Having thus brought my narrative to
a conclusion I shall trespass but little more on the
patience of the reader. It appears to me that
a few observations are necessary to clear some parts,
and to make up for omissions in the body of my work.
I have written it indeed under considerable disadvantage;
for although I have in a great measure recovered from
the loss of sight consequent on my former services,
I cannot glance my eye so rapidly as I once did over
such a voluminous document as this journal; and I
feel that I owe it to the public, as well as to myself,
to make this apology for its imperfections.
There were two great difficulties
against which, during the progress of the expedition,
I had to contend. The one was, the want of water;
the other, the nature of the country. That it
was altogether impracticable for wheeled carriages
of any kind, may readily be conceived from my description;
and in the state in which I found it, horses were evidently
unequal to the task. I cannot help thinking that
camels might have done better; not only for their
indurance, but because they carry more than a horse.
I should, undoubtedly, have been led to try those animals
if I could have procured them; but that was impossible.
Certain however it is, that I went into the interior
to meet with trials that scarcely camels could have
borne up against; for I think there can be no doubt,
from the facts I have detailed, that the season, during
which this expedition was undertaken, was one of unusual
dryness; but although the arid state of the country
contributed so much to prevent its movements, I question
whether, under opposite circumstances, it would have
been possible to have pushed so far as the party succeeded
in doing. Certainly, if the ground had been kept
in a state of constant saturation, travelling would
have been out of the question; for the rain of July
abundantly proved how impracticable any attempt to
penetrate it under such circumstances would have been.
It is difficult to say what kind of
seasons prevail in Central Australia. That low
region does not, as far as I can judge, appear to be
influenced by tropical rains, but rather to be subject
to sudden falls. That the continent of Australia
was at one time more humid than it now is, appears
to be an admitted fact; the marks of floods, and the
violence of torrents (none of which have been witnessed),
are mentioned by every explorer as traceable over
every part of the continent; but no instance of any
general inundation is on record: on the contrary
the seasons appear to be getting drier and drier every
year, and the slowness with which any body exposed
to the air decomposes, would argue the extreme absence
of moisture in the atmosphere. It will be remembered
that one of my bullocks died in the Pine Forest when
I was passing through it in December, 1844. In
July, 1845, when Mr. Piesse was on his route home from
the Depot in charge of the home returning party, he
passed by the spot where this animal had fallen; and,
in elucidation of what I have stated, I will here
give the extract of a letter I subsequently received
from him from India. Speaking of the humidity
of the climate of Bengal, he says: “It appears
to me that heat alone is rather a preservative from
decomposition; of which I recollect an instance, in
the bullock that died in the march through the Pine
scrub on the 1st of January, 1845. When I passed
by the spot in the following July, the carcase was
dried up like a mummy, and was in such a perfect state
of preservation as to be easily recognised.”
No stronger proof, I apprehend, could
have been adduced of the dryness of the atmosphere
in that part of the interior, or more corroborative
of the intensity of heat there during the interval
referred to; but the singular and unusual effects
it had on ourselves, and on every thing around was
equally corroborative of the fact. The atmosphere
on some occasions was so rarified, that we felt a
difficulty in breathing, and a buzzing sensation on
the crown of the head, as if a hot iron had been there.
There were only two occasions on which
the thermometer was noticed to exceed the range of
130 degrees in the shade, the solar intensity at the
same time being nearly 160 degrees. The extremes
between this last and our winter’s cold, when
the thermometer descended to 24 degrees was 133 degrees.
I observe that Sir Thomas Mitchell gives the temperature
at the Bogan, in his tent at 117 degrees and when
exposed to the wind at 129 degrees; but I presume
that local causes, such as radiation from stones and
sand, operated more powerfully with us than in his
case. Whilst we were at the Depot about May,
the water of the creek became slightly putrid, and
cleared itself like Thames water; and during the hotter
months of our stay there, it evaporated at the rate
of nearly an inch a day, as shewn by a rod Mr. Browne
placed in it to note the changes, but the amount varied
according to the quiescent or boisterous state of the
atmosphere. It will readily be believed that in
so heated a region the air was seldom still; to the
currents sweeping over it we had to attribute the
loathsome and muddy state of the water on which we
generally subsisted after we left that place, for the
pools from which we took it were so shallow as to
be stirred up to the consistency of white-wash by
the play and action of the wind on their surfaces.
During our stay at the Depot the barometer never rose
above 30.260, or fell below 29.540.
From December, 1844, to the end of
April of the following year, the prevailing winds
were from E.N.E. to E.S.E., after that month they were
variable, but westerly winds predominated. The
south wind was always cold, and its approach was invariably
indicated by the rise of the barometer.
The rain of July commenced in the
north-east quarter and gradually went round to the
north-west; but more clouds rose from the former point
than from any other. The sky generally speaking
was without a speck, and the dazzling brightness of
the moon was one of the most distressing things we
had to endure when out in the bush. It was impossible
indeed to shut out its light which ever way one turned,
and its irritating effects were remarkable.
It will be observable to those who
cast their eyes over the chart of South Australia
that the range of mountains between St. Vincent’s
Gulf and the Murray river runs up northwards into
the interior. In like manner the ranges crossed
by the Expedition also ran in the same direction.
The Black Rock Hill, so named by Captain Frome, is
in la degrees 45 minutes and in the 139th meridian,
and is the easternmost of the chain to which it belongs.
Mount Gipps on the Coonbaralba range is in la
degrees 52 minutes and in lon degrees 41 minutes,
but from that point the ranges trend somewhat to the
westward of south, and consequently, may run nearer
to that (of which the Black Rock Hill forms so prominent
a feature) than we may suppose, but there is a distance
of nearly 150 miles of country still remaining to
be explored, before this point can be decided.
Nevertheless, it is more than probable the two chains
are in some measure connected, especially as they greatly
resemble each other in their classification.
They are for the most part composed of primary igneous
rocks, amongst which there is a general distribution
of iron, and perhaps of other metals. The iron
ore, however, that was discovered during the progress
of the Expedition, of which Piesse’s Knob is
a remarkable specimen, was of the purest kind.
It was, as has been found in South
Australia, a surface deposit, protruding or cropping
out of the ground in immense clean blocks. This
ore was highly magnetic; the veins of the metal run
north and south, the direction of the ranges, as did
a similar crop on the plains at the S.E. base of the
ranges. Generally speaking there was nothing bold
or picturesque in the scenery of the Barrier Range,
but the Rocky Glen and some few others of a similar
description were exceptions. As the Barrier Range
ran parallel to the coast ranges, so there were other
ranges to the eastward of the Barrier Range, running
parallel to it, and they were separated by broad plains,
partly open and partly covered with brush. The
general elevation of the ranges was about 1200 feet
above the level of the sea, but some of the hills
exceeded 1600. Mount Lyell was 2000; Mount Gipps
1500; Lewis’s Hill 1000: but the general
elevation of the range might be rather under than
over what I have stated. It appears to me that
the whole of the geological formation of this portion
of the continent is the same, and that all the lines
of ranges terminate in the same kind of way to the
north, that is to say, in detached flat-topped hills
of compact or indurated quartz shewing white and abrupt
faces. So terminated the Coonbaralba Range, and
so Mr. Eyre tells us did the Mount Serle Range, and
so terminated the range we saw to the westward of Lake
Torrens.
That they exhibit evidences of a past
violent commotion of waters, I think any one who will
follow my steps and view them, will be ready to admit.
That the range of hills I have called
“Stanley’s Barrier Range,” and that
all the mountain chains to the eastward and westward
of it, were once so many islands I have not the slightest
doubt, and that during the primeval period, a sea
covered the deserts over which I wandered; but it is
impossible for a writer, whatever powers of description
he may have, to transfer to the minds of his readers
the same vivid impressions his own may have received,
on a view of any external object.
From the remarks into which I have
thus been led, as well as those which have escaped
me in the course of this narrative, it will be seen
that the impressions I had received as to the past
and present state of the continent were rather strengthened
than diminished, on my further knowledge of its internal
structure.
It is true, that I did not find an
inland sea as I certainly expected to have done, but
the country as a desert was what I had anticipated,
although I could not have supposed it would have proved
of such boundless extent.
Viewing the objects for which the
Expedition was equipped, and its results, there can,
I think, be no doubt, as to the non-existence of any
mountain ranges in the interior of Australia, but,
on the contrary, that its central regions are nearly
if not quite on a sea level, and that the north coast
is separated from the south as effectually as if seas
rolled between them. I have stated my opinion
that that portion of the desert which I tried to cross
continues with undiminished breadth to the Great Australian
Bight, and I agree with Captain Flinders, in supposing
that if an inland sea exists any where, it exists
underneath and behind that bank, (speaking from seaward).
It would, I think, be unreasonable to suppose that
such an immense tract of sandy desert, once undoubtedly
a sea-bed, should immediately contract; considering,
indeed, the sterile character of the country to the
north of Gawler’s Range, to the westward of
Port Lincoln, and along the whole of the south coast
of Australia, nearly to King George’s Sound,
I must confess I have no hope of any inland fertile
country. I am aware it is the opinion of some
of my friends that the Stony Desert may communicate
with Lake Torrens. Such may have been and still
may be the case I will not argue the contrary,
or answer for the changes in so extraordinary a region.
I only state my own ideas from what I observed, strengthened
by my view of the position I occupied, when at my
farthest north; we will therefore refer to that position,
and to the position of Lake Torrens, and see how far
it is probable, that a large channel, such as I have
described the Stony Dessert to be, should turn so
abruptly, as it must do to connect itself with that
basin; the evident fall of the interior, as far as
that fact could be ascertained, being plainly from
east to west.
The western shore of Lake Torrens,
as laid down by Mr. Eyre, is in 137 degrees 40 minutes
or thereabouts. Its eastern shore in 141 degrees
of longitude. Its southern extremity being in
la 1/2 degrees. My position was in 138 degrees
of long. and 24 degrees 40 minutes of latitude.
I was therefore within 20 miles as far to the westward
of the westernmost part of Lake Torrens, and was also
250 geographical miles due north of it. To gain
Lake Torrens, the Stony Desert must turn at a right
angle from its known course, and in such case hills
must exist to the westward of where I was, for hills
alone could so change the direction of a current,
but the whole aspect of the interior would argue against
such a conclusion. I never lost sight of the
probability of Lake Torrens being connected with some
central feature, until my hopes were destroyed by the
nature of the country I traversed, nor do I think it
probable that in so level a region as that in which
I left it, there is any likelihood of the Stony Desert
changing its direction so much as to form any connection
with the sandy basin to which I have alluded.
Nevertheless it may do so. We naturally cling
to the ideas we ourselves have adopted, and it is
difficult to transfer them to the mind of another.
In reference however to what I had previously stated,
I would give the following quotation from Flinders.
His impressions from what he observed while sailing
along the coast, in a great measure correspond with
mine when travelling inland, the only point we differ
upon is as to the probable origin of the great sea-wall,
which appeared to him to be of calcareous formation,
and he therefore concluded that it had been a coral
reef raised by some convulsion of nature. Had
Capt. Flinders been able to examine the rock
formation of the Great Australian Bight, he would have
found that it was for the most part an oolitic limestone,
with many shells imbedded in it, similar in substance
and in formation to the fossil bed of the Murray,
but differing from it in colour.
“The length of these cliffs
from their second commencement is 33 leagues, and
that of the level bank from New Cape Paisley, where
it was first seen from the sea, no less than 145 leagues.
The height of this extraordinary bank is nearly the
same throughout, being nowhere less by estimation than
400 feet, not anywhere more than 600. In the first
20 leagues the rugged tops of some inland mountains
were visible over it, but during the remainder of
its long course, the bank was the limit of our view.
“This equality of elevation
for so great an extent, and the evidently calcareous
nature of the bank, at least in the upper 200 feet,
would bespeak it to have been the exterior line of
some vast coral reef, which is always more elevated
than the interior parts, and commonly level with high
water mark. From the gradual subsiding of the
sea, or perhaps from some convulsion of nature, this
bank may have attained its present height above the
surface, and however extraordinary such a change may
appear, yet when it is recollected that branches of
coral still exist, upon Bald Head, at the elevation
of 400 feet or more, this supposition assumes a degree
of probability, and it would farther seem that the
subsiding of the waters has not been at a period very
remote, since these frail branches have yet neither
been all beaten down nor mouldered away by the wind
and weather.
“If this supposition be well
founded, it may with the fact of no other hill or
object having been perceived above the bank in the
greater part of its course, assist in forming some
conjecture as to what may be within it, which cannot
as I judge in such case, be other than flat sandy plains
or water. The bank may even be a narrow barrier
between an interior and the exterior sea, and much
do I regret the not having formed an idea of this
probability at the time, for notwithstanding the great
difficulty and risk, I should certainly have attempted
a landing upon some part of the coast, to ascertain
a fact of so much importance.”
Had there been any inland ranges they
would have been seen by that searching officer from
the ocean, but it is clear that none exists; for Mr.
Eyre in his intercourse with the natives, during his
journey from South Australia to King George’s
Sound, elicited nothing from them that led him to
suppose that there were any hills in the interior,
or indeed that an inland sea was to be found there;
even the existence of one may reasonably be doubted,
and it may be that the country behind the Great Australian
Bight is, as Captain Flinders has conjectured, a low
sandy country, formed by a channel of 400 or 500 miles
in breadth, separating the south coast of the continent
from the west and north ones. Although I did
not gain the direct centre of the continent there can
be very little doubt as to the character of the country
round it. The spirit of enterprise alone will
now ever lead any man to gain it, but the gradual
development of the character of the yet unexplored
interior will alone put an end to doubts and theories
on the subject. The desert of Australia is not
more extensive than the deserts in other parts of the
world. Its character constitutes its peculiarity,
and that may lead to some satisfactory conclusion
as to how it was formed, and by what agent the sandy
ridges which traverse it were thrown up. I would
repeat that I am diffident of my own judgment, and
that I should be indebted to any one better acquainted
with the nature of these things than I am to point
out wherein I am in error.
It remains for me, before I close
this part of my work, to make a few observations on
the natives with whom we communicated beyond the river
tribes. Mr. Eyre has given so full and so accurate
an account of the natives of the Murray and Darling
that it is needless for me to repeat his observations.
I would only remark that I attribute our friendly
intercourse with them to the great influence he had
gained over them by his judicious conduct as Resident
Protector at the Murray. I fully concur with
him in the good that resulted from the establishment
of a post on that river, for the express pur
pose of putting a stop to the mutual aggression of
the overlanders and natives upon each other. I
have received too many kindnesses at the hands of
the natives not to be interested in their social welfare,
and most fully approved the wise policy of Captain
Grey, in sending Mr. Eyre to a place where his exertions
were so eminently successful.
In another place I may be led to make
some remarks on the condition of the natives of South
Australia, but at present I have only to observe upon
that of the natives of the distant interior with whom
no white man had ever before come in contact.
If I except the tribe upon Cooper’s
Creek, on which they are numerous, the natives are
but thinly scattered over the interior, as far as our
range extended. The few families wandering over
those gloomy regions may scarcely exceed one hundred
souls. They are a feeble and diminutive race
when compared to the river tribes, but they have evidently
sprung from the same parent stock, and local circumstances
may satisfactorily and clearly account for physical
differences of appearance. Like the tribes of
the Darling and the Murray, and indeed like the aborigines
of the whole continent, they have the quick and deep
set eye, the rapidly retiring forehead, and the great
enlargement of the frontal sinus, the flat nose and
the thick lip. It is quite true that many have
not the depression of the head so great, but in such
cases I think an unusual proportion of the brain lies
behind the ear. In addition, however, to the
above physiognomical resemblances, they have the same
disproportion between the upper region of the body
and the lower extremities, the same prominent chest,
and the same want of muscular development, and in common
with all the natives I have seen, their beards are
strong and stand out from the chin, and their hair
the finest ornament they possess, only that they destroy
its natural beauty by filth and neglect, is both straight
and curly. Their skins are nearly of the same
hue; nor did we see any great difference, excepting
in one woman, whose skin was of a jet black.
Two young women, however, were noticed who had beautiful
glossy ringlets, of which they appeared to be exceedingly
proud, and kept clean, as if they knew their value.
Both Mr. Browne and myself observed a great disparity
of numbers in the male and female children, there being
an excess of the latter of nearly two to one, and
in some instances of a still greater disproportion.
This fact was also obvious both to
Mr. Stuart and myself in the tribe on Cooper’s
Creek, in which the number of female children greatly
exceeded that of the male, though there were more
adult men than women. The personal appearance
of the men of this tribe, as I have already stated,
was exceedingly prepossessing they were
well made and tall, and notwithstanding that my long-legged
friend was an ugly fellow, were generally good looking.
Their children in like manner were in good condition
and appeared to be larger than I had remarked elsewhere,
but with the women no improvement was to be seen.
Thin, half-starved and emaciated they were still made
to bear the burden of the work, and while the men
were lounging about their fires, and were laughing
and talking, the women were ceaselessly hammering
and pounding to prepare that meat, of which, from
their appearance, so small a proportion fell to their
share. As regards the treatment of their women,
however, I think I have observed that they are subjected
to harsher treatment when they are members of a large
tribe than when fewer are congregated together.
Both parents are very fond of and indulgent to their
children, and there is no surer way of gaining the
assistance of the father, or of making a favourable
impression on a tribe than by noticing the children.
I think that generally speaking the
native women seldom have more than four children,
or if they have, few above that number arrive at the
age of puberty. There are, however, several reasons
why the women are not more prolific; the principal
of which is that they suckle their young for such
a length of time, and so severe a task is it with them
to rear their offspring that the child is frequently
destroyed at its birth; and however revolting to us
such a custom may be, it is now too notorious a fact
to be disputed.
The voices of the natives, generally
speaking, are soft, especially those of the women.
They are also a merry people and sit up laughing and
talking all night long. It is this habit, and
the stars so constantly passing before their eyes,
which enables them to know when they are likely to
have rain or cold weather, as they will point to any
star and tell you that when it shall get up higher
then the weather will be cold or hot.
These primitive people have peculiar
customs and ceremonies in their intercourse with strangers,
and on first meeting preserve a most painful silence;
whether this arises from diffidence or some other feeling
it is difficult to say, but it is exceedingly awkward;
but, however awkward or embarrassing it may be, there
can be no doubt as to the policy and necessity of
respecting it. The natives certainly do not allow
strangers to pass through their territory without
permission first obtained, and their passions and
fears are both excited when suddenly intruded upon.
To my early observation of this fact, and to my forbearing
any forced interview, but giving them time to recover
from the surprise into which my presence had thrown
them, I attribute my success in avoiding any hostile
collision. I am sure, indeed, whatever instances
of violence and murder may be recorded of them, they
are naturally a mild and inoffensive people.
It is a remarkable fact that we seldom
or ever saw weapons in the hands of any of the natives
of the interior, such as we did see were similar to
those ordinarily used by natives of other parts of
the continent. Their implements were simple and
rude, and consisted chiefly of troughs for holding
water or seeds, rush bags, skins, stones, etc.
The native habitations, at all events those of the
natives of the interior, with the exception of the
Cooper’s Creek tribe, had huts of a much more
solid construction than those of the natives of the
Murray or the Darling, although some of their huts
were substantially built also. Those of the interior
natives however were made of strong boughs with a thick
coating of clay over leaves and grass. They were
entirely impervious to wind and rain, and were really
comfortable, being evidently erections of a permanent
kind to which the inhabitants frequently returned.
Where there were villages these huts were built in
rows, the front of one hut being at the back of the
other, and it appeared to be a singular but universal
custom to erect a smaller hut at no great distance
from the large ones, but we were unable to detect
for what purpose they were made, unless it was to
deposit their seeds; as they were too small even for
children to inhabit. At the little hut to the
north of the ranges, from which the reader will recollect
we twice frightened away a poor native, we found a
very large spear, apparently for a canoe, which I brought
to the camp. This spear could not possibly have
been used as a weapon, for it was too heavy, but on
shewing it subsequently to some natives, they did not
intimate that it was a canoe spear.
It may be thought that having been
in the interior for so many months I ought to have
become acquainted with many of the customs and habits
of the people inhabiting it, but it will have been
seen that they seldom came near us.
The custom of circumcision generally
prevailed, excepting with the Cooper’s Creek
tribe, but you would meet with a tribe with which that
custom did not prevail, between two with which it did.
As regards their food, it varies with
the season. That which they appeared to me to
use in the greatest abundance were seeds of various
kinds, as of grasses of several sorts, of the mesembryanthemum,
of the acacia and of the box-tree; of roots and herbs,
of caterpillars and moths, of lizards and snakes,
but of these there are very few. Besides these
they sometimes take the emu and kangaroo, but they
are never so plentiful as to constitute a principal
article of food. They take ducks when the rains
favour their frequenting the creeks and lagoons, exactly
as the natives of other parts of Australia do, with
nets stuck up to long poles, and must procure a sufficiency
of birds during the summer season. They also
wander among the sand ridges immediately after a fall
of rain, to hunt the jerboa and talperoo, (see Nat.
Hist.,) of which they procure vast supplies; but all
these sports are temporary, particularly the latter,
as the moment the puddles dry up the natives are forced
to retreat and fall back on previous means of subsistence.
With regard to their language, it
differed in different localities, though all had words
common to each respectively. My friend Mr. Eyre
states, that they have not any generic name for anything,
as tree, fish, bird; but in this, as far as the fish
goes, I think he is mistaken, for the old man who
visited our camp before the rains, and who so much
raised our hopes, certainly gave them a generic name;
for placing his fingers on such fish as he recognised,
he distinctly mentioned their specific name, but when
he put his fingers on such as he did not recognise,
he said “Guia, Guia, Guia,” successively
after each, evidently intending to include them under
the one name. With respect to their religious
impressions, if I may so call them, I believe they
have none. The only impression they have is of
an evil spirit, but however melancholy the fact, it
is no less true that the aborigines of Australia have
no idea of a superintending Providence.
In conclusion: I have spoken
of Mr. Browne and Mr. Piesse throughout my narrative,
in terms such as I feel they deserved. I should
be sorry to close its pages without also recording
the valuable and cheerful assistance I received from
Mr. Stuart, whose zeal and spirit were equally conspicuous,
and whose labour at the charts did him great credit.
To Flood I was indebted for having my horses in a
state fit for service, than whom as a person in charge
of stock, I could not have had a better; and I cannot
but speak well of all the men in their respective
capacities, as having always displayed a willingness
to bear with me, when ever I called on them to do
so, the fatigues and exposure incidental to such a
service as that on which I was employed.
Before closing my narrative I would
make a few observations on the conduct of such an
Expedition as the one the details of which I have just
been giving.
It appears to me then that discipline
is the first and principal point to be considered
on such occasions; unless indeed the leader be implicitly
obeyed it is impossible that matters should go on regularly.
For this reason it is objectionable to associate any
irresponsible person in such an undertaking.
When I engaged the men who were to accompany me, I
made them sign an agreement, giving me power to diminish
or increase the rations, and binding themselves not
only to the performance of any particular duty, but
to do everything in their power to promote the success
of the service in which they were engaged, under the
penalty of forfeiture of wages, in whole or part as
I should determine. I deemed it absolutely necessary
to arm myself with powers with which I could restrain
my men even in the Desert, before I left the haunts
of civilized man, although I never put these powers
in force, and this appears to me to be
a necessary precaution on all such occasions.
Equally necessary is the establishment of a guard
at night, for it is impossible to calculate on the
presence of natives they may be close at
hand, when none have been seen or heard during the
day. Had Dr. Leichhardt adopted this precaution
his camp would not have been surprised, nor would he
have lost a valuable companion. Equally necessary
is it to keep the stock, whether horses or bullocks,
constantly within view. In all situations where
I thought it probable they might wander I had them
watched all night long. Unless due precaution
however is used to ensure their being at hand when
wanted, they are sure to wander and give ceaseless
trouble.
As regards the consumption of provisions,
I had both a weekly and a monthly statement of issues.
In addition to this they were weighed monthly and
their loss ascertained, and their consumption regulated
accordingly, and I must say that I never found that
the men were disposed to object to any reasonable
reduction I made. I found the sheep I took with
me were admirable stock, but I was always aware that
an unforeseen accident might deprive me of them, and
indeed they called for more watchful care even than
the other stock. The men at the Depot were never
without their full allowance of mutton. It was
only the parties out on distant and separate services
who were reduced to an allowance scarcely sufficient
to do their work upon.
The attention of a Leader is no less
called to all these minutiae than his eye and judgment
to the nature of the country in which he may happen
to be. I would observe that in searching for water
along the dry channel of a creek, he should watch
for the slightest appearance of a creek junction,
for water is more frequently found in these lateral
branches, however small they may at first appear to
be, than in the main creek itself, and I would certainly
recommend a close examination of them. The explorer
will ever find the gum-tree in the neighbour hood of
water, and if he should ever traverse such a country
as that into which I went, and should discover creeks
as I did losing themselves on plains, he should never
despair of recovering their channels again. They
invariably terminate in grassy plains, and until he
sees such before him he may rest assured that their
course continues. Should the traveller be in a
country in which water is scarce it will be better
for him to stop at any he may find, although early
in the day, than to go on in the chance of being without
all night, and so entailing fatigue on his men.
I trust that what I have said of the
natives renders it unnecessary for me to add anything
as to the caution and forbearance required in communicating
with them. Kindness gains much on them, and their
friendly disposition eases the mind of a load of anxiety for
however confident the Leader may be, it is impossible
to divest the minds of the men of apprehension when
in the presence of hostile natives. He who shall
have perused these pages will have learnt that under
whatever difficulties he may be placed, that although
his last hope is almost extinguished, he should never
despair. I have recorded instances enough of the
watchful superintendence of that Providence over me
and my party, without whose guidance we should have
perished, nor can I more appropriately close these
humble sheets, than by such an acknowledgment, and
expressing my fervent thanks to Almighty God for the
mercies vouchsafed to me during the trying and doubtful
service on which I was employed.