The mystery, and the secret
of the sea.
The boussole and the astrolabe
sailed from Botany Bay on March 10, 1788. After
recording that fact we might well inscribe the pathetic
last words of Hamlet, “the rest is silence.”
We know what Laperouse intended to
do. He wrote two letters to friends in France,
explaining the programme to be followed after sailing
from Botany Bay. They do not agree in every particular,
but we may take the last letter written to express
his final determination. According to this, his
plan was to sail north, passing between Papua ( New
Guinea) and Australia by another channel than Endeavour
Strait, if he could find one. During September
and October he intended to visit the Gulf of Carpentaria,
and thence sail down the west and along the south of
Australia, to Tasmania, “but in such a manner
that it may be possible for me to stretch northward
in time to arrive at Île-de-France in the beginning
of December, 1788.” That was the programme
which he was not destined to complete hardly,
indeed, to enter upon. Had he succeeded, his
name would have been inscribed amongst the memorable
company of the world’s great maritime explorers.
As it is, the glint on his brow, as he stands in the
light of history, is less that of achievement than
of high promise, noble aims, romance and mystery.
One of the letters sent from Sydney
concluded with these words: “Adieu!
I shall depart in good health, as are all my ship’s
company. We would undertake six voyages round
the world if it could afford to our country either
profit or pleasure.” They were not the last
words he wrote, but we may appropriately take them
as being, not merely his adieu to a friend, but to
the world.
Time sped on; the date given for the
arrival at Île-de-France was passed; the year
1789 dawned and ticked off the tally of its days.
But nothing was heard of Laperouse. People in
France grew anxious, one especially we may be sure she
who knew so well where the ships would anchor in Port
Louis if they emerged out of the ocean brume, and who
longed so ardently that renewed acquaintance with scenes
once sweetly familiar would awaken memories meet to
give wings to speed and spurs to delay. Not a
word came to sustain or cheer, and the faint flush
of hope faded to the wan hue of despair on the cheek
of love. By 1791 all expectation of seeing the
expedition return was abandoned. But could not
some news of its fate be ascertained? Had it faded
out of being like a summer cloud, leaving not a trace
behind? Might not some inkling be had, some small
relics obtained, some whisper caught, in those distant
isles,
“Where the sea egg flames on the
coral,
and the long-backed
breakers croon
Their endless ocean legend to the lazy,
locked lagoon.”
France was then in the throes of her
great social earthquake; but it stands to the credit
of the National Assembly that, amidst many turbulent
projects and boiling passions, they found time and
had the disposition to cause the fitting out of a
new expedition to search for tidings of those whose
disappearance weighed heavily on the heart of the
nation. The decree was passed on February 9, 1791.
Two ships, the recherche and
the Esperance, were selected and placed under
the command of Dentrecasteaux. He had already
had some experience in a part of the region to be
searched, had been a governor of Île-de-France,
and during a South Sea voyage had named the cluster
of islands east of Papua now called the D’Entrecasteaux
Group. The second ship was placed under the command
of Captain Huon Kermadec. The Huon River in Tasmania,
and the Kermadec Islands, N.E. of New Zealand, are
named after him.
Fleurieu again drew up the instructions,
and based them largely upon the letter from Laperouse
quoted above, pointing out that remains of him would
most probably be found in the neighbourhood of coasts
which he had intended to explore. It was especially
indicated that there was, south of New Holland, an
immense stretch of coastline so far utterly unknown.
“No navigator has penetrated in that part of
the sea; the reconnaissances and discoveries
of the Dutch, the English and the French commenced
at the south of Van Diemen’s Land.”
Thus, for the second time, was a French
navigator directed to explore the southern coasts
of Australia; and had Dentrecasteaux followed the
plan laid down for him he would have forestalled the
discoveries of Grant, Bass and Flinders, just as Laperouse
would have done had his work not been cut short by
disaster.
It has to be remembered that the instructions
impressed upon Dentrecasteaux that his business primarily
was not geographical discovery, but to get news of
his lost compatriots. But even so, is it not
curious that the French should have been concerned
with the exploration of Southern Australia before
the English thought about it; that they should have
had two shots at the task, planned with knowledge
and care, officially directed, and in charge of eminently
competent navigators; but that nevertheless their
schemes should have gone awry? They made a third
attempt by means of Baudin’s expedition, during
the Napoleonic Consulate, and again were unsuccessful,
except in a very small measure. It almost seems
as if some power behind human endeavours had intended
these coasts for British finding and keeping.
The full story of Dentrecasteaux’
expedition has not yet been told. Two thick books
were written about it, but a mass of unpublished papers
contain details that were judiciously kept out of those
volumes. When the whole truth is made known,
it will be seen that the bitter strife which plunged
France in an agony of blood and tears was not confined
to the land.
The ships did not visit Sydney.
Why not? It might have been expected that an
expedition sent to discover traces of Laperouse would
have been careful to make Botany Bay in the first
instance, and, after collecting whatever evidence
was available there, would have carefully followed
the route that he had proposed to pursue. But
it would seem that an European settlement was avoided.
Why? The unpublished papers may furnish an answer
to that question.
Neither was the south coast of Australia
explored. That great chance was missed.
Some excellent charting which ten years
later commanded the cordial admiration of Flinders was
done by Beautemps-Beaupre, who was Dentrecasteaux’
cartographer, especially round about the S.W. corner
of the continent. Esperance Bay, in Western Australia,
is named after one of the ships of this expedition.
But from that corner, his ships being short of fresh
water, Dentrecasteaux sailed on a direct line to Southern
Tasmania, and thence to New Zealand, New Caledonia,
and New Guinea. Touch with the only European centre
in these parts was apparently with deliberation not
obtained.
Dentrecasteaux died while his ships
were in the waters to the north of New Guinea.
He fell violently ill, raving at first, then subsiding
into unconsciousness, a death terrible to read about
in the published narrative, where the full extent
of his troubles is not revealed. Kermadec, commander
of the Esperance, also died at New Caledonia.
After their decease the ships returned to France as
rapidly as they could. They were detained by
the Dutch at Sourabaya for several months, as prisoners
of war, and did not reach Europe till March, 1796.
Their mission had been abortive.
Five French Captains who brought expeditions
to Australia at this period all ended in misfortune.
Laperouse was drowned; de Langle was murdered; Dentrecasteaux
died miserably at sea; Kermadec, the fourth, had expired
shortly before; and Baudin, the fifth, died at Port
Louis on the homeward voyage.
Nor is even that the last touch of
melancholy to the tale of tragedy. There was
a young poet who was touched by the fate of Laperouse.
Andre Chenier is now recognised as one of the finest
masters of song who have enriched French literature,
and his poems are more and more studied and admired
both by his own countrymen and abroad. He planned
and partly finished a long poem, “L’Amérique,”
which contains a mournful passage about the mystery
of the sea which had not then been solved. A
translation of the lines will not be attempted here;
they are mentioned because the poet himself had an
end as tragic, though in a different mode, as that
of the hero of whom he sang. He came under the
displeasure of the tyrants of the Red Terror through
his friends and his writings, and in March, 1794,
the guillotine took this brilliant young genius as
a victim.
J’accuserai les vents
et cette mer jalouse
Qui retient, qui peut-être
a ravi Laperouse
so the poem begins. How strangely
the shadow of Tragedy hangs over this ill-starred
expedition; Louis XVI the projector, Laperouse and
de Langle the commanders, Dentrecasteaux and Kermadec
the searchers, Andre Chenier the laureate: the
breath of the black-robed Fury was upon them all!