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+<TITLE>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Bushman, by Edward Wilson Landor</TITLE>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bushman, by Edward Wilson Landor
+
+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: The Bushman
+ Life in a New Country
+
+Author: Edward Wilson Landor
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7181]
+Last Updated: August 10, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BUSHMAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Sue Asscher
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>THE BUSHMAN.</h3>
+
+<h3>LIFE IN A NEW COUNTRY</h3>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h3>EDWARD WILSON LANDOR.</h3>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p><a name="f001"><img alt="" src="images/Landor_f001.jpg" width="500" height=
+"350"></a></p>
+
+<center><b>"Kangaroo Hunting"</b></center>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<h4>PREFACE.</h4>
+
+<p>The British Colonies now form so prominent a portion of the
+Empire, that the Public will be compelled to acknowledge some
+interest in their welfare, and the Government to yield some
+attention to their wants. It is a necessity which both the
+Government and the Public will obey with reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>Too remote for sympathy, too powerless for respect, the
+Colonies, during ages of existence, have but rarely occupied a
+passing thought in the mind of the Nation; as though their
+insignificance entitled them only to neglect. But the weakness of
+childhood is passing away: the Infant is fast growing into the
+possession and the consciousness of strength, whilst the Parent
+is obliged to acknowledge the increasing usefulness of her
+offspring.</p>
+
+<p>The long-existing and fundamental errors of Government, under
+which the Colonies have hitherto groaned in helpless subjection,
+will soon become generally known and understood&mdash;and then they
+will be remedied.</p>
+
+<p>In the remarks which will be found scattered through this work
+on the subject of Colonial Government, it must be observed, that
+the system only is assailed, and not individuals. That it is the
+system and not <i>The Men</i> who are in fault, is sufficiently
+proved by the fact that the most illustrious statesmen and the
+brightest talents of the Age, have ever failed to distinguish
+themselves by good works, whilst directing the fortunes of the
+Colonies. Lord John Russell, Lord Stanley, Mr. Gladstone&mdash;all of
+them high-minded, scrupulous, and patriotic statesmen&mdash;all of
+them men of brilliant genius, extensive knowledge, and profound
+thought&mdash;have all of them been but slightly appreciated as
+Colonial rulers.</p>
+
+<p>Their principal success has been in perpetuating a noxious
+system. They have all of them conscientiously believed their
+first duty to be, in the words of Lord Stanley, to keep the
+Colonies dependent upon the Mother Country; and occupied with
+this belief, they have legislated for the Mother Country and not
+for the Colonies. Vain, selfish, fear-inspired policy! that keeps
+the Colonies down in the dust at the feet of the Parent State,
+and yet is of no value or advantage to her. To make her Colonies
+useful to England, they must be cherished in their infancy, and
+carefully encouraged to put forth all the strength of their
+secret energies.</p>
+
+<p>It is not whilst held in leading-strings that they can be
+useful, or aught but burthensome: rear them kindly to maturity,
+and allow them the free exercise of their vast natural strength,
+and they would be to the parent country her truest and most
+valuable friends.</p>
+
+<p><i>The colonies of the Empire are the only lasting and
+inalienable markets for its produce</i>; and the first aim of the
+political economist should be to develop to their utmost extent
+the vast resources possessed by Great Britain in these her own
+peculiar fields of national wealth. But the policy displayed
+throughout the history of her Colonial possessions, has ever been
+the reverse of this. It was that grasping and ungenerous policy
+that called forth a Washington, and cost her an empire. It is
+that same miserable and low-born policy that still recoils upon
+herself, depriving her of vast increase of wealth and power in
+order to keep the chain upon her hapless children, those
+ambitious Titans whom she trembles to unbind.</p>
+
+<p>And yet poor Old England considers herself an excellent
+parent, and moans and murmurs over the ingratitude of her
+troublesome offspring! Like many other parents, she means to do
+well and act kindly, but unhappily the principles on which she
+proceeds are radically wrong. Hence, on the one side,
+heart-burning, irritation, and resentment; on the other,
+disappointment, revulsion, and alarm.</p>
+
+<p>Is she too deeply prejudiced, or too old in error, to attempt
+a new system of policy?</p>
+
+<p>In what single respect has she ever proved herself a good
+parent to any of her Colonies? Whilst supplying them with
+Government Officers, she has fettered them with unwholesome laws;
+whilst giving them a trifling preference over foreign states in
+their commerce, she has laid her grasp upon their soil; whilst
+allowing them to legislate in a small degree for themselves, she
+has reserved the prerogative of annulling all enactments that
+interfere with her own selfish or mistaken views; whilst
+permitting their inhabitants to live under a lightened pressure
+of taxation, she has debarred them from wealth, rank, honours,
+rewards, hopes&mdash;all those incentives to action that lead men
+forward to glory, and stamp nations with greatness.</p>
+
+<p>What has she done for her Colonies&mdash;this careful and
+beneficent parent? She has permitted them to exist, but bound
+them down in serf-like dependence; and so she keeps them&mdash;feeble,
+helpless, and hopeless. She grants them the sanction of her flag,
+and the privilege of boasting of her baneful protection.</p>
+
+<p>Years&mdash;ages have gone by, and her policy has been the same&mdash;
+darkening the heart and crushing the energies of Man in climes
+where Nature sparkles with hope and teems with plenty.</p>
+
+<p>Time, however, too powerful for statesmen, continues his
+silent but steady advance in the great work of amelioration. The
+condition of the Colonies must be elevated to that of the
+counties of England. Absolute rule must cease to prevail in them.
+Men must be allowed to win there, as at home, honours and rank.
+Time, the grand minister of correction&mdash;Time the Avenger, already
+has his foot on the threshold of the COLONIAL OFFICE.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<hr>
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>CONTENTS.</h3>
+
+<p><b>CHAPTER.</b></p>
+
+1.&mdash;COLONISTS.<br>
+2.&mdash;ST. JAGO.<br>
+3.&mdash;THE MUTINY.<br>
+4.&mdash;THE PRISON-ISLAND.<br>
+5.&mdash;FIRST ADVENTURES.<br>
+6.&mdash;PERTH.&mdash;COLONIAL JURIES.<br>
+7.&mdash;BOATING UP THE RIVER.<br>
+8.&mdash;FARMS ON THE RIVER.<br>
+9.&mdash;THE MORAL THERMOMETER OF COLONIES.<br>
+10.&mdash;COUNTRY LIFE.<br>
+11.&mdash;PERSECUTIONS.<br>
+12.&mdash;MICHAEL BLAKE, THE IRISH SETTLER.<br>
+13.&mdash;WILD CATTLE HUNTING.<br>
+14.&mdash;WOODMAN'S POINT.<br>
+15.&mdash;HOW THE LAWS OF ENGLAND AFFECT THE NATIVES.<br>
+16.&mdash;REMARKS ON THE PHYSICAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NATIVES.<br>
+17.&mdash;SKETCHES OF LIFE AMONG THE NATIVES.<br>
+18.&mdash;THE MODEL KINGDOM.<br>
+19.&mdash;TRIALS OF A GOVERNOR.<br>
+20.&mdash;MR. SAILS, MY GROOM.&mdash;OVER THE HILLS.&mdash;A SHEEP STATION.<br>
+21.&mdash;EXTRACTS FROM THE LOG OF A HUT-KEEPER.<br>
+22.&mdash;PELICAN SHOOTING.&mdash;GALES.&mdash;WRESTLING WITH DEATH.<br>
+23.&mdash;THE DESERT OF AUSTRALIA.&mdash;CAUSE OF THE HOT
+WINDS.&mdash;GEOLOGY.<br>
+24.&mdash;COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.<br>
+25.&mdash;ONE OF THE ERRORS OF GOVERNMENT.&mdash;ADVENTURES OF THE
+"BRAMBLE".<br>
+26.&mdash;SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERIES.&mdash;KANGAROO HUNTING.&mdash;EMUS.&mdash;LOST IN
+THE BUSH.<br>
+27.&mdash;THE COMET.&mdash;VITAL STATISTICS.&mdash;METEOROLOGY.<br>
+28.&mdash;THE BOTANY OF THE COLONY.<br>
+29.&mdash;MISFORTUNES OF THE COLONY.<br>
+30.&mdash;RESOURCES OF THE COLONY:&mdash;HORSES FOR INDIA.&mdash;WINE.&mdash;<br>
+DRIED FRUITS.&mdash;COTTON.&mdash;COAL.&mdash;WOOL.&mdash;CORN.&mdash;WHALE-OIL.&mdash;A WHALE
+HUNT.&mdash;CURED FISH.&mdash;SHIP TIMBER.<br>
+31.&mdash;RISE AND FALL OF A SETTLEMENT.&mdash;THE SEQUEL TO CAPTAIN GREY'S
+DISCOVERIES.&mdash;A WORD AT PARTING.<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<p><b>PLATES.</b></p>
+
+<p><a href="#f001">KANGAROO HUNTING (Frontispiece).</a><br>
+<a href="#f160">THE BIVOUAC.</a><br>
+<a href="#f214">SPEARING KANGAROO</a><br>
+<a href="#f336">DEATH OF THE KANGAROO.</a><br>
+<a href="#f339">EMU HUNT (woodcut).</a></p>
+
+<p><b>THE BUSHMAN; OR, LIFE IN A NEW COUNTRY.</b></p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 1.</h3>
+
+<h4>COLONISTS.</h4>
+
+<p>The Spirit of Adventure is the most animating impulse in the
+human breast. Man naturally detests inaction; he thirsts after
+change and novelty, and the prospect of excitement makes him
+prefer even danger to continued repose.</p>
+
+<p>The love of adventure! how strongly it urges forward the
+Young! The Young, who are ever discontented with the Present, and
+sigh for opportunities of action which they know not where to
+seek. Old men mourn over the folly and recklessness of the Young,
+who, in the fresh and balmy spring-time of life, recoil from the
+confinement of the desk or the study, and long for active
+occupation, in which all their beating energies may find
+employment. Subjection is the consequence of civilized life; and
+self-sacrifice is necessary in those who are born to toil, before
+they may partake of its enjoyments. But though the Young are
+conscious that this is so, they repine not the less; they feel
+that the freshness and verdure of life must first die away; that
+the promised recompense will probably come too late to the
+exhausted frame; that the blessings which would now be received
+with prostrate gratitude will cease to be felt as boons; and that
+although the wishes and wants of the heart will take new
+directions in the progress of years, the consciousness that the
+spring-time of life&mdash; that peculiar season of happiness which can
+never be known again&mdash; has been consumed in futile desires and
+aspirations, in vain hopes and bitter experiences, must ever
+remain deepening the gloom of Memory.</p>
+
+<p>Anxious to possess immediate independence, young men, full of
+adventurous spirit, proceed in search of new fields of labour,
+where they may reap at once the enjoyments of domestic life,
+whilst they industriously work out the curse that hangs over the
+Sons of Adam.</p>
+
+<p>They who thus become emigrants from the ardent spirit of
+adventure, and from a desire to experience a simpler and less
+artificial manner of living than that which has become the
+essential characteristic of European civilization, form a large
+and useful body of colonists. These men, notwithstanding the pity
+which will be bestowed upon them by those whose limited
+experience of life leads to the belief that happiness or
+contentment can only be found in the atmosphere of England, are
+entitled to some consideration and respect.</p>
+
+<p>To have dared to deviate from the beaten track which was
+before them in the outset of life; to have perceived at so vast a
+distance advantages which others, if they had seen, would have
+shrunk from aiming at; to have persevered in their resolution,
+notwithstanding the expostulations of Age, the regrets of
+Friendship, and the sighs of Affection&mdash;all this betokens
+originality and strength of character.</p>
+
+<p>Does it also betoken indifference to the wishes of others?
+Perhaps it does; and it marks one of the broadest and least
+amiable features in the character of a colonist.</p>
+
+<p>The next class of emigrants are those who depart from their
+native shores with reluctance and tears. Children of misfortune
+and sorrow, they would yet remain to weep on the bosom from which
+they have drawn no sustenance. But the strong blasts of necessity
+drive them from the homes which even Grief has not rendered less
+dear. Their future has never yet responded to the voice of Hope,
+and now, worn and broken in spirit, imagination paints nothing
+cheering in another land. They go solely because they may not
+remain&mdash;because they know not where else to look for a resting
+place; and Necessity, with her iron whip, drives them forth to
+some distant colony.</p>
+
+<p>But there is still a third class, the most numerous perhaps of
+all, that helps to compose the population of a colony. This is
+made up of young men who are the wasterels of the World; who have
+never done, and never will do themselves any good, and are a
+curse instead of a benefit to others. These are they who think
+themselves fine, jovial, spirited fellows, who disdain to work,
+and bear themselves as if life were merely a game which ought to
+be played out amid coarse laughter and wild riot.</p>
+
+<p>These go to a colony because their relatives will not support
+them in idleness at home. They feel no despair at the
+circumstance, for their pockets have been refilled, though (they
+are assured) for the last time; and they rejoice at the prospect
+of spending their capital far from the observation of intrusive
+guardians.</p>
+
+<p>Disgusted at authority which has never proved sufficient to
+restrain or improve them, they become enamoured with the idea of
+absolute license, and are far too high-spirited to entertain any
+apprehensions of future poverty. These gallant-minded and truly
+enviable fellows betake themselves, on their arrival, to the
+zealous cultivation of field-sports instead of field produce.
+They leave with disdain the exercise of the useful arts to
+low-bred and beggarly-minded people, who have not spirit enough
+for anything better; whilst they themselves enthusiastically
+strive to realize again those glorious times,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When wild in woods the noble savage ran."</p>
+
+<p>In the intervals of relaxation from these fatigues, when they
+return to a town life, they endeavour to prove the activity of
+their energies and the benevolence of their characters, by
+getting up balls and pic-nics, solely to promote the happiness of
+the ladies. But notwithstanding this appearance of devotion to
+the fair sex, their best affections are never withdrawn from the
+companion of their hearts&mdash;the brandy flask. They evince their
+generous hospitality by hailing every one who passes their door,
+with "How are you, old fellow? Come in, and take a nip." Somehow
+or other they are always liked, even by those who pity and
+despise them.</p>
+
+<p>The women only laugh at their irregularities&mdash;they are such
+"good-hearted creatures!" And so they go easily and rapidly down
+that sloping path which leads to ruin and despair. What is their
+end? Many of them literally kill themselves by drinking; and
+those who get through the seasoning, which is the fatal period,
+are either compelled to become labourers in the fields for any
+one who will provide them with food; or else succeed in exciting
+the compassion of their friends at home, by their dismal accounts
+of the impossibility of earning a livelihood in a ruined and
+worthless colony; and having thus obtained money enough to enable
+them to return to England, they hasten to throw themselves and
+their sorrows into the arms of their sympathizing relatives.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing can be more absurd than to imagine that a fortune may
+be made in a colony by those who have neither in them nor about
+them any of the elements or qualities by which fortunes are
+gained at home.</p>
+
+<p>There are, unfortunately, few sources of wealth peculiar to a
+colony. The only advantage which the emigrant may reasonably
+calculate upon enjoying, is the diminution of competition. In
+England the crowd is so dense that men smother one another.</p>
+
+<p>It is only by opening up the same channels of wealth under
+more favourable circumstances, that the emigrant has any right to
+calculate upon success. Without a profession, without any
+legitimate calling in which his early years have been properly
+instructed; without any knowledge or any habits of business, a
+man has no better prospect of making a fortune in a colony than
+at home. None, however, so circumstanced, entertains this belief;
+on the contrary, he enters upon his new career without any
+misgivings, and with the courage and enthusiasm of a newly
+enlisted recruit.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! the disappointment which so soon and so inevitably
+succeeds, brings a crowd of vices and miseries in its train.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 2.</h3>
+
+<h4>ST. JAGO.</h4>
+
+<p>The reader may naturally expect to be informed of the reasons
+that have induced me thus to seek his acquaintance. In one
+word&mdash;I am a colonist. In England, a great deal is said every day
+about colonies and colonists, but very little is known about
+them. A great deal is projected; but whatever is done, is
+unfortunately to their prejudice. Secretaries of State know much
+more about the distant settlements of Great Britain than the
+inhabitants themselves; and, consequently, the latter are seldom
+able to appreciate the ordinances which (for their own good) they
+are compelled to submit to.</p>
+
+<p>My own experience is chiefly confined to one of the most
+insignificant of our colonies,&mdash;insignificant in point of
+population, but extremely important as to its geographical
+position, and its prospects of future greatness,&mdash;but the same
+principle of government applies to all the British
+settlements.</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago, I was the victim of medical skill; and being
+sentenced to death in my own country by three eminent physicians,
+was comparatively happy in having that sentence commuted to
+banishment. A wealthy man would have gone to Naples, to Malta, or
+to Madeira; but a poor one has no resource save in a colony,
+unless he will condescend to live upon others, rather than
+support himself by his own exertions.</p>
+
+<p>The climate of Western Australia was recommended; and I may be
+grateful for the alternative allowed me.</p>
+
+<p>As I shall have occasion hereafter to allude to them
+incidentally, I may mention that my two brothers accompanied me
+on this distant voyage.</p>
+
+<p>The elder, a disciple of Aesculapius, was not only anxious to
+gratify his fraternal solicitude and his professional tastes by
+watching my case, but was desirous of realizing the pleasures of
+rural life in Australia.</p>
+
+<p>My younger brother (whose pursuits entitle him to be called
+Meliboeus) was a youth not eighteen, originally designed for the
+Church, and intended to cut a figure at Oxford; but modestly
+conceiving that the figure he was likely to cut would not tend to
+the advancement of his worldly interests, and moreover, having no
+admiration for Virgil beyond the Bucolics, he fitted himself out
+with a Lowland plaid and a set of Pandaean pipes, and solemnly
+dedicated himself to the duties of a shepherd.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was that we were all embarked in the same boat; or
+rather, we found ourselves in the month of April, 1841, on board
+of a certain ill-appointed barque bound for Western
+Australia.</p>
+
+<p>We had with us a couple of servants, four rams with curling
+horns&mdash; a purchase from the late Lord Western; a noble
+blood-hound, the gift of a noble Lord famous for the breed; a
+real old English mastiff-bitch, from the stock at Lyme Park; and
+a handsome spaniel cocker. Besides this collection of quadrupeds,
+we had a vast assortment of useless lumber, which had cost us
+many hundred pounds. Being most darkly ignorant of every thing
+relating to the country to which we were going, but having a
+notion that it was very much of the same character with that so
+long inhabited by Robinson Crusoe, we had prudently provided
+ourselves with all the necessaries and even non-necessaries of
+life in such a region. Our tool chests would have suited an army
+of pioneers; several distinguished ironmongers of the city of
+London had cleared their warehouses in our favour of all the
+rubbish which had lain on hand during the last quarter of a
+century; we had hinges, bolts, screws, door-latches, staples,
+nails of all dimensions&mdash;from the tenpenny, downwards&mdash;and every
+other requisite to have completely built a modern village of
+reasonable extent. We had tents, Macintosh bags, swimming-belts,
+several sets of sauce-pans in graduated scale, (we had here a
+distant eye to kangaroo and cockatoo stews,) cleavers, meat-saws,
+iron skewers, and a general apparatus of kitchen utensils that
+would have satisfied the desires of Monsieur Soyer himself. Then
+we had double and single-barrelled guns, rifles, pistols, six
+barrels of Pigou and Wilkes' gunpowder; an immense assortment of
+shot, and two hundred weight of lead for bullets.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the several articles already enumerated, we had
+provided ourselves with eighteen months' provisions, in pork and
+flour, calculating that by the time this quantity was consumed,
+we should have raised enough to support our establishment out of
+the soil by the sweat of our brows. And thus from sheer ignorance
+of colonial life, we had laid out a considerable portion of our
+capital in the purchase of useless articles, and of things which
+might have been procured more cheaply in the colony itself. Nor
+were we the only green-horns that have gone out as colonists: on
+the contrary, nine-tenths of those who emigrate, do so in perfect
+ignorance of the country they are about to visit and the life
+they are destined to lead. The fact is, Englishmen, as a body
+know nothing and care nothing about colonies. My own was merely
+the national ignorance. An Englishman's idea of a colony (he
+classes them altogether) is, that it is some miserable place&mdash;the
+Black-hole of the British empire&mdash;where no one would live if he
+were allowed a choice; and where the exiled spirits of the nation
+are incessantly sighing for a glimpse of the white cliffs of
+Albion, and a taste of the old familiar green-and-yellow fog of
+the capital of the world. Experience alone can convince him that
+there are in other regions of the world climes as delightful,
+suns as beneficent, and creditors as confiding, as those of Old
+England.</p>
+
+<p>The voyage, of course, was tedious enough; but some portion of
+it was spent very pleasantly in calculating the annual profits
+which our flocks were likely to produce.</p>
+
+<p>The four noble rams, with their curly horns, grew daily more
+valuable in our estimation. By the sailors, no doubt, they were
+rated no higher than the miserable tenants of the long-boat, that
+formed part of the cuddy provisions. But with us it was very
+different. As we looked, every bright and balmy morning, into the
+pen which they occupied, we were enabled to picture more vividly
+those Arcadian prospects which seemed now brought almost within
+reach. In these grave and respectable animals we recognised the
+patriarchs of a vast and invaluable progeny; and it was
+impossible to help feeling a kind of veneration for the sires of
+that fleecy multitude which was to prove the means of justifying
+our modest expectations of happiness and wealth.</p>
+
+<p>Our dogs also afforded us the most pleasing subjects for
+speculation. With the blood-hound we were to track the footsteps
+of the midnight marauder, who should invade the sanctity of our
+fold. The spaniel was to aid in procuring a supply of game for
+the table; and I bestowed so much pains upon his education during
+the voyage, that before we landed he was perfectly au fait in the
+article of "down-charge!" and used to flush the cat in the
+steward's pantry with the greatest certainty and
+satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>Jezebel, the mastiff-birch, was expected to assist in guarding
+our castle,&mdash;an honourable duty which her courage and fidelity
+amply warranted us in confiding to her. Of the former quality, I
+shall mention an instance that occurred during the voyage. We had
+one day caught a shark, twelve feet long; and no sooner was he
+hauled on deck than Jezebel, wild with fury, rushed through the
+circle of eager sailors and spectators, and flew directly at the
+nose of the struggling monster. It was with difficulty that she
+was dragged away by the admiring seamen, who were compelled to
+admit that there was a creature on board more reckless and daring
+than themselves.</p>
+
+<p>We were now approaching the Cape Verd Islands. I daresay it
+has been frequently mentioned, that there is in these latitudes a
+vast bed of loose sea-weed, floating about, which has existed
+there from time immemorial, and which is only found in this one
+spot of the ocean; as though it were here compelled to remain
+under the influence of some magic spell. Some navigators are of
+opinion that it grows on the rocks at the bottom of the sea,
+beneath the surface on which it floats. Others maintain that it
+has been drifted across the Atlantic, having issued from the Gulf
+of Mexico. Here, however, it is doomed to drift about hopelessly,
+for ever lost in the wilderness of waters; on the surface of
+which it now vegetates, affording shelter to small crabs, and
+many curious kinds of fishes.</p>
+
+<p>One of the latter which we caught, about an inch in length,
+had a spike on his back, and four legs, with which he crawled
+about the sea-weed.</p>
+
+<p>We approached the Island of St. Jago, sailing unconsciously
+close to a sunken rock, on which (as we afterwards learnt) the
+"Charlotte" had struck about six weeks before whilst under full
+sail, and had gone down in a few minutes, barely allowing time
+for the crew to escape in their boat.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding we had been five weeks at sea when we dropped
+anchor in Porto Praya roads, the appearance of the land was by no
+means inviting to the eyes. A high and extremely barren hill, or
+large heap of dry earth, with a good many stones about it, seemed
+to compose the Island. Close to us was the town, a collection of
+white houses that looked very dazzling in the summer sun. Beside,
+and running behind it, was a greenish valley, containing a clump
+of cocoa-nut trees. This was the spot we longed to visit; so,
+getting into the captain's boat, we approached the shore, where a
+number of nearly naked negroes rushing into the sea (there being
+no pier or jetty) presented their slimy backs at the gun-wale,
+and carried us in triumph to the beach. The town boasted of one
+hotel, in the only sitting-room of which we found some Portuguese
+officers smoking pipes as dirty as themselves, and drinking a
+beverage which had much the appearance of rum and water. There
+was no one who could speak a word of English; but at length a
+French waiter appeared, who seemed ravished with delight at the
+jargon with which we feebly reminded him of his own lively
+language "when at home." Having ordered dinner, we wandered off
+in search of the coca-nut valley, and purchased bananas for the
+first time in our lives, and oranges, the finest in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>Those who have been long at sea know how pleasant it is to
+walk once more upon the land. It is one of the brightest of the
+Everlasting flowers in the garland of Memory.</p>
+
+<p>We walked along the sea-beach, as people so circumstanced must
+ever do, full of gladsome fancies. There was delight for us in
+the varied shells at our feet; in the curious skeletons of small
+fishes, untimely deceased; in the fantastic forms of the drifted
+sea-weed; in the gentle ripple of the companionable waves by our
+side. And little Fig, the spaniel, was no less pleased then
+ourselves. He ran before us rejoicing in his fleetness; and he
+ran back again in a moment to tell us how glad he was. Then as a
+wave more incursive than its predecessor unexpectedly wetted his
+feet, he would droop his tail and run faster with alarm, until
+the sight of some bush or bough, left high and dry by the last
+tide, awakened his nervous suspicions, and dreading an ambuscade,
+he would stop suddenly and bark at the dreadful object, until we
+arrived at his side, when, wagging his tail and looking slyly up
+with his joyous eyes, he would scamper away again as though he
+would have us believe he had been all the time only in fun.</p>
+
+<p>What profound satisfaction is there in the freedom of land
+after so long a confinement! The sunshine that makes joyous every
+object around us finds its way into the deeps of the heart.</p>
+
+<p>And now we determined to bathe. So we crossed over a jutting
+rock, on the other side of which was a beautiful and secluded
+little bay, so sheltered that the waves scarcely rippled as they
+came to kiss the shell-covered beach. Here we soon unrobed; and I
+was the first to rush at full speed into the inviting waters.
+Before I got up to my middle, however, I saw something before me
+that looked like a dark rock just below the surface. I made
+towards it, intending to get upon it, and dive off on the other
+side; but lo! as I approached, it stirred; then it darted like a
+flash of lightning towards one side of the bay, whilst I, after
+standing motionless for a moment, retreated with the utmost
+expedition.</p>
+
+<p>It was a ground-shark, of which there are numbers on that
+coast.</p>
+
+<p>We lost no time in putting on our clothes again, and returned
+in rather a fluttered state to the inn.</p>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 3.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE MUTINY.</h4>
+
+<p>We remained a week at St. Jago, the captain being busily
+engaged in taking in water, and quarrelling with his crew. One
+day, at the instigation of our friend, the French waiter, we made
+a trip of seven miles into the interior of the island, to visit a
+beautiful valley called Trinidad. Mounted on donkeys, and
+attended by two ragged, copper-coloured youths, we proceeded in
+gallant style up the main street, and, leaving the town, crossed
+the valley beyond it, and emerged into the open country. It was a
+rough, stony, and hilly road, through a barren waste, where there
+scarcely appeared a stray blade of grass for the goats which
+rambled over it in anxious search of herbage.</p>
+
+<p>At length, after a wearisome ride of several hours, we
+descended suddenly into the most fertile and luxuriant valley I
+ever beheld, and which seemed to extend a distance of some miles.
+A mountain brook flowed down the midst, on the banks of which
+numerous scattered and picturesque cottages appeared. On either
+side the ground was covered with the green carpet of Nature in
+the spring of the year. Everywhere, except in this smiling
+valley, we saw nothing but the aridity of summer, and the
+desolation caused by a scorching tropical sun. But here&mdash;how very
+different! How sudden, how magical was the change! Every species
+of vegetable grew here in finest luxuriance. Melons of every
+variety, pine-apples, sweet potatoes, plantains, and bananas,
+with their broad and drooping leaves of freshest green and rich
+purple flower, and ripe yellow fruit. Orange-trees, cocoa-nut
+trees, limes&mdash;the fig, the vine, the citron, the pomegranate, and
+numerous others, grateful to the weary sight, and bearing
+precious stores amid their branches, combined to give the
+appearance of wealth and plenty to this happy valley. It was not,
+however, destined to be entered by us without a fierce combat for
+precedence between two of our steeds. The animal whom it was the
+evil lot of Meliboeus to bestride, suddenly threw back its ears,
+and darted madly upon the doctor's quadruped, which, on its side,
+manifested no reluctance to the fight.</p>
+
+<p>Dreadful was the scene; the furious donkeys nearing and
+striking with their fore-feet, and biting each other about the
+head and neck without the smallest feeling of compunction or
+remorse; the two guides shrieking and swearing in Portuguese at
+the donkeys and each other, and striking right and left with
+their long staves, perfectly indifferent as to whom they hit; the
+unhappy riders, furious with fright and chagrin, shouting in
+English to the belligerents of both classes to "keep off!" The
+screams of two women, who were carrying water in the
+neighbourhood, enhanced by the barking of a terrified cur, that
+ran blindly hither and thither with its tail between its legs, in
+a state of frantic excitement&mdash;altogether produced a tableau of
+the most spirited description. Peace was at length restored, and
+we all dismounted from our saddles with fully as much
+satisfaction as we had experienced when vaulting into them.</p>
+
+<p>There is little more to say about the valley of Trinidad. The
+cottagers who supply the town of Porto Praya with fruits and
+vegetables are extremely poor, and very uncleanly and untidy in
+their houses and habits. We had intended to spend the night with
+them, but the appearance of the accommodations determined us to
+return to our inn, in spite of the friendly and disinterested
+advice of our guides.</p>
+
+<p>St. Jago abounds with soldiers and priests; the former of whom
+are chiefly convicts from Lisbon, condemned to serve here in the
+ranks.</p>
+
+<p>The day for sailing arrived, and we were all on board and
+ready. Our barque was a temperance ship; that is, she belonged to
+owners who refused to allow their sailors the old measure of a
+wine-glass of rum in the morning, and another in the afternoon,
+but liberally substituted an extra pint of water instead.</p>
+
+<p>There is always one thing remarkable about these temperance
+ships, that when they arrive in harbour, their crews, excited to
+madness by long abstinence from their favourite liquor, and
+suffering in consequence all the excruciating torments of thirst,
+run into violent excesses the moment they get on shore. St. Jago
+is famous for a kind of liquid fire, called aguadente, which is
+smuggled on board ship in the shape of pumpkins and watermelons.
+These are sold to the sailors for shirts and clothing; there
+being nothing so eagerly sought for by the inhabitants of St.
+Jago as linen and calico.</p>
+
+<p>Our crew, being thoroughly disgusted with their captain, as
+indeed they had some reason to be, and their valour being
+wondrously excited by their passionate fondness for water-melons,
+came to a stern resolution of spending the remainder of their
+lives on this agreeable island; at any rate, they determined to
+sail no farther in our company. The captain was ashore, settling
+his accounts and receiving his papers; the chief-mate had given
+orders to loose the fore-topsail and weigh anchor; and we were
+all in the cuddy, quietly sipping our wine, when we heard three
+cheers and a violent scuffling on deck. In a few moments down
+rushed the mate in a state of delirious excitement, vociferating
+that the men were in open mutiny, and calling upon us, in the
+name of the Queen, to assist the officers of the ship in bringing
+them to order. Starting up at the call of our Sovereign, we
+rushed to our cabins in a state of nervous bewilderment, and
+loading our pistols in a manner that ensured their not going off,
+we valiantly hurried on deck in the rear of the exasperated
+officer. On reaching the raised quarter-deck of the vessel, we
+found the crew clustered together near the mainmast, armed with
+hand-spikes, boat-oars, crow-bars, and a miscellaneous assortment
+of other weapons, and listening to an harangue which the
+carpenter was in the act of delivering to them. They were all
+intoxicated; but the carpenter, a ferocious, determined villain,
+was the least so.</p>
+
+<p>At one of the quarter-deck gangways stood the captain's lady,
+a lean and wizened Hecate, as famous for her love of rum as any
+of the crew, but more openly rejoicing in the no less
+objectionable spirit of ultra-methodism. Screaming at the top of
+her voice, whilst her unshawled and dusky shoulders, as well as
+the soiled ribands of her dirty cap, were gently fanned by the
+sea-breeze, she commanded the men to return to their duty, in a
+volume of vociferation that seemed perfectly inexhaustible.
+Fearing that the quarter-deck would be carried by storm, we
+divided our party, consisting of the two mates, three passengers
+with their servants, and Mungo the black servant, into two
+divisions, each occupying one of the gang-ways.</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments the carpenter ceased his oration; the men
+cheered and danced about the deck, brandishing their weapons, and
+urging one another to "come on." Then with a rush, or rather a
+stagger, they assailed our position, hoping to carry it in an
+instant by storm. The mate shouted to us to fire, and pick out
+three or four of the most desperate; but perceiving the
+intoxicated state of the men we refused to shed blood, except in
+the last extremity of self-defence; and determined to maintain
+our post, if possible, by means of our pistol-butts, or our fists
+alone. In the general melee which ensued, the captain's lady, who
+fought in the van, and looked like a lean Helen MacGregor, or the
+mythological Ate, was captured by the assailants, and dragged to
+the deck below. Then it was that combining our forces, and
+inspired with all the ardour which is naturally excited by the
+appearance of beauty in distress, we made a desperate sally, and
+after a fearful skirmish, succeeded in rescuing the lady, and
+replacing her on the quarter-deck, with the loss only of her cap
+and gown, and a few handfuls of hair.</p>
+
+<p>After this exploit, both parties seemed inclined to pause and
+take breath, and in the interval we made an harangue to the
+sailors, expressive of our regret that they should act in so
+disgraceful a manner.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant (or rather ungallant) fellows replied that they
+were determined to be no longer commanded by a she-captain, as
+they called the lady, and therefore would sail no farther in such
+company.</p>
+
+<p>I really believe that most of them had no serious intention
+whatever in their proceedings, but the officers of the ship were
+firmly convinced that the carpenter and one or two others had
+resolved to get possession of the vessel, dispose of the
+passengers and mates somehow or other, and then slip the cable,
+and wreck and sell the ship and cargo on the coast of South
+America.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the truce lasted, the second mate had been busily
+engaged making signals of distress, by repeatedly hoisting and
+lowering the ensign reversed, from the mizen-peak. This was soon
+observed from the deck of a small Portuguese schooner of war,
+which lay at anchor about half a mile from us, having arrived a
+few hours previously, bringing the Bishop of some-where-or-other
+on a visitation to the island. The attention of the officer of
+the watch had been previously attracted towards us by the noise
+we had made, and the violent scuffle which he had been observing
+through his glass. No sooner, therefore, was the flag reversed,
+than a boat was lowered from the quarter-davits, filled with
+marines, and pulled towards our vessel with the utmost rapidity.
+The mutineers, whose attention was directed entirely to the
+quarter-deck, did not perceive this manoeuvre, which, however,
+was evident enough to us, who exerted ourselves to the utmost to
+prolong the parley until our allies should arrive.</p>
+
+<p>The carpenter now decided upon renewing the assault, having
+laid aside his handspike and armed himself with an axe; but just
+at this moment the man-of-war's boat ran alongside, and several
+files of marines, with fixed bayonets, clambering on to the deck,
+effected a speedy change in the aspect of affairs. Perceiving at
+once how matters stood, the officer in command, without asking a
+single question, ordered a charge against the astonished sailors,
+who, after a short resistance, and a few violent blows given and
+received, were captured and disarmed.</p>
+
+<p>There was a boy among the party called Shiny Bill, some
+fifteen years of age, who managed to escape to the fore-shrouds,
+and giving the marine who pursued him a violent kick in the face,
+succeeded in reaching the fore-top, where he coiled himself up
+like a ball. Two or three marines, exasperated by the scuffle,
+and by several smart raps on the head which they had received,
+hastened up the shrouds after the fugitive, who, however,
+ascended to the fore-top-mast cross-trees, whither his enemies,
+after some hesitation, pursued. Finding this post also untenable,
+he proceeded to swarm up the fore-top-gallant-mast shrouds, and
+at last seated himself on the royal yard, where he calmly awaited
+the approach of the enemy. These, however, feeling that the
+position was too strong to be successfully assailed by marines,
+deliberately commenced their retreat, and arrived on deck, whilst
+their officer was hailing the immovable Bill in Portuguese, and
+swearing he would shoot him unless he instantly descended.</p>
+
+<p>Disdaining, however, to pay the least attention to these
+threats, Shiny William continued to occupy his post with the
+greatest tranquillity; and the officer, giving up the attempt in
+despair, proceeded to inquire from us in Portuguese-French the
+history of this outbreak. The scene concluded with the removal of
+the mutineers in one of the ship's boats to the man-of-war,
+where, in a few moments, several dozen lashes were administered
+to every man in detail, and the whole party were then sent on
+shore, and committed to a dungeon darker and dirtier than the
+worst among them had ever before been acquainted with. But before
+all this was done, and when the boats had pulled about a hundred
+yards from the vessel, Shiny Bill began to descend from his post.
+He slipped down unobserved by any one, and the first notice we
+had of his intentions was from perceiving him run across the deck
+to the starboard bow, whence he threw himself, without
+hesitation, into the sea, and began to swim lustily after his
+captive friends. Our shouts&mdash;for, remembering the abundance of
+sharks, we were very much alarmed for the poor fellow&mdash;attracted
+the attention of the officer in the boat, to whom we pointed out
+the figure of Bill, who seemed as eager now to make a voluntary
+surrender, and share the fate of his comrades, as he had
+previously been opposed to a violent seizure. The swimmer was
+soon picked up, and, to our regret, received in due season the
+same number of stripes as fell to the lot of his friends captured
+in battle.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners remained several days in their dungeon, where
+they were hospitably regaled with bread and water by the
+Portuguese Government; and at the end of this period (so unworthy
+did they prove of the handsome treatment they received) the
+British spirit was humbled within them, and they entreated with
+tears to be allowed to return to their duty. The mates, however,
+refused to sail in the same vessel with the carpenter, and it was
+accordingly settled that he should remain in custody until the
+arrival of a British man-of-war, and then be returned to his
+country, passage free.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 4.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE PRISON-ISLAND.</h4>
+
+<p>It was nearly the end of August when we approached the
+conclusion of our voyage. The wind was fair, the sun shone
+brightly, and every heart was gay with the hope of once more
+being upon land. We drew nigh to the Island of Rottnest, about
+sixteen miles from the mouth of the river Swan, and anchored to
+the north of it, waiting for a pilot from Fremantle.</p>
+
+<p>And there we had the first view of our future home. Beyond
+that low line of sand-hills, which stretched away north and
+south, far as the eye could reach, we were to begin life again,
+and earn for ourselves a fortune and an honourable name. No
+friendly voice would welcome us on landing, but numberless
+sharpers, eager to prey upon the inexperienced Griffin, and take
+advantage of his unavoidable ignorance and confiding innocence.
+There was nothing very cheering in the prospect; but supported by
+the confidence and ambition of youth, we experienced no feelings
+of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>In order to wile away the time, we landed on the island, and,
+passing through a thick wood of cypresses, came to a goodly-sized
+and comfortable-looking dwelling-house, with numerous
+out-buildings about it, all built of marine lime-stone.</p>
+
+<p>As the particulars which I then learned respecting this island
+were afterwards confirmed by experience and more extended
+information, I may as well enter upon its history at once.</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman who was then Governor of Western Australia, was
+Mr. John Hutt, a man of enlightened mind, firm, sagacious, and
+benevolent. From the first, he adopted an admirable policy with
+regard to the native inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>Exhibiting on all occasions a friendly interest in their
+welfare, he yet maintained a strict authority over them, which
+they soon learned to respect and fear. The Aborigines were easily
+brought to feel that their surest protection lay in the
+Government; that every act of violence committed upon them by
+individual settlers was sure to be avenged by the whites
+themselves; and that, as certainly, any aggression on the part of
+the natives would call down the utmost severity of punishment
+upon the offenders. By this firm administration of equal justice
+the Aboriginal population, instead of being, as formerly, a
+hostile, treacherous, and troublesome race, had become harmless,
+docile, and in some degree useful to the settlers.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not the policy of Mr. Hutt merely to punish the
+natives for offences committed against the whites; he was anxious
+to substitute the milder spirit of the British law in lieu of
+their own barbarous code; and to make them feel, in process of
+time, that it was for their own interest to appeal for protection
+on all occasions to the dominant power of Government, rather than
+trust to their own courage and spears. This was no easy task, and
+could only be accomplished by firmness, discrimination, and
+patience; but in the course of a few years, considerable progress
+had been made in subduing the prejudices and the barbarous
+customs of the Aborigines. Although it had been declared by Royal
+Proclamation that the native inhabitants were in every respect
+subjects of the British throne, and as such entitled to equal
+privileges with ourselves, and to be judged on all occasions by
+the common and statute laws, it proved to be no easy matter to
+carry into practice these views of the Home Government. People in
+England, who derive their knowledge of savages from the orations
+delivered at Exeter Hall, are apt to conceive that nothing more
+is requisite than to ensure them protection from imaginary
+oppression, and a regular supply of spiritual comforts. They do
+not consider that whilst they insist upon these unfortunate
+creatures being treated exactly as British subjects, they are
+placing a yoke on their own necks too heavy for them to bear in
+their present condition. Primitive and simple laws are necessary
+to a primitive state of society; and the cumbrous machinery of
+civilized life is entirely unsuited to those who in their daily
+habits and their intellectual endowments are little superior to
+the beasts that perish. By declaring the savages to be in every
+respect British subjects, it becomes illegal to treat them
+otherwise than such. If a settler surprise a native in the act of
+stealing a pound of flour, he of course delivers him over to a
+constable, by whom he is conveyed before the nearest magistrate.
+Now this magistrate, who is an old settler, and well acquainted
+with the habits of the natives, is also a man of humanity; and if
+he were allowed to exercise a judicious discretion, would order
+the culprit to be well flogged and dismissed to his expectant
+family. But thanks to Her Majesty's well-meaning Secretaries of
+State for the Colonies, who have all successively judged alike on
+this point, it is declared most unadvisable to allow a local
+magistrate the smallest modicum of discretion. He has only one
+course to pursue, and that is, to commit the offender for trial
+at the next Quarter Sessions, to be held in the capital of the
+colony. Accordingly the poor native, who would rather have been
+flayed alive than sent into confinement for two months previous
+to trial, whilst his wives are left to their own resources, is
+heavily ironed, lest he should escape, and marched down some
+sixty or seventy miles to Fremantle gaol, where the denizen of
+the forest has to endure those horrors of confinement which only
+the untamed and hitherto unfettered savage can possibly know.</p>
+
+<p>Among savages, the 'Lex talionis'&mdash;the law of retaliation&mdash;is
+the law of nature and of right; to abstain from avenging the
+death of a relative would be considered, by the tribe of the
+deceased, an act of unpardonable neglect. Their own customs,
+which are to them as laws, point out the mode of vengeance. The
+nearest relative of the deceased must spear his slayer. Nothing
+is more common among these people than to steal one another's
+wives; and this propensity affords a prolific source of
+bloodshed.</p>
+
+<p>They have also a general law, which is never deviated from,
+and which requires that whenever a member of a tribe dies,
+whether from violence or otherwise, a life must be taken from
+some other tribe. This practice may have originated in a desire
+to preserve the balance of power; or from a belief, which is very
+general among them, that a man never dies a natural death. If he
+die of some disorder, and not of a spear-wound, they say he is
+"quibble gidgied," or speared by some person a long distance off.
+The native doctor, or wise man of the tribe, frequently pretends
+to know who has caused the death of the deceased; and the
+supposed murderer is of course pursued and murdered in turn. This
+custom necessarily induces a constant state of warfare. Now it is
+very right that all these barbarous and unchristian practices
+should be put an end to; but, whilst endeavouring to suppress
+them, we ought to remember that they are part and parcel of the
+long-established laws of this rude people, and that it is not
+possible all at once to make them forego their ancient
+institutions and customs. The settlers would gladly see punished
+all acts of violence committed among the natives in their
+neighbourhood. Were they permitted to inflict such punishments as
+are best suited to the limited ideas and moral thraldom of the
+Aborigines, these, without cruelty or injustice, might gradually
+be brought within the pale of civilization; but when the law
+declares it to be inevitable that every British subject who is
+tried and found guilty of having speared his enemy shall be
+hanged without benefit of clergy, the colonists out of sheer
+humanity and pity for the ignorance of the culprit, refrain from
+bringing him to trial and punishment&mdash;a proceeding which, by the
+way, would cost the colony some fifteen or twenty pounds&mdash;and
+thus he goes on in his errors, unreproved by the wisdom or the
+piety of the whites. Sometimes, however, it happens that the
+officers who exercise the calling of Protectors of the
+Aborigines, anxious to prove that their post is no sinecure, make
+a point of hunting up an occasional law-breaker, who, being
+brought to trial, is usually found guilty upon his own
+evidence&mdash;the unfortunate culprit, conscious of no guilt in
+having followed the customs of his ancestors, generally making a
+candid statement of his offence. The sentence decreed by the
+English law is then passed upon him, and he would, of course, be
+duly subjected to the penalty which justice is supposed to
+demand, did not the compassionate Governor, in the exercise of
+the highest privilege of the Crown, think proper to step in and
+commute the sentence to perpetual imprisonment. As it would have
+entailed a serious expense upon the colony to have had to
+maintain these prisoners in a gaol in the capital, his Excellency
+determined to establish a penal settlement at Rottnest; and this
+he accordingly accomplished, with very good effect.</p>
+
+<p>At the time we visited the island, there were about twenty
+native prisoners in charge of a superintendent and a few
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners were employed in cultivating a sufficient
+quantity of ground to produce their own food. It was they also
+who had built the superintendent's residence; and whenever there
+was nothing else to do, they were exercised in carrying stone to
+the top of a high hill, on which a lighthouse was proposed to be
+built.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor has certainly shown very good judgment in the
+formation of this penal establishment. It is the dread of the
+natives throughout the colony; and those prisoners who are
+released inspire among their fellows the greatest horror and
+dismay by their tales of the hardships they have suffered. No
+punishment can be more dreadful to these savages&mdash;the most
+indolent race in the world&mdash;than being compelled to work; and as
+their idleness brings them occasionally in contact with the
+superintendent's lash, their recollections and accounts of
+Rottnest are of the most fearful description. Certain, however,
+it is, that nothing has tended so much to keep the Aborigines in
+good order as the establishment of this place of punishment. It
+is maintained at very little expense to the colony, as the
+prisoners grow their own vegetables, and might easily be made to
+produce flour enough for their own consumption.</p>
+
+<p>It was a clear, beautiful, sparkling day, and there was a
+sense of enjoyment attached to the green foliage, the waving
+crops, and the gently heaving sea, that threw over this new world
+of ours a charm which filled our hearts with gladness.</p>
+
+<p>Having returned to our ship, we saw the pilot-boat rapidly
+approaching. As it came alongside, and we were hailed by the
+steersman, we felt a sensation of wonder at hearing ourselves
+addressed in English and by Englishmen, so far, so very far from
+the shores of England. With this feeling, too, was mingled
+something like pity; we could not help looking upon these poor
+boatmen, in their neat costume of blue woollen shirts, canvass
+trousers, and straw hats, as fellow-countrymen who had been long
+exiled from their native land, and who must now regard us with
+eyes of interest and affection, as having only recently left its
+shores.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner was the pilot on board than the anchor was weighed,
+the sails were set, and we began to beat up into the anchorage
+off Fremantle. Night closed upon us ere we reached the spot
+proposed, and we passed the interval in walking the deck and
+noting the stars come forth upon their watch. The only signs of
+life and of human habitation were in the few twinkling lights of
+the town of Fremantle: all beside, on the whole length of the
+coast, seemed to be a desert of sand, the back-ground of which
+was occupied with the dark outline of an illimitable forest.</p>
+
+<p>It was into this vast solitude that we were destined to
+penetrate. It was a picture full of sombre beauty, and it filled
+us with solemn thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning we were up at daybreak. Certainly it was a
+beautiful sight, to watch the sun rise without a cloud from out
+of the depths of that dark forest, rapidly dispersing the cold
+gray gloom, and giving life, as it seemed, to the sparkling
+waves, which just before had been unconsciously heaved by some
+internal power, and suffered to fall back helplessly into their
+graves.</p>
+
+<p>How differently now they looked, dancing joyously forward
+towards the shore! And the sun, that seems to bring happiness to
+inanimate things, brought hope and confidence back to the hearts
+of those who watched him rise.</p>
+
+<p>Flights of sea-birds of the cormorant tribe, but generally
+known as Shags, were directing their course landward from the
+rocky islands on which they had roosted during the night. What
+long files they form! &mdash;the solitary leader winging his rapid and
+undeviating way just above the level of the waves, whilst his
+followers, keeping their regular distances, blindly pursue the
+course he takes. See! he enters the mouth of the river; some
+distant object to his practised eye betokens danger, and though
+still maintaining his onward course, he inclines upwards into the
+air, and the whole line, as though actuated by the same impulse,
+follow his flight. And now they descend again within a few feet
+of the river's surface, and now are lost behind projecting rocks.
+All day long they fish in the retired bays and sheltered nooks of
+the river, happy in the midst of plenty.</p>
+
+<p>The river Swan issues forth into the sea over a bar of rocks,
+affording only a dangerous passage for boats, or vessels drawing
+from four to five feet water. Upon the left bank of the river is
+the town of Fremantle. The most prominent object from the sea is
+a circular building of white limestone, placed on the summit of a
+black rock at the mouth of the Swan. This building is the
+gaol.</p>
+
+<p>On the other side of the roadstead, about ten or twelve miles
+distant from the main, is a chain of islands, of which Rottnest
+is the most northern. Then come some large rocks, called the
+Stragglers, leaving a passage out from the roadstead by the south
+of Rottnest; after these is Carnac, an island abounding with
+rabbits and mutton-birds; and still farther south is Garden
+island.</p>
+
+<p>Fremantle, the principal port of the colony, is unfortunately
+situated, as vessels of any burthen are obliged to anchor at a
+considerable distance from the shore. Lower down the coast is a
+fine harbour, called Mangles Bay, containing a splendid
+anchorage, and it is much to be lamented that this was not
+originally fixed upon as the site for the capital of the
+colony.</p>
+
+<p>The first impression which the visitor to this settlement
+receives is not favourable. The whole country between Fremantle
+and Perth, a distance of ten miles, is composed of granitic sand,
+with which is mixed a small proportion of vegetable mould. This
+unfavourable description of soil is covered with a coarse scrub,
+and an immense forest of banksia trees, red gums, and several
+varieties of the eucalyptus. The banksia is a paltry tree, about
+the size of an apple-tree in an English or French orchard,
+perfectly useless as timber, but affording an inexhaustible
+supply of firewood. Besides the trees I have mentioned, there is
+the xanthorea, or grass-tree, a plant which cannot be
+intelligibly described to those who have never seen it. The stem
+consists of a tough pithy substance, round which the leaves are
+formed. These, long and tapering like the rush, are four-sided,
+and extremely brittle; the base from which they shoot is broad
+and flat, about the size of a thumb-nail, and very resinous in
+substance. As the leaves decay annually, others are put forth
+above the bases of the old ones, which are thus pressed down by
+the new shoots, and a fresh circle is added every year to the
+growing plant. Thousands of acres are covered with this singular
+vegetable production; and the traveller at his night bivouac is
+always sure of a glorious fire from the resinous stem of the
+grass-tree, and a comfortable bed from its leaves.</p>
+
+<p>We landed in a little bay on the southern bank of the river.
+The houses appeared to be generally two-storied, and were built
+of hard marine limestone. Notwithstanding the sandy character of
+the soil, the gardens produced vegetables of every variety, and
+no part of the world could boast of finer potatoes or cabbages.
+Anxious to begin the primitive life of a settler as speedily as
+possible, we consulted a merchant to whom we had brought letters
+of introduction as to the best mode of proceeding. He advised us
+to fix our head-quarters for a time near to Fremantle, and thence
+traverse the colony until we should decide upon a permanent place
+of abode. In the meantime we dined and slept at Francisco's
+Hotel, where we were served with French dishes in first-rate
+style, and drank good luck to ourselves in excellent claret.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of the colony, Sir James Stirling, the first
+Governor, had fixed upon Fremantle as the seat of government; and
+the settlers had begun to build themselves country-houses and
+elegant villa residences upon the banks of the river. These,
+however, were not completed before it was determined to fix the
+capital at Perth, some dozen miles up the river, where the soil
+was rather better, and where a communication with the proposed
+farms in the interior would be more readily kept up.</p>
+
+<p>The government officers had now to abandon their half-built
+stone villas, and construct new habitations of wood, as there was
+no stone to be found in the neighbourhood of Perth, and brick
+clay had not then been discovered.</p>
+
+<p>It was in one of these abandoned houses (called the
+Cantonment), situate on the banks of the Swan, about half a mile
+from Fremantle, that, by the advice of our friend, we resolved to
+take up our quarters. The building was enclosed on three sides by
+a rough stone wall, and by a wooden fence, forming a paddock of
+about three quarters of an acre in extent. It comprised one large
+room, of some forty feet by eighteen, which had a roof of thatch
+in tolerable repair. The north side, protected by a verandah, had
+a door and two windows, in which a few panes of glass remained,
+and looked upon the broad river, from which it was separated by a
+bank of some twenty feet in descent, covered with a variety of
+shrubs, just then bursting into flower. A few scattered red-gum
+trees, of the size of a well-grown ash, gave a park-like
+appearance to our paddock, of which we immediately felt extremely
+proud, and had no doubt of being very comfortable in our new
+domain. Besides the large room I have mentioned, there were two
+others at the back of it, which, unfortunately, were in rather a
+dilapidated condition; and below these apartments (which were
+built on the slope of a hill) were two more, which we immediately
+allotted to the dogs and sheep. This side of the building was
+enclosed by a wall, which formed a small court-yard. Here was an
+oven, which only wanted a little repair to be made ready for
+immediate use.</p>
+
+<p>For several days we were occupied in superintending the
+landing of our stores, and housing them in a building which we
+rented in the town at no trifling sum per week. A light dog-cart,
+which I had brought out, being unpacked, proved extremely useful
+in conveying to our intended residence such articles as we were
+likely to be in immediate want of.</p>
+
+<p>The two men had already taken up their abode there, together
+with the rams and dogs; and at last, leaving our comfortable
+quarters at the hotel with something like regret and a feeling of
+doubt and bewilderment, we all three marched in state, with our
+double-barrels on our shoulders, to take possession of our rural
+habitation.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 5.</h3>
+
+<h4>FIRST ADVENTURES.</h4>
+
+<p>We had providently dined before we took possession; and now,
+at sunset, we stood on the bank before our house, looking down
+upon the placid river. The blood-hound was chained to one of the
+posts of the verandah; Jezebel, the noble mastiff-bitch, lay
+basking before the door, perfectly contented with her situation
+and prospects; and little Fig was busily hunting among the
+shrubs, and barking at the small birds which he disturbed as they
+were preparing to roost.</p>
+
+<p>One of the men was sitting on an upturned box beside the fire,
+waiting for the gently-humming kettle to boil; whilst the other
+was chipping wood outside the house, and from time to time
+carrying the logs into the room, and piling them upon the hearth.
+As we looked around we felt that we had now indeed commenced a
+new life. For some months, at any rate, we were to do without
+those comforts and luxuries which Englishmen at home, of every
+rank above the entirely destitute, deem so essential to bodily
+ease and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>We were to sleep on the floor, to cook our own victuals, and
+make our own beds. This was to be our mode of acquiring a
+settlement in this land of promise. Still there was an air of
+independence about it, and we felt a confidence in our own
+energies and resources that made the novelty of our position
+rather agreeable than otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>There was something exhilarating in the fresh sea-breeze;
+there was something very pleasing in the gay appearance of the
+shrubs that surrounded us&mdash;in the broad expanse of the river,
+with its occasional sail, and its numerous birds passing rapidly
+over it on their way to the islands where they roosted, or
+soaring leisurely to and fro, with constant eyes piercing its
+depths, and then suddenly darting downwards like streams of light
+into the flood, and emerging instantly afterwards with their
+finny prey. The opposite bank of the river displayed a sandy
+country covered with dark scrub; and beyond this was the sea,
+with a view of Rottnest and the Straggler rocks. A few white
+cottages relieved the sombre and death-like appearance of that
+opposite shore. Unpromising as was the aspect of the country, it
+yet afforded sufficient verdure to support in good condition a
+large herd of cattle, which supplied Fremantle with milk and
+food.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, the reader may behold us for the first time in our
+character of settlers. He may behold three individuals in light
+shooting coats and cloth caps, standing upon the bank before
+their picturesque and half-ruinous house, their dogs at their
+side, and their gaze fixed upon the river that rolled beneath
+them. The same thoughts probably occupied them all: they were now
+left in a land which looked much like a desert, with Heaven for
+their aid, and no other resources than a small capital, and their
+own energies and truth. The great game of life was now to begin
+in earnest, and the question was, how it should be played with
+success? Individual activity and exertion were absolutely
+necessary to ensure good fortune; and warmly impressed with the
+consciousness of this, we turned with one impulse in search of
+employment.</p>
+
+<p>Aesculapius began to prepare their supper for the dogs, and
+Meliboeus looked after his sheep, which were grazing in the
+paddock in front of the dwelling. As for myself, with the ardent
+mind of a young settler, I seized upon the axe, and began to chop
+firewood&mdash;an exercise, by the way, which I almost immediately
+renounced.</p>
+
+<p>And now for supper!</p>
+
+<p>Our most necessary articles were buried somewhere beneath the
+heaps of rubbish with which we had filled the store-room at
+Fremantle. Our plates, cups and saucers, etc., were in a crate
+which was not to be unpacked until we had removed our property
+and abode to the inland station which we designed for our
+permanent residence. There were, however, at hand for present use
+eight or nine pewter plates, and a goodly sized pannikin a-piece.
+In one corner of the room was a bag of flour, in another a bag of
+sugar, in a third a barrel of pork, and on the table, composed of
+a plank upon two empty casks, were a couple of loaves which Simon
+had purchased in the town, and a large tea-pot which he had
+fortunately discovered in the same cask with the pannikins.</p>
+
+<p>The kettle fizzed upon the fire, impatient to be poured out;
+the company began to draw round the hospitable board, seating
+themselves upon their bedding, or upon empty packing-cases; and,
+in a word, tea time had arrived. Hannibal, as we called the
+younger of our attendants, from his valiant disposition, had
+filled one of the pewter plates with brown sugar from the bag;
+the doctor made the tea, and we wanted nothing but spoons to make
+our equipage complete. However, every man had his pocket-knife,
+and so we fell to work.</p>
+
+<p>Butter being at that time half-a-crown a pound, Simon (our
+head man) had prudently refrained from buying any; and as he had
+forgotten to boil a piece of the salt pork, we had to sup upon
+dry bread, which we did without repining, determined, however, to
+manage better on the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime we were nearly driven desperate by most
+violent attacks upon our legs, committed by myriads of fleas.
+They were so plentiful that we could see them crawling upon the
+floor; the dogs almost howled with anguish, and the most sedate
+among us could not refrain from bitter and deep execrations. We
+had none of us ever before experienced such torment; and really
+feared that in the course of the night we should be eaten up
+entirely. These creatures are hatched in the sand, and during the
+rains of winter they take refuge in empty houses; but they infest
+every place throughout the country, during all seasons, more or
+less, and are only kept down by constant sweeping from becoming a
+most tremendous and overwhelming plague, before which every
+created being, not indigenous to the soil, would soon disappear,
+or be reduced to a bundle of polished bones. The natives
+themselves never sleep twice under the same wigwam.</p>
+
+<p>After tea, the sheep and dogs being carefully disposed of for
+the night, we turned out before the house, and comforted
+ourselves with cigars; and having whiled away as much time as
+possible, we spread out our mattresses on the floor, and in a
+state of desperation attempted to find rest. We escaped with our
+lives, and were thankful in the morning for so much mercy
+vouchsafed to us, but we could not conscientiously return thanks
+for a night's refreshing rest.</p>
+
+<p>At the first dawn of day we rolled up our beds, lighted the
+fire, swept out the room, let the dogs loose, and drove the rams
+to pasture on the margin of the river. After breakfast, which was
+but a sorry meal, we determined to make our first attempt at
+baking. Simon, a man of dauntless resolution, undertook the task,
+using a piece of stale bread as leaven. It was a serious
+business, and we all helped or looked on; but the result,
+notwithstanding the multitude of councillors, was a lamentable
+failure. Better success, fortunately, attended the labours of
+Hannibal, who boiled a piece of salt pork with the greatest
+skill.</p>
+
+<p>Mutton at this period, 1841, was selling at sixteen-pence per
+pound (it is now two-pence), and we therefore resolved to depend
+upon our guns for fresh meat. We had brought with us a
+fishing-net, which we determined to put in requisition the
+following day.</p>
+
+<p>The most prominent idea in the imagination of a settler on his
+first arrival at an Australian colony, is on the subject of the
+natives. Whilst in England he was, like the rest of his
+generous-minded countrymen, sensibly alive to the wrongs of these
+unhappy beings&mdash; wrongs which, originating in a great measure in
+the eloquence of Exeter Hall, have awakened the sympathies of a
+humane and unselfish people throughout the length and breadth of
+the kingdom. Full of these noble and ennobling sentiments, the
+emigrant approaches the scene of British-colonial cruelty; but no
+sooner does he land, than a considerable change takes place in
+his feelings. He begins to think that he is about to place his
+valuable person and property in the very midst of a nation of
+savages, who are entirely unrestrained by any moral or human
+laws, or any religious scruples, from taking the most
+disagreeable liberties with these precious things.</p>
+
+<p>The refined and amiable philanthropist gradually sinks into
+the coarse-minded and selfish settler, who is determined to
+protect himself, his family, and effects, by every means in his
+power&mdash;even at the risk of outraging the amiable feelings of his
+brother philanthropists at home. In Western Australia, the
+natives generally are in very good order; they behave peaceably
+towards the settlers, eat their flour, and in return occasionally
+herd or hunt up their cattle, and keep their larders supplied
+with kangaroo.</p>
+
+<p>It is very rarely&mdash;I have never indeed heard of a single
+well-authenticated instance&mdash;that any amount of benefits, or the
+most unvarying kindness, can awaken the smallest spark of
+gratitude in the breasts of these degraded savages. Those who
+derive their chief support from the flour and broken meat daily
+bestowed upon them by the farm settlers, would send a spear
+through their benefactors with as little remorse as through the
+breast of a stranger. The fear of punishment alone has any
+influence over them; and although in this colony they are never
+treated with anything like cruelty or oppression, it is
+absolutely necessary to personal safety to maintain a firm and
+prompt authority over them.</p>
+
+<p>When we first arrived, we were philanthropists, in the usual
+sense of that term, and thought a good deal about the moral and
+general destitution of this unfortunate people; but when we first
+encountered on the road a party of coffee-coloured savages, with
+spears in their hands, and loose kangaroo-skin cloaks (their only
+garments) on their shoulders, accompanied by their women
+similarly clad, and each carrying in a bag at her back her
+black-haired offspring, with a face as filthy as its mother's&mdash;we
+by no means felt inclined to step forward and embrace them as
+brethren.</p>
+
+<p>I question, indeed, whether the most ardent philanthropist in
+the world would not have hesitated before he even held forth his
+hand to creatures whose heads and countenances were darkened over
+with a compound of grease and red clay, whose persons had never
+been submitted to ablution from the hour of their birth, and
+whose approach was always heralded by a perfume that would
+stagger the most enthusiastic lover of his species.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not merely disgust that kept us at arm's length. We
+must confess we were somewhat appalled at this first view of
+savage life, as we looked upon the sharp-pointed spears, wild
+eyes, and well-polished teeth of our new acquaintance. Although,
+in truth, they were perfectly harmless in their intentions, we
+could not help feeling a little nervous as they drew nigh, and
+saluted us with shrill cries and exclamations, and childish
+bursts of wild laughter. Their principal question was, whether we
+were "cabra-man?" or seamen, as we afterwards discovered their
+meaning to be. After a good deal of screaming and laughing, they
+passed on their way, leaving us much relieved by their absence.
+They seemed to be, and experience has proved to us that they are,
+the most light-hearted, careless, and happy people in the world.
+Subsisting upon the wild roots of the earth, opossums, lizards,
+snakes, kangaroos, or anything else that is eatable which happens
+to fall in their way, they obtain an easy livelihood, and never
+trouble themselves with thoughts of the morrow. They build a new
+house for themselves every evening; that is, each family, erects
+a slight shelter of sticks covered over with bark, or the tops of
+the xanthorea, that just keeps off the wind; and with a small
+fire at their feet, the master of the family, his wife, or wives,
+and children, lie huddled together like a cluster of snakes&mdash;
+happier than the tenants of downy beds. Far happier, certainly,
+than we had lately been in ours. We had, however, devised a new
+plan for the next night. Having each of us a hammock, we
+suspended them from the rafters; and thus, after the first
+difficulty and danger of getting into bed was overcome, we lay
+beyond the reach of our formidable enemies, and contrived to
+sleep soundly and comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning we breakfasted early. My brothers resolved to
+try the effect of the fishing-net, and I myself arranged a
+shooting excursion with a lad, whose parents rented a house
+situated about a quarter of a mile from our own. We were to go to
+some lakes a few miles distant, which abounded with wild ducks
+and other water-fowl. Preceded by Fig, and more soberly
+accompanied by Jezebel, we set out upon our expedition.</p>
+
+<p>It was the close of the Australian winter, and the temperature
+was that of a bright, clear day in England at the end of
+September. The air was mild, but elastic and dry; the peppermint
+and wattle-trees were gay with white and yellow blossoms; an
+infinite variety of flowering shrubs gave to the country the
+appearance of English grounds about a goodly mansion; whilst the
+earth was carpeted with the liveliest flowers. It was impossible
+to help being in good spirits.</p>
+
+<p>We passed up a valley of white gum-trees, which somewhat
+resemble the ash, but are of a much lighter hue. They belong to
+the eucalyptus species.</p>
+
+<p>I shot several beautiful parroquets, the plumage of which was
+chiefly green; the heads were black, and some of the pinion
+feathers yellow. The country presented very little appearance of
+grass, though abounding with green scrub; and frequently we
+passed over denuded hills of limestone-rock, from which we beheld
+the sea on one side, and on the other the vast forest of banksias
+and eucalypti, that overspreads the entire country. The river
+winding among this mass of foliage, relieved the eye.</p>
+
+<p>After a walk of two hours we approached the lakes of which we
+were in search. situated in a flat country, and their margins
+covered with tall sedges, it was difficult to obtain a view of
+the water. Now, then, we prepared for action. Behind those tall
+sedges was probably a brood of water-fowl, either sleeping in the
+heat of the day, or carefully feeding in the full security of
+desert solitude. "Fig! you villain! what are you about? are you
+going to rush into the water, and ruin me by your senseless
+conduct? I have got you now, and here you must please to remain
+quiet. No, you rascal! you need not look up to me with such a
+beseeching countenance, whilst you tremble with impatience, eager
+to have a share in the sport. You must wait till you hear my gun.
+I am now shooting for my dinner, and perhaps for yours also, if
+you will condescend to eat duck, and I dare not allow you the
+pleasure of putting up the game. You understand all this well
+enough, and therefore please to be silent;&mdash;or, observe! I'll
+murder you."</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the boy with the dogs, I began to steal towards the
+lake, when I heard his muttered exclamation, and turning round,
+saw him crouching to the earth and pointing to the sky. Imitating
+his caution, I looked in the direction he pointed out, and beheld
+three large birds leisurely making towards the spot we occupied.
+They were larger than geese, black, with white wings, and sailed
+heavily along, whilst I lay breathlessly awaiting their approach.
+The dogs were held down by the boy, and we all seemed equally to
+feel the awfulness of the moment. The birds came slowly towards
+us, and then slanted away to the right; and then wheeling round
+and round, they alighted upon the lake.</p>
+
+<p>Creeping to the sedges, I pushed cautiously through, up to the
+ankles in mud and water. How those provoking reeds, three feet
+higher than my head, rustled as I gently put them aside! And now
+I could see plainly across a lake of several acres in extent.
+There on the opposite side, were three black swans sailing about,
+and occasionally burying their long necks in the still waters.
+With gaze riveted upon that exciting spectacle, I over-looked a
+myriad of ducks that were reposing within a few yards of me, and
+which, having discovered the lurking danger, began to rise en
+masse from the lake.</p>
+
+<p>Never before had I seen such a multitude. Struck with
+amazement, I stood idly gaping as they rose before me; and after
+sweeping round the lake, with a few quacks of alarm, whirled over
+the trees and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>The swans seemed for a moment to catch the general
+apprehension, and one of them actually rose out of the water, but
+after skimming along the surface for a few yards, he sank down
+again, and his companions swam to rejoin him. Gently retreating,
+I got back upon the dry land, and motioning the boy to remain
+quiet, hastened round the lake to its opposite bank. More
+cautiously than before I entered the grove of sedges, and soon
+beheld two of the swans busily fishing at some distance from the
+shore. What had become of the third? There he is, close to the
+border of the lake, and only about fifty yards from my position!
+My first shot at a swan!&mdash;Now then&mdash;present! fire!&mdash; bang! What a
+splutter! The shots pepper the water around him. He tries to
+rise, He cannot! his wing is broken! Hurrah! hurrah! "Here
+Jonathan! Toby! what's your name? here! bring the dogs&mdash;I've hit
+him&mdash;I've done for him!</p>
+
+<p>"Fig, Fig!&mdash;O! here you are; good little dog&mdash;good little
+fellow! now then, in with you! there he is!"</p>
+
+<p>With a cry of delight, little Fig dashed through the reeds.
+The water rushed down his open throat and half-choked him; but he
+did not care. Shaking the water out of his nose as he swam, he
+whimpered with pleasure, and hurried after the swan which was now
+slowly making towards the middle of the lake. Its companions had
+left it to its fate. We stood in the water watching the chase.
+Jezebel, excited out of all propriety, though she could see
+nothing of what was going on, gallopped up and down the bank,
+with her tail stiff out, tumbling over the broken boughs which
+lay there, and uttering every now and then deep barks that awoke
+the astonished echoes of the woods. Sometimes she would make a
+plunge into the water, splashing us all over, and then she
+quickly scrambled out again, her ardour considerably cooled.</p>
+
+<p>"Well done, Fig! good little dog! at him again! never mind
+that rap on the head from his wing."</p>
+
+<p>Away swam the swan, and Fig after him, incessantly
+barking.</p>
+
+<p>Had not the noble bird been grievously wounded he would have
+defied the utmost exertions of the little spaniel, but as it was,
+he could only get for a moment out of the reach of his pursuer by
+a violent effort, which only left him more exhausted. And now
+they approached the shore; and the swan, hard pressed, turns
+round and aims a blow with its bill at the dog.</p>
+
+<p>This Fig managed to elude, and in return made a snap at his
+enemy's wing, and obtained a mouthful of feathers; but in revenge
+he received on his nose a rap from the strong pinion of the bird
+that made him turn tail and fairly yelp with anguish. "Never
+mind, brave Fig! good dog! at him again! Bravo&mdash;bravo! good
+little fellow!" There he is, once more upon him. And now, master
+Fig, taught a lesson by the smart blows he had received,
+endeavours to assail only the wounded wing of the swan. It was a
+very fierce combat, but the swan would probably have had the best
+of it had not loss of blood rendered him faint and weak.</p>
+
+<p>He still fought bravely, but now whenever he missed his
+adversary, his bill would remain a moment in the water, as though
+he had scarcely strength to raise his head; and as he grew
+momentarily weaker and weaker, so Fig waxed more daring and
+energetic in his assaults; until at length he fairly seized his
+exhausted foe by the neck, and notwithstanding his struggles, and
+the violent flapping of his long unwounded wing, began to draw
+him towards the shore. We hurried to meet and help him. Jezebel
+was the first that dashed breast-high into the water; and seizing
+a pinion in her strong jaws, she soon drew both the swan and Fig,
+who would have died rather than let go, through the yielding
+sedges to the land.</p>
+
+<p>The swan was soon dead; and Fig lay panting on the sand, with
+his moth open, and looking up to his master as he wagged his
+tail, clearly implying, "Did not I do it well, master?" "Yes, my
+little dog, you did it nobly. And now you shall have some of this
+bread, of Simon's own baking, which I cannot eat myself; and
+Jonathan and I will finish this flask of brandy and water."</p>
+
+<p>And now we set out on our return home, anxious to display our
+trophy to envious eyes.</p>
+
+<p>As we approached the Cantonment, I discharged my unloaded
+barrel at a bird like a thrush in appearance, called a
+Wattle-bird, from having two little wattles which project from
+either side of its head.</p>
+
+<p>The salute was answered by a similar discharge from the
+Cantonment, and soon afterwards Meliboeus came running to meet
+us, preceded by the blood-hound at full gallop. The dogs greeted
+one another with much apparent satisfaction. Little Fig was
+evidently anxious to inform his big friend of all that he had
+done, but Nero was much too dignified and important to attend to
+him, and bestowed all his notice upon Jezebel.</p>
+
+<p>The fishermen had succeeded in catching a dozen mullet, which
+were all ready for cooking; and the frying-pan being soon put in
+requisition, we were speedily placed at table.</p>
+
+<p>Being still without legitimate knives and forks, the absence
+of the latter article was supplied by small forked-sticks, cut
+from a neighbouring peppermint tree. Those who did not like cold
+water alone were allowed grog; and the entertainment, consisting
+of fish and boiled pork (which a few months before we should have
+considered an utter abomination), being seasoned with hunger,
+went off with tolerable satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>The following day we had the swan skinned and roasted, but it
+certainly was not nearly so good as a Michaelmas goose.
+Nevertheless, it was a change from boiled pork, and we
+endeavoured to think it a luxury. Simon had been more successful
+in his latter efforts at baking, and, on the whole, things
+assumed a more comfortable aspect.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 6.</h3>
+
+<h4>PERTH&mdash;COLONIAL JURIES.</h4>
+
+<p>So soon as we were well settled in our new abode, we began to
+think of pushing our researches a little farther into the
+country. We thought it high time that we visited the capital, and
+paid our respects to the Governor. About a mile and a half from
+our location, the Fremantle and Perth road crosses the river
+(which is there about four hundred yards wide) by a ferry.
+John-of-the-Ferry, the lessee of the tolls, the Charon of the
+passage, is a Pole by birth, who escaped with difficulty out of
+the hands of the Russians; and having the fortune to find an
+English master, after a series of adventures entered into the
+employment of an emigrant, and settled in Western Australia. He
+had now become not only the lessee of the ferry, but a dealer in
+various small articles, and at the time to which I refer, was the
+owner of several Timor ponies. Singular enough for a horse-dealer
+and a colonist, John had the reputation of being an honest man,
+and his customers always treated him with the utmost
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Having learnt his good character, we repaired to his neat,
+white-washed cottage on the banks of the river to inspect his
+stud; and soon effected a purchase of two of his ponies. These
+animals, about thirteen hands high, proved to belong to the
+swiftest and hardiest race of ponies in the world. They required
+no care or grooming; blessed with excellent appetites, they
+picked up their food wherever they could find any, and came night
+and morning to the door to receive their rations of barley,
+oat-meal, bread-crusts, or any thing that could be spared them.
+The colony had been supplied with several cargoes of these ponies
+from Timor, and they proved extremely useful so long as there was
+a scarcity of horses; but afterwards they became a nuisance, and
+tended greatly to keep back improvements in the breed of horses.
+Pony-stallions suffered to roam at large, became at length such
+an evil, that special acts of Council were passed against them;
+and as these did not prove of sufficient efficacy, the animals
+were sometimes hunted like wild cattle, and shot with rifles.</p>
+
+<p>It was some amusement to us to break in our small quadrupeds
+to draw my light cart; we had brought out tandem-harness; and in
+a short time we got up a very fair team. But, alas! there was no
+pleasure in driving in that neighbourhood&mdash;the road being only a
+track of deep sand. One bright and tempting morning the doctor
+and myself mounted our steeds, and leaving our affairs at the
+castle in the faithful charge of Meliboeus, wended our way
+towards the capital of the colony. The river at the ferry has a
+picturesque appearance, precipitous rocks forming its sides, and
+two bays, a mile apart, terminating the view on either hand,
+where the river winds round projecting head-lands.</p>
+
+<p>The old road to Perth was truly a miserable one, being at
+least six inches deep in sand the whole way. It was scarcely
+possible to see more than fifty yards ahead of you, so thickly
+grew the banksia trees. After crossing the ferry, we lost sight
+of the river for several miles, and then diverged from the dismal
+road by a path which we had been directed by the ferryman to look
+out for, and which brought us to a sandy beach at the bottom of a
+beautiful bay, called Freshwater Bay. From this point to the
+opposite side was a stretch of several miles, and the broad and
+winding river, or rather estuary, with its forest banks,
+presented a beautiful appearance.</p>
+
+<p>We now ascended from the shore to the high land above. The
+forest through which we passed resembled a wild English park;
+below was the broad expanse of Melville water, enlivened by the
+white sails of several boats on their way from Perth to
+Fremantle. Farther on, the mouth of the Canning River opened upon
+us; and now we could see, deep below the high and dark hill-side
+on which we travelled, the narrow entrance from Melville water
+into Perth water. At length we obtained a full view of the
+picturesquely situated town of Perth.</p>
+
+<p>It stands on the right bank of a broad and crescent-shaped
+reach of the river Swan, in an extremely well-chosen locality.
+The streets are broad; and those houses which are placed nearest
+to the river, possess, perhaps, the most luxuriant gardens in the
+world. Every kind of fruit known in the finest climates is here
+produced in perfection. Grapes and figs are in profuse abundance;
+melons and peaches are no less plentiful, and bananas and
+plantains seem to rejoice in the climate as their own.</p>
+
+<p>The town has a never-failing supply of fresh water from a
+chain of swamps at the back, and the wells fed by them are never
+dry. Many of the houses are well built&mdash;brick having long since
+superseded the original structure of wood&mdash;and possess all the
+usual comforts of English residences.</p>
+
+<p>In the principal street, most of the houses stand alone, each
+proprietor having a garden, or paddock of three quarters of an
+acre in extent, about his dwelling. The great misfortune of the
+town is, that the upper portion of it is built upon sand, which
+is many feet deep. The streets, not being yet paved, are all but
+impassable; but happily, each possesses a good foot-path of clay,
+and it is to be hoped that the cart-ways will ere long be
+similarly improved. Sydney was originally in the state that Perth
+presents now; but there the natural unfavourableness of the soil
+has been entirely overcome. Increasing wealth and population will
+ere long do as much for us.</p>
+
+<p>It is not until we reach Guildford, eight miles farther inland
+than Perth, that the stratum of sand ceases, and a cold and marly
+clay succeeds, which reaches to the foot of the Darling range of
+hills, and extends many miles down the coast.</p>
+
+<p>The banks of the Swan River, as well as of the Canning and
+most other rivers of the colony, contain many miles of rich
+alluvial soil, capable of growing wheat sufficient for the
+support of a large population. Many of these flats have produced
+crops of wheat for sixteen years successively, without the aid of
+any kind of manure. It must, however, be owned, that a very
+slovenly system of farming has been generally pursued throughout
+the colony; and, in fact, is commonly observable in all colonies.
+The settlers are not only apt to rely too much upon the natural
+productiveness of the soil, but they are in general men whose
+attention has only lately been turned to agriculture, and who are
+almost entirely ignorant of practical farming in its most
+important details. The Agricultural Society of Western Australia
+has for some years exerted itself to improve this state of
+things, and has in some measure succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>It must be observed that with the exception of the rich flats
+of the Swan and Canning rivers, the vast extent of country
+between the coast and the Darling Hills is a miserable region,
+scarcely more valuable for the purposes of cultivation than the
+deserts of Africa, except where occasional swamps appear like
+oases, and tempt the hardy settler to found a location. As all
+the worst land of the colony lies unfortunately near the coast,
+those who visit only the port and capital usually leave the
+country with a very unfavourable and a very erroneous impression
+of its real character.</p>
+
+<p>It is not until the granite range of the Darling Hills is
+passed over, that the principal pastoral and agricultural
+districts are found. There are the farm settlements, the flocks,
+and herds of the colony. From the Victoria plains north of
+Toodyay, for hundreds of miles to the southward, comprising the
+fertile districts of Northam, York, Beverley, the Dale and the
+Hotham, is found a surface of stiff soil, covered over with
+straggling herbage, and many varieties of trees and shrubs. But I
+am travelling too fast: I must pause for the present at
+Perth.</p>
+
+<p>Circumstances determined me to take up my residence there,
+instead of accompanying the rest of my party into the interior,
+as I had originally intended. I liked the appearance and
+situation of the town; and I liked the people generally. And here
+I may state, with many kindly feelings, that never was a more
+united or cordial society than that of the town of Perth, with
+its civil and military officers, and its handful of merchants. No
+political or religious differences have hitherto disturbed its
+harmony; nor have there yet been introduced many of those
+distinctions which may be necessary and unavoidable in large
+communities, but which, though generally to be met with in all
+societies, are not only lamentable but highly ridiculous in small
+out-of-the-way colonies. Such divisions, however, must be
+apprehended even here in progress of time, and the period will
+come when we shall look back with regret to those days when we
+were all friends and associates together, and when each
+sympathized with the fortunes of his neighbour. The kindly
+feeling which thus held society together, was ever manifested at
+the death of one of its members. Then not only the immediate
+connexions of the deceased attended his funeral, but every member
+of his circle, and many also of the lower classes. It has more
+than once happened that a young man has fallen a victim to his
+rashness and nautical inexperience, and met with an untimely fate
+whilst sailing on Melville water. I myself twice narrowly escaped
+such a calamity, as perhaps I may hereafter narrate. Every boat
+belonging to the place is immediately engaged in search of the
+body, and many of the boatmen freely sacrifice their time and
+day's wages in the pursuit. And when at length the object of that
+melancholy search is discovered, and the day of the funeral has
+arrived, the friends, companions, neighbours, and fellow-townsmen
+of the deceased assemble at the door of his late residence, to
+pay the last testimonies of sympathy and regret for him who has,
+in that distant colony, no nearer relative to weep at his grave.
+It is a long procession that follows the corpse to its home,
+passing with solemn pace through the else deserted streets, and
+emerging into the wild forest which seems almost to engulph the
+town; and then pursuing the silent and solitary path for a mile
+until, on the summit of a hill, surrounded by dark ever-green
+foliage, appears the lonesome burial-ground. Ah! how little
+thought the tenant of that insensible body, late so full of life
+and vigour, that here he should so soon be laid, far from the
+tombs of his family, far from the home of his parents, to which
+his thoughts had so constantly recurred! I do not think any one
+ever witnessed the interment in that solitary place of one whom
+perhaps he knew but slightly when living, without feeling in
+himself a sensation of loneliness, as though a cold gust from the
+open grave had blown over him. It is then we think most of
+England and home&mdash;and of those who though living are dead to
+us.</p>
+
+<p>But these are only transient emotions; they are idle and
+unavailing, so away with them!</p>
+
+<p>I shall now proceed to give an account of my first appearance
+before a colonial public. Some of the crew of our vessel,
+exasperated by the conduct of the captain, who refused to allow
+them any liberty on shore after their long voyage, and encouraged
+and even led on by the chief mate, had broken into the
+store-room, and consumed a quantity of spirits and other stores.
+Now as we had been most shabbily treated by the miserly and
+ruffian captain, and as the stores thus stolen had been paid for
+by the passengers, and withheld from them upon the voyage
+(stolen, in fact, by the captain himself), we were delighted with
+the robbery, and extremely sorry to hear that the chief mate had
+been committed to prison for trial as the principal offender. In
+fact, the captain thought proper to wink at the conduct of the
+others, as he could not afford to part with any more of his crew.
+The General Quarter Sessions drew nigh, and the day before they
+commenced I received a kind of petition from the prisoner,
+entreating me to aid him at this pinch, as he had not a friend in
+that part of the world, and would inevitably be ruined for what
+he considered rather a meritorious action&mdash;taking vengeance on
+the stinginess of the captain. Though I did not see exactly of
+what benefit I could be to him, I repaired to the court-house on
+the day of trial. It was crowded with people, as such places
+always are when prisoners are to be tried; and as I had met at
+dinner most of the magistrates on the Bench, I did not much like
+the idea of making my first public appearance before them as a
+friend of the gentleman in the dock, who had improperly
+appropriated the goods of his employer.</p>
+
+<p>The amiable desire, however, of paying off old scores due to
+the captain, annihilated every other feeling; and when the
+prisoner, on being asked whether he was guilty or not guilty of
+the felony laid to his charge, instead of answering, cast his
+imploring eyes upon me, as though I knew more of the business
+than himself, I could not refrain from advancing towards the
+table occupied by the counsel and solicitors, and asking
+permission of the bench to give my valuable assistance to the
+prisoner. This being graciously accorded, the mate, with a most
+doleful countenance, and a very unassured voice, made answer to
+the plain interrogative of the Clerk of Arraigns&mdash; "Not guilty,
+my Lord."</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the prosecutor was being examined by the Advocate
+General, I conned over the indictment with a meditative
+countenance, but without being able to see my way in the least.
+The captain, scowling atrociously at me and my persecuted friend,
+gave his evidence with the bitterest animosity. He proved his
+losses, and the facts of the store-room door having been broken
+open, and the prisoner and most of the sailors being found drunk
+by him on his repairing one evening to the vessel. It now became
+my turn to ask questions, as</p>
+
+<p>Prisoner's Counsel. Your ship, Captain W., is commonly called
+a Temperance ship, is it not?</p>
+
+<p>Captain (after a ferocious stare). I should think you knew
+that.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. And being a temperance ship, you do not allow the
+men, at any time, any other liquor than water?</p>
+
+<p>Captain. No.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. In temperance ships, I suppose it sometimes
+happens that the men contrive to buy liquor for themselves?</p>
+
+<p>Captain (looking like a bull about to charge a matadore).
+Boo!</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Do you remember the day we were off Madeira?</p>
+
+<p>Captain stares and snorts.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Do you remember on that day several of the sailors
+being remarkably light-headed&mdash;reeling about the deck?</p>
+
+<p>Captain (roaring, and striking the table with his hand).
+Yes!</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Was this the effect of a 'coup de soleil', do you
+think?</p>
+
+<p>Captain. No!</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Very well. Do you remember, whilst we were on the
+Line, the second-mate being in your cabin helping Mrs. W. to stow
+away some things in the lazarette, and both being found
+afterwards extremely unwell, and obliged to be taken to bed?</p>
+
+<p>Chairman (interfering). I think the witness need not answer
+that question.</p>
+
+<p>Advocate General. I should have made the same objection, Sir,
+but&mdash; (aside) I was laughing too much.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Very well, Sir. I will not press it if it be
+disagreeable. Do you remember at St. Jago the whole of the crew
+being every day notoriously drunk&mdash;from eating water-melons?</p>
+
+<p>Captain (recovering from an apoplectic fit). Ah-h!</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Do you remember, when off the Cape, the sail-maker
+and several others being unable to do their duty, and being
+pronounced by the doctor to be in a state of liquor?</p>
+
+<p>Captain. Yes.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Then, as it appears that on board of a temperance
+ship, men do occasionally (and in your vessel very often) get
+drunk, might not the prisoner at the time of his alleged offence
+have been drinking other liquor than that which formed part of
+your stores?</p>
+
+<p>Chairman (the Captain being too full of rage to articulate).
+The jury will be able to draw their own inference as to that.</p>
+
+<p>Captain. It was he, gentlemen; it was this&mdash;gentleman
+(forsooth&mdash; ha! ha!) who gave the men money on landing in order
+to make them drunk.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Thank you for that evidence. The intelligent
+gentlemen in the box will perceive that it was at my expense that
+the unfortunate prisoner got drunk, and not at the captain's.</p>
+
+<p>The prosecutor was now permitted to retire, which he did
+growling like a bear, amid the jeers of the populace, who always
+sympathize with misfortune when it appears impersonated in the
+dock.</p>
+
+<p>The jury were also evidently in high glee, and cast most
+friendly looks at the prisoner, and the 'fidus Achates' who stood
+up for him so stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>The next witness was the sail-maker, who reluctantly owned
+himself to have aided the prisoner in drinking some brandy which
+had come from the ship's stores.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. But, Sails, you do not mean to say that the
+prisoner told you he had himself taken it from the ship's
+stores?</p>
+
+<p>Witness. Oh no, Sir, certainly not.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. In fact, of your own knowledge, you do not know
+where the liquor came from?</p>
+
+<p>Witness. No, Sir; oh, no, Sir!</p>
+
+<p>Here the Advocate-General administered such a lecture to the
+witness, who was considerably more than half-drunk at the time,
+that he entirely lost his wits and memory, and answered so
+completely at random, that the jury begged he might not be asked
+any more questions.</p>
+
+<p>Advocate General. It is of no importance. I shall call no more
+witnesses, as I hold in my hand the prisoner's own confession,
+made before the committing magistrate, who was yourself, Mr.
+Chairman.</p>
+
+<p>This was a knock-down blow to me, and made the jury look
+extremely blank. They gazed on one another in despair. The
+document was duly proved, and the case for the prosecution
+closed. The chairman asked if I wished to address the jury, but I
+declined, and observed that the prisoner must explain for himself
+what he meant by this extraordinary confession. Every thing
+seemed dead against the prisoner, who hung his head and looked
+remarkably simple. I read over the paper, which stated that he,
+the prisoner, with several others, on a certain day took a
+quantity of the captain's brandy, and got drunk thereupon.</p>
+
+<p>A ray of hope beamed upon me. I started up, and the jury
+instinctively began to brighten; they had given up the prisoner
+as lost, and now they were ready to catch at a straw. I addressed
+the unfortunate "You state here, that you took the captain's
+brandy with certain of the sailors. Do you mean by that, you
+'partook' of the brandy which other sailors were drinking?"</p>
+
+<p>Prisoner (balbutiant). I&mdash;I&mdash;ye&mdash;ye&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. What do you really mean, Sir, by this written
+document? Do you mean to say that you yourself took this brandy,
+or that you partook of it with others?</p>
+
+<p>Prisoner. Yes, Sir,&mdash;that I partook of it.</p>
+
+<p>P. Counsel. Then, gentlemen of the jury, this document does
+not convict the unfortunate man at the bar; and what appears like
+an admission of guilt is only to be attributed to his imperfect
+mode of expressing himself. He admits that he partook of certain
+brandy stated to be the captain's, which the captain, himself,
+however, would lead you to suppose had been provided by me. The
+witness who has been examined throws no further light upon the
+matter; and though the prisoner himself has admitted that he
+partook of liquor which he believed belonged to the captain, that
+admission does not convict him under the present indictment,
+which charges him with having "feloniously taken and carried
+away," etc.</p>
+
+<p>The jury were evidently delighted with this construction; and
+the people in the gallery and body of the court could scarcely be
+restrained from giving three cheers.</p>
+
+<p>The chairman recapitulated the evidence, and left the matter
+in the hands of the jury, who jostled one another out of the box,
+and retired to "consider their verdict." As they passed through
+the ante-room to the apartment in which they usually held their
+solemn deliberations, they caught up a bucket of water which the
+bailiff of the court generally kept at hand for thirsty counsel
+or magistrates; and as soon as they had decently secluded
+themselves, and indulged in a genial fit of merriment, the
+foreman produced a bottle of brandy from his pocket, and seizing
+the pannikin which floated in the bucket, poured forth a good
+libation, and drank "towards all present." Each juryman in turn
+then drank the health of the foreman. After that, they all drank
+the prisoner's health; and as one of the number afterwards
+assured me, they would have conscientiously toasted the
+prisoner's counsel, but the liquor unfortunately failed.</p>
+
+<p>The foreman then said, "Come, my lads, there's no more left,
+so we may as well go back again." So they jostled one another out
+of the room, and with composed countenances returned to the
+court, where they were ostentatiously conducted to their box by
+the sheriff's officer amid loud cries of "Silence in the court!
+silence there!"</p>
+
+<p>Their names having been called over, the Clerk of Arraigns
+asked the usual question, "Have you considered your verdict,
+gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not guilty!" interrupted the foreman, as if he feared lest
+the prisoner should be convicted in spite of the jury.</p>
+
+<p>"How say you," continued the clerk, "is the prisoner at the
+bar guilty or not guilty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not guilty!" cried the whole jury to a man; and amid thunders
+of acclamations the prisoner was released from the dock, and
+turned out of court, where he was seized upon by a multitude of
+sympathizers, and carried in triumph to the next public-house.
+There he spent the ensuing four-and-twenty hours, the hero of the
+day.</p>
+
+<p>In this slight sketch I am conscious that I have only been
+able to convey to the reader a very faint idea of A COLONIAL
+JURY.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 7.</h3>
+
+<h4>BOATING UP THE RIVER.</h4>
+
+<p>Whilst I was making acquaintances at Perth, my brothers,
+mounted on our Timor steeds, were making a tour of inspection
+beyond the Darling Hills. They fixed at length upon a farm at
+York, with about three thousand acres belonging to it, and having
+a good farm-house, with excellent barn and out-buildings
+attached. This evinced a more comfortable and luxurious state of
+things than they had anticipated, and they returned in high
+spirits to head-quarters.</p>
+
+<p>It now became necessary to consider how the various goods and
+utensils were to be conveyed to the new settlement, which was
+seventy miles distant from Fremantle. We sold most of our flour
+and pork at a fair profit, and left by far the greater part of
+the other articles which we had brought out with us to be sold by
+a commission agent, as opportunity offered.</p>
+
+<p>From various causes, but chiefly from our own ignorance in
+selecting our goods in London, we lost a considerable sum upon
+the things we had brought out. Emigrants, unless they are men of
+great experience, should bring all their capital to a colony in
+bills or specie, and not attempt to increase their property by
+speculating in goods. On their arrival, they will most probably
+find the markets already glutted, and they will be compelled
+either to sell at a sacrifice, or leave their effects in the
+hands of an agent, who will charge enormously for warehouse-rent
+and other expenses, and will take especial care that the
+unfortunate emigrant is not the party who profits most by the
+sale of his goods.</p>
+
+<p>We had brought out with us an old artillery waggon; and all
+hands now set to work to put it together, which was accomplished
+after a good deal of difficulty. We also purchased three pair of
+bullocks, which were at that date very dear. One
+pair&mdash;magnificent animals certainly&mdash;cost fifty guineas, and the
+other animals twenty pounds a-piece. Now, however, the best
+working bullocks may be obtained for about fifteen pounds a pair.
+As the road so far as Guildford was excessively heavy, we
+resolved to convey most of our goods by water to a spot a few
+miles beyond that town, where a friendly settler had placed at
+our disposal a wooden building, consisting of a single room,
+situated on the banks of the river, and used occasionally by
+himself as a store-house for his own goods on their transit to
+his dwelling. The same friend lent us his own whale-boat; and by
+determining to convey our effects ourselves we avoided a very
+heavy expense. The cost of conveying necessaries from the coast
+to the farm settlements in the interior, has been one of the
+chief drawbacks to the colony. The boatmen made fortunes, whilst
+the farmers were nearly ruined by their charges, and those of the
+storekeepers in the towns.</p>
+
+<p>For fifteen years, at least, the latter have grumbled with
+violent indignation unless their goods have realised from two to
+five hundred per cent profit. Resolved, therefore, to be our own
+boatmen, we moored our vessel at a little wooden jetty below our
+house, and began to pack up such articles as were designed to
+compose the first cargo.</p>
+
+<p>I remember well the pleasure with which we stood upon that
+wooden jetty one summer's evening, looking upon the boat in which
+we were to perform our first voyage up the river, as she lightly
+floated before us, scarcely giving a strain upon the rope which
+held her to one of the posts at the end of the pier. Fig and
+Jezebel, always intimate friends, were hunting for
+bandicoots&mdash;animals less than a kangaroo-rat&mdash;which abounded in
+the bank below our dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this bank, Hannibal was to be seen cleaning the tandem
+harness, suspended from the bough of a tree, and occasionally
+casting an eye in the direction of the sheep, for whose safety he
+was responsible. By the river side, our bullocks were busily
+engaged picking the scanty herbage. The sea-breeze blowing
+steadily up the river cooled the air, and seemed to bear health
+and spirits on its wings.</p>
+
+<p>The only sound that met the ear was a rushing noise, which
+every now and then rose from the water along the shore. It was
+caused by myriads of little fish rushing into shoal water to
+escape from some pressing foe.</p>
+
+<p>There are some minds that draw pleasure from things which in
+no degree affect others; to such, this was one of those seasons
+of tranquil happiness that leave no regrets behind. The
+consciousness of independence&mdash;the pleasant nature of our
+duties&mdash;the cheerful aspect of all around&mdash;the flattering
+whispers of Hope, though false as usual&mdash;all helped to form for
+the mental eye a picture which it loved to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>And now we were busied in loading our boat. What pride we
+felt! no shame at being seen performing manual labour; but pride,
+and pleasure, and exultation. We had always been fond of boating,
+and now that it was about to be an useful employment, it seemed
+additionally agreeable. And what a noble scene for this our first
+adventurous voyage, upon that broad river or rather arm of the
+sea! We had found out the secret of human happiness, long hidden
+from us &mdash;business had become our pleasure. I was to be the
+captain, and my youngest brother and Simon composed the crew.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was not loaded until late in the afternoon, and our
+departure was therefore postponed until the sea-breeze should set
+in on the following day. Still, we could not resist the delight
+of making an experimental trip, and so the sprit-sail and jib
+were set, and we shoved off into the tide-way. A whale-boat goes
+very fast before the wind, but will not beat, nor will she go
+about well without using an oar; she is not, therefore the craft
+best adapted for nautical evolutions, but we were too happy to
+find much fault with her on that occasion; and so we sailed
+several times across the river and back again in the very height
+of enjoyment. Then suddenly luffing up in the middle of the
+stream, the anchor was let go, and the sail brailed up, in order
+that we might have the pleasure of sitting still in the very
+midst of the waters, and rest, as it were, in the plenitude of
+our satisfaction; and when the anchor dragged a few yards over
+the sand before it held, and then suddenly brought up the boat
+with a jerk, it seemed the climax of our pleasure. This, the
+sagacious reader, in the depth of his gravity, will consider
+extremely boyish. But should we not rejoice and be thankful
+whenever we find among the many simple pleasures of our boyhood,
+a single one which retains the power of gladdening our maturer
+years? Alas! one after another they die down, and are no more to
+be revived. We are apt to fancy that when the pleasures of youth
+have lost their sweetness, and are no longer desired, it is an
+evidence of our increasing wisdom. But it proves only that our
+tastes, grown more vitiated, have taken new directions. We have
+only changed our follies&mdash;and for the worse.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *"'Tis sweet to think we grow more wise When
+Radcliffe's page we cease to prize, And turn to Malthus, and to
+Hervey, For tombs, or cradles topsy-turvy; 'Tis sweet to flatter
+one's dear self, And altered feelings vaunt, when pelf Is
+passion, poetry, romance;&mdash; And all our faith's in three per
+cents." R. R. Madden</p>
+
+<p>The breeze! the breeze! the glorious sea-breeze comes stealing
+swiftly over the bar; it crosses the first bay. Like a dark
+shadow it moves along the face of the river, and now it has
+reached our landing-place and gone swiftly forwards, bringing
+pleasure and thankfulness on its path. Now, my men, jump in! hand
+me the grog and provision basket&mdash;and now loose the sails, and
+shove off. There, we are fairly under weigh, and little Fig
+whimpers his adieu to Jezebel and Nero, who for some minutes
+accompany the course of the boat along the shore; and then
+finding we are really going, remain fixed with astonishment,
+gazing upon their departing friend. Soon, how soon, vanishes from
+their breasts every feeling of regret! Before we have turned the
+first headland we perceive them playfully biting each other about
+the ears and neck: and now Nero scampers off under the trees in
+the direction of the house, and Jezebel (type of her sex!)
+hurries after him.</p>
+
+<p>The breeze came rattling up the river, and the boat flew
+merrily before it. We had occasionally sailed to Perth in the
+passage-boats, and therefore knew something of the channel.
+Sand-spits frequently run far out into the river, and those who
+think only of steering a straight course, are very sure of
+running aground several times during the voyage.</p>
+
+<p>The distance from Fremantle to Perth, by water, is about
+twelve miles, and it is about as many more from Perth to
+Guildford. After passing the ferry-reach, the river appeared
+about a quarter of a mile broad, having abrupt rocky banks on
+either side; far a-head was the wooded bottom of Freshwater Bay.
+Instead of coasting round this bay, we passed through a channel
+cut across the spit into Melville water. Here is a beautiful site
+for a house: a sloping lawn, covered with fine peppermint trees,
+which in form resemble the weeping willow, and a great variety of
+flowering shrubs, down to the water's edge. The view from the
+house (lately the seat of Alfred Waylen, Esq.) is exceedingly
+pleasing; on one hand is the fine sheet of Melville water, seven
+miles in extent, and three or four in breadth, surrounded by
+thick woods; in front is the graceful curve of Freshwater Bay;
+and on the opposite side of the house from Melville water, the
+river sweeps abruptly round through the deep and broad channel I
+have already mentioned towards the ferry-reach.</p>
+
+<p>We passed up Melville water, and in about an hour and a
+quarter after starting came abreast of the town of Perth, which
+we left about three-quarters of a mile on our larboard side, and
+continued our passage up Perth water. We had now a difficult
+channel to pass through, where the river is extremely shoal; and
+in our inexperience we soon got the boat aground. Jumping into
+the water, we succeeded in shoving her again into the channel,
+and passed by a small island called Harrison's Island. It was
+here that a French exploring party took refuge after they had
+come so far up the river in spite of many alarms. These men were
+some of the crew of Captain Perron, who was engaged in a survey
+of this part of the coast of Australia, for the French
+Government. During the night they were thrown into a state of
+agitation and alarm by hearing incessant noises in the thick
+woods on the main land, that were thought by some to be the
+bellowing of wild bulls; by many the howling of wolves; and by
+others the cries of savages. After a night spent in momentary
+expectation of attack and massacre, the Frenchmen got into their
+boats and hastened down the river again with the utmost
+expedition, and scarcely thought themselves quite safe until they
+were once more on board their ship.</p>
+
+<p>This account of the French navigators was uppermost in the
+minds of the English settlers on their first arrival, and
+contributed greatly to the dread they felt at wandering a few
+yards from the settlement. In those days, an orderly scarcely
+durst take a message from the Governor to the Surveyor General's
+tent, within sight, unless accompanied by a couple of his
+fellows, with their muskets ready for action.</p>
+
+<p>The borders of the river were in many parts, especially on the
+present town site of Perth, so entangled with thick brushwood,
+that enemies might be lying in swarms, close at hand, without the
+least fear of detection. When Sir James Stirling and his party
+first passed up the river in boats, they had the accounts of the
+French sailors fully in mind, and were very cautious how they
+landed. They passed the night in a state of preparation, if not
+of alarm, and were kept in constant vigilance by the same fearful
+noises.</p>
+
+<p>The woods were now supposed to be filled with wild beasts, and
+it was not until some time had elapsed that people became
+convinced that the dreadful sounds which assailed their ears at
+night proceeded from myriads of frogs. These little creatures
+swarm in the samphire marshes near the river, and possess voices
+far surpassing anything known in their species in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>I was once looking out for ducks or coots in a thicket of
+bulrushes higher than my head, when I was startled by hearing a
+loud "bomb!" at no great distance from me. Having no idea what
+kind of wild beast had made its lair in that dense thicket, I got
+ready to fire both barrels on the first appearance of danger.
+Again the same awful noise! It must be the snorting of a bison,
+or vast buffalo, seeking shelter from the sun&mdash;or it may proceed
+from some kind of water-dragon, I thought. I looked in every
+direction, but could see no living creature; and at last was
+about to retreat in the quietest manner possible, when I espied a
+little frog perched on the top of a reed, about a yard from my
+nose, and apparently looking full in my face, whilst, ever and
+anon he inflated his cheeks, and uttered the fearful sounds I had
+heard.</p>
+
+<p>But besides the dread of wild beasts, the colonists were long
+in the greatest apprehension of losing themselves in the vast
+wilderness of forest by which they were on every side enclosed.
+The country being extremely level, up to the Darling range of
+hills, which is seen trending north and south about twelve or
+fourteen miles at the back of Perth, a man once in the woods has
+no object but the sun by which to direct his course. Every now
+and then he comes upon an impassable swamp, which throws him out
+of his track, and causes him infinite difficulty before he can
+get round it, and then he begins to doubt of his true direction.
+This is certainly, an awkward predicament; and nothing is so easy
+as for inexperienced bushmen to lose their way. When once a man
+begins to doubt whether he is right, he loses all confidence in
+himself; he wanders first in one direction and then in another,
+in the hope of finding something to guide him; and fears lest
+every step should take him farther into the labyrinth of the
+forest-wilderness. I have myself been several times lost for a
+short period, and know how very unpleasant is the sensation. A
+common soldier, sent on a message from Perth to Fremantle,
+happened to get off the track. Becoming alarmed, he tried to
+recover it, but as it had made a bend, he walked as far as he
+thought its position ought to be, without success, and then
+fancied he must have mistaken the direction. He therefore
+diverged at right angles, and after walking a short time,
+recollected that he must now be going in the wrong direction, as
+he had left the path originally on his left hand. Accordingly he
+turned back again, and walked so far without perceiving any signs
+of the track that he now fancied he must be going parallel with
+it. Had he gone on a few yards father, all would have been right,
+but now he really took a parallel course, and after walking for
+some time longer, he again turned back, and walked in another
+direction. Now this man had the sea on one side of him, and the
+river on the other, at most not more than four miles apart; yet
+the dread of having walked back into the wilderness behind Perth
+overpowered his faculties, and he walked for hours in a circle of
+about half a mile in diameter. He might have considered that the
+Darling Hills were behind Perth, and must have brought him up,
+but reason does not always act freely at these times. At length,
+completely exhausted, he sat down at the foot of a tree, where he
+remained all night, expecting death from starvation, from the
+natives, or some unknown wild beasts.</p>
+
+<p>The next day he walked again as long as his strength would
+allow, but before night sank down in the extremity of despair. It
+was not until the third day of his misfortunes that he was
+tracked up by a party sent in search of him, and guided by
+friendly natives, who followed his many devious steps with
+unerring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Another man, similarly lost in the interior, after vainly
+trying to recover the road, determined to make for the coast,
+which he knew lay to the west. He was also confident that the sun
+regularly set in that quarter, and therefore, he boldly
+determined to trust himself to the guidance of the sun, making
+sure, that if he followed it far enough, it must lead him to the
+coast at last. Accordingly, he marched after the sun till
+night-fall and then went cheerfully to sleep, having supped upon
+some bread and pork, which he carried with him. The next morning,
+at sunrise, he started off in the direction of his guide,
+perfectly unconscious that he was now retracing his steps, and
+journeying eastward. All day, however, he continued to follow the
+sun, and when it set, wondered that he had not yet reached the
+sea. At night, he finished his bread and pork, and the next
+morning set off again on his long and tedious journey; still, at
+night, there was no appearance of the ocean, and he fired off his
+gun at a black cockatoo, which he killed with his only charge of
+shot.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this bird he lived for the next two days, and for two
+more he subsisted upon roots. He had now given up all hopes of
+discovering the sea, and had lain down to die, when he was found
+by his master and a party of natives, who had come in search of
+him.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared that he was found upon almost the very spot on
+which he had first lost himself.</p>
+
+<p>When once a man begins to believe that he is lost in the
+wilderness, he feels as helpless as one who is blind-folded at
+the game of blindman's buff, and who has been twirled round so
+often, that he has no idea whereabouts the door or the fire-place
+is situated. Those who are used to the bush steer their course
+with almost unerring precision by the sun, and a few known
+objects, but there are numbers who never acquire this power. the
+natives appear to know by instinct the direction of every spot
+they wish to reach; and many white men seem to possess the same
+faculty.</p>
+
+<p>But I have almost forgotten that we are all this time sailing
+up the rive in our whale-boat. It was a very beautiful sail, and
+we repeatedly passed cheerful-looking farm-houses on either
+bank&mdash; sometimes goodly mansions with park-like enclosures about
+them. In the afternoon we dined upon cold wild-duck; and as each
+man sipped his grog in his pannikin, we felt so exceedingly
+cheerful, that Simon and Meliboeus favoured the public with "Away
+with melancholy!" and divers other agreeable ditties. The wind
+however died away, and evening set in as we passed Guildford. The
+banks of the river had now risen into steep cliffs, which threw a
+deep gloom over our course. We had furled the sails, and taken to
+the oars, and as we blindly poked our way, we began to think this
+kind of work was not quite so agreeable as it had at first
+appeared. Nothing was now to be seen but the outlines of the
+steep sides of the river on which occasional houses were visible,
+the light streaming through the windows, and making us fancy how
+comfortable every thing must be within, and how pleasant it would
+be to be sitting at supper in a cheerful room, instead of toiling
+at our oars with blistered hands, and without the prospect of a
+good bed at the end of the voyage.</p>
+
+<p>Romance was gone; the sad reality of life remained. Still we
+pulled along, steering by turns, and doubting and wondering every
+hundred yards whether we had not gone past the place we sought.
+Sometimes we paused on our oars to debate the question, but still
+we continued to push on; till at length we found ourselves close
+abreast of the wooden building we were so anxiously looking out
+for, and experienced a sensation of surprise as well as of
+delight.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was soon safely moored, and the door of the building
+unlocked; and by the light of a wax taper, which we had brought
+on purpose, we found ourselves in a large empty room, without any
+fire-place. A heap of dead wood was soon collected at the
+entrance; and a glorious fire lighted up the small enclosure
+which surrounded the building, and sufficiently illuminated a
+considerable portion of the room itself. The kettle being put on,
+we soon had tea ready, and managed to get through our rations of
+bread and pork, not forgetting to give little Fig his supper, who
+sat very seriously before the fire, wondering what it all
+meant.</p>
+
+<p>Cigars, and brandy and water, having been duly administered
+before bed-time, we next proceeded to litter down coats and
+cloaks; and having made ourselves as comfortable as circumstances
+would admit of, stretched ourselves on the floor, with a few
+sighs and thoughts of home, and slept until day-break.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing we did next morning was to unload the boat;
+and then having breakfasted, and secured the door on our effects,
+we started on our homeward trip, and had the satisfaction of
+pulling the whole distance to Perth, where we were obliged to
+sleep the next night, as it was impossible for us to get down
+Melville water in the teeth of a strong sea-breeze.</p>
+
+<p>When we had to start again with another load of goods, our
+hearts were much heavier than on the first excursion.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 8.</h3>
+
+<h4>FARMS ON THE RIVER.</h4>
+
+<p>First impressions endure the longest, and are recalled with
+most pleasure. Further acquaintance does not always give us a
+truer idea of the value of the object, as familiarity frequently
+makes us overlook as insignificant that which is constantly
+before us. It is not the object that is proved to be really less
+valuable as we become better acquainted with it, but our own
+views which change with our position. My first impressions on
+visiting the various farms, or rather gentlemen's residences, on
+the banks of the Swan, were extremely agreeable. I thought
+nothing could be more delightful than to live at one of those
+picturesque and lovely spots. If the romance of that first
+feeling be now faded from my heart, it is not because I have
+discovered that all which I then saw was an illusion, but because
+a more sober state of mind&mdash;that state into which the mind
+settles as the excitement of sudden change and unwonted novelty
+subsides&mdash;teaches that happiness is not local, and that it is no
+more likely to be found in the finest country residence than in
+the main street of a town.</p>
+
+<p>At the first view we are apt to imagine that people who live
+in one of these pleasant retreats must needs be happier than
+ourselves, who possess nothing but a miserable shilling.</p>
+
+<p>This is the delusion; and when with increasing knowledge, we
+recover from this, we cease to envy and to covet.</p>
+
+<p>My first ride up the Swan was a most delightful one. No park
+in England could be more beautiful than the grounds around some
+of the dwellings.</p>
+
+<p>The ride through the scattered village of Guildford, with a
+view of the rich and extensive flats of Woodbridge, the property
+of Sir James Stirling, and the frequent bends of the river, is a
+very agreeable one. The whole country of the middle and upper
+Swan resembles a vast English park. We passed the pretty country
+church of the Middle Swan, with its modest parsonage beside it,
+and then proceeded through wooded ravines along a pleasant drive
+to one of the most hospitable mansions in the colony. Extensive
+stables, barns and out-buildings occupied the back of the
+premises. As it was now too late in the evening to see much of
+the surrounding scenery, we entered the house of Samuel Moore,
+Esq., and sat down to an excellent dinner. In the evening we had
+music&mdash;pianos are as common in Western Australia as in England.
+At night I occupied a sofa in the parlour. The excitement and
+novelty of my present situation&mdash;so many thousands of leagues
+removed from the spot on which, only a few months before, I had
+deemed I was to spend my life&mdash;kept me wakeful; and about one
+o'clock I arose, and opening the French window, stepped out into
+the verandah. How solemn was the scene before me, faintly lighted
+by the moon! In front of the house was a pretty sloping garden,
+and below this stretched a broad clearing, now waving with corn,
+amidst which rose up a number of scattered, lofty, dead trees,
+which had been purposely killed by ringing the bark. How mournful
+they looked in that gloomy light!</p>
+
+<p>The river bounded this clearing, and beyond the river
+stretched its high bank, covered with forest trees, the advanced
+lines, as it were, of the vast wilderness which lay behind. From
+out the depths of those woods rose the occasional shrieks of an
+owl, or other night bird, and at intervals the long dismal howl
+of a wild dog&mdash;the only carnivorous animal indigenous in that
+country. The air was balmy, but there was something in the
+mournful aspect of the scene that weighed upon the spirits, and
+made one feel inexpressibly lonely in the midst of that boundless
+wilderness of forest.</p>
+
+<p>Time soon takes off the edge of novelty, and long ago I have
+learned to feel perfectly at ease and cheerful, whilst lying in
+the midst of much deeper solitude, with no companions but my
+horse grazing near me, and the fire at my feet. There is no
+country in the world so safe for the traveller as Western
+Australia.</p>
+
+<p>The next day we went over the farm of our host. His best land
+was on the flats at the river side, but his upland, by judicious
+cultivation, is made productive and valuable. A carriage-drive
+extends through the grounds and affords beautiful prospects of
+the river, and of the estates through which it runs; and on the
+other side, of the Darling Hills. The hedge-rows on this property
+are planted with olive, almond, and peach trees&mdash;an admirable
+policy, which ought to be adopted throughout Australia. In a few
+years&mdash; for the olive bears fruit much sooner here than in the
+south of Europe&mdash;a valuable traffic in olive-oil may be expected
+from this colony.</p>
+
+<p>The ingenious gentleman who owns this property (which is, in
+point of soil, one of the worst farms on the Swan) continues
+annually to add to its value by his persevering system of
+improvement. He has had a steam-engine constructed on his own
+premises, and under his personal superintendence; and he grinds
+his own flour as well as that of his neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>The neighbouring estate of W. L. Brockman, Esq., is a more
+valuable property, and equally attractive in possessing a
+well-cultivated farm, a beautiful situation, a comfortable
+residence, and an amiable family.</p>
+
+<p>With similar energy and savoir faire, all the beautiful farms
+on this river might be made most enviable residences.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst on the subject of farming, I may mention a
+reaping-machine which has been introduced into this colony from
+South Australia, where it was invented. It is only adapted to a
+very dry climate, but there it is most valuable. A pair of horses
+push a machine before them, which consists of a threshing-machine
+and a set of revolving combs, some six feet wide. These combs, in
+their revolutions, catch up the wheat, and tear off the ears from
+the stalks, throwing them back into the threshing-machine. A
+field of wheat is thus reaped and threshed as fast as the horses
+can walk over it. The straw is afterwards mown.</p>
+
+<p>The roads are hard and good in this neighbourhood, and some of
+the settlers keep their open carriages.</p>
+
+<p>I doubt whether I have conveyed to the reader a just idea of
+some of the pleasantest spots which are to be met with in this
+colony; but I would not have him (full of romantic thoughts and
+agricultural purposes) rush hastily into the mart and sell his
+substance in order to lead a life of tranquil retirement in this
+distant Eden. It requires a good deal of philosophy to make a
+contented settler. Most colonists leave England full of virtuous
+resolutions&mdash;with bosoms glowing with the ardent love of nature;
+and fully persuaded that they need nothing to make them happy but
+a small farm, beautifully situated, with its cottage ornee, and
+its spreading vines, and a noble fig-tree, beneath which they are
+to sit in the cool of the evening, with their little ones around
+them. All this they may really possess; and for some time they
+are in raptures at the novel feeling of being men of landed
+interest. This is always the first ambition of a colonist&mdash;to
+have some property which he may lawfully call his own. And,
+indeed, the human heart never expands with more satisfactory
+pride than in the breast of him whose territorial possessions
+have hitherto been confined to a few flower-pots in his
+parlour-window, but who now stands firmly beneath a lofty
+gum-tree, and looking round him, murmurs "This is mine!" It is,
+indeed, a very pleasant sensation, but, unfortunately, it is very
+short-lived.</p>
+
+<p>Men do not come out to a colony to spend an income, but to
+make a living. When once their capital is laid out in the
+acquisition of a farm, and in the necessary purchase of stock,
+they have to raise money out of it to pay their labourers' wages,
+and find their households with tea, sugar, clothing, and
+"sundries." Many things may be grown upon your farm, but not
+everything. At first, the settler is satisfied with finding that
+he can sell sufficient produce to enable him to pay his way,
+provided he practise the utmost economy, and exhibit a reasonable
+degree of good management.</p>
+
+<p>But soon there are extra expenses to be liquidated; a long
+illness in his family brings him in debt to the doctor; or his
+neighbour has injured him, and he has, thereupon, further injured
+himself by going to law and avenging the wrong. He now becomes
+discontented, and thinks he is as badly off as he was before he
+left England; or, perhaps he may have sustained no losses, and is
+just able to live on his property without getting into debt; he
+forgets, however, the principles on which he came out to settle;
+he begins to complain that he is not making money. It is true he
+leads an easier life than he did in England; he is not striving
+and struggling for existence as he was there, but he is making no
+money. His wife asks him daily, in the pleasantest connubial key,
+why he brought them all from England, to bury them there, and see
+nobody from morn till night? What, she urges, is to become of
+their children? Will Jonadab, their first-born, be a gentleman
+like his maternal ancestors?&mdash;But how, indeed should he, with the
+pursuits of a cow-boy and the hands of a scavenger? It is very
+well for one who cares nothing for genteel society, and whose
+bearish manners, in fact, unfit him for it, to lead such a life;
+but is she to endure this for ever, and see her daughters married
+to men who wear long beards and Blucher boots?</p>
+
+<p>These incessant attacks at length overthrow the ennobling
+philosophy of the colonist. He knows not where to procure more
+than he already possesses, or he would gladly return to the
+country of his fore-fathers; but alas! he sees no prospect of
+gaining even a bare livelihood there. Without knowing, then, how
+or where to improve his condition, he deplores the penury of his
+lot, and sighs for wealth which he has no prospect of ever
+obtaining.</p>
+
+<p>My own opinion has ever been that colonists, with few
+exceptions, must always be poor men. They may possess large
+estates and numerous herds; but the more numerous these herds,
+the less is their marketable value: for population and demand can
+never increase in equal ratio with the supply. A man, therefore,
+who possesses the elements of wealth, may still be poor in the
+article of money.</p>
+
+<p>Nor will his estates produce him more income than his herds;
+for in most cases the only rent which his tenants can afford to
+pay is in kind. 'The only real wealth to a colony is the
+incessant influx of immigration, combining capital and
+labour.'</p>
+
+<p>There are some of us, happily, who still retain the ancient
+philosophy. We have not thought of pecuniary wealth, and are
+content to live easily, with those moderate blessings which
+attach to a beneficent climate and a simple mode of life.</p>
+
+<p>So very little is required which money can buy, that men seem
+to be annoyed at the fact, and insist upon creating new
+wants.</p>
+
+<p>A great deal of discontent and repining generally prevails in
+a colony. People who have lived miserably in England, who have
+long doubtfully hovered between suicide and highway robbery,
+determine at length to adopt the still more melancholy
+alternative of emigration. After bequeathing a few tender sighs
+to the country which they have hitherto regarded rather as a
+step-mother than a parent; and having pathetically solicited the
+sympathy of those who more readily bestow upon them a few pounds
+than a few tears, in the pious hope of never seeing them more,
+our emigrants betake themselves to the favoured land of their
+adoption, in the full and confident belief that they have nothing
+now to do, but live "like gentlemen," though without the means,
+or any other qualifications of that class. Their Faith is of that
+affecting and unlimited description, as to lead them to suppose
+that He who beneficently feeds the ravens will not neglect the
+rooks or the drones.</p>
+
+<p>In a very short time, however, they find that they are no
+better off in the new than they were in the old country. The
+gum-trees do not produce bread, nor the banksias shoulders of
+mutton; and, consequently, their hopes have been miserably
+disappointed, and they loudly proclaim their wants and sorrows in
+the streets. There are unfortunately in all colonies&mdash;those
+'refugia peccatorum'&mdash;many emigrants of this class, idle and
+worthless, who have never done well, and never will succeed in
+any part of the world.</p>
+
+<p>A colonial life is not for these men, and we recommend them to
+pass on to some other region as quickly as possible.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 9.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE MORAL THERMOMETER OF COLONIES.</h4>
+
+<p>In the chief town of every colony, there is always agreeable
+society to be found among the resident Government officers, and
+the other principal inhabitants. Many estimable individuals are
+to be met with in all communities; in that in which I have myself
+resided for some years, there are many for whom I entertain the
+highest regard. I hope, therefore, it will not be considered
+that, in the remarks which I am about to make, I am actuated by
+any ill or invidious feeling, or at all allude to individuals.
+Since I have undertaken the task of drawing sketches of colonial
+life, I must not endeavour to conceal any portion of the truth,
+nor tacitly allow erroneous conclusions to be drawn from my
+remarks.</p>
+
+<p>I have already observed that a good and kindly feeling towards
+one another prevails in this colony among the settlers generally.
+But I must qualify this remark by adding&mdash;in all cases in which
+individual interests are not concerned. There is less perhaps of
+the 'spirit of dealing' in this colony than in any other of the
+British empire. Ours is not a mercantile community, and the
+farm-settlers generally are young men of good birth and
+gentlemanly spirit. Still, even here, beyond all question, exists
+the same odious tendency (though less apparent) which prevails
+more or less in all colonies, to advance self-interest on every
+possible occasion, without being deterred by any scruples
+whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>When men become emigrants, they leave behind them their
+relations, friends, connexions, and all their old associations,
+and appear upon a new theatre of action, where they have no
+feelings to consult beyond their own personal wishes and
+interests.</p>
+
+<p>They find themselves suddenly emancipated from all those
+restraints which formerly acted with a salutary influence upon
+their natural inclinations; and having no one near them whose
+opinion they regard, or whom they care to conciliate, they fall
+rapidly into the belief that they have no one to live for but
+themselves, and, consequently, make self the sole guide of all
+their actions, and sole god of their idolatry.</p>
+
+<p>This spirit of 'Yankeeism' is the prevailing spirit of
+colonies. It is the natural consequence of the isolated state in
+which men feel themselves to exist, when they have no longer
+those less selfish motives of action that influenced and
+regulated their conduct under other circumstances. The eye of a
+parent no longer watches over them with approbation or anxiety;
+and what has a still more powerful influence upon their conduct,
+they are now beyond the observation of that circle of friends,
+relations, and acquaintance, to which they had been known from
+childhood; which had constituted their world, and the censure or
+approbation of which determined their state of self-reproach or
+self-satisfaction. Few men may be trusted far who can say, "I am
+not known here," for these are always the people who care least
+what they do. Good and well-meaning persons will exclaim,
+"Colonists can have very little sense of religion, if they allow
+themselves to act at a distance differently from what they would
+do at home." Those who have more than a theoretical acquaintance
+with mankind, and who are used to look upon them in their
+undisguised selfishness, know well that their sense of religion
+is greatly dependent upon the circumstances in which men find
+themselves placed. We are not speaking of what such and such
+people would do and feel, but of what is really done and felt by
+thousands.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, I have already premised that it is not every colonist
+who acts on these principles, but that such is the general
+tendency to act in a colony.</p>
+
+<p>We can now understand the origin of that intense selfishness
+in the American character, which has never yet been cast aside,
+and which, in fact, is perpetuated by a republican form of
+government.</p>
+
+<p>The high and nice sense of honour, the chivalrous generosity,
+the frank acknowledgment of superiority, and the ready devotion
+of self to the interests of others at the call of duty,
+constituted the brightest ornaments of the feudal system, and
+still glitter (though with feebler lustre) among the fragments of
+that system throughout civilized Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The Spirit of Trade, which has shattered feudalism, has
+impaired the brightness of that principle which was the soul of
+feudalism. Nor has religion yet succeeded in supplying the loss.
+Religion, which is the bond between Man and his God, has less
+influence in regulating his dealings with his fellows than
+Honour, which is the bond between man and man.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *In making this observation, I refer to the general
+conduct of the World; and am far from intending to say, that
+honour ought to have more influence with mankind than religion.
+The truly religious, a small but sacred band, "do justly, love
+mercy, and walk humbly with God."</p>
+
+<p>And when the principle of honour loses its purity, you may be
+sure that the principle of religion is already decayed or dead.
+Now the principle of honour being (so to speak) of human origin,
+depends greatly for existence upon the opinions of men; and when
+we are emancipated from all great regard for those opinions, it
+almost inevitably follows that our sense of honour becomes much
+impaired; and having no longer any fear of censure, we no longer
+have any feeling of shame.</p>
+
+<p>In a colony, then, is most apparent the accursed Spirit of
+Trade&mdash; that insidious spirit which undermines the truth of the
+heart, which destroys its most generous impulses, and sneers at
+every manifestation of disinterestedness. The first object of a
+colonist is that of a petty shopkeeper,&mdash;to grasp at every thing
+which is likely to benefit himself, without regard to justice,
+religion, or honour. His own interest is the only guide of his
+actions, and becomes the very soul of his existence. He came out
+to make a fortune, if possible, and he thinks himself justified
+in using every means to this end. Do not suppose that he is a
+downright villain who would commit highway robbery. He would be
+greatly shocked at such an imputation, for his conscience is
+still too timid for so flagrant a crime. He merely follows the
+golden maxim of 'caveat emptor', and, like the petty shopkeeper,
+thinks he is justified in cheating those who are too stupid to
+look after their own interests, and too ignorant or too feeble to
+enforce their just dues.</p>
+
+<p>When that nice sense of honour which rules the conduct of the
+high-minded gentleman, and makes him scorn to take advantage of
+the ignorance or the necessities of another, ceases to influence,
+the accursed spirit becomes dominant, and men look with suspicion
+on all around them.</p>
+
+<p>It has become the pride and the boast of colonists, as of
+horse-dealers, that they are sharp fellows; that they have cut
+their eye-teeth, and are remarkably wide-awake. These honourable
+distinctions are acknowledged by the simple-minded with alarm.
+They feel like men involved among a mob, and instinctively button
+up their pockets.</p>
+
+<p>The moral thermometer in a colony is lamentably low.</p>
+
+<p>We do not, however, look upon this state of things as
+irremediable, and without hope; on the contrary, we doubt not but
+the Better Spirit will in time resume its pre-eminence, and
+colonists will be respected for their elevated sentiments and
+high sense of honour, rather than for their acuteness in driving
+a bargain. This evil, which is the natural consequence of their
+present condition as isolated atoms, unconnected together by
+those bonds of mutual respect which confine men in older
+countries, will cease as society becomes re-organized, and men
+feel themselves occupying in a colony the same position, as
+regards obligations and duties, that they would have filled in
+the parent state. As they settle themselves more firmly in their
+places, they will come to feel that respect which ever attaches
+to the character of HOME; and conscious that example is necessary
+from men who occupy prominent positions, a higher tone will
+insensibly be assumed, and the Better Spirit again be diffused
+throughout all the ramifications of society. But to this end, it
+is most essential that every aid should be given that Government
+has the power to bestow. Religious instruction, and that good
+example which, we may assume, is ever afforded to society by the
+English clergy, are the principal instruments to be sought. In
+Western Australia there are at this time only six clergymen, who
+are scattered over a country many hundred miles in extent. Many
+districts are, unavoidably, entirely without the exhortations and
+offices of a minister. At King George's Sound, an important post,
+no clergyman is seen from one year to another. Human beings are
+born, married, and buried, without a minister to baptize, to
+teach, to bless, or to give consolation in their extremity. There
+is no bishop to consecrate, to watch over, or to reprove.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *By the munificence of Miss Burdett Coutts, a
+bishopric has been recently founded in South Australia; and the
+Western Colony is for the present to be included in the same
+diocese. But when it is remembered that there is no over-land
+communication between the colonies, and the route by sea occupies
+about ten days, it must be evident that this provision is very
+inadequate to our wants.</p>
+
+<p>This is a state of things that must be remedied, or moral
+improvements cannot be expected.</p>
+
+<p>The Roman Church has been more thoughtful of her children in
+this colony, there being now settled here a bishop, and about a
+dozen priests of that persuasion&mdash;reason the more for the active
+interference of a Protestant Government to protect the spiritual
+welfare of the Protestant community.</p>
+
+<p>The next most important object is the education of the youth
+of the colony. So soon as ever Government can afford the grant of
+a few hundreds a year, free-schools ought to be established in
+various districts. Such is usually the scarcity of money in a
+colony, that parents cannot afford to bestow even the commonest
+education upon their children. Of course, I allude only to the
+general condition of society; there are individuals who educate
+their families in a judicious and sufficient manner; but the
+great prevailing want is not the less felt and deplored. Boys,
+the sons of men who have themselves been well educated, are early
+made to supply the place of labourers and servants. Hardy and
+manly in appearance, they are naturally rough and uncouth in
+manner, and unhappily possess no mental stores beyond those early
+principles of gain which have grown with their growth. In their
+anxiety that their sons should do well in the world, the parent's
+first object is to impress upon them the necessity of making the
+most of every thing. Their early powers are exercised in selling
+stores, sheep, cattle, or other produce, and they are applauded
+in proportion to the hard bargain which they have driven. If a
+man, threatened with law proceedings, is compelled to sell his
+whole crop of potatoes at a ruinous loss, our keen and knowing
+youngster glories in the opportunity of making a bargain by which
+he shall profit to the amount of a hundred per cent., though the
+seller return to his agitated family writhing with despair. The
+malleable intellect of our youth is annealed by the Demon of Gain
+upon the anvil of Self-interest.</p>
+
+<p>National education is one of the first objects of a paternal
+government. The course of study ought ever to be adapted to the
+circumstances and position of the scholars. In the first years of
+a colony, the human mind peculiarly exhibits a downward tendency.
+Few men prove themselves in their new condition of life superior
+or equal to the character which they had formerly borne, as
+pious, learned, or humane. The circumstances which formerly so
+eminently conduced to the maintenance of piety, the cultivation
+of intellect, and the exercise of benevolence, no longer exist.
+Solitary and selfish from position, men of naturally generous
+temper and good disposition, feel their hearts contract and
+shrivel within them. Surrounded by a sordid and selfish crew,
+they find no objects for sympathy, no inducements for the
+increase or the preservation of knowledge, no animating impulse
+to lead them forward in a good cause. Struggling for a time in
+the net which is around them, they at length fall from the edge,
+down into the seething cauldron, and become fused among the
+mass.</p>
+
+<p>'The tendency of colonization is to deteriorate.' The first
+object of Government should therefore be to arrest this impulse,
+and remedy the evil so far as may be accomplished. If the
+original settlers degenerate in their moral condition, their
+children sink still lower. When parents cease to feel the
+influence of those high and pure principles in which they were
+themselves brought up, they naturally forget to inculcate them in
+the minds of their offspring. What, then, are the guides that
+direct these in their progress through life? What can they be but
+Self-interest, relieved perhaps occasionally by a few touches of
+Good-nature?</p>
+
+<p>The young women inevitably grow up mere creatures of impulse.
+Where are those high qualities which are necessary to give them
+their proper influence over the minds and actions of the other
+sex? Where is that powerful sense of the duties of their calling
+and position, that is necessary to create confidence in the
+breast of the lover or the husband? Where are those unswerving
+principles which alone can keep them, through trial and
+temptation, in the right way?</p>
+
+<p>Woman, alas! has lost her power, when she ceases to inspire
+veneration and command respect.</p>
+
+<p>It is the interest of every colony, and the duty of every
+Government, to raise the moral character and condition of the
+people. The necessity of this must be forcibly present in the
+minds of those to whom the duties of legislation are intrusted;
+and as the most obvious means of improvement lie in the judicious
+instruction of the young generation, the attention of Government
+must soon be directed to this grand object.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 10.</h3>
+
+<h4>COUNTRY LIFE.</h4>
+
+<p>It is most undeniably true, "that there is no place like
+England," for men who are in "easy circumstances," and who
+therefore think no more of direct or indirect taxation, and of
+those multitudinous burthens which highly-civilized life imposes,
+than a besom-maker's ass does of the load under which it daily
+journeys. But how many thousands are there (children of sad
+parents&mdash;Toil and Sorrow) who find their utmost efforts scarcely
+sufficient to keep them out of the debtor's prison! Continual
+gloom fills the chambers of their hearts; the sun bestows its
+cheering rays in vain; and all the gay and beautiful influences
+of the bright world of Nature fail to inspirit him whose every
+energy is directed to the task of raising his family beyond the
+threatening grasp of Want. In his few moments of relaxation, when
+those whom he loves&mdash;for whom he is toiling unto death&mdash;hang
+around him with gentle fondness; in those sweet moments, when
+love unutterable beams through the glistening eye, and tender
+solicitude watches the care-worn face, seeking to win one happy
+smile&mdash;even then, he dare not give himself up to joy. The thought
+is never absent from him that life perhaps is ebbing fast; the
+very labours to which his only hope of income is attached, are
+gradually wearing him down to the grave; and when he is no more,
+what shall be the lot of those whose beaming faces smile so
+sweetly? What struggles, what miseries are in store for the
+beloved wife, and those young and innocent daughters whose hearts
+are full of him! No! he dare not give himself up to joy; he
+smiles in answer to their endearments&mdash;but it is rather a shadow
+than a sunbeam that passes across his countenance.</p>
+
+<p>How many thousands are there in England so circumstanced, who
+curse the artificial state of society in which they are compelled
+to live! In their profession or trade they are bound to keep up a
+certain degree of appearance, or they are shunned by those whom
+it is their chief interest to conciliate. The great bug-bear ever
+present in the mind of an Englishman, is the dread of not being
+thought sufficiently "respectable." Professional men and
+tradesmen depend for their subsistence upon appearances. To be
+flashy is as bad as to be shabby; the great object is to appear
+substantial. If you are rich, you have less temptation to be
+dishonest, and may consequently be trusted. Every man, therefore,
+who depends upon the opinion of others, is compelled to assume
+the appearance of being comfortably circumstanced in order to
+inspire confidence. Character is the life-blood of Englishmen,
+but character alone will seldom extricate a man from the slough
+of Poverty. In our highly artificial state of society, something
+more powerful than character alone is required to place a man in
+the road to fortune&mdash;call it as you please, tact or humbug.</p>
+
+<p>This necessity for keeping up appearances in order to move in
+that rank of life which his business requires him to occupy, is
+the heaviest tax imposed upon the income of an Englishman. How
+often does it draw from him all his profits, leaving him to
+lament how little he is enabled to lay by annually for his
+children! Many times, without doubt, he wishes he durst retire to
+a cottage too small to admit the visits of the heartless
+acquaintance who form his "fashionable" world. Does their society
+afford him or his family any real happiness? Is it not rather the
+cause of many heart-burnings to him and to them? How much happier
+he feels he should be, had he never looked abroad for happiness,
+but sought it only around his own hearth! To see his daughters
+elegantly attired, would gratify him extremely, were it not for
+the unwelcome reminiscences of expense. But would they look less
+lovely to his eyes, or be less dear to his heart, when moving
+about him in the useful performance of domestic duties, clad in
+homely garments, and thinking more of him and home than of
+visiting and display?</p>
+
+<p>How economically, and how happily too, might he live, were his
+own house his world, and his wife and children the only beings
+for whose opinion he cared! But alas! these are the persons whose
+opinion is of least importance in his pursuit of fortune. He must
+do as the world does if he would secure its smiles, and is
+compelled to think less of happiness than of gain.</p>
+
+<p>Is such a man happier, leading such a life, than he would be
+as a colonist? Here&mdash;ever blessed be the recollection!&mdash;there is
+no necessity for sacrificing peace of mind to appearance. The man
+whose conduct proves him to be of gentlemanly mould, is
+everywhere treated as an equal; and though his occupation and
+mode of living be ever so humble, he loses nothing in the
+consideration of his fellow-colonists. The half-pay officer, or
+gentleman farmer, who occasionally drives his own cart, or sows
+the seed which he has purchased in the market, is not thought
+less qualified to act as a magistrate, nor is less respected by
+the great and small in his neighbourhood. His cares are all
+directed towards obtaining substantial comforts for his family,
+and not towards making a display in the eyes of the little world
+around him.</p>
+
+<p>Conscious that he is respected only for his character as an
+upright man, and that as every one knows he is not wealthy, it
+would be ridiculous to affect the appearance of wealth, he wears
+the coarsest garments with more pleasure than the finest coat,
+and draws all his happiness from domestic sources. His sons and
+daughters equally indifferent to show&mdash;though the latter, at
+least, are always neatly dressed&mdash;are busied with their different
+duties, all tending to promote the general comfort.</p>
+
+<p>Happy family!&mdash;how pleasantly the evenings pass in your
+society! Gladly would I ride many miles to spend such pleasant
+hours, and witness happiness so unpretending and real. How
+cheerful looks that large room, with its glorious fire of
+Jarra-wood and black-boys, (for it is the winter season,) and how
+lightly those young girls move about, arranging the tea-table,
+and preparing for the evening meal! The kind-hearted mother,
+relieved of all duties but that of superintendence, sits by the
+fire chatting cheerfully with the guest, whose eyes,
+nevertheless, wander round the room after a certain light and
+dancing shape; the host, a man of eld, but stalwart in
+appearance, full of hospitality and noble courtesy, appears in
+his easy slippers and an old and well-worn coat, which formerly
+had seen service in London ball-rooms. He discourses not only of
+the crops and colonial politics, but of literature, and the last
+news from England; for like many other colonists he receives the
+English papers, and patronizes the 'Quarterly Review'. On the
+sofa lie the latest numbers of 'Punch' and 'the Illustrated
+London News'&mdash;some four months old, of course&mdash;for the ladies
+like fun and pictures, whilst their father laboriously wades
+through a three months' accumulation of the 'Times'.</p>
+
+<p>With what alacrity the old gentleman rises up and welcomes a
+traveller, who has unexpectedly arrived, and has just stabled his
+horse, and seen him fed before he made his appearance in the
+parlour! There is no beating about the bush for a bed, or an
+invitation to supper. Of the latter he is certain, and
+indifferent about the former; for having slept the last night
+under a tree, he feels sure of making himself comfortable on the
+sofa, or on the hearth-rug before the fire. And then the girls,
+who have no affectation or nonsense about them, crowd round the
+new-arrived, and ply him with questions about their young friends
+in other parts of the colony, and whether he was at the last ball
+at Government House, and what was most worn on that
+occasion&mdash;until the good man, laughing, breaks through the
+circle, declaring he will answer no more questions till he has
+had his supper, and, it may be, a glass of whisky-toddy
+screeching hot.</p>
+
+<p>During the evening the girls sing, and happily they sing well;
+and they take most pleasure in those songs which papa likes best
+to hear. And the poor bachelor-guest, who looks on, feels his
+heart melting within him, and reviles himself for the destitution
+in which he lives at home. Suddenly, perhaps, horses at a gallop
+are heard to enter the yard; and soon afterwards two young
+fellows, fresh from the capital, come dashing into the room, full
+of spirits, and vowing they have gallopped over on purpose to
+ascertain whether the ladies were still living. Here is authority
+of undoubted value for everything relating to the ball at
+Government House; and the merits and appearance of every person
+who attended it are soon brought under discussion. This naturally
+inspires the young people with a desire to dance; so the table is
+pushed aside, and papa being squeezed nearly into the fire, mamma
+takes her place at the piano, and bursts off with the Annen
+Polka.</p>
+
+<p>It may seem strange to you, dear reader, who have an idea that
+colonists are merely wild beasts, that such things should be. But
+so it is; and though people may dance the Cellarius with more
+gravity in the saloons of St. James's, I question whether dancing
+be half the fun there that our light-hearted colonists seem to
+think it. There are no strangers in small colonies&mdash;it is always
+a family party dancing together; and consequently, people are as
+merry as if it were Christmas-time all the year round.</p>
+
+<p>Your fashionable people may pity them; but God help them, poor
+things! In their dark and degraded state they seem to enjoy
+themselves so much, that I should not like them to be put out of
+conceit with themselves, or made to repudiate whatever gives them
+innocent pleasure. Nor are they entirely insensible to the good
+opinion of great people; for when they learnt that the Polka was
+thought vulgar at Buckingham Palace, they had serious intentions
+of denying it admittance into the ball-rooms of Perth; and I
+sincerely believe it would speedily have pined away and died,
+like a maiden under the breath of slander, but for a confidently
+entertained hope that her Majesty would never hear of the
+offences of the people of Perth&mdash;and people will do all kinds of
+things when they can do them secretly. So the Polka continues to
+be danced in Western Australia; and the courage of the dancers
+has been much revived of late by hearing that it is still greatly
+in vogue at home, notwithstanding the august censures said to
+have been passed upon it.</p>
+
+<p>A country life might always be a happy one, were people
+possessed of the smallest competence, and of properly regulated
+minds. There is as much unhappiness, or at least discontent, in
+colonies as elsewhere; but discontented colonists are the
+greatest fools in the world, because they have themselves created
+the evils, and the remedies are generally in their own power. The
+grand object of man's search is happiness, which he strives to
+obtain by a thousand various ways. Wealth he covets, because he
+fondly believes that it contains the prize he seeks; but if
+happiness may be found without wealth, of what value are riches?
+Money is not so indispensable a necessary in a colony. Very
+little indeed suffices to enable a proprietor on the banks of the
+Swan, the Avon, or the Brunswick, to bring up his family in
+comfort, and to perform all the rights of a generous hospitality.
+The discontent which is so often felt in colonies arises from two
+causes: first, it is the natural feeling of those who emigrate
+late in life; who, although unsuccessful at home, have ever been
+fondly attached to home associations, to the friends and
+connexions with whom they have been bound up during many years,
+and to the national belief that a man can never be truly happy
+out of England. In addition to this, the emigrant of mature years
+has been so long accustomed to feel himself living in the very
+centre of intelligence, he has so long been accustomed to watch
+the progress of political action at home and on the continent,
+and to drink the fresh draughts of scientific discovery at the
+fountain-head, that now, when far removed from the busy and
+exciting scenes of the ever-moving panorama of European life, he
+feels lost in the wilderness&mdash;a fragment of drift-wood washed
+ashore and left far behind by the fast-progressing waves of
+Knowledge and Action.</p>
+
+<p>The second cause of discontent is found in the non-acquisition
+of money. Every one goes out to a colony with the full conviction
+that he shall make a fortune in a few years, and then return to
+England and become a man of landed interest.</p>
+
+<p>A man has to conquer his first disappointments before he can
+become a happy settler; he has to form new and more just ideas of
+his actual position. Generally, it is necessary that he should
+return to England once more before he can entirely appreciate the
+advantages open to him in a colony. He then fully perceives how
+much more difficult it is to obtain a bare subsistence in the old
+country. He finds that with the utmost economy he cannot supply
+the numerous wants of his family, and he longs for his old
+Australian dwelling again, and the easy, independent life which
+he was accustomed to lead, when his children used to run about in
+brown holland, and his wife looked becoming in printed cotton,
+and thought no beverage so good as the wine which she had
+assisted to make.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 11.</h3>
+
+<h4>PERSECUTIONS.</h4>
+
+<p>Scepticism is the offspring of ignorance. There are many
+people still living who doubt the existence of dragons; who go so
+far as to assert that such creatures never did exist upon the
+face of this earth, and never did torment and destroy the
+inhabitants thereof, and persecute forlorn maidens. They scoff at
+the records which have descended to our times, as fabulous
+legends, composed by idle monks; who were accustomed to write
+fictitious histories during the dark ages. They deny to
+historical ballads that authority which Mr. Macaulay attaches to
+them; and yet the principal fact in the biography of Andromeda
+(even before the times of the monks) may have been true; and the
+poor people of Wantley may really have been harassed by the
+celebrated dragon of that ilk. We speak seriously.</p>
+
+<p>Geologists have ascertained beyond a doubt that winged
+monsters of the size described in ancient legends did really
+inhabit this earth at some period or other. Happily they no
+longer exist of the same dimensions as formerly; like the
+descendants of Anak, they have become 'fined down', as it were,
+in the course of ages, until their proportions no longer awaken
+personal fear, nor do their exploits engage the attention of
+historians. Sometimes, however, the ancient ferocity, the
+propensity for devastation, still breaks forth, even in the
+diminutive descendants of this formidable race, and persecuted
+Man feels himself driven to the brink of despair.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after I had settled at Perth, in a small house, with
+three quarters of an acre of ground about it, I began to think of
+improving my little territory. I thought it was a duty I owed to
+society to set a good example, by bringing my property into a
+high state of cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>I intended to "make the barren desert smile"&mdash;to embower my
+dwelling in the midst of blossoming peas, and aspiring kidney
+beans, &mdash;to draw around me, as it were, a little luxuriant Eden,
+which should be the admiration of a Sunday public, as they stood
+riveted at the palings, unable to pass by without a lengthened
+survey; whilst the envied possessor, stooping behind his
+magnificent cabbages, would listen to their unstudied bursts of
+rapture with justifiable pride. Glowing with horticultural
+fervour, I rose early in the morning, and dug up the soil with
+stern resolution, toiling with a Patagonian pick-axe at the great
+roots which ran in every direction, until I thought myself a
+perfect pattern of a settler. My man also exerted himself with
+equal energy and more steady endurance; and in process of time a
+considerable portion of ground was got ready for seed. In order
+that nothing might be wanting to insure the most unlimited
+success, I purchased a quantity of manure, and had it drawn upon
+the ground. Then it was that the Evil Genius who (like the wicked
+Enchanter that always kept his eye upon Don Quixote,) hath ever
+dogged my steps, made his baleful presence manifest by the most
+rampant hostility. The day on which the manure arrived, I went
+out in my pleasure-boat upon Melville Water, accompanied by my
+man Hannibal, to manage the head-sheets. On our return, at dusk,
+we found the manure scattered all over the premises, as if it had
+been kicked about by a party of dancing demons.</p>
+
+<p>The traces of talons were clearly discernible on the ground. I
+knew not what to make of it. I thought a dragon must have been
+rampaging about the premises. Well! the next day the man
+scratched the manure together again as well as he could, and we
+sowed a quantity of seed &mdash;peas, beans, and divers succulent
+vegetables. The following morning Hannibal rose late, having
+overslept himself, as he alleged. I was awakened by his sudden
+appearance at my bed-side, but no sooner sat up than I fell back
+again, appalled by the ghastliness of his visage.</p>
+
+<p>"The d&mdash;ls," said he, "have been again, and have scrat up the
+earth far and wide; and (he added using a strong expression,)
+I'll be dashed if there's a seed left!"</p>
+
+<p>Alas! "'twas but owre true." The ground so neatly raked the
+evening before, which I had returned again and again to look at
+with fond pride, until it was obscured by darkness, was now torn
+up and defaced throughout its length and breadth.</p>
+
+<p>"Well!" I exclaimed, as soon as I could speak, "there are
+dragons in the world."</p>
+
+<p>I could now enter into the feelings of the poor husbandman of
+the dark ages, when he got up in the morning, and found a dragon
+finishing the last of his highly-prized dairy cows. If I could
+only catch him at it! I felt immediately a fit of
+blood-thirstiness creep over me. I could have destroyed a dozen
+dragons with pleasure, might I only come within reach of them.
+Calmly, however, I ordered Hannibal to sow the seeds again, and
+keep better watch and ward in future.</p>
+
+<p>It now became a serious question how my property was to be
+protected. Am I to be subject to these incursions without
+defence? Is there no safeguard in this country for a man's
+possessions?</p>
+
+<p>I finished breakfast hastily, and went to consult the chief
+magistrate. To my question as to how I ought to guard my garden
+and vegetables from the attacks of the insidious enemy, he
+replied by referring me to the 2 Wm. IV. No. 2, a local act, by
+which people whose property is trespassed upon, are allowed the
+privilege of impounding the trespassers.</p>
+
+<p>Impound a dragon! I thanked the worthy magistrate, "But," said
+I, "the creatures that destroy my substance have wings, and are
+not to be caught by men who have none."</p>
+
+<p>"The law," replied his worship, "is decisive on the subject;
+you must follow the law, whether you be able to follow the
+offender or not."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said I again, "if the law gives me no protection&mdash;and
+merely to authorize me to impound a creature with wings, is a
+mockery unworthy of the dignity of the law&mdash;I may surely protect
+myself? I will have a file of men on guard, and fire on any
+creature that infringes upon the vested rights which I possess in
+my property. I will defend myself," said I, growing warm under
+the oppressive weight of the law, "and maintain my vested
+rights."</p>
+
+<p>"No man," replied the worshipful justice, "as you know very
+well, has a right to defend himself, except with the weapons of
+the law. You will only get into scrapes if you fight with any
+other weapons."</p>
+
+<p>Finding that I was kicking against the pricks, I made my bow,
+and went home again in a very ireful mood.</p>
+
+<p>Hannibal had resown the beds, and was at work upon others. On
+seeing me, he stepped up to a fine Nuytsia floribunda, which
+ornaments my grounds, and taking up a double-barrelled gun that
+was leaning against it, gave a few significant slaps upon the
+breach, and smiling complacently, winked his eye. I turned away
+and entered the house, filled with a kind of grim satisfaction,
+as thoughts of vengeance flitted through my brain. Too much
+disturbed to sit still, I paced up and down the room, listening
+eagerly for sounds which should announce the hour of slaughter
+and revenge.</p>
+
+<p>The milk of human kindness had curdled in my breast; I felt
+that I could sympathize with the restless anxiety of Charles IX
+on the memorable eve of St. Bartholomew. But the butchery of
+unarmed Huguenots was a different affair altogether from a war of
+extermination against invading dragons. I looked out of the
+windows every moment to see what Hannibal was about; but there he
+continued hoeing, and weeding, and raking, and looking as calm
+and amiable as the Duke when he awaited the proper moment to
+attack the French. Suddenly he paused; I watched him quietly drop
+his rake, and retire backwards behind a bush, where he remained
+crouching down, with the double-barrelled gun in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Unable to remain quiet any longer, I opened the window, and
+cried in a fierce whisper, "Kill! kill!" With his hand he
+motioned me to be quiet, so I withdrew and paced about the room
+with feverish anxiety. The discharge of both barrels made me drop
+into a chair. Murder had been committed! Vengeance was satisfied,
+and remorse arrived as usual. Remorse, the ill-favoured offspring
+of Fear!</p>
+
+<p>"You will get yourself into scrapes," said the chief
+magistrate, "if you use any other weapon than the law." I
+reasoned with Conscience; I repeated the argument that I had a
+right to defend my property when the law failed to afford me
+protection. Dragons, said I, are 'ferae naturae'; the people of
+Perth, it would seem, are in the habit of keeping them as pets,
+and thus they come to be considered private property. But then,
+let the people of Perth destroy their own substance, and not
+mine. If they do not choose to have gardens of their own, they
+have no right to prevent the growth of my radishes. Because they
+do not like sack, shall we have no more cakes and ale? Because
+they can exist without cauliflowers, must I renounce all hopes of
+having hyssop in my pottage?</p>
+
+<p>What! am I to rise up early in the morning and sow the seeds
+of carefulness and labour, merely for the sustenance of other
+people's harpies?</p>
+
+<p>To whom am I to look for redress, when I know not to whom the
+ruthless creatures belong?&mdash;Creatures that wander far and wide in
+search of food; that gain their precarious subsistence by plunder
+and rapine; and are intensely hostile to the labours and
+improvements of civilization. No wonder the poet looked upon them
+as hell-born, and called them a pest and a curse to
+society:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;nec saevior ulla Pestis et ira Deuim Stygiis sese
+extulit undis."</p>
+
+<p>I had made these reflections, and received a good deal of
+comfort from them, when Hannibal appeared at the door with a
+pallid countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of them, Sir, are done for; one's a big un&mdash;eight pounds,
+if he weighs an 'unce. He's a handsome feller, that un; black
+feathers, and spurs to his heels six inches long. They'll make a
+houtcry about him, I expect."</p>
+
+<p>"What have you done with the carcases?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dragged 'em behind the bushes. 'Tan't legal to lift the
+bodies."</p>
+
+<p>"Go on with your work, Hannibal, and don't appear at all
+fluttered or discomposed. Look as if nothing had happened. If any
+one calls, I am not at home."</p>
+
+<p>An outcry was raised about the death of the dragon. He was the
+favourite of a young lady who was a pet of her papa's&mdash;(next to
+dragons, children are the most horrid nuisances).&mdash;An accursed
+dog (the D&mdash;-l take all dogs! say I,) had found the body, and
+dragged it into the street, where it was recognised by the girl.
+The papa, furious at the sight of the favourite's tears, roamed
+and raged about the town in search of witnesses. Men of Belial
+are always to be found, especially in a colony, and Hannibal was
+openly accused of the murder.</p>
+
+<p>The whole town was in a state of excitement. People seemed to
+think that a blow had been struck at the very roots of civil and
+religious liberty; and as every one had his favourite dragon,
+every one felt alarmed for its safety so long as Hannibal
+remained unpunished.</p>
+
+<p>The ladies were especially bitter in their remarks and
+innuendoes.</p>
+
+<p>I was told by 'friends', that more than one lady had observed,
+that an old bachelor like myself cared nothing about dragons, and
+therefore it was just like my selfishness to seek to deprive them
+of their innocent pleasures and amusements.</p>
+
+<p>No one would listen to my plea of self-defence; no one
+regarded my losses; I was not looked upon as a sufferer; and
+instead of sympathy received only abuse.</p>
+
+<p>A summons being issued against Hannibal, he appeared before
+the tribunal of two of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace,
+accused of a grave misdemeanour.</p>
+
+<p>As every one knew that I was the instigator of the offence, I
+magnanimously avowed the fact, and was requested to stand in the
+place of Hannibal.</p>
+
+<p>In vain, however, did I use every argument to justify the
+deed. The chief magistrate reminded me that I had been fully
+advised to proceed only according to law, under the Act, 2 Wm.
+IV. No. 2, amended (!!) by 4 Wm. IV. No. 5; by either of which I
+was fully authorized to seize and impound all trespassers&mdash;a
+limit and license that included dragons.</p>
+
+<p>My defence was allowed to be a sensible and rational one; but
+the law was opposed to it, and their worships were bound by oath
+to prefer the law to common sense. (I doubted myself whether
+dragons came within the Law, but the Justices decided that they
+were poundable animals.) This being the case, I was under the
+necessity of paying the sum of ten shillings damages, and as many
+more for costs and expenses incurred by the bailiff, in
+travelling up and down his bailiwick in search of the body of
+John Hannibal Muckthorne (whose body was all the time sitting
+quietly in my kitchen)&mdash;rather than go to Fremantle gaol for a
+month, and help to draw stones about the streets in a large
+cart.</p>
+
+<p>I need scarcely add, that I returned home a wiser and sadder
+man. "Hannibal," said I, "the Spirit of the Age in this colony is
+opposed to territorial and to social improvement. My grounds must
+still remain a barren waste. Instead of embowering myself in
+fertility, as I had intended; instead of creating new beauties
+which should transfuse fresh charms into the minds of the
+peripatetics of Perth; I must continue to live in a desert, and
+shall doubtless soon subside into an ascetic recluse. Hannibal!
+turn the horses into the garden, and let them trample over the
+beds."</p>
+
+<p>Thus have I reluctantly shown the reader that the dark ages
+still cast their shadows over the city of Perth;&mdash;the dawn of a
+high state of civilization is still wanting there, where man
+continues defenceless from the ravages of noxious monsters
+peculiar to an early and uncivilized era.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *The laws which colonists make for themselves are
+often as absurd as any that the Imperial Parliament thinks proper
+to enact for them. To this day, the only legal remedy (except an
+action and a shilling damages) against the winged and long-clawed
+nuisances that destroy the hopes and break the heart of the
+horticulturist, is to impound them.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 12.</h3>
+
+<h4>MICHAEL BLAKE, THE IRISH SETTLER.*</h4>
+
+<p>[footnote] *A dry and humorous old man, who I cannot help
+suspecting coins a good many of his anecdotes, gave me this
+account of one of the early settlers, just as I record it. The
+fact of Blake's coming to this colony, solely because he had
+heard there was an estate in it called Skibbereen, (after the
+place of his nativity,) struck me as being something truly Irish
+and original. The man's whole history is given almost in the
+words of my informant, who professed to have received it pure
+from the fountain-head.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Blake was a native of Skibbereen, a well-known barony
+in the "ould country." His parents lived in a hut, "quite handy"
+to the road, in the midst of a bit of turf-ground where they
+managed to rear their annual crops of potatoes and their sprouts
+of children with as little trouble to themselves as possible.
+Michael, as he said himself, was the youngest of four, but there
+were five younger than he. As soon as he could walk, his mother
+clothed him in an old coat of his father's, the tails of which
+swept the ground far behind him, as he trotted over the
+cabin-floor with a stick in his hand to wallop his favourite
+companion, the long-legged and long-snouted sow, as she lay
+dreaming in the door-way. His father was an upright man, and
+dealt equal justice among his children, whom he 'lathered' daily
+with the strictest impartiality. This was all the education they
+had any reason to expect, as the priest was always in a hurry
+when he called at their door, and had not time to dismount from
+his pony, from whose back he bestowed his blessing upon the
+tattered crowd of children as they pressed around, and gazed upon
+his Reverence with their wild grey eyes and open mouths. And
+their parents could not be expected to give any other education
+than they had themselves received.</p>
+
+<p>Michael grew up, therefore, as might be expected, a hungry,
+dirty-faced, unbreeched, long-coated urchin. Although his parents
+had done no more for him than to usher him into a life of mud and
+misery, Nature had been more compassionate. She had bestowed upon
+him a restless imagination, apparently for the purpose of
+removing him from this scene of trouble as quickly as possible.
+It led him, at an early age, to explore the passes of a
+neighbouring bog, where he fell into a deep hole filled with
+water, and was just on the point of escaping from the cares of
+the world, when his eldest brother unfortunately came by, and
+fished him out. Their father seized the opportunity, and lathered
+them both.</p>
+
+<p>Michael next travelled in a northerly direction, and reached
+the high-road with another brother, who was sent out to beg. Here
+they both sat upon a stone and cried for their breakfast, until a
+brilliant idea occurred to Michael, which dried his tears. He
+made a dirt-pie, and presented it to his brother; and they both
+passed their time very pleasantly, until an English carriage
+appeared coming along the road. Little Pat ran forward, begging
+and praying their honours to give him a halfpenny for the love of
+the Virgin, as he had been carefully instructed to do by his dear
+mother, whilst his father took measures to impress the lesson
+upon his mind and person. Michael, on his part, made a vigorous
+effort to cross over to the other side, crying lustily, "Please
+Sir, a halfpenny!" but his mother, in order to give him a good
+appearance in front, had buttoned the old coat wrong side before,
+and poor Mike, in his haste and hurry, happening to put one of
+his little feet into the remains of a pocket, unhappily tripped
+himself up, and rolled before the horses' feet. The post-boy
+cleverly turned them aside as quickly as possible, but nothing
+could prevent the hind-wheel of the carriage from grazing one of
+Michael's shins, and making him squall out in the most dreadful
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>A young lady and gentleman descended from the carriage, and
+showed the greatest compassion for the sufferer, whom they caused
+to be carried by a servant to his father's hovel, whither they
+accompanied him, and soon relieved the anxieties of his parents
+by a present of five golden guineas.</p>
+
+<p>Some years elapsed, and things went on in the old way with the
+Blake family. Mike had sprouted out into a fine gossoon of a boy,
+and exercised his errant disposition by running after the
+gentlemen when they went out shooting, and helping the keepers to
+carry the game. One day, a gentleman who was shooting in the
+neighbourhood called at his father's cabin, and asked for the
+little boy whom he had run over in his carriage some seven years
+before. Mr. Blake, senior, after blessing his honour for his
+goodness, and wishing him long life and every earthly happiness
+called to the young spalpeen to get out of that; and why was he
+not for coming when the gentleman was spaking to him? Mr. Blake
+hinted to his visitors that he should correct the manners of the
+youth at an early opportunity, and in the meantime Mike slyly
+approached with a gun that he was carrying for the keeper in his
+hands, and received the compliments of the gentleman on his good
+looks.</p>
+
+<p>The end of it was that the gentleman, who was an officer, took
+Mike into his service; and in process of time, when he joined his
+regiment, Michael became his constant attendant. Dying, however,
+unexpectedly, as most people do, the worthy Mr. Blake, junior,
+was left to his own resources; and finding nothing better to do,
+he accepted a shilling from a friendly serjeant, and entered Her
+Majesty's service as a full private.</p>
+
+<p>In process of time he married a wife&mdash;a real jewel, from that
+"gem of the sea" so dear to poor old England&mdash;and accompanied his
+regiment to Van Dieman's Land, en route to India. He was well
+known and liked by the officers, having a peculiar talent for
+blarney; and nothing pleased him so much as a little conversation
+with a superior.</p>
+
+<p>The regiment remained seven years in Van Dieman's Land, and
+then passed on to its destination, leaving a number of men, who
+had received their discharge, to become settlers in the colony.
+Among these was Mr. Michael Blake, who soon established himself
+on a block of land, and became a prosperous colonist. But times
+grew bad, ere he could retire with a fortune. His wife formed
+undesirable acquaintances, and Michael endeavoured to reclaim her
+by wholesome correction; but, unhappily, he bestowed so much
+attention upon her amendment that he entirely neglected himself,
+and before he was aware that he was falling into error, had
+become an habitual drunkard.</p>
+
+<p>Everything now went wrong. Mike, hating himself, began to hate
+everything about him; he hated the colony; he hated the
+magistrates, who now and then imposed a penalty upon him; he
+hated the laws, and discovered the difference between law and
+justice, without being able to find any traces of the latter. His
+fences fell into decay; his pigs and cattle committed trespasses,
+and the neighbours made him pay damages. It was the fault of the
+law, or rather of the lawyers, whom he condemned to the flames
+with dreadful imprecations.</p>
+
+<p>Unable to pay the storekeeper for sugar and tea, judgment was
+given against him, and his last surviving cow was seized by the
+sheriff. He had the satisfaction of beating the officer nearly to
+death; but the cow was sold notwithstanding, and he took a
+month's exercise on the treadmill, whilst his wife spent the time
+with her friend the excise-officer, and drank to his better
+health and general improvement.</p>
+
+<p>On being released, he complained to the Governor, and
+presented petitions to the Legislative Council against the unjust
+judges who ruled the land, and crushed the hearts out of the
+people.</p>
+
+<p>Soon, however, softer feelings came over him; thoughts
+returned of home, so long forgotten in days of prosperity. He
+wondered whether his parents were alive, whom, forty years ago,
+he had left in the barony of Skibbereen, and had not heard of
+since.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of the home of his boyhood; of the antiquated cabin
+in which, at the will of his father, he had so often "eaten
+stick;" of the long-legged and long-snouted sow, that used to
+grunt uneasily in her dreams before the fire; of the potatoes and
+salt for breakfast and dinner, of which he never got enough; of
+the puddle before the door, in which he used to love to
+dabble&mdash;all these visions of the past came back upon him now in
+the time of his sorrows, and filled him with a craving for the
+scenes of his youth.</p>
+
+<p>Every one in trouble goes to the Governor, who has
+consequently plenty of morning-callers. A few words of sympathy
+from his Excellency are very consoling, and serve the afflicted
+for a topic of conversation for some time to come. "His
+Excellency, the last time I saw him, desired me to write to my
+friends." "His Excellency particularly wishes me to make it up
+with Smith, or I'd never have forgiven him for seizing my cow."
+"His Excellency swears that he can't spare me from the colony, or
+nothing should make me stay another day in it," etc. etc.</p>
+
+<p>Mike presented himself at the government-offices, and after
+waiting a couple of hours, caught sight of the Governor as he was
+passing out through the ante-room.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless your Honour, it's bould I am to be stopping your
+Honour and Excellency this way, and you going out too with the
+business of the Nation upon your Honour's shoulders."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want, my good friend, what do you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's your Honour and Excellency that's the good friend to me
+and the poor, and many's the prayer that's offered up night and
+morning for your Excellency, by them that blesses the Good God
+and the Virgin for having sent your Honour to reign over
+us."&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Mike, what is it? I'm in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p>"And is it me that's hindering your Honour? sure and I'll walk
+wid ye to the world's end and talk all the same. Och, and it's
+the bad times that have come upon us all entirely&mdash;and the ould
+settlers feels it the most, as is likely. Faith and we'd all die
+off, out and out, if it wasn't for your Excellency thinking of
+us, and schaming to do us the good turn, when the Council (bad
+luck to 'em!) raises the duties."</p>
+
+<p>"My horse is waiting; I really cannot stay."</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, and it's a fine baste that same, and the two of you
+looks well together, with the white cockatoo feathers, and the
+sword all gould and diamonds."</p>
+
+<p>Here his Excellency showed signs of mounting his horse, so
+Mike hastened to whisper confidentially,</p>
+
+<p>"Governor, dear, my heart's broken entirely for the ould
+country, and the poor father and mother that's looking out for me
+night and morning these forty years, to give me their blessing;
+and the woman at home, the crathur, kills me day-by-day with her
+going on; and I'd like to see ould Ireland once before I die, and
+Skibbereen, which your Honour knows is the finest place under God
+Almighty's blessed canopy, and I can't die in pace till I see
+it&mdash;'deed I can't, Governor dear; and ther's a Man-of-war, no
+less than the Shannon herself, going to sail for the Indies,
+where I'd get passed on by Colonel Maxwell (God bless him for the
+rale gintleman!) only, Governor dear, spake the good word for me
+to Captain Widdicombe, and I'll be took to Calcutty free for
+nothing; and it's not a tinpenny-piece that I have in the world,
+the blessed Virgin pity me!" &mdash;Here his Excellency, being mounted
+on horseback, felt himself in more independent circumstances, and
+told Mike that he must not think of leaving the colony without
+his wife, as it would be most improper conduct (the Government
+would have to support her), and that he himself had no interest
+with Captain Widdicombe&mdash;His Excellency's charger, being of an
+impatient temper, allowed no further time for parley, but
+cantered off with his rider, leaving Mike rather at fault.</p>
+
+<p>The more numerous the difficulties that appeared in the way of
+Mike's return to Skibbereen, the more yearning became his desire
+to lay his bones there. Every day he appeared at the
+Government-offices, and waylaid the Colonial-secretary, or the
+Attorney-General, or some other of the officials, entreating them
+to obtain a free passage for an old soldier, whose only desire on
+earth was to die among the bogs of Skibbereen.</p>
+
+<p>He talked incessantly of that beautiful spot, and swore that
+he loved it better than the Garden of Eden. He pined after
+Skibbereen as the melancholy pelican pines for his desert home;
+but hope gradually seemed to leave him&mdash;all other friends had
+long since abandoned him, and he had fallen helplessly into the
+power of his arch-enemy the Rum-bottle, when a fellow-countryman
+arrived at Hobart Town from Western Australia. Mr. Denis Maguire
+listened patiently to Mike's pathetic lamentation over the lost
+Skibbereen, and then calmly replied, "Och, but it's little that
+I'd disthract myself for a place like that in the ould country;
+sure isn't there Skibbereen near the Swan River, belonging to Mr.
+O'Driscoll, and isn't it a beautifuller place entirely than any
+other Skibbereen in the world?" "What!" interrupted Mike, "is
+there Skibbereen at the Swan River, and is it Mr. O'Driscoll
+that's living there? Arrah! say that again, my darling, if you
+plaze." Maguire repeated the statement; on which Mike, starting
+up, began to dance an Irish hornpipe; and then, stopping short of
+a sudden swore that he was the happiest boy alive, and thanked
+the blessed Saints for all their goodness to him.</p>
+
+<p>The next day he managed to sell all the remains of his
+property, and made a bargain with the owner of a small
+coasting-vessel to convey him and his wife (whom he was compelled
+to take with him) to Swan River, where he arrived in due course
+of time, and managed to locate himself at Skibbereen, where he
+built a hut, cultivated several acres of land, and became quite a
+reformed character.</p>
+
+<p>Although his landlord, Mr. O'Driscoll, was his countryman,
+Mike managed to blarney him so that he did just what he liked,
+and never paid any rent either in cash or in kind. His yearning
+desire had been to live at Skibbereen, and now that he had
+attained his object he was (wonderful to say) contented and
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>He frequently came to Perth for the sake of a little chat with
+the storekeepers and the gentry, and as he was sure to blarney
+some one into giving him a dinner, he always returned home light
+of heart and unimpaired in pocket. But alas! poor Mike was not
+destined to die in peace at Skibbereen. A large party of the
+natives had suddenly attacked the abode of a neighbouring
+settler, and put the owner to death. Michael Blake and two of his
+friends, without waiting for other assistance, hastened to the
+rescue, imperfectly armed. They were overpowered in an instant.
+Blake and one of his companions fell pierced with many spears,
+whilst the other, being on horseback, escaped, carrying with him
+four spears fixed in his body. Years afterwards, one of the
+natives who had assisted at the slaughter coolly related the
+particulars of the death of Michael Blake.</p>
+
+<p>When he was lying on the ground, said this man, he turned
+round, and supporting himself on his arm, entreated for mercy in
+the most moving terms. The savages stood round him, looking on,
+and listening patiently to his address.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you show him mercy?" asked my informant.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" replied the savage, with calm indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"We cut his tongue out."</p>
+
+<p>"Wretch! what for?"</p>
+
+<p>"He wongee (chattered) too much."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Mike! his blarney could not save him; it had often before
+done him good service, but the savages valued it not.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 13.</h3>
+
+<h4>WILD CATTLE HUNTING.</h4>
+
+<p>Having received intelligence that a numerous herd of wild
+cattle had lately been seen grazing upon some extensive plains a
+day's journey south of Perth, I got up a party with the intention
+of hunting them.</p>
+
+<p>Our preparations were made the day before starting on the
+expedition. A bullock-cart was loaded with fire-arms, kegs of
+brandy, various kinds of provisions, and cloaks and blankets. A
+couple of natives had been engaged to act as guides, and these,
+with their wives and families, spent the greater part of the day
+lounging about my premises, idly inspecting the arrangements, and
+sleeping in the sunshine, lazy as the pigs, which they surpassed
+in filth. In the afternoon, taking with them a supply of flour,
+they commenced their journey, intending to sleep upon the road,
+and leave us to overtake them on the following day.</p>
+
+<p>At day-break the next morning we were in our saddles, the
+bullock-cart having started during the night. The party consisted
+of three, who were all clad in blue hunting-shirts, and had
+polished horns hanging at their backs, filled with eau-de-vie,
+wine and water, or the simple fluid, according to the taste of
+the wearer. As we passed down the silent street at that early
+hour, one of the party, an officer, agreeably dispelled the
+slumbers of the peaceful inhabitants by a most able performance
+upon a key-bugle; the others gave vent to the exuberance of their
+spirits by loud "tally-ho's!" and cries of "hark away!" and other
+encouraging expressions addressed to imaginary dogs. Then we gave
+our able steeds the head, and dashed along with all those happy
+and exulting thoughts which bubble in the breast of youth
+hurrying to the chase. Is there any moment in life so dear to
+memory as those we have passed on horseback, in the fine air of
+morning, when we hurried along towards the haunt of cunning
+Reynard, and expected every instant to see him break cover? Less
+exciting by far is hunting in Australia, but still it is hunting,
+and we are on horseback, and eager as ever for a gallop. Passing
+over two well-built wooden bridges, connected by a causeway, we
+crossed the river, and took the road for the Canning.</p>
+
+<p>Thick woods of banksia, wattle, and eucalypti, closed in the
+view on every side; but occasionally we ascended a gentle slope,
+and then looking back we could see a beautiful picture before us.
+In the still air and misty light of the morning, Perth water lay
+clear and tranquil amidst the vast forest by which it is
+surrounded. The heights of Mount Eliza looked down into the
+glittering mirror. On the right bank were the white houses of the
+capital; far to the left we caught glimpses of Melville water.
+Except the occasional flights of wild ducks, and the dark gusts
+which from time to time swept along the waters, heralding the
+rising land-wind, all was still and breathless. One could not
+help asking oneself how long this scene had existed as we now
+beheld it? Was it designed for thousands of years to be viewed
+only by savages, mindless as the birds or fishes that frequented
+its waters? Had it always existed thus, or been growing during
+centuries under the hand of Nature, until it should be adapted to
+the habitation of civilized man? And was that period now arrived,
+or were we premature in seizing upon our inheritance before it
+was thoroughly prepared for our reception? Many times have we
+asked ourselves this last question. This singular country appears
+to represent the ancient character of the earth in one of the
+earlier stages of formation. It represents that epoch when animal
+life was first developed in the lowest order of quadrupeds.</p>
+
+<p>There are a few small exceptions, but it may be laid down as a
+general rule, that all the animals indigenous to this country are
+marsupial&mdash;from the kangaroo, the largest down to the little
+field-mouse.</p>
+
+<p>The animals not indigenous are Man, the wild cattle, and the
+wild dogs. Many speculations have been hazarded as to the origin
+of the first: to me it appears there can be little doubt that the
+first tribes found their way hither from the eastern islands,
+having proceeded originally from India. The language of the
+natives bears more traces of the Hindu than of any other. This, I
+believe, is the opinion of the Rev. J. Mitchell, M.A., of the
+Middle Swan, whose long residence in India, and intimate
+acquaintance with some of the languages of that country, give
+weight to his conjectures. Many of the words used by the natives
+of both countries are identical in sound, and express the same
+meaning.</p>
+
+<p>I have also noticed that the Coolies of India and the natives
+of this colony manage to understand one another much sooner than
+is the case between the latter and the whites.</p>
+
+<p>The wild cattle have long existed in the interior, as appears
+from their remains. Both they and the wild dog have probably
+descended from animals cast ashore by shipwreck. The indigenous
+tribes are those of the kangaroo, the opossum, and the lizard. It
+is curious to observe how the distinguishing features of the
+first are manifested in a great variety of animals, of all sizes
+from the kangaroo downwards&mdash;the long hind, and short fore legs,
+the three toes on the former, the rat-like-head, the warm pouch,
+betokening the immature parturition. The opossums also are
+marsupial. All these animals seem to belong to an early age of
+the geological world. Many of the plants speak the same
+language&mdash;especially the Zamia. The rocks, too, of this portion
+of New Holland are all primary, except the limestone and
+sandstone near the coast. Is this country, then, a portion of the
+world that has remained in the same state for thousands, or
+hundreds of thousands, of years; or is it of comparatively recent
+formation, exhibiting that condition which at one period belonged
+to the whole surface of the earth? The latter, of course, must be
+the case; and if so, we cannot help thinking that further changes
+must take place in its geological character before it shall be
+permanently occupied by civilized man. At present, however, it
+must be admitted there is no sign of volcanic action going on to
+effect these changes. Our conjectures are purely speculative, and
+will probably meet with no sympathy from the reader, but we throw
+them out because the subject is full of wonder and mystery; and
+those who have brought personal observation to bear upon it, best
+know it to be so. As we wander through the lacustrine valleys
+which abound here; valleys once the beds of rivers, but now broad
+swamps choked up with lofty reeds&mdash;we feel as though we were in
+the land and the age of the Saurians.</p>
+
+<p>The whole country swarms with lizards, some of which, to the
+northward, grow to the size of five feet; but the most common are
+the 'Iguana', or 'Guana', a creature some ten or twelve inches
+long, with a flat head, very wide mouth, and only the stump of a
+tail. they are perfectly harmless, and subsist upon frogs and
+insects. One variety of this species, found in the district of
+King George's Sound, was brought to my notice by my brother. It
+is usually found in a tuft of grass, where it lies completely
+hidden except its tongue, which is thrust upwards, and bears an
+exact resemblance to the petal of a flower, crimson and pink.
+Flies seem to delight in resting upon this deceptive flower,
+which being covered with an adhesive mucous substance, takes them
+prisoner, and proves their destruction.</p>
+
+<p>We have now had a long canter, which has brought us to the
+neighbourhood of the Canning River. The country hereabouts
+resembles a wild English park. The trees are all of the eucalypti
+species, large and dispersed; the surface of the ground is level,
+affording a view of the Darling Hills, which appear to be close
+at hand. Crossing the river by a rustic bridge, we ascended the
+opposite bank, whilst our trumpeter blew a charge that was
+intended to announce our approach at a farm-house close at hand.
+As we rode up to the door, the proprietor, attended by three
+stalwart sons, hastened to greet us. He was a gentleman who had
+passed a good portion of his life on the Continent, but having a
+large family to bring up had resolved to seek his fortune in the
+Southern hemisphere. Breakfast was already set out for us in a
+large room which served as the baronial hall of the mansion;
+whilst our horses, partaking of the prodigal hospitality of the
+farmer colonist, were tethered in various parts of a fine field
+of clover.</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast is a famous meal after an early morning ride, and
+people have then not only good appetites but good spirits.
+Half-a-dozen kangaroo-dogs, attracted by the clatter of knives
+and the tempting savour that arose from the large dish of sheep's
+fry, crowded round the open door, whilst they seemed to feel
+keenly the selfishness of those who appropriated the whole of the
+feast to themselves. Every now and then arose a howl of anguish
+from the group, as one of the young men would arrive with fresh
+supplies of coffee or fried bacon, and kicked a clear passage for
+himself into the room. One only of the canine race was allowed to
+approach the table&mdash;the venerable Tip, who having formerly, in
+times of scarcity, earned his master five pounds a-week by
+catching kangaroos for the market of Fremantle, was now entitled
+to sit at his right hand, where a few morsels were occasionally
+bestowed upon him, which he received with becoming gravity and
+decorum.</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast finished, we saddled our horses and proceeded on our
+way, accompanied by one of the sons of our host. We pushed along
+towards the foot of the hills, over a sandy country covered with
+scrub, and trees of various magnitudes.</p>
+
+<p>The birds that we saw were chiefly fly-catchers and
+parroquets; and occasionally the wild turkey, or bustard sailing
+along in the distance, made us sigh for a nearer
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>After a cheerful ride of several hours, having the hills on
+our left hand, we crossed a few small plains; and understanding
+from our guide, Tom H&mdash;&mdash;-, that we were now at our destination,
+we began to look about us for our bullock-cart, whose track we
+had noticed from time to time as we came along. Our "cooeys" were
+answered by voices not far distant; and following the sound, we
+soon came within view of a column of smoke curling lightly above
+the trees; and on arriving at the spot whence it arose, we found
+our man, assisted by the natives, busily engaged in erecting a
+kind of hut, or rather skreen of boughs, for our night quarters.
+The bullocks were feeding quietly at a short distance; the cart
+was conveniently placed for being unpacked; and a group of three
+native women and their children, squatted round a fire of their
+own, about a hundred yards from ours, and busily occupied in
+baking flour-dampers, signalled our approach by shrill cries of
+welcome without rising from their places.</p>
+
+<p><a name="f160"><img alt="" src="images/Landor_f160.jpg" width="500" height=
+"350"></a></p>
+
+<center><b>Sketch of "The Bivouac"</b></center>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p>Our horses were soon relieved of their saddles, and each man
+leading his own steed by the long tether-rope which had been
+carefully coiled round its neck, took it to a neighbouring pool
+to drink, and then proceeded in search of the best pasture. Our
+animals having been attended to, our next thought was of
+ourselves; and every one took his bundle of blankets and cloaks
+out of the cart, and unrolled it beneath the sloping skreen of
+boughs, and prepared his bed according to his particular taste or
+experience; testing the accommodation from time to time by
+flinging himself upon his couch, and ascertaining the different
+vents by which the wind would be likely to prove annoying during
+the night. These were next stopped up by handfuls of xanthorea
+leaves, or by strips of bark from the paper-tree.</p>
+
+<p>The lodging being pronounced perfect, and the sun being level
+with the horizon, we hastened the preparation for our meal; and
+hampers and boxes soon gave forth their stores of cold fowls,
+tongues, hams, and meat-pies. Sausages are excellent things in
+bush-campaigns; and as every man toasts his own on the point of a
+long stick, a high degree of nervous excitement is felt by each,
+lest he should lose his savoury morsel in the fire.</p>
+
+<p>The kettle soon boiled, and as we ate our tea-dinner, the sun
+went down, and night quickly swallowed up the short twilight,
+leaving us to depend entirely on our fire, which presented a
+goodly pile that shot forth cheerful flames, making the scenery
+around us bright with light. The ground for the space of many
+yards glittered beneath the flickering rays; the bowls of the
+tall trees seemed whiter than usual; even the brown cheeks of the
+natives looked less dark, as they chattered and laughed over
+their supper. Cold grog, or hot brandy-and-water, was leisurely
+sipped by those who lay on their couches in the full tranquillity
+of after-dinner ease; and as digestion proceeded, songs and
+catches awakened the echoes of the woods.</p>
+
+<p>Tired at last, we sank to sleep, having first, however,
+visited our horses and changed their tether. During the night I
+woke up. All around were fast asleep in different postures; some
+rolling about uneasily in their dreams; others still as the dead.
+I heaped fresh logs upon the fire, which blazed forth anew. The
+natives were all huddled under their wigwams, which are about the
+size and shape of an open umbrella resting on its edge. The night
+was dark throughout the forest, and overhead; the little circle
+of light within which I stood, seemed like a magician's ring,
+sacred and safe from evil spirits that filled the air around. It
+was as the speck of Time amid the ocean of Eternity&mdash;as Hope,
+bright and solitary in the midst of unfathomable darkness. There
+I felt safe and secure&mdash;but without &mdash;who might tell what spirits
+roamed abroad, melancholy and malignant? Peering into that dark
+boundary of forest, the eye vainly endeavoured to pierce the
+gloom. Fancy peopled its confines with flitting shapes, and
+beheld a grinning hobgoblin in the grotesque stump of many a
+half-burnt tree, on which the light momentarily flickered. The
+ear listened eagerly for sounds in the distant solitude; and one
+almost expected to hear shrieks of laughter or of terror borne
+upon the night-wind from the recesses of the hills. Evil spirits
+seem peculiarly the companions of heathen savages. A wild,
+desert, and desolate region, traversed only in the day-time, and
+rarely even then, by straggling barbarians whose hearts have
+never known a single gentle emotion, seems naturally to be the
+haunt of the Spirits of Evil.</p>
+
+<p>Chingi, the terror of our natives, is often seen by them, as
+they lie cowering under their kangaroo skins, and huddled
+together in the extremity of fear, stalking giant-like and gloomy
+along the summits of the hills, whilst the moon shrinks timidly
+behind her curtain of clouds.</p>
+
+<p>On that night, however, there was no moon, and Chingi was not
+visible to me, nor did any sound break in upon the silence of the
+forest, save that of our horses eating their food, and giving an
+occasional snort as the sand affected their nostrils. Anxious to
+behold any spirits that might please to be visible, I walked to
+the spot occupied by my quadruped, with the intention of changing
+his quarters; but finding him comfortably stretched in repose, I
+left him to dream of his own distant manger and two quarterns of
+oats, and returned to my couch. The appearance of the bivouac, to
+one viewing it from the surrounding darkness, was very
+picturesque. Every object was lighted up by the cheerful
+blaze&mdash;the cart with its packages in or about it, the sleepers in
+their blue or red woollen shirts, under the sloping roof, their
+guns leaning against the uprights, their shot-belts and pouches
+hanging in front&mdash;the kangaroo-dogs lying round the fire, and as
+near to it as possible&mdash;the surrounding trees and shrubs
+glittering with a silvery light, their evergreen foliage rustling
+at the breath of the soft land-breeze&mdash;altogether formed a
+striking and peculiar scene.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning we were up before the sun, and having
+breakfasted, proceeded on horseback in search of the herd of wild
+cattle, which we knew, from the reports of natives, to be
+somewhere in the neighbourhood. We rode down an extensive plain,
+covered plentifully with grass, and presenting numerous clumps of
+trees, which afforded shelter to bronze-winged pigeons and
+immense flights of white cockatoos. The latter screamed fearfully
+as we drew nigh, but did not remain long enough to allow us the
+chance of a shot. Many tracks of the cattle were visible,
+traversing these plains in every direction; but on reaching a
+small pool, we found such recent traces as led us to believe the
+animals could not be far distant. Remaining stationary for a few
+moments, we allowed the two natives who accompanied us to
+ascertain the direction in which the herd had wandered, and their
+signs soon led us to follow in profound silence. The natives
+walked rapidly ahead; the tracks were very apparent, and we were
+all in high glee, and growing extremely excited. The sun shone
+brightly, but as it was in the month of May, the air was mild and
+pleasant, without being hot. After proceeding along the plains
+for several miles we came to a thick jungle, through which the
+cattle had formed a path. The interior presented a rocky area of
+considerable extent. Fragments of rock lay jostled together,
+among which trees and shrubs appeared, and here and there an open
+space afforded room for the herbage which had tempted the cattle
+into this rough scene. In parts where grass refused to grow,
+beautiful purple flowers raised their heads in clusters&mdash;and ever
+in the most rugged and barren spots the gayest flowers are found
+to bloom. How grateful do we feel to Nature for bestowing such
+charms upon the wild desert! cheering our spirits with a sense of
+the beautiful, that else would droop and despond as we journeyed
+through the lone and dreary waste.</p>
+
+<p>Although we sometimes proceeded over a surface of bare rock,
+and at others over large and loose stones, where no foot-print
+was visible to the eye of a white man, the natives never failed
+to discover the traces which they sought with unerring sagacity.
+After a ride of nearly two hours we observed one of the natives
+making signs to us to halt. "There they are!" passed in eager
+whispers from one to the other. Before us was a belt of wood,
+through which we could perceive about a dozen cattle grazing on a
+broad plain.</p>
+
+<p>Already they had a suspicion of danger, and began to look
+around them. One of the natives, with my double-barrelled gun
+loaded with heavy ball was creeping toward them through the grass
+upon his hands and knees, whilst we cautiously drew up at the
+side of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>The herd consisted of a huge mouse-coloured bull, with an
+enormous hunch on his shoulders, and about a dozen cows, with a
+few calves. The bull came slowly towards us, muttering low
+bellows, and shaking his fierce head and ponderous neck, on which
+grew a short, black mane. From some unexplained cause or other
+the native fired his gun before the animal was within range, and
+the bull, being a beast of discretion, stopped short, as though
+extremely surprised, and after a little hesitation, turned round
+and rejoined his female friends. The whole herd then began to
+trot off at a slow pace across the plain, which was thereabout a
+mile broad. We were now all eagerness for the pursuit; and Tom
+H&mdash;&mdash;-, the most experienced of the party, calling on us to
+follow him, dashed off at right angles from the herd, and outside
+the belt of wood, in the belief that he would be able to head the
+animals by a little manoeuvring; but at the instant he started
+the old bull turned short on his course, and made across the
+plain in a new direction. I happened to be the last of our party,
+and was the only one who perceived this new disposition of the
+enemy. Anxious to be the first in the melee, I allowed my friends
+to gallop off, and dashed myself through the wood directly in
+pursuit of the herd. Thinking there was no time to lose, I waited
+not for my gun, but resolved to trust to the pistols in my
+holsters.</p>
+
+<p>The cattle, who had begun their retreat at a steady trot,
+increased their speed as they saw me gallopping up to them. I was
+afraid of their crossing the plain, and escaping in the thick
+forest beyond, and so pushed my good horse to his utmost speed.
+He seemed to be as much excited as myself, and in a few minutes I
+headed the herd, and tried to turn them back; but they would not
+deviate from their course, and would have rushed through a
+regiment of foot, had it been in their way: I therefore avoided
+the old bull, who came charging along at the head of the phalanx,
+and found myself in the midst of the herd. It was a moment of
+delightful excitement; some skill was required to avoid the
+hurtling forest of horns, but I turned round and gallopped with
+the mass; and having perfect confidence in my horse and
+horsemanship, I felt that I could pick out any of the animals I
+pleased. My gun, however, was wanting to bring the huge bull to
+his bearings. He looked so enormous as I gallopped alongside of
+him, that I despaired of making any impression with a pistol, and
+resolved to limit my ambition to the slaughter of one of the
+cows. We were now across the plain, the bull had entered the
+forest, and the others were in the act of doing the same, when I
+rode against the outside cow, in the hope of turning her away
+from the thick cover, and keeping her in the open plain. She
+would not, however, turn aside, and I fired my first pistol at
+her eye, and though I only grazed her cheek, succeeded in
+separating her from her companions, and turning her up the long
+plain. At this moment four kangaroo-dogs, (a cross between a
+greyhound and a blood-hound, bold, powerful, and swift,) that had
+followed me in the chase, but had only gallopped alongside of the
+cattle, finding me seriously engaged with one of the number, made
+a simultaneous dash at the unfortunate cow, and endeavoured to
+impede her career by barking, and biting at her nostrils,
+dew-lap, and flanks.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fine sight to see these four noble hounds chasing
+away on either side of the animal, whilst she, every now and
+then, stooped low her head and made a dash at them, without
+pausing in her career. Away she went at a slapping pace, keeping
+me on the gallop. Fearful of hurting the dogs, I refrained from
+firing for some time, but at length got a chance, and aimed a
+ball behind her shoulders, but it struck her ribs, and penetrated
+no deeper than the skin. Loading as I rode along, I delivered
+another ball with better success, and she began to abate her
+speed. The rest of the party now came up, cheering and hallooing,
+but the game had dashed into a swamp in which the reeds and
+shrubs were high enough to conceal horses and huntsmen;
+nevertheless, we pushed through, and found her on the bank of a
+muddy pool, where she stood at bay, whilst the dogs barked
+cautiously before her. She was covered with sweat, blood, and
+dirt, and perfectly furious; and the moment we approached she
+made a rush, trampling over several of the dogs; and darting
+madly against the nearest horseman, caught his charger on the
+flank, and steed and rider rolled together on the ground. The
+furious assailant stumbled over her prostrate foes, and was
+saluted with a discharge of fire-arms, which, however, did not
+prevent her from rushing against me in return for a ball in the
+shoulder, but I eluded the assault, and the animal fell exhausted
+to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>All this may sound savage enough to those who read in cold
+blood, but it was very exciting at the time; and MAN, when a
+hunter, becomes for the moment ruthless and blood-thirsty. This
+was a very severe chase; the animal had run full five miles over
+a rough country at such a pace as to cover our horses with foam,
+and they now stood thoroughly blown, and shaking in every
+limb.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to our home after a short rest, taking the tail
+with us as a trophy. A party was despatched in the evening with
+the cart, and a large portion of the carcase was brought in and
+skilfully salted by the experienced hand of Tom H.</p>
+
+<p>This evening passed away as pleasantly as the last, and as we
+were all rather fatigued, we retired early, and slept until
+awakened by the sun.</p>
+
+<p>A native arrived early in the morning with the intelligence
+that a herd of wild cattle was now grazing in a ravine of the
+hills about four miles distant. As we could not well follow them
+on horseback in that locality, we started off on foot armed with
+our rifles. The morning as usual was brilliant, but not too warm,
+and we walked along in high spirits. We had not proceeded far
+through the woods when one of the natives, who was in advance,
+stopped short on a sudden, and we all instinctively did the same.
+Stealing back to us, he took my rifle out of my hands without any
+ceremony, and telling us to remain perfectly still, crept slowly
+forward, stooping nearly to the ground. We now perceived a small
+plain about two hundred yards a-head of us, on which were six
+wild turkeys leisurely feeding and walking about.</p>
+
+<p>The native had dived among the scrub, and we lost all signs of
+him. It soon, however, became evident that the turkeys suspected
+danger; they erected their tall brown and grey necks, and looked
+about them like alarmed sentinels. "They're off!" cried we&mdash;but
+just as they were preparing to run, which they do with great
+rapidity, one of them was seen to flutter his wings and tumble
+over, whilst the crack of the rifle proclaimed the triumph of
+Migo. We rushed through the brush-wood, elated as schoolboys who
+have shot their first throstle with a horse-pistol, and found the
+bustard flapping out its last breath in the hands of the native,
+whose dark visage gleamed with triumphant pride.</p>
+
+<p>Resuming our march, we passed over the side of a hill covered
+with inferior Jarra trees, and soon entered the ravine in which
+we expected to find the cattle. They were not visible; so we
+crossed the valley, and passed up the other side for about
+half-a-mile, when we entered another valley, some distance up
+which we perceived a herd of cattle quietly grazing, or lying
+ruminating in the confidence of perfect security. We endeavoured
+to creep towards them as quietly as possible, but their senses of
+smelling and hearing were so acute that they became acquainted
+with their danger too soon for us, and trotted gently up the
+valley before we could reach them. We now dispersed in the hope
+of heading them. Attaching myself to Migo, who considered my
+rifle the most likely to prove successful, as he had killed the
+bustard with it, we walked for half an hour across the hill-side
+without seeing anything of our game. A rifle-shot and a loud
+shout prepared us for something, and in another minute we heard
+the crashing of branches and the tread of feet, and soon beheld
+half-a-dozen cows and two or three calves making their way up the
+hill at a short distance from us.</p>
+
+<p>"What for you no get behind tree?" said the native in an angry
+whisper, and giving me a push that prevented my staring idly any
+longer, and sent me into a proper position.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! why will they go in that direction? Why will they not
+come within range? I will give everything I have on earth for one
+good point-blank shot!"</p>
+
+<p>And sure enough a bouncing bull-calf, turning aside from a
+thick clump of trees, came within about a hundred yards of me
+apparently wild with fright, and not knowing which way to run.
+Just as he was turning off again, I fired, and he fell upon his
+knees, struck in the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Migo was upon him in an instant, and felled him to the earth
+with a blow of his stone-hammer. I shouted the paean of victory,
+and was answered by a loud "cooey" from the valley and the voice
+of my friend Mr. B. calling out, "I have killed a splendid cow
+and dispersed the herd. The bull and several cows are gone down
+the valley towards the plains."</p>
+
+<p>All the party, with the exception of Tom N., were soon
+assembled round the body of B.'s cow, which was black and
+fine-limbed. She was evidently in milk, and there was little
+doubt that the calf slain by me had belonged to her.</p>
+
+<p>Every one now asked what had become of Tom, whose assistance
+was absolutely necessary in cutting up the carcases. B. had heard
+his rifle down the valley, and we now began to "cooey" for him.
+In a few moments we heard a faint "cooey" in reply, and started
+in that direction. After walking for about ten minutes towards
+the opening of the valley we heard distinctly, and at no great
+distance, the bellowing of a bull. Proceeding cautiously, with
+our rifles all ready, we soon arrived at the spot, and there
+beheld a huge bull tearing up the ground with his feet and horns,
+and bellowing in the most savage manner. A shout of joy directed
+our attention among the boughs of a low banksia tree, where our
+unfortunate friend Tom sat painfully perched, only just out of
+reach of danger. The animal below every now and then fell upon
+his knees, crushing and smashing something which we had great
+difficulty in recognising as poor Tom's rifle.</p>
+
+<p>"He is badly wounded," cried Tom, "pitch into him, and don't
+be afraid!"</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for this exhortation, we let fly a volley,
+which brought the animal down upon his knees; and after a few
+staggering efforts to run at us, he sank to rise no more; whilst
+his first assailant, Tom, slipped down from his perch, and limped
+towards the remains of his rifle, execrating the dying bull in a
+furious manner, and even venting his wrath in a kick. As Tom wore
+a red shirt that only reached to his hips, he had no chance of
+concealing an enormous rent in his nether garment, through which
+protruded the remains of a shirt, which at the best of times was
+probably far from presenting the appearance of virgin purity, but
+now was stained with blood. As people in Tom's plight, when not
+seriously hurt, are usually more laughed at than pitied, the
+chagrin of our friend enhanced the interest with which we
+listened to his story.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing that there was no escape for the herd of cattle up the
+valleys, as they terminated in steep rocks, and that therefore
+they would either cross over the side of the hill, or return down
+the first valley towards the plains, Tom hung back, leaving the
+rest of the party to head them. After some time had elapsed, he
+distinguished the bull and several cows trotting along the
+hill-side; and hastening to meet them, he posted himself behind a
+tree, close to which he saw they would soon pass.</p>
+
+<p>Anxious, however, to get a view of the game, he stepped out
+from his ambush just as the bull had approached within fifty
+yards. Each saw the other at the same moment. The bull stopped
+short, and Tom felt rather queer. He did not like to fire at the
+vast head of the animal, lest the ball should glance off without
+effect. The bull, instead of turning aside, began to bellow and
+tear up the ground with his hoofs. The cows stood still, and
+stared at Tom, who began to think the state of his affairs looked
+gloomy; but he knew that his best policy was to remain
+stock-still; so he looked at the bull and the cows, and the bull
+and the cows looked at Tom. At length the bull had sufficiently
+nerved his resolution, and began to advance, tearing up the
+ground and bellowing as he came on. Tom took aim between the
+shoulder-blade and the neck, and fired; the enemy staggered, and
+roared with fury, rushing like a whirlwind upon Tom, who took to
+his heels, and began dodging round the trees. But the bull was in
+earnest; and savage with rage as a thousand lions, he tore round
+the trees more quickly even than Tom, carrying his head close to
+the ground, and his tail straight out behind, whilst his eyes,
+Tom said, glared with such fury, that our poor friend's heart
+froze up within him. Luckily he espied a banksia tree which
+seemed easy to ascend; but just as he reached it the bull was
+upon him. The bull roared, and Tom, roaring almost as loudly,
+made a spring at the tree but slipped down again just upon the
+horns of the animal. The next hoist, however, rent his garments,
+and lacerated a portion of his person which he had always
+considered especially sacred; but as the thrust heaved him
+upwards at the same time, and gave a fresh impulse to his
+agility, he succeeded in scrambling upon a bough that kept him
+just out of danger. No one may describe the pangs of despair by
+which he was assailed when he beheld the utter destruction of his
+only rifle. He threw his cap in the face of the bull, but he only
+lost his cap as well as his rifle by this rash and inconsiderate
+action, which was the highest proof he could have given of the
+extremity of his distress.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Tom! he had often been made a butt of, but had never been
+so butted before.</p>
+
+<p>The cup went merrily round that evening, and many and jovial
+were the songs that were sung, and witty and pleasant were the
+jokes that passed freely at the expense of the unfortunate
+'tauricide', who, bereft of his rifle, and dilapidated in
+reputation and pantaloons, was heartily glad to be able to hide
+his sorrows in sleep.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 14.</h3>
+
+<h4>WOODMAN'S POINT*</h4>
+
+<p>[footnote] *This is a more sentimental story than that of
+Michael Blake, but I owe them both to the same authority.</p>
+
+<p>There is a pleasant ride along the shore from Fremantle to a
+little bay about seven miles distant, one side of which, covered
+with lofty trees, runs far into the sea, and is called Woodman's
+Point. The sea in this part appears to be only a few miles broad;
+Garden-island forming the opposite shore, the southern extremity
+of which seems almost to join Cape Perron, and thus presents the
+appearance of a vast bay. Not long ago, the blackened remains of
+a small house, or hovel, were to be seen on the verge of the
+wood, facing towards Cape Perron. Around it might be
+distinguished the traces of a garden of considerable extent; a
+few stunted vines still continued annually to put forth the
+appearance of verdure, which served only to tempt the appetite of
+the stray cattle that wandered down to this solitary spot. A
+large bed of geraniums had extended itself across the path which
+used to lead to the door of the house; and their varied and
+beautiful flowers, rejoicing in this congenial climate, gave
+additional melancholy to the scene. It was evident those plants
+had been reared, and tended, and prized for their beauty; they
+had once been carefully cultured, pruned, and watered&mdash;now they
+were left to bloom or to die, as accident permitted. Near to this
+bed of geraniums, but apart and solitary, untouched even by
+weeds, of which there were only few in that sandy soil, grew an
+English rose-tree. Its long, unpruned boughs straggled wildly on
+the ground. It looked the picture of desolation and despair. A
+few imperfect flowers occasionally peeped forth, but knew only a
+short and precarious existence, for the shrub being no longer
+sheltered behind the house, was now exposed to the daily violence
+of the sea-breeze.</p>
+
+<p>This widowed rose, deprived of the hand which had tended it so
+carefully, and of the heart which its beauty had gladdened,
+seemed now in its careless desolation awaiting the hour when it
+should die. It really looked, with its drooping boughs, its torn
+blossoms, and its brown leaves, rustling and sighing to the
+breeze, like a sentient being mourning without hope. Those who
+have never lived in exile from their native land, can have no
+idea of the feelings with which a lonely colonist, long separated
+from all the associations of home, would regard a solitary plant
+which so peculiarly calls up home memories. Pardon us, good
+reader, this appearance of sentiment; you who will read these
+lines in Old England&mdash;that land which we must ever think of with
+pardonable emotion&mdash;will evince but little sympathy with us, who
+necessarily feel some fond regard for the Mother from whom we are
+parted, and are naturally drawn towards the inanimate things by
+which we are reminded of her. There is in this colony of western
+Australia a single daisy root; and never was the most costly
+hot-house plant in England so highly prized as this humble little
+exile. The fortunate possessor pays it far more attention than he
+bestows upon any of the gorgeous flowers that bloom about it; and
+those who visit his garden of rare plants find nothing there that
+fills them with so profound a feeling of interest as the meek and
+lowly flower which recalls to their memories the pleasant
+pastures of Old England.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to the ruins of Woodman's Point. This plot of
+land, now so neglected and forlorn, was once the blooming garden
+of a very singular old man, who owed his support to the
+vegetables which it produced, and to the fish that he caught from
+the little cobble which danced at anchor in the bay, whenever the
+weather permitted the fisherman to exercise his art. No one knew
+his history, but his conversation and deportment told you that he
+was of gentle birth, and had been well educated. His manners were
+particularly amiable and retiring, and every one who visited the
+solitary old man came away impressed with a melancholy interest
+in his fate.</p>
+
+<p>He always welcomed a visitor with gentle pleasure, and seemed
+glad of the opportunity of showing his crops of vegetables and
+the flowers in which he delighted.</p>
+
+<p>The rose-tree never failed to arrest his steps for a moment.
+He had brought it himself from England as a cutting, and there
+was evidently some history attached to it; but he never shared
+his confidence with any one; and the history of the rose-tree,
+like his own, was never revealed.</p>
+
+<p>There was only one point on which he betrayed any feeling of
+pride&mdash; and that was his name. No one else would perhaps have
+been so proud of it, but he himself ever seemed to regard it with
+veneration.</p>
+
+<p>He called himself Anthony Elisha Simson; and never failed to
+make you observe that his patronymic was spelt without a "p".</p>
+
+<p>Nothing irritated him so much as to receive a note addressed,
+"A. E. Simpson, Esq."</p>
+
+<p>The Simsons, he would assure you, were an old family in the
+northern counties of England, and traced back their genealogy to
+the Conquest; whereas the Simpsons were of quite a different, and
+doubtless inferior origin. Nothing more than this did he ever
+relate concerning his family or his personal history.</p>
+
+<p>He arrived in the colony a few years after its foundation,
+without any other effects than what were contained in a
+portmanteau and carpet-bag, and with only a few sovereigns in his
+purse. Without associating himself with any one, he early fixed
+upon the spot where he afterwards built his house, and
+established his permanent abode. Here he began to make his
+garden, and did not disdain to earn a few shillings occasionally
+by cutting fire-wood for a man who supplied Fremantle with that
+necessary article. It was this occupation that caused the
+settlers, who knew nothing more of him, to give him the title of
+"The Woodman"&mdash;a name which soon attached to the locality.</p>
+
+<p>After he had been some time in the colony, Mr. Simson began to
+express great impatience for the arrival of letters from England.
+Whenever a vessel arrived at the port, he would put on his old
+shooting-coat, and walk along the shore to Fremantle, where,
+after having inquired in vain at the post-office, he would
+purchase a pound of tea, and then return home again.</p>
+
+<p>Years went by. Every time that a vessel arrived, poor Simson
+would hurry to Fremantle. He would watch, with eyes of
+ill-repressed eagerness, the mail carried to the post-office in
+boxes and large sacks. Surely amid that multitude of letters
+there must be one for him! Patiently would he wait for hours at
+the window, whilst the post-master and his assistants sorted the
+letters; and when he had received the usual answer to his
+inquiry, he would return to his abode with down-cast looks.</p>
+
+<p>As time passed on he grew more fretful and impatient.
+Receiving no intelligence from England, he seemed to be anxious
+to return thither. He would drop expressions which led his
+visitors (generally government officers who called upon him in
+their rides) to believe he would depart from the colony were he
+rich enough to pay his passage, or were he not restrained by some
+other powerful motive.</p>
+
+<p>His mind ran altogether upon the Old Country, and it was with
+reluctance that he planted the vegetables and cured the fish
+which were essential to his support.</p>
+
+<p>For many hours during the day he used to be seen standing
+fixed as a sentinel on the low rock which formed the extremity of
+the ridge called after himself&mdash;the Woodman's Point&mdash;and looking
+homewards.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless, thought was busy within him&mdash;the thought of all he
+had left or acted there. None had written to him; none remembered
+or perhaps wished to remember him. But home was in his heart,
+even whilst he felt there was no longer a home for him. A
+restless anxiety preyed upon his mind, and he grew thin and
+feeble; but still whenever a sail was seen coming round the north
+end of Rottnest, and approaching the port, he would seize his
+staff, and set out upon his long journey to Fremantle to inquire
+if there were, at last, a letter awaiting him.</p>
+
+<p>May we imagine the growing despair in the heart of this poor
+old exile, as life seemed ebbing away, and yet there came no
+news, no hope to him from home? Frequently he wrote himself, but
+always to the same address&mdash;that of a broker, it was supposed, in
+Throgmorton-street. But no answer was ever returned. Had he no
+children&mdash;no friends?</p>
+
+<p>Naturally weak-minded, he had now grown almost imbecile; but
+his manners were still so gentle, and every thing about him
+seemed to betoken so amiable and so resigned a spirit, that those
+who visited him could scarcely part again without tears. As he
+grew more feeble in body, he became more anxious to receive a
+letter from home; he expected that every one who approached his
+dwelling was the bearer of the intelligence so long hoped for in
+vain; and he would hasten to greet him at the gate with eager
+looks and flushed cheeks&mdash;again only to be disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>At length it was with difficulty that he tottered to the
+Point, to look for a vessel which might bring him news. Although
+no ship had arrived since he last sent to the post-office, he
+would urge his visitor, though with hesitating earnestness, to be
+so good as to call there on his return, and ascertain if by
+chance a letter were not awaiting him. He said he felt that his
+hour was approaching, but he could not bear to think of setting
+out on that long journey without having once heard from home.
+Sometimes he muttered, as it were to himself, that treachery had
+been practised against him, and he would go and expose it; but he
+never allowed himself to indulge long in this strain. Sometimes
+he would try to raise money enough by drawing bills to pay his
+passage, but no one would advance anything upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Daily he became more feeble, and men began to talk of sending
+him a nurse. The last visitor who beheld him alive, found him
+seated in the chair which he had himself constructed, and
+appearing less depressed than usual. He said he expected soon to
+receive news from home, and smiled with child-like glee. His
+friend helped him to walk as far as the rose-tree, which was then
+putting forth its buds. "Promise," said the old man, laying his
+trembling hand upon the other's arm, "promise that when I am gone
+you will come and see them in full blow? Promise! you will make
+me happy."</p>
+
+<p>The next day they sent a lad from Fremantle to attend upon
+him. The boy found him seated in his chair. He was dead. A mound
+of earth at the foot of a mahogany-tree, still marks the spot
+where he was buried. Those 'friends' at home who neglected or
+repulsed him when living, may by chance meet with this record
+from the hand of a stranger&mdash;but it will not move them; nor need
+it now.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 15.</h3>
+
+<h4>HOW THE LAWS OF ENGLAND AFFECT THE NATIVES.</h4>
+
+<p>The native population of our colony are said to be a much more
+peaceable and harmless race than those of any other part of
+Australia. In the early days of the settlement they caused a good
+deal of trouble, and were very destructive to the pigs and sheep
+of the colonists; but a little well-timed severity, and a
+steadily pursued system of government, soon reduced them into
+well-conducted subjects of the British Crown. There appears,
+however, to be little hope of civilizing them, and teaching them
+European arts and habits. Those of mature age, though indolent,
+and seldom inclined to be useful in the smallest degree, are
+peaceful in their habits; and when in want of a little flour will
+exert themselves to earn it, by carrying letters, shooting wild
+ducks with a gun lent to them, driving home cattle, or any other
+easy pursuit; but they appear to be incapable of elevation above
+their original condition. Considerable pains have been bestowed
+(especially by the Wesleyans) upon the native children, many of
+whom are educated in schools at Perth, Fremantle, and other
+places, in the hope of making them eventually useful servants to
+the settlers. Most of these, however, betake themselves to the
+bush, and resume their hereditary pursuits, just at the age when
+it is hoped they will become useful. Very frequently they die at
+that age of mesenteric disorders; and very few indeed become
+permanently civilized in their habits.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more anomalous and perplexing than the
+position of the Aborigines as British subjects. Our brave and
+conscientious Britons, whilst taking possession of their
+territory, have been most careful and anxious to make it
+universally known, that Australia is not a conquered country; and
+successive Secretaries of State, who write to their governors in
+a tone like that in which men of sour tempers address their
+maladroit domestics, have repeatedly commanded that it must never
+be forgotten "that our possession of this territory is based on a
+right of occupancy."</p>
+
+<p>A "right of occupancy!" Amiable sophistry! Why not say boldly
+at once, the right of power? We have seized upon the country, and
+shot down the inhabitants, until the survivors have found it
+expedient to submit to our rule. We have acted exactly as Julius
+Caesar did when he took possession of Britain. But Caesar was not
+so hypocritical as to pretend any moral right to possession. On
+what grounds can we possibly claim a right to the occupancy of
+the land? We are told, because civilized people are justified in
+extending themselves over uncivilized countries. According to
+this doctrine, were there a nation in the world superior to
+ourselves in the arts of life, and of a different religious
+faith, it would be equally entitled (had it the physical power)
+to the possession of Old England under the "right of occupancy;"
+for the sole purpose of our moral and social improvement, and to
+make us participants in the supposed truths of a new creed.</p>
+
+<p>We have a right to our Australian possessions; but it is the
+right of Conquest, and we hold them with the grasp of Power.
+Unless we proceed on this foundation, our conduct towards the
+native population can be considered only as a monstrous
+absurdity. However Secretaries of State may choose to phrase the
+matter, we can have no other right of occupancy. We resolve to
+found a colony in a country, the inhabitants of which are not
+strong enough to prevent our so doing, though they evince their
+repugnance by a thousand acts of hostility.</p>
+
+<p>We build houses and cultivate the soil, and for our own
+protection we find it necessary to declare the native population
+subject to our laws.</p>
+
+<p>This would be an easy and simple matter were it the case of
+conquerors dictating to the conquered; but our Secretaries of
+State, exhibiting an interesting display of conscientiousness and
+timidity, shrink from the responsibility of having sanctioned a
+conquest over a nation of miserable savages, protected by the
+oracles at Exeter Hall, and reject with sharp cries of anger the
+scurrilous imputation. Instead, therefore, of being in possession
+by right of arms, we modestly appropriate the land to ourselves,
+whilst making the most civil assurances that we take not this
+liberty as conquerors, but merely in order to gratify a
+praiseworthy desire of occupying the country. We then declare
+ourselves seised in fee by right of occupancy. But now comes the
+difficulty. What right have we to impose laws upon people whom we
+profess not to have conquered, and who have never annexed
+themselves or their country to the British Empire by any written
+or even verbal treaty?</p>
+
+<p>And if this people and country be not subject to our rule by
+conquest, and have never consented or desired (but the contrary)
+to accept of our code of laws, and to submit themselves to our
+authority, are they really within the jurisdiction of the laws of
+England&mdash;'especially for offences committed inter se?'</p>
+
+<p>Such is the anomalous position in which the native inhabitants
+are placed through the tender consciences of our rulers at home.
+A member of a tribe has been speared by one of another tribe, who
+happens to be patronized by a farm-settler, and is occasionally
+useful in hunting-up stray cattle. The friends of the dead man
+proceed to punish the assassin according to their own hereditary
+laws; they surprise him suddenly, and spear him. The farmer
+writes an account of the fact to the Protector of Natives at
+Perth; and this energetic individual, rising hastily from dinner,
+calls for his horse, and endowing himself with a blue woollen
+shirt, and a pair of dragoon spurs, with a blanket tied round his
+waist, fearlessly commits himself to the forest, and repairs to
+the scene of slaughter.</p>
+
+<p>He learns from the mouth of the farm-settler, that the facts
+are really what he had been already apprised of by letter; and
+then, having left word that the offender may be caught as soon as
+possible, and forwarded to Fremantle gaol, he hastens back again
+to his anxious family; and the next morning delivers a suitable
+report to his Excellency the Governor of all that he has
+performed. In course of time the native is apprehended&mdash;betrayed
+by a friend for a pound of flour&mdash;and brought to the bar of
+justice. His natural defence would be that he certainly slew an
+enemy, as he is accused of having done, but then it was a
+meritorious and necessary act; he glories in it; his own laws
+required that he should slay the murderer of his relative; and
+his own laws, therefore, accuse him not. What are English
+customs, prejudices, or laws to him? He is not a British subject,
+for he is not the inhabitant of a conquered country (as English
+governors tell him), nor has he, or any of his tribe or
+complexion, consented or wished to be placed under the protection
+of our laws. Why, then, should he be violently dragged from the
+arms of his 'wilgied' squaws, and his little pot-bellied
+piccaninnies, and required to plead for his life in the midst of
+a large room filled with frowning white faces? Much obliged is he
+to the judge, who kindly tells him, through the interpreter, that
+he is not bound to convict himself, and need not acknowledge
+anything that may operate to his disadvantage in the minds of the
+jury.</p>
+
+<p>The unfortunate savage disregards the friendly caution, and
+heeds it not; he maintains, stoutly, that he 'gidgied' Womera
+through the back, because Womera had 'gidgied' Domera through the
+belly. He enters into minute details to the gentlemen of the jury
+of the manner in which these slaughters were effected, and
+describes the extent and direction of the wounds, and every other
+interesting particular that occurs to him. The gentlemen of the
+jury, after duly considering the case, return (of necessity) a
+verdict of "Wilful murder," and the judge pronounces sentence of
+death&mdash;which is afterwards commuted by the Governor to
+transportation for life to the Isle of Rottnest.</p>
+
+<p>Now if our laws had been imposed upon this people as a
+conquered nation, or if they had annexed themselves and their
+country to our rule and empire by anything like a treaty, all
+these proceedings would be right and proper. But as it is, we are
+two nations occupying the same land, and we have no more right to
+try them by our laws for offences committed 'inter se', than they
+have to seize and spear an Englishman, according to their law,
+because he has laid himself open to an action of 'crim. con.' at
+the suit of his next-door neighbour.</p>
+
+<p>Look at the question in another point of view. Is jurisdiction
+a necessary incident of sovereignty? Do a people become subject
+to our laws by the very act of planting the British standard on
+the top of a hill? If so, they have been subject to them from the
+days of Captain Cook; and the despatches of Her Majesty's
+Secretaries of State, declaring that the natives should be
+considered amenable to our laws for all offences which they might
+commit among themselves, were very useless compositions. We claim
+the sovereignty, yet we disclaim having obtained it by conquest;
+we acknowledge that it was not by treaty; we should be very sorry
+to allow that it was by fraud; and how, in the name of wonder,
+then, can we defend our claim? Secretaries of State have
+discovered the means, and tell us that Her Majesty's claim to
+possession and sovereignty is "based on a right of occupancy."
+Jurisdiction, however, is not the necessary incident of
+territorial sovereignty, unless that sovereignty were acquired by
+conquest or treaty. We question, indeed, whether it is the
+necessary consequence even of conquest&mdash;the laws of the conqueror
+must first be expressly imposed. The old Saxon laws prevailed
+among the people of England after the Conquest, until the Norman
+forms were expressly introduced.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known in colonies, that the laws propounded in
+certain despatches are more powerful, and more regarded and
+reverenced, than any others, human or divine. A kind of moral
+gun-cotton, they drive through the most stupendous difficulties,
+and rend rocks that appeared to be insuperable barriers in the
+eyes of common sense or common justice. Judges are compelled to
+yield to their authority, and do violence to their own
+consciences whilst they help to lay the healing unction to those
+of their lawgivers.</p>
+
+<p>The most convenient and the most sensible proceeding, on the
+part of our rulers at home, would be to consider this country in
+the light of a recent conquest. Instead of declaring, as now,
+that the natives are to be treated in every way as British
+subjects&mdash;thus making them amenable to the English law in all its
+complexity, whilst their own laws and habits are so entirely
+opposite in character&mdash;it would be better to pass a few simple
+ordinances, in the nature of military law, which would be
+intelligible to the natives themselves, and which would avoid the
+difficulty of applying the cumbrous machinery of our criminal
+code to the government of savages who can never be made to
+comprehend its valuable properties. It is most essential that the
+natives who commit offences against the persons or property of
+the whites should be brought to punishment. At the same time it
+is most difficult to establish the guilt of the party accused,
+according to the strict rules of legal evidence. The only
+witnesses, probably, were natives, who understand not the nature
+of an oath, and who lie like the Prince of Darkness whenever they
+have wit enough to perceive it is their interest to do so. In
+general, the only chance of obtaining a legal conviction is
+through the confession of the prisoner; and as it is most
+desirable that he should be convicted, when there is no moral
+doubt of his guilt, as his acquittal would be looked upon as a
+triumph by his fellows, and make them more daring in their
+opposition to the law, very little delicacy is used in obtaining
+that confession.</p>
+
+<p>Were the prisoner defended by counsel, who did his duty to his
+client, without regard to the interests of the public, the guilty
+person would escape in almost every instance. As it is, the law
+is outraged, and a trial by jury made an occasion of mockery and
+gross absurdity, in order to obtain a conviction which is
+necessary to the welfare of the white population. Nothing would
+be more easy than to legislate for the proper government of the
+Aborigines; but you must begin 'de novo', and throw aside with
+scorn the morbid sentimentality that refuses to look upon those
+as a conquered people, whom, nevertheless, it subjects to the
+heavy thraldom of laws which they are not yet fitted to
+endure.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 16.</h3>
+
+<h4>REMARKS ON THE PHYSICAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NATIVES.</h4>
+
+<p>The native inhabitants of Western Australia are only superior
+in the scale of human beings to the Bosjemans of Southern Africa.
+Their intellectual capacity appears to be very small, and their
+physical structure is extremely feeble. In some respects the
+Australian peculiarly assimilates to two of the five varieties of
+the human race. In the form of his face and the texture of his
+hair he resembles the Malay; in the narrow forehead, the
+prominent cheek-bones, and the knees turned in, he approaches
+towards the Ethiopian.* There is a remarkable difference between
+the jaws and teeth of the Australian and those of any other
+existing race. The incisores are thick and round, not, as usual,
+flattened into edges, but resembling truncated cones; the
+cuspidati are not pointed, but broad and flat on the masticating
+surface, like the neighbouring bicuspides. This may be
+attributable to mechanical attrition, depending on the nature of
+the food which the teeth are employed in masticating. The upper
+does not overlap the under jaw, but the teeth meet at their
+surfaces. This peculiarity of teeth has been noticed by
+Blumenbach as a characteristic of the Egyptian mummy; but he
+thinks the nature of the food not sufficient to account for it,
+and imagines it to depend on a natural variety. He observes, that
+"although it seemed most easy to account for this appearance by
+attributing it to the nature of the food used by the Egyptians,
+yet the generality of its occurrence in Egyptian mummies, and its
+absence in other races, are remarkable; and it affords some
+probability that the peculiarity depends upon a natural
+variety."** A constant uniformity in the structure and
+arrangement of the teeth is an important particular in the
+identification of species; and if any human race were found to
+deviate materially in its dentition from the rest of mankind, the
+fact would give rise to a strong suspicion of a real specific
+diversity. I have examined the teeth of infants and children, and
+found them in every respect similar to those of Europeans of
+similar ages. Moreover, the process of degradation may be traced
+in natives of different ages up to the teeth worn to the level of
+the gums in the old man. I therefore consider it the effect of
+attrition; but it becomes an interesting question to determine
+what may be the nature of the food which produced the same
+character in the ancient Egyptian and the modern Australian. Did
+the fathers of science live on barks and roots, like the wretched
+Australian? Although attrition may cause this singular appearance
+of the teeth, the real question is, why does the lower jaw so
+perfectly and exactly meet its fellow? And is this confined to
+these two examples?</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *The observations in this chapter were contributed
+by Henry Landor, Esq., Colonial Surgeon on the Gold Coast, who
+resided five years among the natives of Western Australia, and is
+intimately acquainted with all their habits and
+peculiarities.</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] **In a former chapter (13.) I have expressed an
+opinion that the natives are descended from the old inhabitants
+of India, which I think is exceedingly probable. It is
+interesting to remember, that the ancient Egyptians are supposed
+to have originally come from the same country.</p>
+
+<p>There is no fixed law determining invariably the human
+stature, although there is a standard, as in other animals, from
+which deviations are not very considerable in either direction.
+Some varieties exceed, others fall short of, the ordinary stature
+in a small degree. The source of these deviations is in the
+breed; they are quite independent of external influences.</p>
+
+<p>In all the five human varieties, some nations are conspicuous
+for height and strength, others for lower stature and inferior
+muscular power; but in no case is the peculiarity confined to any
+particular temperature, climate, or mode of life. The
+Australians, in general, are of a moderate stature, with slender
+limbs, thin arms, and long taper fingers. Although in general
+stature there is nothing to distinguish one variety of man from
+another, yet in the comparative length of the different parts of
+the human frame there are striking differences. In the highest
+and most intellectual variety (the Caucasian) the arm (os humeri)
+exceeds the fore-arm in length by two or three inches&mdash;in none
+less than two inches. In monkeys the fore-arm and arm are of the
+same length, and in some monkeys the fore-arm is the longer. In
+the Negro, the 'ulna', the longest bone of the fore-arm, is
+nearly of the same length as the 'os humeri', the latter being
+from one to two inches longer. In a Negro in the lunatic asylum
+of Liverpool (says Mr. White) the ulna was twelve and a half
+inches, and the humerus only thirteen and a half. In the
+Australian, the ulna in some I have measured was ten and a half,
+nine, ten, eleven and a half; the humerus was in those
+individuals respectively eleven and a half, ten and a half,
+eleven and a half, twelve and a half. Thus, in none of the
+measurements did the humerus exceed the ulna two inches, which in
+the Caucasian variety is the lowest number. In all the black
+races the arm is longer in proportion to the stature than in the
+white. The length of the leg of the Australian averages
+thirty-six inches; in one man it was only thirty-three and a
+half, and the tibia of that man measured sixteen and a half,
+leaving only seventeen to the femur&mdash;a very remarkable
+disproportion.</p>
+
+<p>Thus in the proportion of their limbs, the Australian ranks
+far below the European; nay, even below the Negro, and approaches
+far nearer to the simiae than any of the other races of mankind.
+Perron, in his voyage, made an estimate of the average strength
+of the arms and loins of the Australian, and of some French and
+English; this is the result in French measures:&mdash;</p>
+
+<pre>
+ ARMS. LOINS.
+ Kilogrammes. Myriagrammes.
+Australian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50.8 . . . . . . . .10.2
+Natives of Timor . . . . . . . . . . . 58.7 . . . . . . . 11.6
+French . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69.2 . . . . . . . .15.2
+English . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71.4 . . . . . . . .16.3
+</pre>
+
+<p>Thus in whatever manner the capacity of the race is tested,
+its inferiority is strikingly exhibited. We shall find, when
+examining the skull, that the coronal suture falls on the
+temporal instead of the sphenoid bone, which is one of the
+strongest marks of the simiae, and does not occur in other human
+skulls.</p>
+
+<p>I have no desire to place the Australian lower in the scale of
+intelligence than he is fairly entitled to rank, but I cannot
+shut my eyes to facts; and if his organization is in conformity
+with his inferiority, there he must rank, in spite of the wishes
+of his warmest friends. At the same time I agree with the most
+enthusiastic philanthropist that no attempt should be left
+untried to amend his condition, and bestow upon him the blessings
+which Providence has lavished upon us; but I cannot help fearing
+the result will be disappointment. A fair comparative experiment
+says Mr. Lawrence, has been made of the white and dark races of
+North America; and no trial in natural philosophy has had a more
+unequivocal result. The native races have not advanced a single
+step in 300 years; neither example nor persuasion has induced
+them, except in very small numbers and in few instances, to
+exchange the precarious supply of hunting, and fishing for
+agriculture and the arts of settled life.</p>
+
+<p>The colour of the skin is chocolate, and resembles the Malay,
+although perhaps a little darker. The colour of the skin is, of
+course, greatly dependent upon the nature of the climate and the
+constant exposure of the surface of the body to the sun; the
+parts under the arms are of a brighter colour than those more
+exposed. We find in human races, as in vegetation, that every
+successive level alters its character; thus indicating that the
+state of the temperature of high regions assimilates to high
+latitudes. If, therefore, complexions depend upon climate and
+external conditions, we should expect to find them varying in
+reference to elevation of surface; and if they should be actually
+found to undergo such variations, this will be a strong argument
+in favour of the supposition that these external characters do in
+fact depend upon local conditions. The Swiss in the high
+mountains above the plains of Lombardy have sandy or brown hair.
+What a contrast presents itself to the traveller in the Milanese,
+where the peasants have black hair and almost Oriental features!
+The Basques, of the tracts approaching the Pyrenees, says Colonel
+Napier, are a strikingly different people from the inhabitants of
+the low parts around, whether Spaniards or Biscayans. They are
+finely made, tall men, with aquiline noses, fair complexions,
+light eyes, and flaxen hair; instead of the swarthy complexion,
+black hair, and dark eyes of the Castilian. And in Africa what
+striking differences of complexion exist between the Negro of the
+plains and of the mountains, even whilst the osteology is the
+same, therefore I pass over the hair and skin of the Australian
+as parts too much subjected to the influence of climate to afford
+means of legitimate deduction. It is the general opinion that
+these natives are not a long-lived race. The poverty of their
+food may account for this, together with the want of shelter from
+the vicissitudes of the climate. The care taken by civilized man
+to preserve health is, by increasing susceptibility, the indirect
+cause of disease; the more rigid is the observance of regimen,
+the more pernicious will be the slightest aberration from it; but
+a total disregard of all the comforts of regular food, and
+efficient shelter, the habit of cramming the stomach when food is
+plentiful, and of enduring long abstinence when it cannot be
+procured, has a far more baneful effect upon the human
+constitution than all the excesses of the white man. As man
+recedes from one hastener of destruction, he inevitably
+approaches another: "Gross riot treasures up a wealthy fund Of
+plagues, but more immedicable ills Attend the lean extreme."</p>
+
+<p>I have observed that the natives mix the gum of certain trees
+with the bark, and masticate both together. This is attributed to
+the difficulty of masticating the gum alone; but I am persuaded
+that it has another cause also, and that it arises from that
+experience of the necessity of an additional stimulus to the
+digestive organ which has taught the Esquimaux and Ottomacs to
+add sawdust or clay to their train-oil. It arises from the fact
+that (paradoxical as it may appear) an animal may be starved by
+giving it continually too simple and too nutritious food; aliment
+in such a state of condensation does not impart the necessary
+stimulus, which requires to be partly mechanical and partly
+chemical, and to be exerted at once on the irritability of the
+capillaries of the stomach to promote its secretions, and on the
+muscular fibres to promote its contractions.</p>
+
+<p>I shall now point out the difference between the Australian
+skull and those of some other races, without giving a description
+of skulls in general, which would unnecessarily lengthen these
+observations. "Of all the peculiarities in the form of the bony
+fabric, those of the skull are the most striking and
+distinguishing. It is in the head that we find the varieties most
+strongly characteristic of the different races. The characters of
+the countenance, and the shape of the features depend chiefly on
+the conformation of the bones of the head."</p>
+
+<p>The Australian skull belongs to that variety called the
+prognathous, or narrow elongated variety; yet it is not so
+striking an example of this variety as the Negro skull. If the
+skull be held in the hand so that the observer look upon the
+vertex, the first point he remarks is the extreme narrowness of
+the frontal bone, and a slight bulging where the parietal and
+occipital bones unite. He also sees distinctly through the
+zygomatic arches on both sides, which in the European skull is
+impossible, as the lateral portions of the frontal bone are more
+developed. The summit of the head rises in a longitudinal ridge
+in the direction of the sagittal suture; so that from the
+sagittal suture to that portion of the cranium where the diameter
+is greatest the head slopes like the roof of a house. The
+forehead is generally flat; the upper jaw rather prominent; the
+frontal sinuses large; the occipital bone is flat, and there is a
+remarkable receding of the bone from the posterior insertion of
+the 'occipitofrontalis' muscle to the 'foramen magnum'. It is a
+peculiar character of the Australian skull to have a very
+singular depression at the junction of the nasal bones with the
+nasal processes of the frontal bone. This may be seen in an
+engraving in Dr. Pritchard's work. I have before described the
+teeth, and mentioned the remarkable junction of the temporal and
+parietal bones at the coronal suture, and consequently the
+complete separation of the sphenoid from the parietal, which in
+European skulls meet for the space of nearly half an inch.
+Professor Owen has observed this conformation in six out of seven
+skulls of young chimpanzees, and Professor Mayo has also noticed
+it in the skulls he has examined. But although this is a
+peculiarity found in this race alone, it is not constant. I have
+a skull in which the sphenoid touches the parietal on one side,
+whilst on the other they are separated a sixth of an inch; and in
+the engraving, before referred to, the bones are slightly
+separated, but by no means to the extent that they are in
+European skulls. The super and infra orbital foramina are very
+large, and the orbits are broad, with the orbital ridge sharp and
+prominent. All the foramina for the transmission of the
+sensiferous nerves are large, the auditory particularly so; while
+the foramen, through which the carotid artery enters the skull,
+is small. The mastoid processes are large, which might be
+expected, as their hearing is acute. The styloid process is
+small; in monkeys it is wanting. The position of the 'foramen
+magnum', as in all savage tribes, is more behind the middle
+transverse diameter than in Europeans; but this arises in a great
+measure, though not entirely, from the prominence of the alveolar
+processes of the upper jaw. Owing to constant exposure to all
+seasons, the skulls of savages are of greater density, and weigh
+heavier than those of Europeans:&mdash;</p>
+
+<pre>
+ Avoirdupois.
+ lb. oz.
+Skull of a Greek . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 11 1/2
+ " Negro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 0
+ " Mulatto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 10
+ " Chinese . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 1/2
+ " Gipsy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 0
+ " Australian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 12 1/2
+</pre>
+
+<p>Upon an examination of the foregoing points of diversity, it
+is unquestionable that the Australian skull is inferior in
+development to the European, and the capacity of the cranium of
+much less.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 17.</h3>
+
+<h4>SKETCHES OF LIFE AMONG THE NATIVES.</h4>
+
+<p>The Natives have very few traditions, and most of those which
+they relate resemble the disconnected phantasies of a dream
+rather than the record of a series of facts.</p>
+
+<p>They have some indistinct ideas about Chingi, the Evil Spirit,
+but no notion whatever of a Supreme God. When first the English
+arrived, many of the Aborigines considered them to be the spirits
+of their deceased relatives; and some of them fancied they could
+trace the features of former friends in the lineaments of
+individuals among the whites. One of these natives, still living,
+has more than once told me that his late uncle is now a certain
+eloquent and popular member of the Legislative Council. The
+nephew and resuscitated uncle occasionally meet, when the former
+never fails to claim the relationship, which the latter
+good-humouredly acknowledges; and the relatives separate with
+mutual expressions of politeness and good-will.</p>
+
+<p>One of their most remarkable and most intelligible traditions
+was recorded some time ago in the 'Perth Inquirer', by Mr.
+Armstrong, Interpreter to the Natives.</p>
+
+<p>It is as follows:&mdash; "The natives assert that they have been
+told from age to age, that when man first began to exist, there
+were two beings, male and female, named Wal-lyne-up (the father)
+and Doronop (the mother); that they had a son called
+Biu-dir-woor, who received a deadly wound, which they carefully
+endeavoured to heal, but without success; whereupon it was
+declared by Wal-lyne-up, that all who came after him should also
+die in like manner. Could the wound have been healed in this
+case, being the first, the natives think death would have had no
+power over them. The place where the scene occurred, and where
+Bin-dir-woor was buried, the natives imagine to have been on the
+southern plains, between Clarence and the Murray; and the
+instrument used is said to have been a spear thrown by some
+unknown being, and directed by some supernatural power. The
+tradition goes on to state that Bin-dir-woor, the son, although
+deprived of life and buried in his grave, did not remain there,
+but arose and went to the west; to the unknown land of spirits
+across the sea. The parents followed after their son, but (as the
+natives suppose) were unable to prevail upon him to return, and
+they have remained with him ever since."</p>
+
+<p>The following is one of their fables:&mdash;The kangaroo was
+originally blind, and could only walk or crawl. The frog seeing
+it so much at the mercy of its enemies, took compassion on it,
+and anointed the sightless eyeballs of the kangaroo with its
+saliva, and told it to hop as he did. The kangaroo did so, and is
+now become the most difficult animal in the world to catch.</p>
+
+<p>Besides Chingi, the evil spirit who haunts the woods, there is
+another in the shape of an immense serpent, called Waugul, that
+inhabits solitary pools. Snakes that frequent both water and
+land, of great size&mdash;twenty feet long, according to some
+authorities&mdash; have been occasionally seen, and give a colour to
+this belief of the natives. One day, whilst bivouacking at a
+lonely and romantic spot, in a valley of rocks, situated some
+forty miles north of Perth, called the 'Dooda-mya', or the Abode
+of Dogs, I desired a native to lead my horse to a pool, and let
+him drink. The man, however, declined with terror, refusing to go
+near the pool, which was inhabited by the Waugul. I therefore had
+to take my horse myself to the spot, whilst the native stood
+aloof, fully expecting that the Waugul would seize him by the
+nose and pull him under water.</p>
+
+<p>The natives are polygamists. Each male is entitled to all the
+females who are related to him in a certain degree. A newly-born
+child is therefore the betrothed spouse of a man who may be
+thirty years of age, and who claims her from her parents so soon
+as she is marriageable&mdash;when she is twelve years old, or earlier.
+Some men have, consequently, four or six wives of various ages,
+whilst others have none at all. The latter are therefore
+continually engaged in stealing the wives of other people.</p>
+
+<p>This causes incessant wars among the tribes. When the
+legitimate husband recovers his wife, he does not restore her to
+the full enjoyment of domestic happiness, until he has punished
+her for eloping. This he does by thrusting a spear through the
+fleshy part of her leg or thigh.</p>
+
+<p>The natives are very good-natured to one another; sharing
+their provisions and kangaroo-skin cloaks without grudging. The
+head of a family takes the half-baked duck, opossum, or wild-dog,
+from the fire, and after tearing it in pieces with his teeth,
+throws the fragments into the sand for his wives and children to
+pick up. They are very fond of rice and sugar; and bake dampers
+from flour, making them on a corner of their cloaks.</p>
+
+<p>Fish and other things are frequently baked in the bark of the
+paper-tree.</p>
+
+<p>The following observations have been sent to me by my youngest
+brother: "Every tribe possesses a certain tract of country which
+is called after the name of the tribe&mdash;as Moenaing Budja&mdash;the
+Moenai-men's ground. They are not always very particular about
+trespassing on their neighbour's territory. Many of the colonists
+say that each tribe has its chief or king; but among all whom I
+have seen, I never could discover that they paid any particular
+respect to one individual, though they appear to reverence old
+age; and I have frequently seen a party of young men, alternately
+carrying an old grey-headed patriarch during their excursions
+from one encampment to another.</p>
+
+<p>"They have no religion whatever, but they believe in some kind
+of an evil spirit. I have often tried to discover, but could
+never clearly understand, whether they believe in only one
+all-powerful evil spirit, or whether it is merely the spirits of
+their departed friends that they fear; or, (as I am inclined to
+believe) they fear both; and for these reasons:&mdash;wherever there
+is a large encampment of natives, each family has its own private
+fire and hut, but you will always perceive another fire about one
+hundred yards from the camp, which apparently belongs to no one;
+but which the old hags take care shall never go out during the
+night; for they will frequently get up and replenish that fire,
+when they are too lazy to fetch fuel for their own. They call
+that Chingi's fire; and they believe if he comes in the night he
+will sit quietly by his own fire and leave them undisturbed. That
+they likewise believe in the reappearance of departed spirits,
+may be easily proved by the manner and the formalities with which
+they bury their dead. In the first place they cut off the hair
+and beard; they then break his finger-joints and tie the thumb
+and fore-finger of the right hand together; so that if he rise
+again, he may not have the power to use a spear and revenge
+himself. They then break his spears, throwing-stick, and all his
+other implements of war, and throw them into the grave, over
+which they build a hut; and a fire is kept lighted for a certain
+length of time. It is likewise customary for his wife or nearest
+relation, if at any future period they should happen to pass near
+the grave, to repair the hut, rekindle the fire, and utter a long
+rigmarole to the departed, to induce him to lie still, and not
+come back and torment them. Nothing will induce a stranger to go
+near a new grave, or to mention the name of the departed for a
+long time after his death. They always speak of him as
+So-and-so's brother, or father. If the deceased be the father of
+a family, it is the duty of his eldest son, or nearest relation,
+to avenge his death by killing one of the next, or any other
+tribe; and this often leads to furious battles or cold-blooded
+murders; for they are by no means particular whether it be man,
+woman, or child who is the victim; and it is generally the poor
+women who suffer on these occasions; the men being too cowardly,
+unless under the influence of very strong passion, to attack
+those of equal strength with themselves. The women do all the
+work, such as building huts, carrying water, digging up roots,
+and procuring grubs out of the wattle and grass-trees. I have
+seen a poor unfortunate woman marching twenty miles a-day, with
+(at least) a hundred pounds'-weight on her back, including the
+child and all their effects; whilst the husband has been too lazy
+to carry even his cloak. A hunting excursion with a large party
+of natives is capital sport. They choose, if possible, a valley,
+at one end of which they station ten or twenty of the most expert
+spearmen; with whom, if you want any fun, you must station
+yourself, taking care to remain concealed. All the juveniles of
+the party then start off, and make a circuit of many miles in
+extent, shouting and hallooing the whole time. They form a
+semicircle, and drive all the kangaroos before them down the
+valley, to the spot where the old hunters are placed. Then comes
+the tug of war, the crashing of bushes, the flying of spears, and
+the thump, thump of the kangaroos, as they come tearing along,
+sometimes in hundreds, from the old grey grandfather of six feet
+high, to the little picanniny of twelve inches, who has tumbled
+out of his mother's pouch; and numbers fall victims to the
+ruthless arms of the hunters. The evening terminates with a grand
+feast and a corrobery."</p>
+
+<p><a name="f214"><img alt="" src="images/Landor_f214.jpg" width="500" height=
+"350"></a></p>
+
+<center><b>"Spearing Kangaroos"</b></center>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p>Each tribe has its doctor, or wise man, who is supposed to
+have supernatural powers of healing wounds, and is the oracle of
+the tribe. One of these fellows described to me the mode of his
+initiation. He said his father, himself a wise man, took him one
+night to the edge of a steep hill, where he left him lying
+wrapped in his kangaroo-skin cloak. He was very much frightened,
+but durst not stir. During the night Chingi came and tried to
+throw him down the hill, and to strangle him, but did not
+succeed. Chingi was like something very black. He afterwards came
+again, and told him a great many secrets; and thus is was that my
+informant became a doctor and a wise man. I think I have heard of
+people obtaining the power of second sight in the Isle of Skye by
+lying on a rock all night, wrapped in a bull's hide, and
+receiving a visit from the devil. The similarity between these
+initiatory processes struck me forcibly.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 18.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE MODEL-KINGDOM.</h4>
+
+<p>A well-governed colony is the Model of a great kingdom. As in
+the case of other models, every part of the machinery by which it
+is moved is placed at once before the eye of the spectator. In a
+great empire, the springs of action are concealed; the public
+behold only the results, and can scarcely guess how those results
+were brought about. In a colony, every one stands so close to the
+little machine of Government, that he can readily discern how it
+is made to work, and therefore takes a more lively interest in
+the working of it. The model has its representative of a
+sovereign; its Ministers, who comprise the Executive Council with
+the Colonial Secretary as Premier; its Parliament, the
+Legislative Assembly; its Bishop of London, who is represented by
+the Colonial Chaplain, the dignitary of the Church in those
+parts. In the Legislative Assembly there are the Government
+party, consisting of the Colonial Secretary and the Attorney
+General, who prove their loyalty and devotion by adhering to His
+Excellency the Governor on every division, and (according to
+general belief) would rather vote against their own measures than
+against the representative of their Queen. Then there is the
+popular party, consisting of the popular member, who speaks at
+random on either side of the debate, but invariably votes against
+the Government, in order to maintain inviolate the integrity of
+his principles. We have also the Judge, or Lord chancellor, the
+great Law officer of the Crown, who sits silently watching the
+progress of a Bill, as it steals gently forward towards the close
+of the second reading; and then suddenly pounces upon it, to the
+consternation of his Excellency, and the delight of the popular
+member, and tears it in pieces with his sharp legal teeth, whilst
+he shows that it is in its scope and tendency contrary to the Law
+of England in that case provided, and is besides impossible to be
+carried out in the present circumstances of the Colony. The Model
+Nation has its national debt of one thousand pounds, due to the
+Commissariat chest; and this burthen of the State costs his
+Excellency many a sleepless night, spent in vain conjectures as
+to the best mode of relieving the financial embarrassments.</p>
+
+<p>It is pleasant to learn from the model, how Government
+patronage is disposed of in the Parent country. Kindly motives,
+however, which never appear in the arrangements of the latter,
+are always conspicuous in a colony. A public work is sometimes
+created for the sole purpose of saving an unfortunate mechanic
+from the horrors of idleness; and a debt due to the State is
+occasionally discharged by three months' washing of a Privy
+Councillor's shirts.</p>
+
+<p>Then we have the exact fac-simile of a Royal Court, with its
+levees and drawing-rooms, where his Excellency displays the
+utmost extent of his affability, and his lady of her queenly
+airs. There may be seen, in all its original freshness and
+vigour, the smiling hatred of rival ladies, followed by their
+respective trains of admirers; whilst the full-blown dames of
+Members of Council elbow their way, with all the charming
+confidence of rank, towards the vicinity of her who is the
+cynosure of all eyes. The early levees of the first Governor of
+Western Australia were held in a dry swamp, near the centre of
+the present town of Perth. His Excellency, graciously bowing
+beneath the shade of a banksia tree, received with affability
+those who were introduced to him, as they stumbled into his
+presence over tangled brushwood, and with difficulty avoided the
+only humiliation that is scorned by English courtiers&mdash;that of
+the person.</p>
+
+<p>Ladies, in struggling through the thorny brake, had sometimes
+to labour under the double embarrassment of a ragged reputation
+and dress. To appear before the Presence, under such
+circumstances, with a smiling countenance, proved the triumph of
+feminine art, and of course excited general admiration. But this
+was in the early days of the settlement. We have now a handsome
+Government-house, where ladies who attend drawing-rooms incur no
+danger of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>From the financial difficulties of a small colony you may form
+some idea of the troubles of the Chancellor of the Exchequer at
+home. And yet there is less financial talent required to raise
+five hundred thousand pounds in England than five hundred in an
+impoverished colony. In the former country only a few voices,
+comparatively, are raised in expostulation; and no one cares
+about them, if Mr. Hume could be gagged, and the other patriots
+in the Commons. But in a colony! threaten to raise the price of
+sugar by the imposition of another half-penny per pound, and the
+whole land will be heaved as though by an earthquake. Not only
+will the newspapers pour forth a terrific storm of denunciations
+against a treacherous Government, but every individual of the
+public will take up the matter as a personal injury, and roar out
+his protest against so monstrous a political crime. Those who
+called most loudly for the erection of a necessary bridge, will
+be most indignant when asked next year to contribute towards its
+cost.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor of a colony should not only be a good financier,
+but if he would avoid the bitter pangs of repentance, must
+possess great firmness in resisting the innumerable calls upon
+the Government purse.</p>
+
+<p>His Excellency may lay his account to being daily vituperated
+for not consenting to the construction of this or that national
+work, but he will be still more taken to task when the melancholy
+duty of paying for it becomes imperative, and is found to be
+unavoidable.</p>
+
+<p>It is the general belief, that in a colony we are altogether
+out of the world; but it has always appeared to me, that within
+the narrow confines of one of those epitomes of a kingdom we may
+see more of the world than when standing on the outer edge of
+society in England.</p>
+
+<p>A man thinks himself in the midst of the world in Great
+Britain, because he reads the newspapers and knows what is
+passing and being enacted around him. But the same newspapers are
+read with equal diligence in a colony, and the same knowledge is
+acquired there, though some three months later. To read the
+newspapers, and to hang, close as a burr, upon the skirts of
+society, is not to be in the world. The world is, in truth, the
+heart of Man; and he knows most of the World who knows most of
+his species. And where, alas! may this knowledge, so painful and
+so humiliating, be better acquired than in a colony? There we
+have the human heart laid open before us without veil or
+disguise: there we see it in all its coarseness, its selfishness,
+its brutality.</p>
+
+<p>How many fine natures, cultivated, delicate, and generous,
+have gone forth from their native land, full of high resolves,
+only to perish in the mephitic atmosphere of a colony!</p>
+
+<p>There we find whatever there is of good and bad in human
+nature brought immediately before our eyes. It is a school of
+moral anatomy, in which we study subjects whose outer covering
+has been removed, and where the inner machinery (fearful to see!)
+is left exposed.</p>
+
+<p>A knowledge of the world! if we gain it not in a colony, it
+must ever remain a sealed book to us.</p>
+
+<p>We shall leave but a bad impression on the mind of the reader
+in concluding this short chapter with these sombre observations;
+but we would not leave him without hope. Time will remedy all
+this. Some moral evils correct themselves; as the water of the
+Nile becomes pure again after it has gone putrid.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 19.</h3>
+
+<h4>TRIALS OF A GOVERNOR.</h4>
+
+<p>Except the waiter at a commercial inn, no man has so much upon
+his hands, or so many faults to answer for, as the Governor of a
+colony. If public affairs go wrong, every voice is raised,
+requiring him immediately to rectify them; and as every one has a
+particular plan of his own, the Governor is expected instantly to
+adopt them all. Nor has he public calamities only to answer for;
+the private misfortunes of individuals are, without hesitation,
+laid at his door. He is expected to do something, and not a
+little, for all who are in trouble; he has to devise expedients
+for those whose own wits are at fault: it is among his duties to
+console, to cheer, to advise, to redress, to remedy; and, above
+all, to enrich.</p>
+
+<p>As men set up a block of wood in a field to become a
+rubbing-post for asses; as bachelors take to themselves wives,
+and elderly spinsters individuals of the feline race, in order to
+have something on which to vent their occasional ill-humours, so
+is a Governor set up in a colony, that the settlers may have a
+proper object or mark set apart, on which they may satisfactorily
+discharge their wrongs, sorrows, wants, troubles, distractions,
+follies, and unreasonable expectations. A Governor is the
+safety-valve of a colony; withdraw this legitimate object of
+abuse, and the whole community would be at loggerheads. A state
+of anarchy would be the immediate consequence, and broil and
+blood-shed would prevail throughout the land. Sometimes a
+Governor forgets the purpose for which he was sent out from home,
+and placed on high in a colony, as a rubbing-post; he sometimes
+lapses into the error of fancying himself a colonial Solon, and
+strives to distinguish his reign by the enactment of laws, which
+only increase the natural irritability of the settlers, and cause
+him to be more rubbed against than ever. On these occasions he is
+not always entitled to much sympathy; but when private parties
+come crowding round him to have the consequence of their follies
+averted, or merely in a state of discontented irritation, to have
+their backs scratched, his poor Excellency is much to be
+compassionated.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every morning a long-eared crowd assembles around the
+Government-offices, where the rubbing-post is set up, and one
+after another they are admitted to find what relief they may from
+this cheap luxury. It is pleasant to observe that they almost all
+come out again with smiling countenances. For a moment, the sense
+of pain or discontent has been alleviated by the gentle
+application.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes an honest farmer has ridden fifty miles in order to
+have the pleasure of complaining to his Excellency of the
+mal-administration of the post-office department, evidenced by
+the non-delivery of a letter, which, after a vast deal of
+investigation and inquiry, turns out never to have been posted.
+Sometimes a man comes for advice as to the propriety of going to
+law with his neighbour about a bull which had taken the liberty
+to eat some of his turnips. One man wishes to have his
+Excellency's opinion upon a disease which has lately broken out
+among his pigs; another has mysteriously carried a piece of
+iron-stone in his pocket for a hundred miles, and claims the
+reward for the discovery of a coal-mine; a third has a plan to
+propose for fertilizing the sand-plains around Perth, by manuring
+them with sperm oil. Some are desirous that their sons should be
+made Government clerks, and insist upon their right to all vacant
+appointments on the plea of being "old settlers." Others have
+suggestions to make the neglect of which would prove ruinous to
+the colony: general misery is only to be averted by the repeal of
+the duty on tobacco: no more ships need be expected (this is
+after a gale and wreck,) unless a break-water be constructed,
+which may be done for ninety-five thousand pounds, and there was
+a surplus revenue last year over the expenditure of thirteen
+shillings and sixpence, the local government being also indebted
+to the Commissariat chest in the sum of nine hundred pounds odd.
+Some complain of roads and bridges being in a defective state,
+and wonder why two thousand pounds extra per annum are not laid
+out upon them; these are succeeded by a deputation from the
+inhabitants of Rockingham, requesting, as a matter of right, that
+half that sum may be applied in ornamenting their principal
+square with a botanical garden. Then the Governor has to attend
+to complaints against public officers. The Commissioner of the
+Civil Court has proved himself to be an unjust judge by deciding
+for the defendant contrary to the truth, as proved by the
+plaintiff; or the Commissioner of the Court of Requests has
+received a bribe of three-and-fourpence, and refused to listen to
+the complainant's story. The magistrates have granted a spirit
+license to a notorious character, and denied one to the
+applicant, an unimpeachable householder. The Post-Master General
+has embezzled a letter, or the Colonial Secretary has neglected
+to reply to one.</p>
+
+<p>All these things, and a thousand others, the Governor is
+expected to listen to, inquire about, remedy, or profit by.</p>
+
+<p>One day, I remember, I went myself to complain of the
+absurdity of an Act of Council which I thought might be
+advantageously amended by the aid of a little light which had
+lately dawned upon me.</p>
+
+<p>Among those who haunted the ante-room, waiting for admittance
+to the rubbing-post was a tall Irish woman, who had seen better
+days, but was now reduced to much distress, and was besides not
+altogether right in her intellects.</p>
+
+<p>She was in the frequent habit of attending there, for the
+purpose of complaining against the Advocate General, who never
+paid her proper attention when she went to lay her grievances
+before him. This woman was the terror of the Government officers.
+She never allowed her victim to escape when once she had begun
+her story;&mdash;in vain might he try to edge away towards the
+door&mdash;if he were not to be retained by the fascination of her
+voice, she would seize him by the coat with a grasp of iron, and
+a fly might as well try to escape from a pot-bellied spider.
+Whenever she appeared, no public officer was ever to be found. A
+general epidemic seemed to have fallen upon the offices, and
+exterminated all the inhabitants. The Colonial Secretary would
+rush out to luncheon, deaf as an adder to the cries of female
+distress that rang in the troubled air behind him. The Advocate
+General, hearing the well-known voice inquiring for him in no
+friendly key, would hurry away through an opposite door, and dive
+into the woods adjoining Government-house, and there gnaw his
+nails, in perturbation of spirit until he thought the evil was
+overpast. His Excellency himself would sooner have seen the
+Asiatic cholera walk into the room than Miss Maria Martin, and
+invariably turned paler then his writing-paper, and shuddered
+with a sudden ague. She had so many wrongs to complain of, which
+no human power could redress, and she required so much to be done
+for her, and insisted upon having reiterated promises to that
+effect, that no wonder she excited the utmost terror in the minds
+of all whom she approached. She was, moreover, a huge, brawny,
+fierce-looking creature, and though upwards of fifty years of
+age, had the strength of an Irish porter. She was reported on one
+occasion to have taken a gentleman of high reputation, and
+unimpeachable morals, by the collar of his coat, and pinned him
+up against the wall, until he had promised to speak for her to
+the Governor; and when he subsequently accused her of this
+violence, she retorted by saying that it was in self-defence, as
+he had attempted improper liberties. The fear of such an
+unscrupulous and cruel accusation made Government officers,
+especially the married ones, extremely shy of granting a
+tete-a-tete conversation to Miss Martin; and as no one was, of
+course, more correct in his conduct than his Excellency the
+Governor, no wonder that he should feel extremely nervous
+whenever he was surprised into an interview with this interesting
+spinster.</p>
+
+<p>When I found her in the ante-room I naturally recoiled, and
+tried to back out again, smiling blandly all the time, as one
+does when a violent-looking dog comes up. and begins sniffing
+about your legs. Miss Martin, however, was used to these
+manoeuvres, and suddenly getting between me and the door,
+intercepted my retreat, and insisted on telling me, for the
+twentieth time, how villanously the Advocate General had deceived
+her. Escape was impossible; I groaned and sweated with anguish,
+but listen I must, and had to suffer martyrdom for an hour, when
+the Governor's door opened, and he himself looked out. On seeing
+the Gorgon he tried to withdraw, but she pounded like a tigress
+through the door-way, and slamming the door after her, secured an
+audience with his Excellency, which she took care should not be a
+short one. I could remain no longer, and therefore owe the rest
+of the story to public report. After an hour's tete-a-tete, his
+Excellency's voice grew more imperative. The clerks, highly
+interested, conceived that he was insisting upon her withdrawing.
+It is supposed that he could not possibly escape himself, as she
+of course cut off all communication with either the door or the
+bell-rope. The lady's voice also waxed higher; at length it rose
+into a storm. Nothing more was heard of the poor Governor beyond
+a faint, moaning sound; whether he was deprecating the tempest,
+or being actually strangled, became a matter of grave
+speculation. Some asserted that they heard his kicks upon the
+floor, others could only hear convulsive sobs; then all fancied
+they could distinguish the sounds of a struggle. The officials
+debated whether it would be proper or indelicate to look in upon
+the interview; but it became so evident that a scuffle was going
+on, that the private secretary's anxiety overcame all other
+considerations. The door was opened just as his Excellency,
+escaping from the grasp of the mad woman, had made a vault at the
+railing which ran across the farther end of the Council Room (to
+keep back the public on certain days), in hopes of effecting his
+escape by the door beyond. Nothing could have been better
+conceived than this design; but unhappily the lady had caught
+hold of his coat-tail to arrest his flight, and therefore instead
+of vaulting clear over the rails, as he had anticipated, his
+Excellency was drawn back in his leap, and found himself seated
+astride upon the barrier, with a desperate woman tugging at his
+tail, and trying to pull him back into the arena. Nothing, we
+believe, has ever exceeded the ludicrous misery displayed in his
+Excellency's visage on finding himself in this perilous
+situation. But seeing the private secretary and a mob of clerks,
+with their pens in their hands, hastening to his rescue, he made
+a desperate effort, and cast himself off on the other side; and
+finally succeeded in rushing out of the room, having only one
+tail hanging to his coat, with which he escaped into an adjoining
+apartment, and was received into the arms of the Surveyor General
+in a state of extreme exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p>Such are some of the troubles and afflictions incident to the
+unenviable office of Governor of a colony. Those innocent country
+gentlemen who have expended the better part of their property on
+contested elections, and now weary heaven and Her Majesty's
+Principal Secretaries of State for colonial appointments, little
+know what they invoke upon themselves. In my opinion Sancho Panza
+had a sinecure, compared with theirs, in his Governorship of the
+island of Barrataria.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *Our love of the ludicrous frequently makes us
+delighted to find even the most estimable characters in a
+ridiculous position. The above anecdote is perhaps exaggerated,
+but it is here recorded as a moral warning to those who yearn
+like Sancho Panza for a government, and not from a desire to cast
+ridicule upon one who was universally respected and esteemed, for
+the quiet decorum of his life, his high principles, his strict
+impartiality, and the conscientious discharge of all the duties
+of his office.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 20.</h3>
+
+<h4>MR. SAILS, MY GROOM.&mdash;OVER THE HILLS.&mdash;A SHEEP STATION.</h4>
+
+<p>Soon after I was settled in my residence at Perth I purchased
+a couple of young mares unbroke, recently imported from the Cape
+of Good Hope. They were the offspring of an Arab horse and Cape
+mare, and one of them, a chestnut, was almost the handsomest
+creature I ever beheld. They cost me thirty guineas each; but
+since that period the value of horses is greatly diminished.</p>
+
+<p>I was very much pleased with this purchase, which recalled the
+memories of boyhood and a long-tailed pony, whenever I found
+myself feeding or grooming my stud&mdash;which I often thought proper
+to do, as my establishment, though at that time numerous, did not
+comprise a well-educated groom.</p>
+
+<p>Besides my own man, I had two runaway sailors from the ship in
+which we had come out, quartered upon me. They expressed so
+flattering a regard for me, as the only person whom they knew in
+this part of the world, and were so ready to dig the garden and
+plant potatoes, or do any other little matter to make themselves
+useful, that I had not the heart to refuse them a nook in the
+kitchen, or a share of our daily meals. I now called their
+services into activity by making them assist at the breaking in
+of my mares; and whilst I held the lunging-rein, Mr. Sails would
+exert himself till he became as black as a sweep with dust and
+perspiration, by running round and round in the rear of the
+animal, urging her forward with loud cries and objurgations,
+accompanied with furious crackings of his whip. These sailors
+never did anything quietly. If told to give the horses some hay,
+they would both start up from their stools by the kitchen fire,
+as if in a state of frantic excitement; thrust their pipes into
+the leathern belt which held up their trousers, and jostling each
+other through the doorway like a brace of young dogs, tear round
+the house to the stable, or rather shed, as though possessed by a
+legion of devils. Then, unable to use a fork, they would seize as
+much hay as they could clasp in their arms, and littering it all
+about the premises, rush to the stalls, where they suddenly grew
+exceedingly cautious; for in fact, they felt much greater dread
+of these horses than they would have done of a ground shark. Then
+it was all, "Soh! my little feller! Soh! my pretty little
+lass!&mdash;Avast there&mdash;(in a low tone) you lubber, or I'll rope's
+end you&mdash;none of that!" This was whenever the mare, pleased at
+the sight of the hay, looked round and whinnied. Unless I
+superintended the operation myself, the hay would be thrown under
+the horse's feet, whilst the men took to their heels at the same
+moment, and then turned round to see whether the animals could
+reach their fodder. If they could, these worthy grooms would come
+cheerfully to me and tell me that the horses were eating their
+allowance; but if not, they filled their pipes, and took a turn
+out of the way, trusting the hay would all be trampled into the
+litter before I happened to see it. Whenever I was present, I
+made them get upon the manger and put the hay into the rack, (I
+never could teach them to use a fork,) but it was with fear and
+trembling that they did this. One day, Sails was standing on the
+manger, with the hay in his arms, when the mare, trying to get a
+mouthful, happened to rub her nose against the hinder portion of
+his person. Sails roared aloud, and let the hay fall upon the
+mare's head and neck.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter, man?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"By Gad, sir," cried Sails, looking round with a face of
+terror, and scrambling down, "he's tuk a bite out of my
+starn!"</p>
+
+<p>After the horses had been well lunged it became necessary to
+mount them. In vain, however, I tried to persuade Sails or his
+comrade Dick to get upon their backs. I therefore mounted first
+myself, and after a deal of plunging and knocking about was
+dismounted again, with the mare, who had thrown herself down,
+actually kneeling upon my body. All this time, Sails stood
+helplessly looking on open-mouthed, holding the lunging-rein in
+his hands; and I had to call to him to "pull her off" before he
+made any attempt to give assistance. This accident effectually
+prevented my gallant grooms from trusting themselves on
+horseback; but they proved more useful in breaking in the animals
+to draw the light cart. One would ride whilst the other drove,
+and their nautical phrases, and seaman-like style of steering the
+craft, as they called it, excited the admiration of the
+neighbourhood. But they never could bring themselves to like the
+employment of tending horses; and finding that I insisted upon
+their making themselves useful in this way, they at last gave me
+up, and volunteered as part of the crew of a vessel about to sail
+for Sincapore.</p>
+
+<p>Long after this period I drove the dog-cart over the hills to
+York races. My brother had come down to Perth, and we went
+together, taking with us our friend the amiable and talented
+editor of one of the Perth journals. Attaching another horse to
+an outrigger, we drove unicorn, or a team of three.</p>
+
+<p>It was a splendid October morning, (the commencement of
+summer,) and we rattled over the long and handsome wooden bridges
+that cross the two streams of the Swan, at a spanking pace,
+whilst the worthy editor, exulting in his temporary emancipation
+from office, made the wooded banks of the river ring again with
+the joyous notes of his key-bugle.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour carried us over five miles of road, and brought
+us to Mangonah, the beautifully situated dwelling of R. W. Nash,
+Esq., barrister at law, the most active-minded and
+public-spirited man in the colony. After a short delay, to laugh
+at one of our friend's last coined and most facetious anecdotes,
+and also to visit his botanical garden, we rattled off again to
+Guildford; a scattered hamlet that was made acquainted with our
+approach by loud strains from the editor's bugle. Here, however,
+we paused not, but proceeded along a hard and good road towards
+Green Mount, the first hill which we had to ascend. Green Mount,
+six miles from Guildford, is famous for a desperate skirmish
+which took place some years ago between a large body of natives
+and Messrs. Bland and Souper, at the head of a party escorting
+provisions from Perth to the infant settlement at York. Whilst
+slowly ascending the hill, a thick flight of spears fell among
+the party, wounding several of them. No enemy was visible, and
+the greatest consternation prevailed among the men, who hastened
+to shelter themselves under the carts. This induced the natives
+to rush out of their ambush, when they were received with a
+shower of balls; and at length driven back, after losing a good
+many men. Mr. Souper had several spears sticking in his body, and
+others of the English were severely wounded, but none
+mortally.</p>
+
+<p>The natives are very tenacious of life, and so are all the
+birds and animals indigenous to the country.</p>
+
+<p>The natives often have spears thrust completely through their
+bodies, and without any serious injury, receive wounds that would
+prove mortal to the whites. A vagabond who had speared one of
+those noble rams of ours, of whom honourable mention has been
+already made, was shot by our shepherd whilst in the act of
+decamping with the carcase. The ball passed completely through
+his lungs, and would have made an end of any white man; but the
+native recovered in the course of a few days, and walked a
+hundred miles heavily ironed, to take his trial for
+sheep-stealing at the Quarter Sessions.</p>
+
+<p>From Guildford to the foot of Green Mount, the country
+presents a vast plain of cold clayey soil, unfit for cultivation,
+and though covered with scrub, affording very little useful
+herbage.</p>
+
+<p>On ascending the hill, we come upon what is generally called
+the iron-stone range, which extends nearly to York, a distance of
+forty miles. These extensive hills (about fifteen hundred feet
+above the level of the sea) are composed almost entirely of
+granite rocks, with occasional tracts of quartz; and the surface
+is generally strewn over with a hard loose rubble.</p>
+
+<p>Although the sides and summits of the hills present scarcely
+any appearance of soil, vast forests of large Jarra trees, and
+other varieties of the eucalyptus, extend in every direction; and
+flowers the most beautiful relieve the sombre appearance of the
+ground. Some few of the valleys afford a few acres of alluvial
+soil; and in the first of these, called Mahogany Creek, six miles
+from Green Mount, we found a comfortable way-side house, with
+good out-buildings, and other accommodations; and here we halted
+to lunch, and bait our horses.</p>
+
+<p>Many other individuals, bent upon the same journey as
+ourselves, were lounging and smoking before the house, or
+partaking of the refreshments. Most were travelling on horseback;
+some in gigs, and some in light spring-carts. A famous round of
+cold beef, with bottled ale and porter, proved extremely
+agreeable after our drive.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon we proceeded fifteen miles farther, to the
+half-way house, where on my first arrival in the colony I had
+been initiated into the art of cooking a saddle of kangaroo, and
+serving it up with mint-sauce. The road, through a dense forest
+of evergreen trees, is excessively dreary, and the quarters for
+the night were never very satisfactory; but the traveller might
+always look forward to a comfortable sitting-room, kangaroo
+steaks and pork, with plenty of fresh eggs and good bread. Since
+that time the house has been given up by the energetic landlord;
+and the Local Government is partly responsible for the loss of
+this accommodation, in consequence of having insisted upon a
+heavy license being annually taken out. In good times, when the
+farm-settlers of the York and Northam districts brought their
+wool and other produce down this road to the capital, they
+invariably spent a merry evening at the half-way house; but since
+money has become scarcer in the colony, they have been compelled
+to avoid this place of entertainment, and kindle instead a fire
+by the road-side, where they spend their evenings in solitary
+meditation, to the advantage doubtless of their minds and purses.
+In the morning, full of philosophical thoughts and fried rashers
+of pork, they calmly yoke their bullocks to the wain, unafflicted
+by those pangs which were often the only acknowledgment rendered
+to the hospitality of Mr. Smith&mdash;pangs of mental remorse and a
+bilious stomach. And yet the worthy host never suffered a guest
+whom he respected to depart without administering to him what he
+called "a doctor"&mdash;of which, about five o'clock in the morning,
+the poor man usually felt himself much in need; and at that hour,
+as Aurora entered at the window, would mine host (equally
+rosy-cheeked) enter by the door, and deliver his matutinal
+salutation. This "doctor," a character universally esteemed by
+travellers in those parts, was a tumbler of milk fresh from the
+cow, tinctured with brandy.</p>
+
+<p>The glory had not departed from the half-way house at the
+period to which I refer; and as we drove up to the door, amid the
+liveliest strains of the editorial bugle, our jovial host
+welcomed us with his heartiest greeting. This spot is truly an
+oasis in the desert, affording a few acres of tolerable land, and
+some excellent garden-ground which, in the season, produces
+abundance of grapes, peaches, apples, figs, and various kinds of
+vegetables. A deep brook runs at the bottom of the garden which
+is very well watered; and on its margin, in the midst of a green
+plot, protected by palings from rude encroachment, is the quiet
+grave of one of Mr. Smith's children. How different looks the
+solitary grave of the desert from the crowded churchyards of
+England! How much more home it comes to the heart! Across the
+brook is a large barley-field, and down the valley are several
+other inclosures; all around, beyond these, is the dark,
+melancholy, illimitable forest. At one end of the house, which is
+of goodly size, stands a huge erection of wood, resembling a
+gallows, from which are suspended the bodies of three kangaroos.
+Not far from this, a group of natives&mdash;men, women, and
+children&mdash;are squatted round a small fire, eating baked opossums,
+and chattering, and uttering shrill screams of laughter, with all
+their might. Half a dozen large kangaroo dogs are hanging about
+this group with wistful eyes, but evidently without any
+expectations of obtaining a morsel.</p>
+
+<p>The house, being filled with people on their way to the races,
+resounded all the evening with jokes and merriment; and when the
+well-disposed retired to bed, and flattered themselves they were
+just sinking into repose, a mob of their evil-minded friends,
+headed by an Irish barrister and the usually sedate Crown
+Solicitor, beat down the door, and pulled them forth again. Then
+were the four walls of the room (which contained four beds) made
+witnesses to a scene exhibiting all the horrors of war. Dreadful
+was the conflict: bolsters and carpet-bags were wielded with
+fierce animosity; pillows and rolled-up blankets flew about the
+room like cannon-shot; and long was the contest doubtful, until
+the despair of the besieged at length overcame the impetuosity of
+the assailants, and succeeded in driving them from the
+apartment.</p>
+
+<p>The half-way house was often so crowded that some of the
+guests had to sleep upon the dining-table, the sofas, and the
+floor. At early dawn it was usually cleared of its visitors, who
+would push on to breakfast at Mahogany Creek; or if going to
+York, at St. Roman's Well, distant some fifteen miles. It was
+here that we breakfasted, sitting upon the grass, whilst with our
+camp-kettle we boiled our chocolate, and enjoyed our morning meal
+exceedingly.</p>
+
+<p>York is a scattered hamlet of good farm-houses. The country is
+highly interesting. A lofty hill, or mountain, called Mount
+Bakewell, confines the view on one side, and below it is the
+river Avon, a broad stream in winter, but in summer consisting
+only of deep pools in various parts of its course. The
+neighbourhood is beautifully wooded, and has the appearance of a
+park. In the centre of the hamlet a modest-looking, white-washed
+church "rears its meek fane." Nothing could be more peaceful and
+serene than the whole aspect of the place.</p>
+
+<p>At my brother's farm, comprising 4,000 acres, the property of
+R. H. Bland, Esq., Protector of Natives, we found a hearty
+reception, and a very pleasant dwelling-house. For several days
+it was filled with young men who had come from various parts of
+the colony to attend the races.</p>
+
+<p>These gentlemen were most of them young men of good family,
+and well educated, who having only a small patrimony, and having
+been brought up to no trade or profession, had come out to a
+colony in the hope of acquiring landed estates, and of founding
+in this part of the world a family of their own. In the meantime
+they had to drive their teams, shear their sheep, thresh their
+corn, and exhibit their skill in husbandry; whilst their houses
+were as ill arranged and uncomfortable as could be expected from
+the superintendence of bachelors who thought more of their
+stables than of the appearance of their rooms. They care more
+about good horses than good cooks, and in most cases prefer doing
+without kitchen stuff rather than be troubled with a garden.</p>
+
+<p>Freedom of discourse and ease of manner characterize the
+social meetings of our bachelor aristocracy "over the hills."</p>
+
+<p>Dinner is only to be obtained by dint of incessant shouting to
+the slave (frequently an Indian Coolie) who presides in the
+detached kitchen, and brings in the viands as fast as he "dishes
+up." The roast mutton gradually cools upon the table while Mooto
+is deliberately forking the potatoes out of the pot, and
+muttering curses against his master, who stands at the
+parlour-door, swearing he will wring his ears off if he does not
+despatch. In order to moderate the anguish of stomach experienced
+by the guests, the host endeavours to fill up the time by sending
+the sherry round. The dinner is at length placed upon the table,
+and Mooto scuffles out of the room whilst his master is busy
+carving, lest he should be compelled to wait, an occupation less
+agreeable than that to which he returns, and which engages most
+of his time&mdash;sitting on an upturned box before the fire, and
+smoking his pipe. Here, piously thanking Vishnu and Brama for
+such good tobacco, he puffs away, heedless of the shouts of his
+suzerain, who has just discovered there are only eight plates for
+twelve people. One of the guests volunteers a foray into Mooto's
+territory, chiefly for the sake of relieving his own feelings by
+making that worthy acquainted with the opinion he entertains of
+him, and returns to his seat with cold plates and a tranquillized
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>When the villain lacquey has smoked his pipe, he brings in the
+cheese, and clears away. No unnecessary feelings of delicacy
+restrain the guests from reviling him seriatim as he removes the
+platters; and he retires to his own den and the enjoyment of a
+pound of boiled rice with undisturbed equanimity, leaving the
+others to boil the kettle and concoct egg-flip, which, together
+with wine, brandy, cigars, and pipes, enables the party to get
+through the afternoon. Some remain at the table, drinking out of
+wine-glasses, tumblers, or pannikins (every vessel which the
+house contains being put in requisition), and talking loudly
+about their horses, or making bets for the next day's races;
+others having thrown off their coats, and flung their persons
+upon a sofa, with their feet on a window-sill, puff away in
+meditative silence, only joining occasionally in the
+conversation; whilst two or three walk up and down the verandah,
+in solemn consultation as to the best mode of hedging, having
+unhappily backed a colt for the Margaux Cup that turns out to be
+a dunghill.</p>
+
+<p>I trust my good friends over the hills will not think I am
+making an ungrateful return for much hospitality by this rough
+and imperfect sketch. Heaven knows they are a worthy,
+kind-hearted, hospitable set of good fellows as ever drew a cork
+or made egg-flip; but I must say some of the bachelor
+establishments are rather in a rude and primitive state at
+present.</p>
+
+<p>Those houses which are fortunate enough to possess a presiding
+genius in the gentle and attractive form of Woman are very
+differently ordered. English neatness and English comforts
+pervade the establishment, and the manners and customs of
+well-regulated society are never forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>It is a pleasant sight in the evening to watch the cattle
+driven into the stock-yard by the native boy, who has been with
+them all day in the bush. Some of the old cows go steadily enough
+in the right direction, but others, and especially the young
+heifers, are continually bunting one another, and trying to push
+their next neighbours into the ditch. Several, tempted by a
+pleasant field of barley, have leapt over a broken rail, and are
+eating and trampling down all before them. But soon they are
+perceived by the dusky herdsman, who incontinently shrieks like
+one possessed by demons, and rushing after the stray kine with a
+bough hastily picked up, chases and belabours them up and down
+the field (the gate of which he has never thought of opening),
+until he has done as much mischief as possible to the crop.
+Somebody then opens the gate for him, and the cattle are at
+length secured in the yard.</p>
+
+<p>Next arrives a flock of two thousand sheep, driven by white
+shepherds. On coming to the entrance of the fold-yard, they stop
+and hesitate, refusing to enter. All is uncertainty and
+confusion, the rearmost urged forward by the shout of the men and
+the barking of the dogs, who run from side to side, thrusting
+their noses into the soft white fleeces, press into the mass;
+great is the scuffle, the rush, and the pattering of feet over
+the loose pebbles of the yard. At length, a hardy and determined
+ram in the vanguard gives a leap of ten feet through the open
+gateway, and the others hustle through after him, every one
+leaping as he had done, and all congratulating themselves on
+having thus cleverly eluded the designs of some unseen enemy.</p>
+
+<p>I do not intend to give an account of the races, though they
+afforded more amusement probably than is common at Epsom or
+Ascot. Every one knew everybody and everybody's horse; and as the
+horses were generally ridden by gentlemen, there was no doubt of
+fair play. There was an accident, as usual, in the hurdle-race;
+but not being fatal, it did not interrupt the sports. Large
+groups of the natives, sitting on the ground, or standing leaning
+on their spears, gave increased effect to the picturesque
+scenery. Some clumps of forest-trees still occupied the centre of
+the course, and through these you caught glimpses of coloured
+jackets and jockey-caps as they flashed by. The green side of
+Mount Bakewell was spotted with sheep, and above them frowned a
+forest of dark trees.</p>
+
+<p>A loaf of bread stuck upon a spear was a mark and a prize for
+native dexterity. The dusky savages forming a line in front, and
+clustering eagerly upon one another behind, took their turns to
+throw at the coveted target; and every time that a spear left the
+womera, or throwing-stick, and missed the mark, a shrill yell
+burst simultaneously from the mass, relieving the excitement
+which had been pent up in every breast. But when a successful
+spear struck down the loaf, trebly wild and shrill was the yell
+that rent the air.</p>
+
+<p>The York and Northam districts afford a vast quantity of land
+suitable for all kinds of grain. The sheep and cattle runs are
+excellent, but they are now fully stocked, and new settlers must
+direct their steps to the southward, the Dale and Hotham
+districts affording scope and verge enough for many a flock and
+herd. Our own sheep were generally kept at a squatting station on
+the Hotham, some sixty or seventy miles south of York. Thither,
+after the races, we drove to inspect the flock. There was no
+road, and only an endless succession of trees, and of gently
+rising and falling country. How my brother and his men used to
+manage to hit upon the site of the location is more than I can
+conjecture. People accustomed to the bush seem to acquire, like
+the natives, the faculty of knowing exactly the direction,
+position, and distance of the spot they want to reach.</p>
+
+<p>On the way, we fell in with one of those extraordinary nests
+constructed by that singular bird called by the natives the Now.
+Mr. Gould's description of a similar bird in New South Wales, the
+Brush Turkey 'Talegalla Lathami' does not exactly tally with that
+which we should give of the Now. His description is as
+follows:&mdash;"For some weeks previous to laying its eggs, the Brush
+turkey collects together an immense mass of vegetable matter,
+varying from two to four cart-loads, with which it forms a
+pyramidal heap; in this heap it plants its eggs about eighteen
+inches deep, and from nine to twelve inches apart. The eggs are
+always placed with the large ends upwards, being carefully
+covered, and are then left to hatch by the heat engendered by the
+decomposition of the surrounding matter. The heaps are formed by
+the labours of several pairs of birds. The eggs are white, about
+three inches and three quarters long by two and a half in
+diameter, and have an excellent flavour."</p>
+
+<p>Of this bird, Professor Owen observes, "On comparing the
+osteology of the 'Talegalla' with that of other birds, it
+exhibits all the essential modifications which characterize the
+gallinaceous tribe; and among the Rasores, it most nearly
+resembles the genera Penelope and Crax."</p>
+
+<p>The Now of Western Australia does not build its nest of
+vegetable substances, but collects together an immense heap of
+earth, sand, and small stones, into the form of a broad cone,
+four or five feet high in the centre, and about ten feet across.
+Directly in the centre it either leaves or subsequently hollows
+out a hole large enough to admit itself, into which it descends
+and deposits its eggs. The powerful summer sun heats the earth
+sufficiently to hatch the eggs, and the young birds come forth
+active and able to provide for themselves. Not the least
+astonishing part to me is, how they manage to scramble out of
+that deep hole. The natives declare that the hen frequently
+visits the nest, and watches the progress of incubation, and then
+when the young ones are hatched, they get upon her back, and she
+scrambles out with her family about her.</p>
+
+<p>This bird is about the size of a pheasant, has long legs, and
+a very deep breast-bone. It runs fast. Each nest is supposed to
+be built by a single bird, but it is believed that other birds
+may occupy them in succeeding seasons.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon of the second day after leaving York, we
+descended into a broad valley, abounding with grass and scattered
+gum-trees. A large flock of sheep were being driven towards the
+bottom of the valley, where we could discern signs of human
+habitation.</p>
+
+<p>On arriving, we found a hut built of piles or stakes
+interwoven with boughs, before the door of which was a fire with
+a large pot upon it, from which a powerful steam arose that was
+evidently very grateful to a group of natives seated around. Two
+families seemed to compose this group, consisting of a couple of
+men, four women, and five or six children of various ages. As we
+drew nigh, the whole party, without rising, uttered a wild scream
+of welcome, accompanied by that loud laughter which always seems
+to escape so readily from this light-hearted and empty-headed
+people.</p>
+
+<p>On descending from the vehicle, and looking in at the hut
+door, we perceived lying in his shirt-sleeves on a couch composed
+of grass-tree tops covered with blankets and a rug made of
+opossum skins, the illustrious Meliboeus himself, with a short
+black pipe in his mouth, and a handsome edition of "Lalla Rookh"
+in his hand. Perceiving us, he jumped up, and expressing his loud
+surprise, welcomed us to this rustic Castle of Indolence.</p>
+
+<p>When a large flock of sheep is sent into the bush, and a
+squatting station is formed, the shepherds take the sheep out to
+pasture every morning, and bring them home at night, whilst one
+of the party always remains at the station to protect the
+provisions from being stolen by the natives. This person is
+called the hut-keeper. His duty is to boil the pork, or kangaroo
+flesh, and provide supper, etc., for the shepherds on their
+return at night. Meliboeus, who superintended this station,
+undertook the duties of cooking and guarding the hut whenever he
+did not feel disposed to go out kangaroo-hunting, or shooting
+wild turkeys or cockatoos. In all things, sports or labours, the
+natives were his daily assistants, and in return for their
+services were rewarded with the fore-quarters of the kangaroos
+killed, and occasionally with a pound or two of flour. There were
+some noble dogs at the station, descendants of Jezebel and Nero;
+and my brother had a young kangaroo, which hopped in and out with
+the utmost confidence, coming up to any one who happened to be
+eating, and insisting upon having pieces of bread given to it.
+Full of fun and spirits, it would sport about as playfully as a
+kitten; and it was very amusing to see how it would tease the
+dogs, pulling them about with its sharp claws, and trying to roll
+them over on the ground. The dogs, who were in the daily habit of
+killing kangaroos, never attempted to bite Minny, who sometimes
+teased them so heartily, that they would put their tails between
+their legs and fairly run away.</p>
+
+<p>The great enemies of the sheep in the Australian colonies are
+the wild-dogs. At York, and in the other settled districts, they
+are very troublesome, and require the shepherd to keep a constant
+lookout. We were therefore much surprised to learn that although
+wild dogs abounded near this squatting station, they never
+attempted to touch our flocks. A sheep was to them a new animal;
+they had yet to learn the value of mutton. A cowardly race, they
+are easily intimidated, and as they have not the art of jumping
+or clambering over a fence, a low sheep-fold will keep them out,
+provided they cannot force their way under the palings or
+hurdles. They cannot bark, and utter only a melancholy howl. The
+bitch generally litters in a hollow tree, and produces four or
+five puppies at a birth.</p>
+
+<p>The production of wool&mdash;the careful acquisition of a good
+flock of well-bred sheep, and the attainment of the highest
+degree of perfection in preparing the fleeces for the English
+market&mdash;appears to us to be the proper ambition of an emigrant to
+the Australian colonies. When ill-health compelled my steps
+hither, it was the intention of myself and brothers to invest our
+capital entirely in sheep; and retiring into the bush for some
+six or seven years, gradually accumulate a large flock, the
+produce of which would soon have afforded a handsome income. It
+has never, however, appeared to be the object of either the Home
+Government or the Local Government of any colony (though
+unquestionably the interest of both) to encourage emigration.
+Settlers have invariably every possible difficulty thrown in
+their way. On arriving in this colony, we found to our
+astonishment that squatting was illegal, and that we would not be
+allowed, as we had designed to carry our goods into the interior
+and form a station upon Government land. No license could at that
+time be obtained, and if we bought the smallest section allowed
+to be sold, which was 640 acres, for as many pounds, it was ten
+to one but we should soon find the district in which it was
+situated insufficient for the run of a large flock, and should
+have to change our quarters again. The consequence was, that we
+were compelled to abandon our project: my brothers took a farm at
+a high rent, and wasted their capital upon objects that could
+never bring in a good return; whilst I (infelix!), instead of
+listening to the gentle bleatings of sheep, and ministering to
+the early comforts of innocent lambs, have been compelled to
+hearken to the angry altercations of plaintiff and defendant, and
+decide upon the amount of damages due to injured innocence when
+the pot had insulted the kettle.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however, limited licenses are granted to persons wishing
+to go as squatters upon Government land; and even before these
+were issued, we were OBLIGED to send our sheep upon Crown lands,
+and form a station, for want of room in the settled
+districts.</p>
+
+<p>Sheep flocks constitute doubtlessly one of the most profitable
+investments for the employment of capital, notwithstanding the
+many obstacles and discouragements still thrown by both
+governments in the way of the wool-grower. They yield a very
+large return TO THOSE WHO ATTEND TO THEM IN PERSON, and who
+confine their attention entirely to that pursuit, growing only
+corn enough for their own consumption.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 21.</h3>
+
+<h4>EXTRACTS FROM THE LOG OF A HUT-KEEPER.</h4>
+
+<p>May 10th.&mdash;Felt rather lonely to-day, in the midst of this
+endless solitude. Sat before the hut-door thinking of Zimmerman
+and his Reflections. Also thought of Brasenose, Oxford, and my
+narrow escape from Euclid and Greek plays. Davus sum, non
+Oedipus. Set to work, and cooked a kangaroo stew for the three
+shepherds.</p>
+
+<p>June 4th.&mdash;We have removed the sheep from the Dale to the
+Avon. We go wandering about with our flocks and baggage like the
+Israelites of old, from one patch of good grass to another. I
+wonder how long it will be before we make our fortunes?</p>
+
+<p>28th.&mdash;K. arrived from York with a supply of flour, pork, tea
+and sugar. Brings no news from England, or anywhere else. Where
+the deuce are all the ships gone to, that we get no letters?
+Moved the station to Corbeding.</p>
+
+<p>29th.&mdash;K. returned to York with his bullock-cart. No chance of
+my being relieved at present. Went out by myself kangarooing. The
+pup, Hector, out of Jezebel, will make a splendid dog. First
+kangaroo fought like a devil; Hector, fearing nothing, dashed at
+him, and got a severe wound in the throat; but returned to the
+charge, after looking on for a few moments. Crossed an immense
+grassy plain, eight or nine miles wide, without a tree upon it.
+Had to carry a kangaroo more than five miles on my back. Wished
+it at Hanover, and twice abandoned it, but returned for it again,
+being so much in want of fresh meat.</p>
+
+<p>30th.&mdash;Spent the day in dreary solitude in the hut. All my
+books have been read, re-read, and re-re-read.</p>
+
+<p>July 1st.&mdash;Went out with the dogs, and caught three kangaroos.
+Passed over some splendid country&mdash;wish it were peopled with
+white humans. How pleasant to have been able to call at a
+cottage, and get a draught of home-brewed! On the contrary, could
+not find even a pond, or a pint of water, and was nearly worried
+to death by sand-flies.</p>
+
+<p>2d.&mdash;Some scabby sheep having got among our flock, have played
+the deuce with it. The scab has regularly broke out. I had rather
+it were the plague or Asiatic cholera, and cleared them all off
+(my own sheep are fortunately at York). Dressing lambs all
+morning&mdash; beastly work. In the afternoon went out with the sheep,
+and left James to mind the hut. Sand-flies infernal.</p>
+
+<p>3d, Sunday.&mdash;Stayed in the hut all day. Smoked sheep-tobacco,*
+all my Turkish being finished. Felt pious, and wrote a short
+sermon, choosing the text at random&mdash;Jeremiah ii. 7: "And I
+brought you into a plentiful country, to eat the fruit thereof
+and the goodness thereof." Read it at night to the shepherds.
+James said it was "slap-up."</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *Coarse pig-tail, used as a decoction for dressing
+the diseased sheep.</p>
+
+<p>4th.&mdash;Went out kangarooing. Killed an immense fellow: when
+standing on his hind legs fighting with me and the dogs, he was a
+foot higher than myself. He ran at me, and nearly gave me a
+desperate dig with his claw, which tore my only good
+hunting-shirt miserably. Smashed his skull for it.</p>
+
+<p>5th and 6th.&mdash;Dressing sheep all day. Out [band of] York
+natives, whom we have hitherto kept with us, are all gone home
+again, leaving me and my three men, with only two guns, among a
+suspicious and treacherous tribe that cannot understand a word we
+say to them. Wish my brothers would come and look after their own
+sheep. It would do E.'s health more good than sitting in Court,
+hearing a set of fools jabber. Sand-flies eat us alive here, and
+the mosquitoes polish our bones.</p>
+
+<p>7th.&mdash;Muston and myself dressed fifty sheep to-day. John out
+with part of the flock.</p>
+
+<p>8th.&mdash;Heavy rain last night. Cannot go on dressing. Did
+nothing all day.</p>
+
+<p>9th.&mdash;Stayed in the hut doing nothing.</p>
+
+<p>10th, Sunday.&mdash;Ditto.</p>
+
+<p>11th.&mdash;Tired of doing nothing. Dressed sheep most of the day.
+Muston out kangarooing; caught three.</p>
+
+<p>12th.&mdash;Cooking. Made a "sea-pie," which was generally
+admired.</p>
+
+<p>August 1st.&mdash;The Doctor arrived from York, driving tandem in
+E.'s trap. He has brought me a parcel of books just come from
+England. Blessings on my dear sister for remembering me. I
+thought myself forgotten by all the world. Sisters (Heaven for
+ever bless them!) are the only people that never forget. News
+from home! How many thoughts come flooding upon me!</p>
+
+<p>2d.&mdash;Last night, I confess, I cried myself to sleep, like a
+great big baby. I am very comfortable and contented so long as I
+receive no letter from home; and yet I am such a fool as to wish
+for them; and when they come I am made miserable for a week
+afterwards. Somehow, they make me feel my loneliness more. I feel
+deserted, forgotten by all but ONE. She says she is constantly
+wishing for me in her rides. They seem to enjoy themselves more
+at home than they used to do, now that we are gone&mdash;always
+picknicking, boating, or forming riding parties. "Fairy"
+continues the favourite&mdash;I always thought she was a good hack.
+"Light-foot," whom I lamed hunting, was obliged to be sold. It
+seems to be a sore subject with the Governor. I wonder how Juno
+has turned out; she was a splendid-looking whelp. I wish they'd
+enter more into particulars when they write. It's ridiculous my
+asking questions, as it will be more than a year before answers
+can arrive. They ought to write about EVERY THING. I cannot bear
+to think to-day of anything but home.</p>
+
+<p>3d.&mdash;The Doctor gone back to York&mdash;sulky about the sheep being
+so bad. Why does he not send us more tobacco and turpentine? Says
+we smoke it all. The Doctor is an&mdash;&mdash;. Promises to send K. next
+week with mercurial ointment; it is therefore useless to waste
+any more tobacco on the sheep&mdash;the stock is low enough as it
+is.</p>
+
+<p>4th.&mdash;Lay all day on my couch, reading "Rose d'Albret." Wish I
+had her here. One wants somebody to sympathize with so
+desperately in the bush.</p>
+
+<p>5th.&mdash;Ditto, ditto.</p>
+
+<p>6th.&mdash;Reading Punch all morning. In the afternoon made a
+damper, baked it, and eat it in company with the others. "Pit a
+cake, pat a cake, baker's man!" etc.</p>
+
+<p>16th.&mdash;Dressing sheep all day with mercurial ointment. Wish
+this job was over. Dreadful work bending one's back all day, and
+rooting amongst the wool for the diseased places.</p>
+
+<p>18th.&mdash;Went out with the dogs, and killed two kangaroos. It
+rained tremendously all the time, and I wish the kangaroos at
+the&mdash;&mdash;. The natives happened to be hunting in a large party,
+driving the game before them; and as I stood in the midst of a
+large plain which they had surrounded on three sides, multitudes
+of kangaroos&mdash;I believe I might say thousands&mdash;of all sizes, came
+rushing past me. The dogs were quite bewildered, and remained at
+my side aghast; and it was several minutes before they recovered
+themselves enough to give chase. The natives took no notice of
+me. In the evening fifty of them came about the hut. We took care
+to show our guns, and I shot a green parrot, sixty yards off,
+just to show them what we could do. They were quite peaceable,
+and danced a corrobery at night.</p>
+
+<p>20th.&mdash;I dressed twenty-five sheep this morning myself. In the
+afternoon William came from York with six hundred more sheep
+(mine among them), which were found to be scabby. More work! This
+is really too bad, thrusting all this cursed business upon me. He
+had been four days coming, and had not lost a single sheep.</p>
+
+<p>21st.&mdash;Went out kangarooing, quite disgusted. Wandered a long
+distance, and had to carry a large buck several miles. Could
+scarcely find my way back, but at length got home (!!) quite
+knocked up, and more and more disgusted with human nature and
+every thing.</p>
+
+<p>22d.&mdash;The Doctor is enjoying himself at York, and E. lives on
+the fat of the land at Perth, whilst I have never tasted anything
+but salt pork and kangaroo for many months, and have nothing to
+drink but tea. I have almost forgotten the taste of a potato. We
+have nothing here but kangaroo and pork, and unleavened bread,
+called damper. I wish I could exchange our bill of fare
+occasionally with that French fellow who complained of having
+"toujours perdrix." He would be the loser, I take it. I could eat
+even perdrix aux choux&mdash;a villanous dish formerly&mdash;but we have no
+more cabbages than partridges to thank God for. I have long been
+obliged to leave off saying "grace after meat;" it really became
+an impious mockery, and was also impolitic and uneconomical, as
+my stomach used to turn against it. I consulted John this morning
+about killing a sheep, as none of them seemed inclined to die
+naturally. John caught at the idea with great quickness. He
+really is an intelligent fellow; and both he and the other poor
+devils are so patient and unrepining, that the Doctor is little
+better than a beast not to order them some mutton occasionally. I
+consider it absolutely necessary for their health. We fixed upon
+one of E.'s sheep, as it looked the fattest; and he being the
+richest, and never coming himself to look at his flock, will not
+care about a few sheep more or less. I'd kill one of my own, but
+they are such a seedy lot. No one is answerable for the murder of
+this sheep but myself, as I hereby confess that I killed it with
+my own hand, and afterwards held a coroner's inquest on the body,
+directing a verdict of "Visitation of Providence" to be recorded
+in the accounts relating to the flock. We had the liver for
+supper. Excellent! never tasted anything half so good.</p>
+
+<p>23d.&mdash;Dined on sheep's head and trotters. (Tea to drink,
+toujours.)</p>
+
+<p>24th.&mdash;Saddle of mutton.</p>
+
+<p>25th.&mdash;Leg.</p>
+
+<p>26th.&mdash;Shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>27th.&mdash;Leg.</p>
+
+<p>28th.&mdash;Shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>29th.&mdash;Finished the sheep, and polished the bones.</p>
+
+<p>[The rest of the Journal runs on much in the same way. This
+specimen will probably be enough for the reader.]</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 22.</h3>
+
+<h4>PELICAN SHOOTING.&mdash;GALES.&mdash;WRESTLING WITH DEATH.</h4>
+
+<p>The large estuary of the Swan affords ample scope for boating
+or sailing in small pleasure-yachts.</p>
+
+<p>Perth water, on the northern bank of which the capital is
+built, extends from two to three miles in length, and about the
+same distance in its broadest part, its form being that of a half
+moon. It is connected with Melville water by an opening of a
+quarter of a mile across. Melville water is some six miles long,
+and from three to four broad; a splendid bay, called Freshwater
+Bay, developes itself at the western extremity of this fine sheet
+of water; and the river, or estuary, here makes a turn at right
+angles, and pursues its course towards the sea between high
+precipitous rocks of marine limestone, which are from six to
+seven hundred yards apart.</p>
+
+<p>My pleasure-boat has enabled me to pass many agreeable hours
+upon this estuary.</p>
+
+<p>At first, especially, it was exceedingly pleasant to make
+expeditions for the purpose of exploring the different bays and
+inlets, which abounded with ducks, swans, and pelicans.</p>
+
+<p>My youngest brother and myself would frequently rise at a good
+hour, and having supplied our little vessel with a stock of
+provisions, and a few bottles of ale or other drinkables, hoist
+the sails, and bear away upon a cruise. The warm dry air,
+tempered by the sea-breeze, made boating exceedingly pleasant;
+and as we often touched at gardens situated at the mouth of the
+Canning, or on the shores of Melville water, and procured a
+basket of grapes, or peaches and melons, we managed to lunch
+luxuriously, having first cast anchor and bathed.</p>
+
+<p>Many readers must have felt the excitement experienced by
+young sportsmen when they have the luck to fall in with some bird
+or animal not previously known to them. Every one remembers the
+delight with which, when a boy, he shot his first wood-pigeon, or
+lay in ambush behind a hedge for an old crow.</p>
+
+<p>When first we beheld a group of huge tall birds, standing
+lazily in the sunshine upon a sand-spit which ran far into
+Melville water, we could scarcely believe our eyes that these
+were really live pelicans; and it was not only with intense
+interest, but with feelings of self-reproach, that we drew nigh
+with hostile intentions to birds which in the days of our
+boyhood, when visiting Mr. Wombwell's menagerie, had filled us
+with awe and reverence, as creatures that were wont to evince the
+depth of parental devotion by feeding their young with their own
+blood.</p>
+
+<p>Our first overt act of hostility against the pelicans was
+unsuccessful. The sea-breeze was blowing strong, and we had to
+beat out against it close-hauled; just as we made the last board,
+and were bearing down upon the enemy, the huge, heavy birds,
+awakening from the siesta "with a start," raised their heads and
+looked about them. Then the foremost began to flap his long
+wings, and lift himself on tip-toe, whilst the others followed
+his example; and soon they were all heavily skimming along the
+surface of the water, trying to launch themselves fairly into the
+upward air; and having at length succeeded, they rose higher and
+higher in wide gyrations. The leader seemed resolved to hide
+himself in the distant blue of the cloudless heavens; and
+upward&mdash;up, up, up&mdash;they continued to mount, going round, and
+round, and round, in lessening circles&mdash;whilst the spectator
+gazed in wonder at the slowly diminishing specks, that were
+almost lost in ether; and at length, moving slowly towards the
+east &mdash;the unknown, mysterious wilderness&mdash;they altogether faded
+away. We have heard of eagles soaring into the sun, but I doubt
+whether even they could soar much higher, or look much grander,
+than the noble pelican of the desert.</p>
+
+<p>The sheets were eased off, the long boom of the graceful
+sliding-gunter (a kind of latteen) sail, stretched far over the
+gun-wale of the boat, which slipped along easily and rapidly
+through the water, the rolling waves heaving up her stern, and
+sending her forward with a gentle impulse. We were opening the
+broad mouth of the Canning, when Meliboeus pointed out two other
+pelicans fishing in-shore on the lee-bow. Gently we edged away
+towards them; Meliboeus standing before the mast with his
+double-barrel ready, and motioning to me how to steer, as the
+main-sail hid the birds from my view.</p>
+
+<p>They perceived us, and began to swim along shore at a rapid
+rate; the water was shoaling fast, and we greatly feared they
+would escape, but still we held on. The majestic birds rose
+slowly from the water, one following the other, and made towards
+the Canning. "I'll let fly at them" cried Meliboeus, in an
+intense whisper, "luff up!&mdash; hard-a-lee!" The helm was jammed
+down, and the sheet hauled in; the boat luffed into the wind, and
+became stationary, only bobbing upon the waves, whilst her sails
+shivered and rattled in the breeze. Meliboeus fired&mdash;and the
+hindmost bird declined gradually towards the water; its long
+wings became fixed and motionless at their widest stretch, and
+slowly it sank down upon its heaving death-bed. Loud shouted the
+sportsman; and momentary envy filled the heart of him who
+steered.</p>
+
+<p>Away goes the boat before the freshening breeze, and soon it
+dashes past the body of the pelican, which is seized by the ready
+Meliboeus, and with great difficulty hauled on board. A shot had
+penetrated to its brain and killed it instantaneously. The wind
+up the Canning was nearly abeam, and we dashed through the deep
+and narrow passage called Hell's Gates, and held on till we came
+to the foot of a steep and rounded hill, Mount Henry. The river
+here turns at right angles, sweeping round the base of the hill,
+and leaving a broad and deep bay called Bull's Creek, to the
+southward. This is a famous spot for ducks and swans, and many a
+pleasant bivouac have I formed near it, waiting for early morn
+when the birds are busy feeding. As we rounded Mount Henry, we
+observed a large slate-coloured bird lazily flying across the
+river ahead of us. The Canning is here about four hundred yards
+broad, widening occasionally to a quarter of a mile. The wind was
+now right aft, and we soon came upon the line of the bird, which
+appeared to be a crested crane. The boom was topped-up in a
+moment, the jib-sheet let fly, and the boat's nose ran crashing
+through the sedges which in this part fringed the bank. The crane
+had alighted on the very summit of a straight and lofty tree, and
+there she sat, unconscious of the danger at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Too much excited to care for any obstacles, and with eyes ever
+fixed upon the game, I tore my way through brambles, thickets,
+water and mud, until with no little difficulty I arrived at
+ground free from underwood. The bird was still sitting patiently
+on her lofty perch, and my heart beat anxiously with hope that I
+should be able to creep within shot. What a moment of interest!
+It is still vivid in the memory, with all its doubts and fears
+and wildly-beating hopes. The crane seemed preparing to fly.
+Death! I felt nearly distracted with apprehension. The interest
+and excitement became intense. I crept from tree to tree, and
+whenever I thought I was observed, stood motionless. My eye-balls
+became dry and hard with incessant gazing. I feared to wink lest
+she should be gone. She extended her wings! I bounded forward.
+She was just off, and barely within reach, as I fired; a single
+number two shot struck her pinion, and down she tumbled to the
+ground with a glorious wallop.</p>
+
+<p>A loud shout from Meliboeus, who had sat in the boat scarcely
+daring to breathe, proclaimed the presence of a witness to my
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>Since then I have shot cranes without emotion or much feeling
+of interest.</p>
+
+<p>Boating, as an amusement, ought only to be followed during the
+summer months, from the 1st of October to the 1st of April. In
+the winter season there are extremely violent gales of wind from
+the north-west, that sometimes last for three days together.
+Their arrival is generally foretold by the rapid falling of the
+barometer; and at Perth it is almost always preceded by the
+rising of the estuary. A singular storm visited the district of
+Australind in the night of the 17th June, 1842. It crossed the
+Leschenault estuary, and entered the forest, making a lane
+through the trees from three to four hundred yards wide. In this
+lane, which extended for many miles, nothing was left standing
+but the stumps of trees; whilst the trees on either wide of the
+land stood up like a wall and were perfectly uninjured. The storm
+in its course, which was in a direct line from N.W. to S.E.
+levelled the trees in the valleys as well as those on the hills.
+Its effects were not like those of a whirlwind, when trees appear
+twisted round, and scattered in every direction; in this lane the
+young healthy trees, which were generally broken off about two or
+three yards from the ground, all lay in the same direction.</p>
+
+<p>Twice have I nearly paid dearly for my rashness in boating. My
+boat was once capsized in a moment in a squall, and Hannibal and
+myself were soused in the water before we knew what had happened.
+I caught hold of the bilge of the boat, and nearly drowned myself
+with laughing at the Son of Amilcar, who was splashing about
+shrieking with terror, and swallowing quarts of salt-water, as
+his open mouth popped every moment under a wave. In vain I called
+to him to come to me, and lay hold of the boat; he could neither
+see nor hear, and would have soon joined his illustrious namesake
+in the Elysian fields, had I not managed to throw the bight of a
+rope round his neck, and towed him within reach, when I held him
+up by the collar of his jacket (ducking him under water
+occasionally to make him cease from howling) until we were
+rescued by a fishing-boat.</p>
+
+<p>One day, the 11th April, 1843, feeling disposed to take my
+book on the water and enjoy the calm air, I embarked by myself&mdash;a
+most unusual occurrence, as I scarcely ever went out alone. What
+little wind there was blew down the estuary, but only gently
+ruffled the waters; and my boat glided noiselessly before it. A
+couple of hours took me to the farther extremity of Melville
+water, and here it fell calm. I now began to feel uncomfortable,
+for the air was close, and dark clouds appeared rising in the
+north-west. The wind began to blow in gusts; a sudden puff,
+curling the waters, would strike the boat and make her heel over
+until her gunwale kissed the wave, as with a sudden start she
+rushed forward under the impulse of the blast. I was now making
+homeward. The heavens became black with angry clouds; the wind
+first sighed and moaned like a reluctant Spirit driven forth to
+fulfil its task of evil, feeling something of remorse at crimes
+foreshadowed and inevitable; and then working itself into fury,
+as though it would stifle thought, and crush out the germ of
+pity, the Wind in its might and rage rushed roaring over the
+waters, making the foam fly before it, and tearing up the face of
+the estuary into rugged lines of wild tumultuous waves. The
+little bark vainly strove to keep her head to the storm, which
+bore her down until the water poured over the gunwale.</p>
+
+<p>It was about six o'clock in the evening, and darkness, hurried
+on prematurely by the tempest, spread suddenly around. The waves,
+as if trying to leap beyond the reach of some internal agony,
+rolled high above my head, as the "Fair Maid of Perth" sank
+hopelessly in the deep channel, with rocking mast and shivering
+sails. But not yet submerged, she rose again, and fronted the
+storm, struggling desperately to reach the northern shore, which
+was not far distant. But the skies grew blacker still; the storm
+became a hurricane; the wind roared so loud that no voice of
+human agony or despair might be heard above its tremendous fury;
+the waves grew higher and mightier, and became rushing hills of
+water, overwhelming, irresistible. To me, quailing in my frail
+bark, in all the consciousness of helplessness and ruin, it
+seemed as though the winds and the waves were really sentient
+beings combining to overwhelm me, and increasing their efforts
+the more I struggled.</p>
+
+<p>This is no fiction that I am relating, but a reality that
+happened to myself, and which it would be impossible to
+exaggerate. Never shall I forget the last tremendous wave that
+came down upon me, impelled by a maddening gust which whirled
+tearing along through the wild air, and scooping its deep passage
+through the waters. In vain was the jib-sheet let fly; in vain
+did I luff into the wind. I could not quit the helm, and
+therefore was unable to lower the sail which in that hurricane
+could not have been got in easily, and in the meantime the boat,
+breaking off from the wind, would have been swamped. I was so
+near the shore that I hoped still to reach it, the wind being
+abeam, in the course of a few minutes. But nothing could
+withstand the last wave and blast. The boat lurched, and broke
+off. Hurled on her beam-ends, the boom was in the water; the
+waves rushed over the side; she struggled bravely, and tried to
+right herself; but after staggering forwards a few seconds, the
+weight of the in-rushing water bore her down, and she slowly fell
+over on her side. The sensation was by no means pleasant. I felt
+her going, without being able to prevent it. I glanced around for
+aid or hope; but there was neither. I could see nothing but
+waves, and hear nothing but the roaring blast. The shore was
+close to me, but the high waves, and the darkness of the
+hurricane, prevented my discerning even the tops of the trees. As
+the boat capsized, I kicked off my shoes and threw off my coat
+and waistcoat, and seizing the main-sheet, let myself down in the
+water, trying to find bottom, but there was none within
+reach.</p>
+
+<p>I struck out towards the shore, but the ablest swimmer that
+ever swam could have made no progress against that sea, and I
+could scarcely swim at all.</p>
+
+<p>I scrambled back to the boat, which now lay on her side, level
+with the surface. On getting upon her, you may conceive&mdash;but no!
+you cannot&mdash;the horror of the moment, as I felt her gradually go
+down &mdash;sink, sinking beneath me. All now seemed over. My time had
+arrived; my last moment was come. I collected my thoughts, and
+prepared for it.</p>
+
+<p>I did not feel so much terror as I should have anticipated in
+such a scene. Death seemed inevitable, and I nerved myself, and
+prayed. All the past did NOT press upon me at this moment, in
+this death- struggle, as some readers may imagine. I thought not
+of my sins, nor of my friends, nor of time misspent and work left
+undone&mdash;my whole mind was absorbed in the sense of DEATH and
+FUTURITY. The glances, rather than the thoughts which shot across
+my soul, seemed like revealings of immortality. My sensations
+were mixed of horror and hope; the CHANGE from the old to the new
+Life seemed beginning within me. It might have been excess of
+terror, but I did not feel terrified. I felt that all was over,
+and there was no room for the anguish that arises from doubt. All
+struggling was vain, and though in tumult and horror, I yet felt
+resigned. The World of Time was past, and new being was at
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the memory which I must ever bear of the hour when
+(yet vigorous and full of Life) I was held in the arms of
+Death.</p>
+
+<p>The boat went down. The waves rushed over me; the enemy held
+me by the throat, and seemed to press me into the opening grave.
+Even as the light faded from my eyes, and the Spirit waited for
+that quick, sharp touch of the dart which should free it from the
+bonds of mortal life, I perceived the stem of the boat rising
+slowly out of the waves, whilst the stern was borne down by my
+weight.</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively I swam forward, and got upon another part of the
+boat. Down it went again; and as the water dashed against my
+face, I saw the stern now rising up, whilst the stem plunged down
+into the depths below. I scrambled amidships; the sea and the
+wind struck her, and she rolled heavily over, righting herself
+for a moment, with her mast and sail erect; but soon she lay on
+her larboard side, deep in the water. I had been washed off her,
+but clung to the main-sheet, and so got back again. I now held on
+to the side with one hand, whilst I managed to strip off all my
+clothes except my shirt and flannel waistcoat, first taking my
+knife out of my pocket. With this I tried to cut away the stays
+which held the mast in its place, hoping that it would then fall
+out, and relieve the boat of the sails which weighed her down so
+low in the water. Most fortunately I had not sand-ballast, in
+tarred bags, as most of our pleasure-boats had, but water-ballast
+in breakers, which now proved no additional burthen to the boat.
+It was also fortunate that she was built partly of deal, and had
+only her lower streaks of jarra wood, which does not float.</p>
+
+<p>The blade of the knife, which was only a pen-knife, soon
+broke, and I was obliged to give up the attempt to remove the
+sails. Still the hurricane blew on, wild and terrible as ever;
+the spray washed over me like rain; the waves dashed me
+repeatedly from the boat, which was whirled and tossed about in a
+strange manner; sometimes rolling completely over, sometimes
+going down head, and sometimes stern foremost, I had to scramble
+from part to part, and exercise a good deal of agility in saving
+myself from being struck by the gunwale, or by the boom and sail,
+as they rose from the water and fell back again.</p>
+
+<p>And now I could see but small prospect of being eventually
+saved. The only chance was that the boat would drift, in the
+course of time, across the estuary, here nearly four miles broad.
+Then I tried, and for a long time vainly, to ascertain whether
+she drifted at all. The anchor, with about five-and-twenty feet
+of cable, had doubtless fallen out, and the boat was probably
+stationary. Night had set in, and it was too dark to distinguish
+even the shore with its forest of trees. These gales sometimes
+continue three days, and I knew it would be impossible to exist
+many hours immersed in water. I dreaded lest I should become
+benumbed and unable to hold on to the boat.</p>
+
+<p>In order to keep up circulation as much as possible, I shouted
+aloud, and rubbed my breast and thighs with my disengaged
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Some dark object was on the water near me. It moved; it came
+quickly towards me. I could just discern that it was a whale-boat
+containing several men. It had no sails or oars, yet it flew
+before the blast. I shouted and screamed as it went by, not
+twenty yards from me; and the men turned their heads and waved
+their arms, and doubtless answered, but the gale roared with
+unabated fury, the waves intercepted them from my sight, and I
+could not hear their voices.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *These men were about a mile and a half astern of
+me, when the hurricane began, and tried to pull in shore; but
+just as they thought to have reached it, one of their oars broke,
+and being now helpless, they were obliged to scud before the
+wind. By good fortune they were carried up the Canning, where
+they remained all night.</p>
+
+<p>The moon had now risen, and the clouds were partially
+dispersed, so that I could at length distinguish the woods on the
+weather-shore; and I could see the weary waste of waters over
+which I must drift before I could possibly be saved.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the wind blew with lessened violence, and I could
+sit upon the submerged bilge of the boat, and consider my state
+and prospects. After long observation, I felt assured that the
+boat did really drift, but it was very slowly; and I feared that
+as we approached the other shore, her anchor must inevitably
+bring her up in twenty-five feet water, and that nothing could
+save me from perishing of cold. It never occurred to me during
+this memorable night, that when I set sail in the afternoon I had
+shortened the cable to about five feet in length, in order the
+more easily to trip the anchor. This was one of the
+circumstances, providentially ordered, that tended to save my
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Some miles down the estuary I could distinguish a light in the
+house at Point Walter, high placed on a steep bank; there two of
+my friends were at that moment carousing, whilst I was being
+buffetted by waves and tempest, and fearing that the saturated
+sails and heavy wood at length would sink the unfortunate boat to
+the bottom. I yet could scarcely hope to escape; my mind was
+still made up to die, and I tranquilly awaited the event.</p>
+
+<p>The moon had now made half of her journey across the heavens;
+the wind had moderated, and I redoubled my exertions to keep off
+the cold by shouting and rubbing myself. My flannel-shirt was
+another instrument of safety to me. It felt warm to my body
+though the waves poured continually over it.</p>
+
+<p>The outline of the forest on the lee side of the estuary was
+now distinguishable, and hope would have been rife within me but
+for the expectation of finding myself anchored fast at a fatal
+distance from the shore.</p>
+
+<p>Every thing appeared so indistinct in the gloom of the night,
+that I could not guess how far I was from land; and it was with
+surprise, as well as delight and gratitude, that I felt the boat
+bump against the sand. Oh that first bump, which told me of
+safety and deliverance after five hours of incessant peril! Shall
+I ever forget the thrill of delight which it gave me? I could
+scarcely credit my senses, and put down my benumbed feet with
+doubt; but they rested on the sand&mdash; real, hard, blessed terra
+firma! and without delay I waded through the water to the
+beach.</p>
+
+<p>The wind had now fallen, and it began to rain.</p>
+
+<p>I was on the edge of a thick wilderness of forest, without any
+house within reach&mdash;the nearest was some miles distant, and to
+reach it in the dark, and without shoes, through swamps and
+thickets was almost impossible.</p>
+
+<p>The Canning River was about half-a-mile from me, and on the
+farther side of it was a settler's house; but though I might
+reach the bank of the river, I could not hope to make myself
+heard half a mile off, amid the howling of the dying storm, and
+by people fast asleep. There was nothing for it, therefore, but
+to make myself as comfortable as possible, and remain where I was
+until morning. Fortunately, I recollected having seen the ruins
+of a goat-shed not far distant, when I had landed on this spot
+with my gun two or three months before. With some difficulty, and
+some pain to my feet from thorns, I discovered this relic of a
+hovel. Part of the roof was yet entire, and sheltered me from the
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>The door was lying inside, and this I made my bed. Then,
+having wrung out my shirt and flannel-waistcoat, and returned
+thanks to the Almighty for preserving a life not, perhaps,
+sufficiently prized by the owner, I lay down completely exhausted
+and fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>Awaking at daylight, I started off through the woods, stiff
+and hoarse with cold, but light of heart; and having reached the
+Canning, succeeded at last in making myself heard by the farmer
+opposite, who took me across in his boat, breakfasted me, and
+lent me his clothes, and finally conveyed me to Perth, where I
+found my friends preparing to go in search of my body.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 23.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE DESERT OF AUSTRALIA.&mdash;CAUSE OF THE HOT
+WINDS.&mdash;GEOLOGY.</h4>
+
+<p>I intend in this chapter* to give an explanation of the cause
+of the hot-winds of Australia; to throw out a suggestion on the
+most likely mode of prosecuting discovery towards the interior;
+and to conclude with a slight sketch of the geology of the
+colony. Before doing this I shall give a brief account of a
+journey made by myself and Mr. Maxwell Lefroy in search of the
+inland sea so often talked of, and which a native promised to
+show to us; so large, he said, that when he stood on one shore he
+could not see the other. Although this sea turned out to be a
+pure fiction, the journey was not entirely useless, nor
+altogether uninteresting. As this sea was probably not more than
+200 miles distant from York, according to the reckoning of the
+native, who said it was "ten sleeps off," I judged that one
+month's provision would be sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *This chapter I owe to Mr. Henry Landor.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, Mr. Lefroy and myself started on the expedition,
+on horseback, taking with us a native boy, and a pack-horse
+loaded with flour, tea, and sugar, and other necessaries. It will
+be sufficient to state that we pursued a south-east course,
+crossing the Hotham, the Williams, and the Arthur rivers, and
+traversing an indifferent country, but in many places fit for
+sheep-grazing, before we came to the lake, or sea, of which we
+were in search. When we arrived at it, we were disappointed to
+find it not more than six miles long, although the natives, with
+their usual amount of exaggeration, had increased it to an
+illimitable ocean. Before descending from the high land to the
+plain in which the lakes are situated, we caught a distant
+glimpse of what appeared to be a grand and broad river, pursuing
+a winding course through a magnificently wooded valley, with its
+clear bright waters dwindling in the distance to a silvery
+thread. A nearer examination, however, dispelled the illusion,
+and the beautiful river turned out to be nothing more than a
+chain of shallow lakes, situated in a woody valley; and only in
+very wet seasons flowing from one to another.</p>
+
+<p>We determined to follow the chain of lakes eastward, so long
+as our provisions should last, or as long as our horses could
+find food for themselves. We proceeded east for six days, passing
+numberless lakes, and observing that the chain divided, one
+branch of lakes running north-east, and the other due east. We
+followed the latter until we came to a lake called Dambeling, by
+far the largest we had seen, being about fifteen miles long by
+seven or eight wide, with a good sheep country on its northern
+bank, and a river, which we called the Lefroy, falling into its
+eastern end. The river was about thirty yards wide, with a clayey
+bed, and large fresh-water pools, and flowed from the east,
+through the worst country we had seen, it being an apparently
+endless desert, and level to the horizon. We went one day's
+journey into this inhospitable country, but the want of food for
+our horses, and our own unprepared state, prevented us from
+penetrating farther. On our return, we went for two or three days
+north, on the outskirts of the desert, before we turned westward
+on our way back to York.</p>
+
+<p>The only land we crossed in this expedition was situated on
+the head of the Hotham and Williams. The area of this country is
+undoubtedly very great, but its average character is below the
+York district, although it is well adapted for sheep-grazing.</p>
+
+<p>But the most interesting feature is the barren and desolate
+country to the east of Lake Dambeling, doubtless a continuation
+of the same sterile country seen by Mr. Roe, the
+surveyor-General, east of York many years previously; and
+probably from Mr. Eyre's observation, extending quite down to the
+southern coast. We had no means of ascertaining the width of this
+dreary country, but we did not think it could be impassably wide
+because the river Lefroy appeared to come across it. This river,
+in a geographical point of view, may be important, as the
+character of its bed, without trees, more water-worn than the
+other rivers of the colony, its size, and the direction from
+which it comes, render it exceedingly interesting to determine
+how it is supplied. The sandy nature of the country on its banks,
+and for many miles east, and the flatness of the country,
+preclude the idea that it receives its supply of water from the
+immediately surrounding district. It must either be supplied by a
+country of a far better character to the eastward, or it is the
+outlet of another and larger lake far in the interior. From the
+natives we could learn nothing but that there were no kangaroos,
+no opossums, and no water to the east; but as their knowledge
+never extends 100 miles, and they would tell any lie to avoid
+going where they had no inclination to go, their opinions are
+worthless. It might be worth the while of the colony to send
+forth another expedition to determine the boundaries of this
+desolate country, as it is not improbable that a practicable rout
+might be discovered to South Australia by means of the river and
+lakes.</p>
+
+<p>The outlet of the lakes is into the river Beaufort, and
+possibly also into the Gordon. There is no doubt that in
+exceedingly wet seasons the whole valley is one continuous
+stream, when all the lakes would be united and present a truly
+magnificent appearance; but as the area of evaporation is so
+large, and the banks of many of the lakes are high, the quantity
+of rain must be enormous before the valley becomes filled with a
+running river. Lake Barbering, where the valley divides, has a
+steep shore, with three distinct marks of former water-levels.
+All the lakes have two or more shores, showing either a decrease
+of rain or an elevation of the land itself, probably both.
+Between the present and ancient shores there is a belt of
+swamp-oaks and tea-trees, which show that some length of time has
+elapsed since the water left its old levels.</p>
+
+<p>The water to fill these large reservoirs must come down the
+river Lefroy, as the neighbouring country is too sandy to supply
+it in sufficient quantities.</p>
+
+<p>No question in geography has presented a wider field for
+conjecture than the much-debated one of the nature of the
+interior of Australia. Is it desert, or water, or pasture?
+inhabited, or destitute alike of animal and vegetable life? The
+explorations of Captain Sturt, and the journey of Mr. Eyre, would
+incline us to believe that the country is one vast sterile waste;
+but the journey of the latter is worth nothing as an attempt to
+expose the nature of the interior, since he never left the coast.
+It certainly shows how much suffering the human frame can endure;
+and whilst, as illustrative of Australian geography, it is
+valueless, it is highly creditable to the energies of the
+traveller.</p>
+
+<p>The expedition of Captain Sturt has shown that to the north of
+South Australia the country is chiefly desert, totally incapable
+of supporting animal life: while the geological specimens of that
+traveller prove that the rich mineral strata of South Australia
+extend far beyond the pastoral boundaries of the colony. A
+reference to the journey of Mr. Lefroy and myself, from York to
+the south-east, will show that there exists a low level country
+running far beyond our farthest eastern point, which may afford
+abundance of water and pasture for any future expedition
+proceeding in that direction.</p>
+
+<p>An expedition starting from these lakes in the BEGINNING OF
+WINTER, so as to take advantage of the first supplies of water,
+might advance far enough into the interior to discover at least
+the possibility of proceeding before the succeeding summer would
+render it impossible to return; for the lakes alone would not be
+sufficient to ensure a supply of good drinkable water during the
+summer, as they generally become quite salt long before summer is
+over. It would be necessary to find a good deep water-hole for
+the party to remain at during the dry season, and from which they
+could push out small lateral expeditions as a sort of foundation
+for the next season's main advance. Expeditions in Australia
+require great circumspection. It is not the most rapid traveller
+who will get the farthest, but the most prudent and cautious. I
+consider it quite possible to get across the island, either to
+South Australia or to Port Essington. Most probably it would be
+easier to get to the latter than the former.</p>
+
+<p>From observations made on the rains and winds in Western
+Australia, and careful inquiries on the same subjects when I was
+in South Australia, and on a comparison of the two, I am inclined
+to believe that the climates of the two colonies assimilate. A
+wet winter in one is a wet winter in the other. Both receive
+their rains when the wind blows from the north-west to
+south-west. Thus the rains from South Australia pass from the
+Indian Ocean over Western Australia, and the whole island, to
+South Australia. The hot wind of Western Australia blows from the
+north-east; and, in fact, the hot wind of both colonies comes
+from the same portion of the great island. That which is the hot
+wind in summer in Western Australia is the cold wind in winter;
+and the same in South Australia. The reason is obvious. It is
+evident, from the fact that South Australia receives its rain
+from the Indian Ocean, that there are no mountains in the
+interior of sufficient elevation to intercept the clouds; that
+there are no mountains in the interior, is shown also by the
+absence of rivers emptying themselves into the ocean. From the
+observation of Mr. Lefroy and myself, we were led to suppose that
+the interior consisted for the most part of immense clay plains;
+the lower portion of these plains being hollowed into the large
+shallow lakes we meet with in our journey. Where the country is a
+little more elevated the plains are sand instead of clay. In
+winter these plains are covered with water, as the drifted leaves
+on the bushes testify; and the marks of water on the surface are
+very evident. Now, when the winter winds pass over these immense
+masses of water, the great evaporation renders them intensely
+cold; and they arrive in the colony laden, (if I may so
+unphilosophically express it,) with cold, caused by rapid
+evaporation. In summer these very plains are equally the cause of
+the hot wind; for when the rains cease, and the sun acquires his
+summer power, the water is quickly evaporated, the clay becomes
+baked, and the heat is reflected from the hard heated surface
+quite sufficiently to raise a thermometer to 110 degrees in the
+shade. The wind is now driven towards the colony laden with heat
+from the cracked, baked, clay-plains in the interior; and thus it
+is, that at different seasons the same country produces such
+opposite effects. But although the general state of the interior
+is barren and unproductive, as I imagine, I do not suppose that
+it is entirely so. I believe there are many cases of good pasture
+land in the midst of this sterile country; fertile spots, small
+when compared with the vast area of indifferent country around
+them, but large in themselves. And these pastoral oases are more
+cultivated than the worthless land amid which they are placed. In
+these patches of good land there are always water-holes to be
+found, and water-courses well marked, conducting the surplus
+waters to the lakes in the clay plains. That there are such
+fertile spots in the Australian deserts is certain, for I have
+seen many of them myself, and they are mentioned also by the
+South Australian travellers. The similarity in most respects of
+vegetation in Western Australia and in South Australia, and the
+identity of many plants, proves also a country of good quality
+lying between the two colonies; by which such plants were
+conveyed from one country to the other. Thus, the so called
+white-gum is the same tree in both colonies; the mungat, or
+raspberry-jam tree, is common to both; and also to the plains of
+New England, in New South Wales, where (I understand) it acquires
+a larger size than in Western Australia. The manch is another
+tree also common to the two colonies; so is the black-wattle. The
+grasses are many of them alike. But this similarity is not
+confined only to the vegetable kingdom. The birds and animals are
+many of them also alike. The white and the black cockatoo are
+common to the three colonies, as are many kinds of the smaller
+parrots, the kangaroo, and the kangaroo-rat, the numbat, the
+opossum, the native cat, and many others. And this is not only
+true of animals of great locomotion, or birds of long flight, as
+the pigeon or cockatoo, but equally so of the opossum, the quail,
+and the wild-turkey. The quail and the turkey are birds chiefly
+found in grassy lands, and neither fly to any great distance: at
+least the quail never does; the turkey will when much disturbed,
+but not otherwise. Also the water animals, as the tortoise, are
+to be found in both colonies; but not the platypus, which is
+confined to the country east of the great river Murrumbidgee and
+its tributary the Darling.</p>
+
+<p>The natives are also alike in feature and habits, evidently
+the same race, with language similar in character, in both
+countries, with similar weapons and methods of procuring food;
+having also similar customs and laws.</p>
+
+<p>Now, I infer from these facts, that the population, animal as
+well as vegetable, proceeded from one country to the other; and
+that many forms of vegetation in the two colonies possess no
+greater difference, than the difference of soil and latitude may
+account for; and that it may therefore be possible for men to
+find a route from one country to the other, by carefully noting
+and following the lay of the water-courses, the direction of the
+oases, and the nature of the geology of the country; for that no
+impenetrable desert exists between the countries, is evident from
+the passage of vegetables and animals from the one to the other.
+What will be the benefit, some one may ask, when such a route is
+discovered? Why, independent of the knowledge gained to
+geography, there will be the great practical good of opening the
+boundless pastures of Western Australia to the flocks of the
+already overstocked lands of the other colonies. To Western
+Australia the gain would be great; and to South Australia it
+would be equally advantageous, as it would maintain the value of
+stock there, which will rapidly fall when no more land can be
+found fit for occupation. Even with all the rapid increase of
+population which the great mineral abundance of that colony will
+continue to create, sheep will multiply faster than the
+population, until they become of the same low value as in New
+South Wales, where, if there be no run sold with them, they are
+not worth more than the value of the wool on their backs.</p>
+
+<p>It is therefore most desirable that attempts should be made to
+find a stock route from the western to the eastern coasts.</p>
+
+<p>Intra-tropical Australia is more abundantly supplied with
+rivers, and of a larger magnitude, than any out of the tropics,
+the Murray alone excepted; and doubtless a journey across the
+island within the tropic would present fewer difficulties than
+one direct from Perth to Sydney, or Adelaide; but, excepting for
+the advancement of geographical knowledge, there is no object to
+be gained by such a journey. The best way is along the valley of
+the lakes, guided as the party proceeds, by the nature of the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>I earnestly hope that an expedition will be sent to make some
+effort to penetrate the great extent of an unknown country, lying
+east of Western Australia, as it is an object well worth the
+attention of the Government, or of the Geographical Society.</p>
+
+<p>The geology of Western Australia is not very interesting, as
+the country is entirely of primary formation to the east of the
+Darling range of hills: the granite every where crowning the
+summit of the hills, and the immense plains consisting entirely
+of granitic sand, or of hard clay containing nodules of primary
+rocks. This formation, which does not in Western Australia
+consist of the stratified primary series, as in South Australia,
+cannot be expected to yield the abundant mineral riches that the
+strata of South Australia exhibit. Probably gold may be met with,
+and copper and lead may be found in the Koikunenup Range, which
+is not entirely a granitic range, but is, I believe, capped with
+clay slate. The level country lying between the Darling hills and
+the sea is of a much more recent formation; but has not been
+sufficiently examined to determine its age precisely, though I
+imagine it will be found to belong to the pliocene tertiary
+formations. Certainly it contains many shells of species now
+living in the neighbouring ocean; and the limestone ridge running
+parallel with and close to the coast, and which in the colony is
+falsely called magnesian limestone, contains a great proportion
+of modern shells. The country lying between the hills and the sea
+contains many beds of lignite; one of which, at Nornalup, on the
+south coast, is more than two feet thick, and shows itself on the
+face of the cliff on the north shore of the estuary. Following
+the line of coast in any part of Australia, the geologist cannot
+fail to be much struck by the evident marks of a gradual
+elevation of the land; he will every where see the marks of the
+sea on the cliffs, at a considerable height above its present
+level. At Cape Chatham, on the south coast, these sea-marks are
+visible 300 feet above the present level of the ocean; and can be
+seen on the face of the rocks, in the hills at some distance from
+the coast. On my journey to Nornalup, I discovered a lake
+containing shells in abundance, which appeared to me, and were
+also considered by the late Dr. Hinds (Surgeon, Royal Navy) a
+skilful conchologist, to be a littoral species, common to the
+shores of various parts of the globe. These shells, of no
+interest in themselves, become excessively interesting as
+evidence of a connexion once existing between this lake and the
+ocean, from which it is now at least forty miles distant. This
+lake is not more than 100 feet above the present level of the
+ocean, and entirely separated from any other lake or river. How,
+therefore, could these marine shell-fish be living in a salt
+lake, unless they had continued to exist there from the period
+when it was a portion of the ocean itself? That many generations
+of them had lived and died in this spot, was quite certain, from
+the abundance of dead shells on the shores of this very
+interesting lake. Nor is the evidence of elevation confined to
+the coast; all the lakes seen by Mr. Lefroy and myself have
+ancient shores much higher than the present waters ever reach.
+The same evidence of elevation is to be seen in the harbour of
+Sydney, and in Spencer's Gulf, in South Australia. At the head of
+the latter the shingle and rolled-stones clearly show that the
+gulf has formerly run much farther inland: probably to Lake
+Torrens, the superfluous waters of which are now discharged into
+the head of the gulf. The whole plain of the Murrumbidgee has
+been, at not a very distant date, beneath the ocean; as the
+Madrepores, and other fossils in the limestone cliffs of the
+river testify. Earthquakes have been felt in South Australia
+since its settlement. A very intelligent gentleman there told me
+that he had noted eleven since his arrival; quite perceptible
+enough to leave no doubt as to their character. Probably the
+country was elevated at each shock, in a slight degree; and
+perhaps before the volcano of Mount Gambier became extinct the
+elevatory movements were more rapid. Be that as it may, I am
+quite convinced that they are going on at this moment; and it
+would be well to make marks on the cliffs in various parts of the
+coast, at the present sea-level, in order to determine, after the
+lapse of years, the rate of elevation.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 24.</h3>
+
+<h4>COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.</h4>
+
+<p>We have already observed that a vast deal of discontent
+prevails in colonies. With all the natural advantages of a
+fruitful soil and a heavenly climate, colonists are always
+dissatisfied with their position; because, in a pecuniary point
+of view, they are always poor. And why are they so? The answer is
+a startling one. The excess of their abundance is the first cause
+of their poverty; the instability of their government, the
+second. They possess more than they can dispose of, and are borne
+down by the weight of their possessions. Place the markets of
+England and the labour of Ireland within their reach, and they
+would become millionaires were they to cease to be colonists; but
+so long as they continue to be colonists, governed by a Power
+altogether distinct from that which rules over Englishmen in
+their native land, they will continue to be helpless, oppressed,
+and poverty-stricken.</p>
+
+<p>They alone, among British subjects, are living under an
+absolute Monarchy; the caprices of which render property insecure
+and of uncertain value; neutralizing industry, paralyzing
+enterprise, and crushing with fatal authority the energies and
+the spirits of the people.</p>
+
+<p>In the absolute recklessness of colonial rule, no sooner does
+private enterprise raise its head, and throw out the first
+feelers on the way to wealth, than a watchful government steps
+forward, and careful only to secure gain to itself, crushes out
+(in the first feebleness of existence,) the germ of vitality.</p>
+
+<p>In all new countries in which the sources of wealth are
+imperfectly developed, the expense of applying the means
+necessary to their development is so enormous, as to leave but
+small profit to the speculator. Labour is always dear in new
+countries, where there is so large an outlet afforded to the
+labourer to escape from the toils of servitude, and become
+himself an occupant or an owner of the soil. All that he gains by
+the exchange is an ideal independence; which is, unhappily, but
+too attractive to the uneasy spirit of modern improvement.</p>
+
+<p>The prosperity of a colony is the aggregate of individual
+wealth. the prosperous advance of the colonist, is, therefore,
+the first duty of a superintending Government. But the first aim
+of that watchful guardian is ever to wring from the settler as
+much as may be extracted by pressure. The lowest demand for land,
+which would be dear at half-a-crown an acre, is eight times that
+amount. No sooner does the settler, by his science or industry,
+discover some lucrative opening, than government steps in with
+its restrictions, its taxes and duties, and at once cuts down the
+budding promise. If the design be to bring to light the mineral
+wealth of the country, royalties are immediately imposed; and no
+chance of profit is left to the speculator when the rents are
+raised according to the probabilities of success. It is the same
+with all other speculations; no one will embark, even in a
+timber-trade, when he knows that he is placing his capital at the
+mercy of a grasping and short-sighted Government.</p>
+
+<p>How much more lucrative, and how much more statesman-like
+would it prove, were our rulers to display as much good policy as
+the peasants of Norfolk, who do not pluck their geese until they
+be well feathered! Colonists, like cabbages, should be allowed to
+acquire the necessary strength, and attain the proper dimensions,
+before they be seriously operated upon. You might then cut and
+nick them with reasonable hope of their sprouting forth anew.</p>
+
+<p>But the worst evil of an absolute Government arises from the
+destruction in the minds of the people of all faith and
+confidence in its truth and honour.</p>
+
+<p>One Secretary of State countermands the edicts of his
+predecessor; and as the Executive Government of a colony is
+composed of the paid servants of the Crown, and is merely the
+machine of the Secretary for the time being, the ordinances which
+it promulgates are distinguished by only one uniform feature&mdash;the
+announcement of broken promises and betrayed faith.</p>
+
+<p>The inhabitants of colonies, disappointed and deceived, have
+no trust in their rulers, and dare not invest their capital in
+enterprises which may be ruined in a moment by an arbitrary
+edict. At one period, for instance, they may have been induced,
+upon the faith of the Government, to purchase remission tickets,
+which entitle the owner to a certain quantity of land wherever he
+may choose to select it. A succeeding Government confines this
+right of selection within certain narrow limits; whilst another
+decides that the holder shall be allowed to purchase with these
+tickets only land that is entirely valueless. At one period men
+are encouraged to attempt the production of colonial spirits; but
+no sooner is a large amount of capital expended, than it is made
+illegal to distil. Some parties are permitted to purchase land at
+a distance from the capital: and after years of toil and expense
+are deprived of all protection from the Government, and allowed
+no compensation for its withdrawal.</p>
+
+<p>But it were vain to attempt to enumerate the acts of broken
+faith on the part of an absolute Government, from whose decree
+there is no appeal, and from whose oppression no redress. The
+moral evil to colonies is crushing and fatal.</p>
+
+<p>The best informed among English statesmen know nothing of
+colonies: but their hardihood in legislating for them is,
+unhappily, equal to their ignorance. It was only last year (1846)
+that the bill for the government of Western Australia was
+(according to newspaper report) opposed in the House of Lords by
+a noble duke, on the ground, as his grace alleged in an animated
+and interesting speech, of the wretchedly immoral state of the
+colony, arising from the system of transportation, which so
+deluged the country with convicts that it was now a perfect hell
+upon earth! A noble lord, then Under-secretary for the Colonies,
+apologised, with the best grace he could assume, for this
+lamentable state of things, and assured the noble duke that the
+Government was quite aware of the evil, and was turning its
+attention to a remedy for it. Had any one of the noble lords
+present known anything at all about the subject of the debate, he
+might in a few words have relieved the anxiety of the Government,
+by informing it that Western Australia is not, and never has
+been, a penal settlement&mdash;that convicts are not sent thither for
+punishment; that even a single bush-ranger has never been known
+within the territory; and that, in the words of an Adelaide
+journal, "it is as free from stain as any of the rural districts
+of England."</p>
+
+<p>Another Australian colony (that of Port Phillip) calls for the
+attention of Government more imperatively, perhaps, than any
+other of these settlements. At present an appendage to Sydney,
+but situated at a most inconvenient distance from that capital,
+it is compelled to remit thither between fifty and one hundred
+thousand pounds annually for rates, taxes, and duties, not a
+tithe of which ever finds its way back again. It is deprived of
+roads, bridges, and all public works of importance, solely
+because it is friendless at home, voiceless and unrepresented.
+Might Englishmen be made to feel that interest in colonies which
+in general they are ever ready to accord to the unfortunate, they
+would glow with indignation at the wrongs, the injustice, and the
+oppression under which the inhabitants of distant settlements
+bend in silence. "If you don't keep your colonies in a state of
+dependence," are the memorable words of Lord Stanley, in May,
+1846, "of what use are they?" Such has ever been the
+narrow-minded and unstatesman-like policy of the British
+Government. And yet even the infant colonies of the empire,
+though fettered, cramped, and swathed like the young progeny of
+the Esquimaux, are useful still to the Mother Country. They
+afford the best market for her produce; and when freed from the
+pressure of their bonds, like plants released from the torturing
+confinement of their earthenware prison, and allowed to extend
+their roots abroad in the free soil of Nature, they will display
+new strength and viridity, and bring forth fruit in increased
+abundance. Her Majesty's present Secretary of State for the
+Colonies (Earl Grey) entered upon his office with truly liberal
+and right-minded views, which, we trust, will be carried out into
+operation wherever found necessary and practicable. "There can be
+no doubt," said his Lordship in the House of Lords, shortly
+before taking office, "that in our colonial empire we have the
+advantage of possessing warm friends and allies in all quarters
+of the world, who, commanding great natural resources, are united
+in heart and soul to defend our trade and our interests, and to
+take part with us in all contests against our enemies. We have
+garrisons of the cheapest kind in every quarter of the universe.
+On the other hand, the colonies have this inestimable
+advantage&mdash;they have the glory and security to be derived from an
+intimate connexion with the greatest, the most civilized, and the
+most powerful nation on the face of the earth. They have the
+glory&mdash;and they feel it to be a glory&mdash;of calling themselves
+British subjects, and feeling that in defence of their interests
+and best rights, the power and might of this country are ready at
+any moment to be called forth and exercised in their behalf. This
+is a substantial advantage of the most important kind to the
+colonies; and they are fully sensible of it. And if with this we
+pursue a liberal policy, and extend to them the dearest privilege
+of Englishmen&mdash;THE PRIVILEGE OF SELF-GOVERNMENT, AND DO NOT
+VEXATIOUSLY INTERMEDDLE WITH THEIR INTERNAL AFFAIRS; in short, if
+we pursue a liberal policy towards them, both commercially and
+politically, we shall bind them to us with chains which no power
+on earth may break, and the connexion between the parent state
+and those great dependencies may continue until they far exceed
+us in population."</p>
+
+<p>These are generous sentiments and profound truths, and they
+have shed the bright beams of Hope over that vast colonial empire
+to which they refer.</p>
+
+<p>In legislating for colonies, let it not be forgotten that one
+of the chief drawbacks to their prosperity is the want of
+confidence in the stability and permanency of existing
+regulations. There can be no success, and there can be no safety,
+whilst those regulations and laws are liable to the influence of
+peculiar views or individual caprice. It is the people
+themselves, for whose government the laws are intended, who
+should be allowed to impose, to modify, or to expunge them.</p>
+
+<p>The predominating evil in colonies is THE WANT OF CONFIDENCE
+AND FAITH IN THE GOVERNMENT.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 25.</h3>
+
+<h4>ONE OF THE ERRORS OF GOVERNMENT&mdash;ADVENTURE OF THE
+BRAMBLE.</h4>
+
+<p>It has ever been considered one of the first principles of
+good government, that a frequent and ready communication and
+intercourse should be maintained between the ruling power and the
+possessions subject to its authority. The first act of Roman sway
+was ever to lay down good lines of road through the conquered
+country; and nothing has tended so much to maintain the authority
+of the United States over the Red Indians of America, as the
+formation of roads through the wilderness. The rulers of Great
+Britain entertain the opinion that when they have once seized
+upon a distant country, and thrown into it a handful of troops
+and a few of their importunate friends, with the title of
+government officers, they have done all that is required of them.
+They wait with resignation for any account that may be brought of
+the progress of the new colony, by some wandering
+merchant-vessel. Despatches, frequently dated twelve months
+previously, during which time they have been making the tour of
+all the oceans at present known upon the globe, are brought to
+Downing Street; and are then thrown aside, or at least are never
+attended to, probably because they are too old to be deemed
+interesting. No matter how pressing and immediate the wants of
+the colony, chance alone affords the opportunity of making their
+necessities known at home. Letters and despatches accumulate in
+the Post-office; no vessel arrives bringing intelligence from
+England, or offering to take away a mail: the Colonial Secretary,
+having exhausted every official resource in the way of mental
+occupation, looks out at the window, and meditates upon
+quail-shooting. His Excellency the Governor, questions the
+possibility of adding another despatch to the hundred and fifty
+already composed in illustration of the art of making despatches,
+as Soyer makes soup, out of nothing; and oppressed by the
+subject, becomes dormant in his chair of state; the clerks in the
+neighbouring offices no longer exhibit the uplifted countenance
+which, as justly observed by Sallust, distinguishes man from all
+other creatures; nothing is to be seen of them but masses of hair
+in wild profusion, and right hands extended on the table, still
+mechanically grasping steel-pens, whilst every face lies
+flattened upon a paper-case, and sleep and silence, broken only
+by sighs and snores, reign throughout the building. Universal
+stagnation prevails among government people; and merchants and
+store-keepers appear to be much in the same condition. The only
+person in office who is kept in a constant state of fever, is the
+unhappy Post-Master-General, who is hourly called upon to state
+when he is going to make up a mail for England. In vain he
+apologises for the non-arrival of ships; there is something
+radically wrong in his department, for which he is expected to
+answer; and dark denunciations are muttered in his ear, until
+worn out with anxiety and nervousness, he loses his appetite, and
+gradually withers away, like grass in the oven.</p>
+
+<p>And when at length a vessel arrives accidentally from Van
+Diemen's Land, or perhaps from America, the Master at first
+demurs about taking a mail, under the idea that it may convey
+letters giving information of the state of markets that he
+desires should be known only to himself and his employers; but
+finally consents; and then, having received the mail on board,
+carries it about with him from port to port, until at the
+conclusion of a long voyage, having occasion to empty his vessel
+in order to smoke out the rats, he discovers the forgotten boxes,
+and conscientiously sends them ashore.</p>
+
+<p>But if it be vexatious and inconvenient to have only this
+uncertain means of despatching our letters to England, how much
+more annoying is it to have no regular and stated time for
+receiving them from home! What could be more painful than to have
+to wait twelve months before you can receive an answer to an
+inquiry; and what more destructive to the interests of commerce?
+How many fluctuations are there in the state of the markets
+during those twelve months!</p>
+
+<p>It is one of the greatest of evils to have no regular
+post-office communication between the Mother Country and her
+colonies, and the interests of trade in both greatly suffer by
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Much has been said lately of establishing steam communication
+with Sydney. A committee of Sydney merchants has been appointed
+in London to consider the subject, and the restless and
+indefatigable Lieut. Waghorn has written a pamphlet showing how
+it may be done, provided the Government will contribute 100,000
+pounds per annum towards the project. He proposes that a branch
+line of steamers shall be established, to proceed from Sincapore
+by the north of New Holland, touching at Port Essington, and
+through Torres Straits to Sydney, and probably on to Van Dieman's
+Land. But why follow such a route as this, through the most
+dangerous channel in the world, where even steamers would have to
+lie-to at night (as the Lieutenant admits), and where
+light-houses would have to be erected and kept up at an
+extravagant cost? Why take such a route, which presents not a
+single place to call at, except Port Essington, a miserable spot,
+intended only as a kind of refuge for shipwrecked mariners,
+possessing no commercial or agricultural inhabitants, and only
+enjoying the advantages and the society of a Governor, a handful
+of soldiers, and three white women? Why insist upon expending so
+much public money, and encountering so many dangers, without
+conferring a single additional benefit upon the Australian
+colonies, when the route by the south of New Holland is so
+obvious, so practicable, and so superior? The projectors talk of
+making Port Essington a depot for coal; but why not make this
+depot in Western Australia? During the summer months, from 1st
+October to 1st April, the steamers might touch at Fremantle; and
+during the winter months, at Port Gladstone, fifteen miles to the
+southward, affording a sheltered harbour where ships may ride
+securely within one hundred yards of the shore. Coal mines will
+probably soon be at work in the colony, vast beds of that mineral
+having been discovered, thus offering every inducement to
+steam-vessels to touch here. Nor could anything be more
+advantageous, considering the great interests that England now
+has at stake in these seas, than to form a general depot in this
+colony, where her Majesty's steamers and ships-of-war might refit
+on occasion. As there is no other spot in all New Holland, Van
+Dieman's Land, or New Zealand, where first-rate ship-timber may
+be obtained, and where IRON, COAL, and COPPER, are also
+procurable in abundance, this colony offers advantages for the
+formation of a Government Dock-yard and depot (at Port
+Gladstone), that must be acknowledged by every unprejudiced
+person.</p>
+
+<p>Objections may be raised to doubling Cape Lewin during the
+winter season; but let the steamers stand well out to sea, and
+there would be no difficulty. The time lost would not exceed that
+spent in lying-to in Torres Straits during the night. Our
+colonial schooner, the Champion, goes round Cape Lewin at all
+seasons.</p>
+
+<p>We would propose that the mail steamers, instead of branching
+off from Sincapore, as proposed by Lieut. Waghorn, should depart
+from Point de Galle, Ceylon, make direct for Swan River, there
+take in coal, and pass on to Adelaide, South Australia, and
+thence to Van Dieman's Land, where they might put the Melbourne
+and Sydney mails on board of the steamer already plying between
+Van Dieman's Land and those places. By this route the Sydney
+people would receive their letters quite as soon as though their
+interests alone had been consulted, according to the desire of
+the disinterested committee before alluded to; whilst Van
+Dieman's Land would gain a few days, and South Australia and
+Western Australia would be allowed to share in the general
+advantage, from which they would otherwise be entirely
+excluded.</p>
+
+<p>But the Government and the public would also be gainers by the
+route which we suggest. It would be much cheaper to them, because
+it would be much more profitable to the company that carried it
+out. The colony of South Australia is now a populous country, and
+becomes more so every year; but the Steam Company would carry no
+passengers and no goods for South Australia (perhaps not even for
+Van Dieman's Land), if the route to Sydney were to be by Port
+Essington and Torres Straits. The two colonies of South and
+Western Australia deriving no benefit from such a course, could
+give no support to the company. Government hitherto has resisted
+the efforts of the Sydney merchants, and refused to sanction the
+proposal of Mr. Waghorn, but chiefly upon the ground of expense.
+And there is no doubt that Ministers would be guilty of a gross
+misdemeanour, were they to consent to apply 100,000 pounds per
+annum of the public money in furtherance of a scheme designed for
+the exclusive benefit of a single colony. It is the duty of
+Government to see that any sum which may be granted shall be so
+applied as to confer the most extensive benefit upon all the
+Australian colonies. That measures ought to be immediately taken
+to ensure a regular communication between the home country and
+every one of her colonies is a matter of no doubt to us. The want
+of this has long appeared to be one of the grand errors of
+colonial legislation. Let us hope that the day is not far distant
+when this crying evil shall be remedied. Now that steam
+navigation has come so generally into use, there is no valid
+reason why it should not be made the means of uniting together,
+as it were, the different outposts of the empire, drawing them
+more closely towards their parent country as to a common centre.
+It is full time that a greater appearance of sympathy were
+exhibited at home for those distant settlements which have now
+become the principal markets for British produce, and which,
+therefore, deserve something more at the hand of Government than
+what they have so long been accustomed to find&mdash;alternate periods
+of tyranny and neglect.</p>
+
+<p>By far the greater portion of English merchant-ships are
+engaged in trading to the colonies; our manufactures there find
+their principal mart; our surplus population is there cheaply
+provided with maintenance and a home. These are the grounds on
+which the colonies lay claim to the fostering care of the Mother
+Country, and we trust the days are at hand that will see it
+afforded.</p>
+
+<p>The first step must be to ensure a regular and frequent
+intercourse between the countries, without which there can be no
+real protection; without which there is no sufficient
+encouragement given to trade; and the parent state can therefore
+reap but little advantage, comparatively, from a colony whose
+powers are only imperfectly developed.</p>
+
+<p>Since the above remarks were written, accounts have reached
+England of the arrival at Fremantle of her Majesty's surveying
+vessel Bramble, Commander Lieutenant Yule, after passing some
+time in Torres Straits and on the coast of New Guinea.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Yule having kindly placed the notes of his voyage at the
+disposal of a friend in the colony, they were partially published
+in one of the local journals in the month of January last. The
+portion relating to Torres Straits is instructive. The Bramble
+sailed from Port Jackson about the end of December 1845, in
+company with the Castlereagh tender, Lieut. Aird, Commander.
+Touching at Moreton Bay, Mr. Yule visited his old acquaintance,
+Captain Wickham, R.N., late in command of H.M.S. Beagle, and now
+a settler on the Brisbane. In the words of the journal referred
+to, "the Bramble proceeded slowly to the northward, being much
+delayed by the bad sailing of the tender." The voyage presents
+nothing worthy of notice, until the arrival of the ships in
+Torres Straits, when it is impossible to help being struck with
+the commentary which Mr. Yule unconsciously affords upon the
+"perfect safety" of that passage, now so much vaunted by the
+advocates of the northern route. While the Bramble and
+Castlereagh were lying off Sir Charles Hardy's Islands, the
+latter being deficient in ballast, Mr. Aird was despatched with
+the boats to look for the "wreck" of the Maid of Athens and the
+"wreck" of the Martha Ridgway, with the view of procuring some;
+and having failed in discovering the former, and therefore in
+procuring a sufficient supply, he was again sent to the "wreck"
+of the Sir Archibald Campbell for the same purpose. So much for
+Torres Straits!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Yule strongly recommends Cairncross Island as the best
+station for obtaining wood and water for vessels navigating the
+straits, there being abundance of both easily procurable, and
+even large timber, if required. On this island they shot four
+megapodii, and observed many of their nests, some of which Mr.
+Yule describes as being twelve feet high, and upwards of fifty
+feet in circumference.</p>
+
+<p>On Friday, the 10th April they made the coast of New Guinea,
+which presented a low and thickly-wooded coast-line, backed by
+mountains of magnificent height and beauty; the country being
+apparently very rich, with many villages, embowered in cocoa-nut
+trees, scattered along the shore. While coasting along, in search
+of a convenient place to land, they encountered a native vessel
+of most extraordinary size and character, which we will allow Mr.
+Yule to describe in his own words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"At daybreak, as the sun was rising, I was very much struck
+with the grandeur of some very distant mountains in a
+south-eastern direction &mdash;one in particular, the outline of whose
+summit was only visible above the intervening clouds; immense
+ranges of mountains were also distinctly visible this side of it,
+extending in a N.W. and S.E. direction. It is seldom the rising
+sun has disclosed to my sight so splendid a view as then
+presented itself; but in a few minutes, when the sun's disk
+appeared, the beautiful scene vanished, leaving only inferior
+cloud-topped mountains visible, together with the rich and
+undulating foreground. We shortly afterwards saw the strange sail
+seen last night. Although she was much nearer, she proved more
+unaccountable than before. As there was not sufficient wind to
+enable us to weigh, I resolved to send Mr. Pollard in the second
+gig to take a nearer view of this extraordinary vessel. I watched
+the boat until Mr. Pollard must have gone nearly five miles from
+us, when the boat's sails appeared a mere speck when close to the
+wonderful stranger. On this officer's return, he informed me he
+had approached within bow-shot of the vessel, which proved to be
+a gigantic double canoe, which he conceives must have measured
+fifty or sixty feet long, kept apart and together by a platform
+from fifteen to twenty feet broad, which extended nearly the
+whole length of the canoes, the after-end being square with the
+sterns of the boats; six or eight feet of this was left clear for
+the three steersmen, who guided the vessel with three long
+paddles over the stern. With the exception of this part of the
+platform, the whole was covered by a strong, well-built house,
+made of cane, the roof being flat, and about five or six feet
+above the platform. This roof answered the purpose of an upper
+deck, affording the crew the means of conveniently walking on it.
+This extraordinary craft was propelled by two large mat sails,
+each spread between two bamboo masts, the heels of which were
+fixed in the same step, the mastheads being spread (athwartships)
+from twenty to thirty feet asunder, the sail being triangular
+between these bamboo masts, which were supported by diagonal
+shores fore and aft on either side; besides these two large
+sails, the canoe had numerous smaller (square) ones suspended
+from the principal masts; there was also a small square sail
+forward. The whole of the spars and rigging was ornamented with a
+sort of flags and streamers. Mr. Pollard thinks that he saw about
+forty or fifty people on the roof, several of whom were in the
+act of stringing their bows; except this precaution on the part
+of the strangers, there was no demonstration of hostility. After
+taking a good view of this most extraordinary canoe, Mr. Pollard
+returned; and she ultimately was wafted out of sight. Whence she
+came, or where bound, still remains to me a problem.</p>
+
+<p>"At noon I obtained the latitude, which was 8 degrees 3
+minutes S.; longitude, by chronometer, 145 degrees 28 minutes
+E.</p>
+
+<p>"In the afternoon the Castlereagh was visited by two small
+canoes, with eight men, who had come off from a village we
+discovered abreast of us. The natives brought off a few
+cocoa-nuts and some bows and arrows, which they readily bartered
+for such trifles as were given in exchange."</p>
+
+<p>The lofty mountain which so much excited Mr. Yule's
+admiration, was named by him Mount Victoria, and between it and
+the shore were several ranges of inferior altitude, which gave
+him "every reason to believe that the lower regions were well
+watered and fertile."</p>
+
+<p>Having fixed upon a favourable spot for commencing his
+triangulation behind a promontory which served to conceal them
+from the view of a native village which they saw at no great
+distance, Mr. Yule went ashore in the first gig with five seamen
+and one marine, accompanied by Mr. Sweetman, in the second gig,
+with three seamen and two marines, all well armed, and proceeded
+to hoist the Union Jack and take possession of the place in the
+name of her Majesty Queen Victoria. Having successfully performed
+this duty, and obtained the observations he required, Mr. Yule
+thought it high time to return on board; but the surf had in the
+meantime increased so heavily, that in the attempt the second gig
+was swamped, and every thing in her, including the arms, lost,
+except the quintant and chronometer, the boat herself being with
+difficulty saved by being towed outside the surf by the other
+gig. The rest of the adventure we shall give in Mr. Yule's own
+words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"At this time I observed the Castlereagh about two miles
+beyond Cape Possession, under sail; I therefore made signs to Mr.
+Wright, in the first gig, to tow the second gig towards the
+Castlereagh, which I concluded would attract Mr. Aird's
+attention. In this I was not mistaken, as the Castlereagh was
+immediately anchored about a mile and a half off, and her boats
+sent to the relief of ours. In the interim I determined that
+every thing which was washed on shore should be collected
+together, after which we all huddled close under a bush near the
+beech, whence we could see our boats and be hid from the view of
+the natives as much as possible. The Castlereagh's boats having
+at length closed with the Bramble's, the second gig was soon
+baled out, when all four boats pulled up abreast of us outside of
+the surf, which had continued to increase; the Castlereagh at the
+same time weighed, which I confess alarmed me much, as I knew
+very few persons could be left on board after she had dispatched
+two boats' crews; I therefore concluded we were discovered by the
+natives beyond Cape Possession. I was in a few moments confirmed
+in my fears by seeing Mr. Andrews prepare to push his boat
+through the surf. I waved him back, when he energetically pointed
+towards Cape Possession. I fully understood his signs (that
+natives were coming), but still waved him off, as I knew his
+gallant attempt to relieve us would fail, and that he and his
+boat's crew would be added to those already in distress on shore;
+he, however, pushed through the surf, when, as I expected, this
+boat was upset, and all his arms, ammunition, etc. lost. At the
+same moment we observed crowds of natives coming round the point
+of Cape Possession, armed with spears, clubs, and stone axes. Our
+arms and ammunition had been all lost or destroyed; our situation
+was therefore most defenceless, and, I may say, our retreat
+hopeless; those boats at the back being unable to afford us the
+least relief. I then thought it best to show no signs of fear or
+mistrust, but to make friends with the natives, and amuse them,
+until the next tide should enable a boat to back through the
+surf. In the interim, Mr. Andrews, with his four men, and
+assisted by some others, made three attempts to launch his boat,
+which failed, and she was ultimately dashed in pieces against the
+rocks. I advanced alone with playful gestures, waving a branch of
+green leaves, in token of peace. One man pointed a spear at me,
+but the others stared at me with more wonder depicted on their
+countenances than ferocity. I then offered them some bits of
+tobacco, which they would not approach near enough to take from
+my hands. This shyness, unfortunately, did not continue long; for
+when the main body came up, amounting to eighty or ninety men,
+armed, they became troublesome, and laid their hands on
+everything they could get hold of that was lying on the beach. To
+these robberies I attempted to put a stop, and made them some
+presents instead; but the savages must have known our helpless
+condition, and became every moment more daring and rapacious;
+and, to add to our tribulation, we observed two large canoes,
+each containing thirty or forty men, come round Possession Point,
+and heave to between the Castlereagh and the boats, as if with
+the intention of cutting off the latter. The Castlereagh could
+not unfortunately take advantage of her guns by firing grape or
+canister, as we were completely intermixed with the natives. At
+this critical stage of our anxiety, the second gig, at all
+hazards, was veered through the surf, and, to our great joy, four
+or five men were drawn off in safety. A second attempt was made,
+and succeeded. Then came the awful moment for us who waited for
+the last trip; for only a few moments before, I baulked a native
+when taking a deliberate aim at one of our last men who embarked.
+The natives now, seeing our numbers decrease, laid hands on us in
+the most violent manner. My quintant was first wrested from my
+coxswain, who in a tone of grief made me known the circumstance.
+I immediately turned round and exclaimed 'Oh! don't part with
+that'; but it was too late; and when I endeavoured to recover it,
+I found a club wielded over my head. In making my escape from
+this wretch I was secured by four others, who first took the
+government micronometer, which was slung round my neck. I then
+endeavoured to struggle out of their clutches, and escape with
+the pocket chronometer and note-book, but these, AS WELL AS EVERY
+ARTICLE OF CLOTHING I HAD ABOUT MY BODY, were stripped off; when
+the second gig was opportunely again backed in, and in this
+forlorn state Mr. Pollard, the two marines, and I, waded off, and
+were dragged into the boat. We then went on board the
+Castlereagh, which was at anchor about a mile from the shore; the
+canoes slowly made off to the north-westward, after we had
+embarked. The boats having been hoisted up and secured, we got
+the anchor up and proceeded out to the Bramble, and anchored
+close to her at 6h. 30m. p.m. I immediately afterwards returned
+to the Bramble, truly thankful for our having escaped with our
+lives. The loss of instruments grieved me exceedingly,
+particularly as the nature of the coast rendered it next to
+impossible to effect a safe landing to attempt their recovery.
+From the account I heard of the ferocity of the natives where the
+Fly had been surveying last year on this coast, I confess I fully
+expected death would be my fate in a few minutes, and thought of
+the similar position poor Captain Skying was in when murdered at
+Cape Roso. If we had been possessed of six or eight muskets and
+plenty of ammunition, I think the natives might easily have been
+checked, but being defenceless, my only hope was to dissemble my
+fears and amuse them, to give us time until we could effect our
+escape. These people varied in complexion from black to a light
+copper colour; they appeared well made and active; all of them
+were ornamented, but some much more so than others; their
+ear-rings were made of rings of tortoiseshell, a number of them
+being fastened together, and suspended to the lower parts of the
+ears, in which are holes stretched so large as to admit a man's
+thumb being passed through them; the cartilage dividing the
+nostrils is perforated in like manner."</p>
+
+<p>This adventure of our old friends of the Bramble appears to me
+sufficiently interesting to excuse my having wandered through
+Torres Straits in order to record it.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 26.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERIES.&mdash;KANGAROO HUNTING.&mdash;EMUS.&mdash;LOST IN
+THE BUSH.</h4>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt as to the truth of the axiom that "facts
+are stubborn things." Right or wrong, they seem to persist in a
+resolution to force conviction upon a man however reluctant he
+may be.</p>
+
+<p>Sturdy facts are never wanting in support of erroneous views;
+and more false conclusions are drawn from them than from the
+subtlest arguments of the sophist.</p>
+
+<p>When your theory is once confirmed by a fact, the question is
+considered decided, and no further argument is admissible. I had
+two theories not long ago, the pursuit and investigation of which
+gave me a good deal of pleasure; they were built upon facts, and
+therefore they were indisputable.</p>
+
+<p>My first theory was upon the amount of evaporation at Perth
+during the summer months.</p>
+
+<p>The excessive dryness of the atmosphere proved that the
+evaporation at the end of the rainy, or winter season, must be
+very great indeed. My friend, Mr. H., had an hygrometer, which he
+kept in a small room adjoining that in which he usually sat; and
+this hygrometer afforded the ground-work for our theories. It
+proved most satisfactorily that the evaporation exceeded every
+thing of the kind known in any other part of the globe. It was
+clear that our atmosphere was drier than that of a brick-kiln
+when burning its best. But the great beauty and novelty of the
+theory was, that the evaporation was greater at night than in the
+day time.</p>
+
+<p>This certainly puzzled us a good deal at first; but when once
+you are sure of your facts, it is astonishing how soon you come
+to mould your theory so as to make it perfectly agree with them,
+and manage to reconcile yourself to the most startling
+contradictions. After satisfying himself of the truth of the
+fact&mdash;that the evaporation was really greater by night than by
+day&mdash;Mr. H. proceeded to prove philosophically that nothing could
+be more reasonable than such a circumstance. From all that I
+could make out of his arguments, which were extremely logical and
+ingenious, it seemed clear that as every thing in this country is
+diametrically opposite to every thing in the old country, it was
+perfectly consistent with the regulations of nature in Australia,
+that evaporation should be greater at night than during the day
+time. Moreover, he placed great reliance upon the attraction of
+the moon.</p>
+
+<p>For my part, seeing that facts were on his side, I embraced
+his views with ardour; and went about as an apostle, proclaiming
+the new tidings far and wide. It was one of those astonishing
+truths in science that come suddenly and unexpectedly upon
+mankind&mdash;like those connected with electricity&mdash;that take the
+reason captive, and are beyond the reach of human investigation.
+Men usually appeared incredulous when the theory was first
+broached to them; but when convinced of the fact, as proved
+indisputably by the hygrometer, they were compelled to
+acknowledge the truth, and forthwith looked upon it as a matter
+of course.</p>
+
+<p>As the weather grew warmer&mdash;when the thermometer stood daily
+at about 86 degrees in a cool room&mdash;the nocturnal evaporation
+increased. At length it grew to such a pitch, that the tube of
+the hygrometer containing the water was exhausted in a couple of
+nights. Notwithstanding the astonishment of Mr. H., he was
+enraptured at the triumphant confirmation of his theory. He
+devoted every moment he could spare from public duties, to the
+compilation of a learned and voluminous treatise upon the
+subject. He looked upon himself as destined to be considered one
+of the master-philosophers of the age, the promulgator of a new
+and wondrous theory, based not only upon sound argument, but upon
+long observation and indisputable facts. When any one ventured to
+raise a doubt, he would smile with that ineffable sweetness which
+distinguishes a man conscious of his superior knowledge and
+sources of information. I, his enthusiastic adherent, picked up
+the crumbs of instruction that fell from his table; and dealt
+forth mysterious hints of the scientific errors about to be
+corrected by the observations and treatises of Mr. H., who was
+now generally known to have forwarded an account of his
+discoveries to some of the learned Societies of London; and the
+English papers were perused with avidity, in the hope of finding
+that due honour had been paid to his merits.</p>
+
+<p>As he walked along the streets he was looked upon with
+additional reverence. He had raised the renown of Western
+Australia, and was now considered to be at once its decus et
+tutamen. The idlers who congregated in small knots about
+luncheon-time at the corners of the streets, began to talk of a
+statue in the market-place.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, however, the philosopher secluded himself from the
+vulgar gaze. The public wondered, and then became alarmed. The
+philosopher had taken to his bed. After some days I was admitted
+to his presence, and found him greatly enfeebled for want of
+rest. It was evident there was something that weighed upon his
+mind. After many ineffectual efforts, many sighs and some
+blushes, he faltered forth a confession that he feared our
+theory, (he seemed now, for the first time, kindly solicitous to
+share the merit of the discovery,) of evaporation being greater
+at night than in the day-time, was not well founded. An electric
+shock, shivering the funny-bones of both elbows, could not have
+startled me more. What did he mean? He continued, that one night
+whilst engaged upon a new hygrometrical treatise, he had sat up
+till a very late hour; the door of the room which contained the
+instrument was open, and the light from his lamp fell directly
+upon it. Absorbed in profound speculations, his eye occasionally
+rested upon the little instrument which stood upon a table. There
+it was&mdash;the pillar of his fame. It seemed to dilate in dimensions
+until it rivalled the column in the Place Vendome, and on the top
+of it was a figure, less sturdy than that of Napoleon. Suddenly
+his vision was broken, and his thoughts were recalled from the
+future to the present, by seeing a living object move along the
+table, and quietly approach the foot of his column. Appalled and
+paralyzed, he sat immovable whilst he beheld an actual mouse,
+unrestrained by any scientific considerations, place its profane
+snout in the bowl of the hygrometer, and drink deliberately until
+its thirst was satisfied. It then retired, and other mice soon
+came trotting along the table and did the same.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. H. is a man of great self-control. He did not tear his
+remaining locks, or commit any other rash act, but with all the
+calmness of despair he set fire to the unfinished treatise, and
+saw it consumed; then he retired to bed, a desolate individual,
+and rose not again for several days.</p>
+
+<p>My next theory was entirely my own. I claimed all the merit of
+it, and felt the utmost pangs of jealousy when any one ventured
+to assert that HE had long ago suspected it. Built upon a solid
+foundation of facts, I maintained an opinion entirely at variance
+with that of Professor Owen and certain Parisian professors, and
+satisfied myself, at least, that the young of the kangaroo, and
+of other marsupial animals, is produced, not in the usual way,
+but from the teat of the dam. And although this theory is, and
+must be erroneous, I can even yet scarcely bring myself to
+believe it so&mdash;with such fidelity do we cling to error. There are
+many men in the colony who have been for years in the constant,
+almost daily, habit of killing kangaroos, and they have
+consequently had opportunities of observing the young ones in
+every stage of development. Females have been killed with young
+ones hanging to the nipple, about half an inch long&mdash;the form not
+fully developed, a mere foetus, presenting no appearance of
+active vitality. The nipple to which it is attached is not merely
+placed in the mouth of the foetus, but extends into its stomach,
+where it serves the purposes of the umbilical cord in other
+animals, whilst the lips grow round it, so that it cannot be
+removed without rupturing the skin. A little older, and it
+becomes evidently possessed of vitality&mdash;a quickened foetus. The
+pouch of the doe is closed up until the birth of the young one;
+and gradually enlarges to accommodate the inhabitant.</p>
+
+<p>There are other marsupial animals, of the size of rabbits,
+that are found with eight or ten young ones, or rather small
+foetuses, similarly attached to the nipples of the parent.</p>
+
+<p>Now I could not conceive how creatures with long sharp claws,
+though provided with flexible wrists or joints, should be able to
+take up the newly produced little lump of inanimate flesh, and
+thrust a long, soft, yielding nipple down into the depths of the
+stomach. I collected a number of FACTS to prove the contrary&mdash;but
+the question is now considered to be set at rest by the
+observations of French naturalists, and therefore I have quietly
+strangled my theory, but am still occasionally haunted by its
+ghost.</p>
+
+<p>I may mention here that male kangaroos are sometimes found
+provided with pouches; but these, I conceive, are lusus
+Naturae.</p>
+
+<p>This allusion to kangaroos (being good for nothing else) may
+serve as an introduction to a hunting excursion. A party of us
+started from Perth, equipped in the manner already described in
+the chapter upon Wild Cattle.</p>
+
+<p>We rode to the Canning to breakfast, at the house of the&mdash;&mdash;s,
+where we found the table ready spread with coffee, grilled fowls,
+eggs, ham, etc. The room was a good one, having French windows,
+looking out upon park-like scenery, among which the Canning River
+pursued its lazy course. There was also a piano belonging to the
+sister of our hosts, then absent on a visit. One of her brothers
+informed us that he had availed himself of her absence to
+abstract sundry of the wires from the piano in order to make
+bell-wires, which he thought was turning the piano to good
+account.</p>
+
+<p>After breakfast we loaded our bullock-cart with our goods, and
+left it in charge of a servant whom we appointed to meet us at a
+certain spot where we were to bivouac for the night. The only
+disagreeable part of travelling in Australia is the scarcity of
+water, except at the end of winter, when all the gullies are
+filled. Unless, therefore, the ground be well known, it is always
+advisable to take a native, who can inform you where the pools or
+springs are situated. Four of us set out, well mounted, and
+attended by a native on foot, and five kangaroo dogs. These dogs
+are descended from a cross between a bloodhound and a greyhound,
+and combine strength, fleetness, scent, and sight. As it was the
+middle of winter (late in June) the air was cool and pleasant,
+and the sun bright and joyous, as he always is here. We were all
+in high spirits, anticipating excellent sport, as the country to
+which we were going abounds with game of great
+variety&mdash;kangaroos, emus, quail, and turkeys, or bustards. A
+rough coarse scrub, interspersed with small quantities of grass,
+overspread the sandy soil. The only animal we saw for some time
+was an opossum, which the native discovered in a tree and climbed
+up for. I examined its pouch, but there was no young one within
+it. At length we caught a glimpse of a kangaroo hopping along at
+a distance, and we galloped off in full chase, but he was too far
+ahead for the dogs to make anything of it; so we lost him.
+Disconcerted and vexed we drew together again after a short run,
+but had scarcely done so before we emerged upon an open prairie,
+where on our right we beheld three kangaroos hopping away at a
+gentle pace. the kangaroo uses only his hind legs in running. The
+leg presses the ground from the hock to the toes, and its strong
+sinews enable the animal to bound forward with immense leaps; the
+heavy tail vibrating behind keeps him steady. Four of the dogs
+rushed after the game, followed by all the horsemen, at full
+gallop, hallooing and shouting vociferously. A more animated
+sight could scarcely be conceived; three graceful kangaroos
+bounding away in a line, with four large greyhounds laying well
+after them, and the hunters chiveying along, and dashing through
+brushwood and thickets like whirlwinds. The kangaroos, however,
+fairly beat us; they gained a thick wood, dashed through it and
+into a swamp beyond, and there we lost sight of them. We all
+returned to the side of the wood, and waited for the dogs, who
+came back with hanging heads and drooping tail, completely blown.
+All returned but one&mdash;the oldest and most sagacious of them. He
+had not gone with the four which followed the heels of the
+kangaroos, but had made a short cut to the left, so that he was
+in the wood almost as soon as the kangaroos, whilst the other
+dogs were still a long way behind. We waited patiently for old
+Tip (of whom honourable mention has been made before); his
+master, Tom H., asserting confidently that he had killed. At
+length as we were standing talking together, we suddenly
+perceived Tip among us. His master examined his mouth, and
+declared he had killed; then saying, "Show, Tip, show!" the dog
+turned round, and trotted off before us; and going into the swamp
+took us to the spot where the kangaroo lay dead.</p>
+
+<p>It is not all kangaroo dogs that can be taught to show game,
+and those that do so are therefore highly prized. It is a very
+pleasing sight to observe how proud a dog is of this
+accomplishment. He will come quietly back to his master, and
+oftentimes lay himself down as if he were afraid the other dogs
+should suspect he had got something to tell, and would run off in
+search of it. And when his master gives the signal, he
+deliberately proceeds to lead the way, snarling at the other dogs
+whenever they run before him, and seem likely to arrive first at
+the spot. Sometimes he tries to deceive them by going in a wrong
+direction, and when the others have started off, full of
+eagerness, as if they themselves (the senseless fools!) were
+inviting people to follow, and were anxious to show them the
+game, the old dog will rapidly turn aside, evidently laughing in
+his sleeve, and dash forward to the spot where he left the
+carcase. There you will find him standing over it; and as you
+ride up he will give a faint wag of his tail, as though he were
+glad that you are pleased with him, and yet he cannot help
+feeling that he is not properly rewarded. His gaunt ribs and
+melancholy eye speak of his hungry stomach; he seems to remember
+that he receives from his rough master more kicks than caresses,
+but still he does his duty, and will do so to the last; and
+denies himself even a mouthful of the prey, which but for him,
+would lie undiscovered in the thicket. I used to know an old
+show-dog who displayed so much thought and sagacity, that I never
+was in his company without feeling for him a certain degree of
+respect. Whenever struck by brutes of lower order than himself,
+he did not howl or display his teeth, but slunk aside with a look
+of deep sorrow and reproach.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening we bivouacked near a small pool of water, where
+the cart joined us, according to previous arrangement. The horses
+were tethered out and fed; a good fire was kindled, and with
+kangaroo steaks, cold fowls and ham, and brandy and water, we
+managed to make a tolerable supper. A fence against the wind was
+constructed of upright sticks, and leaves of the black-boy
+(Xanthorea, or grass-tree) resembling rushes, only brittle; and
+with a good fire at our feet we were exceedingly warm and
+comfortable. The wild dogs uttered their doleful, wailing cries
+around our camp during the night, and caused our own frequently
+to sally forth and give them chase.</p>
+
+<p>We had kangaroo curry for breakfast next morning; and having
+fed our horses, and sounded to saddle, set out again in pursuit
+of game.</p>
+
+<p>Proceeding across some plains, interspersed with swamps and
+thickets, we soon perceived a herd of about a dozen kangaroos
+feeding and hopping about. Keeping a covert in line before us, we
+tried to get near them, but they soon made off, bounding away
+like a herd of deer, which they much resemble at a distance. The
+dogs started after them at full speed; and with loud halloos and
+bounding hearts the horsemen spurred their steeds, and scoured
+along the plain. There are, unfortunately, no fences in this
+country, but there are a thousand worse obstructions&mdash;fallen
+trees, thick clumps of black-boys extending right across the
+plain, and therefore not to be avoided; woods through which the
+game dashes at speed, and where you must follow at the risk of
+striking head or limbs against the trunks or branches of trees,
+or else you will be thrown out. Then of course you don't like to
+be last, and you don't like to allow the gallant captain, who is
+spurring at your side, the opportunity of bragging at mess that
+he alone kept near the dogs, which you know he would be delighted
+to do. So, determined to ride against the captain at any rate,
+you keep your horse and yourself well together, and flinch at
+nothing; dashing through thickets, tearing over rough ground,
+steering between trees, ducking your head under boughs, and
+twitching up first one leg and then the other to save them from
+being smashed against black-boys or banksias. You clear the wood,
+and emerge again upon a plain; the kangaroos are bounding along,
+some three hundred yards in advance, the dogs lying well up to
+them; and now the latter have fixed upon one of the herd, whom
+they pursue with resolute fierceness. The others escape into
+friendly thickets, but the doomed one, an old buck, some six feet
+in height when resting on his haunches, still holds out, though
+his enemies are fast gaining upon him.</p>
+
+<p>At length, finding escape impossible, he makes for a broad
+mahogany tree, where he suddenly comes to bay. The dogs hesitate
+to rush in upon him, his eye gleams with such deadly ferocity,
+whilst he sits erect upon his haunches, ready to dart the long
+claw of his hind leg into the first assailant who comes within
+reach.</p>
+
+<p>A kangaroo in this position is no despicable enemy. He has
+great power in his limbs; and if he happens to strike a dog with
+his claw, he inflicts a grievous wound, and sometimes tears out
+his entrails, and kills him on the spot. He rushes at men with
+the same fury, and tries to clasp them with his fore-paws whilst
+he strikes at them with his hind-legs. I rode up to the animal in
+question, dismounted, and struck him a rap on the head with a
+broken bough, as he rushed towards me with a fierce hissing
+noise. As he staggered at the blow, the dogs darted upon him and
+quickly despatched him.</p>
+
+<p>We had several other good runs before luncheon, and then
+baited our horses, and allowed them to rest for two or three
+hours. Whilst riding towards our bivouac in the afternoon, a
+native who was walking at my side, and who had accompanied us all
+day, stopped suddenly, and, pointing with his finger, said,
+"Emu!" About a mile distant across the prairie were two of those
+large birds quietly feeding. The dogs were immediately called
+together, fresh vigour seemed to animate the whole party, and we
+proceeded to give chase in high spirits. Emus are sometimes shot
+with the rifle, but the usual mode of obtaining them is by
+hunting them with kangaroo dogs. If you happen to come near
+enough to them without raising alarm, they may frequently be
+detained, and even attracted almost up to your stirrup by
+WHISTLING. I have known this to be repeatedly tried with success.
+When you begin to whistle, the emu lifts up its head and listens
+with attention; soon, delighted with the sound, he walks
+leisurely in the direction from which it comes; then, perceiving
+a human being, he pauses, seems irresolute, and finally walks
+round and round you in circles gradually lessening, until he
+approaches within a few yards. If his confidence be not repaid
+with a bullet, he will, after gratifying his curiosity by a good
+stare, quietly walk away through his native woods. Emus are
+frequently speared by the natives, who, by taking care to stand
+stock-still the moment the creature lifts up its head, manage to
+approach within a few yards of them while feeding. Though the
+savage may have his hand raised in the act of throwing the spear,
+he remains fixed in that attitude whilst the emu takes a survey
+of him. Perceiving only an object without motion, the bird takes
+him for a tree, and continues to graze, falling a victim, like
+other innocent things, to a misplaced confidence in its own
+security.</p>
+
+<p><a name="f336"><img alt="" src="images/Landor_f336.jpg" width="500" height=
+"350"></a></p>
+
+<h4>"Death of the Kangaroo"</h4>
+
+<p><a name="f339"><img alt="" src="images/Landor_f339.jpg" width="500" height=
+"350"></a></p>
+
+<h4>Emu Hunt</h4>
+
+<p>The emus ran fast, and gave us a long chase; but at length the
+headmost dog caught hold of the extended flapper of one of the
+birds, and arrested its progress; the others, coming up, soon
+pulled him to the ground, and by the time we reached the spot he
+was dead. The feathers from the tail were distributed among the
+party, and placed in our caps; and the legs being cut off, the
+rest of the bird was abandoned. The legs alone afford any meat,
+which is by no means a delicacy, and resembles coarse beef.
+Whilst the process of cutting up was going on, my attention was
+attracted to the movements of old Tip, who had stolen away from
+the party, and was now, ventre a terre, scouring along the edge
+of a belt of trees about a quarter of a mile from us. His master
+in vain tried to recall him, and I set off to see what he was
+about. Following him through the wood, I perceived him at the
+other side in hot pursuit of half-a-dozen kangaroos, that were
+bounding away some hundred yards ahead of him. It was in vain to
+attempt to recall him, so I foolishly followed the chase, though
+it was leading far away from the direction I wanted to take. Old
+Tip held on unflaggingly, as though this were his first run that
+day; and for nearly two miles we dashed along through woods and
+across prairies, until I began to wish myself back with my
+friends. At length we lost the game in a vast swamp, covered with
+thick underwood, in which my horse floundered for some time in a
+fearful manner. Thinking it worse to return than to push through,
+we struggled on, in momentary danger of sinking for ever, and
+after great exertions got upon solid ground again. When
+dismounted, to rest the horse, who panted and trembled with the
+efforts he had made, I called for Tip till the woods rang again,
+but all in vain. At last I saw a single kangaroo, a fresh one of
+immense size, break cover, with Tip about forty yards in his
+rear. In the ardour of the chase, all prudential considerations
+were given to the winds; and cheering on the gallant hound, I
+followed the game more determinedly than ever. And what a race
+that villain kangaroo led us!&mdash;through thickets where my
+hunting-shirt was torn into strips, my arms and legs covered with
+bruises, and my face lacerated with boughs that were not to be
+avoided. The villain doubled like a hare, and led us in such
+various directions, that I fancied we must have turned upon our
+steps and gone past the spot where I had parted from my friends.
+Unless a man be very well accustomed to the bush, he is certain
+to lose himself in a few minutes. One clump of trees is so like
+another&mdash;the thick swamps, the open plains, all bear such a
+general resemblance to one another, that you feel quite
+confounded whilst trying to recollect whether you have really
+seen them before, and can form some tolerable guess as to your
+position. The kangaroo was now approaching the foot of the long,
+even, uninteresting range of the Darling Hills; his pace was
+slow, he made his leaps with difficulty, and would soon have been
+caught, had not poor Tip been equally dead beat.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident the old dog could scarcely drag himself along,
+but still he refused to give in. My horse, exhausted with
+floundering in the swamp, was completely knocked up; and for some
+time I had only been able to push him along at a jog-trot. Still
+I was no more willing to give up the chase than old Tip. It
+seemed to have become a point of honour that I should not desert
+the hound; and moreover, feeling myself completely lost, I did
+not like to part from my companion; and, above all, it would
+never do to let the kangaroo escape after all the trouble he had
+given us. So we all three continued to work along as best we
+could.</p>
+
+<p>At last my poor horse happened to set his foot in an empty
+water-hole, and too weak to recover himself, came down on his
+shoulder and side with great violence. I threw myself off as he
+fell, but could not save my foot from being crushed beneath the
+saddle, and so both horse and man lay extended on the ground. I
+could just see the hound and kangaroo still struggling onward,
+and almost close together. The horse made no attempt to rise, and
+I tried in vain to extricate my foot; at length I managed to flog
+him up, and then raised myself with difficulty. I had not
+suffered much damage, though bruised, and in some pain, but my
+poor horse had sprained his shoulder, and was completely hors de
+combat. On looking about for the chase, I fancied I could
+perceive the dog lying on a little rising ground, a few hundred
+yards distant; and leaving the horse, I hopped after the game. On
+arriving at the spot, I found the kangaroo and the dog lying side
+by side, both alive, but completely exhausted; the one unable to
+do any injury, and the other to get away. Securing the dog with
+my handkerchief, I sat down, waiting till he should be able to
+walk. In a few minutes the kangaroo lifted up his head, and
+looked about him; the dog sat up, panting as though his heart
+would burst, and took no notice of the other. The kangaroo,
+scrambling to its feet, hopped away a few yards, and then stood
+still again. "Go along, old fellow!" said I, "you have done us
+abundance of mischief, but it would be criminal to kill you when
+I cannot carry home even your tail&mdash;so farewell!" Off he jumped,
+and was soon lost to view, leaving us alone&mdash;three miserable
+cripples, far from any shelter, and (so far as I was concerned)
+not knowing at all how to rejoin our friends. Tip being now able
+to limp on three legs, and myself upon one, we returned to the
+unhappy steed, who remained where I had left him, hanging down
+his head, and looking the image of woe.</p>
+
+<p>In vain I tried to determine the direction I ought to take;
+trees and swamps were on all sides of me, and I could not decide
+whether my friends were now on my right-hand or my left. I
+remembered that our place of rendezvous appeared to be nearly
+opposite an opening in the hills, some six or eight miles
+distant; but there were openings in the hills on each side of me,
+and which was the one to be sought I could not determine. I
+therefore resolved to retrace the foot-marks of my horse, if
+possible; and set out leading the animal, having Tip limping at
+my side, and every now and then looking up as though he felt for
+the ill plight in which we all appeared. It soon became evident
+that the horse must be left behind; and therefore removing his
+saddle and bridle, I placed them at the foot of a tree, and gave
+him his liberty.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *Six months afterwards he was caught among the
+horses of a settler on the Serpentine, perfectly sound and in
+excellent condition.</p>
+
+<p>After going some distance, I came within view of an extensive
+swamp, which I fancied formed part of that I had so much
+difficulty in crossing. Turning to the right, I followed its
+course for some time, hoping to get round it, but it seemed to
+extend towards the hills, cutting off all farther progress. The
+sun was now about to set, and getting desperate, I plunged into
+the thicket, and tried to push through the swamp. There was no
+water, but the immense quantities of bind-weed, and other
+thickly-growing plants, quite defied every attempt, and I was
+obliged to turn back again. Tip and myself had now to retrace our
+steps. It was getting dusk, and the state of affairs looked
+uncomfortable. Again we tried in vain to cross the swamp, which
+soon afterwards receded farther from the hills, and left a broad
+plain before us, which we traversed in the course of half an
+hour.</p>
+
+<p>My foot seemed to get better with exercise, but night had now
+set in, and it was useless to attempt making farther progress,
+when we could not distinguish an object thirty feet in advance. I
+now found myself stumbling up a rising ground covered with trees;
+and here I lay down, with Tip at my side, to wait as patiently as
+possible for morning. The dog, I imagine, had found some water in
+the swamp, as he did not now seem to be suffering from thirst as
+I was myself. He was soon asleep, and I envied him, for hours
+elapsed before I could find repose. The land-wind, sweeping down
+from the hill-side, moaned through the trees; the rising moon
+shed her sickly and distorting light upon the bushes around; and
+bruised and stiff, hungry, thirsty, and uncomfortable, I felt by
+no means delighted with my quarters. A fire would have been
+agreeable, but there were no means of procuring one. Sleep at
+last befriended me, and I did not wake until the sun began to
+shed his first rays upon the tops of the trees.</p>
+
+<p>On rising I found myself exceedingly stiff, and by no means in
+good condition for walking, but there was no choice; and when Tip
+had got upon his legs, and given himself a good stretch and yawn,
+and licked my hand, as much as to say he had no intention of
+leaving me in the lurch, we started on our doubtful journey. In
+vain I tried to encourage the dog to lead the way; he would not
+stir from my side. Only once he darted after a kangaroo-rat, and
+caught it before it had gone twenty yards. This afforded a
+breakfast which I envied him. I now pushed on towards the coast,
+but was continually intercepted by thick swamps impossible to
+penetrate, and turned from the right direction. I looked about
+for water, and found some at length in a muddy hole. It was most
+refreshing, and revived my spirits, which had begun to flag
+considerably.</p>
+
+<p>Mid-day was long past, and I was still rambling over plains of
+coarse grass, penetrating into woods, and struggling through
+swamps; worn almost to death with fatigue and hunger, and the
+pain of my ankle, now greatly swollen, I sat down at last at the
+foot of a mahogany-tree in order to gain a little rest.</p>
+
+<p>I knew that the hills were behind me, and the sea must be
+somewhere before me, but as to my precise locality, and the
+distance of the nearest settler's house, I was quite at a loss.
+In vain I tried to satisfy myself as to whether I was much to the
+south of the bivouac. I was growing dizzy with hunger and
+weariness, and no longer felt any wonder at the confusion of mind
+which seizes upon those who are lost in the wilderness. During
+the day, I had repeatedly cooeyed as loudly as I could, in the
+faint hope of attracting the attention of my friends; but no
+voice responded.</p>
+
+<p>It was now nearly five o'clock in the evening, and I had the
+prospect before me of spending another night in solitude, and
+felt some misgivings as to whether it would not be the last of my
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to struggle on a little farther, as it was possible
+that I might be close to some farm on the Serpentine; but it was
+difficult to move along. Tip seemed to be getting tired of this
+slow progress; he grew fidgety, and I fancied he had formed the
+base resolution of leaving me to myself. Suddenly he started off
+upon our traces, and I was alone without a friend.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes I heard behind me a distant shout, and
+immediately afterwards a loud cooey met my ear. Oh how thankfully
+I heard it, and answered it as loudly as I could! And then,
+having returned grateful acknowledgments to the Almighty for this
+seasonable relief, I began to walk towards the sounds, which were
+repeated from minute to minute. Not long afterwards I perceived a
+party of natives, followed by men on horseback, emerging from the
+trees. The latter galloped towards me, waving their hats, and
+shouting with friendly joy. It is due to Tip to state that he
+reached me first, and gave his congratulations with warm
+sincerity.</p>
+
+<p>My friends had started at day-break with the natives, who had
+tracked my footsteps without once losing the trail. They had
+found the horse grazing near the place where I had left him, but
+he was too lame to be removed; the natives had fully accounted
+for every trace; they perceived that the dog and kangaroo had
+lain side by side, and that the latter had recovered first, and
+got away. They found and brought with them the saddle and bridle,
+and followed my steps to the swamp, through which they saw I had
+not been able to penetrate. And so they tracked me during the
+whole of the day, whilst I was only going farther and farther
+from my friends. I had wandered much more to the south than I
+expected; and now, mounting a horse, we all rode to a house on
+the Serpentine, where we were hospitably entertained, and where I
+continued until able to return to Perth.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 27.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE COMET.&mdash;VITAL STATISTICS.&mdash;METEOROLOGY.</h4>
+
+<p>One evening in March, 1844, whilst standing at my gate
+enjoying the pleasant balmy air and the conversation of a friend,
+our attention was attracted to a luminous appearance in the sky
+immediately above the horizon. We fancied that a large ship must
+be on fire not a great distance from the coast.</p>
+
+<p>The next evening, happening to leave the house at an early
+hour, my eye was immediately caught by a grant novelty in the
+heavens. A magnificent comet extended itself over an entire fifth
+of the firmament. Its tail reached to the belt of Orion, whilst
+its nucleus, a ball of fire resembling a star of the fourth
+magnitude, was scarcely a degree above the horizon. It looked
+like a fiery messenger rushing headlong down from the very
+presence of GOD, bound with dread tidings for some distant world.
+Beautiful, yet terrible messenger, it seemed to leave its long,
+fiery trace behind it in its passage through the heavens. The
+soul of the spectator was filled with the sense of its beauty,
+whilst admiration was sublimed into awe. Speaking to us strange
+and wonderful things of the hidden Holy of Holies which it seemed
+to have left, it passed on its headlong journey of billions and
+trillions of miles with the glad speed of a love-inspired
+emanation from the Most High. It left us to wonder at its
+transient visit, and to wish in vain for its return.*</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *This comet, having exactly the appearance I have
+described, was visible nearly a week, gradually disappearing in
+the northern heavens.</p>
+
+<p>Whether it had or not any effect upon the season, I cannot
+say, but the ensuing six months were the most unhealthy period
+ever known in the colony. The natives, who were greatly alarmed
+by the sudden appearance of the comet, declared that it would
+cause many people to be mendik and die&mdash;so universal is the
+belief in the portentous and malign influence of these
+phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>In general, as I have before observed, the climate is most
+salubrious. "The Comparative Statement of Deaths to the
+Population" proves the vast superiority of Western Australia in
+this respect, not only over Great Britain, but over neighbouring
+colonies. I refer to the able, interesting, and
+carefully-prepared Reports of G. F. Stone, Esq. the Colonial
+Registrar-General of Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Taking his
+data from the Parliamentary Reports of 1836, he deduces the
+following:</p>
+
+<p>Comparative Statement of Deaths to the Population.</p>
+
+<pre>
+Western Australia . . . . . . . . . .1 death in 94 21/41
+Van Dieman's Land . . . . . . . . . .1 " 65 161/220
+Cape of Good Hope . . . . . . . . . .1 " 60 1/3
+England . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 " 46 3/5
+Mauritius . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 " 44 2/5
+</pre>
+
+<p>The opinions of medical men, published in different reports, a
+few of which happen now to lie before me, may prove interesting
+to some readers, and I therefore extract them briefly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>J. M. Johnson, Esq. M.D. Surgeon of H.M.S. Sulphur:&mdash; "During
+the three years that H.M.S. Sulphur was employed on that station
+(Western Australia) not a single death, and very few important
+cases of disease occurred, notwithstanding the very great
+exposure of her men. When exploring the country for several days,
+and sometimes weeks, they have been exposed to the sun; fatigued
+in the evening after a day's excursion, slept in the open air,
+(and that repeatedly in wet weather,) and suffered no
+inconvenience. I have no hesitation in stating that such a life
+in any other climate would have been productive of the most
+serious sickness."</p>
+
+<p>William Milligen, Esq. M.D. Surgeon 6th Dragoons:&mdash; "I have
+met with several individuals here, who, on leaving England, were
+great sufferers from dyspepsia, and diseases of the digestive
+organs, who have recovered their health in a wonderful degree
+since their arrival. Children thrive remarkably well; and I may
+add that every description of live stock, although collected from
+different countries&mdash;England, India, America, Africa, etc.&mdash;find
+here a congenial temperature."</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Harris, Esq. Acting Government Surgeon:&mdash; "Nothing can
+be more delightful than the climate generally; and its
+invigorating influences on the human constitution, especially
+those of Europeans, render it more fit for invalids than any
+other in the world. Several persons arrived in the colony
+suffering from pulmonary and bronchial affections, asthma,
+phthisis, haemoptysis, or spitting of blood, hopeless of recovery
+in England, are now perfectly restored, or living in comparative
+health&mdash;measles and small-pox are unknown."</p>
+
+<p>W. H. Sholl, Esq. Government Surgeon, pro tempore:&mdash; "From
+pulmonary complaints we are happily free; and even when these
+have gone to some length in other countries, removal to this
+climate has been of the highest possible benefit. Children are
+exempt from the diseases common to them in England;&mdash;small-pox,
+measles, scarlet-fever, and hooping-cough, are unknown here."</p>
+
+<p>W. P. Dineley, Esq. Surgeon of Fremantle Gaol:&mdash; "We have
+almost a cloudless sky, a clear dry atmosphere, and a climate
+unsurpassed by any in the world."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Ferguson, of Australind:&mdash; "We have no fevers or epidemics
+here."</p>
+
+<p>By the Registrar-General's Report for 1843, it appears that
+the births in Western Australia are about 1 to 24 83/158, which
+is a very high rate. Those readers who are fond of statistics
+will be pleased to learn the following rather curious fact:&mdash;In
+the year 1836, males were in respect to females, as about five to
+three, but during the following seven years, females increased 21
+per cent. more than males; and the continued preponderance of
+female births promises speedily to adjust the balance of the
+sexes.</p>
+
+<p>The Registrar-General in his Report for 1844, makes the
+following interesting observations:&mdash; "Supposing the whole
+population of the colony were now grown up and unmarried, out of
+every 100 males, as many as 67 could find wives.</p>
+
+<p>"Supposing the total population UNDER TWELVE were now of age,
+and wished to marry; out of every 100 males 97 could find
+wives.</p>
+
+<p>"Supposing the total population OF PERTH were now grown up,
+and unmarried, 87 out of every 100 males could find wives.</p>
+
+<p>"But supposing the population OF PERTH UNDER TWELVE were grown
+up, and wished to marry, out of 100 FEMALES, only 85 could find
+husbands."</p>
+
+<p>The temperature of the atmosphere is exceedingly dry, and
+therefore the heat is not oppressive, though the thermometer may
+stand at a high degree.</p>
+
+<p>A rainy day in February or March is an extremely rare
+occurrence at Perth, though not unusual at Australind, a hundred
+miles southward.</p>
+
+<p>In the hottest weather, farm-labourers work all day in the
+open air, and feel no more inconvenience than reapers do in
+England. This is owing to the dryness and elasticity of the
+atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>I have no recorded observations of a late date, but the
+following table is extracted from the journal of an obliging
+friend, Robert Dale, Esq., who, when a Lieutenant in the 63d
+regiment, was stationed some years in the colony.</p>
+
+<p>The thermometer was kept in a cool house at Perth, from March,
+1830 to June 1831.</p>
+
+<pre>
+MONTHS. A B C D E F REMARKS.
+ 1830
+March . . .28 . . 2 . . 1 . .88 . .71 . .58
+April . . .23 . . 0 . . 7 . .87 . .70 1/2. .54
+May . . . .17 . . 6 . . 8 . .84 . .64 1/2. .45 . .Fine weather at commence-
+ ment of this month.
+June . . . 18 . . 5 . . 2 . .76 . .56 . .40 . .Five days not accounted
+ for.
+July . . . 14 . . 9 . . 8 . .65 . .49 1/2. .30
+August . . 9 . . 8 . . 7 . .76 . .57 . .38 . .Seven days not accounted
+ for.
+September .17 . . 2 . . 4 . .80 . .62 . .44 . . Ditto ditto.
+October . .19 . . 5 . . 6 . .78 . .62 . .46 . .One day not accounted for
+November . 23 . . 3 . . 4 . .93 . .73 1/2. .54
+December 26 . . - . . 5 . 103 . .82 1/2. .62 The thermometer was lower
+ than what is marked in
+ the minimum column.
+ 1831
+January 28 . . - . . 3 . 106 . .87 . .68
+February 26 . . 1 . . 1 . 102 . .82 . .62
+March 30 . . - . . 1 . 96 . .78 . .60
+April . . .28 . . - . . 2 . .98 . .73 . .48
+May . . . .21 . . 2 . . 8 . .78 . .61 . .44 At this season frequently
+ a heavy dew during the
+ night.
+June . . . 14 . . 9 . . 7 . .70 . .52 . .38
+
+A - No. of Fine Days.
+B - No. of Rainy Days.
+C - No. of Showers
+D - Maximum Height of Thermometer
+E - Medium Height of Thermometer
+F - Minimum Height of Thermometer
+
+</pre>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 28.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE BOTANY OF THE COLONY.</h4>
+
+<p>Baron Hugel, Dr. Lindley, and Sir William Hooker, have
+published lists of Western Australian shrubs and plants, but the
+most complete and elaborate work on the botany of Western
+Australia is the series of nineteen letters published in the
+"Inquirer," by Mr. Drummond, of Hawthornden, in the colony, and
+from them we shall compile the present chapter; but, interesting
+as they are in their fullest and most minute details to
+botanists, it is possible that they may be TOO descriptive and
+extend too much into detail for general readers, and we shall
+therefore abstain from giving a catalogue of the various
+indigenous plants, and confine our remarks to the more useful
+ones.* The first to which Mr. Drummond alludes is the blackboy,
+of which there are several varieties. The glaucus-leaved York
+blackboy is, however, the most important, and grows thirty feet
+in height without a branch. It is considered by the settlers the
+best material for thatch, and the young and tender leaves are
+found to be an agreeable vegetable, and also fodder for horses,
+goats, sheep, and cattle. The natives are particularly fond of
+the blackboy, whilst its sound old flower-stalks furnish them
+with the means of obtaining a light by friction. the native yam,
+of the class Dioeceae, is stated by Mr. Drummond to be the finest
+esculent vegetable the colony produces. The fungi, or mushrooms,
+are also palatable to the Aborigines; one species belonging to
+this order, and named the Boletus, is remarkable for possessing
+the properties of German tinder, when well dried, and for
+emitting a radiant light in its natural state.</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] *This brief compilation is the work of Alexander
+Andrews, Esq.</p>
+
+<p>There are seventy species of grasses. The genus stripa has
+several varieties, of which the seeds are injurious to sheep,
+penetrating into the wool, and sometimes into the carcase and
+causing death. By adopting the precaution of shearing before the
+seeds are ripe, this mischief is however obviated. Another
+description is distinguished as elegantissima, from its beautiful
+appearance, and is used as a decoration, and for ornamenting
+rooms.</p>
+
+<p>The bulrush of Scripture is found here, and is used by coopers
+to stanch their work. A large jointed rush has also been found of
+great service, and introduced in the walls of houses to
+advantage, and some varieties of the Restiaceae are useful in
+thatch work; and in his sixth letter, Mr. Drummond mentions the
+buttack as very useful in tyings. A climbing species of the
+Thysanotus, near the Moore river, is much used by the natives as
+food. The Madge and the Guardine are roots from which the natives
+extract nutritious food; the pigs are also fond of them, and
+besides these there are other white roots used as food by the
+natives.</p>
+
+<p>The oak-leaved Chenopodium is supposed to contain essential
+oil; it was formerly used by the settlers as a vegetable, and is
+proved to contain carbonate of soda, so that, as Mr. Drummond
+suggests, "it would be worth inquiry at what price we could
+afford barilla as an export." The Erythraea Australis is, we are
+informed, a good substitute, and is used as such, for hops; and
+one species of tobacco is indigenous to the colony. The
+sow-thistle of Swan River was, in the early days of the
+settlement, used as a vegetable, but is now eaten only by the
+domestic animals, by whom it is much relished. As a salad, it is
+said to be scarcely inferior to endive. The Helicrysum, a
+biennial of the Vasse district, is a grateful fodder for horses,
+and the Morna nitida for goats, sheep, and cattle, as are also
+several species of Picris and other shrubs. There is also a
+native celery, which forms a poor substitute for that of Europe;
+two varieties of this species are mentioned&mdash;the Conna, of which
+the roots are eaten by the natives after being peeled, and the
+Kukire, the foot of which resembles the carrot in appearance,
+with the smell and colour of the parsnip. The wild carrot is also
+an excellent vegetable, and from its root rich wine has been
+extracted. The order Eryngo has a species of which the roots when
+candied have great restorative powers. Of the Hederoma latifolia,
+Dr. Lindley remarks, that its half-ripe fruits, if sent to
+Europe, would give several original and valuable scents to the
+perfumer.</p>
+
+<p>Of the sea-weeds, one particular species, supposed to be the
+Fucus amylaeceus, thrown in great quantities upon the coast, is
+mentioned as forming when boiled, sweetened, and spiced, a
+nutritious and beautiful jelly of a fine rose colour; and as it
+appears that it may be dried without injury and preserved for
+years, it would be of value as an export.</p>
+
+<p>The catalogue of indigenous fruits is not very extensive, but
+one species, belonging to the order Epacrideae, is reported to
+bear very palatable berries. The Vasse apple, of the size of a
+peach, is stated when boiled with sugar to be an agreeable
+sweet-meat.</p>
+
+<p>Another fruit, of the species Mesembryanthemum, is of a less
+pleasing flavour; but one of the same species, resembling the
+English gooseberry, is said to be delicious. Mr. Drummond also
+records the discovery, southward of the Vasse, of a nondescript
+shrub of about five feet in height, and bearing fruit as large as
+a middle-sized plum, of a fine purple colour, covered with a rich
+bloom, and having a stone similar to the plum. It is reported to
+have a pleasing taste. This completes the list of fruits, which
+Mr. Drummond acknowledges to be imperfect, as the cultivation of
+the vine, olive, currant, and other imported fruits has withdrawn
+the attention of the settlers from the native productions; and we
+shall now pass to the smaller classes of the Eucalyptus tribe.
+The Doatta is a species of this class, and the bark of its root
+is much relished by the natives, having a sweet and pleasing
+taste, as is also the trunk of the red-gum; and its leaves,
+washed in water, form an agreeable beverage. They also collect a
+description of manna from the leaves of the York gum, which
+yields a considerable quantity of saccharine matter. The common
+green wattle of the genus of Acacia is found plentifully on the
+alluvial flats of the Swan, and the bark is much used for
+tanning; and the gum-wattle of the same order produces so great a
+quantity of gum as to demand the attention of exporters. Another
+shrub of this order is found in the Vasse district, and produces
+galls similar to those of the oak, which might also be collected
+for exportation. The gum of some of these species is used by the
+natives as food, and the seeds, when ground, give them a
+tolerable substitute for flour.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of entering more at large into dry botanical details,
+I will transfer to these pages a letter from my respected friend,
+Mr. James Drummond, the botanist already alluded to, which
+perhaps will prove more acceptable to the general reader.</p>
+
+<p>This letter was published at the time in the local
+journals.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Sir,&mdash;I send you a few extracts from a journal of
+observations which I made in a journey to the north, in company
+with Mr. Gilbert, the ornithologist.* My sons had heard from the
+natives that a considerable river and lakes of fresh water were
+to be found about two days' journey to the north of their station
+on the Moore River; and in company with Captain Scully, the
+Government Resident of this district, they determined to explore
+the country in that direction. Mr. Phillips and some other
+gentlemen who were to be of the party, as well as Mr. Gilbert and
+myself, arrived at the station too late; I shall therefore
+principally confine my observations to Mr. Gilbert's transactions
+and my own.</p>
+
+<p>[footnote] * Mr. Gilbert, an enthusiastic naturalist, and an
+amiable and highly respectable man, was treacherously murdered by
+natives to the North-East of New Holland, whilst engaged upon a
+scientific expedition.</p>
+
+<p>"We left Hawthornden on the 22d August, and slept at the
+residence of Captain Scully, who had set out some days before to
+join the exploring party. On the 23d we proceeded on our journey
+to the north, and in about five or six miles we examined some
+remarkable masses of granite rocks a little to the right of the
+road which is formed by our carts and horses passing to and from
+the Moore River. Mr. Gilbert found a small but curious
+fresh-water shell in some pools of rain-water on the rocks, and I
+found two plants which I had not seen before. In about eleven or
+twelve miles from Captain Scully's we reached a permanent spring
+called Yoolgan, where there is excellent grass, and where we
+stopped to dine and feed our horses. Soon after leaving Yoolgan,
+we met with Mr. Phillips and Mr. John Mackie returning; they had
+arrived at our station a day too late for the party; we therefore
+knew that our hurrying on to join them was useless. In ten or
+twelve miles from Yoolgan we reached Yeinart, a tea-tree swamp,
+where there is grass and water to be had throughout the year. The
+night threatened to rain, but we arrived too late to do much in
+the house-making way; fortunately, the rain kept off until
+daylight, when we soon covered our house with tea-tree bark, and
+determined to stop for the day, which I consider the best way, as
+no collections can be made when it is raining, and provisions and
+everything get spoiled. It cleared up about ten o'clock, and we
+went to visit a brushwood swamp, where my son Johnston had shot
+several specimens of a beautiful species of kangaroo with a
+dark-coloured fur, overtopped with silvery hairs, called Marnine
+by the natives: we saw plenty of tracks of the animals, but could
+not see a single specimen. On the top of a hill to the north of
+the swamp I succeeded in finding two very distinct species of
+Dryandra, new to me. I also found a fine species of Eucalyptus in
+flower, which is distinguished from the Matilgarring of the
+natives, the Eucalyptus macrocarpus of Sir W. T. Hooker, by
+having lengthened recurved flower-stalks; the flowers are
+rose-coloured.</p>
+
+<p>"On the 25th we proceeded on our journey. I observed two new
+species of acacia near Yeinart. We mistook our road, and made our
+old station at Badgee-badgee, where we stopped to dine and feed
+our horses. I also found some curious aquatic plants in the pools
+of water among the rocks at Badgee-badgee. After dinner we
+succeeded with difficulty in tracing our road to our present
+station on the Mouran pool, the cart tracks being nearly
+obliterated by the trampling of the sheep. On arriving, we found
+that the exploring party had returned, and that Captain Scully
+and my son James had left, on their return, about half an hour
+before our arrival. The mutilated specimens of plants brought
+home by the party, and the accounts of some which were left
+behind, determined me to visit the new river myself, after
+botanizing a day in the vicinity of the station, where I found a
+fine glaucus-leaved Anadenia, and Mr. Gilbert got specimens of
+the blue kangaroo, and several small new quadrupeds&mdash;one of them
+apparently a true rat, almost as large and mischievous as the
+Norway rat. Having got two natives, one of whom (Cabbinger) had
+been with the party to the north, we started on the 27th, and
+slept at a spring called Boorbarna. On the way I found a species
+of the common poison which I had not seen before, and a beautiful
+Conospermum, with pannicles of blue flowers varying to white. I
+was informed, by my son Johnston, that a plant like horehound,
+but with scarlet flowers, in tubes about an inch long, grew on
+the top of a stony hill to the north of the spring; I went and
+found the plant, which belongs to Scrophularinae; I also found a
+Manglesia, allied to Tridentifera, but having the leaves more
+divided; I also found a beautiful blue climbing plant, a species
+of Pronaya, on the top of the same hill. On the 28th, soon after
+setting out on our journey, I found two splendid species of
+everlasting flower, of which my son Johnston had been the
+original discoverer; one, with golden-yellow flowers varying to
+white, has the flowers in heads different from anything of the
+sort I have seen before, and will, I think, form a new genus of
+Compositae; and the other with pink flowers, growing two feet
+high, something like Lawrencella rosea, or Rhodanthe Manglesii,
+but if possible finer than either. In nine or ten miles to the
+north of Boorbarna, we crossed a curious tract of country,
+covered with what I considered a variety of quartz, which breaks
+with a conchoidal fracture, but it has very much the appearance
+of flint; in many places the pieces were large, with sharp
+angles; my sons complained that it injured their horses' feet,
+but by alighting, and leading our horses over the worse parts, I
+did not perceive any bad effects from it. This tract of country
+produces some interesting plants; a splendid Calathamnus, with
+leaves nine inches long, and showy scarlet flowers, was found by
+my youngest son, and I got plenty of specimens.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to a new Banksia, allied to Aquifolia, which he
+found here, I was not so fortunate, and he brought home no
+specimens. After crossing several miles of this quartz formation,
+we came upon an extensive flat of strong clay, covered with
+Eucalyptus, and some curious species of acacia; we crossed a
+considerable river, or brook, running strong to the west, and
+about two miles, after crossing this brook, we made the river we
+were in quest of at a place called Murarino by the natives. Near
+the river I found a splendid plant, which had been first observed
+by my son Johnston; he took it for a Lasiopetalum, but I expect
+it will prove to be a species of Solanum; it grows two or three
+feet high, with large purple flowers, with calyxes like brown
+velvet; the leaves are irregularly shaped, acuminate, about two
+inches long, and an inch and a half wide at their broadest parts;
+the stems are prickly, and all the leaves covered with a down as
+in Lasiopetalum. I am uncertain about the genus, not having seen
+the seed-vessels, but whatever that may be, it is of our finest
+Australian plants.</p>
+
+<p>"We stopped to dine on the river, and in about four miles
+farther to the north, we reached two fresh-water lakes called
+Dalarn and Maradine. Ducks of various sorts were here in
+thousands, and the water-hens, or gallinules, which visited the
+settlements on the Swan some years ago, were plentiful. Mr.
+Gilbert shot three or four at a shot. I found a fine Baechia,
+which had been first found by my son James, and a curious new
+plant belonging to Compositae, but not yet in flower. The
+appearance of the country about these lakes, of which there are
+several besides those I have named, and the plants which grow
+about them, which are generally met with at no great distance
+from the sea, seem to prove that the lakes are at no great
+distance from it, and that the Darling Range does not extend so
+far to the north. No hills of any description appeared to the
+west; from the top of a hill to the east, two remarkable hills
+appeared, apparently about thirty miles to the north; one of them
+was observed by my son to have a remarkable peaked top, and they
+supposed they might be Mount Heathcote and Wizard Peak. We saw,
+as we came along, a high hill, which the natives called Wangan
+Catta; they said it was three days' walk to it; it lay due east
+of our course.</p>
+
+<p>"On the 29th, we returned on our track for about seven miles,
+until we reached the first running river we met on our journey to
+the north. Our guides agreed to take us back by a different
+route, and to take us to a hill where a curious species of
+kangaroo called Damar by them, would be met with. My son Johnston
+has shot several of these animals about a day's walk to the east
+of our station on the Moore River. We therefore ascended this
+river in a course S.E. by E., and soon after we were upon its
+banks, we came upon a grassy country; three or four miles up we
+stopped to dine and feed the horses, at a place called Nugadrine;
+several pairs of beautiful falcons, the Falco Nypolencus of
+Gould, were flying over us, and Mr. Gilbert succeeded in shooting
+one of them. After dinner, we proceeded in the same direction for
+nine or ten miles; we soon crossed the tracks of Captain Scully
+and my sons on their return; they had gone up the main or
+northern branch of the river, and had found but little grass
+while they followed its banks; but they had passed over a great
+deal of grassy land in crossing the country from it to the Moore
+River.</p>
+
+<p>"We travelled for ten or eleven miles through a splendid
+grassy country, and met with a large tribe of natives, several of
+whom had never seen white men before; they were very friendly,
+and offered us some of their favourite root, the wyrang, which
+grows abundantly among these grassy hills. They made so much
+noise, that we wished to get some distance from them to sleep,
+but they all followed us and encamped near, many of the single
+men sleeping by our fire. In the morning of the 30th I went to
+the top of a hill, near our bivouac, while Mr. Gilbert was
+superintending the preparations for breakfast, and clipping the
+beards of some of our new friends. After breakfast, we started
+direct for our station on the Moore River; the natives who were
+with us as guides considering our stock of flour insufficient to
+proceed any farther in the direction of the hill where they
+expected to find the Damars. For almost the whole of this day we
+travelled over the most splendid grassy country I have ever seen
+in Australia; the hill-sides, as far as we could see in every
+direction, were covered with beautiful grass, and of a golden
+colour, from the flowers of the beautiful yellow everlasting
+flower which I have described in a former part of this letter,
+which is only to be found in the richest soil. After reaching our
+station, I was a day or two employed in drying my specimens of
+plants. My son Johnston pointed out a most beautiful new
+Dryandra, which he had discovered on the top of a hill near the
+Mouran-pool; I have named the species Dryandra floribunda, from
+its numerous blossoms, which almost hide the leaves; it grows
+twelve or fifteen feet high, and in such abundance, that the side
+of the hill on which it grows actually appears of a golden colour
+for several miles. I consider it the most beautiful species of
+the genus yet known for cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>"I am, Sir, "Your obedient servant, "James Drummond.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.&mdash;Our course generally by compass from Hawthornden to
+these lakes has been several points to the west of north. The
+natives informed us, when at the lakes, that they could reach the
+sea-coast long before sunset.</p>
+
+<p>"Hawthornden Farm, Toodyay Valley."</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 29.</h3>
+
+<h4>MISFORTUNES OF THE COLONY.</h4>
+
+<p>Many causes have unhappily united to keep Western Australia
+from rising into notice and importance with that rapidity which
+has marked the career of the other Australian colonies. The
+misfortunes of the first settlers, attributable in a great
+measure to flagrant mismanagement, deterred intending emigrants
+from tempting the like fate. The man who had the largest grant in
+the colony allotted to him&mdash;a monster grant of 250,000
+acres&mdash;made so ill an use of the means at his command, that
+nothing but misery and misfortune has ever attended his steps.
+The funds with which he was intrusted might have been applied
+with the happiest effect, both for the advancement of the colony
+and of his own personal fortunes. The people whom he brought out,
+chiefly mechanics and labourers, to the number of four hundred or
+upwards, were sufficient to have formed a settlement of their
+own. By an unhappy fatality, the early settlers were landed on a
+part of the coast the most unfavourable in the world for their
+purposes. The whole country around them was a mere limestone
+rock. Here, however, the town-site of Clarence was fixed upon,
+but scarcely a yard of land was to be found that afforded space
+for a garden. No attempt was made to sow grain, or plant
+potatoes, to provide for the wants of the following year.</p>
+
+<p>The people lived upon the provisions they had brought out with
+them. The four hundred workmen being left by their principal
+without direction or employment, soon consumed in riotous living
+the abundant stores left at their disposal, and too soon found
+that destitution is the inevitable consequence of idleness and
+folly. Many perished miserably of want and sickness, and many
+others effected their escape to Van Dieman's Land, where they
+gave a melancholy account of the wretchedness of those who were
+unable to flee from the scene of their errors.</p>
+
+<p>The active intelligence, and unremitting exertions of the
+Governor, Sir James Stirling, at length ameliorated the condition
+of the unfortunate settlers. He removed the seat of Government to
+Perth, and explored the neighbouring country in every direction
+in the hope of finding tracts of land sufficient for the support
+of the people under his charge. The flats of the Swan River
+afforded all the facilities he required; but the settlers were
+greatly intimidated by the treacherous attacks of the natives,
+and were very reluctant to separate from the main body. In
+consequence of these fears, many consumed their capital in their
+present support, instead of applying it in the formation of
+farms, and laying the ground-work of future prosperity.
+Provisions being all imported, were sold at high rates, and the
+hesitating colonists became unavoidably subservient to the
+cupidity of the traders.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to these misfortunes, no man liked to lay out his
+money in building a house upon land which might not eventually be
+allotted to him. He lived therefore, with his wife, children, and
+servants, miserably under a tent, until the surveyor-general
+should be able to point out to him the land which had fallen to
+his share, in the general lottery of the Government. In many
+cases this was not done for one or two years after the formation
+of the colony, in consequence of the lamentably inefficient force
+placed at the disposal of the able and indefatigable
+surveyor-general; and even then, the boundaries of the different
+allotments were not permanently defined. This state of
+incertitude had the most fatal effect, not only upon the
+fortunes, but upon the moral condition of the settlers. Those who
+had come out resolutely bent upon cultivating their own land, and
+supporting themselves and families by their manual labour,
+refused to make the necessary exertions upon property which might
+eventually belong to others for whom they had no desire to toil.
+Waiting, therefore, in their tents on the shore, until the
+Government should determine their respective locations, they
+passed the time in idleness, or in drinking and riotous living;
+and when at length they obtained their Letters of Allocation,
+they found themselves without money or any means of subsistence,
+except by hiring out their manual labour to others more prudent,
+or more fortunate.</p>
+
+<p>Other accidental circumstances have combined to retard the
+progress of the colony. From ignorance of the seasons, many lost
+their crops, and were obliged consequently to expend the last
+remains of their capital in procuring necessary supplies. From
+the same cause, vessels which brought emigrants to the colony
+were not secured during the winter season in the safest
+anchorages, and being exposed to the fury of the north-west
+gales, were in too many instances, driven ashore and completely
+wrecked.</p>
+
+<p>Again, too, there has always existed a strong desire on the
+part of Western Australia to connect herself with India,
+conscious that there are great facilities of communication
+between the countries, from favourable trade-winds, and that her
+own climate is perhaps better suited to invalids than even that
+of the Cape. This desire has been met by several influential
+gentleman of Calcutta, and on two occasions, vessels were
+freighted and despatched from that city to the colony, in the
+hope of establishing a mutually advantageous connexion, and on
+both occasions the vessels were lost on the voyage. At length a
+small establishment was effected near Australind, by the agents
+of Mr. W. H. Prinsep, for the purpose of breeding horses for the
+Indian market; and we most sincerely hope success will ultimately
+attend the enterprising effort. Indian officers have occasionally
+visited the colony; but they have naturally received unfavourable
+impressions, from being unable to find those accommodations and
+luxuries to which they had been accustomed.</p>
+
+<p>The settlers will not build houses and lay out their money on
+the mere speculation of gaining advantage by the visits of Indian
+officers, but if once there appeared a reasonable prospect of
+early remuneration, every convenience would be provided, and
+every comfort ensured to visitors. Living is now extremely cheap,
+and there is a profusion of vegetables and fruits of every kind.
+There are plenty of good horses and pleasure-boats, and there are
+the amusements of fishing, and hunting the Kangaroo and Emu.</p>
+
+<p>The misconduct of some, and the misfortunes of others of the
+early settlers, tended to bring about calamities which were
+echoed throughout Great Britain, and for many years had the
+effect of turning the stream of emigration away from these
+shores. Other causes have also contributed to this end. The
+Government plan of giving grants of land to emigrants,
+proportioned to the capital which they introduced into the
+colony, was good to a certain extent, but the object was
+perverted, and the boon abused. In almost all instances, men
+received a much greater quantity of land than they were justly
+entitled to. Every article of provisions, furniture, and
+household effects, and even wearing apparel, were taken into
+account. The valuations were made by friends and neighbours, who
+accommodated one another, and rated the property of the applicant
+at a most astounding price. The consequence has been, that large
+grants of land have fallen into the hands of those who have never
+lived upon them, or spent anything upon their improvement, beyond
+a fictitious amount which they were required to specify to the
+Government before they could obtain possession of their deeds of
+grant. These original grantees have clung to their lands with
+desperate tenacity, in the hope that some day their value will be
+more than nominal. The idea that all the best portions of the
+colony are in the hands of a few great unimproving proprietors,
+has been one reason why emigrants have turned away from it.</p>
+
+<p>But the provision, which has so long been an evil to the
+colony, may now be looked upon, thanks to the narrow-minded
+policy of the Home Government, as an advantage. These original
+grants, which have proved so little beneficial to the owner, and
+so highly detrimental to the community, are now far more easily
+obtainable by the emigrant than the surrounding crown-lands. The
+policy of the Government has entirely changed with regard to the
+disposal of waste lands in the Australian colonies; instead of
+giving them away with a lavish hand, it has for some years been
+the practice to throw every obstacle in the way of intending
+purchasers.</p>
+
+<p>They are now valued at one pound per acre, though it is well
+known, even at the colonial office, that five acres of Australian
+land are requisite to maintain a single sheep; and as the average
+value of sheep in all these colonies is six or seven shillings,
+it scarcely requires the head of a Secretary of State to
+calculate that every one who buys land for the purpose of feeding
+his flocks upon it, must be content to purchase it at an
+irreparable loss of capital. In consequence of this wise
+regulation, no purchase of crown-lands are now made in any of the
+Australian colonies, except of town allotments, which have a
+factitious value, altogether irrespective of the qualities of the
+soil. It is now that the holders of large grants find purchasers,
+as they are extremely willing to sell at a much lower rate than
+the crown. In Western Australia alone, however, are these grants
+to be found; and here excellent land may be purchased at three
+shillings an acre. Thus the careless profusion of one government,
+and the false policy and unhappy cupidity of another, have proved
+the means of placing this colony in a better position in some
+respects than any other.</p>
+
+<p>Western Australia has been unfortunate also in having had no
+powerful company to support her cause in England. The
+neighbouring colony of South Australia, with a much less
+extensive territory, and without any natural superiority in the
+quality of the soil, was immediately puffed into notice by the
+exertions of her friends at home.</p>
+
+<p>But whilst the settlers at Adelaide and their patrons in
+London, proclaimed to the world the advantages of the new colony,
+they scrupled not to draw comparisons between it and the Western
+settlement, that were neither flattering nor just to the latter.
+Not content with elevating their own idol with paeans and
+thanksgiving, before the gaze of a bedinned public, they
+persisted in shouting out their scorn and contempt at the
+pretensions of their unhappy neighbour. The public, with its
+usual discernment, gave implicit credence to both fables. Western
+Australia had met its contumelious detractors with silence; and
+the false statements were therefore looked upon as admitted and
+undeniable. But notwithstanding the injurious misrepresentations
+of enemies, and her own injurious silence, this colony has been
+quietly and steadily progressing, until she has laid for herself
+a foundation that no envious calumny can shake. The last blow she
+has received was from the failure of the settlement at
+Australind; a subject that I intend to treat of in a separate
+chapter.</p>
+
+<p>So many misfortunes and untoward accidents have combined to
+prejudice the emigrating portion of the British public against
+Western Australia, that no voice is ever raised in her behalf,
+and scarcely any literary journal condescends to acknowledge her
+existence. And yet, notwithstanding the veil of darkness that
+conceals her from Northern eyes, there is perhaps no spot in the
+world that contains so eminently within itself the elements of
+prosperity and happiness. A climate more genial, more divine than
+that of Italy, robs poverty of its bleakness and its bitterness.
+Absolute want is never felt, and those who possess but little,
+find how little is sufficient in a climate so productive and so
+beneficent.</p>
+
+<p>The purity and elasticity of the atmosphere induce a continual
+flow of good spirits.</p>
+
+<p>To all the fruits of Italy in most abundant profusion, are
+added the productions of the East.</p>
+
+<p>The regularity of the seasons is so certain, that the
+husbandman always reckons with confidence upon his crops. No
+droughts interfere, AS IN THE OTHER COLONIES, to ruin his hopes.
+the vintages, annually increasing and improving, are equally free
+from disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>It must not, however, be denied that there are many natural
+disadvantages which can never be overcome without a much larger
+population.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, the only good harbour on the Western coast
+has only just been discovered&mdash;June 1846&mdash;and is at least
+thirty-five miles distant from Perth, the capital. Then,
+secondly, all the superior land of the colony is situated about
+sixty miles back from the capital, and the farmers therefore have
+a considerable distance to convey their produce to the port; and
+part of that distance the roads are extremely bad.</p>
+
+<p>There is another objection to the colony in the opinion of
+intending emigrants, which arises from a small plant, or shrub,
+of the order leguminosae, a deadly poison to sheep and cattle.
+This plant grows over the colony in patches, but is now so well
+known, that accidents very seldom occur from it, shepherds being
+careful not to allow their flocks to feed in its vicinity. It is
+however to be observed, that neither sheep nor cattle will feed
+upon this plant unless they be very hungry, and other food be
+wanting. It is very seldom indeed that cattle, which are
+sometimes left to roam at large over the country, are found to
+have perished from pasturing upon it. This plant has no injurious
+effect upon horses; but these animals have in several instances
+been poisoned by eating the leaves of a small plant described as
+resembling the ranunculus, which grows in small quantities in the
+Southern portion of the colony. A gentleman once informed me that
+he was riding up from Australind on a favourite and very fine
+horse, which he allowed to feed, during several hours of rest, on
+a spot where this plant unfortunately grew. On mounting to resume
+his journey, the horse seemed full of spirit; but he had not
+proceeded a mile before it stumbled, and was with difficulty kept
+from falling. A little farther on, after proceeding with evident
+difficulty, it fell, to rise no more, and died in a few hours of
+violent inflammation of the kidneys.</p>
+
+<p>However alarming these drawbacks may seem to people at a
+distance, they are only lightly considered in the colony.
+Fatalities are very rare among the flocks and herds, and many
+diseases which prevail in New South Wales are entirely unknown
+among us.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 30.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE RESOURCES OF THE COLONY:&mdash;HORSES FOR INDIA&mdash;WINE&mdash;DRIED
+FRUITS&mdash;COTTON&mdash;COAL&mdash;WOOL&mdash;CORN&mdash;WHALE-OIL&mdash;A WHALE-HUNT&mdash;CURED
+FISH&mdash;SHIP TIMBER.</h4>
+
+<p>The geographical position of Western Australia makes it one of
+the most desirable colonies of the British empire. The French
+would be delighted to possess so advantageous a station in that
+part of the world, whence they could sally forth and grievously
+annoy our shipping-trade. Vessels bound for China and the Eastern
+Islands pass within a few days' sail of the colony. For my part,
+I confess I should feel by no means sorry were we to fall into
+the hands of the French for a few years, as they would not
+hesitate to make such lasting improvements as would materially
+add to the importance of the settlement. It requires that
+Government should be made to feel the value of this colony as a
+naval station before it will rise into anything like consequence.
+The anchorage of Cockburn Sound, lying between Garden Island and
+the main land, presents a splendid harbour, where hundreds of
+ships of war might lie throughout all weathers in perfect safety.
+Enemy's cruisers passing along the coast cannot come within
+Garden Island from the south, and they would scarcely venture
+without a pilot from the north, except with a great deal of
+deliberation and caution, so that small vessels might readily
+slip away and avoid the danger; and numbers of ships might lie so
+close under Garden Island, that they never would be perceived by
+men-of-war reconnoitring the coast.</p>
+
+<p>There is no other colony in Australia so admirably situated
+with respect to other countries. The Cape of Good Hope is four or
+five weeks sail distant; Ceylon about twenty days; Calcutta,
+Sincapore, and Batavia are all within easy reach. In exporting
+live-stock, this is of vast importance; and in time of war a
+central position like this would afford an admirable place for
+vessels to repair to in order to refit. With the finest timber in
+the world for naval purposes in unlimited profusion; with a soil
+teeming with various metals; with harbours and dock-yards almost
+ready made by the hand of Nature, all things requisite for the
+wants of shipping may be obtained whenever a Government shall see
+fit to resort to them.</p>
+
+<p>It must doubtless surprise many that more has not been done in
+a colony possessing such natural advantages. The reason is, that
+the prejudices which have so long prevailed against this
+settlement have retarded the progress of immigration, and the
+small number of inhabitants has ever precluded the possibility of
+any great effort being made by the colony itself.</p>
+
+<p>Public opinion in England must turn in its favour before it
+can rise from obscurity into importance; but public opinion is
+never in favour of the poor and deserted. Time, however, will
+eventually develope those resources, which at present lie dormant
+for want of capital and opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>The proximity of this colony to India peculiarly marks it as
+the most advantageous spot for the breeding of horses for that
+market. From Van Dieman's Land or New South Wales, ships are
+generally about eight weeks in reaching an Indian port, and must
+proceed either by the north of New Holland, through the dangerous
+navigation of Torres Straits, or by the south and west, round
+Cape Lewin. Either route presents a long and rough passage,
+highly detrimental to stock, and of course increasing the cost of
+the horses exported. The voyage from Fremantle may be performed
+in half the time, and the animals will therefore arrive at their
+destination in much finer order, and with much less loss.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that none of these colonies afford better or
+more extensive pasture-ground for horses and cattle than ours.
+Nothing is wanted but capital and population to produce a
+thriving traffic in horse-flesh between this settlement and
+India.</p>
+
+<p>There is every reason to believe that Western Australia will
+one day become a great wine country. Its vineyards are becoming
+more numerous and extensive every year, and the wine produced in
+them is of a quality to lead us to believe that when the art of
+preparing it is better understood, it will be found of very
+superior quality. It will, however, be a new kind of wine; and
+therefore, before it will be prized in Europe, prejudices in
+favour of older wines have to be overcome. Soil and climate
+combined, give to different wines their peculiar flavour. The
+vines which in Madeira produce the wine of that name, when
+brought to another country, even in a corresponding latitude, and
+planted in soil that chemically approaches as closely as possible
+to that which they have left, will produce a wine materially
+different from that called Madeira. So with the vines of Xeres
+and Oporto; of Teneriffe or Constantia. Different countries
+produce wines peculiar to themselves; and the wine of Western
+Australia will be found to be entirely sui generis. All that I
+have tasted, though made from the poorest of grapes, the common
+sweet-water, have one peculiarity; a good draught, instead of
+affecting the head or flushing the face, causes a most delightful
+glow to pervade the stomach; and it is of so comforting a nature,
+that the labourers in harvest prefer the home-made colonial wine
+to any other beverage. Every farm-settler is now adding a
+vineyard to his estate. The olive is also being extensively
+cultivated. In a few years' time, dried fruits will be exported
+in large quantities; but we almost fear that the colonists are
+giving too much of their attention to the cultivation of grapes
+and other fruits. In addition to exports, on a large scale, of
+wool, horses, timber, and metals, these articles of commerce are
+not undeserving of attention, but they should not be brought so
+prominently forward as to form the principal feature in the trade
+of the colony. Wine and fruit countries are always poor
+countries; let us think of substantials first, and of wine and
+fruit only by way of dessert.</p>
+
+<p>Cotton is a plant that grows extremely well in this colony,
+and might be cultivated on a large scale, and doubtless with
+great success. Mr. Hutt, the late governor, whose constant
+anxiety to promote the interests of the settlers in every way
+must long endear him to their memories, always appeared extremely
+sanguine as to the practicability of making this a great cotton
+country.</p>
+
+<p>But Western Australia contains, perhaps, greater internal
+wealth than that which appears on the surface. She abounds in
+iron, which must some day come into the Indian market; and as the
+metal lies close to the surface, it may be obtained without much
+expenditure of capital. There is no doubt, also, that she is
+equally rich in copper and platina, but capital is wanting at
+present to enable the settlers to work the mines. Soon, however,
+companies will be formed, and operations will be carried on
+rivalling those of South Australia.</p>
+
+<p>Extensive fields of excellent COAL have lately been
+discovered, and will prove the source of vast wealth to the
+colony. Steam-vessels in the Indian ocean will be supplied with
+coal from Western Australia; and the depots at Sincapore,
+Point-de-Galle, and perhaps at Aden, will afford a constant
+market for this valuable commodity.</p>
+
+<p>The staple export of the colony is, of course, at present
+wool. Our flocks, unfortunately, increase in a much greater ratio
+than the inhabitants, and thus the scarcity of labour becomes
+severely felt. A large flock becomes an evil, and men are
+burdened and impoverished by the very sources of wealth. The
+expense of maintaining becomes greater than the returns. The
+emigrants who are most sure of improving their condition in a
+colony, are those men who begin as shepherds, and having
+established a good character for themselves, undertake the care
+of a flock upon shares; that is, they receive a certain
+proportion&mdash;a third, and sometimes even a half&mdash;of the annual
+increase and wool, delivering the remainder to the owner at the
+seaport, ready packed for shipping. These men, of course, soon
+acquire a flock of their own, and then abandon the original
+employer to his old embarrassment, leaving him, (a resident
+probably in the capital, and already a prey to multitudinous
+distractions,) to find out a new shepherd on still more
+exorbitant terms. As large grants of land may be obtained by
+tenants for merely nominal rents, or in consideration of their
+erecting stock-yards or farm-buildings in the course of a term of
+years, there is every inducement to men of this class to become
+settlers.</p>
+
+<p>The houses in some districts are built of clay, or prepared
+earth, rammed down between boards, and thus forming solid walls
+of twelve or eighteen inches in thickness, that harden in a short
+time almost to the consistency of stone. The windows and doorways
+are cut out of the walls. These edifices are built at a very
+cheap rate; and when laths or battens are fixed inside of them,
+may be covered with plaister, and either whitewashed or
+painted.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the extensive sheep-runs of the colony, there is an
+unlimited extent of excellent corn-land. The crops in the
+Northam, Toodyay, and York districts&mdash;though inferior to those of
+the midland counties of England, for want of manure, and a more
+careful system of husbandry&mdash;are extremely fine; and there is
+land enough, if cultivated, to supply the whole of the southern
+hemisphere with grain.</p>
+
+<p>The sea on the western coast of New Holland still abounds with
+whales, although the Americans for many years made it one of
+their principal stations, and have consequently driven many of
+the animals away. The whale is a very suspicious and timid
+creature, and when it has been once chased it seldom returns to
+the same locality. The Americans tell us that Geographe Bay,
+about twenty years ago, abounded with whales at certain seasons.
+Many of them came there apparently to die, and the shore was
+covered with their carcases and bones. About the month of June,
+the whales proceed along the coast, going northward; and then
+visit the various bays and inlets as they pass, in pursuit of the
+shoals of small fish that precede them in their migration. They
+generally return towards the south about six weeks afterwards,
+and at these times the whale-fishery is eagerly pursued both by
+the Americans and the colonists. Bay-whaling is followed with
+various success at Fremantle, Bunbury, the Vasse, Augusta, and
+King George's Sound.</p>
+
+<p>At these times swarms of sharks of enormous dimensions infest
+the coast. At the Vasse, they were so numerous in 1845, that the
+men in the boats became quite cowed by their audacity. Were a
+whale killed in the evening, two-thirds of it would be eaten
+before morning by the sharks. The monsters (sometimes thirty feet
+in length) would follow the whale-boats, and strike against them
+with their snouts and fins; until the men were so intimidated
+that they even refused to go in pursuit of a whale which
+otherwise they might easily have captured. Mr. Robert Viveash,
+one of the principals at this station, told me, among other
+anecdotes, that one day, standing on the deck of a small
+schooner, watching the evolutions of an enormous shark, he saw it
+seize the rudder with its teeth in a kind of frenzy, or else in
+mere sport, and shake it so violently that the tiller, striking
+against some heavy object on deck, was actually broken in two
+pieces. It is a well-authenticated fact, that some years ago a
+shark, playing round a whaling vessel of upwards of 300 tons,
+whilst lying at anchor during a calm, got entangled in the
+buoy-rope of the anchor, and in its efforts to free itself
+actually tripped the anchor. The people on board, perceiving
+something extraordinary had happened, hove up the anchor, and
+brought the struggling shark to the surface. Having thrown a rope
+over its head and secured it by a running bowline knot under the
+pectoral fins, the fish was boused up to the fore-yard; and its
+length was so great, that when its nose touched the yard, its
+tail was still lashing the water.</p>
+
+<p>There is something highly exciting in the chase of the whale.
+I have watched the proceedings for hours from Arthur's Head, the
+high rock between Fremantle and the sea. A man stationed here on
+the look out, perceives a whale spouting about six miles off,
+between the main-land and the opposite islands. He immediately
+hoists a flag, and makes signals indicating the direction.</p>
+
+<p>The crews of six whale-boats, which have been lying ready on
+the beach, with their lines carefully coiled in a tub, and
+harpoon and lances all at hand, assemble like magic. The boats
+are launched, and pulling rapidly out of the bay, each with its
+own particular flag flying at the bows; the steersman leans
+forward, and gives additional force to the stroke-oar by the
+assistance of his weight and strength; the men pull strongly and
+well-together; the boats dance over the flashing waves, and
+silence and determination reign among the crews. The object is to
+meet the whale, and come down upon him in front; none but a
+lubber or a knave would cross his wake; for his eyes are so
+placed that he can see laterally and behind better than straight
+before him, and the moment he detects a boat in pursuit he begins
+to run. The lubber crosses his wake, because he has not steered
+so as to be able to avoid doing so; the knave, because either out
+of spite to his employer, or because he is bribed by an adverse
+company, is desirous that the fish should be lost. If the boats
+are a long distance astern when the whale begins to run, pursuit
+is useless, and the men return, hoping for better luck another
+time.</p>
+
+<p>The boats come round Arthur's Head almost together. The men,
+knowing that many hours of severe toil are probably before them,
+pull steadily, but not so as to exhaust themselves at the outset.
+At length one boat creeps out from the rest; the others gradually
+drop into line, and the distance between each widens perceptibly.
+The last boat, a heavy sailer, is half-a-mile astern of the
+first. From the boats, your eye wanders to the spot where the
+whale was last seen to blow. For some time you can discern
+nothing, and fancy he must be gone off to sea again. At last a
+thin white column of vapour is perceptible; the animal is
+carelessly sporting about, unconscious of danger. The first boat
+draws rapidly down upon him; it approaches nearer and nearer. The
+fish has disappeared, but his enemies seem to know the direction
+in which he is going, and are ready awaiting him when he returns
+to the surface. You now perceive him blowing close to the first
+boat, the steersman of which draws in the steer-oar and runs
+forward, whilst the men have all peaked their oars, and remain
+quiet in their seats. The steersman has seized the harpoon to
+which the long line of coiled rope is attached; in a moment he
+has plunged it into the animal's side. Starting at the stroke,
+away it darts; the line flies out of the tub over the bow of the
+boat; the men begin to pull, in order to ease the shock when the
+line is all run out; and now away they go, the whale drawing the
+boat after him at such speed that the water flies off from the
+bows in broad flakes.</p>
+
+<p>After running upwards of a mile, the fish dives down to the
+bottom; there he remains some minutes, until compelled to return
+to the surface for breath. His reappearance is heralded by a
+column of water spouted from his nostrils.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the boats are able to approach near enough to allow
+lances to be thrown at him, which, penetrating through the
+blubber, pierce his vitals, and cause him to run again as swiftly
+as before. Again he sinks, and again appears on the surface; the
+column which he now spouts forth is tinged with red. The boats
+again approach, the more lances are driven into his sides, but he
+is not yet subdued; he breaks away from the assassins, and tries
+once more to escape; but, alas! his strength and his life-blood
+are fast ebbing away; his breath begins to fail, and he cannot
+remain long beneath the surface.</p>
+
+<p>He comes up suddenly in the very midst of the boats, and, as
+he rolls from side to side, he strikes one of them with his fin,
+staving it in and making it a wreck upon the water. The drowning
+men are picked up by their companions, and the whale is again
+pursued. He is now in the death-flurry, spinning round and round,
+and lashing the sea into foam with his broad tail. He is still;
+and now the boats venture to come close up to the carcase, and
+fixing grapnels in it, with tow-lines attached, they form in a
+line, and commence towing their conquest to the shore, singing as
+they row, their measured paeans of victory.</p>
+
+<p>When the blubber is cut off and tryed out, it produces from
+three to ten tons of oil.</p>
+
+<p>Besides whales, there are immense quantities of fish upon this
+coast. The best kind are called tailors, and have a good deal of
+the mackerel flavour; and snappers, which somewhat resemble
+cod-fish. The mullets and whitings are better than those on the
+English coast, but every other fish is much inferior in flavour
+to those known in England. We have nothing to equal salmon,
+turbot, soles, cod, or mackerel; nevertheless, a snapper of
+twenty pounds weight is a very eatable fish.</p>
+
+<p>They are caught in great quantities, salted and exported to
+the Mauritius, where they are acknowledged to be superior to the
+fish imported from the Cape of Good Hope. Snapper-fishing is not
+bad sport, as they bite freely. They go in immense shoals, and it
+is not an uncommon thing to catch twenty-hundred weight at a
+single haul. When H.M.S. Challenger was lying in Cockburn Sound,
+some of the men with a very large seine-net, caught two thousand
+fish at a single haul&mdash;averaging five pounds a-piece. This is
+almost incredible, but it is related on good authority.</p>
+
+<p>The fresh-water rivers have no fish but a small craw-fish,
+that buries itself in the ground when the bed of the stream is
+dry; and a flat-headed, tapering fish called a cobbler. This is
+about twelve inches long, and has a sharp, serrated bone an inch
+in length on each side of its head, that lies flat and perfectly
+concealed until an enemy approaches. This bone is hollow, like an
+adder's tooth, and contains a virulent poison, which is injected
+into the wound, and causes intense pain for several hours. Men
+are frequently stung by these wretches, whilst wading through the
+water.</p>
+
+<p>There are several valuable kinds of wood in this colony, which
+do not exist in South Australia or New South Wales. We may
+mention the sandalwood, which now finds a market in Ceylon, where
+it fetches about 22 pounds per ton; but if it were sent direct to
+China, (its ultimate destination,) it would obtain probably 35
+pounds per ton. Sandal-wood is burnt in large quantities in
+China, as a kind of incense. There is another highly-fragrant
+wood peculiar to this colony, called by the settlers raspberry
+jam, from its resembling that sweet-meat in its scent. A small
+quantity sent to Tonbridge-Wells, was worked up into boxes, and
+highly approved of by the cabinet-makers, who gave it the name of
+violet wood.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most beautiful trees in the colony is called the
+peppermint-tree; its leaves, which are very abundant, resemble
+those of the willow, and, on being rubbed, smell strongly of
+peppermint. It bears a small yellow flower. These is much reason
+to believe that this is of the same species as the tree which
+yields the valuable Cajeput oil, and it is highly desirable that
+an endeavour should be made to distil this oil from the
+leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the vegetable productions of Western Australia appear
+to correspond with those of Java and others of the Eastern
+Islands, modified by the difference of climate.</p>
+
+<p>The timber adapted to ship-building purposes, extends in vast
+quantities down the line of coast, and is of three kinds, all
+varieties of the eucalyptus. The tooart in the districts of
+Bunbury and the Vasse, and the blue-gum which abounds at Augusta
+and Nornalup, are woods of large size, and remarkably hard and
+close-grained in texture. It is well adapted for keel-pieces,
+stern-posts, capstan-heads, and heavy beams: and its fibres are
+so closely matted and interwoven together, that it is scarcely
+possible to split it. It grows in lengths of from 30 to 60 feet,
+and measures from 15 to 30 inches in diameter.</p>
+
+<p>But the wood most highly prized and most easily attainable is
+the Jarra, which grows upon the entire range of the Darling
+Hills, distant from sixteen to twenty miles from the coast, and
+extends over a country averaging at least twenty miles in
+breadth. It was for a long time erroneously called mahogany by
+the settlers, as it takes an excellent polish, and is extremely
+useful for cabinet purposes. A small quantity recently sent to
+England for the purpose of being worked up with furniture, has
+been thus reported upon:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We have just inspected about two tons of wood brought to this
+town (Leeds) under the name of Swan River Mahogany. Some of the
+wood is firm and close in texture, with a very great abundance of
+cross mottle;&mdash;in fact, it is quite crowded with figure. The
+colour is something like old Jamaica mahogany, and it bears a
+strong resemblance in some of its figures to the wood so
+celebrated by Messrs. Collard as Ocean Wood. We are quite firm in
+our opinion, that it is NOT mahogany, and do not know why it
+should be nicknamed. Why not call it by its proper name?&mdash;for it
+has sufficiently strong claims to maintain its own
+independence.</p>
+
+<p>"J. Kendell and Co. "Cabinet Manufacturers, Leeds."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bond, of the firm of Gillows and Co., cabinet
+manufacturers, 176 and 177 Oxford-street, London, to whom a small
+quantity was submitted, has also made an equally favourable
+report. Messrs. Chaloner and Fleming, of Liverpool, whose firm is
+one of the most extensive importers of timber in the empire, have
+reported that they "consider the specimens submitted to them to
+be of rich figure, and very fine quality, although the colour is
+rather dark. It is quite as fine in texture as the best Spanish
+mahogany, and takes the polish remarkably well."</p>
+
+<p>It is not, however, as cabinet wood that the Jarra is so
+highly valuable. It has been found to be some of the best
+ship-timber in the world. It is so extremely durable, that when
+it is cut in a healthy state, it is never found to rot, even
+though it be buried in the ground for years. For seventeen years
+it has been constantly used in the colony for a variety of
+purposes. As it resists the white-ant, an insect that destroys
+oak and every other kind of wood, and is never subject to the
+dry-rot, it is invaluable for building purposes. Boats
+constructed of it, which have been in the water during the whole
+of this period, and entirely unprotected by paint, are still as
+sound as they were when first launched.</p>
+
+<p>It resists the sea-worm; and our colonial vessels, when hove
+down for repairs or survey at Sincapore, Launceston, or other
+ports, have always excited the admiration of the surveyors, and
+have been pronounced not to require to be coppered. This wood is
+long in the grain, but very close and tough, and not only makes
+very good planking, but excellent beams, keel-pieces, and many
+other portions of a ship. Growing without a branch to the height
+of from fifty to one hundred feet, and from eighteen inches to
+three feet and upwards in diameter, it excites the admiration of
+all practical men; and as its properties have been so long
+tested, and are so generally admitted in the southern hemisphere,
+it is matter of no less surprise than regret that it should be
+still unknown in the English markets. Strong prejudice, and the
+interest of parties connected with the timber-trade in other
+countries, have served to keep the inexhaustible forests of
+Western Australia in the obscurity which has hung over them from
+primeval times. Besides this, although the Jarra wood exists not
+in other parts of Australia, and is confined to the Western coast
+alone, timber has been imported to England from New South Wales,
+and is very little prized there. Timber-merchants, therefore, who
+confound all the Australian colonies together, as most other
+people in England do, are willing to believe that the Jarra of
+Western Australia is the same as the Stringy-bark of New South
+Wales, and therefore worth little or nothing for ship-building
+purposes. The experience of seventeen years has proved the
+contrary. Not only have the valuable qualities of the Jarra been
+tested in vessels built in the colony, and employed in trading to
+the neighbouring ports; but men-of-war and merchant ships have
+been frequently repaired with it, and the wood so employed has
+always been highly esteemed when subsequently inspected
+abroad.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn of 1845, the Halifax Packet, a barque of 400
+tons, having parted from her anchor in a gale, and drifted
+ashore, underwent repairs at Fremantle, to the extent of about
+eleven hundred pounds. On being surveyed at the Port of London on
+her return home, the new timber, which had never been previously
+recognized at Lloyd's, though many efforts have been made to
+obtain that sanction, was allowed to remain in the ship as being
+perfectly serviceable. The following memorandum was addressed by
+the Surveyor of Lloyd's to A. Andrews, Esq., a gentleman
+interested in the welfare of the colony:</p>
+
+<p>"The wood used in the repairs of the Halifax Packet at Swan
+River, appears to answer the purpose very well. It is not found
+necessary to remove any part thereof.</p>
+
+<p>"From the samples which I have seen of Swan River timber, I am
+of opinion that it will form a very desirable and serviceable
+wood in ship-building; but this must be regarded as my private
+opinion, the Society of Lloyd's Register, to which I belong, not
+having as yet assigned any character to it in their rules.</p>
+
+<p>(Signed) "P. Courtney, Lloyd's Surveyor. "Lloyd's, 24th
+February, 1846."</p>
+
+<p>This extraordinary timber grows to a size that would appear
+incredible to readers in England. It is perhaps only manageable
+and remunerative from 40 to 60 feet; but in the southern
+districts of the colony&mdash;especially to the back of Nornalup and
+Wilson's Inlet&mdash;it is found growing to 120 and 150 feet in
+height, before the first branch appears. My brother and his
+servant, when exploring in that district, took refuge once from a
+storm in the hollow of an old Jarra tree, which not only
+sheltered themselves but their horses; and the interior actually
+measured in diameter three times the length of the largest horse,
+an animal sixteen hands high and very long backed. This may
+appear an astounding assertion, but the following is not less so.
+The same parties found a Jarra tree which had fallen completely
+across a broad and deep river (called the Deep River) running
+between high precipitous banks, thus forming a natural bridge,
+along which a bullock cart might have passed!</p>
+
+<p>Timber of such large dimensions is perfectly useless; but
+there are, of course, trees of every size, growing in boundless
+profusion.</p>
+
+<p>As Indian teak and African oak are now scarcely obtainable, we
+look upon our colony as a store-house for the British navy; and
+though we have hitherto vainly battled against prejudice and
+private interest to make this timber known to our rulers, the day
+will arrive when the wants of the naval service will compel men
+in authority to acknowledge the value of wood, which is most
+highly prized by all who have had the opportunity of testing its
+qualities.</p>
+
+<p>It is due to the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty to
+state, that on two occasions they have promised to receive a
+quantity of this timber, provided it were delivered at one of the
+royal dockyards, and to allow a fair price for it. But
+unfortunately, there is so great a scarcity of labour and of
+capital in the colony, that the settlers have shrunk from the
+outlay necessary to perform what would be, after all, only an
+experiment.</p>
+
+<p>It cannot be supposed, that timber which has been tested in
+every way for seventeen years, and is known throughout Australia
+to be indisputably FIRST-RATE for ship-building purposes, should
+be condemned at home as unserviceable. But the colonists know how
+many prejudices and interested feelings environ the Admiralty;
+and in general shrink from the experiment.</p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER 31.</h3>
+
+<h4>RISE AND FALL OF A SETTLEMENT.&mdash;THE SEQUEL TO CAPTAIN GREY'S
+DISCOVERIES.&mdash;A WORD AT PARTING.</h4>
+
+<p>His Excellency the Governor having kindly invited me to be his
+companion on a journey which he proposed to make to the new
+settlement of Australind, about a hundred miles south of Perth, I
+set about making the necessary preparations. I borrowed a pair of
+saddle-bags, and having stuffed my traps into one side of them,
+loaded the other with a cold roast fowl, a boiled tongue, a pound
+of sausages, a loaf of bread, a flask of brandy, and sundry small
+packages of tea, sugar, cigars, etc.</p>
+
+<p>When I looked at the result of my labours, the swollen sides
+of the leathern receptacle, I enjoyed a noble feeling of
+independence; as though I were now prepared to ramble through the
+world, and stood in no need of friendly welcome, or the doubtful
+hospitality of an inn.</p>
+
+<p>Having breakfasted at five o'clock on a December morning (the
+middle of summer), and equipped myself in a broad-brimmed
+straw-hat and light shooting jacket, I mounted my steed, and
+sallied forth from my gate, followed by the sympathizing grins of
+Hannibal.</p>
+
+<p>His Excellency, true to the hour, was mounting his horse at
+the door of Government House&mdash;and as the appearance of the whole
+turn-out was rather unlike anything usually seen in Hyde Park, or
+even connected with the morning drives of his Excellency the
+Viceroy of Ireland, I may as well describe it.</p>
+
+<p>The representative of our gracious Sovereign was habited in
+his bush costume&mdash;a white hat, bare of beaver, having a green
+veil twisted round it, a light shooting coat and plaid trousers,
+shoes, and jean gaiters. His illustrious person was seated on a
+pair of broad saddle-bags, which went flap, flap against the
+sides of his charger, as he jogged steadily along at the usual
+travelling pace. On the pummel of his saddle was strapped a roll
+of blankets for the night bivouac, and to one of the straps was
+attached a tin-pannikin, which bumped incessantly against his
+horse's mane. Round the animal's neck was coiled a long
+tether-rope, which every now and then kept coming undone, and the
+caravan had to halt whilst it was being readjusted.</p>
+
+<p>Behind us rode his Excellency's man, no longer the smug
+gentleman in a black suit, with a visage as prim as his
+neck-cloth, but blazing in a red woollen shirt, and grinning
+incessantly with amazement at his own metamorphosis. Strapped to
+his waist by a broad belt of leather, was a large tin-kettle, for
+the purpose of making his Excellency's tea in the evening. Huge
+saddle-bags contained provisions, knives and forks, plates, and
+everything necessary for travelling in the Bush in a style of
+princely magnificence. No scheik or emir among the Arabs wanders
+about the desert half so sumptuously provided. I could not help
+laughing (in my sleeve, of course,) at the figure produced by the
+tout ensemble of John mounted on his ewe-necked and pot-bellied
+steed.</p>
+
+<p>In excellent spirits we jogged along to the Canning, and then
+eleven miles farther, to a muddy pool called Boregarup, where we
+baited the horses, and lunched on one of his Excellency's cold
+meat-pies. The water in the pool was not very tempting, but we
+ladled a little out in our pannikins, and mixing it with brandy,
+managed to drink it. The want of water makes travelling in the
+bush during summer a serious business. Frequently you find a
+well, on which your thoughts and hopes have been fixed for the
+last twenty miles, completely dried up; and you have to endure
+thirst as well as you can for some hours longer. Sometimes by
+scraping the bottom of the well, and digging down with your
+pannikin, you come to a little moisture, and after waiting an
+hour, succeed in obtaining about half-a-pint of yellow fluid,
+compounded of mud and water. This you strain through as many
+pocket-handkerchiefs as you can command, and are at last enabled
+to moisten your baked lips.</p>
+
+<p>On these occasions the traveller cares less about himself than
+his horse, and often have we served the latter out of our
+pannikin from holes into which he could not get his nose, whilst
+denying ourselves more than a little sip.</p>
+
+<p>After lying an hour on our blankets in the hot shade, smoking
+a cigar, and waging incessant war with myriads of mosquitoes and
+sand-flies, we decided that it was impossible to continue any
+longer so unequal a conflict; and saddling our horses in haste,
+we beat a quick retreat, and felt much cooler and more
+comfortable whilst in motion. In the course of the afternoon we
+passed through a vast dry swamp many miles long. The reeds on
+each side of the track frequently reached to our heads, and
+prevented our seeing any thing else on either side of us; and
+when we did get a glimpse over the rushes level with our eyes, we
+could behold nothing but an immense plain of waving green, like a
+huge field of unripe wheat, edged in the distance by the stern
+outline of the ever-sombre forest of eucalyptus trees. This swamp
+is a terrible place to pass through in winter. It is nevertheless
+one of the royal post-roads of the colony; and the bearer of her
+Majesty's mail from Pinjarra to Perth, is frequently obliged to
+swim for his life, with the letter-bag towing astern, like a
+jolly-boat behind a Newcastle collier.</p>
+
+<p>After emerging from the swamp, we passed through an extensive
+plain, covered with coarse scrub and thinly-scattered grass, and
+lined with forest trees and clumps of black-boys. When about
+half-way down it, we came upon a herd of wild cattle grazing at
+some two hundred yards' distance from the path. They seemed very
+much astonished at the appearance of three such picturesque
+individuals; and after gazing for a few moments, lost in wonder,
+they tossed up their heads, and trotted along-side of us, keeping
+their original distance. Having kept us company for about
+half-a-mile, they relieved us of their society, (which was not
+very agreeable, as we had no firearms) by coming to a halt, and
+allowing us to proceed in peace, whilst they contented themselves
+with brandishing their horns and tails, and butting against one
+another in play.</p>
+
+<p>That night we slept at the Dandalup, hospitably entertained by
+F. Corbet Singleton, Esq., M.C., the owner of a fine estate of
+twelve thousand acres, a good deal of it alluvial soil. Were the
+population such as it ought to be in this fine country; and the
+markets proportioned to the capabilities of the soil, nothing
+would be more agreeable than to live on a beautiful property like
+this, cultivating your corn lands and multiplying your flocks and
+herds. But as it is, unfortunately, a man is soon overdone with
+his own wealth. He has more corn than he can find a market for;
+more cattle than he can sell; and he is obliged to allow his land
+to run waste, and his herds to run wild, rather than be at the
+expense of farming on a great scale without adequate
+remuneration.</p>
+
+<p>Let me advise emigrants to these colonies to turn their
+attention chiefly to the breeding of sheep and horses, which are
+saleable things in foreign markets. The growers of wool, and the
+breeders of horses for India will make their estates profitable;
+but large herds of cattle will produce nothing to the owner in a
+thinly-populated country.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, after inspecting the farm, we proceeded with our
+host to Mandurah, crossing an estuary a quarter of a mile broad,
+but so shallow that the water did not reach above our
+saddle-flaps. And now (having parted from Singleton) we had to
+swim our horses across the mouth of the Murray River. After a
+little delay, a boat was found; with a couple of men to row it
+across, and removing the saddles and other things from the
+horses' backs, we prepared for the passage. His Excellency's Arab
+mare was destined to make the experimental trip, and the
+Governor, with many injunctions and misgivings, committed the end
+of the tether-rope to the hand of his servant, who belayed it to
+the stern of the boat, where he seated himself, to act as
+occasion should require. The boatman rowed till the tether-rope
+was out at full stretch; his Excellency coaxed and entreated the
+mare to enter the water, and "shoo-ed!" and "shaa-ed!" and called
+her a stupid creature, whilst I cracked my whip and jumped about,
+and rattled my hat, and made as much noise as people usually do
+on such occasions. The mare, on her part, reared up, and flung
+herself back, and plunged about, and showed so strong a
+determination not to go down the broken bank, that we feared we
+should never get her into the river. At last, however, we managed
+to back her into the water, when she was dragged instantly out of
+her depth and obliged to swim. The men pulled so fast that she
+could not keep up with them, and giving up the attempt, floated
+quietly on her side, to the great horror of her master, who
+thought he never should bestride her again, until he was relieved
+by seeing her start to her feet in shallow water, and scramble up
+the bank, dripping like a veritable hippopotamus.</p>
+
+<p>The other horses behaved better; and when we had ourselves
+crossed and remounted, we rode by the side of the river, or
+rather estuary, a distance of ten miles, till we came to a
+picturesque little spot called Mocha weir&mdash;a high bank, a clump
+of trees, a brawling brook, (unusual sight in this country,) and
+a patch of excellent grass.</p>
+
+<p>Here we resolved to halt for the night. Each rider attended to
+his own horse, which, however, did not get much grooming, and
+then we prepared for the great business of life, and kindled a
+fire, filled the kettle with limpid water, drew out our various
+stocks of provisions, and arranged the dinner-table on the grass,
+and made every thing look exceedingly comfortable and inviting.
+Then we made tea, and invited each other to eat, and did eat
+without invitation; and joked and laughed, and felt considerably
+more happy and sociable than if vice-royalty had been
+real-royalty, and the green canopy of the trees were the
+banqueting-hall at Windsor Castle. The man munched his victuals
+at a small private bivouac of his own, within easy call, as he
+had to jump up every now and then, and bring the kettle, or wash
+the plates for the second and third courses. When the things were
+removed, we lighted cigars, and pleasantly discoursed, recumbent
+before the fire. Our beds were already made of black-boy tops,
+and, therefore we had nothing to do but await the hour of rest.
+The sun had disappeared, and darkness, closing around us, drew
+nigher and more nigh every moment, swallowing up object after
+object in its stealthy advance, and seeming about to overwhelm us
+in its mysterious obscurity. But John heaped logs of dry wood
+upon the fire, and nobly we resisted all the powers of Darkness.
+In the midst of that black solitude, our little circle of light
+maintained its independence, nor yielded to the invasion which
+had swallowed up all around it. Here was our Camp of Refuge, and
+here we felt snug, and secure, and at home; whilst all without
+our magic circle was comfortless and desolate.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the active-minded John would dive, without apparent
+dismay, into the black and hostile-looking regions of Night,
+which seemed to close upon him as though for ever; and when we
+had resignedly given him up, a prey to the evil spirits that
+prowled around, he would reappear with startling suddenness,
+issuing forth into the light like some red demon of the woods,
+and bearing a huge log upon his shoulder &mdash;the spoils of his
+"foray-sack"&mdash;which he would fling down upon the fire, making it
+blaze up with sudden fierceness, and extending the circle of
+light for a few moments to a greater distance around, so as to
+give us a transient glimpse of things which were soon swallowed
+up again in darkness&mdash;like glimpses of the dead in dreams.</p>
+
+<p>I must hurry on to Australind, merely mentioning that we
+passed two lakes not far from each other, one of which was fresh,
+and the other salt&mdash;salt as the Dead Sea. It is usual in this
+perverse country (though not so in this instance) to find a salt
+lake surrounded with good, and a fresh-water lake with bad land.
+Here it was bad altogether. The country, however, improved
+greatly as we drew towards Australind; and about ten miles from
+that place, we came upon a fine flock of sheep that seemed to be
+doing extremely well.</p>
+
+<p>We now passed along the banks of the Leschenault estuary, on
+which Australind is situated; and soon we discovered three
+figures approaching on horseback. these proved to be M. Waller
+Clifton, Esq., the chief Commissioner of the Western Australian
+Company, to whom the whole district belongs, attended by a brace
+of his surveyors as aides-de-camp&mdash;one mounted on a very tall
+horse, and the other on a very small pony. The Chief Commissioner
+himself bestrode a meek-looking cart-horse, which, on perceiving
+us in the distance, he urged into an exhilarating trot. His
+Excellency, seeing these demonstrations of an imposing reception,
+hastily drew forth his black silk neck-cloth from his pocket, and
+re-enveloped his throat therewith, which, during the heat of the
+day, he had allowed to be carelessly exposed. Gathering himself
+up in his saddle, and assuming the gravity proper to the
+representative of his sovereign, he awaited with as much dignity
+as his state of perspiration would allow, the approach of the
+Chief of Australind. As for myself, I plucked up my shirt-collar,
+and tried to look as spicy as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The first greetings over, the two chieftains rode into the
+town side by side, as amicably as Napoleon and Alexander of
+Russia; whilst I fell to the share of the aides, and related the
+most recent news of Perth, and the last bon mots of Richard Nash,
+for their entertainment; receiving in return an account of the
+arrival of 400 male and female emigrants at the settlement the
+day before.</p>
+
+<p>We were entertained, as every guest invariably is, right
+hospitably by Mr. Clifton and his amiable family.</p>
+
+<p>Australind was then (December 1842) a promising new town. It
+was alive with well-dressed young men and women, who were
+promenading under the large forest trees which still occupied the
+intended squares and most of the streets. They had only landed
+from the vessel which had brought them some twenty-four hours
+before, and they were evidently variously affected by all they
+saw. Some appeared to be struck with the strange circumstance of
+trees growing in the streets; some looked aghast at the wooden
+houses and canvass tents; one thought everything looked
+exceedingly green; another fancied that a town built upon sand
+could not possibly endure long. And he was right: for the town
+has long since been deserted, except by half a dozen families;
+and the newly arrived settlers are dispersed over the colony.
+This has not been the fault of the Chief Commissioner, nor is it
+owing to any inferiority in the soil, but to causes which I
+intend briefly to explain, as there are many people in England
+who are, or were, interested in the fortunes of this promising
+young settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The Western Australian Company's grant of land at Australind
+comprises 100,000 acres, among which there is a large quantity of
+excellent pasture and arable land. It is well watered, and
+generally well adapted for the site of a new settlement. The
+flats of the Brunswick and Collic rivers would supply the whole
+colony, if thoroughly peopled, with grain; and there is abundance
+of feed for sheep and cattle, even to the summits of the
+hills.</p>
+
+<p>A great portion of this grant has been purchased by the
+Company from Colonel Lautour, who, however, could not furnish a
+good title to it. Having never performed the necessary
+improvements which would entitle him to a deed of grant in
+fee-simple from the crown, his right of possession became
+forfeit; and in April, 1840, Governor Hutt, though much
+interested in the success of the Company, of which his brother,
+the member for Gateshead, was chairman, thought himself obliged,
+in the conscientious discharge of his duty, to resume the estate
+for the crown.</p>
+
+<p>This proved to be a most fatal proceeding. The Company's title
+to Colonel Lautour's grant had been confirmed by the
+Home-government in November 1839, but owing to the non-existence
+of regular post-office communication (that grand and inexcusable
+error, which allows the British Empire to be composed of a mass
+of unconnected settlements, dependent upon chance for
+intelligence and aid from the mother country), the news did not
+reach the colony until May or June following.</p>
+
+<p>Accounts of the resumption of the grant by the Governor
+reached England, and not only perplexed the Company, but greatly
+disquieted the minds of the numerous individuals to whom they had
+sold land, to the value of nearly 60,000 pounds. At this very
+time, too, unhappily, arrived Captain Grey in England, on his
+return from the expedition to the north-western side of New
+Holland, of which he has since published a clever and popular
+narrative. Captain Grey took an early opportunity of giving a
+somewhat lamentable account of the Company's land at Leschenault,
+or Australind, and a very glowing description of a district, many
+miles to the north of Perth, between Gantheaume Bay and the
+Arrowsmith River, which he had passed through on his disastrous
+return. He also expatiated, in most precise terms, upon a
+splendid harbour which he called Port Grey, and of which he made
+an elaborate sketch; and on the 26th of October, 1840, addressed
+to Lord John Russell "a detailed description of that portion of
+the western coast of Australia which lies between Gantheaume Bay
+and the River Arrowsmith, as it would be found useful in enabling
+persons, intending to occupy that tract of country, to arrive at
+correct conclusions regarding its capabilities." In the map of
+his route, published by Arrowsmith, Port Grey is laid down as a
+spacious, well-sheltered harbour, with a convenient point of land
+extending a couple of miles out to sea from its northern
+extremity, and having a useful reef of rocks projecting, most
+happily, to the same distance, affording altogether a secure
+shelter for shipping in seven fathoms' water.</p>
+
+<p>The Directors of the Western Australian Company, alarmed at
+the account related of Australind, perplexed by the proceedings
+of the local Government, and captivated by the description of
+Port Grey, with its splendid districts of "rich flats," and
+"fertile downs," determined to change the site of their
+settlement.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Grey describes two "flat-topped ranges," in the
+neighbourhood of this port, lying about twenty miles apart; and
+in his diary of "Sunday, April 7, 1839," he says: "The country
+between these two ranges was an open grassy valley thinly wooded;
+and IT APPEARED TO BE ONE OF THE MOST EXTENSIVELY FERTILE
+portions of country which I had yet seen in Australia. After
+travelling for another mile over the sandy downs, we reached
+another romantic glen-like valley, bounded to the north and south
+by steep limestone cliffs; we descended these cliffs, and at
+their base found as in the last valley we had crossed, EXTENSIVE
+FLATS, through which wound a water-course. All the hills I could
+see in the vicinity consisted of limestone, and for the whole
+distance I could see to the eastward (about seven or eight miles)
+the country appeared to be of the MOST FERTILE and picturesque
+character; the hills were slightly wooded with large timber, and
+the valleys were nearly bare of trees and COVERED WITH GRASS. On
+ascending the limestone hills to the south of the valley, we
+found ourselves once more in open sandy downs; after travelling
+three miles across these in a S. by E. direction, we again came
+to a valley of the same character as the one above described; it
+ran from the same direction; to the eastward we saw a fertile
+valley. * * * We halted for some time immediately at the foot of
+Mount Fairfax.</p>
+
+<p>"We continued our route in the evening over the sandy downs,
+which, at the distance of half a mile from the sea, terminated in
+cliffs. * * * After travelling three miles, we halted for the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>"Monday 8th. The first three miles of our route lay over sandy
+downs, when we found ourselves in grassy, wooded plains, lying
+between the flat-topped range, and some dunes which bordered a
+bay," etc.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that people in the latter stages of
+starvation have constantly visions before their eyes of sumptuous
+entertainments, rich meats, and delicious wines. Captain Grey,
+who was then walking for his life, at a Barclay pace, with a very
+empty stomach, was probably labouring under a similar
+hallucination with respect to the country over which he passed;
+beholding flowery meads and fertile vales in districts which we
+fear would prove little attractive to a settler. He beheld fine
+flowing rivers and sheltered bays, which have since altogether
+disappeared, like the scenes beheld on misty mornings by Sicilian
+mariners.</p>
+
+<p>His account of the country determined the Western Australian
+Company to change the site of their intended settlement. Calling
+together the purchasers of land at Australind, the Directors
+offered to return them the amount of their respective purchases,
+or allow them to take up new allotments in the very superior
+district of Port Grey. Almost all chose to reclaim their cash,
+and declined further speculation.</p>
+
+<p>The Company now, towards the close of 1840, sent out Mr.
+Clifton, their "Chief Commissioner," with directions to remove
+the whole of their establishment then settled at Australind, to
+the new settlement of Port Grey. On arriving at Australind, Mr.
+Clifton was agreeably surprised to find the country much superior
+to what he had expected, after hearing Captain Grey's account of
+it. So differently do the same objects appear to different eyes!
+And perhaps Captain Grey had only viewed the sandy banks of the
+inlet, without having passed into the interior, and seen the
+flats of the Brunswick, etc. There is a very great deal more of
+worthless than of good land at Australind, which is the case
+throughout the whole of New Holland, in the very best districts.
+The general character throughout all the settled parts of the
+island, or continent, is bad, with scattered patches of good.</p>
+
+<p>The Chief Commissioner, however, prepared to carry out his
+instructions, though with much regret, as he doubted greatly
+whether the proposed alteration would prove for the better. These
+preparations were put a stop to by a communication from his
+Excellency the Governor, informing him that the Government
+schooner had recently returned from a survey of the coast and
+district of the so-called Port Grey, and that no sufficient
+harbour could be discovered along the coast; whilst the country
+in every direction appeared barren and incapable of cultivation.
+Mr. Clifton therefore remained at Australind with his party, and
+used every effort and exerted every energy to found a flourishing
+colony. But unfortunately, the change of site to Port Grey, and
+then the return to Australind, and the various conflicting
+accounts promulgated by the Company themselves, now lauding and
+now condemning the two places in turn, operated so unfavourably
+upon the public mind that no more sales of land could be
+effected. It became, therefore, inexpedient to maintain the
+expensive establishment of Commissioners, Secretaries, and
+Surveyors at Australind, who were accordingly conge'd without
+much ceremony; and the Western Australian Company, like the
+"unsubstantial pageant," or Port Grey itself, "melted into air,
+thin air," leaving "not a rack behind." Yet not exactly so, for
+it has left behind, like some stranded wreck by the receding
+tide, a most worthy and high-minded family who deserved a
+brighter fate.</p>
+
+<p>Such has been the lamentable result of Captain Grey's
+discoveries in Western Australia; for whether there be or not a
+good tract of land in the neighbourhood of Champion Bay, Captain
+Grey's denunciation of Australind, and his strongly urged advice
+to the Company to change the site of their settlement, have
+undoubtedly been the chief causes of their failure.</p>
+
+<p>Three expeditions have been sent to the scene of this
+Australian Fata Morgana, in the hope of beholding it again, but
+like the door of the fairy palace in the rock, it is visible only
+to Prince Ahmed; and unless the Governor of New Zealand will
+himself found a colony there, it is most likely ever to remain
+desert and valueless. The first expedition was that in the
+Government schooner, in 1840, already alluded to; the second was
+made in 1841, by H.M.S. Beagle, Captain Stokes, accompanied by
+the Chief Commissioner, Mr. Clifton. A careful survey was made of
+the coast as far north as the spot were Captain Grey was wrecked,
+and began his march southward, but nothing was discovered at all
+resembling the description given of Port Grey. The only bay in
+which a ship could lie, and that with very doubtful security, was
+Champion Bay; but unfortunately the country in every direction
+from this spot is most barren and miserable. Captain Grey
+travelled close along the coast-line, according to his journal,
+but those who have gone in search of his "fertile valleys" have
+penetrated some distance into the interior, without discovering
+anything but scrub and desert.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Stokes, in his published "Letter to the Surveyor
+General of Western Australia," detailing his proceedings,
+mentions having "now seen and examined an extent of country
+little short of forty miles, nearly the whole of which deserved
+the character of sterility." In another place, he related the
+discovery of "the only piece of grass of a useful nature seen in
+this route; it was, however, quite parched, and occupied a space
+of three or four acres."</p>
+
+<p>Not being able to find any tolerable shelter along the coast
+besides Champion Bay, he concludes that it must be the spot
+designated as Port Grey; and after exploring the country behind
+it, with the effect just stated, he sailed away one morning
+towards the north-west and meeting with a "favourable westerly
+wind," by afternoon was carried "past the bight south of Point
+Moore, sufficiently near to see that its shores were fronted with
+many sunken rocks." This also led to the conclusion that
+"Champion Bay is the port Captain Grey speaks of in his journal,
+placed in Arrowsmith's chart twelve miles south of its true
+position."</p>
+
+<p>Since the date of Captain Stokes's survey, Captain Grey has
+himself virtually admitted Champion Bay to be the locality
+visited by him. In a letter to that officer dated, "Government
+House, Adelaide, January 28, 1842," and published in the South
+Australian journals, Captain Grey observes, "I have attentively
+read your letter to the Hon. the Surveyor-General of Western
+Australia; and have also considered the observations made by you
+to me, relative to the error you suppose I have fallen into in
+mistaking the Wizard Peak of Captain King for the hill named by
+him Mount Fairfax, and I find I have certainly fallen into this
+error&mdash;a by no means unlikely one, considering the very similar
+character of the singular group of hills called Moresby's
+Flat-topped Range, and the circumstances under which I was
+journeying."</p>
+
+<p>The hill, therefore, at whose foot Captain Grey halted on the
+afternoon of April 7, 1839, was not Mount Fairfax, but the Wizard
+Peak, or some other hill "to the north of Mount Fairfax." From
+thence the "sandy downs," (mentioned in the extract from his
+Journal that I have given above) over which he passed in the
+evening continued to within "half a mile of the sea," where "they
+terminated in cliffs." To have seen all this he must have been
+walking at no very great distance from the shore during that
+day's marsh. His object was to reach Perth as quickly as
+possible; and he steered in the most direct course&mdash;"south by
+east." We know, therefore, exactly the line of country traversed
+by Captain Grey&mdash;the "singular group called Moresby's Flat-topped
+Range" being unmistakeable.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1844, H. M. colonial schooner, Champion, under
+the command of Lieutenant Helpman, R.N., accompanied by Mr. J.
+Harrison, Civil Engineer, etc., was again despatched by Governor
+Hutt to make further observations in the neighbourhood of
+Gantheaume Bay. Lieutenant Helpman says in his report, "I coasted
+close in from Champion Bay, collecting angles and soundings until
+in latitude 28 degrees 10' 30", S. the low ridges of sand along
+the shore induced me to land, being then (as I concluded from the
+latitude given by Captain Grey) in the immediate vicinity of the
+estuary." This estuary is described by Captain Grey in his diary
+of the FIFTH April, who states that "for one mile we continued
+along THE RICH FLATS which bordered the estuary" ... "we ascended
+the limestone range, and got a view of the country to the
+eastward and found it STILL GRASSY, and exactly the same
+character as far as we could see. For the next five miles we
+continued along the top of the limestone range, the estuary still
+occupying the valley which lay to the west of us." ... "At the
+end of a mile in a south by east direction, we found ourselves on
+the banks of a river, the Hutt, from forty to fifty yards wide,
+which was running strong, and was brackish at its mouth," etc.
+Such was the appearance of the estuary and of the Hutt River in
+the eyes of Captain Grey.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Helpman continues his report as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"On reaching the summit of the highest coast hill I found
+myself abreast of the centre of the inlet, which was void of
+water, but presented the appearance of a continuous sheet of salt
+as far as the eye could reach. Passing over the coast ridges, I
+came down, in about half a mile, to the edge of the estuary, and
+followed it in a southerly direction for about two miles, when I
+ascended another hill, from which I could clearly see the south
+end of it, which was covered with the same description of
+incrustration of salt.</p>
+
+<p>"A gorge at the south-east corner of the estuary is probably
+where the Hutt River discharges itself during the rainy season,
+but there was no appearance of water in any part of the flat,
+which was about two miles wide between the hills and the
+south-east shore of the inlet.</p>
+
+<p>"Observing that the north extremity of the estuary, as seen
+from the hill just referred to, presented some slight appearance
+of water, I was induced to examine it, and found the sand ridges
+on the coast extremely low, nearly destitute of herbage, but
+giving the idea of having had water passing over them. This I
+judged to be the case, from a few blades of very coarse grass
+which were laid flat on the ground, as if from the effects of
+running water.</p>
+
+<p>"From the highest point of these ridges, notwithstanding the
+smoke from the numerous native fires, the whole north end of the
+inlet was plainly seen to be covered with salty incrustations,
+similar to those previously referred to.</p>
+
+<p>"I conceive the point of land near which these latter
+observations were made, and where I landed the second time, to be
+Shoal Point of the chart; but, except that it is very low, I see
+no cause for its name, as the water was deep close to it, and
+having only a few rocks close off its extreme west point, within
+a quarter of a mile of the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"Following close in from Shoal Point, the coast is perfectly
+clear of dangers; but I observed no opening in the hills
+indicative of a river, nor could I discover any bay or place of
+shelter for shipping to resort to.</p>
+
+<p>"Red Point, which is the western entrance of Gantheaume Bay,
+is a very bold headland of considerable elevation, it is
+circular, and about four miles in extent. I landed at the east
+end of the red sand cliffs, taking a specimen of the rock.</p>
+
+<p>"The land to the northward from this promontory is of a white
+sandy appearance, having ridges of sand hills along the coast of
+moderate altitude.</p>
+
+<p>"The low state of the barometer, and the strong northerly
+winds, induced me to keep the vessel at a considerable offing.
+During the day the breezes were very fresh, and had it not been
+for the whale-boat with which I was furnished, I should not have
+been able to have effected a landing on any part of the coast
+which came under my observation. Under these circumstances, I was
+compelled most reluctantly to abandon the idea of spending much
+time in examining the interior.</p>
+
+<p>"The VERY DRY STATE OF THE HUTT AT THIS SEASON seems to
+indicate that but little water flows into it at any time; and I
+am disposed to fancy, that the lagoon, or estuary, owes its
+formation to the breaking in of the sea over the low sand hills
+during the tempestuous gales of the winter months, more
+especially towards the north end of the inlet, where the sand
+ridges are lower than in any other part of the coast in that
+vicinity."</p>
+
+<p>Thus the luxuriant country of Captain Grey, like the
+water-pools seen in the mirage of the desert, when approached,
+vanishes from the view of the traveller.</p>
+
+<p>It is to be observed, that Captain Stokes and Lieutenant
+Helpman surveyed these districts in the early part of the summer
+season&mdash; November and December&mdash;when they were more likely to
+appear fertile than on the 5th and 7th April, quite at the end of
+that season, and just before the commencement of the winter
+rains.</p>
+
+<p>Since the above passages were written, I have read an account
+in the Perth journals of January, 1847, of the discovery of coal
+by the Messrs. Gregory, about forty miles east of Champion Bay.
+These gentlemen relate, that in journeying towards the coast,
+they passed through a tract of country capable of being settled.
+This may possibly be Captain Grey's luxuriant district; and yet
+the district which he describes was close upon the coast. It is
+also stated, that there is now ascertained to be a corner of
+Champion Bay in which small vessels may find a safe anchorage;
+and this is conjectured to be that Port Grey whose existence has
+been so long denied. But, although a few miles of country may be
+found in this neighbourhood capable of supporting a limited
+number of flocks and herds, it is certain that there is no such
+district here as would suffice for the purposes of a colony of
+the magnitude contemplated by the Western Australian Company. The
+advice, therefore, given them to change the site of the
+operations from Australind, or Leschenault, to Champion Bay, or
+Port Grey, was the most pernicious that could have been
+bestowed.</p>
+
+<p>But it may certainly be doubted whether the principles on
+which the settlement of Australind was founded were in themselves
+of a sound and permanent nature. They were those propounded
+originally by Mr. Edward Gibbon Wakefield, and applied with
+extraordinary success to the formation and to the circumstances
+of the colony of South Australia. The most prominent features
+which they present are,&mdash; the concentration of population, and
+the high price of land.</p>
+
+<p>The land in the immediate neighbourhood of Adelaide is very
+fine, and capable of supporting a dense population; it was
+therefore perhaps, good policy to divide it into eight-acre
+sections, valued at one pound per acre, which supported a body of
+agriculturalists, who found a ready and near market for their
+productions in the rapidly rising town. But there are few
+theories that will bear universal application; and the mistake
+made in the case of Australind was, in expecting to obtain the
+same result from principles which were to be applied under very
+different circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>The land adjoining the town-site of Australind is generally
+very indifferent, though the flats of the Brunswick and Collie
+Rivers afford perhaps some thousand acres of excellent land, but
+still not sufficient to maintain a large and dense population.
+The Company's property was divided into farms of 100 acres, and
+these were valued at 100 pounds each to the emigrants, who drew
+lots for the choice of site.</p>
+
+<p>When the settlers arrived and took possession of their
+respective grants, they soon discovered that if they all produced
+wheat, there would certainly be plenty of food in the settlement,
+but very little sale for it; whereas, if they intended to become
+sheep-farmers, and produce wool for the English market, one
+hundred acres of land would not suffice in that country for the
+keep of fifty sheep. The sections of one hundred acres were,
+therefore, far too small for the wants of the settler, who found
+that, although he might probably be able to supply his table with
+vegetables, he had but small prospect of ever applying his capers
+to boiled mutton, or initiating his family into the mysteries of
+beef a la mode. Disgusted with the narrowness of his prospects,
+and recoiling from the idea of a vegetable diet, the sturdy
+settler quickly abandoned the limited sections of Australind, and
+wandered away in search of a grant of some three or four thousand
+acres, on which he might reasonably hope to pasture a flock of
+sheep that would return him good interest for the capital
+invested.</p>
+
+<p>The Western Australian Company gave far too much for their
+land in the first instance, and were therefore compelled to set a
+much higher value upon it than it would bear. The ministers of
+the Crown, who have adopted the principles of Mr. Gibbon
+Wakefield, require one pound per acre for waste lands; and the
+Company, though they purchased their property from private
+individuals at a somewhat lower rate, expected to sell it again
+at the same price. There is very little land (in proportion to
+the vast extent of poor and of entirely worthless land)
+throughout the length and breadth of all New Holland, that is
+worth twenty shillings an acre. In the more densely populated
+parts, arable land is worth that sum, and often much more; but in
+the pastoral districts, three shillings an acre is in truth a
+high price.</p>
+
+<p>It has long been acknowledged in New South Wales, as well as
+in other parts of Australia, that it takes from three to five
+acres to support a single sheep throughout the year. An ewe-sheep
+is worth about nine shillings; and if you have to buy three and a
+half acres of land, at three shillings, to keep her upon, the
+amount of capital you invest will be nineteen shillings and
+sixpence. The profits on the wool of this sheep, after paying all
+expenses of keep, shearing, freight, commission, etc., will be
+barely two-pence, or about one per cent upon the capital
+invested. But then you have her lamb? True, but you must buy an
+additional quantity of land to keep it upon. Still there is a
+gain upon the increase; and in process of time the annual profits
+amount up to ten and even twenty per cent. But suppose the three
+and a half acres of land, instead of 10 shillings and 6 pence had
+cost 3 pounds 10 shillings and 6 pence, it would then be
+perfectly absurd to think of investing money in sheep.</p>
+
+<p>The course pursued by the home Government, in fixing the
+uniform extravagant price of twenty shillings an acre upon the
+pastoral lands of Australia, is probably more the result of
+ignorance of their real value than of a desire to check or
+prevent emigration to that country. It is an ignorance, however,
+that refuses to be enlightened, and has therefore all the guilt
+of deliberate injury.</p>
+
+<p>The monstrous demand of twenty shillings an acre for
+crown-lands, has not only had the effect of deterring capitalists
+from embarking in so hopeless a speculation, but has grievously
+wronged the existing land-owners, by raising the price of labour.
+When land was sold at five shillings an acre, a fund was
+accumulated in the hand of the local Government that served to
+pay for the introduction of labouring emigrants. That fund has
+ceased to exist in New South Wales and in Western Australia. The
+value of labour has therefore risen, whilst the value of
+agricultural produce, by the increase of the supply beyond the
+demand, has grievously diminished. The advocates of the Wakefield
+system triumphantly inform us that there never can be a
+labour-fund in any colony in which private individuals are able
+to sell land at a cheaper rate than the Government.</p>
+
+<p>They point to South Australia, and bid us note how different
+is the state of things there, where land universally is worth a
+pound an acre or more. But to us it appears, that the character
+of the soil is much the same throughout these countries&mdash;if
+anything, being superior in Western Australia, where there are no
+droughts, and where the wool produced, though the worst got up,
+from the want of labour, is stated by the London brokers to be
+pre-eminent in quality&mdash;that colony would most naturally be
+sought by the emigrant in which the price of land is the most
+reasonable. It is not the high price of land that has caused the
+prosperity of South Australia. Every one who is well informed on
+the subject, is perfectly aware, that in 1841 and 1842, before
+the discovery of copper-mines, South Australia was universally in
+a state of bankruptcy. Never was a country so thoroughly smitten
+with ruin. Almost all the original settlers sank in the general
+prostration of the settlement, and never again held up their
+heads. The inhabitants slunk away from the colony in numbers; and
+property even in Adelaide was almost worthless. The holders of
+the eighty-acre sections produced far more of the necessaries of
+life than the non-producing population required; and the
+neighbouring colonies were deluged with the farm-produce of the
+bankrupt agriculturalists of South Australia. This model colony
+afforded itself the most signal refutation of the truth of the
+Wakefield theories; and the whole world would have been compelled
+to acknowledge the falsehood, but for the opportune discovery of
+the mineral wealth of the colony. It is to its mines that South
+Australia owes its good fortune, its population, and its riches,
+and not to any secret of political economy bestowed upon it by
+adventurous theorists. According to the opinion of these
+philosophers, New South Wales and Western Australia can never
+again by any possibility possess a labour-fund, because the
+private owners of large grants of land, which they obtained for
+nominal sums, can always afford to undersell the Crown. So long
+as the Crown refuses to sell for less than a pound an acre, this
+will certainly be the case; but the day will doubtless come when
+our rulers will condescend to enquire into the necessities of
+those over whose fortunes they preside; and will adopt a policy
+suited to the actual circumstances of the case, and not vainly
+endeavour to apply, universally, abstract opinions which have
+long been proved to be, in almost all parts of Australia, totally
+useless and inapplicable. THE ONLY WAY TO RAISE A LABOUR-FUND IN
+THESE COLONIES IS, BY OFFERING CROWN-LANDS TO THE EMIGRANT AT THE
+LOWEST MARKET PRICE. The Crown could always afford to undersell
+the private land-speculator, and might establish a permanent fund
+for the introduction of labour, by selling land at a low rate,
+AND RESERVING A RENT-CHARGE, IN THE SHAPE OF A LAND-TAX&mdash; OF ONE
+HALF-PENNY PER ACRE. Thus, every grant of five thousand acres
+would pay an annual tax to Government of 10 pounds 8 shillings
+and 4 pence; and would, therefore, in a very few years,
+accumulate a fund sufficient to supply itself with a labouring
+population. When it is remembered how very small was the original
+cost to the owners of most of the lands in Western Australia,
+there will not appear much hardship in imposing this tax upon all
+the private property of the colony, as well as upon lands to be
+hereafter sold by the Crown. This course of legislation would
+infuse new vitality into the colony; and at the end of the short
+period of five years, the tax might be suspended as regards all
+lands purchased by individuals PRIOR TO THE PASSING OF THE ACT,
+but continued for ever upon lands purchased under the Act, and in
+contemplation of having to bear such a rent-charge.</p>
+
+<p>This is the only way by which emigration can be insured to the
+colonies of New South Wales and Western Australia; and the time
+will sooner or later arrive when this suggestion will be adopted,
+though it may not be acknowledged.</p>
+
+<p>Her Majesty's present Secretary of State for the Colonies is
+the first really liberal minister we have had; and to him the
+distant and struggling settlements of Australia look with
+reviving hope. THE OBJECTS MOST EAGERLY SOUGHT BY THOSE COLONIES
+ARE&mdash;A NEW SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT, WITH LESS OF COLONIAL-OFFICE
+INTERFERENCE; A REGULAR POST-OFFICE COMMUNICATION WITH ENGLAND;
+AND A TOTAL REFORM IN THE EXISTING REGULATIONS FOR THE SALE OF
+CROWN-LANDS, WITHOUT WHICH, IN COUNTRIES PURELY PASTORAL AND
+AGRICULTURAL, THERE CAN NEVER AGAIN BE FORMED A FUND FOR THE
+INTRODUCTION OF LABOUR.</p>
+
+<p>In the hope of making colonial subjects more familiar to the
+general reader, and more popular than they are at present, I have
+perhaps given to this little work a character so trifling as to
+make it appear unworthy of the attention of political
+philosophers; and yet, inasmuch as it points out some of the
+wants of a large body of British subjects, whose fortunes lie
+entirely at the mercy of distant rulers, who have but little
+sympathy with a condition of which they possess but a most
+imperfect knowledge&mdash;it is a work (inadequate though it be) not
+altogether undeserving of the consideration even of
+Statesmen.</p>
+
+<h4>NOTE TO CHAPTER 30.</h4>
+
+<p>I am happy that this work will become the medium of informing
+the Colonists of Western Australia of one of the most promising
+events that has ever happened to that country.</p>
+
+<p>The ship-timber of the Colony, a trial cargo of which arrived
+in England this month (October, 1847), has just been admitted
+into the Royal Navy. A highly favourable report has been made
+upon it by the Government surveyors, and it is pronounced
+admirably adapted for kelsons, stern-posts, great beams for
+steam-frigates, and other heavy work. If a company be formed, on
+good principles, and under proper management, a timber trade for
+the supply of the Navy will be found most lucrative.</p>
+
+<p>The principal portion of the labour should be performed by
+Chinamen, to be obtained from Sincapore.</p>
+
+<p>For this great boon, the Colonists are indebted to LORD
+AUCKLAND, the First Lord of the Admiralty, for his ready
+acquiescence in agreeing to receive the timber, by way of
+experiment; to Mr. G. H. Ward, the Secretary, for the kind
+attention he has paid to every request made to him on the
+subject, notwithstanding that he has been sufficiently pestered
+to have wearied the patience of the most amiable of mankind; and,
+above all, to our late Governor, MR. HUTT, and his brother, the
+Honourable Member for Gateshead, who have been indefatigable in
+their exertions to promote the weal of the Colony.</p>
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+
+
+<BR>
+<BR>
+<BR>
+<BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bushman, by Edward Wilson Landor
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+</pre>
+
+</BODY>
+</HTML>
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