of the river, in so
+unsatisfactory a manner. There was no difference in the appearance of
+the country to the westward of it; but a seeming interminable flat
+stretched away in that direction. A journey across it was not likely,
+therefore, to be attended with any favorable results, since it was
+improbable that any other leading feature was within our reach. I
+proposed, therefore, to take the most serviceable of the horses with me
+down the river, that, in the event of our finding fresh water, we might
+again push forward. Mr. Hume requesting to be permitted to accompany
+me, it was arranged that we should start on the 8th, thereby giving the
+animals a day's rest. We had not seen any natives since our parting
+with the chief horde; and as we were stationed at some little distance
+from the river, I hoped that they would not visit the camp during my
+absence. This was the only circumstance that gave me uneasiness, but
+the men had generally been behaving so well that I relied a great deal
+upon them.
+
+EXTRAORDINARY SOUND.
+
+About 3 p.m. on the 7th, Mr. Hume and I were occupied tracing the chart
+upon the ground. The day had been remarkably fine, not a cloud was
+there in the heavens, nor a breath of air to be felt. On a sudden we
+heard what seemed to be the report of a gun fired at the distance of
+between five and six miles. It was not the hollow sound of an earthly
+explosion, or the sharp cracking noise of falling timber, but in every
+way resembled a discharge of a heavy piece of ordnance. On this all
+were agreed, but no one was certain whence the sound proceeded. Both
+Mr. Hume and myself had been too attentive to our occupation to form a
+satisfactory opinion; but we both thought it came from the N.W. I sent
+one of the men immediately up a tree, but he could observe nothing
+unusual. The country around him appeared to be equally flat on all
+sides, and to be thickly wooded: whatever occasioned the report, it
+made a strong impression on all of us; and to this day, the singularity
+of such a sound, in such a situation, is a matter of mystery to me.
+
+FURTHER ATTEMPT TO EXPLORE THE RIVER.
+
+On the 8th, we commenced our journey down the river, accompanied by two
+men, and a pack-horse, carrying our provisions on one side and a bucket
+of water on the other. Keeping in general near the stream, but making
+occasional turns into the plains, we got to the brush from which the
+party had turned back, about 3 p.m. Passing through, we crossed a small
+plain, of better soil and vegetation than usual; but it soon gave place
+to the sandy loam of the interior; nor did we observe any material
+alteration, either in the country or the river, as we rode along. The
+flooded-gum trees on the banks of the latter, were of beautiful growth,
+but in the brushes dividing the plains, box and other eucalypti, with
+cypresses and many minor shrubs, prevailed. We slept on the river side,
+and calculated our distance from the camp at about twenty-six or
+twenty-eight miles.
+
+The horses would not drink the river water, so that we were obliged to
+give them a pint each from our own supply. On the following morning we
+continued our journey. The country was generally open to the eastward,
+and we had fine views of D'Urban's Group, distant from twenty to
+twenty-five miles. About noon, turning towards the river to rest, both
+ourselves and the horses, we passed through brush land for about a mile
+and a half. When we came upon its banks, we found them composed of a
+red loam with sandy superficies. We had, in the course of the day,
+crossed several creeks, but in none of them could we find water,
+although their channels were of great depth.
+
+The day had been extremely warm, and from shaking in the barrel our
+supply of water had diminished to a little more than a pint; it
+consequently became a matter of serious consideration, how far it would
+be prudent to proceed farther; for, however capable we were of bearing
+additional fatigue, it was evident our animals would soon fail, since
+they trembled exceedingly, and had the look of total exhaustion. We
+calculated that we were forty miles from the camp, in a S.W. direction,
+a fearful distance under our circumstances, since we could not hope to
+obtain relief for two days. Independently however, of the state of the
+animals, our spirits were damped by the nature of the country, and the
+change which had taken place on the soil, upon which it was impossible
+that water could rest; while the general appearance of the interior
+showed how much it had suffered from drought. On the other hand,
+although the waters of the river had become worse to the taste, the
+river itself had increased in size, and stretched away to the westward,
+with all the uniformity of a magnificent canal, and gave every promise
+of increasing importance; while the pelicans were in such numbers upon
+it as to be quite dazzling to the eye. Considering, however, that
+perseverance would only involve us in inextricable difficulties, and
+that it would also be useless to risk the horses, since we had gained a
+distance to which the bullocks could not have been brought, I intimated
+my intention of giving up the further pursuit of the river, though it
+was with extreme reluctance that I did so.
+
+CALLED IT THE "DARLING".
+
+As soon as we had bathed and finished our scanty meal, I took the
+bearings of D'Urban's Group, and found them to be S. 58 E. about
+thirty-three miles distant; and as we mounted our horses, I named the
+river the "Darling," as a lasting memorial of the respect I bear the
+governor.
+
+ABANDON THE ATTEMPT.
+
+I should be doing injustice to Mr. Hume and my men, if I did not
+express my conviction that they were extremely unwilling to yield to
+circumstances, and that, had I determined on continuing the journey,
+they would have followed me with cheerfulness, whatever the
+consequences might have been.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks
+on the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our
+return--Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount
+Harris--Miserable condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the
+slaughter of two Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the
+Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--Find the famished natives feeding on
+gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--Character of the country in its
+vicinity--Another tribe of natives--Amicable intercourse with
+them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach the Darling River ninety
+miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+
+
+We kept near the river as we journeyed homewards, and in striking
+across a plain, found an isolated rock of quartz and jasper, just
+showing itself partially above the surface of the ground.
+
+We were anxious to get to the small plain I have mentioned, if
+possible, for the sake of the animals, and pushed on rapidly for it.
+About 4 p.m. we had reached our sleeping place of the previous evening,
+and being overpowered by thirst, we stopped in hopes that by making our
+tea strong we might destroy, in some measure, the nauseous taste of the
+water. The horses were spancelled and a fire lit. Whilst we were
+sitting patiently for the boiling of the tins, Mr. Hume observed at a
+considerable distance above us, a large body of natives under some gum
+trees. They were not near enough for us to observe them distinctly, but
+it was evident that they were watching our motions. We did not take any
+notice of them for some time, but at last I thought it better to call
+out to them, and accordingly requested Mr. Hume to do so. In a moment
+the whole of them ran forward and dashed into the river, having been on
+the opposite side, with an uproar I had never witnessed on any former
+occasion.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH NATIVES.
+
+Mr. Hume thought they intended an attack, and the horses had taken
+fright and galloped away. I determined, therefore, to fire at once upon
+them if they pressed up the bank on which we were posted. Mr. Hume went
+with me to the crest of it, and we rather angrily beckoned to the
+foremost of the natives to stop. They mistook our meaning, but laid all
+their spears in a heap as they came up. We then sat down on the bank
+and they immediately did the same; nor did they stir until we beckoned
+to them after the horses had been secured.
+
+As they conducted themselves so inoffensively, we gave them everything
+we had to spare. My gun seemed to excite their curiosity, as they had
+seen Mr. Hume shoot a cockatoo with it; they must consequently have
+been close to us for the greater part of the day, as the bird was
+killed in the morning. It was of a species new to me, being smaller
+than the common white cockatoo, and having a large scarlet-and-yellow
+instead of a pine-yellow top-knot.
+
+Having stayed about half an hour with them, we remounted our horses,
+and struck away from the river into the plains, while the natives went
+up its banks to join their hordes. Those whom we saw were about
+twenty-seven in number and the most of them were strangers.
+
+DISTRESS FROM THIRST.
+
+It was some time after sunset before we reached the little plain on
+which we had arranged to sleep, and when we dismounted we were in a
+truly pitiable state. I had been unable to refrain from drinking
+copiously at the river, and now became extremely sick. Mr. Hume had
+been scarcely more prudent than myself, but on him the water had a
+contrary effect, as well as upon Hopkinson. The tinker was the only man
+fit for duty, and it was well for us that such was the case, as the
+horses made frequent attempts to stray, and would have left us in a
+pretty plight had they succeeded. We reached the camp on the following
+day a little before sunset, nor was I more rejoiced to dismount from my
+wearied horse than to learn that everything in the camp had been
+regular during our absence and that the men had kept on the best terms
+with the natives who had paid them frequent visits.
+
+The bullocks had improved, but were still extremely weak, and as the
+horses we had employed on the last journey required a day or two's
+rest, it was arranged that we should not break up our camp until the
+12th, beyond which period we could not stop, in consequence of the low
+state of our salt provisions, we having barely sufficient to last to
+Mount Harris, at the rate of two pounds per week.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES.
+
+The morning after we returned from our excursion, a large party of
+natives, about seventy in number, visited the camp. On this occasion,
+the women and children passed behind the tents, but did not venture to
+stop. Most of the men had spears, and were unusually inquisitive and
+forward. Several of them carried fire-sticks under the influence of the
+disease I have already noticed, whilst others were remarked to have
+violent cutaneous eruptions all over the body. We were pretty well on
+the alert; notwithstanding which, every minor article was seized with a
+quickness that would have done credit to a most finished juggler. One
+of the natives thus picked up my comb and toothbrush, but as he did not
+attempt to conceal them, they were fortunately recovered. After staying
+with us a short time the men followed the women. They appeared to be
+strangers who had come from a distance.
+
+CUSTOMS OF THE NATIVES.
+
+The natives of the Darling are a clean-limbed, well-conditioned race,
+generally speaking. They seemingly occupy permanent huts, but their
+tribe did not bear any proportion to the size or number of their
+habitations. It was evident their population had been thinned. The
+customs of these distant tribes, as far as we could judge, were similar
+to those of the mountain blacks, and they are essentially the same
+people, although their language differs. They lacerate their bodies,
+but do not extract the front teeth. We saw but few cloaks among them,
+since the opossum does not inhabit the interior. Those that were
+noticed, were made of the red kangaroo skin. In appearance, these men
+are stouter in the bust than at the lower extremities; they have broad
+noses, sunken eyes, overhanging eyebrows, and thick lips. The men are
+much better looking than the women. Both go perfectly naked, if I
+except the former, who wear nets over the loins and across the
+forehead, and bones through the cartilages of the nose. Their chief
+food is fish, of which they have great supplies in the river; still
+they have their seasons for hunting their emus and kangaroos. The nets
+they use for this purpose, as well as for fishing, are of great length,
+and are made upon large frames. These people do not appear to have
+warlike habits nor do they take any pride in their arms, which differ
+little from those used by the inland tribes, and are assimilated to
+them as far as the materials will allow. One powerful man, however, had
+a regular trident, for which Mr. Hume offered many things without
+success. He plainly intimated to us that he had a use for it, but
+whether against an enemy or to secure prey, we could not understand. I
+was most anxious to have ascertained if any religious ceremonies
+obtained among them, but the difficulty of making them comprehend our
+meaning was insurmountable; and to the same cause may be attributed the
+circumstance of my being unable to collect any satisfactory vocabulary
+of their language. They evinced a strange perversity, or obstinacy
+rather, in repeating words, although it was evident that they knew they
+were meant as questions. The pole we observed in the creek, on the
+evening previously to our making the Darling, was not the only one that
+fell under our notice; our impression therefore, that they were fixed
+by the natives to propitiate some deity, was confirmed. It would appear
+that the white pigment was an indication of mourning. Whether these
+people have an idea of a superintending Providence I doubt, but they
+evidently dread evil agency. On the whole I should say they are a
+people, at present, at the very bottom of the scale of humanity.
+
+REMARKS ON THE DARLING RIVER.
+
+We struck the Darling River in lat. 29 degrees 37 minutes S. and in E.
+long. 145 degrees 33 minutes, and traced it down for about sixty-six
+miles in a direct line to the S.W. If I might hazard an opinion from
+appearance, to whatever part of the interior it leads, its source must
+be far to the N.E. or N. The capacity of its channel, and the terrific
+floods that must sometimes rage in it, would argue that it is
+influenced by tropical rains, which alone would cause such floods. It
+is likely that it seldom arrives at so reduced a state as that in which
+we found it, and that, generally speaking, it has a sufficient depth of
+water for the purposes of inland navigation: in such case its future
+importance cannot be questioned, since it most probably receives the
+chief streams falling westerly from the coast ranges. But, with every
+anticipation of the benefit that may at some time or other be derived
+from this remarkable and central stream, it is incumbent on me to state
+that the country, through which it flows, holds out but little prospect
+of advantage. Certainly the portion we know of it, is far from
+encouraging. The extent of alluvial soil, between the inner and outer
+banks of the river, is extremely limited, and, instead of being covered
+with sward, is in most places over-run by the polygonum. Beyond this
+the plains of the interior stretch away, whose character and soil must
+change, ere they can be available to any good purpose. But there is a
+singular want of vegetable decay in the interior of New Holland, and
+that powerfully argues its recent origin.
+
+REMARKS ON THE COUNTRY.
+
+There is no life upon its surface, if I may so express myself; but the
+stillness of death reigns in its brushes, and over its plains. It
+cannot, however, be doubted that we visited the interior during a most
+unfavorable season. Probably in ordinary ones it wears a different
+appearance, but its deserts are of great extent, and its productions
+are of little value.
+
+Agreeably to our arrangements, we broke up our camp at an early hour on
+the morning of the 12th, and proceeded up the river to the junction of
+New Year's Creek. We then struck away in an easterly direction from it,
+detaching a man to trace the creek up, lest we should pass any water;
+and we should certainly have been without it had we not taken this
+precaution.
+
+On the following day, we again passed to the eastward, through an open
+country, having picturesque views of Oxley's Table Land. We crossed our
+track about noon, and struck on the creek at about five miles beyond
+it, and we were fortunate enough to procure both water and grass. The
+timber upon the plains, between us and the Darling, we found to be a
+rough gum, but box prevailed in the neighbourhood of the creek at this
+part of it.
+
+On the 14th, we changed our direction more to the southward, but made a
+short journey, in consequence of being obliged to make some slight
+repairs on the boat carriage.
+
+REGAIN OUR OLD ROUTE.
+
+On the 15th, we kept an E.S.E. course, and, crossing the creek at an
+early hour, got upon our old track, which we kept. We had the lateral
+ridge of the Pink Hills upon our right, and travelled through a good
+deal of brush. Four or five natives joined us, and two followed us to
+the end of our day's journey. In the course of the evening, they
+endeavoured to pilfer whatever was in their reach, but were detected
+putting a tin into a bush, and soon took to their heels. This was the
+first instance we had of open theft among the natives of the interior.
+
+We passed Mosquito Brush on the 18th, but found the ponds quite dry, we
+were, therefore, under the necessity of pushing on, to shorten the next
+day's journey, as we could not expect to get water nearer than the
+marshes. At noon, on the 19th, we entered the plain, and once more saw
+them spreading in dreariness before us. While the party was crossing to
+the first channel, I rode to the left, in order to examine the
+appearance of the country in the direction of the wood, and as far as I
+skirted the reeds had my impressions confirmed as to their partial
+extension. I was obliged, however, to join the men without completing
+the circuit of the marshes. They had found the first channel dry, and
+had passed on to the other, in which, fortunately, a small quantity of
+water still remained. It was, however, so shallow as to expose the
+backs of the fish in it, and a number of crows had congregated, and
+were pecking at them. Wishing to satisfy my mind as to the distance to
+which the river extended to the northward, Mr. Hume rode with me on the
+following day, to examine the country in that direction, leaving the
+men stationary. We found that the reeds gradually decreased in body,
+until, at length, they ceased, or gave place to bulrushes. There were
+general appearances of inundation, and of the subsidence of waters, but
+none that led us to suppose that any channel existed beyond the flooded
+lands.
+
+ALARM FOR THE SAFETY OF THE PROVISION PARTY.
+
+On our return to the camp, we observed dense masses of smoke rising at
+the head of the marshes, and immediately under Mount Foster. This
+excited our alarm for the safety of the party we hoped to find at Mount
+Harris, and obliged us to make forced marches, to relieve it if
+threatened by the natives.
+
+On the 22nd, we crossed the plains of the Macquarie, and surprised a
+numerous tribe on the banks of the river; and the difficulty we found
+in getting any of them to approach us, their evident timidity, and the
+circumstance of one of them having on a jacket, tended to increase our
+apprehensions. When two or three came to us, they intimated that white
+men either had been or were under Mount Harris, but we were left in
+uncertainty and passed a most anxious night.
+
+The body of reeds was still on fire; and the light embers were carried
+to an amazing distance by the wind, falling like a black-shower around
+us. As we knew that the natives never made such extensive
+conflagration, unless they had some mischievous object in view, our
+apprehension for the safety of Riley, with his supplies, was increased.
+
+At the earliest dawn, we pushed for the hill. In passing that part of
+the meadows under Mount Foster, we observed that the grass had also
+been consumed, and we scarcely recognized the ground from its altered
+appearance. As we approached Mount Harris, we saw recent traces of
+cattle, but none were visible on the plains. Under the hill, however,
+we could distinctly see that a hut of some kind had been erected, and
+it is impossible for me to describe the relief we felt when a soldier
+came forward to reconnoitre us. I could no longer doubt the safety of
+the party, and this was confirmed by the rest of the men turning out to
+welcome us. It appeared that our suspicions with regard to the natives
+had not been without foundation, since they attempted to surprise the
+camp, and it was supposed the firing of the marshes was done with a
+view to collect the distant tribes, to make a second attack; so that
+our arrival was most opportune.
+
+The party I found awaiting our arrival at Mount Harris consisted of one
+soldier, Riley, who had the charge of the supplies, and a drayman. They
+had found the paper I had fixed against the tree, and also the letters
+I had hid, and had forwarded them to Sydney, by another soldier and a
+prisoner; which had weakened their party a good deal. Riley informed
+me, that he had been between a month and three weeks at the station,
+and that knowing our provisions must have run short he had expected us
+much earlier than we had made our appearance.
+
+My dispatches stated, that additional supplies had been forwarded for
+my use, together with horses and bullocks, in the event of my requiring
+them. On examination, the former were found to be in excellent order;
+and, as it would take some time to carry any changes I might
+contemplate, or find it necessary to make, into effect, I determined to
+give the men who had been with me a week's rest.
+
+ENCAMP AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+The camp was made snug; and as the weather had become much cooler I
+thought it a good opportunity to slaughter one of the bullocks, in
+order to guard against any bad effects of our having been living for
+some weeks exclusively on salt provisions. I was also induced to this
+measure, from a wish to preserve my supplies as much as possible.
+
+These matters having been arranged, I had a temporary awning erected
+near the river, and was for three or four days busily employed writing
+an account of our journey for the Governor's information.
+
+Having closed my despatches, and answered the numerous friendly letters
+I had received, my attention was next turned to the changes that had
+taken place at Mount Harris during our absence. The Macquarie, I found,
+had wholly ceased to flow, and now consisted of a chain of ponds. Such
+of the minor vegetation as had escaped the fires of the natives, had
+perished under the extreme heat of the season. The acacia pendula stood
+leafless upon the plains, and the polygonum junceum appeared to be the
+only plant that had withstood the effects of the drought. Yet,
+notwithstanding this general depression of the vegetable kingdom, the
+animals that had been brought from Wellington Valley were in the best
+condition, and were, indeed, too fat for effective labour; it might,
+therefore, be reasonably presumed, that herbage affording such
+nourishment in so unfavourable a season, would be of the richest
+quality, if fresh and vigorous under the influence of seasonable, and
+not excessive, rains.
+
+FIRING OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+The appearance of the country was, however, truly melancholy; there was
+not a flower in bloom, nor a green object to be seen. Whether our
+arrival had increased their alarm, is uncertain, but the natives
+continued to fire the great marshes, and as the element raged amongst
+them, large bodies of smoke rose over the horizon like storm clouds,
+and had the effect of giving additional dreariness to the scene. I am
+inclined to think that they made these conflagrations to procure food,
+by seizing whatsoever might issue from the flames, as snakes, birds, or
+other animals; for they had taken every fish in the river, and the low
+state of its waters had enabled them to procure an abundance of muscles
+from its bed, which they had consumed with their characteristic
+improvidence. They were, consequently, in a starving condition, and so
+pitiable were their indications of it, that I was induced to feed such
+of them as visited the camp, notwithstanding their late misconduct;
+being likewise anxious to bring about a good understanding, as the best
+means of ensuring the safety of the smaller party when we should
+separate, of which I had reason to be doubtful. These people had killed
+two white men not long before my arrival among them, and as the
+circumstances attending the slaughter are singular, I shall relate them.
+
+SLAUGHTER OF TWO IRISH RUNAWAYS.
+
+The parties were two Irish runaways, who thought they could make their
+way to Timor. They escaped from Wellington Valley with a fortnight's
+provision each, and a couple of dogs, and proceeded down the Macquarie.
+About the cataract, they fell in with the Mount Harris tribe, and
+remained with them for some days, when they determined on pursuing
+their journey. The blacks, however, wanted to get possession of their
+dogs, and a resistance on the part of the Europeans brought on a
+quarrel. It appears, that before the blacks proceeded to extremities,
+they furnished the Irishmen, who were unarmed, with weapons, and then
+told them to defend themselves, but whether against equal or inferior
+numbers, I am uninformed. One of them soon fell, which the other
+observing, he took his knife out, and cut the throats of both the dogs
+before the blacks had time to put him to death. He was, however,
+sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe generally. I
+questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the most sullen
+silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact.
+
+ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE.
+
+Mr. Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid
+his compass on a large rock, near to which Mr. Oxley's boat had been
+burnt. To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings
+were all wrong. I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the
+error produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr. Hume noticed.
+When I placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N. by
+W., the true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W. My
+placing my notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did
+the card move until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the
+stone, when it first became violently agitated, and then settled
+correctly; and my bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range,
+and of its centre, were as follows:
+
+ Mount Exmouth to the N ...... N. 86 E.
+ Centre....................... N. 85 E.
+ Vernon's Peak................ N. 89 E.
+ Distance 70 miles.
+
+Having finished my reports and letters, it became necessary to consider
+the best point on which to move, and to fix a day for our departure
+from Mount Harris. It struck me that having found so important a
+feature as the Darling River, the Governor would approve my
+endeavouring to regain it more to the southward, in order to trace it
+down. I, therefore, detached Mr. Hume to survey the country in that
+direction, and to ascertain if a descent upon the Bogen district would
+be practicable, through which I had been informed a considerable river
+forced itself. The report he made on his return was such as to deter me
+from that attempt, but he stated that the country for 30 miles from the
+Macquarie was well watered, and superior to any he had passed over
+during the journey; beyond that distance, it took up the character of
+the remote interior, and alternated with plains and brush, the soil
+being too sandy to retain water on its surface. He saw some hills from
+the extremity of his journey, bearing by compass W.S.W. We consequently
+determined to make for the Castlereagh, agreeably to our instructions.
+Preparations were made for breaking up the camp, all the various
+arrangements in the change of animals were completed, the boat carriage
+was exchanged for a dray, and I took Boyle in the place of Norman,
+whose timidity in the bush rendered him unfit for service.
+
+CIRCUIT OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+There is a small hill on the opposite side of the river, and
+immediately facing Mount Harris, and to the S.E. of it there is a small
+lagoon, the head of a creek, by means of which its superfluous waters
+are carried off. This creek runs parallel to the river for about ten
+miles, and enters the marshes at the S.E. angle. This I ascertained one
+day in riding to carry on my survey of the southern extremity of the
+marshes, and to join my line of route by making the circuit of that
+part of them. I found that the river was turned to its northerly course
+by a rising ground of forest land, which checks its further progress
+westerly. I proceeded round the S.W. angle, and then, taking a
+northerly course, got down to the bottom of the first great marsh, thus
+completing the circuit of them. I did not return to the camp until
+after 10 p.m., having crossed the river at day-light, nor did we
+procure any water from the time we left the stream to the moment of our
+recrossing it.
+
+WALLIS'S PONDS.
+
+Having completed our various arrangements, and closed our letters, we
+struck our tents on the morning of the 7th March; we remained, however,
+to witness the departure of Riley's party for Wellington Valley, and
+then left the Macquarie on an E.N.E. course for Wallis's Ponds, and
+made them at about 14 miles. They undoubtedly empty themselves into the
+marshes, and are a continuation of that chain of ponds on which I left
+the party in Mr. Hume's charge. About a mile from Mount Harris, we
+passed a small dry creek, that evidently lays the country under water
+in the wet seasons. There was a blue-gum flat to the eastward of it,
+which we crossed, and then entered a brush of acacia pendula and box.
+The soil upon the plain was an alluvial deposit; that in the brushes
+was sandy. From the extremity of the plain, Mount Harris bore, by
+compass, S.W. by W.; Mount Foster due west. The scrub through which we
+were penetrating, at length became so dense, that we found it
+impossible to travel in a direct line through it, and frequent ridges
+of cypresses growing closely together, turned us repeatedly from our
+course. The country at length became clearer, and we travelled over
+open forest of box, casuarina, and cypresses, on a sandy soil; the
+first predominating. For about two miles before we made the creek, the
+country was not heavily timbered, the acacia pendula succeeding the
+larger trees. The ground had a good covering of grass upon it, and
+there were few of the salsolaceous plants, so abundant on the western
+plains, to be found. The rough-gum abounded near the creek, with a
+small tree bearing a hard round nut, and we had the luxury of plenty of
+water.
+
+We remained stationary on the 8th, in hopes that Riley would have met
+the soldier who had been sent back to Wellington Valley, and that he
+would have forwarded any letters to us, of which he might have been the
+bearer. The day, however, passed over without realizing our
+expectations; and we started once more for the interior, and cut
+ourselves off from all communication with society.
+
+MORRISSET'S PONDS.
+
+We made for Morrisset's chain of ponds, and travelled over rich and
+extensive plains, divided by plantations of cypress, box, and
+casuarina, in the early and latter period of the day. About noon we
+entered a dense forest of cypresses, which continued for three miles,
+when the cypresses became mixed with casuarina, box, and mountain-gum,
+a tree we had not remarked before in so low a situation. We struck upon
+the creek after a journey of about 15 miles. It had a sandy bed, and
+was extremely tortuous in its course, nor was it until after a
+considerable search, that we at length succeeded in finding water, at
+which a party of natives were encamped. The moment they saw us, they
+fled, and left all their utensils, &c. behind them. Among other things,
+we found a number of bark troughs, filled with the gum of the mimosa,
+and vast quantities of gum made into cakes upon the ground. From this
+it would appear these unfortunate creatures were reduced to the last
+extremity, and, being unable to procure any other nourishment, had been
+obliged to collect this mucilaginous food.
+
+The plains we traversed, were of uniform equality of surface. Water
+evidently lodges and continues on them long after a fall of rain, and
+in wet seasons they must, I should imagine, be full of quagmires, and
+almost impassable.
+
+On the 10th, we passed through a country that differed in no material
+point from that already described. We stopped at 10 a.m. under some
+brush, in the centre of a large plain, from which Arbuthnot's range
+bore S. 84 E. distant from 50 to 55 miles, and afterwards traversed or
+rather crossed, those extensive tracts described by Mr. Evans as being
+under water and covered with reeds, in 1817. They now bore a very
+different appearance, being firm and dry. The soil was in general good,
+and covered with forest grass and a species of oxalia. We did not
+observe any reeds, or the signs of inundation, but, as is invariably
+the case with plains in the interior, they were of too even surface, as
+I have so lately remarked, to admit of the waters running quickly off
+them; and no doubt, when they became saturated, many quagmires are
+formed, that would very much impede the movements of an expedition.
+
+REACH THE CASTLEREAGH RIVER.
+
+We reached the Castlereagh about 4 p.m., and although its channel could
+not have been less than 130 yards in breadth, there was apparently not
+a drop of water in it. Its bed consisted of pure sand and reeds; amid
+the latter, we found a small pond of 15 yards circumference, after a
+long search. There is a considerable dip in the country towards the
+river, at about two miles from it; and the intervening brush was full
+of kangaroo, which, I fancy, had congregated to a spot where there was
+abundance of food for them. The soil covering the space was of the
+richest quality, and the timber upon it consisted of box, mountain gum,
+and the angophora lanceolata, a tree that is never found except on rich
+ground.
+
+WANT OF WATER; CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appeared that our troubles were to recommence, and that in order to
+continue on the Castlereagh, it would be necessary for Mr. Hume and
+myself to undertake those fatiguing journeys in search of water that
+had so exhausted us already: and after all, it was doubtful how soon we
+might be forced back. I had certainly expected that, on our gaining the
+banks of the river, we should have had a constant supply of water, but
+the circumstance of the Castlereagh having not only ceased to flow, but
+being absolutely dry, while it afforded the best and clearest proof of
+the severity and continuance of the drought in the interior, at the
+same time damped the spirits and ardour of the men. We kept the left
+bank of the river as we proceeded down it, and passed two or three
+larger ponds about a mile below where we had slept, but there they
+ceased. The bed of the river became one of pure sand, nor did there
+appear to be any chance of our finding any water in it. I stopped the
+party at about eight miles, and desired the men to get their dinners,
+to give Mr. Hume and myself time to search for a supply upon the
+plains. Disappointed to the left, we crossed the channel of the
+Castlereagh, and struck over a small plain upon the right bank, and at
+the extremity of it, came upon a swamp, from which we immediately
+returned for the cattle, and got them unloaded by seven o'clock. As
+there was sufficient pasture around us, I proposed to Mr. Hume on the
+following day, to leave the party stationary, and to ride down the
+river to see how far its present appearances continued. Like the
+generality of rivers of the interior, it had, where we struck upon it,
+outer banks to confine its waters during floods, and to prevent them
+from spreading generally over the country; the space between the two
+banks being of the richest soil, and the timber chiefly of the
+angophora kind. Flooded-gum overhung the inner banks of the river, or
+grew upon the many islands, with casuarina. It became evident, however,
+that the outer banks declined in height as we proceeded down the river,
+nor was it long before they ceased altogether. As we rode along, we
+found that the inner ones were fast decreasing in height also. Riding
+under a hanging wood of the angophora, which had ceased for a time, we
+were induced to break off to our right, to examine some large
+flooded-gum trees about a couple of miles to the N.W. of us. On
+arriving near them, we were astonished to find that they concealed a
+serpentine lagoon that had a belt of reeds round it. Keeping this
+lagoon upon our right, we at length came to the head of it, past which
+the river sweeps. Crossing the channel of the river, we continued to
+ride in an easterly direction to examine the country. In doing this,
+we struck on a second branch of the Castlereagh, leading W. by N. into
+a plain, which it of course inundates at times, and running up it, we
+found its bed at the point of separation, to be considerably higher
+than that of the main channel, which still continued of pure sand--and
+was stamped all over with the prints of the feet of natives, kangaroos,
+emus, and wild dogs, We then turned again to the head of the lagoon,
+and took the following bearings of Arbuthnot's range:
+
+ Mount Exmouth .......... E. 90 S.
+ Centre Range ........... E. 35 E.
+ Vernon's Peak .......... E. 20 S.
+
+From the head of the lagoon, the river appeared to enter a reedy
+hollow, shaded by a long line of flooded gum trees, and on proceeding
+to it, we found the banks ceased here altogether; and that a very
+considerable plain extended both to the right and the left, which
+cannot fail of being frequently laid under water.
+
+LAGOONS AND CREEKS OF THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+On the following morning we moved the party to the lagoon, and, passing
+its head, encamped to the north of it; after which we again rode down
+the river in search of water. It continued to hold a straight and
+northerly course for about five miles, having a plain on either side.
+The reeds that had previously covered the channel then suddenly ceased,
+and the channel, contracting in breadth, gained in depth: it became
+extremely serpentine, and at length lost all the character and
+appearance of a river. It had many back channels, as large as the main
+one, serving to overflow the neighbouring country. We succeeded in
+finding a small pond of water in one of the former, hardly large enough
+to supply our necessities, but as it enabled us to push so much further
+on, we turned towards the lagoon, making a circuitous journey to the
+right, across a large plain, bounded to the north by low acacia brush
+and box. We struck upon a creek at the further extremity of the plain,
+in which there was a tolerably sized pond. It appeared from the traces
+of men, that some natives had been there the day before; but we did not
+see any of them. The water was extremely muddy and unfit for use. The
+lagoon at which we had encamped, was of less importance than we had
+imagined.
+
+JOURNEY DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+Whilst Mr. Hume led the party down the river, I rode up its northward
+bank, to examine it more closely. I found it to be a serpentine sheet
+of about three miles in length, gradually decreasing in depth until it
+separated into two small creeks. In following one of them up, I
+observed that they re-united at the distance of about two miles, and
+that the lagoon was filled from the eastward, and not by the river as I
+had at first supposed. The waters at the head of the lagoon were
+putrid, nor was there a fish in, or a wild fowl upon it. The only bird
+we saw was a beautiful eagle, of the osprey kind, with plumage like a
+sea gull, which had a nest in the tree over the tents.
+
+In turning to overtake the party I rode through a great deal of acacia
+scrub, and on arriving at the place at which I expected to have
+overtaken them, I found they had pushed on.
+
+The Castlereagh, as I rode down it, diminished in size considerably,
+and became quite choked up with rushes and brambles. Rough-gum again
+made its appearance, with swamp-oak and a miserable acacia scrub
+outside. The country on both sides of the river seemed to be an
+interminable flat, and the soil of an inferior description.
+
+WRETCHED APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+I came up with with Mr. Hume about 1 o'clock and we again pushed
+forward at 3, and halted for the night without water, the want of which
+the cattle did not feel. The river held a general westerly course, and
+the country in its neighbourhood became extremely depressed and low. On
+the following day we moved forward a distance of not more than nine
+miles, through a country on which, at first, the acacia pendula alone
+was growing on a light alluvial soil. The river had many back drains,
+by means of which, in wet seasons, it inundates the adjacent plains. It
+was evident, however, that they had not been flooded for many years;
+and, notwithstanding that the country was low, the line of inundation
+did not appear to be very extensive, nor were there any reeds growing
+beyond the immediate banks of the river. Swamp-oak and rough-gum again
+prevailed near the stream at our halting place, and the improvement
+that had taken place, both in the country and in the Castlereagh, had
+induced us to make so short a journey; for not only was there abundance
+of the grass for the animals, but large ponds of water in the river.
+Some natives had only just preceded us down it: we came upon their
+fires that were still smoking; and upon them were the remains of some
+fish they had taken, near which they had left a cumbrous spear. The
+circumstances cheered us with hopes that an improvement would take
+place in the country, and that some new feature would soon open upon
+us. In the course of the following day, however, every favorable
+change, both in the river and in the country, disappeared. The latter
+continued extremely depressed, and in general open, or lightly covered
+with acacia pendula; the former dwindled into a mere ditch, choked up
+with brambles and reeds, and having only here and there a stagnant pool
+of water. We travelled on a N.W. 1/2 W. course for about ten miles, and
+again stopped for the night without water. In the course of the
+afternoon, we traversed several flats, on which the rough-gum alone was
+growing. These flats were evidently subject to flood; and contained an
+alluvial soil.
+
+They became more frequent as we travelled down the river, and the work
+was so heavy for the animals, that I was obliged to keep wide of them,
+in doing which we struck upon a creek of large size, coming from the
+N.E. and, having crossed, we traversed its right bank to its junction
+with the Castlereagh, and stopped close to it at a pond of water,
+though the feed for the animals was bad. The country to the left of the
+river, though somewhat high, was the same, in essential points, as that
+to the right.
+
+The Castlereagh seemed to have increased in size below the creek, but
+still it had no resemblance to a river. We had not proceeded very far
+down its banks, on the 18th, when we crossed a broad footpath leading
+to it from the interior. I turned my horse to the left, and struck upon
+a long sheet of water, from which I startled a number of pelicans. It
+was evident that the natives had recently been in the neighbourhood,
+but we thought it probable they might have been a hunting party, who
+had returned again to the plains. The whole track we passed over during
+the day was miserably poor and bare of vegetation, nor did the
+appearance of the country to the N.E. indicate any improvement. We lost
+the traces of the natives immediately after crossing their path or
+beat, and again found the bed of the river dry, after we had passed the
+sheet of water to which it led. The soil was so rotten and yielding,
+that the team knocked up early; indeed, it was a matter of surprise to
+me that they should not have failed before. The river made somewhat to
+the westward with little promise of improvement. The wretched
+appearance of the country as we penetrated into it, damped our spirits;
+we pressed on, however, with difficulty, over ground that was totally
+destitute of vegetation. Instead of lofty timber and a living stream,
+we wandered along the banks of an insignificant watercourse, and under
+trees of stunted size and scanty foliage. We stopped on the 20th at the
+angle of a creek, in which there was some dry grass, in consequence of
+the animals being almost in a starving state, but even here they had
+but little to eat.
+
+A violent thunder-storm passed over us in the afternoon, but it made no
+change in the temperature of the air. The weather, although it had been
+hot and sultry, had fallen far short of the intense heat we experienced
+in crossing the marshes of the Macquarie, when it was such as to melt
+the sugar in the canisters, and to destroy all our dogs; and our nights
+were now become agreeably cool.
+
+A PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+We still, however, continued to travel over a dead level, nor was a
+height or break visible from the loftiest trees we ascended. A little
+before we stopped at the creek, we surprised a party of natives; old
+men, women, and children. They were preparing dinners of fish in much
+larger quantities than they could have devoured--probably for a part of
+the tribe that were absent; but the moment they saw us they fled, and
+left every thing at our mercy. On examining the fish, we found them
+totally different from any in the Macquarie, and took two of the most
+perfect to preserve. In the afternoon one of the men came to inform me
+that the tribe was coming down upon us.
+
+Mr. Hume and I, therefore, went to meet them. They were at this time
+about 150 yards from the tent, but seeing us advance, they stopped, and
+forming two deep, they marched to and fro, to a war song I suppose,
+crouching with their spears. We had not, however, any difficulty in
+communicating with them, and I shall detail the manner in which this
+was brought about, in hopes that it may help to guide others. When the
+natives saw us advance, they stopped, and we did the same. Mr. Hume
+then walked to a tree, and broke off a short branch. It is singular
+that this should, even with these rude people, be a token of peace. As
+soon as they saw the branch, the natives laid aside their spears, and
+two of them advanced about twenty paces in front of the rest, who sat
+down. Mr. Hume then went forward and sat down, when the two natives
+again advanced and seated themselves close to him.
+
+Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every
+people is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with
+patience and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the
+interior. It is not to avoid alarming their natural timidity that a
+gradual approach is so necessary. They preserve the same ceremony among
+themselves. These men, who were eighteen in number, came with us to the
+tents, and received such presents as we had for them. They conducted
+themselves very quietly, and, after a short time, left us with every
+token of friendship.
+
+LARGE CREEK.
+
+On the 21st we proceeded down the river on a N.N.W. course, and at
+about five miles struck upon a very large creek, apparently coming from
+the E.N.E.
+
+Although the Castlereagh had increased in size, this creek was
+infinitely larger; it was, however, perfectly dry. Lofty flooded-gum
+trees were upon its banks, and it appeared so much superior to the
+river that I was induced to halt the party at the junction, in order to
+examine it more closely. Mr. Hume, therefore, rode with me up the right
+bank. We had not proceeded very far, when some natives called out to us
+from the opposite scrub. Thinking that they belonged to the tribe we
+had left behind us, we pointed to the junction, and motioned them to go
+there, but one of the party continued to follow and call to us for some
+time. On our return to the men, we found that the natives had joined
+them, and they now gave us to understand that we were going away from
+water. This had indeed been apparent to us. The creek was perfectly
+dry, as far as we traced it up; and seemed to have been totally
+deserted by the natives.
+
+We were about to proceed on our journey, when from twenty to thirty
+natives approached us from down the river. We sent two of those who had
+been with us to them, and the whole accompanied us for some miles,
+talking incessantly to the men, but keeping at a very respectful
+distance from the animals. We at length got opposite to their camp,
+near which there was a very fine pool of water, and they were earnest
+in persuading us to stop at it. We were, however, too anxious to get
+forward to comply; under the improved appearance of the river since it
+had received the creeks from the eastward, little anticipating what was
+before us.
+
+NATIVE ARMOURY.
+
+The natives did not follow us beyond their own encampment. Within sight
+of it, we came upon their armoury, if I may so term it. Numerous spears
+were reared against the trees, and heaps of boomerangs were lying on
+the ground. The spears were very heavy, and half barbed; and it is
+singular that three of them were marked with a broad arrow. We saw the
+natives watching us, fearful, I imagine, that we should help ourselves;
+but I would not permit any of their weapons to be touched.
+
+EXAMINATION OF CREEKS NEAR THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+Pursuing our journey, we reached another creek, at about five miles,
+similar to the last in appearance and size, and we crossed it
+repeatedly during the afternoon. We had been induced to keep along a
+native path in the hope that it would have led us to the river by a
+short cut; but it eventually led us to this creek, and away from the
+Castlereagh; for, notwithstanding that we subsequently changed our
+course to the S.W., we failed, as we supposed, again to strike upon the
+latter, and were obliged to stop for the night on the banks of what
+appeared to be a third large dry creek, which we intersected nearly at
+right angles.
+
+We travelled through a good deal of brush during the day, nor did the
+country change from the miserable and barren character it had assumed
+for the last thirty or forty miles. The Castlereagh had so frequently
+changed, that both Mr. Hume and myself were puzzled as to the identity
+of the creek upon which we had halted. We searched its bed in vain for
+water, although it was most capacious. Under an impression that the
+river was still to the south, and that we were at a point to which many
+watercourses from the high lands tended, I crossed the creek early in
+the morning, and held a S.W. course, over an open forest country. At
+about eight miles, we came upon a large space over-run by the polygonum
+junceum, a certain indication of flooded ground, and of our consequent
+proximity to some stream. Accordingly, after pushing through it, we
+struck upon a small creek with abundance of water in it. Whether this
+creek was the Castlereagh, which it resembled much more than the one we
+had left in the morning, was doubtful; but it was a great source of
+comfort to us to have so unexpected a supply of water as that which was
+now at our disposal. Whatever channel this was, whether a river or a
+creek, our tracing it down would lead us in the direction we wished to
+go, and probably to some junction.
+
+The neighbourhood of the creek was well clothed with vegetation, and
+the cattle found good feed; but the only trees near it were rough-gum
+and casuarinae; the flooded-gum had again disappeared. The soil of the
+forest land over which we journeyed was a light sandy loam; and its
+timber consisted chiefly of eucalypti, acacia pendula, and the
+angophora.
+
+Some natives visited us in the afternoon, and among them, both Mr. Hume
+and I recognized one of those we had seen on the Darling. He also knew
+us again, but we could not make out from him how far we were from that
+river. They stayed with us till sunset, and then went down the creek,
+leaving their spears against a tree, for which they said they would
+return.
+
+On the 23rd we took up a W.N.W. course, and when we again touched on
+the creek it was dry. This was at a distance of about five miles from
+where we had slept. As the animals had not recovered from their late
+privations, I deemed it better to halt the party and to examine the
+creek for a few miles below us, that in case it should prove destitute
+of water, we might return to that we had left. Mr. Hume accordingly
+rode down it for about three miles, without success; and on his
+rejoining the men, we returned with them to our last camp, or to within
+a short distance of it. Wishing to examine the creek above our
+position, I requested Mr. Hume to take two men with him, and to trace
+it down in search of water, while I should proceed in the opposite
+direction. I went from the camp at an early hour, and as I wandered
+along the creek, I passed a regular chain of ponds. The country on both
+sides of the creek was evidently subject to flood, but more extensively
+to the south than to the north. From the creek, I struck away to my
+left, and after penetrating through a belt of swamp-oak and minor
+shrubs, got on a small plain, which I crossed N.E. and, to my
+annoyance, found it covered with rhagodia and salsolae. As I had not
+started with the intention of sleeping, I turned to the S.W. a little
+before sunset, and reached the tents between ten and eleven. I found
+Mr. Hume awaiting me. He informed me that at about nine miles from
+where we had turned back with the party, he had struck upon a junction;
+and that as the junction was much larger than the channel he had been
+tracing, he thought it better to follow it up for a few miles. He found
+that it narrowed in width, and that its banks became steep, with a fine
+avenue of flooded-gum trees overhanging them. At four miles, he came
+upon another junction, and at four miles more, found himself opposite
+to the ground on which we had slept on the previous Saturday. From this
+point he retraced the channel, but not finding any water for three
+miles below the lower junction, he returned to the camp, with a view of
+prosecuting a longer journey on the morrow. Mr. Hume had become
+impressed with an opinion, that the junction up which we had slept was
+no other than the Castlereagh itself; and that our position was on a
+creek, probably Morrisset's chain of ponds, flowing into it. As the
+cattle wanted a few days' rest, Mr. Hume and I determined to ride,
+unattended, along our track to our camp of the 21st, and then to follow
+the channel upwards, until we should arrive at the station of the
+natives, or until we should have ridden to such a distance as would set
+our conjectures at rest. In the morning, however, instead of running
+upon our old track, we followed that of Mr. Hume to the junction,
+giving up our first intention, with a view to ascertain if there
+existed any water which we could, by an effort, gain, below where Mr.
+Hume had been. The channel was very broad, with a considerable fall in
+its bed, and, in appearance, more resembled the slope of a lawn than
+the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees in the centre of its channel,
+in one of which the floods had left the trunk of a large tree. We could
+discover where it narrowed and its banks rose, but, as we intended to
+make a closer examination before we left the neighbourhood, we
+continued our journey down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
+an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood, but the distant
+country was miserably poor and bare. At about three miles, we came upon
+the fresh traces of some natives, which led us to the channel again,
+from which we had wandered unintentionally. In it we found there had
+been water very lately, and it appeared that the natives had dug holes
+at the bottom to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted, but
+still retained the appearance of moisture. At a mile and a half beyond
+these, we were led to some similar holes, by observing a number of
+birds flying about them. The water was too muddy for us to drink, but
+the horses emptied them successively. We now kept sufficiently near the
+channel to insure our seeing any pool that might still remain in it,
+but rode for about seven miles before we again saw water, and even
+here, although it was a spring, we were obliged to dig holes, and await
+their filling, before we could get sufficient for our use. Having
+dined, we again pursued our journey, and almost immediately came upon a
+long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined by bulrushes. The creek or
+river had for some time kept the centre of a deep alluvial valley, in
+which there was plenty of food for the cattle, and which, at this
+place, was apparently broader than anywhere else. The situation being
+favourable, we returned to the camp, and reached it late.
+
+DEPRESSION OF THE MEN.
+
+I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture, but I fancied,
+about this time, that the men generally were desponding. Whether it was
+that the constant fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our
+constant absence, or the consequent exhaustion it produced, had any
+effect on their minds, or that they feared the result of our
+perseverance, is difficult to say; but certainly, they all had a
+depression of spirits, and looked, I thought, altered in appearance;
+nor did they evince any satisfaction at our success--at least, not the
+satisfaction they would have shown at an earlier period of our journey.
+
+Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain if the channel
+from the junction was the Castlereagh, or only a creek. The
+intersection of so many channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so
+much alike, made it essentially necessary that we should satisfy
+ourselves on this point. Mr. Hume, therefore, accompanied me, as had at
+first been intended the morning of our return to the place at which we
+had slept. We took fresh horses, but dispensed with any other
+attendants, and indeed went wholly unarmed.
+
+CAMP OF NATIVES.
+
+After following our old track to its termination, we kept up the right
+bank of the channel, and at length arrived at the camp of the natives;
+thus satisfying ourselves that we had been journeying on the
+Castlereagh, and that we were still following it down. By this ride we
+ascertained that there was a distance of five-and-forty miles in its
+bed without a drop of water. Few of the natives were in the camp. The
+women avoided us, but not as if they were under any apprehension.
+Crossing at the head of the pool, we again got on our old track, but
+seeing two or three men coming towards us we alighted, and, tying our
+horses to a tree, went to meet them. One poor fellow had two ducks in
+his hand, which he had just taken off the fire; these he offered to us,
+and on our declining to accept of them, he called to a boy, who soon
+appeared with a large trough of honey, of which we partook. One of the
+men had an ulcer in the arm, and asked me what he should do to heal it;
+indeed, I believe Fraser had promised him some ointment, but not having
+any with me, I signified to him that he should wash it often, and
+stooping down, made as if I was taking up water in my hand. The poor
+fellow mistook me, and, also stooping down, took up a handful of dust
+which he threw over the sore. This gave me the trouble of explaining
+matters again, and by pointing to the water, I believe I at length made
+him understand me.
+
+DRY CHANNEL OF THE RIVER.
+
+These good natured people asked us where we had slept the day we
+passed, and when informed of the direction, shook their heads,
+motioning at the same time, that we must have been without water. We
+informed them where the party was, and asked them to come and see us,
+but I fancy the distance was too great, or else we were in the beat of
+another tribe. On mentioning these facts to the men, they said that two
+of the natives had followed us for some miles, calling out loudly to
+us, but Mr. Hume and I both being in front, we did not hear them,
+although, evidently, they wished to save us distress.
+
+Since the result of our excursion proved that the channel, about which
+I had been so doubtful, was the Castlereagh, it necessarily followed,
+that the creek at which we were encamped was one of those (most
+probably Morrisset's chain of ponds,) which we had already crossed
+nearer its source, and which Mr. Hume must have struck upon when
+endeavouring to gain the Castlereagh from the marshes of the Macquarie.
+
+A perusal of these sheets will ere this have impressed on the reader's
+mind, the peculiarity of that fortune which led us from the Castlereagh
+to the creek, at which alone our wants could have been supplied. Had we
+wandered down the river, as we undoubtedly should have done had we
+recognised it as such, the loss of many of our animals would have been
+the inevitable consequence, and very probably a final issue would have
+been put to our journey. It is only to those who are placed in
+situations that baffle their own exertions or foresight, that the
+singular guidance of Providence becomes fully apparent.
+
+NATIVES PERISHING FROM FAMINE.
+
+It would appear that the natives were dying fast, not from any disease,
+but from the scarcity of food; and, should the drought continue, it
+seemed probable they may became extinct.
+
+The men found the body of a woman covered with leaves near the tents,
+and very properly buried it. We made Friday a day of rest for
+ourselves, as indeed was necessary; and on the following morning
+proceeded down the river, and encamped on a high bank above it, at the
+base of which, our cattle both fed and watered.
+
+At this spot one of the largest gum-trees I had ever seen had fallen,
+having died for want of moisture; indeed, the state of the vegetable
+kingdom was such as to threaten its total extinction, unless a change
+of seasons should take place.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that, from our first arrival on the banks of
+the Castlereagh, to our arrival at the present camp, we never picked up
+a stone, or a pebble, in its bed.
+
+JUNCTION OF THE CASTLEREAGH WITH THE DARLING.
+
+In the hope that we should fall on some detached pond, we pursued our
+journey on the 29th. The Castlereagh gave singular proofs of its
+violence, as if its waters, confined in the valley, had a difficulty in
+escaping from it. We had not travelled two miles, when in crossing, as
+we imagined, one of its bights, we found ourselves checked by a broad
+river. A single glimpse of it was sufficient to tell us it was the
+Darling. At a distance of more than ninety miles nearer its source,
+this singular river still preserved its character, so strikingly, that
+it was impossible not to have recognised it in a moment. The same steep
+banks and lofty timber, the same deep reaches, alive with fish, were
+here visible as when we left it. A hope naturally arose to our minds,
+that if it was unchanged in other respects, it might have lost the
+saltness that rendered its waters unfit for use; but in this we were
+disappointed--even its waters continued the same. As it was impossible
+for us to cross the Darling, I determined on falling back upon our last
+encampment, which was at a most Convenient distance, and of concerting
+measures there for our future movements. Prior to doing so, however, I
+rode to the junction of the Castlereagh with the Darling, accompanied
+by Mr. Hume, a distance of about half a mile. Upon the point formed by
+the two streams, there were a number of huts, and on the opposite bank
+of the Darling, about twenty natives had collected. We called out to
+them, but they would not join us.
+
+At the junction, the Castlereagh, with whatever impetuosity it rushes
+from its confinement, makes not apparently the least impression on the
+Darling River. The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a
+tributary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback
+across the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the
+drought--Retreat towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie
+and the Darling--Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving
+condition of the natives.
+
+
+On our return to the party, we found them surrounded by the natives,
+who were looking with an eye of wonder on the cattle and horses. We
+pointed out to them the direction in which we were going, and invited
+them to visit us; and nothing appeared to astonish them so much as the
+management of the team by a single man. We got back to our position
+early, and again fixed ourselves upon it.
+
+It now only remained for us to consider what we should do under
+circumstances of certainly more than ordinary perplexity. We had
+nothing to hope for from travelling in a southerly direction, while to
+the E. and N.E., the state of the country was worse than that by which
+we had penetrated to the Darling. It was evident, that the large creeks
+joining the Castlereagh in that direction were dry, since the natives
+not only intimated this to us, but it was unquestionable that they
+themselves had deserted them, and had crowded to such places as still
+contained a supply of water. Even in retreating, we could not hope to
+retrace our steps. Experience had proved to us, that the dry state of
+the interior was as injurious to the movements of an expedition as a
+too wet season would have been. Taking everything, therefore, into
+consideration, I determined on leaving the party stationary, and on
+crossing the Darling to the N.W., and, if any encouraging feature
+presented itself, to return for the party, and persevere in an
+examination of the distant interior. Such, at least, appeared to me the
+most judicious plan: indeed, an attempt to have moved in any other
+direction would have been fruitless. And, as the result of this journey
+would be decisive, and would either fix or determine our advance or
+retreat, I was anxious for Mr. Hume's attendance.
+
+The natives followed to the camp, and in the course of the afternoon,
+were joined by their women. The latter however, would not approach
+nearer than the top of a little hillock on which they sat. The men did
+not come round the tents, but stood in a row at a short distance. At
+sunset, they gained a little courage, and wandered about a little more;
+at length they went off to the Darling.
+
+HONESTY OF A NATIVE.
+
+It was quite dark, when I heard a native call from the hill on which
+the women had been, and I desired Hopkinson to take his firelock and
+ascertain what the man wanted. He soon after returned, and brought a
+blanket, which he said the man had returned to him. The native was
+alone, and when he offered the blanket, kept his spear poised in his
+right hand; but, seeing that no violence was intended him, he lowered
+his weapon, and walked away.
+
+REWARD THE MAN FOR HIS CONDUCT.
+
+I was extremely pleased at this trait of honesty, and determined to
+reward it. On inquiry, I found that the men had availed themselves of
+the day to wash their blankets and that one of them had been flung over
+a bush hanging over the bank of the river, and it was supposed that one
+of the natives must have pulled it down with him. In the morning, the
+tribe went away from their encampment before day-light as we judged
+from the cry of their dogs, than which nothing could be more
+melancholy; but about eight, the men made their appearance on the hill
+occupied by the women the evening previously, and seemed to be doubtful
+whether to approach nearer. I went out to them, and, with a downward
+motion of my hand, beckoned for them to come to me: they mistook the
+signal, but laid all their spears on the ground, and it was not until
+after the sign had been reversed that they stirred or moved towards me.
+I then got them in a row, and desired Hopkinson to single out the man
+who had given him the blanket. It was, however, with great difficulty
+that he recognised him, as the man stood firm and motionless. At
+length, after walking two or three times along the line, he stopped
+before one man, and put his hand on his shoulder, upon which the manner
+of the native testified as to the correctness of his guess.
+
+The blanket being produced, I explained to the savage, with Mr. Hume's
+assistance, that I was highly pleased with him, and forthwith presented
+him with a tomahawk and a clasp-knife. The tribe were perfectly aware
+of the reason of my conduct, and all of them seemed highly delighted.
+
+I was happy in having such an opportunity of showing the natives of the
+interior that I came among them with a determination to maintain
+justice in my communication with them, and to impress them, at the same
+time, with a sense of our love of it in them. That they appreciated my
+apparent lenity in not calling for the defaulter, I am sure, and I feel
+perfectly conscious that I should have failed in my duty had I acted
+otherwise than I did.
+
+EFFECT OF FIRING A GUN.
+
+Although the natives had shown so good a disposition, as they were
+numerous, I thought it as well, since I was about to leave the camp, to
+show them that I had a power they little dreamt of about me. I
+therefore called for my gun and fired a ball into a tree. The effect of
+the report upon the natives, was truly ridiculous. Some stood and
+stared at me, others fell down, and others ran away; and it was with
+some difficulty we collected them again. At last, however, we did so,
+and, leaving them to pick out the ball, mounted our horses and struck
+away for the Darling. We crossed the river a little above where we
+struck it, and then proceeded N.W. into the interior.
+
+EXCURSION ACROSS THE DARLING.
+
+It is impossible for me to describe the nature of the country over
+which we passed, for the first eight miles. We rode through brushes of
+polygonum, under rough-gum, without a blade of vegetation, the whole
+space being subject to inundation. We then got on small plains of
+firmer surface, and red soil, but these soon changed again for the
+former; and at 4 p.m. we found ourselves advanced about two miles on a
+plain that stretched away before us, and bounded the horizon. It was
+dismally brown; a few trees only served to mark the distance. Up one of
+the highest I sent Hopkinson, who reported that he could not see the
+end of it, and that all around looked blank and desolate. It is a
+singular fact, that during the whole day, we had not seen a drop of
+water or a blade of grass.
+
+DESOLATING EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT.
+
+To have stopped where we were, would, therefore, have been impossible;
+to have advanced, would probably have been ruin. Had there been one
+favorable circumstance to have encouraged me with the hope of success,
+I would have proceeded. Had we picked up a stone as indicating our
+approach to high land, I would have gone on; or had there been a break
+in the level of the country, or even a change in the vegetation. But we
+had left all traces of the natives far behind us; and this seemed a
+desert they never entered--that not even a bird inhabited. I could not
+encourage a hope of success, and, therefore, gave up the point; not
+from want of means, but a conviction of the inutility of any further
+efforts. If there is any blame to be attached to the measure, it is I
+who am in fault, but none who had not like me traversed the interior at
+such a season, would believe the state of the country over which I had
+wandered. During the short interval I had been out, I had seen rivers
+cease to flow before me, and sheets of water disappear; and had it not
+been for a merciful Providence, should, ere reaching the Darling, have
+been overwhelmed by misfortune.
+
+I am giving no false picture of the reality. So long had the drought
+continued, that the vegetable kingdom was almost annihilated, and minor
+vegetation had disappeared. In the creeks, weeds had grown and
+withered, and grown again; and young saplings were now rising in their
+beds, nourished by the moisture that still remained; but the largest
+forest trees were drooping, and many were dead. The emus, with
+outstretched necks, gasping for breath, searched the channels of the
+rivers for water, in vain; and the native dog, so thin that it could
+hardly walk, seemed to implore some merciful hand to despatch it. How
+the natives subsisted it was difficult to say, but there was no doubt
+of the scarcity of food among them.
+
+We arrived in camp at a late hour, and having nothing to detain us
+longer, prepared for our retreat in the morning. The natives had
+remained with the party during the greater part of the day, and had
+only left them a short time prior to our arrival.
+
+When examining the creek on which we had been encamped for some days,
+Mr. Hume observed a small junction; and as we knew we were almost due
+N. of the marshes of the Macquarie, both of us were anxious to
+ascertain whence it originated. To return to Mount Harris, by retracing
+our steps up the Castlereagh, would have entailed the severest distress
+upon us; we the rather preferred proceeding up this creek, and taking
+our chance for a supply of water. We therefore crossed Morrisset's
+chain of ponds, and encamped in the angle formed by the junction of the
+two creeks.
+
+Before we left this position, we were visited by a party of natives,
+twelve in number, but not of the Darling tribe. They accompanied us a
+short way, and then struck off to the right. At about a mile and a
+half, we crossed Mr. Hume's track, leading westerly, which still
+remained observable. The creek was, no doubt, the hollow he stated that
+he crossed on that excursion, and its appearance certainly justified
+his opinion of it. Its bed was choked up with bulrushes or the
+polygonum, and its banks were level with the country on either side, or
+nearly so. We passed over extremely rich soil the whole day, on a S.W.
+and by W. course, though the timber upon it was dwarfish, and
+principally of the rough-gum kind.
+
+On the 2nd of April, we stopped in order to make some repairs upon the
+dray; the wheels of which had failed us. Clayton put in four new
+spokes, and we heated the tyres over again, by which means we got it
+once more serviceable.
+
+WILD MELON.
+
+The soil in the creek was of the richest quality, and was found to
+produce a dwarf melon, having all the habits and character of the
+cucumber. The fruit was not larger than a pigeon's egg, but was
+extremely sweet. There were not, however, many ripe, although the
+runners were covered with flowers, and had an abundance of fruit upon
+them. In the morning, we sent the tinker on horseback up the creek, to
+ascertain how far the next water was from us, desiring him to keep the
+creek upon his right, and to follow his own track back again. He
+thought fit, however, considering himself a good bushman, to wander
+away to his left, and the consequence was, that he soon lost himself.
+It would appear that he doubled and passed through some thick brush at
+the back of the camp, and at length found himself at dark on the banks
+of a considerable creek. In wandering along it, he luckily struck upon
+the natives we had last seen, who, good-naturedly, led him to the track
+of the dray, which his horse would not afterwards desert, and the
+tinker sneaked into the tent about 3 o'clock in the morning, having
+failed in his errand, and made himself the butt of the whole party.
+
+RETURN UP THE CREEK.
+
+The day succeeding this adventure, we moved up the creek, which was,
+for the most part, even with the plain. The country continued the same
+as that we had passed over from the junction, being subject to flood,
+and having patches of bulrushes and reeds upon it. No change took place
+in the timber, but the line of acacia pendula, which forms the line of
+inundation, approached neater to us; nor was the mark of flood so high
+on the trunks of trees as below. We halted, with abominable water, but
+excellent food for the animals in the plains behind us. In continuing
+our journey, we found several changes take place in the appearance of
+the creek and its neighbourhood. The former diminished in size, and at
+length separated into two distinct channels, choked up, for the most
+part, with dead bulrushes, but having a few green reeds in patches
+along it. The flats on either side became slightly timbered, and blue
+gum was the prevailing tree. Crossing one of the channels, we observed
+every appearance of our near approach to the marshes, the flats being
+intersected by many little water-runs, such as we had noticed at the
+bottom of them. About noon we struck upon a body of reeds under the
+wood of eucalypti, below the second great morass, and keeping a little
+to our right to avoid them, fell shortly afterwards into our old track
+on the plain, upon which we continued to move, making the best of our
+way to the channel which had supplied our wants on our first return
+from the Darling. It was now, however, quite dry, and we were obliged
+to push on further, to shorten the journey of the morrow.
+
+CONNECTION OF MACQUARIE AND DARLING.
+
+The result of our journey up the creek was particularly satisfactory,
+both to myself and Mr. Hume; since it cleared up every doubt that might
+have existed regarding the actual termination of the Macquarie, and
+enabled us to connect the flow of waters at so interesting and
+particular a point. It will be seen by a reference to the chart, that
+the waters of the marshes, after trickling through the reeds, form a
+small creek, which carries off the superfluous part of them into
+Morrisset's chain of ponds, which latter again falls into the
+Castlereagh, at about eight miles to the W.N.W. and all three join the
+Darling in a W. by N. direction, in lat. 30 degrees 52 minutes south
+and E. lon. 147 degrees 8 minutes at about 90 miles to the N.N.W. of
+Mount Harris, and about an equal distance to the E.S.E. of where we
+struck upon the last-mentioned river. Thus it is evident that the
+Darling had considerably neared the eastern ranges, although it was
+still more than 150 miles from their base. It was apparently coming
+from the N.E., and whether it has its sources in the mountains behind
+our distant settlements, or still farther to the northwards, is a
+question of curious speculation, although, as I have already stated, I
+am of opinion that none but tropical rains could supply the furious
+torrent that must sometimes rage in it.
+
+It would be presumptuous to hazard any opinion as to the nature of the
+interior to the westward of that remarkable river. Its course is
+involved in equal mystery, and it is a matter of equal doubt whether it
+makes its way to the south coast, or ultimately exhausts itself in
+feeding a succession of swamps, or falls into a large reservoir in the
+centre of the island.
+
+RETURN TO MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+We reached Mount Harris on the 7th of the month, and moving leisurely
+up the banks of the Macquarie, gained Mr. Palmer's first station on the
+14th, and Wellington Valley on the 21st, having been absent from that
+settlement four months and two weeks. The waters of the Macquarie had
+diminished so much, that its bed was dry for more than half a mile at a
+stretch, nor did we observe the least appearance of a current in it,
+until after we had ascended the ranges. The lower tribes were actually
+starving, and brought their children to us to implore something to eat.
+The men attempted to surprise the camp, but I believe they were urged
+from absolute necessity to procure subsistence for themselves, and that
+they intended robbery rather than personal violence.
+
+DEPLORABLE STATE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+We left the interior in a still more deplorable state than that in
+which we found it; but it is more than probable that under other
+circumstances, we should have found it impossible to traverse its
+distant plains, as it is certain that unless rain fell in less than
+three weeks, all communication with the Darling would have been cut off:
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--Mr.
+Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--Mr.
+Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally
+inferred from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the
+Macquarie merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's
+observations--Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior
+plain--The convict Barber's report of rivers traversing the
+interior--Surveyor-General Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+RESULT OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+Whether the discoveries that have been made during this expedition,
+will ultimately prove of advantage to the colony of New South Wales, is
+a question that time alone can answer. We have in the meanwhile to
+regret that no beneficial consequences will immediately follow them.
+The further knowledge that has been gained of the interior is but as a
+gleam of sunshine over an extensive landscape. A stronger light has
+fallen upon the nearer ground, but the distant horizon is still
+enveloped in clouds. The veil has only as it were been withdrawn from
+the marshes of the Macquarie to be spread over the channel of the
+Darling. Unsatisfactory, however, as the discoveries may as yet be
+considered in a commercial point of view, the objects for which the
+expedition had been fitted out were happily attained. The marsh it had
+been directed to examine, was traversed on every side, and the rivers
+it had been ordered to trace, were followed down to their terminations
+to a distance far beyond where they had ceased to exist as living
+streams. To many who may cast their eyes over the accompanying chart,
+the extent of newly discovered country may appear trifling; but when
+they are told, that there is not a mile of that ground that was not
+traversed over and over again, either by Mr. Hume or by myself, that we
+wandered over upwards of 600 miles more than the main body of the
+expedition, on different occasions, in our constant and anxious search
+for water, and that we seldom dismounted from our horses, until long
+after sunset, they will acknowledge the difficulties with which we had
+to contend, and will make a generous allowance for them; for, however
+unsuccessful in some respects the expedition may have been, it
+accomplished as much, it is to be hoped, as under such trying
+circumstances could have been accomplished. It now only remains for me
+to sum up the result of my own observations, and to point out to the
+reader, how far the actual state of the interior, has been found to
+correspond with the opinions that were entertained of it.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S REMARKS.
+
+I have already stated, in the introduction to this work, that the
+general impression on the minds of those best qualified to judge was,
+that the western streams discharged themselves into a central shoal
+sea. Mr. Oxley thus expresses himself on the subject:--
+
+
+"July 3rd. Towards morning the storm abated, and at day-light, we
+proceeded on our voyage. The main bed of the river was much contracted,
+but very deep; the waters spreading to the depth of a foot or eighteen
+inches over the banks, but all running on the same point of bearing. We
+met with considerable interruptions from fallen timber, which in places
+nearly choked up the channel. After going about twenty miles, we lost
+the land and trees; the channel of the river, which lay through reeds,
+and was from one to three feet deep, ran northerly.--This continued for
+three or four miles farther, when, although there had been no previous
+change in the breadth, depth, or rapidity of the stream for several
+miles, and I was sanguine in my expectations of soon entering the
+long-sought-for Australian sea, it all at once eluded our farther
+pursuit, by spreading on every point from N.W. to N.E. among the ocean
+of reeds which surrounded us, still running with the same rapidity as
+before. There was no channel whatever among those reeds, and the depth
+varied from three to five feet. This astonishing change (for I cannot
+call it a termination of the river) of course left me no alternative
+but to endeavour to return to some spot on which we could effect a
+landing before dark. I estimated, that during the day, we had gone
+about twenty-four miles, on nearly the same point of bearing as
+yesterday. To assert, positively, that we were on the margin of the
+lake, or sea, into which this great body of water is discharged, might
+reasonably be deemed a conclusion, which has nothing but conjecture for
+its basis. But if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from
+actual appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the
+immediate vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal
+one, and gradually filling up by numerous depositions from the high
+lands, left by the waters which flow into it. It is most singular, that
+the high lands on this continent seem to be confined to the sea-coast,
+and not to extend to any distance from it."
+
+MR. CUNNINGHAM'S REMARKS.
+
+In a work published at Sydney, containing an account of Mr. Allan
+Cunningham's journey towards Moreton Bay, in 1828, the following
+remarks occur, from which it is evident Mr. Cunningham entertained Mr.
+Oxley's views of the character and nature of the Western interior.
+Towards the conclusion of the narrative, the author thus observes:--
+
+
+"Of the probable character of the distant unexplored interior, into
+which it has been ascertained ALL the rivers falling westerly from the
+dividing ranges flow, some inference may be drawn from the following
+data.
+
+"Viewing, between the parallels of 34 degrees and 27 degrees, a vast
+area of depressed interior, subjected in seasons of prolonged rains to
+partial inundation, by a dispersion of the several waters that flow
+upon it from the eastern mountains whence they originate; and bearing
+in mind at the same time, that the declension of the country within the
+above parallels, as most decidedly shown by the dip of its several
+rivers, is uniformly to the N.N.W. and N.W., it would appear very
+conclusive, that either a portion of our distant interior is occupied
+by a lake of considerable magnitude, or that the confluence of those
+large streams, the Macquarie, Castlereagh, Gwydir, and the Dumaresq,
+with the many minor interfluent waters, which doubtless takes place
+upon those low levels, forms one or more noble rivers, which may flow
+across the continent by an almost imperceptible declivity of country to
+the north of north-west coasts, on certain parts of which, recent
+surveys have discovered to us extensive openings, by which the largest
+accumulations of waters might escape to the sea."
+
+CHARACTER OF THE RIVERS.
+
+It is the characteristic of the streams falling westerly from the
+eastern, or coast ranges, to maintain a breadth of channel and a
+rapidity of current more immediately near their sources, that ill
+accords with their diminished size, and the sluggish flow of their
+waters in the more depressed interior. In truth, neither the Macquarie
+nor the Castlereagh can strictly be considered as permanent rivers. The
+last particularly is nothing more than a mountain torrent. The
+Macquarie, although it at length ceased to run, kept up the appearance
+of a river to the very marshes; but the bed of the Castlereagh might
+have been crossed in many places without being noticed, nor did its
+channel contain so much water as was to be found on the neighbouring
+plains.
+
+There are two circumstances upon which the magnitude, and velocity of a
+river, more immediately depend. The first is the abundance of its
+sources, the other the dip of its bed. If a stream has constant
+fountains at its head, and numerous tributaries joining it in its
+course, and flows withal through a country of gradual descent, such a
+stream will never fail; but if the supplies do not exceed the
+evaporation and absorption, to which every river is subject, if a river
+dependant on its head alone, falls rapidly into a level country,
+without receiving a single addition to its waters to assist the first
+impulse acquired in their descent, it must necessarily cease to flow at
+one point or other. Such is the case with the Lachlan, the Macquarie,
+the Castlereagh, and the Darling. Whence the latter originates, still
+remains to be ascertained; but most undoubtedly its sources have been
+influenced by the same drought that has exhausted the fountains of the
+three first mentioned streams.
+
+In supporting his opinion of the probable discharge of the interior
+waters of Australia upon its north-west coast, Mr. Cunningham thus
+remarks in the publication from which I have already made an extract.
+
+
+"To those remarkable parts of the north-west coast above referred to in
+the parallel of 16 degrees south, the Macquarie river, which rises in
+lat. 33 degrees, and under the meridian of 150 degrees east, would have
+a course of 2045 statute miles throughout, while the elevation of its
+source, being 3500 feet above the level of the sea as shown by the
+barometer, would give its waters an average descent of twenty inches to
+the mile, supposing the bed of the river to be an inclined plane.
+
+"The Gwydir originating in elevated land, lying in 31 degrees south,
+and long. 151 degrees east, at a mean height of 3000 feet, would have
+to flow 2020 miles, its elevated sources giving to each a mean fall of
+seventeen inches.
+
+"Dumaresq's river falling 2970 feet from granite mountains, in 28 1/4
+degrees under the meridian of 152 degrees, would have to pursue its
+course for 2969 miles, its average fall being eighteen inches to a
+mile."
+
+As I have never been upon the banks either of the Gwydir or the
+Dumaresq, I cannot speak of those two rivers; but in estimating the
+sources of the Macquarie at 3500 feet above the level of the sea, Mr.
+Cunningham has lost sight of, or overlooked the fact, that the fall of
+its bed in the first two hundred miles, is more than 2800 feet, since
+the cataract, which is midway between Wellington Valley and the
+marshes, was ascertained by barometrical admeasurement, to be 680 feet
+only above the ocean. The country, therefore, through which the
+Macquarie would have to flow during the remainder of its course of 1700
+miles, in order to gain the N.W. coast, would not be a gradually
+inclined plain, but for the most part a dead level, and the fact of its
+failure is a sufficient proof in itself how short the course of a river
+so circumstanced must necessarily be.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S OPINIONS.
+
+Having conversed frequently with Mr. Oxley on the subject of his
+expeditions, I went into the interior prepossessed in favour of his
+opinions, nor do I think he could have drawn any other conclusion than
+that which he did, from his experience of the terminations of the
+rivers whose courses he explored. Had Mr. Oxley advanced forty, or even
+thirty miles, farther than he did, to the westward of Mount Harris;
+nay, had he proceeded eight miles in the above direction beyond the
+actual spot from which he turned back, he would have formed other and
+very different opinions of the probable character of the distant
+interior. But I am aware that Mr. Oxley performed all that enterprise,
+and perseverance, and talent could have performed, and that it would
+have been impracticable in him to have attempted to force its marshes
+in the state in which he found them. It was from his want of knowledge
+of their nature and extent, that he inferred the swampy and
+inhospitable character of the more remote country, a state in which
+subsequent investigation has found it not to be. The marsh of the
+Macquarie is nothing more than an ordinary marsh or swamp in another
+country. However large a space it covers, it is no more than a
+concavity or basin for the reception of the waters of the river itself,
+nor has it any influence whatever on the country to the westward of it,
+in respect to inundation; the general features of the latter being a
+regular alternation of plain and brush. These facts are in themselves
+sufficient to give a fresh interest to the interior of the Australian
+continent, and to increase its importance.
+
+CAPT. KING'S OPINIONS.
+
+With respect to that part of its coast at which the rivers falling from
+the eastern mountains, discharge themselves, it is a question of very
+great doubt. It seems that Capt. King, in consequence of some
+peculiarities in the currents at its N.W. angle, supports Mr.
+Cunningham's opinion as to their probable discharge in that quarter.
+But I fear the internal structure of the continent is so low, as to
+preclude the hopes of any river reaching from one extremity of it to
+the other. A variety of local circumstances, as the contraction of a
+channel, a shoal sea, or numerous islands, influence currents
+generally, but more especially round so extensive a continent as that
+of which we are treating; nor does it strike me that any observations
+made by Capt. King during his survey, can be held to bear any
+connection with the eastern ranges, or their western waters. It may,
+however, be said, that as the course of the Darling is still involved
+in uncertainty, the question remains undecided; but it appears to me,
+the discovery of that river has set aside every conjecture (founded on
+previous observation) respecting the main features of the interior
+lying to the westward of the Blue Mountains. Both Mr. Oxley and Mr.
+Cunningham drew their conclusions from the appearances of the country
+they severally explored. The ground on which those theories were built,
+has been travelled over, and has not been found to realise them, but
+subsequent investigation has discovered to us a river, the dip of whose
+bed is to the S.W. We have every reason to believe that the sources of
+this river must be far to the northward of the most distant northerly
+point to which any survey has been made, as we are certain that it is
+far beyond the stretch of vision from the loftiest and most westerly of
+the barrier ranges; from which circumstance, it is evident that
+whatever disposition the streams descending from those ranges to the
+westward may show to hold a N.W. course more immediately at the base,
+the whole of the interior streams, from the Macquarie to the Dumaresq,
+are tributaries to the principal channel which conveys their united
+waters at right angles, if not still more opposite to the direction
+they were supposed to take, as far as is yet known.
+
+COURSE OF THE DARLING.
+
+The Darling River must be considered as the boundary line to all inland
+discoveries from the eastward. Any judgment or opinion of the interior
+to the westward of that stream, would be extremely premature and
+uncertain. There is not a single feature over it to guide or to
+strengthen either the one or the other.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR.
+
+My impression, when travelling the country to the west and N.W. of the
+marshes of the Macquarie, was, that I was traversing a country of
+comparatively recent formation. The sandy nature of its soil, the great
+want of vegetable decay, the salsolaceous character of its plants, the
+appearance of its isolated hills and flooded tracts, and its trifling
+elevations above the sea, severally contributed to strengthen these
+impressions on my mind. My knowledge of the interior is, however, too
+limited to justify me in any conclusion with regard to the central
+parts of Australia. An ample field is open to enterprise and to
+ambition, and it is to be hoped that some more decisive measures will
+be carried into effect, both for the sake of the colony and of
+geography, to fill up the blank upon the face of the chart of
+Australia, and remove from us the reproach of indifference and inaction.
+
+BARBER'S STATEMENT.
+
+Since the above pages were written, an expedition was undertaken by
+Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, to ascertain the truth of a
+report brought in by a runaway convict of the name of Barber, or
+Clarke, who had been at large for five years, at different times, among
+the natives to the northward of Port Macquarie. This man stated that a
+large river, originating in the high lands near Liverpool Plains, and
+the mountains to the north of them, pursued a N.W. course to the sea.
+His story ran thus: Having learnt from the natives the existence of
+this river, he determined to follow it down, in hopes that he might
+ultimately be enabled to make his escape from the colony. He
+accordingly started from Liverpool Plains, and kept on a river called
+the Gnamoi, for some time, which took him N.W. After a few days'
+journey, he left this river, traversed the country northwards, and
+crossed some lofty ranges. Descending to the N.E. he came to another
+large river, the Keindur, which again took him N.W. He travelled 400
+miles down it, when he observed a large stream joining it upon its left
+bank, which he supposed to be the Gnamoi. The river he was upon was
+broad and navigable. It flowed through a level country with a dead
+current and muddy water, and spread into frequent lakes. He found that
+it ultimately discharged itself into the sea, but was uncertain at what
+distance from its sources. He was positive he never travelled to the
+SOUTHWARD OF WEST. He ascended a hill near the sea, and observed an
+island in the distance, from which, the natives informed him, a race of
+light-coloured men came in large canoes for a scented wood; but having
+failed in the immediate object of his journey, he was eventually
+obliged to return.
+
+MAJOR MITCHELL'S REPORT.
+
+The following official report of Major Mitchell will sufficiently point
+out the incorrectness of the preceding statement. It is most probable
+that Barber merely told that which he had heard from the natives, and
+that having a more than ordinary share of cunning, he made up a story
+upon their vague and uncertain accounts, in hopes that it would benefit
+him, as in truth it did.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+ Bullabalakit, on the River Nammoy,
+ in lat. 30 degrees 38 minutes 21 seconds S.,
+ long. 149 degrees 30 minutes 20 seconds E.
+ 23d December, 1831.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to state, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, the progress I have made in exploring the course of the
+interior waters to the northward of the Colony, with reference to the
+letter which I had the honour to address to Col. Lindesay, on this
+subject, on the 19th ult.
+
+On crossing Liverpool Range my object was to proceed northward, so as
+to avoid the plains and head the streams which water them, and avoiding
+also the mountain ranges on the east.
+
+I arrived accordingly, by a tolerably straight and level line, at
+Walamoul, on Peel's River; this place (a cattle station of Mr. Brown)
+being nearly due north from the common pass across Liverpool Range, and
+about a mile-and-a-half above the spot where Mr. Oxley crossed this
+river.
+
+PEEL'S RIVER.
+
+I found the general course of the Peel below Walamoul to be nearly
+west; and after tracing this river downwards twenty-two miles (in
+direct distance), I crossed it at an excellent ford, named Wallamburra.
+I then traversed the extensive plain of Mulluba; and leaving that of
+Coonil on the right, extending far to the north-east, we passed through
+a favourable interval of what I considered Hardwicke's Range, the
+general direction of this range being two points west of north.
+
+On passing through this gorge, which, from the name of a hill on the
+south side, may be named Ydire, I crossed a very extensive tract of
+flat country, on which the wood consisted of iron-bark and acacia
+pendula; this tract being part of a valley evidently declining to the
+north-west, which is bounded on the south by the Liverpool Range, and
+on the south-west by the extremities from the same. On the west, at a
+distance of twenty-two miles from Hardwicke's Range, there stands a
+remarkable isolated hill named Bounalla; and towards the lowest part of
+the country, and in the direction in which all the waters tend, there
+is a rocky peak named Tangulda. On the north, a low range (named Wowa),
+branching westerly from Hardwicke's Range, bounds on that side this
+extensive basin, which includes Liverpool Plains. Peel's River is the
+principal stream, and receives, in its course, all the waters of these
+plains below the junction of Connadilly,--which I take to be York's
+River, of Oxley.
+
+THE RIVER NAMMOY.
+
+The stream is well known to the natives by the name Nammoy; and six
+miles below Tangulda, the low extremities from the surrounding ranges
+close on the river, and separate this extensive vale from the
+unexplored country which extends beyond to an horizon which is unbroken
+between W.N.W. and N.N.W.
+
+
+The impracticable appearance of the mountains to the northward, induced
+me to proceed thus far to the west; and on examining the country thirty
+miles N.E. by N. from Tangulda, I ascended a lofty range extending
+westward from the coast chain, and on which the perpendicular sides of
+masses of trachyte (a volcanic rock) were opposed to my further
+progress even with horses: it was therefore evident that the river
+supposed to rise about the latitude of 28 degrees would not be
+accessible, or at least available to the Colony, in that direction, and
+that in the event of the discovery of a river beyond that range flowing
+to the northern or north-western shores, it would become of importance
+to ascertain whether it was joined by the Nammoy, the head of this
+river being so accessible that I have brought my heavily laden drays to
+where it is navigable for boats, my present encampment being on its
+banks six miles below Tangulda. From this station I can perceive the
+western termination of the Trachytic range, and I am now about to
+explore the country between it and the Nammoy, and the further course
+of this river; and in the event of its continuance in a favourable
+direction, I shall fix my depot on its right bank, whence I now write,
+and descend the stream in the portable boats.
+
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your most obedient servant,
+ T. L. MITCHELL,
+ SURVEYOR-GENERAL
+
+The Hon. The Colonial Secretary.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Peel's River, 29th February, 1832.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to inform you, for the information of His Excellency
+the Governor, that I have reached the left bank of this River with my
+whole party on my return from the northern interior, having explored
+the course of the river referred to in my letter of 22nd December last,
+and others within the 29th parallel of latitude.
+
+There was so much fallen timber in the Nammoy, and its waters were so
+low, that the portable boats could not be used on that river with
+advantage, and I proceeded by land in a north-west direction, until
+convinced by its course turning more to the westward that this river
+joined the river Darling. I therefore quitted its banks with the
+intention of exploring the country further northward, by moving round
+the western extremities of the mountains mentioned in my former letter,
+and which I have since distinguished in my map by the name of the
+Lindesay Range. These mountains terminate abruptly on the west, and I
+entered a fine open country at their base, from whence plains (or
+rather open ground of gentle undulation) extended westward as far as
+could be seen. On turning these mountains I directed my course
+northward, and to the eastward of north, into the country beyond them,
+in search of the river KINDUR; and I reached a river flowing westward,
+the bed of which was deep, broad, and permanent, but in which there was
+not then much water.
+
+THE RIVER KARAULA.
+
+The marks of inundation on trees, and on the adjoining high ground,
+proved that its floods rose to an extraordinary height; and from the
+latitude, and also from the general direction of its course, I
+considered this to be the river which Mr. Cunningham named the Gwydir,
+on crossing it sixty miles higher, on his route to Moreton Bay. I
+descended this river, and explored the country on its left bank for
+about eighty miles to the westward, when I found that its general
+course was somewhat to the southward of west. This river received no
+addition from the mountains over that part of its left bank traversed
+by me; and the heat being intense, the stream was at length so reduced
+that I could step across it. The banks had become low, and the bed much
+contracted, being no longer gravelly, but muddy. I therefore crossed
+this river and travelled northward, on a meridian line, until, in the
+latitude of 29 degrees 2 minutes, I came upon the largest river I had
+yet seen. The banks were earthy and broken, the soil being loose, and
+the water of a white muddy colour. Trees, washed out by the roots from
+the soft soil, filled the bed of this river in many places. There was
+abundance of cod-fish of a small size, as well as of the two other
+kinds of fish which we had caught in the Peel, the Nammoy, and the
+Gwydir. The name of this river, as well as we could make it out from
+the natives, was Karaula. Having made fast one tree to top of another
+tall tree, I obtained a view of the horizon, which appeared perfectly
+level, and I was in hopes that we had at length found a river which
+would flow to the northward and avoid the Darling. I accordingly
+ordered the boat to be put together, and sent Mr. White with a party
+some miles down to clear away any trees in the way. Mr. White came upon
+a rocky fall, and found besides the channel so much obstructed by
+trees, and the course so tortuous, that I determined to ascertain
+before embarking upon it, whether the general course was in the desired
+direction. Leaving Mr. White with half the party, I accordingly traced
+the Karaula downwards, and found that its course changed to south, a
+few miles below where I had made it, and that it was joined by the
+Gwydir only eight miles below where I had crossed that river.
+Immediately below the junction of the Gwydir (which is in latitude 29
+degrees 30 minutes 27 seconds, longitude 148 degrees 13 minutes 20
+seconds) the course of the river continues southward of west, directly
+towards where Captain Sturt discovered the River Darling; and I could
+no longer doubt that this was the same river. I therefore returned to
+the party, determined to explore the country further northward.
+
+The results of my progress thus far were sufficient, I considered, to
+prove that the division of the waters falling towards the northern and
+southern shores of Australia is not, as has been supposed, in the
+direction of the Liverpool and Warrabangle range, but extends between
+Cape Byron on the eastern shore, towards Dick Hartog's Island on the
+west; the greater elongation of this country being between these
+points, and intermediate between the lines of its northern and southern
+coasts. The basin of the streams I have been upon must be bounded on
+the north by this dividing ground or water-shed, and although no rise
+was perceptible in the northern horizon, the river was traversed by
+several rocky dykes, over which it fell southward; their direction
+being oblique to the course, and nearly parallel to this division of
+the waters. I beg leave to state, that I should not feel certain on
+this point without having seen more, were it not evident from Mr.
+Cunningham's observations, made on crossing this division on his way to
+Moreton Bay. Mr. Cunningham, on crossing the head of this river, nearly
+in the same latitude, but much nearer its sources, found the height of
+its bed above the sea to be 840 feet; at about forty-five miles further
+northward the ground rose to upwards of 1700 feet, but immediately
+beyond, he reached a river flowing north-west, the height of which was
+only 1400 feet above the sea. He had thus crossed this dividing higher
+ground, between the parallels of 29 degrees and 28 degrees. It appears,
+therefore, that all the interior rivers we know of to the northward of
+the Morumbidgee, belong to the basin of the Karaula; this stream
+flowing southward, and hence the disappearance of the Macquarie and
+other lower rivers may be understood, for all along the banks of the
+Karaula, the Gwydir, and the Nammoy, the country, though not swampy,
+bears marks of frequent inundation; thus the floods occasioned by these
+rivers united, cover the low country, and receive the Macquarie so that
+no channel marks its further course.
+
+That a basin may be found to the northward receiving the waters of the
+northern part of the coast range in a similar manner is extremely
+probable, and that they form a better river, because the angle is more
+acute between the high ground, which must bound it on the N.E. and the
+watershed on the south. I therefore prepared to cross the Karaula, in
+hopes of seeing the head at least of such a river, and to explore the
+country two degrees further northward, but moving in a N.W. direction.
+My tent was struck, and I had just launched my portable boat for the
+purpose of crossing the river, when Mr. Surveyor Finch, whom I had
+instructed to bring up a supply of flour, arrived with the distressing
+intelligence, that two of his men had been killed by the natives, who
+had taken the flour, and were in possession of everything he had
+brought--all the cattle, including his horse, being also dispersed or
+lost. I therefore determined not to extend my excursion further, as the
+party were already on reduced rations, and on the 8th instant I retired
+from the Karaula, returning by the marked line, which being cut through
+thick scrubs in various places, is now open, forming a tolerably direct
+line of communication in a N.W. direction from Sydney, to a river,
+beyond which the survey may be extended whenever His Excellency the
+Governor thinks fit.
+
+The natives had never troubled my party on our advance; indeed I only
+saw them when I came upon them by surprise, and then they always ran
+off. Their first visit was received at my camp on the Karaula, during
+my absence down that river, when they were very friendly, but much
+disposed to steal. Various tribes followed us on coming back, but never
+with any show of hostility, although moving in tribes of a hundred or
+more parallel to our marked line, or in our rear; it was necessary to
+be ever on our guard, and to encamp in strong positions only, arranging
+the drays for defence during the night: three men were always under
+arms, and I have much pleasure in stating, that throughout the whole
+excursion, and under circumstances of hardship and privation, the
+conduct of the men was very good. I took an armed party to the scene of
+pillage, and buried the bodies of the two men, who appeared to have
+been treacherously murdered while asleep by the blacks during the
+absence of Mr. Finch: no natives were to be found when I visited the
+spot, although it appeared from columns of smoke on hills which
+overlooked if, that they were watching our movements.
+
+The party has now arrived within a day's journey of Brown's station,
+and I have instructed Assistant-Surveyor White (from whom I have
+received great assistance during the whole journey) to conduct it
+homewards, being desirous to proceed without delay to Sydney, and to
+receive the instructions of His Excellency the Governor.
+
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your most obedient Servant,
+ T. L. MITCHELL,
+ SURVEYOR-GENERAL.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY, "&c. &c. &c."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+
+Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior of
+Australia--Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men
+requisite,--and of cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other
+arrangements--Treatment of the natives--Dimensions of the boat used in
+the second expedition.
+
+
+Having now had considerable experience in the fitting out and
+management of expeditions in New South Wales, I cannot refrain from
+making some few observations on the subject. And without presuming to
+lay dawn any fixed rules, I shall only refer to those by which I have
+best succeeded, in hopes that some of my remarks may prove of use to
+future travellers who may venture to penetrate into the trackless
+deserts over so small a portion of which I wandered.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EXPLORING AUSTRALIA.
+
+The great difficulty of examining the interior of Australia, is that of
+carrying supplies; for increasing the number of individuals composing
+an expedition is of no avail, since an additional number of men must
+necessarily increase the consumption of food. In order to meet this
+difficulty it has been proposed to establish depots upon which an
+expedition could fall back to recruit its supplies, and in ordinary
+cases this plan might answer; but I am decidedly of opinion that no
+party could long remain stationary in the distant interior without some
+fatal collision with the natives, which would be attended with the most
+deplorable consequences; and I do think, considering all things, that
+the experiment is too dangerous to be tried; for when I reached Mount
+Harris, on my first retreat from the Darling, I found the party who
+were awaiting me, with a supply of provisions, under very great alarm,
+in consequence of the hostile proceedings of the Mount Harris tribe.
+The men had been obliged to put the camp into a state of defence. The
+blacks had attempted to surprise them, and would, had I not returned,
+have combined in some general attack. It appears to me that the most
+judicious plan would be to send a supply of provisions, with an
+expedition, to a distant point, under the charge of a minor party.
+These provisions could replace those already expended, and the animals
+that carried them could be taken back.
+
+SELECTION OF SUBORDINATES.
+
+The number of individuals of which the expedition down the banks of the
+Macquarie was composed, was fourteen: that is to say, myself, Mr. Hume,
+two soldiers, one free man, and seven prisoners of the crown. The
+latter behaved, on all occasions, as steadily as it was possible for
+men to do. Yet the circumstance of the two soldiers being with me
+increased my confidence in the whole, for I was aware that their
+example would influence the rest. However well disposed the prisoners
+of the crown may be, (as in this instance they certainly were,) the
+beneficial example of steady discipline cannot be denied. I should not
+have considered myself justified in leaving the camp as I did for a
+week, and in detaching Mr. Hume at the same time when at the bottom of
+the marshes, or in making the last effort to maintain our position on
+the banks of the Darling, if I had not reposed every confidence in the
+man to whom I entrusted the safety of the camp during my absence.
+
+Experience, therefore, of the value of the two soldiers, whom General
+Darling was good enough to permit me to take on the strength of the
+party, fully bears me out in recommending that one man, at least, of
+general responsibility shall be attached to all future expeditions. The
+success of an expedition depends so much on the conduct of the persons
+of whom it is composed, that too much attention cannot be given to the
+selection even of the most subordinate. Men of active intelligent
+minds, of persevering habits, and of even temper, should be preferred
+to mechanics who do not possess these most requisite qualities. On the
+other hand, it is impossible to do without a good carpenter, however
+defective he may be in other respects. I was indebted to Mr. Maxwell,
+the superintendent of Wellington Valley, for some excellent men, both
+on my first and on my second journey, because he understood the nature
+of the service for which they were required, and the characters of
+those whom he recommended. But however well selected the party, or the
+men rather, might be, I still consider a man of general responsibility
+necessary for its complete organisation. I would have him somewhat
+superior to the rest in his station in life. Him I would hold
+answerable for the immediate discipline of the camp, whilst I was
+present, and for its safety when absent. The assistant to the leader I
+would put entirely out of the question. He has other and most important
+duties to perform. I would rate this man wholly independent of him.
+
+DANGER OF COLLISION WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to what I have already said with regard to the natives, it
+was supposed that they were so little to be apprehended, that when I
+went on the first occasion into the interior, I applied for a limited
+number of men only, under an impression that with a few men I could
+carry provisions equal to a consumption of a greater number, and by
+this means be enabled to keep the field for a greater length of time.
+But I do not think it would be safe to penetrate into the distant
+country with fewer than fifteen men, for although, happily, no rupture
+has as yet taken place with the natives, yet, there is no security
+against their treachery, and it is very certain that a slight cause
+might involve an expedition in inextricable difficulty, and oblige the
+leader to throw himself on the defensive, when far away from other
+resources than those with which he should have provided himself, and
+that, perhaps, when navigating a close and intricate river, with all
+the dangers and perplexities attendant on such a situation. It is
+absolutely necessary to establish nightly guards, not only for the
+security of the camp, but of the cattle, and at the same time to have a
+force strong enough to maintain an obstinate resistance against any
+number of savages, where no mercy is to be expected. It will be borne
+in mind, that there is a wide difference between penetrating into a
+country in the midst of its population, and landing from ships for the
+purpose of communication or traffic. Yet, how few voyages of discovery
+have terminated without bloodshed! Boats while landing are covered by
+their ships, and have succour within view; but not so parties that go
+into unknown tracts. They must depend on their immediate resources and
+individual courage alone.
+
+PACK-OXEN, HORSES, WHEEL-CARRIAGES.
+
+With regard to the animals, I should recommend an equal number of
+horses as of bullocks; since it has been found that the latter, though
+slow, travel better over swampy ground than horses, which, on the other
+hand, are preferable for expeditious journeys, to which bullocks would
+never be equal. One of the colonial pack-saddles weighs fifty pounds
+complete, and is preferable to those sent out from England. This, with
+a load of 250 lbs. is sufficient for any animal, since it enables the
+men to place a part of their provisions with the general loads. The
+difficulty of keeping the backs of the animals free from injury, more
+especially where any blemish has before existed, is exceedingly great.
+They should undergo an examination twice a-day, that is, in the morning
+prior to moving off, and in the afternoon before they are turned out to
+feed; and measures should then be taken to ease them as circumstances
+require. I never suffered the saddles to be removed from the backs of
+the animals under my charge for twenty minutes after the termination of
+the journey for the day, in order to guard against the effects of the
+sun; and where the least swelling appeared the saddle was altered and
+the place dressed. Yet, notwithstanding all this care and attention,
+several both of the horses and bullocks were at one time in a sad
+condition, during the first journey,--so much so as almost to paralyse
+our efforts. It would be advisable that such animals as are entirely
+free from blemish should be chosen for the service of expeditions, for,
+with proper management they might be kept in order. The anxiety of mind
+attendant on a bad state of the animals is really quite embarrassing,
+for it not only causes a delay in the movements, but a derangement in
+the loads. Other animals are overburdened, and there is no knowing
+where the evil will stop.
+
+In addition to the pack-animals, I would recommend the employment of a
+dray or cart under any practicable circumstances. It serves to carry
+necessary comforts, gives an expedition greater facility for securing
+its collections, and is of inconceivable advantage in many other
+respects.
+
+ISSUE OF PROVISIONS.
+
+Constant and most earnest attention should be paid to the issue of
+provisions, on the discreet management of which so much depends, and
+the charge of them should be committed to the second in command. The
+most important articles are flour, tea, sugar, and tobacco. All should
+be husbanded with extreme care, and weighed from time to time. The
+flour is best carried in canvass bags, containing 100 pounds each, and
+should at the termination of each day's journey, be regularly piled up
+and covered with a tarpaulin. Tea, sugar and tobacco lose considerably
+in weight, so that it is necessary to estimate for somewhat more than
+the bare supply. With regard to the salt meat, the best mode of
+conveying it appears to be in small barrels of equal weight with the
+bags of flour. Salt pork is better than beef. It should be deprived of
+all bones and be of the very best quality. I have heard spirits
+recommended, but I do not approve their use. Tea is much more relished
+by the men; indeed they could not do well without it. A small quantity
+of spirits would, however, of course be necessary in the event of its
+being required.
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+Mr. Cornelius O'Brien, an enterprising and long-established settler,
+who has pushed his flocks and herds to the banks of the Morumbidgee,
+was good enough to present me with eight wethers as I passed his
+station. It may be some gratification to Mr. O'Brien to know, that they
+contributed very materially to our comforts, and he will, perhaps,
+accept my acknowledgements in this place, not only for so liberal a
+present to myself, but for his attention and kindness to my men as long
+as they remained in his neighbourhood. It was found that the sheep gave
+but little additional trouble, requiring only to be penned at night, as
+much to secure them from the native dogs as to prevent them from
+straying away. They followed the other animals very quietly, and soon
+became accustomed to daily movements. They proved a most available
+stock; no waste attended their slaughter, and they admitted of a
+necessary and wholesome change of fresh food from the general salt
+diet, on which the men would otherwise have had to subsist.
+
+The provisions should, if possible, be issued weekly, and their
+diminution should be so regulated as to give an equal relief to the
+animals.
+
+For general information I have annexed a list of the supplies I took
+with me on my first expedition. It may appear long, but the articles
+were packed in a small compass, and their value immaterial.
+
+As a precautionary measure I should advise, that one of the pack
+animals be kept apart for the purpose of carrying water. Two casks of
+equal weight are the best for such a purpose. In long and hot marches,
+the men experience great relief from having water at hand.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to the natives, I hope sufficient has been said of the
+manner of communicating with them to prevent the necessity of a
+repetition here. The great point is not to alarm their natural
+timidity: to exercise patience in your intercourse with them; to treat
+them kindly; and to watch them with suspicion, especially at night.
+Never permit the men to steal away from the camp, but keep them as
+compact as possible; and at every station so arrange your drays and
+provisions that they may serve as a defence in case of your being
+attacked.
+
+The natives appeared to me to be indifferent to our presents, in most
+cases. Tomahawks, knives, pieces of iron, and different coloured
+ribbons for the forehead, were most esteemed by them. They will barter
+and exchange their fish for articles, and readily acquire confidence.
+
+I believe I have now touched on all the more important points: on minor
+ones no observation I can make will be of use; men must, in many
+things, be guided by circumstances.
+
+* * * * *
+
+WHALE BOAT EMPLOYED ON THE SECOND EXPEDITION.
+
+I may here notice that, in my second expedition, as it was anticipated
+that I should require adequate provision for water conveyance, at one
+stage or other of my journey down the Morumbidgee, I was furnished with
+a whale-boat, the dimensions of which are given below. She was built by
+Mr. Egan, the master builder of the dock-yard and a native of the
+colony, and did great credit to his judgment. She carried two tons and
+a half of provisions, independently of a locker, which I appropriated
+for the security of the arms, occupying the space between the
+after-seat and the stern. She was in the first instance put together
+loosely, her planks and timbers marked, and her ring bolts, &c. fitted.
+She was then taken to pieces, carefully packed up, and thus conveyed in
+plank into the interior, to a distance of four hundred and forty miles,
+without injury. She was admirably adapted for the service, and rose as
+well as could have been expected over the seas in the lake. It was
+evident, however, that she would have been much safer if she had had
+another plank, for she was undoubtedly too low. The following were her
+dimensions:--
+
+ Breadth across 7th timber aft, 5 ft. 1/2 an inch outside.
+ Across 12th timber, 5 ft. 11 1/4 in.
+ Across 17th timber forward, 5 ft.
+ 25 ft. 8 in. in length inside.
+ Curve of the keel No. 1, from the after side of each apron, 3 ft. 3 3/4in.
+ No. 2, from head to head of the dead wood, 13 1/2 in.
+ No. 3, from one end of keel to the other inner side, 3 in.
+ No. 4, round of keel from the toe of each dead wood, 7/8 1/16th.
+ The timbers were marked, beginning from the stern to the bow on the
+ starboard side, and from bow to stern on the larboard.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. I.
+
+LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS.
+
+
+By His Excellency Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, Commanding His
+Majesty's Forces, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales, and its dependencies, and Vice Admiral of
+the same, &c. &c. &c.
+
+TO CHARLES STURT, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE 39TH REGIMENT OF FOOT.
+
+Whereas it has been judged expedient to fit out an expedition for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of New Holland, and the present dry
+season affords a reasonable prospect of an opportunity of ascertaining
+the nature and extent of the large marsh or marshes which stopped the
+progress of the late John Oxley Esq, Surveyor General, in following the
+courses of the rivers Lachlan and Macquarie in the years 1817 and 1818.
+And whereas I repose full confidence in your abilities and zeal for
+conducting such an expedition, I do hereby constitute and appoint you
+to command and take charge of the expedition now preparing for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of the country, and for ascertaining,
+if practicable, the nature and extent of the marsh or marshes above
+mentioned.
+
+In the prosecution of this service, you will be guided generally by the
+following instructions.
+
+1. You will be accompanied on this expedition by Mr. Hamilton Hume,
+whose great experience in travelling through the remote parts of the
+Colony, cannot fail to be highly useful to you. You will also be
+attended by two soldiers and six convicts, of whom one is to understand
+the shoeing of horses, one to be a carpenter, one a harness-maker and
+three stock-men, and you will be provided with six horses and twelve
+bullocks.
+
+2. A small boat has been built here for the use of the expedition, and
+for its conveyance, there is provided a light four-wheeled carriage to
+be drawn by two bullocks.
+
+The deputy Commissary General has received orders for supplying the
+expedition with provisions of the best quality sufficient for six
+months' consumption, together with tents, blankets, clothing,
+pack-saddles, utensils, instruments, tools, and necessaries of all
+kinds of which you are likely to stand in need. Orders are also given
+for providing you with arms and ammunition, with rockets for signals,
+and an ample supply of simple medicines--You are to consider it an
+important duty to attend to the providing of all these supplies, and to
+take care that not only every article is of the best quality that can
+be procured, but also that no article be wanting with which you may
+desire to be provided.
+
+3. Orders are given for forwarding without delay all your provisions,
+stores and supplies of every kind to Wellington Valley, at which place,
+you, Mr. Hume, and all your men are to rendezvous as soon as possible.
+Mr Maxwell, the superintendent, will furnish you with well-trained
+bullocks, and afford you all the assistance you may require in
+arranging every thing for your departure from that station.
+
+4. After you shall have completed all your arrangements, you are to
+lose no time in finally departing from Wellington Valley in prosecution
+of the immediate objects of the expedition.
+
+5. You are first to proceed to Mount Harris, where you are to form a
+temporary depot, by means of which you will have an opportunity of more
+readily communicating with Mr. Maxwell.
+
+6. You are then to endeavour to determine the fate of the Macquarie
+River, by tracing it as far as possible beyond the point to which Mr.
+Oxley went, and by pushing westward, you are to ascertain if there be
+any high lands in that direction, or if the country be, as it is
+supposed, an unbroken level and under water. If you should fail in
+these objects, you will traverse the plains lying behind our north-west
+boundaries, with a view to skirt any waters by which you may have been
+checked to the westward; and if you should succeed in skirting them,
+you are to explore the country westward and southward as far as
+possible, endeavouring to discover the Macquarie beyond the marsh of
+Mr. Oxley, and following it to its mouth if at all practicable.
+
+7. There is some reason to believe that the over-flowing of the
+Macquarie when visited by Mr. Oxley, was occasioned by heavy rains
+falling in the mountains to the eastward, and that as you are to visit
+the same spot at a different season of the year, you may escape such
+embarrassment; but although you should get beyond the point at which
+Mr. Oxley stopped, it would not be prudent to risk your own health or
+that of your men, by continuing long in a swampy country. Therefore it
+may be advisable for you in the first instance to leave the greater
+part of your men, bullocks, and baggage, at Mount Harris, and if you
+should see a probability of your being able to cross into the interior,
+you will then return to Mount Harris for such additional supplies as
+you may judge necessary. You can there communicate with Mr. Maxwell
+respecting any ulterior arrangements which you may be desirous of
+making.
+
+8. The success of the expedition is so desirable an object, that I
+cannot too strongly impress upon you the importance of perseverance in
+endeavouring to skirt any waters or marshes which may check your course
+as long as you have provisions sufficient for your return; but you must
+be cautious not to proceed a single day's journey further than where
+you find that your provisions will be barely sufficient to enable you
+to reach the nearest place at which you can depend upon getting
+supplies.
+
+9. If after every endeavour you should find it totally impracticable to
+get to the westward, you are still to proceed northward, keeping as
+westerly a direction as possible; and when the state of your provisions
+will oblige you to retreat, you will be guided by your latitude, as to
+the place to which you are to make the best of your way, but you are
+not to make for any place on the coast, if Wellington valley should
+still be nearer.
+
+10. You must be aware that the success of the expedition will greatly
+depend upon the time for which your provisions will hold out, and
+therefore you will see the great importance of observing every possible
+economy in the expenditure of provisions, and preventing waste of every
+kind.
+
+11. You are to keep a detailed account of your proceedings in a
+journal, in which all observations and occurrences of every kind, with
+all their circumstances, however minute, are to be carefully noted
+down. You are to be particular in describing the general face of all
+the country through which you pass, the direction and shape of the
+mountains, whether detached or in ranges, together with the bearings
+and estimated distances of the several mountains, hills, or eminences
+from each other. You are likewise to note the nature of the climate, as
+to heat, cold, moisture, winds, rains, &c., and to keep a register of
+the temperature from Fahrenheit's thermometer, as observed at two or
+three periods of each day. The rivers, with their several branches,
+their direction, velocity, breadth, and depth, are carefully to be
+noted. It is further expected that you will, as far as may be in your
+power, attend to the animal, vegetable, and mineral productions of the
+country, noting down every thing that may occur to you, and preserving
+specimens as far as your means will admit, especially some of all the
+ripe seeds which you may discover; when the preservation of specimens
+is impossible, drawings or detailed accounts of them, are very
+desirable.
+
+12. You will note the description of the several people whom you may
+meet, the extent of the population, their means of subsistence, their
+genius and disposition, the nature of their amusements, their diseases
+and remedies, their objects of worship, religious ceremonies, and a
+vocabulary of their language.
+
+Lastly. On your return from your journey, you are to cause all the
+journals or other written documents belonging to, and curiosities
+collected by the several individuals composing the expedition, to be
+carefully sealed up with your own seal and kept in that state until you
+shall have made your report to me in writing of the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Given at Sydney, this eighteenth day of November, 1828. By Command of
+His Excellency the Governor, ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. II.
+
+LIST OF STORES SUPPLIED FOR THE EXPEDITION.
+
+
+List of Articles delivered from His Majesty's Stores, in charge of D.
+A. C. Goodsir, to Captain Sturt, viz.--
+
+ 1 Hack saddle. 9 Harness casks.
+ 1 Bridle. 23 Canvas bags.
+ 2 Tents. 4 Tin cases.
+ 14 Pack saddles. 16 Padlocks.
+ 14 Pair hobbles. 6 Tarpaulens.
+ 24 Sets horse shoes. 10 Haversacks.
+ 2000 Horse nails. 113 Fathom one-inch rope.
+ 113 Fathoms 1 1/2 inch rope. 1 Boat compass.
+ 1 Hammer, (Blacksmith's) 1 Telescope.
+ 1 Paring knife. 1 Spare glass for ditto.
+ 2 Chipping do. 1 Tin case (for charts.)
+ 2 Rasps. 100 Fish-hooks, (large.)
+ 1 Pair pincers. 12 Fishing-lines.
+ 1 Cutter. 10 Knives.
+ 2lb. Pack thread. 10 Forks.
+ 24 Needles. 10 Spoons.
+ 1/4lb. Bristles. 2 Frying-pans.
+ 7lbs. Leather. 2 Tinder-boxes.
+ 1/2lb. Thread. 1 Tea-kettle, (tin.)
+ 1 Pair of steelyards. 10 Tin dishes.
+ 10 Tin pots. 8 Jackets.
+ 1 Flour seive. 8 Duck frocks.
+ 2 Felling-axes. 8 Shirts.
+ 4 Tomahawks. 16 Trousers.
+ 2 Hammers. 24 Pair shoes.
+ 1 Hand-saw. 16 Blankets.
+ 3 Bill-hooks. 16 Pair stockings.
+ 3 Awls. 2 Bullock collars.
+ 3 Broad hoes. 2 Do. back-bands and pipes.
+ 4 Razors. 2 Leading cruppers.
+ 4 Brushes. 1 Boat with sail and oars.
+ 4 Combs. 1 Do. carriage.
+ 3 Iron pots, (camp kettles.) 1 Canvass boat-cover.
+ 1 Pair scissors. 3 Water breaker.
+
+ COMMISSARIAT OFFICE, SYDNEY, NOV. 10TH, 1828.
+
+ P.S.--l Tarpaulin.
+ Large Fish-hook.
+ 1 Tin tea-kettle.
+ 1 Camp kettle.
+ Pitch and oil.
+ Hemp or twine.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. III.
+
+SHEEP-FARMING RETURNS, SHOWING THE INCREASE IN FOUR YEARS, from two
+Breeding Flocks, consisting of 670 Ewes in Lamb.
+
+
+ (A.)--1st JUNE, 1828.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Flocks. Breeding Ewes. Lambs. Total. Remarks.
+
+ 2 yrs. old. 3 yrs. old. Male.-Female.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Lambs.
+ No. 1 330 148 149 627 Deaths 6. Incr.297
+ No. 2 330 154 154 638 4 308
+ ---- -- ---
+ * 1265 10 605
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ * The increase throughout these returns is calculated at from 270 to 290
+ Lambs, to 300 Ewes, which is the usual average in N.S.W.
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Purchased two Flocks of Ewes, at 84s.............................670 Ewes.
+ Increase of Lambs.......................................... 605
+ Casual Deaths............................................... 10
+ 595
+ ---
+ Total as per Return............................................ 1265
+
+
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ (B.)--1st JUNE, 1829.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 3-yr. 327 154 154 635 Deaths 3 Incr.308
+ 2 4-yr. 326 155 155 636 4 310
+ 3 1-yr. 302 302 1 ---
+ 4 1-yr. 302 18 320 -- 618
+ ---- 8
+ 1893
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (A) Total...............................................1265
+ Increase by Lambing....................................618
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 636
+ Casual Deaths......................................... 8 628
+ ----
+ Total as per return............................................1893
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ (C.)--1st JUNE, 1830.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 296 133 154 562 Deaths 6 Incr.266
+ 2 4-yr. 325 150 155 625 2 300
+ 3 5-yr. 326 160 646 320
+ 4 2-yr. 302 27 329 ---
+ 5 1-yr. 309 309 886
+ 6 1-yr. 309 309 ---
+ ---- 3 Rams died
+ 2780 12 ditto purchased
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (B) Total............................................ 1893
+ Increase by Lambing....................................886
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................12
+ ---
+ 898
+ Deaths............................................... 11 887
+ ----
+ Total as per return......................................... 2780
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ (D.)--1st JUNE, 1831.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 304 136 136 576 Deaths 5 Incr.272
+ 2 3-yr. 293 135 136 564 3 271
+ 3 5-yr. 324 156 156 636 1 312
+ 4 6-yr. 320 156 156 632 2 312
+ Killed 4 ---
+ 5 3-yr. 300 300 Deaths 2 1167
+ 6 2-yr. 308 308 1
+ 7 1-yr 443 443
+ 8 1-yr 442 442 1
+ 9 40 40 5
+ ---- --
+ 3941 20
+ Purchased 12
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (C) Total............................................ 2780
+ Increase by Lambing...................................1167
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 1185
+ Casual deaths 20 ...Killed for use 4 ................. 24 1161
+ ----
+ Total as per return.......................................... 3941
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ (E.)--1st JUNE, 1832.
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ No. Lambs.
+ 1 2-yr. 344 154 154 652 Deaths 6 Incr.308
+ 2 3-yr. 344 162 161 667 4 323
+ 4 3-yr. 342 164 165 671 3 329
+ 5 6-yr. 320 155 155 630 2 310
+ 6 7-yr. 300 145 145 590 2 290
+ 7 4-yr. 300 300 ----
+ 1560
+ 8 3-yr 302 302 2
+ 9 2-yr 440 440 1
+ 10 1-yr 583 583
+ 11 1-yr 584 584
+ 12 45 45 5 Purch. 10
+ ---- ---- ---- --- --- --- ----
+ 1650 584 1625 45 780 780 5464
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ ABSTRACT.
+
+ Return (D) Total............................................ 3941
+ Increase by Lambing...................................1560
+ Ditto Rams purchased....................................10
+ ---
+ 1570
+ Decrease by casual death .............................. 25
+ Decrease by slaughter for use ......................... 22
+ ---
+ 1523
+ ----
+ Grand Total .............................. 5464 as above
+ --------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ MEMORANDUM,--The deaths have been calculated at the lowest rate under the
+ best management. It may be safer to assume a rate of four or five per
+ cent. per annum.
+
+
+
+ Account of Expenditure and Income upon Sheep Stock in Australia,
+ appended to Returns A. B. C. D. and E.
+ 1st YEAR, (RETURN A.) JUNE, 1829.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 11265 fleeces, average weight 2 1/4 lbs. 284 lbs
+ wool at 1s. 6d. per lb. 213 9 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 1 Watchman at 20 20 0 O PROFIT.
+ To Hurdles, &c. 10 0 0
+ -------- 90 0 0
+ -------- 123 9 0
+
+ 2nd YEAR, (B.) JUNE, 1830.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 1893 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 4259lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 319 8 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 20 40 0 0
+ To 1 Watchman 20 0 0
+ To Hurdles &c. 5 0 0
+ ---------
+ 125 0 0
+ To 18 Rams at 10 pounds* 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 305 0 0
+ ---------
+ 14 8 6
+ *The price of rams will probably fall to 5 pounds
+
+ 3rd YEAR, (C.) JUNE, 1831.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 2780 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 6255lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 469 2 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 25 25 0 0
+ To 3 Ditto 20 60 0 0
+ To 2 Watchman 20 40 0 0
+ To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 195 0 0
+ To 12 Rams at 10 pounds 120 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+ ---------
+ 154 2 6
+
+ 4th YEAR, (D.) JUNE, 1832.
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 3941 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 8867lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 665 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 2 Ditto 25 50 0 0
+ To 4 Ditto 20 80 0 0
+ To 3 Watchman &c. 60 0 0
+ (one to take charge of rams)
+ To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 260 0 0
+ To 18 Rams at 10 pounds 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 440 0 0
+ ---------
+ 225 0 0
+
+ 5th YEAR, (E.) JUNE, 1833.*
+
+ INCOME.
+ By 5464 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 12,294 lbs. wool at
+ 1s. 6d. 922 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+ To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+ To 3 Ditto 25 75 0 0
+ To 5 Ditto 20 100 0 0
+ To 3 Watchman 20 60 0 0
+ To Hurdles &c. 20 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+ To 10 Rams at 10 pounds 100 0 0
+ ---------
+ 415 0 0
+ ---------
+ 507 0 0
+ ----------
+ Net profit by sales of wool in 5 years 1024 0 0
+
+ 1024 0 0 divided by 5 gives 204 8 0 for annual interest on the
+ original capital of 2814 0 0, (about 7 1/4 percent per annum)
+ in addition to the accumulation of capital itself, shown by the
+ valuation of stock.
+
+ *These accounts are a year in advance of the sheep returns, in order to
+ bring them to the time at which the wool would be sold.
+
+
+ VALUATION OF SHEEP, JUNE, 1832----(RETURN E.)
+
+ 1614 Ewes from 1 to 4 years old at 3 pounds each 4842 0 O
+ 620 Do. 4 to 7 years old 2 1240 0 0
+ 780 Female Lambs 2 1560 0 0
+ 2405 Wethers and Male Lambs 15s. 1803 0 0
+ 45 Rams (original cost, 450l.) 400 0 0
+ ----------
+ 9845 0 0
+
+
+
+Note.--About 500 pounds would be added to the Income on the fifth year,
+by the sale of wethers of 3 and 4 years old.
+
+The cost of rams ought, strictly speaking, to be added to capital, and
+not deducted from Income; but these returns were made out in their
+present form at the request of a gentleman proceeding to the Colony
+with a limited capital, and who wished to know how much he might safely
+invest in sheep.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. IV.
+
+LIST OF GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS, COLLECTED IN THE DISTANT INTERIOR DURING
+THE FIRST EXPEDITION, WITH THEIR LOCALITIES AND THEIR RELATIVE
+DISTANCES FROM EACH OTHER.
+
+
+It may be necessary to observe that the height of the Cataract of the
+Macquarie River above the sea, was ascertained by barometrical
+admeasurement to be 650 feet. The country subsequently traversed is
+considerably lower. The specimens refer only to the geological
+formation of the distant interior.
+
+Schorl Rock.--Colour blueish grey, fine grained, extremely hard.
+Composed of Tourmaline and Quartz. Forms the bed of the Macquarie at
+the Cataract, 75 miles to the N.W. of Wellington Valley.
+
+Decomposed Mica Slate.--Colour white; yields to the knife; adheres
+strongly to the tongue.
+
+Decomposed Feldspar.--Colour pale rose-pink; very fine grained; easily
+scratched with the knife; adheres strongly to the tongue.
+
+Both specimens immediately succeed the Schorl rock at the Cataract, in
+large smooth-sided masses.
+
+This formation may be said to terminate the rocks connected with the
+dividing ranges, since it is the last that occurs at their western base.
+
+A little below the Cataract, the county undergoes a remarkable change,
+and becomes extremely depressed.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour dull red, with white spots, or grey
+with red spots; very hard, compact, sonorous, magnetic. [See pp. 27 and
+115.] Composition of Mount Harris, a hill called by Mr. Oxley, elevated
+about 170 feet above the level of the plains. It lies 65 miles to the
+N.N.W. of the Cataract, and is about 16 miles distant from the first of
+the marshes of the Macquarie.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour grey with red spots, similar to the
+last. Was not observed to affect the needle. Formation of Mount Foster.
+Mount Foster is more than 200 feet in height, and lies about 5 miles to
+the N.N.W. of Mount Harris. From the summit of both, Arbuthnot's range
+is visible, bearing nearly due east, distant 70 miles. [See page 28.]
+
+Quartz Rock varieties--Slaty Quartz varieties.--Composition of the
+first elevations to the Westward of the marshes of the Macquarie,
+called New Year's Range, a group of five hills. The loftiest about 200
+feet in elevation; distant about 80 miles to the N.W. of Mount Harris.
+
+Granite.--Colour red, coarse-grained. Composed of Quartz, Feldspar, and
+Mica.
+
+ Granite, Porphyritic.--Colour light red. Both occurring in the bed of
+New Year's Creek, traversing it obliquely, and are visible for a few
+hundred yards only. This granite occurs about 16 miles from the Range
+in a N. by E. direction.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of Oxley's Table Land, 500 feet above
+the level of the plains. It is broken into two hills, that appear to
+have been separated by some convulsion. [See page 81.] It bears N.W. by
+W. from New Year's Range, distant 50 miles.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of D'Urban's group. The highest
+elevation ascended during the expedition, being nearly 600 feet above
+the level of the plain in which it rises. It lies to the S.S.W. of
+Oxley's Table Land, distant 40 miles, and the rock of which it is
+composed is much harder and closer.
+
+Breccia.--Colour pale yellow, silicious cement. Composition of some
+trifling elevations to the North of New-Year's range, with which it is
+doubtful whether they are connected.
+
+Crystallized Sulphate of Lime.--Found imbedded in the alluvial soil
+forming the banks of the Darling river. Occurring in a regular vein.
+Soft, yielding to the nail; not acted on by acids.--See Plate.
+
+Breccia.--Pale ochre colour, silicious cement, extremely hard.
+Cellular, and sharp edges to the fractured pebbles. Has apparently
+undergone fusion. Occurs in the bed of the Darling in one place only.
+
+Sandstone Varieties.--Colour dull red and muddy white; appears like
+burnt bricks; light, easily frangible; adheres to the tongue; occurs in
+large masses in the bed of the Darling; probably in connection with the
+rock-salt of the neighbourhood, which, from the number of brine springs
+discovered feeding the river, must necessarily exist.
+
+Variety of the same description of rock.
+
+Jasper and Quartz.--Showing itself above the surface of a plain, from
+which D'Urban's group bore S. 40 E. distant 33 miles.
+
+It is a remarkable fact, that not a pebble or a stone was picked up
+during the progress of the expedition, on any one of the plains; and
+that after it again left Mount Harris for the Castlereagh, the only
+rock-formation discovered was a small Freestone tract near the Darling
+river. There was not a pebble of any kind either in the bed of the
+Castlereagh, or in the creeks falling into it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. V.
+
+OFFICIAL REPORTS TO THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 23RD JANUARY, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor has been pleased to order, that the
+following communication, dated the 25th of December last, from Captain
+Sturt, of the 39th Regiment, who is employed in an exploring expedition
+into the interior of the country, be published for general information.
+
+By his Excellency's Command,
+ ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN MARSHES, 25TH DECEMBER, 1828.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to forward, for the Governor's perusal, a
+copy of my journal up to the date of my arrival at Mount Harris. I
+should not have directed the messenger to return so soon, had I not
+subsequently advanced to Mount Foster, and surveyed the country from
+that eminence. I could distinctly see Arbuthnot's Range to the
+eastward. From that point the horizon appeared to me unbroken, but the
+country to the northward and westward seemed to favour an attempt to
+penetrate into it. I did not observe any sheet of water, and the course
+of the Macquarie was lost in the woodlands below.
+
+Mr. Hume ascended the hill at sun-rise, and thought he could see
+mountains to the north east, but at such a distance as to make it quite
+a matter of uncertainty. Agreeing, however, in the prudence of an
+immediate descent, we left our encampment on the morning of the 23rd,
+under Mount Foster, to which we had removed from Mount Harris, and
+pursued a north-north-west course to the spot on which we rest at
+present. We passed some fine meadow land near the river, and were
+obliged to keep wide of it in consequence of fissures in the ground.
+Traversing a large and blasted plain, on which the sun's rays fell with
+intense heat, and on which there was but little vegetation, we skirted
+the first great morass, and made the river immediately beyond it. It is
+of very considerable extent, the channel of the river passing through
+it. We are encompassed on every side by high reeds, which exist in the
+woods as well as in the plains. Mr. Hume and myself rode forward
+yesterday through the second morass, and made the river on slightly
+elevated ground, at a distance of about five miles; the country beyond
+appeared to favour our object, and we, to-morrow, proceed with the
+party to the north-west. The river seems to bend to the north-east; but
+in this level country it is impossible to speak with certainty, or to
+give any decided opinion of the nature of it, beyond the flats on which
+we are travelling. The reeds to the north-east and northward extend
+over a circumference of fifty miles; but if Mr. Hume really saw
+mountains or rising ground in the former point, the apparent course of
+the Macquarie is at once accounted for. The country, however, seems to
+dip to the north, though generally speaking it is level, and I am
+inclined to think that the state of the atmosphere caused a deception
+in this appearance.
+
+I regret to add, that the effects of the sun on the plain over which we
+passed on the 23rd produced a return of inflammation in the eyes of the
+men, I have named in my journals, and caused the same in the eyes of
+several others of my party. I halted, therefore, to expedite their
+recovery. They are doing well now, and we can proceed in the cool of
+the morning without any fear of their receiving injury by it. One of
+the men, who were to return to Wellington Valley, was attacked slightly
+with dysentery, but the medicines I gave him carried it off in the
+course of a day or two. I have taken every precaution with regard to
+the health of the men, in preparing them for the country into which
+they are going; and I have to request that you will inform the governor
+that the conduct of the whole party merits my approbation, and that I
+have no fault to find. The men from Sydney are not so sharp as those
+from Wellington Valley, but are equally well disposed. The animals,
+both horses and bullocks, are in good order, and I find the two
+soldiers of infinite service to me. The boat has received some damage
+from exposure to intense heat, but is otherwise uninjured. We still
+retain the carriage and have every prospect of dragging it on with us.
+
+His Excellency, having been good enough to order a fresh supply of
+provisions to Wellington Valley, I have to beg they may be forwarded to
+Mount Harris, and that the person in charge thereof be instructed to
+remain at that station for one month. We shall, during the interval,
+have examined the country to the north-west; and, in case we are forced
+back, shall require a supply to enable us to proceed to the northward,
+in furtherance of the views I have already had the honor to submit for
+the Governor's approval.
+
+I have the honor to be, Sir,
+ Your most obedient and humble Servant,
+ CHARLES STURT,
+ Captain, 39th Regt.
+
+
+THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER.
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 6TH APRIL, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor is pleased to direct that the following
+interesting Report which has been received from Captain Sturt, 39th
+Regiment, who has been employed for some months past, (as will be seen
+on reference to the Government Order, No. 4, published with Captain
+Sturt's First Report in the Sydney Gazette, of the 24th of January
+last) in exploring the interior, be communicated for the information of
+the public.
+
+It appears that the river Macquarie ceases to exist near the spot where
+the expedition under the late Mr. Oxley terminated, which, from the
+state of country at the time, being then flooded, could not be
+ascertained; and that another river of no inconsiderable magnitude, fed
+by salt springs, was discovered by Captain Sturt on the 2nd February
+last, about 100 miles to the westward of the Macquarie, running to the
+southward and westward.
+
+By His Excellency's Command,
+ ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 4TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His
+Excellency the Governor, that I returned to this eminence on Monday,
+the 23rd ult. having been driven from the interior, in consequence of
+the extreme drought which prevails there.
+
+I am to state, in reference to my former communication, that agreeably
+to what I then reported, I moved, on the 26th December last, lower down
+the plains of the Macquarie, but encountered a barrier of reeds, formed
+by the marshes of that river, through which we in vain endeavoured to
+force our way. I was in consequence obliged to make the nearest part of
+the river to my left, and to take such measures as the nature of my
+situation required. Here, for the first time, I set the boat afloat,
+deeming it essential to trace the river, as I could not move upon its
+banks, and wishing also to ascertain where it again issued from the
+marshes, I requested Mr. Hume to proceed northerly, with a view to
+skirt them, and to descend westerly, wherever he saw an open space. He
+was fortunate enough to strike upon the channel about twelve miles
+north of our position, but was obstructed in his further progress by
+another marsh, in consequence of which he returned to the camp the next
+day; in the mean time, I had taken the boat, and proceeded down the
+Macquarie, my way being at first considerably obstructed by fallen
+timber: clearing this obstacle, however, I got into a deeper channel,
+with fine broad reaches, and a depth of from twelve to fifteen feet
+water. I had a short time previously cleared all woods and trees, and
+was now in the midst of reeds of great height. After proceeding onwards
+for about eight miles from the place whence I started, my course was
+suddenly and unexpectedly checked; I saw reeds before me, and expected
+I was about to turn an angle of the river, but I found that I had got
+to the end of the channel, and that the river itself had ceased to
+exist. Confounded at such a termination to a stream, whose appearance
+justified the expectation that it would have led me through the heart
+of the marsh to join Mr. Hume, I commenced a most minute examination of
+the place, and discovered two creeks, if they deserve the name,
+branching, the one to the north-west, and the other to the north-east;
+after tracing the former a short distance, I reached its termination,
+and in order to assure myself that such was the case, I walked round
+the head of it by pushing through the reeds; it being then too dark to
+continue where I was, I returned to a place on the river, at which I
+had rested during a shower, and slept there. In the morning I again
+went to the spot to examine the north-eastern branch, when I was
+equally disappointed. I then examined the space between the two creeks,
+opposite to the main channel of the river, and where the bank receives
+the force of the current. Here I saw water in the reeds, but it was
+scarcely ankle deep, and was running off to the north-west quicker than
+the waters of the river, which had almost an imperceptible motion, I
+was therefore at once convinced that it was not permanent, but had
+lodged there in the night, during which much rain had fallen. I next
+pushed my way through the reeds into the marsh, and at length clearly
+perceived that the waters which were perfectly sweet, after running
+several courses, flowed off to the north, towards which point there was
+an apparent declination or dip. Finding it impossible to proceed
+further, I regained the boat, and thence returned to the camp, under a
+conviction that I had reached the very spot, at which Mr. Oxley lost
+the channel of the river in 1818.
+
+The next day I moved to the place where Mr. Hume had struck upon the
+channel of the river, but was again doubtful in what direction to
+proceed.
+
+The marsh, at the commencement of which we now found ourselves, being
+the third from Mount Foster, but the second great one, seemed to extend
+beyond us to the north for many miles, but varying in breadth. In the
+evening I went in the boat up the channel, and found it at first, deep
+and sullen, as that of the river above. It soon however, narrowed, and
+the weeds formed over its surface, so that I abandoned the boat and
+walked along a path up it. I had not gone far when the channel divided;
+two smaller channels came, the one from the southern, and the other
+from the western parts of the marsh into it. There was an evident
+declination where they were, and it was at their junction the river
+again rallied and formed. On my return to the camp, Mr. Hume and I went
+down the river, but found that about a mile it lost itself, and spread
+its waters ever the extensive marsh before it.
+
+In this extremity, I knew not what movement to make, as Mr. Hume had
+been checked in his progress north. I therefore determined to ascertain
+the nature of the country to the eastward and to the westward, that I
+might move accordingly; I proposed to Mr. Hume, to take a week's
+provisions, with two attendants, and go to the north-east, in order
+again to turn the marsh, but with the expectation that the angle formed
+by the junction of the Castlereagh with the Macquarie would arrest its
+progress, as the last was fast approaching the former.
+
+I myself determined to cross the river, and to skirt the marshes on the
+left, and in case they turned off to the north east, as they appeared
+to do, it was my intention to pursue a N.W. course into the interior,
+to learn the nature of it. With these views I left the camp on the 31st
+of December, and did not return until the 5th of January. Having found
+early in my journey, from the change of soil and of timber, that I was
+leaving the neighbourhood of the Macquarie, I followed a N.W. course,
+from a more northerly one, and struck at once across the country, under
+an impression that Mr. Hume would have made the river again long before
+my return. I found, after travelling between twenty and thirty miles,
+the country began to rise; and at the end of my journey, I made a hill
+of considerable elevation, from the summit of which I had a view of
+other high lands; one to the S.W. being a very fine mountain. As I had
+not found any water excepting in two creeks, which I had left far
+behind me, and as I had got on a soil which appeared incapable of
+holding it, I made this the termination of my journey, having exceeded
+100 miles in distance from the camp, on my return to which I found Mr.
+Hume still absent. When he joined, he stated to me, that not making the
+Castlereagh as soon as he expected, he had bent down westerly for the
+Macquarie, and that he ended his journey at some gentle hills he had
+made; so that it appeared we must either have crossed each other's line
+of route, or that they were very near, and that want of length must
+alone have prevented them from crossing; but as such all assumption led
+to the conclusion that the Macquarie no longer existed, I determined to
+pursue a middle course round the swamps, to ascertain the point; as in
+case the river had ended, a westerly course was the one which my
+instructions directed me to pursue.
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the marshes we were obliged to sink
+wells for water, and it was thus early that we began to feel the want
+of a regular supply.
+
+Having made a creek about four miles from our position by cutting
+through the reeds where there was a narrow space, we pursued a westerly
+course over a plain, having every appearance of frequent inundation,
+and for four or five days held nearly the same direction; in the course
+of which we crossed both our tracks on the excursions we had made,
+which had intersected each other in a dense oak brush; thus renewing
+the few doubts, or rather the doubt we had as to the fate of the
+Macquarie, whose course we had been sent to trace. Indeed, had I not
+felt convinced that that river had ceased, I should not have moved
+westward without further examination, but we had passed through a very
+narrow part of the marshes, and round the greater part of them, and had
+not seen any hollow that could by any possible exaggeration be
+construed into or mistaken for the channel of a river.
+
+It appears, then, that the Macquarie, flowing as it does for so many
+miles, through a bed, and not a declining country, and having little
+water in it, except in times of flood, loses its impetus long ere it
+reaches the formidable barrier that opposes its progress northwards;
+the soil in which the reeds grow being a stiff clay. Its waters
+consequently spread, until a slight declivity giving them fresh
+impulse, they form a channel again, but soon gaining a level, they lose
+their force and their motion together, and spread not only over the
+second great marsh, but over a vast extent of the surrounding country,
+the breadth of ground thus subject to inundation being more than twenty
+miles, and its length considerably greater; around this space there is
+a gentle rise which confines the waters, while small hollows in various
+directions lead them out of the marshes over the adjacent plains, on
+which they eventually subside. On my return from the interior, I
+examined those parts round which I had not been, with particular
+attention, partly in company with Mr. Hume, and this statement was
+confirmed by what we saw. Thus, at a distance of about twenty-five
+miles from Mount Foster to the N.N.W. the river Macquarie ceases to
+exist, in any shape as a river, and at a distance of between fifty and
+sixty, the marshes terminate, though the country subject to inundation
+from the river is of a very considerable extent, as shown by the
+withered bulrushes, wet reeds, and shells, that are scattered over its
+surface.
+
+Having executed the first part of the instructions with which I had
+been honoured, I determined on pursuing a west, or north-west course
+into the interior, to ascertain the nature of it, in fulfilment of the
+second, but in doing this I was obliged to follow creeks, and even on
+their banks had to carry a supply of water, so uncertain was it that we
+should meet with any at the termination of our day's journey, and that
+what we did find would be fit to drink. Our course led us over plains
+immediately bordering the lower lands of the Macquarie, alternating
+with swamp oak, acacia pendula, pine, box, eucalyptus, and many other
+trees of minor growth, the soil being inclined to a red loam, while the
+plains were generally covered with a black scrub, though in some places
+they had good grass upon them. We crossed two creeks before we made the
+hills Mr. Hume had ascended, and which he called New Year's Range.
+Around these hills the country appeared better--they are gentle,
+picturesque elevations, and are for the most part, covered with
+verdure, and have, I fancy, a whinstone base, the rock of which they
+are composed being of various substances. I place New Year's Range in
+lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes, long. 146 degrees 3 minutes 30 seconds. Our
+course next lying north-west along a creek, led us to within twenty
+miles of the hill that had terminated my excursion, and as I hoped that
+a more leisurely survey of the country from its summit would open
+something favourable to our view, I struck over for it, though
+eventually obliged to return. From it Mr. Hume and I rode to the S.W.
+mountain, a distance of about forty miles, without crossing a brook or
+a creek, our way leading through dense acacia brushes, and for the most
+part over a desert. We saw high lands from this mountain, which exceeds
+1,300 feet in elevation, and is of sandstone formation, and thickly
+covered with stunted pine, in eight different points--the bearings of
+which are as follows:--
+
+ Oxley's Table Land, N. 40 E., distant 40 miles.
+ Kengall Hill, due E. very distant.
+ Conical Hill, S. 60 E.
+ Highland, S.E. distance 30 miles.
+ Highland, S. 30 E. distance 25 miles.
+ Long Range, S. 16 E. distance 60 miles.
+ Long Range, S. 72 W. distance 60 miles.
+ Distant Range, S. 25 W. supposed.
+
+It was in vain, however, that we looked for water. The country to the
+north-west, was low and unbroken, and alternated with wood and plain.
+
+The country from New Year's Range to the hill I had made, and which I
+called Oxley's Table Land, had been very fair, with good soil in many
+places, but with a total want of water, except in the creeks, wherein
+the supply was both bad and uncertain; on our second day's journey from
+the former, we came to the creek on which we were moving, where it had
+a coarse granite bottom. The country around it improved very much in
+appearance, and there was abundance of good grass on the surface of it,
+in spite of the drought. On the right of this creek, a large plain
+stretches parallel to it for many miles, varying in quality of soil.
+Near Oxley's Table Land, we passed over open forest, the prevailing
+timber of which was box. I have placed Oxley's Table Land in latitude
+29 degrees 57 minutes 30 seconds, longitude 145 degrees 43 minutes 30
+seconds.
+
+Finding it impracticable to move westward from the hill I again
+descended on the creek, whose general course was to the north-west, in
+which direction we at length struck upon a river whose appearance
+raised our most sanguine expectations. It flowed round an angle from
+the north-east to the north-west, and extended in longitude five
+reaches as far as we could see. At that place it was about sixty yards
+broad, with banks of from thirty to forty feet high, and it had
+numerous wild fowl and many pelicans on its bosom, and seemed to be
+full of fish, while the paths of the natives on both sides, like
+well-trodden roads, showed how numerous they were about it. On tasting
+its waters, however, we found them perfectly salt, and useless to us,
+and as our animals had been without water the night before, this
+circumstance distressed us much; our first day's journey led us past
+between sixty and seventy huts in one place, and on our second we fell
+in with a numerous tribe of natives, having previously seen some
+between two creeks before we made New-Year's Range. At some places the
+water proved less salt than at others; our animals drank of it
+sparingly: we found two small fresh-water holes, which served us as we
+passed. After tracing the river for a considerable distance, we came on
+brine springs in the bed of it, the banks having been encrusted with
+salt from the first; and as the difficulty of getting fresh water was
+so great, I here foresaw an end to our wanderings. And as I was
+resolved not to involve my party in greater distress, I halted it, on
+overtaking the animals, and the next morning turned back to the nearest
+fresh-water, at a distance of eighteen miles from us. Unwilling,
+however, to give up our pursuit, Mr. Hume and I started with two men on
+horseback, to trace the river as far as we could, and to ascertain what
+course it took; in the hopes also that we should fall on some creek, or
+get a more certain supply of drinkable water. We went a distance to
+which the bullocks could not have been brought, and then got on a red
+sandy soil, which at once destroyed our hopes; and on tasting the river
+water we found it salter than ever, our supply being diminished to two
+pints. Our animals being weak and purged, and having proceeded at least
+forty miles from the camp, I thought it best to yield to circumstances,
+and to return, though I trust I shall be believed when I add, it was
+with extreme reluctance I did so; and had I followed the wishes of my
+party, should still have continued onwards. Making a part of the river
+where we had slept, we stayed to refresh, and in consequence of the
+heat of the weather were obliged to drink the water in it, which made
+us sick. While here, a tribe of blacks came to us and behaved
+remarkably well. At night we slept on a plain without water, and the
+next day we regained the camp, which had been visited by the natives
+during our absence.
+
+We found the river held a south-west course, and appeared to be making
+for the central space between a high land, which I called Dunlop's
+Range, at Mr. Hume's request, and a lofty range to the westward. It
+still continued its important appearance, having gained in breadth and
+in the height of its banks, while there were hundreds of pelicans and
+wild-fowl on it. Flowing through a level country with such a channel,
+it may be presumed that this river ultimately assumes either a greater
+character, or that it adds considerably to the importance of some other
+stream. It had a clay bottom, generally speaking, in many places
+semi-indurated and fast forming into sandstone, while there was
+crystallized sulphate of lime running in veins through the soil which
+composed the bank.
+
+This river differs from most in the colony, in having a belt of barren
+land of from a quarter of a mile to two miles in breadth in its
+immediate neighbourhood, and which is subject to overflow. This belt
+runs to the inland plains, where a small elevation checks the further
+progress of the flood. There is magnificent blue gum on both sides the
+river, but the right bank is evidently the most fertile, and I am
+mistaken greatly if there is not a beautiful country north of it.
+
+Of the country over which we have passed, it is impossible for me to
+have formed a correct opinion under its present melancholy
+circumstances. It has borne the appearance of barrenness, where in even
+moderate rain, it might have shown very differently, though no doubt we
+passed over much of both good and bad land; our animals on the whole,
+have thrived on the food they have had, which would argue favourably
+for the herbage. Generally speaking, I fear the timber is bad--the
+rough-gum may be used for knees, and such purposes, and we may have
+seen wood for the wheelwright and cabinet-maker, specimens of which I
+have procured, but none for general or household purposes.
+
+The creeks we have traced are different in character from those in the
+settled districts, inasmuch as that, like the river, they have a belt
+of barren land near then and but little grass--they have all of them
+been numerously frequented by the natives, as appeared from the number
+of muscle-shells on their banks, but now having scarcely any water in
+them, the fish having either been taken, or are dead, and the tribes
+gone elsewhere for food, while the badness of the river water has
+introduced a cutaneous disease among the natives of that district,
+which is fast carrying them off. Our intercourse with these people was
+incessant from the time we first met them, and on all occasions they
+behaved remarkably well, nor could we have seen less than than two
+hundred and fifty of them.
+
+Our return is to be attributable to the want of water alone, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the effects of the drought on animal as
+well as vegetable nature. The natives are wandering in the desert, and
+it is melancholy to reflect on the necessity which obliges them to
+drink the stinking and loathsome water they do--birds sit gasping in
+the trees and are quite thin--the wild dog prowls about in the day-time
+unable to avoid us, and is as lean as he can be in a living state,
+while minor vegetation is dead, and the very trees are drooping. I have
+noticed all these things in my Journal I shall have the honour of
+submitting through you, for the Governor's perusal and information, on
+my return. Finally, I fear our expedition will not pave the way to any
+ultimate benefit; although it has been the means by which two very
+doubtful questions,--the course of the Macquarie, and the nature of the
+interior, have been solved; for it is beyond doubt, that the interior
+for 250 miles beyond its former known limits to the W.N.W., so far from
+being a shoal sea, has been ascertained not only to have considerable
+elevations upon it, but is in itself a table land to all intents and
+purposes, and has scarcely water on its surface to support its
+inhabitants.
+
+I beg you will inform His Excellency the Governor, that I have on all
+occasions received the most ready and valuable assistance from Mr.
+Hume. His intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs of the
+natives, enabled him to enter into intercourse with them, and chiefly
+contributed to the peaceable manner in which we have journeyed, while
+his previous experience put it in his power to be of real use to me. I
+cannot but say he has done an essential service to future travellers,
+and to the colony at large, by his conduct on all occasions since he
+has been with me; nor should I be doing him justice, if I did not avail
+myself of the first opportunity of laying my sentiments before the
+Governor, through you. I am happy to add that every individual of the
+party deserves my warmest approbation, and that they have, one and all,
+borne their distresses, trifling certainly, but still unusual, with
+cheerfulness, and that they have at all times been attentive to their
+duty, and obedient to their orders. The whole are in good health, and
+are eager again to start.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+ Sir
+ Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+ CHARLES STURT,
+ Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HONORABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 5TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--It having appeared to me, that after discovering such a river as
+the one I have described in my letter of yesterday, His Excellency the
+Governor would approve of my endeavouring to regain it. There being a
+probability that it ultimately joins the Southern Waters, I thought of
+turning my steps to the southward and westward; and with a view to
+learn the nature of the country, I despatched Mr. Hume in that
+direction on Saturday last. He returned in three days, after having
+gone above forty miles from the river, and states, that he crossed two
+creeks, the one about twenty-five miles, the other about thirty-two
+distance, evidently the heads of the creeks we passed westward of the
+marshes of the Macquarie. He adds, that, to the second creek the land
+was excellent, but that on crossing it, he got onto red soil, on which
+he travelled some miles further, until he saw a range of high land,
+bearing from him S.W.. by W., when, knowing from the nature of the
+country around him, and from the experience of our late journey, that
+he could not hope to find a regular supply of water in advance, and
+that in the present dry state of the low lands, a movement such as I
+had contemplated would be impracticable, he returned home. I do myself
+the honour, therefore, to report to you, for His Excellency's
+information, that I shall proceed on Saturday next in a N.E. direction
+towards the Castlereagh, intending to trace that river down, and
+afterwards to penetrate as far to the northward and westward as
+possible; it being my wish to get into the country north of the more
+distant river, where I have expectations that there is an extensive and
+valuable track of country, but that in failure of the above, I shall
+examine the low country behind our N.W. boundaries, if I can find a
+sufficiency of water to enable me to do so.
+
+I am to inform you that in this neighbourhood the Macquarie has ceased
+to flow, and that it is now a chain of shallow ponds. The water is fast
+diminishing in it, and unless rain descends in a few weeks it will be
+perfectly dry.
+
+I am also to report, that the natives attempted the camp with the
+supplies before my arrival at Mount Harris, but that on the soldier
+with the party firing a shot, after they had thrown a stone and other
+of the weapons, they fled. It was in consequence of their fires, which
+I saw at a distance of forty miles, and which they never make on so
+extensive a scale, except as signals when they want to collect, and are
+inclined to be mischievous, that I made forced marches up, and I am led
+to believe my arrival was very opportune. The natives have visited us
+since, and I do not think they will now attempt to molest either party
+when we separate.
+
+I have the honour to be,
+ Sir,
+ Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+ CHARLES STURT,
+ Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+
+END OF VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia, Volume I, by Charles Sturt
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+#1 in our series by Charles Sturt
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+Title: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Volume I
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+Author: Charles Sturt
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+Release Date: August, 2003 [Etext# 4328]
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+
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA DURING THE YEARS
+1828,1829,1830,1831 WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOIL, CLIMATE AND GENERAL
+RESOURCES OF THE COLONY OF NEW SOUTH WALES.
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+
+"For though most men are contented only to see a river as it runs by
+them, and talk of the changes in it as they happen; when it is troubled,
+or when clear; when it drowns the country in a flood, or forsakes it in a
+drought: yet he that would know the nature of the water, and the causes of
+those accidents (so as to guess at their continuance or return), must find
+out its source, and observe with what strength it rises, what length it
+runs, and how many small streams fall in, and feed it to such a height,
+as make it either delightful or terrible to the eye, and useful or
+dangerous to the country about it."...SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S NETHERLANDS.
+
+
+
+TO THE RIGHT HON.
+THE EARL OF RIPON,
+VISCOUNT GODERICH,
+Lord Privy Seal
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+
+
+MY LORD,
+
+The completion of this Work affords me the opportunity I have long desired
+of thanking your Lordship thus publicly, for the kindness with which you
+acceded to my request to be permitted to dedicate it to you.
+
+The encouragement your Lordship was pleased to give me has served to
+stimulate me in the prosecution of a task, which would, I fear, have been
+too great for me to have accomplished in my present condition, under any
+ordinary views of ambition. Indeed, labouring as I have been for many
+months past, under an almost total deprivation of sight, (the effect of
+exposure and anxiety of mind in the prosecution of geographical
+researches,) I owe it to the casual assistance of some of my friends, that
+I am at length enabled to lay these results before your Lordship and the
+public.
+
+While I feel a painful conviction that many errors must necessarily
+pervade a work produced under such unfavourable circumstances, it affords
+me no small consolation to reflect that Your Lordship has been aware of my
+situation, and will be disposed to grant me every reasonable indulgence.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+With the highest respect,
+My Lord,
+Your Lordship's
+Very obedient and humble servant,
+
+CHARLES STURT
+London June, 1833.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE MACQUARIE RIVER, AND INTO THE WESTERN INTERIOR
+IN 1828 AND 1829.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach the
+Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Concluding Remarks--Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior
+of Australia--Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men
+requisite,--and of cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--
+Treatment of the natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second
+expedition.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+No. I. Letter of Instructions
+No. II. List of Stores supplied for the Expedition
+No. III. Sheep-farming Returns
+No. IV. List of Geological Specimens
+No. V. Official Report to the Colonial Government, (Jan. 1829.)
+No. VI. Ditto (April 1829.)
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE FIRST VOLUME
+(Not included in this etext)
+
+Native Burial Place near Budda
+Vice Admiral Arthur Phillip
+Cataract of the Macquarie
+A Selenite
+Chrystallized Sulphate of Lime
+
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
+
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+PURPOSE OF THIS PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+When I first determined on committing to the press a detailed account of
+the two expeditions, which I conducted into the interior of the Australian
+continent, pursuant to the orders of Lieutenant General Darling, the late
+Governor of the Colony of New South Wales, it was simply with a view of
+laying their results before the geographical world, and of correcting the
+opinions that prevailed with regard to the unexplored country to the
+westward of the Blue Mountains. I did not feel myself equal either to the
+task or the responsibility of venturing any remarks on the Colony of New
+South Wales itself. I had had little time for inquiry, amidst the various
+duties that fell to my lot in the ordinary routine of the service to which
+I belonged, when unemployed by the Colonial Government in the prosecution
+of inland discoveries. My observations had been in a great measure
+confined to those points which curiosity, or a desire of personal
+information, had prompted me to investigate. I did not, therefore, venture
+to flatter myself that I had collected materials of sufficient importance
+on general topics to enable me to write for the information of others.
+Since my return to England, however, I have been strenuously urged to give
+a short description of the colony before entering upon my personal
+narrative; and I have conversed with so many individuals whose ideas of
+Australia are totally at variance with its actual state, that I am
+encouraged to indulge the hope that my observations, desultory as they
+are, may be of some interest to the public. I am strengthened in this hope
+by the consideration that some kind friends have enabled me to add much
+valuable matter to that which I had myself collected. It is not my
+intention, however, to enter at any length on the commercial or
+agricultural interests of New South Wales. It may be necessary for me to
+touch lightly on those important subjects, but it is my wish to connect
+this preliminary chapter, as much as possible with the subjects treated of
+in the body of the work, and chiefly to notice the physical structure, the
+soil, climate, and productions of the colony, in order to convey to the
+reader general information on these points, before I lead him into the
+remote interior.
+
+NAME OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that the name "Australia," has of late years
+been affixed to that extensive tract of land which Great Britain possesses
+in the Southern Seas, and which, having been a discovery of the early
+Dutch navigators, was previously termed "New Holland." The change of name
+was, I believe, introduced by the celebrated French geographer, Malte
+Brun, who, in his division of the globe, gave the appellation of
+Austral Asia and Polynesia to the new discovered lands in the southern
+ocean; in which division he meant to include the numerous insular groups
+scattered over the Pacific.
+
+IMPRESSIONS OF ITS EARLY VISITORS.
+
+Australia is properly speaking an island, but it is so much larger than
+every other island on the face of the globe, that it is classed as a
+continent in order to convey to the mind a just idea of its magnitude.
+Stretching from the 115th to the 153rd degree of east longitude, and from
+the 10th to the 37th of south latitude, it averages 2700 miles in length
+by 1800 in breadth; and balanced, as it were, upon the tropic of that
+hemisphere in which it is situated, it receives the fiery heat of the
+equator at one extremity, while it enjoys the refreshing coolness of the
+temperate zone at the other. On a first view we should be led to expect
+that this extensive tract of land possessed more than ordinary advantages;
+that its rivers would be in proportion to its size; and that it would
+abound in the richest productions of the inter-tropical and temperate
+regions. Such, indeed, was the impression of those who first touched upon
+its southern shores, but who remained no longer than to be dazzled by the
+splendour and variety of its botanical productions, and to enjoy for a
+few days the delightful mildness of its climate. But the very spot which
+had appeared to Captain Cook and Sir Joseph Banks an earthly paradise, was
+abandoned by the early settlers as unfit for occupation; nor has the
+country generally been fount to realize the sanguine expectations of those
+distinguished individuals, so far as it has hitherto been explored.
+
+CHARACTER OF AUSTRALIAN RIVERS.
+
+Rivers which have the widest mouths or the most practicable entrances,
+are, in Europe or America, usually of impetuous current, or else contain
+such a body of water as to bear down all opposition to their free course;
+whilst on the other hand, rivers whose force is expended ere they reach
+the sea, have almost invariably a bar at their embouchure, or where they
+mingle their waters with those of the ocean. This last feature
+unfortunately appears to characterize all rivers of Australia, or such of
+them at least as are sufficiently known to us. Falling rapidly from the
+mountains in which they originate into a level and extremely depressed
+country; having weak and inconsiderable sources, and being almost wholly
+unaided by tributaries of any kind; they naturally fail before they reach
+the coast, and exhaust themselves in marshes or lakes or reach it so
+weakened as to be unable to preserve clear or navigable months, or to
+remove the sand banks that the tides throw up before them. On the other
+hand the productions of this singular region seem to be peculiar to it,
+and unlike those of any other part of the world; nor have any indigenous
+fruits of any value as yet been found either in its forests or on its
+plains.
+
+He who has never looked on any other than the well-cultured fields of
+England, can have little idea of a country that Nature has covered with an
+interminable forest. Still less can he estimate the feelings with which
+the adventurer approaches a shore that has never (or perhaps only lately)
+been trodden by civilized man.
+
+FIRST VIEW OF PORT JACKSON.
+
+It was with feelings peculiar to the occasion, that I gazed for the first
+time on the bold cliffs at the entrance of Port Jackson, as our vessel
+neared them, and speculated on the probable character of the landscape
+they hid; and I am free to confess, that I did not anticipate anything
+equal to the scene which presented itself both to my sight and my
+judgment, as we sailed up the noble and extensive basin we had entered,
+towards the seat of government. A single glance was sufficient to tell me
+that the hills upon the southern shore of the port, the outlines of which
+were broken by houses and spires, must once have been covered with the
+same dense and gloomy wood which abounded every where else. The contrast
+was indeed very great--the improvement singularly striking. The labour and
+patience required, and the difficulties which the first settlers
+encountered effecting these improvements, must have been incalculable. But
+their success has been complete: it is the very triumph of human skill and
+industry over Nature herself. The cornfield and the orchard have
+supplanted the wild grass and the brush; a flourishing town stands over
+the ruins of the forest; the lowing of herds has succeeded the wild whoop
+of the savage; and the stillness of that once desert shore is now broken
+by the sound of the bugle and the busy hum of commerce.
+
+EXTENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES AND DIVISIONS OF THE COLONY.
+
+The Colony of New South Wales is situated upon the eastern coast of
+Australia; and the districts within which land has been granted to
+settlers, extends from the 36th parallel of latitude to the 32nd, that is
+say, from the Moroyo River to the south of Sydney on the one hand, and to
+the Manning River on the other, including Wellington Valley within its
+limits to the westward. Thus it will appear that the boundaries of the
+located parts of the colony have been considerably enlarged, and some fine
+districts of country included within them. In consequence of its extent
+and increasing population, it has been found convenient to divide it into
+counties, parishes, and townships; and indeed, every measure of the
+Colonial Government of late years, has had for its object to assimilate
+its internal arrangements as nearly as possible, to those of the mother
+country. Whether we are to attribute the present flourishing state of the
+colony to the beneficial influence of that system of government which has
+been exercised over it for the last seven years it is not for me to say.
+That the prosperity of a country depends, however, in a great measure,
+on the wisdom of its legislature, is as undoubted, as that within the
+period I have mentioned the colony of N. S. Wales has risen
+unprecedentedly in importance and in wealth, and has advanced to a state
+of improvement at which it could not have arrived had its energies been
+cramped or its interests neglected.
+
+ITS ADVANCES IN PROSPERITY.
+
+There is a period in the history of every country, during which it will
+appear to have been more prosperous than at any other. I allude not to the
+period of great martial achievements, should any such adorn its pages, but
+to that in which the enterprise of its merchants was roused into action,
+and when all classes of its community seem to have put forth their
+strength towards the attainment of wealth and power.
+
+ERRONEOUS IMPRESSIONS.
+
+In this eventful period the colony of New South Wales is already far
+advanced. The conduct of its merchants is marked by the boldest
+speculations and the most gigantic projects. Their storehouses are built
+on the most magnificent scale, and with the best and most substantial
+materials. Few persons in England have even a remote idea of its present
+flourishing condition, or of the improvements that are daily taking place
+both in its commerce and in its agriculture. I am aware that many object
+to it as a place of residence, and I can easily enter into their feelings
+from the recollection of what my own were before I visited it. I cannot
+but remark, however, that I found my prejudices had arisen from a natural
+objection to the character of a part of its population; from the
+circumstance of its being a penal colony, and from my total ignorance of
+its actual state, and not from any substantial or permanent cause. On the
+contrary I speedily became convinced of the exaggerated nature of the
+reports I had heard in England, on some of the points just adverted to;
+nor did any thing fall under my observation during a residence in it of
+more than six years to justify the opinion I had been previously led to
+entertain of it. I embarked for New South Wales, with strong prejudices
+against it: I left it with strong feelings in its favour, and with a deep
+feeling of interest in its prosperity. It is a pleasing task to me,
+therefore, to write of it thus, and to have it in my power to contribute
+to the removal of any erroneous impressions with regard to its condition
+at the present moment.
+
+COMMERCIAL IMPORTANCE OF SYDNEY.
+
+I have already remarked, that I was not prepared for the scene that met my
+view when I first saw Sydney. The fact was, I had not pictured to myself;
+nor conceived from any thing that I had ever read or heard in England,
+that so extensive a town could have been reared in that remote region, in
+so brief a period as that which had elapsed since its foundation. It is
+not, however, a distant or cursory glance that will give the observer a
+just idea of the mercanthe importance of this busy capital. In order to
+form an accurate estimate of it, he should take a boat and proceed from
+Sydney Cove to Darling Harbour. He would then be satisfied, that it is not
+upon the first alone that Australian commerce has raised its storehouse
+and wharfs, but that the whole extent of the eastern shore of the last
+more capacious basin, is equally crowded with warehouses, stores,
+dockyards, mills, and wharfs, the appearance and solidity of which would
+do credit even to Liverpool. Where, thirty years ago, the people flocked
+to the beach to hail an arrival, it is not now unusual to see from thirty
+to forty vessels riding at anchor at one time, collected there from every
+quarter of the globe. In 1832, one hundred and fifty vessels entered the
+harbour of Port Jackson, from foreign parts, the amount of their tonnage
+being 31,259 tons.
+
+The increasing importance of Sydney must in some measure be attributed to
+the flourishing condition of the colony itself, to the industry of its
+farmers, to the successful enterprise of its merchants, and to particular
+local causes. It is foreign to my purpose, however, to enter largely into
+an investigation of these important points. To do so would require more
+space than I can afford for the purpose, and might justly be considered as
+irrelevant in a work of this kind. Without attempting any lengthened
+detail, it may be considered sufficient if I endeavour merely to point out
+the principal causes of the present prosperity (and, as they may very
+probably prove) of the eventual progress of our great southern colony to
+power and independence.
+
+STAPLE OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
+
+The staple of our Australian colonies, but more particularly of New South
+Wales, the climate and the soil of which are peculiarly suited to its
+production,--is fine wool. There can be no doubt that the growth of this
+article has mainly contributed to the prosperity of the above mentioned
+colony and of Van Diemen's Land.
+
+At the close of the last century, wool was imported into England from
+Spain and Germany only, and but a few years previously from Spain alone.
+Indeed, long after its introduction from the latter country, German wool,
+obtained but little consideration in the London market; and in like
+manner, it may be presumed that many years will not have elapsed
+before the increased importation of wool from our own possessions in
+the southern hemisphere, will render us, in respect to this commodity,
+independent of every other part of the world. The great improvements
+in modern navigation are such, that the expense of sending the fleece
+to market from New South Wales is less than from any part of Europe.
+The charges for instance on Spanish and German wool, are from
+fourpence to fourpence three farthings per pound; whereas the entire
+charge, after shipment from New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land, does
+not exceed threepence three farthings,--and in this the dock and landing
+charges, freight, insurance, brokerage, and commission, are included.
+
+GROWTH OF FINE WOOL. MR. M'ARTHUR'S EXERTIONS.
+
+As some particulars respecting the introduction of this source of national
+wealth into Australia may prove interesting to the public, I have put
+together the following details of it, upon the authenticity of which they
+may rely. The person who foresaw the advantage to be derived from the
+growth of fine wool in New South Wales, and who commenced the culture of
+it in that colony, was Mr. John M'Arthur. So far back, I believe, as the
+year 1793, not long after the establishment of the first settlement at
+Sydney, this gentleman commenced sheep-farming, and about two years
+afterwards he obtained a ram and two ewes from Captain Kent, of the royal
+navy, who had brought them, with some other stock for the supply of the
+settlement, from the Cape of Good Hope, to which place a flock of these
+sheep had been originally sent by the Dutch government. Sensible of the
+importance of the acquisition, Mr. M'Arthur began to cross his
+coarse-fleeced sheep with Merino blood; and, proceeding upon a system, he
+effected a considerable improvement in the course of a few years. So
+prolific was the mixed breed, that in ten years, a flock which originally
+consisted of not more than seventy Bengal sheep, had increased in number
+to 4,000 head, although the wethers had been killed as they became fit for
+slaughter. It appears, however, that as the sheep approached to greater
+purity of blood, their extreme fecundity diminished.
+
+TO REAR MERINO FLOCKS.
+
+In 1803, Mr. M'Arthur revisited England; and there happening at the time
+to be a committee of manufacturers in London from the clothing districts,
+he exhibited before them samples of his wool, which were so much approved,
+that the committee represented to their constituents the advantages which
+would result from the growth of fine wool, in one of the southern
+dependencies of the empire. In consequence of this a memorial was
+transmitted to His Majesty's government, and Mr. M'Arthur's plans having
+been investigated by a Privy Council, at which he was present, they were
+recommended to the government as worthy of its protection. With such
+encouragement Mr. M'Arthur purchased two ewes and three rams, from the
+Merino flock of His Majesty King George the Third. He embarked with them
+on his return to New South Wales in 1806, on board a vessel named by him
+"the Argo," in reference to the golden treasure with which she was
+freighted. On reaching the colony he removed his sheep to a grant of land
+which the Home Government had directed he should receive in the Cow
+Pastures. To commemorate the transaction, and to transmit to a grateful
+posterity the recollection of the nobleman who then presided over the
+colonies, the estate, together with the district in which it is situated,
+was honoured by the name of Camden.
+
+EXPORT OF WOOL TO ENGLAND.
+
+Since that time the value of New South Wales wool has been constantly on
+the increase, and the colony are indebted to Mr. M'Arthur for the
+possession of an exportable commodity which has contributed very
+materially to its present wealth and importance. Such general attention is
+now paid to this interesting branch of rural economy, that the importation
+of wool into England from our Australian colonies, amounted, in 1832, to
+10,633 bales, or 2,500,000 lbs. It has been sold at as high a price as
+10s. per lb.; but the average price of wool of the best flocks vary from
+1s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. at the present moment. The number of sheep in New South
+Wales alone was calculated in the last census at 536,891 head. The
+ordinary profits on this kind of stock may be extracted from the Table
+given in the Appendix to the first volume of this work.
+
+WHALE FISHERY.
+
+Among the various speculations undertaken by the merchants of Sydney,
+there is not one into which they have entered with so much spirit as in
+the South Sea Fishery. The local situation of Port Jackson gives them an
+advantage over the English and the American merchants, since the distance
+of both these from the field of their gains, must necessarily impede them
+greatly; whereas the ships that leave Sydney on a whaling excursion,
+arrive without loss of time upon their ground, and return either for fresh
+supplies or to repair damages with equal facility. The spirit with which
+the colonial youth have engaged in this adventurous and hardy service, is
+highly to their credit. The profits arising from it may not be (indeed I
+have every reason to think are not) so great as might be supposed, or such
+as might reasonably be expected; but the extensive scale on which it is
+conducted, speaks equally for the energy and perseverance of the parties
+concerned, in the prosecution of their commercial enterprises. It has
+enabled them to equip a creditable colonial marine, and given great
+importance to their mercanthe interests in the mother country.
+
+In the year 1831, the quantity of sperm and black oil, the produce of the
+fisheries exported from New South Wales, amounted to 2,307 tons, and was
+estimated, together with skins and whalebone, to be worth 107,971 pounds
+sterling. The gross amount of all other exports during that year, did not
+exceed 107,697 pounds sterling. Of these exports, the following were the
+most considerable:
+
+
+Timber 7,410 pounds sterling
+Butter and Cheese 2,376
+Mimosa bark 40
+Hides 7,333
+Horses 7,302
+Salt provisions 5,184
+Wool 66,112
+
+
+The above is exclusive of 61,000 pounds value of British manufactures
+re-exported to the various ports and islands in the Southern Seas.
+
+OTHER EXPORTS.
+
+In this scale, moreover, tobacco is not mentioned; but that plant is now
+raised for the supply of every private establishment, and will assuredly
+form an article of export, as soon as its manufacture shall be well
+understood. Neither can it be doubted but that the vine and the olive
+will, in a short time, be abundantly cultivated; and that a greater
+knowledge of the climate and soil of the more northern parts of the
+colony, will lead to the introduction of fresh sources of wealth.
+
+GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES.
+
+Having taken this hasty review of the commercial interests of the colony,
+we may now turn to a brief examination of its internal structure and
+principal natural features.
+
+I have already given a cursory sketch of the geographical features of the
+whole continent. Of the vast area which its coasts embrace, the east part
+alone has been fully explored.
+
+A range of hills runs along the eastern coast, from north to south, which,
+in different quarters, vary in their distance from the sea; at one place
+approaching it pretty nearly, at another, receding from it to a distance
+of forty miles. It is a singular fact, that there is no pass or break in
+these mountains, by which any of the rivers of the interior can escape in
+an easterly direction. Their spine is unbroken. The consequence is, that
+there is a complete division of the eastern and western waters, and that
+streams, the heads of which are close to each other, flow away in opposite
+directions; the one to pursue a short course to the sea; the other to fall
+into a level and depressed interior, the character of which will be
+noticed in its proper place.
+
+GREAT PROPORTION OF BAD SOIL.
+
+The proportion of bad soil to that which is good in New South Wales, is
+certainly very great: I mean the proportion of inferior soil to such as is
+fit for the higher purposes of agriculture. Mr. Dawson, the late
+superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company's possessions, has
+observed, as a singular fact, that the best soil generally prevails on the
+summits of the hills, more especially where they are at all level. He
+accounts for so unusual a circumstance by the fact, that elevated
+positions are less subject to the effects of fire or floods than their
+valleys or flanks, and attributes the general want of vegetable mould over
+the colony chiefly to the ravages of the former element, whereby the
+growth of underwood, so favourable in other countries to the formation of
+soil, is wholly prevented. Undoubtedly this is a principal cause for the
+deficiency in question. There is no part of the world in which fires
+create such havoc as in News South Wales and indeed in Australia
+generally. The climate, on the one hand, which dries up vegetation, and
+the wandering habits of the natives on the other, which induce them to
+clear the country before them by conflagration, operate equally against
+the growth of timber and underwood.
+
+CAUSE OF THIS.
+
+But there is another circumstance that appears to have escaped
+Mr. Dawson's observation; which is the actual property of the trees
+themselves, as to the quantity of vegetable matter they produce in decay.
+Being a military man, I cannot be supposed to have devoted much of my time
+to agricultural pursuits; but it has been obvious to me, as it must have
+been to many others, that in New South Wales, the fall of leaves and the
+decay of timber, so far from adding to the richness of its soil, actually
+destroy minor vegetation. This fact was brought more home to me in
+consequence of its having been my lot to spend some months upon Norfolk
+Island, a distant penal settlement attached to the Government of Sydney.
+There the abundance of vegetable decay was as remarkable as the want of it
+on the Australian Continent. I have frequently sunk up to my knees in a
+bed of leaves when walking through its woods; and, often when I placed my
+foot on what appeared externally to be the solid trunk of a tree, I have
+found it yield to the pressure, in consequence of its decomposition into
+absolute rottenness. But such is not the case in New South Wales. There,
+no such accumulations of vegetable matter are to be met with; but where
+the loftiest tree of the forest falls to the ground, its figure and length
+are marked out by the total want of vegetation within a certain distance
+of it, and a small elevation of earth, resembling more the refuse or
+scoria of burnt bricks than any thing else, is all that ultimately remains
+of the immense body which time or accident had prostrated. Thus it would
+appear, that it is not less to the character of its woods than to the
+ravages of fire that New South Wales owes its general sterility.
+
+CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GEOLOGY AND VEGETATION.
+
+Whilst prosecuting my researches in the interior of the colony, I could
+not but be struck with the apparent connection between its geology and
+vegetation; so strong, indeed, was this connection, that I had little
+difficulty, after a short experience, in judging of the rock that formed
+the basis of the country over which I was travelling, from the kind of
+tree or herbage that flourished in the soil above it. The eucalyptus
+pulv., a species of eucalyptus having a glaucus-coloured leaf, of
+dwarfish habits and growing mostly in scrub, betrayed the sandstone
+formation, wherever it existed, This was the case in many parts of the
+County of Cumberland, in some parts of Wombat Brush, at the two passes on
+the great south road, over a great extent of country to the N.W. of Yass
+Plains, and at Blackheath on the summit of the Blue Mountains. On the
+other hand, those open grassy and park-like tracts, of which so much has
+been said, characterise the secondary ranges of granite and porphyry. The
+trees most usual on these tracts, were the box, an unnamed species of
+eucalyptus, and the grass chiefly of that kind, called the oat or forest
+grass, which grows in tufts at considerable distances from each other,
+and which generally affords good pasturage. On the richer grounds the
+angophora lanceolata, and the eucalyptus mammifera more frequently point
+out the quality of the soil on which they grow. The first are abundant on
+the alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter; the
+latter on the limestone formation of Wellington Valley and in the better
+portions of Argyle; whilst the cupressus calytris seems to occupy sandy
+ridges with the casuarina. It was impossible that these broad features
+should have escaped observation: it was naturally inferred from this, that
+the trees of New South Wales are gregarious; and in fact they may, in a
+great measure, be considered so. The strong line that occasionally
+separates different species, and the sudden manner in which several
+species are lost at one point, to re-appear at another more distant,
+without any visible cause for the break that has taken place, will furnish
+a number of interesting facts in the botany of New South Wales.
+
+It was observed both on the Macquarie river and the Morumbidgee, that the
+casuarinae ceased at a particular point. On the Macquarie particularly,
+these trees which had often excited our admiration from Wellington Valley
+downwards, ceased to occupy its banks below the cataract, nor were they
+again noticed until we arrived on the banks of the Castlereagh. The
+blue-gum trees, again, were never observed to extend beyond the secondary
+embankments of the rivers, occupying that ground alone which was subject
+to flood and covered with reeds. These trees waved over the marshes of the
+Macquarie, but were not observed to the westward of them for many miles;
+yet they re-appeared upon the banks of New-Year's Creek as suddenly as
+they had disappeared after we left the marshes, and grew along the line
+of the Darling to unusual size. But it is remarkable, that, even in the
+midst of the marshes, the blue-gum trees were strictly confined to the
+immediate flooded spaces on which the reeds prevailed, or to the very beds
+of the water-courses. Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach
+of flood, the box (unnamed) alone occupied it; and, though the branches of
+these trees might be interwoven together, the one never left its wet and
+reedy bed, the other never descended from its more elevated position. The
+same singular distinction marked the acacia pendula, when it ceased to
+cover the interior plains of light earth, and was succeeded by another
+shrub of the same species. It continued to the banks of New-Year's Creek,
+a part of which it thickly lined. To the westward of the creek, another
+species of acacia was remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like the
+blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together, but the creek formed
+the line of separation between them. The acacia pendula was not afterwards
+seen, but that which had taken its place, as it were, was found to cover
+large tracts of country and to form extensive brushes. Many other
+peculiarities in the vegetation of the interior are noticed in the body
+of this work, but I have thought that these more striking ones deserved
+to be particularly remarked upon.
+
+GEOLOGICAL FEATURES.
+
+If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington Valley, we shall
+find that little change takes place in the geological features of the
+country. The sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges is
+composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York, and at Cox's River is
+succeeded by grey granite. The secondary ranges to the N.W. of Bathurst,
+are wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are partial changes
+of strata between Bathurst and Moulong Plains, granite is undoubtedly the
+rock upon which the whole are based: but at Moulong Plains, a military
+station intermediate between Bathurst and Wellington Valley, limestone
+appears in the bed of a small clear stream, and with little interruption
+continues to some distance below the last-mentioned place. The accidental
+discovery of some caves at Moulong Plains, led to the more critical
+examination of the whole formation, and cavities of considerable size were
+subsequently found in various parts of it, but more particularly in the
+neighbourhood of Wellington Valley. The local interest which has of late
+years been taken in the prosecution of geological investigations, led many
+gentlemen to examine the contents of these caverns; and among the most
+forward, Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, must justly be considered,
+to whose indefatigable perseverance the scientific world is already so
+much indebted.
+
+The caves into which I penetrated, did not present anything particular to
+my observation; they differed little from caves of a similar description
+into which I had penetrated in Europe. Large masses of stalactites hung
+from their roofs, and a corresponding formation encrusted their floors.
+They comprised various chambers or compartments, the most remote of which
+terminated at a deep chasm that was full of water. A close examination of
+these caves has led to the discovery of some organic remains, bones of
+various animals embedded in a light red soil; but I am not aware that the
+remains of any extinct species have been found, or that any fossils have
+been met with in the limestone itself. There can, however, be little doubt
+but that the same causes operated in depositing these mouldering remains
+in the caves of Kirkdale and those of Wellington Valley.
+
+About twenty miles below the junction of the Bell with the Macquarie,
+free-stone supersedes the limestone, but as the country falls rapidly from
+that point, it soon disappears, and the traveller enters upon a flat
+country of successive terraces. A schorl rock, of a blue colour and fine
+grain, composed of tourmaline and quartz, forms the bed of the Macquarie
+at the Cataract; and, in immediate contact with it, a mass of mica slate
+of alternate rose, pink, and white, was observed, which must have been
+covered by the waters of the river when Mr. Oxley descended it.
+
+From the Cataract of the Macquarie, a flat extends to the marshes in which
+that river exhausts itself. From the midst of this flat Mount Foster and
+Mount Harris rise, both of which are porphyritic: but as I have been
+particular in describing these heights in their proper place, any minute
+notice of them here may be considered unnecessary. We will rather extend
+our enquiries to those parts of the colony upon which we shall not be
+called upon to remark in the succeeding pages.
+
+Returning to the coast, we may mark the geological changes in a line to
+the S.W. of Sydney; and as my object is to extend the information of my
+readers, I shall notice any particular district on either side of the line
+I propose to touch upon, which may be worthy of notice. It would appear
+that the first decided break in the sandstone formation which penetrates
+into the county of Camden, is at Mittagong Range. It is there traversed by
+a dike of whinstone, of which that range is wholly composed. The change of
+soil and of vegetation are equally remarkable at this place; the one being
+a rich, greasy, chocolate-coloured earth, the other partaking greatly of
+the intertropical character. In wandering over them, I noticed the wild
+fig and the cherry-tree, growing to a much larger size than I had seen
+them in any other part of the colony. Upon their branches, the satin bird,
+the gangan, and various kinds of pigeons were feeding. Birds unknown to
+the eastward of the Blue Mountains, were numerous in the valleys; and
+there was an unusual appearance of freshness and moisture in the
+vegetation.
+
+These signs of improvement, however, vanish the moment Mittagong range is
+crossed, and sand-stone again forms the basis of the country to a
+considerable distance beyond Bong-bong. At a small farm called the
+Ploughed Ground, it is again traversed by a dike of whinstone, and a rich
+but isolated spot is thus passed over. With occasional and partial
+interruption, however, the sand-stone formation continues to an abrupt
+pass, from which the traveller descends to the county of Argyle. This pass
+is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I have
+noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. A small but lively stream,
+called Paddy's River, runs at the bottom of this pass, and immediately to
+the S.W. of it, an open forest country of granite base extends for many
+miles, on which the eucalyptus manifera is prevalent, and which affords
+the best grazing tracts in Argyle. At Goulburn Plains, however, a vein of
+limestone occurs, which is evidently connected with that forming the
+ShoalHaven Gully, which is perhaps the most remarkable geological feature
+in the colony of New South Wales. It is a deep chasm of about a quarter of
+a mile in breadth, and 1200 feet in depth. The country on either side is
+perfectly level, so much so that the traveller approaches almost to its
+very brink before he is aware of his being near so singular an abyss. A
+small rivulet flows through the Gully, and discharges itself into the sea
+at ShoalHaven; but this river is hardly perceptible, from the summit of
+the cliffs forming the sides of the Gully, which are of the boldest and
+most precipitous character. The ground on the summit is full of caves of
+great depth, but there has been a difficulty in examining them, in
+consequence of the violent wind that rushes up them, and extinguishes
+every torch.
+
+The open and grassy forests of Argyle are terminated by another of those
+abrupt sand-stone passes I have just described, and the traveller again
+falls considerably from his former level, previously to his entering on
+Yass Plains, to which this pass is the only inlet.
+
+From Yass Plains the view to the S. and S.W. is over a lofty and broken
+country: mountains with rounded summits, others with towering peaks, and
+others again of lengthened form but sharp spine, characterise the various
+rocks of which they are composed. The ranges decline rapidly from east to
+west, and while on the one hand the country has all the appearance of
+increasing height, on the other it sinks to a dead level; nor on the
+distant horizon to the N. W. is there a hill or an inequality to be seen.
+
+From Yass Plains to the very commencement of the level interior, every
+range I crossed presented a new rock-formation; serpentine quartz in
+huge white masses, granite, chlorite, micaceous schist, sandstone,
+chalcedony, quartz, and red jasper, and conglomerate rocks.
+
+It was however, out of my power, in so hurried a journey as that which I
+performed down the banks of the Morumbidgee River, to examine with the
+accuracy I could have wished, either the immediate connection between
+these rocks or their gradual change from the one to the other. I was
+content to ascertain their actual succession, and to note the general
+outlines of the ranges; but the defect of vision under which I labour,
+prevents me from laying them before the public.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE SOIL CONNECTED WITH GEOLOGICAL FORMATION.
+
+From what has been advanced, however, it will appear that the physical
+structure of the southern parts of the colony is as varied, as that of the
+western interior is monotonous, and we may now pursue our original
+observations on the soil of the colony with greater confidence.
+
+In endeavouring to account for the poverty of the soil in New South Wales,
+and in attributing it in a great degree to the causes already mentioned,
+it appears necessary to estimate more specifically the influence which the
+geological formation of a country exercises on its soil, and how much the
+quality of the latter partakes of the character of the rock on which it
+reposes. And although I find it extremely difficult to explain myself as
+I should wish to do, in the critical discussion on which I have thus
+entered, yet as it is material to the elucidation of an important subject
+in the body of the work, I feel it incumbent on me to proceed to the best
+of my ability.
+
+I have said that the soil of a country depends much upon its geological
+formation. This appears to be particularly the case in those parts of the
+colony with which I nm acquainted, or those lying between the parallels of
+30 degrees and 35 degrees south. Sandstone, porphyry, and granite,
+succeed each other from the coast to a very considerable distance into the
+interior, on a N. W. line. The light ferruginous dust that is distributed
+over the county of Cumberland, and which annoys the traveller by its
+extreme minuteness, to the eastward of the Blue Mountains, is as different
+from the coarse gravelly soil on the secondary ranges to the westward of
+them, as the barren scrubs and thickly-wooded tracts of the former
+district are to the grassy and open forests of the latter.
+
+As soon as I began to descend to the westward it became necessary to pay
+strict and earnest attention to the features of the country through which
+I passed, in order to determine more accurately the different appearances
+which, as I was led to expect, the rivers would assume. In the course of
+my examination I found, first, that the broken country through which I
+travelled, was generally covered with a loose, coarse, and sandy soil;
+and, secondly, that the ranges were wholly deficient in that peat
+formation which fills the valleys, or covers the flat summits of the hills
+or mountains, in the northern hemisphere. The peculiar property of this
+formation is to retain water like a sponge; and to this property the
+regular and constant flow of the rivers descending from such hills, may,
+in a great measure, be attributed. In New South Wales on the contrary, the
+rains that fall upon the mountains drain rapidly through a coarse and
+superficial soil, and pour down their sides without a moment's
+interruption. The consequence is that on such occasions the rivers are
+subject to great and sudden rises, whereas they have scarcely water enough
+to support a current in ordinary seasons. At one time the traveller will
+find it impracticable to cross them: at another he may do so with ease;
+and only from the remains of debris in the branches of the trees high
+above, can he judge of the furious torrent they must occasionally
+contain.
+
+This seeming deviation on the part of Nature from her usual laws will no
+longer appear such, if we consider its results for a moment. The very
+floods which swell the rivers to overflowing, are followed by the most
+beneficent effects; and, rude and violent as the means are by which she
+accomplishes her purpose, they form, no doubt, a part of that process by
+which she preserves the balance of good and evil. Vast quantities of the
+best soil have been thus washed down from the mountains to accumulate in
+more accessible places. From frequent depositions, a great extent of
+country along the banks of every river and creek has risen high above the
+influence of the floods, and constitutes the richest tracts in the colony.
+The alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury, and the Hunter, are
+striking instances of the truth of these observations; to which the plains
+of O'Connell and Bathurst must be added. The only good soil upon the two
+latter, is in the immediate neighbourhood of the Macquarie River: but,
+even close to its banks, the depositions are of little depth, lying on a
+coarse gravelly soil, the decomposition of the nearer ranges. The former
+is found to diminish in thickness, according to the concavity of the
+valley through which the Macquarie flows, and at length becomes mixed with
+the coarser soil. This deposit is alone fit for agricultural purposes;
+but it does not necessarily follow that the distant country is unavailable
+since it is admitted, that the best grazing tracts are upon the secondary
+ranges of granite and porphyry. These ranges generally have the appearance
+of open forest, and are covered with several kinds of grasses, among which
+the long oat-grass is the most abundant.
+
+COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND.
+
+If we except the valley of the Nepean, the banks of the South Creek, the
+Pennant Hills near Parramatta, and a few other places, the general soil of
+the county of Cumberland, is of the poorest description. It is superficial
+in most places, resting either upon a cold clay, or upon sandstone; and
+is, as I have already remarked, a ferruginous compound of the finest dust.
+Yet there are many places upon its surface, (hollows for instance,) in
+which vegetable decay has accumulated, or valleys, into which it has been
+washed, that are well adapted for the usual purposes of agriculture, and
+would, if the country was more generally cleared, be found to exist to a
+much greater extent than is at present imagined. I have frequently
+observed the isolated patches of better land, when wandering through the
+woods, both on the Parramatta River, and at a greater distance from the
+coast. And I cannot but think, that it would be highly advantageous to
+those who possess large properties in the County of Cumberland to let
+Portions of them. The concentration of people round their capital,
+promotes more than anything else the prosperity of a colony, by creating
+a reciprocal demand for the produce both of the country and the town,
+since the one would necessarily stimulate the energy of the farmer, as the
+other would rouse the enterprise of the merchant. The consideration,
+however, of such a subject is foreign to my present purpose.
+
+It must not be supposed, that because I have given a somewhat particular
+description of the County of Cumberland, I have done so with a view to
+bring it forward as a specimen of the other counties, or to found upon it
+a general description of the colony. It is, in fact, poorer in every
+respect than any tract of land of similar extent in the interior, and is
+still covered with dense forests of heavy timber, excepting when the trees
+have been felled by dint of manual labour, and the ground cleared at an
+expense that nothing but its proximity to the seat of government could
+have justified. But experience has proved, that neither the labour nor the
+the expense have been thrown away. Many valuable farms and extensive
+gardens chequer the face of the country, from which the proprietors
+derive a very efficient income.
+
+COUNTRY WEST OF BLUE MOUNTAINS.
+
+To the westward of the Blue Mountains, the country differs in many
+respects from that lying between those ranges and the coast; and although,
+its aspect varies in different places, three principal features appear
+more immediately to characterise it. These are, first, plains of
+considerable extent wholly destitute of timber; secondly, open undulating
+woodlands; and, thirdly, barren unprofitable tracts. The first almost
+invariably occur in the immediate neighbourhood of some river, as the
+Plains of Bathurst, which are divided by the Macquarie; Goulburn Plains,
+through which the Wallandilly flows; and Yass Plains, which are watered by
+a river of the same name. The open forests, through which the horseman may
+gallop in perfect safety, seem to prevail over the whole secondary ranges
+of granite, and are generally considered as excellent grazing tracts. Such
+is the country in Argyleshire on either side of the Lachlan, where that
+river crosses the great southern road near Mr. Hume's station; such also
+are many parts of Goulburn and the whole extent of country lying between
+Underaliga and the Morumbidgee River. The barren tracts, on the other
+hand, may be said to occupy the central spaces between all the principal
+streams. With regard to the proportion that these different kinds of
+country bear to each other, there can be no doubt of the undue
+preponderance of the last over the first two; but there are nevertheless
+many extensive available tracts in every part of the colony.
+
+MEANS OF INLAND TRANSPORT.
+
+The greatest disadvantage under which New South Wales labours, is the want
+of means for conveying inland produce to the market, or to the coast. The
+Blue Mountains are in this respect a serious bar to the internal
+prosperity of the colony. By this time, however, a magnificent
+road will have been completed across them to the westward, over parts of
+which I travelled in 1831. Indeed the efforts of the colonial government
+have been wisely directed, not only to the construction of this road,
+which the late Governor, General Darling commenced, but also in
+facilitating the communication to the southern districts, by an almost
+equally fine road over the Razor Back Range, near the Cow Pastures; so
+that as far as it is possible for human efforts to overcome natural
+obstacles, the wisdom and foresight of the executive have ere this been
+successful.
+
+DISADVANTAGES OF DISTANT SETTLERS.
+
+The majority of the settlers in the Bathurst country, and in the more
+remote interior, are woolgrowers; and as they send their produce to the
+market only once a year, receiving supplies for home consumption, on the
+return of their drays or carts from thence, the inconvenience of bad
+roads is not so much felt by them. But to an agriculturist a residence to
+the westward of the Blue Mountains is decidedly objectionable, unless he
+possess the means with which to procure the more immediate necessaries of
+life, otherwise than by the sale of his grain or other produce, and can be
+satisfied to cultivate his property for home consumption, or for the
+casual wants of his neighbours. Under such circumstances, a man with a
+small private income would enjoy every rational comfort. But of course,
+not only in consequence of the loss of labour, but the chance of accidents
+during a long journey, the more the distance is increased from Sydney, as
+the only place at which the absolute necessaries of life can be purchased,
+the greater becomes the objection to a residence in such a part of the
+country; and on this account it is, that although some beautiful locations
+both as to extent and richness, are to be found to the westward of
+Bathurst, equally on the Bell, the Macquarie and the Lachlan, it is not
+probable they will be taken up for many years, or will only be occupied as
+distant stock stations.
+
+CHARACTER OF EASTERN COAST.
+
+Since, therefore, it appears from what has been advanced, that it is not
+to the westward the views of any settlers should he directed, excepting
+under particular circumstances, it remains for us to consider what other
+parts of the colony hold out, or appear to hold out, greater advantages.
+The eye naturally turns to the south on the one hand, and to
+Port Macquarie northerly on the other. It is to be remarked that the
+eastern shores of Australia partake of the same barren character that
+marks the other three. it is generally bounded to a certain extent by a
+sandy and sterile tract. There are, however, breaks in so prolonged a
+line, as might have been expected, where, from particular local causes,
+both the soil and vegetation are of a superior kind. At Illawarra for
+instance, the contiguity of the mountains to the coast leaves no room for
+the sandy belt we have noticed, but the debris from them reaches to the
+very shore. Whether from reflected heat, or from some other peculiarity of
+situation, the vegetation of Illawarra is of an intertropical character,
+and birds that are strangers to the county of Cumberland frequent its
+thickets. There is no part of Australia where the feathered race are more
+beautiful, or more diversified. The most splendid pigeon, perhaps, that
+the world produces, and the satin bird, with its lovely eye, feed there
+upon the berries of the ficus (wild fig,) and other trees: and a numerous
+tribe of the accipitrine class soar over its dense and spacious forests.
+
+PORT MACQUARIE AND FIVE ISLANDS.
+
+We again see a break in the sandy line of the coast at Broken Bay, at
+Newcastle, and still further north at Port Macquarie; at which places the
+Hawkesbury, the Hunter, and the Hastings severally debouche. Of Port
+Macquarie, as a place of settlement, I entertain a very high opinion, in
+consequence of its being situated under a most favourable parallel
+latitude. I am convinced it holds out many substantial advantages. One of
+the most important of these is the circumstance of its having been much
+improved when occupied as a penal settlement. And since the shores of the
+colony are how navigated by steam-boats, the facility of water
+communication would be proportionably great.
+
+I believe the Five Islands or Illawarr district is considered peculiarly
+eligible for small settlers. The great drawback to this place is the
+heavy character of its timber and the closeness of its thickets, which vie
+almost with the American woods in those respects. Thee return, however, is
+adequate to the labour required in clearing the ground. Between the Five
+Islands and Sydney, a constant intercourse is kept up by numerous small
+craft; and a communication with the interior, by branch roads from the
+great southern line to the coast, would necessarily be thrown open, if the
+more distant parts of it were sufficiently peopled.
+
+RICH TRACTS IN THE INTERIOR.
+
+Recent surveys have discovered to us rich and extensive tracts in the
+remote interior between Jervis Bay and Bateman's Bay, and southwards upon
+the western slope of the dividing range. The account given by Messrs.
+Hovel and Hume is sufficient to prove that every valley they crossed was
+worthy of notice, and that the several rivers they forded were flanked by
+rich and extensive flats.
+
+The distance of Moneroo Plains, and of the Doomot and Morumbidgee Rivers
+from Sydney, alarms the settler, who knows not the value of those
+localities; but men whose experience has taught them to set this obstacle
+at nought, have long depastured their herds on the banks of the last two.
+The fattest cattle that supply the Sydney market are fed upon the rich
+flats, and in the grassy valleys of the Morumbidgee; and there are several
+beautiful farms upon those of the Doomot. Generally speaking, the persons
+who reside in those distant parts, pay little attention to the comfort of
+their dwellings, or to the raising of more grain than their establishments
+may require; but there can be no doubt this part of the interior ought to
+be the granary of New South Wales; its climate and greater humidity being
+more favourable than that of Sydney for the production of wheat.
+
+PERIODICAL DROUGHTS; THE SEASONS AFFECTED BY THE MARSHES.
+
+The most serious disadvantages under which the colony of New South Wales
+labours, is in the drought to which it is periodically subject. Its
+climate may be said to be too dry; in other respects it is one of the most
+delightful under heaven; and experience of the certainty of the recurrence
+of the trying seasons to which I allude, should teach men to provide
+against their effects. Those seasons, during which no rain falls, appear,
+from the observations of former writers, to occur every ten or twelve
+years; and it is somewhat singular that no cause has been assigned for
+such periodical visitations. Whether the state of the interior has
+anything to do with them, and whether the wet or dry condition of the
+marshes at all regulate the seasons, is a question upon which I will not
+venture to give my decisive opinion. But most assuredly, when the interior
+is dry, the seasons are dry, and VICE VERSA. Indeed, not only is this the
+case, but rains, from excessive duration in the first year after a
+drought, decrease gradually year after year, until they wholly cease for a
+time. It seems not improbable, therefore, that the state of the interior
+does, in some measure, regulate the fall of rain upon the eastern ranges,
+which appears to decrease in quantity yearly as the marshes become
+exhausted, and cease altogether, when they no longer contain any water. A
+drought will naturally follow until such time as the air becomes
+surcharged with clouds or vapour from the ocean, which being no longer
+able to sustain their own weight, descend upon the mountains, and being
+conveyed by hundreds of streams into the western lowlands, again fill the
+marshes, and cause the recurrence of regular seasons.
+
+TEMPERATURE OF THE CLIMATE.
+
+The thermometer ranges during the summer months, that is, from September
+to March, from 36 degrees to 106 degrees of Fahrenheit, but the mean
+of the temperature during the above period is 70 degrees. The instrument
+in the winter months ranges from 27 degrees to 98 degrees, with a mean of
+66 degrees. However great the summer heat may appear, it is certain that
+the climate of New South Wales has not the relaxing and enfeebling effect
+upon the constitution, which renders a residence in India or other parts
+of the south so intolerable. Neither are any of the ordinary occupations
+of business or of pleasure laid aside at noon, or during the hottest part
+of the day. The traveller may cast himself at length under the first tree
+that invites him, and repose there as safely as if he were in a palace.
+Fearless of damps, and unmolested by noxious insects, his sleep is as
+sound as it is refreshing, and he rises with renewed spirits to pursue his
+journey. Equally so may the ploughman or the labourer seek repose beside
+his team, and allow them to graze quietly around him. The delicious
+coolness of the morning and the mild temperature of the evening air, in
+that luxurious climate, are beyond the power of description. It appears to
+have an influence on the very animals, the horses and the cattle being
+particularly docile; and I cannot but think it is is some degree the same
+happy effect upon some of the hardened human beings who are sent thither
+from the old world.
+
+FRUITS.
+
+As I have before observed, it has not yet been discovered whether there
+are any indigenous fruits of any value in Australia. In the colony of New
+South Wales there certainly are none; yet the climate is peculiarly
+adapted for the growth of every European and of many tropical productions.
+The orange, the fig, the citron, the pomegranate, the peach, the apple,
+the guava, the nectarine, the pear, and the loquette, grow side by side
+together. The plantain throws its broad leaves over the water, the vine
+encircles the cottages, and the market of Sydney is abundantly supplied
+with every culinary vegetable.
+
+In a climate, therefore, so soft that man scarcely requires a dwelling,
+and so enchanting that few have left it but with regret, the spirits must
+necessarily be acted upon,--and the heart feel lighter. Such, indeed, I
+have myself found to be the case; nor have I ever been happier than when
+roving through the woods or wandering along one of the silent and
+beautiful bays for which the harbour of Port Jackson is so celebrated. I
+went to New South Wales as I have already remarked, highly prejudiced
+against it, both from the nature of the service, and the character of the
+great body of its inhabitants. My regiment has since quitted its shores,
+but I am aware there are few of them who would not gladly return. The
+feeling I have in its favour arises not, therefore, from the services in
+which I was employed, but from circumstances in the colony itself; and I
+yet hope to form one of its community and to join a number of valuable and
+warm-hearted friends whom I left in that distant part of the world.
+
+REMARKS ON EMIGRATION.
+
+On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any
+length. My object in these preliminary remarks has been to give the reader
+a general idea of the country, in the interior recesses of which I am
+about to lead him. Still, however, it may be useful to offer a few general
+observations on a topic which has, of late years, become so interesting to
+the British public.
+
+The main consideration with those who, possessing some capital, propose to
+emigrate as the means of improving their condition, is, the society likely
+to he found in the land fixed on for their future residence. One of the
+first questions I have been asked, when conversing on the subject of
+emigration, has consequently related to this important matter. I had only
+then to observe in reply, that the civil and military establishments in
+New South Wales, form the elements of as good society as it is the lot of
+the majority to command in Great Britain.
+
+The houses of the settlers are not scattered over a greater surface than
+the residences of country gentlemen here, and if they cannot vie with them
+in size, they most assuredly do in many other more important respects; and
+if a substantial cottage of brick or stone has any claim to the rank of a
+tenantable mansion, there are few of them which do not posses all the
+means of exercising that hospitality for which young communities are
+remarkable.
+
+But to sever the links of kindred, and to abandon the homes of our fathers
+after years of happy tranquillity, is a sacrifice the magnitude of which
+is unquestionable. The feelings by which men are influenced under such
+circumstances have a claim to our respect. Indeed, no class of persons can
+have a stronger hold upon our sympathies than those whom unmerited adverse
+fortune obliges to seek a home in a distant country.
+
+Far, therefore, be it from me to dispute a single expression of regret to
+which they may give utterance. It must, however, he remembered that the
+deepest feelings of anguish are providentially alleviated in time. Our
+heaviest misfortunes are frequently repaired by industry and caution. The
+sky clears up, as it were: new interests engage the attention, and the
+cares of a family or the improvement of a newly acquired property engross
+those moments which would otherwise be spent in vain and unprofitable
+regrets.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF IMMIGRANTS; MOST LIKELY TO PROSPER.
+
+It cannot be doubted that persons such as I have described, whose conduct
+has hitherto been regulated by prudence, and whose main object is to
+provide for their children, are the most valuable members of every
+community, whether young or old. To such men few countries hold out
+greater prospects of success than New South Wales; for the more we extend
+our enquiries, the more we shall find that the success of the emigrant in
+that colony depends upon his prudence and foresight rather than on any
+collateral circumstance of climate or soil; and to him who can be
+satisfied with the gradual acquirement of competency, it is the land of
+promise. Blessed with a climate of unparalleled serenity, and of unusual
+freedom from disease, the settler has little external cause of anxiety,
+little apprehension of sickness among his family or domestics, and little
+else to do than to attend to his own immediate interests. I should wish to
+illustrate the observations by two or three instances of their practical
+bearing and tendency.
+
+CASES OF EMIGRANTS; CAUSES OF SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
+
+It was on my return from my second expedition, that I visited
+Lieut. ****** who resides in the southern parts of the colony. The day
+after my arrival, he took me round his property, and explained the various
+improvements he had made, considering the small means with which he had
+commenced. At this part of our conversation, we came within view of his
+house, a substantial weather-board cottage. "I trust," said I, turning
+to him, "you will excuse the question I am about to ask; for your
+frankness emboldens me to propose it, and on your answer much of the
+effect of what you have been saying will depend. In effecting these
+various improvements, and in the building of that house, have you been
+obliged to embarrass yourself, or are they free from incumbrance?"--"Your
+question," he said, "is a reasonable one, and I will answer it with the
+frankness you are kind enough to ascribe to me. I have ever made it a rule
+not to exceed my income. Mrs. ****** bore our first trials with so much
+cheerfulness, and contributed so much to my happiness and my prosperity,
+that I felt myself bound to build her a good house with the first money
+I had to spare." I confess this answer raised my host in my estimation,
+and it was a gratifying proof to me of the success that attends industry
+and perseverance.
+
+But let us look at another case. Mr. *** had a property to the N.W. of
+Sydney, and having considerable funded means when he arrived in the
+colony, he soon put his property into a state of progressive improvement,
+and being in truth an excellent practical farmer, it assumed the
+appearance of regularity and order. Had Mr. *** stopped at this moment,
+he would have been in the enjoyment of affluence and of every rational
+comfort. But instead of exercising prudent rules of hospitality, he gave
+way to the natural generosity of his disposition, entered into expenses he
+could not afford, and was ultimately obliged to part with his estate. Now
+it is deeply to be regretted, that one whose energies and abilities
+particularly fitted him for the life he had chosen, should have failed
+through such conduct; and it is more than probable, that if he had
+commenced with smaller means, and had gradually improved his property, his
+fate would have been very different.
+
+I shall leave these cases without any further comment, convinced as I am,
+that each of them furnishes matter for serious consideration, and that
+they are practical illustrations of the causes of success or failure of
+those who emigrate to the colony of New South Wales. And although I do not
+mean to affirm, that the majority follow Mr. ***'s example, I must venture
+to assert that thoughtlessness--useless expenditure in the first
+instance--waste of time and other circumstances, lead to equally ruinous
+consequences.
+
+MORAL OBJECTIONS TO THE COLONY.
+
+One of the greatest objections which families have to New South Wales, is
+their apprehension of the moral effects that are likely to overwhelm them
+by bad example, and for which no success in life could compensate. In a
+colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of crime
+must of course be great. Yet it falls less under the notice of private
+families than one might at first sight have been led to suppose.
+Drunkenness, as in the mother country, is the besetting sin; but it is
+confined chiefly to the large towns in consequence of the difficulty of
+procuring spirits in the country. There are, no doubt, many incorrigible
+characters sent to settle in the interior, and it is an evil to have these
+men, even for a single day, to break the harmony of a previously well
+regulated establishment, or to injure its future prospects by the
+influence of evil example. They are men who are sent upon trial, from on
+board a newly arrived ship, and they generally terminate their misconduct
+either on the roads or at a penal settlement, being thus happily removed
+from the mass of the prisoners. Frequently, however, men remain for years
+under the same master. They become attached to their occupations, their
+hearts become softened by kindness, and they atone as much as they
+possibly can for previous error.
+
+SYSTEM OF IMMIGRATION RECOMMENDED; ENCOURAGEMENT FOR EMIGRATION.
+
+Still there can be no doubt, but that the evil complained of is
+considerable. It is from this reason, and from my personal knowledge of
+the southern parts of the colony, that I should rejoice to see its flats
+and its valleys filled with an industrious population of a better
+description of farmers. A hope might then be reasonably indulged, that the
+Home Government would not be backward in recognising, and in acting upon
+a principle, the soundness of which has been felt and acknowledged in all
+ages, but the chief difficulty of which rests in its judicious
+application. I allude to a system of emigration. Sure I am that if it were
+well organized, and care were taken to profit by the experience of the
+past in similar attempts, it could not fail to be attended with ultimate
+success. The evils resulting from a surplus population in an old
+community, were never more seriously felt than in Great Britain at the
+present moment. Assuming that the amount of surplus population is
+2,000,000, the excess of labour and competition thus occasioned by
+diminishing profits and wages, creates, it has been said, an indirect tax
+to the enormous extent of 20,000,000 pounds per annum. It has appeared
+to many experienced persons, that it is in emigration, we should best find
+the means of relief from this heavy pressure; particularly if the
+individuals encouraged to go out to the colonies were young persons of
+both sexes, from the industrious classes of the community. Even if no
+more than three couples were induced to emigrate from each parish in
+England in ten years, the relief to the springs of industry would be very
+great. Besides, the funds necessary for this purpose would revert to the
+country by a thousand indirect channels. Persons unacquainted with our
+Australian colonies, whether Van Dieman's Land or New South Wales, can
+form little idea of the increasing demand for, and consumption in them of
+every species of British manufacture. The liberal encouragement given by
+government to every practicable scheme of emigration, and the sum advanced
+by it towards the expenses of the voyage to the labouring classes,
+sufficiently indicate the light in which the subject is viewed by the
+legislature; and the fact that no private family taking out servants to
+Sydney, has in any one instance been able to retain them, on account of
+offers more advantageous from other quarters, shows clearly the great
+demand for labour in the colony. If I might judge of the feelings of the
+majority of respectable individuals there, from the assurances of the few,
+they would willingly defray any parochial expenses attendant on the
+voyage, provided the services of such individuals could be secured to them
+for a time sufficiently long to remunerate them for such pavement. The
+tide of emigration should be directed to Sydney, Van Dieman's Land, or
+Western Australia, upon condition of the labourer's receiving a certain
+sum in wages, and his daily subsistence from his employer, with an
+understanding, however, that he must consider himself bound for two years
+to such employer. Surely there are hundreds of our indigent countrymen,
+who would gladly seek a land of such plenty, and cast away the natural,
+but unavailing regret of leaving home to secure to themselves and their
+families, the substantial comforts of life on such easy conditions.
+
+COMMITTEE FOUND AT SYDNEY.
+
+It is not, perhaps, generally known that a committee has been formed in
+Sydney, to advise settlers as to the best mode of proceeding on arrival
+there. Such a plan is one of obvious utility; and if those who may find
+themselves at a loss for information would apply to this committee for
+advice, rather than to individuals with whom they may become casually
+acquainted, they would further their own interests, and in all probability
+ensure success. Still there are some broad rules upon which every man
+ought to act, which I shall endeavour to point out, and it will give me no
+ordinary satisfaction, if I should be the means of directing any one to
+the road of prosperity and comfort.
+
+HINTS TO EMIGRANTS.
+
+It is to be feared that those who emigrate to New South Wales, generally
+anticipate too great facility in their future operations and certainty of
+success in conducting them; but they should recollect that competency
+cannot be obtained without labour. Every trade--every profession in this
+respect, is subject to the same law--the lawyer, the physician, the
+tradesman, and the mechanic. This labour is required at our hands, even in
+an old community; how much more then is it called for in a new, where the
+ingenuity of men is put to trial to secure those means of accomplishing
+their ends which here are abundant. Now, it appears to me but consistent,
+that he who is obliged to leave his native country from want of means to
+hold his station there, can hardly expect to find, or rather to secure,
+abundance elsewhere without some exertion. Every man who emigrates should
+proceed with a conviction on his mind, that he is about to encounter years
+of labour and privation. He will not then be disappointed at partial
+reverses, and will be more thankful for unexpected prosperity. I feel
+persuaded the tone of mind has a great deal to do with success, because it
+influences the conduct of the individual. Supposing, however, that an
+emigrant has taken this rational view of his situation, he should
+determine on his pursuits, and allow nothing but absolute certainty of
+better fortune to turn him aside. Men, however, landing at Sydney, in
+their eagerness for information get bewildered, give up their original
+plans, adopt new and uncertain speculations, trifle away both their time
+and their money, and ultimately ruin themselves. An individual who goes to
+New South Wales for the purpose of settling, should not remain in Sydney
+a day longer than is necessary for the arrangement of his affairs. Every
+shilling spent there is thrown away. The greatest facility is given by the
+different departments of the Colonial Government to the settlers; and it
+is entirely his own fault if he trifles away his time in search of
+information elsewhere than at the fountainhead, or if he trusts to any
+other opinion than his own, supposing him experienced as to the quality of
+the land he may fix upon. Let him be speedy in his selection, and fix
+himself upon his allotment as soon as possible. Instead of overstocking
+his farm, or employing more labourers than he can afford to keep, let him
+be satisfied with a gradual increase of his stock, and wait patiently till
+he can better afford to employ labour; above all, let him avoid
+embarrassing himself by the purchase of any superfluous or unnecessary
+comfort. I consider that man has already failed, who runs into debt in the
+first instance, or who exhausts his means in the purchase of large herds,
+from the vain expectation that their increase will clear him. The time was
+when those idle speculations were occasionally attended with success, but
+such is not now the case. The energies of the agriculturist are directed
+to their proper channel, and if the few are unable to make rapid fortunes,
+the many have escaped inevitable ruin. No farm in a state of nature can be
+expected to yield any return of consequence for the first year. It is
+incumbent on a settler to provide for his establishment, or to retain the
+means of providing for it as circumstances may require.
+
+Farming implements are as cheap in Sydney as in England. Horses and cattle
+are cheaper. It requires little, therefore, to stock a farm in a
+reasonable manner. On the other hand, the climate is so mild that the want
+of a house is scarcely felt, and a temporary residence easily constructed.
+On the whole I am convinced, that a man who regulates his conduct by
+prudence, and who perseveringly follows up his occupations, who behaves
+with kindness to those around him, and performs his social and moral
+duties with punctuality, will ultimately secure to himself a home that
+will make up for the one he has quitted in the land of his fathers, and
+place him in as respectable and as happy a situation as that which he
+there enjoyed.
+
+
+*****
+
+
+PROGRESS OF INLAND DISCOVERY.
+
+Having thrown out the foregoing remarks for the information of the general
+reader, and of persons who look to Australia with the more earnest views
+of selecting a colonial home, I now return to the immediate object of
+these volumes; but before entering on the narrative of my own expeditions,
+I think it necessary to advert cursorily to the discoveries previously
+accomplished.
+
+The journeys of Mr. Oxley, far into the western interior of Australia,
+gave rise to various and conflicting opinions as to the character of the
+more central parts of that extensive continent, of which the colony of New
+South Wales forms but a small portion. I feel, therefore, called upon
+briefly to advert to the conclusions which that able and intelligent
+officer drew from his personal observation of the country into which he
+penetrated, as an acquaintance with his opinions will not only tend to
+throw a clearer light on the following details, but will, also, convey
+much necessary information to those of my readers who may not have
+perused his journals. It is necessary, however, in order to divest the
+subject of all obscureness, to trace, in the first instance, the progress
+of inland discovery, in New South Wales, from the first foundation of the
+colony to the period when Mr. Oxley's exertions attracted the public
+attention.
+
+In the year 1788, the British Government took formal possession of the
+eastern coast of Australia, by the establishment of a penal colony at Port
+Jackson. The first settlers, under Governor Phillips, had too many
+difficulties to contend with to submit themselves to be thwarted from
+pursuits essential to their immediate safety and comfort, by the prospect
+of remote and uncertain advantages. It was by perseverance and toil alone
+that they first established and ultimately spread themselves over that
+part of the territory, which, flanked by the ocean on the one hand, and
+embraced as it were by the Nepean River on the other, is now entitled the
+County Of Cumberland. For many years, this single district supplied the
+wants of the settlers. Upon it they found ample pasture for their herds,
+and sufficient employment for themselves. Nor was it until a succession of
+untoward seasons, and the rapid increase of their stock pointed out to
+them the necessity of seeking for more extensive pasturage, that they
+contemplated surmounting that dark and rugged chain of mountains, which,
+like the natural ramparts of Spain and Italy, rose high over the nether
+forest, and broke the line of the western horizon.
+
+MR. CALEY'S ATTEMPT.
+
+A Mr. Caley is said to have been the first who attempted to scale the Blue
+Mountains: but he did not long persevere in struggling with difficulties
+too great for ordinary resolution to overcome. It appears that he retraced
+his steps, after having penetrated about sixteen miles into their dark and
+precipitous recesses; and a heap of stones, which the traveller passes
+about that distance from Erne Ford, on the road to Bathurst, marks the
+extreme point reached by the first expedition to the westward of the
+Nepean river.
+
+LIEUT. LAWSON'S EXPEDITION.
+
+Shortly after the failure of this expedition, the sad effects of a long
+protracted drought called forth a more general spirit of enterprise and
+exertion among the settlers; and Mr. Oxley makes honorable mention of the
+perseverance and resolution with which Lieut. Lawson, of the 104th
+regiment, accompanied by Messrs. Blaxland and Wentworth, conducted an
+expedition into the Blue Mountains. Their efforts were successful: and
+the objects of their enterprise would have been completely attained, but
+for the failure of their provisions at a moment when their view of the
+distant interior was such as to convince them that they had overcome the
+most formidable obstacles to their advance, and that in their further
+progress few impediments would have presented themselves.
+
+MR. EVANS' DISCOVERIES.
+
+The success of this undertaking induced Governor Macquarie to further the
+prosecution of inland discovery, and of attempts to ascertain the nature
+of the country of which Mr. Lawson only obtained a glimpse. An expedition
+was accordingly dispatched under Mr. Evans, the Deputy Surveyor-General,
+to follow the route taken by the former one, and to penetrate as far as
+practicable into the western interior. The result was the discovery of the
+Macquarie river, and of Bathurst Plains. The report of Mr. Evans was so
+favourable, that orders were immediately issued for the construction of a
+line of road across the mountains. When that was completed, the Governor
+went in person to fix the site of a future town on Bathurst Plains. From
+thence Mr. Evans, who accompanied the Governor on the occasion, was
+directed to proceed to the southward and westward, to ascertain the nature
+of the country in that direction. He discovered another considerable
+river, flowing, like the Macquarie, to the west, to which he gave the name
+of the Lachlan. The promising appearance of these two streams, and the
+expectation of all parties that they would be found to water rich and
+extensive tracts of country, led to the fitting out of a more important
+expedition than any which had before been contemplated.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S DISCOVERIES.
+
+Mr. Oxley, the Surveyor-General of the Colony, was appointed chief of this
+expedition, and was directed to trace the Lachlan and Macquarie rivers, as
+far as practicable, with a view to ascertain their capabilities and the
+nature of the country they watered. In 1817, Mr. Oxley directed his
+attention to the former river, and continued to follow its windings, until
+it appeared that its waters were lost in successive marshes and it ceased
+to be a river. In the following year he turned towards the Macquarie, and
+traced it, in like manner, until he was checked by high reeds that covered
+an extensive plain before him, amidst which the channel of the river was
+lost.
+
+From what he observed of the country, on both these occasions, he was led
+to infer that beyond the limits of his advance the interior had a uniform
+level, and was, for the most part, uninhabitable and under water. Its
+features must have been strongly marked to have confirmed such an opinion
+in the mind of the late Surveyor-General. It stands recorded on the pages
+of his journal, that he travelled over a country of many miles in extent,
+after clearing the mountains, which so far from presenting any rise of
+ground to the eye, bore unequivocal marks of frequent and extensive
+inundation. He traced two rivers of considerable size, and found that, at
+a great distance from each other, they apparently terminated in marshes,
+and that the country beyond them was low and unbroken. In his progress
+eastward, he crossed a third stream (the Castlereagh), about forty-five
+miles from the Macquarie, seemingly not inferior to it in size,
+originating in the mountains for which he was making, and flowing nearly
+parallel to the other rivers into a level country like that which he had
+just quitted.
+
+DISCOVERIES OF MESSRS. MECHAN, HUME, HOVEL AND CUNNINGHAM.
+
+Mr. Evans, moreover, who accompanied Mr. Oxley on these journeys, and who
+had been detached by his principal from Mount Harris, to ascertain the
+nature of the country in the line which the expedition was next to pursue,
+having crossed the Castlereagh considerably below the place at which the
+party afterwards effected a passage, reported that the river was then
+running through high reeds. The inference naturally drawn by Mr. Oxley,
+was, that it terminated as the Lachlan and the Macquarie had done; and
+that their united waters formed an inland sea or basin. It is evident that
+Mr. Oxley had this impression on his mind, when he turned towards the
+coast; but the wet state of the lowlands prevented him from ascertaining
+its correctness or error. Doubt, consequently, still existed as to the
+nature of the country he had left behind him; a question in which the best
+interests of the colony were apparently involved. Subsequently to these
+discoveries, Mr. Surveyor Mechan, accompanied by Mr. Hamilton Hume, a
+colonist of considerable experience, explored the country more to the
+southward and westward of Sydney, and discovered most of the new country
+called Argyle, and also Lake Bathurst.
+
+Mr. Hume was afterwards associated with a Mr. Hovel, in an excursion to
+the south coast, under the auspices of Sir Thomas Brisbane. After a most
+persevering and laborious journey, they reached the sea; but it is
+uncertain whether they made Port Philips, or Western Port. Mr. Hume, whose
+practical experience will yield to that of no man, entertains a conviction
+that it was to the former they descended from the neighbouring ranges; but
+Mr. Hovel, I believe supports a contrary opinion. In the early stage of
+their journey, they passed over York or Yass Plains; and, after crossing
+the Morumbidgee, were generally entangled among mountain ranges that
+increased in height to the east and south-east. They crossed three
+considerable rivers, falling westerly, which they named the Goulburn, the
+Hume, and the Ovens; and found a beautiful and well-watered country in the
+vicinity of the coast.
+
+In 1826, Mr. Allan Cunningham, Botanical Collector to his late Majesty,
+traversed a considerable portion of the interior to the north of Bathurst,
+and, with a laudable zeal, devoted his labours to the acquisition of
+general information, as well as to his more immediate professional
+pursuits. In 1827, this gentleman again bent his steps towards the
+northward, and succeeded in gaining the 28th parallel of latitude; and,
+on a subsequent occasion, having taken his departure from Moreton Bay, he
+connected his former journey with that settlement, and thus contributed
+largely to our knowledge of the mountain country between it and the
+capital. Mr. Cunningham, who, independently of his individual excursions,
+had not only circumnavigated the Australian Continent with Capt. King,
+but had formed also one of the party with Mr. Oxley, in the journeys
+before noticed, had adopted this gentleman's opinion with regard to the
+swampy and inhospitable character of the distant interior. Its depressed
+appearance from the high ground on which Mr. Cunningham subsequently
+moved, tended to confirm this opinion, which was moreover daily gaining
+strength from the reports of the natives, who became more frequent in
+their intercourse with the whites, and who reported that there were large
+waters to the westward, on which the natives had canoes, and in which
+there were fish of great size.
+
+It became, therefore, a current opinion, that the western interior of New
+Holland comprehended an extensive basin, of which the ocean of reeds which
+had proved so formidable to Mr. Oxley, formed most probably the outskirts;
+and it was generally thought that an expedition proceeding into the
+interior, would encounter marshes of vast extent, which would be extremely
+difficult to turn, and no less dangerous to enter.
+
+It remained to be proved, however, whether these conjectures were founded
+in fact. The chief difficulty lay in the character of the country, and in
+providing the necessary means to ensure success. Those which were resorted
+to will be found in the succeeding chapter. Whether they would have been
+found sufficient and applicable had the interior been wholly under water,
+is doubtful; and my impression on this point induced me to make more
+efficient arrangements on the second expedition.
+
+
+
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER in 1828 and 1829.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+The year 1826 was remarkable for the commencement of one of those fearful
+droughts to which we have reason to believe the climate of New South Wales
+is periodically subject. It continued during the two following years with
+unabated severity. The surface of the earth became so parched up that
+minor vegetation ceased upon it. Culinary herbs were raised with
+difficulty, and crops failed even in the most favourable situations.
+Settlers drove their flocks and herds to distant tracts for pasture and
+water, neither remaining for them in the located districts. The interior
+suffered equally with the coast, and men, at length, began to despond
+under so alarming a visitation. It almost appeared as if the Australian
+sky were never again to be traversed by a cloud.
+
+OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+But, however severe for the colony the seasons had proved, or were likely
+to prove, it was borne in mind at this critical moment, that the wet and
+swampy state of the interior had alone prevented Mr. Oxley from
+penetrating further into it, in 1818. Each successive report from
+Wellington Valley, the most distant settlement to the N. W., confirmed the
+news of the unusually dry state of the lowlands, and of the exhausted
+appearance of the streams falling into them. It was, consequently, hoped
+that an expedition, pursuing the line of the Macquarie, would have a
+greater chance of success than the late Surveyor General had; and that the
+difficulties he had to contend against would be found to be greatly
+diminished, if not altogether removed. The immediate fitting out of an
+expedition was therefore decided upon, for the express purpose of
+ascertaining the nature and extent of that basin into which the Macquarie
+was supposed to fall, and whether any connection existed between it and
+the streams falling westerly. As I had early taken a great interest in the
+geography of New South Wales, the Governor was pleased to appoint me to
+the command of this expedition.
+
+JOURNEY FROM SYDNEY TO EMU PLAINS.
+
+In the month of September, 1828, I received his Excellency's commands to
+prepare for my journey; and by the commencement of November, had organised
+my party, and completed the necessary arrangements. On the 9th of that
+month, I waited on the Governor, at Parramatta, to receive his definitive
+instructions. As the establishments at Sydney had been unable to supply me
+with the necessary number of horses and oxen, instructions had been
+forwarded to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of Wellington Valley, to
+train a certain number for my use; and I was now directed to push for that
+settlement without loss of time. I returned to Sydney in the afternoon of
+the 9th, and on the 10th took leave of my brother officers, to commence a
+journey of very dubious issue; and, in company with my friend,
+Staff-surgeon M'Leod, who had obtained permission to accompany me to the
+limits of the colony, followed my men along the great western road. We
+moved leisurely over the level country, between the coast and the Nepean
+River, and availed ourselves of the kind hospitality of those of our
+friends whose property lay along that line of road, to secure more
+comfortable places of rest than the inns would have afforded.
+
+We reached Sheane, the residence of Dr. Harris, on the 11th, and were
+received by him with the characteristic kindness with which friends or
+strangers are ever welcomed by that gentleman, He had accompanied
+Mr. Oxley as a volunteer in 1818, and his name was then given to the
+mount which formed the extreme point to which the main body of the first
+expedition down the banks of the Macquarie penetrated, in a westerly
+direction.
+
+The general appearance of the property of Dr. Harris, showed how much
+perseverance and labour had effected towards its improvement. Many acres
+of ground bore a promising crop, over which a gloomy forest had once
+waved. The Doctor's farming establishment was as complete as his husbandry
+seemed to be prosperous; but he did not appear to be satisfied with the
+extent of his dwelling, to which he was making considerable additions,
+although I should have thought it large enough for all ordinary purposes
+of residence or hospitality. The rewards of successful industry were
+everywhere visible.
+
+FROM EMU PLAINS TO WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+On the 13th, we gained Regent's Ville, the more splendid mansion of Sir
+John Jamieson, which overlooks the Nepean River, and commands the most
+beautiful and extensive views of the Blue Mountains. Crossing the ford on
+the 14th, we overtook the men as they were toiling up the first ascent of
+those rugged bulwarks, which certainly gave no favourable earnest of the
+road before us; and, as we could scarcely hope to reach the level country
+to the westward without the occurrence of some accident, I determined to
+keep near the drays, that I might be on hand should my presence be
+required. We gained O'Connell's plains on the 20th November, and arrived
+at Bathurst on the 22nd, with no other damage than the loss of one of the
+props supporting the boat which snapped in two as we descended Mount York.
+On examination, it was found that the boat had also received a slight
+contusion, but it admitted of easy repair.
+
+I was detained at Bathurst longer than I intended, in consequence of
+indisposition, and during my stay there experienced many proofs of the
+kind hospitality of the settlers of that promising district: nor was I
+ever more impressed with the importance of the service upon which I was
+employed, or more anxious as to the issue, than while contemplating the
+rapid advance of agriculture upon its plains, and the formidable bar to
+its prosperity which I had left behind me, in the dark and gloomy ranges
+which I had crossed.
+
+On the 27th, Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose experience well qualified him for
+the task, and who had been associated with me in the expedition, having
+joined me, we proceeded on our journey, and reached Wellington Valley
+about the end of the month.
+
+WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+I wished to push into the interior without any delay, or at least, so soon
+as we should have completed our arrangements and organized the party; but,
+although Mr. Maxwell had paid every attention to the training of the
+cattle, he was of opinion that they could not yet be wholly relied upon,
+and strongly recommended that they should be kept at practice for another
+week. As we could not have left the settlement under the most favourable
+circumstances in less than four days, the further delay attendant on this
+measure was considered immaterial, and it was, accordingly, determined
+upon. Mr. Hume undertook to superintend the training of the animals, and
+this left me at leisure to gather such information as would be of use to
+us in our progress down the river.
+
+In his description of Wellington Valley, Mr. Oxley has not done it more
+than justice. It is certainly a beautiful and ferthe spot, and it was now
+abundant in pasturage, notwithstanding the unfavourable season that had
+passed over it.
+
+The settlement stands upon the right bank of the Bell, about two miles
+above the junction of that stream with the Macquarie. Its whitewashed
+buildings bore outward testimony to the cleanliness and regularity of the
+inhabitants; and the respectful conduct of the prisoners under his charge,
+showed that Mr. Maxwell had maintained that discipline by which alone he
+could have secured respect to himself and success to his exertions, at
+such a distance from the seat of government.
+
+The weather was so exceedingly hot, during our stay, that it was
+impossible to take exercise at noon; but in the evening, or at an early
+hour in the morning, we were enabled to make short excursions in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+Mr. Maxwell informed me that there were three stations below the
+settlement, the first of which, called Gobawlin, belonging to Mr. Wylde,
+was not more than five miles from it; the other two, occupied by Mr.
+Palmer, were at a greater distance, one being nineteen, the other
+thirty-four miles below the junction of the Bell. He was good enough to
+send for the stockman (or chief herdsman), in charge of the last, to give
+me such information of the nature of the country below him, as he could
+furnish from personal knowledge or from the accounts of the natives.
+
+LOW STATE OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER.
+
+Mr. Maxwell pointed out to me the spot on which Mr. Oxley's boats had been
+built, close upon the bank of the Macquarie; and I could not but reflect
+with some degree of apprehension on the singularly diminished state of the
+river from what it must then have been to allow a boat to pass down it.
+Instead of a broad stream and a rapid current, the stream was confined to
+a narrow space in the centre of the channel, and it ran so feebly amidst
+frequent shallows that it was often scarcely perceptible. The Bell, also,
+which Mr. Oxley describes as dashing and rippling along its pebbly bed,
+had ceased to flow, and consisted merely of a chain of ponds.
+
+On the 3rd of Dec, the stockman from below arrived; but the only
+information we gathered from him was the existence of a lake to the left
+of the river, about three days' journey below the run of his herds, on the
+banks of which he assured us, the native companions, a species of stork,
+stood in rows like companies of soldiers.
+
+He brought up a nest of small paroquets of the most beautiful plumage, as
+a present to Mr. Maxwell, and affirmed that they were common about his
+part of the river. The peculiarity of the seasons had also brought a
+parrot into the valley which had never before visited it. This delicate
+bird was noticed by Captain Cook upon the coast, and is called
+PSITTACUS NOVAE HOLLANDIAE, or New Holland Parrot, by Mr. Brown. It had
+not, however, been subsequently seen until the summer of 1828, when it
+made its appearance at Wellington Valley in considerable numbers, together
+with a species of merops or mountain bee-eater.
+
+DEPARTURE FOR THE INTERIOR.
+
+On the 5th, our preparations being wholly completed, and the loads
+arranged, the party was mustered, end was found to consist of myself and
+Mr. Hume, two soldiers and eight prisoners of the crown, two of whom were
+to return with dispatches. Our animals numbered two riding, and seven
+pack, horses, two draft, and eight pack, bullocks, exclusive of two
+horses of my own, and two for the men to be sent back.
+
+BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+The morning of the 7th December, the day upon which we were to leave the
+valley, was ushered in by a cloudless sky, and that heated appearance in
+the atmosphere which foretells an oppressively sultry day. I therefore put
+off the moment of our departure to the evening, and determined to proceed
+no further than Gobawlin. I was the more readily induced to order this
+short journey because the animals had not been practised to their full
+loads, and I thought they might have given some trouble at starting with
+an unusual weight. They moved off however very quietly, and as if they had
+been accustomed to their work by a long course of training. We took our
+departure from the settlement at 3 p.m. and, crossing to the right bank of
+the Macquarie, a little above its junction with the Bell, reached Mr
+Wylde's station about half-past five. Thus we commenced our journey under
+circumstances as favorable as could have been wished. In disengaging
+ourselves on the following day from the hills by which Wellington Valley
+is encompassed on the westward, with a view to approach Mr. Palmer's first
+station, we kept rather wide of the river, and only occasionally touched
+on its more projecting angles. The soil at a distance from the stream was
+by no means so good as that in its immediate vicinity, nor was the timber
+of the same description. On the rich and picturesque grounds near the
+river the angophora prevailed with the flooded gum, and the scenery upon
+its banks was improved by the casuarinae that overhung them. On the
+latter, inferior eucalypti and cypresses were mixed together. The country
+was broken and undulating, and the hills stony, notwithstanding which,
+they appeared to have an abundance of pasture upon them. Mr. Hume rode
+with me to the summit of a limestone elevation, from which I thought it
+probable we might have obtained such a view as would have enabled us to
+form some idea of the country into which we were about to descend. But in
+following the river line, the eye wandered over a dark and unbroken
+forest alone. The ranges from which we were fast receding formed an
+irregular and beautiful landscape to the southward; and contrasted
+strongly with the appearance of the country to the N. W., in which
+direction it was rapidly assuming a level.
+
+We reached Mr. Palmer's at a late hour in the afternoon, in consequence of
+a delay we experienced in crossing a gully, and encamped upon a high bank
+immediately opposite to the mouth of Molle's rivulet which here joins the
+Macquarie from the southward. The cattle had consumed all the food, and
+the ground on both sides of the river looked bare and arid.
+
+No doubt, however, the face of the country in ordinary seasons wears a
+very different appearance. Its general elevation continued high; nor did
+the Macquarie assume any change of aspect. Mountain debris and rounded
+pebbles of various kinds formed its bed, which was much encumbered with
+timber.
+
+DIBILAMBLE.
+
+We had been unable to persuade any of the natives of Wellington Valley to
+accompany us as guides, on our leaving that settlement. Even Mr. Maxwell's
+influence failed; for, notwithstanding the promises of several, when they
+saw that we were ready to depart, they either feigned sickness or stated
+that they were afraid of the more distant natives. The fact is, that they
+were too lazy to wander far from their own district, and too fond of
+Maxwell's beef to leave it for a precarious bush subsistence. Fortunately
+we found several natives with Mr. Palmer's stockmen, who readily undertook
+to conduct us by the nearest route to the cataract, which we considered to
+be midway between Wellington Valley and Mount Harris. We started under
+their guidance for Dibilamble, Mr. Palmer's second station, and reached it
+about half-past 4 p.m. The distance between the two is sixteen miles. The
+country for some miles differs in no material point from that through
+which we had already passed. The same rich tracts of soil near the river
+and the same inferiority in the tracks remote from it. Near Dibilamble,
+however, the limestone formation terminates, and gives place to barren
+stony ridges, upon which the cypress callities is of close and stunted
+growth. The ridges themselves were formed of a coarse kind of freestone
+in a state of rapid decomposition. The Tabragar (the Erskine of Mr. Oxley)
+falls into the Macquarie at Dibilamble. It had long ceased to flow, being
+a small mountain torrent whose source, if we judge from the shingly nature
+of its bed, cannot be very distant. Our descent was considerable during
+the day; the rapids were frequent in the river, but it underwent no change
+in its general appearance. Its waters were hard and transparent, and its
+banks, in many places, extremely lofty; with a red sandy loam and gravel
+under the alluvial deposits. It generally happened that where the bank was
+high on the one side it was low and subject to flood, to a limited extent
+at least, on the other. Upon these low grounds the blue-gum trees were of
+lofty growth, but on the upper levels box prevailed.
+
+SCENERY NEAR THE RIVER.
+
+The views upon the river were really beautiful, and varied at every turn;
+nor is it possible for any tree to exceed the casuarina in the graceful
+manner in which it bends over the stream, or clings to some solitary rock
+in its centre.
+
+It here became necessary for us to cross to the left bank of the river,
+not only to avoid its numerous windings, and thus to preserve as much as
+possible the direct line to Mount Harris; but also, because the travelling
+was much better on the south side. We therefore availed ourselves of a
+ford opposite to the ground on which the tents had stood; and then pursued
+our journey, in a south-westerly course, over a country of a description
+very inferior to that of any we had previously noticed.
+
+Iron-bark and cypresses generally prevailed along our line of route on a
+poor and sandy soil, which improved after we passed Elizabeth Burn, a
+small creek mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+TAYLOR'S RIVULET.
+
+We approached the river again early in the day, and pitched our tent on
+the summit of a sloping bank that overlooked one of its long still
+reaches. We were protected from the sun by the angophora trees, which
+formed a hanging wood around us, and, with its bright green foliage, gave
+a cheerfulness to the scene that was altogether unusual. The opposite side
+of the river was rather undulated, and the soil appeared to be of the
+finest description. The grass, although growing in tufts, afforded
+abundance of pasture for the cattle; and, on the whole, this struck me as
+a most eligible spot for a station, and I found it occupied as such on the
+return of the expedition. We had encamped about a quarter of a mile from
+Taylor's Rivulet, which discharges itself into the Macquarie from the
+N. E., and is the first stream, upon the right bank, below the Wellington
+Valley.
+
+Immediately after receiving it the river sweeps away to the southward, in
+consequence of which it became again necessary for us to cross it. Our
+guides, who were intelligent lads, led the cattle to a ford, a little
+below the junction of Taylor's Rivulet, at which we effected a passage
+with some difficulty; the opposite bank being very steep, and we were
+obliged to force our way up a gully for some eighty or a hundred yards
+before we could extricate the team. Pursuing our journey, in a N. W.
+direction, we soon left the rich and undulating grounds bordering the
+river behind us. A poor, level, and open country, succeeded them. The
+soil changed to a light red, sandy loam, on which eucalypti, cypresses,
+and casuarinae, were intermixed with minor shrubs; of which latter, the
+cherry tree (exocarpus cupressiformis) was the most prevalent.
+
+At about seven miles from the river we passed some barren freestone
+ridges, near which Mr. Hume killed the first kangaroo we had seen. At
+mid-day we passed a small creek, at which the cattle were watered; and
+afterwards continued our journey through a country similar to that over
+which we had already made our way.
+
+As we neared the stream we noticed the acacia pendula for the first
+time,--an indication of our approach to the marshes. The weather still
+continued extremely hot. Our journey this day was unusually long, and our
+cattle suffered so much, and moved so slowly, that it was late when we
+struck upon the Macquarie, at a part where its banks were so high that we
+had some difficulty in finding a good watering place.
+
+SURPRISE SOME NATIVES.
+
+Being considerably in front of the party, with one of our guides, when we
+neared the river, I came suddenly upon a family of natives. They were much
+terrified, and finding that they could not escape, called vehemently to
+some of their companions, who were in the distance. By the time Mr. Hume
+came up, they had in some measure recovered their presence of mind, but
+availed themselves of the first favourable moment to leave us. I was
+particular in not imposing any restraint on these men, in consequence of
+which they afterwards mustered sufficient resolution to visit us in our
+camp. We now judged that we were about ten miles from the cataract, and
+that, according to the accounts of the stockman, we could not be very
+distant from the lake he had mentioned.
+
+NATIVE BURIAL PLACE.
+
+As I was unwilling to pass any important feature of the country without
+enquiry or examination, I requested Mr. Hume to interrogate the strangers
+on the subject. They stated that they belonged to the lake tribe, that the
+lake was a short day's journey to the eastward, and that they would guide
+us to it if we wished. The matter was accordingly arranged. They left us
+at dusk, but returned to the camp at the earliest dawn; when we once more
+crossed the river, and, after traversing a very level country for about
+nine miles, arrived at our destination. We passed over the dried beds of
+lagoons, and through coppices of cypresses and acacia pendula, or open
+forest, but did not observe any of the barren stony ridges so common to
+the N.E. About a mile, or a mile and a half, from the lake we examined a
+solitary grave that had recently been constructed. It consisted of an
+oblong mound, with three semicircular seats. A walk encompassed the whole,
+from which three others branched off for a few yards only, into the
+forest. Several cypresses, overhanging the grave, were fancifully carved
+on the inner side, and on one the shape of a heart was deeply engraved.
+
+BUDDAH LAKE.
+
+We were sadly disappointed in the appearance of the lake, which the
+natives call the Buddah. It is a serpentine sheet of fresh water, of
+rather more than a mile in length, and from three to four hundred yards in
+breadth. Its depth was four fathoms; but it seemed as if it were now five
+or six feet below the ordinary level. No stream either runs into it or
+flows from it; yet it abounds in fish; from which circumstance I should
+imagine that it originally owed its supply to the river during some
+extensive inundation. Notwithstanding that we had crossed some rich tracts
+of land in our way to it, the neighbourhood of the lake was by no means
+ferthe. The trees around it were in rapid decay, and the little
+vegetation to be seen appeared to derive but little advantage from its
+proximity to water.
+
+EXTREME HEAT OF THE WEATHER.
+
+We had started at early dawn; and the heat had become intolerable long ere
+the sun had gained the meridian. It was rendered still more oppressive
+from the want of air in the dense bushes through which we occasionally
+moved. At 2 p.m. the thermometer stood at 129 degrees of Fahrenheit, in
+the shade; and at 149 degrees in the sun; the difference being exactly 20
+degrees. It is not to be wondered at that the cattle suffered, although
+the journey was so short. The sun's rays were too powerful even for the
+natives, who kept as much as possible in the shade. In the evening, when
+the atmosphere was somewhat cooler, we launched the boat upon the lake,
+in order to get some wild fowl and fish; but although we were tolerably
+successful with our guns, we did not take anything with our hooks.
+
+The natives had, in the course of the afternoon, been joined by the rest
+of the tribe, and they now numbered about three and twenty. They were
+rather distant in their manner, and gazed with apparent astonishment at
+the scene that was passing before them.
+
+If there had been other proof wanting, of the lamentably parched and
+exhausted state of the interior, we had on this occasion ample evidence of
+it, and of the fearful severity of the drought under which the country was
+suffering. As soon as the sun dipped under the horizon, hundreds of birds
+came crowding to the border of the lake, to quench the thirst they had
+been unable to allay in the forest. Some were gasping, others almost too
+weak to avoid us, and all were indifferent to the reports of our guns.
+
+CATARACT OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+On leaving the Buddah, eleven only of the natives accompanied us. We
+reached the river again about noon, on a north-half-east course, where it
+had a rocky bed, and continued to journey along it, until we reached the
+cataract at which we halted. We travelled over soil generally inferior to
+that which we had seen on the preceding day, but rich in many places. The
+same kind of timber was observed, but the acacia pendula was more
+prevalent than any other, although near the river the flooded gum and
+Australian apple-tree were of beautiful growth.
+
+It had appeared to me that the waters of the Macquarie had been
+diminishing in volume since our departure from Wellington Valley, and I
+had a favourable opportunity of judging as to the correctness of this
+conclusion at the cataract, where its channel, at all times much
+contracted, was particularly so on the present occasion. So little force
+was there in the current, that I began to entertain doubts how long it
+would continue, more especially when I reflected on the level character of
+the country we had entered, and the fact of the Macquarie not receiving
+any tributary between this point and the marshes. I was in consequence
+led to infer that result, which, though not immediately, eventually took
+place.
+
+As they were treated with kindness, the natives who accompanied us soon
+threw off all reserve, and in the afternoon assembled at the pool below
+the fall to take fish. They went very systematically to work, with short
+spears in their hands that tapered gradually to a point, and sank at once
+under water without splash or noise at a given signal from an elderly man.
+In a short time, one or two rose with the fish they had transfixed; the
+others remained about a minute under water, and then made their
+appearance near the same rock into the crevices of which they had driven
+their prey. Seven fine bream were taken, the whole of which they insisted
+on giving to our men, although I am not aware that any of themselves had
+broken their fast that day. They soon, however, procured a quantity of
+muscles, with which they sat down very contentedly at a fire. My
+barometrical admeasurement gave the cataract an elevation of 680 feet
+above the level of the sea; and my observations placed it in east
+longitude 148 degrees 3 minutes and in latitude 31 degrees 50 minutes
+south.
+
+It became an object with us to gain the right bank of the Macquarie as
+soon as possible; for it was evident that the country to the southward of
+it was much more swampy than it was to the north: but for some distance
+below the cataract, we found it impossible to effect our purpose. The
+rocks composing the bed of the river at the cataract, which are of trapp
+formation, disappeared at about eight miles below it, when the river
+immediately assumed another character. Its banks became of equal height,
+which had not before been the case, and averaged from fifteen to eighteen
+feet. They were composed entirely of alluvial soil, and were higher than
+the highest flood-marks. Its waters appeared to be turbid and deep, and
+its bed was a mixture of sand and clay. The casuarina, which had so often
+been admired by us, entirely disappeared and the channel in many places
+became so narrow as to be completely arched over by gum-trees.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+On the 16th, we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives who joined our
+train after the very necessary ceremonies of an introduction had passed,
+and when added to those who still accompanied us, amounted to fifty-three.
+On this occasion I was riding somewhat in front of the party, when I came
+upon them. They were very different in appearance from those whom we had
+surprised at the river; and from the manner in which I was received, I was
+led to infer that they had been informed of our arrival, and had
+purposely assembled to meet us. I was saluted by an old man, who had
+stationed himself in front of his tribe, and who was their chief. Behind
+him the young men stood in a line, and behind them the warriors were
+seated on the ground.
+
+CONDUCT OF THE NATIVES.
+
+I had a young native with me who had attached himself to our party, and
+who, from his extreme good nature and superior intelligence, was
+considered by us as a first-rate kind of fellow. He explained who and what
+we were, and I was glad to observe that the old chief seemed perfectly
+reconciled to my presence, although he cast many an anxious glance at the
+long train of animals that were approaching. The warriors, I remarked,
+never lifted their eyes from the ground. They were hideously painted with
+red and yellow ochre, and had their weapons at their sides, while their
+countenances were fixed, sullen, and determined. In order to overcome this
+mood, I rode up to them, and, taking a spear from the nearest, gave him
+my gun to examine; a mark of confidence that was not lost upon them, for
+they immediately relaxed from their gravity, and as soon as my party
+arrived, rose up and followed us. That which appeared most to excite their
+surprise, was the motion of the wheels of the boat carriage. The young
+native whom I have noticed above, acted as interpreter, and, by his
+facetious manner, contrived to keep the whole of us in a fit of laughter
+as we moved along. He had been named Botheri by some stockman.
+
+
+In consequence of our wish to cross the river, we kept near it, and
+experienced considerable delay from the frequent marshes that opposed
+themselves to our progress. In one of these we saw a number of ibises and
+spoonbills; and the natives succeeded in killing two or three snakes. Our
+view to the westward was extremely limited; but to the eastward the
+country appeared in some places to expand into plains.
+
+CROSSING OF THE RIVER.
+
+After travelling some miles down the banks of the river, finding that they
+still retained their steep character, we turned back to a place which Mr.
+Hume had observed, and at which he thought we might, with some little
+trouble, cross to the opposite side. And, however objectionable the
+attempt was, we found ourselves obliged to make it. We descended,
+therefore, into the channel of the river, and unloaded the animals and
+boat-carriage. In order to facilitate the ascent of the right bank, some
+of the men were directed to cut steps up it. I was amused to see the
+natives voluntarily assist them; and was surprised when they took up bags
+of flour weighing 100 pounds each, and carried them across the river. We
+were not long in getting the whole of the stores over. The boat was then
+hoisted on the shoulders of the strongest, and deposited on the top of the
+opposite bank; and ropes being afterwards attached to the carriage, it was
+soon drawn up to a place of safety. The natives worked as hard as our own
+people, and that, too, with a cheerfulness for which I was altogether
+unprepared, and which is certainly foreign to their natural habits. We
+pitched our tents as soon as we had effected the passage of the river;
+after which, the men went to bathe, and blacks and whites were mingled
+promiscuously in the stream. I did not observe that the former differed in
+any respect from the natives who frequent the located districts. They were
+generally clean limbed and stout, and some of the young men had pleasing
+intelligent countenances. They lacerate their bodies, inflicting deep
+wounds to raise the flesh, and extract the front teeth like the Bathurst
+tribes; and their weapons are precisely the same. They are certainly a
+merry people, and sit up laughing and talking more than half the night.
+
+BAROMETER BROKEN.
+
+During the removal of the stores my barometer was unfortunately broken,
+and I had often, in the subsequent stages of the journey, occasion to
+regret the accident. I apprehend that the corks in the instrument, placed
+to steady the tube, are too distant from each other in most cases; and
+indeed I fear that barometers as at present constructed, will seldom be
+carried with safety in overland expeditions.
+
+DESERTED BY THE NATIVES.
+
+Nine only of the natives accompanied us on the morning succeeding the day
+in which we crossed the river. Botheri was, however, at the head of them;
+and, as we journeyed along, he informed me that he had been promised a
+wife on his return from acting as our guide, by the chief of the last
+tribe. The excessive heat of the weather obliged us to shorten our
+journey, and we encamped about noon in some scrub after having traversed a
+level country for about eleven miles.
+
+Several considerable plains were noticed to our right, stretching east and
+west, which were generally rich in point of soil; but we passed through
+much brushy land during the day. It was lamentable to see the state of
+vegetation upon the plains from want of moisture. Although the country
+had assumed a level character, and was more open than on the higher
+branches of the Macquarie, the small freestone elevations, backing the
+alluvial tracts near the river, still continued upon our right, though
+much diminished in height, and at a great distance from the banks. They
+seemed to be covered with cypresses and beef-wood, but dwarf-box and the
+acacia pendula prevailed along the plains; while flooded-gum alone
+occupied the lands in the immediate neighbourhood of the stream, which was
+evidently fast diminishing, both in volume and rapidity; its bed, however,
+still continuing to be a mixture of sand and clay.
+
+The cattle found such poor feed around the camp that they strayed away in
+search of better during the night. On such an occasion Botheri and his
+fraternity would have been of real service; but he had decamped at an
+early hour, and had carried off an axe, a tomahawk, and some bacon,
+although I had made him several presents. I was not at all surprised at
+this piece of roguery, since cunning is the natural attribute of a savage;
+but I was provoked at their running away at a moment when I so much
+required their assistance.
+
+Left to ourselves, I found Mr. Hume of the most essential service in
+tracking the animals, and to his perseverance we were indebted for their
+speedy recovery, They had managed to find tolerable feed near a serpentine
+sheet of water, which Mr. Hume thought it would be advisable to examine.
+We directed our course to it as soon as the cattle were loaded, moving
+through bush, and found it to be a very considerable creek that receives a
+part of the superfluous waters of the Macquarie, and distributes them,
+most probably, over the level country to the north. It was much wider than
+the river, being from fifty to sixty yards across, and is resorted to by
+the natives, who procure muscles from its bed in great abundance. We were
+obliged to traverse its eastern bank to its junction with the river, at
+which it fortunately happened to be dry. We had, however, to cut roads
+down both its banks before we could cross it; and, consequently, made but
+a short day's journey. The soil passed over was inferior to the generality
+of soil near the river, but we encamped on a tongue of land on which both
+the flooded-gum and the grass were of luxuriant height. We found a
+quantity of a substance like pipe-clay in the bed of the river, similar to
+that mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+GREAT HEAT.
+
+The heat, which had been excessive at Wellington Valley, increased upon us
+as we advanced into the interior. The thermometer was seldom under 114
+degrees at noon, and rose still higher at 2 p.m. We had no dews at night,
+and consequently the range of the instrument was trifling in the
+twenty-four hours. The country looked bare and scorched, and the plains
+over which we journeyed had large fissures traversing them, so that the
+earth may literally be said to have gasped for moisture. The country,
+which above the cataract had borne the character of open forest, excepting
+on the immediate banks of the river, where its undulations and openness
+gave it a park-like appearance, or where the barren stony ridges prevailed
+below that point, generally exhibited alternately plain and brush, the
+soil on both of which was good. On the former, crested pigeons were
+numerous, several of which were shot. We had likewise procured some of the
+rose-coloured and grey parrots, mentioned by Mr. Oxley, and a small
+paroquet of beautiful plumage; but there was less of variety in the
+feathered race than I expected to find, and most of the other birds we had
+seen were recognised by me as similar to specimens I had procured from
+Melville Island, and were, therefore, most probably birds of passage.
+
+ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AND THE RIVER.
+
+As we neared Mount Harris, the Macquarie became more sluggish in its flow,
+and fell off so much as scarcely to deserve the name of a river. In
+breadth, it averaged from thirty-five to forty-five yards, and in the
+height of its banks, from fifteen to eighteen. Mr. Hume had succeeded in
+taking some fish at one of the stock stations; but if I except those
+speared by the natives, we had since been altogether unsuccessful with the
+hook, a circumstance which I attribute to the lowness of the river itself.
+
+About thirty miles from the cataract the country declines to the north as
+a medium point, and again changes somewhat in its general appearance. To
+the S. and S.W. it appeared level and wooded, while to the N. the plains
+became more frequent, but smaller, and travelling over them was extremely
+dangerous, in consequence of the large fissures by which they were
+traversed. The only trees to be observed were dwarf-box and the acacia
+pendula, both of stunted growth, although flooded-gum still prevailed upon
+the river.
+
+On the 20th we travelled on a N.W. course, and in the early part of the
+day passed over tolerably good soil. It was succeeded by a barren scrub,
+through which we penetrated in the direction of Welcome Rock, a point we
+had seen from one of the Plains and had mistaken for Mount Harris.
+
+ARRIVAL AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+On a nearer approach, however, we observed our error, and corrected it by
+turning more to the left; and we ultimately encamped about a mile to the
+W.S.W. of the latter eminence. On issuing from the scrub we found
+ourselves among reeds and coarse water-grass; and, from the appearance of
+the country, we were led to conclude that we had arrived at a part of the
+interior more than ordinarily subject to overflow.
+
+As soon as the camp was fixed, Mr. Hume and I rode to Mount Harris, over
+ground subject to flood and covered for the most part by the polygonum,
+being too anxious to defer our examination of its neighbourhood even for a
+few hours.
+
+VESTIGES OF MR. OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT.
+
+Nearly ten years had elapsed since Mr. Oxley pitched his tents under the
+smallest of the two hills into which Mount Harris is broken. There was no
+difficulty in hitting upon his position. The trenches that had been cut
+round the tents were still perfect, and the marks of the fire-places
+distinguishable; while the trees in the neighbourhood had been felled,
+and round about them the staves of some casks and a few tent-pegs were
+scattered. Mr. Oxley had selected a place at some distance from the river,
+in consequence of its then swollen state. I looked upon it from the same
+ground, and could not discern the waters in its channel; so much had they
+fallen below their ordinary level. He saw the river when it was
+overflowing its banks; on the present occasion it had scarcely sufficient
+water to support a current. On the summit of the greater eminence, which
+we ascended, there remained the half-burnt planks of a boat, some clenched
+and rusty nails, and an old trunk; but my search for the bottle Mr. Oxley
+had left was unsuccessful.
+
+A reflection naturally arose to my mind on examining these decaying
+vestiges of a former expedition, whether I should be more fortunate than
+the leader of it, and how far I should be enabled to penetrate beyond the
+point which had conquered his perseverance. Only a week before I left
+Sydney I had followed Mr. Oxley to the tomb. A man of uncommon quickness,
+and of great ability, the task of following up his discoveries was not
+less enviable than arduous; but, arrived at that point at which his
+journey may be said to have terminated and mine only to commence, I knew
+not how soon I should be obliged, like him, to retreat from the marshes
+and exhalations of so depressed a country. My eye instinctively turned to
+the North-West, and the view extended over an apparently endless forest.
+I could trace the river line of trees by their superior height; but saw no
+appearance of reeds, save the few that grew on the banks of the stream.
+
+Mount Foster, somewhat higher than Mount Harris, on the opposite side of
+the river, alone broke the line of the horizon to the North N.W. at a
+distance of five miles. From that point all round the compass, the low
+lands spread, like a dark sea, before me; except where a large plain
+stretching from E. to W., and lying to the S.E. broke their monotony;
+and if there was nothing discouraging, there certainly was nothing
+cheering, in the prospect.
+
+ILLNESS OF TWO OF THE MEN.
+
+On our return to the camp, I was vexed to find two of the men, Henwood and
+Williams, with increased inflammation of the eyes, of which they had
+previously been complaining, and I thought it advisable to bleed the
+latter.
+
+In consequence of the indisposition of these men, we remained stationary
+on the 21st, which enabled me to pay a second visit to Mount Harris. On
+ascending the smaller hill, I was surprised to find similar vestiges on
+its summit to those I had noticed on the larger one; in addition to which,
+the rollers still continued on the side of the hill, which had been used
+to get the boat up it. [Mr. Oxley had two boats; one of which he dragged
+to the top of each of these hills, and left them turned bottom upwards,
+buryinq a bottle under the head of the larger boat, which was conveyed to
+the more distant hill.]
+
+Mount Harris is of basaltic formation, but I could not observe any
+columnar regularity in it, although large blocks are exposed above the
+ground. The rock is extremely hard and sonorous.
+
+MOUNT FOSTER AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
+
+We moved leisurely towards Mount Foster, on the 22nd, and arrived opposite
+to it a little before sunset. The country between the two is mostly open,
+or covered only with the acacia pendula and dwarf-box. The soil, although
+an alluvial deposit, is not of the best; nor was vegetation either fresh
+or close upon it. As soon as the party stopped, I crossed the river, and
+lost no time in ascending the hill, being anxious to ascertain if any
+fresh object was visible from its summit, I thought that from an eminence
+so much above the level of the surrounding objects, I might obtain a view
+of the marshes, or of water; but I was wholly disappointed. The view was
+certainly extensive, but it was otherwise unsatisfactory. Again to the
+N.W. the lowlands spread in darkness before me; there were some
+considerable plains beyond the near wood; but the country at the foot of
+the hill appeared open and promising. Although the river line was lost in
+the distance, it was as truly pointed out by the fires of the natives,
+which rose in upright columns into the sky, as if it had been marked by
+the trees upon its banks.
+
+To the eastward, Arbuthnot's range rose high above the line of the
+horizon, bearing nearly due East, distant seventy miles. The following
+sketch of its outlines will convey a better idea of its appearance from
+Mount Foster than any written description.
+
+[small sketch here--not shown in etext]
+
+I stayed on the mount until after sunset, but I could not make out any
+space that at all resembled the formidable barrier I knew we were so
+rapidly approaching. I saw nothing to check our advance, and I therefore
+returned to the camp, to advise with Mr. Hume upon the subject. Not having
+been with me on Mount Foster, he took the opportunity to ascend it on the
+following morning; and on his return concurred with me in opinion, that
+there was no apparent obstacle to our moving onwards. As the men were
+considerably better, I had the less hesitation in closing with the
+marshes. We left our position, intending to travel slowly, and to halt
+early.
+
+The first part of our journey was over rich flats, timbered sufficiently
+to afford a shade, on which the grass was luxuriant; but we were obliged
+to seek more open ground, in consequence of the frequent stumbling of the
+cattle.
+
+We issued, at length, upon a plain, the view across which was as dreary as
+can be imagined; in many places without a tree, save a few old stumps
+left by the natives when they fired the timber, some of which were still
+smoking in different parts of it. Observing some lofty trees at the
+extremity of the plain, we moved towards them, under an impression that
+they indicated the river line. But on this exposed spot the sun's rays
+fell with intense power upon us, and the dust was so minute and
+penetrating, that I soon regretted having left the shady banks of the
+river.
+
+About 2.p.m. we neared the trees for which we had been making, over ground
+evidently formed by alluvial deposition, and were astonished to find that
+reeds alone were growing under the trees as far as the eye could
+penetrate. It appeared that we were still some distance from the river,
+and it was very doubtful how far we might be from water, for which the
+men were anxiously calling. I therefore halted, and sent Fraser into the
+reeds towards some dead trees, on which a number of spoonbills were
+sitting. He found that there was a small lake in the centre of the reeds,
+the resort of numerous wild fowl; but although the men were enabled to
+quench their thirst, we found it impossible to water the animals. We were
+obliged, therefore, to continue our course along the edge of the reeds;
+which in a short time appeared in large masses in front of us, stretching
+into a vast plain upon our right; and it became evident that the whole
+neighbourhood was subject to extensive inundation.
+
+ENCAMP AMIDST REEDS.
+
+I was fearful that the reeds would have checked us; but there was a
+passage between the patches, through which we managed to force our way
+into a deep bight, and fortunately gained the river at the bottom of it
+much sooner than we expected. We were obliged to clear away a space for
+the tents; and thus, although there had been no such appearance from Mount
+Foster, we found ourselves in less than seven hours after leaving it,
+encamped pretty far in that marsh for which we had so anxiously looked
+from its summit, and now trusting to circumstances for safety, upon
+ground on which, in any ordinary state of the river, it would have been
+dangerous to have ventured. Indeed, as it was, our situation was
+sufficiently critical, and would not admit of hesitation on my part.
+
+NATURE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+After the cattle had been turned out, Mr. Hume and I again mounted our
+horses, and proceeded to the westward, with a view to examine the nature
+of the country before us, and to ascertain if it was still practicable to
+move along the river side. For, although it was evident that we had
+arrived at what might strictly be called the marshes of the Macquarie, I
+still thought we might be at some distance from the place where Mr. Oxley
+terminated his journey.
+
+There was no indication in the river to encourage an idea that it would
+speedily terminate; nor, although we were on ground subject to extensive
+inundation, could we be said to have reached the heart of the marshes, as
+the reeds still continued in detached bodies only. We forced a path
+through various portions of them, and passed over ground wholly subject to
+flood, to a distance of about six miles. We then crossed a small rise of
+ground, sufficiently high to have afforded a retreat, had necessity
+obliged us to seek for one; and we shortly afterwards descended on the
+river, unaltered in its appearance, and rather increased than diminished
+in size. A vast plain extended to the N.W., the extremity of which we
+could not discern; though a thick forest formed its northern boundary.
+
+It was evident that this plain had been frequently under water, but it was
+difficult to judge from the marks on the trees to what height the floods
+had risen. The soil was an alluvial deposit, superficially sandy; and many
+shells were scattered over its surface. To the south, the country appeared
+close and low; nor do I think we could have approached the river from that
+side, by reason of the huge belts of reeds that appeared to extend as far
+as the the eye could reach.
+
+MEN ATTACKED WITH OPHTHALMIA.
+
+The approach of night obliged us to return to the camp. On our arrival,
+we found that the state of Henwood and Williams would prevent our stirring
+for a day or two. Not only had they a return of inflammation, but several
+other of the men complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, which
+were dreadfully blood-shot and weak. I was in some measure prepared for a
+relapse in Henwood, as the exposure which he necessarily underwent on the
+plain was sufficient to produce that effect; but I now became apprehensive
+that the affection would run through the party.
+
+Considering our situation in its different bearings, it struck me that the
+men who were to return to Wellington Valley with an account our our
+proceedings for the Governor's information, had been brought as far as
+prudence warranted. There was no fear of their going astray, as long as
+they had the river to guide them; but in the open country which we were to
+all appearance approaching, or amidst fields of reeds, they might wander
+from the track, and irrecoverably lose themselves. I determined,
+therefore, not to risk their safety, but to prepare my dispatches for
+Sydney, and I hoped most anxiously, that ere they were closed, all
+symptoms of disease would have terminated.
+
+In the course of the day, however, Spencer, who was to return with Riley
+to Wellington Valley, became seriously indisposed, and I feared that he
+was attacked with dysentery. Indeed, I should have attributed his illness
+to our situation, but I did not notice any unusual moisture in the
+atmosphere, nor did any fogs rise from the river. I therefore the rather
+attributed it to exposure and change of diet, and treated him accordingly.
+To my satisfaction, when I visited the men late in the evening, I found a
+general improvement in the whole of them. Spencer was considerably
+relieved, and those of the party who had inflammation of the eyes no
+longer felt that painful irritation of which they had before complained.
+I determined, therefore, unless untoward circumstances should prevent it,
+to send Riley and his companion homewards, and to move the party without
+loss of time.
+
+We had not seen any natives for many days, but a few passed the camp on
+the opposite side of the river on the evening of the 25th. They would not,
+however, come to us; but fled into the interior in great apparent alarm.
+
+DEPARTURE OF TWO MEN FOR WELLINGTON.
+
+On the morning of the 26th, the men were sufficiently recovered to pursue
+their journey. Riley and Spencer left us at an early hour; and about
+7 a.m. we pursued a N.N.W. course along the great plain I have noticed,
+starting numberless quails, and many wild turkeys, by the way. Leaving
+that part of the river on which Mr. Hume and I had touched considerably to
+the left, we made for the point of a wood, projecting from the river line
+of trees into the plain. The ground under us was an alluvial deposit, and
+bore all the marks of frequent inundation.
+
+The soil was yielding, blistered, and uneven; and the claws of cray-fish,
+together with numerous small shells, were every where collected in the
+hollows made by the subsiding of the waters, between broad belts of reeds
+and scrubs of polygonum.
+
+CONSULTATION.
+
+On gaining the point of the wood, we found an absolute check put to our
+further progress. We had been moving directly on the great body of the
+marsh, and from the wood it spread in boundless extent before us. It was
+evidently lower than the ground on which we stood; we had therefore, a
+complete view over the whole expense; and there was a dreariness and
+desolation pervading the scene that strengthened as we gazed upon it.
+Under existing circumstances, it only remained for us either to skirt
+the reeds to the northward, or to turn in again upon the river; and as I
+considered it important to ascertain the direction of the Macquarie at so
+critical and interesting a point, I thought it better to adopt the latter
+measure. We, accordingly, made for the river, and pitched our tents, as at
+the last station, in the midst of reeds.
+
+There were two points at this time, upon which I was extremely anxious.
+The first was as to the course of the river; the second, as to the extent
+of the marshes by which we had been checked, and the practicability of the
+country to the northward.
+
+In advising with Mr. Hume, I proposed launching the boat, as the surest
+means of ascertaining the former, and he, on his part, most readily
+volunteered to examine the marshes, in any direction I should point out.
+It was therefore, arranged, that I should take two men, and a week's
+provision with me in the boat down the river; and that he should proceed
+with a like number of men on an excursion to the northward.
+
+After having given directions as to the regulations of camp during our
+absence, we separated, on the morning of the 26th for the first time, in
+furtherance of the objects each had in view.
+
+BOAT EXCURSION.
+
+In pulling down the river, I found that its channel was at first extremely
+tortuous and irregular, but that it held a general N.W. course, and bore
+much the same appearance as it had done since our descent from Mount
+Foster.
+
+We had a laborious task in lifting the boat over the trunks of trees that
+had fallen into the channel of the river or that had been left by the
+floods, and at length we stove her in upon a sunken log. The injury she
+received was too serious not to require immediate repair; and we,
+therefore, patched her up with a tin plate. This accident occasioned some
+delay, and the morning was consumed without our having made any
+considerable progress. At length, however, we got into a more open
+channel.
+
+The river suddenly increased in breadth to thirty-five or forty-five
+yards, with a depth of from twelve to twenty feet of water. Its banks
+shelved perpendicularly down, and were almost on a level with the surface
+of the stream; and the flood mark was not more than two feet high on the
+reeds by which they were lined. We had hitherto passed under the shade of
+the flooded gum, which still continued on the immediate banks of the
+river; but, the farther we advanced, the more did we find these trees in a
+state of decay, until at length they ceased, or were only rarely met with.
+
+TERMINATION OF THE RIVER.
+
+About 2 p.m. I brought up under a solitary tree, in consequence of heavy
+rain: this was upon the left bank. In the afternoon, however, we again
+pushed forward, and soon lost sight of every other object amidst reeds of
+great height. The channel of the river continued as broad and as deep as
+ever, but the flood mark did not show more than a foot above the banks,
+which were now almost on a level with the water; and the current was so
+sluggish as to be scarcely perceptible. These general appearances
+continued for about three miles, when our course was suddenly, and most
+unexpectedly, checked. The channel, which had promised so well, without
+any change in its breadth or depth, ceased altogether; and whilst we were
+yet lost in astonishment at so abrupt a termination of it, the boat
+grounded. It only remained for us to examine the banks, which we did with
+particular attention. Two creeks were then discovered, so small as
+scarcely to deserve the name, and which would, under ordinary
+circumstances, have been overlooked. The one branched off to the
+north--the other to the west. We were obliged to get out of the boat to
+push up the former, the leeches sticking in numbers to our legs. The creek
+continued for about thirty yards, when it was terminated; and, in order
+fully to satisfy myself of the fact, I walked round the head of it by
+pushing through the reeds. Night coming on, we returned to the tree at
+which we had stopped during the rain, and slept under it. The men cut away
+the reeds, or we should not have had room to move. At 2 a.m. it commenced
+raining, with a heavy storm of thunder and lightning; the boat was
+consequently hauled ashore, and turned over to afford us a temporary
+shelter. The lightning was extremely vivid, and frequently played upon
+the ground, near the firelocks, for more than a quarter of a minute at a
+time.
+
+It is singular, that Mr. Oxley should, under similar circumstances, have
+experienced an equally stormy night, and most probably within a few yards
+of the place on which I had posted myself. Notwithstanding that the
+elements were raging around me, as if to warn me of the danger of my
+situation, my mind turned solely on the singular failure of the river. I
+could not but encourage hopes that this second channel that remained to
+be explored would lead us into an open space again; and as soon as the
+morning dawned we pursued our way to it. In passing some dead trees upon
+the right bank, I stopped to ascend one, that, from an elevation, I might
+survey the marsh, but I found it impossible to trace the river through it.
+The country to the westward was covered with reeds, apparently to the
+distance of seven miles; to the N.W. to a still greater distance; and to
+the north they bounded the horizon.
+
+The whole expanse was level and unbroken, but here and there the reeds
+were higher and darker than at other places, as if they grew near constant
+moisture; but I could see no appearance of water in any body, or of high
+lands beyond the distant forest.
+
+As soon as we arrived at the end of the main channel, we again got out of
+the boat, and in pushing up the smaller one, soon found ourselves under a
+dark arch of reeds. It did not, however, continue more than twenty yards
+when it ceased, and I walked round the head of it as I had done round that
+of the other. We then examined the space between the creeks, where the
+bank receives the force of the current, which I did not doubt had formed
+them by the separation of its eddies. Observing water among the reeds, I
+pushed through them with infinite labour to a considerable distance. The
+soil proved to be a stiff clay; the reeds were closely embodied, and from
+ten to twelve feet high; the waters were in some places ankle deep, and in
+others scarcely covered the surface. They were flowing in different
+points, with greater speed than those of the river, which at once
+convinced me that they were not permanent, but must have lodged in the
+night during which so much rain had fallen. They ultimately appeared to
+flow to the northward, but I found it impossible to follow them, and it
+was not without difficulty that, after having wandered about at every
+point of the compass, I again reached the boat.
+
+CAUSES OF THE FAILURE OF THE RIVER.
+
+The care with which I had noted every change that took place in the
+Macquarie, from Wellington Valley downwards, enabled me, in some measure,
+to account for its present features. I was led to conclude that the waters
+of the river being so small in body, excepting in times of flood, and
+flowing for so many miles through a level country without receiving any
+tributary to support their first impulse, became too sluggish, long ere
+they reached the marshes, to cleave through so formidable a barrier; and
+consequently spread over the surrounding country--whether again to take
+up the character of a river, we had still to determine. Unless, however,
+a decline of country should favour its assuming its original shape, it was
+evident that the Macquarie would not be found to exist beyond this marsh,
+of the nature and extent of which we were still ignorant. The loss of my
+barometer was at this time severely felt by me, since I could only guess
+at our probable height above the ocean; and I found that my only course
+was to endeavour to force my way to the northward, to ascertain, if I
+could, from the bottom of the marshes; then penetrate in a westerly
+direction beyond them, in order to commence my survey of the S.W.
+interior. I was aware of Mr. Hume's perseverance, and determined,
+therefore, to wait the result of his report ere I again moved the camp, to
+which we returned late in the afternoon of the second day of our
+departure. We found it unsufferably hot and suffocating in the reeds, and
+were tormented by myriads of mosquitoes, but the waters were perfectly
+sweet to the taste, nor did the slightest smell, as of stagnation, proceed
+from them. I may add that the birds, whose sanctuary we had invaded, as
+the bittern and various tribes of the galinule, together with the frogs,
+made incessant noises around us, There were, however, but few water-fowl
+on the river; which was an additional proof to me that we were not near
+any very extensive lake.
+
+MR. HUME'S REPORT.
+
+Mr. Hume had returned before me to the camp, and had succeeded in finding
+a serpentine sheet of water, about twelve miles to the northward; which he
+did not doubt to be the channel of the river. He had pushed on after this
+success, in the hope of gaining a further knowledge of the country; but
+another still more extensive marsh checked him, and obliged him to retrace
+his steps. He was no less surprised at the account I gave of the
+termination of the river, than I was at its so speedily re-forming, and it
+was determined to lose no time in the further examination of so singular a
+region.
+
+FALSE CHANNEL; PERPLEXITIES.
+
+On the morning of the 28th therefore we broke up the camp, and proceeded
+to the northward, under Mr. Hume's guidance, moving over ground wholly
+subject to flood, and extensively covered with reeds; the great body of
+the marsh lying upon our left. After passing the angle of a wood, upon our
+right, from which Mount Foster was distant about fourteen miles, we got
+upon a small plain, on which there was a new species of tortuous box. This
+plain was clear of reeds, and the soil upon it was very rich. Crossing in
+a westerly direction we arrived at the channel found by Mr. Hume, who must
+naturally have concluded that it was a continuation of the river. The boat
+was immediately prepared, and I went up it in order to ascertain the
+nature of its formation. For two miles it preserved a pretty general width
+of from twenty to thirty yards; but at that distance began to narrow, and
+at length it became quite shallow and covered with weeds. We were
+ultimately obliged to abandon the boat, and to walk along a native path.
+The country to the westward was more open than I had expected. About a
+quarter of a mile from where we had left the boat, the channel separated
+into two branches; to which I perceived it owed its formation, coming, as
+they evidently did, direct from the heart of the marsh. The wood through
+which I had entered it on the first occasion bore south of me, to which
+one of the branches inclined; as the other did to the S.W. An almost
+imperceptible rise of ground was before me, which, by giving an impetus to
+the waters of the marsh, accounted to me for the formation of the main
+channel. It was too late, on my return to the camp, to prosecute any
+further examination of it downwards; but in the morning, Mr. Hume
+accompanied me in the boat, to ascertain to what point it led; and we
+found that at about a mile it began to diminish in breadth, until at
+length it was completely lost in a second expanse of reeds. We passed a
+singular scaffolding erected by the natives, on the side of the channel,
+to take fish; and also found a weir at the termination of it for the like
+purpose so that it was evident the natives occasionally ventured into
+the marshes.
+
+There was a small wood to our left which Mr. Hume endeavoured to gain, but
+he failed in the attempt. He did, however, reach a tree that was
+sufficiently high to give him a full view of the marsh, which appeared to
+extend in every direction, but more particularly to the north, for many
+miles. We were, however, at fault, and I really felt at a loss what step
+to take. I should have been led to believe from the extreme flatness of
+the country, that the Macquarie would never assume its natural shape, but
+from the direction of the marshes I could not but indulge a hope that it
+would meet the Castlereagh, and that their united waters might form a
+stream of some importance. Under this impression I determined on again
+sending Mr. Hume to the N.E. in order to ascertain the nature of the
+country in that direction.
+
+EXCURSION TO THE NORTH-WEST.
+
+The weather was excessively hot, and as my men were but slowly recovering,
+I was anxious while those who were in health continued active, to give the
+others a few days of rest. I proposed, therefore, to cross the river, and
+to make an excursion into the interior, during the probable time of
+Mr. Hume's absence; since if, as I imagined, the Macquarie had taken a
+permanent northerly course, I should not have an opportunity of examining
+the distant western country. Mr. Hume's experience rendered it unnecessary
+for me to give him other than general directions.
+
+A PLAIN ON FIRE.
+
+On the last day of the year we left the camp, each accompanied by two men.
+I had the evening previously ordered the horses I intended taking with me
+across the channel, and at an early hour of the morning I followed them.
+Getting on a plain, immediately after I had disengaged myself from the
+reeds on the opposite side of the river, which was full of holes and
+exceedingly treacherous for the animals, I pushed on for a part of the
+wood Mr. Hume had endeavoured to gain from the boat, with the intention of
+keeping near the marsh. On entering it, I found myself in a thick brush of
+eucalypti, casuarinae and minor trees; the soil under them being mixed
+with sand. I kept a N.N.W. course through it, and at the distance of
+three miles from its commencement, ascended a tree, to ascertain if I was
+near the marshes; when I found that I was fast receding from them. I
+concluded, therefore, that my conjecture as to their direction was right,
+and altered my course to N.W., a direction in which I had observed a dense
+smoke arising, which I supposed had been made by some natives near water.
+At the termination of the brush I crossed a barren sandy plain, and from
+it saw the smoke ascending at a few miles' distance from me. Passing
+through a wood, at the extremity of the plain, I found myself at the
+outskirts of an open space of great extent, almost wholly enveloped in
+flames. The fire was running with incredible rapidity through the rhagodia
+shrubs with which it was covered. Passing quickly over it, I continued my
+journey to the N.W. over barren plains of red sandy loam of even surface,
+and bushes of cypresses skirted by acacia pendula. It was not until after
+sunset that we struck upon a creek, in which the water was excellent; and
+we halted on its banks for the night, calculating our distance at
+twenty-nine miles from the camp. The creek was of considerable size,
+leading northerly. Several huts were observed by us, and from the heaps of
+muscle-shells that were scattered about, there could be no doubt of its
+being much frequented by the natives. The grass being fairly burnt up, our
+animals found but little to eat, but they had a tolerable journey. and did
+not attempt to wander in search of better food. I shot a snipe near the
+creek, much resembling the painted snipe of India; but I had not the means
+with me of preserving it.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+Continuing our journey on the following morning, we at first kept on the
+banks of the creek, and at about a quarter of a mile from where we had
+slept, came upon a numerous tribe of natives. A young girl sitting by the
+fire was the first to observe us as we were slowly approaching her. She
+was so excessively alarmed, that she had not the power to run away; but
+threw herself on the ground and screamed violently. We now observed a
+number of huts, out of which the natives issued, little dreaming of the
+spectacle they were to behold. But the moment they saw us, they started
+back; their huts were in a moment in flames, and each with a fire-brand
+ran to and fro with hideous yells, thrusting them into every bush they
+passed. I walked my horse quietly towards an old man who stood more
+forward than the rest, as if he intended to devote himself for the
+preservation of his tribe. I had intended speaking to him, but on a nearer
+approach I remarked that he trembled so violently that it was impossible
+to expect that I could obtain any information from him, and as I had not
+time for explanations, I left him to form his own conjectures as to what
+we were, and continued to move towards a thick brush, into which they did
+not venture to follow us.
+
+CONTINUE OUR JOURNEY.
+
+After a ride of about eighteen miles, through a country of alternate plain
+and brush, we struck upon a second creek leading like the first to the
+northward. The water in it was very bitter and muddy, and it was much
+inferior in appearance to that at which we had slept. After stopping for
+half-an-hour upon its banks, to rest our animals, we again pushed forward.
+We had not as yet risen any perceptible height above the level of the
+marshes, but had left the country subject to overflow for a considerable
+space behind us. The brushes through which we had passed were too sandy to
+retain water long, but the plains were of such an even surface, that they
+could not but continue wet for a considerable period after any fall of
+rain. They were covered with salsolaceous plants, without a blade of
+grass; and their soil was generally a red sandy loam. There were
+occasional patches that appeared moist, in which the calystemma was
+abundant, and these patches must, I should imagine, form quagmires in the
+wet season.
+
+On leaving the last-mentioned creek, we found a gently rising country
+before us; and about three or four miles from it we crossed some stony
+ridges, covered with a new species of acacia so thickly as to prevent our
+obtaining any view from them. As the sun declined, we got into open forest
+ground; and travelled forwards in momentary expectation, from appearances,
+of coming in sight of water; but we were obliged to pull up at sunset on
+the outskirts of a larger plain without having our expectation realized.
+The day had been extremely warm, and our animals were as thirsty as
+ourselves. Hope never forsakes the human breast; and thence it was that,
+after we had secured the horses, we began to wander round our lonely
+bivouac. It was almost dark, when one of my men came to inform me that he
+had found a small puddle of water, to which be had been led by a pigeon.
+
+It was, indeed, small enough, probably the remains of a passing shower; it
+was, however, sufficient for our necessities, and I thanked Providence for
+its bounty to us. We were now about sixty miles from the Macquarie, in a
+N.W. by W. direction, and the country had proved so extremely
+discouraging, that I intimated to my men my intention of retracing my
+steps, should I not discover any change in it before noon on the morrow.
+A dense brush of acacia succeeded to the plain on which we had slept,
+which we entered, and shortly afterwards found ourselves in an open space,
+of oblong shape, at the extremity of which there was a shallow lake. The
+brush completely encircled it, and a few huts were upon its banks. About
+10 p.m. we got into an open forest track of better appearance than any
+over which we had recently travelled.
+
+ISOLATED HILL.
+
+There was a visible change in the country, and the soil, although red, was
+extremely rich and free from sand. A short time afterwards we rose to the
+summit of a round hill, from which we obtained an extensive view on most
+points of the compass. We had imperceptibly risen considerably above the
+general level of the interior.
+
+VIEW FROM THE SUMMIT.
+
+Beneath us, to the westward, I observed a broad and thinly wooded valley;
+and W. by S., distant apparently about twenty miles, an isolated mountain,
+whose sides seemed almost perpendicular, broke the otherwise even line of
+the horizon; but the country in every other direction looked as if it was
+darkly wooded. Anticipating that I should find a stream in the valley, I
+did not for a moment hesitate in striking down into it. Disappointed,
+however, in this expectation, I continued onwards to the mountain, which I
+reached just before the sun set. Indeed, he was barely visible when I
+gained its summit; but my eyes, from exposure to his glare, became so
+weak, my face was so blistered, and my lips cracked in so many places,
+that I was unable to look towards the west, and was actually obliged to
+sit down behind a rock until he had set.
+
+Perhaps no time is so favourable for a view along the horizon as the
+sunset hour; and here, at an elevation of from five to six hundred feet
+above the plain, the visible line of it could not have been less than from
+thirty-five to forty-five miles. The hill upon which I stood was broken
+into two points; the one was a bold rocky elevation; the other had its
+rear face also perpendicular, but gradually declined to the north, and at
+a distance of from four to five miles was lost in an extensive and open
+plain in that direction. In the S.E. quarter, two wooded hills were
+visible, which before had appeared to be nothing more than swells in the
+general level of the country. A small hill, similar to the above, bore
+N.E. by compass; and again, to the west, a more considerable mountain than
+that I had ascended, and evidently much higher, reflected the last beams
+of the sun as he sunk behind them. I looked, however, in vain for water.
+I could not trace either the windings of a stream, or the course of a
+mountain torrent; and, as we had passed a swamp about a mile from the
+hill, we descended to it for the night, during which we were grievously
+tormented by the mosquitoes.
+
+RESULTS OF THE EXCURSION.
+
+I had no inducement to proceed further into the interior. I had been
+sufficiently disappointed in the termination of this excursion, and the
+track before me was still less inviting. Nothing but a dense forest, and a
+level country, existed between me and the distant hill. I had learnt, by
+experience, that it was impossible to form any opinion of the probable
+features of so singular a region as that in which I was wandering, from
+previous appearances, or to expect the same result, as in other countries,
+from similar causes. In a geographical point of view, my journey had been
+more successful, and had enabled me to put to rest for ever a question of
+much previous doubt. Of whatever extent the marshes of the Macquarie might
+be, it was evident they were not connected with those of the Lachlan. I
+had gained knowledge of more than 100 miles of the western interior, and
+had ascertained that no sea, indeed that little water, existed on its
+surface; and that, although it is generally flat, it still has elevations
+of considerable magnitude upon it.
+
+Although I had passed over much barren ground, I had likewise noticed soil
+that was far from poor, and the vegetation upon which in ordinary seasons
+would, I am convinced, have borne a very different aspect.
+
+Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the haunt
+of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a chain of
+connection to a more ferthe country; if such a country exist to the
+westward.
+
+The hill which thus became the extreme of my journey, is of sandstone
+formation, and is bold and precipitous. Its summit is level and lightly
+timbered. As a tribute of respect to the late Surveyor-General, I called
+it Oxley's Table Land, and I named the distant hills D'Urban's Group,
+after Sir Benjamin D'Urban, in compliance with a previous request of my
+friend Lieut. De la Condamine, that I would so name any prominent feature
+of the interior that I might happen to come upon.
+
+RETURN TO THE CAMP.
+
+In returning to the camp, I made a circuit to the N.E., and reached the
+Macquarie late on the evening of the 5th of January; having been absent
+six days, during which we could not have ridden less than 200 miles. Yet
+the horses were not so fatigued as it was natural to expect they would
+have been.
+
+My servant informed me that a party of natives had visited the camp on the
+3rd, but that they retired precipitately on seeing the animals. I
+regretted to find the men but little better than when I left them. Several
+still complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, and of great
+weakness of sight. Attributing their continued indisposition in some
+measure to our situation, I was anxious to have moved from it; but as Mr.
+Hume was still absent, I could not decide upon the measure. He made his
+appearance, however, on the 6th, having ridden the greater part of the day
+through rain, which commenced to fall in the morning. Soon after his
+arrival, Dawber, my overseer of animals, who had accompanied him, was
+taken suddenly ill. During the night he became much worse, with shivering
+and spasms, and on the following morning he was extremely weak and
+feverish. To add to my anxiety, Mr. Hume also complained of indisposition.
+His state of health made me the more anxious to quit a position which I
+fancied unwholesome, and in which, if there was no apparent, there was
+certainly some secret, exciting cause; and as Mr. Hume reported having
+crossed a chain of ponds about four miles to the eastward, and out of the
+immediate precincts of the marshes, I ordered the tents to be struck, and
+placing Dawber on my horse, we all moved quietly over to them.
+
+MR. HUME'S EXCURSION.
+
+The result of Mr. Hume's journey perplexed me exceedingly. He stated, that
+on setting out from the Macquarie his intention was to have proceeded to
+the N.E., to ascertain how far the reeds existed in that direction, and,
+if at all practicable, to reach the Castlereagh; but in case of failure,
+to regain the Macquarie by a westerly course. At first he travelled nearly
+four miles east, to clear the marshes, when he came on the chain of ponds
+to which we had removed.
+
+He travelled over good soil for two miles after crossing this chain of
+ponds, but afterwards got on a red sandy loam, and found it difficult to
+proceed, by reason of the thickness of the brush, and the swampy state of
+the ground in consequence of the late rain.
+
+The timber in the brushes was of various kinds, and he saw numerous
+kangaroos and emus. On issuing from this brush, he crossed a creek,
+leading northerly, the banks of which were from ten to twelve feet high.
+Whatever the body of water usually in it is, it now only afforded a few
+shallow puddles. Mr. Hume travelled through brushes until he came upon a
+third creek, similar to the one he had left behind him, at which he halted
+for the night. The water in it was bad, and the feed for the animals
+extremely poor. The brush lined the creek thickly, and consisted chiefly
+of acacia pendula and box. The country preserved an uniform level, nor did
+Mr. Hume, from the highest trees, observe any break on the horizon.
+
+On the 2nd of January, Mr. Hume kept more northerly, being unable to
+penetrate the brushes he encountered. At two miles he crossed a creek
+leading to the N.W., between which and the place at which he had slept, he
+passed a native burial ground, containing eight graves. The earth was
+piled up in a conical shape, but the trees were not carved over as he had
+seen them in most other places.
+
+The country became more open after he had passed the last mentioned creek,
+which he again struck upon at the distance of eight miles, and as it was
+then leading to the N.N.E. he followed it down for eighteen or twenty
+miles, and crossed it frequently during the day. The creek was dry in most
+places, and where he stopped for the night the water was bad, and the
+cattle feed indifferent.
+
+Mr. Hume saw many huts, but none of them had been recently occupied,
+although large quantities of muscle-shells were scattered about. He
+computed that he had travelled about thirty miles, in a N.N.W.
+direction, and the whole of the land he passed over was, generally
+speaking, bad, nor did it appear to be subject to overflow.
+
+On the 3rd, Mr. Hume proceeded down the creek on which he had slept, on a
+northern course, under an impression that it would have joined the
+Castlereagh, but it took a N.W. direction after he had ridden about four
+miles, and then turned again to the eastward of north. In consequence of
+this, he left it, and proceeded to the westward, being of opinion that the
+river just mentioned must have taken a more northerly course than Mr.
+Oxley supposed it to have done.
+
+A short time after Mr. Hume turned towards the Macquarie, the country
+assumed a more pleasing appearance. He soon cleared the brushes, and at
+two miles came upon a chain of ponds, again running northerly in times of
+flood. Shortly after crossing these, he found himself on an extensive
+plain, apparently subject to overflow. The timber on it was chiefly of
+the blue-gum kind, and the ground was covered with shells. He then thought
+he was approaching the Macquarie, and proceeded due west across the flat
+for about two miles. At the extremity of it there was a hollow, which he
+searched in vain for water. Ascending about thirty feet, he entered a
+thick brush of box and acacia pendula, which continued for fourteen miles,
+when it terminated abruptly, and extensive plains of good soil commenced,
+stretching from N. to S. as far as the eye could reach, on which there
+were many kangaroos. Continuing to journey over them, he reached a creek
+at 5 p.m. on which the wild fowl were numerous, running nearly north and
+south, and he rested on its banks for the night. The timber consisted both
+of blue and rough gum, and the soil was a light earth.
+
+Mr. Hume expected in the course of the day to have reached the Macquarie,
+but on arriving at the creek, he began to doubt whether it any longer
+existed, or whether it had not taken a more westerly direction. On the
+following morning, therefore, he crossed the creek, and travelled
+W.S.W., for about two miles over good plains; then through light brushes
+of swamp-oak, cypress, box, and acacia pendula, for about twelve miles, to
+another creek leading northerly. He shortly afterwards ascended a range of
+hills stretching W.N.W. to which he gave the name of New Year's Range.
+From these hills, he had an extensive view, although not upon the highest
+part, but the only break he could see in the horizon was caused by some
+hills bearing by compass W. by S. distant about twenty-five miles. There
+was, however, an appearance as of high land to the northward, although Mr.
+Hume thought it might have been an atmospheric deception. From the range
+he looked in vain for the Macquarie, or other waters, and, as his
+provisions were nearly consumed, he was obliged to give up all further
+pursuit, and to retrace his steps. He fell in with two parties of natives,
+which, taken collectively, amounted to thirty-five in number, but had no
+communication with them.
+
+It was evident, from the above account, that supposing a line to have been
+drawn from the camp northerly, Mr. Hume must have travelled considerably
+to the westward of it, and as I had run on a N.W. course from the marshes,
+it necessarily followed that our lines of route must have intersected each
+other, or that want of extension could alone have prevented them from
+having done so; but that, under any circumstances, they could not have
+been very far apart. This was too important a point to be left undecided,
+as upon it the question of the Macquarie's termination seemed to depend.
+
+Both Mr. Hume and myself were of opinion, that a medium course would be
+the most satisfactory for us to pursue, to decide this point; and it
+appeared that we could not do better than, by availing ourselves of the
+creek on which we were, and skirting the reeds, to take the first
+opportunity of dashing through them in a westerly direction.
+
+DOUBTS OF THE FURTHER EXTENSION OF THE RIVER.
+
+I entertained great doubts as to the longer existence of the river, and as
+I foresaw that, in the event of its having terminated we should strike at
+once into the heart of the interior, I became anxious for the arrival of
+supplies at Mount Harris; and although I could hardly expect that they had
+yet reached it, I determined to proceed thither. Mr. Hume was too unwell
+for me to think of imposing additional fatigue upon him; I left him,
+therefore, to conduct the party, by easy stages, to the northward, until
+such time as I should overtake them. Even in one day there was a visible
+improvement in the men, and Dawber's attack seemed to be rather the
+effects of cold than of any thing else. A death, however, under our
+circumstances, would have been so truly deplorable an event, that the
+least illness was sufficient to create alarm.
+
+I can hardly say that I was disappointed on my arrival at Mount Harris, to
+find its neighbourhood silent and deserted. I remained, however, under it
+for the greater part of the next day, and, prior to leaving it, placed a
+sheet of paper with written instructions against a tree, though almost
+without a hope that it would remain untouched.
+
+PERPLEXING SITUATION.
+
+A little after sun-set we reached the first small marsh, at which we
+slept; and on the following morning I crossed the plains of the Macquarie,
+and joined the party at about fifteen miles from the creek at which I had
+left it. I found it in a condition that was as unlooked for by Mr. Hume as
+it was unexpected by me, and really in a most perplexing situation.
+
+On the day I left him, Mr. Hume only advanced about two miles, in
+consequence of some derangement in the loads. Having crossed the creek,
+he, the next morning, proceeded down its right bank, until it entered the
+marshes and was lost. He then continued to move on the outskirts of the
+latter, and having performed a journey or about eight miles, was anxious
+to have stopped, but there was no water at hand. The men, however, were so
+fatigued, in consequence of previous illness, that he felt it necessary to
+halt after travelling about eleven miles.
+
+No water could be procured even here, notwithstanding that Mr. Hume, who
+was quite unfit for great exertion, underwent considerable bodily fatigue
+in his anxiety to find some. He was, therefore, obliged to move early on
+the following morning, but neither men nor animals were in a condition to
+travel; and he had scarcely made three miles' progress, when he stopped
+and endeavoured to obtain a supply or water by digging pits among the
+reeds. From these he had drawn sufficient for the wants of the people when
+I arrived. Some rain had fallen on the 6th and 7th of the month, or it is
+more than probable the expedient to which he resorted would have failed of
+success. Mr. Hume, I was sorry to observe, looked very unwell; but nothing
+could prevent him from further endeavours to extricate the party from its
+present embarrassment.
+
+JOURNEY CONTINUED.
+
+As soon as I had taken a little refreshment, therefore, I mounted a fresh
+horse; and he accompanied me across a small plain, immediately in front of
+the camp, which was subject to overflow and covered with polygonum, having
+a considerable extent of reeds to its right.
+
+From the plain we entered a wood of blue-gum, in which reeds, grass, and
+brush formed a thick coppice. We at length passed into an open space,
+surrounded on every side by weeds in dense bodies. The great marsh bore
+south of us, and was clear and open, but behind us the blue-gum trees
+formed a thick wood above the weeds.
+
+About two hundred yards from the outskirts of the marsh there was a line
+of saplings that had perished, and round about them a number of the tern
+tribe (sea swallow) were flying, one of which Mr. Hume had followed a
+considerable way into the reeds the evening before, in the hope that it
+would have led him to water. The circumstance of their being in such
+numbers led us to penetrate towards them, when we found a serpentine sheet
+of water of some length, over which they were playing. We had scarcely
+time to examine it before night closed in upon us, and it was after nine
+when we returned to the tents.
+
+From the general appearance of the country to the northward, and from the
+circumstance of our having got to the bottom of the great marsh, which but
+a few days before had threatened to be so formidable, I thought it
+probable that the reeds would not again prove so extensive as they had
+been, and I determined, if I could do so, to push through them in a
+westerly direction from our position.
+
+SECOND GREAT MARSH.
+
+The pits yielded us so abundant a supply during the night, that in the
+morning we found it unnecessary to take the animals to water at the
+channel we had succeeded in finding the evening before; but pursuing a
+westerly course we passed it, and struck deep into the reeds. At mid-day
+we were hemmed in by them on every side, and had crossed over numerous
+channels, by means of which the waters of the marshes are equally and
+generally distributed over the space subject to their influence. Coming to
+a second sheet of water, narrower, but longer, as well as we could judge,
+than the first, we stopped to dine at it; and, while the men were resting
+themselves, Mr. Hume rode with me in a westerly direction, to ascertain
+what obstacles we still had to contend with. Forcing our way through
+bodies of reeds, we at length got on a plain, stretching from S.E. to
+N.W., bounded on the right by a wood of blue-gum, under which the reeds
+still extended, and on the left by a wood in which they did not appear to
+exist. Certain that there was no serious obstacle in our way, we returned
+to the men; and as soon as they had finished their meal, led them over the
+plain in a N.W. by W. direction. It was covered with shells, and was full
+of holes from the effects of flood.
+
+CONCLUSIONS IN REGARD TO THE MACQUARIE.
+
+As we were journeying over it, I requested Mr. Hume to ride into the wood
+upon our left, to ascertain if it concealed any channel. On his return he
+informed me that he descended from the plain into a hollow, the bottom of
+which was covered with small shells and bulrushes. He observed a new
+species of eucalypti, on the trunks of which the water-mark was three feet
+high. After crossing this hollow, which was about a quarter of a mile in
+breadth, he gained an open forest of box, having good grass under it; and,
+judging from the appearance of the country that no other channel could
+exist beyond him, and that he had ascertained sufficient for the object I
+had in view, he turned back to the plain. We stopped for the night under a
+wood of box, where the grass, which had been burnt down, was then
+springing up most beautifully green, and was relished exceedingly by the
+animals.
+
+It was in consequence of our not having crossed any channel, while
+penetrating through the reeds, that could by any possible exaggeration
+have been laid down as the bed of the river, that I detached Mr. Hume; and
+the account he brought me at once confirmed my opinion in regard to the
+Macquarie, and I thenceforth gave up every hope of ever seeing it in its
+characteristic shape again.
+
+Independently however of all circumstantial evidence, it was clear that
+the river had not re-formed at a distance of twenty-five miles to the
+north of us, since Mr. Hume had gone to the westward of that point, at
+about the same distance on his late journey, without having observed the
+least appearance of reeds or of a river. He had, indeed, noticed a hollow,
+which occasionally contained water, but he saw nothing like the bed of a
+permanent stream. I became convinced, also, from observation of the
+country through which we had passed, that the sources of the Macquarie
+could not be of such magnitude as to give a constant flow to it as a
+river, and at the same time to supply with water the vast concavity into
+which it falls. In very heavy rains only could the marshes and adjacent
+lands be laid wholly under water, since the evaporation alone would be
+equal to the supply.
+
+The great plains stretching for so many miles to the westward of Mount
+Harris, even where they were clear of reeds, were covered with shells and
+the claws of cray-fish and their soil, although an alluvial deposit, was
+superficially sandy. They bore the appearance not only of frequent
+inundation, but of the floods having eventually subsided upon them. This
+was particularly observable at the bottom of the marshes. We did not find
+any accumulation of rubbish to indicate a rush of water to any one point;
+but numerous minor channels existed to distribute the floods equally and
+generally over every part of the area subject to them, and the marks of
+inundation and subsidence were everywhere the same. The plain we had last
+crossed, was, in like manner, covered with shells, so that we could not
+yet be said to be out of the influence of the marshes; besides which we
+had not crossed the hollow noticed by Mr. Hume, which it was clear we
+should do, sooner or later.
+
+SITUATION OF THE PARTY.
+
+To have remained in our position would have been impossible, as there was
+no water either for ourselves or the animals; to have descended into the
+reeds again, for the purpose of carrying on a minute survey, would, under
+existing circumstances, have been imprudent. Our provisions were running
+short, and if a knowledge of the distant interior was to be gained, we had
+no time to lose. It was determined, therefore, to defer our further
+examination of the marshes to the period of our return; and to pursue such
+a course as would soonest and most effectually enable us to determine the
+character of the western interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+We left our position at the head of the plain early on the 13th of
+January, and, ere the sun dipped, had entered a very different country
+from that in which we had been labouring for the last three weeks. We had,
+as yet, passed over little other than an alluvial soil, but found that it
+changed to a red loam in the brushes immediately backing the camp. An open
+forest track succeeded this, over which the vegetation had an unusual
+freshness, indicating that the waters had not long subsided from its
+surface. We shortly afterwards crossed a hollow, similar to that Mr. Hume
+had described, in which bulrushes had taken the place of reeds.
+Flooded-gum trees, of large size, were also growing in it, but on either
+side box alone prevailed, under which the forest grass grew to a
+considerable height. We crossed the hollow two or three times, and as
+often remarked the line of separation between those trees. The last time
+we crossed it the country rose a few feet, and we journeyed for the
+remainder of the day, at one time over good plains, at another through
+brushes, until we found water and feed, at which we stopped for the night,
+after having travelling about thirteen miles on a W. by N. course. The
+mosquitoes were so extremely troublesome at this place that we called it
+Mosquito Brush. At this time my men were improving rapidly, and Mr. Hume
+complained less, and looked better. I hoped, therefore, that our progress
+would be rapid into the interior.
+
+CREEK LEADING NORTHERLY; PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+On the 14th we took up a westerly course, and in the first instance
+traversed a plain of great extent; the soil of which was for the most part
+a red sandy loam, but having patches of light earth upon it. The former
+was covered with plants of the chenopedia kind; the latter had evidently
+been quagmires, and bore even then the appearance of moisture. At about
+seven miles from Mosquito Brush we struck upon a creek of excellent water,
+upon which the wild fowl were numerous. Some natives was seen, but they
+were only women, and seemed so alarmed that I purposely avoided them. As
+the creek was leading northerly, we traced it down on that course for
+about seven miles, and then halted upon its banks, which were composed of
+a light tenacious earth. Brushes of casuarina existed near it, but a
+tortuous box was the prevailing tree, which, excepting for the knees of
+small vessels, could not have been applied to any use, while the
+flooded-gum had entirely disappeared. Some ducks were shot in the
+afternoon, which proved a great treat, as we had been living for some time
+on salt provisions. Our animals fared worse than ourselves, as the bed of
+the creek was occupied by coarse rushes, and but little vegetation was
+elsewhere to be seen. I here killed a beautiful snake, of about four feet
+in length, and of a bright yellow colour: I had not, however, the means of
+preserving it. Fraser collected numerous botanical specimens, and among
+them two kinds of caparis. Indeed a great alteration had taken place in
+the minor shrubs, and few of those now prevalent had been observed to the
+eastward of the marshes.
+
+From the creek, which both I and Mr. Hume must have crossed on our
+respective journeys, we held a westerly course for about fifteen miles,
+through a country of alternate plain and brush, the latter predominating,
+and in its general character differing but little from that we had
+traversed the day previous.
+
+The acacia pendula still continued to exist on the plains backed by dark
+rows of cypresses (Cupressus callitris). In the brushes, box and
+casuarina (Casuarina tortuosa), with several other kinds of eucalypti,
+prevailed; but none of them were sufficiently large to be of use. The
+plains were so extremely level that a meridian altitude could have been
+taken without any material error; and I doubt much whether it would have
+been possible to have traversed them had the season been wet.
+
+HUNTING PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+As we were travelling through a forest we surprised a hunting party of
+natives. Mr. Hume and I were considerably in front of our party at the
+time, and he only had his gun with him. We had been moving along so
+quietly that we were not for some time observed by them. Three were seated
+on the ground, under a tree, and two others were busily employed on one of
+the lower branches cutting out honey. As soon as they saw us, four of them
+ran away; but the fifth, who wore a cap of emu feathers, stood for a
+moment looking at us, and then very deliberately dropped out of the tree
+to the ground. I then advanced towards him, but before I got round a bush
+that intervened, he had darted away. I was fearful that he was gone to
+collect his tribe, and, under this impression, rode quickly hack for my
+gun to support Mr. Hume. On my arrival I found the native was before me.
+He stood about twenty paces from Mr. Hume, who was endeavouring to explain
+what he was; but seeing me approach he immediately poised his spear at
+him, as being the nearest. Mr. Hume then unslung his carbine, and
+presented it; but, as it was evident my re-appearance had startled the
+savage, I pulled up; and he immediately lowered his weapon. His coolness
+and courage surprised me, and increased my desire to communicate with him.
+He had evidently taken both man and horse for one animal, and as long as
+Mr. Hume kept his seat, the native remained upon his guard; but when he
+saw him dismount, after the first astonishment had subsided, he stuck his
+spear into the ground, and walked fearlessly up to him. We easily made him
+comprehend that we were in search of water; when he pointed to the west,
+as indicating that we should supply our wants there. He gave his
+information in a frank and manly way, without the least embarrassment,
+and when the party passed, he stepped back to avoid the animals, without
+the smallest confusion. I am sure he was a very brave man; and I left him
+with the most favourable impressions, and not without hope that he would
+follow us.
+
+From a more open forest, we entered a dense scrub, the soil in which was
+of a bright-red colour and extremely sandy, and the timber of various
+kinds. A leafless species of stenochylus aphylta, which, from the
+resemblance, I at first thought one of the polygonum tribe, was very
+abundant in the open spaces, and the young cypresses were occasionally so
+close as to turn us from the direction in which we had been moving. In the
+scrub we crossed Mr. Hume's tract, and, from the appearance of the ground,
+I was led to believe mine could not be very distant.
+
+FATE OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+We struck upon a creek late in the afternoon, at which we stopped; New
+Year's Range bearing nearly due west at about four miles' distance. Had we
+struck upon my track, the question about which we were so anxious would
+still have been undecided; but the circumstance of our having crossed Mr.
+Hume's, which, from its direction, could not be mistaken, convinced me of
+the fate of the Macquarie, and I felt assured that, whatever channels it
+might have for the distribution of its waters, to the north of our line of
+route, the equality of surface of the interior would never permit it
+again to form a river; and that it only required an examination of the
+lower parts of the marshes to confirm the theory of the ultimate
+evaporation and absorption of its waters, instead of their contributing to
+the permanence of an inland sea, as Mr. Oxley had supposed.
+
+NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+On the 17th of January we encamped under New Year's Range, which is the
+first elevation in the interior of Eastern Australia to the westward of
+Mount Harris. Yet when at its base, I do not think that we had ascended
+above forty feet higher than the plains in the neighbourhood of that last
+mentioned eminence. There certainly is a partial rise of country, where
+the change of soil takes place from the alluvial deposits of the marshes,
+to the sandy loam so prevalent on the plains we had lately traversed; but
+I had to regret that I was unable to decide so interesting a question by
+other than bare conjecture.
+
+Notwithstanding that Mr. Hume had already been on them, I encouraged hopes
+that a second survey of the country from the highest point of New Year's
+Range would enable us to form some opinion of it, by which to direct our
+future movements; but I was disappointed.
+
+The two wooded hills I had seen from Oxley's Table Land were visible from
+the range, bearing south; and other eminences bore by compass S.W.
+and W. by S.; but in every other direction the horizon was unbroken. To
+the westward, there appeared to be a valley of considerable extent,
+stretching N. and S., in which latter direction there was a long strip of
+cleared ground, that looked very like the sandy bed of a broad and rapid
+river. The bare possibility of the reality determined me to ascertain by
+inspection, whether my conjecture was right, and Mr. Hume accompanied me
+on this excursion. After we left the camp we crossed a part of the range,
+and travelled for some time through open forest land that would afford
+excellent grazing in most seasons. We passed some hollows, and noticed
+many huts that had been occupied near them; but the hollows were now quite
+dry, and the huts had been long deserted. After about ten miles' ride we
+reached a plain of white sand, from which New Year's Range was distinctly
+visible; and this no doubt was the spot that had attracted my attention.
+Pools of water continued on it, from which circumstance it would appear
+that the sand had a substratum of clay or marl. From this plain we
+proceeded southerly through acacia scrub, bounding gently undulating
+forest land, and at length ascended some small elevations that scarcely
+deserved the name of hills. They had fragments of quartz profusely
+scattered over them; and the soil, which was sandy, contained particles of
+mica.
+
+MOSQUITOES.
+
+The view from them was confused, nor did any fresh object meet our
+observation. We had, however, considerably neared the two wooded hills,
+and the elevations that from the range were to the S.W., now bore N.W.
+of us. We had wandered too far from the camp to admit of our returning to
+it to sleep; we therefore commenced a search for water, and having found
+some, we tethered our horses near it for the night, and should have been
+tolerably comfortable, had not the mosquitoes been so extremely
+troublesome. They defied the power of smoke, and annoyed me so much, that,
+hot as it was, I rolled myself in my boat cloak, and perspired in
+consequence to such a degree, that my clothes were wet through, and I had
+to stand at the fire in the morning to dry them. Mr. Hume, who could not
+bear such confinement, suffered the penalty, and was most unmercifully
+bitten.
+
+A MAN MISSING.
+
+We reached the camp about noon the following day, and learnt, to our
+vexation, that one of the men, Norman, had lost himself shortly after we
+started, and had not since been heard of. Dawber, my overseer, was out in
+search of him. I awaited his return, therefore, before I took any measures
+for the man's recovery; nor was I without hopes that Dawber would have
+found him, as it appeared he had taken one of the horses with him, and
+Dawber, by keeping his tracks, might eventually have overtaken him. He
+returned, however, about 3 p.m. unsuccessful, when Mr. Hume and I mounted
+our horses, and proceeded in different directions in quest of him, but
+were equally disappointed.
+
+We met at the creek in the dark, and returned to the camp together, when I
+ordered the cypresses on the range to be set on fire, and thus illuminated
+the country round for many miles. In the morning, however, as Norman had
+not made his appearance, we again started in search of the poor fellow,
+on whose account I was now most uneasy; for his horse, it appeared, had
+escaped him, and was found with the others at watering time.
+
+I did not return to the camp until after sunset, more fatigued than I
+recollect ever having been before. I was, however, rejoiced on being
+informed that the object of my anxiety was safe in his tent; that he had
+caught sight of the hill the evening before, and that he had reached the
+camp shortly after I left it. He had been absent three nights and two
+days, and had not tasted water or food of any kind during that time.
+
+To my enquiries he replied, that, being on horseback, he thought he could
+have overtaken a kangaroo, which passed him whilst waiting at the creek
+for the cattle, and that in the attempt, he lost himself. It would appear
+that he crossed the creek in the dark, and his horse escaped from him on
+the first night. He complained more of thirst than of hunger, although he
+had drunk at the watering-place to such an excess, on his return, as to
+make him vomit; but, though not a little exhausted, he had escaped better
+than I should have expected.
+
+COUNTRY AROUND NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+New Year's Range consists of a principal group of five hills, the loftiest
+of which does not measure 300 feet in height. It has lateral ridges,
+extending to the N.N.W. on the one hand, and bending in to the creek on
+the other. The former have a few cypresses, sterculia, and iron bark upon
+them; the latter are generally covered with brush, under box; the brush
+for the most part consisting of two distinct species of stenochylus, and a
+new acacia. The whole range is of quartz formation, small fragments of
+which are profusely scattered over the ridges, and are abundantly
+incrusted with oxide of iron. The soil in the neighbourhood of New Year's
+Range is a red loam, with a slight mixture of sand. An open forest country
+lies between it and the creek, and it is not at all deficient in pasture.
+
+NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+That a change of soil takes place to the westward of the creek, is
+obvious, from the change of vegetation, the most remarkable feature of
+which is the sudden check given to the further extension of the acacia
+pendula, which is not to be found beyond it, it being succeeded by another
+acacia of the same species and habits; neither do the plants of the
+chenopedia class exist in the immediate vicinity of the range.
+
+I place these hills, as far as my observations will allow, in east
+lon. 146 degrees 32 minutes 15 seconds, and in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes
+south; the variation of the compass being 6 degrees 40 minutes easterly.
+
+As New Year's Creek was leading northerly, it had been determined to trace
+it down as long as it should keep that course, or one to the westward of
+it. We broke up the camp, therefore, under the range, on the evening of
+the 18th, and moved to the creek, about two miles north of the place at
+which we had before crossed it, with the intention of prosecuting our
+journey on the morrow. But both Mr. Hume and I were so fatigued that we
+were glad of an opportunity to rest, even for a single day. We remained
+stationary, therefore, on the 19th; nor was I without hope that the
+natives whom we had surprised in the woods, would have paid us a visit,
+since Mr. Hume had met them in his search for Norman, and they had
+promised not only to come to us, but to do all in their power to find
+the man, whose footsteps some of them had crossed. They did not, however,
+venture near us; and I rather attribute their having kept aloof, to the
+circumstance of Mr. Hume's having fired a shot, shortly after he left
+them, as a signal to Norman, in the event of his being within hearing of
+the report. They must have been alarmed at so unusual a sound; but I am
+sure nothing was further from Mr. Hume's intention than to intimidate
+them; his knowledge of their manners and customs, as well as his
+partiality to the natives, being equally remarkable. The circumstance is,
+however, a proof of the great caution that is necessary in communicating
+with them.
+
+ANNOYED BY KANGAROO FLIES.
+
+I have said that we remained stationary the day after we left the range,
+with a view to enjoy a little rest; it would, however, have been
+infinitely better if we had moved forward. Our camp was infested by the
+kangaroo fly, which settled upon us in thousands. They appeared to rise
+from the ground, and as fast as they were swept off were succeeded by
+fresh numbers. It was utterly impossible to avoid their persecution,
+penetrating as they did into the very tents.
+
+The men were obliged to put handkerchiefs over their faces, and stockings
+upon their hands; but they bit through every thing. It was to no purpose
+that I myself shifted from place to place; they still followed, or were
+equally numerous everywhere. To add to our discomfort, the animals were
+driven almost to madness, and galloped to and fro in so furious a manner
+that I was apprehensive some of them would have been lost. I never
+experienced such a day of torment; and only when the sun set, did these
+little creatures cease from their attacks.
+
+SUDDENLY RELIEVED.
+
+It will be supposed that we did not stay to subject ourselves to another
+trial; indeed it was with some degree of horror that the men saw the first
+light of morning streak the horizon. They got up immediately, and we moved
+down the creek, on a northerly course, without breakfasting as usual. We
+found that dense brushes of casuarina lined the creek on both sides,
+beyond which, to our left, there was open rising ground, on which
+eucalypti, cypresses, and the acacia longifolia, prevailed; whilst to the
+east, plains seemed to predominate.
+
+Although we had left the immediate spot at which the kangaroo flies
+(cabarus) seemed to be collected, I did not expect that we should have got
+rid of them so completely as we did. None of them were seen during the
+day; a proof that they were entirely local. They were about half the size
+of a common house fly, had flat brown bodies, and their bite, although
+sharp and piercing, left no irritation after it.
+
+About noon we stopped at the creek side to take some refreshment. The
+country bore an improved appearance around us, and the cattle found
+abundance of pasture. It was evident that the creek had been numerously
+frequented by the natives, although no recent traces of them could be
+found. It had a bed of coarse red granite, of the fragments of which the
+natives had constructed a weir for the purpose of taking fish. The
+appearance of this rock in so isolated a situation, is worthy of the
+consideration of geologists.
+
+DESOLATION OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+The promise of improvement I have noticed, gradually disappeared as we
+proceeded on our day's journey, and we at length found ourselves once more
+among brushes, and on the edge of plains, over which the rhagodia
+prevailed. Nothing could exceed in dreariness the appearance of the tracks
+through which we journeyed, on this and the two following days. The creek
+on which we depended for a supply of water, gave such alarming indications
+of a total failure, that I at one time, had serious thoughts of abandoning
+my pursuit of it. We passed hollow after hollow that had successively
+dried up, although originally of considerable depth; and, when we at
+length found water, it was doubtful how far we could make use of it.
+Sometimes in boiling it left a sediment nearly equal to half its body; at
+other times it was so bitter as to be quite unpalatable. That on which we
+subsisted was scraped up from small puddles, heated by the sun's rays;
+and so uncertain were we of finding water at the end of the day's journey,
+that we were obliged to carry a supply on one of the bullocks. There was
+scarcely a living creature, even of the feathered race, to be seen to
+break the stillness of the forest. The native dogs alone wandered about,
+though they had scarcely strength to avoid us; and their melancholy howl,
+breaking in upon the ear at the dead of the night, only served to impress
+more fully on the mind the absolute loneliness of the desert.
+
+It appeared, from their traces that the natives had lingered on this
+ground, on which they had perhaps been born, as long as it continued to
+afford them a scanty though precarious subsistence; but that they had at
+length been forced from it. Neither fish nor muscles remained in the
+creek, nor emus nor kangaroos on the plains. How then could an European
+expect to find food in deserts through which the savage wandered in vain?
+There is no doubt of the fate that would have overtaken any one of the
+party who might have strayed away, and I was happy to find that Norman's
+narrow escape had made a due impression on the minds of his comrades.
+
+SANDY PLAINS; LEAVE THE CREEK.
+
+We passed some considerable plains, lying to the eastward of the creek, on
+parts of which the grass, though growing in tufts, was of luxuriant
+growth. They were, however, more generally covered with salsola and
+rhagodia, and totally destitute of other vegetation, the soil upon them
+being a red sandy loam. The paths across the plains, which varied in
+breadth from three to eight miles, were numerous; but they had not been
+recently trodden. The creek continued to have a thick brush of casuarina
+and acacia near it, to the westward of which there was a rising open
+forest track; the timber upon it being chiefly box, cypress, and the
+acacia longifolia. It was most probably connected with New Year's Range,
+those elevations being about thirty miles distant. It terminated in some
+gentle hills which, though covered in places with acacia shrub, were
+sufficiently open to afford an extensive view. From their summit Oxley's
+Table Land, towards which we had been gradually working our way, was
+distinctly visible, distant about twenty miles, and bearing by compass
+W. by S. On descending from these hills (called the Pink Hills, from the
+colour of a flower upon them) which were scattered over with fragments of
+slaty quartz, we traversed a box flat, apparently subject to overflow,
+having a barren sandy scrub to its left. I had desired the men to preserve
+a W.N.W. direction, on leaving them, supposing that that course would have
+kept them near the creek; but, on overtaking the party, I found that they
+had wandered completely away from it. The fact was, that the creek had
+taken a sudden bend to the eastward of N. and had thus thrown them out.
+It was with some difficulty that we regained it before sunset; and we were
+at length obliged to stop for the night at a small plain, about a quarter
+of a mile short of it, but we had the satisfaction of having excellent
+feed for the animals.
+
+OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Fearful that New Year's Creek would take us too far to the eastward, and
+being anxious to keep westward as much as possible, it struck me that we
+could not, under existing circumstances, do better than make for Oxley's
+Table Land. Water, I knew, we should find in a swamp at it's base, and we
+might discover some more encouraging feature than I had observed on my
+hasty visit to it. We left the creek, therefore on the 23rd, and once more
+took up a westerly course. Passing through a generally open country, we
+stopped at noon to rest the animals; and afterwards got on an excellent
+grazing forest track, which continued to the brush, through another part
+of which I had penetrated to the marsh more to the south. While making our
+way through it, we came upon a small pond of water, and must have alarmed
+some natives, as there was a fresh made fire close to it. Our journey had
+been unusually long, and the cattle had felt the heat so much, that the
+moment they saw water they rushed into it; and, as this created some
+confusion, I thought it best to stop where we were for the night.
+
+In the morning, Mr. Hume walked with me to the hill, a distance of about a
+mile. It is not high enough to deserve the name of a mountain, although a
+beautiful feature in the country, and showing well from any point of view.
+We ascended it with an anxiety that may well be imagined, but were wholly
+disappointed in our most sanguine expectations. Our chief object, in this
+second visit to Oxley's Table Land, had been to examine, more at leisure,
+the face of the country around it, and to discover, if possible, some
+fixed point on which to move.
+
+If the rivers of the interior had already exhausted themselves, what had
+we to expect from a creek whose diminished appearance where we left it
+made us apprehend its speedy termination, and whose banks we traversed
+under constant apprehension? In any other country I should have followed
+such a water course, in hopes of its ultimately leading to some reservoir;
+but here I could encourage no such favourable anticipation.
+
+The only new object that struck our sight was a remarkable and distant
+hill of conical shape, bearing by compass S. 10 E. To the southward and
+westward, in the direction of D'Urban's Group, a dense and apparently low
+brush extended; but to the N. and N.W., there was a regular alternation of
+wood and plain. I left Mr. Hume upon the hill, that he might the more
+readily notice any smoke made by the natives; and returned myself to the
+camp about one o'clock, to move the party to the swamp. Mr. Hume's
+perseverance was of little avail. The region he had been overlooking was,
+to all appearance, uninhabited, nor did a single fire indicate that there
+was even a solitary wanderer upon its surface.
+
+EXCURSION TO D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+Our situation, at this time, was extremely embarrassing, and the only
+circumstance on which we had to congratulate ourselves was, the improved
+condition of our men; for several of the cattle and horses were in a sad
+plight. The weather had been so extremely oppressive, that we had found it
+impossible to keep them free from eruptions. I proposed to Mr. Hume,
+therefore, to give them a few days' rest, and to make an excursion, with
+such of them as were serviceable, to D'Urban's Group. We were both of us
+unwilling to return to the creek, but we foresaw that a blind reliance
+upon fortune, in our next movements, might involve us in inextricable
+difficulty.
+
+On the other hand, there was a very great risk in delay. It was more than
+probable, from the continued drought, that our retreat would be cut off
+from the want of water, or that we should only be enabled to effect our
+retreat with loss of most of the animals. The hope, however, of our
+intersecting some stream, or of falling upon a better country, prevailed
+over other considerations; and the excursion was, consequently, determined
+upon.
+
+DISTRESS FROM WANT OF WATER.
+
+We left the camp on the 25th, accompanied by Hopkinson and the tinker;
+and, almost immediately after, entered an acacia scrub of the most sterile
+description, and one, through which it would have been impossible to have
+found a passage for the boat carriage. The soil was almost a pure sand,
+and the lower branches of the trees were decayed so generally as to give
+the whole an indescribable appearance of desolation. About mid-day, we
+crossed a light sandy plain, on which there were some dirty puddles of
+water. They were so shallow as to leave the backs of the frogs in them
+exposed, and they had, in consequence, been destroyed by solar heat, and
+were in a state of putrefaction. Our horses refused to drink, but it was
+evident that some natives must have partaken of this sickening beverage
+only a few hours before our arrival. Indeed, it was clear that a wandering
+family must have slept near this spot, as we observed a fresh made gunneah
+(or native hut), and their foot-prints were so fresh along the line we
+were pursuing, that we momentarily expected to have overtaken them. It was
+late in the evening when we got out of this brush into better and more
+open ground, where, in ordinary seasons we should, no doubt, have found
+abundance of water. But we now searched in vain for it, and were contented
+to be enabled to give our wearied animals better food than they had tasted
+for many days, the forest grass, though in tufts, being abundant.
+
+We brought up for the night at the edge of a scrub, having travelled from
+thirty-two to thirty-five miles, judging the distance from the mountains
+still to be about twelve.
+
+BEARINGS FROM OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+In the morning we started at an early hour, and immediately entered the
+brush, beneath which we had slept; pursuing a westerly course through it.
+After a short ride, we found ourselves upon a plain, that was crowded with
+flocks of cockatoos. Here we got a supply of water, such as it was--so
+mixed with slime as to hang in strings between the fingers; and, after a
+hasty breakfast, we proceeded on our journey, mostly through a barren
+sandy scrub that was a perfect burrow from the number of wombats in it, to
+within a mile of the hill group, where the country appeared like one
+continuous meadow to the very base of them. I never saw anything like the
+luxuriance of the grass on this tract of country, waving as it did higher
+than our horses' middles as we rode through it. We ascended the S.W. face
+of the mountain to an elevation of at least 800 feet above the level of
+the plain, and had some difficulty in scaling the masses of rock that
+opposed themselves to our progress. But on gaining the summit, we were
+amply repaid for our trouble. The view extended far and wide, but we were
+again disappointed in the main object that had induced us to undertake the
+journey. I took the following bearings by compass. Oxley's Table Land bore
+N. 40 E. distant forty-five miles; small and distant hill due E.; conical
+peak seen from Oxley's Table Land S. 60 E., very distant; long ridge of
+high land, S.E., distant thirty-five miles; high land, S. 30 E., distant
+thirty miles; long range, S. 25 W.
+
+To the westward, as a medium point. the horizon was unbroken, and the eye
+wandered over an apparently endless succession of wood and plain. A
+brighter green than usual marked the course of the mountain torrents in
+several places, but there was no glittering light among the trees, no
+smoke to betray a water hole, or to tell that a single inhabitant was
+traversing the extensive region we were overlooking. We were obliged to
+return to the plain on which we had breakfasted, and to sleep upon it.
+
+D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+D'Urban's Group is of compact sandstone formation. Its extreme length is
+from E.S.E. to W.N.W., and cannot be more than from seven to nine miles,
+whilst its breadth is from two to four. The central space forms a large
+basin, in which there are stunted pines and eucalyptus scrub, amid huge
+fragments of rocks. It rises like an island from the midst of the ocean,
+and as I looked upon it from the plains below, I could without any great
+stretch of the imagination, picture to myself that it really was such.
+Bold and precipitous, it only wanted the sea to lave its base; and I
+cannot but think that such must at no very remote period have been the
+case, and that the immense flat we had been traversing, is of
+comparatively recent formation.
+
+We reached the camp on the 28th of the month, by nearly the same route;
+and were happy to find that, after the few days' rest they had enjoyed,
+there was a considerable improvement in the animals.
+
+Our experience of the nature of the country to the southward, and the
+westward, was such as to deter us from risking anything, by taking such a
+direction as was most agreeable to our views. Nothing remained to us but
+to follow the creek, or to retreat; and as we could only be induced to
+adopt the last measure when every other expedient should have failed, we
+determined on pursuing our original plan, of tracing New Year's Creek as
+far as practicable.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Oxley's Table Land is situated in lat. 29 degrees 57 minutes 30 seconds,
+and in E. long. 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds, the mean variation
+being 6.32 easterly. It consists of two hills that appear to have been
+rent asunder by some convulsion of nature, since the passage between them
+is narrow and their inner faces are equally perpendicular. The hill which
+I have named after the late Surveyor-general, is steep on all sides; but
+the other gradually declines from the south, and at length loses itself in
+a large plain that extends to the north. It is from four to five miles in
+length, and is picturesque in appearance, and lightly wooded. A few
+cypresses were growing on Oxley's Table Land; but it had, otherwise, very
+little timber upon its summit. Both hills are of sandstone formation, and
+there are some hollows upon the last that deserve particular notice. They
+have the appearance of having been formed by eddies of water, being deeper
+in the centre than at any other part, and contain fragments and slabs of
+sandstone of various size and breadth, without a particle of soil or of
+sand between them. It is to be observed that the edges of these slabs,
+which were perfect parallelograms, were unbroken, and that they were as
+clean as if they had only just been turned out of the hand of the mason.
+We counted thirteen of these hollows in one spot about twenty-five feet in
+diameter, but they are without doubt of periodical formation, since a
+single hollow was observed lower than the summit of the hill upon its
+south extremity, that had evidently long been exposed to the action of the
+atmosphere, and had a general coating of moss over it.
+
+CONTINUE THE JOURNEY; DOWN NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+We left Oxley's Table Land on the morning of the 31st of January, pursuing
+a northern course through the brush and across a large plain, moving
+parallel to the smaller hill, and keeping it upon our left. The soil upon
+this plain differed in character from that on the plains to the eastward,
+and was much freer from sand. We stopped to dine at a spot, whence Oxley's
+Table Land bore by compass, S. by W., distant about twelve miles.
+Continuing our journey, at 2 p.m. we cleared the plain, and entered a
+tract covered with the polygonum junceum, on a soil evidently the deposit
+of floods. Box-trees were thinly scattered over it, and among the
+polygonum, the crested pigeons were numerous. These general appearances,
+together with a dip of country to the N.N.W., made us conclude that we
+were approaching the creek, and we accordingly intersected it on a N.N.E.
+course, at about three miles' distance from where we had dined. It had,
+however, undergone so complete a change, and had increased so much in size
+and in the height of its banks, that we were at a loss to recognize it.
+Still, with all these favourable symptoms, there was not a drop of water
+in it. But small shells lay in heaps in its bed, or were abundantly
+scattered over it; and we remarked that they differed from those on the
+plains of the Macquarie. A circumstance that surprised us much, was the
+re-appearance of the flooded-gum upon its banks, and that too of a large
+size. We had not seen any to the westward of the marshes, and we were,
+consequently, led to indulge in more sanguine expectation as to our
+ultimate success than we had ever ventured to do before.
+
+The party crossed to the right bank of the creek, and then moved in a
+westerly direction along it in search of water. A brush extended to our
+right, and some broken stony ground, rather elevated, was visible, to
+which Mr. Hume rode; nor did he join me again until after I had halted the
+party for the night.
+
+DISTRESSED FOR WATER.
+
+My search for water had been unsuccessful, and the sun had set, when I
+came upon a broad part of the creek that appeared very favourable for an
+encampment, as it was encompassed by high banks, and would afford the men
+a greater facility of watching the cattle, that I knew would stray away if
+they could.
+
+My anxiety for them led me to wander down the bed of the creek, when, to
+my joy, I found a pond of water within a hundred yards of the tents. It is
+impossible for me to describe the relief I felt at this success, or the
+gladness it spread among the men. Mr. Hume joined me at dusk, and informed
+me that he had made a circuit, and had struck upon the creek about three
+miles below us but that, in tracing it up, he had not found a drop of
+water until he came to the pond near which we had so providentially
+encamped. On the following morning, we held a westerly course over an open
+country for about eight miles and a half. The prevailing timber appeared
+to he a species of eucalypti, with rough bark, of small size, and
+evidently languishing from the want of moisture. The soil over which we
+travelled was far from bad, but there was a total absence of water upon
+it. At 6 p.m. Oxley's Table Land was distant from us about fifteen miles,
+bearing S. 20 E. by compass.
+
+We had not touched upon the creek from the time we left it in the morning,
+having wandered from it in a northerly direction, along a native path that
+we intersected, and that seemed to have been recently trodden, since
+footsteps were fresh upon it. At sunset, we crossed a broad dry creek that
+puzzled us extremely, and were shortly afterwards obliged to stop for the
+night upon a plain beyond it. We had, during the afternoon, bent down to
+the S.W. in hopes that we should again have struck upon New Year's Creek;
+and, under an impression that we could not be far from it, Mr. Hume and I
+walked across the plain, to ascertain if it was sufficiently near to be of
+any service to us. We came upon a creek, but could not decide whether it
+was the one for which we had been searching, or another.
+
+Its bed was so perfectly even that it was impossible to say to what point
+it flowed, more especially as all remains of debris had mouldered away. It
+was, however, extremely broad, and evidently, at times, held a furious
+torrent. In the centre of it, at one of the angles, we discovered a pole
+erected, and at first thought, from the manner in which it was propped up,
+that some unfortunate European must have placed it there as a mark to tell
+of his wanderings, but we afterwards concluded that it might be some
+superstitious rite of the natives, in consequence of the untowardness of
+the season, as it seemed almost inconceivable that an European could have
+wandered to such a distance from the located districts in safety.
+
+REACH A LARGE RIVER.
+
+The creek had flooded-gum growing upon its banks, and, on places
+apparently subject to flood, a number of tall straight saplings were
+observed by us. We returned to the camp, after a vain search for water,
+and were really at a loss what direction next to pursue. The men kept the
+cattle pretty well together, and, as we were not delayed by any
+preparations for breakfast, they were saddled and loaded at an early hour.
+The circumstance of there having been natives in the neighbourhood, of
+whom we had seen so few traces of late, assured me that water was at hand,
+but in what direction it was impossible to guess. As the path we had
+observed was leading northerly, we took up that course, and had not
+proceeded more than a mile upon it, when we suddenly found ourselves on
+the banks of a noble river. Such it might in truth be called, where water
+was scarcely to be found. The party drew up upon a bank that was from
+forty to forty-five feet above the level of the stream. The channel of the
+river was front seventy to eighty yards broad, and enclosed an unbroken
+sheet of water, evidently very deep, and literally covered with pelicans
+and other wild fowl. Our surprise and delight may better be imagined than
+described. Our difficulties seemed to be at an end, for here was a river
+that promised to reward all our exertions, and which appeared every moment
+to increase in importance to our imagination. Coming from the N.E.,and
+flowing to the S.W., it had a capacity of channel that proved that we were
+as far from its source as from its termination. The paths of the natives
+on either side of it were like well trodden roads; and the trees that
+overhung it were of beautiful and gigantic growth.
+
+DISAPPOINTMENT ON FINDING THE RIVER SALT.
+
+Its banks were too precipitous to allow of our watering the cattle, but
+the men eagerly descended to quench their thirst, which a powerful sun had
+contributed to increase; nor shall I ever forget the cry of amazement that
+followed their doing so, or the looks of terror and disappointment with
+which they called out to inform me that the water was so salt as to be
+unfit to drink! This was, indeed, too true: on tasting it, I found it
+extremely nauseous, and strongly impregnated with salt, being apparently
+a mixture of sea and fresh water. Whence this arose, whether from local
+causes, or from a communication with some inland sea, I knew not, but the
+discovery was certainly a blow for which I was not prepared. Our hopes
+were annihilated at the moment of their apparent realization. The cup of
+joy was dashed out of our hands before we had time to raise it to our
+lips. Notwithstanding this disappointment, we proceeded down the river,
+and halted at about five miles, being influenced by the goodness of the
+feed to provide for the cattle as well as circumstances would permit. They
+would not drink of the river water, but stood covered in it for many
+hours, having their noses alone exposed above the stream. Their condition
+gave me great uneasiness. It was evident they could not long hold out
+under their excessive thirst, and unless we should procure some fresh
+water, it would impossible for us to continue our journey. On a closer
+examination, the river appeared to me much below its ordinary level, and
+its current was scarcely perceptible. We placed sticks to ascertain if
+there was a rise or fall of tide, but could arrive at no satisfactory
+conclusion, although there was undoubtedly a current in it. Yet, as I
+stood upon its banks at sunset, when not a breath of air existed to break
+the stillness of the waters below me, and saw their surface kept in
+constant agitation by the leaping of fish, I doubted whether the river
+could supply itself so abundantly, and the rather imagined, that it owed
+such abundance, which the pelicans seemed to indicate was constant, to
+some mediterranean sea or other. Where, however, were the human
+inhabitants of this distant and singular region? The signs of a numerous
+population were around us, but we had not seen even a solitary wanderer.
+The water of the river was not, by any means, so salt as that of the
+ocean, but its taste was precisely similar. Could it be that its unnatural
+state had driven its inhabitants from its banks?
+
+One would have imagined that our perplexities would have been sufficient
+for one day, but ere night closed, they increased upon us, although our
+anxiety, with regard to the cattle, was happily removed. Mr. Hume with his
+usual perseverance, walked out when the camp was formed; and, at a little
+distance from it, ascended a ridge of pure sand, crowned with cypresses.
+From this, he descended to the westward, and, at length, struck upon the
+river, where a reef of rocks creased its channel, and formed a dry passage
+from one side to the other; but the bend, which the river must have taken,
+appeared to him so singular, that he doubted whether it was the same
+beside which we had been travelling during the day. Curiosity led him to
+cross it, when he found a small pond of fresh water on a tongue of land,
+and, immediately afterwards, returned to acquaint me with the welcome
+tidings. It was too late to move, but we had, at least, the prospect of a
+comfortable breakfast in the morning.
+
+JUNCTION OF NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+In consequence of the doubts that hung upon Mr. Hume's mind, as to the
+course of the river, we arranged that the animals should precede us to the
+fresh water; and that we should keep close in upon the stream, to
+ascertain that point. After traversing a deep bight, we arrived nearly as
+soon as the party, at the appointed rendezvous. The rocks composing the
+channel of the river at the crossing place, were of indurated clay. In the
+course of an hour, the animals appearing quite refreshed, we proceeded on
+our journey, and at about four miles crossed New Year's Creek, at its
+junction with the salt river. We passed several parts of the main channel
+that were perfectly dry, and were altogether at a loss to account for the
+current we undoubtedly had observed in the river when we first came upon
+it. At midday D'Urban's Group bore S. 65 E. distant about 32 miles. We
+made a little westing in the afternoon. The river continued to maintain
+its character and appearance, its lofty banks, and its long still reaches:
+while, however, the blue-gum trees upon its banks were of magnificent
+size, the soil had but little vegetation upon it, although an alluvial
+deposit.
+
+We passed over vast spaces covered with the polygonum junceum, that bore
+all the appearance of the flooded tracks in the neighbourhood of the
+marshes, and on which the travelling was equally distressing to the
+animals. Indeed, it had been sufficiently evident to us that the waters of
+this river were not always confined to its channel, capacious as it was,
+but that they inundated a belt of barren land, that varied in width from a
+quarter of a mile to a mile, when they were checked by an outer embankment
+that prevented them from spreading generally over the country, and upon
+the neighbouring plains. At our halting place, the cattle drank sparingly
+of the water, but it acted as a violent purgative both on them and the men
+who partook of it.
+
+NATIVE VILLAGE.
+
+On the 5th, the river led us to the southward and westward. Early in the
+day, we passed a group of seventy huts, capable of holding from twelve to
+fifteen men each. They appeared to be permanent habitations, and all of
+them fronted the same point of the compass. In searching amongst them we
+observed two beautifully made nets, of about ninety yards in length. The
+one had much larger meshes than the other, and was, most probably,
+intended to take kangaroos; but the other was evidently a fishing net.
+
+In one hut, the floor of which was swept with particular care, a number of
+white balls, as of pulverised shells or lime, had been deposited--the
+use of which we could not divine. A trench was formed round the hut to
+prevent the rain from running under it, and the whole was arranged with
+more than ordinary attention.
+
+TERROR OF THE NATIVES.
+
+We had not proceeded very far when we came suddenly upon the tribe to
+which this village, as it might be called, belonged.
+
+In breaking through some brush to an open space that was bounded on one
+side by the river, we observed three or four natives, seated on a bank at
+a considerable distance from us; and directly in the line on which we were
+moving. The nature of the ground so completely favoured our approach, that
+they did not become aware of it until we were within a few yards of them,
+and had ascended a little ridge, which, as we afterwards discovered, ended
+in an abrupt precipice upon the river, not more than thirty yards to our
+right. The crack of the drayman's whip was the first thing that aroused
+their attention. They gazed upon us for a moment, and then started up and
+assumed an attitude of horror and amazement; their terror apparently
+increasing upon them. We stood perfectly immovable, until at length they
+gave a fearful yell, and darted out of sight.
+
+THEY FIRE THE BUSH.
+
+Their cry brought about a dozen more natives from the river, whom we had
+not before observed, but who now ran after their comrades with surprising
+activity, and without once venturing to look behind them. As our position
+was a good one, we determined to remain upon it, until we should ascertain
+the number and disposition of the natives. We had not been long
+stationary, when we heard a crackling noise in the distance, and it soon
+became evident that the bush had been fired. It was, however, impossible
+that we could receive any injury on the narrow ridge upon which we stood,
+so that we waited very patiently to see the end of this affair.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES; DISEASE AMONG THEM.
+
+In a short time the fire approached pretty near to us, and dense columns
+of smoke rose into the air over our heads. One of the natives, who had
+been on the bank, now came out of the bush, exactly from the spot into
+which he had retreated. He advanced a few paces towards us, and bending
+his body so that his hands rested on his knees, he fixed his gaze upon us
+for some time; but, seeing that we remained immovable, he began to throw
+himself into the most extravagant attitudes, shaking his foot from time to
+time. When he found that all his violence had no effect, he turned his
+rear to us in a most laughable manner, and absolutely groaned in spirit
+when he found that this last insult failed of success.
+
+He stood perplexed and not knowing what next to do, which gave Mr. Hume an
+opportunity to call out to him, and with considerable address he at length
+got the savage to approach close up to him; Mr. Hume himself having
+advanced a short distance from the animals in the first instance. As soon
+as I thought the savage had sufficiently recovered from his alarm, I went
+up to him with a tomahawk, the use of which he immediately guessed. We now
+observed that the natives who had fled from the river, had been employed
+in setting a net. They had placed it in a semicircle, with either end to
+the shore, and rude pieces of wood were attached to it to keep the upper
+part perpendicular. It was in fact a sein, only that the materials, with
+the exception of the net-work, were simpler and rougher than cork or
+lead--for which last, we afterwards discovered stones had been
+substituted.
+
+We had on this occasion a remarkable instance of the docility of the
+natives of the interior, or of the power they have of subduing their
+apprehensions; manifesting the opposite extremes of fear and confidence.
+These men whom we had thus surprised, and who, no doubt, imagined that we
+were about to destroy them, having apparently never seen nor heard of
+white men before, must have taken us for something preternatural; yet from
+the extremity of fear that had prompted them to set their woods in flames,
+they in a brief space so completely subdued those fears as to approach
+the very beings who had so strongly excited their alarm. The savage who
+had been the principal actor in the scene, was an elderly man, rather
+descending to the vale of years than what might be strictly called aged.
+I know not how it was, but I regarded him with peculiar interest.
+Mr. Hume's manners had in a great measure contributed to allay his evident
+agitation; but, from the moment I approached him, I thought there was a
+shade of anxiety upon his brow, and an expression of sorrow over his
+features, the cause of which did not originate with us. I could see in a
+moment, that his bosom was full even to bursting, and he seemed to claim
+at once our sympathy and our protection, although we were ignorant of that
+which oppressed him. We had not long been seated together, when some of
+his tribe mustered sufficient courage to join him. Both Mr. Hume and I
+were desirous of seeing the net drawn, but the old man raised some
+objection, by pointing to the heavens and towards the sun. After a little
+more solicitation, however, he gave a whistle, and, four or five natives
+having obeyed the summons, he directed them to draw the net, but they were
+unfortunate, and our wish to ascertain the kind of fish contained in the
+river was disappointed. As his tribe gathered round him, the old chief
+threw a melancholy glance upon them, and endeavoured, as much as he could,
+to explain the cause of that affliction which, as I had rightly judged,
+weighed heavily upon him. It appeared, then, that a violent cutaneous
+disease raged throughout the tribe, that was sweeping them off in great
+numbers. He called several young men to Mr. Hume and myself, who had been
+attacked by this singular malady. Nothing could exceed the anxiety of his
+explanations, or the mild and soothing tone in which he addressed his
+people, and it really pained me that I could not assist him in his
+distress. We now discovered the use to which the conical substance that
+had been deposited with such unusual care in one of the huts, was applied.
+There were few of the natives present who were not more or less marked
+with it, and it was no doubt, indicative of mourning.
+
+DEPARTURE OF THE NATIVES.
+
+Some of the men, however, were painted with red and yellow ochre, with
+which it was evident to me they had besmeared themselves since our
+appearance, most likely in preparing for the combat in which they fancied
+they would be engaged. We distributed such presents as we had to those
+around us, and when we pursued our journey, the majority accompanied us,
+nor did they wholly leave us until we had passed the place to which their
+women had retired. They might have left us when they pleased, for we
+intended them no harm; as it was, however, they struck into the brushes to
+join their families, and we pushed on to make up for lost time.
+
+The travelling near the river had been so bad, not only in consequence of
+the nature of the soil and brush, but from the numerous gullies that had
+been formed by torrents, as they poured into its channel after heavy rains
+and floods, that it was thought advisable to keep at a greater distance
+from it. We turned away, therefore, to the plains, and found them of much
+firmer surface. They partook, however, of the same general character as
+the plains we had traversed more to the eastward. Their soil was a light
+sandy loam, and the same succulent plants still continued to prevail upon
+them, which we have already noticed as existing upon the other plains.
+Both emus and kangaroos were seen, though not in any considerable numbers,
+but our dogs were not in a condition to run, and were all but killed by
+the extreme heat of the weather. We had fallen on a small pool of water
+shortly after we started in the morning, but we could do no more than
+refresh ourselves and the animals at it. In the afternoon, we again turned
+towards the river, and found it unaltered. Its water was still salt, and
+from the increased number of wild fowl and pelicans upon it, as well as
+from the general flatness of the country, I certainly thought we were
+rapidly approaching some inland sea. It was, however, uncertain how long
+we should be enabled to continue on the river. The animals were all of
+them extremely weak, and every day increased the probable difficulty of
+our return. There was not the least appearance of a break-up of the
+drought, the heavens were without a cloud, and the atmosphere was so clear
+that the outline of the moon could be distinctly seen, although she was
+far in her wane.
+
+BRINE SPRINGS IN THE RIVER.
+
+On the 6th, we journeyed again through a barren scrub, although on firmer
+ground, and passed numerous groups of huts. At about eight miles from our
+last encampment, we came upon the river, where its banks were of
+considerable height. In riding along them, Mr. Hume thought he observed a
+current running, and be called to inform me of the circumstance. On a
+closer examination, we discovered some springs in the very bed of the
+river, from which a considerable stream was gushing, and from the
+incrustation around them, we had no difficulty in guessing at their
+nature: in fact, they were brine springs, and I collected a quantity of
+salt from the brink of them.
+
+DISTRESS FOR WANT OF FRESH WATER.
+
+After such a discovery, we could not hope to keep our position. No doubt
+the current we had observed on first reaching the river, was caused by
+springs that had either escaped our notice or were under water. Here was
+at length a local cause for its saltness that destroyed at once the
+anticipation and hope of our being near its termination, and,
+consequently, the ardour with which we should have pressed on to decide so
+interesting a point.
+
+Our retreat would have been a measure of absolute necessity ere this, had
+we not found occasional supplies of fresh water, the last pond of which
+was now about eighteen miles behind us.
+
+OUR COURSE ARRESTED.
+
+Whether we should again find any, was a doubtful question, and I hesitated
+to run the risk. The animals were already, from bad food, and from the
+effects of the river water, so weak, that they could scarcely carry their
+loads, and I was aware, if any of the bullocks once fell, he would never
+rise again. Under such circumstances, I thought it better to halt the
+party at the edge of the scrub, though the feed was poor, and the water
+not drinkable. Our situation required most serious consideration. It was
+necessary that we should move either backward or forward in the morning.
+Yet we could not adopt either measure with satisfaction to ourselves,
+under such unfavorable circumstances. I determined to relieve my own mind
+by getting the animals into a place of safety, as soon as possible; and,
+as the only effectual way of doing this was to retire upon the nearest
+fresh water, I resolved at once to do so. The party turned back on the
+morning of the 6th; nor do I think the cattle would ever have reached
+their destination had we not found a few buckets of rain water in the
+cleft of a rock, to refresh them. Thus it will appear that under our most
+trying circumstances, we received aid from Providence, and that the bounty
+of Heaven was extended towards us, when we had least reason to expect it.
+
+Notwithstanding we had been thus forced to a partial retreat, both
+Mr. Hume and myself were unwilling to quit the pursuit of the river, in so
+unsatisfactory a manner. There was no difference in the appearance of the
+country to the westward of it; but a seeming interminable flat stretched
+away in that direction. A journey across it was not likely, therefore, to
+be attended with any favorable results, since it was improbable that any
+other leading feature was within our reach. I proposed, therefore, to take
+the most serviceable of the horses with me down the river, that, in the
+event of our finding fresh water, we might again push forward. Mr. Hume
+requesting to be permitted to accompany me, it was arranged that we should
+start on the 8th, thereby giving the animals a day's rest. We had not seen
+any natives since our parting with the chief horde; and as we were
+stationed at some little distance from the river, I hoped that they would
+not visit the camp during my absence. This was the only circumstance that
+gave me uneasiness, but the men had generally been behaving so well that I
+relied a great deal upon them.
+
+EXTRAORDINARY SOUND.
+
+About 3 p.m. on the 7th, Mr. Hume and I were occupied tracing the chart
+upon the ground. The day had been remarkably fine, not a cloud was there
+in the heavens, nor a breath of air to be felt. On a sudden we heard what
+seemed to be the report of a gun fired at the distance of between five and
+six miles. It was not the hollow sound of an earthly explosion, or the
+sharp cracking noise of falling timber, but in every way resembled a
+discharge of a heavy piece of ordnance. On this all were agreed, but no
+one was certain whence the sound proceeded. Both Mr. Hume and myself had
+been too attentive to our occupation to form a satisfactory opinion; but
+we both thought it came from the N.W. I sent one of the men immediately up
+a tree, but he could observe nothing unusual. The country around him
+appeared to be equally flat on all sides, and to be thickly wooded:
+whatever occasioned the report, it made a strong impression on all of us;
+and to this day, the singularity of such a sound, in such a situation,
+is a matter of mystery to me.
+
+FURTHER ATTEMPT TO EXPLORE THE RIVER.
+
+On the 8th, we commenced our journey down the river, accompanied by two
+men, and a pack-horse, carrying our provisions on one side and a bucket of
+water on the other. Keeping in general near the stream, but making
+occasional turns into the plains, we got to the brush from which the party
+had turned back, about 3 p.m. Passing through, we crossed a small plain,
+of better soil and vegetation than usual; but it soon gave place to the
+sandy loam of the interior; nor did we observe any material alteration,
+either in the country or the river, as we rode along. The flooded-gum
+trees on the banks of the latter, were of beautiful growth, but in the
+brushes dividing the plains, box and other eucalypti, with cypresses and
+many minor shrubs, prevailed. We slept on the river side, and calculated
+our distance from the camp at about twenty-six or twenty-eight miles.
+
+The horses would not drink the river water, so that we were obliged to
+give them a pint each from our own supply. On the following morning we
+continued our journey. The country was generally open to the eastward, and
+we had fine views of D'Urban's Group, distant from twenty to twenty-five
+miles. About noon, turning towards the river to rest, both ourselves and
+the horses, we passed through brush land for about a mile and a half. When
+we came upon its banks, we found them composed of a red loam with sandy
+superficies. We had, in the course of the day, crossed several creeks, but
+in none of them could we find water, although their channels were of great
+depth.
+
+The day had been extremely warm, and from shaking in the barrel our supply
+of water had diminished to a little more than a pint; it consequently
+became a matter of serious consideration, how far it would he prudent to
+proceed farther; for, however capable we were of bearing additional
+fatigue, it was evident our animals would soon fail, since they trembled
+exceedingly, and had the look of total exhaustion. We calculated that we
+were forty miles from the camp, in a S.W. direction, a fearful distance
+under our circumstances, since we could not hope to obtain relief for two
+days. Independently however, of the state of the animals, our spirits were
+damped by the nature of the country, and the change which had taken place
+on the soil, upon which it was impossible that water could rest; while the
+general appearance of the interior showed how much it had suffered from
+drought. On the other hand, although the waters of the river had become
+worse to the taste, the river itself had increased in size, and stretched
+away to the westward, with all the uniformity of a magnificent canal, and
+gave every promise of increasing importance; while the pelicans were in
+such numbers upon it as to be quite dazzling to the eye. Considering,
+however, that perseverance would only involve us in inextricable
+difficulties, and that it would also be useless to risk the horses, since
+we had gained a distance to which the bullocks could not have been
+brought, I intimated my intention of giving up the further pursuit of the
+river, though it was with extreme reluctance that I did so.
+
+CALLED IT THE "DARLING".
+
+As soon as we had bathed and finished our scanty meal, I took the bearings
+of D'Urban's Group, and found them to be S. 58 E. about thirty-three miles
+distant; and as we mounted our horses, I named the river the "Darling,"
+as a lasting memorial of the respect I bear the governor.
+
+ABANDON THE ATTEMPT.
+
+I should be doing injustice to Mr. Hume and my men, if I did not express
+my conviction that they were extremely unwilling to yield to
+circumstances, and that, had I determined on continuing the journey, they
+would have followed me with cheerfulness, whatever the consequences might
+have been.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach
+the Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck
+upon it.
+
+
+We kept near the river as we journeyed homewards, and in striking across a
+plain, found an isolated rock of quartz and jasper, just showing itself
+partially above the surface of the ground.
+
+We were anxious to get to the small plain I have mentioned, if possible,
+for the sake of the animals, and pushed on rapidly for it. About 4 p.m. we
+had reached our sleeping place of the previous evening, and being
+overpowered by thirst, we stopped in hopes that by making our tea strong
+we might destroy, in some measure, the nauseous taste of the water. The
+horses were spancelled and a fire lit. Whilst we were sitting patiently
+for the boiling of the tins, Mr. Hume observed at a considerable distance
+above us, a large body of natives under some gum trees. They were not near
+enough for us to observe them distinctly, but it was evident that they
+were watching our motions. We did not take any notice of them for some
+time, but at last I thought it better to call out to them, and accordingly
+requested Mr. Hume to do so. In a moment the whole of them ran forward and
+dashed into the river, having been on the opposite side, with an uproar I
+had never witnessed on any former occasion.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH NATIVES.
+
+Mr. Hume thought they intended an attack, and the horses had taken fright
+and galloped away. I determined, therefore, to fire at once upon them if
+they pressed up the bank on which we were posted. Mr. Hume went with me
+to the crest of it, and we rather angrily beckoned to the foremost of the
+natives to stop. They mistook our meaning, but laid all their spears in a
+heap as they came up. We then sat down on the bank and they immediately
+did the same; nor did they stir until we beckoned to them after the horses
+had been secured.
+
+As they conducted themselves so inoffensively, we gave them everything we
+had to spare. My gun seemed to excite their curiosity, as they had seen
+Mr. Hume shoot a cockatoo with it; they must consequently have been close
+to us for the greater part of the day, as the bird was killed in the
+morning. It was of a species new to me, being smaller than the common
+white cockatoo, and having a large scarlet-and-yellow instead of a
+pine-yellow top-knot.
+
+Having stayed about half an hour with them, we remounted our horses, and
+struck away from the river into the plains, while the natives went up its
+banks to join their hordes. Those whom we saw were about twenty-seven in
+number and the most of them were strangers.
+
+DISTRESS FROM THIRST.
+
+It was some time after sunset before we reached the little plain on which
+we had arranged to sleep, and when we dismounted we were in a truly
+pitiable state. I bad been unable to refrain from drinking copiously at
+the river, and now became extremely sick. Mr. Hume had been scarcely more
+prudent than myself, but on him the water had a contrary effect, as well
+as upon Hopkinson. The tinker was the only man fit for duty, and it was
+well for us that such was the case, as the horses made frequent attempts
+to stray, and would have left us in a pretty plight had they succeeded. We
+reached the camp on the following day a little before sunset, nor was I
+more rejoiced to dismount from my wearied horse than to learn that
+everything in the camp had been regular during our absence and that the
+men had kept on the best terms with the natives who had paid them frequent
+visits.
+
+The bullocks had improved, but were still extremely weak, and as the
+horses we had employed on the last journey required a day or two's rest,
+it was arranged that we should not break up our camp until the 12th,
+beyond which period we could not stop, in consequence of the low state of
+our salt provisions, we having barely sufficient to last to Mount Harris,
+at the rate of two pounds per week.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES.
+
+The morning after we returned from our excursion, a large party of
+natives, about seventy in number, visited the camp. On this occasion, the
+women and children passed behind the tents, but did not venture to stop.
+Most of the men had spears, and were unusually inquisitive and forward.
+Several of them carried fire-sticks under the influence of the disease I
+have already noticed, whilst others were remarked to have violent
+cutaneous eruptions all over the body. We were pretty well on the alert;
+notwithstanding which, every minor article was seized with a quickness
+that would have done credit to a most finished juggler. One of the natives
+thus picked up my comb and toothbrush, but as he did not attempt to
+conceal them, they were fortunately recovered. After staying with us a
+short time the men followed the women. They appeared to be strangers who
+had come from a distance.
+
+CUSTOMS OF THE NATIVES.
+
+The natives of the Darling are a clean-limbed, well-conditioned race,
+generally speaking. They seemingly occupy permanent huts, but their tribe
+did net bear any proportion to the size or number of their habitations.
+It was evident their population had been thinned. The customs of these
+distant tribes, as far as we could judge, were similar to those of the
+mountain blacks, and they are essentially the same people, although their
+language differs. They lacerate their bodies, but do not extract the front
+teeth. We saw but few cloaks among them, since the opossum does not
+inhabit the interior. Those that were noticed, were made of the red
+kangaroo skin. In appearance, these men are stouter in the bust than at
+the lower extremities; they have broad noses, sunken eyes, overhanging
+eyebrows, and thick lips. The men are much better looking than the women.
+Both go perfectly naked, if I except the former, who wear nets over the
+loins and across the forehead, and bones through the cartilages of the
+nose. Their chief food is fish, of which they have great supplies in the
+river; still they have their seasons for hunting their emus and kangaroos.
+The nets they use for this purpose, as well as for fishing, are of great
+length, and are made upon large frames. These people do not appear to have
+warlike habits nor do they take any pride in their arms, which differ
+little from those used by the inland tribes, and are assimilated to them
+as far as the materials will allow. One powerful man, however, had a
+regular trident, for which Mr. Hume offered many things without success.
+He plainly intimated to us that he had a use for it, but whether against
+an enemy or to secure prey, we could not understand. I was most anxious to
+have ascertained if any religious ceremonies obtained among them, but the
+difficulty of making them comprehend our meaning was insurmountable; and
+to the same cause may be attributed the circumstance of my being unable to
+collect any satisfactory vocabulary of their language. They evinced a
+strange perversity, or obstinacy rather, in repeating words, although it
+was evident that they knew they were meant as questions. The pole we
+observed in the creek, on the evening previously to our making the
+Darling, was not the only one that fell under our notice; our impression
+therefore, that they were fixed by the natives to propitiate some deity,
+was confirmed. It would appear that the white pigment was an indication of
+mourning. Whether these people have an idea of a superintending Providence
+I doubt, but they evidently dread evil agency. On the whole I should say
+they are a people, at present, at the very bottom of the scale of
+humanity.
+
+REMARKS ON THE DARLING RIVER.
+
+We struck the Darling River in lat. 29 degrees 37 minutes S. and in E.
+long. 145 degrees 33 minutes, and traced it down for about sixty-six miles
+in a direct line to the S.W. If I might hazard an opinion from appearance,
+to whatever part of the interior it leads, its source must be far to the
+N.E. or N. The capacity of its channel, and the terrific floods that must
+sometimes rage in it, would argue that it is influenced by tropical rains,
+which alone would cause such floods. It is likely that it seldom arrives
+at so reduced a state as that in which we found it, and that, generally
+speaking, it has a sufficient depth of water for the purposes of inland
+navigation: in such case its future importance cannot be questioned, since
+it most probably receives the chief streams falling westerly from the
+coast ranges. But, with every anticipation of the benefit that may at some
+time or other be derived from this remarkable and central stream, it is
+incumbent on me to state that the country, through which it flows, holds
+out but little prospect of advantage. Certainly the portion we know of it,
+is far from encouraging. The extent of alluvial soil, between the inner
+and outer banks of the river, is extremely limited, and, instead of being
+covered with sward, is in most places over-run by the polygonum. Beyond
+this the plains of the interior stretch away, whose character and soil
+must change, ere they can be available to any good purpose. But there is a
+singular want of vegetable decay in the interior of New Holland, and that
+powerfully argues its recent origin.
+
+REMARKS ON THE COUNTRY.
+
+There is no life upon its surface, if I may so express myself; but the
+stillness of death reigns in its brushes, and over its plains. It cannot,
+however, be doubted that we visited the interior during a most unfavorable
+season. Probably in ordinary ones it wears a different appearance, but its
+deserts are of great extent, and its productions are of little value.
+
+Agreeably to our arrangements, we broke up our camp at an early hour on
+the morning of the 12th, and proceeded up the river to the junction of
+New Year's Creek. We then struck away in an easterly direction from it,
+detaching a man to trace the creek up, lest we should pass any water; and
+we should certainly have been without it had we not taken this precaution.
+
+On the following day, we again passed to the eastward, through an open
+country, having picturesque views of Oxley's Table Land. We crossed our
+track about noon, and struck on the creek at about five miles beyond it,
+and we were fortunate enough to procure both water and grass. The timber
+upon the plains, between us and the Darling, we found to be a rough gum,
+but box prevailed in the neighbourhood of the creek at this part of it.
+
+On the 14th, we changed our direction more to the southward, but made a
+short journey, in consequence of being obliged to make some slight repairs
+on the boat carnage.
+
+REGAIN OUR OLD ROUTE.
+
+On the 15th, we kept an E.S.E. course, and, crossing the creek at an early
+hour, got upon our old track, which we kept. We had the lateral ridge of
+the Pink Hills upon our right, and travelled through a good deal of brush.
+Four or five natives joined us, and two followed us to the end of our
+day's journey. In the course of the evening, they endeavoured to pilfer
+whatever was in their reach, but were detected putting a tin into a bush,
+and soon took to their heels. This was the first instance we had of open
+theft among the natives of the interior.
+
+We passed Mosquito Brush on the 18th, but found the ponds quite dry, we
+were, therefore, under the necessity of pushing on, to shorten the next
+day's journey, as we could not expect to get water nearer than the
+marshes. At noon, on the 19th, we entered the plain, and once more saw
+them spreading in dreariness before us. While the party was crossing to
+the first channel, I rode to the left, in order to examine the appearance
+of the country in the direction of the wood, and as far as I skirted the
+reeds had my impressions confirmed as to their partial extension. I was
+obliged, however, to join the men without completing the circuit of the
+marshes. They had found the first channel dry, and had passed on to the
+other, in which, fortunately, a small quantity of water still remained.
+It was, however, so shallow as to expose the backs of the fish in it, and
+a number of crows had congregated, and were pecking at them. Wishing to
+satisfy my mind as to the distance to which the river extended to the
+northward, Mr. Hume rode with me on the following day, to examine the
+country in that direction, leaving the men stationary. We found that the
+reeds gradually decreased in body, until, at length, they ceased, or gave
+place to bulrushes. There were general appearances of inundation, and of
+the subsidence of waters, but none that led us to suppose that any channel
+existed beyond the flooded lands.
+
+ALARM FOR THE SAFETY OF THE PROVISION PARTY.
+
+On our return to the camp, we observed dense masses of smoke rising at the
+head of the marshes, and immediately under Mount Foster. This excited our
+alarm for the safety of the party we hoped to find at Mount Harris, and
+obliged us to make forced marches, to relieve it if threatened by the
+natives.
+
+On the 22nd, we crossed the plains of the Macquarie, and surprised a
+numerous tribe on the banks of the river; and the difficulty we found in
+getting any of them to approach us, their evident timidity, and the
+circumstance of one of them having on a jacket, tended to increase our
+apprehensions. When two or three came to us, they intimated that white
+men either had been or were under Mount Harris, but we were left in
+uncertainty and passed a most anxious night.
+
+The body of reeds was still on fire; and the light embers were carried to
+an amazing distance by the wind, falling like a black-shower around us. As
+we knew that the natives never made such extensive conflagration, unless
+they had some mischievous object in view, our apprehension for the safety
+of Riley, with his supplies, was increased.
+
+At the earliest dawn, we pushed for the hill. In passing that part of the
+meadows under Mount Foster, we observed that the grass had also been
+consumed, and we scarcely recognized the ground from its altered
+appearance. As we approached Mount Harris, we saw recent traces of cattle,
+but none were visible on the plains. Under the hill, however, we could
+distinctly see that a hut of some kind had been erected, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the relief we felt when a soldier came
+forward to reconnoitre us. I could no longer doubt the safety of the
+party, and this was confirmed by the rest of the men turning out to
+welcome us. It appeared that our suspicions with regard to the natives had
+not been without foundation, since they attempted to surprise the camp,
+and it was supposed the firing of the marshes was done with a view to
+collect the distant tribes, to make a second attack; so that our arrival
+was most opportune.
+
+The party I found awaiting our arrival at Mount Harris consisted of one
+soldier, Riley, who had the charge of the supplies, and a drayman. They
+had found the paper I had fixed against the tree, and also the letters I
+had hid, and had forwarded them to Sydney, by another soldier and a
+prisoner; which had weakened their party a goad deal. Riley informed me,
+that he had been between a month and three weeks at the station, and that
+knowing our provisions must have run short he had expected us much earlier
+than we had made our appearance.
+
+My dispatches stated, that additional supplies had been forwarded for my
+use, together with horses and bullocks, in the event of my requiring them.
+On examination, the former were found to be in excellent order; and, as it
+would take some time to carry any changes I might contemplate, or find it
+necessary to make, into effect, I determined to give the men who had been
+with me a week's rest.
+
+ENCAMP AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+The camp was made snug; and as the weather had become much cooler I
+thought it a good opportunity to slaughter one of the bullocks, in order
+to guard against any bad effects of our having been living for some weeks
+exclusively on salt provisions. I was also induced to this measure, from a
+wish to preserve my supplies as much as possible.
+
+These matters having been arranged, I had a temporary awning erected near
+the river, and was for three or four days busily employed writing an
+account of our journey for the Governor's information.
+
+Having closed my despatches, and answered the numerous friendly letters I
+had received, my attention was next turned to the changes that had taken
+place at Mount Harris during our absence. The Macquarie, I found, had
+wholly ceased to flow, and now consisted of a chain of ponds. Such of the
+minor vegetation as had escaped the fires of the natives, had perished
+under the extreme heat of the season. The acacia pendula stood leafless
+upon the plains, and the polygonum junceum appeared to be the only plant
+that had withstood the effects of the drought. Yet, notwithstanding this
+general depression of the vegetable kingdom, the animals that had been
+brought from Wellington Valley were in the best condition, and were,
+indeed, too fat for effective labour; it might, therefore, be reasonably
+presumed, that herbage affording such nourishment in so unfavourable a
+season, would be of the richest quality, if fresh and vigorous under the
+influence of seasonable, and not excessive, rains.
+
+FIRING OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+The appearance of the country was, however, truly melancholy; there was
+not a flower in bloom, nor a green object to be seen. Whether our arrival
+had increased their alarm, is uncertain, but the natives continued to fire
+the great marshes, and as the element raged amongst them, large bodies of
+smoke rose over the horizon like storm clouds, and had the effect of
+giving additional dreariness to the scene. I am inclined to think that
+they made these conflagrations to procure food, by seizing whatsoever
+might issue from the flames, as snakes, birds, or other animals; for they
+had taken every fish in the river, and the low state of its waters had
+enabled them to procure an abundance of muscles from its bed, which they
+had consumed with their characteristic improvidence. They were,
+consequently, in a starving condition, and so pitiable were their
+indications of it, that I was induced to feed such of them as visited the
+camp, notwithstanding their late misconduct; being likewise anxious to
+bring about a good understanding, as the best means of ensuring the safety
+of the smaller party when we should separate, of which I had reason to be
+doubtful. These people had killed two white men not long before my arrival
+among them, and as the circumstances attending the slaughter are singular,
+I shall relate them.
+
+SLAUGHTER OF TWO IRISH RUNAWAYS.
+
+The parties were two Irish runaways, who thought they could make their way
+to Timor. They escaped from Wellington Valley with a fortnight's provision
+each, and a couple of dogs, and proceeded down the Macquarie. About the
+cataract, they fell in with the Mount Harris tribe, and remained with them
+for some days, when they determined on pursuing their journey. The blacks,
+however, wanted to get possession of their dogs, and a resistance on the
+part of the Europeans brought on a quarrel. It appears, that before the
+blacks proceeded to extremities, they furnished the Irishmen, who were
+unarmed, with weapons, and then told them to defend themselves, but
+whether against equal or inferior numbers, I am uninformed. One of them
+soon fell, which the other observing, he took his knife out, and cut the
+throats of both the dogs before the blacks had time to put him to death.
+He was, however, sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe
+generally. I questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the
+most sullen silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact.
+
+ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE.
+
+Mr. Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid his
+compass on a large rock, near to which Mr. Oxley's boat had been burnt.
+To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings were all
+wrong. I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the error
+produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr. Hume noticed. When I
+placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N. by W., the
+true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W. My placing my
+notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did the card move
+until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the stone, when it
+first became violently agitated, and then settled correctly; and my
+bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range, and of its centre,
+were as follows:
+
+Mount Exmouth to the N ...... N. 86 E.
+Centre....................... N. 85 E.
+Vernon's Peak................ N. 89 E.
+Distance 70 miles.
+
+Having finished my reports and letters, it became necessary to consider
+the best point on which to move, and to fix a day for our departure from
+Mount Harris. It struck me that having found so important a feature as the
+Darling River, the Governor would approve my endeavouring to regain it
+more to the southward, in order to trace it down. I, therefore, detached
+Mr. Hume to survey the country in that direction, and to ascertain if a
+descent upon the Bogen district would be practicable, through which I had
+been informed a considerable river forced itself. The report he made on
+his return was such as to deter me from that attempt, but he stated that
+the country for 30 miles from the Macquarie was well watered, and superior
+to any he had passed over during the journey; beyond that distance, it
+took up the character of the remote interior, and alternated with plains
+and brush, the soil being too sandy to retain water on its surface. He saw
+some hills from the extremity of his journey, bearing by compass W.S.W.
+We consequently determined to make for the Castlereagh, agreeably to our
+instructions. Preparations were made for breaking up the camp, all the
+various arrangements in the change of animals were completed, the boat
+carriage was exchanged for a dray, and I took Boyle in the place of
+Norman, whose timidity in the bush rendered him unfit for service.
+
+CIRCUIT OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+There is a small hill on the opposite side of the river, and immediately
+facing Mount Harris, and to the S.E. of it there is a small lagoon, the
+head of a creek, by means of which its superfluous waters are carried off.
+This creek runs parallel to the river for about ten miles, and enters the
+marshes at the S.E. angle. This I ascertained one day in riding to carry
+on my survey of the southern extremity of the marshes, and to join my line
+of route by making the circuit of that part of them. I found that the
+river was turned to its northerly course by a rising ground of forest
+land, which checks its further progress westerly. I proceeded round
+the S.W. angle, and then, taking a northerly course, got down to the
+bottom of the first great marsh, thus completing the circuit of them. I
+did not return to the camp until after 10 p.m., having crossed the river
+at day-light, nor did we procure any water from the time we left the
+stream to the moment of our recrossing it.
+
+WALLIS'S PONDS.
+
+Having completed our various arrangements, and closed our letters, we
+struck our tents on the morning of the 7th March; we remained, however, to
+witness the departure of Riley's party for Wellington Valley, and then
+left the Macquarie on an E.N.E. course for Wallis's Ponds, and made them
+at about 14 miles. They undoubtedly empty themselves into the marshes, and
+are a continuation of that chain of ponds on which I left the party in
+Mr. Hume's charge. About a mile from Mount Harris, we passed a small dry
+creek, that evidently lays the country under water in the wet seasons.
+There was a blue-gum flat to the eastward of it, which we crossed, and
+then entered a brush of acacia pendula and box. The soil upon the plain
+was an alluvial deposit; that in the brushes was sandy. From the extremity
+of the plain, Mount Harris bore, by compass, S.W. by W.; Mount Foster due
+west. The scrub through which we were penetrating, at length became so
+dense, that we found it impossible to travel in a direct line through it,
+and frequent ridges of cypresses growing closely together, turned us
+repeatedly from our course. The country at length became clearer, and we
+travelled over open forest of box, casuarina, and cypresses, on a sandy
+soil; the first predominating. For about two miles before we made the
+creek, the country was not heavily timbered, the acacia pendula
+succeeding the larger trees. The ground had a good covering of grass upon
+it, and there were few of the salsolaceous plants, so abundant on the
+western plains, to be found. The rough-gum abounded near the creek, with a
+small tree bearing a hard round nut, and we had the luxury of plenty of
+water.
+
+We remained stationary on the 8th, in hopes that Riley would have met the
+soldier who had been sent back to Wellington Valley, and that he would
+have forwarded any letters to us, of which he might have been the bearer.
+The day, however, passed over without realizing our expectations; and we
+started once more for the interior, and cut ourselves off from all
+communication with society.
+
+MORRISSET'S PONDS.
+
+We made for Morrisset's chain of ponds, and travelled over rich and
+extensive plains, divided by plantations of cypress, box, and casuarina,
+in the early and latter period of the day. About noon we entered a dense
+forest of cypresses, which continued for three miles, when the cypresses
+became mixed with casuarina, box, and mountain-gum, a tree we had not
+remarked before in so low a situation. We struck upon the creek after a
+journey of about 15 miles. It had a sandy bed, and was extremely tortuous
+in its course, nor was it until after a considerable search, that we at
+length succeeded in finding water, at which a party of natives were
+encamped. The moment they saw us, they fled, and left all their utensils,
+&c. behind them. Among other things, we found a number of bark troughs,
+filled with the gum of the mimosa, and vast quantities of gum made into
+cakes upon the ground. From this it would appear these unfortunate
+creatures were reduced to the last extremity, and, being unable to procure
+any other nourishment, had been obliged to collect this mucilaginous food.
+
+The plains we traversed, were of uniform equality of surface. Water
+evidently lodges and continues on them long after a fall of rain, and in
+wet seasons they must, I should imagine, be full of quagmires, and almost
+impassable.
+
+On the 10th, we passed through a country that differed in no material
+point from that already described. We stopped at 10 a.m. under some brush,
+in the centre of a large plain, from which Arbuthnot's range bore S. 84 E.
+distant from 50 to 55 miles, and afterwards traversed or rather crossed,
+those extensive tracts described by Mr. Evans as being under water and
+covered with reeds, in 1817. They now bore a very different appearance,
+being firm and dry. The soil was in general good, and covered with forest
+grass and a species of oxalia. We did not observe any reeds, or the signs
+of inundation, but, as is invariably the case with plains in the interior,
+they were of too even surface, as I have so lately remarked, to admit of
+the waters running quickly off them; and no doubt, when they became
+saturated, many quagmires are formed, that would very much impede the
+movements of an expedition.
+
+REACH THE CASTLEREAGH RIVER.
+
+We reached the Castlereagh about 4 p.m., and although its channel could
+not have been less than 130 yards in breadth, there was apparently not a
+drop of water in it. Its bed consisted of pure sand and reeds; amid the
+latter, we found a small pond of 15 yards circumference, after a long
+search. There is a considerable dip in the country towards the river, at
+about two miles from it; and the intervening brush was full of kangaroo,
+which, I fancy, had congregated to a spot where there was abundance of
+food for them. The soil covering the space was of the richest quality,
+and the timber upon it consisted of box, mountain gum, and the angophora
+lanceolata, a tree that is never found except on rich ground.
+
+WANT OF WATER; CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appeared that our troubles were to recommence, and that in order to
+continue on the Castlereagh, it would be necessary for Mr. Hume and myself
+to undertake those fatiguing journeys in search of water that had so
+exhausted us already: and after all, it was doubtful how soon we might be
+forced back. I had certainly expected that, on our gaining the banks of
+the river, we should have had a constant supply of water, but the
+circumstance of the Castlereagh having not only ceased to flow, but being
+absolutely dry, while it afforded the best and clearest proof of the
+severity and continuance of the drought in the interior, at the same time
+damped the spirits and ardour of the men. We kept the left bank of the
+river as we proceeded down it, and passed two or three larger ponds about
+a mile below where we had slept, but there they ceased. The bed of the
+river became one of pure sand, nor did there appear to be any chance of
+our finding any water in it. I stopped the party at about eight miles, and
+desired the men to get their dinners, to give Mr. Hume and myself time to
+search for a supply upon the plains. Disappointed to the left, we crossed
+the channel of the Castlereagh, and struck over a small plain upon the
+right bank, and at the extremity of it, came upon a swamp, from which we
+immediately returned for the cattle, and got them unloaded by seven
+o'clock. As there was sufficient pasture around us, I proposed to Mr. Hume
+on the following day, to leave the party stationary, and to ride down the
+river to see how far its present appearances continued. Like the
+generality of rivers of the interior, it had, where we struck upon it,
+outer banks to confine its waters during floods, and to prevent them from
+spreading generally over the country; the space between the two banks
+being of the richest soil, and the timber chiefly of the angophora kind.
+Flooded-gum overhung the inner banks of the river, or grew upon the many
+islands, with casuarina. It became evident, however, that the outer banks
+declined in height as we proceeded down the river, nor was it long before
+they ceased altogether. As we rode along, we found that the inner ones
+were fast decreasing in height also. Riding under a hanging wood of the
+angophora, which had ceased for a time, we were induced to break off to
+our right, to examine some large flooded-gum trees about a couple of miles
+to the N.W. of us. On arriving near them, we were astonished to find that
+they concealed a serpentine lagoon that had a belt of reeds round it.
+Keeping this lagoon upon our right, we at length came to the head of it,
+past which the river sweeps. Crossing the channel of the river, we
+continued to ride in an easterly direction to examine the country. In
+doing this, we struck on a second branch of the Castlereagh, leading
+W. by N. into a plain, which it of course inundates at times, and running
+up it, we found its bed at the point of separation, to be considerably
+higher than that of the main channel, which still continued of pure
+sand--and was stamped all over with the prints of the feet of natives,
+kangaroos, emus, and wild dogs, We then turned again to the head of the
+lagoon, and took the following bearings of Arbuthnot's range:
+
+Mount Exmouth .......... E. 90 S.
+Centre Range ........... E. 35 E.
+Vernon's Peak .......... E. 20 S.
+
+From the head of the lagoon, the river appeared to enter a reedy hollow,
+shaded by a long line of flooded gum trees, and on proceeding to it, we
+found the banks ceased here altogether; and that a very considerable plain
+extended both to the right and the left, which cannot fail of being
+frequently laid under water.
+
+LAGOONS AND CREEKS OF THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+On the following morning we moved the party to the lagoon, and, passing
+its head, encamped to the north of it; after which we again rode down the
+river in search of water. It continued to hold a straight and northerly
+course for about five miles, having a plain on either side. The reeds that
+had previously covered the channel then suddenly ceased, and the channel,
+contracting in breadth, gained in depth: it became extremely serpentine,
+and at length lost all the character and appearance of a river. It had
+many back channels, as large as the main one, serving to overflow the
+neighbouring country. We succeeded in finding a small pond of water in one
+of the former, hardly large enough to supply our necessities, but as it
+enabled us to push so much further on, we turned towards the lagoon,
+making a circuitous journey to the right, across a large plain, bounded to
+the north by low acacia brush and box. We struck upon a creek at the
+further extremity of the plain, in which there was a tolerably sized pond.
+It appeared from the traces of men, that some natives had been there the
+day before; but we did not see any of them. The water was extremely muddy
+and unfit for use. The lagoon at which we had encamped, was of less
+importance than we had imagined.
+
+JOURNEY DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+Whilst Mr. Hume led the party down the river, I rode up its northward
+bank, to examine it more closely. I found it to be a serpentine sheet of
+about three miles in length, gradually decreasing in depth until it
+separated into two small creeks. In following one of them up, I observed
+that they re-united at the distance of about two miles, and that the
+lagoon was filled from the eastward, and not by the river as I had at
+first supposed. The waters at the head of the lagoon were putrid, nor was
+there a fish in, or a wild fowl upon it. The only bird we saw was a
+beautiful eagle, of the osprey kind, with plumage like a sea gull, which
+had a nest in the tree over the tents.
+
+In turning to overtake the party I rode through a great deal of acacia
+scrub, and on arriving at the place at which I expected to have overtaken
+them, I found they had pushed on.
+
+The Castlereagh, as I rode down it, diminished in size considerably, and
+became quite choked up with rushes and brambles. Rough-gum again made its
+appearance, with swamp-oak and a miserable acacia scrub outside. The
+country on both sides of the river seemed to be an interminable flat, and
+the soil of an inferior description.
+
+WRETCHED APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+I came up with with Mr. Hume about 1 o'clock and we again pushed forward
+at 3, and halted for the night without water, the want of which the cattle
+did not feel. The river held a general westerly course, and the country in
+its neighbourhood became extremely depressed and low. On the following day
+we moved forward a distance of not more than nine miles, through a country
+on which, at first, the acacia pendula alone was growing on a light
+alluvial soil. The river had many back drains, by means of which, in wet
+seasons, it inundates the adjacent plains. It was evident, however, that
+they had not been flooded for many years; and, notwithstanding that the
+country was low, the line of inundation did not appear to be very
+extensive, nor were there any reeds growing beyond the immediate banks of
+the river. Swamp-oak and rough-gum again prevailed near the stream at our
+halting place, and the improvement that had taken place, both in the
+country and in the Castlereagh, had induced us to make so short a journey;
+for not only was there abundance of the grass for the animals, but large
+ponds of water in the river. Some natives had only just preceded us down
+it: we came upon their fires that were still smoking; and upon them were
+the remains of some fish they had taken, near which they had left a
+cumbrous spear. The circumstances cheered us with hopes that an
+improvement would take place in the country, and that some new feature
+would soon open upon us. In the course of the following day, however,
+every favorable change, both in the river and in the country, disappeared.
+The latter continued extremely depressed, and in general open, or lightly
+covered with acacia pendula; the former dwindled into a mere ditch, choked
+up with brambles and reeds, and having only here and there a stagnant pool
+of water. We travelled on a N.W. 1/2 W. course for about ten miles, and
+again stopped for the night without water. In the course of the afternoon,
+we traversed several flats, on which the rough-gum alone was growing.
+These flats were evidently subject to flood; and contained an alluvial
+soil.
+
+They became more frequent as we travelled down the river, and the work was
+so heavy for the animals, that I was obliged to keep wide of them, in
+doing which we struck upon a creek of large size, coming from the N.E.
+and, having crossed, we traversed its right bank to its junction with the
+Castlereagh, and stopped close to it at a pond of water, though the feed
+for the animals was bad. The country to the left of the river, though
+somewhat high, was the same, in essential points, as that to the right.
+
+The Castlereagh seemed to have increased in size below the creek, but
+still it had no resemblance to a river. We had not proceeded very far down
+its banks, on the 18th, when we crossed a broad footpath leading to it
+from the interior. I turned my horse to the left, and struck upon a long
+sheet of water, from which I startled a number of pelicans. It was evident
+that the natives had recently been in the neighbourhood, but we thought it
+probable they might have been a hunting party, who had returned again to
+the plains. The whole track we passed over during the day was miserably
+poor and bare of vegetation, nor did the appearance of the country to the
+N.E. indicate any improvement. We lost the traces of the natives
+immediately after crossing their path or beat, and again found the bed of
+the river dry, after we had passed the sheet of water to which it led. The
+soil was so rotten and yielding, that the team knocked up early; indeed,
+it was a matter of surprise to me that they should not have failed before.
+The river made somewhat to the westward with little promise of
+improvement. The wretched appearance of the country as we penetrated into
+it, damped our spirits; we pressed on, however, with difficulty, over
+ground that was totally destitute of vegetation. Instead of lofty timber
+and a living stream, we wandered along the banks of an insignificant
+watercourse, and under trees of stunted size and scanty foliage. We
+stopped on the 20th at the angle of a creek, in which there was some dry
+grass, in consequence of the animals being almost in a starving state, but
+even here they had but little to eat.
+
+A violent thunder-storm passed over us in the afternoon, but it made no
+change in the temperature of the air. The weather, although it had been
+hot and sultry, had fallen far short of the intense heat we experienced in
+crossing the marshes of the Macquarie, when it was such as to melt the
+sugar in the canisters, and to destroy all our dogs; and our nights were
+now become agreeably cool.
+
+A PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+We still, however, continued to travel over a dead level, nor was a height
+or break visible from the loftiest trees we ascended. A little before we
+stopped at the creek, we surprised a party of natives; old men, women, and
+children. They were preparing dinners of fish in much larger quantities
+than they could have devoured--probably for a part of the tribe that were
+absent; but the moment they saw us they fled, and left every thing at our
+mercy. On examining the fish, we found them totally different from any in
+the Macquarie, and took two of the most perfect to preserve. In the
+afternoon one of the men came to inform me that the tribe was coming down
+upon us.
+
+Mr. Hume and I, therefore, went to meet them. They were at this time about
+150 yards from the tent, but seeing us advance, they stopped, and forming
+two deep, they marched to and fro, to a war song I suppose, crouching with
+their spears. We had not, however, any difficulty in communicating with
+them, and I shall detail the manner in which this was brought about, in
+hopes that it may help to guide others. When the natives saw us advance,
+they stopped, and we did the same. Mr. Hume then walked to a tree, and
+broke off a short branch. It is singular that this should, even with these
+rude people, be a token of peace. As soon as they saw the branch, the
+natives laid aside their spears, and two of them advanced about twenty
+paces in front of the rest, who sat down. Mr. Hume then went forward and
+sat down, when the two natives again advanced and seated themselves close
+to him.
+
+Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every people
+is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with patience
+and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the interior. It is not
+to avoid alarming their natural timidity that a gradual approach is so
+necessary. They preserve the same ceremony among themselves. These men,
+who were eighteen in number, came with us to the tents, and received such
+presents as we had for them. They conducted themselves very quietly, and,
+after a short time, left us with every token of friendship.
+
+LARGE CREEK.
+
+On the 21st we proceeded down the river on a N.N.W. course, and at about
+five miles struck upon a very large creek, apparently coming from
+the E.N.E.
+
+Although the Castlereagh had increased in size, this creek was infinitely
+larger; it was, however, perfectly dry. Lofty flooded-gum trees were upon
+its banks, and it appeared so much superior to the river that I was
+induced to halt the party at the junction, in order to examine it more
+closely. Mr. Hume, therefore, rode with me up the right bank. We had not
+proceeded very far, when some natives called out to us from the opposite
+scrub. Thinking that they belonged to the tribe we had left behind us, we
+pointed to the junction, and motioned them to go there, but one of the
+party continued to follow and call to us for some time. On our return to
+the men, we found that the natives had joined them, and they now gave us
+to understand that we were going away from water. This had indeed been
+apparent to us. The creek was perfectly dry, as far as we traced it up;
+and seemed to have been totally deserted by the natives.
+
+We were about to proceed on our journey, when from twenty to thirty
+natives approached us from down the river. We sent two of those who had
+been with us to them, and the whole accompanied us for some miles, talking
+incessantly to the men, but keeping at a very respectful distance from the
+animals. We at length got opposite to their camp, near which there was a
+very fine pool of water, and they were earnest in persuading us to stop at
+it. We were, however, too anxious to get forward to comply; under the
+improved appearance of the river since it had received the creeks from the
+eastward, little anticipating what was before us.
+
+NATIVE ARMOURY.
+
+The natives did not follow us beyond their own encampment. Within sight of
+it, we came upon their armoury, if I may so term it. Numerous spears were
+reared against the trees, and heaps of boomerangs were lying on the
+ground. The spears were very heavy, and half barbed; and it is singular
+that three of them were marked with a broad arrow. We saw the natives
+watching us, fearful, I imagine, that we should help ourselves; but I
+would not permit any of their weapons to be touched.
+
+EXAMINATION OF CREEKS NEAR THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+Pursuing our journey, we reached another creek, at about five miles,
+similar to the last in appearance and size, and we crossed it repeatedly
+during the afternoon. We had been induced to keep along a native path in
+the hope that it would have led us to the river by a short cut; but it
+eventually led us to this creek, and away from the Castlereagh; for,
+notwithstanding that we subsequently changed our course to the S.W., we
+failed, as we supposed, again to strike upon the latter, and were obliged
+to stop for the night on the banks of what appeared to be a third large
+dry creek, which we intersected nearly at right angles.
+
+We travelled through a good deal of brush during the day, nor did the
+country change from the miserable and barren character it had assumed for
+the last thirty or forty miles. The Castlereagh had so frequently changed,
+that both Mr. Hume and myself were puzzled as to the identity of the
+creek upon which we had halted. We searched its bed in vain for water,
+although it was most capacious. Under an impression that the river was
+still to the south, and that we were at a point to which many watercourses
+from the high lands tended, I crossed the creek early in the morning, and
+held a S.W. course, over an open forest country. At about eight miles, we
+came upon a large space over-run by the polygonum junceum, a certain
+indication of flooded ground, and of our consequent proximity to some
+stream. Accordingly, after pushing through it, we struck upon a small
+creek with abundance of water in it. Whether this creek was the
+Castlereagh, which it resembled much more than the one we had left in the
+morning, was doubtful; but it was a great source of comfort to us to have
+so unexpected a supply of water as that which was now at our disposal.
+Whatever channel this was, whether a river or a creek, our tracing it down
+would lead us in the direction we wished to go, and probably to some
+junction.
+
+The neighbourhood of the creek was well clothed with vegetation, and the
+cattle found good feed; but the only trees near it were rough-gum and
+casuarinae; the flooded-gum had again disappeared. The soil of the forest
+land over which we journeyed was a light sandy loam; and its timber
+consisted chiefly of eucalypti, acacia pendula, and the angophora.
+
+Some natives visited us in the afternoon, and among them, both Mr. Hume
+and I recognized one of those we had seen on the Darling. He also knew us
+again, but we could not make out from him how far we were from that river.
+They stayed with us till sunset, and then went down the creek, leaving
+their spears against a tree, for which they said they would return.
+
+On the 23rd we took up a W.N.W. course, and when we again touched on the
+creek it was dry. This was at a distance of about five miles from where we
+had slept. As the animals had not recovered from their late privations, I
+deemed it better to halt the party and to examine the creek for a few
+miles below us, that in case it should prove destitute of water, we might
+return to that we had left. Mr. Hume accordingly rode down it for about
+three miles, without success; and on his rejoining the men, we returned
+with them to our last camp, or to within a short distance of it. Wishing
+to examine the creek above our position, I requested Mr. Hume to take two
+men with him, and to trace it down in search of water, while I should
+proceed in the opposite direction. I went from the camp at an early hour,
+and as I wandered along the creek, I passed a regular chain of ponds. The
+country on both sides of the creek was evidently subject to flood, but
+more extensively to the south than to the north. From the creek, I struck
+away to my left, and after penetrating through a belt of swamp-oak and
+minor shrubs, got on a small plain, which I crossed N.E. and, to my
+annoyance, found it covered with rhagodia and salsolae. As I had not
+started with the intention of sleeping, I turned to the S.W. a little
+before sunset, and reached the tents between ten and eleven. I found
+Mr. Hume awaiting me. He informed me that at about nine miles from
+where we had turned back with the party, he had struck upon a junction;
+and that as the junction was much larger than the channel he had been
+tracing, he thought it better to follow it up for a few miles. He found
+that it narrowed in width, and that its banks became steep, with a fine
+avenue of flooded-gum trees overhanging them. At four miles, he came upon
+another junction, and at four miles more, found himself opposite to the
+ground on which we had slept on the previous Saturday. From this point he
+retraced the channel, but not finding any water for three miles below the
+lower junction, he returned to the camp, with a view of prosecuting a
+longer journey on the morrow. Mr. Hume had become impressed with an
+opinion, that the junction up which we had slept was no other than the
+Castlereagh itself; and that our position was on a creek, probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds, flowing into it. As the cattle wanted a few
+days' rest, Mr. Hume and I determined to ride, unattended, along our track
+to our camp of the 21st, and then to follow the channel upwards, until we
+should arrive at the station of the natives, or until we should have
+ridden to such a distance as would set our conjectures at rest. In the
+morning, however, instead of running upon our old track, we followed that
+of Mr. Hume to the junction, giving up our first intention, with a view to
+ascertain if there existed any water which we could, by an effort, gain,
+below where Mr. Hume had been. The channel was very broad, with a
+considerable fall in its bed, and, in appearance, more resembled the slope
+of a lawn than the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees in the centre of
+its channel, in one of which the floods had left the trunk of a large
+tree. We could discover where it narrowed and its banks rose, but, as we
+intended to make a closer examination before we left the neighbourhood,
+we continued our journey down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
+an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood, but the distant
+country was miserably poor and bare. At about three miles, we came upon
+the fresh traces of some natives, which led us to the channel again, from
+which we bad wandered unintentionally. In it we found there had been water
+very lately, and it appeared that the natives had dug holes at the bottom
+to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted, but still retained
+the appearance of moisture. At a mile and a half beyond these, we were led
+to some similar holes, by observing a number of birds flying about them.
+The water was too muddy for us to drink, but the horses emptied them
+successively. We now kept sufficiently near the channel to insure our
+seeing any pool that might still remain in it, but rode for about seven
+miles before we again saw water, and even here, although it was a spring,
+we were obliged to dig holes, and await their filling, before we could get
+sufficient for our use. Having dined, we again pursued our journey, and
+almost immediately came upon a long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined
+by bulrushes. The creek or river had for some time kept the centre of a
+deep alluvial valley, in which there was plenty of food for the cattle,
+and which, at this place, was apparently broader than anywhere else. The
+situation being favourable, we returned to the camp, and reached it late.
+
+DEPRESSION OF THE MEN.
+
+I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture, but I fancied, about
+this time, that the men generally were desponding. Whether it was that the
+constant fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our constant
+absence, or the consequent exhaustion it produced, had any effect on their
+minds, or that they feared the result of our perseverance, is difficult to
+say; but certainly, they all had a depression of spirits, and looked, I
+thought, altered in appearance; nor did they evince any satisfaction at
+our success--at least, not the satisfaction they would have shown at an
+earlier period of our journey.
+
+Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain if the channel from
+the junction was the Castlereagh, or only a creek. The intersection of so
+many channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so much alike, made it
+essentially necessary that we should satisfy ourselves on this point.
+Mr. Hume, therefore, accompanied me, as had at first been intended the
+morning of our return to the place at which we had slept. We took fresh
+horses, but dispensed with any other attendants, and indeed went wholly
+unarmed.
+
+CAMP OF NATIVES.
+
+After following our old track to its termination, we kept up the right
+bank of the channel, and at length arrived at the camp of the natives;
+thus satisfying ourselves that we had been journeying on the Castlereagh,
+and that we were still following it down. By this ride we ascertained that
+there was a distance of five-and-forty miles in its bed without a drop of
+water. Few of the natives were in the camp. The women avoided us, but not
+as if they were under any apprehension. Crossing at the head of the pool,
+we again got on our old track, but seeing two or three men coming towards
+us we alighted, and, tying our horses to a tree, went to meet them. One
+poor fellow had two ducks in his hand, which he had just taken off the
+fire; these he offered to us, and on our declining to accept of them, he
+called to a boy, who soon appeared with a large trough of honey, of which
+we partook. One of the men had an ulcer in the arm, and asked me what he
+should do to heal it; indeed, I believe Fraser had promised him some
+ointment, but not having any with me, I signified to him that be should
+wash it often, and stooping down, made as if I was taking up water in my
+hand. The poor fellow mistook me, and, also stooping down, took up a
+handful of dust which he threw over the sore. This gave me the trouble of
+explaining matters again, and by pointing to the water, I believe I at
+length made him understand me.
+
+DRY CHANNEL OF THE RIVER.
+
+These good natured people asked us where we had slept the day we passed,
+and when informed of the direction, shook their heads, motioning at the
+same time, that we must have been without water. We informed them where
+the party was, and asked them to come and see us, but I fancy the distance
+was too great, or else we were in the beat of another tribe. On mentioning
+these facts to the men, they said that two of the natives had followed us
+for some miles, calling out loudly to us, but Mr. Hume and I both being in
+front, we did not hear them, although, evidently, they wished to save us
+distress.
+
+Since the result of our excursion proved that the channel, about which I
+had been so doubtful, was the Castlereagh, it necessarily followed, that
+the creek at which we were encamped was one of those (most probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds,) which we had already crossed nearer its
+source, and which Mr. Hume must have struck upon when endeavouring to gain
+the Castlereagh from the marshes of the Macquarie.
+
+A perusal of these sheets will ere this have impressed on the reader's
+mind, the peculiarity of that fortune which led us from the Castlereagh to
+the creek, at which alone our wants could have been supplied. Had we
+wandered down the river, as we undoubtedly should have done had we
+recognised it as such, the loss of many of our animals would have been the
+inevitable consequence, and very probably a final issue would have been
+put to our journey. It is only to those who are placed in situations that
+baffle their own exertions or foresight, that the singular guidance of
+Providence becomes fully apparent.
+
+NATIVES PERISHING FROM FAMINE.
+
+It would appear that the natives were dying fast, not from any disease,
+but from the scarcity of food; and, should the drought continue, it seemed
+probable they may became extinct.
+
+The men found the body of a woman covered with leaves near the tents, and
+very properly buried it. We made Friday a day of rest for ourselves, as
+indeed was necessary; and on the following morning proceeded down the
+river, and encamped on a high bank above it, at the base of which, our
+cattle both fed and watered.
+
+At this spot one of the largest gum-trees I had ever seen had fallen,
+having died for want of moisture; indeed, the state of the vegetable
+kingdom was such as to threaten its total extinction, unless a change of
+seasons should take place.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that, from our first arrival on the banks of
+the Castlereagh, to our arrival at the present camp, we never picked up a
+stone, or a pebble, in its bed.
+
+JUNCTION OF THE CASTLEREAGH WITH THE DARLING.
+
+In the hope that we should fall on some detached pond, we pursued our
+journey on the 29th. The Castlereagh gave singular proofs of its violence,
+as if its waters, confined in the valley, had a difficulty in escaping
+from it. We had not travelled two miles, when in crossing, as we imagined,
+one of its bights, we found ourselves checked by a broad river. A single
+glimpse of it was sufficient to tell us it was the Darling. At a distance
+of more than ninety miles nearer its source, this singular river still
+preserved its character, so strikingly, that it was impossible not to have
+recognised it in a moment. The same steep banks and lofty timber, the same
+deep reaches, alive with fish, were here visible as when we left it.
+A hope naturally arose to our minds, that if it was unchanged in other
+respects, it might have lost the saltness that rendered its waters unfit
+for use; but in this we were disappointed--even its waters continued the
+same. As it was impossible for us to cross the Darling, I determined on
+falling back upon our last encampment, which was at a most Convenient
+distance, and of concerting measures there for our future movements. Prior
+to doing so, however, I rode to the junction of the Castlereagh with
+the Darling, accompanied by Mr. Hume, a distance of about half a mile.
+Upon the point formed by the two streams, there were a number of huts,
+and on the opposite bank of the Darling, about twenty natives had
+collected. We called out to them, but they would not join us.
+
+At the junction, the Castlereagh, with whatever impetuosity it rushes from
+its confinement, makes not apparently the least impression on the Darling
+River. The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a tributary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+On our return to the party, we found them surrounded by the natives, who
+were looking with an eye of wonder on the cattle and horses. We pointed
+out to them the direction in which we were going, and invited them to
+visit us; and nothing appeared to astonish them so much as the management
+of the team by a single man. We got back to our position early, and again
+fixed ourselves upon it.
+
+It now only remained for us to consider what we should do under
+circumstances of certainly more than ordinary perplexity. We had nothing
+to hope for from travelling in a southerly direction, while to the E. and
+N.E., the state of the country was worse than that by which we had
+penetrated to the Darling. It was evident, that the large creeks joining
+the Castlereagh in that direction were dry, since the natives not only
+intimated this to us, but it was unquestionable that they themselves had
+deserted them, and had crowded to such places as still contained a supply
+of water. Even in retreating, we could not hope to retrace our steps.
+Experience had proved to us, that the dry state of the interior was as
+injurious to the movements of an expedition as a too wet season would have
+been. Taking everything, therefore, into consideration, I determined on
+leaving the party stationary, and on crossing the Darling to the N.W.,
+and, if any encouraging feature presented itself, to return for the party,
+and persevere in an examination of the distant interior. Such, at least,
+appeared to me the most judicious plan: indeed, an attempt to have moved
+in any other direction would have been fruitless. And, as the result of
+this journey would be decisive, and would either fix or determine our
+advance or retreat, I was anxious for Mr. Hume's attendance.
+
+The natives followed to the camp, and in the course of the afternoon, were
+joined by their women. The latter however, would not approach nearer than
+the top of a little hillock on which they sat. The men did not come round
+the tents, but stood in a row at a short distance. At sunset, they gained
+a little courage, and wandered about a little more; at length they went
+off to the Darling.
+
+HONESTY OF A NATIVE.
+
+It was quite dark, when I heard a native call from the hill on which the
+women had been, and I desired Hopkinson to take his firelock and ascertain
+what the man wanted. He soon after returned, and brought a blanket, which
+he said the man had returned to him. The native was alone, and when he
+offered the blanket, kept his spear poised in his right hand; but, seeing
+that no violence was intended him, he lowered his weapon, and walked away.
+
+REWARD THE MAN FOR HIS CONDUCT.
+
+I was extremely pleased at this trait of honesty, and determined to reward
+it. On inquiry, I found that the men had availed themselves of the day to
+wash their blankets and that one of them had been flung over a bush
+hanging over the bank of the river, and it was supposed that one of the
+natives must have pulled it down with him. In the morning, the tribe went
+away from their encampment before day-light as we judged from the cry of
+their dogs, than which nothing could be more melancholy; but about eight,
+the men made their appearance on the hill occupied by the women the
+evening previously, and seemed to be doubtful whether to approach nearer.
+I went out to them, and, with a downward motion of my hand, beckoned for
+them to come to me: they mistook the signal, but laid all their spears on
+the ground, and it was not until after the sign had been reversed that
+they stirred or moved towards me. I than got them in a row, and desired
+Hopkinson to single out the man who had given him the blanket. It was,
+however, with great difficulty that he recognised him, as the man stood
+firm and motionless. At length, after walking two or three times along the
+line, he stopped before one man, and put his hand on his shoulder, upon
+which the manner of the native testified as to the correctness of his
+guess.
+
+The blanket being produced, I explained to the savage, with Mr. Hume's
+assistance, that I was highly pleased with him, and forthwith presented
+him with a tomahawk and a clasp-knife. The tribe were perfectly aware of
+the reason of my conduct, and all of them seemed highly delighted.
+
+I was happy in having such an opportunity of showing the natives of the
+interior that I came among them with a determination to maintain justice
+in my communication with them, and to impress them, at the same time, with
+a sense of our love of it in them. That they appreciated my apparent
+lenity in not calling for the defaulter, I am sure, and I feel perfectly
+conscious that I should have failed in my duty had I acted otherwise than
+I did.
+
+EFFECT OF FIRING A GUN.
+
+Although the natives had shown so good a disposition, as they were
+numerous, I thought it as well, since I was about to leave the camp, to
+show them that I had a power they little dreamt of about me. I therefore
+called for my gun and fired a ball into a tree. The effect of the report
+upon the natives, was truly ridiculous. Some stood and stared at me,
+others fell down, and others ran away; and it was with some difficulty we
+collected them again. At last, however, we did so, and, leaving them to
+pick out the ball, mounted our horses and struck away for the Darling.
+We crossed the river a little above where we struck it, and then proceeded
+N.W. into the interior.
+
+EXCURSION ACROSS THE DARLING.
+
+It is impossible for me to describe the nature of the country over which
+we passed, for the first eight miles. We rode through brushes of
+polygonum, under rough-gum, without a blade of vegetation, the whole space
+being subject to inundation. We then got on small plains of firmer
+surface, and red soil, but these soon changed again for the former; and
+at 4 p.m. we found ourselves advanced about two miles on a plain that
+stretched away before us, and bounded the horizon. It was dismally brown;
+a few trees only served to mark the distance. Up one of the highest I sent
+Hopkinson, who reported that he could not see the end of it, and that all
+around looked blank and desolate. It is a singular fact, that during the
+whole day, we had not seen a drop of water or a blade of grass.
+
+DESOLATING EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT.
+
+To have stopped where we were, would, therefore, have been impossible; to
+have advanced, would probably have been ruin. Had there been one favorable
+circumstance to have encouraged me with the hope of success, I would have
+proceeded. Had we picked up a stone as indicating our approach to high
+land, I would have gone on; or had there been a break in the level of the
+country, or even a change in the vegetation. But we had left all traces of
+the natives far behind us; and this seemed a desert they never
+entered--that not even a bird inhabited. I could not encourage a hope of
+success, and, therefore, gave up the point; not from want of means, but a
+conviction of the inutility of any further efforts. If there is any blame
+to be attached to the measure, it is I who am in fault, but none who had
+not like me traversed the interior at such a season, would believe the
+state of the country over which I had wandered. During the short interval
+I had been out, I had seen rivers cease to flow before me, and sheets of
+water disappear; and had it not been for a merciful Providence, should,
+ere reaching the Darling, have been overwhelmed by misfortune.
+
+I am giving no false picture of the reality. So long had the drought
+continued, that the vegetable kingdom was almost annihilated, and minor
+vegetation had disappeared. In the creeks, weeds had grown and withered,
+and grown again; and young saplings were now rising in their beds,
+nourished by the moisture that still remained; but the largest forest
+trees were drooping, and many were dead. The emus, with outstretched
+necks, gasping for breath, searched the channels of the rivers for water,
+in vain; and the native dog, so thin that it could hardly walk, seemed to
+implore some merciful hand to despatch it. How the natives subsisted it
+was difficult to say, but there was no doubt of the scarcity of food
+among them.
+
+We arrived in camp at a late hour, and having nothing to detain us longer,
+prepared for our retreat in the morning. The natives had remained with the
+party during the greater part of the day, and had only left them a short
+time prior to our arrival,
+
+When examining the creek on which we had been encamped for some days,
+Mr. Hume observed a small junction; and as we knew we were almost
+due N. of the marshes of the Macquarie, both of us were anxious to
+ascertain whence it originated. To return to Mount Harris, by retracing
+our steps up the Castlereagh, would have entailed the severest distress
+upon us; we the rather preferred proceeding up this creek, and taking our
+chance for a supply of water. We therefore crossed Morrisset's chain of
+ponds, and encamped in the angle formed by the junction of the two creeks.
+
+Before we left this position, we were visited by a party of natives,
+twelve in number, but not of the Darling tribe. They accompanied us a
+short way, and then struck off to the right. At about a mile and a half,
+we crossed Mr. Hume's track, leading westerly, which still remained
+observable. The creek was, no doubt, the hollow he stated that he crossed
+on that excursion, and its appearance certainly justified his opinion of
+it. Its bed was choked up with bulrushes or the polygonum, and its banks
+were level with the country on either side, or nearly so. We passed over
+extremely rich soil the whole day, on a S.W. and by W. course, though the
+timber upon it was dwarfish, and principally of the rough-gum kind.
+
+On the 2nd of April, we stopped in order to make some repairs upon the
+dray; the wheels of which had failed us. Clayton put in four new spokes,
+and we heated the tyres over again, by which means we got it once more
+serviceable.
+
+WILD MELON.
+
+The soil in the creek was of the richest quality, and was found to produce
+a dwarf melon, having all the habits and character of the cucumber.
+The fruit was not larger than a pigeon's egg, but was extremely sweet.
+There were not, however, many ripe, although the runners were covered with
+flowers, and had an abundance of fruit upon them. In the morning, we sent
+the tinker on horseback up the creek, to ascertain how far the next water
+was from us, desiring him to keep the creek upon his right, and to follow
+his own track back again. He thought fit, however, considering himself
+a good bushman, to wander away to his left, and the consequence was, that
+he soon lost himself. It would appear that be doubled and passed through
+some thick brush at the back of the camp, and at length found himself at
+dark on the banks of a considerable creek. In wandering along it, he
+luckily struck upon the natives we had last seen, who, good-naturedly, led
+him to the track of the dray, which his horse would not afterwards desert,
+and the tinker sneaked into the tent about 3 o'clock in the morning,
+having failed in his errand, and made himself the butt of the whole party.
+
+RETURN UP THE CREEK.
+
+The day succeeding this adventure, we moved up the creek, which was, for
+the most part, even with the plain. The country continued the same as that
+we had passed over from the junction, being subject to flood, and having
+patches of bulrushes and reeds upon it. No change took place in the
+timber, but the line of acacia pendula, which forms the line of
+inundation, approached neater to us; nor was the mark of flood so high on
+the trunks of trees as below. We halted, with abominable water, but
+excellent food for the animals in the plains behind us. In continuing our
+journey, we found several changes take place in the appearance of the
+creek and its neighbourhood. The former diminished in size, and at length
+separated into two distinct channels, choked up, for the most part, with
+dead bulrushes, but having a few green reeds in patches along it. The
+flats on either side became slightly timbered, and blue gum was the
+prevailing tree. Crossing one of the channels, we observed every
+appearance of our near approach to the marshes, the flats being
+intersected by many little water-runs, such as we had noticed at the
+bottom of them. About noon we struck upon a body of reeds under the wood
+of eucalypti, below the second great morass, and keeping a little to our
+right to avoid them, fell shortly afterwards into our old track on the
+plain, upon which we continued to move, making the best of our way to the
+channel which had supplied our wants on our first return from the Darling.
+It was now, however, quite dry, and we were obliged to push on further,
+to shorten the journey of the morrow.
+
+CONNECTION OF MACQUARIE AND DARLING.
+
+The result of our journey up the creek was particularly satisfactory, both
+to myself and Mr. Hume; since it cleared up every doubt that might have
+existed regarding the actual termination of the Macquarie, and enabled us
+to connect the flow of waters at so interesting and particular a point.
+It will be seen by a reference to the chart, that the waters of the
+marshes, after trickling through the reeds, form a small creek, which
+carries off the superfluous part of them into Morrisset's chain of ponds,
+which latter again falls into the Castlereagh, at about eight miles to the
+W.N.W. and all three join the Darling in a W. by N. direction, in lat.
+30 degrees 52 minutes south and E. lon. 147 degrees 8 minutes at about
+90 miles to the N.N.W. of Mount Harris, and about an equal distance to
+the E.S.E. of where we struck upon the last-mentioned river. Thus it
+is evident that the Darling had considerably neared the eastern ranges,
+although it was still more than 150 miles from their base. It was
+apparently coming from the N.E., and whether it has its sources in the
+mountains behind our distant settlements, or still farther to the
+northwards, is a question of curious speculation, although, as I have
+already stated, I am of opinion that none but tropical rains could
+supply the furious torrent that must sometimes rage in it.
+
+It would be presumptuous to hazard any opinion as to the nature of the
+interior to the westward of that remarkable river. Its course is involved
+in equal mystery, and it is a matter of equal doubt whether it makes its
+way to the south coast, or ultimately exhausts itself in feeding a
+succession of swamps, or falls into a large reservoir in the centre of
+the island.
+
+RETURN TO MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+We reached Mount Harris on the 7th of the month, and moving leisurely up
+the banks of the Macquarie, gained Mr. Palmer's first station on the 14th,
+and Wellington Valley on the 21st, having been absent from that settlement
+four months and two weeks. The waters of the Macquarie had diminished so
+much, that its bed was dry for more than half a mile at a stretch, nor did
+we observe the least appearance of a current in it, until after we had
+ascended the ranges. The lower tribes were actually starving, and brought
+their children to us to implore something to eat. The men attempted to
+surprise the camp, but I believe they were urged from absolute necessity
+to procure subsistence for themselves, and that they intended robbery
+rather than personal violence.
+
+DEPLORABLE STATE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+We left the interior in a still more deplorable state than that in which
+we found it; but it is more than probable that under other circumstances,
+we should have found it impossible to traverse its distant plains, as it
+is certain that unless rain fell in less than three weeks, all
+communication with the Darling would have been cut off:
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+RESULT OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+Whether the discoveries that have been made during this expedition, will
+ultimately prove of advantage to the colony of New South Wales, is a
+question that time alone can answer. We have in the meanwhile to regret
+that no beneficial consequences will immediately follow them. The further
+knowledge that has been gained of the interior is but as a gleam of
+sunshine over an extensive landscape. A stronger light has fallen upon the
+nearer ground, but the distant horizon is still enveloped in clouds. The
+veil has only as it were been withdrawn from the marshes of the Macquarie
+to be spread over the channel of the Darling. Unsatisfactory, however, as
+the discoveries may as yet be considered in a commercial point of view,
+the objects for which the expedition had been fitted out were happily
+attained. The marsh it had been directed to examine, was traversed on
+every side, and the rivers it had been ordered to trace, were followed
+down to their terminations to a distance far beyond where they had ceased
+to exist as living streams. To many who may cast their eyes over the
+accompanying chart, the extent of newly discovered country may appear
+trifling; but when they are told, that there is not a mile of that
+ground that was not traversed over and over again, either by Mr. Hume or
+by myself, that we wandered over upwards of 600 miles more than the main
+body of the expedition, on different occasions, in our constant and
+anxious search for water, and that we seldom dismounted from our horses,
+until long after sunset, they will acknowledge the difficulties with which
+we had to contend, and will make a generous allowance for them; for,
+however unsuccessful in some respects the expedition may have been, it
+accomplished as much, it is to be hoped, as under such trying
+circumstances could have been accomplished. It now only remains for me to
+sum up the result of my own observations, and to point out to the reader,
+how far the actual state of the interior, has been found to correspond
+with the opinions that were entertained of it.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S REMARKS.
+
+I have already stated, in the introduction to this work, that the general
+impression on the minds of those best qualified to judge was, that the
+western streams discharged themselves into a central shoal sea. Mr. Oxley
+thus expresses himself on the subject:--
+
+
+"July 3rd. Towards morning the storm abated, and at day-light, we
+proceeded on our voyage. The main bed of the river was much contracted,
+but very deep; the waters spreading to the depth of a foot or eighteen
+inches over the banks, but all running on the same point of bearing. We
+met with considerable interruptions from fallen timber, which in places
+nearly choked up the channel. After going about twenty miles, we lost the
+land and trees; the channel of the river, which lay through reeds, and was
+from one to three feet deep, ran northerly.--This continued for three or
+four miles farther, when, although there had been no previous change in
+the breadth, depth, or rapidity of the stream for several miles, and I was
+sanguine in my expectations of soon entering the long-sought-for
+Australian sea, it all at once eluded our farther pursuit, by spreading on
+every point from N.W. to N.E. among the ocean of reeds which surrounded
+us, still running with the same rapidity as before. There was no channel
+whatever among those reeds, and the depth varied from three to five feet.
+This astonishing change (for I cannot call it a termination of the river)
+of course left me no alternative but to endeavour to return to some spot
+on which we could effect a landing before dark. I estimated, that during
+the day, we had gone about twenty-four miles, on nearly the same point of
+bearing as yesterday. To assert, positively, that we were on the margin of
+the lake, or sea, into which this great body of water is discharged, might
+reasonably be deemed a conclusion, which has nothing but conjecture for
+its basis. But if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from actual
+appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the immediate
+vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal one, and
+gradually filling up by numerous depositions from the high lands, left by
+the waters which flow into it. It is most singular, that the high lands on
+this continent seem to be confined to the sea-coast, and not to extend to
+any distance from it."
+
+MR. CUNNINGHAM'S REMARKS.
+
+In a work published at Sydney, containing an account of Mr. Allan
+Cunningham's journey towards Moreton Bay, in 1828, the following remarks
+occur, from which it is evident Mr. Cunningham entertained Mr. Oxley's
+views of the character and nature of the Western interior. Towards the
+conclusion of the narrative, the author thus observes:--
+
+
+"Of the probable character of the distant unexplored interior, into which
+it has been ascertained ALL the rivers falling westerly from the dividing
+ranges flow, some inference may be drawn from the following data.
+
+"Viewing, between the parallels of 34 degrees and 27 degrees, a vast area
+of depressed interior, subjected in seasons of prolonged rains to partial
+inundation, by a dispersion of the several waters that flow upon it from
+the eastern mountains whence they originate; and bearing in mind at the
+same time, that the declension of the country within the above parallels,
+as most decidedly shown by the dip of its several rivers, is uniformly
+to the N.N.W. and N.W., it would appear very conclusive, that either a
+portion of our distant interior is occupied by a lake of considerable
+magnitude, or that the confluence of those large streams, the Macquarie,
+Castlereagh, Gwydir, and the Dumaresq, with the many minor interfluent
+waters, which doubtless takes place upon those low levels, forms one
+or more noble rivers, which may flow across the continent by an almost
+imperceptible declivity of country to the north of north-west coasts, on
+certain parts of which, recent surveys have discovered to us extensive
+openings, by which the largest accumulations of waters might escape to the
+sea."
+
+CHARACTER OF THE RIVERS.
+
+It is the characteristic of the streams falling westerly from the eastern,
+or coast ranges, to maintain a breadth of channel and a rapidity of
+current more immediately near their sources, that ill accords with their
+diminished size, and the sluggish flow of their waters in the more
+depressed interior. In truth, neither the Macquarie nor the Castlereagh
+can strictly be considered as permanent rivers. The last particularly is
+nothing more than a mountain torrent. The Macquarie, although it at length
+ceased to run, kept up the appearance of a river to the very marshes; but
+the bed of the Castlereagh might have been crossed in many places without
+being noticed, nor did its channel contain so much water as was to be
+found on the neighbouring plains.
+
+There are two circumstances upon which the magnitude, and velocity of a
+river, more immediately depend. The first is the abundance of its sources,
+the other the dip of its bed. If a stream has constant fountains at its
+head, and numerous tributaries joining it in its course, and flows withal
+through a country of gradual descent, such a stream will never fail; but
+if the supplies do not exceed the evaporation and absorption, to which
+every river is subject, if a river dependant on its head alone, falls
+rapidly into a level country, without receiving a single addition to its
+waters to assist the first impulse acquired in their descent, it must
+necessarily cease to flow at one point or other. Such is the case with the
+Lachlan, the Macquarie, the Castlereagh, and the Darling. Whence the
+latter originates, still remains to be ascertained; but most undoubtedly
+its sources have been influenced by the same drought that has exhausted
+the fountains of the three first mentioned streams.
+
+In supporting his opinion of the probable discharge of the interior waters
+of Australia upon its north-west coast, Mr. Cunningham thus remarks in the
+publication from which I have already made an extract.
+
+
+"To those remarkable parts of the north-west coast above referred to in
+the parallel of 16 degrees south, the Macquarie river, which rises in
+lat. 33 degrees, and under the meridian of 150 degrees east, would have a
+course of 2045 statute miles throughout, while the elevation of its
+source, being 3500 feet above the level of the sea as shown by the
+barometer, would give its waters an average descent of twenty inches to
+the mile, supposing the bed of the river to be an inclined plane.
+
+"The Gwydir originating in elevated land, lying in 31 degrees south, and
+long. 151 degrees east, at a mean height of 3000 feet, would have to flow
+2020 miles, its elevated sources giving to each a mean fall of seventeen
+inches.
+
+"Dumaresq's river falling 2970 feet from granite mountains, in 28 1/4
+degrees under the meridian of 152 degrees, would have to pursue its course
+for 2969 miles, its average fall being eighteen inches to a mile."
+
+As I have never been upon the banks either of the Gwydir or the Dumaresq,
+I cannot speak of those two rivers; but in estimating the sources of the
+Macquarie at 3500 feet above the level of the sea, Mr. Cunningham has lost
+sight of, or overlooked the fact, that the fall of its bed in the first
+two hundred miles, is more than 2800 feet, since the cataract, which is
+midway between Wellington Valley and the marshes, was ascertained by
+barometrical admeasurement, to be 680 feet only above the ocean. The
+country, therefore, through which the Macquarie would have to flow during
+the remainder of its course of 1700 miles, in order to gain the
+N.W. coast, would not be a gradually inclined plain, but for the most part
+a dead level, and the fact of its failure is a sufficient proof in itself
+how short the course of a river so circumstanced must necessarily be.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S OPINIONS.
+
+Having conversed frequently with Mr. Oxley on the subject of his
+expeditions, I went into the interior prepossessed in favour of his
+opinions, nor do I think he could have drawn any other conclusion than
+that which he did, from his experience of the terminations of the rivers
+whose courses he explored. Had Mr. Oxley advanced forty, or even thirty
+miles, farther than he did, to the westward of Mount Harris; nay, had he
+proceeded eight miles in the above direction beyond the actual spot from
+which he turned back, he would have formed other and very different
+opinions of the probable character of the distant interior. But I am aware
+that Mr. Oxley performed all that enterprise, and perseverance, and talent
+could have performed, and that it would have been impracticable in him to
+have attempted to force its marshes in the state in which he found them.
+It was from his want of knowledge of their nature and extent, that he
+inferred the swampy and inhospitable character of the more remote country,
+a state in which subsequent investigation has found it not to be. The
+marsh of the Macquarie is nothing more than an ordinary marsh or swamp in
+another country. However large a space it covers, it is no more than a
+concavity or basin for the reception of the waters of the river itself,
+nor has it any influence whatever on the country to the westward of it,
+in respect to inundation; the general features of the latter being a
+regular alternation of plain and brush. These facts are in themselves
+sufficient to give a fresh interest to the interior of the Australian
+continent, and to increase its importance.
+
+CAPT. KING'S OPINIONS.
+
+With respect to that part of its coast at which the rivers falling from
+the eastern mountains, discharge themselves, it is a question of very
+great doubt. It seems that Capt. King, in consequence of some
+peculiarities in the currents at its N.W. angle, supports Mr. Cunningham's
+opinion as to their probable discharge in that quarter. But I fear the
+internal structure of the continent is so low, as to preclude the hopes of
+any river reaching from one extremity of it to the other. A variety of
+local circumstances, as the contraction of a channel, a shoal sea, or
+numerous islands, influence currents generally, but more especially round
+so extensive a continent as that of which we are treating; nor does it
+strike me that any observations made by Capt. King during his survey, can
+be held to bear any connection with the eastern ranges, or their western
+waters. It may, however, be said, that as the course of the Darling is
+still involved in uncertainty, the question remains undecided; but it
+appears to me, the discovery of that river has set aside every conjecture
+(founded on previous observation) respecting the main features of the
+interior lying to the westward of the Blue Mountains. Both Mr. Oxley and
+Mr. Cunningham drew their conclusions from the appearances of the country
+they severally explored. The ground on which those theories were built,
+has been travelled over, and has not been found to realise them, but
+subsequent investigation has discovered to us a river, the dip of whose
+bed is to the S.W. We have every reason to believe that the sources of
+this river must be far to the northward of the most distant northerly
+point to which any survey has been made, as we are certain that it is far
+beyond the stretch of vision from the loftiest and most westerly of the
+barrier ranges; from which circumstance, it is evident that whatever
+disposition the streams descending from those ranges to the westward may
+show to hold a N.W. course more immediately at the base, the whole of the
+interior streams, from the Macquarie to the Dumaresq, are tributaries to
+the principal channel which conveys their united waters at right angles,
+if not still more opposite to the direction they were supposed to take,
+as far as is yet known.
+
+COURSE OF THE DARLING.
+
+The Darling River must be considered as the boundary line to all inland
+discoveries from the eastward. Any judgment or opinion of the interior to
+the westward of that stream, would be extremely premature and uncertain.
+There is not a single feature over it to guide or to strengthen either the
+one or the other.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR.
+
+My impression, when travelling the country to the west and N.W. of the
+marshes of the Macquarie, was, that I was traversing a country of
+comparatively recent formation. The sandy nature of its soil, the great
+want of vegetable decay, the salsolaceous character of its plants, the
+appearance of its isolated hills and flooded tracts, and its trifling
+elevations above the sea, severally contributed to strengthen these
+impressions on my mind. My knowledge of the interior is, however, too
+limited to justify me in any conclusion with regard to the central parts
+of Australia. An ample field is open to enterprise and to ambition, and it
+is to be hoped that some more decisive measures will be carried into
+effect, both for the sake of the colony and of geography, to fill up the
+blank upon the face of the chart of Australia, and remove from us the
+reproach of indifference and inaction.
+
+BARBER'S STATEMENT.
+
+Since the above pages were written, an expedition was undertaken by
+Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, to ascertain the truth of a report
+brought in by a runaway convict of the name of Barber, or Clarke, who had
+been at large for five years, at different times, among the natives to
+the northward of Port Macquarie. This man stated that a large river,
+originating in the high lands near Liverpool Plains, and the mountains to
+the north of them, pursued a N.W. course to the sea. His story ran thus:
+Having learnt from the natives the existence of this river, he determined
+to follow it down, in hopes that he might ultimately be enabled to make
+his escape from the colony. He accordingly started from Liverpool Plains,
+and kept on a river called the Gnamoi, for some time, which took him N.W.
+After a few days' journey, he left this river, traversed the country
+northwards, and crossed some lofty ranges. Descending to the N.E. he came
+to another large river, the Keindur, which again took him N.W. He
+travelled 400 miles down it, when he observed a large stream joining it
+upon its left bank, which he supposed to be the Gnamoi. The river he was
+upon was broad and navigable. It flowed through a level country with a
+dead current and muddy water, and spread into frequent lakes. He found
+that it ultimately discharged itself into the sea, but was uncertain at
+what distance from its sources. He was positive he never travelled to the
+SOUTHWARD OF WEST. He ascended a hill near the sea, and observed an island
+in the distance, from which, the natives informed him, a race of
+light-coloured men came in large canoes for a scented wood; but having
+failed in the immediate object of his journey, he was eventually obliged
+to return.
+
+MAJOR MITCHELL'S REPORT.
+
+The following official report of Major Mitchell will sufficiently point
+out the incorrectness of the preceding statement. It is most probable that
+Barber merely told that which he had heard from the natives, and that
+having a more than ordinary share of cunning, he made up a story upon
+their vague and uncertain accounts, in hopes that it would benefit him,
+as in truth it did.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Bullabalakit, on the River Nammoy,
+in lat. 30 degrees 38 minutes 21 seconds S.,
+long. 149 degrees 30 minutes 20 seconds E.
+23d December, 1831.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to state, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, the progress I have made in exploring the course of the interior
+waters to the northward of the Colony, with reference to the letter which
+I had the honour to address to Col. Lindesay, on this subject, on the
+19th ult.
+
+On crossing Liverpool Range my object was to proceed northward, so as to
+avoid the plains and head the streams which water them, and avoiding also
+the mountain ranges on the east.
+
+I arrived accordingly, by a tolerably straight and level line, at
+Walamoul, on Peel's River; this place (a cattle station of Mr. Brown)
+being nearly due north from the common pass across Liverpool Range, and
+about a mile-and-a-half above the spot where Mr. Oxley crossed this
+river.
+
+PEEL'S RIVER.
+
+I found the general course of the Peel below Walamoul to be nearly west;
+and after tracing this river downwards twenty-two miles (in direct
+distance), I crossed it at an excellent ford, named Wallamburra. I then
+traversed the extensive plain of Mulluba; and leaving that of Coonil on
+the right, extending far to the north-east, we passed through a favourable
+interval of what I considered Hardwicke's Range, the general direction of
+this range being two points west of north.
+
+On passing through this gorge, which, from the name of a hill on the south
+side, may be named Ydire, I crossed a very extensive tract of flat
+country, on which the wood consisted of iron-bark and acacia pendula; this
+tract being part of a valley evidently declining to the north-west, which
+is bounded on the south by the Liverpool Range, and on the south-west by
+the extremities from the same. On the west, at a distance of twenty-two
+miles from Hardwicke's Range, there stands a remarkable isolated hill
+named Bounalla; and towards the lowest part of the country, and in the
+direction in which all the waters tend, there is a rocky peak named
+Tangulda. On the north, a low range (named Wowa), branching westerly from
+Hardwicke's Range, bounds on that side this extensive basin, which
+includes Liverpool Plains. Peel's River is the principal stream, and
+receives, in its course, all the waters of these plains below the junction
+of Connadilly,--which I take to be York's River, of Oxley.
+
+THE RIVER NAMMOY.
+
+The stream is well known to the natives by the name Nammoy; and six miles
+below Tangulda, the low extremities from the surrounding ranges close on
+the river, and separate this extensive vale from the unexplored country
+which extends beyond to an horizon which is unbroken between W.N.W.
+and N.N.W.
+
+
+The impracticable appearance of the mountains to the northward, induced me
+to proceed thus far to the west; and on examining the country thirty miles
+N.E. by N. from Tangulda, I ascended a lofty range extending westward from
+the coast chain, and on which the perpendicular sides of masses of
+trachyte (a volcanic rock) were opposed to my further progress even with
+horses: it was therefore evident that the river supposed to rise about the
+latitude of 28 degrees would not be accessible, or at least available to
+the Colony, in that direction, and that in the event of the discovery of a
+river beyond that range flowing to the northern or north-western shores,
+it would become of importance to ascertain whether it was joined by the
+Nammoy, the head of this river being so accessible that I have brought my
+heavily laden drays to where it is navigable for boats, my present
+encampment being on its banks six miles below Tangulda. From this station
+I can perceive the western termination of the Trachytic range, and I am
+now about to explore the country between it and the Nammoy, and the
+further course of this river; and in the event of its continuance in a
+favourable direction, I shall fix my depot on its right bank, whence I now
+write, and descend the stream in the portable boats.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL
+
+The Hon. The Colonial Secretary.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Peel's River, 29th February, 1832.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to inform you, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, that I have reached the left bank of this River with my whole
+party on my return from the northern interior, having explored the course
+of the river referred to in my letter of 22nd December last, and others
+within the 29th parallel of latitude.
+
+There was so much fallen timber in the Nammoy, and its waters were so low,
+that the portable boats could not be used on that river with advantage,
+and I proceeded by land in a north-west direction, until convinced by its
+course turning more to the westward that this river joined the river
+Darling. I therefore quitted its banks with the intention of exploring the
+country further northward, by moving round the western extremities of the
+mountains mentioned in my former letter, and which I have since
+distinguished in my map by the name of the Lindesay Range. These mountains
+terminate abruptly on the west, and I entered a fine open country at their
+base, from whence plains (or rather open ground of gentle undulation)
+extended westward as far as could be seen. On turning these mountains I
+directed my course northward, and to the eastward of north, into the
+country beyond them, in search of the river KINDUR; and I reached a river
+flowing westward, the bed of which was deep, broad, and permanent, but in
+which there was not then much water.
+
+THE RIVER KARAULA.
+
+The marks of inundation on trees, and on the adjoining high ground, proved
+that its floods rose to an extraordinary height; and from the latitude,
+and also from the general direction of its course, I considered this to be
+the river which Mr. Cunningham named the Gwydir, on crossing it sixty
+miles higher, on his route to Moreton Bay. I descended this river, and
+explored the country on its left bank for about eighty miles to the
+westward, when I found that its general course was somewhat to the
+southward of west. This river received no addition from the mountains over
+that part of its left bank traversed by me; and the heat being intense,
+the stream was at length so reduced that I could step across it. The banks
+had become low, and the bed much contracted, being no longer gravelly, but
+muddy. I therefore crossed this river and travelled northward, on a
+meridian line, until, in the latitude of 29 degrees 2 minutes, I came upon
+the largest river I had yet seen. The banks were earthy and broken, the
+soil being loose, and the water of a white muddy colour. Trees, washed out
+by the roots from the soft soil, filled the bed of this river in many
+places. There was abundance of cod-fish of a small size, as well as of the
+two other kinds of fish which we had caught in the Peel, the Nammoy, and
+the Gwydir. The name of this river, as well as we could make it out from
+the natives, was Karaula. Having made fast one tree to top of another tall
+tree, I obtained a view of the horizon, which appeared perfectly level,
+and I was in hopes that we had at length found a river which would flow to
+the northward and avoid the Darling. I accordingly ordered the boat to be
+put together, and sent Mr. White with a party some miles down to clear
+away any trees in the way. Mr. White came upon a rocky fall, and found
+besides the channel so much obstructed by trees, and the course so
+tortuous, that I determined to ascertain before embarking upon it, whether
+the general course was in the desired direction. Leaving Mr. White with
+half the party, I accordingly traced the Karaula downwards, and found that
+its course changed to south, a few miles below where I had made it, and
+that it was joined by the Gwydir only eight miles below where I had
+crossed that river. Immediately below the junction of the Gwydir (which is
+in latitude 29 degrees 30 minutes 27 seconds, longitude 148 degrees
+13 minutes 20 seconds) the course of the river continues southward of
+west, directly towards where Captain Sturt discovered the River Darling;
+and I could no longer doubt that this was the same river. I therefore
+returned to the party, determined to explore the country further
+northward.
+
+The results of my progress thus far were sufficient, I considered, to
+prove that the division of the waters falling towards the northern and
+southern shores of Australia is not, as has been supposed, in the
+direction of the Liverpool and Warrabangle range, but extends between Cape
+Byron on the eastern shore, towards Dick Hartog's Island on the west; the
+greater elongation of this country being between these points, and
+intermediate between the lines of its northern and southern coasts. The
+basin of the streams I have been upon must be bounded on the north by this
+dividing ground or water-shed, and although no rise was perceptible in the
+northern horizon, the river was traversed by several rocky dykes, over
+which it fell southward; their direction being oblique to the course, and
+nearly parallel to this division of the waters. I beg leave to state, that
+I should not feel certain on this point without having seen more, were it
+not evident from Mr. Cunningham's observations, made on crossing this
+division on his way to Moreton Bay. Mr. Cunningham, on crossing the head
+of this river, nearly in the same latitude, but much nearer its sources,
+found the height of its bed above the sea to be 840 feet; at about
+forty-five miles further northward the ground rose to upwards of
+1700 feet, but immediately beyond, he reached a river flowing north-west,
+the height of which was only 1400 feet above the sea. He had thus crossed
+this dividing higher ground, between the parallels of 29 degrees
+and 28 degrees. It appears, therefore, that all the interior rivers we
+know of to the northward of the Morumbidgee, belong to the basin of the
+Karaula; this stream flowing southward, and hence the disappearance of the
+Macquarie and other lower rivers may be understood, for all along the
+banks of the Karaula, the Gwydir, and the Nammoy, the country, though not
+swampy, bears marks of frequent inundation; thus the floods occasioned by
+these rivers united, cover the low country, and receive the Macquarie so
+that no channel marks its further course.
+
+That a basin may be found to the northward receiving the waters of the
+northern part of the coast range in a similar manner is extremely
+probable, and that they form a better river, because the angle is more
+acute between the high ground, which must bound it on the N.E. and the
+watershed on the south. I therefore prepared to cross the Karaula, in
+hopes of seeing the head at least of such a river, and to explore the
+country two degrees further northward, but moving in a N.W. direction.
+My tent was struck, and I had just launched my portable boat for the
+purpose of crossing the river, when Mr. Surveyor Finch, whom I had
+instructed to bring up a supply of flour, arrived with the distressing
+intelligence, that two of his men had been killed by the natives, who had
+taken the flour, and were in possession of everything he had brought--all
+the cattle, including his horse, being also dispersed or lost. I therefore
+determined not to extend my excursion further, as the party were already
+on reduced rations, and on the 8th instant I retired from the Karaula,
+returning by the marked line, which being cut through thick scrubs in
+various places is now open, forming a tolerably direct line of
+communication in a N.W. direction from Sydney, to a river, beyond which
+the survey may be extended whenever His Excellency the Governor thinks
+fit.
+
+The natives had never troubled my party on our advance; indeed I only saw
+them when I came upon them by surprise, and then they always ran off.
+Their first visit was received at my camp on the Karaula, during my
+absence down that river, when they were very friendly, but much disposed
+to steal. Various tribes followed us on coming back, but never with any
+show of hostility, although moving in tribes of a hundred or more parallel
+to our marked line, or in our rear; it was necessary to be ever on our
+guard, and to encamp in strong positions only, arranging the drays for
+defence during the night: three men were always under arms, and I have
+much pleasure in stating, that throughout the whole excursion, and under
+circumstances of hardship and privation, the conduct of the men was very
+good. I took an armed party to the scene of pillage, and buried the bodies
+of the two men, who appeared to have been treacherously murdered while
+asleep by the blacks during the absence of Mr. Finch: no natives were to
+be found when I visited the spot, although it appeared from columns of
+smoke on hills which overlooked if, that they were watching our movements.
+
+The party has now arrived within a day's journey of Brown's station,
+and I have instructed Assistant-Surveyor White (from whom I have received
+great assistance during the whole journey) to conduct it homewards, being
+desirous to proceed without delay to Sydney, and to receive the
+instructions of His Excellency the Governor.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient Servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY,
+"&c. &c. &c."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+
+Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior of Australia--
+Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady intelligent
+subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men requisite,--and of
+cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--Treatment of the
+natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second expedition.
+
+
+Having now had considerable experience in the fitting out and management
+of expeditions in New South Wales, I cannot refrain from making some few
+observations on the subject. And without presuming to lay dawn any fixed
+rules, I shall only refer to those by which I have best succeeded, in
+hopes that some of my remarks may prove of use to future travellers who
+may venture to penetrate into the trackless deserts over so small a
+portion of which I wandered.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EXPLORING AUSTRALIA.
+
+The great difficulty of examining the interior of Australia, is that of
+carrying supplies; for increasing the number of individuals composing an
+expedition is of no avail, since an additional number of men must
+necessarily increase the consumption of food. In order to meet this
+difficulty it has been proposed to establish depots upon which an
+expedition could fall back to recruit its supplies, and in ordinary cases
+this plan might answer; but I am decidedly of opinion that no party could
+long remain stationary in the distant interior without some fatal
+collision with the natives, which would be attended with the most
+deplorable consequences; and I do think, considering all things, that the
+experiment is too dangerous to be tried; for when I reached Mount Harris,
+on my first retreat from the Darling, I found the party who were awaiting
+me, with a supply of provisions, under very great alarm, in consequence of
+the hostile proceedings of the Mount Harris tribe. The men had been
+obliged to put the camp into a state of defence. The blacks had attempted
+to surprise them, and would, had I not returned, have combined in some
+general attack. It appears to me that the most judicious plan would be to
+send a supply of provisions, with an expedition, to a distant point, under
+the charge of a minor party. These provisions could replace those already
+expended, and the animals that carried them could be taken back.
+
+SELECTION OF SUBORDINATES.
+
+The number of individuals of which the expedition down the banks of the
+Macquarie was composed, was fourteen: that is to say, myself, Mr. Hume,
+two soldiers, one free man, and seven prisoners of the crown. The latter
+behaved, on all occasions, as steadily as it was possible for men to do.
+Yet the circumstance of the two soldiers being with me increased my
+confidence in the whole, for I was aware that their example would
+influence the rest. However well disposed the prisoners of the crown may
+be, (as in this instance they certainly were,) the beneficial example of
+steady discipline cannot be denied. I should not have considered myself
+justified in leaving the camp as I did for a week, and in detaching Mr.
+Hume at the same time when at the bottom of the marshes, or in making the
+last effort to maintain our position on the banks of the Darling, if I had
+not reposed every confidence in the man to whom I entrusted the safety
+of the camp during my absence.
+
+Experience, therefore, of the value of the two soldiers, whom General
+Darling was good enough to permit me to take on the strength of the party,
+fully bears me out in recommending that one man, at least, of general
+responsibility shall be attached to all future expeditions. The success of
+an expedition depends so much on the conduct of the persons of whom it is
+composed, that too much attention cannot be given to the selection even of
+the most subordinate. Men of active intelligent minds, of persevering
+habits, and of even temper, should be preferred to mechanics who do not
+possess these most requisite qualities. On the other hand, it is
+impossible to do without a good carpenter, however defective he may be in
+other respects. I was indebted to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of
+Wellington Valley, for some excellent men, both on my first and on my
+second journey, because he understood the nature of the service for which
+they were required, and the characters of those whom he recommended.
+But however well selected the party, or the men rather, might be, I still
+consider a man of general responsibility necessary for its complete
+organisation. I would have him somewhat superior to the rest in his
+station in life. Him I would hold answerable for the immediate discipline
+of the camp, whilst I was present, and for its safety when absent. The
+assistant to the leader I would put entirely out of the question. He
+has other and most important duties to perform. I would rate this man
+wholly independent of him.
+
+DANGER OF COLLISION WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to what I have already said with regard to the natives, it
+was supposed that they were so little to be apprehended, that when I went
+on the first occasion into the interior, I applied for a limited number of
+men only, under an impression that with a few men I could carry provisions
+equal to a consumption of a greater number, and by this means be enabled
+to keep the field for a greater length of time. But I do not think it
+would be safe to penetrate into the distant country with fewer than
+fifteen men, for although, happily, no rupture has as yet taken place with
+the natives, yet, there is no security against their treachery, and it is
+very certain that a slight cause might involve an expedition in
+inextricable difficulty, and oblige the leader to throw himself on the
+defensive, when far away from other resources than those with which he
+should have provided himself, and that, perhaps, when navigating a close
+and intricate river, with all the dangers and perplexities attendant on
+such a situation. It is absolutely necessary to establish nightly guards,
+not only for the security of the camp, but of the cattle, and at the same
+time to have a force strong enough to maintain an obstinate resistance
+against any number of savages, where no mercy is to be expected. It will
+be borne in mind, that there is a wide difference between penetrating into
+a country in the midst of its population, and landing from ships for the
+purpose of communication or traffic. Yet, how few voyages of discovery
+have terminated without bloodshed! Boats while landing are covered by
+their ships, and have succour within view; but not so parties that go into
+unknown tracts. They must depend on their immediate resources and
+individual courage alone.
+
+PACK-OXEN, HORSES, WHEEL-CARRIAGES.
+
+With regard to the animals, I should recommend an equal number of horses
+as of bullocks; since it has been found that the latter, though slow,
+travel better over swampy ground than horses, which, on the other hand,
+are preferable for expeditious journeys, to which bullocks would never be
+equal. One of the colonial pack-saddles weighs fifty pounds complete, and
+is preferable to those sent out from England. This, with a load of
+250 1bs. is sufficient for any animal, since it enables the men to place a
+part of their provisions with the general loads. The difficulty of keeping
+the backs of the animals free from injury, more especially where any
+blemish has before existed, is exceedingly great. They should undergo an
+examination twice a-day, that is, in the morning prior to moving off,
+and in the afternoon before they are turned out to feed; and measures
+should then be taken to ease them as circumstances require. I never
+suffered the saddles to be removed from the backs of the animals under my
+charge for twenty minutes after the termination of the journey for the
+day, in order to guard against the effects of the sun; and where the least
+swelling appeared the saddle was altered and the place dressed. Yet,
+notwithstanding all this care and attention, several both of the horses
+and bullocks were at one time in a sad condition, during the first
+journey,--so much so as almost to paralyse our efforts. It would be
+advisable that such animals as are entirely free from blemish should be
+chosen for the service of expeditions, for, with proper management they
+might he kept in order. The anxiety of mind attendant on a bad state of
+the animals is really quite embarrassing, for it not only causes a delay
+in the movements, but a derangement in the loads. Other animals are
+overburdened, and there is no knowing where the evil will stop.
+
+In addition to the pack-animals, I would recommend the employment of a
+dray or cart under any practicable circumstances. It serves to carry
+necessary comforts, gives an expedition greater facility for securing its
+collections, and is of inconceivable advantage in many other respects.
+
+ISSUE OF PROVISIONS.
+
+Constant and most earnest attention should be paid to the issue of
+provisions, on the discreet management of which so much depends, and the
+charge of them should be committed to the second in command. The most
+important articles are flour, tea, sugar, and tobacco. All should be
+husbanded with extreme care, and weighed from time to time. The flour is
+best carried in canvass bags, containing 100 pounds each, and should at
+the termination of each day's journey, be regularly piled up and covered
+with a tarpaulin. Tea, sugar and tobacco lose considerably in weight, so
+that it is necessary to estimate for somewhat more than the bare supply.
+With regard to the salt meat, the best mode of conveying it appears to be
+in small barrels of equal weight with the bags of flour. Salt pork is
+better than beef. It should be deprived of all bones and be of the very
+best quality. I have heard spirits recommended, but I do not approve their
+use. Tea is much more relished by the men; indeed they could not do well
+without it. A small quantity of spirits would, however, of course be
+necessary in the event of its being required.
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+Mr. Cornelius O'Brien, an enterprising and long-established settler, who
+has pushed his flocks and herds to the banks of the Morumbidgee, was good
+enough to present me with eight wethers as I passed his station. It may be
+some gratification to Mr. O'Brien to know, that they contributed very
+materially to our comforts, and he will, perhaps, accept my
+acknowledgements in this place, not only for so liberal a present to
+myself, but for his attention and kindness to my men as long as they
+remained in his neighbourhood. It was found that the sheep gave but little
+additional trouble, requiring only to be penned at night, as much to
+secure them from the native dogs as to prevent them from straying away.
+They followed the other animals very quietly, and soon became accustomed
+to daily movements. They proved a most available stock; no waste attended
+their slaughter, and they admitted of a necessary and wholesome change of
+fresh food from the general salt diet, on which the men would otherwise
+have had to subsist.
+
+The provisions should, if possible, be issued weekly, and their diminution
+should be so regulated as to give an equal relief to the animals.
+
+For general information i have annexed a list of the supplies I took with
+me on my first expedition. It may appear long, but the articles were
+packed in a small compass, and their value immaterial.
+
+As a precautionary measure I should advise, that one of the pack animals
+be kept apart for the purpose of carrying water. Two casks of equal weight
+are the best for such a purpose. In long and hot marches, the men
+experience great relief from having water at hand.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to the natives, I hope sufficient has been said of the manner
+of communicating with them to prevent the necessity of a repetition here.
+The great point is not to alarm their natural timidity: to exercise
+patience in your intercourse with them; to treat them kindly; and to watch
+them with suspicion, especially at night. Never permit the men to steal
+away from the camp, but keep them as compact as possible; and at every
+station so arrange your drays and provisions that they may serve as a
+defence in case of your being attacked.
+
+The natives appeared to me to be indifferent to our presents, in most
+cases. Tomahawks, knives, pieces of iron, and different coloured ribbons
+for the forehead, were most esteemed by them. They will barter and
+exchange their fish for articles, and readily acquire confidence.
+
+I believe I have now touched on all the more important points: on minor
+ones no observation I can make will be of use; men must, in many things,
+be guided by circumstances.
+
+* * * * *
+
+WHALE BOAT EMPLOYED ON THE SECOND EXPEDITION.
+
+I may here notice that, in my second expedition, as it was anticipated
+that I should require adequate provision for water conveyance, at one
+stage or other of my journey down the Morumbidgee, I was furnished with a
+whale-boat, the dimensions of which are given below. She was built by
+Mr. Egan, the master builder of the dock-yard and a native of the colony,
+and did great credit to his judgment. She carried two tons and a half of
+provisions, independently of a locker, which I appropriated for the
+security of the arms, occupying the space between the after-seat and the
+stern. She was in the first instance put together loosely, her planks
+and timbers marked, and her ring bolts, &c. fitted. She was then taken to
+pieces, carefully packed up, and thus conveyed in plank into the interior,
+to a distance of four hundred and forty miles, without injury. She was
+admirably adapted for the service, and rose as well as could have been
+expected over the seas in the lake. It was evident, however, that she
+would have been much safer if she had had another plank, for she was
+undoubtedly too low. The following were her dimensions:--
+
+Breadth across 7th timber aft, 5 ft. 1/2 an inch outside.
+Across 12th timber, 5 ft. 11 1/4 in.
+Across 17th timber forward, 5 ft.
+25 ft. 8 in. in length inside.
+Curve of the keel No. 1, from the after side of each apron, 3 ft. 3 3/4in.
+No. 2, from head to head of the dead wood, 13 1/2 in.
+No. 3, from one end of keel to the other inner side, 3 in.
+No. 4, round of keel from the toe of each dead wood, 7/8 1/16th.
+The timbers were marked, beginning from the stern to the bow on the
+starboard side, and from bow to stern on the larboard.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. I.
+
+
+
+LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS.
+
+
+
+By His Excellency Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, Commanding
+His Majesty's Forces, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales, and its dependencies, and
+Vice Admiral of the same, &c. &c. &c.
+
+TO CHARLES STURT, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE 39TH REGIMENT OF FOOT.
+
+Whereas it has been judged expedient to fit out an expedition for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of New Holland, and the present dry
+season affords a reasonable prospect of an opportunity of ascertaining the
+nature and extent of the large marsh or marshes which stopped the progress
+of the late John Oxley Esq, Surveyor General, in following the courses of
+the rivers Lachlan and Macquarie in the years 1817 and 1818. And whereas I
+repose full confidence in your abilities and zeal for conducting such an
+expedition, I do hereby constitute and appoint you to command and take
+charge of the expedition now preparing for the purpose of exploring the
+interior of the country, and for ascertaining, if practicable, the nature
+and extent of the marsh or marshes above mentioned.
+
+In the prosecution of this service, you will be guided generally by the
+following instructions.
+
+1. You will be accompanied on this expedition by Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose
+great experience in travelling through the remote parts of the Colony,
+cannot fail to be highly useful to you. You will also be attended by two
+soldiers and six convicts, of whom one is to understand the shoeing of
+horses, one to be a carpenter, one a harness-maker and three stock-men,
+and you will be provided with six horses and twelve bullocks.
+
+2. A small boat has been built here for the use of the expedition, and for
+its conveyance, there is provided a light four-wheeled carriage to be
+drawn by two bullocks.
+
+The deputy Commissary General has received orders for supplying the
+expedition with provisions of the best quality sufficient for six months'
+consumption, together with tents, blankets, clothing, pack-saddles,
+utensils, instruments, tools, and necessaries of all kinds of which you
+are likely to stand in need. Orders are also given for providing you with
+arms and ammunition, with rockets for signals, and an ample supply of
+simple medicines--You are to consider it an important duty to attend to
+the providing of all these supplies, and to take care that not only every
+article is of the best quality that can be procured, but also that no
+article be wanting with which you may desire to be provided.
+
+3. Orders are given for forwarding without delay all your provisions,
+stores and supplies of every kind to Wellington Valley, at which place,
+you, Mr. Hume, and all your men are to rendezvous as soon as possible.
+Mr Maxwell, the superintendent, will furnish you with well-trained
+bullocks, and afford you all the assistance you may require in arranging
+every thing for your departure from that station.
+
+4. After you shall have completed all your arrangements, you are to lose
+no time in finally departing from Wellington Valley in prosecution of the
+immediate objects of the expedition.
+
+5. You are first to proceed to Mount Harris, where you are to form a
+temporary depot, by means of which you will have an opportunity of more
+readily communicating with Mr. Maxwell.
+
+6. You are then to endeavour to determine the fate of the Macquarie River,
+by tracing it as far as possible beyond the point to which Mr. Oxley went,
+and by pushing westward, you are to ascertain if there be any high lands
+in that direction, or if the country be, as it is supposed, an unbroken
+level and under water. If you should fail in these objects, you will
+traverse the plains lying behind our north-west boundaries, with a view to
+skirt any waters by which you may have been checked to the westward; and
+if you should succeed in skirting them, you are to explore the country
+westward and southward as far as possible, endeavouring to discover the
+Macquarie beyond the marsh of Mr. Oxley, and following it to its mouth if
+at all practicable.
+
+7. There is some reason to believe that the over-flowing of the Macquarie
+when visited by Mr. Oxley, was occasioned by heavy rains falling in the
+mountains to the eastward, and that as you are to visit the same spot at a
+different season of the year, you may escape such embarrassment; but
+although you should get beyond the point at which Mr. Oxley stopped, it
+would not be prudent to risk your own health or that of your men, by
+continuing long in a swampy country. Therefore it may be advisable for you
+in the first instance to leave the greater part of your men, bullocks, and
+baggage, at Mount Harris, and if you should see a probability of your
+being able to cross into the interior, you will then return to Mount
+Harris for such additional supplies as you may judge necessary. You can
+there communicate with Mr. Maxwell respecting any ulterior arrangements
+which you may be desirous of making.
+
+8. The success of the expedition is so desirable an object, that I cannot
+too strongly impress upon you the importance of perseverance in
+endeavouring to skirt any waters or marshes which may check your course as
+long as you have provisions sufficient for your return; but you must be
+cautious not to proceed a single day's journey further than where you find
+that your provisions will be barely sufficient to enable you to reach the
+nearest place at which you can depend upon getting supplies.
+
+9. If after every endeavour you should find it totally impracticable to get
+to the westward, you are still to proceed northward, keeping as westerly a
+direction as possible; and when the state of your provisions will oblige
+you to retreat, you will be guided by your latitude, as to the place to
+which you are to make the best of your way, but you are not to make for
+any place on the coast, if Wellington valley should still be nearer.
+
+10. You must be aware that the success of the expedition will greatly
+depend upon the time for which your provisions will hold out, and
+therefore you will see the great importance of observing every possible
+economy in the expenditure of provisions, and preventing waste of every
+kind.
+
+11. You are to keep a detailed account of your proceedings in a journal,
+in which all observations and occurrences of every kind, with all their
+circumstances, however minute, are to be carefully noted down. You are to
+be particular in describing the general face of all the country through
+which you pass, the direction and shape of the mountains, whether detached
+or in ranges, together with the bearings and estimated distances of the
+several mountains, hills, or eminences from each other. You are likewise
+to note the nature of the climate, as to heat, cold, moisture, winds,
+rains, &c, and to keep a register of the temperature from Fahrenheit's
+thermometer, as observed at two or three periods of each day. The rivers,
+with their several branches, their direction, velocity, breadth, and
+depth, are carefully to be noted. It is further expected that you will,
+as far as may he in your power, attend to the animal, vegetable, and
+mineral productions of the country, noting down every thing that may occur
+to you, and preserving specimens as far as your means will admit,
+especially some of all the ripe seeds which you may discover; when the
+preservation of specimens is impossible, drawings or detailed accounts of
+them, are very desirable.
+
+12. You will note the description of the several people whom you may meet,
+the extent of the population, their means of subsistence, their genius and
+disposition, the nature of their amusements, their diseases and remedies,
+their objects of worship, religious ceremonies, and a vocabulary of their
+language.
+
+Lastly. On your return from your journey, you are to cause all the
+journals or other written documents belonging to, and curiosities
+collected by the several individuals composing the expedition, to be
+carefully sealed up with your own seal and kept in that state until you
+shall have made your report to me in writing of the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Given at Sydney, this eighteenth day of November, 1828.
+By Command of His Excellency the Governor,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. II.
+
+
+
+LIST OF STORES SUPPLIED FOR THE EXPEDITION.
+
+
+List of Articles delivered from His Majesty's Stores,
+in charge of D. A. C. Goodsir, to Captain Sturt, viz.--
+
+1 Hack saddle. 9 Harness casks.
+1 Bridle. 23 Canvas bags.
+2 Tents. 4 Tin cases.
+14 Pack saddles. 16 Padlocks.
+14 Pair hobbles. 6 Tarpaulens.
+24 Sets horse shoes. 10 Haversacks.
+2000 Horse nails. 113 Fathom one-inch rope.
+113 Fathoms 1 1/2 inch rope. 1 Boat compass.
+1 Hammer, (Blacksmith's) 1 Telescope.
+1 Paring knife. 1 Spare glass for ditto.
+2 Chipping do. 1 Tin case (for charts.)
+2 Rasps. 100 Fish-hooks, (large.)
+1 Pair pincers. 12 Fishing-lines.
+1 Cutter. 10 Knives.
+21b. Pack thread. 10 Forks.
+24 Needles. 10 Spoons.
+1/4lb. Bristles. 2 Frying-pans.
+71bs. Leather. 2 Tinder-boxes.
+1/2lb. Thread. 1 Tea-kettle, (tin.)
+1 Pair of steelyards. 10 Tin dishes.
+10 Tin pots. 8 Jackets.
+1 Flour seive. 8 Duck frocks.
+2 Felling-axes. 8 Shirts.
+4 Tomahawks. 16 Trousers.
+2 Hammers. 24 Pair shoes.
+1 Hand-saw. 16 Blankets.
+3 Bill-hooks. 16 Pair stockings.
+3 Awls. 2 Bullock collars.
+3 Broad hoes. 2 Do. back-bands and pipes.
+4 Razors. 2 Leading cruppers.
+4 Brushes. 1 Boat with sail and oars.
+4 Combs. 1 Do. carriage.
+3 Iron pots, (camp kettles.) 1 Canvass boat-cover.
+1 Pair scissors. 3 Water breaker.
+
+COMMISSARIAT OFFICE, SYDNEY, NOV. 10TH, 1828.
+
+P.S.--l Tarpaulin.
+ Large Fish-hook.
+ 1 Tin tea-kettle.
+ 1 Camp kettle.
+ Pitch and oil.
+ Hemp or twine.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. III.
+
+
+
+SHEEP-FARMING RETURNS, SHOWING THE INCREASE IN FOUR YEARS,
+from two Breeding Flocks, consisting of 670 Ewes in Lamb.
+
+
+(A.)--1st JUNE, 1828.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks. Breeding Ewes. Lambs. Total. Remarks.
+
+ 2 yrs. old. 3 yrs. old. Male.-Female.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Lambs.
+No. 1 330 148 149 627 Deaths 6. Incr.297
+No. 2 330 154 154 638 4 308
+ ---- -- ---
+ * 1265 10 605
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+* The increase throughout these returns is calculated at from 270 to 290
+Lambs, to 300 Ewes, which is the usual average in N.S.W.
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Purchased two Flocks of Ewes, at 84s.............................670 Ewes.
+Increase of Lambs.......................................... 605
+Casual Deaths............................................... 10
+ 595
+ ---
+Total as per Return............................................ 1265
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(B.)--1st JUNE, 1829.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 3-yr. 327 154 154 635 Deaths 3 Incr.308
+2 4-yr. 326 155 155 636 4 310
+3 1-yr. 302 302 1 ---
+4 1-yr. 302 18 320 -- 618
+ ---- 8
+ 1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (A) Total...............................................1265
+Increase by Lambing....................................618
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 636
+Casual Deaths......................................... 8 628
+ ----
+Total as per return............................................1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(C.)--1st JUNE, 1830.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 296 133 154 562 Deaths 6 Incr.266
+2 4-yr. 325 150 155 625 2 300
+3 5-yr. 326 160 646 320
+4 2-yr. 302 27 329 ---
+5 1-yr. 309 309 886
+6 1-yr. 309 309 ---
+ ---- 3 Rams died
+ 2780 12 ditto purchased
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (B) Total............................................ 1893
+Increase by Lambing....................................886
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................12
+ ---
+ 898
+Deaths............................................... 11 887
+ ----
+Total as per return......................................... 2780
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(D.)--1st JUNE, 1831.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 304 136 136 576 Deaths 5 Incr.272
+2 3-yr. 293 135 136 564 3 271
+3 5-yr. 324 156 156 636 1 312
+4 6-yr. 320 156 156 632 2 312
+ Killed 4 ---
+5 3-yr. 300 300 Deaths 2 1167
+6 2-yr. 308 308 1
+7 1-yr 443 443
+8 1-yr 442 442 1
+9 40 40 5
+ ---- --
+ 3941 20
+ Purchased 12
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (C) Total............................................ 2780
+Increase by Lambing...................................1167
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 1185
+Casual deaths 20 ...Killed for use 4 ................. 24 1161
+ ----
+Total as per return.......................................... 3941
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(E.)--1st JUNE, 1832.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 344 154 154 652 Deaths 6 Incr.308
+2 3-yr. 344 162 161 667 4 323
+4 3-yr. 342 164 165 671 3 329
+5 6-yr. 320 155 155 630 2 310
+6 7-yr. 300 145 145 590 2 290
+7 4-yr. 300 300 ----
+ 1560
+8 3-yr 302 302 2
+9 2-yr 440 440 1
+10 1-yr 583 583
+11 1-yr 584 584
+12 45 45 5 Purch. 10
+ ---- ---- ---- --- --- --- ----
+ 1650 584 1625 45 780 780 5464
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (D) Total............................................ 3941
+Increase by Lambing...................................1560
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................10
+ ---
+ 1570
+Decrease by casual death .............................. 25
+Decrease by slaughter for use ......................... 22
+ ---
+ 1523
+ ----
+ Grand Total .............................. 5464 as above
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+MEMORANDUM,--The deaths have been calculated at the lowest rate under the
+best management. It may be safer to assume a rate of four or five per
+cent. per annum.
+
+
+
+Account of Expenditure and Income upon Sheep Stock in Australia,
+appended to Returns A. B. C. D. and E.
+ 1st YEAR, (RETURN A.) JUNE, 1829.
+
+INCOME.
+By 11265 fleeces, average weight 2 1/4 lbs. 284 lbs
+wool at 1s. 6d. per lb. 213 9 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 1 Watchman at 20 20 0 O PROFIT.
+To Hurdles, &c. 10 0 0
+ -------- 90 0 0
+ -------- 123 9 0
+
+ 2nd YEAR, (B.) JUNE, 1830.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 1893 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 42591bs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 319 8 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 20 40 0 0
+To 1 Watchman 20 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 5 0 0
+ ---------
+ 125 0 0
+To 18 Rams at 10 pounds* 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 305 0 0
+ ---------
+ 14 8 6
+*The price of rams will probably fall to 5 pounds
+
+ 3rd YEAR, (C.) JUNE, 1831.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 2780 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 62551bs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 469 2 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 25 25 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 20 60 0 0
+To 2 Watchman 20 40 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 195 0 0
+To 12 Rams at 10 pounds 120 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+ ---------
+ 154 2 6
+
+
+
+ 4th YEAR, (D.) JUNE, 1832.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 3941 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 88671bs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 665 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 25 75 0 0
+To 5 Ditto 20 100 0 0
+To 3 Watchman 20 60 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 20 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+To 10 Rams at 10 pounds 100 0 0
+ ---------
+ 415 0 0
+ ---------
+ 507 0 0
+ ----------
+ Net profit by sales of wool in 5 years 1024 0 0
+
+1024 0 0 divided by 5 gives 204 8 0 for annual interest on the
+original capital of 2814 0 0, (about 7 1/4 percent per annum)
+in addition to the accumulation of capital itself, shown by the
+valuation of stock.
+
+These accounts are a year in advance of the sheep returns, in order to
+bring them to the time at which the wool would be sold.
+
+
+ VALUATION OF SHEEP, JUNE, 1832----(RETURN E.)
+
+1614 Ewes from 1 to 4 years old at 3 pounds each 4842 0 O
+ 620 Do. 4 to 7 years old 2 1240 0 0
+ 780 Female Lambs 2 1560 0 0
+2405 Wethers and Male Lambs 15s. 1803 0 0
+ 45 Rams (original cost, 450l.) 400 0 0
+ ----------
+ 9845 0 0
+
+Note.--About 500 pounds would be added to the Income on the fifth year,
+by the sale of wethers of 3 and 4 years old.
+
+The cost of rams ought, strictly speaking, to be added to capital, and not
+deducted from Income; but these returns were made out in their present
+form at the request of a gentleman proceeding to the Colony with a limited
+capital, and who wished to know how much he might safely invest in sheep.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. IV.
+
+
+
+LIST OF GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS, COLLECTED IN THE DISTANT INTERIOR DURING
+THE FIRST EXPEDITION, WITH THEIR LOCALITIES AND THEIR RELATIVE DISTANCES
+FROM EACH OTHER.
+
+
+It may be necessary to observe that the height of the Cataract of the
+Macquarie River above the sea, was ascertained by barometrical
+admeasurement to be 650 feet. The country subsequently traversed is
+considerably lower. The specimens refer only to the geological formation
+of the distant interior.
+
+Schorl Rock.--Colour blueish grey, fine grained, extremely hard. Composed
+of Tourmaline and Quartz. Forms the bed of the Macquarie at the Cataract,
+75 miles to the N.W. of Wellington Valley.
+
+Decomposed Mica Slate.--Colour white; yields to the knife; adheres
+strongly to the tongue.
+
+Decomposed Feldspar.--Colour pale rose-pink; very fine grained; easily
+scratched with the knife; adheres strongly to the tongue.
+
+Both specimens immediately succeed the Schorl rock at the Cataract, in
+large smooth-sided masses.
+
+This formation may be said to terminate the rocks connected with the
+dividing ranges, since it is the last that occurs at their western base.
+
+A little below the Cataract, the county undergoes a remarkable change,
+and becomes extremely depressed.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour dull red, with white spots, or grey with
+red spots; very hard, compact, sonorous, magnetic. [See pp. 27 and 115.]
+Composition of Mount Harris, a hill called by Mr. Oxley, elevated about
+170 feet above the level of the plains. It lies 65 miles to the N.N.W. of
+the Cataract, and is about 16 miles distant from the first of the marshes
+of the Macquarie.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour grey with red spots, similar to the last.
+Was not observed to affect the needle. Formation of Mount Foster.
+Mount Foster is more than 200 feet in height, and lies about 5 miles to
+the N.N.W. of Mount Harris. From the summit of both, Arbuthnot's range is
+visible, bearing nearly due east, distant 70 miles. [See page 28.]
+
+Quartz Rook varieties--Slaty Quartz varieties.--Composition of the first
+elevations to the Westward of the marshes of the Macquarie, called
+New Year's Range, a group of five hills. The loftiest about 200 feet in
+elevation; distant about 80 miles to the N.W. of Mount Harris.
+
+Granite.--Colour red, coarse-grained. Composed of Quartz, Feldspar,
+and Mica.
+
+ Granite, Porphyritic.--Colour light red. Both occurring in the bed of
+New Year's Creek, traversing it obliquely, and are visible for a few
+hundred yards only. This granite occurs about 16 miles from the Range in
+a N. by E. direction.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of Oxley's Table Land, 500 feet above the
+level of the plains. It is broken into two hills, that appear to have been
+separated by some convulsion. [See page 81.] It bears N.W. by W. from
+New Year's Range, distant 50 miles.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of D'Urban's group. The highest elevation
+ascended during the expedition, being nearly 600 feet above the level of
+the plain in which it rises. It lies to the S.S.W. of Oxley's Table Land,
+distant 40 miles, and the rock of which it is composed is much harder
+and closer.
+
+Breccia.--Colour pale yellow, silicious cement. Composition of some
+trifling elevations to the North of New-Year's range, with which it is
+doubtful whether they are connected.
+
+Crystallized Sulphate of Lime.--Found imbedded in the alluvial soil
+forming the banks of the Darling river. Occurring in a regular vein. Soft,
+yielding to the nail; not acted on by acids.--See Plate.
+
+Breccia.--Pale ochre colour, silicious cement, extremely hard. Cellular,
+and sharp edges to the fractured pebbles. Has apparently undergone fusion.
+Occurs in the bed of the Darling in one place only.
+
+Sandstone Varieties.--Colour dull red and muddy white; appears like burnt
+bricks; light, easily frangible; adheres to the tongue; occurs in large
+masses in the bed of the Darling; probably in connection with the
+rock-salt of the neighbourhood, which, from the number of brine springs
+discovered feeding the river, must necessarily exist.
+
+Variety of the same description of rock.
+
+Jasper and Quartz.--Showing itself above the surface of a plain, from
+which D'Urban's group bore S. 40 E. distant 33 miles.
+
+It is a remarkable fact, that not a pebble or a stone was picked up during
+the progress of the expedition, on any one of the plains; and that after
+it again left Mount Harris for the Castlereagh, the only rock-formation
+discovered was a small Freestone tract near the Darling river. There was
+not a pebble of any kind either in the bed of the Castlereagh, or in the
+creeks falling into it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. V.
+
+
+
+OFFICIAL REPORTS TO THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 23RD JANUARY, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor has been pleased to order, that the following
+communication, dated the 25th of December last, from Captain Sturt, of the
+39th Regiment, who is employed in an exploring expedition into the
+interior of the country, be published for general information.
+
+By his Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN MARSHES, 25TH DECEMBER, 1828.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to forward, for the Governor's perusal, a
+copy of my journal up to the date of my arrival at Mount Harris. I should
+not have directed the messenger to return so soon, had I not subsequently
+advanced to Mount Foster, and surveyed the country from that eminence. I
+could distinctly see Arbuthnot's Range to the eastward. From that point
+the horizon appeared to me unbroken, but the country to the northward and
+westward seemed to favour an attempt to penetrate into it. I did not
+observe any sheet of water, and the course of the Macquarie was lost in
+the woodlands below.
+
+Mr. Hume ascended the hill at sun-rise, and thought he could see mountains
+to the north east, but at such a distance as to make it quite a matter of
+uncertainty. Agreeing, however, in the prudence of an immediate descent,
+we left our encampment on the morning of the 23rd, under Mount Foster, to
+which we had removed from Mount Harris, and pursued a north-north-west
+course to the spot on which we rest at present. We passed some fine meadow
+land near the river, and were obliged to keep wide of it in consequence of
+fissures in the ground. Traversing a large and blasted plain, on which the
+sun's rays fell with intense heat, and on which there was but little
+vegetation, we skirted the first great morass, and made the river
+immediately beyond it. It is of very considerable extent, the channel of
+the river passing through it. We are encompassed on every side by high
+reeds, which exist in the woods as well as in the plains. Mr. Hume and
+myself rode forward yesterday through the second morass, and made the
+river on slightly elevated ground, at a distance of about five miles; the
+country beyond appeared to favour our object, and we, to-morrow, proceed
+with the party to the north-west. The river seems to bend to the
+north-east; but in this level country it is impossible to speak with
+certainty, or to give any decided opinion of the nature of it, beyond the
+flats on which we are travelling. The reeds to the north-east and
+northward extend over a circumference of fifty miles; but if Mr. Hume
+really saw mountains or rising ground in the former point, the apparent
+course of the Macquarie is at once accounted for. The country, however,
+seems to dip to the north, though generally speaking it is level, and I am
+inclined to think that the state of the atmosphere caused a deception in
+this appearance.
+
+I regret to add, that the effects of the sun on the plain over which we
+passed on the 23rd produced a return of inflammation in the eyes of the
+men, I have named in my journals, and caused the same in the eyes of
+several others of my party. I halted, therefore, to expedite their
+recovery. They are doing well now, and we can proceed in the cool of the
+morning without any fear of their receiving injury by it. One of the men,
+who were to return to Wellington Valley, was attacked slightly with
+dysentery, but the medicines I gave him carried it off in the course of a
+day or two. I have taken every precaution with regard to the health of the
+men, in preparing them for the country into which they are going; and I
+have to request that you will inform the governor that the conduct of the
+whole party merits my approbation, and that I have no fault to find. The
+men from Sydney are not so sharp as those from Wellington Valley, but are
+equally well disposed. The animals, both horses and bullocks, are in good
+order, and I find the two soldiers of infinite service to me. The boat has
+received some damage from exposure to intense heat, but is otherwise
+uninjured. We still retain the carriage and have every prospect of
+dragging it on with us.
+
+His Excellency, having been good enough to order a fresh supply of
+provisions to Wellington Valley, I have to beg they may be forwarded to
+Mount Harris, and that the person in charge thereof be instructed to
+remain at that station for one month. We shall, during the interval, have
+examined the country to the north-west; and, in case we are forced back,
+shall require a supply to enable us to proceed to the northward, in
+furtherance of the views I have already had the honor to submit for the
+Governor's approval.
+
+I have the honor to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient and humble Servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Captain, 39th Regt.
+
+
+THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER.
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 6TH APRIL, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor is pleased to direct that the following
+interesting Report which has been received from Captain Sturt,
+39th Regiment, who has been employed for some months past, (as will be
+seen on reference to the Government Order, No. 4, published with Captain
+Sturt's First Report in the Sydney Gazette, of the 24th of January last)
+in exploring the interior, be communicated for the information of the
+public.
+
+It appears that the river Macquarie ceases to exist near the spot where
+the expedition under the late Mr. Oxley terminated, which, from the state
+of country at the time, being then flooded, could not be ascertained; and
+that another river of no inconsiderable magnitude, fed by salt springs,
+was discovered by Captain Sturt on the 2nd February last, about 100 miles
+to the westward of the Macquarie, running to the southward and westward.
+
+By His Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 4TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His
+Excellency the Governor, that I returned to this eminence on Monday,
+the 23rd ult. having been driven from the interior, in consequence of the
+extreme drought which prevails there.
+
+I am to state, in reference to my former communication, that agreeably to
+what I then reported, I moved, on the 26th December last, lower down the
+plains of the Macquarie, but encountered a barrier of reeds, formed by the
+marshes of that river, through which we in vain endeavoured to force our
+way. I was in consequence obliged to make the nearest part of the river to
+my left, and to take such measures as the nature of my situation required.
+Here, for the first time, I set the boat afloat, deeming it essential to
+trace the river, as I could not move upon its banks, and wishing also to
+ascertain where it again issued from the marshes, I requested Mr. Hume to
+proceed northerly, with a view to skirt them, and to descend westerly,
+wherever he saw an open space. He was fortunate enough to strike upon the
+channel about twelve miles north of our position, but was obstructed in
+his further progress by another marsh, in consequence of which he returned
+to the camp the next day; in the mean time, I had taken the boat, and
+proceeded down the Macquarie, my way being at first considerably
+obstructed by fallen timber: clearing this obstacle, however, I got into
+a deeper channel, with fine broad reaches, and a depth of from twelve to
+fifteen feet water. I had a short time previously cleared ail woods and
+trees, and was now in the midst of reeds of great height. After proceeding
+onwards for about eight miles from the place whence I started, my course
+was suddenly and unexpectedly checked; I saw reeds before me, and expected
+I was about to turn an angle of the river, but I found that I had got to
+the end of the channel, and that the fiver itself had ceased to exist.
+Confounded at such a termination to a stream, whose appearance justified
+the expectation that it would have led me through the heart of the marsh
+to join Mr. Hume, I commenced a most minute examination of the place, and
+discovered two creeks, if they deserve the name, branching, the one to the
+north-west, and the other to the north-east; after tracing the former a
+short distance, I reached its termination, and in order to assure myself
+that such was the case, I walked round the head of it by pushing through
+the reeds; it being then too dark to continue where I was, I returned to
+a place on the river, at which I had rested during a shower, and slept
+there. In the morning I again went to the spot to examine the
+north-eastern branch, when I was equally disappointed. I then examined the
+space between the two creeks, opposite to the main channel of the river,
+and where the bank receives the force of the current. Here I saw water in
+the reeds, but it was scarcely ankle deep, and was running off to the
+north-west quicker than the waters of the river, which had almost an
+imperceptible motion, I was therefore at once convinced that it was not
+permanent, but had lodged there in the night, during which much rain had
+fallen. I next pushed my way through the reeds into the marsh, and at
+length clearly perceived that the waters which were perfectly sweet, after
+running several courses, flowed off to the north, towards which point
+there was an apparent declination or dip. Finding it impossible to
+proceed further, I regained the boat, and thence returned to the camp,
+under a conviction that I had reached the very spot, at which Mr. Oxley
+lost the channel of the river in 1818.
+
+The next day I moved to the place where Mr. Hume had struck upon the
+channel of the river, but was again doubtful in what direction to proceed.
+
+The marsh, at the commencement of which we now found ourselves, being the
+third from Mount Foster, but the second great one, seemed to extend beyond
+us to the north for many miles, but varying in breadth. In the evening I
+went in the boat up the channel, and found it at first, deep and sullen,
+as that of the river above. It soon however, narrowed, and the weeds
+formed over its surface, so that I abandoned the boat and walked along a
+path up it. I had not gone far when the channel divided; two smaller
+channels came, the one from the southern, and the other from the western
+parts of the marsh into it. There was an evident declination where they
+were, and it was at their junction the river again rallied and formed.
+On my return to the camp, Mr. Hume and I went down the river, but found
+that about a mile it lost itself, and spread its waters ever the extensive
+marsh before it.
+
+In this extremity, I knew not what movement to make, as Mr. Hume had been
+checked in his progress north. I therefore determined to ascertain the
+nature of the country to the eastward and to the westward, that I might
+move accordingly; I proposed to Mr. Hume, to take a week's provisions,
+with two attendants, and go to the north-east, in order again to turn the
+marsh, but with the expectation that the angle formed by the junction of
+the Castlereagh with the Macquarie would arrest its progress, as the last
+was fast approaching the former.
+
+I myself determined to cross the river, and to skirt the marshes on the
+left, and in case they turned off to the north east, as they appeared to
+do, it was my intention to pursue a N.W. course into the interior, to
+learn the nature of it. With these views I left the camp on the 31st of
+December, and did not return until the 5th of January. Having found early
+in my journey, from the change of soil and of timber, that I was leaving
+the neighbourhood of the Macquarie, I followed a N.W. course, from a more
+northerly one, and struck at once across the country, under an impression
+that Mr. Hume would have made the river again long before my return.
+I found, after travelling between twenty and thirty miles, the country
+began to rise; and at the end of my journey, I made a hill of considerable
+elevation, from the summit of which I had a view of other high lands; one
+to the S.W. being a very fine mountain. As I had not found any water
+excepting in two creeks, which I had left far behind me, and as I had got
+on a soil which appeared incapable of holding it, I made this the
+termination of my journey, having exceeded 100 miles in distance from the
+camp, on my return to which I found Mr. Hume still absent. When he joined,
+he stated to me, that not making the Castlereagh as soon as he expected,
+he had bent down westerly for the Macquarie, and that he ended his journey
+at some gentle hills he had made; so that it appeared we must either have
+crossed each other's line of route, or that they were very near, and that
+want of length must alone have prevented them from crossing; but as such
+all assumption led to the conclusion that the Macquarie no longer existed,
+I determined to pursue a middle course round the swamps, to ascertain the
+point; as in case the river had ended, a westerly course was the one which
+my instructions directed me to pursue.
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the marshes we were obliged to sink
+wells for water, and it was thus early that we began to feel the want of a
+regular supply.
+
+Having made a creek about four miles from our position by cutting through
+the reeds where there was a narrow space, we pursued a westerly course
+over a plain, having every appearance of frequent inundation, and for four
+or five days held nearly the same direction; in the course of which we
+crossed both our tracks on the excursions we had made, which had
+intersected each other in a dense oak brush; thus renewing the few doubts,
+or rather the doubt we had as to the fate of the Macquarie, whose course
+we had been sent to trace. Indeed, had I not felt convinced that that
+river had ceased, I should not have moved westward without further
+examination, but we had passed through a very narrow part of the marshes,
+and round the greater part of them, and had not seen any hollow that could
+by any possible exaggeration be construed into or mistaken for the channel
+of a river.
+
+It appears, then, that the Macquarie, flowing as it does for so many
+miles, through a bed, and not a declining country, and having little water
+in it, except in times of flood, loses its impetus long ere it reaches the
+formidable barrier that opposes its progress northwards; the soil in which
+the reeds grow being a stiff clay. Its waters consequently spread, until
+a slight declivity giving them fresh impulse, they form a channel again,
+but soon gaining a level, they lose their force and their motion together,
+and spread not only over the second great marsh, but over a vast extent
+of the surrounding country, the breadth of ground thus subject to
+inundation being more than twenty miles, and its length considerably
+greater; around this space there is a gentle rise which confines the
+waters, while small hollows in various directions lead them out of the
+marshes over the adjacent plains, on which they eventually subside. On my
+return from the interior, I examined those parts round which I had not
+been, with particular attention, partly in company with Mr. Hume, and this
+statement was confirmed by what we saw. Thus, at a distance of about
+twenty-five miles from Mount Foster to the N.N.W. the river Macquarie
+ceases to exist, in any shape as a river, and at a distance of between
+fifty and sixty, the marshes terminate, though the country subject to
+inundation from the river is of a very considerable extent, as shown by
+the withered bulrushes, wet reeds, and shells, that are scattered over
+its surface.
+
+Having executed the first part of the instructions with which I had been
+honoured, I determined on pursuing a west, or north-west coarse into the
+interior, to ascertain the nature of it, in fulfilment of the second, but
+in doing this I was obliged to follow creeks, and even on their banks had
+to carry a supply of water, so uncertain was it that we should meet with
+any at the termination of our day's journey, and that what we did find
+would be fit to drink. Our course led us over plains immediately bordering
+the lower lands of the Macquarie, alternating with swamp oak, acacia
+pendula, pine, box, eucalyptus, and many other trees of minor growth, the
+soil being inclined to a red loam, while the plains were generally covered
+with a black scrub, though in some places they had good grass upon them.
+We crossed two creeks before we made the hills Mr. Hume had ascended, and
+which he called New Year's Range. Around these hills the country appeared
+better--they are gentle, picturesque elevations, and are for the most
+part, covered with verdure, and have, I fancy, a whinstone base, the rock
+of which they are composed being of various substances. I place New Year's
+Range in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes, long. 146 degrees 3 minutes
+30 seconds. Our course next lying north-west along a creek, led us to
+within twenty miles of the hill that had terminated my excursion, and as I
+hoped that a more leisurely survey of the country from its summit would
+open something favourable to our view, I struck over for it, though
+eventually obliged to return. From it Mr. Hume and I rode to the S.W.
+mountain, a distance of about forty miles, without crossing a brook or a
+creek, our way leading through dense acacia brushes, and for the most part
+over a desert. We saw high lands from this mountain, which exceeds 1,300
+feet in elevation, and is of sandstone formation, and thickly covered with
+stunted pine, in eight different points--the bearings of which are as
+follows:--
+
+Oxley'a Table Land, N. 4O E., distant 40 miles.
+Kengall Hill, due E. very distant.
+Conical Hill, S. 6O E.
+Highland, S.E. distance 30 miles.
+Highland, S. 30 E. distance 25 miles.
+Long Range, S. 16 E. distance 60 miles.
+Long Range, S. 72 W. distance 60 miles.
+Distant Range, S. 25 W. supposed.
+
+It was in vain, however, that we looked for water. The country to the
+north-west, was low and unbroken, and alternated with wood and plain.
+
+The country from New Year's Range to the hill I had made, and which I
+called Oxley's Table Land, had been very fair, with good soil in many
+places, but with a total want of water, except in the creeks, wherein the
+supply was both bad and uncertain; on our second day's journey from the
+former, we came to the creek on which we were moving, where it had a
+coarse granite bottom. The country around it improved very much in
+appearance, and there was abundance of good grass on the surface of it, in
+spite of the drought. On the right of this creek, a large plain stretches
+parallel to it for many miles, varying in quality of soil. Near Oxley's
+Table Land, we passed over open forest, the prevailing timber of which was
+box. I have placed Oxley's Table Land in latitude 29 degrees 57 minutes
+30 seconds, longitude 45 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds.
+
+Finding it impracticable to move westward from the hill I again descended
+on the creek, whose general course was to the north-west, in which
+direction we at length struck upon a river whose appearance raised our
+most sanguine expectations. It flowed round an angle from the north-east
+to the north-west, and extended in longitude five reaches as far as we
+could see. At that place it was about sixty yards broad, with banks of
+from thirty to forty feet high, and it had numerous wild fowl and many
+pelicans on its bosom, and seemed to be full of fish, while the paths of
+the natives on both sides, like well-trodden roads, showed how numerous
+they were about it. On tasting its waters, however, we found them
+perfectly salt, and useless to us, and as our animals had been without
+water the night before, this circumstance distressed us much; our first
+day's journey led us past between sixty and seventy huts in one place, and
+on our second we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives, having
+previously seen some between two creeks before we made New-Year's Range.
+At some places the water proved less salt than at others; our animals
+drank of it sparingly: we found two small fresh-water holes, which served
+us as we passed. After tracing the river for a considerable distance, we
+came on brine springs in the bed of it, the banks having been encrusted
+with salt from the first; and as the difficulty of getting fresh water was
+so great, I here foresaw an end to our wanderings. And as I was resolved
+not to involve my party in greater distress, I halted it, on overtaking
+the animals, and the next morning turned back to the nearest fresh-water,
+at a distance of eighteen miles from us. Unwilling, however, to give up
+our pursuit, Mr. Hume and I started with two men on horseback, to trace
+the river as far as we could, and to ascertain what course it took; in the
+hopes also that we should fall on some creek, or get a more certain supply
+of drinkable water. We went a distance to which the bullocks could not
+have been brought, and then got on a red sandy soil, which at once
+destroyed our hopes; and on tasting the river water we found it salter
+than ever, our supply being diminished to two pints. Our animals being
+weak and purged, and having proceeded at least forty miles from the camp,
+I thought it best to yield to circumstances, and to return, though I trust
+I shall be believed when I add, it was with extreme reluctance I did so;
+and had I followed the wishes of my party, should still have continued
+onwards. Making a part of the river where we had slept, we stayed to
+refresh, and in consequence of the heat of the weather were obliged to
+drink the water in it, which made us sick. While here, a tribe of blacks
+came to us and behaved remarkably well. At night we slept on a plain
+without water, and the next day we regained the camp, which had been
+visited by the natives during our absence.
+
+We found the river held a south-west course, and appeared to be making for
+the central space between a high land, which I called Dunlop's Range, at
+Mr. Hume's request, and a lofty range to the westward. It still continued
+its important appearance, having gained in breadth and in the height of
+its banks, while there were hundreds of pelicans and wild-fowl on it.
+Flowing through a level country with such a channel, it may be presumed
+that this river ultimately assumes either a greater character, or that it
+adds considerably to the importance of some other stream. It had a clay
+bottom, generally speaking, in many places semi-indurated and fast forming
+into sandstone, while there was crystallized sulphate of lime running in
+veins through the soil which composed the bank.
+
+This river differs from most in the colony, in having a belt of barren
+land of from a quarter of a mile to two miles in breadth in its immediate
+neighbourhood, and which is subject to overflow. This belt runs to the
+inland plains, where a small elevation checks the further progress of the
+flood. There is magnificent blue gum on both sides the river, but the
+right bank is evidently the most fertile, and I am mistaken greatly if
+there is not a beautiful country north of it.
+
+Of the country over which we have passed, it is impossible for me to have
+formed a correct opinion under its present melancholy circumstances. It
+has borne the appearance of barrenness, where in even moderate rain, it
+might have shown very differently, though no doubt we passed over much of
+both good and bad land; our animals on the whole, have thrived on the food
+they have had, which would argue favourably for the herbage. Generally
+speaking, I fear the timber is bad--the rough-gum may be used for knees,
+and such purposes, and we may have seen wood for the wheelwright and
+cabinet-maker, specimens of which I have procured, but none for general or
+household purposes.
+
+The creeks we have traced are different in character from those in the
+settled districts, inasmuch as that, like the river, they have a belt of
+barren land near then and but little grass--they have all of them been
+numerously frequented by the natives, as appeared from the number of
+muscle-shells on their banks, but now having scarcely any water in them,
+the fish having either been taken, or are dead, and the tribes gone
+elsewhere for food, while the badness of the river water has introduced a
+cutaneous disease among the natives of that district, which is fast
+carrying them off. Our intercourse with these people was incessant from
+the time we first met them, and on all occasions they behaved remarkably
+well, nor could we have seen less than than two hundred and fifty of them.
+
+Our return is to be attributable to the want of water alone, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the effects of the drought on animal as well
+as vegetable nature. The natives are wandering in the desert, and it is
+melancholy to reflect on the necessity which obliges them to drink the
+stinking and loathsome water they do--birds sit gasping in the trees and
+are quite thin--the wild dog prowls about in the day-time unable to avoid
+us, and is as lean as he can be in a living state, while minor vegetation
+is dead, and the very trees are drooping. I have noticed all these things
+in my Journal I shall have the honour of submitting through you, for the
+Governor's perusal and information, on my return. Finally, I fear our
+expedition will not pave the way to any ultimate benefit; although it has
+been the means by which two very doubtful questions,--the course of the
+Macquarie, and the nature of the interior, have been solved; for it is
+beyond doubt, that the interior for 250 miles beyond its former known
+limits to the W.N.W., so far from being a shoal sea, has been ascertained
+not only to have considerable elevations upon it, but is in itself a table
+land to all intents and purposes, and has scarcely water on its surface to
+support its inhabitants.
+
+I beg you will inform His Excellency the Governor, that I have on all
+occasions received the most ready and valuable assistance from Mr, Hume.
+His intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs of the natives,
+enabled him to enter into intercourse with them, and chiefly contributed
+to the peaceable manner in which we have journeyed, while his previous
+experience put it in his power to be of real use to me. I cannot but say
+he has done an essential service to future travellers, and to the colony
+at large, by his conduct on all occasions since he has been with me; nor
+should I be doing him justice, if I did not avail myself of the first
+opportunity of laying my sentiments before the Governor, through you. I am
+happy to add that every individual of the party deserves my warmest
+approbation, and that they have, one and all, borne their distresses,
+trifling certainly, but still unusual, with cheerfulness, and that they
+have at all times been attentive to their duty, and obedient to their
+orders. The whole are in good health, and are eager again to start.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+Sir
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HONORABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 5TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--It having appeared to me, that after discovering such a river as the
+one I have described in my letter of yesterday, His Excellency the
+Governor would approve of my endeavouring to regain it. There being a
+probability that it ultimately joins the Southern Waters, I thought of
+turning my steps to the southward and westward; and with a view to learn
+the nature of the country, I despatched Mr. Hume in that direction on
+Saturday last. He returned in three days, after having gone above forty
+miles from the river, and states, that he crossed two creeks, the one
+about twenty-five miles, the other about thirty-two distance, evidently
+the heads of the creeks we passed westward of the marshes of the
+Macquarie. He adds, that, to the second creek the land was excellent, but
+that on crossing it, he got onto red soil, on which he travelled some
+miles further, until he saw a range of high land, bearing from him S.W..
+by W., when, knowing from the nature of the country around him, and from
+the experience of our late journey, that he could not hope to find a
+regular supply of water in advance, and that in the present dry state of
+the low lands, a movement such as I had contemplated would be
+impracticable, he returned home. I do myself the honour, therefore, to
+report to you, for His Excellency's information, that I shall proceed on
+Saturday next in a N.E. direction towards the Castlereagh, intending to
+trace that river down, and afterwards to penetrate as far to the northward
+and westward as possible; it being my wish to get into the country north
+of the more distant river, where I have expectations that there is an
+extensive and valuable track of country, but that in failure of the above,
+I shall examine the low country behind our N.W. boundaries, if I can find
+a sufficiency of water to enable me to do so.
+
+I am to inform you that in this neighbourhood the Macquarie has ceased to
+flow, and that it is now a chain of shallow ponds. The water is fast
+diminishing in it, and unless rain descends in a few weeks it will be
+perfectly dry.
+
+I am also to report, that the natives attempted the camp with the supplies
+before my arrival at Mount Harris, but that on the soldier with the party
+firing a shot, after they had thrown a stone and other of the weapons,
+they fled. It was in consequence of their fires, which I saw at a distance
+of forty miles, and which they never make on so extensive a scale, except
+as signals when they want to collect, and are inclined to be mischievous,
+that I made forced marches up, and I am led to believe my arrival was very
+opportune. The natives have visited us since, and I do not think they will
+now attempt to molest either party when we separate.
+
+I have the honour to be,
+Sir,
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+
+END OF VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+#1 in our series by Charles Sturt
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+Title: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Volume I
+
+Author: Charles Sturt
+
+Release Date: August, 2003 [Etext# 4328]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
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+
+
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA DURING THE YEARS
+1828,1829,1830,1831 WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOIL, CLIMATE AND GENERAL
+RESOURCES OF THE COLONY OF NEW SOUTH WALES.
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+
+"For though most men are contented only to see a river as it runs by
+them, and talk of the changes in it as they happen; when it is troubled,
+or when clear; when it drowns the country in a flood, or forsakes it in a
+drought: yet he that would know the nature of the water, and the causes of
+those accidents (so as to guess at their continuance or return), must find
+out its source, and observe with what strength it rises, what length it
+runs, and how many small streams fall in, and feed it to such a height,
+as make it either delightful or terrible to the eye, and useful or
+dangerous to the country about it."...SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S NETHERLANDS.
+
+
+
+TO THE RIGHT HON.
+THE EARL OF RIPON,
+VISCOUNT GODERICH,
+Lord Privy Seal
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+
+
+MY LORD,
+
+The completion of this Work affords me the opportunity I have long desired
+of thanking your Lordship thus publicly, for the kindness with which you
+acceded to my request to be permitted to dedicate it to you.
+
+The encouragement your Lordship was pleased to give me has served to
+stimulate me in the prosecution of a task, which would, I fear, have been
+too great for me to have accomplished in my present condition, under any
+ordinary views of ambition. Indeed, labouring as I have been for many
+months past, under an almost total deprivation of sight, (the effect of
+exposure and anxiety of mind in the prosecution of geographical
+researches,) I owe it to the casual assistance of some of my friends, that
+I am at length enabled to lay these results before your Lordship and the
+public.
+
+While I feel a painful conviction that many errors must necessarily
+pervade a work produced under such unfavourable circumstances, it affords
+me no small consolation to reflect that Your Lordship has been aware of my
+situation, and will be disposed to grant me every reasonable indulgence.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+With the highest respect,
+My Lord,
+Your Lordship's
+Very obedient and humble servant,
+
+CHARLES STURT
+London June, 1833.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE MACQUARIE RIVER, AND INTO THE WESTERN INTERIOR
+IN 1828 AND 1829.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach the
+Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Concluding Remarks--Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior
+of Australia--Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men
+requisite,--and of cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--
+Treatment of the natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second
+expedition.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+No. I. Letter of Instructions
+No. II. List of Stores supplied for the Expedition
+No. III. Sheep-farming Returns
+No. IV. List of Geological Specimens
+No. V. Official Report to the Colonial Government, (Jan. 1829.)
+No. VI. Ditto (April 1829.)
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE FIRST VOLUME
+(Not included in this etext)
+
+Native Burial Place near Budda
+Vice Admiral Arthur Phillip
+Cataract of the Macquarie
+A Selenite
+Chrystallized Sulphate of Lime
+
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
+
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+PURPOSE OF THIS PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+When I first determined on committing to the press a detailed account of
+the two expeditions, which I conducted into the interior of the Australian
+continent, pursuant to the orders of Lieutenant General Darling, the late
+Governor of the Colony of New South Wales, it was simply with a view of
+laying their results before the geographical world, and of correcting the
+opinions that prevailed with regard to the unexplored country to the
+westward of the Blue Mountains. I did not feel myself equal either to the
+task or the responsibility of venturing any remarks on the Colony of New
+South Wales itself. I had had little time for inquiry, amidst the various
+duties that fell to my lot in the ordinary routine of the service to which
+I belonged, when unemployed by the Colonial Government in the prosecution
+of inland discoveries. My observations had been in a great measure
+confined to those points which curiosity, or a desire of personal
+information, had prompted me to investigate. I did not, therefore, venture
+to flatter myself that I had collected materials of sufficient importance
+on general topics to enable me to write for the information of others.
+Since my return to England, however, I have been strenuously urged to give
+a short description of the colony before entering upon my personal
+narrative; and I have conversed with so many individuals whose ideas of
+Australia are totally at variance with its actual state, that I am
+encouraged to indulge the hope that my observations, desultory as they
+are, may be of some interest to the public. I am strengthened in this hope
+by the consideration that some kind friends have enabled me to add much
+valuable matter to that which I had myself collected. It is not my
+intention, however, to enter at any length on the commercial or
+agricultural interests of New South Wales. It may be necessary for me to
+touch lightly on those important subjects, but it is my wish to connect
+this preliminary chapter, as much as possible with the subjects treated of
+in the body of the work, and chiefly to notice the physical structure, the
+soil, climate, and productions of the colony, in order to convey to the
+reader general information on these points, before I lead him into the
+remote interior.
+
+NAME OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that the name "Australia," has of late years
+been affixed to that extensive tract of land which Great Britain possesses
+in the Southern Seas, and which, having been a discovery of the early
+Dutch navigators, was previously termed "New Holland." The change of name
+was, I believe, introduced by the celebrated French geographer, Malte
+Brun, who, in his division of the globe, gave the appellation of
+Austral Asia and Polynesia to the new discovered lands in the southern
+ocean; in which division he meant to include the numerous insular groups
+scattered over the Pacific.
+
+IMPRESSIONS OF ITS EARLY VISITORS.
+
+Australia is properly speaking an island, but it is so much larger than
+every other island on the face of the globe, that it is classed as a
+continent in order to convey to the mind a just idea of its magnitude.
+Stretching from the 115th to the 153rd degree of east longitude, and from
+the 10th to the 37th of south latitude, it averages 2700 miles in length
+by 1800 in breadth; and balanced, as it were, upon the tropic of that
+hemisphere in which it is situated, it receives the fiery heat of the
+equator at one extremity, while it enjoys the refreshing coolness of the
+temperate zone at the other. On a first view we should be led to expect
+that this extensive tract of land possessed more than ordinary advantages;
+that its rivers would be in proportion to its size; and that it would
+abound in the richest productions of the inter-tropical and temperate
+regions. Such, indeed, was the impression of those who first touched upon
+its southern shores, but who remained no longer than to be dazzled by the
+splendour and variety of its botanical productions, and to enjoy for a
+few days the delightful mildness of its climate. But the very spot which
+had appeared to Captain Cook and Sir Joseph Banks an earthly paradise, was
+abandoned by the early settlers as unfit for occupation; nor has the
+country generally been fount to realize the sanguine expectations of those
+distinguished individuals, so far as it has hitherto been explored.
+
+CHARACTER OF AUSTRALIAN RIVERS.
+
+Rivers which have the widest mouths or the most practicable entrances,
+are, in Europe or America, usually of impetuous current, or else contain
+such a body of water as to bear down all opposition to their free course;
+whilst on the other hand, rivers whose force is expended ere they reach
+the sea, have almost invariably a bar at their embouchure, or where they
+mingle their waters with those of the ocean. This last feature
+unfortunately appears to characterize all rivers of Australia, or such of
+them at least as are sufficiently known to us. Falling rapidly from the
+mountains in which they originate into a level and extremely depressed
+country; having weak and inconsiderable sources, and being almost wholly
+unaided by tributaries of any kind; they naturally fail before they reach
+the coast, and exhaust themselves in marshes or lakes or reach it so
+weakened as to be unable to preserve clear or navigable months, or to
+remove the sand banks that the tides throw up before them. On the other
+hand the productions of this singular region seem to be peculiar to it,
+and unlike those of any other part of the world; nor have any indigenous
+fruits of any value as yet been found either in its forests or on its
+plains.
+
+He who has never looked on any other than the well-cultured fields of
+England, can have little idea of a country that Nature has covered with an
+interminable forest. Still less can he estimate the feelings with which
+the adventurer approaches a shore that has never (or perhaps only lately)
+been trodden by civilized man.
+
+FIRST VIEW OF PORT JACKSON.
+
+It was with feelings peculiar to the occasion, that I gazed for the first
+time on the bold cliffs at the entrance of Port Jackson, as our vessel
+neared them, and speculated on the probable character of the landscape
+they hid; and I am free to confess, that I did not anticipate anything
+equal to the scene which presented itself both to my sight and my
+judgment, as we sailed up the noble and extensive basin we had entered,
+towards the seat of government. A single glance was sufficient to tell me
+that the hills upon the southern shore of the port, the outlines of which
+were broken by houses and spires, must once have been covered with the
+same dense and gloomy wood which abounded every where else. The contrast
+was indeed very great--the improvement singularly striking. The labour and
+patience required, and the difficulties which the first settlers
+encountered effecting these improvements, must have been incalculable. But
+their success has been complete: it is the very triumph of human skill and
+industry over Nature herself. The cornfield and the orchard have
+supplanted the wild grass and the brush; a flourishing town stands over
+the ruins of the forest; the lowing of herds has succeeded the wild whoop
+of the savage; and the stillness of that once desert shore is now broken
+by the sound of the bugle and the busy hum of commerce.
+
+EXTENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES AND DIVISIONS OF THE COLONY.
+
+The Colony of New South Wales is situated upon the eastern coast of
+Australia; and the districts within which land has been granted to
+settlers, extends from the 36th parallel of latitude to the 32nd, that is
+say, from the Moroyo River to the south of Sydney on the one hand, and to
+the Manning River on the other, including Wellington Valley within its
+limits to the westward. Thus it will appear that the boundaries of the
+located parts of the colony have been considerably enlarged, and some fine
+districts of country included within them. In consequence of its extent
+and increasing population, it has been found convenient to divide it into
+counties, parishes, and townships; and indeed, every measure of the
+Colonial Government of late years, has had for its object to assimilate
+its internal arrangements as nearly as possible, to those of the mother
+country. Whether we are to attribute the present flourishing state of the
+colony to the beneficial influence of that system of government which has
+been exercised over it for the last seven years it is not for me to say.
+That the prosperity of a country depends, however, in a great measure,
+on the wisdom of its legislature, is as undoubted, as that within the
+period I have mentioned the colony of N. S. Wales has risen
+unprecedentedly in importance and in wealth, and has advanced to a state
+of improvement at which it could not have arrived had its energies been
+cramped or its interests neglected.
+
+ITS ADVANCES IN PROSPERITY.
+
+There is a period in the history of every country, during which it will
+appear to have been more prosperous than at any other. I allude not to the
+period of great martial achievements, should any such adorn its pages, but
+to that in which the enterprise of its merchants was roused into action,
+and when all classes of its community seem to have put forth their
+strength towards the attainment of wealth and power.
+
+ERRONEOUS IMPRESSIONS.
+
+In this eventful period the colony of New South Wales is already far
+advanced. The conduct of its merchants is marked by the boldest
+speculations and the most gigantic projects. Their storehouses are built
+on the most magnificent scale, and with the best and most substantial
+materials. Few persons in England have even a remote idea of its present
+flourishing condition, or of the improvements that are daily taking place
+both in its commerce and in its agriculture. I am aware that many object
+to it as a place of residence, and I can easily enter into their feelings
+from the recollection of what my own were before I visited it. I cannot
+but remark, however, that I found my prejudices had arisen from a natural
+objection to the character of a part of its population; from the
+circumstance of its being a penal colony, and from my total ignorance of
+its actual state, and not from any substantial or permanent cause. On the
+contrary I speedily became convinced of the exaggerated nature of the
+reports I had heard in England, on some of the points just adverted to;
+nor did any thing fall under my observation during a residence in it of
+more than six years to justify the opinion I had been previously led to
+entertain of it. I embarked for New South Wales, with strong prejudices
+against it: I left it with strong feelings in its favour, and with a deep
+feeling of interest in its prosperity. It is a pleasing task to me,
+therefore, to write of it thus, and to have it in my power to contribute
+to the removal of any erroneous impressions with regard to its condition
+at the present moment.
+
+COMMERCIAL IMPORTANCE OF SYDNEY.
+
+I have already remarked, that I was not prepared for the scene that met my
+view when I first saw Sydney. The fact was, I had not pictured to myself;
+nor conceived from any thing that I had ever read or heard in England,
+that so extensive a town could have been reared in that remote region, in
+so brief a period as that which had elapsed since its foundation. It is
+not, however, a distant or cursory glance that will give the observer a
+just idea of the mercantile importance of this busy capital. In order to
+form an accurate estimate of it, he should take a boat and proceed from
+Sydney Cove to Darling Harbour. He would then be satisfied, that it is not
+upon the first alone that Australian commerce has raised its storehouse
+and wharfs, but that the whole extent of the eastern shore of the last
+more capacious basin, is equally crowded with warehouses, stores,
+dockyards, mills, and wharfs, the appearance and solidity of which would
+do credit even to Liverpool. Where, thirty years ago, the people flocked
+to the beach to hail an arrival, it is not now unusual to see from thirty
+to forty vessels riding at anchor at one time, collected there from every
+quarter of the globe. In 1832, one hundred and fifty vessels entered the
+harbour of Port Jackson, from foreign parts, the amount of their tonnage
+being 31,259 tons.
+
+The increasing importance of Sydney must in some measure be attributed to
+the flourishing condition of the colony itself, to the industry of its
+farmers, to the successful enterprise of its merchants, and to particular
+local causes. It is foreign to my purpose, however, to enter largely into
+an investigation of these important points. To do so would require more
+space than I can afford for the purpose, and might justly be considered as
+irrelevant in a work of this kind. Without attempting any lengthened
+detail, it may be considered sufficient if I endeavour merely to point out
+the principal causes of the present prosperity (and, as they may very
+probably prove) of the eventual progress of our great southern colony to
+power and independence.
+
+STAPLE OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
+
+The staple of our Australian colonies, but more particularly of New South
+Wales, the climate and the soil of which are peculiarly suited to its
+production,--is fine wool. There can be no doubt that the growth of this
+article has mainly contributed to the prosperity of the above mentioned
+colony and of Van Diemen's Land.
+
+At the close of the last century, wool was imported into England from
+Spain and Germany only, and but a few years previously from Spain alone.
+Indeed, long after its introduction from the latter country, German wool,
+obtained but little consideration in the London market; and in like
+manner, it may be presumed that many years will not have elapsed
+before the increased importation of wool from our own possessions in
+the southern hemisphere, will render us, in respect to this commodity,
+independent of every other part of the world. The great improvements
+in modern navigation are such, that the expense of sending the fleece
+to market from New South Wales is less than from any part of Europe.
+The charges for instance on Spanish and German wool, are from
+fourpence to fourpence three farthings per pound; whereas the entire
+charge, after shipment from New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land, does
+not exceed threepence three farthings,--and in this the dock and landing
+charges, freight, insurance, brokerage, and commission, are included.
+
+GROWTH OF FINE WOOL. MR. M'ARTHUR'S EXERTIONS.
+
+As some particulars respecting the introduction of this source of national
+wealth into Australia may prove interesting to the public, I have put
+together the following details of it, upon the authenticity of which they
+may rely. The person who foresaw the advantage to be derived from the
+growth of fine wool in New South Wales, and who commenced the culture of
+it in that colony, was Mr. John M'Arthur. So far back, I believe, as the
+year 1793, not long after the establishment of the first settlement at
+Sydney, this gentleman commenced sheep-farming, and about two years
+afterwards he obtained a ram and two ewes from Captain Kent, of the royal
+navy, who had brought them, with some other stock for the supply of the
+settlement, from the Cape of Good Hope, to which place a flock of these
+sheep had been originally sent by the Dutch government. Sensible of the
+importance of the acquisition, Mr. M'Arthur began to cross his
+coarse-fleeced sheep with Merino blood; and, proceeding upon a system, he
+effected a considerable improvement in the course of a few years. So
+prolific was the mixed breed, that in ten years, a flock which originally
+consisted of not more than seventy Bengal sheep, had increased in number
+to 4,000 head, although the wethers had been killed as they became fit for
+slaughter. It appears, however, that as the sheep approached to greater
+purity of blood, their extreme fecundity diminished.
+
+TO REAR MERINO FLOCKS.
+
+In 1803, Mr. M'Arthur revisited England; and there happening at the time
+to be a committee of manufacturers in London from the clothing districts,
+he exhibited before them samples of his wool, which were so much approved,
+that the committee represented to their constituents the advantages which
+would result from the growth of fine wool, in one of the southern
+dependencies of the empire. In consequence of this a memorial was
+transmitted to His Majesty's government, and Mr. M'Arthur's plans having
+been investigated by a Privy Council, at which he was present, they were
+recommended to the government as worthy of its protection. With such
+encouragement Mr. M'Arthur purchased two ewes and three rams, from the
+Merino flock of His Majesty King George the Third. He embarked with them
+on his return to New South Wales in 1806, on board a vessel named by him
+"the Argo," in reference to the golden treasure with which she was
+freighted. On reaching the colony he removed his sheep to a grant of land
+which the Home Government had directed he should receive in the Cow
+Pastures. To commemorate the transaction, and to transmit to a grateful
+posterity the recollection of the nobleman who then presided over the
+colonies, the estate, together with the district in which it is situated,
+was honoured by the name of Camden.
+
+EXPORT OF WOOL TO ENGLAND.
+
+Since that time the value of New South Wales wool has been constantly on
+the increase, and the colony are indebted to Mr. M'Arthur for the
+possession of an exportable commodity which has contributed very
+materially to its present wealth and importance. Such general attention is
+now paid to this interesting branch of rural economy, that the importation
+of wool into England from our Australian colonies, amounted, in 1832, to
+10,633 bales, or 2,500,000 lbs. It has been sold at as high a price as
+10s. per lb.; but the average price of wool of the best flocks vary from
+1s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. at the present moment. The number of sheep in New South
+Wales alone was calculated in the last census at 536,891 head. The
+ordinary profits on this kind of stock may be extracted from the Table
+given in the Appendix to the first volume of this work.
+
+WHALE FISHERY.
+
+Among the various speculations undertaken by the merchants of Sydney,
+there is not one into which they have entered with so much spirit as in
+the South Sea Fishery. The local situation of Port Jackson gives them an
+advantage over the English and the American merchants, since the distance
+of both these from the field of their gains, must necessarily impede them
+greatly; whereas the ships that leave Sydney on a whaling excursion,
+arrive without loss of time upon their ground, and return either for fresh
+supplies or to repair damages with equal facility. The spirit with which
+the colonial youth have engaged in this adventurous and hardy service, is
+highly to their credit. The profits arising from it may not be (indeed I
+have every reason to think are not) so great as might be supposed, or such
+as might reasonably be expected; but the extensive scale on which it is
+conducted, speaks equally for the energy and perseverance of the parties
+concerned, in the prosecution of their commercial enterprises. It has
+enabled them to equip a creditable colonial marine, and given great
+importance to their mercantile interests in the mother country.
+
+In the year 1831, the quantity of sperm and black oil, the produce of the
+fisheries exported from New South Wales, amounted to 2,307 tons, and was
+estimated, together with skins and whalebone, to be worth 107,971 pounds
+sterling. The gross amount of all other exports during that year, did not
+exceed 107,697 pounds sterling. Of these exports, the following were the
+most considerable:
+
+
+Timber 7,410 pounds sterling
+Butter and Cheese 2,376
+Mimosa bark 40
+Hides 7,333
+Horses 7,302
+Salt provisions 5,184
+Wool 66,112
+
+
+The above is exclusive of 61,000 pounds value of British manufactures
+re-exported to the various ports and islands in the Southern Seas.
+
+OTHER EXPORTS.
+
+In this scale, moreover, tobacco is not mentioned; but that plant is now
+raised for the supply of every private establishment, and will assuredly
+form an article of export, as soon as its manufacture shall be well
+understood. Neither can it be doubted but that the vine and the olive
+will, in a short time, be abundantly cultivated; and that a greater
+knowledge of the climate and soil of the more northern parts of the
+colony, will lead to the introduction of fresh sources of wealth.
+
+GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES.
+
+Having taken this hasty review of the commercial interests of the colony,
+we may now turn to a brief examination of its internal structure and
+principal natural features.
+
+I have already given a cursory sketch of the geographical features of the
+whole continent. Of the vast area which its coasts embrace, the east part
+alone has been fully explored.
+
+A range of hills runs along the eastern coast, from north to south, which,
+in different quarters, vary in their distance from the sea; at one place
+approaching it pretty nearly, at another, receding from it to a distance
+of forty miles. It is a singular fact, that there is no pass or break in
+these mountains, by which any of the rivers of the interior can escape in
+an easterly direction. Their spine is unbroken. The consequence is, that
+there is a complete division of the eastern and western waters, and that
+streams, the heads of which are close to each other, flow away in opposite
+directions; the one to pursue a short course to the sea; the other to fall
+into a level and depressed interior, the character of which will be
+noticed in its proper place.
+
+GREAT PROPORTION OF BAD SOIL.
+
+The proportion of bad soil to that which is good in New South Wales, is
+certainly very great: I mean the proportion of inferior soil to such as is
+fit for the higher purposes of agriculture. Mr. Dawson, the late
+superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company's possessions, has
+observed, as a singular fact, that the best soil generally prevails on the
+summits of the hills, more especially where they are at all level. He
+accounts for so unusual a circumstance by the fact, that elevated
+positions are less subject to the effects of fire or floods than their
+valleys or flanks, and attributes the general want of vegetable mould over
+the colony chiefly to the ravages of the former element, whereby the
+growth of underwood, so favourable in other countries to the formation of
+soil, is wholly prevented. Undoubtedly this is a principal cause for the
+deficiency in question. There is no part of the world in which fires
+create such havoc as in New South Wales and indeed in Australia
+generally. The climate, on the one hand, which dries up vegetation, and
+the wandering habits of the natives on the other, which induce them to
+clear the country before them by conflagration, operate equally against
+the growth of timber and underwood.
+
+CAUSE OF THIS.
+
+But there is another circumstance that appears to have escaped
+Mr. Dawson's observation; which is the actual property of the trees
+themselves, as to the quantity of vegetable matter they produce in decay.
+Being a military man, I cannot be supposed to have devoted much of my time
+to agricultural pursuits; but it has been obvious to me, as it must have
+been to many others, that in New South Wales, the fall of leaves and the
+decay of timber, so far from adding to the richness of its soil, actually
+destroy minor vegetation. This fact was brought more home to me in
+consequence of its having been my lot to spend some months upon Norfolk
+Island, a distant penal settlement attached to the Government of Sydney.
+There the abundance of vegetable decay was as remarkable as the want of it
+on the Australian Continent. I have frequently sunk up to my knees in a
+bed of leaves when walking through its woods; and, often when I placed my
+foot on what appeared externally to be the solid trunk of a tree, I have
+found it yield to the pressure, in consequence of its decomposition into
+absolute rottenness. But such is not the case in New South Wales. There,
+no such accumulations of vegetable matter are to be met with; but where
+the loftiest tree of the forest falls to the ground, its figure and length
+are marked out by the total want of vegetation within a certain distance
+of it, and a small elevation of earth, resembling more the refuse or
+scoria of burnt bricks than any thing else, is all that ultimately remains
+of the immense body which time or accident had prostrated. Thus it would
+appear, that it is not less to the character of its woods than to the
+ravages of fire that New South Wales owes its general sterility.
+
+CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GEOLOGY AND VEGETATION.
+
+Whilst prosecuting my researches in the interior of the colony, I could
+not but be struck with the apparent connection between its geology and
+vegetation; so strong, indeed, was this connection, that I had little
+difficulty, after a short experience, in judging of the rock that formed
+the basis of the country over which I was travelling, from the kind of
+tree or herbage that flourished in the soil above it. The eucalyptus
+pulv., a species of eucalyptus having a glaucus-coloured leaf, of
+dwarfish habits and growing mostly in scrub, betrayed the sandstone
+formation, wherever it existed, This was the case in many parts of the
+County of Cumberland, in some parts of Wombat Brush, at the two passes on
+the great south road, over a great extent of country to the N.W. of Yass
+Plains, and at Blackheath on the summit of the Blue Mountains. On the
+other hand, those open grassy and park-like tracts, of which so much has
+been said, characterise the secondary ranges of granite and porphyry. The
+trees most usual on these tracts, were the box, an unnamed species of
+eucalyptus, and the grass chiefly of that kind, called the oat or forest
+grass, which grows in tufts at considerable distances from each other,
+and which generally affords good pasturage. On the richer grounds the
+angophora lanceolata, and the eucalyptus mammifera more frequently point
+out the quality of the soil on which they grow. The first are abundant on
+the alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter; the
+latter on the limestone formation of Wellington Valley and in the better
+portions of Argyle; whilst the cupressus calytris seems to occupy sandy
+ridges with the casuarina. It was impossible that these broad features
+should have escaped observation: it was naturally inferred from this, that
+the trees of New South Wales are gregarious; and in fact they may, in a
+great measure, be considered so. The strong line that occasionally
+separates different species, and the sudden manner in which several
+species are lost at one point, to re-appear at another more distant,
+without any visible cause for the break that has taken place, will furnish
+a number of interesting facts in the botany of New South Wales.
+
+It was observed both on the Macquarie river and the Morumbidgee, that the
+casuarinae ceased at a particular point. On the Macquarie particularly,
+these trees which had often excited our admiration from Wellington Valley
+downwards, ceased to occupy its banks below the cataract, nor were they
+again noticed until we arrived on the banks of the Castlereagh. The
+blue-gum trees, again, were never observed to extend beyond the secondary
+embankments of the rivers, occupying that ground alone which was subject
+to flood and covered with reeds. These trees waved over the marshes of the
+Macquarie, but were not observed to the westward of them for many miles;
+yet they re-appeared upon the banks of New-Year's Creek as suddenly as
+they had disappeared after we left the marshes, and grew along the line
+of the Darling to unusual size. But it is remarkable, that, even in the
+midst of the marshes, the blue-gum trees were strictly confined to the
+immediate flooded spaces on which the reeds prevailed, or to the very beds
+of the water-courses. Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach
+of flood, the box (unnamed) alone occupied it; and, though the branches of
+these trees might be interwoven together, the one never left its wet and
+reedy bed, the other never descended from its more elevated position. The
+same singular distinction marked the acacia pendula, when it ceased to
+cover the interior plains of light earth, and was succeeded by another
+shrub of the same species. It continued to the banks of New-Year's Creek,
+a part of which it thickly lined. To the westward of the creek, another
+species of acacia was remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like the
+blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together, but the creek formed
+the line of separation between them. The acacia pendula was not afterwards
+seen, but that which had taken its place, as it were, was found to cover
+large tracts of country and to form extensive brushes. Many other
+peculiarities in the vegetation of the interior are noticed in the body
+of this work, but I have thought that these more striking ones deserved
+to be particularly remarked upon.
+
+GEOLOGICAL FEATURES.
+
+If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington Valley, we shall
+find that little change takes place in the geological features of the
+country. The sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges is
+composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York, and at Cox's River is
+succeeded by grey granite. The secondary ranges to the N.W. of Bathurst,
+are wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are partial changes
+of strata between Bathurst and Moulong Plains, granite is undoubtedly the
+rock upon which the whole are based: but at Moulong Plains, a military
+station intermediate between Bathurst and Wellington Valley, limestone
+appears in the bed of a small clear stream, and with little interruption
+continues to some distance below the last-mentioned place. The accidental
+discovery of some caves at Moulong Plains, led to the more critical
+examination of the whole formation, and cavities of considerable size were
+subsequently found in various parts of it, but more particularly in the
+neighbourhood of Wellington Valley. The local interest which has of late
+years been taken in the prosecution of geological investigations, led many
+gentlemen to examine the contents of these caverns; and among the most
+forward, Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, must justly be considered,
+to whose indefatigable perseverance the scientific world is already so
+much indebted.
+
+The caves into which I penetrated, did not present anything particular to
+my observation; they differed little from caves of a similar description
+into which I had penetrated in Europe. Large masses of stalactites hung
+from their roofs, and a corresponding formation encrusted their floors.
+They comprised various chambers or compartments, the most remote of which
+terminated at a deep chasm that was full of water. A close examination of
+these caves has led to the discovery of some organic remains, bones of
+various animals embedded in a light red soil; but I am not aware that the
+remains of any extinct species have been found, or that any fossils have
+been met with in the limestone itself. There can, however, be little doubt
+but that the same causes operated in depositing these mouldering remains
+in the caves of Kirkdale and those of Wellington Valley.
+
+About twenty miles below the junction of the Bell with the Macquarie,
+free-stone supersedes the limestone, but as the country falls rapidly from
+that point, it soon disappears, and the traveller enters upon a flat
+country of successive terraces. A schorl rock, of a blue colour and fine
+grain, composed of tourmaline and quartz, forms the bed of the Macquarie
+at the Cataract; and, in immediate contact with it, a mass of mica slate
+of alternate rose, pink, and white, was observed, which must have been
+covered by the waters of the river when Mr. Oxley descended it.
+
+From the Cataract of the Macquarie, a flat extends to the marshes in which
+that river exhausts itself. From the midst of this flat Mount Foster and
+Mount Harris rise, both of which are porphyritic: but as I have been
+particular in describing these heights in their proper place, any minute
+notice of them here may be considered unnecessary. We will rather extend
+our enquiries to those parts of the colony upon which we shall not be
+called upon to remark in the succeeding pages.
+
+Returning to the coast, we may mark the geological changes in a line to
+the S.W. of Sydney; and as my object is to extend the information of my
+readers, I shall notice any particular district on either side of the line
+I propose to touch upon, which may be worthy of notice. It would appear
+that the first decided break in the sandstone formation which penetrates
+into the county of Camden, is at Mittagong Range. It is there traversed by
+a dike of whinstone, of which that range is wholly composed. The change of
+soil and of vegetation are equally remarkable at this place; the one being
+a rich, greasy, chocolate-coloured earth, the other partaking greatly of
+the intertropical character. In wandering over them, I noticed the wild
+fig and the cherry-tree, growing to a much larger size than I had seen
+them in any other part of the colony. Upon their branches, the satin bird,
+the gangan, and various kinds of pigeons were feeding. Birds unknown to
+the eastward of the Blue Mountains, were numerous in the valleys; and
+there was an unusual appearance of freshness and moisture in the
+vegetation.
+
+These signs of improvement, however, vanish the moment Mittagong range is
+crossed, and sand-stone again forms the basis of the country to a
+considerable distance beyond Bong-bong. At a small farm called the
+Ploughed Ground, it is again traversed by a dike of whinstone, and a rich
+but isolated spot is thus passed over. With occasional and partial
+interruption, however, the sand-stone formation continues to an abrupt
+pass, from which the traveller descends to the county of Argyle. This pass
+is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I have
+noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. A small but lively stream,
+called Paddy's River, runs at the bottom of this pass, and immediately to
+the S.W. of it, an open forest country of granite base extends for many
+miles, on which the eucalyptus manifera is prevalent, and which affords
+the best grazing tracts in Argyle. At Goulburn Plains, however, a vein of
+limestone occurs, which is evidently connected with that forming the
+ShoalHaven Gully, which is perhaps the most remarkable geological feature
+in the colony of New South Wales. It is a deep chasm of about a quarter of
+a mile in breadth, and 1200 feet in depth. The country on either side is
+perfectly level, so much so that the traveller approaches almost to its
+very brink before he is aware of his being near so singular an abyss. A
+small rivulet flows through the Gully, and discharges itself into the sea
+at ShoalHaven; but this river is hardly perceptible, from the summit of
+the cliffs forming the sides of the Gully, which are of the boldest and
+most precipitous character. The ground on the summit is full of caves of
+great depth, but there has been a difficulty in examining them, in
+consequence of the violent wind that rushes up them, and extinguishes
+every torch.
+
+The open and grassy forests of Argyle are terminated by another of those
+abrupt sand-stone passes I have just described, and the traveller again
+falls considerably from his former level, previously to his entering on
+Yass Plains, to which this pass is the only inlet.
+
+From Yass Plains the view to the S. and S.W. is over a lofty and broken
+country: mountains with rounded summits, others with towering peaks, and
+others again of lengthened form but sharp spine, characterise the various
+rocks of which they are composed. The ranges decline rapidly from east to
+west, and while on the one hand the country has all the appearance of
+increasing height, on the other it sinks to a dead level; nor on the
+distant horizon to the N. W. is there a hill or an inequality to be seen.
+
+From Yass Plains to the very commencement of the level interior, every
+range I crossed presented a new rock-formation; serpentine quartz in
+huge white masses, granite, chlorite, micaceous schist, sandstone,
+chalcedony, quartz, and red jasper, and conglomerate rocks.
+
+It was however, out of my power, in so hurried a journey as that which I
+performed down the banks of the Morumbidgee River, to examine with the
+accuracy I could have wished, either the immediate connection between
+these rocks or their gradual change from the one to the other. I was
+content to ascertain their actual succession, and to note the general
+outlines of the ranges; but the defect of vision under which I labour,
+prevents me from laying them before the public.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE SOIL CONNECTED WITH GEOLOGICAL FORMATION.
+
+From what has been advanced, however, it will appear that the physical
+structure of the southern parts of the colony is as varied, as that of the
+western interior is monotonous, and we may now pursue our original
+observations on the soil of the colony with greater confidence.
+
+In endeavouring to account for the poverty of the soil in New South Wales,
+and in attributing it in a great degree to the causes already mentioned,
+it appears necessary to estimate more specifically the influence which the
+geological formation of a country exercises on its soil, and how much the
+quality of the latter partakes of the character of the rock on which it
+reposes. And although I find it extremely difficult to explain myself as
+I should wish to do, in the critical discussion on which I have thus
+entered, yet as it is material to the elucidation of an important subject
+in the body of the work, I feel it incumbent on me to proceed to the best
+of my ability.
+
+I have said that the soil of a country depends much upon its geological
+formation. This appears to be particularly the case in those parts of the
+colony with which I am acquainted, or those lying between the parallels of
+30 degrees and 35 degrees south. Sandstone, porphyry, and granite,
+succeed each other from the coast to a very considerable distance into the
+interior, on a N. W. line. The light ferruginous dust that is distributed
+over the county of Cumberland, and which annoys the traveller by its
+extreme minuteness, to the eastward of the Blue Mountains, is as different
+from the coarse gravelly soil on the secondary ranges to the westward of
+them, as the barren scrubs and thickly-wooded tracts of the former
+district are to the grassy and open forests of the latter.
+
+As soon as I began to descend to the westward it became necessary to pay
+strict and earnest attention to the features of the country through which
+I passed, in order to determine more accurately the different appearances
+which, as I was led to expect, the rivers would assume. In the course of
+my examination I found, first, that the broken country through which I
+travelled, was generally covered with a loose, coarse, and sandy soil;
+and, secondly, that the ranges were wholly deficient in that peat
+formation which fills the valleys, or covers the flat summits of the hills
+or mountains, in the northern hemisphere. The peculiar property of this
+formation is to retain water like a sponge; and to this property the
+regular and constant flow of the rivers descending from such hills, may,
+in a great measure, be attributed. In New South Wales on the contrary, the
+rains that fall upon the mountains drain rapidly through a coarse and
+superficial soil, and pour down their sides without a moment's
+interruption. The consequence is that on such occasions the rivers are
+subject to great and sudden rises, whereas they have scarcely water enough
+to support a current in ordinary seasons. At one time the traveller will
+find it impracticable to cross them: at another he may do so with ease;
+and only from the remains of debris in the branches of the trees high
+above, can he judge of the furious torrent they must occasionally
+contain.
+
+This seeming deviation on the part of Nature from her usual laws will no
+longer appear such, if we consider its results for a moment. The very
+floods which swell the rivers to overflowing, are followed by the most
+beneficent effects; and, rude and violent as the means are by which she
+accomplishes her purpose, they form, no doubt, a part of that process by
+which she preserves the balance of good and evil. Vast quantities of the
+best soil have been thus washed down from the mountains to accumulate in
+more accessible places. From frequent depositions, a great extent of
+country along the banks of every river and creek has risen high above the
+influence of the floods, and constitutes the richest tracts in the colony.
+The alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury, and the Hunter, are
+striking instances of the truth of these observations; to which the plains
+of O'Connell and Bathurst must be added. The only good soil upon the two
+latter, is in the immediate neighbourhood of the Macquarie River: but,
+even close to its banks, the depositions are of little depth, lying on a
+coarse gravelly soil, the decomposition of the nearer ranges. The former
+is found to diminish in thickness, according to the concavity of the
+valley through which the Macquarie flows, and at length becomes mixed with
+the coarser soil. This deposit is alone fit for agricultural purposes;
+but it does not necessarily follow that the distant country is unavailable
+since it is admitted, that the best grazing tracts are upon the secondary
+ranges of granite and porphyry. These ranges generally have the appearance
+of open forest, and are covered with several kinds of grasses, among which
+the long oat-grass is the most abundant.
+
+COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND.
+
+If we except the valley of the Nepean, the banks of the South Creek, the
+Pennant Hills near Parramatta, and a few other places, the general soil of
+the county of Cumberland, is of the poorest description. It is superficial
+in most places, resting either upon a cold clay, or upon sandstone; and
+is, as I have already remarked, a ferruginous compound of the finest dust.
+Yet there are many places upon its surface, (hollows for instance,) in
+which vegetable decay has accumulated, or valleys, into which it has been
+washed, that are well adapted for the usual purposes of agriculture, and
+would, if the country was more generally cleared, be found to exist to a
+much greater extent than is at present imagined. I have frequently
+observed the isolated patches of better land, when wandering through the
+woods, both on the Parramatta River, and at a greater distance from the
+coast. And I cannot but think, that it would be highly advantageous to
+those who possess large properties in the County of Cumberland to let
+Portions of them. The concentration of people round their capital,
+promotes more than anything else the prosperity of a colony, by creating
+a reciprocal demand for the produce both of the country and the town,
+since the one would necessarily stimulate the energy of the farmer, as the
+other would rouse the enterprise of the merchant. The consideration,
+however, of such a subject is foreign to my present purpose.
+
+It must not be supposed, that because I have given a somewhat particular
+description of the County of Cumberland, I have done so with a view to
+bring it forward as a specimen of the other counties, or to found upon it
+a general description of the colony. It is, in fact, poorer in every
+respect than any tract of land of similar extent in the interior, and is
+still covered with dense forests of heavy timber, excepting when the trees
+have been felled by dint of manual labour, and the ground cleared at an
+expense that nothing but its proximity to the seat of government could
+have justified. But experience has proved, that neither the labour nor the
+the expense have been thrown away. Many valuable farms and extensive
+gardens chequer the face of the country, from which the proprietors
+derive a very efficient income.
+
+COUNTRY WEST OF BLUE MOUNTAINS.
+
+To the westward of the Blue Mountains, the country differs in many
+respects from that lying between those ranges and the coast; and although,
+its aspect varies in different places, three principal features appear
+more immediately to characterise it. These are, first, plains of
+considerable extent wholly destitute of timber; secondly, open undulating
+woodlands; and, thirdly, barren unprofitable tracts. The first almost
+invariably occur in the immediate neighbourhood of some river, as the
+Plains of Bathurst, which are divided by the Macquarie; Goulburn Plains,
+through which the Wallandilly flows; and Yass Plains, which are watered by
+a river of the same name. The open forests, through which the horseman may
+gallop in perfect safety, seem to prevail over the whole secondary ranges
+of granite, and are generally considered as excellent grazing tracts. Such
+is the country in Argyleshire on either side of the Lachlan, where that
+river crosses the great southern road near Mr. Hume's station; such also
+are many parts of Goulburn and the whole extent of country lying between
+Underaliga and the Morumbidgee River. The barren tracts, on the other
+hand, may be said to occupy the central spaces between all the principal
+streams. With regard to the proportion that these different kinds of
+country bear to each other, there can be no doubt of the undue
+preponderance of the last over the first two; but there are nevertheless
+many extensive available tracts in every part of the colony.
+
+MEANS OF INLAND TRANSPORT.
+
+The greatest disadvantage under which New South Wales labours, is the want
+of means for conveying inland produce to the market, or to the coast. The
+Blue Mountains are in this respect a serious bar to the internal
+prosperity of the colony. By this time, however, a magnificent
+road will have been completed across them to the westward, over parts of
+which I travelled in 1831. Indeed the efforts of the colonial government
+have been wisely directed, not only to the construction of this road,
+which the late Governor, General Darling commenced, but also in
+facilitating the communication to the southern districts, by an almost
+equally fine road over the Razor Back Range, near the Cow Pastures; so
+that as far as it is possible for human efforts to overcome natural
+obstacles, the wisdom and foresight of the executive have ere this been
+successful.
+
+DISADVANTAGES OF DISTANT SETTLERS.
+
+The majority of the settlers in the Bathurst country, and in the more
+remote interior, are woolgrowers; and as they send their produce to the
+market only once a year, receiving supplies for home consumption, on the
+return of their drays or carts from thence, the inconvenience of bad
+roads is not so much felt by them. But to an agriculturist a residence to
+the westward of the Blue Mountains is decidedly objectionable, unless he
+possess the means with which to procure the more immediate necessaries of
+life, otherwise than by the sale of his grain or other produce, and can be
+satisfied to cultivate his property for home consumption, or for the
+casual wants of his neighbours. Under such circumstances, a man with a
+small private income would enjoy every rational comfort. But of course,
+not only in consequence of the loss of labour, but the chance of accidents
+during a long journey, the more the distance is increased from Sydney, as
+the only place at which the absolute necessaries of life can be purchased,
+the greater becomes the objection to a residence in such a part of the
+country; and on this account it is, that although some beautiful locations
+both as to extent and richness, are to be found to the westward of
+Bathurst, equally on the Bell, the Macquarie and the Lachlan, it is not
+probable they will be taken up for many years, or will only be occupied as
+distant stock stations.
+
+CHARACTER OF EASTERN COAST.
+
+Since, therefore, it appears from what has been advanced, that it is not
+to the westward the views of any settlers should he directed, excepting
+under particular circumstances, it remains for us to consider what other
+parts of the colony hold out, or appear to hold out, greater advantages.
+The eye naturally turns to the south on the one hand, and to
+Port Macquarie northerly on the other. It is to be remarked that the
+eastern shores of Australia partake of the same barren character that
+marks the other three. it is generally bounded to a certain extent by a
+sandy and sterile tract. There are, however, breaks in so prolonged a
+line, as might have been expected, where, from particular local causes,
+both the soil and vegetation are of a superior kind. At Illawarra for
+instance, the contiguity of the mountains to the coast leaves no room for
+the sandy belt we have noticed, but the debris from them reaches to the
+very shore. Whether from reflected heat, or from some other peculiarity of
+situation, the vegetation of Illawarra is of an intertropical character,
+and birds that are strangers to the county of Cumberland frequent its
+thickets. There is no part of Australia where the feathered race are more
+beautiful, or more diversified. The most splendid pigeon, perhaps, that
+the world produces, and the satin bird, with its lovely eye, feed there
+upon the berries of the ficus (wild fig,) and other trees: and a numerous
+tribe of the accipitrine class soar over its dense and spacious forests.
+
+PORT MACQUARIE AND FIVE ISLANDS.
+
+We again see a break in the sandy line of the coast at Broken Bay, at
+Newcastle, and still further north at Port Macquarie; at which places the
+Hawkesbury, the Hunter, and the Hastings severally debouche. Of Port
+Macquarie, as a place of settlement, I entertain a very high opinion, in
+consequence of its being situated under a most favourable parallel
+latitude. I am convinced it holds out many substantial advantages. One of
+the most important of these is the circumstance of its having been much
+improved when occupied as a penal settlement. And since the shores of the
+colony are how navigated by steam-boats, the facility of water
+communication would be proportionably great.
+
+I believe the Five Islands or Illawarr district is considered peculiarly
+eligible for small settlers. The great drawback to this place is the
+heavy character of its timber and the closeness of its thickets, which vie
+almost with the American woods in those respects. The return, however, is
+adequate to the labour required in clearing the ground. Between the Five
+Islands and Sydney, a constant intercourse is kept up by numerous small
+craft; and a communication with the interior, by branch roads from the
+great southern line to the coast, would necessarily be thrown open, if the
+more distant parts of it were sufficiently peopled.
+
+RICH TRACTS IN THE INTERIOR.
+
+Recent surveys have discovered to us rich and extensive tracts in the
+remote interior between Jervis Bay and Bateman's Bay, and southwards upon
+the western slope of the dividing range. The account given by Messrs.
+Hovel and Hume is sufficient to prove that every valley they crossed was
+worthy of notice, and that the several rivers they forded were flanked by
+rich and extensive flats.
+
+The distance of Moneroo Plains, and of the Doomot and Morumbidgee Rivers
+from Sydney, alarms the settler, who knows not the value of those
+localities; but men whose experience has taught them to set this obstacle
+at nought, have long depastured their herds on the banks of the last two.
+The fattest cattle that supply the Sydney market are fed upon the rich
+flats, and in the grassy valleys of the Morumbidgee; and there are several
+beautiful farms upon those of the Doomot. Generally speaking, the persons
+who reside in those distant parts, pay little attention to the comfort of
+their dwellings, or to the raising of more grain than their establishments
+may require; but there can be no doubt this part of the interior ought to
+be the granary of New South Wales; its climate and greater humidity being
+more favourable than that of Sydney for the production of wheat.
+
+PERIODICAL DROUGHTS; THE SEASONS AFFECTED BY THE MARSHES.
+
+The most serious disadvantages under which the colony of New South Wales
+labours, is in the drought to which it is periodically subject. Its
+climate may be said to be too dry; in other respects it is one of the most
+delightful under heaven; and experience of the certainty of the recurrence
+of the trying seasons to which I allude, should teach men to provide
+against their effects. Those seasons, during which no rain falls, appear,
+from the observations of former writers, to occur every ten or twelve
+years; and it is somewhat singular that no cause has been assigned for
+such periodical visitations. Whether the state of the interior has
+anything to do with them, and whether the wet or dry condition of the
+marshes at all regulate the seasons, is a question upon which I will not
+venture to give my decisive opinion. But most assuredly, when the interior
+is dry, the seasons are dry, and VICE VERSA. Indeed, not only is this the
+case, but rains, from excessive duration in the first year after a
+drought, decrease gradually year after year, until they wholly cease for a
+time. It seems not improbable, therefore, that the state of the interior
+does, in some measure, regulate the fall of rain upon the eastern ranges,
+which appears to decrease in quantity yearly as the marshes become
+exhausted, and cease altogether, when they no longer contain any water. A
+drought will naturally follow until such time as the air becomes
+surcharged with clouds or vapour from the ocean, which being no longer
+able to sustain their own weight, descend upon the mountains, and being
+conveyed by hundreds of streams into the western lowlands, again fill the
+marshes, and cause the recurrence of regular seasons.
+
+TEMPERATURE OF THE CLIMATE.
+
+The thermometer ranges during the summer months, that is, from September
+to March, from 36 degrees to 106 degrees of Fahrenheit, but the mean
+of the temperature during the above period is 70 degrees. The instrument
+in the winter months ranges from 27 degrees to 98 degrees, with a mean of
+66 degrees. However great the summer heat may appear, it is certain that
+the climate of New South Wales has not the relaxing and enfeebling effect
+upon the constitution, which renders a residence in India or other parts
+of the south so intolerable. Neither are any of the ordinary occupations
+of business or of pleasure laid aside at noon, or during the hottest part
+of the day. The traveller may cast himself at length under the first tree
+that invites him, and repose there as safely as if he were in a palace.
+Fearless of damps, and unmolested by noxious insects, his sleep is as
+sound as it is refreshing, and he rises with renewed spirits to pursue his
+journey. Equally so may the ploughman or the labourer seek repose beside
+his team, and allow them to graze quietly around him. The delicious
+coolness of the morning and the mild temperature of the evening air, in
+that luxurious climate, are beyond the power of description. It appears to
+have an influence on the very animals, the horses and the cattle being
+particularly docile; and I cannot but think it is is some degree the same
+happy effect upon some of the hardened human beings who are sent thither
+from the old world.
+
+FRUITS.
+
+As I have before observed, it has not yet been discovered whether there
+are any indigenous fruits of any value in Australia. In the colony of New
+South Wales there certainly are none; yet the climate is peculiarly
+adapted for the growth of every European and of many tropical productions.
+The orange, the fig, the citron, the pomegranate, the peach, the apple,
+the guava, the nectarine, the pear, and the loquette, grow side by side
+together. The plantain throws its broad leaves over the water, the vine
+encircles the cottages, and the market of Sydney is abundantly supplied
+with every culinary vegetable.
+
+In a climate, therefore, so soft that man scarcely requires a dwelling,
+and so enchanting that few have left it but with regret, the spirits must
+necessarily be acted upon,--and the heart feel lighter. Such, indeed, I
+have myself found to be the case; nor have I ever been happier than when
+roving through the woods or wandering along one of the silent and
+beautiful bays for which the harbour of Port Jackson is so celebrated. I
+went to New South Wales as I have already remarked, highly prejudiced
+against it, both from the nature of the service, and the character of the
+great body of its inhabitants. My regiment has since quitted its shores,
+but I am aware there are few of them who would not gladly return. The
+feeling I have in its favour arises not, therefore, from the services in
+which I was employed, but from circumstances in the colony itself; and I
+yet hope to form one of its community and to join a number of valuable and
+warm-hearted friends whom I left in that distant part of the world.
+
+REMARKS ON EMIGRATION.
+
+On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any
+length. My object in these preliminary remarks has been to give the reader
+a general idea of the country, in the interior recesses of which I am
+about to lead him. Still, however, it may be useful to offer a few general
+observations on a topic which has, of late years, become so interesting to
+the British public.
+
+The main consideration with those who, possessing some capital, propose to
+emigrate as the means of improving their condition, is, the society likely
+to he found in the land fixed on for their future residence. One of the
+first questions I have been asked, when conversing on the subject of
+emigration, has consequently related to this important matter. I had only
+then to observe in reply, that the civil and military establishments in
+New South Wales, form the elements of as good society as it is the lot of
+the majority to command in Great Britain.
+
+The houses of the settlers are not scattered over a greater surface than
+the residences of country gentlemen here, and if they cannot vie with them
+in size, they most assuredly do in many other more important respects; and
+if a substantial cottage of brick or stone has any claim to the rank of a
+tenantable mansion, there are few of them which do not posses all the
+means of exercising that hospitality for which young communities are
+remarkable.
+
+But to sever the links of kindred, and to abandon the homes of our fathers
+after years of happy tranquillity, is a sacrifice the magnitude of which
+is unquestionable. The feelings by which men are influenced under such
+circumstances have a claim to our respect. Indeed, no class of persons can
+have a stronger hold upon our sympathies than those whom unmerited adverse
+fortune obliges to seek a home in a distant country.
+
+Far, therefore, be it from me to dispute a single expression of regret to
+which they may give utterance. It must, however, he remembered that the
+deepest feelings of anguish are providentially alleviated in time. Our
+heaviest misfortunes are frequently repaired by industry and caution. The
+sky clears up, as it were: new interests engage the attention, and the
+cares of a family or the improvement of a newly acquired property engross
+those moments which would otherwise be spent in vain and unprofitable
+regrets.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF IMMIGRANTS; MOST LIKELY TO PROSPER.
+
+It cannot be doubted that persons such as I have described, whose conduct
+has hitherto been regulated by prudence, and whose main object is to
+provide for their children, are the most valuable members of every
+community, whether young or old. To such men few countries hold out
+greater prospects of success than New South Wales; for the more we extend
+our enquiries, the more we shall find that the success of the emigrant in
+that colony depends upon his prudence and foresight rather than on any
+collateral circumstance of climate or soil; and to him who can be
+satisfied with the gradual acquirement of competency, it is the land of
+promise. Blessed with a climate of unparalleled serenity, and of unusual
+freedom from disease, the settler has little external cause of anxiety,
+little apprehension of sickness among his family or domestics, and little
+else to do than to attend to his own immediate interests. I should wish to
+illustrate the observations by two or three instances of their practical
+bearing and tendency.
+
+CASES OF EMIGRANTS; CAUSES OF SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
+
+It was on my return from my second expedition, that I visited
+Lieut. ****** who resides in the southern parts of the colony. The day
+after my arrival, he took me round his property, and explained the various
+improvements he had made, considering the small means with which he had
+commenced. At this part of our conversation, we came within view of his
+house, a substantial weather-board cottage. "I trust," said I, turning
+to him, "you will excuse the question I am about to ask; for your
+frankness emboldens me to propose it, and on your answer much of the
+effect of what you have been saying will depend. In effecting these
+various improvements, and in the building of that house, have you been
+obliged to embarrass yourself, or are they free from incumbrance?"--"Your
+question," he said, "is a reasonable one, and I will answer it with the
+frankness you are kind enough to ascribe to me. I have ever made it a rule
+not to exceed my income. Mrs. ****** bore our first trials with so much
+cheerfulness, and contributed so much to my happiness and my prosperity,
+that I felt myself bound to build her a good house with the first money
+I had to spare." I confess this answer raised my host in my estimation,
+and it was a gratifying proof to me of the success that attends industry
+and perseverance.
+
+But let us look at another case. Mr. *** had a property to the N.W. of
+Sydney, and having considerable funded means when he arrived in the
+colony, he soon put his property into a state of progressive improvement,
+and being in truth an excellent practical farmer, it assumed the
+appearance of regularity and order. Had Mr. *** stopped at this moment,
+he would have been in the enjoyment of affluence and of every rational
+comfort. But instead of exercising prudent rules of hospitality, he gave
+way to the natural generosity of his disposition, entered into expenses he
+could not afford, and was ultimately obliged to part with his estate. Now
+it is deeply to be regretted, that one whose energies and abilities
+particularly fitted him for the life he had chosen, should have failed
+through such conduct; and it is more than probable, that if he had
+commenced with smaller means, and had gradually improved his property, his
+fate would have been very different.
+
+I shall leave these cases without any further comment, convinced as I am,
+that each of them furnishes matter for serious consideration, and that
+they are practical illustrations of the causes of success or failure of
+those who emigrate to the colony of New South Wales. And although I do not
+mean to affirm, that the majority follow Mr. ***'s example, I must venture
+to assert that thoughtlessness--useless expenditure in the first
+instance--waste of time and other circumstances, lead to equally ruinous
+consequences.
+
+MORAL OBJECTIONS TO THE COLONY.
+
+One of the greatest objections which families have to New South Wales, is
+their apprehension of the moral effects that are likely to overwhelm them
+by bad example, and for which no success in life could compensate. In a
+colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of crime
+must of course be great. Yet it falls less under the notice of private
+families than one might at first sight have been led to suppose.
+Drunkenness, as in the mother country, is the besetting sin; but it is
+confined chiefly to the large towns in consequence of the difficulty of
+procuring spirits in the country. There are, no doubt, many incorrigible
+characters sent to settle in the interior, and it is an evil to have these
+men, even for a single day, to break the harmony of a previously well
+regulated establishment, or to injure its future prospects by the
+influence of evil example. They are men who are sent upon trial, from on
+board a newly arrived ship, and they generally terminate their misconduct
+either on the roads or at a penal settlement, being thus happily removed
+from the mass of the prisoners. Frequently, however, men remain for years
+under the same master. They become attached to their occupations, their
+hearts become softened by kindness, and they atone as much as they
+possibly can for previous error.
+
+SYSTEM OF IMMIGRATION RECOMMENDED; ENCOURAGEMENT FOR EMIGRATION.
+
+Still there can be no doubt, but that the evil complained of is
+considerable. It is from this reason, and from my personal knowledge of
+the southern parts of the colony, that I should rejoice to see its flats
+and its valleys filled with an industrious population of a better
+description of farmers. A hope might then be reasonably indulged, that the
+Home Government would not be backward in recognising, and in acting upon
+a principle, the soundness of which has been felt and acknowledged in all
+ages, but the chief difficulty of which rests in its judicious
+application. I allude to a system of emigration. Sure I am that if it were
+well organized, and care were taken to profit by the experience of the
+past in similar attempts, it could not fail to be attended with ultimate
+success. The evils resulting from a surplus population in an old
+community, were never more seriously felt than in Great Britain at the
+present moment. Assuming that the amount of surplus population is
+2,000,000, the excess of labour and competition thus occasioned by
+diminishing profits and wages, creates, it has been said, an indirect tax
+to the enormous extent of 20,000,000 pounds per annum. It has appeared
+to many experienced persons, that it is in emigration, we should best find
+the means of relief from this heavy pressure; particularly if the
+individuals encouraged to go out to the colonies were young persons of
+both sexes, from the industrious classes of the community. Even if no
+more than three couples were induced to emigrate from each parish in
+England in ten years, the relief to the springs of industry would be very
+great. Besides, the funds necessary for this purpose would revert to the
+country by a thousand indirect channels. Persons unacquainted with our
+Australian colonies, whether Van Dieman's Land or New South Wales, can
+form little idea of the increasing demand for, and consumption in them of
+every species of British manufacture. The liberal encouragement given by
+government to every practicable scheme of emigration, and the sum advanced
+by it towards the expenses of the voyage to the labouring classes,
+sufficiently indicate the light in which the subject is viewed by the
+legislature; and the fact that no private family taking out servants to
+Sydney, has in any one instance been able to retain them, on account of
+offers more advantageous from other quarters, shows clearly the great
+demand for labour in the colony. If I might judge of the feelings of the
+majority of respectable individuals there, from the assurances of the few,
+they would willingly defray any parochial expenses attendant on the
+voyage, provided the services of such individuals could be secured to them
+for a time sufficiently long to remunerate them for such pavement. The
+tide of emigration should be directed to Sydney, Van Dieman's Land, or
+Western Australia, upon condition of the labourer's receiving a certain
+sum in wages, and his daily subsistence from his employer, with an
+understanding, however, that he must consider himself bound for two years
+to such employer. Surely there are hundreds of our indigent countrymen,
+who would gladly seek a land of such plenty, and cast away the natural,
+but unavailing regret of leaving home to secure to themselves and their
+families, the substantial comforts of life on such easy conditions.
+
+COMMITTEE FOUND AT SYDNEY.
+
+It is not, perhaps, generally known that a committee has been formed in
+Sydney, to advise settlers as to the best mode of proceeding on arrival
+there. Such a plan is one of obvious utility; and if those who may find
+themselves at a loss for information would apply to this committee for
+advice, rather than to individuals with whom they may become casually
+acquainted, they would further their own interests, and in all probability
+ensure success. Still there are some broad rules upon which every man
+ought to act, which I shall endeavour to point out, and it will give me no
+ordinary satisfaction, if I should be the means of directing any one to
+the road of prosperity and comfort.
+
+HINTS TO EMIGRANTS.
+
+It is to be feared that those who emigrate to New South Wales, generally
+anticipate too great facility in their future operations and certainty of
+success in conducting them; but they should recollect that competency
+cannot be obtained without labour. Every trade--every profession in this
+respect, is subject to the same law--the lawyer, the physician, the
+tradesman, and the mechanic. This labour is required at our hands, even in
+an old community; how much more then is it called for in a new, where the
+ingenuity of men is put to trial to secure those means of accomplishing
+their ends which here are abundant. Now, it appears to me but consistent,
+that he who is obliged to leave his native country from want of means to
+hold his station there, can hardly expect to find, or rather to secure,
+abundance elsewhere without some exertion. Every man who emigrates should
+proceed with a conviction on his mind, that he is about to encounter years
+of labour and privation. He will not then be disappointed at partial
+reverses, and will be more thankful for unexpected prosperity. I feel
+persuaded the tone of mind has a great deal to do with success, because it
+influences the conduct of the individual. Supposing, however, that an
+emigrant has taken this rational view of his situation, he should
+determine on his pursuits, and allow nothing but absolute certainty of
+better fortune to turn him aside. Men, however, landing at Sydney, in
+their eagerness for information get bewildered, give up their original
+plans, adopt new and uncertain speculations, trifle away both their time
+and their money, and ultimately ruin themselves. An individual who goes to
+New South Wales for the purpose of settling, should not remain in Sydney
+a day longer than is necessary for the arrangement of his affairs. Every
+shilling spent there is thrown away. The greatest facility is given by the
+different departments of the Colonial Government to the settlers; and it
+is entirely his own fault if he trifles away his time in search of
+information elsewhere than at the fountainhead, or if he trusts to any
+other opinion than his own, supposing him experienced as to the quality of
+the land he may fix upon. Let him be speedy in his selection, and fix
+himself upon his allotment as soon as possible. Instead of overstocking
+his farm, or employing more labourers than he can afford to keep, let him
+be satisfied with a gradual increase of his stock, and wait patiently till
+he can better afford to employ labour; above all, let him avoid
+embarrassing himself by the purchase of any superfluous or unnecessary
+comfort. I consider that man has already failed, who runs into debt in the
+first instance, or who exhausts his means in the purchase of large herds,
+from the vain expectation that their increase will clear him. The time was
+when those idle speculations were occasionally attended with success, but
+such is not now the case. The energies of the agriculturist are directed
+to their proper channel, and if the few are unable to make rapid fortunes,
+the many have escaped inevitable ruin. No farm in a state of nature can be
+expected to yield any return of consequence for the first year. It is
+incumbent on a settler to provide for his establishment, or to retain the
+means of providing for it as circumstances may require.
+
+Farming implements are as cheap in Sydney as in England. Horses and cattle
+are cheaper. It requires little, therefore, to stock a farm in a
+reasonable manner. On the other hand, the climate is so mild that the want
+of a house is scarcely felt, and a temporary residence easily constructed.
+On the whole I am convinced, that a man who regulates his conduct by
+prudence, and who perseveringly follows up his occupations, who behaves
+with kindness to those around him, and performs his social and moral
+duties with punctuality, will ultimately secure to himself a home that
+will make up for the one he has quitted in the land of his fathers, and
+place him in as respectable and as happy a situation as that which he
+there enjoyed.
+
+
+*****
+
+
+PROGRESS OF INLAND DISCOVERY.
+
+Having thrown out the foregoing remarks for the information of the general
+reader, and of persons who look to Australia with the more earnest views
+of selecting a colonial home, I now return to the immediate object of
+these volumes; but before entering on the narrative of my own expeditions,
+I think it necessary to advert cursorily to the discoveries previously
+accomplished.
+
+The journeys of Mr. Oxley, far into the western interior of Australia,
+gave rise to various and conflicting opinions as to the character of the
+more central parts of that extensive continent, of which the colony of New
+South Wales forms but a small portion. I feel, therefore, called upon
+briefly to advert to the conclusions which that able and intelligent
+officer drew from his personal observation of the country into which he
+penetrated, as an acquaintance with his opinions will not only tend to
+throw a clearer light on the following details, but will, also, convey
+much necessary information to those of my readers who may not have
+perused his journals. It is necessary, however, in order to divest the
+subject of all obscureness, to trace, in the first instance, the progress
+of inland discovery, in New South Wales, from the first foundation of the
+colony to the period when Mr. Oxley's exertions attracted the public
+attention.
+
+In the year 1788, the British Government took formal possession of the
+eastern coast of Australia, by the establishment of a penal colony at Port
+Jackson. The first settlers, under Governor Phillips, had too many
+difficulties to contend with to submit themselves to be thwarted from
+pursuits essential to their immediate safety and comfort, by the prospect
+of remote and uncertain advantages. It was by perseverance and toil alone
+that they first established and ultimately spread themselves over that
+part of the territory, which, flanked by the ocean on the one hand, and
+embraced as it were by the Nepean River on the other, is now entitled the
+County Of Cumberland. For many years, this single district supplied the
+wants of the settlers. Upon it they found ample pasture for their herds,
+and sufficient employment for themselves. Nor was it until a succession of
+untoward seasons, and the rapid increase of their stock pointed out to
+them the necessity of seeking for more extensive pasturage, that they
+contemplated surmounting that dark and rugged chain of mountains, which,
+like the natural ramparts of Spain and Italy, rose high over the nether
+forest, and broke the line of the western horizon.
+
+MR. CALEY'S ATTEMPT.
+
+A Mr. Caley is said to have been the first who attempted to scale the Blue
+Mountains: but he did not long persevere in struggling with difficulties
+too great for ordinary resolution to overcome. It appears that he retraced
+his steps, after having penetrated about sixteen miles into their dark and
+precipitous recesses; and a heap of stones, which the traveller passes
+about that distance from Erne Ford, on the road to Bathurst, marks the
+extreme point reached by the first expedition to the westward of the
+Nepean river.
+
+LIEUT. LAWSON'S EXPEDITION.
+
+Shortly after the failure of this expedition, the sad effects of a long
+protracted drought called forth a more general spirit of enterprise and
+exertion among the settlers; and Mr. Oxley makes honorable mention of the
+perseverance and resolution with which Lieut. Lawson, of the 104th
+regiment, accompanied by Messrs. Blaxland and Wentworth, conducted an
+expedition into the Blue Mountains. Their efforts were successful: and
+the objects of their enterprise would have been completely attained, but
+for the failure of their provisions at a moment when their view of the
+distant interior was such as to convince them that they had overcome the
+most formidable obstacles to their advance, and that in their further
+progress few impediments would have presented themselves.
+
+MR. EVANS' DISCOVERIES.
+
+The success of this undertaking induced Governor Macquarie to further the
+prosecution of inland discovery, and of attempts to ascertain the nature
+of the country of which Mr. Lawson only obtained a glimpse. An expedition
+was accordingly dispatched under Mr. Evans, the Deputy Surveyor-General,
+to follow the route taken by the former one, and to penetrate as far as
+practicable into the western interior. The result was the discovery of the
+Macquarie river, and of Bathurst Plains. The report of Mr. Evans was so
+favourable, that orders were immediately issued for the construction of a
+line of road across the mountains. When that was completed, the Governor
+went in person to fix the site of a future town on Bathurst Plains. From
+thence Mr. Evans, who accompanied the Governor on the occasion, was
+directed to proceed to the southward and westward, to ascertain the nature
+of the country in that direction. He discovered another considerable
+river, flowing, like the Macquarie, to the west, to which he gave the name
+of the Lachlan. The promising appearance of these two streams, and the
+expectation of all parties that they would be found to water rich and
+extensive tracts of country, led to the fitting out of a more important
+expedition than any which had before been contemplated.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S DISCOVERIES.
+
+Mr. Oxley, the Surveyor-General of the Colony, was appointed chief of this
+expedition, and was directed to trace the Lachlan and Macquarie rivers, as
+far as practicable, with a view to ascertain their capabilities and the
+nature of the country they watered. In 1817, Mr. Oxley directed his
+attention to the former river, and continued to follow its windings, until
+it appeared that its waters were lost in successive marshes and it ceased
+to be a river. In the following year he turned towards the Macquarie, and
+traced it, in like manner, until he was checked by high reeds that covered
+an extensive plain before him, amidst which the channel of the river was
+lost.
+
+From what he observed of the country, on both these occasions, he was led
+to infer that beyond the limits of his advance the interior had a uniform
+level, and was, for the most part, uninhabitable and under water. Its
+features must have been strongly marked to have confirmed such an opinion
+in the mind of the late Surveyor-General. It stands recorded on the pages
+of his journal, that he travelled over a country of many miles in extent,
+after clearing the mountains, which so far from presenting any rise of
+ground to the eye, bore unequivocal marks of frequent and extensive
+inundation. He traced two rivers of considerable size, and found that, at
+a great distance from each other, they apparently terminated in marshes,
+and that the country beyond them was low and unbroken. In his progress
+eastward, he crossed a third stream (the Castlereagh), about forty-five
+miles from the Macquarie, seemingly not inferior to it in size,
+originating in the mountains for which he was making, and flowing nearly
+parallel to the other rivers into a level country like that which he had
+just quitted.
+
+DISCOVERIES OF MESSRS. MECHAN, HUME, HOVEL AND CUNNINGHAM.
+
+Mr. Evans, moreover, who accompanied Mr. Oxley on these journeys, and who
+had been detached by his principal from Mount Harris, to ascertain the
+nature of the country in the line which the expedition was next to pursue,
+having crossed the Castlereagh considerably below the place at which the
+party afterwards effected a passage, reported that the river was then
+running through high reeds. The inference naturally drawn by Mr. Oxley,
+was, that it terminated as the Lachlan and the Macquarie had done; and
+that their united waters formed an inland sea or basin. It is evident that
+Mr. Oxley had this impression on his mind, when he turned towards the
+coast; but the wet state of the lowlands prevented him from ascertaining
+its correctness or error. Doubt, consequently, still existed as to the
+nature of the country he had left behind him; a question in which the best
+interests of the colony were apparently involved. Subsequently to these
+discoveries, Mr. Surveyor Mechan, accompanied by Mr. Hamilton Hume, a
+colonist of considerable experience, explored the country more to the
+southward and westward of Sydney, and discovered most of the new country
+called Argyle, and also Lake Bathurst.
+
+Mr. Hume was afterwards associated with a Mr. Hovel, in an excursion to
+the south coast, under the auspices of Sir Thomas Brisbane. After a most
+persevering and laborious journey, they reached the sea; but it is
+uncertain whether they made Port Philips, or Western Port. Mr. Hume, whose
+practical experience will yield to that of no man, entertains a conviction
+that it was to the former they descended from the neighbouring ranges; but
+Mr. Hovel, I believe supports a contrary opinion. In the early stage of
+their journey, they passed over York or Yass Plains; and, after crossing
+the Morumbidgee, were generally entangled among mountain ranges that
+increased in height to the east and south-east. They crossed three
+considerable rivers, falling westerly, which they named the Goulburn, the
+Hume, and the Ovens; and found a beautiful and well-watered country in the
+vicinity of the coast.
+
+In 1826, Mr. Allan Cunningham, Botanical Collector to his late Majesty,
+traversed a considerable portion of the interior to the north of Bathurst,
+and, with a laudable zeal, devoted his labours to the acquisition of
+general information, as well as to his more immediate professional
+pursuits. In 1827, this gentleman again bent his steps towards the
+northward, and succeeded in gaining the 28th parallel of latitude; and,
+on a subsequent occasion, having taken his departure from Moreton Bay, he
+connected his former journey with that settlement, and thus contributed
+largely to our knowledge of the mountain country between it and the
+capital. Mr. Cunningham, who, independently of his individual excursions,
+had not only circumnavigated the Australian Continent with Capt. King,
+but had formed also one of the party with Mr. Oxley, in the journeys
+before noticed, had adopted this gentleman's opinion with regard to the
+swampy and inhospitable character of the distant interior. Its depressed
+appearance from the high ground on which Mr. Cunningham subsequently
+moved, tended to confirm this opinion, which was moreover daily gaining
+strength from the reports of the natives, who became more frequent in
+their intercourse with the whites, and who reported that there were large
+waters to the westward, on which the natives had canoes, and in which
+there were fish of great size.
+
+It became, therefore, a current opinion, that the western interior of New
+Holland comprehended an extensive basin, of which the ocean of reeds which
+had proved so formidable to Mr. Oxley, formed most probably the outskirts;
+and it was generally thought that an expedition proceeding into the
+interior, would encounter marshes of vast extent, which would be extremely
+difficult to turn, and no less dangerous to enter.
+
+It remained to be proved, however, whether these conjectures were founded
+in fact. The chief difficulty lay in the character of the country, and in
+providing the necessary means to ensure success. Those which were resorted
+to will be found in the succeeding chapter. Whether they would have been
+found sufficient and applicable had the interior been wholly under water,
+is doubtful; and my impression on this point induced me to make more
+efficient arrangements on the second expedition.
+
+
+
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER in 1828 and 1829.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+The year 1826 was remarkable for the commencement of one of those fearful
+droughts to which we have reason to believe the climate of New South Wales
+is periodically subject. It continued during the two following years with
+unabated severity. The surface of the earth became so parched up that
+minor vegetation ceased upon it. Culinary herbs were raised with
+difficulty, and crops failed even in the most favourable situations.
+Settlers drove their flocks and herds to distant tracts for pasture and
+water, neither remaining for them in the located districts. The interior
+suffered equally with the coast, and men, at length, began to despond
+under so alarming a visitation. It almost appeared as if the Australian
+sky were never again to be traversed by a cloud.
+
+OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+But, however severe for the colony the seasons had proved, or were likely
+to prove, it was borne in mind at this critical moment, that the wet and
+swampy state of the interior had alone prevented Mr. Oxley from
+penetrating further into it, in 1818. Each successive report from
+Wellington Valley, the most distant settlement to the N. W., confirmed the
+news of the unusually dry state of the lowlands, and of the exhausted
+appearance of the streams falling into them. It was, consequently, hoped
+that an expedition, pursuing the line of the Macquarie, would have a
+greater chance of success than the late Surveyor General had; and that the
+difficulties he had to contend against would be found to be greatly
+diminished, if not altogether removed. The immediate fitting out of an
+expedition was therefore decided upon, for the express purpose of
+ascertaining the nature and extent of that basin into which the Macquarie
+was supposed to fall, and whether any connection existed between it and
+the streams falling westerly. As I had early taken a great interest in the
+geography of New South Wales, the Governor was pleased to appoint me to
+the command of this expedition.
+
+JOURNEY FROM SYDNEY TO EMU PLAINS.
+
+In the month of September, 1828, I received his Excellency's commands to
+prepare for my journey; and by the commencement of November, had organised
+my party, and completed the necessary arrangements. On the 9th of that
+month, I waited on the Governor, at Parramatta, to receive his definitive
+instructions. As the establishments at Sydney had been unable to supply me
+with the necessary number of horses and oxen, instructions had been
+forwarded to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of Wellington Valley, to
+train a certain number for my use; and I was now directed to push for that
+settlement without loss of time. I returned to Sydney in the afternoon of
+the 9th, and on the 10th took leave of my brother officers, to commence a
+journey of very dubious issue; and, in company with my friend,
+Staff-surgeon M'Leod, who had obtained permission to accompany me to the
+limits of the colony, followed my men along the great western road. We
+moved leisurely over the level country, between the coast and the Nepean
+River, and availed ourselves of the kind hospitality of those of our
+friends whose property lay along that line of road, to secure more
+comfortable places of rest than the inns would have afforded.
+
+We reached Sheane, the residence of Dr. Harris, on the 11th, and were
+received by him with the characteristic kindness with which friends or
+strangers are ever welcomed by that gentleman, He had accompanied
+Mr. Oxley as a volunteer in 1818, and his name was then given to the
+mount which formed the extreme point to which the main body of the first
+expedition down the banks of the Macquarie penetrated, in a westerly
+direction.
+
+The general appearance of the property of Dr. Harris, showed how much
+perseverance and labour had effected towards its improvement. Many acres
+of ground bore a promising crop, over which a gloomy forest had once
+waved. The Doctor's farming establishment was as complete as his husbandry
+seemed to be prosperous; but he did not appear to be satisfied with the
+extent of his dwelling, to which he was making considerable additions,
+although I should have thought it large enough for all ordinary purposes
+of residence or hospitality. The rewards of successful industry were
+everywhere visible.
+
+FROM EMU PLAINS TO WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+On the 13th, we gained Regent's Ville, the more splendid mansion of Sir
+John Jamieson, which overlooks the Nepean River, and commands the most
+beautiful and extensive views of the Blue Mountains. Crossing the ford on
+the 14th, we overtook the men as they were toiling up the first ascent of
+those rugged bulwarks, which certainly gave no favourable earnest of the
+road before us; and, as we could scarcely hope to reach the level country
+to the westward without the occurrence of some accident, I determined to
+keep near the drays, that I might be on hand should my presence be
+required. We gained O'Connell's plains on the 20th November, and arrived
+at Bathurst on the 22nd, with no other damage than the loss of one of the
+props supporting the boat which snapped in two as we descended Mount York.
+On examination, it was found that the boat had also received a slight
+contusion, but it admitted of easy repair.
+
+I was detained at Bathurst longer than I intended, in consequence of
+indisposition, and during my stay there experienced many proofs of the
+kind hospitality of the settlers of that promising district: nor was I
+ever more impressed with the importance of the service upon which I was
+employed, or more anxious as to the issue, than while contemplating the
+rapid advance of agriculture upon its plains, and the formidable bar to
+its prosperity which I had left behind me, in the dark and gloomy ranges
+which I had crossed.
+
+On the 27th, Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose experience well qualified him for
+the task, and who had been associated with me in the expedition, having
+joined me, we proceeded on our journey, and reached Wellington Valley
+about the end of the month.
+
+WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+I wished to push into the interior without any delay, or at least, so soon
+as we should have completed our arrangements and organized the party; but,
+although Mr. Maxwell had paid every attention to the training of the
+cattle, he was of opinion that they could not yet be wholly relied upon,
+and strongly recommended that they should be kept at practice for another
+week. As we could not have left the settlement under the most favourable
+circumstances in less than four days, the further delay attendant on this
+measure was considered immaterial, and it was, accordingly, determined
+upon. Mr. Hume undertook to superintend the training of the animals, and
+this left me at leisure to gather such information as would be of use to
+us in our progress down the river.
+
+In his description of Wellington Valley, Mr. Oxley has not done it more
+than justice. It is certainly a beautiful and fertile spot, and it was now
+abundant in pasturage, notwithstanding the unfavourable season that had
+passed over it.
+
+The settlement stands upon the right bank of the Bell, about two miles
+above the junction of that stream with the Macquarie. Its whitewashed
+buildings bore outward testimony to the cleanliness and regularity of the
+inhabitants; and the respectful conduct of the prisoners under his charge,
+showed that Mr. Maxwell had maintained that discipline by which alone he
+could have secured respect to himself and success to his exertions, at
+such a distance from the seat of government.
+
+The weather was so exceedingly hot, during our stay, that it was
+impossible to take exercise at noon; but in the evening, or at an early
+hour in the morning, we were enabled to make short excursions in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+Mr. Maxwell informed me that there were three stations below the
+settlement, the first of which, called Gobawlin, belonging to Mr. Wylde,
+was not more than five miles from it; the other two, occupied by Mr.
+Palmer, were at a greater distance, one being nineteen, the other
+thirty-four miles below the junction of the Bell. He was good enough to
+send for the stockman (or chief herdsman), in charge of the last, to give
+me such information of the nature of the country below him, as he could
+furnish from personal knowledge or from the accounts of the natives.
+
+LOW STATE OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER.
+
+Mr. Maxwell pointed out to me the spot on which Mr. Oxley's boats had been
+built, close upon the bank of the Macquarie; and I could not but reflect
+with some degree of apprehension on the singularly diminished state of the
+river from what it must then have been to allow a boat to pass down it.
+Instead of a broad stream and a rapid current, the stream was confined to
+a narrow space in the centre of the channel, and it ran so feebly amidst
+frequent shallows that it was often scarcely perceptible. The Bell, also,
+which Mr. Oxley describes as dashing and rippling along its pebbly bed,
+had ceased to flow, and consisted merely of a chain of ponds.
+
+On the 3rd of Dec, the stockman from below arrived; but the only
+information we gathered from him was the existence of a lake to the left
+of the river, about three days' journey below the run of his herds, on the
+banks of which he assured us, the native companions, a species of stork,
+stood in rows like companies of soldiers.
+
+He brought up a nest of small paroquets of the most beautiful plumage, as
+a present to Mr. Maxwell, and affirmed that they were common about his
+part of the river. The peculiarity of the seasons had also brought a
+parrot into the valley which had never before visited it. This delicate
+bird was noticed by Captain Cook upon the coast, and is called
+PSITTACUS NOVAE HOLLANDIAE, or New Holland Parrot, by Mr. Brown. It had
+not, however, been subsequently seen until the summer of 1828, when it
+made its appearance at Wellington Valley in considerable numbers, together
+with a species of merops or mountain bee-eater.
+
+DEPARTURE FOR THE INTERIOR.
+
+On the 5th, our preparations being wholly completed, and the loads
+arranged, the party was mustered, and was found to consist of myself and
+Mr. Hume, two soldiers and eight prisoners of the crown, two of whom were
+to return with dispatches. Our animals numbered two riding, and seven
+pack, horses, two draft, and eight pack, bullocks, exclusive of two
+horses of my own, and two for the men to be sent back.
+
+BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+The morning of the 7th December, the day upon which we were to leave the
+valley, was ushered in by a cloudless sky, and that heated appearance in
+the atmosphere which foretells an oppressively sultry day. I therefore put
+off the moment of our departure to the evening, and determined to proceed
+no further than Gobawlin. I was the more readily induced to order this
+short journey because the animals had not been practised to their full
+loads, and I thought they might have given some trouble at starting with
+an unusual weight. They moved off however very quietly, and as if they had
+been accustomed to their work by a long course of training. We took our
+departure from the settlement at 3 p.m. and, crossing to the right bank of
+the Macquarie, a little above its junction with the Bell, reached Mr
+Wylde's station about half-past five. Thus we commenced our journey under
+circumstances as favorable as could have been wished. In disengaging
+ourselves on the following day from the hills by which Wellington Valley
+is encompassed on the westward, with a view to approach Mr. Palmer's first
+station, we kept rather wide of the river, and only occasionally touched
+on its more projecting angles. The soil at a distance from the stream was
+by no means so good as that in its immediate vicinity, nor was the timber
+of the same description. On the rich and picturesque grounds near the
+river the angophora prevailed with the flooded gum, and the scenery upon
+its banks was improved by the casuarinae that overhung them. On the
+latter, inferior eucalypti and cypresses were mixed together. The country
+was broken and undulating, and the hills stony, notwithstanding which,
+they appeared to have an abundance of pasture upon them. Mr. Hume rode
+with me to the summit of a limestone elevation, from which I thought it
+probable we might have obtained such a view as would have enabled us to
+form some idea of the country into which we were about to descend. But in
+following the river line, the eye wandered over a dark and unbroken
+forest alone. The ranges from which we were fast receding formed an
+irregular and beautiful landscape to the southward; and contrasted
+strongly with the appearance of the country to the N. W., in which
+direction it was rapidly assuming a level.
+
+We reached Mr. Palmer's at a late hour in the afternoon, in consequence of
+a delay we experienced in crossing a gully, and encamped upon a high bank
+immediately opposite to the mouth of Molle's rivulet which here joins the
+Macquarie from the southward. The cattle had consumed all the food, and
+the ground on both sides of the river looked bare and arid.
+
+No doubt, however, the face of the country in ordinary seasons wears a
+very different appearance. Its general elevation continued high; nor did
+the Macquarie assume any change of aspect. Mountain debris and rounded
+pebbles of various kinds formed its bed, which was much encumbered with
+timber.
+
+DIBILAMBLE.
+
+We had been unable to persuade any of the natives of Wellington Valley to
+accompany us as guides, on our leaving that settlement. Even Mr. Maxwell's
+influence failed; for, notwithstanding the promises of several, when they
+saw that we were ready to depart, they either feigned sickness or stated
+that they were afraid of the more distant natives. The fact is, that they
+were too lazy to wander far from their own district, and too fond of
+Maxwell's beef to leave it for a precarious bush subsistence. Fortunately
+we found several natives with Mr. Palmer's stockmen, who readily undertook
+to conduct us by the nearest route to the cataract, which we considered to
+be midway between Wellington Valley and Mount Harris. We started under
+their guidance for Dibilamble, Mr. Palmer's second station, and reached it
+about half-past 4 p.m. The distance between the two is sixteen miles. The
+country for some miles differs in no material point from that through
+which we had already passed. The same rich tracts of soil near the river
+and the same inferiority in the tracks remote from it. Near Dibilamble,
+however, the limestone formation terminates, and gives place to barren
+stony ridges, upon which the cypress callities is of close and stunted
+growth. The ridges themselves were formed of a coarse kind of freestone
+in a state of rapid decomposition. The Tabragar (the Erskine of Mr. Oxley)
+falls into the Macquarie at Dibilamble. It had long ceased to flow, being
+a small mountain torrent whose source, if we judge from the shingly nature
+of its bed, cannot be very distant. Our descent was considerable during
+the day; the rapids were frequent in the river, but it underwent no change
+in its general appearance. Its waters were hard and transparent, and its
+banks, in many places, extremely lofty; with a red sandy loam and gravel
+under the alluvial deposits. It generally happened that where the bank was
+high on the one side it was low and subject to flood, to a limited extent
+at least, on the other. Upon these low grounds the blue-gum trees were of
+lofty growth, but on the upper levels box prevailed.
+
+SCENERY NEAR THE RIVER.
+
+The views upon the river were really beautiful, and varied at every turn;
+nor is it possible for any tree to exceed the casuarina in the graceful
+manner in which it bends over the stream, or clings to some solitary rock
+in its centre.
+
+It here became necessary for us to cross to the left bank of the river,
+not only to avoid its numerous windings, and thus to preserve as much as
+possible the direct line to Mount Harris; but also, because the travelling
+was much better on the south side. We therefore availed ourselves of a
+ford opposite to the ground on which the tents had stood; and then pursued
+our journey, in a south-westerly course, over a country of a description
+very inferior to that of any we had previously noticed.
+
+Iron-bark and cypresses generally prevailed along our line of route on a
+poor and sandy soil, which improved after we passed Elizabeth Burn, a
+small creek mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+TAYLOR'S RIVULET.
+
+We approached the river again early in the day, and pitched our tent on
+the summit of a sloping bank that overlooked one of its long still
+reaches. We were protected from the sun by the angophora trees, which
+formed a hanging wood around us, and, with its bright green foliage, gave
+a cheerfulness to the scene that was altogether unusual. The opposite side
+of the river was rather undulated, and the soil appeared to be of the
+finest description. The grass, although growing in tufts, afforded
+abundance of pasture for the cattle; and, on the whole, this struck me as
+a most eligible spot for a station, and I found it occupied as such on the
+return of the expedition. We had encamped about a quarter of a mile from
+Taylor's Rivulet, which discharges itself into the Macquarie from the
+N. E., and is the first stream, upon the right bank, below the Wellington
+Valley.
+
+Immediately after receiving it the river sweeps away to the southward, in
+consequence of which it became again necessary for us to cross it. Our
+guides, who were intelligent lads, led the cattle to a ford, a little
+below the junction of Taylor's Rivulet, at which we effected a passage
+with some difficulty; the opposite bank being very steep, and we were
+obliged to force our way up a gully for some eighty or a hundred yards
+before we could extricate the team. Pursuing our journey, in a N. W.
+direction, we soon left the rich and undulating grounds bordering the
+river behind us. A poor, level, and open country, succeeded them. The
+soil changed to a light red, sandy loam, on which eucalypti, cypresses,
+and casuarinae, were intermixed with minor shrubs; of which latter, the
+cherry tree (exocarpus cupressiformis) was the most prevalent.
+
+At about seven miles from the river we passed some barren freestone
+ridges, near which Mr. Hume killed the first kangaroo we had seen. At
+mid-day we passed a small creek, at which the cattle were watered; and
+afterwards continued our journey through a country similar to that over
+which we had already made our way.
+
+As we neared the stream we noticed the acacia pendula for the first
+time,--an indication of our approach to the marshes. The weather still
+continued extremely hot. Our journey this day was unusually long, and our
+cattle suffered so much, and moved so slowly, that it was late when we
+struck upon the Macquarie, at a part where its banks were so high that we
+had some difficulty in finding a good watering place.
+
+SURPRISE SOME NATIVES.
+
+Being considerably in front of the party, with one of our guides, when we
+neared the river, I came suddenly upon a family of natives. They were much
+terrified, and finding that they could not escape, called vehemently to
+some of their companions, who were in the distance. By the time Mr. Hume
+came up, they had in some measure recovered their presence of mind, but
+availed themselves of the first favourable moment to leave us. I was
+particular in not imposing any restraint on these men, in consequence of
+which they afterwards mustered sufficient resolution to visit us in our
+camp. We now judged that we were about ten miles from the cataract, and
+that, according to the accounts of the stockman, we could not be very
+distant from the lake he had mentioned.
+
+NATIVE BURIAL PLACE.
+
+As I was unwilling to pass any important feature of the country without
+enquiry or examination, I requested Mr. Hume to interrogate the strangers
+on the subject. They stated that they belonged to the lake tribe, that the
+lake was a short day's journey to the eastward, and that they would guide
+us to it if we wished. The matter was accordingly arranged. They left us
+at dusk, but returned to the camp at the earliest dawn; when we once more
+crossed the river, and, after traversing a very level country for about
+nine miles, arrived at our destination. We passed over the dried beds of
+lagoons, and through coppices of cypresses and acacia pendula, or open
+forest, but did not observe any of the barren stony ridges so common to
+the N.E. About a mile, or a mile and a half, from the lake we examined a
+solitary grave that had recently been constructed. It consisted of an
+oblong mound, with three semicircular seats. A walk encompassed the whole,
+from which three others branched off for a few yards only, into the
+forest. Several cypresses, overhanging the grave, were fancifully carved
+on the inner side, and on one the shape of a heart was deeply engraved.
+
+BUDDAH LAKE.
+
+We were sadly disappointed in the appearance of the lake, which the
+natives call the Buddah. It is a serpentine sheet of fresh water, of
+rather more than a mile in length, and from three to four hundred yards in
+breadth. Its depth was four fathoms; but it seemed as if it were now five
+or six feet below the ordinary level. No stream either runs into it or
+flows from it; yet it abounds in fish; from which circumstance I should
+imagine that it originally owed its supply to the river during some
+extensive inundation. Notwithstanding that we had crossed some rich tracts
+of land in our way to it, the neighbourhood of the lake was by no means
+fertile. The trees around it were in rapid decay, and the little
+vegetation to be seen appeared to derive but little advantage from its
+proximity to water.
+
+EXTREME HEAT OF THE WEATHER.
+
+We had started at early dawn; and the heat had become intolerable long ere
+the sun had gained the meridian. It was rendered still more oppressive
+from the want of air in the dense bushes through which we occasionally
+moved. At 2 p.m. the thermometer stood at 129 degrees of Fahrenheit, in
+the shade; and at 149 degrees in the sun; the difference being exactly 20
+degrees. It is not to be wondered at that the cattle suffered, although
+the journey was so short. The sun's rays were too powerful even for the
+natives, who kept as much as possible in the shade. In the evening, when
+the atmosphere was somewhat cooler, we launched the boat upon the lake,
+in order to get some wild fowl and fish; but although we were tolerably
+successful with our guns, we did not take anything with our hooks.
+
+The natives had, in the course of the afternoon, been joined by the rest
+of the tribe, and they now numbered about three and twenty. They were
+rather distant in their manner, and gazed with apparent astonishment at
+the scene that was passing before them.
+
+If there had been other proof wanting, of the lamentably parched and
+exhausted state of the interior, we had on this occasion ample evidence of
+it, and of the fearful severity of the drought under which the country was
+suffering. As soon as the sun dipped under the horizon, hundreds of birds
+came crowding to the border of the lake, to quench the thirst they had
+been unable to allay in the forest. Some were gasping, others almost too
+weak to avoid us, and all were indifferent to the reports of our guns.
+
+CATARACT OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+On leaving the Buddah, eleven only of the natives accompanied us. We
+reached the river again about noon, on a north-half-east course, where it
+had a rocky bed, and continued to journey along it, until we reached the
+cataract at which we halted. We travelled over soil generally inferior to
+that which we had seen on the preceding day, but rich in many places. The
+same kind of timber was observed, but the acacia pendula was more
+prevalent than any other, although near the river the flooded gum and
+Australian apple-tree were of beautiful growth.
+
+It had appeared to me that the waters of the Macquarie had been
+diminishing in volume since our departure from Wellington Valley, and I
+had a favourable opportunity of judging as to the correctness of this
+conclusion at the cataract, where its channel, at all times much
+contracted, was particularly so on the present occasion. So little force
+was there in the current, that I began to entertain doubts how long it
+would continue, more especially when I reflected on the level character of
+the country we had entered, and the fact of the Macquarie not receiving
+any tributary between this point and the marshes. I was in consequence
+led to infer that result, which, though not immediately, eventually took
+place.
+
+As they were treated with kindness, the natives who accompanied us soon
+threw off all reserve, and in the afternoon assembled at the pool below
+the fall to take fish. They went very systematically to work, with short
+spears in their hands that tapered gradually to a point, and sank at once
+under water without splash or noise at a given signal from an elderly man.
+In a short time, one or two rose with the fish they had transfixed; the
+others remained about a minute under water, and then made their
+appearance near the same rock into the crevices of which they had driven
+their prey. Seven fine bream were taken, the whole of which they insisted
+on giving to our men, although I am not aware that any of themselves had
+broken their fast that day. They soon, however, procured a quantity of
+muscles, with which they sat down very contentedly at a fire. My
+barometrical admeasurement gave the cataract an elevation of 680 feet
+above the level of the sea; and my observations placed it in east
+longitude 148 degrees 3 minutes and in latitude 31 degrees 50 minutes
+south.
+
+It became an object with us to gain the right bank of the Macquarie as
+soon as possible; for it was evident that the country to the southward of
+it was much more swampy than it was to the north: but for some distance
+below the cataract, we found it impossible to effect our purpose. The
+rocks composing the bed of the river at the cataract, which are of trapp
+formation, disappeared at about eight miles below it, when the river
+immediately assumed another character. Its banks became of equal height,
+which had not before been the case, and averaged from fifteen to eighteen
+feet. They were composed entirely of alluvial soil, and were higher than
+the highest flood-marks. Its waters appeared to be turbid and deep, and
+its bed was a mixture of sand and clay. The casuarina, which had so often
+been admired by us, entirely disappeared and the channel in many places
+became so narrow as to be completely arched over by gum-trees.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+On the 16th, we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives who joined our
+train after the very necessary ceremonies of an introduction had passed,
+and when added to those who still accompanied us, amounted to fifty-three.
+On this occasion I was riding somewhat in front of the party, when I came
+upon them. They were very different in appearance from those whom we had
+surprised at the river; and from the manner in which I was received, I was
+led to infer that they had been informed of our arrival, and had
+purposely assembled to meet us. I was saluted by an old man, who had
+stationed himself in front of his tribe, and who was their chief. Behind
+him the young men stood in a line, and behind them the warriors were
+seated on the ground.
+
+CONDUCT OF THE NATIVES.
+
+I had a young native with me who had attached himself to our party, and
+who, from his extreme good nature and superior intelligence, was
+considered by us as a first-rate kind of fellow. He explained who and what
+we were, and I was glad to observe that the old chief seemed perfectly
+reconciled to my presence, although he cast many an anxious glance at the
+long train of animals that were approaching. The warriors, I remarked,
+never lifted their eyes from the ground. They were hideously painted with
+red and yellow ochre, and had their weapons at their sides, while their
+countenances were fixed, sullen, and determined. In order to overcome this
+mood, I rode up to them, and, taking a spear from the nearest, gave him
+my gun to examine; a mark of confidence that was not lost upon them, for
+they immediately relaxed from their gravity, and as soon as my party
+arrived, rose up and followed us. That which appeared most to excite their
+surprise, was the motion of the wheels of the boat carriage. The young
+native whom I have noticed above, acted as interpreter, and, by his
+facetious manner, contrived to keep the whole of us in a fit of laughter
+as we moved along. He had been named Botheri by some stockman.
+
+
+In consequence of our wish to cross the river, we kept near it, and
+experienced considerable delay from the frequent marshes that opposed
+themselves to our progress. In one of these we saw a number of ibises and
+spoonbills; and the natives succeeded in killing two or three snakes. Our
+view to the westward was extremely limited; but to the eastward the
+country appeared in some places to expand into plains.
+
+CROSSING OF THE RIVER.
+
+After travelling some miles down the banks of the river, finding that they
+still retained their steep character, we turned back to a place which Mr.
+Hume had observed, and at which he thought we might, with some little
+trouble, cross to the opposite side. And, however objectionable the
+attempt was, we found ourselves obliged to make it. We descended,
+therefore, into the channel of the river, and unloaded the animals and
+boat-carriage. In order to facilitate the ascent of the right bank, some
+of the men were directed to cut steps up it. I was amused to see the
+natives voluntarily assist them; and was surprised when they took up bags
+of flour weighing 100 pounds each, and carried them across the river. We
+were not long in getting the whole of the stores over. The boat was then
+hoisted on the shoulders of the strongest, and deposited on the top of the
+opposite bank; and ropes being afterwards attached to the carriage, it was
+soon drawn up to a place of safety. The natives worked as hard as our own
+people, and that, too, with a cheerfulness for which I was altogether
+unprepared, and which is certainly foreign to their natural habits. We
+pitched our tents as soon as we had effected the passage of the river;
+after which, the men went to bathe, and blacks and whites were mingled
+promiscuously in the stream. I did not observe that the former differed in
+any respect from the natives who frequent the located districts. They were
+generally clean limbed and stout, and some of the young men had pleasing
+intelligent countenances. They lacerate their bodies, inflicting deep
+wounds to raise the flesh, and extract the front teeth like the Bathurst
+tribes; and their weapons are precisely the same. They are certainly a
+merry people, and sit up laughing and talking more than half the night.
+
+BAROMETER BROKEN.
+
+During the removal of the stores my barometer was unfortunately broken,
+and I had often, in the subsequent stages of the journey, occasion to
+regret the accident. I apprehend that the corks in the instrument, placed
+to steady the tube, are too distant from each other in most cases; and
+indeed I fear that barometers as at present constructed, will seldom be
+carried with safety in overland expeditions.
+
+DESERTED BY THE NATIVES.
+
+Nine only of the natives accompanied us on the morning succeeding the day
+in which we crossed the river. Botheri was, however, at the head of them;
+and, as we journeyed along, he informed me that he had been promised a
+wife on his return from acting as our guide, by the chief of the last
+tribe. The excessive heat of the weather obliged us to shorten our
+journey, and we encamped about noon in some scrub after having traversed a
+level country for about eleven miles.
+
+Several considerable plains were noticed to our right, stretching east and
+west, which were generally rich in point of soil; but we passed through
+much brushy land during the day. It was lamentable to see the state of
+vegetation upon the plains from want of moisture. Although the country
+had assumed a level character, and was more open than on the higher
+branches of the Macquarie, the small freestone elevations, backing the
+alluvial tracts near the river, still continued upon our right, though
+much diminished in height, and at a great distance from the banks. They
+seemed to be covered with cypresses and beef-wood, but dwarf-box and the
+acacia pendula prevailed along the plains; while flooded-gum alone
+occupied the lands in the immediate neighbourhood of the stream, which was
+evidently fast diminishing, both in volume and rapidity; its bed, however,
+still continuing to be a mixture of sand and clay.
+
+The cattle found such poor feed around the camp that they strayed away in
+search of better during the night. On such an occasion Botheri and his
+fraternity would have been of real service; but he had decamped at an
+early hour, and had carried off an axe, a tomahawk, and some bacon,
+although I had made him several presents. I was not at all surprised at
+this piece of roguery, since cunning is the natural attribute of a savage;
+but I was provoked at their running away at a moment when I so much
+required their assistance.
+
+Left to ourselves, I found Mr. Hume of the most essential service in
+tracking the animals, and to his perseverance we were indebted for their
+speedy recovery, They had managed to find tolerable feed near a serpentine
+sheet of water, which Mr. Hume thought it would be advisable to examine.
+We directed our course to it as soon as the cattle were loaded, moving
+through bush, and found it to be a very considerable creek that receives a
+part of the superfluous waters of the Macquarie, and distributes them,
+most probably, over the level country to the north. It was much wider than
+the river, being from fifty to sixty yards across, and is resorted to by
+the natives, who procure muscles from its bed in great abundance. We were
+obliged to traverse its eastern bank to its junction with the river, at
+which it fortunately happened to be dry. We had, however, to cut roads
+down both its banks before we could cross it; and, consequently, made but
+a short day's journey. The soil passed over was inferior to the generality
+of soil near the river, but we encamped on a tongue of land on which both
+the flooded-gum and the grass were of luxuriant height. We found a
+quantity of a substance like pipe-clay in the bed of the river, similar to
+that mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+GREAT HEAT.
+
+The heat, which had been excessive at Wellington Valley, increased upon us
+as we advanced into the interior. The thermometer was seldom under 114
+degrees at noon, and rose still higher at 2 p.m. We had no dews at night,
+and consequently the range of the instrument was trifling in the
+twenty-four hours. The country looked bare and scorched, and the plains
+over which we journeyed had large fissures traversing them, so that the
+earth may literally be said to have gasped for moisture. The country,
+which above the cataract had borne the character of open forest, excepting
+on the immediate banks of the river, where its undulations and openness
+gave it a park-like appearance, or where the barren stony ridges prevailed
+below that point, generally exhibited alternately plain and brush, the
+soil on both of which was good. On the former, crested pigeons were
+numerous, several of which were shot. We had likewise procured some of the
+rose-coloured and grey parrots, mentioned by Mr. Oxley, and a small
+paroquet of beautiful plumage; but there was less of variety in the
+feathered race than I expected to find, and most of the other birds we had
+seen were recognised by me as similar to specimens I had procured from
+Melville Island, and were, therefore, most probably birds of passage.
+
+ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AND THE RIVER.
+
+As we neared Mount Harris, the Macquarie became more sluggish in its flow,
+and fell off so much as scarcely to deserve the name of a river. In
+breadth, it averaged from thirty-five to forty-five yards, and in the
+height of its banks, from fifteen to eighteen. Mr. Hume had succeeded in
+taking some fish at one of the stock stations; but if I except those
+speared by the natives, we had since been altogether unsuccessful with the
+hook, a circumstance which I attribute to the lowness of the river itself.
+
+About thirty miles from the cataract the country declines to the north as
+a medium point, and again changes somewhat in its general appearance. To
+the S. and S.W. it appeared level and wooded, while to the N. the plains
+became more frequent, but smaller, and travelling over them was extremely
+dangerous, in consequence of the large fissures by which they were
+traversed. The only trees to be observed were dwarf-box and the acacia
+pendula, both of stunted growth, although flooded-gum still prevailed upon
+the river.
+
+On the 20th we travelled on a N.W. course, and in the early part of the
+day passed over tolerably good soil. It was succeeded by a barren scrub,
+through which we penetrated in the direction of Welcome Rock, a point we
+had seen from one of the Plains and had mistaken for Mount Harris.
+
+ARRIVAL AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+On a nearer approach, however, we observed our error, and corrected it by
+turning more to the left; and we ultimately encamped about a mile to the
+W.S.W. of the latter eminence. On issuing from the scrub we found
+ourselves among reeds and coarse water-grass; and, from the appearance of
+the country, we were led to conclude that we had arrived at a part of the
+interior more than ordinarily subject to overflow.
+
+As soon as the camp was fixed, Mr. Hume and I rode to Mount Harris, over
+ground subject to flood and covered for the most part by the polygonum,
+being too anxious to defer our examination of its neighbourhood even for a
+few hours.
+
+VESTIGES OF MR. OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT.
+
+Nearly ten years had elapsed since Mr. Oxley pitched his tents under the
+smallest of the two hills into which Mount Harris is broken. There was no
+difficulty in hitting upon his position. The trenches that had been cut
+round the tents were still perfect, and the marks of the fire-places
+distinguishable; while the trees in the neighbourhood had been felled,
+and round about them the staves of some casks and a few tent-pegs were
+scattered. Mr. Oxley had selected a place at some distance from the river,
+in consequence of its then swollen state. I looked upon it from the same
+ground, and could not discern the waters in its channel; so much had they
+fallen below their ordinary level. He saw the river when it was
+overflowing its banks; on the present occasion it had scarcely sufficient
+water to support a current. On the summit of the greater eminence, which
+we ascended, there remained the half-burnt planks of a boat, some clenched
+and rusty nails, and an old trunk; but my search for the bottle Mr. Oxley
+had left was unsuccessful.
+
+A reflection naturally arose to my mind on examining these decaying
+vestiges of a former expedition, whether I should be more fortunate than
+the leader of it, and how far I should be enabled to penetrate beyond the
+point which had conquered his perseverance. Only a week before I left
+Sydney I had followed Mr. Oxley to the tomb. A man of uncommon quickness,
+and of great ability, the task of following up his discoveries was not
+less enviable than arduous; but, arrived at that point at which his
+journey may be said to have terminated and mine only to commence, I knew
+not how soon I should be obliged, like him, to retreat from the marshes
+and exhalations of so depressed a country. My eye instinctively turned to
+the North-West, and the view extended over an apparently endless forest.
+I could trace the river line of trees by their superior height; but saw no
+appearance of reeds, save the few that grew on the banks of the stream.
+
+Mount Foster, somewhat higher than Mount Harris, on the opposite side of
+the river, alone broke the line of the horizon to the North N.W. at a
+distance of five miles. From that point all round the compass, the low
+lands spread, like a dark sea, before me; except where a large plain
+stretching from E. to W., and lying to the S.E. broke their monotony;
+and if there was nothing discouraging, there certainly was nothing
+cheering, in the prospect.
+
+ILLNESS OF TWO OF THE MEN.
+
+On our return to the camp, I was vexed to find two of the men, Henwood and
+Williams, with increased inflammation of the eyes, of which they had
+previously been complaining, and I thought it advisable to bleed the
+latter.
+
+In consequence of the indisposition of these men, we remained stationary
+on the 21st, which enabled me to pay a second visit to Mount Harris. On
+ascending the smaller hill, I was surprised to find similar vestiges on
+its summit to those I had noticed on the larger one; in addition to which,
+the rollers still continued on the side of the hill, which had been used
+to get the boat up it. [Mr. Oxley had two boats; one of which he dragged
+to the top of each of these hills, and left them turned bottom upwards,
+buryinq a bottle under the head of the larger boat, which was conveyed to
+the more distant hill.]
+
+Mount Harris is of basaltic formation, but I could not observe any
+columnar regularity in it, although large blocks are exposed above the
+ground. The rock is extremely hard and sonorous.
+
+MOUNT FOSTER AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
+
+We moved leisurely towards Mount Foster, on the 22nd, and arrived opposite
+to it a little before sunset. The country between the two is mostly open,
+or covered only with the acacia pendula and dwarf-box. The soil, although
+an alluvial deposit, is not of the best; nor was vegetation either fresh
+or close upon it. As soon as the party stopped, I crossed the river, and
+lost no time in ascending the hill, being anxious to ascertain if any
+fresh object was visible from its summit, I thought that from an eminence
+so much above the level of the surrounding objects, I might obtain a view
+of the marshes, or of water; but I was wholly disappointed. The view was
+certainly extensive, but it was otherwise unsatisfactory. Again to the
+N.W. the lowlands spread in darkness before me; there were some
+considerable plains beyond the near wood; but the country at the foot of
+the hill appeared open and promising. Although the river line was lost in
+the distance, it was as truly pointed out by the fires of the natives,
+which rose in upright columns into the sky, as if it had been marked by
+the trees upon its banks.
+
+To the eastward, Arbuthnot's range rose high above the line of the
+horizon, bearing nearly due East, distant seventy miles. The following
+sketch of its outlines will convey a better idea of its appearance from
+Mount Foster than any written description.
+
+[small sketch here--not shown in etext]
+
+I stayed on the mount until after sunset, but I could not make out any
+space that at all resembled the formidable barrier I knew we were so
+rapidly approaching. I saw nothing to check our advance, and I therefore
+returned to the camp, to advise with Mr. Hume upon the subject. Not having
+been with me on Mount Foster, he took the opportunity to ascend it on the
+following morning; and on his return concurred with me in opinion, that
+there was no apparent obstacle to our moving onwards. As the men were
+considerably better, I had the less hesitation in closing with the
+marshes. We left our position, intending to travel slowly, and to halt
+early.
+
+The first part of our journey was over rich flats, timbered sufficiently
+to afford a shade, on which the grass was luxuriant; but we were obliged
+to seek more open ground, in consequence of the frequent stumbling of the
+cattle.
+
+We issued, at length, upon a plain, the view across which was as dreary as
+can be imagined; in many places without a tree, save a few old stumps
+left by the natives when they fired the timber, some of which were still
+smoking in different parts of it. Observing some lofty trees at the
+extremity of the plain, we moved towards them, under an impression that
+they indicated the river line. But on this exposed spot the sun's rays
+fell with intense power upon us, and the dust was so minute and
+penetrating, that I soon regretted having left the shady banks of the
+river.
+
+About 2.p.m. we neared the trees for which we had been making, over ground
+evidently formed by alluvial deposition, and were astonished to find that
+reeds alone were growing under the trees as far as the eye could
+penetrate. It appeared that we were still some distance from the river,
+and it was very doubtful how far we might be from water, for which the
+men were anxiously calling. I therefore halted, and sent Fraser into the
+reeds towards some dead trees, on which a number of spoonbills were
+sitting. He found that there was a small lake in the centre of the reeds,
+the resort of numerous wild fowl; but although the men were enabled to
+quench their thirst, we found it impossible to water the animals. We were
+obliged, therefore, to continue our course along the edge of the reeds;
+which in a short time appeared in large masses in front of us, stretching
+into a vast plain upon our right; and it became evident that the whole
+neighbourhood was subject to extensive inundation.
+
+ENCAMP AMIDST REEDS.
+
+I was fearful that the reeds would have checked us; but there was a
+passage between the patches, through which we managed to force our way
+into a deep bight, and fortunately gained the river at the bottom of it
+much sooner than we expected. We were obliged to clear away a space for
+the tents; and thus, although there had been no such appearance from Mount
+Foster, we found ourselves in less than seven hours after leaving it,
+encamped pretty far in that marsh for which we had so anxiously looked
+from its summit, and now trusting to circumstances for safety, upon
+ground on which, in any ordinary state of the river, it would have been
+dangerous to have ventured. Indeed, as it was, our situation was
+sufficiently critical, and would not admit of hesitation on my part.
+
+NATURE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+After the cattle had been turned out, Mr. Hume and I again mounted our
+horses, and proceeded to the westward, with a view to examine the nature
+of the country before us, and to ascertain if it was still practicable to
+move along the river side. For, although it was evident that we had
+arrived at what might strictly be called the marshes of the Macquarie, I
+still thought we might be at some distance from the place where Mr. Oxley
+terminated his journey.
+
+There was no indication in the river to encourage an idea that it would
+speedily terminate; nor, although we were on ground subject to extensive
+inundation, could we be said to have reached the heart of the marshes, as
+the reeds still continued in detached bodies only. We forced a path
+through various portions of them, and passed over ground wholly subject to
+flood, to a distance of about six miles. We then crossed a small rise of
+ground, sufficiently high to have afforded a retreat, had necessity
+obliged us to seek for one; and we shortly afterwards descended on the
+river, unaltered in its appearance, and rather increased than diminished
+in size. A vast plain extended to the N.W., the extremity of which we
+could not discern; though a thick forest formed its northern boundary.
+
+It was evident that this plain had been frequently under water, but it was
+difficult to judge from the marks on the trees to what height the floods
+had risen. The soil was an alluvial deposit, superficially sandy; and many
+shells were scattered over its surface. To the south, the country appeared
+close and low; nor do I think we could have approached the river from that
+side, by reason of the huge belts of reeds that appeared to extend as far
+as the the eye could reach.
+
+MEN ATTACKED WITH OPHTHALMIA.
+
+The approach of night obliged us to return to the camp. On our arrival,
+we found that the state of Henwood and Williams would prevent our stirring
+for a day or two. Not only had they a return of inflammation, but several
+other of the men complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, which
+were dreadfully blood-shot and weak. I was in some measure prepared for a
+relapse in Henwood, as the exposure which he necessarily underwent on the
+plain was sufficient to produce that effect; but I now became apprehensive
+that the affection would run through the party.
+
+Considering our situation in its different bearings, it struck me that the
+men who were to return to Wellington Valley with an account our our
+proceedings for the Governor's information, had been brought as far as
+prudence warranted. There was no fear of their going astray, as long as
+they had the river to guide them; but in the open country which we were to
+all appearance approaching, or amidst fields of reeds, they might wander
+from the track, and irrecoverably lose themselves. I determined,
+therefore, not to risk their safety, but to prepare my dispatches for
+Sydney, and I hoped most anxiously, that ere they were closed, all
+symptoms of disease would have terminated.
+
+In the course of the day, however, Spencer, who was to return with Riley
+to Wellington Valley, became seriously indisposed, and I feared that he
+was attacked with dysentery. Indeed, I should have attributed his illness
+to our situation, but I did not notice any unusual moisture in the
+atmosphere, nor did any fogs rise from the river. I therefore the rather
+attributed it to exposure and change of diet, and treated him accordingly.
+To my satisfaction, when I visited the men late in the evening, I found a
+general improvement in the whole of them. Spencer was considerably
+relieved, and those of the party who had inflammation of the eyes no
+longer felt that painful irritation of which they had before complained.
+I determined, therefore, unless untoward circumstances should prevent it,
+to send Riley and his companion homewards, and to move the party without
+loss of time.
+
+We had not seen any natives for many days, but a few passed the camp on
+the opposite side of the river on the evening of the 25th. They would not,
+however, come to us; but fled into the interior in great apparent alarm.
+
+DEPARTURE OF TWO MEN FOR WELLINGTON.
+
+On the morning of the 26th, the men were sufficiently recovered to pursue
+their journey. Riley and Spencer left us at an early hour; and about
+7 a.m. we pursued a N.N.W. course along the great plain I have noticed,
+starting numberless quails, and many wild turkeys, by the way. Leaving
+that part of the river on which Mr. Hume and I had touched considerably to
+the left, we made for the point of a wood, projecting from the river line
+of trees into the plain. The ground under us was an alluvial deposit, and
+bore all the marks of frequent inundation.
+
+The soil was yielding, blistered, and uneven; and the claws of cray-fish,
+together with numerous small shells, were every where collected in the
+hollows made by the subsiding of the waters, between broad belts of reeds
+and scrubs of polygonum.
+
+CONSULTATION.
+
+On gaining the point of the wood, we found an absolute check put to our
+further progress. We had been moving directly on the great body of the
+marsh, and from the wood it spread in boundless extent before us. It was
+evidently lower than the ground on which we stood; we had therefore, a
+complete view over the whole expanse; and there was a dreariness and
+desolation pervading the scene that strengthened as we gazed upon it.
+Under existing circumstances, it only remained for us either to skirt
+the reeds to the northward, or to turn in again upon the river; and as I
+considered it important to ascertain the direction of the Macquarie at so
+critical and interesting a point, I thought it better to adopt the latter
+measure. We, accordingly, made for the river, and pitched our tents, as at
+the last station, in the midst of reeds.
+
+There were two points at this time, upon which I was extremely anxious.
+The first was as to the course of the river; the second, as to the extent
+of the marshes by which we had been checked, and the practicability of the
+country to the northward.
+
+In advising with Mr. Hume, I proposed launching the boat, as the surest
+means of ascertaining the former, and he, on his part, most readily
+volunteered to examine the marshes, in any direction I should point out.
+It was therefore, arranged, that I should take two men, and a week's
+provision with me in the boat down the river; and that he should proceed
+with a like number of men on an excursion to the northward.
+
+After having given directions as to the regulations of camp during our
+absence, we separated, on the morning of the 26th for the first time, in
+furtherance of the objects each had in view.
+
+BOAT EXCURSION.
+
+In pulling down the river, I found that its channel was at first extremely
+tortuous and irregular, but that it held a general N.W. course, and bore
+much the same appearance as it had done since our descent from Mount
+Foster.
+
+We had a laborious task in lifting the boat over the trunks of trees that
+had fallen into the channel of the river or that had been left by the
+floods, and at length we stove her in upon a sunken log. The injury she
+received was too serious not to require immediate repair; and we,
+therefore, patched her up with a tin plate. This accident occasioned some
+delay, and the morning was consumed without our having made any
+considerable progress. At length, however, we got into a more open
+channel.
+
+The river suddenly increased in breadth to thirty-five or forty-five
+yards, with a depth of from twelve to twenty feet of water. Its banks
+shelved perpendicularly down, and were almost on a level with the surface
+of the stream; and the flood mark was not more than two feet high on the
+reeds by which they were lined. We had hitherto passed under the shade of
+the flooded gum, which still continued on the immediate banks of the
+river; but, the farther we advanced, the more did we find these trees in a
+state of decay, until at length they ceased, or were only rarely met with.
+
+TERMINATION OF THE RIVER.
+
+About 2 p.m. I brought up under a solitary tree, in consequence of heavy
+rain: this was upon the left bank. In the afternoon, however, we again
+pushed forward, and soon lost sight of every other object amidst reeds of
+great height. The channel of the river continued as broad and as deep as
+ever, but the flood mark did not show more than a foot above the banks,
+which were now almost on a level with the water; and the current was so
+sluggish as to be scarcely perceptible. These general appearances
+continued for about three miles, when our course was suddenly, and most
+unexpectedly, checked. The channel, which had promised so well, without
+any change in its breadth or depth, ceased altogether; and whilst we were
+yet lost in astonishment at so abrupt a termination of it, the boat
+grounded. It only remained for us to examine the banks, which we did with
+particular attention. Two creeks were then discovered, so small as
+scarcely to deserve the name, and which would, under ordinary
+circumstances, have been overlooked. The one branched off to the
+north--the other to the west. We were obliged to get out of the boat to
+push up the former, the leeches sticking in numbers to our legs. The creek
+continued for about thirty yards, when it was terminated; and, in order
+fully to satisfy myself of the fact, I walked round the head of it by
+pushing through the reeds. Night coming on, we returned to the tree at
+which we had stopped during the rain, and slept under it. The men cut away
+the reeds, or we should not have had room to move. At 2 a.m. it commenced
+raining, with a heavy storm of thunder and lightning; the boat was
+consequently hauled ashore, and turned over to afford us a temporary
+shelter. The lightning was extremely vivid, and frequently played upon
+the ground, near the firelocks, for more than a quarter of a minute at a
+time.
+
+It is singular, that Mr. Oxley should, under similar circumstances, have
+experienced an equally stormy night, and most probably within a few yards
+of the place on which I had posted myself. Notwithstanding that the
+elements were raging around me, as if to warn me of the danger of my
+situation, my mind turned solely on the singular failure of the river. I
+could not but encourage hopes that this second channel that remained to
+be explored would lead us into an open space again; and as soon as the
+morning dawned we pursued our way to it. In passing some dead trees upon
+the right bank, I stopped to ascend one, that, from an elevation, I might
+survey the marsh, but I found it impossible to trace the river through it.
+The country to the westward was covered with reeds, apparently to the
+distance of seven miles; to the N.W. to a still greater distance; and to
+the north they bounded the horizon.
+
+The whole expanse was level and unbroken, but here and there the reeds
+were higher and darker than at other places, as if they grew near constant
+moisture; but I could see no appearance of water in any body, or of high
+lands beyond the distant forest.
+
+As soon as we arrived at the end of the main channel, we again got out of
+the boat, and in pushing up the smaller one, soon found ourselves under a
+dark arch of reeds. It did not, however, continue more than twenty yards
+when it ceased, and I walked round the head of it as I had done round that
+of the other. We then examined the space between the creeks, where the
+bank receives the force of the current, which I did not doubt had formed
+them by the separation of its eddies. Observing water among the reeds, I
+pushed through them with infinite labour to a considerable distance. The
+soil proved to be a stiff clay; the reeds were closely embodied, and from
+ten to twelve feet high; the waters were in some places ankle deep, and in
+others scarcely covered the surface. They were flowing in different
+points, with greater speed than those of the river, which at once
+convinced me that they were not permanent, but must have lodged in the
+night during which so much rain had fallen. They ultimately appeared to
+flow to the northward, but I found it impossible to follow them, and it
+was not without difficulty that, after having wandered about at every
+point of the compass, I again reached the boat.
+
+CAUSES OF THE FAILURE OF THE RIVER.
+
+The care with which I had noted every change that took place in the
+Macquarie, from Wellington Valley downwards, enabled me, in some measure,
+to account for its present features. I was led to conclude that the waters
+of the river being so small in body, excepting in times of flood, and
+flowing for so many miles through a level country without receiving any
+tributary to support their first impulse, became too sluggish, long ere
+they reached the marshes, to cleave through so formidable a barrier; and
+consequently spread over the surrounding country--whether again to take
+up the character of a river, we had still to determine. Unless, however,
+a decline of country should favour its assuming its original shape, it was
+evident that the Macquarie would not be found to exist beyond this marsh,
+of the nature and extent of which we were still ignorant. The loss of my
+barometer was at this time severely felt by me, since I could only guess
+at our probable height above the ocean; and I found that my only course
+was to endeavour to force my way to the northward, to ascertain, if I
+could, from the bottom of the marshes; then penetrate in a westerly
+direction beyond them, in order to commence my survey of the S.W.
+interior. I was aware of Mr. Hume's perseverance, and determined,
+therefore, to wait the result of his report ere I again moved the camp, to
+which we returned late in the afternoon of the second day of our
+departure. We found it unsufferably hot and suffocating in the reeds, and
+were tormented by myriads of mosquitoes, but the waters were perfectly
+sweet to the taste, nor did the slightest smell, as of stagnation, proceed
+from them. I may add that the birds, whose sanctuary we had invaded, as
+the bittern and various tribes of the galinule, together with the frogs,
+made incessant noises around us, There were, however, but few water-fowl
+on the river; which was an additional proof to me that we were not near
+any very extensive lake.
+
+MR. HUME'S REPORT.
+
+Mr. Hume had returned before me to the camp, and had succeeded in finding
+a serpentine sheet of water, about twelve miles to the northward; which he
+did not doubt to be the channel of the river. He had pushed on after this
+success, in the hope of gaining a further knowledge of the country; but
+another still more extensive marsh checked him, and obliged him to retrace
+his steps. He was no less surprised at the account I gave of the
+termination of the river, than I was at its so speedily re-forming, and it
+was determined to lose no time in the further examination of so singular a
+region.
+
+FALSE CHANNEL; PERPLEXITIES.
+
+On the morning of the 28th therefore we broke up the camp, and proceeded
+to the northward, under Mr. Hume's guidance, moving over ground wholly
+subject to flood, and extensively covered with reeds; the great body of
+the marsh lying upon our left. After passing the angle of a wood, upon our
+right, from which Mount Foster was distant about fourteen miles, we got
+upon a small plain, on which there was a new species of tortuous box. This
+plain was clear of reeds, and the soil upon it was very rich. Crossing in
+a westerly direction we arrived at the channel found by Mr. Hume, who must
+naturally have concluded that it was a continuation of the river. The boat
+was immediately prepared, and I went up it in order to ascertain the
+nature of its formation. For two miles it preserved a pretty general width
+of from twenty to thirty yards; but at that distance began to narrow, and
+at length it became quite shallow and covered with weeds. We were
+ultimately obliged to abandon the boat, and to walk along a native path.
+The country to the westward was more open than I had expected. About a
+quarter of a mile from where we had left the boat, the channel separated
+into two branches; to which I perceived it owed its formation, coming, as
+they evidently did, direct from the heart of the marsh. The wood through
+which I had entered it on the first occasion bore south of me, to which
+one of the branches inclined; as the other did to the S.W. An almost
+imperceptible rise of ground was before me, which, by giving an impetus to
+the waters of the marsh, accounted to me for the formation of the main
+channel. It was too late, on my return to the camp, to prosecute any
+further examination of it downwards; but in the morning, Mr. Hume
+accompanied me in the boat, to ascertain to what point it led; and we
+found that at about a mile it began to diminish in breadth, until at
+length it was completely lost in a second expanse of reeds. We passed a
+singular scaffolding erected by the natives, on the side of the channel,
+to take fish; and also found a weir at the termination of it for the like
+purpose so that it was evident the natives occasionally ventured into
+the marshes.
+
+There was a small wood to our left which Mr. Hume endeavoured to gain, but
+he failed in the attempt. He did, however, reach a tree that was
+sufficiently high to give him a full view of the marsh, which appeared to
+extend in every direction, but more particularly to the north, for many
+miles. We were, however, at fault, and I really felt at a loss what step
+to take. I should have been led to believe from the extreme flatness of
+the country, that the Macquarie would never assume its natural shape, but
+from the direction of the marshes I could not but indulge a hope that it
+would meet the Castlereagh, and that their united waters might form a
+stream of some importance. Under this impression I determined on again
+sending Mr. Hume to the N.E. in order to ascertain the nature of the
+country in that direction.
+
+EXCURSION TO THE NORTH-WEST.
+
+The weather was excessively hot, and as my men were but slowly recovering,
+I was anxious while those who were in health continued active, to give the
+others a few days of rest. I proposed, therefore, to cross the river, and
+to make an excursion into the interior, during the probable time of
+Mr. Hume's absence; since if, as I imagined, the Macquarie had taken a
+permanent northerly course, I should not have an opportunity of examining
+the distant western country. Mr. Hume's experience rendered it unnecessary
+for me to give him other than general directions.
+
+A PLAIN ON FIRE.
+
+On the last day of the year we left the camp, each accompanied by two men.
+I had the evening previously ordered the horses I intended taking with me
+across the channel, and at an early hour of the morning I followed them.
+Getting on a plain, immediately after I had disengaged myself from the
+reeds on the opposite side of the river, which was full of holes and
+exceedingly treacherous for the animals, I pushed on for a part of the
+wood Mr. Hume had endeavoured to gain from the boat, with the intention of
+keeping near the marsh. On entering it, I found myself in a thick brush of
+eucalypti, casuarinae and minor trees; the soil under them being mixed
+with sand. I kept a N.N.W. course through it, and at the distance of
+three miles from its commencement, ascended a tree, to ascertain if I was
+near the marshes; when I found that I was fast receding from them. I
+concluded, therefore, that my conjecture as to their direction was right,
+and altered my course to N.W., a direction in which I had observed a dense
+smoke arising, which I supposed had been made by some natives near water.
+At the termination of the brush I crossed a barren sandy plain, and from
+it saw the smoke ascending at a few miles' distance from me. Passing
+through a wood, at the extremity of the plain, I found myself at the
+outskirts of an open space of great extent, almost wholly enveloped in
+flames. The fire was running with incredible rapidity through the rhagodia
+shrubs with which it was covered. Passing quickly over it, I continued my
+journey to the N.W. over barren plains of red sandy loam of even surface,
+and bushes of cypresses skirted by acacia pendula. It was not until after
+sunset that we struck upon a creek, in which the water was excellent; and
+we halted on its banks for the night, calculating our distance at
+twenty-nine miles from the camp. The creek was of considerable size,
+leading northerly. Several huts were observed by us, and from the heaps of
+muscle-shells that were scattered about, there could be no doubt of its
+being much frequented by the natives. The grass being fairly burnt up, our
+animals found but little to eat, but they had a tolerable journey. and did
+not attempt to wander in search of better food. I shot a snipe near the
+creek, much resembling the painted snipe of India; but I had not the means
+with me of preserving it.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+Continuing our journey on the following morning, we at first kept on the
+banks of the creek, and at about a quarter of a mile from where we had
+slept, came upon a numerous tribe of natives. A young girl sitting by the
+fire was the first to observe us as we were slowly approaching her. She
+was so excessively alarmed, that she had not the power to run away; but
+threw herself on the ground and screamed violently. We now observed a
+number of huts, out of which the natives issued, little dreaming of the
+spectacle they were to behold. But the moment they saw us, they started
+back; their huts were in a moment in flames, and each with a fire-brand
+ran to and fro with hideous yells, thrusting them into every bush they
+passed. I walked my horse quietly towards an old man who stood more
+forward than the rest, as if he intended to devote himself for the
+preservation of his tribe. I had intended speaking to him, but on a nearer
+approach I remarked that he trembled so violently that it was impossible
+to expect that I could obtain any information from him, and as I had not
+time for explanations, I left him to form his own conjectures as to what
+we were, and continued to move towards a thick brush, into which they did
+not venture to follow us.
+
+CONTINUE OUR JOURNEY.
+
+After a ride of about eighteen miles, through a country of alternate plain
+and brush, we struck upon a second creek leading like the first to the
+northward. The water in it was very bitter and muddy, and it was much
+inferior in appearance to that at which we had slept. After stopping for
+half-an-hour upon its banks, to rest our animals, we again pushed forward.
+We had not as yet risen any perceptible height above the level of the
+marshes, but had left the country subject to overflow for a considerable
+space behind us. The brushes through which we had passed were too sandy to
+retain water long, but the plains were of such an even surface, that they
+could not but continue wet for a considerable period after any fall of
+rain. They were covered with salsolaceous plants, without a blade of
+grass; and their soil was generally a red sandy loam. There were
+occasional patches that appeared moist, in which the calystemma was
+abundant, and these patches must, I should imagine, form quagmires in the
+wet season.
+
+On leaving the last-mentioned creek, we found a gently rising country
+before us; and about three or four miles from it we crossed some stony
+ridges, covered with a new species of acacia so thickly as to prevent our
+obtaining any view from them. As the sun declined, we got into open forest
+ground; and travelled forwards in momentary expectation, from appearances,
+of coming in sight of water; but we were obliged to pull up at sunset on
+the outskirts of a larger plain without having our expectation realized.
+The day had been extremely warm, and our animals were as thirsty as
+ourselves. Hope never forsakes the human breast; and thence it was that,
+after we had secured the horses, we began to wander round our lonely
+bivouac. It was almost dark, when one of my men came to inform me that he
+had found a small puddle of water, to which be had been led by a pigeon.
+
+It was, indeed, small enough, probably the remains of a passing shower; it
+was, however, sufficient for our necessities, and I thanked Providence for
+its bounty to us. We were now about sixty miles from the Macquarie, in a
+N.W. by W. direction, and the country had proved so extremely
+discouraging, that I intimated to my men my intention of retracing my
+steps, should I not discover any change in it before noon on the morrow.
+A dense brush of acacia succeeded to the plain on which we had slept,
+which we entered, and shortly afterwards found ourselves in an open space,
+of oblong shape, at the extremity of which there was a shallow lake. The
+brush completely encircled it, and a few huts were upon its banks. About
+10 p.m. we got into an open forest track of better appearance than any
+over which we had recently travelled.
+
+ISOLATED HILL.
+
+There was a visible change in the country, and the soil, although red, was
+extremely rich and free from sand. A short time afterwards we rose to the
+summit of a round hill, from which we obtained an extensive view on most
+points of the compass. We had imperceptibly risen considerably above the
+general level of the interior.
+
+VIEW FROM THE SUMMIT.
+
+Beneath us, to the westward, I observed a broad and thinly wooded valley;
+and W. by S., distant apparently about twenty miles, an isolated mountain,
+whose sides seemed almost perpendicular, broke the otherwise even line of
+the horizon; but the country in every other direction looked as if it was
+darkly wooded. Anticipating that I should find a stream in the valley, I
+did not for a moment hesitate in striking down into it. Disappointed,
+however, in this expectation, I continued onwards to the mountain, which I
+reached just before the sun set. Indeed, he was barely visible when I
+gained its summit; but my eyes, from exposure to his glare, became so
+weak, my face was so blistered, and my lips cracked in so many places,
+that I was unable to look towards the west, and was actually obliged to
+sit down behind a rock until he had set.
+
+Perhaps no time is so favourable for a view along the horizon as the
+sunset hour; and here, at an elevation of from five to six hundred feet
+above the plain, the visible line of it could not have been less than from
+thirty-five to forty-five miles. The hill upon which I stood was broken
+into two points; the one was a bold rocky elevation; the other had its
+rear face also perpendicular, but gradually declined to the north, and at
+a distance of from four to five miles was lost in an extensive and open
+plain in that direction. In the S.E. quarter, two wooded hills were
+visible, which before had appeared to be nothing more than swells in the
+general level of the country. A small hill, similar to the above, bore
+N.E. by compass; and again, to the west, a more considerable mountain than
+that I had ascended, and evidently much higher, reflected the last beams
+of the sun as he sunk behind them. I looked, however, in vain for water.
+I could not trace either the windings of a stream, or the course of a
+mountain torrent; and, as we had passed a swamp about a mile from the
+hill, we descended to it for the night, during which we were grievously
+tormented by the mosquitoes.
+
+RESULTS OF THE EXCURSION.
+
+I had no inducement to proceed further into the interior. I had been
+sufficiently disappointed in the termination of this excursion, and the
+track before me was still less inviting. Nothing but a dense forest, and a
+level country, existed between me and the distant hill. I had learnt, by
+experience, that it was impossible to form any opinion of the probable
+features of so singular a region as that in which I was wandering, from
+previous appearances, or to expect the same result, as in other countries,
+from similar causes. In a geographical point of view, my journey had been
+more successful, and had enabled me to put to rest for ever a question of
+much previous doubt. Of whatever extent the marshes of the Macquarie might
+be, it was evident they were not connected with those of the Lachlan. I
+had gained knowledge of more than 100 miles of the western interior, and
+had ascertained that no sea, indeed that little water, existed on its
+surface; and that, although it is generally flat, it still has elevations
+of considerable magnitude upon it.
+
+Although I had passed over much barren ground, I had likewise noticed soil
+that was far from poor, and the vegetation upon which in ordinary seasons
+would, I am convinced, have borne a very different aspect.
+
+Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the haunt
+of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a chain of
+connection to a more fertile country; if such a country exist to the
+westward.
+
+The hill which thus became the extreme of my journey, is of sandstone
+formation, and is bold and precipitous. Its summit is level and lightly
+timbered. As a tribute of respect to the late Surveyor-General, I called
+it Oxley's Table Land, and I named the distant hills D'Urban's Group,
+after Sir Benjamin D'Urban, in compliance with a previous request of my
+friend Lieut. De la Condamine, that I would so name any prominent feature
+of the interior that I might happen to come upon.
+
+RETURN TO THE CAMP.
+
+In returning to the camp, I made a circuit to the N.E., and reached the
+Macquarie late on the evening of the 5th of January; having been absent
+six days, during which we could not have ridden less than 200 miles. Yet
+the horses were not so fatigued as it was natural to expect they would
+have been.
+
+My servant informed me that a party of natives had visited the camp on the
+3rd, but that they retired precipitately on seeing the animals. I
+regretted to find the men but little better than when I left them. Several
+still complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, and of great
+weakness of sight. Attributing their continued indisposition in some
+measure to our situation, I was anxious to have moved from it; but as Mr.
+Hume was still absent, I could not decide upon the measure. He made his
+appearance, however, on the 6th, having ridden the greater part of the day
+through rain, which commenced to fall in the morning. Soon after his
+arrival, Dawber, my overseer of animals, who had accompanied him, was
+taken suddenly ill. During the night he became much worse, with shivering
+and spasms, and on the following morning he was extremely weak and
+feverish. To add to my anxiety, Mr. Hume also complained of indisposition.
+His state of health made me the more anxious to quit a position which I
+fancied unwholesome, and in which, if there was no apparent, there was
+certainly some secret, exciting cause; and as Mr. Hume reported having
+crossed a chain of ponds about four miles to the eastward, and out of the
+immediate precincts of the marshes, I ordered the tents to be struck, and
+placing Dawber on my horse, we all moved quietly over to them.
+
+MR. HUME'S EXCURSION.
+
+The result of Mr. Hume's journey perplexed me exceedingly. He stated, that
+on setting out from the Macquarie his intention was to have proceeded to
+the N.E., to ascertain how far the reeds existed in that direction, and,
+if at all practicable, to reach the Castlereagh; but in case of failure,
+to regain the Macquarie by a westerly course. At first he travelled nearly
+four miles east, to clear the marshes, when he came on the chain of ponds
+to which we had removed.
+
+He travelled over good soil for two miles after crossing this chain of
+ponds, but afterwards got on a red sandy loam, and found it difficult to
+proceed, by reason of the thickness of the brush, and the swampy state of
+the ground in consequence of the late rain.
+
+The timber in the brushes was of various kinds, and he saw numerous
+kangaroos and emus. On issuing from this brush, he crossed a creek,
+leading northerly, the banks of which were from ten to twelve feet high.
+Whatever the body of water usually in it is, it now only afforded a few
+shallow puddles. Mr. Hume travelled through brushes until he came upon a
+third creek, similar to the one he had left behind him, at which he halted
+for the night. The water in it was bad, and the feed for the animals
+extremely poor. The brush lined the creek thickly, and consisted chiefly
+of acacia pendula and box. The country preserved an uniform level, nor did
+Mr. Hume, from the highest trees, observe any break on the horizon.
+
+On the 2nd of January, Mr. Hume kept more northerly, being unable to
+penetrate the brushes he encountered. At two miles he crossed a creek
+leading to the N.W., between which and the place at which he had slept, he
+passed a native burial ground, containing eight graves. The earth was
+piled up in a conical shape, but the trees were not carved over as he had
+seen them in most other places.
+
+The country became more open after he had passed the last mentioned creek,
+which he again struck upon at the distance of eight miles, and as it was
+then leading to the N.N.E. he followed it down for eighteen or twenty
+miles, and crossed it frequently during the day. The creek was dry in most
+places, and where he stopped for the night the water was bad, and the
+cattle feed indifferent.
+
+Mr. Hume saw many huts, but none of them had been recently occupied,
+although large quantities of muscle-shells were scattered about. He
+computed that he had travelled about thirty miles, in a N.N.W.
+direction, and the whole of the land he passed over was, generally
+speaking, bad, nor did it appear to be subject to overflow.
+
+On the 3rd, Mr. Hume proceeded down the creek on which he had slept, on a
+northern course, under an impression that it would have joined the
+Castlereagh, but it took a N.W. direction after he had ridden about four
+miles, and then turned again to the eastward of north. In consequence of
+this, he left it, and proceeded to the westward, being of opinion that the
+river just mentioned must have taken a more northerly course than Mr.
+Oxley supposed it to have done.
+
+A short time after Mr. Hume turned towards the Macquarie, the country
+assumed a more pleasing appearance. He soon cleared the brushes, and at
+two miles came upon a chain of ponds, again running northerly in times of
+flood. Shortly after crossing these, he found himself on an extensive
+plain, apparently subject to overflow. The timber on it was chiefly of
+the blue-gum kind, and the ground was covered with shells. He then thought
+he was approaching the Macquarie, and proceeded due west across the flat
+for about two miles. At the extremity of it there was a hollow, which he
+searched in vain for water. Ascending about thirty feet, he entered a
+thick brush of box and acacia pendula, which continued for fourteen miles,
+when it terminated abruptly, and extensive plains of good soil commenced,
+stretching from N. to S. as far as the eye could reach, on which there
+were many kangaroos. Continuing to journey over them, he reached a creek
+at 5 p.m. on which the wild fowl were numerous, running nearly north and
+south, and he rested on its banks for the night. The timber consisted both
+of blue and rough gum, and the soil was a light earth.
+
+Mr. Hume expected in the course of the day to have reached the Macquarie,
+but on arriving at the creek, he began to doubt whether it any longer
+existed, or whether it had not taken a more westerly direction. On the
+following morning, therefore, he crossed the creek, and travelled
+W.S.W., for about two miles over good plains; then through light brushes
+of swamp-oak, cypress, box, and acacia pendula, for about twelve miles, to
+another creek leading northerly. He shortly afterwards ascended a range of
+hills stretching W.N.W. to which he gave the name of New Year's Range.
+From these hills, he had an extensive view, although not upon the highest
+part, but the only break he could see in the horizon was caused by some
+hills bearing by compass W. by S. distant about twenty-five miles. There
+was, however, an appearance as of high land to the northward, although Mr.
+Hume thought it might have been an atmospheric deception. From the range
+he looked in vain for the Macquarie, or other waters, and, as his
+provisions were nearly consumed, he was obliged to give up all further
+pursuit, and to retrace his steps. He fell in with two parties of natives,
+which, taken collectively, amounted to thirty-five in number, but had no
+communication with them.
+
+It was evident, from the above account, that supposing a line to have been
+drawn from the camp northerly, Mr. Hume must have travelled considerably
+to the westward of it, and as I had run on a N.W. course from the marshes,
+it necessarily followed that our lines of route must have intersected each
+other, or that want of extension could alone have prevented them from
+having done so; but that, under any circumstances, they could not have
+been very far apart. This was too important a point to be left undecided,
+as upon it the question of the Macquarie's termination seemed to depend.
+
+Both Mr. Hume and myself were of opinion, that a medium course would be
+the most satisfactory for us to pursue, to decide this point; and it
+appeared that we could not do better than, by availing ourselves of the
+creek on which we were, and skirting the reeds, to take the first
+opportunity of dashing through them in a westerly direction.
+
+DOUBTS OF THE FURTHER EXTENSION OF THE RIVER.
+
+I entertained great doubts as to the longer existence of the river, and as
+I foresaw that, in the event of its having terminated we should strike at
+once into the heart of the interior, I became anxious for the arrival of
+supplies at Mount Harris; and although I could hardly expect that they had
+yet reached it, I determined to proceed thither. Mr. Hume was too unwell
+for me to think of imposing additional fatigue upon him; I left him,
+therefore, to conduct the party, by easy stages, to the northward, until
+such time as I should overtake them. Even in one day there was a visible
+improvement in the men, and Dawber's attack seemed to be rather the
+effects of cold than of any thing else. A death, however, under our
+circumstances, would have been so truly deplorable an event, that the
+least illness was sufficient to create alarm.
+
+I can hardly say that I was disappointed on my arrival at Mount Harris, to
+find its neighbourhood silent and deserted. I remained, however, under it
+for the greater part of the next day, and, prior to leaving it, placed a
+sheet of paper with written instructions against a tree, though almost
+without a hope that it would remain untouched.
+
+PERPLEXING SITUATION.
+
+A little after sun-set we reached the first small marsh, at which we
+slept; and on the following morning I crossed the plains of the Macquarie,
+and joined the party at about fifteen miles from the creek at which I had
+left it. I found it in a condition that was as unlooked for by Mr. Hume as
+it was unexpected by me, and really in a most perplexing situation.
+
+On the day I left him, Mr. Hume only advanced about two miles, in
+consequence of some derangement in the loads. Having crossed the creek,
+he, the next morning, proceeded down its right bank, until it entered the
+marshes and was lost. He then continued to move on the outskirts of the
+latter, and having performed a journey or about eight miles, was anxious
+to have stopped, but there was no water at hand. The men, however, were so
+fatigued, in consequence of previous illness, that he felt it necessary to
+halt after travelling about eleven miles.
+
+No water could be procured even here, notwithstanding that Mr. Hume, who
+was quite unfit for great exertion, underwent considerable bodily fatigue
+in his anxiety to find some. He was, therefore, obliged to move early on
+the following morning, but neither men nor animals were in a condition to
+travel; and he had scarcely made three miles' progress, when he stopped
+and endeavoured to obtain a supply or water by digging pits among the
+reeds. From these he had drawn sufficient for the wants of the people when
+I arrived. Some rain had fallen on the 6th and 7th of the month, or it is
+more than probable the expedient to which he resorted would have failed of
+success. Mr. Hume, I was sorry to observe, looked very unwell; but nothing
+could prevent him from further endeavours to extricate the party from its
+present embarrassment.
+
+JOURNEY CONTINUED.
+
+As soon as I had taken a little refreshment, therefore, I mounted a fresh
+horse; and he accompanied me across a small plain, immediately in front of
+the camp, which was subject to overflow and covered with polygonum, having
+a considerable extent of reeds to its right.
+
+From the plain we entered a wood of blue-gum, in which reeds, grass, and
+brush formed a thick coppice. We at length passed into an open space,
+surrounded on every side by weeds in dense bodies. The great marsh bore
+south of us, and was clear and open, but behind us the blue-gum trees
+formed a thick wood above the weeds.
+
+About two hundred yards from the outskirts of the marsh there was a line
+of saplings that had perished, and round about them a number of the tern
+tribe (sea swallow) were flying, one of which Mr. Hume had followed a
+considerable way into the reeds the evening before, in the hope that it
+would have led him to water. The circumstance of their being in such
+numbers led us to penetrate towards them, when we found a serpentine sheet
+of water of some length, over which they were playing. We had scarcely
+time to examine it before night closed in upon us, and it was after nine
+when we returned to the tents.
+
+From the general appearance of the country to the northward, and from the
+circumstance of our having got to the bottom of the great marsh, which but
+a few days before had threatened to be so formidable, I thought it
+probable that the reeds would not again prove so extensive as they had
+been, and I determined, if I could do so, to push through them in a
+westerly direction from our position.
+
+SECOND GREAT MARSH.
+
+The pits yielded us so abundant a supply during the night, that in the
+morning we found it unnecessary to take the animals to water at the
+channel we had succeeded in finding the evening before; but pursuing a
+westerly course we passed it, and struck deep into the reeds. At mid-day
+we were hemmed in by them on every side, and had crossed over numerous
+channels, by means of which the waters of the marshes are equally and
+generally distributed over the space subject to their influence. Coming to
+a second sheet of water, narrower, but longer, as well as we could judge,
+than the first, we stopped to dine at it; and, while the men were resting
+themselves, Mr. Hume rode with me in a westerly direction, to ascertain
+what obstacles we still had to contend with. Forcing our way through
+bodies of reeds, we at length got on a plain, stretching from S.E. to
+N.W., bounded on the right by a wood of blue-gum, under which the reeds
+still extended, and on the left by a wood in which they did not appear to
+exist. Certain that there was no serious obstacle in our way, we returned
+to the men; and as soon as they had finished their meal, led them over the
+plain in a N.W. by W. direction. It was covered with shells, and was full
+of holes from the effects of flood.
+
+CONCLUSIONS IN REGARD TO THE MACQUARIE.
+
+As we were journeying over it, I requested Mr. Hume to ride into the wood
+upon our left, to ascertain if it concealed any channel. On his return he
+informed me that he descended from the plain into a hollow, the bottom of
+which was covered with small shells and bulrushes. He observed a new
+species of eucalypti, on the trunks of which the water-mark was three feet
+high. After crossing this hollow, which was about a quarter of a mile in
+breadth, he gained an open forest of box, having good grass under it; and,
+judging from the appearance of the country that no other channel could
+exist beyond him, and that he had ascertained sufficient for the object I
+had in view, he turned back to the plain. We stopped for the night under a
+wood of box, where the grass, which had been burnt down, was then
+springing up most beautifully green, and was relished exceedingly by the
+animals.
+
+It was in consequence of our not having crossed any channel, while
+penetrating through the reeds, that could by any possible exaggeration
+have been laid down as the bed of the river, that I detached Mr. Hume; and
+the account he brought me at once confirmed my opinion in regard to the
+Macquarie, and I thenceforth gave up every hope of ever seeing it in its
+characteristic shape again.
+
+Independently however of all circumstantial evidence, it was clear that
+the river had not re-formed at a distance of twenty-five miles to the
+north of us, since Mr. Hume had gone to the westward of that point, at
+about the same distance on his late journey, without having observed the
+least appearance of reeds or of a river. He had, indeed, noticed a hollow,
+which occasionally contained water, but he saw nothing like the bed of a
+permanent stream. I became convinced, also, from observation of the
+country through which we had passed, that the sources of the Macquarie
+could not be of such magnitude as to give a constant flow to it as a
+river, and at the same time to supply with water the vast concavity into
+which it falls. In very heavy rains only could the marshes and adjacent
+lands be laid wholly under water, since the evaporation alone would be
+equal to the supply.
+
+The great plains stretching for so many miles to the westward of Mount
+Harris, even where they were clear of reeds, were covered with shells and
+the claws of cray-fish and their soil, although an alluvial deposit, was
+superficially sandy. They bore the appearance not only of frequent
+inundation, but of the floods having eventually subsided upon them. This
+was particularly observable at the bottom of the marshes. We did not find
+any accumulation of rubbish to indicate a rush of water to any one point;
+but numerous minor channels existed to distribute the floods equally and
+generally over every part of the area subject to them, and the marks of
+inundation and subsidence were everywhere the same. The plain we had last
+crossed, was, in like manner, covered with shells, so that we could not
+yet be said to be out of the influence of the marshes; besides which we
+had not crossed the hollow noticed by Mr. Hume, which it was clear we
+should do, sooner or later.
+
+SITUATION OF THE PARTY.
+
+To have remained in our position would have been impossible, as there was
+no water either for ourselves or the animals; to have descended into the
+reeds again, for the purpose of carrying on a minute survey, would, under
+existing circumstances, have been imprudent. Our provisions were running
+short, and if a knowledge of the distant interior was to be gained, we had
+no time to lose. It was determined, therefore, to defer our further
+examination of the marshes to the period of our return; and to pursue such
+a course as would soonest and most effectually enable us to determine the
+character of the western interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+We left our position at the head of the plain early on the 13th of
+January, and, ere the sun dipped, had entered a very different country
+from that in which we had been labouring for the last three weeks. We had,
+as yet, passed over little other than an alluvial soil, but found that it
+changed to a red loam in the brushes immediately backing the camp. An open
+forest track succeeded this, over which the vegetation had an unusual
+freshness, indicating that the waters had not long subsided from its
+surface. We shortly afterwards crossed a hollow, similar to that Mr. Hume
+had described, in which bulrushes had taken the place of reeds.
+Flooded-gum trees, of large size, were also growing in it, but on either
+side box alone prevailed, under which the forest grass grew to a
+considerable height. We crossed the hollow two or three times, and as
+often remarked the line of separation between those trees. The last time
+we crossed it the country rose a few feet, and we journeyed for the
+remainder of the day, at one time over good plains, at another through
+brushes, until we found water and feed, at which we stopped for the night,
+after having travelling about thirteen miles on a W. by N. course. The
+mosquitoes were so extremely troublesome at this place that we called it
+Mosquito Brush. At this time my men were improving rapidly, and Mr. Hume
+complained less, and looked better. I hoped, therefore, that our progress
+would be rapid into the interior.
+
+CREEK LEADING NORTHERLY; PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+On the 14th we took up a westerly course, and in the first instance
+traversed a plain of great extent; the soil of which was for the most part
+a red sandy loam, but having patches of light earth upon it. The former
+was covered with plants of the chenopedia kind; the latter had evidently
+been quagmires, and bore even then the appearance of moisture. At about
+seven miles from Mosquito Brush we struck upon a creek of excellent water,
+upon which the wild fowl were numerous. Some natives was seen, but they
+were only women, and seemed so alarmed that I purposely avoided them. As
+the creek was leading northerly, we traced it down on that course for
+about seven miles, and then halted upon its banks, which were composed of
+a light tenacious earth. Brushes of casuarina existed near it, but a
+tortuous box was the prevailing tree, which, excepting for the knees of
+small vessels, could not have been applied to any use, while the
+flooded-gum had entirely disappeared. Some ducks were shot in the
+afternoon, which proved a great treat, as we had been living for some time
+on salt provisions. Our animals fared worse than ourselves, as the bed of
+the creek was occupied by coarse rushes, and but little vegetation was
+elsewhere to be seen. I here killed a beautiful snake, of about four feet
+in length, and of a bright yellow colour: I had not, however, the means of
+preserving it. Fraser collected numerous botanical specimens, and among
+them two kinds of caparis. Indeed a great alteration had taken place in
+the minor shrubs, and few of those now prevalent had been observed to the
+eastward of the marshes.
+
+From the creek, which both I and Mr. Hume must have crossed on our
+respective journeys, we held a westerly course for about fifteen miles,
+through a country of alternate plain and brush, the latter predominating,
+and in its general character differing but little from that we had
+traversed the day previous.
+
+The acacia pendula still continued to exist on the plains backed by dark
+rows of cypresses (Cupressus callitris). In the brushes, box and
+casuarina (Casuarina tortuosa), with several other kinds of eucalypti,
+prevailed; but none of them were sufficiently large to be of use. The
+plains were so extremely level that a meridian altitude could have been
+taken without any material error; and I doubt much whether it would have
+been possible to have traversed them had the season been wet.
+
+HUNTING PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+As we were travelling through a forest we surprised a hunting party of
+natives. Mr. Hume and I were considerably in front of our party at the
+time, and he only had his gun with him. We had been moving along so
+quietly that we were not for some time observed by them. Three were seated
+on the ground, under a tree, and two others were busily employed on one of
+the lower branches cutting out honey. As soon as they saw us, four of them
+ran away; but the fifth, who wore a cap of emu feathers, stood for a
+moment looking at us, and then very deliberately dropped out of the tree
+to the ground. I then advanced towards him, but before I got round a bush
+that intervened, he had darted away. I was fearful that he was gone to
+collect his tribe, and, under this impression, rode quickly back for my
+gun to support Mr. Hume. On my arrival I found the native was before me.
+He stood about twenty paces from Mr. Hume, who was endeavouring to explain
+what he was; but seeing me approach he immediately poised his spear at
+him, as being the nearest. Mr. Hume then unslung his carbine, and
+presented it; but, as it was evident my re-appearance had startled the
+savage, I pulled up; and he immediately lowered his weapon. His coolness
+and courage surprised me, and increased my desire to communicate with him.
+He had evidently taken both man and horse for one animal, and as long as
+Mr. Hume kept his seat, the native remained upon his guard; but when he
+saw him dismount, after the first astonishment had subsided, he stuck his
+spear into the ground, and walked fearlessly up to him. We easily made him
+comprehend that we were in search of water; when he pointed to the west,
+as indicating that we should supply our wants there. He gave his
+information in a frank and manly way, without the least embarrassment,
+and when the party passed, he stepped back to avoid the animals, without
+the smallest confusion. I am sure he was a very brave man; and I left him
+with the most favourable impressions, and not without hope that he would
+follow us.
+
+From a more open forest, we entered a dense scrub, the soil in which was
+of a bright-red colour and extremely sandy, and the timber of various
+kinds. A leafless species of stenochylus aphylta, which, from the
+resemblance, I at first thought one of the polygonum tribe, was very
+abundant in the open spaces, and the young cypresses were occasionally so
+close as to turn us from the direction in which we had been moving. In the
+scrub we crossed Mr. Hume's tract, and, from the appearance of the ground,
+I was led to believe mine could not be very distant.
+
+FATE OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+We struck upon a creek late in the afternoon, at which we stopped; New
+Year's Range bearing nearly due west at about four miles' distance. Had we
+struck upon my track, the question about which we were so anxious would
+still have been undecided; but the circumstance of our having crossed Mr.
+Hume's, which, from its direction, could not be mistaken, convinced me of
+the fate of the Macquarie, and I felt assured that, whatever channels it
+might have for the distribution of its waters, to the north of our line of
+route, the equality of surface of the interior would never permit it
+again to form a river; and that it only required an examination of the
+lower parts of the marshes to confirm the theory of the ultimate
+evaporation and absorption of its waters, instead of their contributing to
+the permanence of an inland sea, as Mr. Oxley had supposed.
+
+NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+On the 17th of January we encamped under New Year's Range, which is the
+first elevation in the interior of Eastern Australia to the westward of
+Mount Harris. Yet when at its base, I do not think that we had ascended
+above forty feet higher than the plains in the neighbourhood of that last
+mentioned eminence. There certainly is a partial rise of country, where
+the change of soil takes place from the alluvial deposits of the marshes,
+to the sandy loam so prevalent on the plains we had lately traversed; but
+I had to regret that I was unable to decide so interesting a question by
+other than bare conjecture.
+
+Notwithstanding that Mr. Hume had already been on them, I encouraged hopes
+that a second survey of the country from the highest point of New Year's
+Range would enable us to form some opinion of it, by which to direct our
+future movements; but I was disappointed.
+
+The two wooded hills I had seen from Oxley's Table Land were visible from
+the range, bearing south; and other eminences bore by compass S.W.
+and W. by S.; but in every other direction the horizon was unbroken. To
+the westward, there appeared to be a valley of considerable extent,
+stretching N. and S., in which latter direction there was a long strip of
+cleared ground, that looked very like the sandy bed of a broad and rapid
+river. The bare possibility of the reality determined me to ascertain by
+inspection, whether my conjecture was right, and Mr. Hume accompanied me
+on this excursion. After we left the camp we crossed a part of the range,
+and travelled for some time through open forest land that would afford
+excellent grazing in most seasons. We passed some hollows, and noticed
+many huts that had been occupied near them; but the hollows were now quite
+dry, and the huts had been long deserted. After about ten miles' ride we
+reached a plain of white sand, from which New Year's Range was distinctly
+visible; and this no doubt was the spot that had attracted my attention.
+Pools of water continued on it, from which circumstance it would appear
+that the sand had a substratum of clay or marl. From this plain we
+proceeded southerly through acacia scrub, bounding gently undulating
+forest land, and at length ascended some small elevations that scarcely
+deserved the name of hills. They had fragments of quartz profusely
+scattered over them; and the soil, which was sandy, contained particles of
+mica.
+
+MOSQUITOES.
+
+The view from them was confused, nor did any fresh object meet our
+observation. We had, however, considerably neared the two wooded hills,
+and the elevations that from the range were to the S.W., now bore N.W.
+of us. We had wandered too far from the camp to admit of our returning to
+it to sleep; we therefore commenced a search for water, and having found
+some, we tethered our horses near it for the night, and should have been
+tolerably comfortable, had not the mosquitoes been so extremely
+troublesome. They defied the power of smoke, and annoyed me so much, that,
+hot as it was, I rolled myself in my boat cloak, and perspired in
+consequence to such a degree, that my clothes were wet through, and I had
+to stand at the fire in the morning to dry them. Mr. Hume, who could not
+bear such confinement, suffered the penalty, and was most unmercifully
+bitten.
+
+A MAN MISSING.
+
+We reached the camp about noon the following day, and learnt, to our
+vexation, that one of the men, Norman, had lost himself shortly after we
+started, and had not since been heard of. Dawber, my overseer, was out in
+search of him. I awaited his return, therefore, before I took any measures
+for the man's recovery; nor was I without hopes that Dawber would have
+found him, as it appeared he had taken one of the horses with him, and
+Dawber, by keeping his tracks, might eventually have overtaken him. He
+returned, however, about 3 p.m. unsuccessful, when Mr. Hume and I mounted
+our horses, and proceeded in different directions in quest of him, but
+were equally disappointed.
+
+We met at the creek in the dark, and returned to the camp together, when I
+ordered the cypresses on the range to be set on fire, and thus illuminated
+the country round for many miles. In the morning, however, as Norman had
+not made his appearance, we again started in search of the poor fellow,
+on whose account I was now most uneasy; for his horse, it appeared, had
+escaped him, and was found with the others at watering time.
+
+I did not return to the camp until after sunset, more fatigued than I
+recollect ever having been before. I was, however, rejoiced on being
+informed that the object of my anxiety was safe in his tent; that he had
+caught sight of the hill the evening before, and that he had reached the
+camp shortly after I left it. He had been absent three nights and two
+days, and had not tasted water or food of any kind during that time.
+
+To my enquiries he replied, that, being on horseback, he thought he could
+have overtaken a kangaroo, which passed him whilst waiting at the creek
+for the cattle, and that in the attempt, he lost himself. It would appear
+that he crossed the creek in the dark, and his horse escaped from him on
+the first night. He complained more of thirst than of hunger, although he
+had drunk at the watering-place to such an excess, on his return, as to
+make him vomit; but, though not a little exhausted, he had escaped better
+than I should have expected.
+
+COUNTRY AROUND NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+New Year's Range consists of a principal group of five hills, the loftiest
+of which does not measure 300 feet in height. It has lateral ridges,
+extending to the N.N.W. on the one hand, and bending in to the creek on
+the other. The former have a few cypresses, sterculia, and iron bark upon
+them; the latter are generally covered with brush, under box; the brush
+for the most part consisting of two distinct species of stenochylus, and a
+new acacia. The whole range is of quartz formation, small fragments of
+which are profusely scattered over the ridges, and are abundantly
+incrusted with oxide of iron. The soil in the neighbourhood of New Year's
+Range is a red loam, with a slight mixture of sand. An open forest country
+lies between it and the creek, and it is not at all deficient in pasture.
+
+NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+That a change of soil takes place to the westward of the creek, is
+obvious, from the change of vegetation, the most remarkable feature of
+which is the sudden check given to the further extension of the acacia
+pendula, which is not to be found beyond it, it being succeeded by another
+acacia of the same species and habits; neither do the plants of the
+chenopedia class exist in the immediate vicinity of the range.
+
+I place these hills, as far as my observations will allow, in east
+lon. 146 degrees 32 minutes 15 seconds, and in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes
+south; the variation of the compass being 6 degrees 40 minutes easterly.
+
+As New Year's Creek was leading northerly, it had been determined to trace
+it down as long as it should keep that course, or one to the westward of
+it. We broke up the camp, therefore, under the range, on the evening of
+the 18th, and moved to the creek, about two miles north of the place at
+which we had before crossed it, with the intention of prosecuting our
+journey on the morrow. But both Mr. Hume and I were so fatigued that we
+were glad of an opportunity to rest, even for a single day. We remained
+stationary, therefore, on the 19th; nor was I without hope that the
+natives whom we had surprised in the woods, would have paid us a visit,
+since Mr. Hume had met them in his search for Norman, and they had
+promised not only to come to us, but to do all in their power to find
+the man, whose footsteps some of them had crossed. They did not, however,
+venture near us; and I rather attribute their having kept aloof, to the
+circumstance of Mr. Hume's having fired a shot, shortly after he left
+them, as a signal to Norman, in the event of his being within hearing of
+the report. They must have been alarmed at so unusual a sound; but I am
+sure nothing was further from Mr. Hume's intention than to intimidate
+them; his knowledge of their manners and customs, as well as his
+partiality to the natives, being equally remarkable. The circumstance is,
+however, a proof of the great caution that is necessary in communicating
+with them.
+
+ANNOYED BY KANGAROO FLIES.
+
+I have said that we remained stationary the day after we left the range,
+with a view to enjoy a little rest; it would, however, have been
+infinitely better if we had moved forward. Our camp was infested by the
+kangaroo fly, which settled upon us in thousands. They appeared to rise
+from the ground, and as fast as they were swept off were succeeded by
+fresh numbers. It was utterly impossible to avoid their persecution,
+penetrating as they did into the very tents.
+
+The men were obliged to put handkerchiefs over their faces, and stockings
+upon their hands; but they bit through every thing. It was to no purpose
+that I myself shifted from place to place; they still followed, or were
+equally numerous everywhere. To add to our discomfort, the animals were
+driven almost to madness, and galloped to and fro in so furious a manner
+that I was apprehensive some of them would have been lost. I never
+experienced such a day of torment; and only when the sun set, did these
+little creatures cease from their attacks.
+
+SUDDENLY RELIEVED.
+
+It will be supposed that we did not stay to subject ourselves to another
+trial; indeed it was with some degree of horror that the men saw the first
+light of morning streak the horizon. They got up immediately, and we moved
+down the creek, on a northerly course, without breakfasting as usual. We
+found that dense brushes of casuarina lined the creek on both sides,
+beyond which, to our left, there was open rising ground, on which
+eucalypti, cypresses, and the acacia longifolia, prevailed; whilst to the
+east, plains seemed to predominate.
+
+Although we had left the immediate spot at which the kangaroo flies
+(cabarus) seemed to be collected, I did not expect that we should have got
+rid of them so completely as we did. None of them were seen during the
+day; a proof that they were entirely local. They were about half the size
+of a common house fly, had flat brown bodies, and their bite, although
+sharp and piercing, left no irritation after it.
+
+About noon we stopped at the creek side to take some refreshment. The
+country bore an improved appearance around us, and the cattle found
+abundance of pasture. It was evident that the creek had been numerously
+frequented by the natives, although no recent traces of them could be
+found. It had a bed of coarse red granite, of the fragments of which the
+natives had constructed a weir for the purpose of taking fish. The
+appearance of this rock in so isolated a situation, is worthy of the
+consideration of geologists.
+
+DESOLATION OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+The promise of improvement I have noticed, gradually disappeared as we
+proceeded on our day's journey, and we at length found ourselves once more
+among brushes, and on the edge of plains, over which the rhagodia
+prevailed. Nothing could exceed in dreariness the appearance of the tracks
+through which we journeyed, on this and the two following days. The creek
+on which we depended for a supply of water, gave such alarming indications
+of a total failure, that I at one time, had serious thoughts of abandoning
+my pursuit of it. We passed hollow after hollow that had successively
+dried up, although originally of considerable depth; and, when we at
+length found water, it was doubtful how far we could make use of it.
+Sometimes in boiling it left a sediment nearly equal to half its body; at
+other times it was so bitter as to be quite unpalatable. That on which we
+subsisted was scraped up from small puddles, heated by the sun's rays;
+and so uncertain were we of finding water at the end of the day's journey,
+that we were obliged to carry a supply on one of the bullocks. There was
+scarcely a living creature, even of the feathered race, to be seen to
+break the stillness of the forest. The native dogs alone wandered about,
+though they had scarcely strength to avoid us; and their melancholy howl,
+breaking in upon the ear at the dead of the night, only served to impress
+more fully on the mind the absolute loneliness of the desert.
+
+It appeared, from their traces that the natives had lingered on this
+ground, on which they had perhaps been born, as long as it continued to
+afford them a scanty though precarious subsistence; but that they had at
+length been forced from it. Neither fish nor muscles remained in the
+creek, nor emus nor kangaroos on the plains. How then could an European
+expect to find food in deserts through which the savage wandered in vain?
+There is no doubt of the fate that would have overtaken any one of the
+party who might have strayed away, and I was happy to find that Norman's
+narrow escape had made a due impression on the minds of his comrades.
+
+SANDY PLAINS; LEAVE THE CREEK.
+
+We passed some considerable plains, lying to the eastward of the creek, on
+parts of which the grass, though growing in tufts, was of luxuriant
+growth. They were, however, more generally covered with salsola and
+rhagodia, and totally destitute of other vegetation, the soil upon them
+being a red sandy loam. The paths across the plains, which varied in
+breadth from three to eight miles, were numerous; but they had not been
+recently trodden. The creek continued to have a thick brush of casuarina
+and acacia near it, to the westward of which there was a rising open
+forest track; the timber upon it being chiefly box, cypress, and the
+acacia longifolia. It was most probably connected with New Year's Range,
+those elevations being about thirty miles distant. It terminated in some
+gentle hills which, though covered in places with acacia shrub, were
+sufficiently open to afford an extensive view. From their summit Oxley's
+Table Land, towards which we had been gradually working our way, was
+distinctly visible, distant about twenty miles, and bearing by compass
+W. by S. On descending from these hills (called the Pink Hills, from the
+colour of a flower upon them) which were scattered over with fragments of
+slaty quartz, we traversed a box flat, apparently subject to overflow,
+having a barren sandy scrub to its left. I had desired the men to preserve
+a W.N.W. direction, on leaving them, supposing that that course would have
+kept them near the creek; but, on overtaking the party, I found that they
+had wandered completely away from it. The fact was, that the creek had
+taken a sudden bend to the eastward of N. and had thus thrown them out.
+It was with some difficulty that we regained it before sunset; and we were
+at length obliged to stop for the night at a small plain, about a quarter
+of a mile short of it, but we had the satisfaction of having excellent
+feed for the animals.
+
+OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Fearful that New Year's Creek would take us too far to the eastward, and
+being anxious to keep westward as much as possible, it struck me that we
+could not, under existing circumstances, do better than make for Oxley's
+Table Land. Water, I knew, we should find in a swamp at it's base, and we
+might discover some more encouraging feature than I had observed on my
+hasty visit to it. We left the creek, therefore on the 23rd, and once more
+took up a westerly course. Passing through a generally open country, we
+stopped at noon to rest the animals; and afterwards got on an excellent
+grazing forest track, which continued to the brush, through another part
+of which I had penetrated to the marsh more to the south. While making our
+way through it, we came upon a small pond of water, and must have alarmed
+some natives, as there was a fresh made fire close to it. Our journey had
+been unusually long, and the cattle had felt the heat so much, that the
+moment they saw water they rushed into it; and, as this created some
+confusion, I thought it best to stop where we were for the night.
+
+In the morning, Mr. Hume walked with me to the hill, a distance of about a
+mile. It is not high enough to deserve the name of a mountain, although a
+beautiful feature in the country, and showing well from any point of view.
+We ascended it with an anxiety that may well be imagined, but were wholly
+disappointed in our most sanguine expectations. Our chief object, in this
+second visit to Oxley's Table Land, had been to examine, more at leisure,
+the face of the country around it, and to discover, if possible, some
+fixed point on which to move.
+
+If the rivers of the interior had already exhausted themselves, what had
+we to expect from a creek whose diminished appearance where we left it
+made us apprehend its speedy termination, and whose banks we traversed
+under constant apprehension? In any other country I should have followed
+such a water course, in hopes of its ultimately leading to some reservoir;
+but here I could encourage no such favourable anticipation.
+
+The only new object that struck our sight was a remarkable and distant
+hill of conical shape, bearing by compass S. 10 E. To the southward and
+westward, in the direction of D'Urban's Group, a dense and apparently low
+brush extended; but to the N. and N.W., there was a regular alternation of
+wood and plain. I left Mr. Hume upon the hill, that he might the more
+readily notice any smoke made by the natives; and returned myself to the
+camp about one o'clock, to move the party to the swamp. Mr. Hume's
+perseverance was of little avail. The region he had been overlooking was,
+to all appearance, uninhabited, nor did a single fire indicate that there
+was even a solitary wanderer upon its surface.
+
+EXCURSION TO D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+Our situation, at this time, was extremely embarrassing, and the only
+circumstance on which we had to congratulate ourselves was, the improved
+condition of our men; for several of the cattle and horses were in a sad
+plight. The weather had been so extremely oppressive, that we had found it
+impossible to keep them free from eruptions. I proposed to Mr. Hume,
+therefore, to give them a few days' rest, and to make an excursion, with
+such of them as were serviceable, to D'Urban's Group. We were both of us
+unwilling to return to the creek, but we foresaw that a blind reliance
+upon fortune, in our next movements, might involve us in inextricable
+difficulty.
+
+On the other hand, there was a very great risk in delay. It was more than
+probable, from the continued drought, that our retreat would be cut off
+from the want of water, or that we should only be enabled to effect our
+retreat with loss of most of the animals. The hope, however, of our
+intersecting some stream, or of falling upon a better country, prevailed
+over other considerations; and the excursion was, consequently, determined
+upon.
+
+DISTRESS FROM WANT OF WATER.
+
+We left the camp on the 25th, accompanied by Hopkinson and the tinker;
+and, almost immediately after, entered an acacia scrub of the most sterile
+description, and one, through which it would have been impossible to have
+found a passage for the boat carriage. The soil was almost a pure sand,
+and the lower branches of the trees were decayed so generally as to give
+the whole an indescribable appearance of desolation. About mid-day, we
+crossed a light sandy plain, on which there were some dirty puddles of
+water. They were so shallow as to leave the backs of the frogs in them
+exposed, and they had, in consequence, been destroyed by solar heat, and
+were in a state of putrefaction. Our horses refused to drink, but it was
+evident that some natives must have partaken of this sickening beverage
+only a few hours before our arrival. Indeed, it was clear that a wandering
+family must have slept near this spot, as we observed a fresh made gunneah
+(or native hut), and their foot-prints were so fresh along the line we
+were pursuing, that we momentarily expected to have overtaken them. It was
+late in the evening when we got out of this brush into better and more
+open ground, where, in ordinary seasons we should, no doubt, have found
+abundance of water. But we now searched in vain for it, and were contented
+to be enabled to give our wearied animals better food than they had tasted
+for many days, the forest grass, though in tufts, being abundant.
+
+We brought up for the night at the edge of a scrub, having travelled from
+thirty-two to thirty-five miles, judging the distance from the mountains
+still to be about twelve.
+
+BEARINGS FROM OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+In the morning we started at an early hour, and immediately entered the
+brush, beneath which we had slept; pursuing a westerly course through it.
+After a short ride, we found ourselves upon a plain, that was crowded with
+flocks of cockatoos. Here we got a supply of water, such as it was--so
+mixed with slime as to hang in strings between the fingers; and, after a
+hasty breakfast, we proceeded on our journey, mostly through a barren
+sandy scrub that was a perfect burrow from the number of wombats in it, to
+within a mile of the hill group, where the country appeared like one
+continuous meadow to the very base of them. I never saw anything like the
+luxuriance of the grass on this tract of country, waving as it did higher
+than our horses' middles as we rode through it. We ascended the S.W. face
+of the mountain to an elevation of at least 800 feet above the level of
+the plain, and had some difficulty in scaling the masses of rock that
+opposed themselves to our progress. But on gaining the summit, we were
+amply repaid for our trouble. The view extended far and wide, but we were
+again disappointed in the main object that had induced us to undertake the
+journey. I took the following bearings by compass. Oxley's Table Land bore
+N. 40 E. distant forty-five miles; small and distant hill due E.; conical
+peak seen from Oxley's Table Land S. 60 E., very distant; long ridge of
+high land, S.E., distant thirty-five miles; high land, S. 30 E., distant
+thirty miles; long range, S. 25 W.
+
+To the westward, as a medium point. the horizon was unbroken, and the eye
+wandered over an apparently endless succession of wood and plain. A
+brighter green than usual marked the course of the mountain torrents in
+several places, but there was no glittering light among the trees, no
+smoke to betray a water hole, or to tell that a single inhabitant was
+traversing the extensive region we were overlooking. We were obliged to
+return to the plain on which we had breakfasted, and to sleep upon it.
+
+D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+D'Urban's Group is of compact sandstone formation. Its extreme length is
+from E.S.E. to W.N.W., and cannot be more than from seven to nine miles,
+whilst its breadth is from two to four. The central space forms a large
+basin, in which there are stunted pines and eucalyptus scrub, amid huge
+fragments of rocks. It rises like an island from the midst of the ocean,
+and as I looked upon it from the plains below, I could without any great
+stretch of the imagination, picture to myself that it really was such.
+Bold and precipitous, it only wanted the sea to lave its base; and I
+cannot but think that such must at no very remote period have been the
+case, and that the immense flat we had been traversing, is of
+comparatively recent formation.
+
+We reached the camp on the 28th of the month, by nearly the same route;
+and were happy to find that, after the few days' rest they had enjoyed,
+there was a considerable improvement in the animals.
+
+Our experience of the nature of the country to the southward, and the
+westward, was such as to deter us from risking anything, by taking such a
+direction as was most agreeable to our views. Nothing remained to us but
+to follow the creek, or to retreat; and as we could only be induced to
+adopt the last measure when every other expedient should have failed, we
+determined on pursuing our original plan, of tracing New Year's Creek as
+far as practicable.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Oxley's Table Land is situated in lat. 29 degrees 57 minutes 30 seconds,
+and in E. long. 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds, the mean variation
+being 6.32 easterly. It consists of two hills that appear to have been
+rent asunder by some convulsion of nature, since the passage between them
+is narrow and their inner faces are equally perpendicular. The hill which
+I have named after the late Surveyor-general, is steep on all sides; but
+the other gradually declines from the south, and at length loses itself in
+a large plain that extends to the north. It is from four to five miles in
+length, and is picturesque in appearance, and lightly wooded. A few
+cypresses were growing on Oxley's Table Land; but it had, otherwise, very
+little timber upon its summit. Both hills are of sandstone formation, and
+there are some hollows upon the last that deserve particular notice. They
+have the appearance of having been formed by eddies of water, being deeper
+in the centre than at any other part, and contain fragments and slabs of
+sandstone of various size and breadth, without a particle of soil or of
+sand between them. It is to be observed that the edges of these slabs,
+which were perfect parallelograms, were unbroken, and that they were as
+clean as if they had only just been turned out of the hand of the mason.
+We counted thirteen of these hollows in one spot about twenty-five feet in
+diameter, but they are without doubt of periodical formation, since a
+single hollow was observed lower than the summit of the hill upon its
+south extremity, that had evidently long been exposed to the action of the
+atmosphere, and had a general coating of moss over it.
+
+CONTINUE THE JOURNEY; DOWN NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+We left Oxley's Table Land on the morning of the 31st of January, pursuing
+a northern course through the brush and across a large plain, moving
+parallel to the smaller hill, and keeping it upon our left. The soil upon
+this plain differed in character from that on the plains to the eastward,
+and was much freer from sand. We stopped to dine at a spot, whence Oxley's
+Table Land bore by compass, S. by W., distant about twelve miles.
+Continuing our journey, at 2 p.m. we cleared the plain, and entered a
+tract covered with the polygonum junceum, on a soil evidently the deposit
+of floods. Box-trees were thinly scattered over it, and among the
+polygonum, the crested pigeons were numerous. These general appearances,
+together with a dip of country to the N.N.W., made us conclude that we
+were approaching the creek, and we accordingly intersected it on a N.N.E.
+course, at about three miles' distance from where we had dined. It had,
+however, undergone so complete a change, and had increased so much in size
+and in the height of its banks, that we were at a loss to recognize it.
+Still, with all these favourable symptoms, there was not a drop of water
+in it. But small shells lay in heaps in its bed, or were abundantly
+scattered over it; and we remarked that they differed from those on the
+plains of the Macquarie. A circumstance that surprised us much, was the
+re-appearance of the flooded-gum upon its banks, and that too of a large
+size. We had not seen any to the westward of the marshes, and we were,
+consequently, led to indulge in more sanguine expectation as to our
+ultimate success than we had ever ventured to do before.
+
+The party crossed to the right bank of the creek, and then moved in a
+westerly direction along it in search of water. A brush extended to our
+right, and some broken stony ground, rather elevated, was visible, to
+which Mr. Hume rode; nor did he join me again until after I had halted the
+party for the night.
+
+DISTRESSED FOR WATER.
+
+My search for water had been unsuccessful, and the sun had set, when I
+came upon a broad part of the creek that appeared very favourable for an
+encampment, as it was encompassed by high banks, and would afford the men
+a greater facility of watching the cattle, that I knew would stray away if
+they could.
+
+My anxiety for them led me to wander down the bed of the creek, when, to
+my joy, I found a pond of water within a hundred yards of the tents. It is
+impossible for me to describe the relief I felt at this success, or the
+gladness it spread among the men. Mr. Hume joined me at dusk, and informed
+me that he had made a circuit, and had struck upon the creek about three
+miles below us but that, in tracing it up, he had not found a drop of
+water until he came to the pond near which we had so providentially
+encamped. On the following morning, we held a westerly course over an open
+country for about eight miles and a half. The prevailing timber appeared
+to he a species of eucalypti, with rough bark, of small size, and
+evidently languishing from the want of moisture. The soil over which we
+travelled was far from bad, but there was a total absence of water upon
+it. At 6 p.m. Oxley's Table Land was distant from us about fifteen miles,
+bearing S. 20 E. by compass.
+
+We had not touched upon the creek from the time we left it in the morning,
+having wandered from it in a northerly direction, along a native path that
+we intersected, and that seemed to have been recently trodden, since
+footsteps were fresh upon it. At sunset, we crossed a broad dry creek that
+puzzled us extremely, and were shortly afterwards obliged to stop for the
+night upon a plain beyond it. We had, during the afternoon, bent down to
+the S.W. in hopes that we should again have struck upon New Year's Creek;
+and, under an impression that we could not be far from it, Mr. Hume and I
+walked across the plain, to ascertain if it was sufficiently near to be of
+any service to us. We came upon a creek, but could not decide whether it
+was the one for which we had been searching, or another.
+
+Its bed was so perfectly even that it was impossible to say to what point
+it flowed, more especially as all remains of debris had mouldered away. It
+was, however, extremely broad, and evidently, at times, held a furious
+torrent. In the centre of it, at one of the angles, we discovered a pole
+erected, and at first thought, from the manner in which it was propped up,
+that some unfortunate European must have placed it there as a mark to tell
+of his wanderings, but we afterwards concluded that it might be some
+superstitious rite of the natives, in consequence of the untowardness of
+the season, as it seemed almost inconceivable that an European could have
+wandered to such a distance from the located districts in safety.
+
+REACH A LARGE RIVER.
+
+The creek had flooded-gum growing upon its banks, and, on places
+apparently subject to flood, a number of tall straight saplings were
+observed by us. We returned to the camp, after a vain search for water,
+and were really at a loss what direction next to pursue. The men kept the
+cattle pretty well together, and, as we were not delayed by any
+preparations for breakfast, they were saddled and loaded at an early hour.
+The circumstance of there having been natives in the neighbourhood, of
+whom we had seen so few traces of late, assured me that water was at hand,
+but in what direction it was impossible to guess. As the path we had
+observed was leading northerly, we took up that course, and had not
+proceeded more than a mile upon it, when we suddenly found ourselves on
+the banks of a noble river. Such it might in truth be called, where water
+was scarcely to be found. The party drew up upon a bank that was from
+forty to forty-five feet above the level of the stream. The channel of the
+river was front seventy to eighty yards broad, and enclosed an unbroken
+sheet of water, evidently very deep, and literally covered with pelicans
+and other wild fowl. Our surprise and delight may better be imagined than
+described. Our difficulties seemed to be at an end, for here was a river
+that promised to reward all our exertions, and which appeared every moment
+to increase in importance to our imagination. Coming from the N.E.,and
+flowing to the S.W., it had a capacity of channel that proved that we were
+as far from its source as from its termination. The paths of the natives
+on either side of it were like well trodden roads; and the trees that
+overhung it were of beautiful and gigantic growth.
+
+DISAPPOINTMENT ON FINDING THE RIVER SALT.
+
+Its banks were too precipitous to allow of our watering the cattle, but
+the men eagerly descended to quench their thirst, which a powerful sun had
+contributed to increase; nor shall I ever forget the cry of amazement that
+followed their doing so, or the looks of terror and disappointment with
+which they called out to inform me that the water was so salt as to be
+unfit to drink! This was, indeed, too true: on tasting it, I found it
+extremely nauseous, and strongly impregnated with salt, being apparently
+a mixture of sea and fresh water. Whence this arose, whether from local
+causes, or from a communication with some inland sea, I knew not, but the
+discovery was certainly a blow for which I was not prepared. Our hopes
+were annihilated at the moment of their apparent realization. The cup of
+joy was dashed out of our hands before we had time to raise it to our
+lips. Notwithstanding this disappointment, we proceeded down the river,
+and halted at about five miles, being influenced by the goodness of the
+feed to provide for the cattle as well as circumstances would permit. They
+would not drink of the river water, but stood covered in it for many
+hours, having their noses alone exposed above the stream. Their condition
+gave me great uneasiness. It was evident they could not long hold out
+under their excessive thirst, and unless we should procure some fresh
+water, it would impossible for us to continue our journey. On a closer
+examination, the river appeared to me much below its ordinary level, and
+its current was scarcely perceptible. We placed sticks to ascertain if
+there was a rise or fall of tide, but could arrive at no satisfactory
+conclusion, although there was undoubtedly a current in it. Yet, as I
+stood upon its banks at sunset, when not a breath of air existed to break
+the stillness of the waters below me, and saw their surface kept in
+constant agitation by the leaping of fish, I doubted whether the river
+could supply itself so abundantly, and the rather imagined, that it owed
+such abundance, which the pelicans seemed to indicate was constant, to
+some mediterranean sea or other. Where, however, were the human
+inhabitants of this distant and singular region? The signs of a numerous
+population were around us, but we had not seen even a solitary wanderer.
+The water of the river was not, by any means, so salt as that of the
+ocean, but its taste was precisely similar. Could it be that its unnatural
+state had driven its inhabitants from its banks?
+
+One would have imagined that our perplexities would have been sufficient
+for one day, but ere night closed, they increased upon us, although our
+anxiety, with regard to the cattle, was happily removed. Mr. Hume with his
+usual perseverance, walked out when the camp was formed; and, at a little
+distance from it, ascended a ridge of pure sand, crowned with cypresses.
+From this, he descended to the westward, and, at length, struck upon the
+river, where a reef of rocks creased its channel, and formed a dry passage
+from one side to the other; but the bend, which the river must have taken,
+appeared to him so singular, that he doubted whether it was the same
+beside which we had been travelling during the day. Curiosity led him to
+cross it, when he found a small pond of fresh water on a tongue of land,
+and, immediately afterwards, returned to acquaint me with the welcome
+tidings. It was too late to move, but we had, at least, the prospect of a
+comfortable breakfast in the morning.
+
+JUNCTION OF NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+In consequence of the doubts that hung upon Mr. Hume's mind, as to the
+course of the river, we arranged that the animals should precede us to the
+fresh water; and that we should keep close in upon the stream, to
+ascertain that point. After traversing a deep bight, we arrived nearly as
+soon as the party, at the appointed rendezvous. The rocks composing the
+channel of the river at the crossing place, were of indurated clay. In the
+course of an hour, the animals appearing quite refreshed, we proceeded on
+our journey, and at about four miles crossed New Year's Creek, at its
+junction with the salt river. We passed several parts of the main channel
+that were perfectly dry, and were altogether at a loss to account for the
+current we undoubtedly had observed in the river when we first came upon
+it. At midday D'Urban's Group bore S. 65 E. distant about 32 miles. We
+made a little westing in the afternoon. The river continued to maintain
+its character and appearance, its lofty banks, and its long still reaches:
+while, however, the blue-gum trees upon its banks were of magnificent
+size, the soil had but little vegetation upon it, although an alluvial
+deposit.
+
+We passed over vast spaces covered with the polygonum junceum, that bore
+all the appearance of the flooded tracks in the neighbourhood of the
+marshes, and on which the travelling was equally distressing to the
+animals. Indeed, it had been sufficiently evident to us that the waters of
+this river were not always confined to its channel, capacious as it was,
+but that they inundated a belt of barren land, that varied in width from a
+quarter of a mile to a mile, when they were checked by an outer embankment
+that prevented them from spreading generally over the country, and upon
+the neighbouring plains. At our halting place, the cattle drank sparingly
+of the water, but it acted as a violent purgative both on them and the men
+who partook of it.
+
+NATIVE VILLAGE.
+
+On the 5th, the river led us to the southward and westward. Early in the
+day, we passed a group of seventy huts, capable of holding from twelve to
+fifteen men each. They appeared to be permanent habitations, and all of
+them fronted the same point of the compass. In searching amongst them we
+observed two beautifully made nets, of about ninety yards in length. The
+one had much larger meshes than the other, and was, most probably,
+intended to take kangaroos; but the other was evidently a fishing net.
+
+In one hut, the floor of which was swept with particular care, a number of
+white balls, as of pulverised shells or lime, had been deposited--the
+use of which we could not divine. A trench was formed round the hut to
+prevent the rain from running under it, and the whole was arranged with
+more than ordinary attention.
+
+TERROR OF THE NATIVES.
+
+We had not proceeded very far when we came suddenly upon the tribe to
+which this village, as it might be called, belonged.
+
+In breaking through some brush to an open space that was bounded on one
+side by the river, we observed three or four natives, seated on a bank at
+a considerable distance from us; and directly in the line on which we were
+moving. The nature of the ground so completely favoured our approach, that
+they did not become aware of it until we were within a few yards of them,
+and had ascended a little ridge, which, as we afterwards discovered, ended
+in an abrupt precipice upon the river, not more than thirty yards to our
+right. The crack of the drayman's whip was the first thing that aroused
+their attention. They gazed upon us for a moment, and then started up and
+assumed an attitude of horror and amazement; their terror apparently
+increasing upon them. We stood perfectly immovable, until at length they
+gave a fearful yell, and darted out of sight.
+
+THEY FIRE THE BUSH.
+
+Their cry brought about a dozen more natives from the river, whom we had
+not before observed, but who now ran after their comrades with surprising
+activity, and without once venturing to look behind them. As our position
+was a good one, we determined to remain upon it, until we should ascertain
+the number and disposition of the natives. We had not been long
+stationary, when we heard a crackling noise in the distance, and it soon
+became evident that the bush had been fired. It was, however, impossible
+that we could receive any injury on the narrow ridge upon which we stood,
+so that we waited very patiently to see the end of this affair.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES; DISEASE AMONG THEM.
+
+In a short time the fire approached pretty near to us, and dense columns
+of smoke rose into the air over our heads. One of the natives, who had
+been on the bank, now came out of the bush, exactly from the spot into
+which he had retreated. He advanced a few paces towards us, and bending
+his body so that his hands rested on his knees, he fixed his gaze upon us
+for some time; but, seeing that we remained immovable, he began to throw
+himself into the most extravagant attitudes, shaking his foot from time to
+time. When he found that all his violence had no effect, he turned his
+rear to us in a most laughable manner, and absolutely groaned in spirit
+when he found that this last insult failed of success.
+
+He stood perplexed and not knowing what next to do, which gave Mr. Hume an
+opportunity to call out to him, and with considerable address he at length
+got the savage to approach close up to him; Mr. Hume himself having
+advanced a short distance from the animals in the first instance. As soon
+as I thought the savage had sufficiently recovered from his alarm, I went
+up to him with a tomahawk, the use of which he immediately guessed. We now
+observed that the natives who had fled from the river, had been employed
+in setting a net. They had placed it in a semicircle, with either end to
+the shore, and rude pieces of wood were attached to it to keep the upper
+part perpendicular. It was in fact a sein, only that the materials, with
+the exception of the net-work, were simpler and rougher than cork or
+lead--for which last, we afterwards discovered stones had been
+substituted.
+
+We had on this occasion a remarkable instance of the docility of the
+natives of the interior, or of the power they have of subduing their
+apprehensions; manifesting the opposite extremes of fear and confidence.
+These men whom we had thus surprised, and who, no doubt, imagined that we
+were about to destroy them, having apparently never seen nor heard of
+white men before, must have taken us for something preternatural; yet from
+the extremity of fear that had prompted them to set their woods in flames,
+they in a brief space so completely subdued those fears as to approach
+the very beings who had so strongly excited their alarm. The savage who
+had been the principal actor in the scene, was an elderly man, rather
+descending to the vale of years than what might be strictly called aged.
+I know not how it was, but I regarded him with peculiar interest.
+Mr. Hume's manners had in a great measure contributed to allay his evident
+agitation; but, from the moment I approached him, I thought there was a
+shade of anxiety upon his brow, and an expression of sorrow over his
+features, the cause of which did not originate with us. I could see in a
+moment, that his bosom was full even to bursting, and he seemed to claim
+at once our sympathy and our protection, although we were ignorant of that
+which oppressed him. We had not long been seated together, when some of
+his tribe mustered sufficient courage to join him. Both Mr. Hume and I
+were desirous of seeing the net drawn, but the old man raised some
+objection, by pointing to the heavens and towards the sun. After a little
+more solicitation, however, he gave a whistle, and, four or five natives
+having obeyed the summons, he directed them to draw the net, but they were
+unfortunate, and our wish to ascertain the kind of fish contained in the
+river was disappointed. As his tribe gathered round him, the old chief
+threw a melancholy glance upon them, and endeavoured, as much as he could,
+to explain the cause of that affliction which, as I had rightly judged,
+weighed heavily upon him. It appeared, then, that a violent cutaneous
+disease raged throughout the tribe, that was sweeping them off in great
+numbers. He called several young men to Mr. Hume and myself, who had been
+attacked by this singular malady. Nothing could exceed the anxiety of his
+explanations, or the mild and soothing tone in which he addressed his
+people, and it really pained me that I could not assist him in his
+distress. We now discovered the use to which the conical substance that
+had been deposited with such unusual care in one of the huts, was applied.
+There were few of the natives present who were not more or less marked
+with it, and it was no doubt, indicative of mourning.
+
+DEPARTURE OF THE NATIVES.
+
+Some of the men, however, were painted with red and yellow ochre, with
+which it was evident to me they had besmeared themselves since our
+appearance, most likely in preparing for the combat in which they fancied
+they would be engaged. We distributed such presents as we had to those
+around us, and when we pursued our journey, the majority accompanied us,
+nor did they wholly leave us until we had passed the place to which their
+women had retired. They might have left us when they pleased, for we
+intended them no harm; as it was, however, they struck into the brushes to
+join their families, and we pushed on to make up for lost time.
+
+The travelling near the river had been so bad, not only in consequence of
+the nature of the soil and brush, but from the numerous gullies that had
+been formed by torrents, as they poured into its channel after heavy rains
+and floods, that it was thought advisable to keep at a greater distance
+from it. We turned away, therefore, to the plains, and found them of much
+firmer surface. They partook, however, of the same general character as
+the plains we had traversed more to the eastward. Their soil was a light
+sandy loam, and the same succulent plants still continued to prevail upon
+them, which we have already noticed as existing upon the other plains.
+Both emus and kangaroos were seen, though not in any considerable numbers,
+but our dogs were not in a condition to run, and were all but killed by
+the extreme heat of the weather. We had fallen on a small pool of water
+shortly after we started in the morning, but we could do no more than
+refresh ourselves and the animals at it. In the afternoon, we again turned
+towards the river, and found it unaltered. Its water was still salt, and
+from the increased number of wild fowl and pelicans upon it, as well as
+from the general flatness of the country, I certainly thought we were
+rapidly approaching some inland sea. It was, however, uncertain how long
+we should be enabled to continue on the river. The animals were all of
+them extremely weak, and every day increased the probable difficulty of
+our return. There was not the least appearance of a break-up of the
+drought, the heavens were without a cloud, and the atmosphere was so clear
+that the outline of the moon could be distinctly seen, although she was
+far in her wane.
+
+BRINE SPRINGS IN THE RIVER.
+
+On the 6th, we journeyed again through a barren scrub, although on firmer
+ground, and passed numerous groups of huts. At about eight miles from our
+last encampment, we came upon the river, where its banks were of
+considerable height. In riding along them, Mr. Hume thought he observed a
+current running, and be called to inform me of the circumstance. On a
+closer examination, we discovered some springs in the very bed of the
+river, from which a considerable stream was gushing, and from the
+incrustation around them, we had no difficulty in guessing at their
+nature: in fact, they were brine springs, and I collected a quantity of
+salt from the brink of them.
+
+DISTRESS FOR WANT OF FRESH WATER.
+
+After such a discovery, we could not hope to keep our position. No doubt
+the current we had observed on first reaching the river, was caused by
+springs that had either escaped our notice or were under water. Here was
+at length a local cause for its saltness that destroyed at once the
+anticipation and hope of our being near its termination, and,
+consequently, the ardour with which we should have pressed on to decide so
+interesting a point.
+
+Our retreat would have been a measure of absolute necessity ere this, had
+we not found occasional supplies of fresh water, the last pond of which
+was now about eighteen miles behind us.
+
+OUR COURSE ARRESTED.
+
+Whether we should again find any, was a doubtful question, and I hesitated
+to run the risk. The animals were already, from bad food, and from the
+effects of the river water, so weak, that they could scarcely carry their
+loads, and I was aware, if any of the bullocks once fell, he would never
+rise again. Under such circumstances, I thought it better to halt the
+party at the edge of the scrub, though the feed was poor, and the water
+not drinkable. Our situation required most serious consideration. It was
+necessary that we should move either backward or forward in the morning.
+Yet we could not adopt either measure with satisfaction to ourselves,
+under such unfavorable circumstances. I determined to relieve my own mind
+by getting the animals into a place of safety, as soon as possible; and,
+as the only effectual way of doing this was to retire upon the nearest
+fresh water, I resolved at once to do so. The party turned back on the
+morning of the 6th; nor do I think the cattle would ever have reached
+their destination had we not found a few buckets of rain water in the
+cleft of a rock, to refresh them. Thus it will appear that under our most
+trying circumstances, we received aid from Providence, and that the bounty
+of Heaven was extended towards us, when we had least reason to expect it.
+
+Notwithstanding we had been thus forced to a partial retreat, both
+Mr. Hume and myself were unwilling to quit the pursuit of the river, in so
+unsatisfactory a manner. There was no difference in the appearance of the
+country to the westward of it; but a seeming interminable flat stretched
+away in that direction. A journey across it was not likely, therefore, to
+be attended with any favorable results, since it was improbable that any
+other leading feature was within our reach. I proposed, therefore, to take
+the most serviceable of the horses with me down the river, that, in the
+event of our finding fresh water, we might again push forward. Mr. Hume
+requesting to be permitted to accompany me, it was arranged that we should
+start on the 8th, thereby giving the animals a day's rest. We had not seen
+any natives since our parting with the chief horde; and as we were
+stationed at some little distance from the river, I hoped that they would
+not visit the camp during my absence. This was the only circumstance that
+gave me uneasiness, but the men had generally been behaving so well that I
+relied a great deal upon them.
+
+EXTRAORDINARY SOUND.
+
+About 3 p.m. on the 7th, Mr. Hume and I were occupied tracing the chart
+upon the ground. The day had been remarkably fine, not a cloud was there
+in the heavens, nor a breath of air to be felt. On a sudden we heard what
+seemed to be the report of a gun fired at the distance of between five and
+six miles. It was not the hollow sound of an earthly explosion, or the
+sharp cracking noise of falling timber, but in every way resembled a
+discharge of a heavy piece of ordnance. On this all were agreed, but no
+one was certain whence the sound proceeded. Both Mr. Hume and myself had
+been too attentive to our occupation to form a satisfactory opinion; but
+we both thought it came from the N.W. I sent one of the men immediately up
+a tree, but he could observe nothing unusual. The country around him
+appeared to be equally flat on all sides, and to be thickly wooded:
+whatever occasioned the report, it made a strong impression on all of us;
+and to this day, the singularity of such a sound, in such a situation,
+is a matter of mystery to me.
+
+FURTHER ATTEMPT TO EXPLORE THE RIVER.
+
+On the 8th, we commenced our journey down the river, accompanied by two
+men, and a pack-horse, carrying our provisions on one side and a bucket of
+water on the other. Keeping in general near the stream, but making
+occasional turns into the plains, we got to the brush from which the party
+had turned back, about 3 p.m. Passing through, we crossed a small plain,
+of better soil and vegetation than usual; but it soon gave place to the
+sandy loam of the interior; nor did we observe any material alteration,
+either in the country or the river, as we rode along. The flooded-gum
+trees on the banks of the latter, were of beautiful growth, but in the
+brushes dividing the plains, box and other eucalypti, with cypresses and
+many minor shrubs, prevailed. We slept on the river side, and calculated
+our distance from the camp at about twenty-six or twenty-eight miles.
+
+The horses would not drink the river water, so that we were obliged to
+give them a pint each from our own supply. On the following morning we
+continued our journey. The country was generally open to the eastward, and
+we had fine views of D'Urban's Group, distant from twenty to twenty-five
+miles. About noon, turning towards the river to rest, both ourselves and
+the horses, we passed through brush land for about a mile and a half. When
+we came upon its banks, we found them composed of a red loam with sandy
+superficies. We had, in the course of the day, crossed several creeks, but
+in none of them could we find water, although their channels were of great
+depth.
+
+The day had been extremely warm, and from shaking in the barrel our supply
+of water had diminished to a little more than a pint; it consequently
+became a matter of serious consideration, how far it would he prudent to
+proceed farther; for, however capable we were of bearing additional
+fatigue, it was evident our animals would soon fail, since they trembled
+exceedingly, and had the look of total exhaustion. We calculated that we
+were forty miles from the camp, in a S.W. direction, a fearful distance
+under our circumstances, since we could not hope to obtain relief for two
+days. Independently however, of the state of the animals, our spirits were
+damped by the nature of the country, and the change which had taken place
+on the soil, upon which it was impossible that water could rest; while the
+general appearance of the interior showed how much it had suffered from
+drought. On the other hand, although the waters of the river had become
+worse to the taste, the river itself had increased in size, and stretched
+away to the westward, with all the uniformity of a magnificent canal, and
+gave every promise of increasing importance; while the pelicans were in
+such numbers upon it as to be quite dazzling to the eye. Considering,
+however, that perseverance would only involve us in inextricable
+difficulties, and that it would also be useless to risk the horses, since
+we had gained a distance to which the bullocks could not have been
+brought, I intimated my intention of giving up the further pursuit of the
+river, though it was with extreme reluctance that I did so.
+
+CALLED IT THE "DARLING".
+
+As soon as we had bathed and finished our scanty meal, I took the bearings
+of D'Urban's Group, and found them to be S. 58 E. about thirty-three miles
+distant; and as we mounted our horses, I named the river the "Darling,"
+as a lasting memorial of the respect I bear the governor.
+
+ABANDON THE ATTEMPT.
+
+I should be doing injustice to Mr. Hume and my men, if I did not express
+my conviction that they were extremely unwilling to yield to
+circumstances, and that, had I determined on continuing the journey, they
+would have followed me with cheerfulness, whatever the consequences might
+have been.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach
+the Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck
+upon it.
+
+
+We kept near the river as we journeyed homewards, and in striking across a
+plain, found an isolated rock of quartz and jasper, just showing itself
+partially above the surface of the ground.
+
+We were anxious to get to the small plain I have mentioned, if possible,
+for the sake of the animals, and pushed on rapidly for it. About 4 p.m. we
+had reached our sleeping place of the previous evening, and being
+overpowered by thirst, we stopped in hopes that by making our tea strong
+we might destroy, in some measure, the nauseous taste of the water. The
+horses were spancelled and a fire lit. Whilst we were sitting patiently
+for the boiling of the tins, Mr. Hume observed at a considerable distance
+above us, a large body of natives under some gum trees. They were not near
+enough for us to observe them distinctly, but it was evident that they
+were watching our motions. We did not take any notice of them for some
+time, but at last I thought it better to call out to them, and accordingly
+requested Mr. Hume to do so. In a moment the whole of them ran forward and
+dashed into the river, having been on the opposite side, with an uproar I
+had never witnessed on any former occasion.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH NATIVES.
+
+Mr. Hume thought they intended an attack, and the horses had taken fright
+and galloped away. I determined, therefore, to fire at once upon them if
+they pressed up the bank on which we were posted. Mr. Hume went with me
+to the crest of it, and we rather angrily beckoned to the foremost of the
+natives to stop. They mistook our meaning, but laid all their spears in a
+heap as they came up. We then sat down on the bank and they immediately
+did the same; nor did they stir until we beckoned to them after the horses
+had been secured.
+
+As they conducted themselves so inoffensively, we gave them everything we
+had to spare. My gun seemed to excite their curiosity, as they had seen
+Mr. Hume shoot a cockatoo with it; they must consequently have been close
+to us for the greater part of the day, as the bird was killed in the
+morning. It was of a species new to me, being smaller than the common
+white cockatoo, and having a large scarlet-and-yellow instead of a
+pine-yellow top-knot.
+
+Having stayed about half an hour with them, we remounted our horses, and
+struck away from the river into the plains, while the natives went up its
+banks to join their hordes. Those whom we saw were about twenty-seven in
+number and the most of them were strangers.
+
+DISTRESS FROM THIRST.
+
+It was some time after sunset before we reached the little plain on which
+we had arranged to sleep, and when we dismounted we were in a truly
+pitiable state. I had been unable to refrain from drinking copiously at
+the river, and now became extremely sick. Mr. Hume had been scarcely more
+prudent than myself, but on him the water had a contrary effect, as well
+as upon Hopkinson. The tinker was the only man fit for duty, and it was
+well for us that such was the case, as the horses made frequent attempts
+to stray, and would have left us in a pretty plight had they succeeded. We
+reached the camp on the following day a little before sunset, nor was I
+more rejoiced to dismount from my wearied horse than to learn that
+everything in the camp had been regular during our absence and that the
+men had kept on the best terms with the natives who had paid them frequent
+visits.
+
+The bullocks had improved, but were still extremely weak, and as the
+horses we had employed on the last journey required a day or two's rest,
+it was arranged that we should not break up our camp until the 12th,
+beyond which period we could not stop, in consequence of the low state of
+our salt provisions, we having barely sufficient to last to Mount Harris,
+at the rate of two pounds per week.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES.
+
+The morning after we returned from our excursion, a large party of
+natives, about seventy in number, visited the camp. On this occasion, the
+women and children passed behind the tents, but did not venture to stop.
+Most of the men had spears, and were unusually inquisitive and forward.
+Several of them carried fire-sticks under the influence of the disease I
+have already noticed, whilst others were remarked to have violent
+cutaneous eruptions all over the body. We were pretty well on the alert;
+notwithstanding which, every minor article was seized with a quickness
+that would have done credit to a most finished juggler. One of the natives
+thus picked up my comb and toothbrush, but as he did not attempt to
+conceal them, they were fortunately recovered. After staying with us a
+short time the men followed the women. They appeared to be strangers who
+had come from a distance.
+
+CUSTOMS OF THE NATIVES.
+
+The natives of the Darling are a clean-limbed, well-conditioned race,
+generally speaking. They seemingly occupy permanent huts, but their tribe
+did not bear any proportion to the size or number of their habitations.
+It was evident their population had been thinned. The customs of these
+distant tribes, as far as we could judge, were similar to those of the
+mountain blacks, and they are essentially the same people, although their
+language differs. They lacerate their bodies, but do not extract the front
+teeth. We saw but few cloaks among them, since the opossum does not
+inhabit the interior. Those that were noticed, were made of the red
+kangaroo skin. In appearance, these men are stouter in the bust than at
+the lower extremities; they have broad noses, sunken eyes, overhanging
+eyebrows, and thick lips. The men are much better looking than the women.
+Both go perfectly naked, if I except the former, who wear nets over the
+loins and across the forehead, and bones through the cartilages of the
+nose. Their chief food is fish, of which they have great supplies in the
+river; still they have their seasons for hunting their emus and kangaroos.
+The nets they use for this purpose, as well as for fishing, are of great
+length, and are made upon large frames. These people do not appear to have
+warlike habits nor do they take any pride in their arms, which differ
+little from those used by the inland tribes, and are assimilated to them
+as far as the materials will allow. One powerful man, however, had a
+regular trident, for which Mr. Hume offered many things without success.
+He plainly intimated to us that he had a use for it, but whether against
+an enemy or to secure prey, we could not understand. I was most anxious to
+have ascertained if any religious ceremonies obtained among them, but the
+difficulty of making them comprehend our meaning was insurmountable; and
+to the same cause may be attributed the circumstance of my being unable to
+collect any satisfactory vocabulary of their language. They evinced a
+strange perversity, or obstinacy rather, in repeating words, although it
+was evident that they knew they were meant as questions. The pole we
+observed in the creek, on the evening previously to our making the
+Darling, was not the only one that fell under our notice; our impression
+therefore, that they were fixed by the natives to propitiate some deity,
+was confirmed. It would appear that the white pigment was an indication of
+mourning. Whether these people have an idea of a superintending Providence
+I doubt, but they evidently dread evil agency. On the whole I should say
+they are a people, at present, at the very bottom of the scale of
+humanity.
+
+REMARKS ON THE DARLING RIVER.
+
+We struck the Darling River in lat. 29 degrees 37 minutes S. and in E.
+long. 145 degrees 33 minutes, and traced it down for about sixty-six miles
+in a direct line to the S.W. If I might hazard an opinion from appearance,
+to whatever part of the interior it leads, its source must be far to the
+N.E. or N. The capacity of its channel, and the terrific floods that must
+sometimes rage in it, would argue that it is influenced by tropical rains,
+which alone would cause such floods. It is likely that it seldom arrives
+at so reduced a state as that in which we found it, and that, generally
+speaking, it has a sufficient depth of water for the purposes of inland
+navigation: in such case its future importance cannot be questioned, since
+it most probably receives the chief streams falling westerly from the
+coast ranges. But, with every anticipation of the benefit that may at some
+time or other be derived from this remarkable and central stream, it is
+incumbent on me to state that the country, through which it flows, holds
+out but little prospect of advantage. Certainly the portion we know of it,
+is far from encouraging. The extent of alluvial soil, between the inner
+and outer banks of the river, is extremely limited, and, instead of being
+covered with sward, is in most places over-run by the polygonum. Beyond
+this the plains of the interior stretch away, whose character and soil
+must change, ere they can be available to any good purpose. But there is a
+singular want of vegetable decay in the interior of New Holland, and that
+powerfully argues its recent origin.
+
+REMARKS ON THE COUNTRY.
+
+There is no life upon its surface, if I may so express myself; but the
+stillness of death reigns in its brushes, and over its plains. It cannot,
+however, be doubted that we visited the interior during a most unfavorable
+season. Probably in ordinary ones it wears a different appearance, but its
+deserts are of great extent, and its productions are of little value.
+
+Agreeably to our arrangements, we broke up our camp at an early hour on
+the morning of the 12th, and proceeded up the river to the junction of
+New Year's Creek. We then struck away in an easterly direction from it,
+detaching a man to trace the creek up, lest we should pass any water; and
+we should certainly have been without it had we not taken this precaution.
+
+On the following day, we again passed to the eastward, through an open
+country, having picturesque views of Oxley's Table Land. We crossed our
+track about noon, and struck on the creek at about five miles beyond it,
+and we were fortunate enough to procure both water and grass. The timber
+upon the plains, between us and the Darling, we found to be a rough gum,
+but box prevailed in the neighbourhood of the creek at this part of it.
+
+On the 14th, we changed our direction more to the southward, but made a
+short journey, in consequence of being obliged to make some slight repairs
+on the boat carriage.
+
+REGAIN OUR OLD ROUTE.
+
+On the 15th, we kept an E.S.E. course, and, crossing the creek at an early
+hour, got upon our old track, which we kept. We had the lateral ridge of
+the Pink Hills upon our right, and travelled through a good deal of brush.
+Four or five natives joined us, and two followed us to the end of our
+day's journey. In the course of the evening, they endeavoured to pilfer
+whatever was in their reach, but were detected putting a tin into a bush,
+and soon took to their heels. This was the first instance we had of open
+theft among the natives of the interior.
+
+We passed Mosquito Brush on the 18th, but found the ponds quite dry, we
+were, therefore, under the necessity of pushing on, to shorten the next
+day's journey, as we could not expect to get water nearer than the
+marshes. At noon, on the 19th, we entered the plain, and once more saw
+them spreading in dreariness before us. While the party was crossing to
+the first channel, I rode to the left, in order to examine the appearance
+of the country in the direction of the wood, and as far as I skirted the
+reeds had my impressions confirmed as to their partial extension. I was
+obliged, however, to join the men without completing the circuit of the
+marshes. They had found the first channel dry, and had passed on to the
+other, in which, fortunately, a small quantity of water still remained.
+It was, however, so shallow as to expose the backs of the fish in it, and
+a number of crows had congregated, and were pecking at them. Wishing to
+satisfy my mind as to the distance to which the river extended to the
+northward, Mr. Hume rode with me on the following day, to examine the
+country in that direction, leaving the men stationary. We found that the
+reeds gradually decreased in body, until, at length, they ceased, or gave
+place to bulrushes. There were general appearances of inundation, and of
+the subsidence of waters, but none that led us to suppose that any channel
+existed beyond the flooded lands.
+
+ALARM FOR THE SAFETY OF THE PROVISION PARTY.
+
+On our return to the camp, we observed dense masses of smoke rising at the
+head of the marshes, and immediately under Mount Foster. This excited our
+alarm for the safety of the party we hoped to find at Mount Harris, and
+obliged us to make forced marches, to relieve it if threatened by the
+natives.
+
+On the 22nd, we crossed the plains of the Macquarie, and surprised a
+numerous tribe on the banks of the river; and the difficulty we found in
+getting any of them to approach us, their evident timidity, and the
+circumstance of one of them having on a jacket, tended to increase our
+apprehensions. When two or three came to us, they intimated that white
+men either had been or were under Mount Harris, but we were left in
+uncertainty and passed a most anxious night.
+
+The body of reeds was still on fire; and the light embers were carried to
+an amazing distance by the wind, falling like a black-shower around us. As
+we knew that the natives never made such extensive conflagration, unless
+they had some mischievous object in view, our apprehension for the safety
+of Riley, with his supplies, was increased.
+
+At the earliest dawn, we pushed for the hill. In passing that part of the
+meadows under Mount Foster, we observed that the grass had also been
+consumed, and we scarcely recognized the ground from its altered
+appearance. As we approached Mount Harris, we saw recent traces of cattle,
+but none were visible on the plains. Under the hill, however, we could
+distinctly see that a hut of some kind had been erected, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the relief we felt when a soldier came
+forward to reconnoitre us. I could no longer doubt the safety of the
+party, and this was confirmed by the rest of the men turning out to
+welcome us. It appeared that our suspicions with regard to the natives had
+not been without foundation, since they attempted to surprise the camp,
+and it was supposed the firing of the marshes was done with a view to
+collect the distant tribes, to make a second attack; so that our arrival
+was most opportune.
+
+The party I found awaiting our arrival at Mount Harris consisted of one
+soldier, Riley, who had the charge of the supplies, and a drayman. They
+had found the paper I had fixed against the tree, and also the letters I
+had hid, and had forwarded them to Sydney, by another soldier and a
+prisoner; which had weakened their party a good deal. Riley informed me,
+that he had been between a month and three weeks at the station, and that
+knowing our provisions must have run short he had expected us much earlier
+than we had made our appearance.
+
+My dispatches stated, that additional supplies had been forwarded for my
+use, together with horses and bullocks, in the event of my requiring them.
+On examination, the former were found to be in excellent order; and, as it
+would take some time to carry any changes I might contemplate, or find it
+necessary to make, into effect, I determined to give the men who had been
+with me a week's rest.
+
+ENCAMP AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+The camp was made snug; and as the weather had become much cooler I
+thought it a good opportunity to slaughter one of the bullocks, in order
+to guard against any bad effects of our having been living for some weeks
+exclusively on salt provisions. I was also induced to this measure, from a
+wish to preserve my supplies as much as possible.
+
+These matters having been arranged, I had a temporary awning erected near
+the river, and was for three or four days busily employed writing an
+account of our journey for the Governor's information.
+
+Having closed my despatches, and answered the numerous friendly letters I
+had received, my attention was next turned to the changes that had taken
+place at Mount Harris during our absence. The Macquarie, I found, had
+wholly ceased to flow, and now consisted of a chain of ponds. Such of the
+minor vegetation as had escaped the fires of the natives, had perished
+under the extreme heat of the season. The acacia pendula stood leafless
+upon the plains, and the polygonum junceum appeared to be the only plant
+that had withstood the effects of the drought. Yet, notwithstanding this
+general depression of the vegetable kingdom, the animals that had been
+brought from Wellington Valley were in the best condition, and were,
+indeed, too fat for effective labour; it might, therefore, be reasonably
+presumed, that herbage affording such nourishment in so unfavourable a
+season, would be of the richest quality, if fresh and vigorous under the
+influence of seasonable, and not excessive, rains.
+
+FIRING OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+The appearance of the country was, however, truly melancholy; there was
+not a flower in bloom, nor a green object to be seen. Whether our arrival
+had increased their alarm, is uncertain, but the natives continued to fire
+the great marshes, and as the element raged amongst them, large bodies of
+smoke rose over the horizon like storm clouds, and had the effect of
+giving additional dreariness to the scene. I am inclined to think that
+they made these conflagrations to procure food, by seizing whatsoever
+might issue from the flames, as snakes, birds, or other animals; for they
+had taken every fish in the river, and the low state of its waters had
+enabled them to procure an abundance of muscles from its bed, which they
+had consumed with their characteristic improvidence. They were,
+consequently, in a starving condition, and so pitiable were their
+indications of it, that I was induced to feed such of them as visited the
+camp, notwithstanding their late misconduct; being likewise anxious to
+bring about a good understanding, as the best means of ensuring the safety
+of the smaller party when we should separate, of which I had reason to be
+doubtful. These people had killed two white men not long before my arrival
+among them, and as the circumstances attending the slaughter are singular,
+I shall relate them.
+
+SLAUGHTER OF TWO IRISH RUNAWAYS.
+
+The parties were two Irish runaways, who thought they could make their way
+to Timor. They escaped from Wellington Valley with a fortnight's provision
+each, and a couple of dogs, and proceeded down the Macquarie. About the
+cataract, they fell in with the Mount Harris tribe, and remained with them
+for some days, when they determined on pursuing their journey. The blacks,
+however, wanted to get possession of their dogs, and a resistance on the
+part of the Europeans brought on a quarrel. It appears, that before the
+blacks proceeded to extremities, they furnished the Irishmen, who were
+unarmed, with weapons, and then told them to defend themselves, but
+whether against equal or inferior numbers, I am uninformed. One of them
+soon fell, which the other observing, he took his knife out, and cut the
+throats of both the dogs before the blacks had time to put him to death.
+He was, however, sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe
+generally. I questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the
+most sullen silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact.
+
+ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE.
+
+Mr. Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid his
+compass on a large rock, near to which Mr. Oxley's boat had been burnt.
+To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings were all
+wrong. I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the error
+produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr. Hume noticed. When I
+placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N. by W., the
+true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W. My placing my
+notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did the card move
+until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the stone, when it
+first became violently agitated, and then settled correctly; and my
+bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range, and of its centre,
+were as follows:
+
+Mount Exmouth to the N ...... N. 86 E.
+Centre....................... N. 85 E.
+Vernon's Peak................ N. 89 E.
+Distance 70 miles.
+
+Having finished my reports and letters, it became necessary to consider
+the best point on which to move, and to fix a day for our departure from
+Mount Harris. It struck me that having found so important a feature as the
+Darling River, the Governor would approve my endeavouring to regain it
+more to the southward, in order to trace it down. I, therefore, detached
+Mr. Hume to survey the country in that direction, and to ascertain if a
+descent upon the Bogen district would be practicable, through which I had
+been informed a considerable river forced itself. The report he made on
+his return was such as to deter me from that attempt, but he stated that
+the country for 30 miles from the Macquarie was well watered, and superior
+to any he had passed over during the journey; beyond that distance, it
+took up the character of the remote interior, and alternated with plains
+and brush, the soil being too sandy to retain water on its surface. He saw
+some hills from the extremity of his journey, bearing by compass W.S.W.
+We consequently determined to make for the Castlereagh, agreeably to our
+instructions. Preparations were made for breaking up the camp, all the
+various arrangements in the change of animals were completed, the boat
+carriage was exchanged for a dray, and I took Boyle in the place of
+Norman, whose timidity in the bush rendered him unfit for service.
+
+CIRCUIT OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+There is a small hill on the opposite side of the river, and immediately
+facing Mount Harris, and to the S.E. of it there is a small lagoon, the
+head of a creek, by means of which its superfluous waters are carried off.
+This creek runs parallel to the river for about ten miles, and enters the
+marshes at the S.E. angle. This I ascertained one day in riding to carry
+on my survey of the southern extremity of the marshes, and to join my line
+of route by making the circuit of that part of them. I found that the
+river was turned to its northerly course by a rising ground of forest
+land, which checks its further progress westerly. I proceeded round
+the S.W. angle, and then, taking a northerly course, got down to the
+bottom of the first great marsh, thus completing the circuit of them. I
+did not return to the camp until after 10 p.m., having crossed the river
+at day-light, nor did we procure any water from the time we left the
+stream to the moment of our recrossing it.
+
+WALLIS'S PONDS.
+
+Having completed our various arrangements, and closed our letters, we
+struck our tents on the morning of the 7th March; we remained, however, to
+witness the departure of Riley's party for Wellington Valley, and then
+left the Macquarie on an E.N.E. course for Wallis's Ponds, and made them
+at about 14 miles. They undoubtedly empty themselves into the marshes, and
+are a continuation of that chain of ponds on which I left the party in
+Mr. Hume's charge. About a mile from Mount Harris, we passed a small dry
+creek, that evidently lays the country under water in the wet seasons.
+There was a blue-gum flat to the eastward of it, which we crossed, and
+then entered a brush of acacia pendula and box. The soil upon the plain
+was an alluvial deposit; that in the brushes was sandy. From the extremity
+of the plain, Mount Harris bore, by compass, S.W. by W.; Mount Foster due
+west. The scrub through which we were penetrating, at length became so
+dense, that we found it impossible to travel in a direct line through it,
+and frequent ridges of cypresses growing closely together, turned us
+repeatedly from our course. The country at length became clearer, and we
+travelled over open forest of box, casuarina, and cypresses, on a sandy
+soil; the first predominating. For about two miles before we made the
+creek, the country was not heavily timbered, the acacia pendula
+succeeding the larger trees. The ground had a good covering of grass upon
+it, and there were few of the salsolaceous plants, so abundant on the
+western plains, to be found. The rough-gum abounded near the creek, with a
+small tree bearing a hard round nut, and we had the luxury of plenty of
+water.
+
+We remained stationary on the 8th, in hopes that Riley would have met the
+soldier who had been sent back to Wellington Valley, and that he would
+have forwarded any letters to us, of which he might have been the bearer.
+The day, however, passed over without realizing our expectations; and we
+started once more for the interior, and cut ourselves off from all
+communication with society.
+
+MORRISSET'S PONDS.
+
+We made for Morrisset's chain of ponds, and travelled over rich and
+extensive plains, divided by plantations of cypress, box, and casuarina,
+in the early and latter period of the day. About noon we entered a dense
+forest of cypresses, which continued for three miles, when the cypresses
+became mixed with casuarina, box, and mountain-gum, a tree we had not
+remarked before in so low a situation. We struck upon the creek after a
+journey of about 15 miles. It had a sandy bed, and was extremely tortuous
+in its course, nor was it until after a considerable search, that we at
+length succeeded in finding water, at which a party of natives were
+encamped. The moment they saw us, they fled, and left all their utensils,
+&c. behind them. Among other things, we found a number of bark troughs,
+filled with the gum of the mimosa, and vast quantities of gum made into
+cakes upon the ground. From this it would appear these unfortunate
+creatures were reduced to the last extremity, and, being unable to procure
+any other nourishment, had been obliged to collect this mucilaginous food.
+
+The plains we traversed, were of uniform equality of surface. Water
+evidently lodges and continues on them long after a fall of rain, and in
+wet seasons they must, I should imagine, be full of quagmires, and almost
+impassable.
+
+On the 10th, we passed through a country that differed in no material
+point from that already described. We stopped at 10 a.m. under some brush,
+in the centre of a large plain, from which Arbuthnot's range bore S. 84 E.
+distant from 50 to 55 miles, and afterwards traversed or rather crossed,
+those extensive tracts described by Mr. Evans as being under water and
+covered with reeds, in 1817. They now bore a very different appearance,
+being firm and dry. The soil was in general good, and covered with forest
+grass and a species of oxalia. We did not observe any reeds, or the signs
+of inundation, but, as is invariably the case with plains in the interior,
+they were of too even surface, as I have so lately remarked, to admit of
+the waters running quickly off them; and no doubt, when they became
+saturated, many quagmires are formed, that would very much impede the
+movements of an expedition.
+
+REACH THE CASTLEREAGH RIVER.
+
+We reached the Castlereagh about 4 p.m., and although its channel could
+not have been less than 130 yards in breadth, there was apparently not a
+drop of water in it. Its bed consisted of pure sand and reeds; amid the
+latter, we found a small pond of 15 yards circumference, after a long
+search. There is a considerable dip in the country towards the river, at
+about two miles from it; and the intervening brush was full of kangaroo,
+which, I fancy, had congregated to a spot where there was abundance of
+food for them. The soil covering the space was of the richest quality,
+and the timber upon it consisted of box, mountain gum, and the angophora
+lanceolata, a tree that is never found except on rich ground.
+
+WANT OF WATER; CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appeared that our troubles were to recommence, and that in order to
+continue on the Castlereagh, it would be necessary for Mr. Hume and myself
+to undertake those fatiguing journeys in search of water that had so
+exhausted us already: and after all, it was doubtful how soon we might be
+forced back. I had certainly expected that, on our gaining the banks of
+the river, we should have had a constant supply of water, but the
+circumstance of the Castlereagh having not only ceased to flow, but being
+absolutely dry, while it afforded the best and clearest proof of the
+severity and continuance of the drought in the interior, at the same time
+damped the spirits and ardour of the men. We kept the left bank of the
+river as we proceeded down it, and passed two or three larger ponds about
+a mile below where we had slept, but there they ceased. The bed of the
+river became one of pure sand, nor did there appear to be any chance of
+our finding any water in it. I stopped the party at about eight miles, and
+desired the men to get their dinners, to give Mr. Hume and myself time to
+search for a supply upon the plains. Disappointed to the left, we crossed
+the channel of the Castlereagh, and struck over a small plain upon the
+right bank, and at the extremity of it, came upon a swamp, from which we
+immediately returned for the cattle, and got them unloaded by seven
+o'clock. As there was sufficient pasture around us, I proposed to Mr. Hume
+on the following day, to leave the party stationary, and to ride down the
+river to see how far its present appearances continued. Like the
+generality of rivers of the interior, it had, where we struck upon it,
+outer banks to confine its waters during floods, and to prevent them from
+spreading generally over the country; the space between the two banks
+being of the richest soil, and the timber chiefly of the angophora kind.
+Flooded-gum overhung the inner banks of the river, or grew upon the many
+islands, with casuarina. It became evident, however, that the outer banks
+declined in height as we proceeded down the river, nor was it long before
+they ceased altogether. As we rode along, we found that the inner ones
+were fast decreasing in height also. Riding under a hanging wood of the
+angophora, which had ceased for a time, we were induced to break off to
+our right, to examine some large flooded-gum trees about a couple of miles
+to the N.W. of us. On arriving near them, we were astonished to find that
+they concealed a serpentine lagoon that had a belt of reeds round it.
+Keeping this lagoon upon our right, we at length came to the head of it,
+past which the river sweeps. Crossing the channel of the river, we
+continued to ride in an easterly direction to examine the country. In
+doing this, we struck on a second branch of the Castlereagh, leading
+W. by N. into a plain, which it of course inundates at times, and running
+up it, we found its bed at the point of separation, to be considerably
+higher than that of the main channel, which still continued of pure
+sand--and was stamped all over with the prints of the feet of natives,
+kangaroos, emus, and wild dogs, We then turned again to the head of the
+lagoon, and took the following bearings of Arbuthnot's range:
+
+Mount Exmouth .......... E. 90 S.
+Centre Range ........... E. 35 E.
+Vernon's Peak .......... E. 20 S.
+
+From the head of the lagoon, the river appeared to enter a reedy hollow,
+shaded by a long line of flooded gum trees, and on proceeding to it, we
+found the banks ceased here altogether; and that a very considerable plain
+extended both to the right and the left, which cannot fail of being
+frequently laid under water.
+
+LAGOONS AND CREEKS OF THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+On the following morning we moved the party to the lagoon, and, passing
+its head, encamped to the north of it; after which we again rode down the
+river in search of water. It continued to hold a straight and northerly
+course for about five miles, having a plain on either side. The reeds that
+had previously covered the channel then suddenly ceased, and the channel,
+contracting in breadth, gained in depth: it became extremely serpentine,
+and at length lost all the character and appearance of a river. It had
+many back channels, as large as the main one, serving to overflow the
+neighbouring country. We succeeded in finding a small pond of water in one
+of the former, hardly large enough to supply our necessities, but as it
+enabled us to push so much further on, we turned towards the lagoon,
+making a circuitous journey to the right, across a large plain, bounded to
+the north by low acacia brush and box. We struck upon a creek at the
+further extremity of the plain, in which there was a tolerably sized pond.
+It appeared from the traces of men, that some natives had been there the
+day before; but we did not see any of them. The water was extremely muddy
+and unfit for use. The lagoon at which we had encamped, was of less
+importance than we had imagined.
+
+JOURNEY DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+Whilst Mr. Hume led the party down the river, I rode up its northward
+bank, to examine it more closely. I found it to be a serpentine sheet of
+about three miles in length, gradually decreasing in depth until it
+separated into two small creeks. In following one of them up, I observed
+that they re-united at the distance of about two miles, and that the
+lagoon was filled from the eastward, and not by the river as I had at
+first supposed. The waters at the head of the lagoon were putrid, nor was
+there a fish in, or a wild fowl upon it. The only bird we saw was a
+beautiful eagle, of the osprey kind, with plumage like a sea gull, which
+had a nest in the tree over the tents.
+
+In turning to overtake the party I rode through a great deal of acacia
+scrub, and on arriving at the place at which I expected to have overtaken
+them, I found they had pushed on.
+
+The Castlereagh, as I rode down it, diminished in size considerably, and
+became quite choked up with rushes and brambles. Rough-gum again made its
+appearance, with swamp-oak and a miserable acacia scrub outside. The
+country on both sides of the river seemed to be an interminable flat, and
+the soil of an inferior description.
+
+WRETCHED APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+I came up with with Mr. Hume about 1 o'clock and we again pushed forward
+at 3, and halted for the night without water, the want of which the cattle
+did not feel. The river held a general westerly course, and the country in
+its neighbourhood became extremely depressed and low. On the following day
+we moved forward a distance of not more than nine miles, through a country
+on which, at first, the acacia pendula alone was growing on a light
+alluvial soil. The river had many back drains, by means of which, in wet
+seasons, it inundates the adjacent plains. It was evident, however, that
+they had not been flooded for many years; and, notwithstanding that the
+country was low, the line of inundation did not appear to be very
+extensive, nor were there any reeds growing beyond the immediate banks of
+the river. Swamp-oak and rough-gum again prevailed near the stream at our
+halting place, and the improvement that had taken place, both in the
+country and in the Castlereagh, had induced us to make so short a journey;
+for not only was there abundance of the grass for the animals, but large
+ponds of water in the river. Some natives had only just preceded us down
+it: we came upon their fires that were still smoking; and upon them were
+the remains of some fish they had taken, near which they had left a
+cumbrous spear. The circumstances cheered us with hopes that an
+improvement would take place in the country, and that some new feature
+would soon open upon us. In the course of the following day, however,
+every favorable change, both in the river and in the country, disappeared.
+The latter continued extremely depressed, and in general open, or lightly
+covered with acacia pendula; the former dwindled into a mere ditch, choked
+up with brambles and reeds, and having only here and there a stagnant pool
+of water. We travelled on a N.W. 1/2 W. course for about ten miles, and
+again stopped for the night without water. In the course of the afternoon,
+we traversed several flats, on which the rough-gum alone was growing.
+These flats were evidently subject to flood; and contained an alluvial
+soil.
+
+They became more frequent as we travelled down the river, and the work was
+so heavy for the animals, that I was obliged to keep wide of them, in
+doing which we struck upon a creek of large size, coming from the N.E.
+and, having crossed, we traversed its right bank to its junction with the
+Castlereagh, and stopped close to it at a pond of water, though the feed
+for the animals was bad. The country to the left of the river, though
+somewhat high, was the same, in essential points, as that to the right.
+
+The Castlereagh seemed to have increased in size below the creek, but
+still it had no resemblance to a river. We had not proceeded very far down
+its banks, on the 18th, when we crossed a broad footpath leading to it
+from the interior. I turned my horse to the left, and struck upon a long
+sheet of water, from which I startled a number of pelicans. It was evident
+that the natives had recently been in the neighbourhood, but we thought it
+probable they might have been a hunting party, who had returned again to
+the plains. The whole track we passed over during the day was miserably
+poor and bare of vegetation, nor did the appearance of the country to the
+N.E. indicate any improvement. We lost the traces of the natives
+immediately after crossing their path or beat, and again found the bed of
+the river dry, after we had passed the sheet of water to which it led. The
+soil was so rotten and yielding, that the team knocked up early; indeed,
+it was a matter of surprise to me that they should not have failed before.
+The river made somewhat to the westward with little promise of
+improvement. The wretched appearance of the country as we penetrated into
+it, damped our spirits; we pressed on, however, with difficulty, over
+ground that was totally destitute of vegetation. Instead of lofty timber
+and a living stream, we wandered along the banks of an insignificant
+watercourse, and under trees of stunted size and scanty foliage. We
+stopped on the 20th at the angle of a creek, in which there was some dry
+grass, in consequence of the animals being almost in a starving state, but
+even here they had but little to eat.
+
+A violent thunder-storm passed over us in the afternoon, but it made no
+change in the temperature of the air. The weather, although it had been
+hot and sultry, had fallen far short of the intense heat we experienced in
+crossing the marshes of the Macquarie, when it was such as to melt the
+sugar in the canisters, and to destroy all our dogs; and our nights were
+now become agreeably cool.
+
+A PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+We still, however, continued to travel over a dead level, nor was a height
+or break visible from the loftiest trees we ascended. A little before we
+stopped at the creek, we surprised a party of natives; old men, women, and
+children. They were preparing dinners of fish in much larger quantities
+than they could have devoured--probably for a part of the tribe that were
+absent; but the moment they saw us they fled, and left every thing at our
+mercy. On examining the fish, we found them totally different from any in
+the Macquarie, and took two of the most perfect to preserve. In the
+afternoon one of the men came to inform me that the tribe was coming down
+upon us.
+
+Mr. Hume and I, therefore, went to meet them. They were at this time about
+150 yards from the tent, but seeing us advance, they stopped, and forming
+two deep, they marched to and fro, to a war song I suppose, crouching with
+their spears. We had not, however, any difficulty in communicating with
+them, and I shall detail the manner in which this was brought about, in
+hopes that it may help to guide others. When the natives saw us advance,
+they stopped, and we did the same. Mr. Hume then walked to a tree, and
+broke off a short branch. It is singular that this should, even with these
+rude people, be a token of peace. As soon as they saw the branch, the
+natives laid aside their spears, and two of them advanced about twenty
+paces in front of the rest, who sat down. Mr. Hume then went forward and
+sat down, when the two natives again advanced and seated themselves close
+to him.
+
+Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every people
+is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with patience
+and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the interior. It is not
+to avoid alarming their natural timidity that a gradual approach is so
+necessary. They preserve the same ceremony among themselves. These men,
+who were eighteen in number, came with us to the tents, and received such
+presents as we had for them. They conducted themselves very quietly, and,
+after a short time, left us with every token of friendship.
+
+LARGE CREEK.
+
+On the 21st we proceeded down the river on a N.N.W. course, and at about
+five miles struck upon a very large creek, apparently coming from
+the E.N.E.
+
+Although the Castlereagh had increased in size, this creek was infinitely
+larger; it was, however, perfectly dry. Lofty flooded-gum trees were upon
+its banks, and it appeared so much superior to the river that I was
+induced to halt the party at the junction, in order to examine it more
+closely. Mr. Hume, therefore, rode with me up the right bank. We had not
+proceeded very far, when some natives called out to us from the opposite
+scrub. Thinking that they belonged to the tribe we had left behind us, we
+pointed to the junction, and motioned them to go there, but one of the
+party continued to follow and call to us for some time. On our return to
+the men, we found that the natives had joined them, and they now gave us
+to understand that we were going away from water. This had indeed been
+apparent to us. The creek was perfectly dry, as far as we traced it up;
+and seemed to have been totally deserted by the natives.
+
+We were about to proceed on our journey, when from twenty to thirty
+natives approached us from down the river. We sent two of those who had
+been with us to them, and the whole accompanied us for some miles, talking
+incessantly to the men, but keeping at a very respectful distance from the
+animals. We at length got opposite to their camp, near which there was a
+very fine pool of water, and they were earnest in persuading us to stop at
+it. We were, however, too anxious to get forward to comply; under the
+improved appearance of the river since it had received the creeks from the
+eastward, little anticipating what was before us.
+
+NATIVE ARMOURY.
+
+The natives did not follow us beyond their own encampment. Within sight of
+it, we came upon their armoury, if I may so term it. Numerous spears were
+reared against the trees, and heaps of boomerangs were lying on the
+ground. The spears were very heavy, and half barbed; and it is singular
+that three of them were marked with a broad arrow. We saw the natives
+watching us, fearful, I imagine, that we should help ourselves; but I
+would not permit any of their weapons to be touched.
+
+EXAMINATION OF CREEKS NEAR THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+Pursuing our journey, we reached another creek, at about five miles,
+similar to the last in appearance and size, and we crossed it repeatedly
+during the afternoon. We had been induced to keep along a native path in
+the hope that it would have led us to the river by a short cut; but it
+eventually led us to this creek, and away from the Castlereagh; for,
+notwithstanding that we subsequently changed our course to the S.W., we
+failed, as we supposed, again to strike upon the latter, and were obliged
+to stop for the night on the banks of what appeared to be a third large
+dry creek, which we intersected nearly at right angles.
+
+We travelled through a good deal of brush during the day, nor did the
+country change from the miserable and barren character it had assumed for
+the last thirty or forty miles. The Castlereagh had so frequently changed,
+that both Mr. Hume and myself were puzzled as to the identity of the
+creek upon which we had halted. We searched its bed in vain for water,
+although it was most capacious. Under an impression that the river was
+still to the south, and that we were at a point to which many watercourses
+from the high lands tended, I crossed the creek early in the morning, and
+held a S.W. course, over an open forest country. At about eight miles, we
+came upon a large space over-run by the polygonum junceum, a certain
+indication of flooded ground, and of our consequent proximity to some
+stream. Accordingly, after pushing through it, we struck upon a small
+creek with abundance of water in it. Whether this creek was the
+Castlereagh, which it resembled much more than the one we had left in the
+morning, was doubtful; but it was a great source of comfort to us to have
+so unexpected a supply of water as that which was now at our disposal.
+Whatever channel this was, whether a river or a creek, our tracing it down
+would lead us in the direction we wished to go, and probably to some
+junction.
+
+The neighbourhood of the creek was well clothed with vegetation, and the
+cattle found good feed; but the only trees near it were rough-gum and
+casuarinae; the flooded-gum had again disappeared. The soil of the forest
+land over which we journeyed was a light sandy loam; and its timber
+consisted chiefly of eucalypti, acacia pendula, and the angophora.
+
+Some natives visited us in the afternoon, and among them, both Mr. Hume
+and I recognized one of those we had seen on the Darling. He also knew us
+again, but we could not make out from him how far we were from that river.
+They stayed with us till sunset, and then went down the creek, leaving
+their spears against a tree, for which they said they would return.
+
+On the 23rd we took up a W.N.W. course, and when we again touched on the
+creek it was dry. This was at a distance of about five miles from where we
+had slept. As the animals had not recovered from their late privations, I
+deemed it better to halt the party and to examine the creek for a few
+miles below us, that in case it should prove destitute of water, we might
+return to that we had left. Mr. Hume accordingly rode down it for about
+three miles, without success; and on his rejoining the men, we returned
+with them to our last camp, or to within a short distance of it. Wishing
+to examine the creek above our position, I requested Mr. Hume to take two
+men with him, and to trace it down in search of water, while I should
+proceed in the opposite direction. I went from the camp at an early hour,
+and as I wandered along the creek, I passed a regular chain of ponds. The
+country on both sides of the creek was evidently subject to flood, but
+more extensively to the south than to the north. From the creek, I struck
+away to my left, and after penetrating through a belt of swamp-oak and
+minor shrubs, got on a small plain, which I crossed N.E. and, to my
+annoyance, found it covered with rhagodia and salsolae. As I had not
+started with the intention of sleeping, I turned to the S.W. a little
+before sunset, and reached the tents between ten and eleven. I found
+Mr. Hume awaiting me. He informed me that at about nine miles from
+where we had turned back with the party, he had struck upon a junction;
+and that as the junction was much larger than the channel he had been
+tracing, he thought it better to follow it up for a few miles. He found
+that it narrowed in width, and that its banks became steep, with a fine
+avenue of flooded-gum trees overhanging them. At four miles, he came upon
+another junction, and at four miles more, found himself opposite to the
+ground on which we had slept on the previous Saturday. From this point he
+retraced the channel, but not finding any water for three miles below the
+lower junction, he returned to the camp, with a view of prosecuting a
+longer journey on the morrow. Mr. Hume had become impressed with an
+opinion, that the junction up which we had slept was no other than the
+Castlereagh itself; and that our position was on a creek, probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds, flowing into it. As the cattle wanted a few
+days' rest, Mr. Hume and I determined to ride, unattended, along our track
+to our camp of the 21st, and then to follow the channel upwards, until we
+should arrive at the station of the natives, or until we should have
+ridden to such a distance as would set our conjectures at rest. In the
+morning, however, instead of running upon our old track, we followed that
+of Mr. Hume to the junction, giving up our first intention, with a view to
+ascertain if there existed any water which we could, by an effort, gain,
+below where Mr. Hume had been. The channel was very broad, with a
+considerable fall in its bed, and, in appearance, more resembled the slope
+of a lawn than the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees in the centre of
+its channel, in one of which the floods had left the trunk of a large
+tree. We could discover where it narrowed and its banks rose, but, as we
+intended to make a closer examination before we left the neighbourhood,
+we continued our journey down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
+an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood, but the distant
+country was miserably poor and bare. At about three miles, we came upon
+the fresh traces of some natives, which led us to the channel again, from
+which we had wandered unintentionally. In it we found there had been water
+very lately, and it appeared that the natives had dug holes at the bottom
+to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted, but still retained
+the appearance of moisture. At a mile and a half beyond these, we were led
+to some similar holes, by observing a number of birds flying about them.
+The water was too muddy for us to drink, but the horses emptied them
+successively. We now kept sufficiently near the channel to insure our
+seeing any pool that might still remain in it, but rode for about seven
+miles before we again saw water, and even here, although it was a spring,
+we were obliged to dig holes, and await their filling, before we could get
+sufficient for our use. Having dined, we again pursued our journey, and
+almost immediately came upon a long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined
+by bulrushes. The creek or river had for some time kept the centre of a
+deep alluvial valley, in which there was plenty of food for the cattle,
+and which, at this place, was apparently broader than anywhere else. The
+situation being favourable, we returned to the camp, and reached it late.
+
+DEPRESSION OF THE MEN.
+
+I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture, but I fancied, about
+this time, that the men generally were desponding. Whether it was that the
+constant fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our constant
+absence, or the consequent exhaustion it produced, had any effect on their
+minds, or that they feared the result of our perseverance, is difficult to
+say; but certainly, they all had a depression of spirits, and looked, I
+thought, altered in appearance; nor did they evince any satisfaction at
+our success--at least, not the satisfaction they would have shown at an
+earlier period of our journey.
+
+Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain if the channel from
+the junction was the Castlereagh, or only a creek. The intersection of so
+many channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so much alike, made it
+essentially necessary that we should satisfy ourselves on this point.
+Mr. Hume, therefore, accompanied me, as had at first been intended the
+morning of our return to the place at which we had slept. We took fresh
+horses, but dispensed with any other attendants, and indeed went wholly
+unarmed.
+
+CAMP OF NATIVES.
+
+After following our old track to its termination, we kept up the right
+bank of the channel, and at length arrived at the camp of the natives;
+thus satisfying ourselves that we had been journeying on the Castlereagh,
+and that we were still following it down. By this ride we ascertained that
+there was a distance of five-and-forty miles in its bed without a drop of
+water. Few of the natives were in the camp. The women avoided us, but not
+as if they were under any apprehension. Crossing at the head of the pool,
+we again got on our old track, but seeing two or three men coming towards
+us we alighted, and, tying our horses to a tree, went to meet them. One
+poor fellow had two ducks in his hand, which he had just taken off the
+fire; these he offered to us, and on our declining to accept of them, he
+called to a boy, who soon appeared with a large trough of honey, of which
+we partook. One of the men had an ulcer in the arm, and asked me what he
+should do to heal it; indeed, I believe Fraser had promised him some
+ointment, but not having any with me, I signified to him that be should
+wash it often, and stooping down, made as if I was taking up water in my
+hand. The poor fellow mistook me, and, also stooping down, took up a
+handful of dust which he threw over the sore. This gave me the trouble of
+explaining matters again, and by pointing to the water, I believe I at
+length made him understand me.
+
+DRY CHANNEL OF THE RIVER.
+
+These good natured people asked us where we had slept the day we passed,
+and when informed of the direction, shook their heads, motioning at the
+same time, that we must have been without water. We informed them where
+the party was, and asked them to come and see us, but I fancy the distance
+was too great, or else we were in the beat of another tribe. On mentioning
+these facts to the men, they said that two of the natives had followed us
+for some miles, calling out loudly to us, but Mr. Hume and I both being in
+front, we did not hear them, although, evidently, they wished to save us
+distress.
+
+Since the result of our excursion proved that the channel, about which I
+had been so doubtful, was the Castlereagh, it necessarily followed, that
+the creek at which we were encamped was one of those (most probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds,) which we had already crossed nearer its
+source, and which Mr. Hume must have struck upon when endeavouring to gain
+the Castlereagh from the marshes of the Macquarie.
+
+A perusal of these sheets will ere this have impressed on the reader's
+mind, the peculiarity of that fortune which led us from the Castlereagh to
+the creek, at which alone our wants could have been supplied. Had we
+wandered down the river, as we undoubtedly should have done had we
+recognised it as such, the loss of many of our animals would have been the
+inevitable consequence, and very probably a final issue would have been
+put to our journey. It is only to those who are placed in situations that
+baffle their own exertions or foresight, that the singular guidance of
+Providence becomes fully apparent.
+
+NATIVES PERISHING FROM FAMINE.
+
+It would appear that the natives were dying fast, not from any disease,
+but from the scarcity of food; and, should the drought continue, it seemed
+probable they may became extinct.
+
+The men found the body of a woman covered with leaves near the tents, and
+very properly buried it. We made Friday a day of rest for ourselves, as
+indeed was necessary; and on the following morning proceeded down the
+river, and encamped on a high bank above it, at the base of which, our
+cattle both fed and watered.
+
+At this spot one of the largest gum-trees I had ever seen had fallen,
+having died for want of moisture; indeed, the state of the vegetable
+kingdom was such as to threaten its total extinction, unless a change of
+seasons should take place.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that, from our first arrival on the banks of
+the Castlereagh, to our arrival at the present camp, we never picked up a
+stone, or a pebble, in its bed.
+
+JUNCTION OF THE CASTLEREAGH WITH THE DARLING.
+
+In the hope that we should fall on some detached pond, we pursued our
+journey on the 29th. The Castlereagh gave singular proofs of its violence,
+as if its waters, confined in the valley, had a difficulty in escaping
+from it. We had not travelled two miles, when in crossing, as we imagined,
+one of its bights, we found ourselves checked by a broad river. A single
+glimpse of it was sufficient to tell us it was the Darling. At a distance
+of more than ninety miles nearer its source, this singular river still
+preserved its character, so strikingly, that it was impossible not to have
+recognised it in a moment. The same steep banks and lofty timber, the same
+deep reaches, alive with fish, were here visible as when we left it.
+A hope naturally arose to our minds, that if it was unchanged in other
+respects, it might have lost the saltness that rendered its waters unfit
+for use; but in this we were disappointed--even its waters continued the
+same. As it was impossible for us to cross the Darling, I determined on
+falling back upon our last encampment, which was at a most Convenient
+distance, and of concerting measures there for our future movements. Prior
+to doing so, however, I rode to the junction of the Castlereagh with
+the Darling, accompanied by Mr. Hume, a distance of about half a mile.
+Upon the point formed by the two streams, there were a number of huts,
+and on the opposite bank of the Darling, about twenty natives had
+collected. We called out to them, but they would not join us.
+
+At the junction, the Castlereagh, with whatever impetuosity it rushes from
+its confinement, makes not apparently the least impression on the Darling
+River. The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a tributary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+On our return to the party, we found them surrounded by the natives, who
+were looking with an eye of wonder on the cattle and horses. We pointed
+out to them the direction in which we were going, and invited them to
+visit us; and nothing appeared to astonish them so much as the management
+of the team by a single man. We got back to our position early, and again
+fixed ourselves upon it.
+
+It now only remained for us to consider what we should do under
+circumstances of certainly more than ordinary perplexity. We had nothing
+to hope for from travelling in a southerly direction, while to the E. and
+N.E., the state of the country was worse than that by which we had
+penetrated to the Darling. It was evident, that the large creeks joining
+the Castlereagh in that direction were dry, since the natives not only
+intimated this to us, but it was unquestionable that they themselves had
+deserted them, and had crowded to such places as still contained a supply
+of water. Even in retreating, we could not hope to retrace our steps.
+Experience had proved to us, that the dry state of the interior was as
+injurious to the movements of an expedition as a too wet season would have
+been. Taking everything, therefore, into consideration, I determined on
+leaving the party stationary, and on crossing the Darling to the N.W.,
+and, if any encouraging feature presented itself, to return for the party,
+and persevere in an examination of the distant interior. Such, at least,
+appeared to me the most judicious plan: indeed, an attempt to have moved
+in any other direction would have been fruitless. And, as the result of
+this journey would be decisive, and would either fix or determine our
+advance or retreat, I was anxious for Mr. Hume's attendance.
+
+The natives followed to the camp, and in the course of the afternoon, were
+joined by their women. The latter however, would not approach nearer than
+the top of a little hillock on which they sat. The men did not come round
+the tents, but stood in a row at a short distance. At sunset, they gained
+a little courage, and wandered about a little more; at length they went
+off to the Darling.
+
+HONESTY OF A NATIVE.
+
+It was quite dark, when I heard a native call from the hill on which the
+women had been, and I desired Hopkinson to take his firelock and ascertain
+what the man wanted. He soon after returned, and brought a blanket, which
+he said the man had returned to him. The native was alone, and when he
+offered the blanket, kept his spear poised in his right hand; but, seeing
+that no violence was intended him, he lowered his weapon, and walked away.
+
+REWARD THE MAN FOR HIS CONDUCT.
+
+I was extremely pleased at this trait of honesty, and determined to reward
+it. On inquiry, I found that the men had availed themselves of the day to
+wash their blankets and that one of them had been flung over a bush
+hanging over the bank of the river, and it was supposed that one of the
+natives must have pulled it down with him. In the morning, the tribe went
+away from their encampment before day-light as we judged from the cry of
+their dogs, than which nothing could be more melancholy; but about eight,
+the men made their appearance on the hill occupied by the women the
+evening previously, and seemed to be doubtful whether to approach nearer.
+I went out to them, and, with a downward motion of my hand, beckoned for
+them to come to me: they mistook the signal, but laid all their spears on
+the ground, and it was not until after the sign had been reversed that
+they stirred or moved towards me. I then got them in a row, and desired
+Hopkinson to single out the man who had given him the blanket. It was,
+however, with great difficulty that he recognised him, as the man stood
+firm and motionless. At length, after walking two or three times along the
+line, he stopped before one man, and put his hand on his shoulder, upon
+which the manner of the native testified as to the correctness of his
+guess.
+
+The blanket being produced, I explained to the savage, with Mr. Hume's
+assistance, that I was highly pleased with him, and forthwith presented
+him with a tomahawk and a clasp-knife. The tribe were perfectly aware of
+the reason of my conduct, and all of them seemed highly delighted.
+
+I was happy in having such an opportunity of showing the natives of the
+interior that I came among them with a determination to maintain justice
+in my communication with them, and to impress them, at the same time, with
+a sense of our love of it in them. That they appreciated my apparent
+lenity in not calling for the defaulter, I am sure, and I feel perfectly
+conscious that I should have failed in my duty had I acted otherwise than
+I did.
+
+EFFECT OF FIRING A GUN.
+
+Although the natives had shown so good a disposition, as they were
+numerous, I thought it as well, since I was about to leave the camp, to
+show them that I had a power they little dreamt of about me. I therefore
+called for my gun and fired a ball into a tree. The effect of the report
+upon the natives, was truly ridiculous. Some stood and stared at me,
+others fell down, and others ran away; and it was with some difficulty we
+collected them again. At last, however, we did so, and, leaving them to
+pick out the ball, mounted our horses and struck away for the Darling.
+We crossed the river a little above where we struck it, and then proceeded
+N.W. into the interior.
+
+EXCURSION ACROSS THE DARLING.
+
+It is impossible for me to describe the nature of the country over which
+we passed, for the first eight miles. We rode through brushes of
+polygonum, under rough-gum, without a blade of vegetation, the whole space
+being subject to inundation. We then got on small plains of firmer
+surface, and red soil, but these soon changed again for the former; and
+at 4 p.m. we found ourselves advanced about two miles on a plain that
+stretched away before us, and bounded the horizon. It was dismally brown;
+a few trees only served to mark the distance. Up one of the highest I sent
+Hopkinson, who reported that he could not see the end of it, and that all
+around looked blank and desolate. It is a singular fact, that during the
+whole day, we had not seen a drop of water or a blade of grass.
+
+DESOLATING EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT.
+
+To have stopped where we were, would, therefore, have been impossible; to
+have advanced, would probably have been ruin. Had there been one favorable
+circumstance to have encouraged me with the hope of success, I would have
+proceeded. Had we picked up a stone as indicating our approach to high
+land, I would have gone on; or had there been a break in the level of the
+country, or even a change in the vegetation. But we had left all traces of
+the natives far behind us; and this seemed a desert they never
+entered--that not even a bird inhabited. I could not encourage a hope of
+success, and, therefore, gave up the point; not from want of means, but a
+conviction of the inutility of any further efforts. If there is any blame
+to be attached to the measure, it is I who am in fault, but none who had
+not like me traversed the interior at such a season, would believe the
+state of the country over which I had wandered. During the short interval
+I had been out, I had seen rivers cease to flow before me, and sheets of
+water disappear; and had it not been for a merciful Providence, should,
+ere reaching the Darling, have been overwhelmed by misfortune.
+
+I am giving no false picture of the reality. So long had the drought
+continued, that the vegetable kingdom was almost annihilated, and minor
+vegetation had disappeared. In the creeks, weeds had grown and withered,
+and grown again; and young saplings were now rising in their beds,
+nourished by the moisture that still remained; but the largest forest
+trees were drooping, and many were dead. The emus, with outstretched
+necks, gasping for breath, searched the channels of the rivers for water,
+in vain; and the native dog, so thin that it could hardly walk, seemed to
+implore some merciful hand to despatch it. How the natives subsisted it
+was difficult to say, but there was no doubt of the scarcity of food
+among them.
+
+We arrived in camp at a late hour, and having nothing to detain us longer,
+prepared for our retreat in the morning. The natives had remained with the
+party during the greater part of the day, and had only left them a short
+time prior to our arrival,
+
+When examining the creek on which we had been encamped for some days,
+Mr. Hume observed a small junction; and as we knew we were almost
+due N. of the marshes of the Macquarie, both of us were anxious to
+ascertain whence it originated. To return to Mount Harris, by retracing
+our steps up the Castlereagh, would have entailed the severest distress
+upon us; we the rather preferred proceeding up this creek, and taking our
+chance for a supply of water. We therefore crossed Morrisset's chain of
+ponds, and encamped in the angle formed by the junction of the two creeks.
+
+Before we left this position, we were visited by a party of natives,
+twelve in number, but not of the Darling tribe. They accompanied us a
+short way, and then struck off to the right. At about a mile and a half,
+we crossed Mr. Hume's track, leading westerly, which still remained
+observable. The creek was, no doubt, the hollow he stated that he crossed
+on that excursion, and its appearance certainly justified his opinion of
+it. Its bed was choked up with bulrushes or the polygonum, and its banks
+were level with the country on either side, or nearly so. We passed over
+extremely rich soil the whole day, on a S.W. and by W. course, though the
+timber upon it was dwarfish, and principally of the rough-gum kind.
+
+On the 2nd of April, we stopped in order to make some repairs upon the
+dray; the wheels of which had failed us. Clayton put in four new spokes,
+and we heated the tyres over again, by which means we got it once more
+serviceable.
+
+WILD MELON.
+
+The soil in the creek was of the richest quality, and was found to produce
+a dwarf melon, having all the habits and character of the cucumber.
+The fruit was not larger than a pigeon's egg, but was extremely sweet.
+There were not, however, many ripe, although the runners were covered with
+flowers, and had an abundance of fruit upon them. In the morning, we sent
+the tinker on horseback up the creek, to ascertain how far the next water
+was from us, desiring him to keep the creek upon his right, and to follow
+his own track back again. He thought fit, however, considering himself
+a good bushman, to wander away to his left, and the consequence was, that
+he soon lost himself. It would appear that he doubled and passed through
+some thick brush at the back of the camp, and at length found himself at
+dark on the banks of a considerable creek. In wandering along it, he
+luckily struck upon the natives we had last seen, who, good-naturedly, led
+him to the track of the dray, which his horse would not afterwards desert,
+and the tinker sneaked into the tent about 3 o'clock in the morning,
+having failed in his errand, and made himself the butt of the whole party.
+
+RETURN UP THE CREEK.
+
+The day succeeding this adventure, we moved up the creek, which was, for
+the most part, even with the plain. The country continued the same as that
+we had passed over from the junction, being subject to flood, and having
+patches of bulrushes and reeds upon it. No change took place in the
+timber, but the line of acacia pendula, which forms the line of
+inundation, approached neater to us; nor was the mark of flood so high on
+the trunks of trees as below. We halted, with abominable water, but
+excellent food for the animals in the plains behind us. In continuing our
+journey, we found several changes take place in the appearance of the
+creek and its neighbourhood. The former diminished in size, and at length
+separated into two distinct channels, choked up, for the most part, with
+dead bulrushes, but having a few green reeds in patches along it. The
+flats on either side became slightly timbered, and blue gum was the
+prevailing tree. Crossing one of the channels, we observed every
+appearance of our near approach to the marshes, the flats being
+intersected by many little water-runs, such as we had noticed at the
+bottom of them. About noon we struck upon a body of reeds under the wood
+of eucalypti, below the second great morass, and keeping a little to our
+right to avoid them, fell shortly afterwards into our old track on the
+plain, upon which we continued to move, making the best of our way to the
+channel which had supplied our wants on our first return from the Darling.
+It was now, however, quite dry, and we were obliged to push on further,
+to shorten the journey of the morrow.
+
+CONNECTION OF MACQUARIE AND DARLING.
+
+The result of our journey up the creek was particularly satisfactory, both
+to myself and Mr. Hume; since it cleared up every doubt that might have
+existed regarding the actual termination of the Macquarie, and enabled us
+to connect the flow of waters at so interesting and particular a point.
+It will be seen by a reference to the chart, that the waters of the
+marshes, after trickling through the reeds, form a small creek, which
+carries off the superfluous part of them into Morrisset's chain of ponds,
+which latter again falls into the Castlereagh, at about eight miles to the
+W.N.W. and all three join the Darling in a W. by N. direction, in lat.
+30 degrees 52 minutes south and E. lon. 147 degrees 8 minutes at about
+90 miles to the N.N.W. of Mount Harris, and about an equal distance to
+the E.S.E. of where we struck upon the last-mentioned river. Thus it
+is evident that the Darling had considerably neared the eastern ranges,
+although it was still more than 150 miles from their base. It was
+apparently coming from the N.E., and whether it has its sources in the
+mountains behind our distant settlements, or still farther to the
+northwards, is a question of curious speculation, although, as I have
+already stated, I am of opinion that none but tropical rains could
+supply the furious torrent that must sometimes rage in it.
+
+It would be presumptuous to hazard any opinion as to the nature of the
+interior to the westward of that remarkable river. Its course is involved
+in equal mystery, and it is a matter of equal doubt whether it makes its
+way to the south coast, or ultimately exhausts itself in feeding a
+succession of swamps, or falls into a large reservoir in the centre of
+the island.
+
+RETURN TO MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+We reached Mount Harris on the 7th of the month, and moving leisurely up
+the banks of the Macquarie, gained Mr. Palmer's first station on the 14th,
+and Wellington Valley on the 21st, having been absent from that settlement
+four months and two weeks. The waters of the Macquarie had diminished so
+much, that its bed was dry for more than half a mile at a stretch, nor did
+we observe the least appearance of a current in it, until after we had
+ascended the ranges. The lower tribes were actually starving, and brought
+their children to us to implore something to eat. The men attempted to
+surprise the camp, but I believe they were urged from absolute necessity
+to procure subsistence for themselves, and that they intended robbery
+rather than personal violence.
+
+DEPLORABLE STATE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+We left the interior in a still more deplorable state than that in which
+we found it; but it is more than probable that under other circumstances,
+we should have found it impossible to traverse its distant plains, as it
+is certain that unless rain fell in less than three weeks, all
+communication with the Darling would have been cut off:
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+RESULT OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+Whether the discoveries that have been made during this expedition, will
+ultimately prove of advantage to the colony of New South Wales, is a
+question that time alone can answer. We have in the meanwhile to regret
+that no beneficial consequences will immediately follow them. The further
+knowledge that has been gained of the interior is but as a gleam of
+sunshine over an extensive landscape. A stronger light has fallen upon the
+nearer ground, but the distant horizon is still enveloped in clouds. The
+veil has only as it were been withdrawn from the marshes of the Macquarie
+to be spread over the channel of the Darling. Unsatisfactory, however, as
+the discoveries may as yet be considered in a commercial point of view,
+the objects for which the expedition had been fitted out were happily
+attained. The marsh it had been directed to examine, was traversed on
+every side, and the rivers it had been ordered to trace, were followed
+down to their terminations to a distance far beyond where they had ceased
+to exist as living streams. To many who may cast their eyes over the
+accompanying chart, the extent of newly discovered country may appear
+trifling; but when they are told, that there is not a mile of that
+ground that was not traversed over and over again, either by Mr. Hume or
+by myself, that we wandered over upwards of 600 miles more than the main
+body of the expedition, on different occasions, in our constant and
+anxious search for water, and that we seldom dismounted from our horses,
+until long after sunset, they will acknowledge the difficulties with which
+we had to contend, and will make a generous allowance for them; for,
+however unsuccessful in some respects the expedition may have been, it
+accomplished as much, it is to be hoped, as under such trying
+circumstances could have been accomplished. It now only remains for me to
+sum up the result of my own observations, and to point out to the reader,
+how far the actual state of the interior, has been found to correspond
+with the opinions that were entertained of it.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S REMARKS.
+
+I have already stated, in the introduction to this work, that the general
+impression on the minds of those best qualified to judge was, that the
+western streams discharged themselves into a central shoal sea. Mr. Oxley
+thus expresses himself on the subject:--
+
+
+"July 3rd. Towards morning the storm abated, and at day-light, we
+proceeded on our voyage. The main bed of the river was much contracted,
+but very deep; the waters spreading to the depth of a foot or eighteen
+inches over the banks, but all running on the same point of bearing. We
+met with considerable interruptions from fallen timber, which in places
+nearly choked up the channel. After going about twenty miles, we lost the
+land and trees; the channel of the river, which lay through reeds, and was
+from one to three feet deep, ran northerly.--This continued for three or
+four miles farther, when, although there had been no previous change in
+the breadth, depth, or rapidity of the stream for several miles, and I was
+sanguine in my expectations of soon entering the long-sought-for
+Australian sea, it all at once eluded our farther pursuit, by spreading on
+every point from N.W. to N.E. among the ocean of reeds which surrounded
+us, still running with the same rapidity as before. There was no channel
+whatever among those reeds, and the depth varied from three to five feet.
+This astonishing change (for I cannot call it a termination of the river)
+of course left me no alternative but to endeavour to return to some spot
+on which we could effect a landing before dark. I estimated, that during
+the day, we had gone about twenty-four miles, on nearly the same point of
+bearing as yesterday. To assert, positively, that we were on the margin of
+the lake, or sea, into which this great body of water is discharged, might
+reasonably be deemed a conclusion, which has nothing but conjecture for
+its basis. But if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from actual
+appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the immediate
+vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal one, and
+gradually filling up by numerous depositions from the high lands, left by
+the waters which flow into it. It is most singular, that the high lands on
+this continent seem to be confined to the sea-coast, and not to extend to
+any distance from it."
+
+MR. CUNNINGHAM'S REMARKS.
+
+In a work published at Sydney, containing an account of Mr. Allan
+Cunningham's journey towards Moreton Bay, in 1828, the following remarks
+occur, from which it is evident Mr. Cunningham entertained Mr. Oxley's
+views of the character and nature of the Western interior. Towards the
+conclusion of the narrative, the author thus observes:--
+
+
+"Of the probable character of the distant unexplored interior, into which
+it has been ascertained ALL the rivers falling westerly from the dividing
+ranges flow, some inference may be drawn from the following data.
+
+"Viewing, between the parallels of 34 degrees and 27 degrees, a vast area
+of depressed interior, subjected in seasons of prolonged rains to partial
+inundation, by a dispersion of the several waters that flow upon it from
+the eastern mountains whence they originate; and bearing in mind at the
+same time, that the declension of the country within the above parallels,
+as most decidedly shown by the dip of its several rivers, is uniformly
+to the N.N.W. and N.W., it would appear very conclusive, that either a
+portion of our distant interior is occupied by a lake of considerable
+magnitude, or that the confluence of those large streams, the Macquarie,
+Castlereagh, Gwydir, and the Dumaresq, with the many minor interfluent
+waters, which doubtless takes place upon those low levels, forms one
+or more noble rivers, which may flow across the continent by an almost
+imperceptible declivity of country to the north of north-west coasts, on
+certain parts of which, recent surveys have discovered to us extensive
+openings, by which the largest accumulations of waters might escape to the
+sea."
+
+CHARACTER OF THE RIVERS.
+
+It is the characteristic of the streams falling westerly from the eastern,
+or coast ranges, to maintain a breadth of channel and a rapidity of
+current more immediately near their sources, that ill accords with their
+diminished size, and the sluggish flow of their waters in the more
+depressed interior. In truth, neither the Macquarie nor the Castlereagh
+can strictly be considered as permanent rivers. The last particularly is
+nothing more than a mountain torrent. The Macquarie, although it at length
+ceased to run, kept up the appearance of a river to the very marshes; but
+the bed of the Castlereagh might have been crossed in many places without
+being noticed, nor did its channel contain so much water as was to be
+found on the neighbouring plains.
+
+There are two circumstances upon which the magnitude, and velocity of a
+river, more immediately depend. The first is the abundance of its sources,
+the other the dip of its bed. If a stream has constant fountains at its
+head, and numerous tributaries joining it in its course, and flows withal
+through a country of gradual descent, such a stream will never fail; but
+if the supplies do not exceed the evaporation and absorption, to which
+every river is subject, if a river dependant on its head alone, falls
+rapidly into a level country, without receiving a single addition to its
+waters to assist the first impulse acquired in their descent, it must
+necessarily cease to flow at one point or other. Such is the case with the
+Lachlan, the Macquarie, the Castlereagh, and the Darling. Whence the
+latter originates, still remains to be ascertained; but most undoubtedly
+its sources have been influenced by the same drought that has exhausted
+the fountains of the three first mentioned streams.
+
+In supporting his opinion of the probable discharge of the interior waters
+of Australia upon its north-west coast, Mr. Cunningham thus remarks in the
+publication from which I have already made an extract.
+
+
+"To those remarkable parts of the north-west coast above referred to in
+the parallel of 16 degrees south, the Macquarie river, which rises in
+lat. 33 degrees, and under the meridian of 150 degrees east, would have a
+course of 2045 statute miles throughout, while the elevation of its
+source, being 3500 feet above the level of the sea as shown by the
+barometer, would give its waters an average descent of twenty inches to
+the mile, supposing the bed of the river to be an inclined plane.
+
+"The Gwydir originating in elevated land, lying in 31 degrees south, and
+long. 151 degrees east, at a mean height of 3000 feet, would have to flow
+2020 miles, its elevated sources giving to each a mean fall of seventeen
+inches.
+
+"Dumaresq's river falling 2970 feet from granite mountains, in 28 1/4
+degrees under the meridian of 152 degrees, would have to pursue its course
+for 2969 miles, its average fall being eighteen inches to a mile."
+
+As I have never been upon the banks either of the Gwydir or the Dumaresq,
+I cannot speak of those two rivers; but in estimating the sources of the
+Macquarie at 3500 feet above the level of the sea, Mr. Cunningham has lost
+sight of, or overlooked the fact, that the fall of its bed in the first
+two hundred miles, is more than 2800 feet, since the cataract, which is
+midway between Wellington Valley and the marshes, was ascertained by
+barometrical admeasurement, to be 680 feet only above the ocean. The
+country, therefore, through which the Macquarie would have to flow during
+the remainder of its course of 1700 miles, in order to gain the
+N.W. coast, would not be a gradually inclined plain, but for the most part
+a dead level, and the fact of its failure is a sufficient proof in itself
+how short the course of a river so circumstanced must necessarily be.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S OPINIONS.
+
+Having conversed frequently with Mr. Oxley on the subject of his
+expeditions, I went into the interior prepossessed in favour of his
+opinions, nor do I think he could have drawn any other conclusion than
+that which he did, from his experience of the terminations of the rivers
+whose courses he explored. Had Mr. Oxley advanced forty, or even thirty
+miles, farther than he did, to the westward of Mount Harris; nay, had he
+proceeded eight miles in the above direction beyond the actual spot from
+which he turned back, he would have formed other and very different
+opinions of the probable character of the distant interior. But I am aware
+that Mr. Oxley performed all that enterprise, and perseverance, and talent
+could have performed, and that it would have been impracticable in him to
+have attempted to force its marshes in the state in which he found them.
+It was from his want of knowledge of their nature and extent, that he
+inferred the swampy and inhospitable character of the more remote country,
+a state in which subsequent investigation has found it not to be. The
+marsh of the Macquarie is nothing more than an ordinary marsh or swamp in
+another country. However large a space it covers, it is no more than a
+concavity or basin for the reception of the waters of the river itself,
+nor has it any influence whatever on the country to the westward of it,
+in respect to inundation; the general features of the latter being a
+regular alternation of plain and brush. These facts are in themselves
+sufficient to give a fresh interest to the interior of the Australian
+continent, and to increase its importance.
+
+CAPT. KING'S OPINIONS.
+
+With respect to that part of its coast at which the rivers falling from
+the eastern mountains, discharge themselves, it is a question of very
+great doubt. It seems that Capt. King, in consequence of some
+peculiarities in the currents at its N.W. angle, supports Mr. Cunningham's
+opinion as to their probable discharge in that quarter. But I fear the
+internal structure of the continent is so low, as to preclude the hopes of
+any river reaching from one extremity of it to the other. A variety of
+local circumstances, as the contraction of a channel, a shoal sea, or
+numerous islands, influence currents generally, but more especially round
+so extensive a continent as that of which we are treating; nor does it
+strike me that any observations made by Capt. King during his survey, can
+be held to bear any connection with the eastern ranges, or their western
+waters. It may, however, be said, that as the course of the Darling is
+still involved in uncertainty, the question remains undecided; but it
+appears to me, the discovery of that river has set aside every conjecture
+(founded on previous observation) respecting the main features of the
+interior lying to the westward of the Blue Mountains. Both Mr. Oxley and
+Mr. Cunningham drew their conclusions from the appearances of the country
+they severally explored. The ground on which those theories were built,
+has been travelled over, and has not been found to realise them, but
+subsequent investigation has discovered to us a river, the dip of whose
+bed is to the S.W. We have every reason to believe that the sources of
+this river must be far to the northward of the most distant northerly
+point to which any survey has been made, as we are certain that it is far
+beyond the stretch of vision from the loftiest and most westerly of the
+barrier ranges; from which circumstance, it is evident that whatever
+disposition the streams descending from those ranges to the westward may
+show to hold a N.W. course more immediately at the base, the whole of the
+interior streams, from the Macquarie to the Dumaresq, are tributaries to
+the principal channel which conveys their united waters at right angles,
+if not still more opposite to the direction they were supposed to take,
+as far as is yet known.
+
+COURSE OF THE DARLING.
+
+The Darling River must be considered as the boundary line to all inland
+discoveries from the eastward. Any judgment or opinion of the interior to
+the westward of that stream, would be extremely premature and uncertain.
+There is not a single feature over it to guide or to strengthen either the
+one or the other.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR.
+
+My impression, when travelling the country to the west and N.W. of the
+marshes of the Macquarie, was, that I was traversing a country of
+comparatively recent formation. The sandy nature of its soil, the great
+want of vegetable decay, the salsolaceous character of its plants, the
+appearance of its isolated hills and flooded tracts, and its trifling
+elevations above the sea, severally contributed to strengthen these
+impressions on my mind. My knowledge of the interior is, however, too
+limited to justify me in any conclusion with regard to the central parts
+of Australia. An ample field is open to enterprise and to ambition, and it
+is to be hoped that some more decisive measures will be carried into
+effect, both for the sake of the colony and of geography, to fill up the
+blank upon the face of the chart of Australia, and remove from us the
+reproach of indifference and inaction.
+
+BARBER'S STATEMENT.
+
+Since the above pages were written, an expedition was undertaken by
+Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, to ascertain the truth of a report
+brought in by a runaway convict of the name of Barber, or Clarke, who had
+been at large for five years, at different times, among the natives to
+the northward of Port Macquarie. This man stated that a large river,
+originating in the high lands near Liverpool Plains, and the mountains to
+the north of them, pursued a N.W. course to the sea. His story ran thus:
+Having learnt from the natives the existence of this river, he determined
+to follow it down, in hopes that he might ultimately be enabled to make
+his escape from the colony. He accordingly started from Liverpool Plains,
+and kept on a river called the Gnamoi, for some time, which took him N.W.
+After a few days' journey, he left this river, traversed the country
+northwards, and crossed some lofty ranges. Descending to the N.E. he came
+to another large river, the Keindur, which again took him N.W. He
+travelled 400 miles down it, when he observed a large stream joining it
+upon its left bank, which he supposed to be the Gnamoi. The river he was
+upon was broad and navigable. It flowed through a level country with a
+dead current and muddy water, and spread into frequent lakes. He found
+that it ultimately discharged itself into the sea, but was uncertain at
+what distance from its sources. He was positive he never travelled to the
+SOUTHWARD OF WEST. He ascended a hill near the sea, and observed an island
+in the distance, from which, the natives informed him, a race of
+light-coloured men came in large canoes for a scented wood; but having
+failed in the immediate object of his journey, he was eventually obliged
+to return.
+
+MAJOR MITCHELL'S REPORT.
+
+The following official report of Major Mitchell will sufficiently point
+out the incorrectness of the preceding statement. It is most probable that
+Barber merely told that which he had heard from the natives, and that
+having a more than ordinary share of cunning, he made up a story upon
+their vague and uncertain accounts, in hopes that it would benefit him,
+as in truth it did.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Bullabalakit, on the River Nammoy,
+in lat. 30 degrees 38 minutes 21 seconds S.,
+long. 149 degrees 30 minutes 20 seconds E.
+23d December, 1831.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to state, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, the progress I have made in exploring the course of the interior
+waters to the northward of the Colony, with reference to the letter which
+I had the honour to address to Col. Lindesay, on this subject, on the
+19th ult.
+
+On crossing Liverpool Range my object was to proceed northward, so as to
+avoid the plains and head the streams which water them, and avoiding also
+the mountain ranges on the east.
+
+I arrived accordingly, by a tolerably straight and level line, at
+Walamoul, on Peel's River; this place (a cattle station of Mr. Brown)
+being nearly due north from the common pass across Liverpool Range, and
+about a mile-and-a-half above the spot where Mr. Oxley crossed this
+river.
+
+PEEL'S RIVER.
+
+I found the general course of the Peel below Walamoul to be nearly west;
+and after tracing this river downwards twenty-two miles (in direct
+distance), I crossed it at an excellent ford, named Wallamburra. I then
+traversed the extensive plain of Mulluba; and leaving that of Coonil on
+the right, extending far to the north-east, we passed through a favourable
+interval of what I considered Hardwicke's Range, the general direction of
+this range being two points west of north.
+
+On passing through this gorge, which, from the name of a hill on the south
+side, may be named Ydire, I crossed a very extensive tract of flat
+country, on which the wood consisted of iron-bark and acacia pendula; this
+tract being part of a valley evidently declining to the north-west, which
+is bounded on the south by the Liverpool Range, and on the south-west by
+the extremities from the same. On the west, at a distance of twenty-two
+miles from Hardwicke's Range, there stands a remarkable isolated hill
+named Bounalla; and towards the lowest part of the country, and in the
+direction in which all the waters tend, there is a rocky peak named
+Tangulda. On the north, a low range (named Wowa), branching westerly from
+Hardwicke's Range, bounds on that side this extensive basin, which
+includes Liverpool Plains. Peel's River is the principal stream, and
+receives, in its course, all the waters of these plains below the junction
+of Connadilly,--which I take to be York's River, of Oxley.
+
+THE RIVER NAMMOY.
+
+The stream is well known to the natives by the name Nammoy; and six miles
+below Tangulda, the low extremities from the surrounding ranges close on
+the river, and separate this extensive vale from the unexplored country
+which extends beyond to an horizon which is unbroken between W.N.W.
+and N.N.W.
+
+
+The impracticable appearance of the mountains to the northward, induced me
+to proceed thus far to the west; and on examining the country thirty miles
+N.E. by N. from Tangulda, I ascended a lofty range extending westward from
+the coast chain, and on which the perpendicular sides of masses of
+trachyte (a volcanic rock) were opposed to my further progress even with
+horses: it was therefore evident that the river supposed to rise about the
+latitude of 28 degrees would not be accessible, or at least available to
+the Colony, in that direction, and that in the event of the discovery of a
+river beyond that range flowing to the northern or north-western shores,
+it would become of importance to ascertain whether it was joined by the
+Nammoy, the head of this river being so accessible that I have brought my
+heavily laden drays to where it is navigable for boats, my present
+encampment being on its banks six miles below Tangulda. From this station
+I can perceive the western termination of the Trachytic range, and I am
+now about to explore the country between it and the Nammoy, and the
+further course of this river; and in the event of its continuance in a
+favourable direction, I shall fix my depot on its right bank, whence I now
+write, and descend the stream in the portable boats.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL
+
+The Hon. The Colonial Secretary.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Peel's River, 29th February, 1832.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to inform you, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, that I have reached the left bank of this River with my whole
+party on my return from the northern interior, having explored the course
+of the river referred to in my letter of 22nd December last, and others
+within the 29th parallel of latitude.
+
+There was so much fallen timber in the Nammoy, and its waters were so low,
+that the portable boats could not be used on that river with advantage,
+and I proceeded by land in a north-west direction, until convinced by its
+course turning more to the westward that this river joined the river
+Darling. I therefore quitted its banks with the intention of exploring the
+country further northward, by moving round the western extremities of the
+mountains mentioned in my former letter, and which I have since
+distinguished in my map by the name of the Lindesay Range. These mountains
+terminate abruptly on the west, and I entered a fine open country at their
+base, from whence plains (or rather open ground of gentle undulation)
+extended westward as far as could be seen. On turning these mountains I
+directed my course northward, and to the eastward of north, into the
+country beyond them, in search of the river KINDUR; and I reached a river
+flowing westward, the bed of which was deep, broad, and permanent, but in
+which there was not then much water.
+
+THE RIVER KARAULA.
+
+The marks of inundation on trees, and on the adjoining high ground, proved
+that its floods rose to an extraordinary height; and from the latitude,
+and also from the general direction of its course, I considered this to be
+the river which Mr. Cunningham named the Gwydir, on crossing it sixty
+miles higher, on his route to Moreton Bay. I descended this river, and
+explored the country on its left bank for about eighty miles to the
+westward, when I found that its general course was somewhat to the
+southward of west. This river received no addition from the mountains over
+that part of its left bank traversed by me; and the heat being intense,
+the stream was at length so reduced that I could step across it. The banks
+had become low, and the bed much contracted, being no longer gravelly, but
+muddy. I therefore crossed this river and travelled northward, on a
+meridian line, until, in the latitude of 29 degrees 2 minutes, I came upon
+the largest river I had yet seen. The banks were earthy and broken, the
+soil being loose, and the water of a white muddy colour. Trees, washed out
+by the roots from the soft soil, filled the bed of this river in many
+places. There was abundance of cod-fish of a small size, as well as of the
+two other kinds of fish which we had caught in the Peel, the Nammoy, and
+the Gwydir. The name of this river, as well as we could make it out from
+the natives, was Karaula. Having made fast one tree to top of another tall
+tree, I obtained a view of the horizon, which appeared perfectly level,
+and I was in hopes that we had at length found a river which would flow to
+the northward and avoid the Darling. I accordingly ordered the boat to be
+put together, and sent Mr. White with a party some miles down to clear
+away any trees in the way. Mr. White came upon a rocky fall, and found
+besides the channel so much obstructed by trees, and the course so
+tortuous, that I determined to ascertain before embarking upon it, whether
+the general course was in the desired direction. Leaving Mr. White with
+half the party, I accordingly traced the Karaula downwards, and found that
+its course changed to south, a few miles below where I had made it, and
+that it was joined by the Gwydir only eight miles below where I had
+crossed that river. Immediately below the junction of the Gwydir (which is
+in latitude 29 degrees 30 minutes 27 seconds, longitude 148 degrees
+13 minutes 20 seconds) the course of the river continues southward of
+west, directly towards where Captain Sturt discovered the River Darling;
+and I could no longer doubt that this was the same river. I therefore
+returned to the party, determined to explore the country further
+northward.
+
+The results of my progress thus far were sufficient, I considered, to
+prove that the division of the waters falling towards the northern and
+southern shores of Australia is not, as has been supposed, in the
+direction of the Liverpool and Warrabangle range, but extends between Cape
+Byron on the eastern shore, towards Dick Hartog's Island on the west; the
+greater elongation of this country being between these points, and
+intermediate between the lines of its northern and southern coasts. The
+basin of the streams I have been upon must be bounded on the north by this
+dividing ground or water-shed, and although no rise was perceptible in the
+northern horizon, the river was traversed by several rocky dykes, over
+which it fell southward; their direction being oblique to the course, and
+nearly parallel to this division of the waters. I beg leave to state, that
+I should not feel certain on this point without having seen more, were it
+not evident from Mr. Cunningham's observations, made on crossing this
+division on his way to Moreton Bay. Mr. Cunningham, on crossing the head
+of this river, nearly in the same latitude, but much nearer its sources,
+found the height of its bed above the sea to be 840 feet; at about
+forty-five miles further northward the ground rose to upwards of
+1700 feet, but immediately beyond, he reached a river flowing north-west,
+the height of which was only 1400 feet above the sea. He had thus crossed
+this dividing higher ground, between the parallels of 29 degrees
+and 28 degrees. It appears, therefore, that all the interior rivers we
+know of to the northward of the Morumbidgee, belong to the basin of the
+Karaula; this stream flowing southward, and hence the disappearance of the
+Macquarie and other lower rivers may be understood, for all along the
+banks of the Karaula, the Gwydir, and the Nammoy, the country, though not
+swampy, bears marks of frequent inundation; thus the floods occasioned by
+these rivers united, cover the low country, and receive the Macquarie so
+that no channel marks its further course.
+
+That a basin may be found to the northward receiving the waters of the
+northern part of the coast range in a similar manner is extremely
+probable, and that they form a better river, because the angle is more
+acute between the high ground, which must bound it on the N.E. and the
+watershed on the south. I therefore prepared to cross the Karaula, in
+hopes of seeing the head at least of such a river, and to explore the
+country two degrees further northward, but moving in a N.W. direction.
+My tent was struck, and I had just launched my portable boat for the
+purpose of crossing the river, when Mr. Surveyor Finch, whom I had
+instructed to bring up a supply of flour, arrived with the distressing
+intelligence, that two of his men had been killed by the natives, who had
+taken the flour, and were in possession of everything he had brought--all
+the cattle, including his horse, being also dispersed or lost. I therefore
+determined not to extend my excursion further, as the party were already
+on reduced rations, and on the 8th instant I retired from the Karaula,
+returning by the marked line, which being cut through thick scrubs in
+various places is now open, forming a tolerably direct line of
+communication in a N.W. direction from Sydney, to a river, beyond which
+the survey may be extended whenever His Excellency the Governor thinks
+fit.
+
+The natives had never troubled my party on our advance; indeed I only saw
+them when I came upon them by surprise, and then they always ran off.
+Their first visit was received at my camp on the Karaula, during my
+absence down that river, when they were very friendly, but much disposed
+to steal. Various tribes followed us on coming back, but never with any
+show of hostility, although moving in tribes of a hundred or more parallel
+to our marked line, or in our rear; it was necessary to be ever on our
+guard, and to encamp in strong positions only, arranging the drays for
+defence during the night: three men were always under arms, and I have
+much pleasure in stating, that throughout the whole excursion, and under
+circumstances of hardship and privation, the conduct of the men was very
+good. I took an armed party to the scene of pillage, and buried the bodies
+of the two men, who appeared to have been treacherously murdered while
+asleep by the blacks during the absence of Mr. Finch: no natives were to
+be found when I visited the spot, although it appeared from columns of
+smoke on hills which overlooked if, that they were watching our movements.
+
+The party has now arrived within a day's journey of Brown's station,
+and I have instructed Assistant-Surveyor White (from whom I have received
+great assistance during the whole journey) to conduct it homewards, being
+desirous to proceed without delay to Sydney, and to receive the
+instructions of His Excellency the Governor.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient Servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY,
+"&c. &c. &c."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+
+Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior of Australia--
+Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady intelligent
+subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men requisite,--and of
+cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--Treatment of the
+natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second expedition.
+
+
+Having now had considerable experience in the fitting out and management
+of expeditions in New South Wales, I cannot refrain from making some few
+observations on the subject. And without presuming to lay dawn any fixed
+rules, I shall only refer to those by which I have best succeeded, in
+hopes that some of my remarks may prove of use to future travellers who
+may venture to penetrate into the trackless deserts over so small a
+portion of which I wandered.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EXPLORING AUSTRALIA.
+
+The great difficulty of examining the interior of Australia, is that of
+carrying supplies; for increasing the number of individuals composing an
+expedition is of no avail, since an additional number of men must
+necessarily increase the consumption of food. In order to meet this
+difficulty it has been proposed to establish depots upon which an
+expedition could fall back to recruit its supplies, and in ordinary cases
+this plan might answer; but I am decidedly of opinion that no party could
+long remain stationary in the distant interior without some fatal
+collision with the natives, which would be attended with the most
+deplorable consequences; and I do think, considering all things, that the
+experiment is too dangerous to be tried; for when I reached Mount Harris,
+on my first retreat from the Darling, I found the party who were awaiting
+me, with a supply of provisions, under very great alarm, in consequence of
+the hostile proceedings of the Mount Harris tribe. The men had been
+obliged to put the camp into a state of defence. The blacks had attempted
+to surprise them, and would, had I not returned, have combined in some
+general attack. It appears to me that the most judicious plan would be to
+send a supply of provisions, with an expedition, to a distant point, under
+the charge of a minor party. These provisions could replace those already
+expended, and the animals that carried them could be taken back.
+
+SELECTION OF SUBORDINATES.
+
+The number of individuals of which the expedition down the banks of the
+Macquarie was composed, was fourteen: that is to say, myself, Mr. Hume,
+two soldiers, one free man, and seven prisoners of the crown. The latter
+behaved, on all occasions, as steadily as it was possible for men to do.
+Yet the circumstance of the two soldiers being with me increased my
+confidence in the whole, for I was aware that their example would
+influence the rest. However well disposed the prisoners of the crown may
+be, (as in this instance they certainly were,) the beneficial example of
+steady discipline cannot be denied. I should not have considered myself
+justified in leaving the camp as I did for a week, and in detaching Mr.
+Hume at the same time when at the bottom of the marshes, or in making the
+last effort to maintain our position on the banks of the Darling, if I had
+not reposed every confidence in the man to whom I entrusted the safety
+of the camp during my absence.
+
+Experience, therefore, of the value of the two soldiers, whom General
+Darling was good enough to permit me to take on the strength of the party,
+fully bears me out in recommending that one man, at least, of general
+responsibility shall be attached to all future expeditions. The success of
+an expedition depends so much on the conduct of the persons of whom it is
+composed, that too much attention cannot be given to the selection even of
+the most subordinate. Men of active intelligent minds, of persevering
+habits, and of even temper, should be preferred to mechanics who do not
+possess these most requisite qualities. On the other hand, it is
+impossible to do without a good carpenter, however defective he may be in
+other respects. I was indebted to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of
+Wellington Valley, for some excellent men, both on my first and on my
+second journey, because he understood the nature of the service for which
+they were required, and the characters of those whom he recommended.
+But however well selected the party, or the men rather, might be, I still
+consider a man of general responsibility necessary for its complete
+organisation. I would have him somewhat superior to the rest in his
+station in life. Him I would hold answerable for the immediate discipline
+of the camp, whilst I was present, and for its safety when absent. The
+assistant to the leader I would put entirely out of the question. He
+has other and most important duties to perform. I would rate this man
+wholly independent of him.
+
+DANGER OF COLLISION WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to what I have already said with regard to the natives, it
+was supposed that they were so little to be apprehended, that when I went
+on the first occasion into the interior, I applied for a limited number of
+men only, under an impression that with a few men I could carry provisions
+equal to a consumption of a greater number, and by this means be enabled
+to keep the field for a greater length of time. But I do not think it
+would be safe to penetrate into the distant country with fewer than
+fifteen men, for although, happily, no rupture has as yet taken place with
+the natives, yet, there is no security against their treachery, and it is
+very certain that a slight cause might involve an expedition in
+inextricable difficulty, and oblige the leader to throw himself on the
+defensive, when far away from other resources than those with which he
+should have provided himself, and that, perhaps, when navigating a close
+and intricate river, with all the dangers and perplexities attendant on
+such a situation. It is absolutely necessary to establish nightly guards,
+not only for the security of the camp, but of the cattle, and at the same
+time to have a force strong enough to maintain an obstinate resistance
+against any number of savages, where no mercy is to be expected. It will
+be borne in mind, that there is a wide difference between penetrating into
+a country in the midst of its population, and landing from ships for the
+purpose of communication or traffic. Yet, how few voyages of discovery
+have terminated without bloodshed! Boats while landing are covered by
+their ships, and have succour within view; but not so parties that go into
+unknown tracts. They must depend on their immediate resources and
+individual courage alone.
+
+PACK-OXEN, HORSES, WHEEL-CARRIAGES.
+
+With regard to the animals, I should recommend an equal number of horses
+as of bullocks; since it has been found that the latter, though slow,
+travel better over swampy ground than horses, which, on the other hand,
+are preferable for expeditious journeys, to which bullocks would never be
+equal. One of the colonial pack-saddles weighs fifty pounds complete, and
+is preferable to those sent out from England. This, with a load of
+250 lbs. is sufficient for any animal, since it enables the men to place a
+part of their provisions with the general loads. The difficulty of keeping
+the backs of the animals free from injury, more especially where any
+blemish has before existed, is exceedingly great. They should undergo an
+examination twice a-day, that is, in the morning prior to moving off,
+and in the afternoon before they are turned out to feed; and measures
+should then be taken to ease them as circumstances require. I never
+suffered the saddles to be removed from the backs of the animals under my
+charge for twenty minutes after the termination of the journey for the
+day, in order to guard against the effects of the sun; and where the least
+swelling appeared the saddle was altered and the place dressed. Yet,
+notwithstanding all this care and attention, several both of the horses
+and bullocks were at one time in a sad condition, during the first
+journey,--so much so as almost to paralyse our efforts. It would be
+advisable that such animals as are entirely free from blemish should be
+chosen for the service of expeditions, for, with proper management they
+might he kept in order. The anxiety of mind attendant on a bad state of
+the animals is really quite embarrassing, for it not only causes a delay
+in the movements, but a derangement in the loads. Other animals are
+overburdened, and there is no knowing where the evil will stop.
+
+In addition to the pack-animals, I would recommend the employment of a
+dray or cart under any practicable circumstances. It serves to carry
+necessary comforts, gives an expedition greater facility for securing its
+collections, and is of inconceivable advantage in many other respects.
+
+ISSUE OF PROVISIONS.
+
+Constant and most earnest attention should be paid to the issue of
+provisions, on the discreet management of which so much depends, and the
+charge of them should be committed to the second in command. The most
+important articles are flour, tea, sugar, and tobacco. All should be
+husbanded with extreme care, and weighed from time to time. The flour is
+best carried in canvass bags, containing 100 pounds each, and should at
+the termination of each day's journey, be regularly piled up and covered
+with a tarpaulin. Tea, sugar and tobacco lose considerably in weight, so
+that it is necessary to estimate for somewhat more than the bare supply.
+With regard to the salt meat, the best mode of conveying it appears to be
+in small barrels of equal weight with the bags of flour. Salt pork is
+better than beef. It should be deprived of all bones and be of the very
+best quality. I have heard spirits recommended, but I do not approve their
+use. Tea is much more relished by the men; indeed they could not do well
+without it. A small quantity of spirits would, however, of course be
+necessary in the event of its being required.
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+Mr. Cornelius O'Brien, an enterprising and long-established settler, who
+has pushed his flocks and herds to the banks of the Morumbidgee, was good
+enough to present me with eight wethers as I passed his station. It may be
+some gratification to Mr. O'Brien to know, that they contributed very
+materially to our comforts, and he will, perhaps, accept my
+acknowledgements in this place, not only for so liberal a present to
+myself, but for his attention and kindness to my men as long as they
+remained in his neighbourhood. It was found that the sheep gave but little
+additional trouble, requiring only to be penned at night, as much to
+secure them from the native dogs as to prevent them from straying away.
+They followed the other animals very quietly, and soon became accustomed
+to daily movements. They proved a most available stock; no waste attended
+their slaughter, and they admitted of a necessary and wholesome change of
+fresh food from the general salt diet, on which the men would otherwise
+have had to subsist.
+
+The provisions should, if possible, be issued weekly, and their diminution
+should be so regulated as to give an equal relief to the animals.
+
+For general information i have annexed a list of the supplies I took with
+me on my first expedition. It may appear long, but the articles were
+packed in a small compass, and their value immaterial.
+
+As a precautionary measure I should advise, that one of the pack animals
+be kept apart for the purpose of carrying water. Two casks of equal weight
+are the best for such a purpose. In long and hot marches, the men
+experience great relief from having water at hand.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to the natives, I hope sufficient has been said of the manner
+of communicating with them to prevent the necessity of a repetition here.
+The great point is not to alarm their natural timidity: to exercise
+patience in your intercourse with them; to treat them kindly; and to watch
+them with suspicion, especially at night. Never permit the men to steal
+away from the camp, but keep them as compact as possible; and at every
+station so arrange your drays and provisions that they may serve as a
+defence in case of your being attacked.
+
+The natives appeared to me to be indifferent to our presents, in most
+cases. Tomahawks, knives, pieces of iron, and different coloured ribbons
+for the forehead, were most esteemed by them. They will barter and
+exchange their fish for articles, and readily acquire confidence.
+
+I believe I have now touched on all the more important points: on minor
+ones no observation I can make will be of use; men must, in many things,
+be guided by circumstances.
+
+* * * * *
+
+WHALE BOAT EMPLOYED ON THE SECOND EXPEDITION.
+
+I may here notice that, in my second expedition, as it was anticipated
+that I should require adequate provision for water conveyance, at one
+stage or other of my journey down the Morumbidgee, I was furnished with a
+whale-boat, the dimensions of which are given below. She was built by
+Mr. Egan, the master builder of the dock-yard and a native of the colony,
+and did great credit to his judgment. She carried two tons and a half of
+provisions, independently of a locker, which I appropriated for the
+security of the arms, occupying the space between the after-seat and the
+stern. She was in the first instance put together loosely, her planks
+and timbers marked, and her ring bolts, &c. fitted. She was then taken to
+pieces, carefully packed up, and thus conveyed in plank into the interior,
+to a distance of four hundred and forty miles, without injury. She was
+admirably adapted for the service, and rose as well as could have been
+expected over the seas in the lake. It was evident, however, that she
+would have been much safer if she had had another plank, for she was
+undoubtedly too low. The following were her dimensions:--
+
+Breadth across 7th timber aft, 5 ft. 1/2 an inch outside.
+Across 12th timber, 5 ft. 11 1/4 in.
+Across 17th timber forward, 5 ft.
+25 ft. 8 in. in length inside.
+Curve of the keel No. 1, from the after side of each apron, 3 ft. 3 3/4in.
+No. 2, from head to head of the dead wood, 13 1/2 in.
+No. 3, from one end of keel to the other inner side, 3 in.
+No. 4, round of keel from the toe of each dead wood, 7/8 1/16th.
+The timbers were marked, beginning from the stern to the bow on the
+starboard side, and from bow to stern on the larboard.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. I.
+
+
+
+LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS.
+
+
+
+By His Excellency Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, Commanding
+His Majesty's Forces, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales, and its dependencies, and
+Vice Admiral of the same, &c. &c. &c.
+
+TO CHARLES STURT, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE 39TH REGIMENT OF FOOT.
+
+Whereas it has been judged expedient to fit out an expedition for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of New Holland, and the present dry
+season affords a reasonable prospect of an opportunity of ascertaining the
+nature and extent of the large marsh or marshes which stopped the progress
+of the late John Oxley Esq, Surveyor General, in following the courses of
+the rivers Lachlan and Macquarie in the years 1817 and 1818. And whereas I
+repose full confidence in your abilities and zeal for conducting such an
+expedition, I do hereby constitute and appoint you to command and take
+charge of the expedition now preparing for the purpose of exploring the
+interior of the country, and for ascertaining, if practicable, the nature
+and extent of the marsh or marshes above mentioned.
+
+In the prosecution of this service, you will be guided generally by the
+following instructions.
+
+1. You will be accompanied on this expedition by Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose
+great experience in travelling through the remote parts of the Colony,
+cannot fail to be highly useful to you. You will also be attended by two
+soldiers and six convicts, of whom one is to understand the shoeing of
+horses, one to be a carpenter, one a harness-maker and three stock-men,
+and you will be provided with six horses and twelve bullocks.
+
+2. A small boat has been built here for the use of the expedition, and for
+its conveyance, there is provided a light four-wheeled carriage to be
+drawn by two bullocks.
+
+The deputy Commissary General has received orders for supplying the
+expedition with provisions of the best quality sufficient for six months'
+consumption, together with tents, blankets, clothing, pack-saddles,
+utensils, instruments, tools, and necessaries of all kinds of which you
+are likely to stand in need. Orders are also given for providing you with
+arms and ammunition, with rockets for signals, and an ample supply of
+simple medicines--You are to consider it an important duty to attend to
+the providing of all these supplies, and to take care that not only every
+article is of the best quality that can be procured, but also that no
+article be wanting with which you may desire to be provided.
+
+3. Orders are given for forwarding without delay all your provisions,
+stores and supplies of every kind to Wellington Valley, at which place,
+you, Mr. Hume, and all your men are to rendezvous as soon as possible.
+Mr Maxwell, the superintendent, will furnish you with well-trained
+bullocks, and afford you all the assistance you may require in arranging
+every thing for your departure from that station.
+
+4. After you shall have completed all your arrangements, you are to lose
+no time in finally departing from Wellington Valley in prosecution of the
+immediate objects of the expedition.
+
+5. You are first to proceed to Mount Harris, where you are to form a
+temporary depot, by means of which you will have an opportunity of more
+readily communicating with Mr. Maxwell.
+
+6. You are then to endeavour to determine the fate of the Macquarie River,
+by tracing it as far as possible beyond the point to which Mr. Oxley went,
+and by pushing westward, you are to ascertain if there be any high lands
+in that direction, or if the country be, as it is supposed, an unbroken
+level and under water. If you should fail in these objects, you will
+traverse the plains lying behind our north-west boundaries, with a view to
+skirt any waters by which you may have been checked to the westward; and
+if you should succeed in skirting them, you are to explore the country
+westward and southward as far as possible, endeavouring to discover the
+Macquarie beyond the marsh of Mr. Oxley, and following it to its mouth if
+at all practicable.
+
+7. There is some reason to believe that the over-flowing of the Macquarie
+when visited by Mr. Oxley, was occasioned by heavy rains falling in the
+mountains to the eastward, and that as you are to visit the same spot at a
+different season of the year, you may escape such embarrassment; but
+although you should get beyond the point at which Mr. Oxley stopped, it
+would not be prudent to risk your own health or that of your men, by
+continuing long in a swampy country. Therefore it may be advisable for you
+in the first instance to leave the greater part of your men, bullocks, and
+baggage, at Mount Harris, and if you should see a probability of your
+being able to cross into the interior, you will then return to Mount
+Harris for such additional supplies as you may judge necessary. You can
+there communicate with Mr. Maxwell respecting any ulterior arrangements
+which you may be desirous of making.
+
+8. The success of the expedition is so desirable an object, that I cannot
+too strongly impress upon you the importance of perseverance in
+endeavouring to skirt any waters or marshes which may check your course as
+long as you have provisions sufficient for your return; but you must be
+cautious not to proceed a single day's journey further than where you find
+that your provisions will be barely sufficient to enable you to reach the
+nearest place at which you can depend upon getting supplies.
+
+9. If after every endeavour you should find it totally impracticable to get
+to the westward, you are still to proceed northward, keeping as westerly a
+direction as possible; and when the state of your provisions will oblige
+you to retreat, you will be guided by your latitude, as to the place to
+which you are to make the best of your way, but you are not to make for
+any place on the coast, if Wellington valley should still be nearer.
+
+10. You must be aware that the success of the expedition will greatly
+depend upon the time for which your provisions will hold out, and
+therefore you will see the great importance of observing every possible
+economy in the expenditure of provisions, and preventing waste of every
+kind.
+
+11. You are to keep a detailed account of your proceedings in a journal,
+in which all observations and occurrences of every kind, with all their
+circumstances, however minute, are to be carefully noted down. You are to
+be particular in describing the general face of all the country through
+which you pass, the direction and shape of the mountains, whether detached
+or in ranges, together with the bearings and estimated distances of the
+several mountains, hills, or eminences from each other. You are likewise
+to note the nature of the climate, as to heat, cold, moisture, winds,
+rains, &c, and to keep a register of the temperature from Fahrenheit's
+thermometer, as observed at two or three periods of each day. The rivers,
+with their several branches, their direction, velocity, breadth, and
+depth, are carefully to be noted. It is further expected that you will,
+as far as may he in your power, attend to the animal, vegetable, and
+mineral productions of the country, noting down every thing that may occur
+to you, and preserving specimens as far as your means will admit,
+especially some of all the ripe seeds which you may discover; when the
+preservation of specimens is impossible, drawings or detailed accounts of
+them, are very desirable.
+
+12. You will note the description of the several people whom you may meet,
+the extent of the population, their means of subsistence, their genius and
+disposition, the nature of their amusements, their diseases and remedies,
+their objects of worship, religious ceremonies, and a vocabulary of their
+language.
+
+Lastly. On your return from your journey, you are to cause all the
+journals or other written documents belonging to, and curiosities
+collected by the several individuals composing the expedition, to be
+carefully sealed up with your own seal and kept in that state until you
+shall have made your report to me in writing of the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Given at Sydney, this eighteenth day of November, 1828.
+By Command of His Excellency the Governor,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. II.
+
+
+
+LIST OF STORES SUPPLIED FOR THE EXPEDITION.
+
+
+List of Articles delivered from His Majesty's Stores,
+in charge of D. A. C. Goodsir, to Captain Sturt, viz.--
+
+1 Hack saddle. 9 Harness casks.
+1 Bridle. 23 Canvas bags.
+2 Tents. 4 Tin cases.
+14 Pack saddles. 16 Padlocks.
+14 Pair hobbles. 6 Tarpaulens.
+24 Sets horse shoes. 10 Haversacks.
+2000 Horse nails. 113 Fathom one-inch rope.
+113 Fathoms 1 1/2 inch rope. 1 Boat compass.
+1 Hammer, (Blacksmith's) 1 Telescope.
+1 Paring knife. 1 Spare glass for ditto.
+2 Chipping do. 1 Tin case (for charts.)
+2 Rasps. 100 Fish-hooks, (large.)
+1 Pair pincers. 12 Fishing-lines.
+1 Cutter. 10 Knives.
+2lb. Pack thread. 10 Forks.
+24 Needles. 10 Spoons.
+1/4lb. Bristles. 2 Frying-pans.
+7lbs. Leather. 2 Tinder-boxes.
+1/2lb. Thread. 1 Tea-kettle, (tin.)
+1 Pair of steelyards. 10 Tin dishes.
+10 Tin pots. 8 Jackets.
+1 Flour seive. 8 Duck frocks.
+2 Felling-axes. 8 Shirts.
+4 Tomahawks. 16 Trousers.
+2 Hammers. 24 Pair shoes.
+1 Hand-saw. 16 Blankets.
+3 Bill-hooks. 16 Pair stockings.
+3 Awls. 2 Bullock collars.
+3 Broad hoes. 2 Do. back-bands and pipes.
+4 Razors. 2 Leading cruppers.
+4 Brushes. 1 Boat with sail and oars.
+4 Combs. 1 Do. carriage.
+3 Iron pots, (camp kettles.) 1 Canvass boat-cover.
+1 Pair scissors. 3 Water breaker.
+
+COMMISSARIAT OFFICE, SYDNEY, NOV. 10TH, 1828.
+
+P.S.--l Tarpaulin.
+ Large Fish-hook.
+ 1 Tin tea-kettle.
+ 1 Camp kettle.
+ Pitch and oil.
+ Hemp or twine.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. III.
+
+
+
+SHEEP-FARMING RETURNS, SHOWING THE INCREASE IN FOUR YEARS,
+from two Breeding Flocks, consisting of 670 Ewes in Lamb.
+
+
+(A.)--1st JUNE, 1828.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks. Breeding Ewes. Lambs. Total. Remarks.
+
+ 2 yrs. old. 3 yrs. old. Male.-Female.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Lambs.
+No. 1 330 148 149 627 Deaths 6. Incr.297
+No. 2 330 154 154 638 4 308
+ ---- -- ---
+ * 1265 10 605
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+* The increase throughout these returns is calculated at from 270 to 290
+Lambs, to 300 Ewes, which is the usual average in N.S.W.
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Purchased two Flocks of Ewes, at 84s.............................670 Ewes.
+Increase of Lambs.......................................... 605
+Casual Deaths............................................... 10
+ 595
+ ---
+Total as per Return............................................ 1265
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(B.)--1st JUNE, 1829.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 3-yr. 327 154 154 635 Deaths 3 Incr.308
+2 4-yr. 326 155 155 636 4 310
+3 1-yr. 302 302 1 ---
+4 1-yr. 302 18 320 -- 618
+ ---- 8
+ 1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (A) Total...............................................1265
+Increase by Lambing....................................618
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 636
+Casual Deaths......................................... 8 628
+ ----
+Total as per return............................................1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(C.)--1st JUNE, 1830.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 296 133 154 562 Deaths 6 Incr.266
+2 4-yr. 325 150 155 625 2 300
+3 5-yr. 326 160 646 320
+4 2-yr. 302 27 329 ---
+5 1-yr. 309 309 886
+6 1-yr. 309 309 ---
+ ---- 3 Rams died
+ 2780 12 ditto purchased
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (B) Total............................................ 1893
+Increase by Lambing....................................886
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................12
+ ---
+ 898
+Deaths............................................... 11 887
+ ----
+Total as per return......................................... 2780
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(D.)--1st JUNE, 1831.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 304 136 136 576 Deaths 5 Incr.272
+2 3-yr. 293 135 136 564 3 271
+3 5-yr. 324 156 156 636 1 312
+4 6-yr. 320 156 156 632 2 312
+ Killed 4 ---
+5 3-yr. 300 300 Deaths 2 1167
+6 2-yr. 308 308 1
+7 1-yr 443 443
+8 1-yr 442 442 1
+9 40 40 5
+ ---- --
+ 3941 20
+ Purchased 12
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (C) Total............................................ 2780
+Increase by Lambing...................................1167
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 1185
+Casual deaths 20 ...Killed for use 4 ................. 24 1161
+ ----
+Total as per return.......................................... 3941
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(E.)--1st JUNE, 1832.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 344 154 154 652 Deaths 6 Incr.308
+2 3-yr. 344 162 161 667 4 323
+4 3-yr. 342 164 165 671 3 329
+5 6-yr. 320 155 155 630 2 310
+6 7-yr. 300 145 145 590 2 290
+7 4-yr. 300 300 ----
+ 1560
+8 3-yr 302 302 2
+9 2-yr 440 440 1
+10 1-yr 583 583
+11 1-yr 584 584
+12 45 45 5 Purch. 10
+ ---- ---- ---- --- --- --- ----
+ 1650 584 1625 45 780 780 5464
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (D) Total............................................ 3941
+Increase by Lambing...................................1560
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................10
+ ---
+ 1570
+Decrease by casual death .............................. 25
+Decrease by slaughter for use ......................... 22
+ ---
+ 1523
+ ----
+ Grand Total .............................. 5464 as above
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+MEMORANDUM,--The deaths have been calculated at the lowest rate under the
+best management. It may be safer to assume a rate of four or five per
+cent. per annum.
+
+
+
+Account of Expenditure and Income upon Sheep Stock in Australia,
+appended to Returns A. B. C. D. and E.
+ 1st YEAR, (RETURN A.) JUNE, 1829.
+
+INCOME.
+By 11265 fleeces, average weight 2 1/4 lbs. 284 lbs
+wool at 1s. 6d. per lb. 213 9 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 1 Watchman at 20 20 0 O PROFIT.
+To Hurdles, &c. 10 0 0
+ -------- 90 0 0
+ -------- 123 9 0
+
+ 2nd YEAR, (B.) JUNE, 1830.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 1893 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 4259lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 319 8 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 20 40 0 0
+To 1 Watchman 20 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 5 0 0
+ ---------
+ 125 0 0
+To 18 Rams at 10 pounds* 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 305 0 0
+ ---------
+ 14 8 6
+*The price of rams will probably fall to 5 pounds
+
+ 3rd YEAR, (C.) JUNE, 1831.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 2780 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 6255lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 469 2 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 25 25 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 20 60 0 0
+To 2 Watchman 20 40 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 195 0 0
+To 12 Rams at 10 pounds 120 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+ ---------
+ 154 2 6
+
+
+
+ 4th YEAR, (D.) JUNE, 1832.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 3941 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 8867lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 665 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 25 75 0 0
+To 5 Ditto 20 100 0 0
+To 3 Watchman 20 60 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 20 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+To 10 Rams at 10 pounds 100 0 0
+ ---------
+ 415 0 0
+ ---------
+ 507 0 0
+ ----------
+ Net profit by sales of wool in 5 years 1024 0 0
+
+1024 0 0 divided by 5 gives 204 8 0 for annual interest on the
+original capital of 2814 0 0, (about 7 1/4 percent per annum)
+in addition to the accumulation of capital itself, shown by the
+valuation of stock.
+
+These accounts are a year in advance of the sheep returns, in order to
+bring them to the time at which the wool would be sold.
+
+
+ VALUATION OF SHEEP, JUNE, 1832----(RETURN E.)
+
+1614 Ewes from 1 to 4 years old at 3 pounds each 4842 0 O
+ 620 Do. 4 to 7 years old 2 1240 0 0
+ 780 Female Lambs 2 1560 0 0
+2405 Wethers and Male Lambs 15s. 1803 0 0
+ 45 Rams (original cost, 450l.) 400 0 0
+ ----------
+ 9845 0 0
+
+Note.--About 500 pounds would be added to the Income on the fifth year,
+by the sale of wethers of 3 and 4 years old.
+
+The cost of rams ought, strictly speaking, to be added to capital, and not
+deducted from Income; but these returns were made out in their present
+form at the request of a gentleman proceeding to the Colony with a limited
+capital, and who wished to know how much he might safely invest in sheep.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. IV.
+
+
+
+LIST OF GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS, COLLECTED IN THE DISTANT INTERIOR DURING
+THE FIRST EXPEDITION, WITH THEIR LOCALITIES AND THEIR RELATIVE DISTANCES
+FROM EACH OTHER.
+
+
+It may be necessary to observe that the height of the Cataract of the
+Macquarie River above the sea, was ascertained by barometrical
+admeasurement to be 650 feet. The country subsequently traversed is
+considerably lower. The specimens refer only to the geological formation
+of the distant interior.
+
+Schorl Rock.--Colour blueish grey, fine grained, extremely hard. Composed
+of Tourmaline and Quartz. Forms the bed of the Macquarie at the Cataract,
+75 miles to the N.W. of Wellington Valley.
+
+Decomposed Mica Slate.--Colour white; yields to the knife; adheres
+strongly to the tongue.
+
+Decomposed Feldspar.--Colour pale rose-pink; very fine grained; easily
+scratched with the knife; adheres strongly to the tongue.
+
+Both specimens immediately succeed the Schorl rock at the Cataract, in
+large smooth-sided masses.
+
+This formation may be said to terminate the rocks connected with the
+dividing ranges, since it is the last that occurs at their western base.
+
+A little below the Cataract, the county undergoes a remarkable change,
+and becomes extremely depressed.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour dull red, with white spots, or grey with
+red spots; very hard, compact, sonorous, magnetic. [See pp. 27 and 115.]
+Composition of Mount Harris, a hill called by Mr. Oxley, elevated about
+170 feet above the level of the plains. It lies 65 miles to the N.N.W. of
+the Cataract, and is about 16 miles distant from the first of the marshes
+of the Macquarie.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour grey with red spots, similar to the last.
+Was not observed to affect the needle. Formation of Mount Foster.
+Mount Foster is more than 200 feet in height, and lies about 5 miles to
+the N.N.W. of Mount Harris. From the summit of both, Arbuthnot's range is
+visible, bearing nearly due east, distant 70 miles. [See page 28.]
+
+Quartz Rook varieties--Slaty Quartz varieties.--Composition of the first
+elevations to the Westward of the marshes of the Macquarie, called
+New Year's Range, a group of five hills. The loftiest about 200 feet in
+elevation; distant about 80 miles to the N.W. of Mount Harris.
+
+Granite.--Colour red, coarse-grained. Composed of Quartz, Feldspar,
+and Mica.
+
+ Granite, Porphyritic.--Colour light red. Both occurring in the bed of
+New Year's Creek, traversing it obliquely, and are visible for a few
+hundred yards only. This granite occurs about 16 miles from the Range in
+a N. by E. direction.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of Oxley's Table Land, 500 feet above the
+level of the plains. It is broken into two hills, that appear to have been
+separated by some convulsion. [See page 81.] It bears N.W. by W. from
+New Year's Range, distant 50 miles.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of D'Urban's group. The highest elevation
+ascended during the expedition, being nearly 600 feet above the level of
+the plain in which it rises. It lies to the S.S.W. of Oxley's Table Land,
+distant 40 miles, and the rock of which it is composed is much harder
+and closer.
+
+Breccia.--Colour pale yellow, silicious cement. Composition of some
+trifling elevations to the North of New-Year's range, with which it is
+doubtful whether they are connected.
+
+Crystallized Sulphate of Lime.--Found imbedded in the alluvial soil
+forming the banks of the Darling river. Occurring in a regular vein. Soft,
+yielding to the nail; not acted on by acids.--See Plate.
+
+Breccia.--Pale ochre colour, silicious cement, extremely hard. Cellular,
+and sharp edges to the fractured pebbles. Has apparently undergone fusion.
+Occurs in the bed of the Darling in one place only.
+
+Sandstone Varieties.--Colour dull red and muddy white; appears like burnt
+bricks; light, easily frangible; adheres to the tongue; occurs in large
+masses in the bed of the Darling; probably in connection with the
+rock-salt of the neighbourhood, which, from the number of brine springs
+discovered feeding the river, must necessarily exist.
+
+Variety of the same description of rock.
+
+Jasper and Quartz.--Showing itself above the surface of a plain, from
+which D'Urban's group bore S. 40 E. distant 33 miles.
+
+It is a remarkable fact, that not a pebble or a stone was picked up during
+the progress of the expedition, on any one of the plains; and that after
+it again left Mount Harris for the Castlereagh, the only rock-formation
+discovered was a small Freestone tract near the Darling river. There was
+not a pebble of any kind either in the bed of the Castlereagh, or in the
+creeks falling into it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. V.
+
+
+
+OFFICIAL REPORTS TO THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 23RD JANUARY, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor has been pleased to order, that the following
+communication, dated the 25th of December last, from Captain Sturt, of the
+39th Regiment, who is employed in an exploring expedition into the
+interior of the country, be published for general information.
+
+By his Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN MARSHES, 25TH DECEMBER, 1828.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to forward, for the Governor's perusal, a
+copy of my journal up to the date of my arrival at Mount Harris. I should
+not have directed the messenger to return so soon, had I not subsequently
+advanced to Mount Foster, and surveyed the country from that eminence. I
+could distinctly see Arbuthnot's Range to the eastward. From that point
+the horizon appeared to me unbroken, but the country to the northward and
+westward seemed to favour an attempt to penetrate into it. I did not
+observe any sheet of water, and the course of the Macquarie was lost in
+the woodlands below.
+
+Mr. Hume ascended the hill at sun-rise, and thought he could see mountains
+to the north east, but at such a distance as to make it quite a matter of
+uncertainty. Agreeing, however, in the prudence of an immediate descent,
+we left our encampment on the morning of the 23rd, under Mount Foster, to
+which we had removed from Mount Harris, and pursued a north-north-west
+course to the spot on which we rest at present. We passed some fine meadow
+land near the river, and were obliged to keep wide of it in consequence of
+fissures in the ground. Traversing a large and blasted plain, on which the
+sun's rays fell with intense heat, and on which there was but little
+vegetation, we skirted the first great morass, and made the river
+immediately beyond it. It is of very considerable extent, the channel of
+the river passing through it. We are encompassed on every side by high
+reeds, which exist in the woods as well as in the plains. Mr. Hume and
+myself rode forward yesterday through the second morass, and made the
+river on slightly elevated ground, at a distance of about five miles; the
+country beyond appeared to favour our object, and we, to-morrow, proceed
+with the party to the north-west. The river seems to bend to the
+north-east; but in this level country it is impossible to speak with
+certainty, or to give any decided opinion of the nature of it, beyond the
+flats on which we are travelling. The reeds to the north-east and
+northward extend over a circumference of fifty miles; but if Mr. Hume
+really saw mountains or rising ground in the former point, the apparent
+course of the Macquarie is at once accounted for. The country, however,
+seems to dip to the north, though generally speaking it is level, and I am
+inclined to think that the state of the atmosphere caused a deception in
+this appearance.
+
+I regret to add, that the effects of the sun on the plain over which we
+passed on the 23rd produced a return of inflammation in the eyes of the
+men, I have named in my journals, and caused the same in the eyes of
+several others of my party. I halted, therefore, to expedite their
+recovery. They are doing well now, and we can proceed in the cool of the
+morning without any fear of their receiving injury by it. One of the men,
+who were to return to Wellington Valley, was attacked slightly with
+dysentery, but the medicines I gave him carried it off in the course of a
+day or two. I have taken every precaution with regard to the health of the
+men, in preparing them for the country into which they are going; and I
+have to request that you will inform the governor that the conduct of the
+whole party merits my approbation, and that I have no fault to find. The
+men from Sydney are not so sharp as those from Wellington Valley, but are
+equally well disposed. The animals, both horses and bullocks, are in good
+order, and I find the two soldiers of infinite service to me. The boat has
+received some damage from exposure to intense heat, but is otherwise
+uninjured. We still retain the carriage and have every prospect of
+dragging it on with us.
+
+His Excellency, having been good enough to order a fresh supply of
+provisions to Wellington Valley, I have to beg they may be forwarded to
+Mount Harris, and that the person in charge thereof be instructed to
+remain at that station for one month. We shall, during the interval, have
+examined the country to the north-west; and, in case we are forced back,
+shall require a supply to enable us to proceed to the northward, in
+furtherance of the views I have already had the honor to submit for the
+Governor's approval.
+
+I have the honor to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient and humble Servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Captain, 39th Regt.
+
+
+THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER.
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 6TH APRIL, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor is pleased to direct that the following
+interesting Report which has been received from Captain Sturt,
+39th Regiment, who has been employed for some months past, (as will be
+seen on reference to the Government Order, No. 4, published with Captain
+Sturt's First Report in the Sydney Gazette, of the 24th of January last)
+in exploring the interior, be communicated for the information of the
+public.
+
+It appears that the river Macquarie ceases to exist near the spot where
+the expedition under the late Mr. Oxley terminated, which, from the state
+of country at the time, being then flooded, could not be ascertained; and
+that another river of no inconsiderable magnitude, fed by salt springs,
+was discovered by Captain Sturt on the 2nd February last, about 100 miles
+to the westward of the Macquarie, running to the southward and westward.
+
+By His Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 4TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His
+Excellency the Governor, that I returned to this eminence on Monday,
+the 23rd ult. having been driven from the interior, in consequence of the
+extreme drought which prevails there.
+
+I am to state, in reference to my former communication, that agreeably to
+what I then reported, I moved, on the 26th December last, lower down the
+plains of the Macquarie, but encountered a barrier of reeds, formed by the
+marshes of that river, through which we in vain endeavoured to force our
+way. I was in consequence obliged to make the nearest part of the river to
+my left, and to take such measures as the nature of my situation required.
+Here, for the first time, I set the boat afloat, deeming it essential to
+trace the river, as I could not move upon its banks, and wishing also to
+ascertain where it again issued from the marshes, I requested Mr. Hume to
+proceed northerly, with a view to skirt them, and to descend westerly,
+wherever he saw an open space. He was fortunate enough to strike upon the
+channel about twelve miles north of our position, but was obstructed in
+his further progress by another marsh, in consequence of which he returned
+to the camp the next day; in the mean time, I had taken the boat, and
+proceeded down the Macquarie, my way being at first considerably
+obstructed by fallen timber: clearing this obstacle, however, I got into
+a deeper channel, with fine broad reaches, and a depth of from twelve to
+fifteen feet water. I had a short time previously cleared all woods and
+trees, and was now in the midst of reeds of great height. After proceeding
+onwards for about eight miles from the place whence I started, my course
+was suddenly and unexpectedly checked; I saw reeds before me, and expected
+I was about to turn an angle of the river, but I found that I had got to
+the end of the channel, and that the river itself had ceased to exist.
+Confounded at such a termination to a stream, whose appearance justified
+the expectation that it would have led me through the heart of the marsh
+to join Mr. Hume, I commenced a most minute examination of the place, and
+discovered two creeks, if they deserve the name, branching, the one to the
+north-west, and the other to the north-east; after tracing the former a
+short distance, I reached its termination, and in order to assure myself
+that such was the case, I walked round the head of it by pushing through
+the reeds; it being then too dark to continue where I was, I returned to
+a place on the river, at which I had rested during a shower, and slept
+there. In the morning I again went to the spot to examine the
+north-eastern branch, when I was equally disappointed. I then examined the
+space between the two creeks, opposite to the main channel of the river,
+and where the bank receives the force of the current. Here I saw water in
+the reeds, but it was scarcely ankle deep, and was running off to the
+north-west quicker than the waters of the river, which had almost an
+imperceptible motion, I was therefore at once convinced that it was not
+permanent, but had lodged there in the night, during which much rain had
+fallen. I next pushed my way through the reeds into the marsh, and at
+length clearly perceived that the waters which were perfectly sweet, after
+running several courses, flowed off to the north, towards which point
+there was an apparent declination or dip. Finding it impossible to
+proceed further, I regained the boat, and thence returned to the camp,
+under a conviction that I had reached the very spot, at which Mr. Oxley
+lost the channel of the river in 1818.
+
+The next day I moved to the place where Mr. Hume had struck upon the
+channel of the river, but was again doubtful in what direction to proceed.
+
+The marsh, at the commencement of which we now found ourselves, being the
+third from Mount Foster, but the second great one, seemed to extend beyond
+us to the north for many miles, but varying in breadth. In the evening I
+went in the boat up the channel, and found it at first, deep and sullen,
+as that of the river above. It soon however, narrowed, and the weeds
+formed over its surface, so that I abandoned the boat and walked along a
+path up it. I had not gone far when the channel divided; two smaller
+channels came, the one from the southern, and the other from the western
+parts of the marsh into it. There was an evident declination where they
+were, and it was at their junction the river again rallied and formed.
+On my return to the camp, Mr. Hume and I went down the river, but found
+that about a mile it lost itself, and spread its waters ever the extensive
+marsh before it.
+
+In this extremity, I knew not what movement to make, as Mr. Hume had been
+checked in his progress north. I therefore determined to ascertain the
+nature of the country to the eastward and to the westward, that I might
+move accordingly; I proposed to Mr. Hume, to take a week's provisions,
+with two attendants, and go to the north-east, in order again to turn the
+marsh, but with the expectation that the angle formed by the junction of
+the Castlereagh with the Macquarie would arrest its progress, as the last
+was fast approaching the former.
+
+I myself determined to cross the river, and to skirt the marshes on the
+left, and in case they turned off to the north east, as they appeared to
+do, it was my intention to pursue a N.W. course into the interior, to
+learn the nature of it. With these views I left the camp on the 31st of
+December, and did not return until the 5th of January. Having found early
+in my journey, from the change of soil and of timber, that I was leaving
+the neighbourhood of the Macquarie, I followed a N.W. course, from a more
+northerly one, and struck at once across the country, under an impression
+that Mr. Hume would have made the river again long before my return.
+I found, after travelling between twenty and thirty miles, the country
+began to rise; and at the end of my journey, I made a hill of considerable
+elevation, from the summit of which I had a view of other high lands; one
+to the S.W. being a very fine mountain. As I had not found any water
+excepting in two creeks, which I had left far behind me, and as I had got
+on a soil which appeared incapable of holding it, I made this the
+termination of my journey, having exceeded 100 miles in distance from the
+camp, on my return to which I found Mr. Hume still absent. When he joined,
+he stated to me, that not making the Castlereagh as soon as he expected,
+he had bent down westerly for the Macquarie, and that he ended his journey
+at some gentle hills he had made; so that it appeared we must either have
+crossed each other's line of route, or that they were very near, and that
+want of length must alone have prevented them from crossing; but as such
+all assumption led to the conclusion that the Macquarie no longer existed,
+I determined to pursue a middle course round the swamps, to ascertain the
+point; as in case the river had ended, a westerly course was the one which
+my instructions directed me to pursue.
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the marshes we were obliged to sink
+wells for water, and it was thus early that we began to feel the want of a
+regular supply.
+
+Having made a creek about four miles from our position by cutting through
+the reeds where there was a narrow space, we pursued a westerly course
+over a plain, having every appearance of frequent inundation, and for four
+or five days held nearly the same direction; in the course of which we
+crossed both our tracks on the excursions we had made, which had
+intersected each other in a dense oak brush; thus renewing the few doubts,
+or rather the doubt we had as to the fate of the Macquarie, whose course
+we had been sent to trace. Indeed, had I not felt convinced that that
+river had ceased, I should not have moved westward without further
+examination, but we had passed through a very narrow part of the marshes,
+and round the greater part of them, and had not seen any hollow that could
+by any possible exaggeration be construed into or mistaken for the channel
+of a river.
+
+It appears, then, that the Macquarie, flowing as it does for so many
+miles, through a bed, and not a declining country, and having little water
+in it, except in times of flood, loses its impetus long ere it reaches the
+formidable barrier that opposes its progress northwards; the soil in which
+the reeds grow being a stiff clay. Its waters consequently spread, until
+a slight declivity giving them fresh impulse, they form a channel again,
+but soon gaining a level, they lose their force and their motion together,
+and spread not only over the second great marsh, but over a vast extent
+of the surrounding country, the breadth of ground thus subject to
+inundation being more than twenty miles, and its length considerably
+greater; around this space there is a gentle rise which confines the
+waters, while small hollows in various directions lead them out of the
+marshes over the adjacent plains, on which they eventually subside. On my
+return from the interior, I examined those parts round which I had not
+been, with particular attention, partly in company with Mr. Hume, and this
+statement was confirmed by what we saw. Thus, at a distance of about
+twenty-five miles from Mount Foster to the N.N.W. the river Macquarie
+ceases to exist, in any shape as a river, and at a distance of between
+fifty and sixty, the marshes terminate, though the country subject to
+inundation from the river is of a very considerable extent, as shown by
+the withered bulrushes, wet reeds, and shells, that are scattered over
+its surface.
+
+Having executed the first part of the instructions with which I had been
+honoured, I determined on pursuing a west, or north-west coarse into the
+interior, to ascertain the nature of it, in fulfilment of the second, but
+in doing this I was obliged to follow creeks, and even on their banks had
+to carry a supply of water, so uncertain was it that we should meet with
+any at the termination of our day's journey, and that what we did find
+would be fit to drink. Our course led us over plains immediately bordering
+the lower lands of the Macquarie, alternating with swamp oak, acacia
+pendula, pine, box, eucalyptus, and many other trees of minor growth, the
+soil being inclined to a red loam, while the plains were generally covered
+with a black scrub, though in some places they had good grass upon them.
+We crossed two creeks before we made the hills Mr. Hume had ascended, and
+which he called New Year's Range. Around these hills the country appeared
+better--they are gentle, picturesque elevations, and are for the most
+part, covered with verdure, and have, I fancy, a whinstone base, the rock
+of which they are composed being of various substances. I place New Year's
+Range in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes, long. 146 degrees 3 minutes
+30 seconds. Our course next lying north-west along a creek, led us to
+within twenty miles of the hill that had terminated my excursion, and as I
+hoped that a more leisurely survey of the country from its summit would
+open something favourable to our view, I struck over for it, though
+eventually obliged to return. From it Mr. Hume and I rode to the S.W.
+mountain, a distance of about forty miles, without crossing a brook or a
+creek, our way leading through dense acacia brushes, and for the most part
+over a desert. We saw high lands from this mountain, which exceeds 1,300
+feet in elevation, and is of sandstone formation, and thickly covered with
+stunted pine, in eight different points--the bearings of which are as
+follows:--
+
+Oxley'a Table Land, N. 4O E., distant 40 miles.
+Kengall Hill, due E. very distant.
+Conical Hill, S. 6O E.
+Highland, S.E. distance 30 miles.
+Highland, S. 30 E. distance 25 miles.
+Long Range, S. 16 E. distance 60 miles.
+Long Range, S. 72 W. distance 60 miles.
+Distant Range, S. 25 W. supposed.
+
+It was in vain, however, that we looked for water. The country to the
+north-west, was low and unbroken, and alternated with wood and plain.
+
+The country from New Year's Range to the hill I had made, and which I
+called Oxley's Table Land, had been very fair, with good soil in many
+places, but with a total want of water, except in the creeks, wherein the
+supply was both bad and uncertain; on our second day's journey from the
+former, we came to the creek on which we were moving, where it had a
+coarse granite bottom. The country around it improved very much in
+appearance, and there was abundance of good grass on the surface of it, in
+spite of the drought. On the right of this creek, a large plain stretches
+parallel to it for many miles, varying in quality of soil. Near Oxley's
+Table Land, we passed over open forest, the prevailing timber of which was
+box. I have placed Oxley's Table Land in latitude 29 degrees 57 minutes
+30 seconds, longitude 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds.
+
+Finding it impracticable to move westward from the hill I again descended
+on the creek, whose general course was to the north-west, in which
+direction we at length struck upon a river whose appearance raised our
+most sanguine expectations. It flowed round an angle from the north-east
+to the north-west, and extended in longitude five reaches as far as we
+could see. At that place it was about sixty yards broad, with banks of
+from thirty to forty feet high, and it had numerous wild fowl and many
+pelicans on its bosom, and seemed to be full of fish, while the paths of
+the natives on both sides, like well-trodden roads, showed how numerous
+they were about it. On tasting its waters, however, we found them
+perfectly salt, and useless to us, and as our animals had been without
+water the night before, this circumstance distressed us much; our first
+day's journey led us past between sixty and seventy huts in one place, and
+on our second we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives, having
+previously seen some between two creeks before we made New-Year's Range.
+At some places the water proved less salt than at others; our animals
+drank of it sparingly: we found two small fresh-water holes, which served
+us as we passed. After tracing the river for a considerable distance, we
+came on brine springs in the bed of it, the banks having been encrusted
+with salt from the first; and as the difficulty of getting fresh water was
+so great, I here foresaw an end to our wanderings. And as I was resolved
+not to involve my party in greater distress, I halted it, on overtaking
+the animals, and the next morning turned back to the nearest fresh-water,
+at a distance of eighteen miles from us. Unwilling, however, to give up
+our pursuit, Mr. Hume and I started with two men on horseback, to trace
+the river as far as we could, and to ascertain what course it took; in the
+hopes also that we should fall on some creek, or get a more certain supply
+of drinkable water. We went a distance to which the bullocks could not
+have been brought, and then got on a red sandy soil, which at once
+destroyed our hopes; and on tasting the river water we found it salter
+than ever, our supply being diminished to two pints. Our animals being
+weak and purged, and having proceeded at least forty miles from the camp,
+I thought it best to yield to circumstances, and to return, though I trust
+I shall be believed when I add, it was with extreme reluctance I did so;
+and had I followed the wishes of my party, should still have continued
+onwards. Making a part of the river where we had slept, we stayed to
+refresh, and in consequence of the heat of the weather were obliged to
+drink the water in it, which made us sick. While here, a tribe of blacks
+came to us and behaved remarkably well. At night we slept on a plain
+without water, and the next day we regained the camp, which had been
+visited by the natives during our absence.
+
+We found the river held a south-west course, and appeared to be making for
+the central space between a high land, which I called Dunlop's Range, at
+Mr. Hume's request, and a lofty range to the westward. It still continued
+its important appearance, having gained in breadth and in the height of
+its banks, while there were hundreds of pelicans and wild-fowl on it.
+Flowing through a level country with such a channel, it may be presumed
+that this river ultimately assumes either a greater character, or that it
+adds considerably to the importance of some other stream. It had a clay
+bottom, generally speaking, in many places semi-indurated and fast forming
+into sandstone, while there was crystallized sulphate of lime running in
+veins through the soil which composed the bank.
+
+This river differs from most in the colony, in having a belt of barren
+land of from a quarter of a mile to two miles in breadth in its immediate
+neighbourhood, and which is subject to overflow. This belt runs to the
+inland plains, where a small elevation checks the further progress of the
+flood. There is magnificent blue gum on both sides the river, but the
+right bank is evidently the most fertile, and I am mistaken greatly if
+there is not a beautiful country north of it.
+
+Of the country over which we have passed, it is impossible for me to have
+formed a correct opinion under its present melancholy circumstances. It
+has borne the appearance of barrenness, where in even moderate rain, it
+might have shown very differently, though no doubt we passed over much of
+both good and bad land; our animals on the whole, have thrived on the food
+they have had, which would argue favourably for the herbage. Generally
+speaking, I fear the timber is bad--the rough-gum may be used for knees,
+and such purposes, and we may have seen wood for the wheelwright and
+cabinet-maker, specimens of which I have procured, but none for general or
+household purposes.
+
+The creeks we have traced are different in character from those in the
+settled districts, inasmuch as that, like the river, they have a belt of
+barren land near then and but little grass--they have all of them been
+numerously frequented by the natives, as appeared from the number of
+muscle-shells on their banks, but now having scarcely any water in them,
+the fish having either been taken, or are dead, and the tribes gone
+elsewhere for food, while the badness of the river water has introduced a
+cutaneous disease among the natives of that district, which is fast
+carrying them off. Our intercourse with these people was incessant from
+the time we first met them, and on all occasions they behaved remarkably
+well, nor could we have seen less than than two hundred and fifty of them.
+
+Our return is to be attributable to the want of water alone, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the effects of the drought on animal as well
+as vegetable nature. The natives are wandering in the desert, and it is
+melancholy to reflect on the necessity which obliges them to drink the
+stinking and loathsome water they do--birds sit gasping in the trees and
+are quite thin--the wild dog prowls about in the day-time unable to avoid
+us, and is as lean as he can be in a living state, while minor vegetation
+is dead, and the very trees are drooping. I have noticed all these things
+in my Journal I shall have the honour of submitting through you, for the
+Governor's perusal and information, on my return. Finally, I fear our
+expedition will not pave the way to any ultimate benefit; although it has
+been the means by which two very doubtful questions,--the course of the
+Macquarie, and the nature of the interior, have been solved; for it is
+beyond doubt, that the interior for 250 miles beyond its former known
+limits to the W.N.W., so far from being a shoal sea, has been ascertained
+not only to have considerable elevations upon it, but is in itself a table
+land to all intents and purposes, and has scarcely water on its surface to
+support its inhabitants.
+
+I beg you will inform His Excellency the Governor, that I have on all
+occasions received the most ready and valuable assistance from Mr, Hume.
+His intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs of the natives,
+enabled him to enter into intercourse with them, and chiefly contributed
+to the peaceable manner in which we have journeyed, while his previous
+experience put it in his power to be of real use to me. I cannot but say
+he has done an essential service to future travellers, and to the colony
+at large, by his conduct on all occasions since he has been with me; nor
+should I be doing him justice, if I did not avail myself of the first
+opportunity of laying my sentiments before the Governor, through you. I am
+happy to add that every individual of the party deserves my warmest
+approbation, and that they have, one and all, borne their distresses,
+trifling certainly, but still unusual, with cheerfulness, and that they
+have at all times been attentive to their duty, and obedient to their
+orders. The whole are in good health, and are eager again to start.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+Sir
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HONORABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 5TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--It having appeared to me, that after discovering such a river as the
+one I have described in my letter of yesterday, His Excellency the
+Governor would approve of my endeavouring to regain it. There being a
+probability that it ultimately joins the Southern Waters, I thought of
+turning my steps to the southward and westward; and with a view to learn
+the nature of the country, I despatched Mr. Hume in that direction on
+Saturday last. He returned in three days, after having gone above forty
+miles from the river, and states, that he crossed two creeks, the one
+about twenty-five miles, the other about thirty-two distance, evidently
+the heads of the creeks we passed westward of the marshes of the
+Macquarie. He adds, that, to the second creek the land was excellent, but
+that on crossing it, he got onto red soil, on which he travelled some
+miles further, until he saw a range of high land, bearing from him S.W..
+by W., when, knowing from the nature of the country around him, and from
+the experience of our late journey, that he could not hope to find a
+regular supply of water in advance, and that in the present dry state of
+the low lands, a movement such as I had contemplated would be
+impracticable, he returned home. I do myself the honour, therefore, to
+report to you, for His Excellency's information, that I shall proceed on
+Saturday next in a N.E. direction towards the Castlereagh, intending to
+trace that river down, and afterwards to penetrate as far to the northward
+and westward as possible; it being my wish to get into the country north
+of the more distant river, where I have expectations that there is an
+extensive and valuable track of country, but that in failure of the above,
+I shall examine the low country behind our N.W. boundaries, if I can find
+a sufficiency of water to enable me to do so.
+
+I am to inform you that in this neighbourhood the Macquarie has ceased to
+flow, and that it is now a chain of shallow ponds. The water is fast
+diminishing in it, and unless rain descends in a few weeks it will be
+perfectly dry.
+
+I am also to report, that the natives attempted the camp with the supplies
+before my arrival at Mount Harris, but that on the soldier with the party
+firing a shot, after they had thrown a stone and other of the weapons,
+they fled. It was in consequence of their fires, which I saw at a distance
+of forty miles, and which they never make on so extensive a scale, except
+as signals when they want to collect, and are inclined to be mischievous,
+that I made forced marches up, and I am led to believe my arrival was very
+opportune. The natives have visited us since, and I do not think they will
+now attempt to molest either party when we separate.
+
+I have the honour to be,
+Sir,
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+
+END OF VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+#1 in our series by Charles Sturt
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+Title: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Volume I
+
+Author: Charles Sturt
+
+Release Date: August, 2003 [Etext# 4328]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
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+
+
+TWO EXPEDITIONS INTO THE INTERIOR OF SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA DURING THE YEARS
+1828,1829,1830,1831 WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOIL, CLIMATE AND GENERAL
+RESOURCES OF THE COLONY OF NEW SOUTH WALES.
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+VOLUME I.
+
+
+"For though most men are contented only to see a river as it runs by
+them, and talk of the changes in it as they happen; when it is troubled,
+or when clear; when it drowns the country in a flood, or forsakes it in a
+drought: yet he that would know the nature of the water, and the causes of
+those accidents (so as to guess at their continuance or return), must find
+out its source, and observe with what strength it rises, what length it
+runs, and how many small streams fall in, and feed it to such a height,
+as make it either delightful or terrible to the eye, and useful or
+dangerous to the country about it."...SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S NETHERLANDS.
+
+
+
+TO THE RIGHT HON.
+THE EARL OF RIPON,
+VISCOUNT GODERICH,
+Lord Privy Seal
+&c. &c. &c.
+
+
+
+MY LORD,
+
+The completion of this Work affords me the opportunity I have long desired
+of thanking your Lordship thus publicly, for the kindness with which you
+acceded to my request to be permitted to dedicate it to you.
+
+The encouragement your Lordship was pleased to give me has served to
+stimulate me in the prosecution of a task, which would, I fear, have been
+too great for me to have accomplished in my present condition, under any
+ordinary views of ambition. Indeed, labouring as I have been for many
+months past, under an almost total deprivation of sight, (the effect of
+exposure and anxiety of mind in the prosecution of geographical
+researches,) I owe it to the casual assistance of some of my friends, that
+I am at length enabled to lay these results before your Lordship and the
+public.
+
+While I feel a painful conviction that many errors must necessarily
+pervade a work produced under such unfavourable circumstances, it affords
+me no small consolation to reflect that Your Lordship has been aware of my
+situation, and will be disposed to grant me every reasonable indulgence.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+With the highest respect,
+My Lord,
+Your Lordship's
+Very obedient and humble servant,
+
+CHARLES STURT
+London, June, 1833.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE MACQUARIE RIVER, AND INTO THE WESTERN INTERIOR
+IN 1828 AND 1829.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach the
+Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck upon it.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Concluding Remarks--Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior
+of Australia--Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady
+intelligent subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men
+requisite,--and of cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--
+Treatment of the natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second
+expedition.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+No. I. Letter of Instructions
+No. II. List of Stores supplied for the Expedition
+No. III. Sheep-farming Returns
+No. IV. List of Geological Specimens
+No. V. Official Report to the Colonial Government, (Jan. 1829.)
+No. VI. Ditto (April 1829.)
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE FIRST VOLUME
+(Not included in this etext)
+
+Native Burial Place near Budda
+Vice Admiral Arthur Phillip
+Cataract of the Macquarie
+A Selenite
+Chrystallized Sulphate of Lime
+
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
+
+
+
+Purpose of this Chapter--Name of Australia--Impressions of its early
+Visitors--Character of the Australian rivers--Author's first view of Port
+Jackson--Extent of the Colony of New South Wales--its rapid advances in
+prosperity--Erroneous impressions--Commercial importance of Sydney--Growth
+of fine wool--Mr. M'Arthur's meritorious exertions--Whale-fishery--Other
+exports--Geographical features--Causes of the large proportion of bad
+soil--Connection between the geology and vegetation--Geological features--
+Character of the soil connected with the geological formation--County of
+Cumberland--Country westward of the Blue Mountains--Disadvantages of the
+remote settlers--Character of the Eastern coast--Rich tracts in the
+interior--Periodical droughts--The seasons apparently affected by the
+interior marshes--Temperature--Fruits--Emigrants: Causes of their success
+or failure--Moral disadvantages--System of emigration recommended--Hints
+to emigrants--Progress of inland discovery--Expeditions across the Blue
+Mountains--Discoveries of Mr. Evans, Mr. Oxley, and others--Conjectures
+respecting the interior.
+
+
+PURPOSE OF THIS PRELIMINARY CHAPTER.
+
+
+When I first determined on committing to the press a detailed account of
+the two expeditions, which I conducted into the interior of the Australian
+continent, pursuant to the orders of Lieutenant General Darling, the late
+Governor of the Colony of New South Wales, it was simply with a view of
+laying their results before the geographical world, and of correcting the
+opinions that prevailed with regard to the unexplored country to the
+westward of the Blue Mountains. I did not feel myself equal either to the
+task or the responsibility of venturing any remarks on the Colony of New
+South Wales itself. I had had little time for inquiry, amidst the various
+duties that fell to my lot in the ordinary routine of the service to which
+I belonged, when unemployed by the Colonial Government in the prosecution
+of inland discoveries. My observations had been in a great measure
+confined to those points which curiosity, or a desire of personal
+information, had prompted me to investigate. I did not, therefore, venture
+to flatter myself that I had collected materials of sufficient importance
+on general topics to enable me to write for the information of others.
+Since my return to England, however, I have been strenuously urged to give
+a short description of the colony before entering upon my personal
+narrative; and I have conversed with so many individuals whose ideas of
+Australia are totally at variance with its actual state, that I am
+encouraged to indulge the hope that my observations, desultory as they
+are, may be of some interest to the public. I am strengthened in this hope
+by the consideration that some kind friends have enabled me to add much
+valuable matter to that which I had myself collected. It is not my
+intention, however, to enter at any length on the commercial or
+agricultural interests of New South Wales. It may be necessary for me to
+touch lightly on those important subjects, but it is my wish to connect
+this preliminary chapter, as much as possible with the subjects treated of
+in the body of the work, and chiefly to notice the physical structure, the
+soil, climate, and productions of the colony, in order to convey to the
+reader general information on these points, before I lead him into the
+remote interior.
+
+NAME OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that the name "Australia," has of late years
+been affixed to that extensive tract of land which Great Britain possesses
+in the Southern Seas, and which, having been a discovery of the early
+Dutch navigators, was previously termed "New Holland." The change of name
+was, I believe, introduced by the celebrated French geographer, Malte
+Brun, who, in his division of the globe, gave the appellation of
+Austral Asia and Polynesia to the new discovered lands in the southern
+ocean; in which division he meant to include the numerous insular groups
+scattered over the Pacific.
+
+IMPRESSIONS OF ITS EARLY VISITORS.
+
+Australia is properly speaking an island, but it is so much larger than
+every other island on the face of the globe, that it is classed as a
+continent in order to convey to the mind a just idea of its magnitude.
+Stretching from the 115th to the 153rd degree of east longitude, and from
+the 10th to the 37th of south latitude, it averages 2700 miles in length
+by 1800 in breadth; and balanced, as it were, upon the tropic of that
+hemisphere in which it is situated, it receives the fiery heat of the
+equator at one extremity, while it enjoys the refreshing coolness of the
+temperate zone at the other. On a first view we should be led to expect
+that this extensive tract of land possessed more than ordinary advantages;
+that its rivers would be in proportion to its size; and that it would
+abound in the richest productions of the inter-tropical and temperate
+regions. Such, indeed, was the impression of those who first touched upon
+its southern shores, but who remained no longer than to be dazzled by the
+splendour and variety of its botanical productions, and to enjoy for a
+few days the delightful mildness of its climate. But the very spot which
+had appeared to Captain Cook and Sir Joseph Banks an earthly paradise, was
+abandoned by the early settlers as unfit for occupation; nor has the
+country generally been fount to realize the sanguine expectations of those
+distinguished individuals, so far as it has hitherto been explored.
+
+CHARACTER OF AUSTRALIAN RIVERS.
+
+Rivers which have the widest mouths or the most practicable entrances,
+are, in Europe or America, usually of impetuous current, or else contain
+such a body of water as to bear down all opposition to their free course;
+whilst on the other hand, rivers whose force is expended ere they reach
+the sea, have almost invariably a bar at their embouchure, or where they
+mingle their waters with those of the ocean. This last feature
+unfortunately appears to characterize all rivers of Australia, or such of
+them at least as are sufficiently known to us. Falling rapidly from the
+mountains in which they originate into a level and extremely depressed
+country; having weak and inconsiderable sources, and being almost wholly
+unaided by tributaries of any kind; they naturally fail before they reach
+the coast, and exhaust themselves in marshes or lakes or reach it so
+weakened as to be unable to preserve clear or navigable months, or to
+remove the sand banks that the tides throw up before them. On the other
+hand the productions of this singular region seem to be peculiar to it,
+and unlike those of any other part of the world; nor have any indigenous
+fruits of any value as yet been found either in its forests or on its
+plains.
+
+He who has never looked on any other than the well-cultured fields of
+England, can have little idea of a country that Nature has covered with an
+interminable forest. Still less can he estimate the feelings with which
+the adventurer approaches a shore that has never (or perhaps only lately)
+been trodden by civilized man.
+
+FIRST VIEW OF PORT JACKSON.
+
+It was with feelings peculiar to the occasion, that I gazed for the first
+time on the bold cliffs at the entrance of Port Jackson, as our vessel
+neared them, and speculated on the probable character of the landscape
+they hid; and I am free to confess, that I did not anticipate anything
+equal to the scene which presented itself both to my sight and my
+judgment, as we sailed up the noble and extensive basin we had entered,
+towards the seat of government. A single glance was sufficient to tell me
+that the hills upon the southern shore of the port, the outlines of which
+were broken by houses and spires, must once have been covered with the
+same dense and gloomy wood which abounded every where else. The contrast
+was indeed very great--the improvement singularly striking. The labour and
+patience required, and the difficulties which the first settlers
+encountered effecting these improvements, must have been incalculable. But
+their success has been complete: it is the very triumph of human skill and
+industry over Nature herself. The cornfield and the orchard have
+supplanted the wild grass and the brush; a flourishing town stands over
+the ruins of the forest; the lowing of herds has succeeded the wild whoop
+of the savage; and the stillness of that once desert shore is now broken
+by the sound of the bugle and the busy hum of commerce.
+
+EXTENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES AND DIVISIONS OF THE COLONY.
+
+The Colony of New South Wales is situated upon the eastern coast of
+Australia; and the districts within which land has been granted to
+settlers, extends from the 36th parallel of latitude to the 32nd, that is
+say, from the Moroyo River to the south of Sydney on the one hand, and to
+the Manning River on the other, including Wellington Valley within its
+limits to the westward. Thus it will appear that the boundaries of the
+located parts of the colony have been considerably enlarged, and some fine
+districts of country included within them. In consequence of its extent
+and increasing population, it has been found convenient to divide it into
+counties, parishes, and townships; and indeed, every measure of the
+Colonial Government of late years, has had for its object to assimilate
+its internal arrangements as nearly as possible, to those of the mother
+country. Whether we are to attribute the present flourishing state of the
+colony to the beneficial influence of that system of government which has
+been exercised over it for the last seven years it is not for me to say.
+That the prosperity of a country depends, however, in a great measure,
+on the wisdom of its legislature, is as undoubted, as that within the
+period I have mentioned the colony of N. S. Wales has risen
+unprecedentedly in importance and in wealth, and has advanced to a state
+of improvement at which it could not have arrived had its energies been
+cramped or its interests neglected.
+
+ITS ADVANCES IN PROSPERITY.
+
+There is a period in the history of every country, during which it will
+appear to have been more prosperous than at any other. I allude not to the
+period of great martial achievements, should any such adorn its pages, but
+to that in which the enterprise of its merchants was roused into action,
+and when all classes of its community seem to have put forth their
+strength towards the attainment of wealth and power.
+
+ERRONEOUS IMPRESSIONS.
+
+In this eventful period the colony of New South Wales is already far
+advanced. The conduct of its merchants is marked by the boldest
+speculations and the most gigantic projects. Their storehouses are built
+on the most magnificent scale, and with the best and most substantial
+materials. Few persons in England have even a remote idea of its present
+flourishing condition, or of the improvements that are daily taking place
+both in its commerce and in its agriculture. I am aware that many object
+to it as a place of residence, and I can easily enter into their feelings
+from the recollection of what my own were before I visited it. I cannot
+but remark, however, that I found my prejudices had arisen from a natural
+objection to the character of a part of its population; from the
+circumstance of its being a penal colony, and from my total ignorance of
+its actual state, and not from any substantial or permanent cause. On the
+contrary I speedily became convinced of the exaggerated nature of the
+reports I had heard in England, on some of the points just adverted to;
+nor did any thing fall under my observation during a residence in it of
+more than six years to justify the opinion I had been previously led to
+entertain of it. I embarked for New South Wales, with strong prejudices
+against it: I left it with strong feelings in its favour, and with a deep
+feeling of interest in its prosperity. It is a pleasing task to me,
+therefore, to write of it thus, and to have it in my power to contribute
+to the removal of any erroneous impressions with regard to its condition
+at the present moment.
+
+COMMERCIAL IMPORTANCE OF SYDNEY.
+
+I have already remarked, that I was not prepared for the scene that met my
+view when I first saw Sydney. The fact was, I had not pictured to myself;
+nor conceived from any thing that I had ever read or heard in England,
+that so extensive a town could have been reared in that remote region, in
+so brief a period as that which had elapsed since its foundation. It is
+not, however, a distant or cursory glance that will give the observer a
+just idea of the mercantile importance of this busy capital. In order to
+form an accurate estimate of it, he should take a boat and proceed from
+Sydney Cove to Darling Harbour. He would then be satisfied, that it is not
+upon the first alone that Australian commerce has raised its storehouse
+and wharfs, but that the whole extent of the eastern shore of the last
+more capacious basin, is equally crowded with warehouses, stores,
+dockyards, mills, and wharfs, the appearance and solidity of which would
+do credit even to Liverpool. Where, thirty years ago, the people flocked
+to the beach to hail an arrival, it is not now unusual to see from thirty
+to forty vessels riding at anchor at one time, collected there from every
+quarter of the globe. In 1832, one hundred and fifty vessels entered the
+harbour of Port Jackson, from foreign parts, the amount of their tonnage
+being 31,259 tons.
+
+The increasing importance of Sydney must in some measure be attributed to
+the flourishing condition of the colony itself, to the industry of its
+farmers, to the successful enterprise of its merchants, and to particular
+local causes. It is foreign to my purpose, however, to enter largely into
+an investigation of these important points. To do so would require more
+space than I can afford for the purpose, and might justly be considered as
+irrelevant in a work of this kind. Without attempting any lengthened
+detail, it may be considered sufficient if I endeavour merely to point out
+the principal causes of the present prosperity (and, as they may very
+probably prove) of the eventual progress of our great southern colony to
+power and independence.
+
+STAPLE OF THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES.
+
+The staple of our Australian colonies, but more particularly of New South
+Wales, the climate and the soil of which are peculiarly suited to its
+production,--is fine wool. There can be no doubt that the growth of this
+article has mainly contributed to the prosperity of the above mentioned
+colony and of Van Diemen's Land.
+
+At the close of the last century, wool was imported into England from
+Spain and Germany only, and but a few years previously from Spain alone.
+Indeed, long after its introduction from the latter country, German wool,
+obtained but little consideration in the London market; and in like
+manner, it may be presumed that many years will not have elapsed
+before the increased importation of wool from our own possessions in
+the southern hemisphere, will render us, in respect to this commodity,
+independent of every other part of the world. The great improvements
+in modern navigation are such, that the expense of sending the fleece
+to market from New South Wales is less than from any part of Europe.
+The charges for instance on Spanish and German wool, are from
+fourpence to fourpence three farthings per pound; whereas the entire
+charge, after shipment from New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land, does
+not exceed threepence three farthings,--and in this the dock and landing
+charges, freight, insurance, brokerage, and commission, are included.
+
+GROWTH OF FINE WOOL. MR. M'ARTHUR'S EXERTIONS.
+
+As some particulars respecting the introduction of this source of national
+wealth into Australia may prove interesting to the public, I have put
+together the following details of it, upon the authenticity of which they
+may rely. The person who foresaw the advantage to be derived from the
+growth of fine wool in New South Wales, and who commenced the culture of
+it in that colony, was Mr. John M'Arthur. So far back, I believe, as the
+year 1793, not long after the establishment of the first settlement at
+Sydney, this gentleman commenced sheep-farming, and about two years
+afterwards he obtained a ram and two ewes from Captain Kent, of the royal
+navy, who had brought them, with some other stock for the supply of the
+settlement, from the Cape of Good Hope, to which place a flock of these
+sheep had been originally sent by the Dutch government. Sensible of the
+importance of the acquisition, Mr. M'Arthur began to cross his
+coarse-fleeced sheep with Merino blood; and, proceeding upon a system, he
+effected a considerable improvement in the course of a few years. So
+prolific was the mixed breed, that in ten years, a flock which originally
+consisted of not more than seventy Bengal sheep, had increased in number
+to 4,000 head, although the wethers had been killed as they became fit for
+slaughter. It appears, however, that as the sheep approached to greater
+purity of blood, their extreme fecundity diminished.
+
+TO REAR MERINO FLOCKS.
+
+In 1803, Mr. M'Arthur revisited England; and there happening at the time
+to be a committee of manufacturers in London from the clothing districts,
+he exhibited before them samples of his wool, which were so much approved,
+that the committee represented to their constituents the advantages which
+would result from the growth of fine wool, in one of the southern
+dependencies of the empire. In consequence of this a memorial was
+transmitted to His Majesty's government, and Mr. M'Arthur's plans having
+been investigated by a Privy Council, at which he was present, they were
+recommended to the government as worthy of its protection. With such
+encouragement Mr. M'Arthur purchased two ewes and three rams, from the
+Merino flock of His Majesty King George the Third. He embarked with them
+on his return to New South Wales in 1806, on board a vessel named by him
+"the Argo," in reference to the golden treasure with which she was
+freighted. On reaching the colony he removed his sheep to a grant of land
+which the Home Government had directed he should receive in the Cow
+Pastures. To commemorate the transaction, and to transmit to a grateful
+posterity the recollection of the nobleman who then presided over the
+colonies, the estate, together with the district in which it is situated,
+was honoured by the name of Camden.
+
+EXPORT OF WOOL TO ENGLAND.
+
+Since that time the value of New South Wales wool has been constantly on
+the increase, and the colony are indebted to Mr. M'Arthur for the
+possession of an exportable commodity which has contributed very
+materially to its present wealth and importance. Such general attention is
+now paid to this interesting branch of rural economy, that the importation
+of wool into England from our Australian colonies, amounted, in 1832, to
+10,633 bales, or 2,500,000 lbs. It has been sold at as high a price as
+10s. per lb.; but the average price of wool of the best flocks vary from
+1s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. at the present moment. The number of sheep in New South
+Wales alone was calculated in the last census at 536,891 head. The
+ordinary profits on this kind of stock may be extracted from the Table
+given in the Appendix to the first volume of this work.
+
+WHALE FISHERY.
+
+Among the various speculations undertaken by the merchants of Sydney,
+there is not one into which they have entered with so much spirit as in
+the South Sea Fishery. The local situation of Port Jackson gives them an
+advantage over the English and the American merchants, since the distance
+of both these from the field of their gains, must necessarily impede them
+greatly; whereas the ships that leave Sydney on a whaling excursion,
+arrive without loss of time upon their ground, and return either for fresh
+supplies or to repair damages with equal facility. The spirit with which
+the colonial youth have engaged in this adventurous and hardy service, is
+highly to their credit. The profits arising from it may not be (indeed I
+have every reason to think are not) so great as might be supposed, or such
+as might reasonably be expected; but the extensive scale on which it is
+conducted, speaks equally for the energy and perseverance of the parties
+concerned, in the prosecution of their commercial enterprises. It has
+enabled them to equip a creditable colonial marine, and given great
+importance to their mercantile interests in the mother country.
+
+In the year 1831, the quantity of sperm and black oil, the produce of the
+fisheries exported from New South Wales, amounted to 2,307 tons, and was
+estimated, together with skins and whalebone, to be worth 107,971 pounds
+sterling. The gross amount of all other exports during that year, did not
+exceed 107,697 pounds sterling. Of these exports, the following were the
+most considerable:
+
+
+Timber 7,410 pounds
+Butter and Cheese 2,376
+Mimosa bark 40
+Hides 7,333
+Horses 7,302
+Salt provisions 5,184
+Wool 66,112
+
+
+The above is exclusive of 61,000 pounds value of British manufactures
+re-exported to the various ports and islands in the Southern Seas.
+
+OTHER EXPORTS.
+
+In this scale, moreover, tobacco is not mentioned; but that plant is now
+raised for the supply of every private establishment, and will assuredly
+form an article of export, as soon as its manufacture shall be well
+understood. Neither can it be doubted but that the vine and the olive
+will, in a short time, be abundantly cultivated; and that a greater
+knowledge of the climate and soil of the more northern parts of the
+colony, will lead to the introduction of fresh sources of wealth.
+
+GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES.
+
+Having taken this hasty review of the commercial interests of the colony,
+we may now turn to a brief examination of its internal structure and
+principal natural features.
+
+I have already given a cursory sketch of the geographical features of the
+whole continent. Of the vast area which its coasts embrace, the east part
+alone has been fully explored.
+
+A range of hills runs along the eastern coast, from north to south, which,
+in different quarters, vary in their distance from the sea; at one place
+approaching it pretty nearly, at another, receding from it to a distance
+of forty miles. It is a singular fact, that there is no pass or break in
+these mountains, by which any of the rivers of the interior can escape in
+an easterly direction. Their spine is unbroken. The consequence is, that
+there is a complete division of the eastern and western waters, and that
+streams, the heads of which are close to each other, flow away in opposite
+directions; the one to pursue a short course to the sea; the other to fall
+into a level and depressed interior, the character of which will be
+noticed in its proper place.
+
+GREAT PROPORTION OF BAD SOIL.
+
+The proportion of bad soil to that which is good in New South Wales, is
+certainly very great: I mean the proportion of inferior soil to such as is
+fit for the higher purposes of agriculture. Mr. Dawson, the late
+superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company's possessions, has
+observed, as a singular fact, that the best soil generally prevails on the
+summits of the hills, more especially where they are at all level. He
+accounts for so unusual a circumstance by the fact, that elevated
+positions are less subject to the effects of fire or floods than their
+valleys or flanks, and attributes the general want of vegetable mould over
+the colony chiefly to the ravages of the former element, whereby the
+growth of underwood, so favourable in other countries to the formation of
+soil, is wholly prevented. Undoubtedly this is a principal cause for the
+deficiency in question. There is no part of the world in which fires
+create such havoc as in New South Wales and indeed in Australia
+generally. The climate, on the one hand, which dries up vegetation, and
+the wandering habits of the natives on the other, which induce them to
+clear the country before them by conflagration, operate equally against
+the growth of timber and underwood.
+
+CAUSE OF THIS.
+
+But there is another circumstance that appears to have escaped
+Mr. Dawson's observation; which is the actual property of the trees
+themselves, as to the quantity of vegetable matter they produce in decay.
+Being a military man, I cannot be supposed to have devoted much of my time
+to agricultural pursuits; but it has been obvious to me, as it must have
+been to many others, that in New South Wales, the fall of leaves and the
+decay of timber, so far from adding to the richness of its soil, actually
+destroy minor vegetation. This fact was brought more home to me in
+consequence of its having been my lot to spend some months upon Norfolk
+Island, a distant penal settlement attached to the Government of Sydney.
+There the abundance of vegetable decay was as remarkable as the want of it
+on the Australian Continent. I have frequently sunk up to my knees in a
+bed of leaves when walking through its woods; and, often when I placed my
+foot on what appeared externally to be the solid trunk of a tree, I have
+found it yield to the pressure, in consequence of its decomposition into
+absolute rottenness. But such is not the case in New South Wales. There,
+no such accumulations of vegetable matter are to be met with; but where
+the loftiest tree of the forest falls to the ground, its figure and length
+are marked out by the total want of vegetation within a certain distance
+of it, and a small elevation of earth, resembling more the refuse or
+scoria of burnt bricks than any thing else, is all that ultimately remains
+of the immense body which time or accident had prostrated. Thus it would
+appear, that it is not less to the character of its woods than to the
+ravages of fire that New South Wales owes its general sterility.
+
+CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GEOLOGY AND VEGETATION.
+
+Whilst prosecuting my researches in the interior of the colony, I could
+not but be struck with the apparent connection between its geology and
+vegetation; so strong, indeed, was this connection, that I had little
+difficulty, after a short experience, in judging of the rock that formed
+the basis of the country over which I was travelling, from the kind of
+tree or herbage that flourished in the soil above it. The eucalyptus
+pulv., a species of eucalyptus having a glaucus-coloured leaf, of
+dwarfish habits and growing mostly in scrub, betrayed the sandstone
+formation, wherever it existed, This was the case in many parts of the
+County of Cumberland, in some parts of Wombat Brush, at the two passes on
+the great south road, over a great extent of country to the N.W. of Yass
+Plains, and at Blackheath on the summit of the Blue Mountains. On the
+other hand, those open grassy and park-like tracts, of which so much has
+been said, characterise the secondary ranges of granite and porphyry. The
+trees most usual on these tracts, were the box, an unnamed species of
+eucalyptus, and the grass chiefly of that kind, called the oat or forest
+grass, which grows in tufts at considerable distances from each other,
+and which generally affords good pasturage. On the richer grounds the
+angophora lanceolata, and the eucalyptus mammifera more frequently point
+out the quality of the soil on which they grow. The first are abundant on
+the alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter; the
+latter on the limestone formation of Wellington Valley and in the better
+portions of Argyle; whilst the cupressus calytris seems to occupy sandy
+ridges with the casuarina. It was impossible that these broad features
+should have escaped observation: it was naturally inferred from this, that
+the trees of New South Wales are gregarious; and in fact they may, in a
+great measure, be considered so. The strong line that occasionally
+separates different species, and the sudden manner in which several
+species are lost at one point, to re-appear at another more distant,
+without any visible cause for the break that has taken place, will furnish
+a number of interesting facts in the botany of New South Wales.
+
+It was observed both on the Macquarie river and the Morumbidgee, that the
+casuarinae ceased at a particular point. On the Macquarie particularly,
+these trees which had often excited our admiration from Wellington Valley
+downwards, ceased to occupy its banks below the cataract, nor were they
+again noticed until we arrived on the banks of the Castlereagh. The
+blue-gum trees, again, were never observed to extend beyond the secondary
+embankments of the rivers, occupying that ground alone which was subject
+to flood and covered with reeds. These trees waved over the marshes of the
+Macquarie, but were not observed to the westward of them for many miles;
+yet they re-appeared upon the banks of New-Year's Creek as suddenly as
+they had disappeared after we left the marshes, and grew along the line
+of the Darling to unusual size. But it is remarkable, that, even in the
+midst of the marshes, the blue-gum trees were strictly confined to the
+immediate flooded spaces on which the reeds prevailed, or to the very beds
+of the water-courses. Where the ground was elevated, or out of the reach
+of flood, the box (unnamed) alone occupied it; and, though the branches of
+these trees might be interwoven together, the one never left its wet and
+reedy bed, the other never descended from its more elevated position. The
+same singular distinction marked the acacia pendula, when it ceased to
+cover the interior plains of light earth, and was succeeded by another
+shrub of the same species. It continued to the banks of New-Year's Creek,
+a part of which it thickly lined. To the westward of the creek, another
+species of acacia was remarked for the first time. Both shrubs, like the
+blue-gum and the box, mixed their branches together, but the creek formed
+the line of separation between them. The acacia pendula was not afterwards
+seen, but that which had taken its place, as it were, was found to cover
+large tracts of country and to form extensive brushes. Many other
+peculiarities in the vegetation of the interior are noticed in the body
+of this work, but I have thought that these more striking ones deserved
+to be particularly remarked upon.
+
+GEOLOGICAL FEATURES.
+
+If we strike a line to the N.W. from Sydney to Wellington Valley, we shall
+find that little change takes place in the geological features of the
+country. The sand-stone of which the first of the barrier ranges is
+composed, terminates a little beyond Mount York, and at Cox's River is
+succeeded by grey granite. The secondary ranges to the N.W. of Bathurst,
+are wholly of that primitive rock; for although there are partial changes
+of strata between Bathurst and Moulong Plains, granite is undoubtedly the
+rock upon which the whole are based: but at Moulong Plains, a military
+station intermediate between Bathurst and Wellington Valley, limestone
+appears in the bed of a small clear stream, and with little interruption
+continues to some distance below the last-mentioned place. The accidental
+discovery of some caves at Moulong Plains, led to the more critical
+examination of the whole formation, and cavities of considerable size were
+subsequently found in various parts of it, but more particularly in the
+neighbourhood of Wellington Valley. The local interest which has of late
+years been taken in the prosecution of geological investigations, led many
+gentlemen to examine the contents of these caverns; and among the most
+forward, Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, must justly be considered,
+to whose indefatigable perseverance the scientific world is already so
+much indebted.
+
+The caves into which I penetrated, did not present anything particular to
+my observation; they differed little from caves of a similar description
+into which I had penetrated in Europe. Large masses of stalactites hung
+from their roofs, and a corresponding formation encrusted their floors.
+They comprised various chambers or compartments, the most remote of which
+terminated at a deep chasm that was full of water. A close examination of
+these caves has led to the discovery of some organic remains, bones of
+various animals embedded in a light red soil; but I am not aware that the
+remains of any extinct species have been found, or that any fossils have
+been met with in the limestone itself. There can, however, be little doubt
+but that the same causes operated in depositing these mouldering remains
+in the caves of Kirkdale and those of Wellington Valley.
+
+About twenty miles below the junction of the Bell with the Macquarie,
+free-stone supersedes the limestone, but as the country falls rapidly from
+that point, it soon disappears, and the traveller enters upon a flat
+country of successive terraces. A schorl rock, of a blue colour and fine
+grain, composed of tourmaline and quartz, forms the bed of the Macquarie
+at the Cataract; and, in immediate contact with it, a mass of mica slate
+of alternate rose, pink, and white, was observed, which must have been
+covered by the waters of the river when Mr. Oxley descended it.
+
+From the Cataract of the Macquarie, a flat extends to the marshes in which
+that river exhausts itself. From the midst of this flat Mount Foster and
+Mount Harris rise, both of which are porphyritic: but as I have been
+particular in describing these heights in their proper place, any minute
+notice of them here may be considered unnecessary. We will rather extend
+our enquiries to those parts of the colony upon which we shall not be
+called upon to remark in the succeeding pages.
+
+Returning to the coast, we may mark the geological changes in a line to
+the S.W. of Sydney; and as my object is to extend the information of my
+readers, I shall notice any particular district on either side of the line
+I propose to touch upon, which may be worthy of notice. It would appear
+that the first decided break in the sandstone formation which penetrates
+into the county of Camden, is at Mittagong Range. It is there traversed by
+a dike of whinstone, of which that range is wholly composed. The change of
+soil and of vegetation are equally remarkable at this place; the one being
+a rich, greasy, chocolate-coloured earth, the other partaking greatly of
+the intertropical character. In wandering over them, I noticed the wild
+fig and the cherry-tree, growing to a much larger size than I had seen
+them in any other part of the colony. Upon their branches, the satin bird,
+the gangan, and various kinds of pigeons were feeding. Birds unknown to
+the eastward of the Blue Mountains, were numerous in the valleys; and
+there was an unusual appearance of freshness and moisture in the
+vegetation.
+
+These signs of improvement, however, vanish the moment Mittagong range is
+crossed, and sand-stone again forms the basis of the country to a
+considerable distance beyond Bong-bong. At a small farm called the
+Ploughed Ground, it is again traversed by a dike of whinstone, and a rich
+but isolated spot is thus passed over. With occasional and partial
+interruption, however, the sand-stone formation continues to an abrupt
+pass, from which the traveller descends to the county of Argyle. This pass
+is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I have
+noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. A small but lively stream,
+called Paddy's River, runs at the bottom of this pass, and immediately to
+the S.W. of it, an open forest country of granite base extends for many
+miles, on which the eucalyptus manifera is prevalent, and which affords
+the best grazing tracts in Argyle. At Goulburn Plains, however, a vein of
+limestone occurs, which is evidently connected with that forming the
+ShoalHaven Gully, which is perhaps the most remarkable geological feature
+in the colony of New South Wales. It is a deep chasm of about a quarter of
+a mile in breadth, and 1200 feet in depth. The country on either side is
+perfectly level, so much so that the traveller approaches almost to its
+very brink before he is aware of his being near so singular an abyss. A
+small rivulet flows through the Gully, and discharges itself into the sea
+at ShoalHaven; but this river is hardly perceptible, from the summit of
+the cliffs forming the sides of the Gully, which are of the boldest and
+most precipitous character. The ground on the summit is full of caves of
+great depth, but there has been a difficulty in examining them, in
+consequence of the violent wind that rushes up them, and extinguishes
+every torch.
+
+The open and grassy forests of Argyle are terminated by another of those
+abrupt sand-stone passes I have just described, and the traveller again
+falls considerably from his former level, previously to his entering on
+Yass Plains, to which this pass is the only inlet.
+
+From Yass Plains the view to the S. and S.W. is over a lofty and broken
+country: mountains with rounded summits, others with towering peaks, and
+others again of lengthened form but sharp spine, characterise the various
+rocks of which they are composed. The ranges decline rapidly from east to
+west, and while on the one hand the country has all the appearance of
+increasing height, on the other it sinks to a dead level; nor on the
+distant horizon to the N. W. is there a hill or an inequality to be seen.
+
+From Yass Plains to the very commencement of the level interior, every
+range I crossed presented a new rock-formation; serpentine quartz in
+huge white masses, granite, chlorite, micaceous schist, sandstone,
+chalcedony, quartz, and red jasper, and conglomerate rocks.
+
+It was however, out of my power, in so hurried a journey as that which I
+performed down the banks of the Morumbidgee River, to examine with the
+accuracy I could have wished, either the immediate connection between
+these rocks or their gradual change from the one to the other. I was
+content to ascertain their actual succession, and to note the general
+outlines of the ranges; but the defect of vision under which I labour,
+prevents me from laying them before the public.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE SOIL CONNECTED WITH GEOLOGICAL FORMATION.
+
+From what has been advanced, however, it will appear that the physical
+structure of the southern parts of the colony is as varied, as that of the
+western interior is monotonous, and we may now pursue our original
+observations on the soil of the colony with greater confidence.
+
+In endeavouring to account for the poverty of the soil in New South Wales,
+and in attributing it in a great degree to the causes already mentioned,
+it appears necessary to estimate more specifically the influence which the
+geological formation of a country exercises on its soil, and how much the
+quality of the latter partakes of the character of the rock on which it
+reposes. And although I find it extremely difficult to explain myself as
+I should wish to do, in the critical discussion on which I have thus
+entered, yet as it is material to the elucidation of an important subject
+in the body of the work, I feel it incumbent on me to proceed to the best
+of my ability.
+
+I have said that the soil of a country depends much upon its geological
+formation. This appears to be particularly the case in those parts of the
+colony with which I am acquainted, or those lying between the parallels of
+30 degrees and 35 degrees south. Sandstone, porphyry, and granite,
+succeed each other from the coast to a very considerable distance into the
+interior, on a N. W. line. The light ferruginous dust that is distributed
+over the county of Cumberland, and which annoys the traveller by its
+extreme minuteness, to the eastward of the Blue Mountains, is as different
+from the coarse gravelly soil on the secondary ranges to the westward of
+them, as the barren scrubs and thickly-wooded tracts of the former
+district are to the grassy and open forests of the latter.
+
+As soon as I began to descend to the westward it became necessary to pay
+strict and earnest attention to the features of the country through which
+I passed, in order to determine more accurately the different appearances
+which, as I was led to expect, the rivers would assume. In the course of
+my examination I found, first, that the broken country through which I
+travelled, was generally covered with a loose, coarse, and sandy soil;
+and, secondly, that the ranges were wholly deficient in that peat
+formation which fills the valleys, or covers the flat summits of the hills
+or mountains, in the northern hemisphere. The peculiar property of this
+formation is to retain water like a sponge; and to this property the
+regular and constant flow of the rivers descending from such hills, may,
+in a great measure, be attributed. In New South Wales on the contrary, the
+rains that fall upon the mountains drain rapidly through a coarse and
+superficial soil, and pour down their sides without a moment's
+interruption. The consequence is that on such occasions the rivers are
+subject to great and sudden rises, whereas they have scarcely water enough
+to support a current in ordinary seasons. At one time the traveller will
+find it impracticable to cross them: at another he may do so with ease;
+and only from the remains of debris in the branches of the trees high
+above, can he judge of the furious torrent they must occasionally
+contain.
+
+This seeming deviation on the part of Nature from her usual laws will no
+longer appear such, if we consider its results for a moment. The very
+floods which swell the rivers to overflowing, are followed by the most
+beneficent effects; and, rude and violent as the means are by which she
+accomplishes her purpose, they form, no doubt, a part of that process by
+which she preserves the balance of good and evil. Vast quantities of the
+best soil have been thus washed down from the mountains to accumulate in
+more accessible places. From frequent depositions, a great extent of
+country along the banks of every river and creek has risen high above the
+influence of the floods, and constitutes the richest tracts in the colony.
+The alluvial flats of the Nepean, the Hawkesbury, and the Hunter, are
+striking instances of the truth of these observations; to which the plains
+of O'Connell and Bathurst must be added. The only good soil upon the two
+latter, is in the immediate neighbourhood of the Macquarie River: but,
+even close to its banks, the depositions are of little depth, lying on a
+coarse gravelly soil, the decomposition of the nearer ranges. The former
+is found to diminish in thickness, according to the concavity of the
+valley through which the Macquarie flows, and at length becomes mixed with
+the coarser soil. This deposit is alone fit for agricultural purposes;
+but it does not necessarily follow that the distant country is unavailable
+since it is admitted, that the best grazing tracts are upon the secondary
+ranges of granite and porphyry. These ranges generally have the appearance
+of open forest, and are covered with several kinds of grasses, among which
+the long oat-grass is the most abundant.
+
+COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND.
+
+If we except the valley of the Nepean, the banks of the South Creek, the
+Pennant Hills near Parramatta, and a few other places, the general soil of
+the county of Cumberland, is of the poorest description. It is superficial
+in most places, resting either upon a cold clay, or upon sandstone; and
+is, as I have already remarked, a ferruginous compound of the finest dust.
+Yet there are many places upon its surface, (hollows for instance,) in
+which vegetable decay has accumulated, or valleys, into which it has been
+washed, that are well adapted for the usual purposes of agriculture, and
+would, if the country was more generally cleared, be found to exist to a
+much greater extent than is at present imagined. I have frequently
+observed the isolated patches of better land, when wandering through the
+woods, both on the Parramatta River, and at a greater distance from the
+coast. And I cannot but think, that it would be highly advantageous to
+those who possess large properties in the County of Cumberland to let
+Portions of them. The concentration of people round their capital,
+promotes more than anything else the prosperity of a colony, by creating
+a reciprocal demand for the produce both of the country and the town,
+since the one would necessarily stimulate the energy of the farmer, as the
+other would rouse the enterprise of the merchant. The consideration,
+however, of such a subject is foreign to my present purpose.
+
+It must not be supposed, that because I have given a somewhat particular
+description of the County of Cumberland, I have done so with a view to
+bring it forward as a specimen of the other counties, or to found upon it
+a general description of the colony. It is, in fact, poorer in every
+respect than any tract of land of similar extent in the interior, and is
+still covered with dense forests of heavy timber, excepting when the trees
+have been felled by dint of manual labour, and the ground cleared at an
+expense that nothing but its proximity to the seat of government could
+have justified. But experience has proved, that neither the labour nor the
+the expense have been thrown away. Many valuable farms and extensive
+gardens chequer the face of the country, from which the proprietors
+derive a very efficient income.
+
+COUNTRY WEST OF BLUE MOUNTAINS.
+
+To the westward of the Blue Mountains, the country differs in many
+respects from that lying between those ranges and the coast; and although,
+its aspect varies in different places, three principal features appear
+more immediately to characterise it. These are, first, plains of
+considerable extent wholly destitute of timber; secondly, open undulating
+woodlands; and, thirdly, barren unprofitable tracts. The first almost
+invariably occur in the immediate neighbourhood of some river, as the
+Plains of Bathurst, which are divided by the Macquarie; Goulburn Plains,
+through which the Wallandilly flows; and Yass Plains, which are watered by
+a river of the same name. The open forests, through which the horseman may
+gallop in perfect safety, seem to prevail over the whole secondary ranges
+of granite, and are generally considered as excellent grazing tracts. Such
+is the country in Argyleshire on either side of the Lachlan, where that
+river crosses the great southern road near Mr. Hume's station; such also
+are many parts of Goulburn and the whole extent of country lying between
+Underaliga and the Morumbidgee River. The barren tracts, on the other
+hand, may be said to occupy the central spaces between all the principal
+streams. With regard to the proportion that these different kinds of
+country bear to each other, there can be no doubt of the undue
+preponderance of the last over the first two; but there are nevertheless
+many extensive available tracts in every part of the colony.
+
+MEANS OF INLAND TRANSPORT.
+
+The greatest disadvantage under which New South Wales labours, is the want
+of means for conveying inland produce to the market, or to the coast. The
+Blue Mountains are in this respect a serious bar to the internal
+prosperity of the colony. By this time, however, a magnificent
+road will have been completed across them to the westward, over parts of
+which I travelled in 1831. Indeed the efforts of the colonial government
+have been wisely directed, not only to the construction of this road,
+which the late Governor, General Darling commenced, but also in
+facilitating the communication to the southern districts, by an almost
+equally fine road over the Razor Back Range, near the Cow Pastures; so
+that as far as it is possible for human efforts to overcome natural
+obstacles, the wisdom and foresight of the executive have ere this been
+successful.
+
+DISADVANTAGES OF DISTANT SETTLERS.
+
+The majority of the settlers in the Bathurst country, and in the more
+remote interior, are woolgrowers; and as they send their produce to the
+market only once a year, receiving supplies for home consumption, on the
+return of their drays or carts from thence, the inconvenience of bad
+roads is not so much felt by them. But to an agriculturist a residence to
+the westward of the Blue Mountains is decidedly objectionable, unless he
+possess the means with which to procure the more immediate necessaries of
+life, otherwise than by the sale of his grain or other produce, and can be
+satisfied to cultivate his property for home consumption, or for the
+casual wants of his neighbours. Under such circumstances, a man with a
+small private income would enjoy every rational comfort. But of course,
+not only in consequence of the loss of labour, but the chance of accidents
+during a long journey, the more the distance is increased from Sydney, as
+the only place at which the absolute necessaries of life can be purchased,
+the greater becomes the objection to a residence in such a part of the
+country; and on this account it is, that although some beautiful locations
+both as to extent and richness, are to be found to the westward of
+Bathurst, equally on the Bell, the Macquarie and the Lachlan, it is not
+probable they will be taken up for many years, or will only be occupied as
+distant stock stations.
+
+CHARACTER OF EASTERN COAST.
+
+Since, therefore, it appears from what has been advanced, that it is not
+to the westward the views of any settlers should he directed, excepting
+under particular circumstances, it remains for us to consider what other
+parts of the colony hold out, or appear to hold out, greater advantages.
+The eye naturally turns to the south on the one hand, and to
+Port Macquarie northerly on the other. It is to be remarked that the
+eastern shores of Australia partake of the same barren character that
+marks the other three. it is generally bounded to a certain extent by a
+sandy and sterile tract. There are, however, breaks in so prolonged a
+line, as might have been expected, where, from particular local causes,
+both the soil and vegetation are of a superior kind. At Illawarra for
+instance, the contiguity of the mountains to the coast leaves no room for
+the sandy belt we have noticed, but the debris from them reaches to the
+very shore. Whether from reflected heat, or from some other peculiarity of
+situation, the vegetation of Illawarra is of an intertropical character,
+and birds that are strangers to the county of Cumberland frequent its
+thickets. There is no part of Australia where the feathered race are more
+beautiful, or more diversified. The most splendid pigeon, perhaps, that
+the world produces, and the satin bird, with its lovely eye, feed there
+upon the berries of the ficus (wild fig,) and other trees: and a numerous
+tribe of the accipitrine class soar over its dense and spacious forests.
+
+PORT MACQUARIE AND FIVE ISLANDS.
+
+We again see a break in the sandy line of the coast at Broken Bay, at
+Newcastle, and still further north at Port Macquarie; at which places the
+Hawkesbury, the Hunter, and the Hastings severally debouche. Of Port
+Macquarie, as a place of settlement, I entertain a very high opinion, in
+consequence of its being situated under a most favourable parallel
+latitude. I am convinced it holds out many substantial advantages. One of
+the most important of these is the circumstance of its having been much
+improved when occupied as a penal settlement. And since the shores of the
+colony are how navigated by steam-boats, the facility of water
+communication would be proportionably great.
+
+I believe the Five Islands or Illawarr district is considered peculiarly
+eligible for small settlers. The great drawback to this place is the
+heavy character of its timber and the closeness of its thickets, which vie
+almost with the American woods in those respects. The return, however, is
+adequate to the labour required in clearing the ground. Between the Five
+Islands and Sydney, a constant intercourse is kept up by numerous small
+craft; and a communication with the interior, by branch roads from the
+great southern line to the coast, would necessarily be thrown open, if the
+more distant parts of it were sufficiently peopled.
+
+RICH TRACTS IN THE INTERIOR.
+
+Recent surveys have discovered to us rich and extensive tracts in the
+remote interior between Jervis Bay and Bateman's Bay, and southwards upon
+the western slope of the dividing range. The account given by Messrs.
+Hovel and Hume is sufficient to prove that every valley they crossed was
+worthy of notice, and that the several rivers they forded were flanked by
+rich and extensive flats.
+
+The distance of Moneroo Plains, and of the Doomot and Morumbidgee Rivers
+from Sydney, alarms the settler, who knows not the value of those
+localities; but men whose experience has taught them to set this obstacle
+at nought, have long depastured their herds on the banks of the last two.
+The fattest cattle that supply the Sydney market are fed upon the rich
+flats, and in the grassy valleys of the Morumbidgee; and there are several
+beautiful farms upon those of the Doomot. Generally speaking, the persons
+who reside in those distant parts, pay little attention to the comfort of
+their dwellings, or to the raising of more grain than their establishments
+may require; but there can be no doubt this part of the interior ought to
+be the granary of New South Wales; its climate and greater humidity being
+more favourable than that of Sydney for the production of wheat.
+
+PERIODICAL DROUGHTS; THE SEASONS AFFECTED BY THE MARSHES.
+
+The most serious disadvantages under which the colony of New South Wales
+labours, is in the drought to which it is periodically subject. Its
+climate may be said to be too dry; in other respects it is one of the most
+delightful under heaven; and experience of the certainty of the recurrence
+of the trying seasons to which I allude, should teach men to provide
+against their effects. Those seasons, during which no rain falls, appear,
+from the observations of former writers, to occur every ten or twelve
+years; and it is somewhat singular that no cause has been assigned for
+such periodical visitations. Whether the state of the interior has
+anything to do with them, and whether the wet or dry condition of the
+marshes at all regulate the seasons, is a question upon which I will not
+venture to give my decisive opinion. But most assuredly, when the interior
+is dry, the seasons are dry, and VICE VERSA. Indeed, not only is this the
+case, but rains, from excessive duration in the first year after a
+drought, decrease gradually year after year, until they wholly cease for a
+time. It seems not improbable, therefore, that the state of the interior
+does, in some measure, regulate the fall of rain upon the eastern ranges,
+which appears to decrease in quantity yearly as the marshes become
+exhausted, and cease altogether, when they no longer contain any water. A
+drought will naturally follow until such time as the air becomes
+surcharged with clouds or vapour from the ocean, which being no longer
+able to sustain their own weight, descend upon the mountains, and being
+conveyed by hundreds of streams into the western lowlands, again fill the
+marshes, and cause the recurrence of regular seasons.
+
+TEMPERATURE OF THE CLIMATE.
+
+The thermometer ranges during the summer months, that is, from September
+to March, from 36 degrees to 106 degrees of Fahrenheit, but the mean
+of the temperature during the above period is 70 degrees. The instrument
+in the winter months ranges from 27 degrees to 98 degrees, with a mean of
+66 degrees. However great the summer heat may appear, it is certain that
+the climate of New South Wales has not the relaxing and enfeebling effect
+upon the constitution, which renders a residence in India or other parts
+of the south so intolerable. Neither are any of the ordinary occupations
+of business or of pleasure laid aside at noon, or during the hottest part
+of the day. The traveller may cast himself at length under the first tree
+that invites him, and repose there as safely as if he were in a palace.
+Fearless of damps, and unmolested by noxious insects, his sleep is as
+sound as it is refreshing, and he rises with renewed spirits to pursue his
+journey. Equally so may the ploughman or the labourer seek repose beside
+his team, and allow them to graze quietly around him. The delicious
+coolness of the morning and the mild temperature of the evening air, in
+that luxurious climate, are beyond the power of description. It appears to
+have an influence on the very animals, the horses and the cattle being
+particularly docile; and I cannot but think it is is some degree the same
+happy effect upon some of the hardened human beings who are sent thither
+from the old world.
+
+FRUITS.
+
+As I have before observed, it has not yet been discovered whether there
+are any indigenous fruits of any value in Australia. In the colony of New
+South Wales there certainly are none; yet the climate is peculiarly
+adapted for the growth of every European and of many tropical productions.
+The orange, the fig, the citron, the pomegranate, the peach, the apple,
+the guava, the nectarine, the pear, and the loquette, grow side by side
+together. The plantain throws its broad leaves over the water, the vine
+encircles the cottages, and the market of Sydney is abundantly supplied
+with every culinary vegetable.
+
+In a climate, therefore, so soft that man scarcely requires a dwelling,
+and so enchanting that few have left it but with regret, the spirits must
+necessarily be acted upon,--and the heart feel lighter. Such, indeed, I
+have myself found to be the case; nor have I ever been happier than when
+roving through the woods or wandering along one of the silent and
+beautiful bays for which the harbour of Port Jackson is so celebrated. I
+went to New South Wales as I have already remarked, highly prejudiced
+against it, both from the nature of the service, and the character of the
+great body of its inhabitants. My regiment has since quitted its shores,
+but I am aware there are few of them who would not gladly return. The
+feeling I have in its favour arises not, therefore, from the services in
+which I was employed, but from circumstances in the colony itself; and I
+yet hope to form one of its community and to join a number of valuable and
+warm-hearted friends whom I left in that distant part of the world.
+
+REMARKS ON EMIGRATION.
+
+On the subject of emigration, it is not my intention to dwell at any
+length. My object in these preliminary remarks has been to give the reader
+a general idea of the country, in the interior recesses of which I am
+about to lead him. Still, however, it may be useful to offer a few general
+observations on a topic which has, of late years, become so interesting to
+the British public.
+
+The main consideration with those who, possessing some capital, propose to
+emigrate as the means of improving their condition, is, the society likely
+to he found in the land fixed on for their future residence. One of the
+first questions I have been asked, when conversing on the subject of
+emigration, has consequently related to this important matter. I had only
+then to observe in reply, that the civil and military establishments in
+New South Wales, form the elements of as good society as it is the lot of
+the majority to command in Great Britain.
+
+The houses of the settlers are not scattered over a greater surface than
+the residences of country gentlemen here, and if they cannot vie with them
+in size, they most assuredly do in many other more important respects; and
+if a substantial cottage of brick or stone has any claim to the rank of a
+tenantable mansion, there are few of them which do not posses all the
+means of exercising that hospitality for which young communities are
+remarkable.
+
+But to sever the links of kindred, and to abandon the homes of our fathers
+after years of happy tranquillity, is a sacrifice the magnitude of which
+is unquestionable. The feelings by which men are influenced under such
+circumstances have a claim to our respect. Indeed, no class of persons can
+have a stronger hold upon our sympathies than those whom unmerited adverse
+fortune obliges to seek a home in a distant country.
+
+Far, therefore, be it from me to dispute a single expression of regret to
+which they may give utterance. It must, however, he remembered that the
+deepest feelings of anguish are providentially alleviated in time. Our
+heaviest misfortunes are frequently repaired by industry and caution. The
+sky clears up, as it were: new interests engage the attention, and the
+cares of a family or the improvement of a newly acquired property engross
+those moments which would otherwise be spent in vain and unprofitable
+regrets.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF IMMIGRANTS; MOST LIKELY TO PROSPER.
+
+It cannot be doubted that persons such as I have described, whose conduct
+has hitherto been regulated by prudence, and whose main object is to
+provide for their children, are the most valuable members of every
+community, whether young or old. To such men few countries hold out
+greater prospects of success than New South Wales; for the more we extend
+our enquiries, the more we shall find that the success of the emigrant in
+that colony depends upon his prudence and foresight rather than on any
+collateral circumstance of climate or soil; and to him who can be
+satisfied with the gradual acquirement of competency, it is the land of
+promise. Blessed with a climate of unparalleled serenity, and of unusual
+freedom from disease, the settler has little external cause of anxiety,
+little apprehension of sickness among his family or domestics, and little
+else to do than to attend to his own immediate interests. I should wish to
+illustrate the observations by two or three instances of their practical
+bearing and tendency.
+
+CASES OF EMIGRANTS; CAUSES OF SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
+
+It was on my return from my second expedition, that I visited
+Lieut. ****** who resides in the southern parts of the colony. The day
+after my arrival, he took me round his property, and explained the various
+improvements he had made, considering the small means with which he had
+commenced. At this part of our conversation, we came within view of his
+house, a substantial weather-board cottage. "I trust," said I, turning
+to him, "you will excuse the question I am about to ask; for your
+frankness emboldens me to propose it, and on your answer much of the
+effect of what you have been saying will depend. In effecting these
+various improvements, and in the building of that house, have you been
+obliged to embarrass yourself, or are they free from incumbrance?"--"Your
+question," he said, "is a reasonable one, and I will answer it with the
+frankness you are kind enough to ascribe to me. I have ever made it a rule
+not to exceed my income. Mrs. ****** bore our first trials with so much
+cheerfulness, and contributed so much to my happiness and my prosperity,
+that I felt myself bound to build her a good house with the first money
+I had to spare." I confess this answer raised my host in my estimation,
+and it was a gratifying proof to me of the success that attends industry
+and perseverance.
+
+But let us look at another case. Mr. *** had a property to the N.W. of
+Sydney, and having considerable funded means when he arrived in the
+colony, he soon put his property into a state of progressive improvement,
+and being in truth an excellent practical farmer, it assumed the
+appearance of regularity and order. Had Mr. *** stopped at this moment,
+he would have been in the enjoyment of affluence and of every rational
+comfort. But instead of exercising prudent rules of hospitality, he gave
+way to the natural generosity of his disposition, entered into expenses he
+could not afford, and was ultimately obliged to part with his estate. Now
+it is deeply to be regretted, that one whose energies and abilities
+particularly fitted him for the life he had chosen, should have failed
+through such conduct; and it is more than probable, that if he had
+commenced with smaller means, and had gradually improved his property, his
+fate would have been very different.
+
+I shall leave these cases without any further comment, convinced as I am,
+that each of them furnishes matter for serious consideration, and that
+they are practical illustrations of the causes of success or failure of
+those who emigrate to the colony of New South Wales. And although I do not
+mean to affirm, that the majority follow Mr. ***'s example, I must venture
+to assert that thoughtlessness--useless expenditure in the first
+instance--waste of time and other circumstances, lead to equally ruinous
+consequences.
+
+MORAL OBJECTIONS TO THE COLONY.
+
+One of the greatest objections which families have to New South Wales, is
+their apprehension of the moral effects that are likely to overwhelm them
+by bad example, and for which no success in life could compensate. In a
+colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of crime
+must of course be great. Yet it falls less under the notice of private
+families than one might at first sight have been led to suppose.
+Drunkenness, as in the mother country, is the besetting sin; but it is
+confined chiefly to the large towns in consequence of the difficulty of
+procuring spirits in the country. There are, no doubt, many incorrigible
+characters sent to settle in the interior, and it is an evil to have these
+men, even for a single day, to break the harmony of a previously well
+regulated establishment, or to injure its future prospects by the
+influence of evil example. They are men who are sent upon trial, from on
+board a newly arrived ship, and they generally terminate their misconduct
+either on the roads or at a penal settlement, being thus happily removed
+from the mass of the prisoners. Frequently, however, men remain for years
+under the same master. They become attached to their occupations, their
+hearts become softened by kindness, and they atone as much as they
+possibly can for previous error.
+
+SYSTEM OF IMMIGRATION RECOMMENDED; ENCOURAGEMENT FOR EMIGRATION.
+
+Still there can be no doubt, but that the evil complained of is
+considerable. It is from this reason, and from my personal knowledge of
+the southern parts of the colony, that I should rejoice to see its flats
+and its valleys filled with an industrious population of a better
+description of farmers. A hope might then be reasonably indulged, that the
+Home Government would not be backward in recognising, and in acting upon
+a principle, the soundness of which has been felt and acknowledged in all
+ages, but the chief difficulty of which rests in its judicious
+application. I allude to a system of emigration. Sure I am that if it were
+well organized, and care were taken to profit by the experience of the
+past in similar attempts, it could not fail to be attended with ultimate
+success. The evils resulting from a surplus population in an old
+community, were never more seriously felt than in Great Britain at the
+present moment. Assuming that the amount of surplus population is
+2,000,000, the excess of labour and competition thus occasioned by
+diminishing profits and wages, creates, it has been said, an indirect tax
+to the enormous extent of 20,000,000 pounds per annum. It has appeared
+to many experienced persons, that it is in emigration, we should best find
+the means of relief from this heavy pressure; particularly if the
+individuals encouraged to go out to the colonies were young persons of
+both sexes, from the industrious classes of the community. Even if no
+more than three couples were induced to emigrate from each parish in
+England in ten years, the relief to the springs of industry would be very
+great. Besides, the funds necessary for this purpose would revert to the
+country by a thousand indirect channels. Persons unacquainted with our
+Australian colonies, whether Van Dieman's Land or New South Wales, can
+form little idea of the increasing demand for, and consumption in them of
+every species of British manufacture. The liberal encouragement given by
+government to every practicable scheme of emigration, and the sum advanced
+by it towards the expenses of the voyage to the labouring classes,
+sufficiently indicate the light in which the subject is viewed by the
+legislature; and the fact that no private family taking out servants to
+Sydney, has in any one instance been able to retain them, on account of
+offers more advantageous from other quarters, shows clearly the great
+demand for labour in the colony. If I might judge of the feelings of the
+majority of respectable individuals there, from the assurances of the few,
+they would willingly defray any parochial expenses attendant on the
+voyage, provided the services of such individuals could be secured to them
+for a time sufficiently long to remunerate them for such pavement. The
+tide of emigration should be directed to Sydney, Van Dieman's Land, or
+Western Australia, upon condition of the labourer's receiving a certain
+sum in wages, and his daily subsistence from his employer, with an
+understanding, however, that he must consider himself bound for two years
+to such employer. Surely there are hundreds of our indigent countrymen,
+who would gladly seek a land of such plenty, and cast away the natural,
+but unavailing regret of leaving home to secure to themselves and their
+families, the substantial comforts of life on such easy conditions.
+
+COMMITTEE FOUND AT SYDNEY.
+
+It is not, perhaps, generally known that a committee has been formed in
+Sydney, to advise settlers as to the best mode of proceeding on arrival
+there. Such a plan is one of obvious utility; and if those who may find
+themselves at a loss for information would apply to this committee for
+advice, rather than to individuals with whom they may become casually
+acquainted, they would further their own interests, and in all probability
+ensure success. Still there are some broad rules upon which every man
+ought to act, which I shall endeavour to point out, and it will give me no
+ordinary satisfaction, if I should be the means of directing any one to
+the road of prosperity and comfort.
+
+HINTS TO EMIGRANTS.
+
+It is to be feared that those who emigrate to New South Wales, generally
+anticipate too great facility in their future operations and certainty of
+success in conducting them; but they should recollect that competency
+cannot be obtained without labour. Every trade--every profession in this
+respect, is subject to the same law--the lawyer, the physician, the
+tradesman, and the mechanic. This labour is required at our hands, even in
+an old community; how much more then is it called for in a new, where the
+ingenuity of men is put to trial to secure those means of accomplishing
+their ends which here are abundant. Now, it appears to me but consistent,
+that he who is obliged to leave his native country from want of means to
+hold his station there, can hardly expect to find, or rather to secure,
+abundance elsewhere without some exertion. Every man who emigrates should
+proceed with a conviction on his mind, that he is about to encounter years
+of labour and privation. He will not then be disappointed at partial
+reverses, and will be more thankful for unexpected prosperity. I feel
+persuaded the tone of mind has a great deal to do with success, because it
+influences the conduct of the individual. Supposing, however, that an
+emigrant has taken this rational view of his situation, he should
+determine on his pursuits, and allow nothing but absolute certainty of
+better fortune to turn him aside. Men, however, landing at Sydney, in
+their eagerness for information get bewildered, give up their original
+plans, adopt new and uncertain speculations, trifle away both their time
+and their money, and ultimately ruin themselves. An individual who goes to
+New South Wales for the purpose of settling, should not remain in Sydney
+a day longer than is necessary for the arrangement of his affairs. Every
+shilling spent there is thrown away. The greatest facility is given by the
+different departments of the Colonial Government to the settlers; and it
+is entirely his own fault if he trifles away his time in search of
+information elsewhere than at the fountainhead, or if he trusts to any
+other opinion than his own, supposing him experienced as to the quality of
+the land he may fix upon. Let him be speedy in his selection, and fix
+himself upon his allotment as soon as possible. Instead of overstocking
+his farm, or employing more labourers than he can afford to keep, let him
+be satisfied with a gradual increase of his stock, and wait patiently till
+he can better afford to employ labour; above all, let him avoid
+embarrassing himself by the purchase of any superfluous or unnecessary
+comfort. I consider that man has already failed, who runs into debt in the
+first instance, or who exhausts his means in the purchase of large herds,
+from the vain expectation that their increase will clear him. The time was
+when those idle speculations were occasionally attended with success, but
+such is not now the case. The energies of the agriculturist are directed
+to their proper channel, and if the few are unable to make rapid fortunes,
+the many have escaped inevitable ruin. No farm in a state of nature can be
+expected to yield any return of consequence for the first year. It is
+incumbent on a settler to provide for his establishment, or to retain the
+means of providing for it as circumstances may require.
+
+Farming implements are as cheap in Sydney as in England. Horses and cattle
+are cheaper. It requires little, therefore, to stock a farm in a
+reasonable manner. On the other hand, the climate is so mild that the want
+of a house is scarcely felt, and a temporary residence easily constructed.
+On the whole I am convinced, that a man who regulates his conduct by
+prudence, and who perseveringly follows up his occupations, who behaves
+with kindness to those around him, and performs his social and moral
+duties with punctuality, will ultimately secure to himself a home that
+will make up for the one he has quitted in the land of his fathers, and
+place him in as respectable and as happy a situation as that which he
+there enjoyed.
+
+
+*****
+
+
+PROGRESS OF INLAND DISCOVERY.
+
+Having thrown out the foregoing remarks for the information of the general
+reader, and of persons who look to Australia with the more earnest views
+of selecting a colonial home, I now return to the immediate object of
+these volumes; but before entering on the narrative of my own expeditions,
+I think it necessary to advert cursorily to the discoveries previously
+accomplished.
+
+The journeys of Mr. Oxley, far into the western interior of Australia,
+gave rise to various and conflicting opinions as to the character of the
+more central parts of that extensive continent, of which the colony of New
+South Wales forms but a small portion. I feel, therefore, called upon
+briefly to advert to the conclusions which that able and intelligent
+officer drew from his personal observation of the country into which he
+penetrated, as an acquaintance with his opinions will not only tend to
+throw a clearer light on the following details, but will, also, convey
+much necessary information to those of my readers who may not have
+perused his journals. It is necessary, however, in order to divest the
+subject of all obscureness, to trace, in the first instance, the progress
+of inland discovery, in New South Wales, from the first foundation of the
+colony to the period when Mr. Oxley's exertions attracted the public
+attention.
+
+In the year 1788, the British Government took formal possession of the
+eastern coast of Australia, by the establishment of a penal colony at Port
+Jackson. The first settlers, under Governor Phillips, had too many
+difficulties to contend with to submit themselves to be thwarted from
+pursuits essential to their immediate safety and comfort, by the prospect
+of remote and uncertain advantages. It was by perseverance and toil alone
+that they first established and ultimately spread themselves over that
+part of the territory, which, flanked by the ocean on the one hand, and
+embraced as it were by the Nepean River on the other, is now entitled the
+County Of Cumberland. For many years, this single district supplied the
+wants of the settlers. Upon it they found ample pasture for their herds,
+and sufficient employment for themselves. Nor was it until a succession of
+untoward seasons, and the rapid increase of their stock pointed out to
+them the necessity of seeking for more extensive pasturage, that they
+contemplated surmounting that dark and rugged chain of mountains, which,
+like the natural ramparts of Spain and Italy, rose high over the nether
+forest, and broke the line of the western horizon.
+
+MR. CALEY'S ATTEMPT.
+
+A Mr. Caley is said to have been the first who attempted to scale the Blue
+Mountains: but he did not long persevere in struggling with difficulties
+too great for ordinary resolution to overcome. It appears that he retraced
+his steps, after having penetrated about sixteen miles into their dark and
+precipitous recesses; and a heap of stones, which the traveller passes
+about that distance from Erne Ford, on the road to Bathurst, marks the
+extreme point reached by the first expedition to the westward of the
+Nepean river.
+
+LIEUT. LAWSON'S EXPEDITION.
+
+Shortly after the failure of this expedition, the sad effects of a long
+protracted drought called forth a more general spirit of enterprise and
+exertion among the settlers; and Mr. Oxley makes honorable mention of the
+perseverance and resolution with which Lieut. Lawson, of the 104th
+regiment, accompanied by Messrs. Blaxland and Wentworth, conducted an
+expedition into the Blue Mountains. Their efforts were successful: and
+the objects of their enterprise would have been completely attained, but
+for the failure of their provisions at a moment when their view of the
+distant interior was such as to convince them that they had overcome the
+most formidable obstacles to their advance, and that in their further
+progress few impediments would have presented themselves.
+
+MR. EVANS' DISCOVERIES.
+
+The success of this undertaking induced Governor Macquarie to further the
+prosecution of inland discovery, and of attempts to ascertain the nature
+of the country of which Mr. Lawson only obtained a glimpse. An expedition
+was accordingly dispatched under Mr. Evans, the Deputy Surveyor-General,
+to follow the route taken by the former one, and to penetrate as far as
+practicable into the western interior. The result was the discovery of the
+Macquarie river, and of Bathurst Plains. The report of Mr. Evans was so
+favourable, that orders were immediately issued for the construction of a
+line of road across the mountains. When that was completed, the Governor
+went in person to fix the site of a future town on Bathurst Plains. From
+thence Mr. Evans, who accompanied the Governor on the occasion, was
+directed to proceed to the southward and westward, to ascertain the nature
+of the country in that direction. He discovered another considerable
+river, flowing, like the Macquarie, to the west, to which he gave the name
+of the Lachlan. The promising appearance of these two streams, and the
+expectation of all parties that they would be found to water rich and
+extensive tracts of country, led to the fitting out of a more important
+expedition than any which had before been contemplated.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S DISCOVERIES.
+
+Mr. Oxley, the Surveyor-General of the Colony, was appointed chief of this
+expedition, and was directed to trace the Lachlan and Macquarie rivers, as
+far as practicable, with a view to ascertain their capabilities and the
+nature of the country they watered. In 1817, Mr. Oxley directed his
+attention to the former river, and continued to follow its windings, until
+it appeared that its waters were lost in successive marshes and it ceased
+to be a river. In the following year he turned towards the Macquarie, and
+traced it, in like manner, until he was checked by high reeds that covered
+an extensive plain before him, amidst which the channel of the river was
+lost.
+
+From what he observed of the country, on both these occasions, he was led
+to infer that beyond the limits of his advance the interior had a uniform
+level, and was, for the most part, uninhabitable and under water. Its
+features must have been strongly marked to have confirmed such an opinion
+in the mind of the late Surveyor-General. It stands recorded on the pages
+of his journal, that he travelled over a country of many miles in extent,
+after clearing the mountains, which so far from presenting any rise of
+ground to the eye, bore unequivocal marks of frequent and extensive
+inundation. He traced two rivers of considerable size, and found that, at
+a great distance from each other, they apparently terminated in marshes,
+and that the country beyond them was low and unbroken. In his progress
+eastward, he crossed a third stream (the Castlereagh), about forty-five
+miles from the Macquarie, seemingly not inferior to it in size,
+originating in the mountains for which he was making, and flowing nearly
+parallel to the other rivers into a level country like that which he had
+just quitted.
+
+DISCOVERIES OF MESSRS. MECHAN, HUME, HOVEL AND CUNNINGHAM.
+
+Mr. Evans, moreover, who accompanied Mr. Oxley on these journeys, and who
+had been detached by his principal from Mount Harris, to ascertain the
+nature of the country in the line which the expedition was next to pursue,
+having crossed the Castlereagh considerably below the place at which the
+party afterwards effected a passage, reported that the river was then
+running through high reeds. The inference naturally drawn by Mr. Oxley,
+was, that it terminated as the Lachlan and the Macquarie had done; and
+that their united waters formed an inland sea or basin. It is evident that
+Mr. Oxley had this impression on his mind, when he turned towards the
+coast; but the wet state of the lowlands prevented him from ascertaining
+its correctness or error. Doubt, consequently, still existed as to the
+nature of the country he had left behind him; a question in which the best
+interests of the colony were apparently involved. Subsequently to these
+discoveries, Mr. Surveyor Mechan, accompanied by Mr. Hamilton Hume, a
+colonist of considerable experience, explored the country more to the
+southward and westward of Sydney, and discovered most of the new country
+called Argyle, and also Lake Bathurst.
+
+Mr. Hume was afterwards associated with a Mr. Hovel, in an excursion to
+the south coast, under the auspices of Sir Thomas Brisbane. After a most
+persevering and laborious journey, they reached the sea; but it is
+uncertain whether they made Port Philips, or Western Port. Mr. Hume, whose
+practical experience will yield to that of no man, entertains a conviction
+that it was to the former they descended from the neighbouring ranges; but
+Mr. Hovel, I believe supports a contrary opinion. In the early stage of
+their journey, they passed over York or Yass Plains; and, after crossing
+the Morumbidgee, were generally entangled among mountain ranges that
+increased in height to the east and south-east. They crossed three
+considerable rivers, falling westerly, which they named the Goulburn, the
+Hume, and the Ovens; and found a beautiful and well-watered country in the
+vicinity of the coast.
+
+In 1826, Mr. Allan Cunningham, Botanical Collector to his late Majesty,
+traversed a considerable portion of the interior to the north of Bathurst,
+and, with a laudable zeal, devoted his labours to the acquisition of
+general information, as well as to his more immediate professional
+pursuits. In 1827, this gentleman again bent his steps towards the
+northward, and succeeded in gaining the 28th parallel of latitude; and,
+on a subsequent occasion, having taken his departure from Moreton Bay, he
+connected his former journey with that settlement, and thus contributed
+largely to our knowledge of the mountain country between it and the
+capital. Mr. Cunningham, who, independently of his individual excursions,
+had not only circumnavigated the Australian Continent with Capt. King,
+but had formed also one of the party with Mr. Oxley, in the journeys
+before noticed, had adopted this gentleman's opinion with regard to the
+swampy and inhospitable character of the distant interior. Its depressed
+appearance from the high ground on which Mr. Cunningham subsequently
+moved, tended to confirm this opinion, which was moreover daily gaining
+strength from the reports of the natives, who became more frequent in
+their intercourse with the whites, and who reported that there were large
+waters to the westward, on which the natives had canoes, and in which
+there were fish of great size.
+
+It became, therefore, a current opinion, that the western interior of New
+Holland comprehended an extensive basin, of which the ocean of reeds which
+had proved so formidable to Mr. Oxley, formed most probably the outskirts;
+and it was generally thought that an expedition proceeding into the
+interior, would encounter marshes of vast extent, which would be extremely
+difficult to turn, and no less dangerous to enter.
+
+It remained to be proved, however, whether these conjectures were founded
+in fact. The chief difficulty lay in the character of the country, and in
+providing the necessary means to ensure success. Those which were resorted
+to will be found in the succeeding chapter. Whether they would have been
+found sufficient and applicable had the interior been wholly under water,
+is doubtful; and my impression on this point induced me to make more
+efficient arrangements on the second expedition.
+
+
+
+
+
+EXPEDITION DOWN THE BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER in 1828 and 1829.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+
+State of the Colony in 1828-29--Objects of the Expedition--Departure
+from Sydney--Wellington Valley--Progress down the Macquarie--Arrival at
+Mount Harris--Stopped by the marshes--Encamp amidst reeds--Excursions down
+the river--Its termination-- Appearance of the marshes--Opthalmic
+affection of the men--Mr. Hume's successful journey to the northward--
+Journey across the plain--Second great marsh--Perplexities--Situation of
+the exploring party--Consequent resolutions.
+
+
+The year 1826 was remarkable for the commencement of one of those fearful
+droughts to which we have reason to believe the climate of New South Wales
+is periodically subject. It continued during the two following years with
+unabated severity. The surface of the earth became so parched up that
+minor vegetation ceased upon it. Culinary herbs were raised with
+difficulty, and crops failed even in the most favourable situations.
+Settlers drove their flocks and herds to distant tracts for pasture and
+water, neither remaining for them in the located districts. The interior
+suffered equally with the coast, and men, at length, began to despond
+under so alarming a visitation. It almost appeared as if the Australian
+sky were never again to be traversed by a cloud.
+
+OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+But, however severe for the colony the seasons had proved, or were likely
+to prove, it was borne in mind at this critical moment, that the wet and
+swampy state of the interior had alone prevented Mr. Oxley from
+penetrating further into it, in 1818. Each successive report from
+Wellington Valley, the most distant settlement to the N. W., confirmed the
+news of the unusually dry state of the lowlands, and of the exhausted
+appearance of the streams falling into them. It was, consequently, hoped
+that an expedition, pursuing the line of the Macquarie, would have a
+greater chance of success than the late Surveyor General had; and that the
+difficulties he had to contend against would be found to be greatly
+diminished, if not altogether removed. The immediate fitting out of an
+expedition was therefore decided upon, for the express purpose of
+ascertaining the nature and extent of that basin into which the Macquarie
+was supposed to fall, and whether any connection existed between it and
+the streams falling westerly. As I had early taken a great interest in the
+geography of New South Wales, the Governor was pleased to appoint me to
+the command of this expedition.
+
+JOURNEY FROM SYDNEY TO EMU PLAINS.
+
+In the month of September, 1828, I received his Excellency's commands to
+prepare for my journey; and by the commencement of November, had organised
+my party, and completed the necessary arrangements. On the 9th of that
+month, I waited on the Governor, at Parramatta, to receive his definitive
+instructions. As the establishments at Sydney had been unable to supply me
+with the necessary number of horses and oxen, instructions had been
+forwarded to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of Wellington Valley, to
+train a certain number for my use; and I was now directed to push for that
+settlement without loss of time. I returned to Sydney in the afternoon of
+the 9th, and on the 10th took leave of my brother officers, to commence a
+journey of very dubious issue; and, in company with my friend,
+Staff-surgeon M'Leod, who had obtained permission to accompany me to the
+limits of the colony, followed my men along the great western road. We
+moved leisurely over the level country, between the coast and the Nepean
+River, and availed ourselves of the kind hospitality of those of our
+friends whose property lay along that line of road, to secure more
+comfortable places of rest than the inns would have afforded.
+
+We reached Sheane, the residence of Dr. Harris, on the 11th, and were
+received by him with the characteristic kindness with which friends or
+strangers are ever welcomed by that gentleman, He had accompanied
+Mr. Oxley as a volunteer in 1818, and his name was then given to the
+mount which formed the extreme point to which the main body of the first
+expedition down the banks of the Macquarie penetrated, in a westerly
+direction.
+
+The general appearance of the property of Dr. Harris, showed how much
+perseverance and labour had effected towards its improvement. Many acres
+of ground bore a promising crop, over which a gloomy forest had once
+waved. The Doctor's farming establishment was as complete as his husbandry
+seemed to be prosperous; but he did not appear to be satisfied with the
+extent of his dwelling, to which he was making considerable additions,
+although I should have thought it large enough for all ordinary purposes
+of residence or hospitality. The rewards of successful industry were
+everywhere visible.
+
+FROM EMU PLAINS TO WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+On the 13th, we gained Regent's Ville, the more splendid mansion of Sir
+John Jamieson, which overlooks the Nepean River, and commands the most
+beautiful and extensive views of the Blue Mountains. Crossing the ford on
+the 14th, we overtook the men as they were toiling up the first ascent of
+those rugged bulwarks, which certainly gave no favourable earnest of the
+road before us; and, as we could scarcely hope to reach the level country
+to the westward without the occurrence of some accident, I determined to
+keep near the drays, that I might be on hand should my presence be
+required. We gained O'Connell's plains on the 20th November, and arrived
+at Bathurst on the 22nd, with no other damage than the loss of one of the
+props supporting the boat which snapped in two as we descended Mount York.
+On examination, it was found that the boat had also received a slight
+contusion, but it admitted of easy repair.
+
+I was detained at Bathurst longer than I intended, in consequence of
+indisposition, and during my stay there experienced many proofs of the
+kind hospitality of the settlers of that promising district: nor was I
+ever more impressed with the importance of the service upon which I was
+employed, or more anxious as to the issue, than while contemplating the
+rapid advance of agriculture upon its plains, and the formidable bar to
+its prosperity which I had left behind me, in the dark and gloomy ranges
+which I had crossed.
+
+On the 27th, Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose experience well qualified him for
+the task, and who had been associated with me in the expedition, having
+joined me, we proceeded on our journey, and reached Wellington Valley
+about the end of the month.
+
+WELLINGTON VALLEY.
+
+I wished to push into the interior without any delay, or at least, so soon
+as we should have completed our arrangements and organized the party; but,
+although Mr. Maxwell had paid every attention to the training of the
+cattle, he was of opinion that they could not yet be wholly relied upon,
+and strongly recommended that they should be kept at practice for another
+week. As we could not have left the settlement under the most favourable
+circumstances in less than four days, the further delay attendant on this
+measure was considered immaterial, and it was, accordingly, determined
+upon. Mr. Hume undertook to superintend the training of the animals, and
+this left me at leisure to gather such information as would be of use to
+us in our progress down the river.
+
+In his description of Wellington Valley, Mr. Oxley has not done it more
+than justice. It is certainly a beautiful and fertile spot, and it was now
+abundant in pasturage, notwithstanding the unfavourable season that had
+passed over it.
+
+The settlement stands upon the right bank of the Bell, about two miles
+above the junction of that stream with the Macquarie. Its whitewashed
+buildings bore outward testimony to the cleanliness and regularity of the
+inhabitants; and the respectful conduct of the prisoners under his charge,
+showed that Mr. Maxwell had maintained that discipline by which alone he
+could have secured respect to himself and success to his exertions, at
+such a distance from the seat of government.
+
+The weather was so exceedingly hot, during our stay, that it was
+impossible to take exercise at noon; but in the evening, or at an early
+hour in the morning, we were enabled to make short excursions in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+Mr. Maxwell informed me that there were three stations below the
+settlement, the first of which, called Gobawlin, belonging to Mr. Wylde,
+was not more than five miles from it; the other two, occupied by Mr.
+Palmer, were at a greater distance, one being nineteen, the other
+thirty-four miles below the junction of the Bell. He was good enough to
+send for the stockman (or chief herdsman), in charge of the last, to give
+me such information of the nature of the country below him, as he could
+furnish from personal knowledge or from the accounts of the natives.
+
+LOW STATE OF THE MACQUARIE RIVER.
+
+Mr. Maxwell pointed out to me the spot on which Mr. Oxley's boats had been
+built, close upon the bank of the Macquarie; and I could not but reflect
+with some degree of apprehension on the singularly diminished state of the
+river from what it must then have been to allow a boat to pass down it.
+Instead of a broad stream and a rapid current, the stream was confined to
+a narrow space in the centre of the channel, and it ran so feebly amidst
+frequent shallows that it was often scarcely perceptible. The Bell, also,
+which Mr. Oxley describes as dashing and rippling along its pebbly bed,
+had ceased to flow, and consisted merely of a chain of ponds.
+
+On the 3rd of Dec, the stockman from below arrived; but the only
+information we gathered from him was the existence of a lake to the left
+of the river, about three days' journey below the run of his herds, on the
+banks of which he assured us, the native companions, a species of stork,
+stood in rows like companies of soldiers.
+
+He brought up a nest of small paroquets of the most beautiful plumage, as
+a present to Mr. Maxwell, and affirmed that they were common about his
+part of the river. The peculiarity of the seasons had also brought a
+parrot into the valley which had never before visited it. This delicate
+bird was noticed by Captain Cook upon the coast, and is called
+PSITTACUS NOVAE HOLLANDIAE, or New Holland Parrot, by Mr. Brown. It had
+not, however, been subsequently seen until the summer of 1828, when it
+made its appearance at Wellington Valley in considerable numbers, together
+with a species of merops or mountain bee-eater.
+
+DEPARTURE FOR THE INTERIOR.
+
+On the 5th, our preparations being wholly completed, and the loads
+arranged, the party was mustered, and was found to consist of myself and
+Mr. Hume, two soldiers and eight prisoners of the crown, two of whom were
+to return with dispatches. Our animals numbered two riding, and seven
+pack, horses, two draft, and eight pack, bullocks, exclusive of two
+horses of my own, and two for the men to be sent back.
+
+BANKS OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+The morning of the 7th December, the day upon which we were to leave the
+valley, was ushered in by a cloudless sky, and that heated appearance in
+the atmosphere which foretells an oppressively sultry day. I therefore put
+off the moment of our departure to the evening, and determined to proceed
+no further than Gobawlin. I was the more readily induced to order this
+short journey because the animals had not been practised to their full
+loads, and I thought they might have given some trouble at starting with
+an unusual weight. They moved off however very quietly, and as if they had
+been accustomed to their work by a long course of training. We took our
+departure from the settlement at 3 p.m. and, crossing to the right bank of
+the Macquarie, a little above its junction with the Bell, reached Mr
+Wylde's station about half-past five. Thus we commenced our journey under
+circumstances as favorable as could have been wished. In disengaging
+ourselves on the following day from the hills by which Wellington Valley
+is encompassed on the westward, with a view to approach Mr. Palmer's first
+station, we kept rather wide of the river, and only occasionally touched
+on its more projecting angles. The soil at a distance from the stream was
+by no means so good as that in its immediate vicinity, nor was the timber
+of the same description. On the rich and picturesque grounds near the
+river the angophora prevailed with the flooded gum, and the scenery upon
+its banks was improved by the casuarinae that overhung them. On the
+latter, inferior eucalypti and cypresses were mixed together. The country
+was broken and undulating, and the hills stony, notwithstanding which,
+they appeared to have an abundance of pasture upon them. Mr. Hume rode
+with me to the summit of a limestone elevation, from which I thought it
+probable we might have obtained such a view as would have enabled us to
+form some idea of the country into which we were about to descend. But in
+following the river line, the eye wandered over a dark and unbroken
+forest alone. The ranges from which we were fast receding formed an
+irregular and beautiful landscape to the southward; and contrasted
+strongly with the appearance of the country to the N. W., in which
+direction it was rapidly assuming a level.
+
+We reached Mr. Palmer's at a late hour in the afternoon, in consequence of
+a delay we experienced in crossing a gully, and encamped upon a high bank
+immediately opposite to the mouth of Molle's rivulet which here joins the
+Macquarie from the southward. The cattle had consumed all the food, and
+the ground on both sides of the river looked bare and arid.
+
+No doubt, however, the face of the country in ordinary seasons wears a
+very different appearance. Its general elevation continued high; nor did
+the Macquarie assume any change of aspect. Mountain debris and rounded
+pebbles of various kinds formed its bed, which was much encumbered with
+timber.
+
+DIBILAMBLE.
+
+We had been unable to persuade any of the natives of Wellington Valley to
+accompany us as guides, on our leaving that settlement. Even Mr. Maxwell's
+influence failed; for, notwithstanding the promises of several, when they
+saw that we were ready to depart, they either feigned sickness or stated
+that they were afraid of the more distant natives. The fact is, that they
+were too lazy to wander far from their own district, and too fond of
+Maxwell's beef to leave it for a precarious bush subsistence. Fortunately
+we found several natives with Mr. Palmer's stockmen, who readily undertook
+to conduct us by the nearest route to the cataract, which we considered to
+be midway between Wellington Valley and Mount Harris. We started under
+their guidance for Dibilamble, Mr. Palmer's second station, and reached it
+about half-past 4 p.m. The distance between the two is sixteen miles. The
+country for some miles differs in no material point from that through
+which we had already passed. The same rich tracts of soil near the river
+and the same inferiority in the tracks remote from it. Near Dibilamble,
+however, the limestone formation terminates, and gives place to barren
+stony ridges, upon which the cypress callities is of close and stunted
+growth. The ridges themselves were formed of a coarse kind of freestone
+in a state of rapid decomposition. The Tabragar (the Erskine of Mr. Oxley)
+falls into the Macquarie at Dibilamble. It had long ceased to flow, being
+a small mountain torrent whose source, if we judge from the shingly nature
+of its bed, cannot be very distant. Our descent was considerable during
+the day; the rapids were frequent in the river, but it underwent no change
+in its general appearance. Its waters were hard and transparent, and its
+banks, in many places, extremely lofty; with a red sandy loam and gravel
+under the alluvial deposits. It generally happened that where the bank was
+high on the one side it was low and subject to flood, to a limited extent
+at least, on the other. Upon these low grounds the blue-gum trees were of
+lofty growth, but on the upper levels box prevailed.
+
+SCENERY NEAR THE RIVER.
+
+The views upon the river were really beautiful, and varied at every turn;
+nor is it possible for any tree to exceed the casuarina in the graceful
+manner in which it bends over the stream, or clings to some solitary rock
+in its centre.
+
+It here became necessary for us to cross to the left bank of the river,
+not only to avoid its numerous windings, and thus to preserve as much as
+possible the direct line to Mount Harris; but also, because the travelling
+was much better on the south side. We therefore availed ourselves of a
+ford opposite to the ground on which the tents had stood; and then pursued
+our journey, in a south-westerly course, over a country of a description
+very inferior to that of any we had previously noticed.
+
+Iron-bark and cypresses generally prevailed along our line of route on a
+poor and sandy soil, which improved after we passed Elizabeth Burn, a
+small creek mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+TAYLOR'S RIVULET.
+
+We approached the river again early in the day, and pitched our tent on
+the summit of a sloping bank that overlooked one of its long still
+reaches. We were protected from the sun by the angophora trees, which
+formed a hanging wood around us, and, with its bright green foliage, gave
+a cheerfulness to the scene that was altogether unusual. The opposite side
+of the river was rather undulated, and the soil appeared to be of the
+finest description. The grass, although growing in tufts, afforded
+abundance of pasture for the cattle; and, on the whole, this struck me as
+a most eligible spot for a station, and I found it occupied as such on the
+return of the expedition. We had encamped about a quarter of a mile from
+Taylor's Rivulet, which discharges itself into the Macquarie from the
+N. E., and is the first stream, upon the right bank, below the Wellington
+Valley.
+
+Immediately after receiving it the river sweeps away to the southward, in
+consequence of which it became again necessary for us to cross it. Our
+guides, who were intelligent lads, led the cattle to a ford, a little
+below the junction of Taylor's Rivulet, at which we effected a passage
+with some difficulty; the opposite bank being very steep, and we were
+obliged to force our way up a gully for some eighty or a hundred yards
+before we could extricate the team. Pursuing our journey, in a N. W.
+direction, we soon left the rich and undulating grounds bordering the
+river behind us. A poor, level, and open country, succeeded them. The
+soil changed to a light red, sandy loam, on which eucalypti, cypresses,
+and casuarinae, were intermixed with minor shrubs; of which latter, the
+cherry tree (exocarpus cupressiformis) was the most prevalent.
+
+At about seven miles from the river we passed some barren freestone
+ridges, near which Mr. Hume killed the first kangaroo we had seen. At
+mid-day we passed a small creek, at which the cattle were watered; and
+afterwards continued our journey through a country similar to that over
+which we had already made our way.
+
+As we neared the stream we noticed the acacia pendula for the first
+time,--an indication of our approach to the marshes. The weather still
+continued extremely hot. Our journey this day was unusually long, and our
+cattle suffered so much, and moved so slowly, that it was late when we
+struck upon the Macquarie, at a part where its banks were so high that we
+had some difficulty in finding a good watering place.
+
+SURPRISE SOME NATIVES.
+
+Being considerably in front of the party, with one of our guides, when we
+neared the river, I came suddenly upon a family of natives. They were much
+terrified, and finding that they could not escape, called vehemently to
+some of their companions, who were in the distance. By the time Mr. Hume
+came up, they had in some measure recovered their presence of mind, but
+availed themselves of the first favourable moment to leave us. I was
+particular in not imposing any restraint on these men, in consequence of
+which they afterwards mustered sufficient resolution to visit us in our
+camp. We now judged that we were about ten miles from the cataract, and
+that, according to the accounts of the stockman, we could not be very
+distant from the lake he had mentioned.
+
+NATIVE BURIAL PLACE.
+
+As I was unwilling to pass any important feature of the country without
+enquiry or examination, I requested Mr. Hume to interrogate the strangers
+on the subject. They stated that they belonged to the lake tribe, that the
+lake was a short day's journey to the eastward, and that they would guide
+us to it if we wished. The matter was accordingly arranged. They left us
+at dusk, but returned to the camp at the earliest dawn; when we once more
+crossed the river, and, after traversing a very level country for about
+nine miles, arrived at our destination. We passed over the dried beds of
+lagoons, and through coppices of cypresses and acacia pendula, or open
+forest, but did not observe any of the barren stony ridges so common to
+the N.E. About a mile, or a mile and a half, from the lake we examined a
+solitary grave that had recently been constructed. It consisted of an
+oblong mound, with three semicircular seats. A walk encompassed the whole,
+from which three others branched off for a few yards only, into the
+forest. Several cypresses, overhanging the grave, were fancifully carved
+on the inner side, and on one the shape of a heart was deeply engraved.
+
+BUDDAH LAKE.
+
+We were sadly disappointed in the appearance of the lake, which the
+natives call the Buddah. It is a serpentine sheet of fresh water, of
+rather more than a mile in length, and from three to four hundred yards in
+breadth. Its depth was four fathoms; but it seemed as if it were now five
+or six feet below the ordinary level. No stream either runs into it or
+flows from it; yet it abounds in fish; from which circumstance I should
+imagine that it originally owed its supply to the river during some
+extensive inundation. Notwithstanding that we had crossed some rich tracts
+of land in our way to it, the neighbourhood of the lake was by no means
+fertile. The trees around it were in rapid decay, and the little
+vegetation to be seen appeared to derive but little advantage from its
+proximity to water.
+
+EXTREME HEAT OF THE WEATHER.
+
+We had started at early dawn; and the heat had become intolerable long ere
+the sun had gained the meridian. It was rendered still more oppressive
+from the want of air in the dense bushes through which we occasionally
+moved. At 2 p.m. the thermometer stood at 129 degrees of Fahrenheit, in
+the shade; and at 149 degrees in the sun; the difference being exactly 20
+degrees. It is not to be wondered at that the cattle suffered, although
+the journey was so short. The sun's rays were too powerful even for the
+natives, who kept as much as possible in the shade. In the evening, when
+the atmosphere was somewhat cooler, we launched the boat upon the lake,
+in order to get some wild fowl and fish; but although we were tolerably
+successful with our guns, we did not take anything with our hooks.
+
+The natives had, in the course of the afternoon, been joined by the rest
+of the tribe, and they now numbered about three and twenty. They were
+rather distant in their manner, and gazed with apparent astonishment at
+the scene that was passing before them.
+
+If there had been other proof wanting, of the lamentably parched and
+exhausted state of the interior, we had on this occasion ample evidence of
+it, and of the fearful severity of the drought under which the country was
+suffering. As soon as the sun dipped under the horizon, hundreds of birds
+came crowding to the border of the lake, to quench the thirst they had
+been unable to allay in the forest. Some were gasping, others almost too
+weak to avoid us, and all were indifferent to the reports of our guns.
+
+CATARACT OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+On leaving the Buddah, eleven only of the natives accompanied us. We
+reached the river again about noon, on a north-half-east course, where it
+had a rocky bed, and continued to journey along it, until we reached the
+cataract at which we halted. We travelled over soil generally inferior to
+that which we had seen on the preceding day, but rich in many places. The
+same kind of timber was observed, but the acacia pendula was more
+prevalent than any other, although near the river the flooded gum and
+Australian apple-tree were of beautiful growth.
+
+It had appeared to me that the waters of the Macquarie had been
+diminishing in volume since our departure from Wellington Valley, and I
+had a favourable opportunity of judging as to the correctness of this
+conclusion at the cataract, where its channel, at all times much
+contracted, was particularly so on the present occasion. So little force
+was there in the current, that I began to entertain doubts how long it
+would continue, more especially when I reflected on the level character of
+the country we had entered, and the fact of the Macquarie not receiving
+any tributary between this point and the marshes. I was in consequence
+led to infer that result, which, though not immediately, eventually took
+place.
+
+As they were treated with kindness, the natives who accompanied us soon
+threw off all reserve, and in the afternoon assembled at the pool below
+the fall to take fish. They went very systematically to work, with short
+spears in their hands that tapered gradually to a point, and sank at once
+under water without splash or noise at a given signal from an elderly man.
+In a short time, one or two rose with the fish they had transfixed; the
+others remained about a minute under water, and then made their
+appearance near the same rock into the crevices of which they had driven
+their prey. Seven fine bream were taken, the whole of which they insisted
+on giving to our men, although I am not aware that any of themselves had
+broken their fast that day. They soon, however, procured a quantity of
+muscles, with which they sat down very contentedly at a fire. My
+barometrical admeasurement gave the cataract an elevation of 680 feet
+above the level of the sea; and my observations placed it in east
+longitude 148 degrees 3 minutes and in latitude 31 degrees 50 minutes
+south.
+
+It became an object with us to gain the right bank of the Macquarie as
+soon as possible; for it was evident that the country to the southward of
+it was much more swampy than it was to the north: but for some distance
+below the cataract, we found it impossible to effect our purpose. The
+rocks composing the bed of the river at the cataract, which are of trapp
+formation, disappeared at about eight miles below it, when the river
+immediately assumed another character. Its banks became of equal height,
+which had not before been the case, and averaged from fifteen to eighteen
+feet. They were composed entirely of alluvial soil, and were higher than
+the highest flood-marks. Its waters appeared to be turbid and deep, and
+its bed was a mixture of sand and clay. The casuarina, which had so often
+been admired by us, entirely disappeared and the channel in many places
+became so narrow as to be completely arched over by gum-trees.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+On the 16th, we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives who joined our
+train after the very necessary ceremonies of an introduction had passed,
+and when added to those who still accompanied us, amounted to fifty-three.
+On this occasion I was riding somewhat in front of the party, when I came
+upon them. They were very different in appearance from those whom we had
+surprised at the river; and from the manner in which I was received, I was
+led to infer that they had been informed of our arrival, and had
+purposely assembled to meet us. I was saluted by an old man, who had
+stationed himself in front of his tribe, and who was their chief. Behind
+him the young men stood in a line, and behind them the warriors were
+seated on the ground.
+
+CONDUCT OF THE NATIVES.
+
+I had a young native with me who had attached himself to our party, and
+who, from his extreme good nature and superior intelligence, was
+considered by us as a first-rate kind of fellow. He explained who and what
+we were, and I was glad to observe that the old chief seemed perfectly
+reconciled to my presence, although he cast many an anxious glance at the
+long train of animals that were approaching. The warriors, I remarked,
+never lifted their eyes from the ground. They were hideously painted with
+red and yellow ochre, and had their weapons at their sides, while their
+countenances were fixed, sullen, and determined. In order to overcome this
+mood, I rode up to them, and, taking a spear from the nearest, gave him
+my gun to examine; a mark of confidence that was not lost upon them, for
+they immediately relaxed from their gravity, and as soon as my party
+arrived, rose up and followed us. That which appeared most to excite their
+surprise, was the motion of the wheels of the boat carriage. The young
+native whom I have noticed above, acted as interpreter, and, by his
+facetious manner, contrived to keep the whole of us in a fit of laughter
+as we moved along. He had been named Botheri by some stockman.
+
+
+In consequence of our wish to cross the river, we kept near it, and
+experienced considerable delay from the frequent marshes that opposed
+themselves to our progress. In one of these we saw a number of ibises and
+spoonbills; and the natives succeeded in killing two or three snakes. Our
+view to the westward was extremely limited; but to the eastward the
+country appeared in some places to expand into plains.
+
+CROSSING OF THE RIVER.
+
+After travelling some miles down the banks of the river, finding that they
+still retained their steep character, we turned back to a place which Mr.
+Hume had observed, and at which he thought we might, with some little
+trouble, cross to the opposite side. And, however objectionable the
+attempt was, we found ourselves obliged to make it. We descended,
+therefore, into the channel of the river, and unloaded the animals and
+boat-carriage. In order to facilitate the ascent of the right bank, some
+of the men were directed to cut steps up it. I was amused to see the
+natives voluntarily assist them; and was surprised when they took up bags
+of flour weighing 100 pounds each, and carried them across the river. We
+were not long in getting the whole of the stores over. The boat was then
+hoisted on the shoulders of the strongest, and deposited on the top of the
+opposite bank; and ropes being afterwards attached to the carriage, it was
+soon drawn up to a place of safety. The natives worked as hard as our own
+people, and that, too, with a cheerfulness for which I was altogether
+unprepared, and which is certainly foreign to their natural habits. We
+pitched our tents as soon as we had effected the passage of the river;
+after which, the men went to bathe, and blacks and whites were mingled
+promiscuously in the stream. I did not observe that the former differed in
+any respect from the natives who frequent the located districts. They were
+generally clean limbed and stout, and some of the young men had pleasing
+intelligent countenances. They lacerate their bodies, inflicting deep
+wounds to raise the flesh, and extract the front teeth like the Bathurst
+tribes; and their weapons are precisely the same. They are certainly a
+merry people, and sit up laughing and talking more than half the night.
+
+BAROMETER BROKEN.
+
+During the removal of the stores my barometer was unfortunately broken,
+and I had often, in the subsequent stages of the journey, occasion to
+regret the accident. I apprehend that the corks in the instrument, placed
+to steady the tube, are too distant from each other in most cases; and
+indeed I fear that barometers as at present constructed, will seldom be
+carried with safety in overland expeditions.
+
+DESERTED BY THE NATIVES.
+
+Nine only of the natives accompanied us on the morning succeeding the day
+in which we crossed the river. Botheri was, however, at the head of them;
+and, as we journeyed along, he informed me that he had been promised a
+wife on his return from acting as our guide, by the chief of the last
+tribe. The excessive heat of the weather obliged us to shorten our
+journey, and we encamped about noon in some scrub after having traversed a
+level country for about eleven miles.
+
+Several considerable plains were noticed to our right, stretching east and
+west, which were generally rich in point of soil; but we passed through
+much brushy land during the day. It was lamentable to see the state of
+vegetation upon the plains from want of moisture. Although the country
+had assumed a level character, and was more open than on the higher
+branches of the Macquarie, the small freestone elevations, backing the
+alluvial tracts near the river, still continued upon our right, though
+much diminished in height, and at a great distance from the banks. They
+seemed to be covered with cypresses and beef-wood, but dwarf-box and the
+acacia pendula prevailed along the plains; while flooded-gum alone
+occupied the lands in the immediate neighbourhood of the stream, which was
+evidently fast diminishing, both in volume and rapidity; its bed, however,
+still continuing to be a mixture of sand and clay.
+
+The cattle found such poor feed around the camp that they strayed away in
+search of better during the night. On such an occasion Botheri and his
+fraternity would have been of real service; but he had decamped at an
+early hour, and had carried off an axe, a tomahawk, and some bacon,
+although I had made him several presents. I was not at all surprised at
+this piece of roguery, since cunning is the natural attribute of a savage;
+but I was provoked at their running away at a moment when I so much
+required their assistance.
+
+Left to ourselves, I found Mr. Hume of the most essential service in
+tracking the animals, and to his perseverance we were indebted for their
+speedy recovery, They had managed to find tolerable feed near a serpentine
+sheet of water, which Mr. Hume thought it would be advisable to examine.
+We directed our course to it as soon as the cattle were loaded, moving
+through bush, and found it to be a very considerable creek that receives a
+part of the superfluous waters of the Macquarie, and distributes them,
+most probably, over the level country to the north. It was much wider than
+the river, being from fifty to sixty yards across, and is resorted to by
+the natives, who procure muscles from its bed in great abundance. We were
+obliged to traverse its eastern bank to its junction with the river, at
+which it fortunately happened to be dry. We had, however, to cut roads
+down both its banks before we could cross it; and, consequently, made but
+a short day's journey. The soil passed over was inferior to the generality
+of soil near the river, but we encamped on a tongue of land on which both
+the flooded-gum and the grass were of luxuriant height. We found a
+quantity of a substance like pipe-clay in the bed of the river, similar to
+that mentioned by Mr. Oxley.
+
+GREAT HEAT.
+
+The heat, which had been excessive at Wellington Valley, increased upon us
+as we advanced into the interior. The thermometer was seldom under 114
+degrees at noon, and rose still higher at 2 p.m. We had no dews at night,
+and consequently the range of the instrument was trifling in the
+twenty-four hours. The country looked bare and scorched, and the plains
+over which we journeyed had large fissures traversing them, so that the
+earth may literally be said to have gasped for moisture. The country,
+which above the cataract had borne the character of open forest, excepting
+on the immediate banks of the river, where its undulations and openness
+gave it a park-like appearance, or where the barren stony ridges prevailed
+below that point, generally exhibited alternately plain and brush, the
+soil on both of which was good. On the former, crested pigeons were
+numerous, several of which were shot. We had likewise procured some of the
+rose-coloured and grey parrots, mentioned by Mr. Oxley, and a small
+paroquet of beautiful plumage; but there was less of variety in the
+feathered race than I expected to find, and most of the other birds we had
+seen were recognised by me as similar to specimens I had procured from
+Melville Island, and were, therefore, most probably birds of passage.
+
+ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AND THE RIVER.
+
+As we neared Mount Harris, the Macquarie became more sluggish in its flow,
+and fell off so much as scarcely to deserve the name of a river. In
+breadth, it averaged from thirty-five to forty-five yards, and in the
+height of its banks, from fifteen to eighteen. Mr. Hume had succeeded in
+taking some fish at one of the stock stations; but if I except those
+speared by the natives, we had since been altogether unsuccessful with the
+hook, a circumstance which I attribute to the lowness of the river itself.
+
+About thirty miles from the cataract the country declines to the north as
+a medium point, and again changes somewhat in its general appearance. To
+the S. and S.W. it appeared level and wooded, while to the N. the plains
+became more frequent, but smaller, and travelling over them was extremely
+dangerous, in consequence of the large fissures by which they were
+traversed. The only trees to be observed were dwarf-box and the acacia
+pendula, both of stunted growth, although flooded-gum still prevailed upon
+the river.
+
+On the 20th we travelled on a N.W. course, and in the early part of the
+day passed over tolerably good soil. It was succeeded by a barren scrub,
+through which we penetrated in the direction of Welcome Rock, a point we
+had seen from one of the Plains and had mistaken for Mount Harris.
+
+ARRIVAL AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+On a nearer approach, however, we observed our error, and corrected it by
+turning more to the left; and we ultimately encamped about a mile to the
+W.S.W. of the latter eminence. On issuing from the scrub we found
+ourselves among reeds and coarse water-grass; and, from the appearance of
+the country, we were led to conclude that we had arrived at a part of the
+interior more than ordinarily subject to overflow.
+
+As soon as the camp was fixed, Mr. Hume and I rode to Mount Harris, over
+ground subject to flood and covered for the most part by the polygonum,
+being too anxious to defer our examination of its neighbourhood even for a
+few hours.
+
+VESTIGES OF MR. OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT.
+
+Nearly ten years had elapsed since Mr. Oxley pitched his tents under the
+smallest of the two hills into which Mount Harris is broken. There was no
+difficulty in hitting upon his position. The trenches that had been cut
+round the tents were still perfect, and the marks of the fire-places
+distinguishable; while the trees in the neighbourhood had been felled,
+and round about them the staves of some casks and a few tent-pegs were
+scattered. Mr. Oxley had selected a place at some distance from the river,
+in consequence of its then swollen state. I looked upon it from the same
+ground, and could not discern the waters in its channel; so much had they
+fallen below their ordinary level. He saw the river when it was
+overflowing its banks; on the present occasion it had scarcely sufficient
+water to support a current. On the summit of the greater eminence, which
+we ascended, there remained the half-burnt planks of a boat, some clenched
+and rusty nails, and an old trunk; but my search for the bottle Mr. Oxley
+had left was unsuccessful.
+
+A reflection naturally arose to my mind on examining these decaying
+vestiges of a former expedition, whether I should be more fortunate than
+the leader of it, and how far I should be enabled to penetrate beyond the
+point which had conquered his perseverance. Only a week before I left
+Sydney I had followed Mr. Oxley to the tomb. A man of uncommon quickness,
+and of great ability, the task of following up his discoveries was not
+less enviable than arduous; but, arrived at that point at which his
+journey may be said to have terminated and mine only to commence, I knew
+not how soon I should be obliged, like him, to retreat from the marshes
+and exhalations of so depressed a country. My eye instinctively turned to
+the North-West, and the view extended over an apparently endless forest.
+I could trace the river line of trees by their superior height; but saw no
+appearance of reeds, save the few that grew on the banks of the stream.
+
+Mount Foster, somewhat higher than Mount Harris, on the opposite side of
+the river, alone broke the line of the horizon to the North N.W. at a
+distance of five miles. From that point all round the compass, the low
+lands spread, like a dark sea, before me; except where a large plain
+stretching from E. to W., and lying to the S.E. broke their monotony;
+and if there was nothing discouraging, there certainly was nothing
+cheering, in the prospect.
+
+ILLNESS OF TWO OF THE MEN.
+
+On our return to the camp, I was vexed to find two of the men, Henwood and
+Williams, with increased inflammation of the eyes, of which they had
+previously been complaining, and I thought it advisable to bleed the
+latter.
+
+In consequence of the indisposition of these men, we remained stationary
+on the 21st, which enabled me to pay a second visit to Mount Harris. On
+ascending the smaller hill, I was surprised to find similar vestiges on
+its summit to those I had noticed on the larger one; in addition to which,
+the rollers still continued on the side of the hill, which had been used
+to get the boat up it. [Mr. Oxley had two boats; one of which he dragged
+to the top of each of these hills, and left them turned bottom upwards,
+buryinq a bottle under the head of the larger boat, which was conveyed to
+the more distant hill.]
+
+Mount Harris is of basaltic formation, but I could not observe any
+columnar regularity in it, although large blocks are exposed above the
+ground. The rock is extremely hard and sonorous.
+
+MOUNT FOSTER AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
+
+We moved leisurely towards Mount Foster, on the 22nd, and arrived opposite
+to it a little before sunset. The country between the two is mostly open,
+or covered only with the acacia pendula and dwarf-box. The soil, although
+an alluvial deposit, is not of the best; nor was vegetation either fresh
+or close upon it. As soon as the party stopped, I crossed the river, and
+lost no time in ascending the hill, being anxious to ascertain if any
+fresh object was visible from its summit, I thought that from an eminence
+so much above the level of the surrounding objects, I might obtain a view
+of the marshes, or of water; but I was wholly disappointed. The view was
+certainly extensive, but it was otherwise unsatisfactory. Again to the
+N.W. the lowlands spread in darkness before me; there were some
+considerable plains beyond the near wood; but the country at the foot of
+the hill appeared open and promising. Although the river line was lost in
+the distance, it was as truly pointed out by the fires of the natives,
+which rose in upright columns into the sky, as if it had been marked by
+the trees upon its banks.
+
+To the eastward, Arbuthnot's range rose high above the line of the
+horizon, bearing nearly due East, distant seventy miles. The following
+sketch of its outlines will convey a better idea of its appearance from
+Mount Foster than any written description.
+
+[small sketch here--not shown in etext]
+
+I stayed on the mount until after sunset, but I could not make out any
+space that at all resembled the formidable barrier I knew we were so
+rapidly approaching. I saw nothing to check our advance, and I therefore
+returned to the camp, to advise with Mr. Hume upon the subject. Not having
+been with me on Mount Foster, he took the opportunity to ascend it on the
+following morning; and on his return concurred with me in opinion, that
+there was no apparent obstacle to our moving onwards. As the men were
+considerably better, I had the less hesitation in closing with the
+marshes. We left our position, intending to travel slowly, and to halt
+early.
+
+The first part of our journey was over rich flats, timbered sufficiently
+to afford a shade, on which the grass was luxuriant; but we were obliged
+to seek more open ground, in consequence of the frequent stumbling of the
+cattle.
+
+We issued, at length, upon a plain, the view across which was as dreary as
+can be imagined; in many places without a tree, save a few old stumps
+left by the natives when they fired the timber, some of which were still
+smoking in different parts of it. Observing some lofty trees at the
+extremity of the plain, we moved towards them, under an impression that
+they indicated the river line. But on this exposed spot the sun's rays
+fell with intense power upon us, and the dust was so minute and
+penetrating, that I soon regretted having left the shady banks of the
+river.
+
+About 2.p.m. we neared the trees for which we had been making, over ground
+evidently formed by alluvial deposition, and were astonished to find that
+reeds alone were growing under the trees as far as the eye could
+penetrate. It appeared that we were still some distance from the river,
+and it was very doubtful how far we might be from water, for which the
+men were anxiously calling. I therefore halted, and sent Fraser into the
+reeds towards some dead trees, on which a number of spoonbills were
+sitting. He found that there was a small lake in the centre of the reeds,
+the resort of numerous wild fowl; but although the men were enabled to
+quench their thirst, we found it impossible to water the animals. We were
+obliged, therefore, to continue our course along the edge of the reeds;
+which in a short time appeared in large masses in front of us, stretching
+into a vast plain upon our right; and it became evident that the whole
+neighbourhood was subject to extensive inundation.
+
+ENCAMP AMIDST REEDS.
+
+I was fearful that the reeds would have checked us; but there was a
+passage between the patches, through which we managed to force our way
+into a deep bight, and fortunately gained the river at the bottom of it
+much sooner than we expected. We were obliged to clear away a space for
+the tents; and thus, although there had been no such appearance from Mount
+Foster, we found ourselves in less than seven hours after leaving it,
+encamped pretty far in that marsh for which we had so anxiously looked
+from its summit, and now trusting to circumstances for safety, upon
+ground on which, in any ordinary state of the river, it would have been
+dangerous to have ventured. Indeed, as it was, our situation was
+sufficiently critical, and would not admit of hesitation on my part.
+
+NATURE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+After the cattle had been turned out, Mr. Hume and I again mounted our
+horses, and proceeded to the westward, with a view to examine the nature
+of the country before us, and to ascertain if it was still practicable to
+move along the river side. For, although it was evident that we had
+arrived at what might strictly be called the marshes of the Macquarie, I
+still thought we might be at some distance from the place where Mr. Oxley
+terminated his journey.
+
+There was no indication in the river to encourage an idea that it would
+speedily terminate; nor, although we were on ground subject to extensive
+inundation, could we be said to have reached the heart of the marshes, as
+the reeds still continued in detached bodies only. We forced a path
+through various portions of them, and passed over ground wholly subject to
+flood, to a distance of about six miles. We then crossed a small rise of
+ground, sufficiently high to have afforded a retreat, had necessity
+obliged us to seek for one; and we shortly afterwards descended on the
+river, unaltered in its appearance, and rather increased than diminished
+in size. A vast plain extended to the N.W., the extremity of which we
+could not discern; though a thick forest formed its northern boundary.
+
+It was evident that this plain had been frequently under water, but it was
+difficult to judge from the marks on the trees to what height the floods
+had risen. The soil was an alluvial deposit, superficially sandy; and many
+shells were scattered over its surface. To the south, the country appeared
+close and low; nor do I think we could have approached the river from that
+side, by reason of the huge belts of reeds that appeared to extend as far
+as the the eye could reach.
+
+MEN ATTACKED WITH OPHTHALMIA.
+
+The approach of night obliged us to return to the camp. On our arrival,
+we found that the state of Henwood and Williams would prevent our stirring
+for a day or two. Not only had they a return of inflammation, but several
+other of the men complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, which
+were dreadfully blood-shot and weak. I was in some measure prepared for a
+relapse in Henwood, as the exposure which he necessarily underwent on the
+plain was sufficient to produce that effect; but I now became apprehensive
+that the affection would run through the party.
+
+Considering our situation in its different bearings, it struck me that the
+men who were to return to Wellington Valley with an account our our
+proceedings for the Governor's information, had been brought as far as
+prudence warranted. There was no fear of their going astray, as long as
+they had the river to guide them; but in the open country which we were to
+all appearance approaching, or amidst fields of reeds, they might wander
+from the track, and irrecoverably lose themselves. I determined,
+therefore, not to risk their safety, but to prepare my dispatches for
+Sydney, and I hoped most anxiously, that ere they were closed, all
+symptoms of disease would have terminated.
+
+In the course of the day, however, Spencer, who was to return with Riley
+to Wellington Valley, became seriously indisposed, and I feared that he
+was attacked with dysentery. Indeed, I should have attributed his illness
+to our situation, but I did not notice any unusual moisture in the
+atmosphere, nor did any fogs rise from the river. I therefore the rather
+attributed it to exposure and change of diet, and treated him accordingly.
+To my satisfaction, when I visited the men late in the evening, I found a
+general improvement in the whole of them. Spencer was considerably
+relieved, and those of the party who had inflammation of the eyes no
+longer felt that painful irritation of which they had before complained.
+I determined, therefore, unless untoward circumstances should prevent it,
+to send Riley and his companion homewards, and to move the party without
+loss of time.
+
+We had not seen any natives for many days, but a few passed the camp on
+the opposite side of the river on the evening of the 25th. They would not,
+however, come to us; but fled into the interior in great apparent alarm.
+
+DEPARTURE OF TWO MEN FOR WELLINGTON.
+
+On the morning of the 26th, the men were sufficiently recovered to pursue
+their journey. Riley and Spencer left us at an early hour; and about
+7 a.m. we pursued a N.N.W. course along the great plain I have noticed,
+starting numberless quails, and many wild turkeys, by the way. Leaving
+that part of the river on which Mr. Hume and I had touched considerably to
+the left, we made for the point of a wood, projecting from the river line
+of trees into the plain. The ground under us was an alluvial deposit, and
+bore all the marks of frequent inundation.
+
+The soil was yielding, blistered, and uneven; and the claws of cray-fish,
+together with numerous small shells, were every where collected in the
+hollows made by the subsiding of the waters, between broad belts of reeds
+and scrubs of polygonum.
+
+CONSULTATION.
+
+On gaining the point of the wood, we found an absolute check put to our
+further progress. We had been moving directly on the great body of the
+marsh, and from the wood it spread in boundless extent before us. It was
+evidently lower than the ground on which we stood; we had therefore, a
+complete view over the whole expanse; and there was a dreariness and
+desolation pervading the scene that strengthened as we gazed upon it.
+Under existing circumstances, it only remained for us either to skirt
+the reeds to the northward, or to turn in again upon the river; and as I
+considered it important to ascertain the direction of the Macquarie at so
+critical and interesting a point, I thought it better to adopt the latter
+measure. We, accordingly, made for the river, and pitched our tents, as at
+the last station, in the midst of reeds.
+
+There were two points at this time, upon which I was extremely anxious.
+The first was as to the course of the river; the second, as to the extent
+of the marshes by which we had been checked, and the practicability of the
+country to the northward.
+
+In advising with Mr. Hume, I proposed launching the boat, as the surest
+means of ascertaining the former, and he, on his part, most readily
+volunteered to examine the marshes, in any direction I should point out.
+It was therefore, arranged, that I should take two men, and a week's
+provision with me in the boat down the river; and that he should proceed
+with a like number of men on an excursion to the northward.
+
+After having given directions as to the regulations of camp during our
+absence, we separated, on the morning of the 26th for the first time, in
+furtherance of the objects each had in view.
+
+BOAT EXCURSION.
+
+In pulling down the river, I found that its channel was at first extremely
+tortuous and irregular, but that it held a general N.W. course, and bore
+much the same appearance as it had done since our descent from Mount
+Foster.
+
+We had a laborious task in lifting the boat over the trunks of trees that
+had fallen into the channel of the river or that had been left by the
+floods, and at length we stove her in upon a sunken log. The injury she
+received was too serious not to require immediate repair; and we,
+therefore, patched her up with a tin plate. This accident occasioned some
+delay, and the morning was consumed without our having made any
+considerable progress. At length, however, we got into a more open
+channel.
+
+The river suddenly increased in breadth to thirty-five or forty-five
+yards, with a depth of from twelve to twenty feet of water. Its banks
+shelved perpendicularly down, and were almost on a level with the surface
+of the stream; and the flood mark was not more than two feet high on the
+reeds by which they were lined. We had hitherto passed under the shade of
+the flooded gum, which still continued on the immediate banks of the
+river; but, the farther we advanced, the more did we find these trees in a
+state of decay, until at length they ceased, or were only rarely met with.
+
+TERMINATION OF THE RIVER.
+
+About 2 p.m. I brought up under a solitary tree, in consequence of heavy
+rain: this was upon the left bank. In the afternoon, however, we again
+pushed forward, and soon lost sight of every other object amidst reeds of
+great height. The channel of the river continued as broad and as deep as
+ever, but the flood mark did not show more than a foot above the banks,
+which were now almost on a level with the water; and the current was so
+sluggish as to be scarcely perceptible. These general appearances
+continued for about three miles, when our course was suddenly, and most
+unexpectedly, checked. The channel, which had promised so well, without
+any change in its breadth or depth, ceased altogether; and whilst we were
+yet lost in astonishment at so abrupt a termination of it, the boat
+grounded. It only remained for us to examine the banks, which we did with
+particular attention. Two creeks were then discovered, so small as
+scarcely to deserve the name, and which would, under ordinary
+circumstances, have been overlooked. The one branched off to the
+north--the other to the west. We were obliged to get out of the boat to
+push up the former, the leeches sticking in numbers to our legs. The creek
+continued for about thirty yards, when it was terminated; and, in order
+fully to satisfy myself of the fact, I walked round the head of it by
+pushing through the reeds. Night coming on, we returned to the tree at
+which we had stopped during the rain, and slept under it. The men cut away
+the reeds, or we should not have had room to move. At 2 a.m. it commenced
+raining, with a heavy storm of thunder and lightning; the boat was
+consequently hauled ashore, and turned over to afford us a temporary
+shelter. The lightning was extremely vivid, and frequently played upon
+the ground, near the firelocks, for more than a quarter of a minute at a
+time.
+
+It is singular, that Mr. Oxley should, under similar circumstances, have
+experienced an equally stormy night, and most probably within a few yards
+of the place on which I had posted myself. Notwithstanding that the
+elements were raging around me, as if to warn me of the danger of my
+situation, my mind turned solely on the singular failure of the river. I
+could not but encourage hopes that this second channel that remained to
+be explored would lead us into an open space again; and as soon as the
+morning dawned we pursued our way to it. In passing some dead trees upon
+the right bank, I stopped to ascend one, that, from an elevation, I might
+survey the marsh, but I found it impossible to trace the river through it.
+The country to the westward was covered with reeds, apparently to the
+distance of seven miles; to the N.W. to a still greater distance; and to
+the north they bounded the horizon.
+
+The whole expanse was level and unbroken, but here and there the reeds
+were higher and darker than at other places, as if they grew near constant
+moisture; but I could see no appearance of water in any body, or of high
+lands beyond the distant forest.
+
+As soon as we arrived at the end of the main channel, we again got out of
+the boat, and in pushing up the smaller one, soon found ourselves under a
+dark arch of reeds. It did not, however, continue more than twenty yards
+when it ceased, and I walked round the head of it as I had done round that
+of the other. We then examined the space between the creeks, where the
+bank receives the force of the current, which I did not doubt had formed
+them by the separation of its eddies. Observing water among the reeds, I
+pushed through them with infinite labour to a considerable distance. The
+soil proved to be a stiff clay; the reeds were closely embodied, and from
+ten to twelve feet high; the waters were in some places ankle deep, and in
+others scarcely covered the surface. They were flowing in different
+points, with greater speed than those of the river, which at once
+convinced me that they were not permanent, but must have lodged in the
+night during which so much rain had fallen. They ultimately appeared to
+flow to the northward, but I found it impossible to follow them, and it
+was not without difficulty that, after having wandered about at every
+point of the compass, I again reached the boat.
+
+CAUSES OF THE FAILURE OF THE RIVER.
+
+The care with which I had noted every change that took place in the
+Macquarie, from Wellington Valley downwards, enabled me, in some measure,
+to account for its present features. I was led to conclude that the waters
+of the river being so small in body, excepting in times of flood, and
+flowing for so many miles through a level country without receiving any
+tributary to support their first impulse, became too sluggish, long ere
+they reached the marshes, to cleave through so formidable a barrier; and
+consequently spread over the surrounding country--whether again to take
+up the character of a river, we had still to determine. Unless, however,
+a decline of country should favour its assuming its original shape, it was
+evident that the Macquarie would not be found to exist beyond this marsh,
+of the nature and extent of which we were still ignorant. The loss of my
+barometer was at this time severely felt by me, since I could only guess
+at our probable height above the ocean; and I found that my only course
+was to endeavour to force my way to the northward, to ascertain, if I
+could, from the bottom of the marshes; then penetrate in a westerly
+direction beyond them, in order to commence my survey of the S.W.
+interior. I was aware of Mr. Hume's perseverance, and determined,
+therefore, to wait the result of his report ere I again moved the camp, to
+which we returned late in the afternoon of the second day of our
+departure. We found it unsufferably hot and suffocating in the reeds, and
+were tormented by myriads of mosquitoes, but the waters were perfectly
+sweet to the taste, nor did the slightest smell, as of stagnation, proceed
+from them. I may add that the birds, whose sanctuary we had invaded, as
+the bittern and various tribes of the galinule, together with the frogs,
+made incessant noises around us, There were, however, but few water-fowl
+on the river; which was an additional proof to me that we were not near
+any very extensive lake.
+
+MR. HUME'S REPORT.
+
+Mr. Hume had returned before me to the camp, and had succeeded in finding
+a serpentine sheet of water, about twelve miles to the northward; which he
+did not doubt to be the channel of the river. He had pushed on after this
+success, in the hope of gaining a further knowledge of the country; but
+another still more extensive marsh checked him, and obliged him to retrace
+his steps. He was no less surprised at the account I gave of the
+termination of the river, than I was at its so speedily re-forming, and it
+was determined to lose no time in the further examination of so singular a
+region.
+
+FALSE CHANNEL; PERPLEXITIES.
+
+On the morning of the 28th therefore we broke up the camp, and proceeded
+to the northward, under Mr. Hume's guidance, moving over ground wholly
+subject to flood, and extensively covered with reeds; the great body of
+the marsh lying upon our left. After passing the angle of a wood, upon our
+right, from which Mount Foster was distant about fourteen miles, we got
+upon a small plain, on which there was a new species of tortuous box. This
+plain was clear of reeds, and the soil upon it was very rich. Crossing in
+a westerly direction we arrived at the channel found by Mr. Hume, who must
+naturally have concluded that it was a continuation of the river. The boat
+was immediately prepared, and I went up it in order to ascertain the
+nature of its formation. For two miles it preserved a pretty general width
+of from twenty to thirty yards; but at that distance began to narrow, and
+at length it became quite shallow and covered with weeds. We were
+ultimately obliged to abandon the boat, and to walk along a native path.
+The country to the westward was more open than I had expected. About a
+quarter of a mile from where we had left the boat, the channel separated
+into two branches; to which I perceived it owed its formation, coming, as
+they evidently did, direct from the heart of the marsh. The wood through
+which I had entered it on the first occasion bore south of me, to which
+one of the branches inclined; as the other did to the S.W. An almost
+imperceptible rise of ground was before me, which, by giving an impetus to
+the waters of the marsh, accounted to me for the formation of the main
+channel. It was too late, on my return to the camp, to prosecute any
+further examination of it downwards; but in the morning, Mr. Hume
+accompanied me in the boat, to ascertain to what point it led; and we
+found that at about a mile it began to diminish in breadth, until at
+length it was completely lost in a second expanse of reeds. We passed a
+singular scaffolding erected by the natives, on the side of the channel,
+to take fish; and also found a weir at the termination of it for the like
+purpose so that it was evident the natives occasionally ventured into
+the marshes.
+
+There was a small wood to our left which Mr. Hume endeavoured to gain, but
+he failed in the attempt. He did, however, reach a tree that was
+sufficiently high to give him a full view of the marsh, which appeared to
+extend in every direction, but more particularly to the north, for many
+miles. We were, however, at fault, and I really felt at a loss what step
+to take. I should have been led to believe from the extreme flatness of
+the country, that the Macquarie would never assume its natural shape, but
+from the direction of the marshes I could not but indulge a hope that it
+would meet the Castlereagh, and that their united waters might form a
+stream of some importance. Under this impression I determined on again
+sending Mr. Hume to the N.E. in order to ascertain the nature of the
+country in that direction.
+
+EXCURSION TO THE NORTH-WEST.
+
+The weather was excessively hot, and as my men were but slowly recovering,
+I was anxious while those who were in health continued active, to give the
+others a few days of rest. I proposed, therefore, to cross the river, and
+to make an excursion into the interior, during the probable time of
+Mr. Hume's absence; since if, as I imagined, the Macquarie had taken a
+permanent northerly course, I should not have an opportunity of examining
+the distant western country. Mr. Hume's experience rendered it unnecessary
+for me to give him other than general directions.
+
+A PLAIN ON FIRE.
+
+On the last day of the year we left the camp, each accompanied by two men.
+I had the evening previously ordered the horses I intended taking with me
+across the channel, and at an early hour of the morning I followed them.
+Getting on a plain, immediately after I had disengaged myself from the
+reeds on the opposite side of the river, which was full of holes and
+exceedingly treacherous for the animals, I pushed on for a part of the
+wood Mr. Hume had endeavoured to gain from the boat, with the intention of
+keeping near the marsh. On entering it, I found myself in a thick brush of
+eucalypti, casuarinae and minor trees; the soil under them being mixed
+with sand. I kept a N.N.W. course through it, and at the distance of
+three miles from its commencement, ascended a tree, to ascertain if I was
+near the marshes; when I found that I was fast receding from them. I
+concluded, therefore, that my conjecture as to their direction was right,
+and altered my course to N.W., a direction in which I had observed a dense
+smoke arising, which I supposed had been made by some natives near water.
+At the termination of the brush I crossed a barren sandy plain, and from
+it saw the smoke ascending at a few miles' distance from me. Passing
+through a wood, at the extremity of the plain, I found myself at the
+outskirts of an open space of great extent, almost wholly enveloped in
+flames. The fire was running with incredible rapidity through the rhagodia
+shrubs with which it was covered. Passing quickly over it, I continued my
+journey to the N.W. over barren plains of red sandy loam of even surface,
+and bushes of cypresses skirted by acacia pendula. It was not until after
+sunset that we struck upon a creek, in which the water was excellent; and
+we halted on its banks for the night, calculating our distance at
+twenty-nine miles from the camp. The creek was of considerable size,
+leading northerly. Several huts were observed by us, and from the heaps of
+muscle-shells that were scattered about, there could be no doubt of its
+being much frequented by the natives. The grass being fairly burnt up, our
+animals found but little to eat, but they had a tolerable journey. and did
+not attempt to wander in search of better food. I shot a snipe near the
+creek, much resembling the painted snipe of India; but I had not the means
+with me of preserving it.
+
+A TRIBE OF NATIVES.
+
+Continuing our journey on the following morning, we at first kept on the
+banks of the creek, and at about a quarter of a mile from where we had
+slept, came upon a numerous tribe of natives. A young girl sitting by the
+fire was the first to observe us as we were slowly approaching her. She
+was so excessively alarmed, that she had not the power to run away; but
+threw herself on the ground and screamed violently. We now observed a
+number of huts, out of which the natives issued, little dreaming of the
+spectacle they were to behold. But the moment they saw us, they started
+back; their huts were in a moment in flames, and each with a fire-brand
+ran to and fro with hideous yells, thrusting them into every bush they
+passed. I walked my horse quietly towards an old man who stood more
+forward than the rest, as if he intended to devote himself for the
+preservation of his tribe. I had intended speaking to him, but on a nearer
+approach I remarked that he trembled so violently that it was impossible
+to expect that I could obtain any information from him, and as I had not
+time for explanations, I left him to form his own conjectures as to what
+we were, and continued to move towards a thick brush, into which they did
+not venture to follow us.
+
+CONTINUE OUR JOURNEY.
+
+After a ride of about eighteen miles, through a country of alternate plain
+and brush, we struck upon a second creek leading like the first to the
+northward. The water in it was very bitter and muddy, and it was much
+inferior in appearance to that at which we had slept. After stopping for
+half-an-hour upon its banks, to rest our animals, we again pushed forward.
+We had not as yet risen any perceptible height above the level of the
+marshes, but had left the country subject to overflow for a considerable
+space behind us. The brushes through which we had passed were too sandy to
+retain water long, but the plains were of such an even surface, that they
+could not but continue wet for a considerable period after any fall of
+rain. They were covered with salsolaceous plants, without a blade of
+grass; and their soil was generally a red sandy loam. There were
+occasional patches that appeared moist, in which the calystemma was
+abundant, and these patches must, I should imagine, form quagmires in the
+wet season.
+
+On leaving the last-mentioned creek, we found a gently rising country
+before us; and about three or four miles from it we crossed some stony
+ridges, covered with a new species of acacia so thickly as to prevent our
+obtaining any view from them. As the sun declined, we got into open forest
+ground; and travelled forwards in momentary expectation, from appearances,
+of coming in sight of water; but we were obliged to pull up at sunset on
+the outskirts of a larger plain without having our expectation realized.
+The day had been extremely warm, and our animals were as thirsty as
+ourselves. Hope never forsakes the human breast; and thence it was that,
+after we had secured the horses, we began to wander round our lonely
+bivouac. It was almost dark, when one of my men came to inform me that he
+had found a small puddle of water, to which be had been led by a pigeon.
+
+It was, indeed, small enough, probably the remains of a passing shower; it
+was, however, sufficient for our necessities, and I thanked Providence for
+its bounty to us. We were now about sixty miles from the Macquarie, in a
+N.W. by W. direction, and the country had proved so extremely
+discouraging, that I intimated to my men my intention of retracing my
+steps, should I not discover any change in it before noon on the morrow.
+A dense brush of acacia succeeded to the plain on which we had slept,
+which we entered, and shortly afterwards found ourselves in an open space,
+of oblong shape, at the extremity of which there was a shallow lake. The
+brush completely encircled it, and a few huts were upon its banks. About
+10 p.m. we got into an open forest track of better appearance than any
+over which we had recently travelled.
+
+ISOLATED HILL.
+
+There was a visible change in the country, and the soil, although red, was
+extremely rich and free from sand. A short time afterwards we rose to the
+summit of a round hill, from which we obtained an extensive view on most
+points of the compass. We had imperceptibly risen considerably above the
+general level of the interior.
+
+VIEW FROM THE SUMMIT.
+
+Beneath us, to the westward, I observed a broad and thinly wooded valley;
+and W. by S., distant apparently about twenty miles, an isolated mountain,
+whose sides seemed almost perpendicular, broke the otherwise even line of
+the horizon; but the country in every other direction looked as if it was
+darkly wooded. Anticipating that I should find a stream in the valley, I
+did not for a moment hesitate in striking down into it. Disappointed,
+however, in this expectation, I continued onwards to the mountain, which I
+reached just before the sun set. Indeed, he was barely visible when I
+gained its summit; but my eyes, from exposure to his glare, became so
+weak, my face was so blistered, and my lips cracked in so many places,
+that I was unable to look towards the west, and was actually obliged to
+sit down behind a rock until he had set.
+
+Perhaps no time is so favourable for a view along the horizon as the
+sunset hour; and here, at an elevation of from five to six hundred feet
+above the plain, the visible line of it could not have been less than from
+thirty-five to forty-five miles. The hill upon which I stood was broken
+into two points; the one was a bold rocky elevation; the other had its
+rear face also perpendicular, but gradually declined to the north, and at
+a distance of from four to five miles was lost in an extensive and open
+plain in that direction. In the S.E. quarter, two wooded hills were
+visible, which before had appeared to be nothing more than swells in the
+general level of the country. A small hill, similar to the above, bore
+N.E. by compass; and again, to the west, a more considerable mountain than
+that I had ascended, and evidently much higher, reflected the last beams
+of the sun as he sunk behind them. I looked, however, in vain for water.
+I could not trace either the windings of a stream, or the course of a
+mountain torrent; and, as we had passed a swamp about a mile from the
+hill, we descended to it for the night, during which we were grievously
+tormented by the mosquitoes.
+
+RESULTS OF THE EXCURSION.
+
+I had no inducement to proceed further into the interior. I had been
+sufficiently disappointed in the termination of this excursion, and the
+track before me was still less inviting. Nothing but a dense forest, and a
+level country, existed between me and the distant hill. I had learnt, by
+experience, that it was impossible to form any opinion of the probable
+features of so singular a region as that in which I was wandering, from
+previous appearances, or to expect the same result, as in other countries,
+from similar causes. In a geographical point of view, my journey had been
+more successful, and had enabled me to put to rest for ever a question of
+much previous doubt. Of whatever extent the marshes of the Macquarie might
+be, it was evident they were not connected with those of the Lachlan. I
+had gained knowledge of more than 100 miles of the western interior, and
+had ascertained that no sea, indeed that little water, existed on its
+surface; and that, although it is generally flat, it still has elevations
+of considerable magnitude upon it.
+
+Although I had passed over much barren ground, I had likewise noticed soil
+that was far from poor, and the vegetation upon which in ordinary seasons
+would, I am convinced, have borne a very different aspect.
+
+Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the haunt
+of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a chain of
+connection to a more fertile country; if such a country exist to the
+westward.
+
+The hill which thus became the extreme of my journey, is of sandstone
+formation, and is bold and precipitous. Its summit is level and lightly
+timbered. As a tribute of respect to the late Surveyor-General, I called
+it Oxley's Table Land, and I named the distant hills D'Urban's Group,
+after Sir Benjamin D'Urban, in compliance with a previous request of my
+friend Lieut. De la Condamine, that I would so name any prominent feature
+of the interior that I might happen to come upon.
+
+RETURN TO THE CAMP.
+
+In returning to the camp, I made a circuit to the N.E., and reached the
+Macquarie late on the evening of the 5th of January; having been absent
+six days, during which we could not have ridden less than 200 miles. Yet
+the horses were not so fatigued as it was natural to expect they would
+have been.
+
+My servant informed me that a party of natives had visited the camp on the
+3rd, but that they retired precipitately on seeing the animals. I
+regretted to find the men but little better than when I left them. Several
+still complained of a painful irritation of the eyes, and of great
+weakness of sight. Attributing their continued indisposition in some
+measure to our situation, I was anxious to have moved from it; but as Mr.
+Hume was still absent, I could not decide upon the measure. He made his
+appearance, however, on the 6th, having ridden the greater part of the day
+through rain, which commenced to fall in the morning. Soon after his
+arrival, Dawber, my overseer of animals, who had accompanied him, was
+taken suddenly ill. During the night he became much worse, with shivering
+and spasms, and on the following morning he was extremely weak and
+feverish. To add to my anxiety, Mr. Hume also complained of indisposition.
+His state of health made me the more anxious to quit a position which I
+fancied unwholesome, and in which, if there was no apparent, there was
+certainly some secret, exciting cause; and as Mr. Hume reported having
+crossed a chain of ponds about four miles to the eastward, and out of the
+immediate precincts of the marshes, I ordered the tents to be struck, and
+placing Dawber on my horse, we all moved quietly over to them.
+
+MR. HUME'S EXCURSION.
+
+The result of Mr. Hume's journey perplexed me exceedingly. He stated, that
+on setting out from the Macquarie his intention was to have proceeded to
+the N.E., to ascertain how far the reeds existed in that direction, and,
+if at all practicable, to reach the Castlereagh; but in case of failure,
+to regain the Macquarie by a westerly course. At first he travelled nearly
+four miles east, to clear the marshes, when he came on the chain of ponds
+to which we had removed.
+
+He travelled over good soil for two miles after crossing this chain of
+ponds, but afterwards got on a red sandy loam, and found it difficult to
+proceed, by reason of the thickness of the brush, and the swampy state of
+the ground in consequence of the late rain.
+
+The timber in the brushes was of various kinds, and he saw numerous
+kangaroos and emus. On issuing from this brush, he crossed a creek,
+leading northerly, the banks of which were from ten to twelve feet high.
+Whatever the body of water usually in it is, it now only afforded a few
+shallow puddles. Mr. Hume travelled through brushes until he came upon a
+third creek, similar to the one he had left behind him, at which he halted
+for the night. The water in it was bad, and the feed for the animals
+extremely poor. The brush lined the creek thickly, and consisted chiefly
+of acacia pendula and box. The country preserved an uniform level, nor did
+Mr. Hume, from the highest trees, observe any break on the horizon.
+
+On the 2nd of January, Mr. Hume kept more northerly, being unable to
+penetrate the brushes he encountered. At two miles he crossed a creek
+leading to the N.W., between which and the place at which he had slept, he
+passed a native burial ground, containing eight graves. The earth was
+piled up in a conical shape, but the trees were not carved over as he had
+seen them in most other places.
+
+The country became more open after he had passed the last mentioned creek,
+which he again struck upon at the distance of eight miles, and as it was
+then leading to the N.N.E. he followed it down for eighteen or twenty
+miles, and crossed it frequently during the day. The creek was dry in most
+places, and where he stopped for the night the water was bad, and the
+cattle feed indifferent.
+
+Mr. Hume saw many huts, but none of them had been recently occupied,
+although large quantities of muscle-shells were scattered about. He
+computed that he had travelled about thirty miles, in a N.N.W.
+direction, and the whole of the land he passed over was, generally
+speaking, bad, nor did it appear to be subject to overflow.
+
+On the 3rd, Mr. Hume proceeded down the creek on which he had slept, on a
+northern course, under an impression that it would have joined the
+Castlereagh, but it took a N.W. direction after he had ridden about four
+miles, and then turned again to the eastward of north. In consequence of
+this, he left it, and proceeded to the westward, being of opinion that the
+river just mentioned must have taken a more northerly course than Mr.
+Oxley supposed it to have done.
+
+A short time after Mr. Hume turned towards the Macquarie, the country
+assumed a more pleasing appearance. He soon cleared the brushes, and at
+two miles came upon a chain of ponds, again running northerly in times of
+flood. Shortly after crossing these, he found himself on an extensive
+plain, apparently subject to overflow. The timber on it was chiefly of
+the blue-gum kind, and the ground was covered with shells. He then thought
+he was approaching the Macquarie, and proceeded due west across the flat
+for about two miles. At the extremity of it there was a hollow, which he
+searched in vain for water. Ascending about thirty feet, he entered a
+thick brush of box and acacia pendula, which continued for fourteen miles,
+when it terminated abruptly, and extensive plains of good soil commenced,
+stretching from N. to S. as far as the eye could reach, on which there
+were many kangaroos. Continuing to journey over them, he reached a creek
+at 5 p.m. on which the wild fowl were numerous, running nearly north and
+south, and he rested on its banks for the night. The timber consisted both
+of blue and rough gum, and the soil was a light earth.
+
+Mr. Hume expected in the course of the day to have reached the Macquarie,
+but on arriving at the creek, he began to doubt whether it any longer
+existed, or whether it had not taken a more westerly direction. On the
+following morning, therefore, he crossed the creek, and travelled
+W.S.W., for about two miles over good plains; then through light brushes
+of swamp-oak, cypress, box, and acacia pendula, for about twelve miles, to
+another creek leading northerly. He shortly afterwards ascended a range of
+hills stretching W.N.W. to which he gave the name of New Year's Range.
+From these hills, he had an extensive view, although not upon the highest
+part, but the only break he could see in the horizon was caused by some
+hills bearing by compass W. by S. distant about twenty-five miles. There
+was, however, an appearance as of high land to the northward, although Mr.
+Hume thought it might have been an atmospheric deception. From the range
+he looked in vain for the Macquarie, or other waters, and, as his
+provisions were nearly consumed, he was obliged to give up all further
+pursuit, and to retrace his steps. He fell in with two parties of natives,
+which, taken collectively, amounted to thirty-five in number, but had no
+communication with them.
+
+It was evident, from the above account, that supposing a line to have been
+drawn from the camp northerly, Mr. Hume must have travelled considerably
+to the westward of it, and as I had run on a N.W. course from the marshes,
+it necessarily followed that our lines of route must have intersected each
+other, or that want of extension could alone have prevented them from
+having done so; but that, under any circumstances, they could not have
+been very far apart. This was too important a point to be left undecided,
+as upon it the question of the Macquarie's termination seemed to depend.
+
+Both Mr. Hume and myself were of opinion, that a medium course would be
+the most satisfactory for us to pursue, to decide this point; and it
+appeared that we could not do better than, by availing ourselves of the
+creek on which we were, and skirting the reeds, to take the first
+opportunity of dashing through them in a westerly direction.
+
+DOUBTS OF THE FURTHER EXTENSION OF THE RIVER.
+
+I entertained great doubts as to the longer existence of the river, and as
+I foresaw that, in the event of its having terminated we should strike at
+once into the heart of the interior, I became anxious for the arrival of
+supplies at Mount Harris; and although I could hardly expect that they had
+yet reached it, I determined to proceed thither. Mr. Hume was too unwell
+for me to think of imposing additional fatigue upon him; I left him,
+therefore, to conduct the party, by easy stages, to the northward, until
+such time as I should overtake them. Even in one day there was a visible
+improvement in the men, and Dawber's attack seemed to be rather the
+effects of cold than of any thing else. A death, however, under our
+circumstances, would have been so truly deplorable an event, that the
+least illness was sufficient to create alarm.
+
+I can hardly say that I was disappointed on my arrival at Mount Harris, to
+find its neighbourhood silent and deserted. I remained, however, under it
+for the greater part of the next day, and, prior to leaving it, placed a
+sheet of paper with written instructions against a tree, though almost
+without a hope that it would remain untouched.
+
+PERPLEXING SITUATION.
+
+A little after sun-set we reached the first small marsh, at which we
+slept; and on the following morning I crossed the plains of the Macquarie,
+and joined the party at about fifteen miles from the creek at which I had
+left it. I found it in a condition that was as unlooked for by Mr. Hume as
+it was unexpected by me, and really in a most perplexing situation.
+
+On the day I left him, Mr. Hume only advanced about two miles, in
+consequence of some derangement in the loads. Having crossed the creek,
+he, the next morning, proceeded down its right bank, until it entered the
+marshes and was lost. He then continued to move on the outskirts of the
+latter, and having performed a journey or about eight miles, was anxious
+to have stopped, but there was no water at hand. The men, however, were so
+fatigued, in consequence of previous illness, that he felt it necessary to
+halt after travelling about eleven miles.
+
+No water could be procured even here, notwithstanding that Mr. Hume, who
+was quite unfit for great exertion, underwent considerable bodily fatigue
+in his anxiety to find some. He was, therefore, obliged to move early on
+the following morning, but neither men nor animals were in a condition to
+travel; and he had scarcely made three miles' progress, when he stopped
+and endeavoured to obtain a supply or water by digging pits among the
+reeds. From these he had drawn sufficient for the wants of the people when
+I arrived. Some rain had fallen on the 6th and 7th of the month, or it is
+more than probable the expedient to which he resorted would have failed of
+success. Mr. Hume, I was sorry to observe, looked very unwell; but nothing
+could prevent him from further endeavours to extricate the party from its
+present embarrassment.
+
+JOURNEY CONTINUED.
+
+As soon as I had taken a little refreshment, therefore, I mounted a fresh
+horse; and he accompanied me across a small plain, immediately in front of
+the camp, which was subject to overflow and covered with polygonum, having
+a considerable extent of reeds to its right.
+
+From the plain we entered a wood of blue-gum, in which reeds, grass, and
+brush formed a thick coppice. We at length passed into an open space,
+surrounded on every side by weeds in dense bodies. The great marsh bore
+south of us, and was clear and open, but behind us the blue-gum trees
+formed a thick wood above the weeds.
+
+About two hundred yards from the outskirts of the marsh there was a line
+of saplings that had perished, and round about them a number of the tern
+tribe (sea swallow) were flying, one of which Mr. Hume had followed a
+considerable way into the reeds the evening before, in the hope that it
+would have led him to water. The circumstance of their being in such
+numbers led us to penetrate towards them, when we found a serpentine sheet
+of water of some length, over which they were playing. We had scarcely
+time to examine it before night closed in upon us, and it was after nine
+when we returned to the tents.
+
+From the general appearance of the country to the northward, and from the
+circumstance of our having got to the bottom of the great marsh, which but
+a few days before had threatened to be so formidable, I thought it
+probable that the reeds would not again prove so extensive as they had
+been, and I determined, if I could do so, to push through them in a
+westerly direction from our position.
+
+SECOND GREAT MARSH.
+
+The pits yielded us so abundant a supply during the night, that in the
+morning we found it unnecessary to take the animals to water at the
+channel we had succeeded in finding the evening before; but pursuing a
+westerly course we passed it, and struck deep into the reeds. At mid-day
+we were hemmed in by them on every side, and had crossed over numerous
+channels, by means of which the waters of the marshes are equally and
+generally distributed over the space subject to their influence. Coming to
+a second sheet of water, narrower, but longer, as well as we could judge,
+than the first, we stopped to dine at it; and, while the men were resting
+themselves, Mr. Hume rode with me in a westerly direction, to ascertain
+what obstacles we still had to contend with. Forcing our way through
+bodies of reeds, we at length got on a plain, stretching from S.E. to
+N.W., bounded on the right by a wood of blue-gum, under which the reeds
+still extended, and on the left by a wood in which they did not appear to
+exist. Certain that there was no serious obstacle in our way, we returned
+to the men; and as soon as they had finished their meal, led them over the
+plain in a N.W. by W. direction. It was covered with shells, and was full
+of holes from the effects of flood.
+
+CONCLUSIONS IN REGARD TO THE MACQUARIE.
+
+As we were journeying over it, I requested Mr. Hume to ride into the wood
+upon our left, to ascertain if it concealed any channel. On his return he
+informed me that he descended from the plain into a hollow, the bottom of
+which was covered with small shells and bulrushes. He observed a new
+species of eucalypti, on the trunks of which the water-mark was three feet
+high. After crossing this hollow, which was about a quarter of a mile in
+breadth, he gained an open forest of box, having good grass under it; and,
+judging from the appearance of the country that no other channel could
+exist beyond him, and that he had ascertained sufficient for the object I
+had in view, he turned back to the plain. We stopped for the night under a
+wood of box, where the grass, which had been burnt down, was then
+springing up most beautifully green, and was relished exceedingly by the
+animals.
+
+It was in consequence of our not having crossed any channel, while
+penetrating through the reeds, that could by any possible exaggeration
+have been laid down as the bed of the river, that I detached Mr. Hume; and
+the account he brought me at once confirmed my opinion in regard to the
+Macquarie, and I thenceforth gave up every hope of ever seeing it in its
+characteristic shape again.
+
+Independently however of all circumstantial evidence, it was clear that
+the river had not re-formed at a distance of twenty-five miles to the
+north of us, since Mr. Hume had gone to the westward of that point, at
+about the same distance on his late journey, without having observed the
+least appearance of reeds or of a river. He had, indeed, noticed a hollow,
+which occasionally contained water, but he saw nothing like the bed of a
+permanent stream. I became convinced, also, from observation of the
+country through which we had passed, that the sources of the Macquarie
+could not be of such magnitude as to give a constant flow to it as a
+river, and at the same time to supply with water the vast concavity into
+which it falls. In very heavy rains only could the marshes and adjacent
+lands be laid wholly under water, since the evaporation alone would be
+equal to the supply.
+
+The great plains stretching for so many miles to the westward of Mount
+Harris, even where they were clear of reeds, were covered with shells and
+the claws of cray-fish and their soil, although an alluvial deposit, was
+superficially sandy. They bore the appearance not only of frequent
+inundation, but of the floods having eventually subsided upon them. This
+was particularly observable at the bottom of the marshes. We did not find
+any accumulation of rubbish to indicate a rush of water to any one point;
+but numerous minor channels existed to distribute the floods equally and
+generally over every part of the area subject to them, and the marks of
+inundation and subsidence were everywhere the same. The plain we had last
+crossed, was, in like manner, covered with shells, so that we could not
+yet be said to be out of the influence of the marshes; besides which we
+had not crossed the hollow noticed by Mr. Hume, which it was clear we
+should do, sooner or later.
+
+SITUATION OF THE PARTY.
+
+To have remained in our position would have been impossible, as there was
+no water either for ourselves or the animals; to have descended into the
+reeds again, for the purpose of carrying on a minute survey, would, under
+existing circumstances, have been imprudent. Our provisions were running
+short, and if a knowledge of the distant interior was to be gained, we had
+no time to lose. It was determined, therefore, to defer our further
+examination of the marshes to the period of our return; and to pursue such
+a course as would soonest and most effectually enable us to determine the
+character of the western interior.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+
+Prosecution of our course into the interior--Mosquito Brush--Aspect and
+productions of the country--Hunting party of natives--Courageous conduct
+of one of them--Mosquitoes--A man missing--Group of hills called
+New-Year's Range--Journey down New-Year's Creek--Tormenting attack of the
+kangaroo fly--Dreariness and desolation of the country--Oxley's Table
+Land--D'Urban's Group--Continue our journey down New-Year's Creek--
+Extreme Disappointment on finding it salt--Fall in with a tribe of
+natives--Our course arrested by the want of fresh water--Extraordinary
+sound--Retreat towards the Macquarie.
+
+
+We left our position at the head of the plain early on the 13th of
+January, and, ere the sun dipped, had entered a very different country
+from that in which we had been labouring for the last three weeks. We had,
+as yet, passed over little other than an alluvial soil, but found that it
+changed to a red loam in the brushes immediately backing the camp. An open
+forest track succeeded this, over which the vegetation had an unusual
+freshness, indicating that the waters had not long subsided from its
+surface. We shortly afterwards crossed a hollow, similar to that Mr. Hume
+had described, in which bulrushes had taken the place of reeds.
+Flooded-gum trees, of large size, were also growing in it, but on either
+side box alone prevailed, under which the forest grass grew to a
+considerable height. We crossed the hollow two or three times, and as
+often remarked the line of separation between those trees. The last time
+we crossed it the country rose a few feet, and we journeyed for the
+remainder of the day, at one time over good plains, at another through
+brushes, until we found water and feed, at which we stopped for the night,
+after having travelling about thirteen miles on a W. by N. course. The
+mosquitoes were so extremely troublesome at this place that we called it
+Mosquito Brush. At this time my men were improving rapidly, and Mr. Hume
+complained less, and looked better. I hoped, therefore, that our progress
+would be rapid into the interior.
+
+CREEK LEADING NORTHERLY; PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+On the 14th we took up a westerly course, and in the first instance
+traversed a plain of great extent; the soil of which was for the most part
+a red sandy loam, but having patches of light earth upon it. The former
+was covered with plants of the chenopedia kind; the latter had evidently
+been quagmires, and bore even then the appearance of moisture. At about
+seven miles from Mosquito Brush we struck upon a creek of excellent water,
+upon which the wild fowl were numerous. Some natives was seen, but they
+were only women, and seemed so alarmed that I purposely avoided them. As
+the creek was leading northerly, we traced it down on that course for
+about seven miles, and then halted upon its banks, which were composed of
+a light tenacious earth. Brushes of casuarina existed near it, but a
+tortuous box was the prevailing tree, which, excepting for the knees of
+small vessels, could not have been applied to any use, while the
+flooded-gum had entirely disappeared. Some ducks were shot in the
+afternoon, which proved a great treat, as we had been living for some time
+on salt provisions. Our animals fared worse than ourselves, as the bed of
+the creek was occupied by coarse rushes, and but little vegetation was
+elsewhere to be seen. I here killed a beautiful snake, of about four feet
+in length, and of a bright yellow colour: I had not, however, the means of
+preserving it. Fraser collected numerous botanical specimens, and among
+them two kinds of caparis. Indeed a great alteration had taken place in
+the minor shrubs, and few of those now prevalent had been observed to the
+eastward of the marshes.
+
+From the creek, which both I and Mr. Hume must have crossed on our
+respective journeys, we held a westerly course for about fifteen miles,
+through a country of alternate plain and brush, the latter predominating,
+and in its general character differing but little from that we had
+traversed the day previous.
+
+The acacia pendula still continued to exist on the plains backed by dark
+rows of cypresses (Cupressus callitris). In the brushes, box and
+casuarina (Casuarina tortuosa), with several other kinds of eucalypti,
+prevailed; but none of them were sufficiently large to be of use. The
+plains were so extremely level that a meridian altitude could have been
+taken without any material error; and I doubt much whether it would have
+been possible to have traversed them had the season been wet.
+
+HUNTING PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+As we were travelling through a forest we surprised a hunting party of
+natives. Mr. Hume and I were considerably in front of our party at the
+time, and he only had his gun with him. We had been moving along so
+quietly that we were not for some time observed by them. Three were seated
+on the ground, under a tree, and two others were busily employed on one of
+the lower branches cutting out honey. As soon as they saw us, four of them
+ran away; but the fifth, who wore a cap of emu feathers, stood for a
+moment looking at us, and then very deliberately dropped out of the tree
+to the ground. I then advanced towards him, but before I got round a bush
+that intervened, he had darted away. I was fearful that he was gone to
+collect his tribe, and, under this impression, rode quickly back for my
+gun to support Mr. Hume. On my arrival I found the native was before me.
+He stood about twenty paces from Mr. Hume, who was endeavouring to explain
+what he was; but seeing me approach he immediately poised his spear at
+him, as being the nearest. Mr. Hume then unslung his carbine, and
+presented it; but, as it was evident my re-appearance had startled the
+savage, I pulled up; and he immediately lowered his weapon. His coolness
+and courage surprised me, and increased my desire to communicate with him.
+He had evidently taken both man and horse for one animal, and as long as
+Mr. Hume kept his seat, the native remained upon his guard; but when he
+saw him dismount, after the first astonishment had subsided, he stuck his
+spear into the ground, and walked fearlessly up to him. We easily made him
+comprehend that we were in search of water; when he pointed to the west,
+as indicating that we should supply our wants there. He gave his
+information in a frank and manly way, without the least embarrassment,
+and when the party passed, he stepped back to avoid the animals, without
+the smallest confusion. I am sure he was a very brave man; and I left him
+with the most favourable impressions, and not without hope that he would
+follow us.
+
+From a more open forest, we entered a dense scrub, the soil in which was
+of a bright-red colour and extremely sandy, and the timber of various
+kinds. A leafless species of stenochylus aphylta, which, from the
+resemblance, I at first thought one of the polygonum tribe, was very
+abundant in the open spaces, and the young cypresses were occasionally so
+close as to turn us from the direction in which we had been moving. In the
+scrub we crossed Mr. Hume's tract, and, from the appearance of the ground,
+I was led to believe mine could not be very distant.
+
+FATE OF THE MACQUARIE.
+
+We struck upon a creek late in the afternoon, at which we stopped; New
+Year's Range bearing nearly due west at about four miles' distance. Had we
+struck upon my track, the question about which we were so anxious would
+still have been undecided; but the circumstance of our having crossed Mr.
+Hume's, which, from its direction, could not be mistaken, convinced me of
+the fate of the Macquarie, and I felt assured that, whatever channels it
+might have for the distribution of its waters, to the north of our line of
+route, the equality of surface of the interior would never permit it
+again to form a river; and that it only required an examination of the
+lower parts of the marshes to confirm the theory of the ultimate
+evaporation and absorption of its waters, instead of their contributing to
+the permanence of an inland sea, as Mr. Oxley had supposed.
+
+NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+On the 17th of January we encamped under New Year's Range, which is the
+first elevation in the interior of Eastern Australia to the westward of
+Mount Harris. Yet when at its base, I do not think that we had ascended
+above forty feet higher than the plains in the neighbourhood of that last
+mentioned eminence. There certainly is a partial rise of country, where
+the change of soil takes place from the alluvial deposits of the marshes,
+to the sandy loam so prevalent on the plains we had lately traversed; but
+I had to regret that I was unable to decide so interesting a question by
+other than bare conjecture.
+
+Notwithstanding that Mr. Hume had already been on them, I encouraged hopes
+that a second survey of the country from the highest point of New Year's
+Range would enable us to form some opinion of it, by which to direct our
+future movements; but I was disappointed.
+
+The two wooded hills I had seen from Oxley's Table Land were visible from
+the range, bearing south; and other eminences bore by compass S.W.
+and W. by S.; but in every other direction the horizon was unbroken. To
+the westward, there appeared to be a valley of considerable extent,
+stretching N. and S., in which latter direction there was a long strip of
+cleared ground, that looked very like the sandy bed of a broad and rapid
+river. The bare possibility of the reality determined me to ascertain by
+inspection, whether my conjecture was right, and Mr. Hume accompanied me
+on this excursion. After we left the camp we crossed a part of the range,
+and travelled for some time through open forest land that would afford
+excellent grazing in most seasons. We passed some hollows, and noticed
+many huts that had been occupied near them; but the hollows were now quite
+dry, and the huts had been long deserted. After about ten miles' ride we
+reached a plain of white sand, from which New Year's Range was distinctly
+visible; and this no doubt was the spot that had attracted my attention.
+Pools of water continued on it, from which circumstance it would appear
+that the sand had a substratum of clay or marl. From this plain we
+proceeded southerly through acacia scrub, bounding gently undulating
+forest land, and at length ascended some small elevations that scarcely
+deserved the name of hills. They had fragments of quartz profusely
+scattered over them; and the soil, which was sandy, contained particles of
+mica.
+
+MOSQUITOES.
+
+The view from them was confused, nor did any fresh object meet our
+observation. We had, however, considerably neared the two wooded hills,
+and the elevations that from the range were to the S.W., now bore N.W.
+of us. We had wandered too far from the camp to admit of our returning to
+it to sleep; we therefore commenced a search for water, and having found
+some, we tethered our horses near it for the night, and should have been
+tolerably comfortable, had not the mosquitoes been so extremely
+troublesome. They defied the power of smoke, and annoyed me so much, that,
+hot as it was, I rolled myself in my boat cloak, and perspired in
+consequence to such a degree, that my clothes were wet through, and I had
+to stand at the fire in the morning to dry them. Mr. Hume, who could not
+bear such confinement, suffered the penalty, and was most unmercifully
+bitten.
+
+A MAN MISSING.
+
+We reached the camp about noon the following day, and learnt, to our
+vexation, that one of the men, Norman, had lost himself shortly after we
+started, and had not since been heard of. Dawber, my overseer, was out in
+search of him. I awaited his return, therefore, before I took any measures
+for the man's recovery; nor was I without hopes that Dawber would have
+found him, as it appeared he had taken one of the horses with him, and
+Dawber, by keeping his tracks, might eventually have overtaken him. He
+returned, however, about 3 p.m. unsuccessful, when Mr. Hume and I mounted
+our horses, and proceeded in different directions in quest of him, but
+were equally disappointed.
+
+We met at the creek in the dark, and returned to the camp together, when I
+ordered the cypresses on the range to be set on fire, and thus illuminated
+the country round for many miles. In the morning, however, as Norman had
+not made his appearance, we again started in search of the poor fellow,
+on whose account I was now most uneasy; for his horse, it appeared, had
+escaped him, and was found with the others at watering time.
+
+I did not return to the camp until after sunset, more fatigued than I
+recollect ever having been before. I was, however, rejoiced on being
+informed that the object of my anxiety was safe in his tent; that he had
+caught sight of the hill the evening before, and that he had reached the
+camp shortly after I left it. He had been absent three nights and two
+days, and had not tasted water or food of any kind during that time.
+
+To my enquiries he replied, that, being on horseback, he thought he could
+have overtaken a kangaroo, which passed him whilst waiting at the creek
+for the cattle, and that in the attempt, he lost himself. It would appear
+that he crossed the creek in the dark, and his horse escaped from him on
+the first night. He complained more of thirst than of hunger, although he
+had drunk at the watering-place to such an excess, on his return, as to
+make him vomit; but, though not a little exhausted, he had escaped better
+than I should have expected.
+
+COUNTRY AROUND NEW YEAR'S RANGE.
+
+New Year's Range consists of a principal group of five hills, the loftiest
+of which does not measure 300 feet in height. It has lateral ridges,
+extending to the N.N.W. on the one hand, and bending in to the creek on
+the other. The former have a few cypresses, sterculia, and iron bark upon
+them; the latter are generally covered with brush, under box; the brush
+for the most part consisting of two distinct species of stenochylus, and a
+new acacia. The whole range is of quartz formation, small fragments of
+which are profusely scattered over the ridges, and are abundantly
+incrusted with oxide of iron. The soil in the neighbourhood of New Year's
+Range is a red loam, with a slight mixture of sand. An open forest country
+lies between it and the creek, and it is not at all deficient in pasture.
+
+NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+That a change of soil takes place to the westward of the creek, is
+obvious, from the change of vegetation, the most remarkable feature of
+which is the sudden check given to the further extension of the acacia
+pendula, which is not to be found beyond it, it being succeeded by another
+acacia of the same species and habits; neither do the plants of the
+chenopedia class exist in the immediate vicinity of the range.
+
+I place these hills, as far as my observations will allow, in east
+lon. 146 degrees 32 minutes 15 seconds, and in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes
+south; the variation of the compass being 6 degrees 40 minutes easterly.
+
+As New Year's Creek was leading northerly, it had been determined to trace
+it down as long as it should keep that course, or one to the westward of
+it. We broke up the camp, therefore, under the range, on the evening of
+the 18th, and moved to the creek, about two miles north of the place at
+which we had before crossed it, with the intention of prosecuting our
+journey on the morrow. But both Mr. Hume and I were so fatigued that we
+were glad of an opportunity to rest, even for a single day. We remained
+stationary, therefore, on the 19th; nor was I without hope that the
+natives whom we had surprised in the woods, would have paid us a visit,
+since Mr. Hume had met them in his search for Norman, and they had
+promised not only to come to us, but to do all in their power to find
+the man, whose footsteps some of them had crossed. They did not, however,
+venture near us; and I rather attribute their having kept aloof, to the
+circumstance of Mr. Hume's having fired a shot, shortly after he left
+them, as a signal to Norman, in the event of his being within hearing of
+the report. They must have been alarmed at so unusual a sound; but I am
+sure nothing was further from Mr. Hume's intention than to intimidate
+them; his knowledge of their manners and customs, as well as his
+partiality to the natives, being equally remarkable. The circumstance is,
+however, a proof of the great caution that is necessary in communicating
+with them.
+
+ANNOYED BY KANGAROO FLIES.
+
+I have said that we remained stationary the day after we left the range,
+with a view to enjoy a little rest; it would, however, have been
+infinitely better if we had moved forward. Our camp was infested by the
+kangaroo fly, which settled upon us in thousands. They appeared to rise
+from the ground, and as fast as they were swept off were succeeded by
+fresh numbers. It was utterly impossible to avoid their persecution,
+penetrating as they did into the very tents.
+
+The men were obliged to put handkerchiefs over their faces, and stockings
+upon their hands; but they bit through every thing. It was to no purpose
+that I myself shifted from place to place; they still followed, or were
+equally numerous everywhere. To add to our discomfort, the animals were
+driven almost to madness, and galloped to and fro in so furious a manner
+that I was apprehensive some of them would have been lost. I never
+experienced such a day of torment; and only when the sun set, did these
+little creatures cease from their attacks.
+
+SUDDENLY RELIEVED.
+
+It will be supposed that we did not stay to subject ourselves to another
+trial; indeed it was with some degree of horror that the men saw the first
+light of morning streak the horizon. They got up immediately, and we moved
+down the creek, on a northerly course, without breakfasting as usual. We
+found that dense brushes of casuarina lined the creek on both sides,
+beyond which, to our left, there was open rising ground, on which
+eucalypti, cypresses, and the acacia longifolia, prevailed; whilst to the
+east, plains seemed to predominate.
+
+Although we had left the immediate spot at which the kangaroo flies
+(cabarus) seemed to be collected, I did not expect that we should have got
+rid of them so completely as we did. None of them were seen during the
+day; a proof that they were entirely local. They were about half the size
+of a common house fly, had flat brown bodies, and their bite, although
+sharp and piercing, left no irritation after it.
+
+About noon we stopped at the creek side to take some refreshment. The
+country bore an improved appearance around us, and the cattle found
+abundance of pasture. It was evident that the creek had been numerously
+frequented by the natives, although no recent traces of them could be
+found. It had a bed of coarse red granite, of the fragments of which the
+natives had constructed a weir for the purpose of taking fish. The
+appearance of this rock in so isolated a situation, is worthy of the
+consideration of geologists.
+
+DESOLATION OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+The promise of improvement I have noticed, gradually disappeared as we
+proceeded on our day's journey, and we at length found ourselves once more
+among brushes, and on the edge of plains, over which the rhagodia
+prevailed. Nothing could exceed in dreariness the appearance of the tracks
+through which we journeyed, on this and the two following days. The creek
+on which we depended for a supply of water, gave such alarming indications
+of a total failure, that I at one time, had serious thoughts of abandoning
+my pursuit of it. We passed hollow after hollow that had successively
+dried up, although originally of considerable depth; and, when we at
+length found water, it was doubtful how far we could make use of it.
+Sometimes in boiling it left a sediment nearly equal to half its body; at
+other times it was so bitter as to be quite unpalatable. That on which we
+subsisted was scraped up from small puddles, heated by the sun's rays;
+and so uncertain were we of finding water at the end of the day's journey,
+that we were obliged to carry a supply on one of the bullocks. There was
+scarcely a living creature, even of the feathered race, to be seen to
+break the stillness of the forest. The native dogs alone wandered about,
+though they had scarcely strength to avoid us; and their melancholy howl,
+breaking in upon the ear at the dead of the night, only served to impress
+more fully on the mind the absolute loneliness of the desert.
+
+It appeared, from their traces that the natives had lingered on this
+ground, on which they had perhaps been born, as long as it continued to
+afford them a scanty though precarious subsistence; but that they had at
+length been forced from it. Neither fish nor muscles remained in the
+creek, nor emus nor kangaroos on the plains. How then could an European
+expect to find food in deserts through which the savage wandered in vain?
+There is no doubt of the fate that would have overtaken any one of the
+party who might have strayed away, and I was happy to find that Norman's
+narrow escape had made a due impression on the minds of his comrades.
+
+SANDY PLAINS; LEAVE THE CREEK.
+
+We passed some considerable plains, lying to the eastward of the creek, on
+parts of which the grass, though growing in tufts, was of luxuriant
+growth. They were, however, more generally covered with salsola and
+rhagodia, and totally destitute of other vegetation, the soil upon them
+being a red sandy loam. The paths across the plains, which varied in
+breadth from three to eight miles, were numerous; but they had not been
+recently trodden. The creek continued to have a thick brush of casuarina
+and acacia near it, to the westward of which there was a rising open
+forest track; the timber upon it being chiefly box, cypress, and the
+acacia longifolia. It was most probably connected with New Year's Range,
+those elevations being about thirty miles distant. It terminated in some
+gentle hills which, though covered in places with acacia shrub, were
+sufficiently open to afford an extensive view. From their summit Oxley's
+Table Land, towards which we had been gradually working our way, was
+distinctly visible, distant about twenty miles, and bearing by compass
+W. by S. On descending from these hills (called the Pink Hills, from the
+colour of a flower upon them) which were scattered over with fragments of
+slaty quartz, we traversed a box flat, apparently subject to overflow,
+having a barren sandy scrub to its left. I had desired the men to preserve
+a W.N.W. direction, on leaving them, supposing that that course would have
+kept them near the creek; but, on overtaking the party, I found that they
+had wandered completely away from it. The fact was, that the creek had
+taken a sudden bend to the eastward of N. and had thus thrown them out.
+It was with some difficulty that we regained it before sunset; and we were
+at length obliged to stop for the night at a small plain, about a quarter
+of a mile short of it, but we had the satisfaction of having excellent
+feed for the animals.
+
+OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Fearful that New Year's Creek would take us too far to the eastward, and
+being anxious to keep westward as much as possible, it struck me that we
+could not, under existing circumstances, do better than make for Oxley's
+Table Land. Water, I knew, we should find in a swamp at it's base, and we
+might discover some more encouraging feature than I had observed on my
+hasty visit to it. We left the creek, therefore on the 23rd, and once more
+took up a westerly course. Passing through a generally open country, we
+stopped at noon to rest the animals; and afterwards got on an excellent
+grazing forest track, which continued to the brush, through another part
+of which I had penetrated to the marsh more to the south. While making our
+way through it, we came upon a small pond of water, and must have alarmed
+some natives, as there was a fresh made fire close to it. Our journey had
+been unusually long, and the cattle had felt the heat so much, that the
+moment they saw water they rushed into it; and, as this created some
+confusion, I thought it best to stop where we were for the night.
+
+In the morning, Mr. Hume walked with me to the hill, a distance of about a
+mile. It is not high enough to deserve the name of a mountain, although a
+beautiful feature in the country, and showing well from any point of view.
+We ascended it with an anxiety that may well be imagined, but were wholly
+disappointed in our most sanguine expectations. Our chief object, in this
+second visit to Oxley's Table Land, had been to examine, more at leisure,
+the face of the country around it, and to discover, if possible, some
+fixed point on which to move.
+
+If the rivers of the interior had already exhausted themselves, what had
+we to expect from a creek whose diminished appearance where we left it
+made us apprehend its speedy termination, and whose banks we traversed
+under constant apprehension? In any other country I should have followed
+such a water course, in hopes of its ultimately leading to some reservoir;
+but here I could encourage no such favourable anticipation.
+
+The only new object that struck our sight was a remarkable and distant
+hill of conical shape, bearing by compass S. 10 E. To the southward and
+westward, in the direction of D'Urban's Group, a dense and apparently low
+brush extended; but to the N. and N.W., there was a regular alternation of
+wood and plain. I left Mr. Hume upon the hill, that he might the more
+readily notice any smoke made by the natives; and returned myself to the
+camp about one o'clock, to move the party to the swamp. Mr. Hume's
+perseverance was of little avail. The region he had been overlooking was,
+to all appearance, uninhabited, nor did a single fire indicate that there
+was even a solitary wanderer upon its surface.
+
+EXCURSION TO D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+Our situation, at this time, was extremely embarrassing, and the only
+circumstance on which we had to congratulate ourselves was, the improved
+condition of our men; for several of the cattle and horses were in a sad
+plight. The weather had been so extremely oppressive, that we had found it
+impossible to keep them free from eruptions. I proposed to Mr. Hume,
+therefore, to give them a few days' rest, and to make an excursion, with
+such of them as were serviceable, to D'Urban's Group. We were both of us
+unwilling to return to the creek, but we foresaw that a blind reliance
+upon fortune, in our next movements, might involve us in inextricable
+difficulty.
+
+On the other hand, there was a very great risk in delay. It was more than
+probable, from the continued drought, that our retreat would be cut off
+from the want of water, or that we should only be enabled to effect our
+retreat with loss of most of the animals. The hope, however, of our
+intersecting some stream, or of falling upon a better country, prevailed
+over other considerations; and the excursion was, consequently, determined
+upon.
+
+DISTRESS FROM WANT OF WATER.
+
+We left the camp on the 25th, accompanied by Hopkinson and the tinker;
+and, almost immediately after, entered an acacia scrub of the most sterile
+description, and one, through which it would have been impossible to have
+found a passage for the boat carriage. The soil was almost a pure sand,
+and the lower branches of the trees were decayed so generally as to give
+the whole an indescribable appearance of desolation. About mid-day, we
+crossed a light sandy plain, on which there were some dirty puddles of
+water. They were so shallow as to leave the backs of the frogs in them
+exposed, and they had, in consequence, been destroyed by solar heat, and
+were in a state of putrefaction. Our horses refused to drink, but it was
+evident that some natives must have partaken of this sickening beverage
+only a few hours before our arrival. Indeed, it was clear that a wandering
+family must have slept near this spot, as we observed a fresh made gunneah
+(or native hut), and their foot-prints were so fresh along the line we
+were pursuing, that we momentarily expected to have overtaken them. It was
+late in the evening when we got out of this brush into better and more
+open ground, where, in ordinary seasons we should, no doubt, have found
+abundance of water. But we now searched in vain for it, and were contented
+to be enabled to give our wearied animals better food than they had tasted
+for many days, the forest grass, though in tufts, being abundant.
+
+We brought up for the night at the edge of a scrub, having travelled from
+thirty-two to thirty-five miles, judging the distance from the mountains
+still to be about twelve.
+
+BEARINGS FROM OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+In the morning we started at an early hour, and immediately entered the
+brush, beneath which we had slept; pursuing a westerly course through it.
+After a short ride, we found ourselves upon a plain, that was crowded with
+flocks of cockatoos. Here we got a supply of water, such as it was--so
+mixed with slime as to hang in strings between the fingers; and, after a
+hasty breakfast, we proceeded on our journey, mostly through a barren
+sandy scrub that was a perfect burrow from the number of wombats in it, to
+within a mile of the hill group, where the country appeared like one
+continuous meadow to the very base of them. I never saw anything like the
+luxuriance of the grass on this tract of country, waving as it did higher
+than our horses' middles as we rode through it. We ascended the S.W. face
+of the mountain to an elevation of at least 800 feet above the level of
+the plain, and had some difficulty in scaling the masses of rock that
+opposed themselves to our progress. But on gaining the summit, we were
+amply repaid for our trouble. The view extended far and wide, but we were
+again disappointed in the main object that had induced us to undertake the
+journey. I took the following bearings by compass. Oxley's Table Land bore
+N. 40 E. distant forty-five miles; small and distant hill due E.; conical
+peak seen from Oxley's Table Land S. 60 E., very distant; long ridge of
+high land, S.E., distant thirty-five miles; high land, S. 30 E., distant
+thirty miles; long range, S. 25 W.
+
+To the westward, as a medium point. the horizon was unbroken, and the eye
+wandered over an apparently endless succession of wood and plain. A
+brighter green than usual marked the course of the mountain torrents in
+several places, but there was no glittering light among the trees, no
+smoke to betray a water hole, or to tell that a single inhabitant was
+traversing the extensive region we were overlooking. We were obliged to
+return to the plain on which we had breakfasted, and to sleep upon it.
+
+D'URBAN'S GROUP.
+
+D'Urban's Group is of compact sandstone formation. Its extreme length is
+from E.S.E. to W.N.W., and cannot be more than from seven to nine miles,
+whilst its breadth is from two to four. The central space forms a large
+basin, in which there are stunted pines and eucalyptus scrub, amid huge
+fragments of rocks. It rises like an island from the midst of the ocean,
+and as I looked upon it from the plains below, I could without any great
+stretch of the imagination, picture to myself that it really was such.
+Bold and precipitous, it only wanted the sea to lave its base; and I
+cannot but think that such must at no very remote period have been the
+case, and that the immense flat we had been traversing, is of
+comparatively recent formation.
+
+We reached the camp on the 28th of the month, by nearly the same route;
+and were happy to find that, after the few days' rest they had enjoyed,
+there was a considerable improvement in the animals.
+
+Our experience of the nature of the country to the southward, and the
+westward, was such as to deter us from risking anything, by taking such a
+direction as was most agreeable to our views. Nothing remained to us but
+to follow the creek, or to retreat; and as we could only be induced to
+adopt the last measure when every other expedient should have failed, we
+determined on pursuing our original plan, of tracing New Year's Creek as
+far as practicable.
+
+DESCRIPTION OF OXLEY'S TABLE LAND.
+
+Oxley's Table Land is situated in lat. 29 degrees 57 minutes 30 seconds,
+and in E. long. 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds, the mean variation
+being 6.32 easterly. It consists of two hills that appear to have been
+rent asunder by some convulsion of nature, since the passage between them
+is narrow and their inner faces are equally perpendicular. The hill which
+I have named after the late Surveyor-general, is steep on all sides; but
+the other gradually declines from the south, and at length loses itself in
+a large plain that extends to the north. It is from four to five miles in
+length, and is picturesque in appearance, and lightly wooded. A few
+cypresses were growing on Oxley's Table Land; but it had, otherwise, very
+little timber upon its summit. Both hills are of sandstone formation, and
+there are some hollows upon the last that deserve particular notice. They
+have the appearance of having been formed by eddies of water, being deeper
+in the centre than at any other part, and contain fragments and slabs of
+sandstone of various size and breadth, without a particle of soil or of
+sand between them. It is to be observed that the edges of these slabs,
+which were perfect parallelograms, were unbroken, and that they were as
+clean as if they had only just been turned out of the hand of the mason.
+We counted thirteen of these hollows in one spot about twenty-five feet in
+diameter, but they are without doubt of periodical formation, since a
+single hollow was observed lower than the summit of the hill upon its
+south extremity, that had evidently long been exposed to the action of the
+atmosphere, and had a general coating of moss over it.
+
+CONTINUE THE JOURNEY; DOWN NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+We left Oxley's Table Land on the morning of the 31st of January, pursuing
+a northern course through the brush and across a large plain, moving
+parallel to the smaller hill, and keeping it upon our left. The soil upon
+this plain differed in character from that on the plains to the eastward,
+and was much freer from sand. We stopped to dine at a spot, whence Oxley's
+Table Land bore by compass, S. by W., distant about twelve miles.
+Continuing our journey, at 2 p.m. we cleared the plain, and entered a
+tract covered with the polygonum junceum, on a soil evidently the deposit
+of floods. Box-trees were thinly scattered over it, and among the
+polygonum, the crested pigeons were numerous. These general appearances,
+together with a dip of country to the N.N.W., made us conclude that we
+were approaching the creek, and we accordingly intersected it on a N.N.E.
+course, at about three miles' distance from where we had dined. It had,
+however, undergone so complete a change, and had increased so much in size
+and in the height of its banks, that we were at a loss to recognize it.
+Still, with all these favourable symptoms, there was not a drop of water
+in it. But small shells lay in heaps in its bed, or were abundantly
+scattered over it; and we remarked that they differed from those on the
+plains of the Macquarie. A circumstance that surprised us much, was the
+re-appearance of the flooded-gum upon its banks, and that too of a large
+size. We had not seen any to the westward of the marshes, and we were,
+consequently, led to indulge in more sanguine expectation as to our
+ultimate success than we had ever ventured to do before.
+
+The party crossed to the right bank of the creek, and then moved in a
+westerly direction along it in search of water. A brush extended to our
+right, and some broken stony ground, rather elevated, was visible, to
+which Mr. Hume rode; nor did he join me again until after I had halted the
+party for the night.
+
+DISTRESSED FOR WATER.
+
+My search for water had been unsuccessful, and the sun had set, when I
+came upon a broad part of the creek that appeared very favourable for an
+encampment, as it was encompassed by high banks, and would afford the men
+a greater facility of watching the cattle, that I knew would stray away if
+they could.
+
+My anxiety for them led me to wander down the bed of the creek, when, to
+my joy, I found a pond of water within a hundred yards of the tents. It is
+impossible for me to describe the relief I felt at this success, or the
+gladness it spread among the men. Mr. Hume joined me at dusk, and informed
+me that he had made a circuit, and had struck upon the creek about three
+miles below us but that, in tracing it up, he had not found a drop of
+water until he came to the pond near which we had so providentially
+encamped. On the following morning, we held a westerly course over an open
+country for about eight miles and a half. The prevailing timber appeared
+to he a species of eucalypti, with rough bark, of small size, and
+evidently languishing from the want of moisture. The soil over which we
+travelled was far from bad, but there was a total absence of water upon
+it. At 6 p.m. Oxley's Table Land was distant from us about fifteen miles,
+bearing S. 20 E. by compass.
+
+We had not touched upon the creek from the time we left it in the morning,
+having wandered from it in a northerly direction, along a native path that
+we intersected, and that seemed to have been recently trodden, since
+footsteps were fresh upon it. At sunset, we crossed a broad dry creek that
+puzzled us extremely, and were shortly afterwards obliged to stop for the
+night upon a plain beyond it. We had, during the afternoon, bent down to
+the S.W. in hopes that we should again have struck upon New Year's Creek;
+and, under an impression that we could not be far from it, Mr. Hume and I
+walked across the plain, to ascertain if it was sufficiently near to be of
+any service to us. We came upon a creek, but could not decide whether it
+was the one for which we had been searching, or another.
+
+Its bed was so perfectly even that it was impossible to say to what point
+it flowed, more especially as all remains of debris had mouldered away. It
+was, however, extremely broad, and evidently, at times, held a furious
+torrent. In the centre of it, at one of the angles, we discovered a pole
+erected, and at first thought, from the manner in which it was propped up,
+that some unfortunate European must have placed it there as a mark to tell
+of his wanderings, but we afterwards concluded that it might be some
+superstitious rite of the natives, in consequence of the untowardness of
+the season, as it seemed almost inconceivable that an European could have
+wandered to such a distance from the located districts in safety.
+
+REACH A LARGE RIVER.
+
+The creek had flooded-gum growing upon its banks, and, on places
+apparently subject to flood, a number of tall straight saplings were
+observed by us. We returned to the camp, after a vain search for water,
+and were really at a loss what direction next to pursue. The men kept the
+cattle pretty well together, and, as we were not delayed by any
+preparations for breakfast, they were saddled and loaded at an early hour.
+The circumstance of there having been natives in the neighbourhood, of
+whom we had seen so few traces of late, assured me that water was at hand,
+but in what direction it was impossible to guess. As the path we had
+observed was leading northerly, we took up that course, and had not
+proceeded more than a mile upon it, when we suddenly found ourselves on
+the banks of a noble river. Such it might in truth be called, where water
+was scarcely to be found. The party drew up upon a bank that was from
+forty to forty-five feet above the level of the stream. The channel of the
+river was front seventy to eighty yards broad, and enclosed an unbroken
+sheet of water, evidently very deep, and literally covered with pelicans
+and other wild fowl. Our surprise and delight may better be imagined than
+described. Our difficulties seemed to be at an end, for here was a river
+that promised to reward all our exertions, and which appeared every moment
+to increase in importance to our imagination. Coming from the N.E.,and
+flowing to the S.W., it had a capacity of channel that proved that we were
+as far from its source as from its termination. The paths of the natives
+on either side of it were like well trodden roads; and the trees that
+overhung it were of beautiful and gigantic growth.
+
+DISAPPOINTMENT ON FINDING THE RIVER SALT.
+
+Its banks were too precipitous to allow of our watering the cattle, but
+the men eagerly descended to quench their thirst, which a powerful sun had
+contributed to increase; nor shall I ever forget the cry of amazement that
+followed their doing so, or the looks of terror and disappointment with
+which they called out to inform me that the water was so salt as to be
+unfit to drink! This was, indeed, too true: on tasting it, I found it
+extremely nauseous, and strongly impregnated with salt, being apparently
+a mixture of sea and fresh water. Whence this arose, whether from local
+causes, or from a communication with some inland sea, I knew not, but the
+discovery was certainly a blow for which I was not prepared. Our hopes
+were annihilated at the moment of their apparent realization. The cup of
+joy was dashed out of our hands before we had time to raise it to our
+lips. Notwithstanding this disappointment, we proceeded down the river,
+and halted at about five miles, being influenced by the goodness of the
+feed to provide for the cattle as well as circumstances would permit. They
+would not drink of the river water, but stood covered in it for many
+hours, having their noses alone exposed above the stream. Their condition
+gave me great uneasiness. It was evident they could not long hold out
+under their excessive thirst, and unless we should procure some fresh
+water, it would impossible for us to continue our journey. On a closer
+examination, the river appeared to me much below its ordinary level, and
+its current was scarcely perceptible. We placed sticks to ascertain if
+there was a rise or fall of tide, but could arrive at no satisfactory
+conclusion, although there was undoubtedly a current in it. Yet, as I
+stood upon its banks at sunset, when not a breath of air existed to break
+the stillness of the waters below me, and saw their surface kept in
+constant agitation by the leaping of fish, I doubted whether the river
+could supply itself so abundantly, and the rather imagined, that it owed
+such abundance, which the pelicans seemed to indicate was constant, to
+some mediterranean sea or other. Where, however, were the human
+inhabitants of this distant and singular region? The signs of a numerous
+population were around us, but we had not seen even a solitary wanderer.
+The water of the river was not, by any means, so salt as that of the
+ocean, but its taste was precisely similar. Could it be that its unnatural
+state had driven its inhabitants from its banks?
+
+One would have imagined that our perplexities would have been sufficient
+for one day, but ere night closed, they increased upon us, although our
+anxiety, with regard to the cattle, was happily removed. Mr. Hume with his
+usual perseverance, walked out when the camp was formed; and, at a little
+distance from it, ascended a ridge of pure sand, crowned with cypresses.
+From this, he descended to the westward, and, at length, struck upon the
+river, where a reef of rocks creased its channel, and formed a dry passage
+from one side to the other; but the bend, which the river must have taken,
+appeared to him so singular, that he doubted whether it was the same
+beside which we had been travelling during the day. Curiosity led him to
+cross it, when he found a small pond of fresh water on a tongue of land,
+and, immediately afterwards, returned to acquaint me with the welcome
+tidings. It was too late to move, but we had, at least, the prospect of a
+comfortable breakfast in the morning.
+
+JUNCTION OF NEW YEAR'S CREEK.
+
+In consequence of the doubts that hung upon Mr. Hume's mind, as to the
+course of the river, we arranged that the animals should precede us to the
+fresh water; and that we should keep close in upon the stream, to
+ascertain that point. After traversing a deep bight, we arrived nearly as
+soon as the party, at the appointed rendezvous. The rocks composing the
+channel of the river at the crossing place, were of indurated clay. In the
+course of an hour, the animals appearing quite refreshed, we proceeded on
+our journey, and at about four miles crossed New Year's Creek, at its
+junction with the salt river. We passed several parts of the main channel
+that were perfectly dry, and were altogether at a loss to account for the
+current we undoubtedly had observed in the river when we first came upon
+it. At midday D'Urban's Group bore S. 65 E. distant about 32 miles. We
+made a little westing in the afternoon. The river continued to maintain
+its character and appearance, its lofty banks, and its long still reaches:
+while, however, the blue-gum trees upon its banks were of magnificent
+size, the soil had but little vegetation upon it, although an alluvial
+deposit.
+
+We passed over vast spaces covered with the polygonum junceum, that bore
+all the appearance of the flooded tracks in the neighbourhood of the
+marshes, and on which the travelling was equally distressing to the
+animals. Indeed, it had been sufficiently evident to us that the waters of
+this river were not always confined to its channel, capacious as it was,
+but that they inundated a belt of barren land, that varied in width from a
+quarter of a mile to a mile, when they were checked by an outer embankment
+that prevented them from spreading generally over the country, and upon
+the neighbouring plains. At our halting place, the cattle drank sparingly
+of the water, but it acted as a violent purgative both on them and the men
+who partook of it.
+
+NATIVE VILLAGE.
+
+On the 5th, the river led us to the southward and westward. Early in the
+day, we passed a group of seventy huts, capable of holding from twelve to
+fifteen men each. They appeared to be permanent habitations, and all of
+them fronted the same point of the compass. In searching amongst them we
+observed two beautifully made nets, of about ninety yards in length. The
+one had much larger meshes than the other, and was, most probably,
+intended to take kangaroos; but the other was evidently a fishing net.
+
+In one hut, the floor of which was swept with particular care, a number of
+white balls, as of pulverised shells or lime, had been deposited--the
+use of which we could not divine. A trench was formed round the hut to
+prevent the rain from running under it, and the whole was arranged with
+more than ordinary attention.
+
+TERROR OF THE NATIVES.
+
+We had not proceeded very far when we came suddenly upon the tribe to
+which this village, as it might be called, belonged.
+
+In breaking through some brush to an open space that was bounded on one
+side by the river, we observed three or four natives, seated on a bank at
+a considerable distance from us; and directly in the line on which we were
+moving. The nature of the ground so completely favoured our approach, that
+they did not become aware of it until we were within a few yards of them,
+and had ascended a little ridge, which, as we afterwards discovered, ended
+in an abrupt precipice upon the river, not more than thirty yards to our
+right. The crack of the drayman's whip was the first thing that aroused
+their attention. They gazed upon us for a moment, and then started up and
+assumed an attitude of horror and amazement; their terror apparently
+increasing upon them. We stood perfectly immovable, until at length they
+gave a fearful yell, and darted out of sight.
+
+THEY FIRE THE BUSH.
+
+Their cry brought about a dozen more natives from the river, whom we had
+not before observed, but who now ran after their comrades with surprising
+activity, and without once venturing to look behind them. As our position
+was a good one, we determined to remain upon it, until we should ascertain
+the number and disposition of the natives. We had not been long
+stationary, when we heard a crackling noise in the distance, and it soon
+became evident that the bush had been fired. It was, however, impossible
+that we could receive any injury on the narrow ridge upon which we stood,
+so that we waited very patiently to see the end of this affair.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES; DISEASE AMONG THEM.
+
+In a short time the fire approached pretty near to us, and dense columns
+of smoke rose into the air over our heads. One of the natives, who had
+been on the bank, now came out of the bush, exactly from the spot into
+which he had retreated. He advanced a few paces towards us, and bending
+his body so that his hands rested on his knees, he fixed his gaze upon us
+for some time; but, seeing that we remained immovable, he began to throw
+himself into the most extravagant attitudes, shaking his foot from time to
+time. When he found that all his violence had no effect, he turned his
+rear to us in a most laughable manner, and absolutely groaned in spirit
+when he found that this last insult failed of success.
+
+He stood perplexed and not knowing what next to do, which gave Mr. Hume an
+opportunity to call out to him, and with considerable address he at length
+got the savage to approach close up to him; Mr. Hume himself having
+advanced a short distance from the animals in the first instance. As soon
+as I thought the savage had sufficiently recovered from his alarm, I went
+up to him with a tomahawk, the use of which he immediately guessed. We now
+observed that the natives who had fled from the river, had been employed
+in setting a net. They had placed it in a semicircle, with either end to
+the shore, and rude pieces of wood were attached to it to keep the upper
+part perpendicular. It was in fact a sein, only that the materials, with
+the exception of the net-work, were simpler and rougher than cork or
+lead--for which last, we afterwards discovered stones had been
+substituted.
+
+We had on this occasion a remarkable instance of the docility of the
+natives of the interior, or of the power they have of subduing their
+apprehensions; manifesting the opposite extremes of fear and confidence.
+These men whom we had thus surprised, and who, no doubt, imagined that we
+were about to destroy them, having apparently never seen nor heard of
+white men before, must have taken us for something preternatural; yet from
+the extremity of fear that had prompted them to set their woods in flames,
+they in a brief space so completely subdued those fears as to approach
+the very beings who had so strongly excited their alarm. The savage who
+had been the principal actor in the scene, was an elderly man, rather
+descending to the vale of years than what might be strictly called aged.
+I know not how it was, but I regarded him with peculiar interest.
+Mr. Hume's manners had in a great measure contributed to allay his evident
+agitation; but, from the moment I approached him, I thought there was a
+shade of anxiety upon his brow, and an expression of sorrow over his
+features, the cause of which did not originate with us. I could see in a
+moment, that his bosom was full even to bursting, and he seemed to claim
+at once our sympathy and our protection, although we were ignorant of that
+which oppressed him. We had not long been seated together, when some of
+his tribe mustered sufficient courage to join him. Both Mr. Hume and I
+were desirous of seeing the net drawn, but the old man raised some
+objection, by pointing to the heavens and towards the sun. After a little
+more solicitation, however, he gave a whistle, and, four or five natives
+having obeyed the summons, he directed them to draw the net, but they were
+unfortunate, and our wish to ascertain the kind of fish contained in the
+river was disappointed. As his tribe gathered round him, the old chief
+threw a melancholy glance upon them, and endeavoured, as much as he could,
+to explain the cause of that affliction which, as I had rightly judged,
+weighed heavily upon him. It appeared, then, that a violent cutaneous
+disease raged throughout the tribe, that was sweeping them off in great
+numbers. He called several young men to Mr. Hume and myself, who had been
+attacked by this singular malady. Nothing could exceed the anxiety of his
+explanations, or the mild and soothing tone in which he addressed his
+people, and it really pained me that I could not assist him in his
+distress. We now discovered the use to which the conical substance that
+had been deposited with such unusual care in one of the huts, was applied.
+There were few of the natives present who were not more or less marked
+with it, and it was no doubt, indicative of mourning.
+
+DEPARTURE OF THE NATIVES.
+
+Some of the men, however, were painted with red and yellow ochre, with
+which it was evident to me they had besmeared themselves since our
+appearance, most likely in preparing for the combat in which they fancied
+they would be engaged. We distributed such presents as we had to those
+around us, and when we pursued our journey, the majority accompanied us,
+nor did they wholly leave us until we had passed the place to which their
+women had retired. They might have left us when they pleased, for we
+intended them no harm; as it was, however, they struck into the brushes to
+join their families, and we pushed on to make up for lost time.
+
+The travelling near the river had been so bad, not only in consequence of
+the nature of the soil and brush, but from the numerous gullies that had
+been formed by torrents, as they poured into its channel after heavy rains
+and floods, that it was thought advisable to keep at a greater distance
+from it. We turned away, therefore, to the plains, and found them of much
+firmer surface. They partook, however, of the same general character as
+the plains we had traversed more to the eastward. Their soil was a light
+sandy loam, and the same succulent plants still continued to prevail upon
+them, which we have already noticed as existing upon the other plains.
+Both emus and kangaroos were seen, though not in any considerable numbers,
+but our dogs were not in a condition to run, and were all but killed by
+the extreme heat of the weather. We had fallen on a small pool of water
+shortly after we started in the morning, but we could do no more than
+refresh ourselves and the animals at it. In the afternoon, we again turned
+towards the river, and found it unaltered. Its water was still salt, and
+from the increased number of wild fowl and pelicans upon it, as well as
+from the general flatness of the country, I certainly thought we were
+rapidly approaching some inland sea. It was, however, uncertain how long
+we should be enabled to continue on the river. The animals were all of
+them extremely weak, and every day increased the probable difficulty of
+our return. There was not the least appearance of a break-up of the
+drought, the heavens were without a cloud, and the atmosphere was so clear
+that the outline of the moon could be distinctly seen, although she was
+far in her wane.
+
+BRINE SPRINGS IN THE RIVER.
+
+On the 6th, we journeyed again through a barren scrub, although on firmer
+ground, and passed numerous groups of huts. At about eight miles from our
+last encampment, we came upon the river, where its banks were of
+considerable height. In riding along them, Mr. Hume thought he observed a
+current running, and be called to inform me of the circumstance. On a
+closer examination, we discovered some springs in the very bed of the
+river, from which a considerable stream was gushing, and from the
+incrustation around them, we had no difficulty in guessing at their
+nature: in fact, they were brine springs, and I collected a quantity of
+salt from the brink of them.
+
+DISTRESS FOR WANT OF FRESH WATER.
+
+After such a discovery, we could not hope to keep our position. No doubt
+the current we had observed on first reaching the river, was caused by
+springs that had either escaped our notice or were under water. Here was
+at length a local cause for its saltness that destroyed at once the
+anticipation and hope of our being near its termination, and,
+consequently, the ardour with which we should have pressed on to decide so
+interesting a point.
+
+Our retreat would have been a measure of absolute necessity ere this, had
+we not found occasional supplies of fresh water, the last pond of which
+was now about eighteen miles behind us.
+
+OUR COURSE ARRESTED.
+
+Whether we should again find any, was a doubtful question, and I hesitated
+to run the risk. The animals were already, from bad food, and from the
+effects of the river water, so weak, that they could scarcely carry their
+loads, and I was aware, if any of the bullocks once fell, he would never
+rise again. Under such circumstances, I thought it better to halt the
+party at the edge of the scrub, though the feed was poor, and the water
+not drinkable. Our situation required most serious consideration. It was
+necessary that we should move either backward or forward in the morning.
+Yet we could not adopt either measure with satisfaction to ourselves,
+under such unfavorable circumstances. I determined to relieve my own mind
+by getting the animals into a place of safety, as soon as possible; and,
+as the only effectual way of doing this was to retire upon the nearest
+fresh water, I resolved at once to do so. The party turned back on the
+morning of the 6th; nor do I think the cattle would ever have reached
+their destination had we not found a few buckets of rain water in the
+cleft of a rock, to refresh them. Thus it will appear that under our most
+trying circumstances, we received aid from Providence, and that the bounty
+of Heaven was extended towards us, when we had least reason to expect it.
+
+Notwithstanding we had been thus forced to a partial retreat, both
+Mr. Hume and myself were unwilling to quit the pursuit of the river, in so
+unsatisfactory a manner. There was no difference in the appearance of the
+country to the westward of it; but a seeming interminable flat stretched
+away in that direction. A journey across it was not likely, therefore, to
+be attended with any favorable results, since it was improbable that any
+other leading feature was within our reach. I proposed, therefore, to take
+the most serviceable of the horses with me down the river, that, in the
+event of our finding fresh water, we might again push forward. Mr. Hume
+requesting to be permitted to accompany me, it was arranged that we should
+start on the 8th, thereby giving the animals a day's rest. We had not seen
+any natives since our parting with the chief horde; and as we were
+stationed at some little distance from the river, I hoped that they would
+not visit the camp during my absence. This was the only circumstance that
+gave me uneasiness, but the men had generally been behaving so well that I
+relied a great deal upon them.
+
+EXTRAORDINARY SOUND.
+
+About 3 p.m. on the 7th, Mr. Hume and I were occupied tracing the chart
+upon the ground. The day had been remarkably fine, not a cloud was there
+in the heavens, nor a breath of air to be felt. On a sudden we heard what
+seemed to be the report of a gun fired at the distance of between five and
+six miles. It was not the hollow sound of an earthly explosion, or the
+sharp cracking noise of falling timber, but in every way resembled a
+discharge of a heavy piece of ordnance. On this all were agreed, but no
+one was certain whence the sound proceeded. Both Mr. Hume and myself had
+been too attentive to our occupation to form a satisfactory opinion; but
+we both thought it came from the N.W. I sent one of the men immediately up
+a tree, but he could observe nothing unusual. The country around him
+appeared to be equally flat on all sides, and to be thickly wooded:
+whatever occasioned the report, it made a strong impression on all of us;
+and to this day, the singularity of such a sound, in such a situation,
+is a matter of mystery to me.
+
+FURTHER ATTEMPT TO EXPLORE THE RIVER.
+
+On the 8th, we commenced our journey down the river, accompanied by two
+men, and a pack-horse, carrying our provisions on one side and a bucket of
+water on the other. Keeping in general near the stream, but making
+occasional turns into the plains, we got to the brush from which the party
+had turned back, about 3 p.m. Passing through, we crossed a small plain,
+of better soil and vegetation than usual; but it soon gave place to the
+sandy loam of the interior; nor did we observe any material alteration,
+either in the country or the river, as we rode along. The flooded-gum
+trees on the banks of the latter, were of beautiful growth, but in the
+brushes dividing the plains, box and other eucalypti, with cypresses and
+many minor shrubs, prevailed. We slept on the river side, and calculated
+our distance from the camp at about twenty-six or twenty-eight miles.
+
+The horses would not drink the river water, so that we were obliged to
+give them a pint each from our own supply. On the following morning we
+continued our journey. The country was generally open to the eastward, and
+we had fine views of D'Urban's Group, distant from twenty to twenty-five
+miles. About noon, turning towards the river to rest, both ourselves and
+the horses, we passed through brush land for about a mile and a half. When
+we came upon its banks, we found them composed of a red loam with sandy
+superficies. We had, in the course of the day, crossed several creeks, but
+in none of them could we find water, although their channels were of great
+depth.
+
+The day had been extremely warm, and from shaking in the barrel our supply
+of water had diminished to a little more than a pint; it consequently
+became a matter of serious consideration, how far it would he prudent to
+proceed farther; for, however capable we were of bearing additional
+fatigue, it was evident our animals would soon fail, since they trembled
+exceedingly, and had the look of total exhaustion. We calculated that we
+were forty miles from the camp, in a S.W. direction, a fearful distance
+under our circumstances, since we could not hope to obtain relief for two
+days. Independently however, of the state of the animals, our spirits were
+damped by the nature of the country, and the change which had taken place
+on the soil, upon which it was impossible that water could rest; while the
+general appearance of the interior showed how much it had suffered from
+drought. On the other hand, although the waters of the river had become
+worse to the taste, the river itself had increased in size, and stretched
+away to the westward, with all the uniformity of a magnificent canal, and
+gave every promise of increasing importance; while the pelicans were in
+such numbers upon it as to be quite dazzling to the eye. Considering,
+however, that perseverance would only involve us in inextricable
+difficulties, and that it would also be useless to risk the horses, since
+we had gained a distance to which the bullocks could not have been
+brought, I intimated my intention of giving up the further pursuit of the
+river, though it was with extreme reluctance that I did so.
+
+CALLED IT THE "DARLING".
+
+As soon as we had bathed and finished our scanty meal, I took the bearings
+of D'Urban's Group, and found them to be S. 58 E. about thirty-three miles
+distant; and as we mounted our horses, I named the river the "Darling,"
+as a lasting memorial of the respect I bear the governor.
+
+ABANDON THE ATTEMPT.
+
+I should be doing injustice to Mr. Hume and my men, if I did not express
+my conviction that they were extremely unwilling to yield to
+circumstances, and that, had I determined on continuing the journey, they
+would have followed me with cheerfulness, whatever the consequences might
+have been.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+Intercourse with the natives--Their appearance and condition--Remarks on
+the Salt or Darling River--Appearance of the marshes on our return--
+Alarm for safety of the provision party--Return to Mount Harris--Miserable
+condition of the natives--Circumstances attending the slaughter of two
+Irish runaways--Bend our course towards the Castlereagh--Wallis's Ponds--
+Find the famished natives feeding on gum--Channel of the Castlereagh--
+Character of the country in its vicinity--Another tribe of natives--
+Amicable intercourse with them--Morrisset's chain of Ponds--Again reach
+the Darling River ninety miles higher up than where we first struck
+upon it.
+
+
+We kept near the river as we journeyed homewards, and in striking across a
+plain, found an isolated rock of quartz and jasper, just showing itself
+partially above the surface of the ground.
+
+We were anxious to get to the small plain I have mentioned, if possible,
+for the sake of the animals, and pushed on rapidly for it. About 4 p.m. we
+had reached our sleeping place of the previous evening, and being
+overpowered by thirst, we stopped in hopes that by making our tea strong
+we might destroy, in some measure, the nauseous taste of the water. The
+horses were spancelled and a fire lit. Whilst we were sitting patiently
+for the boiling of the tins, Mr. Hume observed at a considerable distance
+above us, a large body of natives under some gum trees. They were not near
+enough for us to observe them distinctly, but it was evident that they
+were watching our motions. We did not take any notice of them for some
+time, but at last I thought it better to call out to them, and accordingly
+requested Mr. Hume to do so. In a moment the whole of them ran forward and
+dashed into the river, having been on the opposite side, with an uproar I
+had never witnessed on any former occasion.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH NATIVES.
+
+Mr. Hume thought they intended an attack, and the horses had taken fright
+and galloped away. I determined, therefore, to fire at once upon them if
+they pressed up the bank on which we were posted. Mr. Hume went with me
+to the crest of it, and we rather angrily beckoned to the foremost of the
+natives to stop. They mistook our meaning, but laid all their spears in a
+heap as they came up. We then sat down on the bank and they immediately
+did the same; nor did they stir until we beckoned to them after the horses
+had been secured.
+
+As they conducted themselves so inoffensively, we gave them everything we
+had to spare. My gun seemed to excite their curiosity, as they had seen
+Mr. Hume shoot a cockatoo with it; they must consequently have been close
+to us for the greater part of the day, as the bird was killed in the
+morning. It was of a species new to me, being smaller than the common
+white cockatoo, and having a large scarlet-and-yellow instead of a
+pine-yellow top-knot.
+
+Having stayed about half an hour with them, we remounted our horses, and
+struck away from the river into the plains, while the natives went up its
+banks to join their hordes. Those whom we saw were about twenty-seven in
+number and the most of them were strangers.
+
+DISTRESS FROM THIRST.
+
+It was some time after sunset before we reached the little plain on which
+we had arranged to sleep, and when we dismounted we were in a truly
+pitiable state. I had been unable to refrain from drinking copiously at
+the river, and now became extremely sick. Mr. Hume had been scarcely more
+prudent than myself, but on him the water had a contrary effect, as well
+as upon Hopkinson. The tinker was the only man fit for duty, and it was
+well for us that such was the case, as the horses made frequent attempts
+to stray, and would have left us in a pretty plight had they succeeded. We
+reached the camp on the following day a little before sunset, nor was I
+more rejoiced to dismount from my wearied horse than to learn that
+everything in the camp had been regular during our absence and that the
+men had kept on the best terms with the natives who had paid them frequent
+visits.
+
+The bullocks had improved, but were still extremely weak, and as the
+horses we had employed on the last journey required a day or two's rest,
+it was arranged that we should not break up our camp until the 12th,
+beyond which period we could not stop, in consequence of the low state of
+our salt provisions, we having barely sufficient to last to Mount Harris,
+at the rate of two pounds per week.
+
+REMARKS ON THE NATIVES.
+
+The morning after we returned from our excursion, a large party of
+natives, about seventy in number, visited the camp. On this occasion, the
+women and children passed behind the tents, but did not venture to stop.
+Most of the men had spears, and were unusually inquisitive and forward.
+Several of them carried fire-sticks under the influence of the disease I
+have already noticed, whilst others were remarked to have violent
+cutaneous eruptions all over the body. We were pretty well on the alert;
+notwithstanding which, every minor article was seized with a quickness
+that would have done credit to a most finished juggler. One of the natives
+thus picked up my comb and toothbrush, but as he did not attempt to
+conceal them, they were fortunately recovered. After staying with us a
+short time the men followed the women. They appeared to be strangers who
+had come from a distance.
+
+CUSTOMS OF THE NATIVES.
+
+The natives of the Darling are a clean-limbed, well-conditioned race,
+generally speaking. They seemingly occupy permanent huts, but their tribe
+did not bear any proportion to the size or number of their habitations.
+It was evident their population had been thinned. The customs of these
+distant tribes, as far as we could judge, were similar to those of the
+mountain blacks, and they are essentially the same people, although their
+language differs. They lacerate their bodies, but do not extract the front
+teeth. We saw but few cloaks among them, since the opossum does not
+inhabit the interior. Those that were noticed, were made of the red
+kangaroo skin. In appearance, these men are stouter in the bust than at
+the lower extremities; they have broad noses, sunken eyes, overhanging
+eyebrows, and thick lips. The men are much better looking than the women.
+Both go perfectly naked, if I except the former, who wear nets over the
+loins and across the forehead, and bones through the cartilages of the
+nose. Their chief food is fish, of which they have great supplies in the
+river; still they have their seasons for hunting their emus and kangaroos.
+The nets they use for this purpose, as well as for fishing, are of great
+length, and are made upon large frames. These people do not appear to have
+warlike habits nor do they take any pride in their arms, which differ
+little from those used by the inland tribes, and are assimilated to them
+as far as the materials will allow. One powerful man, however, had a
+regular trident, for which Mr. Hume offered many things without success.
+He plainly intimated to us that he had a use for it, but whether against
+an enemy or to secure prey, we could not understand. I was most anxious to
+have ascertained if any religious ceremonies obtained among them, but the
+difficulty of making them comprehend our meaning was insurmountable; and
+to the same cause may be attributed the circumstance of my being unable to
+collect any satisfactory vocabulary of their language. They evinced a
+strange perversity, or obstinacy rather, in repeating words, although it
+was evident that they knew they were meant as questions. The pole we
+observed in the creek, on the evening previously to our making the
+Darling, was not the only one that fell under our notice; our impression
+therefore, that they were fixed by the natives to propitiate some deity,
+was confirmed. It would appear that the white pigment was an indication of
+mourning. Whether these people have an idea of a superintending Providence
+I doubt, but they evidently dread evil agency. On the whole I should say
+they are a people, at present, at the very bottom of the scale of
+humanity.
+
+REMARKS ON THE DARLING RIVER.
+
+We struck the Darling River in lat. 29 degrees 37 minutes S. and in E.
+long. 145 degrees 33 minutes, and traced it down for about sixty-six miles
+in a direct line to the S.W. If I might hazard an opinion from appearance,
+to whatever part of the interior it leads, its source must be far to the
+N.E. or N. The capacity of its channel, and the terrific floods that must
+sometimes rage in it, would argue that it is influenced by tropical rains,
+which alone would cause such floods. It is likely that it seldom arrives
+at so reduced a state as that in which we found it, and that, generally
+speaking, it has a sufficient depth of water for the purposes of inland
+navigation: in such case its future importance cannot be questioned, since
+it most probably receives the chief streams falling westerly from the
+coast ranges. But, with every anticipation of the benefit that may at some
+time or other be derived from this remarkable and central stream, it is
+incumbent on me to state that the country, through which it flows, holds
+out but little prospect of advantage. Certainly the portion we know of it,
+is far from encouraging. The extent of alluvial soil, between the inner
+and outer banks of the river, is extremely limited, and, instead of being
+covered with sward, is in most places over-run by the polygonum. Beyond
+this the plains of the interior stretch away, whose character and soil
+must change, ere they can be available to any good purpose. But there is a
+singular want of vegetable decay in the interior of New Holland, and that
+powerfully argues its recent origin.
+
+REMARKS ON THE COUNTRY.
+
+There is no life upon its surface, if I may so express myself; but the
+stillness of death reigns in its brushes, and over its plains. It cannot,
+however, be doubted that we visited the interior during a most unfavorable
+season. Probably in ordinary ones it wears a different appearance, but its
+deserts are of great extent, and its productions are of little value.
+
+Agreeably to our arrangements, we broke up our camp at an early hour on
+the morning of the 12th, and proceeded up the river to the junction of
+New Year's Creek. We then struck away in an easterly direction from it,
+detaching a man to trace the creek up, lest we should pass any water; and
+we should certainly have been without it had we not taken this precaution.
+
+On the following day, we again passed to the eastward, through an open
+country, having picturesque views of Oxley's Table Land. We crossed our
+track about noon, and struck on the creek at about five miles beyond it,
+and we were fortunate enough to procure both water and grass. The timber
+upon the plains, between us and the Darling, we found to be a rough gum,
+but box prevailed in the neighbourhood of the creek at this part of it.
+
+On the 14th, we changed our direction more to the southward, but made a
+short journey, in consequence of being obliged to make some slight repairs
+on the boat carriage.
+
+REGAIN OUR OLD ROUTE.
+
+On the 15th, we kept an E.S.E. course, and, crossing the creek at an early
+hour, got upon our old track, which we kept. We had the lateral ridge of
+the Pink Hills upon our right, and travelled through a good deal of brush.
+Four or five natives joined us, and two followed us to the end of our
+day's journey. In the course of the evening, they endeavoured to pilfer
+whatever was in their reach, but were detected putting a tin into a bush,
+and soon took to their heels. This was the first instance we had of open
+theft among the natives of the interior.
+
+We passed Mosquito Brush on the 18th, but found the ponds quite dry, we
+were, therefore, under the necessity of pushing on, to shorten the next
+day's journey, as we could not expect to get water nearer than the
+marshes. At noon, on the 19th, we entered the plain, and once more saw
+them spreading in dreariness before us. While the party was crossing to
+the first channel, I rode to the left, in order to examine the appearance
+of the country in the direction of the wood, and as far as I skirted the
+reeds had my impressions confirmed as to their partial extension. I was
+obliged, however, to join the men without completing the circuit of the
+marshes. They had found the first channel dry, and had passed on to the
+other, in which, fortunately, a small quantity of water still remained.
+It was, however, so shallow as to expose the backs of the fish in it, and
+a number of crows had congregated, and were pecking at them. Wishing to
+satisfy my mind as to the distance to which the river extended to the
+northward, Mr. Hume rode with me on the following day, to examine the
+country in that direction, leaving the men stationary. We found that the
+reeds gradually decreased in body, until, at length, they ceased, or gave
+place to bulrushes. There were general appearances of inundation, and of
+the subsidence of waters, but none that led us to suppose that any channel
+existed beyond the flooded lands.
+
+ALARM FOR THE SAFETY OF THE PROVISION PARTY.
+
+On our return to the camp, we observed dense masses of smoke rising at the
+head of the marshes, and immediately under Mount Foster. This excited our
+alarm for the safety of the party we hoped to find at Mount Harris, and
+obliged us to make forced marches, to relieve it if threatened by the
+natives.
+
+On the 22nd, we crossed the plains of the Macquarie, and surprised a
+numerous tribe on the banks of the river; and the difficulty we found in
+getting any of them to approach us, their evident timidity, and the
+circumstance of one of them having on a jacket, tended to increase our
+apprehensions. When two or three came to us, they intimated that white
+men either had been or were under Mount Harris, but we were left in
+uncertainty and passed a most anxious night.
+
+The body of reeds was still on fire; and the light embers were carried to
+an amazing distance by the wind, falling like a black-shower around us. As
+we knew that the natives never made such extensive conflagration, unless
+they had some mischievous object in view, our apprehension for the safety
+of Riley, with his supplies, was increased.
+
+At the earliest dawn, we pushed for the hill. In passing that part of the
+meadows under Mount Foster, we observed that the grass had also been
+consumed, and we scarcely recognized the ground from its altered
+appearance. As we approached Mount Harris, we saw recent traces of cattle,
+but none were visible on the plains. Under the hill, however, we could
+distinctly see that a hut of some kind had been erected, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the relief we felt when a soldier came
+forward to reconnoitre us. I could no longer doubt the safety of the
+party, and this was confirmed by the rest of the men turning out to
+welcome us. It appeared that our suspicions with regard to the natives had
+not been without foundation, since they attempted to surprise the camp,
+and it was supposed the firing of the marshes was done with a view to
+collect the distant tribes, to make a second attack; so that our arrival
+was most opportune.
+
+The party I found awaiting our arrival at Mount Harris consisted of one
+soldier, Riley, who had the charge of the supplies, and a drayman. They
+had found the paper I had fixed against the tree, and also the letters I
+had hid, and had forwarded them to Sydney, by another soldier and a
+prisoner; which had weakened their party a good deal. Riley informed me,
+that he had been between a month and three weeks at the station, and that
+knowing our provisions must have run short he had expected us much earlier
+than we had made our appearance.
+
+My dispatches stated, that additional supplies had been forwarded for my
+use, together with horses and bullocks, in the event of my requiring them.
+On examination, the former were found to be in excellent order; and, as it
+would take some time to carry any changes I might contemplate, or find it
+necessary to make, into effect, I determined to give the men who had been
+with me a week's rest.
+
+ENCAMP AT MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+The camp was made snug; and as the weather had become much cooler I
+thought it a good opportunity to slaughter one of the bullocks, in order
+to guard against any bad effects of our having been living for some weeks
+exclusively on salt provisions. I was also induced to this measure, from a
+wish to preserve my supplies as much as possible.
+
+These matters having been arranged, I had a temporary awning erected near
+the river, and was for three or four days busily employed writing an
+account of our journey for the Governor's information.
+
+Having closed my despatches, and answered the numerous friendly letters I
+had received, my attention was next turned to the changes that had taken
+place at Mount Harris during our absence. The Macquarie, I found, had
+wholly ceased to flow, and now consisted of a chain of ponds. Such of the
+minor vegetation as had escaped the fires of the natives, had perished
+under the extreme heat of the season. The acacia pendula stood leafless
+upon the plains, and the polygonum junceum appeared to be the only plant
+that had withstood the effects of the drought. Yet, notwithstanding this
+general depression of the vegetable kingdom, the animals that had been
+brought from Wellington Valley were in the best condition, and were,
+indeed, too fat for effective labour; it might, therefore, be reasonably
+presumed, that herbage affording such nourishment in so unfavourable a
+season, would be of the richest quality, if fresh and vigorous under the
+influence of seasonable, and not excessive, rains.
+
+FIRING OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+The appearance of the country was, however, truly melancholy; there was
+not a flower in bloom, nor a green object to be seen. Whether our arrival
+had increased their alarm, is uncertain, but the natives continued to fire
+the great marshes, and as the element raged amongst them, large bodies of
+smoke rose over the horizon like storm clouds, and had the effect of
+giving additional dreariness to the scene. I am inclined to think that
+they made these conflagrations to procure food, by seizing whatsoever
+might issue from the flames, as snakes, birds, or other animals; for they
+had taken every fish in the river, and the low state of its waters had
+enabled them to procure an abundance of muscles from its bed, which they
+had consumed with their characteristic improvidence. They were,
+consequently, in a starving condition, and so pitiable were their
+indications of it, that I was induced to feed such of them as visited the
+camp, notwithstanding their late misconduct; being likewise anxious to
+bring about a good understanding, as the best means of ensuring the safety
+of the smaller party when we should separate, of which I had reason to be
+doubtful. These people had killed two white men not long before my arrival
+among them, and as the circumstances attending the slaughter are singular,
+I shall relate them.
+
+SLAUGHTER OF TWO IRISH RUNAWAYS.
+
+The parties were two Irish runaways, who thought they could make their way
+to Timor. They escaped from Wellington Valley with a fortnight's provision
+each, and a couple of dogs, and proceeded down the Macquarie. About the
+cataract, they fell in with the Mount Harris tribe, and remained with them
+for some days, when they determined on pursuing their journey. The blacks,
+however, wanted to get possession of their dogs, and a resistance on the
+part of the Europeans brought on a quarrel. It appears, that before the
+blacks proceeded to extremities, they furnished the Irishmen, who were
+unarmed, with weapons, and then told them to defend themselves, but
+whether against equal or inferior numbers, I am uninformed. One of them
+soon fell, which the other observing, he took his knife out, and cut the
+throats of both the dogs before the blacks had time to put him to death.
+He was, however, sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe
+generally. I questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the
+most sullen silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact.
+
+ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE.
+
+Mr. Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid his
+compass on a large rock, near to which Mr. Oxley's boat had been burnt.
+To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings were all
+wrong. I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the error
+produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr. Hume noticed. When I
+placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N. by W., the
+true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W. My placing my
+notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did the card move
+until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the stone, when it
+first became violently agitated, and then settled correctly; and my
+bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range, and of its centre,
+were as follows:
+
+Mount Exmouth to the N ...... N. 86 E.
+Centre....................... N. 85 E.
+Vernon's Peak................ N. 89 E.
+Distance 70 miles.
+
+Having finished my reports and letters, it became necessary to consider
+the best point on which to move, and to fix a day for our departure from
+Mount Harris. It struck me that having found so important a feature as the
+Darling River, the Governor would approve my endeavouring to regain it
+more to the southward, in order to trace it down. I, therefore, detached
+Mr. Hume to survey the country in that direction, and to ascertain if a
+descent upon the Bogen district would be practicable, through which I had
+been informed a considerable river forced itself. The report he made on
+his return was such as to deter me from that attempt, but he stated that
+the country for 30 miles from the Macquarie was well watered, and superior
+to any he had passed over during the journey; beyond that distance, it
+took up the character of the remote interior, and alternated with plains
+and brush, the soil being too sandy to retain water on its surface. He saw
+some hills from the extremity of his journey, bearing by compass W.S.W.
+We consequently determined to make for the Castlereagh, agreeably to our
+instructions. Preparations were made for breaking up the camp, all the
+various arrangements in the change of animals were completed, the boat
+carriage was exchanged for a dray, and I took Boyle in the place of
+Norman, whose timidity in the bush rendered him unfit for service.
+
+CIRCUIT OF THE GREAT MARSHES.
+
+There is a small hill on the opposite side of the river, and immediately
+facing Mount Harris, and to the S.E. of it there is a small lagoon, the
+head of a creek, by means of which its superfluous waters are carried off.
+This creek runs parallel to the river for about ten miles, and enters the
+marshes at the S.E. angle. This I ascertained one day in riding to carry
+on my survey of the southern extremity of the marshes, and to join my line
+of route by making the circuit of that part of them. I found that the
+river was turned to its northerly course by a rising ground of forest
+land, which checks its further progress westerly. I proceeded round
+the S.W. angle, and then, taking a northerly course, got down to the
+bottom of the first great marsh, thus completing the circuit of them. I
+did not return to the camp until after 10 p.m., having crossed the river
+at day-light, nor did we procure any water from the time we left the
+stream to the moment of our recrossing it.
+
+WALLIS'S PONDS.
+
+Having completed our various arrangements, and closed our letters, we
+struck our tents on the morning of the 7th March; we remained, however, to
+witness the departure of Riley's party for Wellington Valley, and then
+left the Macquarie on an E.N.E. course for Wallis's Ponds, and made them
+at about 14 miles. They undoubtedly empty themselves into the marshes, and
+are a continuation of that chain of ponds on which I left the party in
+Mr. Hume's charge. About a mile from Mount Harris, we passed a small dry
+creek, that evidently lays the country under water in the wet seasons.
+There was a blue-gum flat to the eastward of it, which we crossed, and
+then entered a brush of acacia pendula and box. The soil upon the plain
+was an alluvial deposit; that in the brushes was sandy. From the extremity
+of the plain, Mount Harris bore, by compass, S.W. by W.; Mount Foster due
+west. The scrub through which we were penetrating, at length became so
+dense, that we found it impossible to travel in a direct line through it,
+and frequent ridges of cypresses growing closely together, turned us
+repeatedly from our course. The country at length became clearer, and we
+travelled over open forest of box, casuarina, and cypresses, on a sandy
+soil; the first predominating. For about two miles before we made the
+creek, the country was not heavily timbered, the acacia pendula
+succeeding the larger trees. The ground had a good covering of grass upon
+it, and there were few of the salsolaceous plants, so abundant on the
+western plains, to be found. The rough-gum abounded near the creek, with a
+small tree bearing a hard round nut, and we had the luxury of plenty of
+water.
+
+We remained stationary on the 8th, in hopes that Riley would have met the
+soldier who had been sent back to Wellington Valley, and that he would
+have forwarded any letters to us, of which he might have been the bearer.
+The day, however, passed over without realizing our expectations; and we
+started once more for the interior, and cut ourselves off from all
+communication with society.
+
+MORRISSET'S PONDS.
+
+We made for Morrisset's chain of ponds, and travelled over rich and
+extensive plains, divided by plantations of cypress, box, and casuarina,
+in the early and latter period of the day. About noon we entered a dense
+forest of cypresses, which continued for three miles, when the cypresses
+became mixed with casuarina, box, and mountain-gum, a tree we had not
+remarked before in so low a situation. We struck upon the creek after a
+journey of about 15 miles. It had a sandy bed, and was extremely tortuous
+in its course, nor was it until after a considerable search, that we at
+length succeeded in finding water, at which a party of natives were
+encamped. The moment they saw us, they fled, and left all their utensils,
+&c. behind them. Among other things, we found a number of bark troughs,
+filled with the gum of the mimosa, and vast quantities of gum made into
+cakes upon the ground. From this it would appear these unfortunate
+creatures were reduced to the last extremity, and, being unable to procure
+any other nourishment, had been obliged to collect this mucilaginous food.
+
+The plains we traversed, were of uniform equality of surface. Water
+evidently lodges and continues on them long after a fall of rain, and in
+wet seasons they must, I should imagine, be full of quagmires, and almost
+impassable.
+
+On the 10th, we passed through a country that differed in no material
+point from that already described. We stopped at 10 a.m. under some brush,
+in the centre of a large plain, from which Arbuthnot's range bore S. 84 E.
+distant from 50 to 55 miles, and afterwards traversed or rather crossed,
+those extensive tracts described by Mr. Evans as being under water and
+covered with reeds, in 1817. They now bore a very different appearance,
+being firm and dry. The soil was in general good, and covered with forest
+grass and a species of oxalia. We did not observe any reeds, or the signs
+of inundation, but, as is invariably the case with plains in the interior,
+they were of too even surface, as I have so lately remarked, to admit of
+the waters running quickly off them; and no doubt, when they became
+saturated, many quagmires are formed, that would very much impede the
+movements of an expedition.
+
+REACH THE CASTLEREAGH RIVER.
+
+We reached the Castlereagh about 4 p.m., and although its channel could
+not have been less than 130 yards in breadth, there was apparently not a
+drop of water in it. Its bed consisted of pure sand and reeds; amid the
+latter, we found a small pond of 15 yards circumference, after a long
+search. There is a considerable dip in the country towards the river, at
+about two miles from it; and the intervening brush was full of kangaroo,
+which, I fancy, had congregated to a spot where there was abundance of
+food for them. The soil covering the space was of the richest quality,
+and the timber upon it consisted of box, mountain gum, and the angophora
+lanceolata, a tree that is never found except on rich ground.
+
+WANT OF WATER; CHARACTER OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appeared that our troubles were to recommence, and that in order to
+continue on the Castlereagh, it would be necessary for Mr. Hume and myself
+to undertake those fatiguing journeys in search of water that had so
+exhausted us already: and after all, it was doubtful how soon we might be
+forced back. I had certainly expected that, on our gaining the banks of
+the river, we should have had a constant supply of water, but the
+circumstance of the Castlereagh having not only ceased to flow, but being
+absolutely dry, while it afforded the best and clearest proof of the
+severity and continuance of the drought in the interior, at the same time
+damped the spirits and ardour of the men. We kept the left bank of the
+river as we proceeded down it, and passed two or three larger ponds about
+a mile below where we had slept, but there they ceased. The bed of the
+river became one of pure sand, nor did there appear to be any chance of
+our finding any water in it. I stopped the party at about eight miles, and
+desired the men to get their dinners, to give Mr. Hume and myself time to
+search for a supply upon the plains. Disappointed to the left, we crossed
+the channel of the Castlereagh, and struck over a small plain upon the
+right bank, and at the extremity of it, came upon a swamp, from which we
+immediately returned for the cattle, and got them unloaded by seven
+o'clock. As there was sufficient pasture around us, I proposed to Mr. Hume
+on the following day, to leave the party stationary, and to ride down the
+river to see how far its present appearances continued. Like the
+generality of rivers of the interior, it had, where we struck upon it,
+outer banks to confine its waters during floods, and to prevent them from
+spreading generally over the country; the space between the two banks
+being of the richest soil, and the timber chiefly of the angophora kind.
+Flooded-gum overhung the inner banks of the river, or grew upon the many
+islands, with casuarina. It became evident, however, that the outer banks
+declined in height as we proceeded down the river, nor was it long before
+they ceased altogether. As we rode along, we found that the inner ones
+were fast decreasing in height also. Riding under a hanging wood of the
+angophora, which had ceased for a time, we were induced to break off to
+our right, to examine some large flooded-gum trees about a couple of miles
+to the N.W. of us. On arriving near them, we were astonished to find that
+they concealed a serpentine lagoon that had a belt of reeds round it.
+Keeping this lagoon upon our right, we at length came to the head of it,
+past which the river sweeps. Crossing the channel of the river, we
+continued to ride in an easterly direction to examine the country. In
+doing this, we struck on a second branch of the Castlereagh, leading
+W. by N. into a plain, which it of course inundates at times, and running
+up it, we found its bed at the point of separation, to be considerably
+higher than that of the main channel, which still continued of pure
+sand--and was stamped all over with the prints of the feet of natives,
+kangaroos, emus, and wild dogs, We then turned again to the head of the
+lagoon, and took the following bearings of Arbuthnot's range:
+
+Mount Exmouth .......... E. 90 S.
+Centre Range ........... E. 35 E.
+Vernon's Peak .......... E. 20 S.
+
+From the head of the lagoon, the river appeared to enter a reedy hollow,
+shaded by a long line of flooded gum trees, and on proceeding to it, we
+found the banks ceased here altogether; and that a very considerable plain
+extended both to the right and the left, which cannot fail of being
+frequently laid under water.
+
+LAGOONS AND CREEKS OF THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+On the following morning we moved the party to the lagoon, and, passing
+its head, encamped to the north of it; after which we again rode down the
+river in search of water. It continued to hold a straight and northerly
+course for about five miles, having a plain on either side. The reeds that
+had previously covered the channel then suddenly ceased, and the channel,
+contracting in breadth, gained in depth: it became extremely serpentine,
+and at length lost all the character and appearance of a river. It had
+many back channels, as large as the main one, serving to overflow the
+neighbouring country. We succeeded in finding a small pond of water in one
+of the former, hardly large enough to supply our necessities, but as it
+enabled us to push so much further on, we turned towards the lagoon,
+making a circuitous journey to the right, across a large plain, bounded to
+the north by low acacia brush and box. We struck upon a creek at the
+further extremity of the plain, in which there was a tolerably sized pond.
+It appeared from the traces of men, that some natives had been there the
+day before; but we did not see any of them. The water was extremely muddy
+and unfit for use. The lagoon at which we had encamped, was of less
+importance than we had imagined.
+
+JOURNEY DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+Whilst Mr. Hume led the party down the river, I rode up its northward
+bank, to examine it more closely. I found it to be a serpentine sheet of
+about three miles in length, gradually decreasing in depth until it
+separated into two small creeks. In following one of them up, I observed
+that they re-united at the distance of about two miles, and that the
+lagoon was filled from the eastward, and not by the river as I had at
+first supposed. The waters at the head of the lagoon were putrid, nor was
+there a fish in, or a wild fowl upon it. The only bird we saw was a
+beautiful eagle, of the osprey kind, with plumage like a sea gull, which
+had a nest in the tree over the tents.
+
+In turning to overtake the party I rode through a great deal of acacia
+scrub, and on arriving at the place at which I expected to have overtaken
+them, I found they had pushed on.
+
+The Castlereagh, as I rode down it, diminished in size considerably, and
+became quite choked up with rushes and brambles. Rough-gum again made its
+appearance, with swamp-oak and a miserable acacia scrub outside. The
+country on both sides of the river seemed to be an interminable flat, and
+the soil of an inferior description.
+
+WRETCHED APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+I came up with with Mr. Hume about 1 o'clock and we again pushed forward
+at 3, and halted for the night without water, the want of which the cattle
+did not feel. The river held a general westerly course, and the country in
+its neighbourhood became extremely depressed and low. On the following day
+we moved forward a distance of not more than nine miles, through a country
+on which, at first, the acacia pendula alone was growing on a light
+alluvial soil. The river had many back drains, by means of which, in wet
+seasons, it inundates the adjacent plains. It was evident, however, that
+they had not been flooded for many years; and, notwithstanding that the
+country was low, the line of inundation did not appear to be very
+extensive, nor were there any reeds growing beyond the immediate banks of
+the river. Swamp-oak and rough-gum again prevailed near the stream at our
+halting place, and the improvement that had taken place, both in the
+country and in the Castlereagh, had induced us to make so short a journey;
+for not only was there abundance of the grass for the animals, but large
+ponds of water in the river. Some natives had only just preceded us down
+it: we came upon their fires that were still smoking; and upon them were
+the remains of some fish they had taken, near which they had left a
+cumbrous spear. The circumstances cheered us with hopes that an
+improvement would take place in the country, and that some new feature
+would soon open upon us. In the course of the following day, however,
+every favorable change, both in the river and in the country, disappeared.
+The latter continued extremely depressed, and in general open, or lightly
+covered with acacia pendula; the former dwindled into a mere ditch, choked
+up with brambles and reeds, and having only here and there a stagnant pool
+of water. We travelled on a N.W. 1/2 W. course for about ten miles, and
+again stopped for the night without water. In the course of the afternoon,
+we traversed several flats, on which the rough-gum alone was growing.
+These flats were evidently subject to flood; and contained an alluvial
+soil.
+
+They became more frequent as we travelled down the river, and the work was
+so heavy for the animals, that I was obliged to keep wide of them, in
+doing which we struck upon a creek of large size, coming from the N.E.
+and, having crossed, we traversed its right bank to its junction with the
+Castlereagh, and stopped close to it at a pond of water, though the feed
+for the animals was bad. The country to the left of the river, though
+somewhat high, was the same, in essential points, as that to the right.
+
+The Castlereagh seemed to have increased in size below the creek, but
+still it had no resemblance to a river. We had not proceeded very far down
+its banks, on the 18th, when we crossed a broad footpath leading to it
+from the interior. I turned my horse to the left, and struck upon a long
+sheet of water, from which I startled a number of pelicans. It was evident
+that the natives had recently been in the neighbourhood, but we thought it
+probable they might have been a hunting party, who had returned again to
+the plains. The whole track we passed over during the day was miserably
+poor and bare of vegetation, nor did the appearance of the country to the
+N.E. indicate any improvement. We lost the traces of the natives
+immediately after crossing their path or beat, and again found the bed of
+the river dry, after we had passed the sheet of water to which it led. The
+soil was so rotten and yielding, that the team knocked up early; indeed,
+it was a matter of surprise to me that they should not have failed before.
+The river made somewhat to the westward with little promise of
+improvement. The wretched appearance of the country as we penetrated into
+it, damped our spirits; we pressed on, however, with difficulty, over
+ground that was totally destitute of vegetation. Instead of lofty timber
+and a living stream, we wandered along the banks of an insignificant
+watercourse, and under trees of stunted size and scanty foliage. We
+stopped on the 20th at the angle of a creek, in which there was some dry
+grass, in consequence of the animals being almost in a starving state, but
+even here they had but little to eat.
+
+A violent thunder-storm passed over us in the afternoon, but it made no
+change in the temperature of the air. The weather, although it had been
+hot and sultry, had fallen far short of the intense heat we experienced in
+crossing the marshes of the Macquarie, when it was such as to melt the
+sugar in the canisters, and to destroy all our dogs; and our nights were
+now become agreeably cool.
+
+A PARTY OF NATIVES.
+
+We still, however, continued to travel over a dead level, nor was a height
+or break visible from the loftiest trees we ascended. A little before we
+stopped at the creek, we surprised a party of natives; old men, women, and
+children. They were preparing dinners of fish in much larger quantities
+than they could have devoured--probably for a part of the tribe that were
+absent; but the moment they saw us they fled, and left every thing at our
+mercy. On examining the fish, we found them totally different from any in
+the Macquarie, and took two of the most perfect to preserve. In the
+afternoon one of the men came to inform me that the tribe was coming down
+upon us.
+
+Mr. Hume and I, therefore, went to meet them. They were at this time about
+150 yards from the tent, but seeing us advance, they stopped, and forming
+two deep, they marched to and fro, to a war song I suppose, crouching with
+their spears. We had not, however, any difficulty in communicating with
+them, and I shall detail the manner in which this was brought about, in
+hopes that it may help to guide others. When the natives saw us advance,
+they stopped, and we did the same. Mr. Hume then walked to a tree, and
+broke off a short branch. It is singular that this should, even with these
+rude people, be a token of peace. As soon as they saw the branch, the
+natives laid aside their spears, and two of them advanced about twenty
+paces in front of the rest, who sat down. Mr. Hume then went forward and
+sat down, when the two natives again advanced and seated themselves close
+to him.
+
+Now it is evident that a little insight into the customs of every people
+is necessary to insure a kindly communication; this, joined with patience
+and kindness, will seldom fail with the natives of the interior. It is not
+to avoid alarming their natural timidity that a gradual approach is so
+necessary. They preserve the same ceremony among themselves. These men,
+who were eighteen in number, came with us to the tents, and received such
+presents as we had for them. They conducted themselves very quietly, and,
+after a short time, left us with every token of friendship.
+
+LARGE CREEK.
+
+On the 21st we proceeded down the river on a N.N.W. course, and at about
+five miles struck upon a very large creek, apparently coming from
+the E.N.E.
+
+Although the Castlereagh had increased in size, this creek was infinitely
+larger; it was, however, perfectly dry. Lofty flooded-gum trees were upon
+its banks, and it appeared so much superior to the river that I was
+induced to halt the party at the junction, in order to examine it more
+closely. Mr. Hume, therefore, rode with me up the right bank. We had not
+proceeded very far, when some natives called out to us from the opposite
+scrub. Thinking that they belonged to the tribe we had left behind us, we
+pointed to the junction, and motioned them to go there, but one of the
+party continued to follow and call to us for some time. On our return to
+the men, we found that the natives had joined them, and they now gave us
+to understand that we were going away from water. This had indeed been
+apparent to us. The creek was perfectly dry, as far as we traced it up;
+and seemed to have been totally deserted by the natives.
+
+We were about to proceed on our journey, when from twenty to thirty
+natives approached us from down the river. We sent two of those who had
+been with us to them, and the whole accompanied us for some miles, talking
+incessantly to the men, but keeping at a very respectful distance from the
+animals. We at length got opposite to their camp, near which there was a
+very fine pool of water, and they were earnest in persuading us to stop at
+it. We were, however, too anxious to get forward to comply; under the
+improved appearance of the river since it had received the creeks from the
+eastward, little anticipating what was before us.
+
+NATIVE ARMOURY.
+
+The natives did not follow us beyond their own encampment. Within sight of
+it, we came upon their armoury, if I may so term it. Numerous spears were
+reared against the trees, and heaps of boomerangs were lying on the
+ground. The spears were very heavy, and half barbed; and it is singular
+that three of them were marked with a broad arrow. We saw the natives
+watching us, fearful, I imagine, that we should help ourselves; but I
+would not permit any of their weapons to be touched.
+
+EXAMINATION OF CREEKS NEAR THE CASTLEREAGH.
+
+Pursuing our journey, we reached another creek, at about five miles,
+similar to the last in appearance and size, and we crossed it repeatedly
+during the afternoon. We had been induced to keep along a native path in
+the hope that it would have led us to the river by a short cut; but it
+eventually led us to this creek, and away from the Castlereagh; for,
+notwithstanding that we subsequently changed our course to the S.W., we
+failed, as we supposed, again to strike upon the latter, and were obliged
+to stop for the night on the banks of what appeared to be a third large
+dry creek, which we intersected nearly at right angles.
+
+We travelled through a good deal of brush during the day, nor did the
+country change from the miserable and barren character it had assumed for
+the last thirty or forty miles. The Castlereagh had so frequently changed,
+that both Mr. Hume and myself were puzzled as to the identity of the
+creek upon which we had halted. We searched its bed in vain for water,
+although it was most capacious. Under an impression that the river was
+still to the south, and that we were at a point to which many watercourses
+from the high lands tended, I crossed the creek early in the morning, and
+held a S.W. course, over an open forest country. At about eight miles, we
+came upon a large space over-run by the polygonum junceum, a certain
+indication of flooded ground, and of our consequent proximity to some
+stream. Accordingly, after pushing through it, we struck upon a small
+creek with abundance of water in it. Whether this creek was the
+Castlereagh, which it resembled much more than the one we had left in the
+morning, was doubtful; but it was a great source of comfort to us to have
+so unexpected a supply of water as that which was now at our disposal.
+Whatever channel this was, whether a river or a creek, our tracing it down
+would lead us in the direction we wished to go, and probably to some
+junction.
+
+The neighbourhood of the creek was well clothed with vegetation, and the
+cattle found good feed; but the only trees near it were rough-gum and
+casuarinae; the flooded-gum had again disappeared. The soil of the forest
+land over which we journeyed was a light sandy loam; and its timber
+consisted chiefly of eucalypti, acacia pendula, and the angophora.
+
+Some natives visited us in the afternoon, and among them, both Mr. Hume
+and I recognized one of those we had seen on the Darling. He also knew us
+again, but we could not make out from him how far we were from that river.
+They stayed with us till sunset, and then went down the creek, leaving
+their spears against a tree, for which they said they would return.
+
+On the 23rd we took up a W.N.W. course, and when we again touched on the
+creek it was dry. This was at a distance of about five miles from where we
+had slept. As the animals had not recovered from their late privations, I
+deemed it better to halt the party and to examine the creek for a few
+miles below us, that in case it should prove destitute of water, we might
+return to that we had left. Mr. Hume accordingly rode down it for about
+three miles, without success; and on his rejoining the men, we returned
+with them to our last camp, or to within a short distance of it. Wishing
+to examine the creek above our position, I requested Mr. Hume to take two
+men with him, and to trace it down in search of water, while I should
+proceed in the opposite direction. I went from the camp at an early hour,
+and as I wandered along the creek, I passed a regular chain of ponds. The
+country on both sides of the creek was evidently subject to flood, but
+more extensively to the south than to the north. From the creek, I struck
+away to my left, and after penetrating through a belt of swamp-oak and
+minor shrubs, got on a small plain, which I crossed N.E. and, to my
+annoyance, found it covered with rhagodia and salsolae. As I had not
+started with the intention of sleeping, I turned to the S.W. a little
+before sunset, and reached the tents between ten and eleven. I found
+Mr. Hume awaiting me. He informed me that at about nine miles from
+where we had turned back with the party, he had struck upon a junction;
+and that as the junction was much larger than the channel he had been
+tracing, he thought it better to follow it up for a few miles. He found
+that it narrowed in width, and that its banks became steep, with a fine
+avenue of flooded-gum trees overhanging them. At four miles, he came upon
+another junction, and at four miles more, found himself opposite to the
+ground on which we had slept on the previous Saturday. From this point he
+retraced the channel, but not finding any water for three miles below the
+lower junction, he returned to the camp, with a view of prosecuting a
+longer journey on the morrow. Mr. Hume had become impressed with an
+opinion, that the junction up which we had slept was no other than the
+Castlereagh itself; and that our position was on a creek, probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds, flowing into it. As the cattle wanted a few
+days' rest, Mr. Hume and I determined to ride, unattended, along our track
+to our camp of the 21st, and then to follow the channel upwards, until we
+should arrive at the station of the natives, or until we should have
+ridden to such a distance as would set our conjectures at rest. In the
+morning, however, instead of running upon our old track, we followed that
+of Mr. Hume to the junction, giving up our first intention, with a view to
+ascertain if there existed any water which we could, by an effort, gain,
+below where Mr. Hume had been. The channel was very broad, with a
+considerable fall in its bed, and, in appearance, more resembled the slope
+of a lawn than the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees in the centre of
+its channel, in one of which the floods had left the trunk of a large
+tree. We could discover where it narrowed and its banks rose, but, as we
+intended to make a closer examination before we left the neighbourhood,
+we continued our journey down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
+an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood, but the distant
+country was miserably poor and bare. At about three miles, we came upon
+the fresh traces of some natives, which led us to the channel again, from
+which we had wandered unintentionally. In it we found there had been water
+very lately, and it appeared that the natives had dug holes at the bottom
+to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted, but still retained
+the appearance of moisture. At a mile and a half beyond these, we were led
+to some similar holes, by observing a number of birds flying about them.
+The water was too muddy for us to drink, but the horses emptied them
+successively. We now kept sufficiently near the channel to insure our
+seeing any pool that might still remain in it, but rode for about seven
+miles before we again saw water, and even here, although it was a spring,
+we were obliged to dig holes, and await their filling, before we could get
+sufficient for our use. Having dined, we again pursued our journey, and
+almost immediately came upon a long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined
+by bulrushes. The creek or river had for some time kept the centre of a
+deep alluvial valley, in which there was plenty of food for the cattle,
+and which, at this place, was apparently broader than anywhere else. The
+situation being favourable, we returned to the camp, and reached it late.
+
+DEPRESSION OF THE MEN.
+
+I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture, but I fancied, about
+this time, that the men generally were desponding. Whether it was that the
+constant fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our constant
+absence, or the consequent exhaustion it produced, had any effect on their
+minds, or that they feared the result of our perseverance, is difficult to
+say; but certainly, they all had a depression of spirits, and looked, I
+thought, altered in appearance; nor did they evince any satisfaction at
+our success--at least, not the satisfaction they would have shown at an
+earlier period of our journey.
+
+Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain if the channel from
+the junction was the Castlereagh, or only a creek. The intersection of so
+many channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so much alike, made it
+essentially necessary that we should satisfy ourselves on this point.
+Mr. Hume, therefore, accompanied me, as had at first been intended the
+morning of our return to the place at which we had slept. We took fresh
+horses, but dispensed with any other attendants, and indeed went wholly
+unarmed.
+
+CAMP OF NATIVES.
+
+After following our old track to its termination, we kept up the right
+bank of the channel, and at length arrived at the camp of the natives;
+thus satisfying ourselves that we had been journeying on the Castlereagh,
+and that we were still following it down. By this ride we ascertained that
+there was a distance of five-and-forty miles in its bed without a drop of
+water. Few of the natives were in the camp. The women avoided us, but not
+as if they were under any apprehension. Crossing at the head of the pool,
+we again got on our old track, but seeing two or three men coming towards
+us we alighted, and, tying our horses to a tree, went to meet them. One
+poor fellow had two ducks in his hand, which he had just taken off the
+fire; these he offered to us, and on our declining to accept of them, he
+called to a boy, who soon appeared with a large trough of honey, of which
+we partook. One of the men had an ulcer in the arm, and asked me what he
+should do to heal it; indeed, I believe Fraser had promised him some
+ointment, but not having any with me, I signified to him that be should
+wash it often, and stooping down, made as if I was taking up water in my
+hand. The poor fellow mistook me, and, also stooping down, took up a
+handful of dust which he threw over the sore. This gave me the trouble of
+explaining matters again, and by pointing to the water, I believe I at
+length made him understand me.
+
+DRY CHANNEL OF THE RIVER.
+
+These good natured people asked us where we had slept the day we passed,
+and when informed of the direction, shook their heads, motioning at the
+same time, that we must have been without water. We informed them where
+the party was, and asked them to come and see us, but I fancy the distance
+was too great, or else we were in the beat of another tribe. On mentioning
+these facts to the men, they said that two of the natives had followed us
+for some miles, calling out loudly to us, but Mr. Hume and I both being in
+front, we did not hear them, although, evidently, they wished to save us
+distress.
+
+Since the result of our excursion proved that the channel, about which I
+had been so doubtful, was the Castlereagh, it necessarily followed, that
+the creek at which we were encamped was one of those (most probably
+Morrisset's chain of ponds,) which we had already crossed nearer its
+source, and which Mr. Hume must have struck upon when endeavouring to gain
+the Castlereagh from the marshes of the Macquarie.
+
+A perusal of these sheets will ere this have impressed on the reader's
+mind, the peculiarity of that fortune which led us from the Castlereagh to
+the creek, at which alone our wants could have been supplied. Had we
+wandered down the river, as we undoubtedly should have done had we
+recognised it as such, the loss of many of our animals would have been the
+inevitable consequence, and very probably a final issue would have been
+put to our journey. It is only to those who are placed in situations that
+baffle their own exertions or foresight, that the singular guidance of
+Providence becomes fully apparent.
+
+NATIVES PERISHING FROM FAMINE.
+
+It would appear that the natives were dying fast, not from any disease,
+but from the scarcity of food; and, should the drought continue, it seemed
+probable they may became extinct.
+
+The men found the body of a woman covered with leaves near the tents, and
+very properly buried it. We made Friday a day of rest for ourselves, as
+indeed was necessary; and on the following morning proceeded down the
+river, and encamped on a high bank above it, at the base of which, our
+cattle both fed and watered.
+
+At this spot one of the largest gum-trees I had ever seen had fallen,
+having died for want of moisture; indeed, the state of the vegetable
+kingdom was such as to threaten its total extinction, unless a change of
+seasons should take place.
+
+It may be worthy of remark that, from our first arrival on the banks of
+the Castlereagh, to our arrival at the present camp, we never picked up a
+stone, or a pebble, in its bed.
+
+JUNCTION OF THE CASTLEREAGH WITH THE DARLING.
+
+In the hope that we should fall on some detached pond, we pursued our
+journey on the 29th. The Castlereagh gave singular proofs of its violence,
+as if its waters, confined in the valley, had a difficulty in escaping
+from it. We had not travelled two miles, when in crossing, as we imagined,
+one of its bights, we found ourselves checked by a broad river. A single
+glimpse of it was sufficient to tell us it was the Darling. At a distance
+of more than ninety miles nearer its source, this singular river still
+preserved its character, so strikingly, that it was impossible not to have
+recognised it in a moment. The same steep banks and lofty timber, the same
+deep reaches, alive with fish, were here visible as when we left it.
+A hope naturally arose to our minds, that if it was unchanged in other
+respects, it might have lost the saltness that rendered its waters unfit
+for use; but in this we were disappointed--even its waters continued the
+same. As it was impossible for us to cross the Darling, I determined on
+falling back upon our last encampment, which was at a most Convenient
+distance, and of concerting measures there for our future movements. Prior
+to doing so, however, I rode to the junction of the Castlereagh with
+the Darling, accompanied by Mr. Hume, a distance of about half a mile.
+Upon the point formed by the two streams, there were a number of huts,
+and on the opposite bank of the Darling, about twenty natives had
+collected. We called out to them, but they would not join us.
+
+At the junction, the Castlereagh, with whatever impetuosity it rushes from
+its confinement, makes not apparently the least impression on the Darling
+River. The latter seemed to loll on, totally heedless of such a tributary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+
+Perplexity--Trait of honesty in the natives--Excursion on horseback across
+the Darling--Forced to return--Desolating effects of the drought--Retreat
+towards the colony--Connection between the Macquarie and the Darling--
+Return up the banks of the Macquarie--Starving condition of the natives.
+
+
+On our return to the party, we found them surrounded by the natives, who
+were looking with an eye of wonder on the cattle and horses. We pointed
+out to them the direction in which we were going, and invited them to
+visit us; and nothing appeared to astonish them so much as the management
+of the team by a single man. We got back to our position early, and again
+fixed ourselves upon it.
+
+It now only remained for us to consider what we should do under
+circumstances of certainly more than ordinary perplexity. We had nothing
+to hope for from travelling in a southerly direction, while to the E. and
+N.E., the state of the country was worse than that by which we had
+penetrated to the Darling. It was evident, that the large creeks joining
+the Castlereagh in that direction were dry, since the natives not only
+intimated this to us, but it was unquestionable that they themselves had
+deserted them, and had crowded to such places as still contained a supply
+of water. Even in retreating, we could not hope to retrace our steps.
+Experience had proved to us, that the dry state of the interior was as
+injurious to the movements of an expedition as a too wet season would have
+been. Taking everything, therefore, into consideration, I determined on
+leaving the party stationary, and on crossing the Darling to the N.W.,
+and, if any encouraging feature presented itself, to return for the party,
+and persevere in an examination of the distant interior. Such, at least,
+appeared to me the most judicious plan: indeed, an attempt to have moved
+in any other direction would have been fruitless. And, as the result of
+this journey would be decisive, and would either fix or determine our
+advance or retreat, I was anxious for Mr. Hume's attendance.
+
+The natives followed to the camp, and in the course of the afternoon, were
+joined by their women. The latter however, would not approach nearer than
+the top of a little hillock on which they sat. The men did not come round
+the tents, but stood in a row at a short distance. At sunset, they gained
+a little courage, and wandered about a little more; at length they went
+off to the Darling.
+
+HONESTY OF A NATIVE.
+
+It was quite dark, when I heard a native call from the hill on which the
+women had been, and I desired Hopkinson to take his firelock and ascertain
+what the man wanted. He soon after returned, and brought a blanket, which
+he said the man had returned to him. The native was alone, and when he
+offered the blanket, kept his spear poised in his right hand; but, seeing
+that no violence was intended him, he lowered his weapon, and walked away.
+
+REWARD THE MAN FOR HIS CONDUCT.
+
+I was extremely pleased at this trait of honesty, and determined to reward
+it. On inquiry, I found that the men had availed themselves of the day to
+wash their blankets and that one of them had been flung over a bush
+hanging over the bank of the river, and it was supposed that one of the
+natives must have pulled it down with him. In the morning, the tribe went
+away from their encampment before day-light as we judged from the cry of
+their dogs, than which nothing could be more melancholy; but about eight,
+the men made their appearance on the hill occupied by the women the
+evening previously, and seemed to be doubtful whether to approach nearer.
+I went out to them, and, with a downward motion of my hand, beckoned for
+them to come to me: they mistook the signal, but laid all their spears on
+the ground, and it was not until after the sign had been reversed that
+they stirred or moved towards me. I then got them in a row, and desired
+Hopkinson to single out the man who had given him the blanket. It was,
+however, with great difficulty that he recognised him, as the man stood
+firm and motionless. At length, after walking two or three times along the
+line, he stopped before one man, and put his hand on his shoulder, upon
+which the manner of the native testified as to the correctness of his
+guess.
+
+The blanket being produced, I explained to the savage, with Mr. Hume's
+assistance, that I was highly pleased with him, and forthwith presented
+him with a tomahawk and a clasp-knife. The tribe were perfectly aware of
+the reason of my conduct, and all of them seemed highly delighted.
+
+I was happy in having such an opportunity of showing the natives of the
+interior that I came among them with a determination to maintain justice
+in my communication with them, and to impress them, at the same time, with
+a sense of our love of it in them. That they appreciated my apparent
+lenity in not calling for the defaulter, I am sure, and I feel perfectly
+conscious that I should have failed in my duty had I acted otherwise than
+I did.
+
+EFFECT OF FIRING A GUN.
+
+Although the natives had shown so good a disposition, as they were
+numerous, I thought it as well, since I was about to leave the camp, to
+show them that I had a power they little dreamt of about me. I therefore
+called for my gun and fired a ball into a tree. The effect of the report
+upon the natives, was truly ridiculous. Some stood and stared at me,
+others fell down, and others ran away; and it was with some difficulty we
+collected them again. At last, however, we did so, and, leaving them to
+pick out the ball, mounted our horses and struck away for the Darling.
+We crossed the river a little above where we struck it, and then proceeded
+N.W. into the interior.
+
+EXCURSION ACROSS THE DARLING.
+
+It is impossible for me to describe the nature of the country over which
+we passed, for the first eight miles. We rode through brushes of
+polygonum, under rough-gum, without a blade of vegetation, the whole space
+being subject to inundation. We then got on small plains of firmer
+surface, and red soil, but these soon changed again for the former; and
+at 4 p.m. we found ourselves advanced about two miles on a plain that
+stretched away before us, and bounded the horizon. It was dismally brown;
+a few trees only served to mark the distance. Up one of the highest I sent
+Hopkinson, who reported that he could not see the end of it, and that all
+around looked blank and desolate. It is a singular fact, that during the
+whole day, we had not seen a drop of water or a blade of grass.
+
+DESOLATING EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT.
+
+To have stopped where we were, would, therefore, have been impossible; to
+have advanced, would probably have been ruin. Had there been one favorable
+circumstance to have encouraged me with the hope of success, I would have
+proceeded. Had we picked up a stone as indicating our approach to high
+land, I would have gone on; or had there been a break in the level of the
+country, or even a change in the vegetation. But we had left all traces of
+the natives far behind us; and this seemed a desert they never
+entered--that not even a bird inhabited. I could not encourage a hope of
+success, and, therefore, gave up the point; not from want of means, but a
+conviction of the inutility of any further efforts. If there is any blame
+to be attached to the measure, it is I who am in fault, but none who had
+not like me traversed the interior at such a season, would believe the
+state of the country over which I had wandered. During the short interval
+I had been out, I had seen rivers cease to flow before me, and sheets of
+water disappear; and had it not been for a merciful Providence, should,
+ere reaching the Darling, have been overwhelmed by misfortune.
+
+I am giving no false picture of the reality. So long had the drought
+continued, that the vegetable kingdom was almost annihilated, and minor
+vegetation had disappeared. In the creeks, weeds had grown and withered,
+and grown again; and young saplings were now rising in their beds,
+nourished by the moisture that still remained; but the largest forest
+trees were drooping, and many were dead. The emus, with outstretched
+necks, gasping for breath, searched the channels of the rivers for water,
+in vain; and the native dog, so thin that it could hardly walk, seemed to
+implore some merciful hand to despatch it. How the natives subsisted it
+was difficult to say, but there was no doubt of the scarcity of food
+among them.
+
+We arrived in camp at a late hour, and having nothing to detain us longer,
+prepared for our retreat in the morning. The natives had remained with the
+party during the greater part of the day, and had only left them a short
+time prior to our arrival,
+
+When examining the creek on which we had been encamped for some days,
+Mr. Hume observed a small junction; and as we knew we were almost
+due N. of the marshes of the Macquarie, both of us were anxious to
+ascertain whence it originated. To return to Mount Harris, by retracing
+our steps up the Castlereagh, would have entailed the severest distress
+upon us; we the rather preferred proceeding up this creek, and taking our
+chance for a supply of water. We therefore crossed Morrisset's chain of
+ponds, and encamped in the angle formed by the junction of the two creeks.
+
+Before we left this position, we were visited by a party of natives,
+twelve in number, but not of the Darling tribe. They accompanied us a
+short way, and then struck off to the right. At about a mile and a half,
+we crossed Mr. Hume's track, leading westerly, which still remained
+observable. The creek was, no doubt, the hollow he stated that he crossed
+on that excursion, and its appearance certainly justified his opinion of
+it. Its bed was choked up with bulrushes or the polygonum, and its banks
+were level with the country on either side, or nearly so. We passed over
+extremely rich soil the whole day, on a S.W. and by W. course, though the
+timber upon it was dwarfish, and principally of the rough-gum kind.
+
+On the 2nd of April, we stopped in order to make some repairs upon the
+dray; the wheels of which had failed us. Clayton put in four new spokes,
+and we heated the tyres over again, by which means we got it once more
+serviceable.
+
+WILD MELON.
+
+The soil in the creek was of the richest quality, and was found to produce
+a dwarf melon, having all the habits and character of the cucumber.
+The fruit was not larger than a pigeon's egg, but was extremely sweet.
+There were not, however, many ripe, although the runners were covered with
+flowers, and had an abundance of fruit upon them. In the morning, we sent
+the tinker on horseback up the creek, to ascertain how far the next water
+was from us, desiring him to keep the creek upon his right, and to follow
+his own track back again. He thought fit, however, considering himself
+a good bushman, to wander away to his left, and the consequence was, that
+he soon lost himself. It would appear that he doubled and passed through
+some thick brush at the back of the camp, and at length found himself at
+dark on the banks of a considerable creek. In wandering along it, he
+luckily struck upon the natives we had last seen, who, good-naturedly, led
+him to the track of the dray, which his horse would not afterwards desert,
+and the tinker sneaked into the tent about 3 o'clock in the morning,
+having failed in his errand, and made himself the butt of the whole party.
+
+RETURN UP THE CREEK.
+
+The day succeeding this adventure, we moved up the creek, which was, for
+the most part, even with the plain. The country continued the same as that
+we had passed over from the junction, being subject to flood, and having
+patches of bulrushes and reeds upon it. No change took place in the
+timber, but the line of acacia pendula, which forms the line of
+inundation, approached neater to us; nor was the mark of flood so high on
+the trunks of trees as below. We halted, with abominable water, but
+excellent food for the animals in the plains behind us. In continuing our
+journey, we found several changes take place in the appearance of the
+creek and its neighbourhood. The former diminished in size, and at length
+separated into two distinct channels, choked up, for the most part, with
+dead bulrushes, but having a few green reeds in patches along it. The
+flats on either side became slightly timbered, and blue gum was the
+prevailing tree. Crossing one of the channels, we observed every
+appearance of our near approach to the marshes, the flats being
+intersected by many little water-runs, such as we had noticed at the
+bottom of them. About noon we struck upon a body of reeds under the wood
+of eucalypti, below the second great morass, and keeping a little to our
+right to avoid them, fell shortly afterwards into our old track on the
+plain, upon which we continued to move, making the best of our way to the
+channel which had supplied our wants on our first return from the Darling.
+It was now, however, quite dry, and we were obliged to push on further,
+to shorten the journey of the morrow.
+
+CONNECTION OF MACQUARIE AND DARLING.
+
+The result of our journey up the creek was particularly satisfactory, both
+to myself and Mr. Hume; since it cleared up every doubt that might have
+existed regarding the actual termination of the Macquarie, and enabled us
+to connect the flow of waters at so interesting and particular a point.
+It will be seen by a reference to the chart, that the waters of the
+marshes, after trickling through the reeds, form a small creek, which
+carries off the superfluous part of them into Morrisset's chain of ponds,
+which latter again falls into the Castlereagh, at about eight miles to the
+W.N.W. and all three join the Darling in a W. by N. direction, in lat.
+30 degrees 52 minutes south and E. lon. 147 degrees 8 minutes at about
+90 miles to the N.N.W. of Mount Harris, and about an equal distance to
+the E.S.E. of where we struck upon the last-mentioned river. Thus it
+is evident that the Darling had considerably neared the eastern ranges,
+although it was still more than 150 miles from their base. It was
+apparently coming from the N.E., and whether it has its sources in the
+mountains behind our distant settlements, or still farther to the
+northwards, is a question of curious speculation, although, as I have
+already stated, I am of opinion that none but tropical rains could
+supply the furious torrent that must sometimes rage in it.
+
+It would be presumptuous to hazard any opinion as to the nature of the
+interior to the westward of that remarkable river. Its course is involved
+in equal mystery, and it is a matter of equal doubt whether it makes its
+way to the south coast, or ultimately exhausts itself in feeding a
+succession of swamps, or falls into a large reservoir in the centre of
+the island.
+
+RETURN TO MOUNT HARRIS.
+
+We reached Mount Harris on the 7th of the month, and moving leisurely up
+the banks of the Macquarie, gained Mr. Palmer's first station on the 14th,
+and Wellington Valley on the 21st, having been absent from that settlement
+four months and two weeks. The waters of the Macquarie had diminished so
+much, that its bed was dry for more than half a mile at a stretch, nor did
+we observe the least appearance of a current in it, until after we had
+ascended the ranges. The lower tribes were actually starving, and brought
+their children to us to implore something to eat. The men attempted to
+surprise the camp, but I believe they were urged from absolute necessity
+to procure subsistence for themselves, and that they intended robbery
+rather than personal violence.
+
+DEPLORABLE STATE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+We left the interior in a still more deplorable state than that in which
+we found it; but it is more than probable that under other circumstances,
+we should have found it impossible to traverse its distant plains, as it
+is certain that unless rain fell in less than three weeks, all
+communication with the Darling would have been cut off:
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+
+General remarks--Result of the expedition--Previous anticipations--
+Mr. Oxley's remarks--Character of the Rivers flowing westerly--
+Mr. Cunningham's remarks--Fall of the Macquarie--Mr. Oxley's erroneous
+conclusions respecting the character of the interior, naturally inferred
+from the state in which he found the country--The marsh of the Macquarie
+merely a marsh of the ordinary character--Captain King's observations--
+Course of the Darling--Character of the low interior plain--The convict
+Barber's report of rivers traversing the interior--Surveyor-General
+Mitchell's Report of his recent expedition.
+
+RESULT OF THE EXPEDITION.
+
+Whether the discoveries that have been made during this expedition, will
+ultimately prove of advantage to the colony of New South Wales, is a
+question that time alone can answer. We have in the meanwhile to regret
+that no beneficial consequences will immediately follow them. The further
+knowledge that has been gained of the interior is but as a gleam of
+sunshine over an extensive landscape. A stronger light has fallen upon the
+nearer ground, but the distant horizon is still enveloped in clouds. The
+veil has only as it were been withdrawn from the marshes of the Macquarie
+to be spread over the channel of the Darling. Unsatisfactory, however, as
+the discoveries may as yet be considered in a commercial point of view,
+the objects for which the expedition had been fitted out were happily
+attained. The marsh it had been directed to examine, was traversed on
+every side, and the rivers it had been ordered to trace, were followed
+down to their terminations to a distance far beyond where they had ceased
+to exist as living streams. To many who may cast their eyes over the
+accompanying chart, the extent of newly discovered country may appear
+trifling; but when they are told, that there is not a mile of that
+ground that was not traversed over and over again, either by Mr. Hume or
+by myself, that we wandered over upwards of 600 miles more than the main
+body of the expedition, on different occasions, in our constant and
+anxious search for water, and that we seldom dismounted from our horses,
+until long after sunset, they will acknowledge the difficulties with which
+we had to contend, and will make a generous allowance for them; for,
+however unsuccessful in some respects the expedition may have been, it
+accomplished as much, it is to be hoped, as under such trying
+circumstances could have been accomplished. It now only remains for me to
+sum up the result of my own observations, and to point out to the reader,
+how far the actual state of the interior, has been found to correspond
+with the opinions that were entertained of it.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S REMARKS.
+
+I have already stated, in the introduction to this work, that the general
+impression on the minds of those best qualified to judge was, that the
+western streams discharged themselves into a central shoal sea. Mr. Oxley
+thus expresses himself on the subject:--
+
+
+"July 3rd. Towards morning the storm abated, and at day-light, we
+proceeded on our voyage. The main bed of the river was much contracted,
+but very deep; the waters spreading to the depth of a foot or eighteen
+inches over the banks, but all running on the same point of bearing. We
+met with considerable interruptions from fallen timber, which in places
+nearly choked up the channel. After going about twenty miles, we lost the
+land and trees; the channel of the river, which lay through reeds, and was
+from one to three feet deep, ran northerly.--This continued for three or
+four miles farther, when, although there had been no previous change in
+the breadth, depth, or rapidity of the stream for several miles, and I was
+sanguine in my expectations of soon entering the long-sought-for
+Australian sea, it all at once eluded our farther pursuit, by spreading on
+every point from N.W. to N.E. among the ocean of reeds which surrounded
+us, still running with the same rapidity as before. There was no channel
+whatever among those reeds, and the depth varied from three to five feet.
+This astonishing change (for I cannot call it a termination of the river)
+of course left me no alternative but to endeavour to return to some spot
+on which we could effect a landing before dark. I estimated, that during
+the day, we had gone about twenty-four miles, on nearly the same point of
+bearing as yesterday. To assert, positively, that we were on the margin of
+the lake, or sea, into which this great body of water is discharged, might
+reasonably be deemed a conclusion, which has nothing but conjecture for
+its basis. But if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from actual
+appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the immediate
+vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal one, and
+gradually filling up by numerous depositions from the high lands, left by
+the waters which flow into it. It is most singular, that the high lands on
+this continent seem to be confined to the sea-coast, and not to extend to
+any distance from it."
+
+MR. CUNNINGHAM'S REMARKS.
+
+In a work published at Sydney, containing an account of Mr. Allan
+Cunningham's journey towards Moreton Bay, in 1828, the following remarks
+occur, from which it is evident Mr. Cunningham entertained Mr. Oxley's
+views of the character and nature of the Western interior. Towards the
+conclusion of the narrative, the author thus observes:--
+
+
+"Of the probable character of the distant unexplored interior, into which
+it has been ascertained ALL the rivers falling westerly from the dividing
+ranges flow, some inference may be drawn from the following data.
+
+"Viewing, between the parallels of 34 degrees and 27 degrees, a vast area
+of depressed interior, subjected in seasons of prolonged rains to partial
+inundation, by a dispersion of the several waters that flow upon it from
+the eastern mountains whence they originate; and bearing in mind at the
+same time, that the declension of the country within the above parallels,
+as most decidedly shown by the dip of its several rivers, is uniformly
+to the N.N.W. and N.W., it would appear very conclusive, that either a
+portion of our distant interior is occupied by a lake of considerable
+magnitude, or that the confluence of those large streams, the Macquarie,
+Castlereagh, Gwydir, and the Dumaresq, with the many minor interfluent
+waters, which doubtless takes place upon those low levels, forms one
+or more noble rivers, which may flow across the continent by an almost
+imperceptible declivity of country to the north of north-west coasts, on
+certain parts of which, recent surveys have discovered to us extensive
+openings, by which the largest accumulations of waters might escape to the
+sea."
+
+CHARACTER OF THE RIVERS.
+
+It is the characteristic of the streams falling westerly from the eastern,
+or coast ranges, to maintain a breadth of channel and a rapidity of
+current more immediately near their sources, that ill accords with their
+diminished size, and the sluggish flow of their waters in the more
+depressed interior. In truth, neither the Macquarie nor the Castlereagh
+can strictly be considered as permanent rivers. The last particularly is
+nothing more than a mountain torrent. The Macquarie, although it at length
+ceased to run, kept up the appearance of a river to the very marshes; but
+the bed of the Castlereagh might have been crossed in many places without
+being noticed, nor did its channel contain so much water as was to be
+found on the neighbouring plains.
+
+There are two circumstances upon which the magnitude, and velocity of a
+river, more immediately depend. The first is the abundance of its sources,
+the other the dip of its bed. If a stream has constant fountains at its
+head, and numerous tributaries joining it in its course, and flows withal
+through a country of gradual descent, such a stream will never fail; but
+if the supplies do not exceed the evaporation and absorption, to which
+every river is subject, if a river dependant on its head alone, falls
+rapidly into a level country, without receiving a single addition to its
+waters to assist the first impulse acquired in their descent, it must
+necessarily cease to flow at one point or other. Such is the case with the
+Lachlan, the Macquarie, the Castlereagh, and the Darling. Whence the
+latter originates, still remains to be ascertained; but most undoubtedly
+its sources have been influenced by the same drought that has exhausted
+the fountains of the three first mentioned streams.
+
+In supporting his opinion of the probable discharge of the interior waters
+of Australia upon its north-west coast, Mr. Cunningham thus remarks in the
+publication from which I have already made an extract.
+
+
+"To those remarkable parts of the north-west coast above referred to in
+the parallel of 16 degrees south, the Macquarie river, which rises in
+lat. 33 degrees, and under the meridian of 150 degrees east, would have a
+course of 2045 statute miles throughout, while the elevation of its
+source, being 3500 feet above the level of the sea as shown by the
+barometer, would give its waters an average descent of twenty inches to
+the mile, supposing the bed of the river to be an inclined plane.
+
+"The Gwydir originating in elevated land, lying in 31 degrees south, and
+long. 151 degrees east, at a mean height of 3000 feet, would have to flow
+2020 miles, its elevated sources giving to each a mean fall of seventeen
+inches.
+
+"Dumaresq's river falling 2970 feet from granite mountains, in 28 1/4
+degrees under the meridian of 152 degrees, would have to pursue its course
+for 2969 miles, its average fall being eighteen inches to a mile."
+
+As I have never been upon the banks either of the Gwydir or the Dumaresq,
+I cannot speak of those two rivers; but in estimating the sources of the
+Macquarie at 3500 feet above the level of the sea, Mr. Cunningham has lost
+sight of, or overlooked the fact, that the fall of its bed in the first
+two hundred miles, is more than 2800 feet, since the cataract, which is
+midway between Wellington Valley and the marshes, was ascertained by
+barometrical admeasurement, to be 680 feet only above the ocean. The
+country, therefore, through which the Macquarie would have to flow during
+the remainder of its course of 1700 miles, in order to gain the
+N.W. coast, would not be a gradually inclined plain, but for the most part
+a dead level, and the fact of its failure is a sufficient proof in itself
+how short the course of a river so circumstanced must necessarily be.
+
+MR. OXLEY'S OPINIONS.
+
+Having conversed frequently with Mr. Oxley on the subject of his
+expeditions, I went into the interior prepossessed in favour of his
+opinions, nor do I think he could have drawn any other conclusion than
+that which he did, from his experience of the terminations of the rivers
+whose courses he explored. Had Mr. Oxley advanced forty, or even thirty
+miles, farther than he did, to the westward of Mount Harris; nay, had he
+proceeded eight miles in the above direction beyond the actual spot from
+which he turned back, he would have formed other and very different
+opinions of the probable character of the distant interior. But I am aware
+that Mr. Oxley performed all that enterprise, and perseverance, and talent
+could have performed, and that it would have been impracticable in him to
+have attempted to force its marshes in the state in which he found them.
+It was from his want of knowledge of their nature and extent, that he
+inferred the swampy and inhospitable character of the more remote country,
+a state in which subsequent investigation has found it not to be. The
+marsh of the Macquarie is nothing more than an ordinary marsh or swamp in
+another country. However large a space it covers, it is no more than a
+concavity or basin for the reception of the waters of the river itself,
+nor has it any influence whatever on the country to the westward of it,
+in respect to inundation; the general features of the latter being a
+regular alternation of plain and brush. These facts are in themselves
+sufficient to give a fresh interest to the interior of the Australian
+continent, and to increase its importance.
+
+CAPT. KING'S OPINIONS.
+
+With respect to that part of its coast at which the rivers falling from
+the eastern mountains, discharge themselves, it is a question of very
+great doubt. It seems that Capt. King, in consequence of some
+peculiarities in the currents at its N.W. angle, supports Mr. Cunningham's
+opinion as to their probable discharge in that quarter. But I fear the
+internal structure of the continent is so low, as to preclude the hopes of
+any river reaching from one extremity of it to the other. A variety of
+local circumstances, as the contraction of a channel, a shoal sea, or
+numerous islands, influence currents generally, but more especially round
+so extensive a continent as that of which we are treating; nor does it
+strike me that any observations made by Capt. King during his survey, can
+be held to bear any connection with the eastern ranges, or their western
+waters. It may, however, be said, that as the course of the Darling is
+still involved in uncertainty, the question remains undecided; but it
+appears to me, the discovery of that river has set aside every conjecture
+(founded on previous observation) respecting the main features of the
+interior lying to the westward of the Blue Mountains. Both Mr. Oxley and
+Mr. Cunningham drew their conclusions from the appearances of the country
+they severally explored. The ground on which those theories were built,
+has been travelled over, and has not been found to realise them, but
+subsequent investigation has discovered to us a river, the dip of whose
+bed is to the S.W. We have every reason to believe that the sources of
+this river must be far to the northward of the most distant northerly
+point to which any survey has been made, as we are certain that it is far
+beyond the stretch of vision from the loftiest and most westerly of the
+barrier ranges; from which circumstance, it is evident that whatever
+disposition the streams descending from those ranges to the westward may
+show to hold a N.W. course more immediately at the base, the whole of the
+interior streams, from the Macquarie to the Dumaresq, are tributaries to
+the principal channel which conveys their united waters at right angles,
+if not still more opposite to the direction they were supposed to take,
+as far as is yet known.
+
+COURSE OF THE DARLING.
+
+The Darling River must be considered as the boundary line to all inland
+discoveries from the eastward. Any judgment or opinion of the interior to
+the westward of that stream, would be extremely premature and uncertain.
+There is not a single feature over it to guide or to strengthen either the
+one or the other.
+
+CHARACTER OF THE WESTERN INTERIOR.
+
+My impression, when travelling the country to the west and N.W. of the
+marshes of the Macquarie, was, that I was traversing a country of
+comparatively recent formation. The sandy nature of its soil, the great
+want of vegetable decay, the salsolaceous character of its plants, the
+appearance of its isolated hills and flooded tracts, and its trifling
+elevations above the sea, severally contributed to strengthen these
+impressions on my mind. My knowledge of the interior is, however, too
+limited to justify me in any conclusion with regard to the central parts
+of Australia. An ample field is open to enterprise and to ambition, and it
+is to be hoped that some more decisive measures will be carried into
+effect, both for the sake of the colony and of geography, to fill up the
+blank upon the face of the chart of Australia, and remove from us the
+reproach of indifference and inaction.
+
+BARBER'S STATEMENT.
+
+Since the above pages were written, an expedition was undertaken by
+Major Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, to ascertain the truth of a report
+brought in by a runaway convict of the name of Barber, or Clarke, who had
+been at large for five years, at different times, among the natives to
+the northward of Port Macquarie. This man stated that a large river,
+originating in the high lands near Liverpool Plains, and the mountains to
+the north of them, pursued a N.W. course to the sea. His story ran thus:
+Having learnt from the natives the existence of this river, he determined
+to follow it down, in hopes that he might ultimately be enabled to make
+his escape from the colony. He accordingly started from Liverpool Plains,
+and kept on a river called the Gnamoi, for some time, which took him N.W.
+After a few days' journey, he left this river, traversed the country
+northwards, and crossed some lofty ranges. Descending to the N.E. he came
+to another large river, the Keindur, which again took him N.W. He
+travelled 400 miles down it, when he observed a large stream joining it
+upon its left bank, which he supposed to be the Gnamoi. The river he was
+upon was broad and navigable. It flowed through a level country with a
+dead current and muddy water, and spread into frequent lakes. He found
+that it ultimately discharged itself into the sea, but was uncertain at
+what distance from its sources. He was positive he never travelled to the
+SOUTHWARD OF WEST. He ascended a hill near the sea, and observed an island
+in the distance, from which, the natives informed him, a race of
+light-coloured men came in large canoes for a scented wood; but having
+failed in the immediate object of his journey, he was eventually obliged
+to return.
+
+MAJOR MITCHELL'S REPORT.
+
+The following official report of Major Mitchell will sufficiently point
+out the incorrectness of the preceding statement. It is most probable that
+Barber merely told that which he had heard from the natives, and that
+having a more than ordinary share of cunning, he made up a story upon
+their vague and uncertain accounts, in hopes that it would benefit him,
+as in truth it did.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Bullabalakit, on the River Nammoy,
+in lat. 30 degrees 38 minutes 21 seconds S.,
+long. 149 degrees 30 minutes 20 seconds E.
+23d December, 1831.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to state, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, the progress I have made in exploring the course of the interior
+waters to the northward of the Colony, with reference to the letter which
+I had the honour to address to Col. Lindesay, on this subject, on the
+19th ult.
+
+On crossing Liverpool Range my object was to proceed northward, so as to
+avoid the plains and head the streams which water them, and avoiding also
+the mountain ranges on the east.
+
+I arrived accordingly, by a tolerably straight and level line, at
+Walamoul, on Peel's River; this place (a cattle station of Mr. Brown)
+being nearly due north from the common pass across Liverpool Range, and
+about a mile-and-a-half above the spot where Mr. Oxley crossed this
+river.
+
+PEEL'S RIVER.
+
+I found the general course of the Peel below Walamoul to be nearly west;
+and after tracing this river downwards twenty-two miles (in direct
+distance), I crossed it at an excellent ford, named Wallamburra. I then
+traversed the extensive plain of Mulluba; and leaving that of Coonil on
+the right, extending far to the north-east, we passed through a favourable
+interval of what I considered Hardwicke's Range, the general direction of
+this range being two points west of north.
+
+On passing through this gorge, which, from the name of a hill on the south
+side, may be named Ydire, I crossed a very extensive tract of flat
+country, on which the wood consisted of iron-bark and acacia pendula; this
+tract being part of a valley evidently declining to the north-west, which
+is bounded on the south by the Liverpool Range, and on the south-west by
+the extremities from the same. On the west, at a distance of twenty-two
+miles from Hardwicke's Range, there stands a remarkable isolated hill
+named Bounalla; and towards the lowest part of the country, and in the
+direction in which all the waters tend, there is a rocky peak named
+Tangulda. On the north, a low range (named Wowa), branching westerly from
+Hardwicke's Range, bounds on that side this extensive basin, which
+includes Liverpool Plains. Peel's River is the principal stream, and
+receives, in its course, all the waters of these plains below the junction
+of Connadilly,--which I take to be York's River, of Oxley.
+
+THE RIVER NAMMOY.
+
+The stream is well known to the natives by the name Nammoy; and six miles
+below Tangulda, the low extremities from the surrounding ranges close on
+the river, and separate this extensive vale from the unexplored country
+which extends beyond to an horizon which is unbroken between W.N.W.
+and N.N.W.
+
+
+The impracticable appearance of the mountains to the northward, induced me
+to proceed thus far to the west; and on examining the country thirty miles
+N.E. by N. from Tangulda, I ascended a lofty range extending westward from
+the coast chain, and on which the perpendicular sides of masses of
+trachyte (a volcanic rock) were opposed to my further progress even with
+horses: it was therefore evident that the river supposed to rise about the
+latitude of 28 degrees would not be accessible, or at least available to
+the Colony, in that direction, and that in the event of the discovery of a
+river beyond that range flowing to the northern or north-western shores,
+it would become of importance to ascertain whether it was joined by the
+Nammoy, the head of this river being so accessible that I have brought my
+heavily laden drays to where it is navigable for boats, my present
+encampment being on its banks six miles below Tangulda. From this station
+I can perceive the western termination of the Trachytic range, and I am
+now about to explore the country between it and the Nammoy, and the
+further course of this river; and in the event of its continuance in a
+favourable direction, I shall fix my depot on its right bank, whence I now
+write, and descend the stream in the portable boats.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL
+
+The Hon. The Colonial Secretary.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+Peel's River, 29th February, 1832.
+
+SIR,
+
+I have the honour to inform you, for the information of His Excellency the
+Governor, that I have reached the left bank of this River with my whole
+party on my return from the northern interior, having explored the course
+of the river referred to in my letter of 22nd December last, and others
+within the 29th parallel of latitude.
+
+There was so much fallen timber in the Nammoy, and its waters were so low,
+that the portable boats could not be used on that river with advantage,
+and I proceeded by land in a north-west direction, until convinced by its
+course turning more to the westward that this river joined the river
+Darling. I therefore quitted its banks with the intention of exploring the
+country further northward, by moving round the western extremities of the
+mountains mentioned in my former letter, and which I have since
+distinguished in my map by the name of the Lindesay Range. These mountains
+terminate abruptly on the west, and I entered a fine open country at their
+base, from whence plains (or rather open ground of gentle undulation)
+extended westward as far as could be seen. On turning these mountains I
+directed my course northward, and to the eastward of north, into the
+country beyond them, in search of the river KINDUR; and I reached a river
+flowing westward, the bed of which was deep, broad, and permanent, but in
+which there was not then much water.
+
+THE RIVER KARAULA.
+
+The marks of inundation on trees, and on the adjoining high ground, proved
+that its floods rose to an extraordinary height; and from the latitude,
+and also from the general direction of its course, I considered this to be
+the river which Mr. Cunningham named the Gwydir, on crossing it sixty
+miles higher, on his route to Moreton Bay. I descended this river, and
+explored the country on its left bank for about eighty miles to the
+westward, when I found that its general course was somewhat to the
+southward of west. This river received no addition from the mountains over
+that part of its left bank traversed by me; and the heat being intense,
+the stream was at length so reduced that I could step across it. The banks
+had become low, and the bed much contracted, being no longer gravelly, but
+muddy. I therefore crossed this river and travelled northward, on a
+meridian line, until, in the latitude of 29 degrees 2 minutes, I came upon
+the largest river I had yet seen. The banks were earthy and broken, the
+soil being loose, and the water of a white muddy colour. Trees, washed out
+by the roots from the soft soil, filled the bed of this river in many
+places. There was abundance of cod-fish of a small size, as well as of the
+two other kinds of fish which we had caught in the Peel, the Nammoy, and
+the Gwydir. The name of this river, as well as we could make it out from
+the natives, was Karaula. Having made fast one tree to top of another tall
+tree, I obtained a view of the horizon, which appeared perfectly level,
+and I was in hopes that we had at length found a river which would flow to
+the northward and avoid the Darling. I accordingly ordered the boat to be
+put together, and sent Mr. White with a party some miles down to clear
+away any trees in the way. Mr. White came upon a rocky fall, and found
+besides the channel so much obstructed by trees, and the course so
+tortuous, that I determined to ascertain before embarking upon it, whether
+the general course was in the desired direction. Leaving Mr. White with
+half the party, I accordingly traced the Karaula downwards, and found that
+its course changed to south, a few miles below where I had made it, and
+that it was joined by the Gwydir only eight miles below where I had
+crossed that river. Immediately below the junction of the Gwydir (which is
+in latitude 29 degrees 30 minutes 27 seconds, longitude 148 degrees
+13 minutes 20 seconds) the course of the river continues southward of
+west, directly towards where Captain Sturt discovered the River Darling;
+and I could no longer doubt that this was the same river. I therefore
+returned to the party, determined to explore the country further
+northward.
+
+The results of my progress thus far were sufficient, I considered, to
+prove that the division of the waters falling towards the northern and
+southern shores of Australia is not, as has been supposed, in the
+direction of the Liverpool and Warrabangle range, but extends between Cape
+Byron on the eastern shore, towards Dick Hartog's Island on the west; the
+greater elongation of this country being between these points, and
+intermediate between the lines of its northern and southern coasts. The
+basin of the streams I have been upon must be bounded on the north by this
+dividing ground or water-shed, and although no rise was perceptible in the
+northern horizon, the river was traversed by several rocky dykes, over
+which it fell southward; their direction being oblique to the course, and
+nearly parallel to this division of the waters. I beg leave to state, that
+I should not feel certain on this point without having seen more, were it
+not evident from Mr. Cunningham's observations, made on crossing this
+division on his way to Moreton Bay. Mr. Cunningham, on crossing the head
+of this river, nearly in the same latitude, but much nearer its sources,
+found the height of its bed above the sea to be 840 feet; at about
+forty-five miles further northward the ground rose to upwards of
+1700 feet, but immediately beyond, he reached a river flowing north-west,
+the height of which was only 1400 feet above the sea. He had thus crossed
+this dividing higher ground, between the parallels of 29 degrees
+and 28 degrees. It appears, therefore, that all the interior rivers we
+know of to the northward of the Morumbidgee, belong to the basin of the
+Karaula; this stream flowing southward, and hence the disappearance of the
+Macquarie and other lower rivers may be understood, for all along the
+banks of the Karaula, the Gwydir, and the Nammoy, the country, though not
+swampy, bears marks of frequent inundation; thus the floods occasioned by
+these rivers united, cover the low country, and receive the Macquarie so
+that no channel marks its further course.
+
+That a basin may be found to the northward receiving the waters of the
+northern part of the coast range in a similar manner is extremely
+probable, and that they form a better river, because the angle is more
+acute between the high ground, which must bound it on the N.E. and the
+watershed on the south. I therefore prepared to cross the Karaula, in
+hopes of seeing the head at least of such a river, and to explore the
+country two degrees further northward, but moving in a N.W. direction.
+My tent was struck, and I had just launched my portable boat for the
+purpose of crossing the river, when Mr. Surveyor Finch, whom I had
+instructed to bring up a supply of flour, arrived with the distressing
+intelligence, that two of his men had been killed by the natives, who had
+taken the flour, and were in possession of everything he had brought--all
+the cattle, including his horse, being also dispersed or lost. I therefore
+determined not to extend my excursion further, as the party were already
+on reduced rations, and on the 8th instant I retired from the Karaula,
+returning by the marked line, which being cut through thick scrubs in
+various places, is now open, forming a tolerably direct line of
+communication in a N.W. direction from Sydney, to a river, beyond which
+the survey may be extended whenever His Excellency the Governor thinks
+fit.
+
+The natives had never troubled my party on our advance; indeed I only saw
+them when I came upon them by surprise, and then they always ran off.
+Their first visit was received at my camp on the Karaula, during my
+absence down that river, when they were very friendly, but much disposed
+to steal. Various tribes followed us on coming back, but never with any
+show of hostility, although moving in tribes of a hundred or more parallel
+to our marked line, or in our rear; it was necessary to be ever on our
+guard, and to encamp in strong positions only, arranging the drays for
+defence during the night: three men were always under arms, and I have
+much pleasure in stating, that throughout the whole excursion, and under
+circumstances of hardship and privation, the conduct of the men was very
+good. I took an armed party to the scene of pillage, and buried the bodies
+of the two men, who appeared to have been treacherously murdered while
+asleep by the blacks during the absence of Mr. Finch: no natives were to
+be found when I visited the spot, although it appeared from columns of
+smoke on hills which overlooked if, that they were watching our movements.
+
+The party has now arrived within a day's journey of Brown's station,
+and I have instructed Assistant-Surveyor White (from whom I have received
+great assistance during the whole journey) to conduct it homewards, being
+desirous to proceed without delay to Sydney, and to receive the
+instructions of His Excellency the Governor.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient Servant,
+T. L. MITCHELL,
+SURVEYOR-GENERAL.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY,
+"&c. &c. &c."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+
+Obstacles that attend travelling into the interior of Australia--
+Difficulty of carrying supplies--Importance of steady intelligent
+subordinates--Danger from the natives--Number of men requisite,--and of
+cattle and carriages--Provisions--Other arrangements--Treatment of the
+natives--Dimensions of the boat used in the second expedition.
+
+
+Having now had considerable experience in the fitting out and management
+of expeditions in New South Wales, I cannot refrain from making some few
+observations on the subject. And without presuming to lay dawn any fixed
+rules, I shall only refer to those by which I have best succeeded, in
+hopes that some of my remarks may prove of use to future travellers who
+may venture to penetrate into the trackless deserts over so small a
+portion of which I wandered.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EXPLORING AUSTRALIA.
+
+The great difficulty of examining the interior of Australia, is that of
+carrying supplies; for increasing the number of individuals composing an
+expedition is of no avail, since an additional number of men must
+necessarily increase the consumption of food. In order to meet this
+difficulty it has been proposed to establish depots upon which an
+expedition could fall back to recruit its supplies, and in ordinary cases
+this plan might answer; but I am decidedly of opinion that no party could
+long remain stationary in the distant interior without some fatal
+collision with the natives, which would be attended with the most
+deplorable consequences; and I do think, considering all things, that the
+experiment is too dangerous to be tried; for when I reached Mount Harris,
+on my first retreat from the Darling, I found the party who were awaiting
+me, with a supply of provisions, under very great alarm, in consequence of
+the hostile proceedings of the Mount Harris tribe. The men had been
+obliged to put the camp into a state of defence. The blacks had attempted
+to surprise them, and would, had I not returned, have combined in some
+general attack. It appears to me that the most judicious plan would be to
+send a supply of provisions, with an expedition, to a distant point, under
+the charge of a minor party. These provisions could replace those already
+expended, and the animals that carried them could be taken back.
+
+SELECTION OF SUBORDINATES.
+
+The number of individuals of which the expedition down the banks of the
+Macquarie was composed, was fourteen: that is to say, myself, Mr. Hume,
+two soldiers, one free man, and seven prisoners of the crown. The latter
+behaved, on all occasions, as steadily as it was possible for men to do.
+Yet the circumstance of the two soldiers being with me increased my
+confidence in the whole, for I was aware that their example would
+influence the rest. However well disposed the prisoners of the crown may
+be, (as in this instance they certainly were,) the beneficial example of
+steady discipline cannot be denied. I should not have considered myself
+justified in leaving the camp as I did for a week, and in detaching Mr.
+Hume at the same time when at the bottom of the marshes, or in making the
+last effort to maintain our position on the banks of the Darling, if I had
+not reposed every confidence in the man to whom I entrusted the safety
+of the camp during my absence.
+
+Experience, therefore, of the value of the two soldiers, whom General
+Darling was good enough to permit me to take on the strength of the party,
+fully bears me out in recommending that one man, at least, of general
+responsibility shall be attached to all future expeditions. The success of
+an expedition depends so much on the conduct of the persons of whom it is
+composed, that too much attention cannot be given to the selection even of
+the most subordinate. Men of active intelligent minds, of persevering
+habits, and of even temper, should be preferred to mechanics who do not
+possess these most requisite qualities. On the other hand, it is
+impossible to do without a good carpenter, however defective he may be in
+other respects. I was indebted to Mr. Maxwell, the superintendent of
+Wellington Valley, for some excellent men, both on my first and on my
+second journey, because he understood the nature of the service for which
+they were required, and the characters of those whom he recommended.
+But however well selected the party, or the men rather, might be, I still
+consider a man of general responsibility necessary for its complete
+organisation. I would have him somewhat superior to the rest in his
+station in life. Him I would hold answerable for the immediate discipline
+of the camp, whilst I was present, and for its safety when absent. The
+assistant to the leader I would put entirely out of the question. He
+has other and most important duties to perform. I would rate this man
+wholly independent of him.
+
+DANGER OF COLLISION WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to what I have already said with regard to the natives, it
+was supposed that they were so little to be apprehended, that when I went
+on the first occasion into the interior, I applied for a limited number of
+men only, under an impression that with a few men I could carry provisions
+equal to a consumption of a greater number, and by this means be enabled
+to keep the field for a greater length of time. But I do not think it
+would be safe to penetrate into the distant country with fewer than
+fifteen men, for although, happily, no rupture has as yet taken place with
+the natives, yet, there is no security against their treachery, and it is
+very certain that a slight cause might involve an expedition in
+inextricable difficulty, and oblige the leader to throw himself on the
+defensive, when far away from other resources than those with which he
+should have provided himself, and that, perhaps, when navigating a close
+and intricate river, with all the dangers and perplexities attendant on
+such a situation. It is absolutely necessary to establish nightly guards,
+not only for the security of the camp, but of the cattle, and at the same
+time to have a force strong enough to maintain an obstinate resistance
+against any number of savages, where no mercy is to be expected. It will
+be borne in mind, that there is a wide difference between penetrating into
+a country in the midst of its population, and landing from ships for the
+purpose of communication or traffic. Yet, how few voyages of discovery
+have terminated without bloodshed! Boats while landing are covered by
+their ships, and have succour within view; but not so parties that go into
+unknown tracts. They must depend on their immediate resources and
+individual courage alone.
+
+PACK-OXEN, HORSES, WHEEL-CARRIAGES.
+
+With regard to the animals, I should recommend an equal number of horses
+as of bullocks; since it has been found that the latter, though slow,
+travel better over swampy ground than horses, which, on the other hand,
+are preferable for expeditious journeys, to which bullocks would never be
+equal. One of the colonial pack-saddles weighs fifty pounds complete, and
+is preferable to those sent out from England. This, with a load of
+250 lbs. is sufficient for any animal, since it enables the men to place a
+part of their provisions with the general loads. The difficulty of keeping
+the backs of the animals free from injury, more especially where any
+blemish has before existed, is exceedingly great. They should undergo an
+examination twice a-day, that is, in the morning prior to moving off,
+and in the afternoon before they are turned out to feed; and measures
+should then be taken to ease them as circumstances require. I never
+suffered the saddles to be removed from the backs of the animals under my
+charge for twenty minutes after the termination of the journey for the
+day, in order to guard against the effects of the sun; and where the least
+swelling appeared the saddle was altered and the place dressed. Yet,
+notwithstanding all this care and attention, several both of the horses
+and bullocks were at one time in a sad condition, during the first
+journey,--so much so as almost to paralyse our efforts. It would be
+advisable that such animals as are entirely free from blemish should be
+chosen for the service of expeditions, for, with proper management they
+might he kept in order. The anxiety of mind attendant on a bad state of
+the animals is really quite embarrassing, for it not only causes a delay
+in the movements, but a derangement in the loads. Other animals are
+overburdened, and there is no knowing where the evil will stop.
+
+In addition to the pack-animals, I would recommend the employment of a
+dray or cart under any practicable circumstances. It serves to carry
+necessary comforts, gives an expedition greater facility for securing its
+collections, and is of inconceivable advantage in many other respects.
+
+ISSUE OF PROVISIONS.
+
+Constant and most earnest attention should be paid to the issue of
+provisions, on the discreet management of which so much depends, and the
+charge of them should be committed to the second in command. The most
+important articles are flour, tea, sugar, and tobacco. All should be
+husbanded with extreme care, and weighed from time to time. The flour is
+best carried in canvass bags, containing 100 pounds each, and should at
+the termination of each day's journey, be regularly piled up and covered
+with a tarpaulin. Tea, sugar and tobacco lose considerably in weight, so
+that it is necessary to estimate for somewhat more than the bare supply.
+With regard to the salt meat, the best mode of conveying it appears to be
+in small barrels of equal weight with the bags of flour. Salt pork is
+better than beef. It should be deprived of all bones and be of the very
+best quality. I have heard spirits recommended, but I do not approve their
+use. Tea is much more relished by the men; indeed they could not do well
+without it. A small quantity of spirits would, however, of course be
+necessary in the event of its being required.
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+Mr. Cornelius O'Brien, an enterprising and long-established settler, who
+has pushed his flocks and herds to the banks of the Morumbidgee, was good
+enough to present me with eight wethers as I passed his station. It may be
+some gratification to Mr. O'Brien to know, that they contributed very
+materially to our comforts, and he will, perhaps, accept my
+acknowledgements in this place, not only for so liberal a present to
+myself, but for his attention and kindness to my men as long as they
+remained in his neighbourhood. It was found that the sheep gave but little
+additional trouble, requiring only to be penned at night, as much to
+secure them from the native dogs as to prevent them from straying away.
+They followed the other animals very quietly, and soon became accustomed
+to daily movements. They proved a most available stock; no waste attended
+their slaughter, and they admitted of a necessary and wholesome change of
+fresh food from the general salt diet, on which the men would otherwise
+have had to subsist.
+
+The provisions should, if possible, be issued weekly, and their diminution
+should be so regulated as to give an equal relief to the animals.
+
+For general information i have annexed a list of the supplies I took with
+me on my first expedition. It may appear long, but the articles were
+packed in a small compass, and their value immaterial.
+
+As a precautionary measure I should advise, that one of the pack animals
+be kept apart for the purpose of carrying water. Two casks of equal weight
+are the best for such a purpose. In long and hot marches, the men
+experience great relief from having water at hand.
+
+INTERCOURSE WITH THE NATIVES.
+
+In reference to the natives, I hope sufficient has been said of the manner
+of communicating with them to prevent the necessity of a repetition here.
+The great point is not to alarm their natural timidity: to exercise
+patience in your intercourse with them; to treat them kindly; and to watch
+them with suspicion, especially at night. Never permit the men to steal
+away from the camp, but keep them as compact as possible; and at every
+station so arrange your drays and provisions that they may serve as a
+defence in case of your being attacked.
+
+The natives appeared to me to be indifferent to our presents, in most
+cases. Tomahawks, knives, pieces of iron, and different coloured ribbons
+for the forehead, were most esteemed by them. They will barter and
+exchange their fish for articles, and readily acquire confidence.
+
+I believe I have now touched on all the more important points: on minor
+ones no observation I can make will be of use; men must, in many things,
+be guided by circumstances.
+
+* * * * *
+
+WHALE BOAT EMPLOYED ON THE SECOND EXPEDITION.
+
+I may here notice that, in my second expedition, as it was anticipated
+that I should require adequate provision for water conveyance, at one
+stage or other of my journey down the Morumbidgee, I was furnished with a
+whale-boat, the dimensions of which are given below. She was built by
+Mr. Egan, the master builder of the dock-yard and a native of the colony,
+and did great credit to his judgment. She carried two tons and a half of
+provisions, independently of a locker, which I appropriated for the
+security of the arms, occupying the space between the after-seat and the
+stern. She was in the first instance put together loosely, her planks
+and timbers marked, and her ring bolts, &c. fitted. She was then taken to
+pieces, carefully packed up, and thus conveyed in plank into the interior,
+to a distance of four hundred and forty miles, without injury. She was
+admirably adapted for the service, and rose as well as could have been
+expected over the seas in the lake. It was evident, however, that she
+would have been much safer if she had had another plank, for she was
+undoubtedly too low. The following were her dimensions:--
+
+Breadth across 7th timber aft, 5 ft. 1/2 an inch outside.
+Across 12th timber, 5 ft. 11 1/4 in.
+Across 17th timber forward, 5 ft.
+25 ft. 8 in. in length inside.
+Curve of the keel No. 1, from the after side of each apron, 3 ft. 3 3/4in.
+No. 2, from head to head of the dead wood, 13 1/2 in.
+No. 3, from one end of keel to the other inner side, 3 in.
+No. 4, round of keel from the toe of each dead wood, 7/8 1/16th.
+The timbers were marked, beginning from the stern to the bow on the
+starboard side, and from bow to stern on the larboard.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. I.
+
+
+
+LETTER OF INSTRUCTIONS.
+
+
+
+By His Excellency Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, Commanding
+His Majesty's Forces, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales, and its dependencies, and
+Vice Admiral of the same, &c. &c. &c.
+
+TO CHARLES STURT, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE 39TH REGIMENT OF FOOT.
+
+Whereas it has been judged expedient to fit out an expedition for the
+purpose of exploring the interior of New Holland, and the present dry
+season affords a reasonable prospect of an opportunity of ascertaining the
+nature and extent of the large marsh or marshes which stopped the progress
+of the late John Oxley Esq, Surveyor General, in following the courses of
+the rivers Lachlan and Macquarie in the years 1817 and 1818. And whereas I
+repose full confidence in your abilities and zeal for conducting such an
+expedition, I do hereby constitute and appoint you to command and take
+charge of the expedition now preparing for the purpose of exploring the
+interior of the country, and for ascertaining, if practicable, the nature
+and extent of the marsh or marshes above mentioned.
+
+In the prosecution of this service, you will be guided generally by the
+following instructions.
+
+1. You will be accompanied on this expedition by Mr. Hamilton Hume, whose
+great experience in travelling through the remote parts of the Colony,
+cannot fail to be highly useful to you. You will also be attended by two
+soldiers and six convicts, of whom one is to understand the shoeing of
+horses, one to be a carpenter, one a harness-maker and three stock-men,
+and you will be provided with six horses and twelve bullocks.
+
+2. A small boat has been built here for the use of the expedition, and for
+its conveyance, there is provided a light four-wheeled carriage to be
+drawn by two bullocks.
+
+The deputy Commissary General has received orders for supplying the
+expedition with provisions of the best quality sufficient for six months'
+consumption, together with tents, blankets, clothing, pack-saddles,
+utensils, instruments, tools, and necessaries of all kinds of which you
+are likely to stand in need. Orders are also given for providing you with
+arms and ammunition, with rockets for signals, and an ample supply of
+simple medicines--You are to consider it an important duty to attend to
+the providing of all these supplies, and to take care that not only every
+article is of the best quality that can be procured, but also that no
+article be wanting with which you may desire to be provided.
+
+3. Orders are given for forwarding without delay all your provisions,
+stores and supplies of every kind to Wellington Valley, at which place,
+you, Mr. Hume, and all your men are to rendezvous as soon as possible.
+Mr Maxwell, the superintendent, will furnish you with well-trained
+bullocks, and afford you all the assistance you may require in arranging
+every thing for your departure from that station.
+
+4. After you shall have completed all your arrangements, you are to lose
+no time in finally departing from Wellington Valley in prosecution of the
+immediate objects of the expedition.
+
+5. You are first to proceed to Mount Harris, where you are to form a
+temporary depot, by means of which you will have an opportunity of more
+readily communicating with Mr. Maxwell.
+
+6. You are then to endeavour to determine the fate of the Macquarie River,
+by tracing it as far as possible beyond the point to which Mr. Oxley went,
+and by pushing westward, you are to ascertain if there be any high lands
+in that direction, or if the country be, as it is supposed, an unbroken
+level and under water. If you should fail in these objects, you will
+traverse the plains lying behind our north-west boundaries, with a view to
+skirt any waters by which you may have been checked to the westward; and
+if you should succeed in skirting them, you are to explore the country
+westward and southward as far as possible, endeavouring to discover the
+Macquarie beyond the marsh of Mr. Oxley, and following it to its mouth if
+at all practicable.
+
+7. There is some reason to believe that the over-flowing of the Macquarie
+when visited by Mr. Oxley, was occasioned by heavy rains falling in the
+mountains to the eastward, and that as you are to visit the same spot at a
+different season of the year, you may escape such embarrassment; but
+although you should get beyond the point at which Mr. Oxley stopped, it
+would not be prudent to risk your own health or that of your men, by
+continuing long in a swampy country. Therefore it may be advisable for you
+in the first instance to leave the greater part of your men, bullocks, and
+baggage, at Mount Harris, and if you should see a probability of your
+being able to cross into the interior, you will then return to Mount
+Harris for such additional supplies as you may judge necessary. You can
+there communicate with Mr. Maxwell respecting any ulterior arrangements
+which you may be desirous of making.
+
+8. The success of the expedition is so desirable an object, that I cannot
+too strongly impress upon you the importance of perseverance in
+endeavouring to skirt any waters or marshes which may check your course as
+long as you have provisions sufficient for your return; but you must be
+cautious not to proceed a single day's journey further than where you find
+that your provisions will be barely sufficient to enable you to reach the
+nearest place at which you can depend upon getting supplies.
+
+9. If after every endeavour you should find it totally impracticable to get
+to the westward, you are still to proceed northward, keeping as westerly a
+direction as possible; and when the state of your provisions will oblige
+you to retreat, you will be guided by your latitude, as to the place to
+which you are to make the best of your way, but you are not to make for
+any place on the coast, if Wellington valley should still be nearer.
+
+10. You must be aware that the success of the expedition will greatly
+depend upon the time for which your provisions will hold out, and
+therefore you will see the great importance of observing every possible
+economy in the expenditure of provisions, and preventing waste of every
+kind.
+
+11. You are to keep a detailed account of your proceedings in a journal,
+in which all observations and occurrences of every kind, with all their
+circumstances, however minute, are to be carefully noted down. You are to
+be particular in describing the general face of all the country through
+which you pass, the direction and shape of the mountains, whether detached
+or in ranges, together with the bearings and estimated distances of the
+several mountains, hills, or eminences from each other. You are likewise
+to note the nature of the climate, as to heat, cold, moisture, winds,
+rains, &c, and to keep a register of the temperature from Fahrenheit's
+thermometer, as observed at two or three periods of each day. The rivers,
+with their several branches, their direction, velocity, breadth, and
+depth, are carefully to be noted. It is further expected that you will,
+as far as may he in your power, attend to the animal, vegetable, and
+mineral productions of the country, noting down every thing that may occur
+to you, and preserving specimens as far as your means will admit,
+especially some of all the ripe seeds which you may discover; when the
+preservation of specimens is impossible, drawings or detailed accounts of
+them, are very desirable.
+
+12. You will note the description of the several people whom you may meet,
+the extent of the population, their means of subsistence, their genius and
+disposition, the nature of their amusements, their diseases and remedies,
+their objects of worship, religious ceremonies, and a vocabulary of their
+language.
+
+Lastly. On your return from your journey, you are to cause all the
+journals or other written documents belonging to, and curiosities
+collected by the several individuals composing the expedition, to be
+carefully sealed up with your own seal and kept in that state until you
+shall have made your report to me in writing of the result of the
+expedition.
+
+Given at Sydney, this eighteenth day of November, 1828.
+By Command of His Excellency the Governor,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. II.
+
+
+
+LIST OF STORES SUPPLIED FOR THE EXPEDITION.
+
+
+List of Articles delivered from His Majesty's Stores,
+in charge of D. A. C. Goodsir, to Captain Sturt, viz.--
+
+1 Hack saddle. 9 Harness casks.
+1 Bridle. 23 Canvas bags.
+2 Tents. 4 Tin cases.
+14 Pack saddles. 16 Padlocks.
+14 Pair hobbles. 6 Tarpaulens.
+24 Sets horse shoes. 10 Haversacks.
+2000 Horse nails. 113 Fathom one-inch rope.
+113 Fathoms 1 1/2 inch rope. 1 Boat compass.
+1 Hammer, (Blacksmith's) 1 Telescope.
+1 Paring knife. 1 Spare glass for ditto.
+2 Chipping do. 1 Tin case (for charts.)
+2 Rasps. 100 Fish-hooks, (large.)
+1 Pair pincers. 12 Fishing-lines.
+1 Cutter. 10 Knives.
+2lb. Pack thread. 10 Forks.
+24 Needles. 10 Spoons.
+1/4lb. Bristles. 2 Frying-pans.
+7lbs. Leather. 2 Tinder-boxes.
+1/2lb. Thread. 1 Tea-kettle, (tin.)
+1 Pair of steelyards. 10 Tin dishes.
+10 Tin pots. 8 Jackets.
+1 Flour seive. 8 Duck frocks.
+2 Felling-axes. 8 Shirts.
+4 Tomahawks. 16 Trousers.
+2 Hammers. 24 Pair shoes.
+1 Hand-saw. 16 Blankets.
+3 Bill-hooks. 16 Pair stockings.
+3 Awls. 2 Bullock collars.
+3 Broad hoes. 2 Do. back-bands and pipes.
+4 Razors. 2 Leading cruppers.
+4 Brushes. 1 Boat with sail and oars.
+4 Combs. 1 Do. carriage.
+3 Iron pots, (camp kettles.) 1 Canvass boat-cover.
+1 Pair scissors. 3 Water breaker.
+
+COMMISSARIAT OFFICE, SYDNEY, NOV. 10TH, 1828.
+
+P.S.--l Tarpaulin.
+ Large Fish-hook.
+ 1 Tin tea-kettle.
+ 1 Camp kettle.
+ Pitch and oil.
+ Hemp or twine.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. III.
+
+
+
+SHEEP-FARMING RETURNS, SHOWING THE INCREASE IN FOUR YEARS,
+from two Breeding Flocks, consisting of 670 Ewes in Lamb.
+
+
+(A.)--1st JUNE, 1828.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks. Breeding Ewes. Lambs. Total. Remarks.
+
+ 2 yrs. old. 3 yrs. old. Male.-Female.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Lambs.
+No. 1 330 148 149 627 Deaths 6. Incr.297
+No. 2 330 154 154 638 4 308
+ ---- -- ---
+ * 1265 10 605
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+* The increase throughout these returns is calculated at from 270 to 290
+Lambs, to 300 Ewes, which is the usual average in N.S.W.
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Purchased two Flocks of Ewes, at 84s.............................670 Ewes.
+Increase of Lambs.......................................... 605
+Casual Deaths............................................... 10
+ 595
+ ---
+Total as per Return............................................ 1265
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(B.)--1st JUNE, 1829.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 3-yr. 327 154 154 635 Deaths 3 Incr.308
+2 4-yr. 326 155 155 636 4 310
+3 1-yr. 302 302 1 ---
+4 1-yr. 302 18 320 -- 618
+ ---- 8
+ 1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (A) Total...............................................1265
+Increase by Lambing....................................618
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 636
+Casual Deaths......................................... 8 628
+ ----
+Total as per return............................................1893
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(C.)--1st JUNE, 1830.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 296 133 154 562 Deaths 6 Incr.266
+2 4-yr. 325 150 155 625 2 300
+3 5-yr. 326 160 646 320
+4 2-yr. 302 27 329 ---
+5 1-yr. 309 309 886
+6 1-yr. 309 309 ---
+ ---- 3 Rams died
+ 2780 12 ditto purchased
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (B) Total............................................ 1893
+Increase by Lambing....................................886
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................12
+ ---
+ 898
+Deaths............................................... 11 887
+ ----
+Total as per return......................................... 2780
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(D.)--1st JUNE, 1831.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 304 136 136 576 Deaths 5 Incr.272
+2 3-yr. 293 135 136 564 3 271
+3 5-yr. 324 156 156 636 1 312
+4 6-yr. 320 156 156 632 2 312
+ Killed 4 ---
+5 3-yr. 300 300 Deaths 2 1167
+6 2-yr. 308 308 1
+7 1-yr 443 443
+8 1-yr 442 442 1
+9 40 40 5
+ ---- --
+ 3941 20
+ Purchased 12
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (C) Total............................................ 2780
+Increase by Lambing...................................1167
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................18
+ ---
+ 1185
+Casual deaths 20 ...Killed for use 4 ................. 24 1161
+ ----
+Total as per return.......................................... 3941
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+(E.)--1st JUNE, 1832.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Flocks.|Breeding|Maiden|Wethers.|Rams.| Lambs. |Total.| Remarks.
+ | Ewes. | Ewes.| |Male. Female.|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+No. Lambs.
+1 2-yr. 344 154 154 652 Deaths 6 Incr.308
+2 3-yr. 344 162 161 667 4 323
+4 3-yr. 342 164 165 671 3 329
+5 6-yr. 320 155 155 630 2 310
+6 7-yr. 300 145 145 590 2 290
+7 4-yr. 300 300 ----
+ 1560
+8 3-yr 302 302 2
+9 2-yr 440 440 1
+10 1-yr 583 583
+11 1-yr 584 584
+12 45 45 5 Purch. 10
+ ---- ---- ---- --- --- --- ----
+ 1650 584 1625 45 780 780 5464
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ABSTRACT.
+
+Return (D) Total............................................ 3941
+Increase by Lambing...................................1560
+Ditto Rams purchased....................................10
+ ---
+ 1570
+Decrease by casual death .............................. 25
+Decrease by slaughter for use ......................... 22
+ ---
+ 1523
+ ----
+ Grand Total .............................. 5464 as above
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+MEMORANDUM,--The deaths have been calculated at the lowest rate under the
+best management. It may be safer to assume a rate of four or five per
+cent. per annum.
+
+
+
+Account of Expenditure and Income upon Sheep Stock in Australia,
+appended to Returns A. B. C. D. and E.
+ 1st YEAR, (RETURN A.) JUNE, 1829.
+
+INCOME.
+By 11265 fleeces, average weight 2 1/4 lbs. 284 lbs
+wool at 1s. 6d. per lb. 213 9 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 1 Watchman at 20 20 0 O PROFIT.
+To Hurdles, &c. 10 0 0
+ -------- 90 0 0
+ -------- 123 9 0
+
+ 2nd YEAR, (B.) JUNE, 1830.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 1893 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 4259lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 319 8 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 20 40 0 0
+To 1 Watchman 20 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 5 0 0
+ ---------
+ 125 0 0
+To 18 Rams at 10 pounds* 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 305 0 0
+ ---------
+ 14 8 6
+*The price of rams will probably fall to 5 pounds
+
+ 3rd YEAR, (C.) JUNE, 1831.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 2780 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 6255lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 469 2 6
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 25 25 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 20 60 0 0
+To 2 Watchman 20 40 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 195 0 0
+To 12 Rams at 10 pounds 120 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+ ---------
+ 154 2 6
+
+ 4th YEAR, (D.) JUNE, 1832.
+
+ INCOME.
+By 3941 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 8867lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 665 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 2 Ditto 25 50 0 0
+To 4 Ditto 20 80 0 0
+To 3 Watchman &c. 60 0 0
+(one to take charge of rams)
+To Hurdles &c. 10 0 0
+ ---------
+ 260 0 0
+To 18 Rams at 10 pounds 180 0 0
+ ---------
+ 440 0 0
+ ---------
+ 225 0 0
+
+ 5th YEAR, (E.) JUNE, 1833.*
+
+ INCOME.
+By 5464 fleeces, at 2 1/4 lbs. 12,294 lbs. wool at
+1s. 6d. 922 0 0
+ EXPENDITURE.
+To 2 Shepherds at 30 pounds 60 0 0
+To 3 Ditto 25 75 0 0
+To 5 Ditto 20 100 0 0
+To 3 Watchman 20 60 0 0
+To Hurdles &c. 20 0 0
+ ---------
+ 315 0 0
+To 10 Rams at 10 pounds 100 0 0
+ ---------
+ 415 0 0
+ ---------
+ 507 0 0
+ ----------
+ Net profit by sales of wool in 5 years 1024 0 0
+
+1024 0 0 divided by 5 gives 204 8 0 for annual interest on the
+original capital of 2814 0 0, (about 7 1/4 percent per annum)
+in addition to the accumulation of capital itself, shown by the
+valuation of stock.
+
+*These accounts are a year in advance of the sheep returns, in order to
+bring them to the time at which the wool would be sold.
+
+
+ VALUATION OF SHEEP, JUNE, 1832----(RETURN E.)
+
+1614 Ewes from 1 to 4 years old at 3 pounds each 4842 0 O
+ 620 Do. 4 to 7 years old 2 1240 0 0
+ 780 Female Lambs 2 1560 0 0
+2405 Wethers and Male Lambs 15s. 1803 0 0
+ 45 Rams (original cost, 450l.) 400 0 0
+ ----------
+ 9845 0 0
+
+Note.--About 500 pounds would be added to the Income on the fifth year,
+by the sale of wethers of 3 and 4 years old.
+
+The cost of rams ought, strictly speaking, to be added to capital, and not
+deducted from Income; but these returns were made out in their present
+form at the request of a gentleman proceeding to the Colony with a limited
+capital, and who wished to know how much he might safely invest in sheep.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. IV.
+
+
+
+LIST OF GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS, COLLECTED IN THE DISTANT INTERIOR DURING
+THE FIRST EXPEDITION, WITH THEIR LOCALITIES AND THEIR RELATIVE DISTANCES
+FROM EACH OTHER.
+
+
+It may be necessary to observe that the height of the Cataract of the
+Macquarie River above the sea, was ascertained by barometrical
+admeasurement to be 650 feet. The country subsequently traversed is
+considerably lower. The specimens refer only to the geological formation
+of the distant interior.
+
+Schorl Rock.--Colour blueish grey, fine grained, extremely hard. Composed
+of Tourmaline and Quartz. Forms the bed of the Macquarie at the Cataract,
+75 miles to the N.W. of Wellington Valley.
+
+Decomposed Mica Slate.--Colour white; yields to the knife; adheres
+strongly to the tongue.
+
+Decomposed Feldspar.--Colour pale rose-pink; very fine grained; easily
+scratched with the knife; adheres strongly to the tongue.
+
+Both specimens immediately succeed the Schorl rock at the Cataract, in
+large smooth-sided masses.
+
+This formation may be said to terminate the rocks connected with the
+dividing ranges, since it is the last that occurs at their western base.
+
+A little below the Cataract, the county undergoes a remarkable change,
+and becomes extremely depressed.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour dull red, with white spots, or grey with
+red spots; very hard, compact, sonorous, magnetic. [See pp. 27 and 115.]
+Composition of Mount Harris, a hill called by Mr. Oxley, elevated about
+170 feet above the level of the plains. It lies 65 miles to the N.N.W. of
+the Cataract, and is about 16 miles distant from the first of the marshes
+of the Macquarie.
+
+Porphyry with Feldspar.--Colour grey with red spots, similar to the last.
+Was not observed to affect the needle. Formation of Mount Foster.
+Mount Foster is more than 200 feet in height, and lies about 5 miles to
+the N.N.W. of Mount Harris. From the summit of both, Arbuthnot's range is
+visible, bearing nearly due east, distant 70 miles. [See page 28.]
+
+Quartz Rock varieties--Slaty Quartz varieties.--Composition of the first
+elevations to the Westward of the marshes of the Macquarie, called
+New Year's Range, a group of five hills. The loftiest about 200 feet in
+elevation; distant about 80 miles to the N.W. of Mount Harris.
+
+Granite.--Colour red, coarse-grained. Composed of Quartz, Feldspar,
+and Mica.
+
+ Granite, Porphyritic.--Colour light red. Both occurring in the bed of
+New Year's Creek, traversing it obliquely, and are visible for a few
+hundred yards only. This granite occurs about 16 miles from the Range in
+a N. by E. direction.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of Oxley's Table Land, 500 feet above the
+level of the plains. It is broken into two hills, that appear to have been
+separated by some convulsion. [See page 81.] It bears N.W. by W. from
+New Year's Range, distant 50 miles.
+
+Old Red Sandstone.--Composition of D'Urban's group. The highest elevation
+ascended during the expedition, being nearly 600 feet above the level of
+the plain in which it rises. It lies to the S.S.W. of Oxley's Table Land,
+distant 40 miles, and the rock of which it is composed is much harder
+and closer.
+
+Breccia.--Colour pale yellow, silicious cement. Composition of some
+trifling elevations to the North of New-Year's range, with which it is
+doubtful whether they are connected.
+
+Crystallized Sulphate of Lime.--Found imbedded in the alluvial soil
+forming the banks of the Darling river. Occurring in a regular vein. Soft,
+yielding to the nail; not acted on by acids.--See Plate.
+
+Breccia.--Pale ochre colour, silicious cement, extremely hard. Cellular,
+and sharp edges to the fractured pebbles. Has apparently undergone fusion.
+Occurs in the bed of the Darling in one place only.
+
+Sandstone Varieties.--Colour dull red and muddy white; appears like burnt
+bricks; light, easily frangible; adheres to the tongue; occurs in large
+masses in the bed of the Darling; probably in connection with the
+rock-salt of the neighbourhood, which, from the number of brine springs
+discovered feeding the river, must necessarily exist.
+
+Variety of the same description of rock.
+
+Jasper and Quartz.--Showing itself above the surface of a plain, from
+which D'Urban's group bore S. 40 E. distant 33 miles.
+
+It is a remarkable fact, that not a pebble or a stone was picked up during
+the progress of the expedition, on any one of the plains; and that after
+it again left Mount Harris for the Castlereagh, the only rock-formation
+discovered was a small Freestone tract near the Darling river. There was
+not a pebble of any kind either in the bed of the Castlereagh, or in the
+creeks falling into it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX No. V.
+
+
+
+OFFICIAL REPORTS TO THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 23RD JANUARY, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor has been pleased to order, that the following
+communication, dated the 25th of December last, from Captain Sturt, of the
+39th Regiment, who is employed in an exploring expedition into the
+interior of the country, be published for general information.
+
+By his Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN MARSHES, 25TH DECEMBER, 1828.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to forward, for the Governor's perusal, a
+copy of my journal up to the date of my arrival at Mount Harris. I should
+not have directed the messenger to return so soon, had I not subsequently
+advanced to Mount Foster, and surveyed the country from that eminence. I
+could distinctly see Arbuthnot's Range to the eastward. From that point
+the horizon appeared to me unbroken, but the country to the northward and
+westward seemed to favour an attempt to penetrate into it. I did not
+observe any sheet of water, and the course of the Macquarie was lost in
+the woodlands below.
+
+Mr. Hume ascended the hill at sun-rise, and thought he could see mountains
+to the north east, but at such a distance as to make it quite a matter of
+uncertainty. Agreeing, however, in the prudence of an immediate descent,
+we left our encampment on the morning of the 23rd, under Mount Foster, to
+which we had removed from Mount Harris, and pursued a north-north-west
+course to the spot on which we rest at present. We passed some fine meadow
+land near the river, and were obliged to keep wide of it in consequence of
+fissures in the ground. Traversing a large and blasted plain, on which the
+sun's rays fell with intense heat, and on which there was but little
+vegetation, we skirted the first great morass, and made the river
+immediately beyond it. It is of very considerable extent, the channel of
+the river passing through it. We are encompassed on every side by high
+reeds, which exist in the woods as well as in the plains. Mr. Hume and
+myself rode forward yesterday through the second morass, and made the
+river on slightly elevated ground, at a distance of about five miles; the
+country beyond appeared to favour our object, and we, to-morrow, proceed
+with the party to the north-west. The river seems to bend to the
+north-east; but in this level country it is impossible to speak with
+certainty, or to give any decided opinion of the nature of it, beyond the
+flats on which we are travelling. The reeds to the north-east and
+northward extend over a circumference of fifty miles; but if Mr. Hume
+really saw mountains or rising ground in the former point, the apparent
+course of the Macquarie is at once accounted for. The country, however,
+seems to dip to the north, though generally speaking it is level, and I am
+inclined to think that the state of the atmosphere caused a deception in
+this appearance.
+
+I regret to add, that the effects of the sun on the plain over which we
+passed on the 23rd produced a return of inflammation in the eyes of the
+men, I have named in my journals, and caused the same in the eyes of
+several others of my party. I halted, therefore, to expedite their
+recovery. They are doing well now, and we can proceed in the cool of the
+morning without any fear of their receiving injury by it. One of the men,
+who were to return to Wellington Valley, was attacked slightly with
+dysentery, but the medicines I gave him carried it off in the course of a
+day or two. I have taken every precaution with regard to the health of the
+men, in preparing them for the country into which they are going; and I
+have to request that you will inform the governor that the conduct of the
+whole party merits my approbation, and that I have no fault to find. The
+men from Sydney are not so sharp as those from Wellington Valley, but are
+equally well disposed. The animals, both horses and bullocks, are in good
+order, and I find the two soldiers of infinite service to me. The boat has
+received some damage from exposure to intense heat, but is otherwise
+uninjured. We still retain the carriage and have every prospect of
+dragging it on with us.
+
+His Excellency, having been good enough to order a fresh supply of
+provisions to Wellington Valley, I have to beg they may be forwarded to
+Mount Harris, and that the person in charge thereof be instructed to
+remain at that station for one month. We shall, during the interval, have
+examined the country to the north-west; and, in case we are forced back,
+shall require a supply to enable us to proceed to the northward, in
+furtherance of the views I have already had the honor to submit for the
+Governor's approval.
+
+I have the honor to be, Sir,
+Your most obedient and humble Servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Captain, 39th Regt.
+
+
+THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+GOVERNMENT ORDER.
+
+COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 6TH APRIL, 1829.
+
+His Excellency the Governor is pleased to direct that the following
+interesting Report which has been received from Captain Sturt,
+39th Regiment, who has been employed for some months past, (as will be
+seen on reference to the Government Order, No. 4, published with Captain
+Sturt's First Report in the Sydney Gazette, of the 24th of January last)
+in exploring the interior, be communicated for the information of the
+public.
+
+It appears that the river Macquarie ceases to exist near the spot where
+the expedition under the late Mr. Oxley terminated, which, from the state
+of country at the time, being then flooded, could not be ascertained; and
+that another river of no inconsiderable magnitude, fed by salt springs,
+was discovered by Captain Sturt on the 2nd February last, about 100 miles
+to the westward of the Macquarie, running to the southward and westward.
+
+By His Excellency's Command,
+ALEXANDER M'LEAY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 4TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--I do myself the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His
+Excellency the Governor, that I returned to this eminence on Monday,
+the 23rd ult. having been driven from the interior, in consequence of the
+extreme drought which prevails there.
+
+I am to state, in reference to my former communication, that agreeably to
+what I then reported, I moved, on the 26th December last, lower down the
+plains of the Macquarie, but encountered a barrier of reeds, formed by the
+marshes of that river, through which we in vain endeavoured to force our
+way. I was in consequence obliged to make the nearest part of the river to
+my left, and to take such measures as the nature of my situation required.
+Here, for the first time, I set the boat afloat, deeming it essential to
+trace the river, as I could not move upon its banks, and wishing also to
+ascertain where it again issued from the marshes, I requested Mr. Hume to
+proceed northerly, with a view to skirt them, and to descend westerly,
+wherever he saw an open space. He was fortunate enough to strike upon the
+channel about twelve miles north of our position, but was obstructed in
+his further progress by another marsh, in consequence of which he returned
+to the camp the next day; in the mean time, I had taken the boat, and
+proceeded down the Macquarie, my way being at first considerably
+obstructed by fallen timber: clearing this obstacle, however, I got into
+a deeper channel, with fine broad reaches, and a depth of from twelve to
+fifteen feet water. I had a short time previously cleared all woods and
+trees, and was now in the midst of reeds of great height. After proceeding
+onwards for about eight miles from the place whence I started, my course
+was suddenly and unexpectedly checked; I saw reeds before me, and expected
+I was about to turn an angle of the river, but I found that I had got to
+the end of the channel, and that the river itself had ceased to exist.
+Confounded at such a termination to a stream, whose appearance justified
+the expectation that it would have led me through the heart of the marsh
+to join Mr. Hume, I commenced a most minute examination of the place, and
+discovered two creeks, if they deserve the name, branching, the one to the
+north-west, and the other to the north-east; after tracing the former a
+short distance, I reached its termination, and in order to assure myself
+that such was the case, I walked round the head of it by pushing through
+the reeds; it being then too dark to continue where I was, I returned to
+a place on the river, at which I had rested during a shower, and slept
+there. In the morning I again went to the spot to examine the
+north-eastern branch, when I was equally disappointed. I then examined the
+space between the two creeks, opposite to the main channel of the river,
+and where the bank receives the force of the current. Here I saw water in
+the reeds, but it was scarcely ankle deep, and was running off to the
+north-west quicker than the waters of the river, which had almost an
+imperceptible motion, I was therefore at once convinced that it was not
+permanent, but had lodged there in the night, during which much rain had
+fallen. I next pushed my way through the reeds into the marsh, and at
+length clearly perceived that the waters which were perfectly sweet, after
+running several courses, flowed off to the north, towards which point
+there was an apparent declination or dip. Finding it impossible to
+proceed further, I regained the boat, and thence returned to the camp,
+under a conviction that I had reached the very spot, at which Mr. Oxley
+lost the channel of the river in 1818.
+
+The next day I moved to the place where Mr. Hume had struck upon the
+channel of the river, but was again doubtful in what direction to proceed.
+
+The marsh, at the commencement of which we now found ourselves, being the
+third from Mount Foster, but the second great one, seemed to extend beyond
+us to the north for many miles, but varying in breadth. In the evening I
+went in the boat up the channel, and found it at first, deep and sullen,
+as that of the river above. It soon however, narrowed, and the weeds
+formed over its surface, so that I abandoned the boat and walked along a
+path up it. I had not gone far when the channel divided; two smaller
+channels came, the one from the southern, and the other from the western
+parts of the marsh into it. There was an evident declination where they
+were, and it was at their junction the river again rallied and formed.
+On my return to the camp, Mr. Hume and I went down the river, but found
+that about a mile it lost itself, and spread its waters ever the extensive
+marsh before it.
+
+In this extremity, I knew not what movement to make, as Mr. Hume had been
+checked in his progress north. I therefore determined to ascertain the
+nature of the country to the eastward and to the westward, that I might
+move accordingly; I proposed to Mr. Hume, to take a week's provisions,
+with two attendants, and go to the north-east, in order again to turn the
+marsh, but with the expectation that the angle formed by the junction of
+the Castlereagh with the Macquarie would arrest its progress, as the last
+was fast approaching the former.
+
+I myself determined to cross the river, and to skirt the marshes on the
+left, and in case they turned off to the north east, as they appeared to
+do, it was my intention to pursue a N.W. course into the interior, to
+learn the nature of it. With these views I left the camp on the 31st of
+December, and did not return until the 5th of January. Having found early
+in my journey, from the change of soil and of timber, that I was leaving
+the neighbourhood of the Macquarie, I followed a N.W. course, from a more
+northerly one, and struck at once across the country, under an impression
+that Mr. Hume would have made the river again long before my return.
+I found, after travelling between twenty and thirty miles, the country
+began to rise; and at the end of my journey, I made a hill of considerable
+elevation, from the summit of which I had a view of other high lands; one
+to the S.W. being a very fine mountain. As I had not found any water
+excepting in two creeks, which I had left far behind me, and as I had got
+on a soil which appeared incapable of holding it, I made this the
+termination of my journey, having exceeded 100 miles in distance from the
+camp, on my return to which I found Mr. Hume still absent. When he joined,
+he stated to me, that not making the Castlereagh as soon as he expected,
+he had bent down westerly for the Macquarie, and that he ended his journey
+at some gentle hills he had made; so that it appeared we must either have
+crossed each other's line of route, or that they were very near, and that
+want of length must alone have prevented them from crossing; but as such
+all assumption led to the conclusion that the Macquarie no longer existed,
+I determined to pursue a middle course round the swamps, to ascertain the
+point; as in case the river had ended, a westerly course was the one which
+my instructions directed me to pursue.
+
+In the immediate neighbourhood of the marshes we were obliged to sink
+wells for water, and it was thus early that we began to feel the want of a
+regular supply.
+
+Having made a creek about four miles from our position by cutting through
+the reeds where there was a narrow space, we pursued a westerly course
+over a plain, having every appearance of frequent inundation, and for four
+or five days held nearly the same direction; in the course of which we
+crossed both our tracks on the excursions we had made, which had
+intersected each other in a dense oak brush; thus renewing the few doubts,
+or rather the doubt we had as to the fate of the Macquarie, whose course
+we had been sent to trace. Indeed, had I not felt convinced that that
+river had ceased, I should not have moved westward without further
+examination, but we had passed through a very narrow part of the marshes,
+and round the greater part of them, and had not seen any hollow that could
+by any possible exaggeration be construed into or mistaken for the channel
+of a river.
+
+It appears, then, that the Macquarie, flowing as it does for so many
+miles, through a bed, and not a declining country, and having little water
+in it, except in times of flood, loses its impetus long ere it reaches the
+formidable barrier that opposes its progress northwards; the soil in which
+the reeds grow being a stiff clay. Its waters consequently spread, until
+a slight declivity giving them fresh impulse, they form a channel again,
+but soon gaining a level, they lose their force and their motion together,
+and spread not only over the second great marsh, but over a vast extent
+of the surrounding country, the breadth of ground thus subject to
+inundation being more than twenty miles, and its length considerably
+greater; around this space there is a gentle rise which confines the
+waters, while small hollows in various directions lead them out of the
+marshes over the adjacent plains, on which they eventually subside. On my
+return from the interior, I examined those parts round which I had not
+been, with particular attention, partly in company with Mr. Hume, and this
+statement was confirmed by what we saw. Thus, at a distance of about
+twenty-five miles from Mount Foster to the N.N.W. the river Macquarie
+ceases to exist, in any shape as a river, and at a distance of between
+fifty and sixty, the marshes terminate, though the country subject to
+inundation from the river is of a very considerable extent, as shown by
+the withered bulrushes, wet reeds, and shells, that are scattered over
+its surface.
+
+Having executed the first part of the instructions with which I had been
+honoured, I determined on pursuing a west, or north-west course into the
+interior, to ascertain the nature of it, in fulfilment of the second, but
+in doing this I was obliged to follow creeks, and even on their banks had
+to carry a supply of water, so uncertain was it that we should meet with
+any at the termination of our day's journey, and that what we did find
+would be fit to drink. Our course led us over plains immediately bordering
+the lower lands of the Macquarie, alternating with swamp oak, acacia
+pendula, pine, box, eucalyptus, and many other trees of minor growth, the
+soil being inclined to a red loam, while the plains were generally covered
+with a black scrub, though in some places they had good grass upon them.
+We crossed two creeks before we made the hills Mr. Hume had ascended, and
+which he called New Year's Range. Around these hills the country appeared
+better--they are gentle, picturesque elevations, and are for the most
+part, covered with verdure, and have, I fancy, a whinstone base, the rock
+of which they are composed being of various substances. I place New Year's
+Range in lat. 30 degrees 21 minutes, long. 146 degrees 3 minutes
+30 seconds. Our course next lying north-west along a creek, led us to
+within twenty miles of the hill that had terminated my excursion, and as I
+hoped that a more leisurely survey of the country from its summit would
+open something favourable to our view, I struck over for it, though
+eventually obliged to return. From it Mr. Hume and I rode to the S.W.
+mountain, a distance of about forty miles, without crossing a brook or a
+creek, our way leading through dense acacia brushes, and for the most part
+over a desert. We saw high lands from this mountain, which exceeds 1,300
+feet in elevation, and is of sandstone formation, and thickly covered with
+stunted pine, in eight different points--the bearings of which are as
+follows:--
+
+Oxley's Table Land, N. 4O E., distant 40 miles.
+Kengall Hill, due E. very distant.
+Conical Hill, S. 6O E.
+Highland, S.E. distance 30 miles.
+Highland, S. 30 E. distance 25 miles.
+Long Range, S. 16 E. distance 60 miles.
+Long Range, S. 72 W. distance 60 miles.
+Distant Range, S. 25 W. supposed.
+
+It was in vain, however, that we looked for water. The country to the
+north-west, was low and unbroken, and alternated with wood and plain.
+
+The country from New Year's Range to the hill I had made, and which I
+called Oxley's Table Land, had been very fair, with good soil in many
+places, but with a total want of water, except in the creeks, wherein the
+supply was both bad and uncertain; on our second day's journey from the
+former, we came to the creek on which we were moving, where it had a
+coarse granite bottom. The country around it improved very much in
+appearance, and there was abundance of good grass on the surface of it, in
+spite of the drought. On the right of this creek, a large plain stretches
+parallel to it for many miles, varying in quality of soil. Near Oxley's
+Table Land, we passed over open forest, the prevailing timber of which was
+box. I have placed Oxley's Table Land in latitude 29 degrees 57 minutes
+30 seconds, longitude 145 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds.
+
+Finding it impracticable to move westward from the hill I again descended
+on the creek, whose general course was to the north-west, in which
+direction we at length struck upon a river whose appearance raised our
+most sanguine expectations. It flowed round an angle from the north-east
+to the north-west, and extended in longitude five reaches as far as we
+could see. At that place it was about sixty yards broad, with banks of
+from thirty to forty feet high, and it had numerous wild fowl and many
+pelicans on its bosom, and seemed to be full of fish, while the paths of
+the natives on both sides, like well-trodden roads, showed how numerous
+they were about it. On tasting its waters, however, we found them
+perfectly salt, and useless to us, and as our animals had been without
+water the night before, this circumstance distressed us much; our first
+day's journey led us past between sixty and seventy huts in one place, and
+on our second we fell in with a numerous tribe of natives, having
+previously seen some between two creeks before we made New-Year's Range.
+At some places the water proved less salt than at others; our animals
+drank of it sparingly: we found two small fresh-water holes, which served
+us as we passed. After tracing the river for a considerable distance, we
+came on brine springs in the bed of it, the banks having been encrusted
+with salt from the first; and as the difficulty of getting fresh water was
+so great, I here foresaw an end to our wanderings. And as I was resolved
+not to involve my party in greater distress, I halted it, on overtaking
+the animals, and the next morning turned back to the nearest fresh-water,
+at a distance of eighteen miles from us. Unwilling, however, to give up
+our pursuit, Mr. Hume and I started with two men on horseback, to trace
+the river as far as we could, and to ascertain what course it took; in the
+hopes also that we should fall on some creek, or get a more certain supply
+of drinkable water. We went a distance to which the bullocks could not
+have been brought, and then got on a red sandy soil, which at once
+destroyed our hopes; and on tasting the river water we found it salter
+than ever, our supply being diminished to two pints. Our animals being
+weak and purged, and having proceeded at least forty miles from the camp,
+I thought it best to yield to circumstances, and to return, though I trust
+I shall be believed when I add, it was with extreme reluctance I did so;
+and had I followed the wishes of my party, should still have continued
+onwards. Making a part of the river where we had slept, we stayed to
+refresh, and in consequence of the heat of the weather were obliged to
+drink the water in it, which made us sick. While here, a tribe of blacks
+came to us and behaved remarkably well. At night we slept on a plain
+without water, and the next day we regained the camp, which had been
+visited by the natives during our absence.
+
+We found the river held a south-west course, and appeared to be making for
+the central space between a high land, which I called Dunlop's Range, at
+Mr. Hume's request, and a lofty range to the westward. It still continued
+its important appearance, having gained in breadth and in the height of
+its banks, while there were hundreds of pelicans and wild-fowl on it.
+Flowing through a level country with such a channel, it may be presumed
+that this river ultimately assumes either a greater character, or that it
+adds considerably to the importance of some other stream. It had a clay
+bottom, generally speaking, in many places semi-indurated and fast forming
+into sandstone, while there was crystallized sulphate of lime running in
+veins through the soil which composed the bank.
+
+This river differs from most in the colony, in having a belt of barren
+land of from a quarter of a mile to two miles in breadth in its immediate
+neighbourhood, and which is subject to overflow. This belt runs to the
+inland plains, where a small elevation checks the further progress of the
+flood. There is magnificent blue gum on both sides the river, but the
+right bank is evidently the most fertile, and I am mistaken greatly if
+there is not a beautiful country north of it.
+
+Of the country over which we have passed, it is impossible for me to have
+formed a correct opinion under its present melancholy circumstances. It
+has borne the appearance of barrenness, where in even moderate rain, it
+might have shown very differently, though no doubt we passed over much of
+both good and bad land; our animals on the whole, have thrived on the food
+they have had, which would argue favourably for the herbage. Generally
+speaking, I fear the timber is bad--the rough-gum may be used for knees,
+and such purposes, and we may have seen wood for the wheelwright and
+cabinet-maker, specimens of which I have procured, but none for general or
+household purposes.
+
+The creeks we have traced are different in character from those in the
+settled districts, inasmuch as that, like the river, they have a belt of
+barren land near then and but little grass--they have all of them been
+numerously frequented by the natives, as appeared from the number of
+muscle-shells on their banks, but now having scarcely any water in them,
+the fish having either been taken, or are dead, and the tribes gone
+elsewhere for food, while the badness of the river water has introduced a
+cutaneous disease among the natives of that district, which is fast
+carrying them off. Our intercourse with these people was incessant from
+the time we first met them, and on all occasions they behaved remarkably
+well, nor could we have seen less than than two hundred and fifty of them.
+
+Our return is to be attributable to the want of water alone, and it is
+impossible for me to describe the effects of the drought on animal as well
+as vegetable nature. The natives are wandering in the desert, and it is
+melancholy to reflect on the necessity which obliges them to drink the
+stinking and loathsome water they do--birds sit gasping in the trees and
+are quite thin--the wild dog prowls about in the day-time unable to avoid
+us, and is as lean as he can be in a living state, while minor vegetation
+is dead, and the very trees are drooping. I have noticed all these things
+in my Journal I shall have the honour of submitting through you, for the
+Governor's perusal and information, on my return. Finally, I fear our
+expedition will not pave the way to any ultimate benefit; although it has
+been the means by which two very doubtful questions,--the course of the
+Macquarie, and the nature of the interior, have been solved; for it is
+beyond doubt, that the interior for 250 miles beyond its former known
+limits to the W.N.W., so far from being a shoal sea, has been ascertained
+not only to have considerable elevations upon it, but is in itself a table
+land to all intents and purposes, and has scarcely water on its surface to
+support its inhabitants.
+
+I beg you will inform His Excellency the Governor, that I have on all
+occasions received the most ready and valuable assistance from Mr, Hume.
+His intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs of the natives,
+enabled him to enter into intercourse with them, and chiefly contributed
+to the peaceable manner in which we have journeyed, while his previous
+experience put it in his power to be of real use to me. I cannot but say
+he has done an essential service to future travellers, and to the colony
+at large, by his conduct on all occasions since he has been with me; nor
+should I be doing him justice, if I did not avail myself of the first
+opportunity of laying my sentiments before the Governor, through you. I am
+happy to add that every individual of the party deserves my warmest
+approbation, and that they have, one and all, borne their distresses,
+trifling certainly, but still unusual, with cheerfulness, and that they
+have at all times been attentive to their duty, and obedient to their
+orders. The whole are in good health, and are eager again to start.
+
+I have the honor to be,
+Sir
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HONORABLE THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+* * * * *
+
+
+MOUNT HARRIS, 5TH MARCH, 1829.
+
+SIR,--It having appeared to me, that after discovering such a river as the
+one I have described in my letter of yesterday, His Excellency the
+Governor would approve of my endeavouring to regain it. There being a
+probability that it ultimately joins the Southern Waters, I thought of
+turning my steps to the southward and westward; and with a view to learn
+the nature of the country, I despatched Mr. Hume in that direction on
+Saturday last. He returned in three days, after having gone above forty
+miles from the river, and states, that he crossed two creeks, the one
+about twenty-five miles, the other about thirty-two distance, evidently
+the heads of the creeks we passed westward of the marshes of the
+Macquarie. He adds, that, to the second creek the land was excellent, but
+that on crossing it, he got onto red soil, on which he travelled some
+miles further, until he saw a range of high land, bearing from him S.W..
+by W., when, knowing from the nature of the country around him, and from
+the experience of our late journey, that he could not hope to find a
+regular supply of water in advance, and that in the present dry state of
+the low lands, a movement such as I had contemplated would be
+impracticable, he returned home. I do myself the honour, therefore, to
+report to you, for His Excellency's information, that I shall proceed on
+Saturday next in a N.E. direction towards the Castlereagh, intending to
+trace that river down, and afterwards to penetrate as far to the northward
+and westward as possible; it being my wish to get into the country north
+of the more distant river, where I have expectations that there is an
+extensive and valuable track of country, but that in failure of the above,
+I shall examine the low country behind our N.W. boundaries, if I can find
+a sufficiency of water to enable me to do so.
+
+I am to inform you that in this neighbourhood the Macquarie has ceased to
+flow, and that it is now a chain of shallow ponds. The water is fast
+diminishing in it, and unless rain descends in a few weeks it will be
+perfectly dry.
+
+I am also to report, that the natives attempted the camp with the supplies
+before my arrival at Mount Harris, but that on the soldier with the party
+firing a shot, after they had thrown a stone and other of the weapons,
+they fled. It was in consequence of their fires, which I saw at a distance
+of forty miles, and which they never make on so extensive a scale, except
+as signals when they want to collect, and are inclined to be mischievous,
+that I made forced marches up, and I am led to believe my arrival was very
+opportune. The natives have visited us since, and I do not think they will
+now attempt to molest either party when we separate.
+
+I have the honour to be,
+Sir,
+Your most obedient and most humble servant,
+CHARLES STURT,
+Capt. 39th Regt.
+
+THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.
+
+
+
+END OF VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Two Expeditions into the Interior of
+Southern Australia Volume I by Charles Sturt
+
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