June 1. Mr. Gilbert and
Charley made an excursion down the river last night,
to look for water, but, as they did not return in the
morning, and as water had been found, after they left,
about four miles lower down, we started to meet them.
Observing a swarm of white cranes circling in the
air, and taking their flight down the river, I concluded
that we should meet with a good supply of water lower
down, and, therefore, passed the nearest water-hole;
but, the country and the bed of the river being exceedingly
rocky, our progress was very slow. After proceeding
about eight miles, we came to the junction of a river
from the south-west with the Lynd; and encamped at
some small pools of water in latitude 17 degrees 45
minutes 40 seconds: having travelled, during the
last two stages, in a west-north-west direction.
June 2. When we left our
camp this morning, Mr. Gilbert and Charley returned
from their ride; they had come on our tracks last night,
but, surrounded as they were by rocky hills and gullies,
had been compelled to encamp. We travelled about
seven miles and a half, and crossed three good sized
creeks, joining the Lynd from the north east.
The river divided several times into anabranches,
flowing round, and insulating rocky hills and ridges.
It was much better supplied with water, and contained
several large reedy lagoons. An elegant Acacia,
about thirty or thirty-five feet high, grew on its
small flats: it had large drooping glaucous bipinnate
leaves, long broad pods, and oval seeds, half black,
and half bright red.
June 3. We continued our
journey down the river, about seven or eight miles.
The first three miles were very tolerable, over limited
box-flats near the river. As we approached the
ranges again, the supply of water increased; and we
passed one large poel, in particular, with many ducks
and spoonbills on it. But the ranges approached
the banks of the river on both sides, and formed either
precipitous walls, or flats so exceedingly rocky,
that it was out of the question to follow it.
We, therefore, ascended the hills and mountains, and
with our foot-sore cattle passed over beds of sharp
shingles of porphyry. We crept like snails over
these rocky hills, and through their gullies filled
with boulders and shingles, until I found it necessary
to halt, and allow my poor beasts to recover.
During the afternoon, I examined the country in advance,
and found that the mountains extended five miles farther,
and were as rocky as those we had already passed.
But, after that, they receded from the river, and the
country became comparatively level. To this place
I brought forward my party on the 4th June, and again
descended into the valley of the river, and encamped
near a fine pool of water in its sandy bed, in latitude
17 degrees 34 minutes 17 seconds. Here, last
night, I met a family of natives who had just commenced
their supper; but, seeing us, they ran away and left
their things, without even making an attempt to frighten
us. Upon examining their camp, I found their koolimans,
(vessels to keep water) full of bee bread, of which
I partook, leaving for payment some spare nose rings
of our bullocks. In their dillies I found the
fleshy roots of a bean, which grows in a sandy soil,
and has solitary yellow blossoms; the tuber of a vine,
which has palmate leaves; a bitter potato, probably
belonging to a water-plant; a fine specimen of rock-crystal;
and a large cymbium (a sea shell), besides other
trifles common to almost all the natives we had seen.
Their koolimans were very large, almost like small
boats, and were made of the inner layer of the bark
of the stringy-bark tree. There was no animal
food in the camp.
The whole extent of the mountainous
country passed in our two last stages, was of porphyry,
with crystals of quartz and felspar in a grey paste;
on both sides of it, the rock was granite and pegmatite;
and, at the north-west side of the gorge, I observed
talc-schist in the bed of the river.
The vegetation of the forest, and
along the river, did not vary; but, on the mountains,
the silver-leaved Ironbark prevailed.
The general course of the Lynd, from
my last latitude to that of the 4th June, was north-west.
Sleeping in the open air at night,
with a bright sky studded with its stars above us,
we were naturally led to observe more closely the hourly
changes of the heavens; and my companions became curious
to know the names of those brilliant constellations,
with which nightly observation had now, perhaps for
the first time, made them familiar. We had reached
a latitude which allowed us not only to see the brightest
stars of the southern, but, also of the northern hemisphere,
and I shall never forget the intense pleasure I experienced,
and that evinced by my companions, when I first called
them, about 4 o’clock in the morning, to see
Ursa Major. The starry heaven is one of those
great features of nature, which enter unconsciously
into the composition of our souls. The absence
of the stars gives us painful longings, the nature
of which we frequently do not understand, but which
we call home sickness: and their sudden
re-appearance touches us like magic, and fills us with
delight. Every new moon also was hailed with
an almost superstitious devotion, and my Blackfellows
vied with each other to discover its thin crescent,
and would be almost angry with me when I strained
my duller eyes in vain to catch a glimpse of its faint
light in the brilliant sky which succeeds the setting
of the sun. The questions: where were we
at the last new moon? how far have we travelled since?
and where shall we be at the next? were
invariably discussed amongst us; calculations were
made as to the time that would be required to bring
us to the end of our journey, and there was no lack
of advice offered as to what should, and ought to
be done.
At several of our last camps the cry
of the goat suckers, and the hooting of owls, were
heard the whole night; and immediately after sunset,
the chirping of several kinds of crickets was generally
heard, the sound of which was frequently so metallic,
as to be mistaken for the tinkling of our bell.
At Separation Creek, we first met with the ring-tailed
opossum; and, on the table land, often heard its somewhat
wailing cry.
June 5. We travelled, in
a direct line, about nine miles west by north, down
the river, although the distance along its banks was
much greater; for it made a large bend at first to
the northward, and afterwards, being turned by a fine
conspicuous short range, to the westward. I named
the Range after W. Kirchner, Esq., another of the
supporters of my expedition. The river was here,
in some places, fully half a mile broad, and formed
channels covered with low shrubs, among which a myrtle
was frequent. Between the ranges, the river became
narrower: and, before it reached Kirchner’s
Range, a large creek joined it from the eastward; and
another from the southward, after it had passed the
range. The flats increased on both side of the
river, and were openly timbered with box and narrow-leaved
Ironbark. The rock near our yesterday’s
camp was talc-schist. Farther down sienite was
observed, which contained so much hornblende as to
change occasionally into hornblende rock, with scattered
crystals of quartz. Granite and pegmatite were
round some lagoons near the creek from the southward.
The clustered fig tree of the Burdekin, became again
more frequent; but Sarcocephalus was the characteristic
tree of the river. The Acacia of Expedition Range
and of the upper Lynd, grew to a comparatively large
size in the open forest. We observed a cotton
tree (Cochlospermum), covered with large yellow blossoms,
though entirely leafless; and we could not help thinking
how great an ornament this plant would be to the gardens
of the colony.
As the water-holes became larger,
water-fowl became more plentiful; and Brown succeeded
in shooting several wood-ducks and a Malacorhyncus
membranaceus. The bean of the Mackenzie was very
abundant in the sandy bed of the river; we roasted
and ate some of its fruit; it was, however, too heavy,
and produced indigestion: Mr. Phillips pounded
them, and they made an excellent substitute for coffee,
which I preferred to our tea, which, at that time,
was not very remarkable for its strength.
June 6. We travelled about
nine miles west by north to latitude 17 degrees 30
minutes 47 seconds. The first part of the stage
was over an undulating country timbered with box and
Ironbark; but the latter part was hilly and mountainous:
the mountains were so rocky, where they entered the
bed of the river, that we were obliged to leave its
banks, and travel over a very difficult country.
On the small flats, the apple-gum
grew with a few scattered Moreton Bay ash trees; on
the bergues of the river we found the white cedar (Melia
azedarach), Clerodendron; an asclepiadaceous shrub
with large triangular seed-vessels; and, on the hills,
the blood-wood and stringy-bark. The rock, as
far as I examined it, was of porphyry of great hardness,
and composing hills of an almost conical form.
June 7. The same difficult
country not only continued, but rather increased.
Charley told me last night, on his return from a walk,
that he had found sandstone. To-day we travelled
over porphyries like those of the last stage:
but, about four miles from the last camp, steep sandstone
rocks with excavations appeared on our left, at some
distance from the river, from which they were separated
by porphyry; but, farther on, they approached the
river on both sides, and formed steep slopes, which
compelled us to travel along the bed of the river itself.
Two large creeks joined the river from the southward,
one of which was running, and also made the river
run until the stream lost itself in the sandy bed.
At the end of the stage, however, the stream re-appeared,
and we were fairly on the fourth flowing river of
the expedition: for the Condamine, although not
constantly, was raised by rains, and showed the origin
of its supply, by the muddy nature of its waters;
the Dawson commenced running where we left it; and
the Burdekin, with several of its tributaries, was
running as far as we followed it. The waters of
the Dawson, the Burdekin, and the Lynd, were very
clear, and received their constant supply from springs.
We passed a camp of natives, who vere
very much alarmed at the report of a gun, which Mr.
Gilbert happened to fire when very near them; this
he did in his anxiety to procure a pair of Geophaps
plumifera, for his collection. These pretty little
pigeons had been first observed by Brown in the course
of our yesterday’s stage, who shot two of them,
but they were too much mutilated to make good specimens.
We frequently saw them afterwards, but never more
than two, four, or six together, running with great
rapidity and with elevated crest over the ground, and
preferring the shady rocks along the sandy bed of
the river. I tried several methods to render
the potatoes, which we had found in the camps of the
natives, eatable; but neither roasting nor boiling
destroyed their sickening bitterness. At last,
I pounded and washed them, and procured their starch,
which was entirely tasteless, but thickened rapidly
in hot water, like arrow-root; and was very agreeable
to eat, wanting only the addition of sugar to make
it delicious; at least so we fancied.
June 8. We travelled about
nine miles west-north-west. The country was in
general open, with soft ground on the more extensive
flats; although sandstone ranges approached the river
in many places. Four good-sized creeks entered
the river from the southward. The sandstone, or
psammite, was composed of large grains of quartz mixed
with clay of a whitish red or yellow colour; it frequently
formed steep cliffs and craggy rugged little peaks.
The stringy-bark grew to a fine size
on the hills, and would yield, together with Ironbark
and the drooping tea-tree, the necessary timber for
building. A new species of Melaleuca and also
of Boronia were found, when entering upon the sandstone
formation.
The wind for the last few days has
been westerly; cumuli forming during the day,
dissolved towards sunset; the days were very hot, the
nights mild and dry. It was evident that we had
descended considerably into the basin of the gulf.
June 9. We travelled about
ten miles north-west. Box-tree flats, of more
or less extent, were intercepted by abrupt barren craggy
hills composed of sandstone, which seemed to rest
on layers of argillaceous rock. The latter was
generally observed at the foot of the hills and in
the bed of the river; it had in most places been worn
by the action of water. The stringy-bark became
even numerous on the flats, in consequence of the
more sandy nature of the soil: but the hills were
scrubby, and Mr. Gilbert reported that he had even
seen the Bricklow. The grass of the Isaacs grew
from twelve to fifteen feet high, in the hollows near
the river, which was, as usual, fringed with Sarcocephalus;
a species of Terminalia; the drooping tea-tree; and
with an Acacia which perfumed the air with the fragrant
odours of its flowers. We gathered some blossoms
of the drooping tea-tree, which were full of honey,
and, when soaked, imparted a very agreeable sweetness
to the water. We frequently observed great quantities
of washed blossoms of this tree in the deserted camps
of the natives; showing that they were as fond of
the honey in the blossoms of the tea-tree, as the
natives of the east coast are of that of the several
species of Banksia.
June 10. We travelled about
five miles north-north-west to latitude 17 degrees
9 minutes 17 seconds. The flats, the rugged hills,
and the river, maintained the same character.
Creeks, probably of no great extent, joined the Lynd
from the south side of all the hills we passed both
yesterday and to-day.
The weather was very fine, although
exceedingly hot during the day; but the nights were
mild, and without dew. An easterly and south-easterly
wind blew during the whole day, moderated a little
at sunset, and again freshened up after it; but the
latter part of the night, and for an hour and a half
after sunrise, was calm. I was induced to think
that this wind originated from the current of cold
air flowing from the table-land of the Burdekin down
to the gulf, as the easterly winds west of New England
do, and as the westerly winds of Sydney during July
and August, which are supposed to be equally connected
with the table-land of New England and of Bathurst.
The westerly winds occurring at the upper Lynd, do
not militate against such a supposition, as they might
well belong to an upper current coming from the sea.
Two new fishes were caught; both were
very small; the one malacopterygious, and resembling
the pike, would remain at times motionless at the
bottom, or dart at its prey; the other belonged to
the perches, and had an oblong compressed body, and
three dark stripes perpendicular to its length; this
would hover through the water, and nibble at the bait.
Silurus and Gristes were also caught.
Brown rendered himself very useful
to us in shooting ducks, which were very numerous
on the water-holes; and he succeeded several times
in killing six, eight, or ten, at oneshot; particularly
the Leptotarsis, Gould, (whistling duck) which
habitually crowd close together on the water.
Native companions were also numerous, but these birds
and the black cockatoos were the most wary of any
that we met. Whilst travelling with our bullocks
through the high grass, we started daily a great number
of wallabies; two of which were taken by Charley
and John Murphy, assisted by our kangaroo dog.
Brown, who had gone to the lower part of the long
pool of water near our encampment, to get a shot at
some sheldrakes (Tadorna Raja), returned in a great
hurry, and told me that he had seen a very large and
most curious fish dead, and at the water’s edge.
Messrs. Gilbert and Calvert went to fetch it, and I
was greatly surprised to find it a sawfish (Pristis),
which I thought lived exclusively in salt water.
It was between three and four feet in length, and
only recently, perhaps a few days, dead. It had
very probably come up the river during a flood, for
the water-hole in which the creature had been detained,
had no connection with the tiny stream, which hardly
resisted the absorbing power of the sands. Another
question was, what could have been the cause of its
death? as the water seemed well tenanted with small
fish. We supposed that it had pursued its prey
into shallow water, and had leaped on the dry land,
in its efforts to regain the deep water. Charley
also found and brought me the large scales of the fish
of the Mackenzie, and the head-bones of a large guard-fish.
June 11. We travelled about
eight miles due north. The bed of the river was
very broad; and an almost uninterrupted flat, timbered
with box and apple-gum, extended along its banks.
We were delighted with the most exquisite fragrance
of several species of Acacia in blossom.
June 12. We travelled about
nine miles N.N.W. to la degrees 55 minutes.
The flats were again interrupted by sandstone ranges.
One large creek, and several smaller ones joined the
river.
June 13. We accomplished
nine miles to-day in a N.N.W. direction. The
country was partly rocky; the rock was a coarse conglomerate
of broken pieces of quartz, either white or coloured
with oxide of iron; it greatly resembled the rock
of the Wybong hills on the upper Hunter, and was equally
worn and excavated. The flats were limited, and
timbered with apple-gum, box, and blood-wood, where
the sand was mixed with a greater share of clay; and
with stringy-bark on the sandy rocky soil; also with
flooded-gum, in the densely grassed hollows along the
river. The Severn tree, the Acacia of Expedition
Range, and the little bread tree, were frequent along
the banks of the river. A species of Stravadium
attracted our attention by its loose racemes of crimson
coloured flowers, and of large three or four ribbed
monospermous fruit; it was a small tree, with bright
green foliage, and was the almost constant companion
of the permanent water-holes. As its foliage
and the manner of its growth resemble the mangrove,
we called it the Mangrove Myrtle.
Brown shot fifteen ducks, mostly Leptotarsis
Eytoni, Gould.; and Charley a bustard (Otis Australasianus),
which saved two messes of our meat.
The river was joined by a large creek
from the south-west, and by several small ones; we
passed a very fine lagoon, at scarcely three miles
from our last camp.
June 14. We travelled nine
miles north by west, to la degrees 38 minutes.
The box-tree flats were very extensive, and scattered
over with small groves of the Acacia of Expedition
Range. The narrow-leaved Ironbark had disappeared
with the primitive rocks; the moment sandstone commenced,
stringy-bark took its place. We passed some lagoons,
crossed a good sized creek from the south-west, and
saw a small lake in the distance. At the latter
part of the stage the country became more undulating.
The edges of the stiff shallows were densely covered
with the sharp pointed structures of the white ants,
about two or three feet high. They were quite
as frequent at the upper part of the river, where I
omitted to mention them. We saw a very interesting
camping place of the natives, containing several two-storied
gunyas, which were constructed in the following manner:
four large forked sticks were rammed into the ground,
supporting cross poles placed in their forks, over
which bark was spread sufficiently strong and spacious
for a man to lie upon; other sheets of stringy-bark
were bent over the platform, and formed an arched
roof, which would keep out any wet. At one side
of these constructions, the remains of a large fire
were observed, with many mussel-shells scattered about.
All along the Lynd we had found the gunyas of the
natives made of large sheets of stringy-bark, not however
supported by forked poles, but bent, and both ends
of the sheet stuck into the ground; Mr. Gilbert thought
the two-storied gunyas were burial places; but we met
with them so frequently afterwards, during our journey
round the gulf, and it was frequently so evident that
they had been recently inhabited, that no doubt remained
of their being habitations of the living, and constructed
to avoid sleeping on the ground during the wet season.
June 15. We travelled about
nine miles and a half down the river, over a country
like that of yesterday, the tree vegetation was, however,
more scanty, the forest still more open, the groves
of Acacia larger. Brown returned with two sheldrakes
(Tadorna Raja), four black ducks (Anas Novae
Hollandiae), four teals (Querquedula castanea);
and brought the good news that the Lynd joined a river
coming from the south-east, with a rapid stream to
the westward.
June 16. We left the Lynd,
along which we had journeyed from la degrees
58 minutes to la degrees 30 minutes, and travelled
about twelve miles W.N.W., when we encamped at the
west side of a very long lagoon Though I did not see
the junction of the two rivers myself, Mr. Roper,
Brown, and Charley, informed me, that the Lynd became
very narrow, and its banks well confined, before joining
the new river; which I took the liberty of naming
after Sir Thomas Mitchell, the talented Surveyor-General
of New South Wales; they also stated that the Lynd
was well filled by a fine sheet of water. The
bed of the Mitchell was very broad, sandy, and quite
bare of vegetation; showing the more frequent recurrence
of floods. A small stream meandered through the
sheet of sand, and from time to time expanded into
large water-holes: the river was also much more
tortuous in its course than the Lynd, which for long
distances generally kept the same course. The
Mitchell came from the eastward, and took its course
to the west-north-west. At the sudden bends of
the river, the bergue was interrupted by gullies,
and occasionally by deep creeks, which seemed, however,
only to have a short course, and to be the outlets
of the waters collecting on the flats and stiff plains
at some distance from the river. The bergue was
covered with fine bloodwood trees, stringy-bark and
box. At a greater distance from the river, the
trees became scanty and scattered, and, still farther,
small plains extended, clothed but sparingly with
a wiry grass. These plains were bounded by an
open forest of the Acacia of Expedition Range.
This little tree gave us a good supply of a light
amber-coloured wholesome gum, which we sometimes ate
in its natural state, or after it had been dissolved
by boiling. Towards the end of the day’s
stage, we came to several very fine lagoons; one of
which was several miles long, and apparently parallel
to the river: it was exceedingly deep, and covered
with the broad leaves of Villarsia and Nymphaea, and
well stocked with numerous large fish, which betrayed
their presence by an incessant splashing during the
early part of the night. John Murphy caught the
small striped perch of the Lynd; and another small
perch-like fish, with a broad anal fin, which had already
excited our admiration at the Lynd, by the beauty of
its colours, and by the singularity of its movements.
Charley saw the Silurus and the guardfish, and caught
several of the broad-scaled fish of the Mackenzie;
one of which, a most beautiful specimen, has been preserved
and sent to Mr. Gould.
When we left our last camp at the
Lynd, John Murphy’s pony was missing. Charley
went to look for it, and did not join us before we
had arrived at our camp, after an unusually long and
fatiguing stage. He brought us the melancholy
news that he had found the poor beast on the sands
of the Lynd, with its body blown up, and bleeding
from the nostrils. It had either been bitten
by a snake; or had eaten some noxious herb, which had
fortunately been avoided by the other horses.
Accidents of this kind were well calculated to impress
us with the conviction of our dependence on Providence,
which had hitherto been so kind and merciful.
As all our meat was consumed, I was
compelled to stop, in order to kill one of our little
steers. It proved to be very fat, and allowed
us once more to indulge in our favourite dish of fried
liver. Although we were most willing to celebrate
the anniversary of the battle of Waterloo, and to
revive our own ambitious feelings at the memory of
the deeds of our illustrious heroes, we had nothing
left but the saturated rags of our sugar bags; which,
however, we had kept for the purpose, and which we
now boiled up with our tea: our last flour was
consumed three weeks ago; and the enjoyment of fat
cake, therefore, was not to be thought of. Should
any of my readers think these ideas and likings ridiculous
and foolish, they may find plenty of analogous facts
by entering the habitations of the poor, where I have
not only witnessed, but enjoyed, similar treats of
sugared tea and buttered bread.
In crossing one of the creeks we found
a species of Acacia [Inga moniliformis, D. C. Prod.
Vol. II. , where it is described as having
been found at Timor.], with articulate pods and large
brown seeds; it was a small tree with spreading branches,
and a dark green shady foliage: it occurred afterwards
on all the creeks and water-holes until we reached
our destination.
It was at the lower part of the Lynd
that we first saw the green-tree ant; which seemed
to live in small societies in rude nests between the
green leaves of shady trees. The passer by, when
touching one of these nests, would be instantaneously
covered with them, and would soon be aware of their
presence by the painful bites they are able, and apparently
most ready, to inflict.
June 19. We travelled about
eight miles degrees W. la degrees 22 minutes
16 seconds and again encamped at a very deep lagoon,
covered near its edges with Villarsias, but without
Nymphaeas. The soil of the flat round the lagoon,
was very stiff and suitable for making bricks.
The country along the Mitchell was an immense uninterrupted
flat with a very clayey soil, on which the following
plants were frequent: viz. Grevillea,
Cerotaphylla, and Mimosoides, a Melaleuca with broad
lanceolate leaves, Spathodea and a Balfouria, R. Br.
Whilst walking down by the lagoon,
I found a great quantity of ripe Grewia seeds, and,
on eating many of them, it struck me, that their slightly
acidulous taste, if imparted to water, would make a
very good drink; I therefore gathered as many as I
could, and boiled them for about an hour; the beverage
which they produced was at all events the best we
had tasted on our expedition: and my companions
were busy the whole afternoon in gathering and boiling
the seeds.
Charley and Brown, who had gone to
the river, returned at a late hour, when they told
us that they had seen the tracks of a large animal
on the sands of the river, which they judged to be
about the size of a big dog, trailing a long tail
like a snake. Charley said, that when Brown fired
his gun, a deep noise like the bellowing of a bull
was heard; which frightened both so much that they
immediately decamped. This was the first time
that we became aware of the existence of the crocodile
in the waters of the gulf.
June 20. We travelled about
ten miles north-west, and avoided the gullies by keeping
at a distance from the river. Plains covered with
high dry grass alternated with an open forest; in
which we observed Spathodea, Bauhinia, a Balfouria,
groves of Cochlospermum gossypium, and several other
trees, which I had seen in the scrubs of Comet River;
among which was the arborescent Cassia with long pods.
A Bauhinia, different from the two species I had previously
seen, was covered with red blossoms, which, where
the tree abounded, gave quite a purple hue to the country.
The stringy-bark, the bloodwood, the apple-gum, the
box, and the flooded-gum, grew along the bergue of
the river.
We passed some fine lagoons at the
latter end of the stage. The banks of the river
were so steep, that the access to its water was difficult;
its stream, deep and apparently slow, occupied about
half the bed, which was perhaps one hundred and eighty,
or two hundred yards broad. The soil was very
sandy, and three deep channels parallel to the river
were overgrown with high stiff grass. A pretty
yellow Ipomoea formed dense festoons between the trees
that fringed the waters. The unripe seeds of
Cochlospermum, when crushed, gave a fine yellow colour,
shaded into an orange hue.
Large flocks of Peristera histrionica
(the Harlequin pigeon) were lying on the patches of
burnt grass on the plains, they feed on the brown seeds
of a grass, which annoyed us very much by getting into
our stockings, trowsers, and blankets. The rose-breasted
cockatoo, Mr. Gilbert’s Platycercus of Darling
Downs, and the Betshiregah (Melopsittacus undulatus,
Gould.) were very numerous, and it is probable
that the plains round the gulf are their principal
home, whence they migrate to the southward. The
white and black cockatoos were also very numerous.
John Murphy caught four perches, one
of which weighed two pounds. The purple ant of
the east coast has disappeared, and a similar one with
brick-coloured head and thorax, but by no means so
voracious, has taken its place.
The flooded-gum and the bloodwood
were in blossom: this usually takes place, at
Moreton Bay, in November and December. This different
state of vegetation to the northward and southward,
may perhaps account for the periodical migration of
several kinds of birds.
June 21. A shower of rain
fell, but cleared up at midnight. We travelled
nine miles north-west to la degrees 9 minutes
41 seconds, over a country very much like that of
the two preceding stages, and past several fine lagoons,
richly adorned by the large showy flowers of a white
Nymphaea, the seed-vessels of which some families of
natives were busily gathering: after having blossomed
on the surface of the water, the seed-vessel grows
larger and heavier, and sinks slowly to the bottom,
where it rots until its seeds become free, and are
either eaten by fishes and waterfowl, or form new
plants. The natives had consequently to dive
for the ripe seed-vessels; and we observed them constantly
disappearing and reappearing on the surface of the
water. They did not see us until we were close
to them, when they hurried out of the water, snatched
up some weapons and ran off, leaving their harvest
of Nymphaea seeds behind. Brown had visited another
lagoon, where he had seen an old man and two gins;
the former endeavoured to frighten him by setting the
grass on fire, but, when he saw that Brown still approached,
he retired into the forest. We took a net full
of seeds, and I left them a large piece of iron as
payment. On returning to the camp, we boiled the
seeds, after removing the capsule; but as some of
the numerous partitions had remained, the water was
rendered slightly bitter. This experiment having
failed, the boiled seeds were then (Unclear:)tied with
a little fat, which rendered them very palatable and
remarkably satisfying. The best way of cooking
them was that adopted by the natives, who roast the
whole seed-vessel. I then made another trial
to obtain the starch from the bitter potatoes, in
which I succeeded; but the soup for eight people,
made with the starch of sixteen potatoes, was rather
thin.
We were encamped at a small creek,
scarcely a mile from the river, from which John Murphy
and Brown brought the leaves of the first palm trees
we had seen on the waters of the gulf. They belonged
to the genus Corypha; some of them were very thick
and high.
The mornings and evenings were very
beautiful, and are surpassed by no climate that I
have ever lived in. It was delightful to watch
the fading and changing tints of the western sky after
sunset, and to contemplate, in the refreshing coolness
of advancing night, the stars as they successively
appeared, and entered on their nightly course.
The state of our health showed how congenial the climate
was to the human constitution; for, without the comforts
which the civilized man thinks essentially necessary
to life; without flour, without salt and miserably
clothed, we were yet all in health; although at times
suffering much from weakness and fatigue. At
night we stretched ourselves on the ground, almost
as naked as the natives, and though most of my companions
still used their tents, it was amply proved afterwards
that the want of this luxury was attended with no
ill consequences.
We heard some subdued cooees, not
very far from our camp, which I thought might originate
from natives returning late from their excursions,
and whose attention had been attracted by our fires.
I discharged a gun to make them aware of our presence;
after which we heard no more of them.
June 22. We travelled about
twelve miles N. degrees W. to la degrees
3 minutes 11 seconds, and encamped at a swamp or sedgy
lagoon, without any apparent outlet; near which a
great number of eagles, kites, and crows were feasting
on the remains of a black Ibis. We passed a very
long lagoon, and, in the latter part of our stage,
the country had much improved, both in the increased
extent of its forest land, and in the density and
richness of its grass.
Jun. We travelled
eight or nine miles in a W. N. W. direction to latitude
16 degrees 0 minutes 26 seconds, over many Bauhinia
plains with the Bauhinias in full blossom. The
stiff soil of these plains was here and there marked
by very regular pentagonal, hexagonal, and heptagonal
cracks, and, as these cracks retain the moisture of
occasional rains better than the intervening space,
they were fringed with young grass, which showed these
mathematical figures very distinctly. We passed
a great number of dry swamps or swampy water-holes;
sometimes however containing a little water.
They were surrounded by the Mangrove myrtle (Stravadium),
which was mentioned as growing at the lower Lynd.
The bottom of the dry swamps was covered with a couch
grass, which, like all the other grasses, was partly
withered.
Bustards were numerous, and the Harlequin
pigeon was seen in large flocks. Wallabies
abounded both in the high grass of the broken country
near the river, and in the brush. Mr. Roper shot
one, the hind quarters of which weighed 15 1/2 lbs.:
it was of a light grey colour, and was like those
we had seen at Separation Creek. Charley and Brown
got seventeen ducks, on one of the sedgy lagoons.
I visited the bed of the river:
its banks were covered with a rather open vine brush.
Palm trees became numerous, and grew forty or fifty
feet high, with a thick trunk swelling in the middle,
and tapering upwards and downwards. Sarcocephalus,
the clustered fig-tree, and the drooping tea-tree,
were also present as usual. The bed of the river,
an immense sheet of sand, was full a mile and a half
broad, but the stream itself did not exceed thirty
yards in width.
During the night we had again a few drops of rain.
June 24. We continued our
journey about nine miles west by north to latitude
15 degrees 59 minutes 30 seconds, over a rather broken
country alternating with Bauhinia plains and a well-grassed
forest. The banks of a large lagoon, on which
several palm trees grew, were covered with heaps of
mussel-shells. Swarms of sheldrakes were perching
in the trees, and, as we approached, they rose with
a loud noise, flying up and down the lagoon, and circling
in the air around us. A chain of water-holes,
fringed with Mangrove myrtle, changed, farther to the
westward, into a creek, which had no connection with
the river, but was probably one of the heads of the
Nassau. We crossed it, and encamped on a water-hole
covered with Nymphaeas, about a mile from the river,
whose brushy banks would have prevented us from approaching
it, had we wished to do so.
Though the easterly winds still prevailed,
a slight north-west breeze was very distinctly felt,
from about 11 o’clock a.m.
June 25. We travelled about
ten miles N.N.W. to latitude 15 degrees 51 minutes
26 seconds, but did not follow the river, which made
large windings to the northward. It was very
broad where Brown saw it last, and, by his account,
the brush was almost entirely composed of palm trees.
He saw a little boat with a fine Cymbium shell
floating on the water. Our road led us over a
well grassed forest land, and several creeks, which,
although rising near the river, appeared to have no
communication with it. Some plains of considerable
size were between the river and our line of march;
they were well grassed, but full of melon-holes, and
rose slightly towards the river, forming a remarkable
water-shed, perhaps, between the Nassau and the Mitchell.
As we approached the river, we entered into a flat
covered with stunted box, and intersected by numerous
irregular water-courses. The box was succeeded
by a Phyllanthus scrub, through which we pushed, and
then came to a broad creek, filled with fine water,
but not running, although high water-marks on the
drooping tea-trees proved that it was occasionally
flooded. We did not understand, nor could we ascertain,
in what relation this singular country and the creek
stood to the river, of which nothing was to be seen
from the right bank of the creek.
The scrub, and the high grass along
the creek, were swarming with white flanked wallabies,
three of which Brown and Charley succeeded in shooting;
and these, with a common grey kangaroo caught by Spring,
and five ducks shot by Brown, provided our larder
with a fine supply of game.
When I first came on the Lynd, I supposed
that it flowed either independently to the head of
the gulf, or that it was the tributary of a river
which collected the waters of the York Peninsula, and
carried them in a south-west or south-south-west course
to the head of the gulf of Carpentaria. Such
a course would have corresponded to that of the Burdekin
at the eastern side, and the supposition was tolerably
warranted by the peculiar conformation of the gulf.
I expected, therefore, at every stage down the Lynd,
at every bend to the westward, that it would keep
that course. But, having passed the latitude of
the head of the gulf, as well as those of the Van
Diemen and the Staaten rivers, the Lynd still flowed
to the north-west; and then, when it joined the Mitchell,
I imagined that the new river would prove to be the
Nassau; but, when it passed the latitude of that river,
I conjectured that it would join the sea at the large
embouchure in the old charts, in latitude 15 degrees
5 minutes the “Water Plaets”
of the Dutch navigators. To follow it farther,
therefore, would have been merely to satisfy my curiosity,
and an unpardonable waste of time. Besides, the
number of my bullocks was decreasing, and prudence
urged the necessity of proceeding, without any farther
delay, towards the goal of my journey. I determined
therefore to leave the Mitchell at this place, and
to approach the sea-coast so near at least,
as not to risk an easy progress and to pass
round the bottom of the gulf.
June 26. We travelled,
accordingly, about seven miles almost due west, the
latitude of our new camp being 15 degrees 52 minutes
38 seconds. On our way we passed some very fine
long water-holes; some of which were surrounded with
reeds, and others covered with the white species of
Nymphaea; groves of Pandanus spiralis occupied their
banks. Some fine plains, full of melon-holes,
but well grassed, separated from each other by belts
of forest-land, in which the Pandanus was also very
frequent, were crossed during the day.
June 27. We travelled eight
miles W.S.W. over a succession of plains separated
by belts of forest, consisting of bloodwood, box, apple-gum,
and rusty-gum. Some plains were scattered over
with Bauhinias. The holes along the plains are
probably filled with water during the rainy season;
dead shells of Paludina were extremely numerous, and
we found even the shield of a turtle in one of them.
At the end of the stage, we skirted some dense scrub,
and encamped at one of the lagoons parallel to a dry
creek, which must belong to the Nassau, as its latitude
was 15 degrees 55 minutes 8 seconds. The lagoon
was covered with small white Nymphaeas, Damasoniums,
and yellow Utricularias; and on its banks were heaps
of mussel-shells. The smoke of natives’
fires were seen on the plains, in every direction;
but we saw no natives. Brown approached very near
to a flock of Harlequin pigeons, and shot twenty-two
of them. A young grey kangaroo was also taken.
The kites were so bold that one of
them snatched the skinned specimen of a new species
of honey-sucker out of Mr. Gilbert’s tin case;
and, when we were eating our meals, they perched around
us on the branches of overhanging trees, and pounced
down even upon our plates, although held in our hands,
to rob us of our dinners; not quite so bad,
perhaps, as the Harpies in the Aeneid, but sufficiently
so to be a very great nuisance to us.
Yesterday and to-day we experienced
a cold dry southerly wind, which lasted till about
11 o’clock A. M., when it veered to the south-west,
but at night returned again, and rendered the air
very cold, and dry, which was very evident from the
total absence of dew. The forenoon was very clear;
cumuli and cirrho-cumuli gathered during
the afternoon. The sky of the sunset was beautifully
coloured. After sunset, the clouds cleared off,
but, as the night advanced, gradually collected again.
A circumstance occurred to-day which
gave me much concern, as it showed that the natives
of this part were not so amicably disposed towards
us as those we had hitherto met: whilst
Charley and Brown were in search of game in the vicinity
of our camp, they observed a native sneaking up to
our bullocks, evidently with the intention of driving
them towards a party of his black companions, who
with poised spears were waiting to receive them.
Upon detecting this manoeuvre, Charley and his companion
hurried forward to prevent their being driven away,
when the native gave the alarm, and all took to their
heels, with the exception of a lame fellow, who endeavoured
to persuade his friends to stand fight. Charley,
however, fired his gun, which had the intended effect
of frightening them; for they deserted their camp,
which was three hundred yards from ours, in a great
hurry, leaving, among other articles, a small net full
of potatoes, which Charley afterwards picked up.
The gins had previously retired; a proof that mischief
was intended.
June 28. We crossed the
creek, near which we had encamped, and travelled about
nine miles wost, over most beautifully varied country
of plains, of forest land, and chains of lagoons.
We crossed a large creek or river, which I believed
to be the main branch of the Nassau. It was well
supplied with water-holes, but there was no stream.
Loose clayey sandstone cropped out in its bed, and
also in the gullies which joined it. A small
myrtle tree with smooth bark, and a leafless tree resembling
the Casuarina, grew plentifully on its banks.
We saw smoke rising-in every direction, which showed
how thickly the country was inhabited. Near the
lagoons we frequently noticed bare spots of a circular
form, about twelve or fifteen feet in diameter, round
each of which was a belt of ten, twelve, or more fire
places, separated from each other by only a few feet.
It seems that the natives usually sit within the circle
of fires; but it is difficult to know whether it belonged
to a family, or whether each fire had an independent
proprietor. Along the Lynd and Mitchell, the
natives made their fires generally in heaps of stones,
which served as ovens for cooking their victuals.
Bones of kangaroos and wallabies, and heaps of
mussel-shells, were commonly seen in their camps; but
fish bones were very rarely observed. It was
very different, however, when we travelled round the
head, and along the western side, of the gulf; for
fish seemed there to form the principal food of the
natives.
At the end of our stage, we came to
a chain of shallow lagoons, which were slightly connected
by a hollow. Many of them were dry; and fearing
that, if we proceeded much farther, we should not find
water, I encamped on one of them, containing a shallow
pool; it was surrounded by a narrow belt of small
tea trees, with stiff broad lanceolate leaves.
As the water occupied only the lower part of this
basin, I deposited our luggage in the upper part.
Mr. Roper and Mr. Calvert made their tent within the
belt of trees, with its opening towards the packs;
whilst Mr. Gilbert and Murphy constructed theirs amongst
the little trees, with its entrance from the camp.
Mr. Phillips’s was, as usual, far from the others,
and at the opposite side of the water. Our fire
place was made outside of the trees, on the banks.
Brown had shot six Leptotarsis Eytoni, (whistling
ducks) and four teals, which gave us a good dinner;
during which, the principal topic of conversation
was our probable distance from the sea coast, as it
was here that we first found broken sea shells, of
the genus Cytherea. After dinner, Messrs. Roper
and Calvert retired to their tent, and Mr. Gilbert,
John, and Brown, were platting palm leaves to make
a hat, and I stood musing near their fire place, looking
at their work, and occasionally joining in their conversation.
Mr. Gilbert was congratulating himself upon having
succeeded in learning to plat; and, when he had nearly
completed a yard, he retired with John to their tent.
This was about 7 o’clock; and I stretched myself
upon the ground as usual, at a little distance from
the fire, and fell into a dose, from which I was suddenly
roused by a loud noise, and a call for help from Calvert
and Roper. Natives had suddenly attacked us.
They had doubtless watched our movements during the
afternoon, and marked the position of the different
tents; and, as soon as it was dark, sneaked upon us,
and threw a shower of spears at the tents of Calvert,
Roper, and Gilbert, and a few at that of Phillips,
and also one or two towards the fire. Charley
and Brown called for caps, which I hastened to find,
and, as soon as they were provided, they discharged
their guns into the crowd of the natives, who instantly
fled, leaving Roper and Calvert pierced with several
spears, and severely beaten by their waddies.
Several of these spears were barbed, and could not
be extracted without difficulty. I had to force
one through the arm of Roper, to break off the barb;
and to cut another out of the groin of Mr. Calvert.
John Murphy had succeeded in getting out of the tent,
and concealing himself behind a tree, whence he fired
at the natives, and severely wounded one of them, before
Brown had discharged his gun. Not seeing Mr.
Gilbert, I asked for him, when Charley told me that
our unfortunate companion was no more! He had
come out of his tent with his gun, shot, and powder,
and handed them to him, when he instantly dropped
down dead. Upon receiving this afflicting intelligence,
I hastened to the spot, and found Charley’s account
too true. He was lying on the ground at a little
distance from our fire, and, upon examining him, I
soon found, to my sorrow, that every sign of life had
disappeared. The body was, however, still warm,
and I opened the veins of both arms, as well as the
temporal artery, but in vain; the stream of life had
stopped, and he was numbered with the dead.
As soon as we recovered from the panic
into which we were thrown by this fatal event, every
precaution was taken to prevent another surprise; we
watched through the night, and extinguished our fires
to conceal our individual position from the natives.
A strong wind blew from the southward,
which made the night air distressingly cold; it seemed
as if the wind blew through our bodies. Under
all the circumstances that had happened, we passed
an anxious night, in a state of most painful suspense
as to the fate of our still surviving companions.
Mr. Roper had received two or three spear wounds in
the scalp of his head; one spear had passed through
his left arm, another into his cheek below the jugal
bone, and penetrated the orbit, and injured the optic
nerve, and another in his loins, besides a heavy blow
on the shoulder. Mr. Calvert had received several
severe blows from a waddi; one on the nose which had
crushed the nasal bones; one on the elbow, and another
on the back of his hand; besides which, a barbed spear
had entered his groin; and another into his knee.
As may be readily imagined, both suffered great pain,
and were scarcely able to move. The spear that
terminated poor Gilbert’s existence, had entered
the chest, between the clavicle and the neck; but
made so small a wound, that, for some time, I was
unable to detect it. From the direction of the
wound, he had probably received the spear when stooping
to leave his tent.
The dawning of the next morning, the
29th, was gladly welcomed, and I proceeded to examine
and dress the wounds of my companions, more carefully
than I had been able to do in the darkness of the night.
Very early in the morning we heard
the cooees of the natiyes, who seemed wailing, as
if one of their number was either killed or severely
wounded: for we found stains of blood on their
tracks. They disappeared, however, very soon,
for, on reconnoitring about the place, I saw nothing
of them. I interred the body of our ill-fated
companion in the afternoon, and read the funeral service
of the English Church over him. A large fire was
afterwards made over the grave, to prevent the natives
from detecting and disinterring the body. Our
cattle and horses fortunately had not been molested.
The cold wind from the southward continued
the whole day; at night it fell calm, and continued
so until the morning of the 30th June, when a strong
easterly wind set in, which afterwards veered round
to the north and north-west.
Calvert and Roper recovered wonderfully,
considering the severe injuries they had received;
and the wounds, which I feared as being the most dangerous,
promised with care and patience to do well. As
it was hazardous to remain long at the place, for
the natives might return in greater numbers, and repeat
their attack, as well on ourselves as the cattle,
I determined to proceed, or at least to try if my wounded
companions could endure to be removed on horseback.
In a case like this, where the lives of the whole
party were concerned, it was out of the question to
attend only to the individual feelings and wishes of
the patients; I felt for their position to the fullest
extent that it was possible for one to feel towards
his fellow creatures so situated; but I had equal
claims on my attention. I had to look exclusively
to the state of their wounds, and to the consequences
of the daily journey on their constitutions; to judge
if we could proceed or ought to stop; and I had reason
to expect, or at least was sanguine enough to hope,
that although the temporary feelings of acute pain
might make them discontented with my arrangements,
sober reflection at the end of our journey would induce
them to do me justice.
The constant attention which they
required, and the increased work which fell to the
share of our reduced number, had scarcely allowed me
time to reflect upon the melancholy accident which
had befallen us, and the ill-timed death of our unfortunate
companion. All our energies were roused, we found
ourselves in danger, and, as was absolutely necessary,
we strained every nerve to extricate ourselves from
it: but I was well aware, that the more coolly
we went to work, the better we should succeed.