July 1. We left the camp
where Mr. Gilbert was killed, and travelled in all
about fourteen miles south-west, to la degrees
6 minutes. We passed an extensive box-tree flat,
and, at four miles, reached a chain of water-holes;
but, during the next ten miles, we did not meet the
slightest indication of water. Box-tree flats
of various sizes were separated by long tracts of
undulating country, covered with broad-leaved tea-trees,
Grevillea ceratophylla, and G. mimosoides, and with
the new species of Grevillea, with broad lanceolate
leaves. We had to skirt several impassable thickets
and scrubs of tea-tree, in one of which Pandanus abounded.
At last, just as the sun was setting, and we were
preparing to encamp in the open forest without water,
we came to a creek with fine water-holes covered with
Villarsias. Charley shot a native companion;
a Fabirou was seen crossing our camp. My wounded
companions got on uncommonly well, notwithstanding
the long stage, and I now had all reason to hope,
that their wounds would not form any impediment to
the progress of our journey.
July 2. We travelled ten
miles south-west over a country exactly like that
of yesterday; and encamped at a shallow water-hole
in a creek, which headed in a tea-tree thicket, a
grove of Pandanus being on its north side, and a small
box-flat to the southward. Though the country
was then very dry, it is very probably impassable
during the rainy season. The tea-tree thickets
seemed liable to a general inundation, and many shallow
water-holes and melon-holes were scattered everywhere
about the flats. The flats and elevations of
the surface were studded with turreted ant-hills,
either forming single sharp cones from three to five
feet high, and scarcely a foot broad at their base,
or united into a row, or several rows touching each
other, and forming piles of most remarkable appearance.
The directions of the rows seemed to be the same over
large tracts of country, and to depend upon the direction
of the prevailing winds. I found Verticordia,
a good sized tree, and a Melaleuca with clustered
orange blossoms and smooth bark, which I mentioned
as growing on the supposed Nassau.
July 3. We followed the
tea-tree creek about four miles lower down, and encamped
near some fine rocky water-holes, in which I discovered
a yellow Villarsia, resembling in its leaves Villarsia
inundata, R. Br.
Our day’s journey was a short
one in consequence of our having started so late.
The delay was caused by Charley having captured an
emu, a flock of which he met when fetching the horses.
By holding branches before him, he was enabled to
approach so close to them, that he shot one dead with
a charge of dust shot. It was a welcome prize,
and repaid us for the delay. To our wounded friends
the delay itself was a welcome one.
The mussel-shells of these water-holes
appeared to be narrower and comparatively longer than
those we had previously seen. Pandanus was, as
usual, very frequent; but a middle sized shady wide
spreading tree, resembling the elm in the colour and
form of its leaves, attracted our attention, and excited
much interest. Its younger branches were rather
drooping, its fruit was an oblong yellow plum, an inch
long and half an inch in diameter, with a rather rough
kernel. When ripe, the pericarp is very mealy
and agreeable to eat, and would be wholesome, if it
were not so extraordinarily astringent. We called
this tree the “Nonda,” from its resemblance
to a tree so called by the natives in the Moreton Bay
district. I found the fruit in the dilli of the
natives on the 21st June, and afterwards most abundantly
in the stomach of the emu. The tree was very
common in the belt of forest along the creek.
The wind, during the last two days,
was southerly, south-westerly, and westerly, freshening
up during the afternoon. The forenoon was very
hot: the night clear, and rather cool towards
morning. I observed many shooting stars during
the two last nights.
July 4. We travelled seven
miles in a south-west direction, to la degrees
15 minutes 11 seconds, over an entirely flat country,
covered with a very open forest of box, of bloodwood,
and of the stiff-leaved Melaleuca, with the arborescent
Grevillea already mentioned, and with a species of
Terminalia with winged fruit. In the more sandy
tracts of bloodwood forest, grew the Nonda, the Pandanus,
and the apple-gum. The shallow creek was surrounded
by a scrub of various myrtaceous trees, particularly
Melaleucas. The creek afterwards divided into
water-holes, fringed with Stravadium, which, however,
lower down gave way to dense belts of Polygonum.
The water was evidently slightly brackish; the first
actual sign of the vicinity of the sea. A young
emu was killed with the assistance of Spring; and
a sheldrake was shot by Brown. Native companions
were very numerous, and were heard after sunset, all
round our camp. The stomach of the emu was full
of a small plant resembling chickweed, which grew
round the water-holes.
The smoke of the natives’ fires
was seen to the south and south-west.
July 5. We travelled over
full twenty miles of country, although the distance
from camp to camp, in a straight line, did not exceed
fourteen, in a south by west direction; the latitude
of our new camp was 16 degrees 27 minutes 26 seconds.
After passing several miles of tea-tree forest, intermixed
with box, and alternating with belts of grassy forest
land, with bloodwood and Nonda, we entered upon a
series of plains increasing in size, and extending
to the westward as far as the eye could reach, and
separated from each other by narrow strips of forest;
they were well-grassed, but the grasses were stiff.
Tea-tree hollows extended along the outskirts of the
plains. In one of them, we saw Salicornia for
the first time, which led us to believe that the salt
water was close at hand. Having crossed the plains,
we came to broad sheets of sand, overgrown with low
shrubby tea-trees, and a species of Hakea, which always
grows in the vicinity of salt water. The sands
were encrusted with salt, and here and there strewed
with heaps of Cytherea shells. Beyond the sands,
we saw a dense green line of mangrove trees extending
along a salt water creek, which we headed, and in
which Brown speared the first salt water mullet.
We then came to a fine salt water river, whose banks
were covered with an open well grassed forest; interrupted
only by flat scrubby sandy creeks, into which the
tide entered through narrow channels, and which are
probably entirely inundated by the spring tides.
Not finding any fresh water along the river I went
up one of the creeks, and found fresh water-holes,
not in its bed, but parallel to it, scarcely a mile
from the river. When crossing the plains, the
whole horizon appeared to be studded with smoke from
the various fires of the natives; and when we approached
the river, we noticed many well beaten footpaths of
the natives, who are found generally in greater numbers
and stronger tribes near the sea coast, where the
supply of food is always more abundant and certain.
The first sight of the salt water
of the gulf was hailed by all with feelings of indescribable
pleasure, and by none more than by myself; although
tinctured with regret at not having succeeded in bringing
my whole party to the end of what I was sanguine enough
to think the most difficult part of my journey.
We had now discovered a line of communication by land
between the eastern coast of Australia, and the gulf
of Carpentaria: we had travelled along never failing,
and, for the greater part, running waters: and
over an excellent country, available, almost in its
whole extent, for pastoral purposes. The length
of time we had been in the wilderness, had evidently
made the greater portion of my companions distrustful
of my abilities to lead them through the journey;
and, in their melancholy conversations, the desponding
expression, “We shall never come to Port Essington,”
was too often overheard by me to be pleasant.
My readers will, therefore, readily understand why
Brown’s joyous exclamation of “Salt Water!”
was received by a loud hurrah from the whole party;
and why all the pains, and fatigues, and privations
we had endured, were, for the moment, forgotten, almost
as completely as if we had arrived at the end of the
journey.
July 6. remained in camp
the whole of this day, to rest the poor animals, which
had been much fatigued by our last long stage.
Charley shot a duck (Malacorhynchus membranaceus);
and he, Brown, and John Murphy, went to the salt water
to angle. My expectations, however, of catching
fish in the salt water, and of drying them, were sadly
disappointed. The whole amount of their day’s
work was, a small Silurus, one mullet, and some small
guard-fish.
The weather continued fine, the forenoon
usually very hot, but the air was cooled in the afternoon
by a south-west breeze; the nights were clear and
rather cold.
When I left Moreton Bay, I had taken
a spare set of horse-shoes with me for every horse.
They were shod at our leaving the Downs, but they soon
lost their shoes; and, as our stages were short, and
the ground soft, I did not think it necessary to shoe
them again. In travelling along the Burdekin,
however, and the upper Lynd, they became very foot-sore;
but still there was a sufficient change of good country
to allow them to recover; I had been frequently inclined
to throw the spare shoes away, but they had as often
been retained, under the impression that they might
be useful, when we came to the gulf, to barter with
the natives for food, particularly for fish.
Finding, however, that the natives were hostile, and
scarcely wishing to have any farther intercourse with
them, I decided upon leaving the horse-shoes, and
several other cumbersome articles behind; and they
were consequently thrown, with two spare gun barrels,
into the water-hole at which we were encamped.
The natives will probably find them, when the holes
dry up; and, if preserved, they will be a lasting
testimonial of our visit.
July 7. Charley told me
that he had followed the river up to its termination.
I consequently kept a little more to the left, in order
to head it, and travelled two or three miles through
a fine bloodwood and Nonda forest, the verdant appearance
of which was much increased by the leguminous Ironbark,
which grew here in great perfection. Two émus
had just made their breakfast on some Nonda fruit
when we started them, and Charley and Brown, assisted
by Spring, succeeded in killing one of them.
We soon came to a salt-water river,
with a broad sandy bed, perfectly free of vegetation,
although its banks were fringed with drooping tea-trees.
The tide being low, we were enabled to ford it.
Whilst crossing it, a flock of black-winged pelicans
stood gravely looking at us. The latitude of
the ford, which was two miles and a half south from
our last camp, would be 16 degrees 30 minutes, which
corresponds with that of the Staaten, marked at the
outline of the coast. A well grassed open forest
extended along both sides of the river; and, at its
left, large deep Nymphaea lagoons were parallel to
it. South of the Staaten, we travelled over a
forest country, similar to that of former stages, and
which might be aptly distinguished by the name of Grevillea
Forest; as Gr. mimosoides (R. Br.)
is its characteristic feature; though a rather stunted
stiff-leaved tea-tree was more numerous. Some
slight rises were covered with thickets of the Acacia
of Expedition Range. The last six or seven miles
of our stage were over an immense box-flat. We
passed many spots lately burnt by the natives, and
saw the smoke of their fires in every direction.
We encamped on a good sized creek, on which grew the
articulate podded Acacia, the Mangrove Myrtle (Stravadium),
and the drooping tea-tree. As soon as we had
pitched our tents, we cut up the hind quarters of
the emu into slices for drying; but we had to guard
it by turns, whip in hand, from a host of square-tailed
kites (Milvus isiurus).
John Murphy and Charley, whilst riding
round the camp to ascertain if natives were in the
neighbourhood, came on one of their camps occupied
chiefly by women, and a few old men, who immediately
ran off, but set the grass on fire as they went, to
prevent the approach of the horsemen; and left behind
them their waddies, spears, and a good supply of potatoes.
At dusk, when Charley brought in the horses, two of
which we tethered near the camp, the form of a native
glided like a ghost into our camp, and walked directly
up to the fire. John, who saw him first, called
out, “a Blackfellow! look there! a Blackfellow!”
and every gun was ready. But the stranger was
unarmed, and evidently unconscious of his position;
for, when he saw himself suddenly surrounded by the
horses and ourselves, he nimbly climbed a tree to
its very summit, where he stood between some dry branches
like a strange phantom or a statue. We called
to him, and made signs for him to descend, but he
not only remained silent, but motionless, notwithstanding
all the signs and noise we made. We then discharged
a gun, but it had not the intended effect of inducing
him to speak or stir. At last I desired Charley
to ascend the neighbouring tree, to show him that
we could easily get at him if necessary. This
plan was more successful; for no sooner were Charley’s
intentions perceived, than our friend gave the most
evident proof of his being neither deaf nor dumb,
by calling out most lustily. He pooh’d,
he birrrred, he spat, and cooeed; in fact, he did
everything to make the silent forest re-echo with
the wild sounds of his alarm; our horses, which were
standing under the tree, became frightened, and those
which were loose ran away. We were much afraid
that his cooees would bring the whole tribe to his
assistance, and every one eagerly proffered his advice.
Charley wished to shoot him, “or,” said
he, “you will all be killed; I do not care for
myself, but I care for your being killed and buried.”
Others wished to remove from the spot, and so give
him an opportunity of escaping. I was, of course,
horrified at the idea of shooting a poor fellow, whose
only crime, if so it might be called, was in having
mistaken our fire for that of his own tribe:
so I went to our own fire, which was at a short distance,
where he could see me distinctly, and then made signs
for him to descend and go away. He then began
to be a little more quiet, and to talk; but soon hallooed
again, and threw sticks at myself, at my companions,
and at the horses. We now retired about eight
yards, to allow him to escape, which we had not done
before, because I feared he might imagine we were
afraid of his incantations, for he sang most lamentable
corrobories, and cried like a child; frequently exclaiming,
“Mareka! Mareka!!” This word is probably
identical with Marega; the name given by the Malays
to the natives of the north coast, which is also called
by them “Marega.” [Capt. King’s
Intertropical Survey of Australia, vol.
I. .] After continuing his lamentations for some
time, but of which we took no notice, they gradually
ceased; and, in a few minutes, a slight rustling noise
was heard, and he was gone: doubtless delighted
at having escaped from the hands of the pale-faced
anthropophagi.
July 8. This morning the
whole tribe, well armed, watched us from a distance;
but they allowed us quietly to load our bullocks, and
depart, without offering us the least annoyance.
Their companion will, no doubt, leave a dreadful account
of the adventures of last night to his black posterity.
We travelled about twelve miles south
by west to latitude 16 degrees 47 minutes; at first
over an almost uninterrupted box-flat, full of melon-holes,
and with many small holes in the ground, which caused
our horses and cattle to stumble at almost every step.
The dry melon-holes were covered with dead Paludinas,
with shells of a large crab, and of the fresh water
turtle. At about seven miles, we passed a strip
of Blackwood forest, with many Nonda trees; and crossed
a small creek. The latter part of the stage was
again over a large box-flat, intersected by shallow
grassy depressions, timbered with flooded-gum.
We saw on the rising ground some open scrub, with
scattered Bauhinias and Cochlospermums. Our encampment
was at a creek on the south side of a slight rise,
with Bauhinia trees, and near good water-holes.
The creek, like all the others we had passed, flowed
to the westward.
Near our camp we examined three holes,
full six feet deep, and four feet in diameter, communicating
with each other at their bottom. They were about
three feet apart, and appeared to have been dug with
sharp sticks. I have not the slightest idea for
what purpose they were intended. They were most
certainly not dug to obtain roots; and it seemed unlikely
for wells; for the water, even in this unusually dry
season, was very abundant.
The white ant-hills, which are built
in rows, had, during this stage, a direction from
north by west to south by east, and, as I have before
mentioned a conjecture that the little builders would
expose the narrowest side of their habitation to the
weather side, the prevailing winds would be from the
north.
July 9. We travelled thirteen
or fourteen miles south by west to latitude 17 degrees
0 minutes 13 seconds, at first crossing a box-flat,
and after that a succession of greater or smaller plains,
separated by a very open Grevillea forest. These
plains were well grassed, or partly covered with a
species of Euphorbia, which was eaten by our horses
and cattle; and also with the long trailings of the
native melon; the fruit of which tastes very tolerably,
after the bitter skin has been removed; but when too
ripe, the fruit is either insipid or nauseous.
The bustard seems to feed almost exclusively on them,
for the stomach of one, which Brown shot, was full
of them.
The apple-gum, which we had missed
for some time, again made its appearance, accompanied
by another white gum, with long narrow leaves.
As we approached the creek, at which we afterwards
encamped, the vegetation became richer, and the melon-holes
enlarged into dry water-holes, which were frequently
shaded by the Acacia with articulate pods (Inga moniliformis).
The two species of Terminalia, of the upper Lynd, were
numerous; and a small green looking tree, which we
found growing densely along the creek, had wood of
a brown colour, which smelt like raspberry jam; and,
upon burning it, the ashes produced a very strong lye,
which I used in dressing the wounds of my companions.
This tree was found in great abundance on all the
rivers and creeks round the gulf, within the reach
of salt water; and when crossing Arnheim Land, though
less frequently.
Sandstone cropped out in the banks
of the creek, and formed the reservoirs in its bed.
Last night, and the night before,
we experienced a very cold wind from the southward.
The laughing Jackass (Dacelo cervina,
Gould) of this part of the country, is of a different
species from that of the eastern coast, is of a smaller
size, and speaks a different language; but the noise
is by no means so ridiculous as that of Dac. gigantea:
he is heard before sunrise, and immediately after
sunset, like his representative of the eastern coast.
The latter was observed as far as the upper Lynd, where
the new one made his appearance.
We crossed a bush fire, which had
been lighted just before we came to the creek, but
we did not see the incendiaries. In the morning
of the 10th July, however, they had discovered our
tracks, and followed them until they came in sight
of the camp; but retired as soon as they saw us:
and when they met Charley returning with the bullocks,
they ran away. After half-an-hour’s travelling
towards the south-west, we came to the Van Diemen,
which is marked in Arrowsmith’s map in latitude
17 degrees. It was about seventy or eighty yards
broad, with steep banks and a fine sandy bed, containing
detached pools of water surrounded by Polygonum, and
extremely boggy. My horse stuck in the mud, and
it was with great difficulty that I extricated him.
As our meal bags were empty, and no
sign of game appeared, I decided upon selecting a
good open camping place, for the purpose of killing
our last little steer. The country was a fine
open grassy forest land, in which the apple-gum prevailed,
and with many swampy grassy lagoons covered with white,
blue, and pink Nymphaeas. The box tree grew in
their immediate neighbourhood.
In the bed of the Van Diemen we saw
some well constructed huts of the natives; they were
made of branches arched over in the form of a bird-cage,
and thatched with grass and the bark of the drooping
tea-tree. The place where we encamped had been
frequently used by the natives for the same purpose.
Our attention was particularly attracted by a large
heap of chaff, from which the natives appeared to have
taken the seeds. This grass was, however, very
different from the panicum, of the seeds of which
the natives of the Gwyder River make a sort of bread;
and which there forms the principal food of the little
Betshiregah (Melopsittacus undulatus, Gould).
The night was calm, clear, and cold.
The kites became most daring and impudent.
Yesterday, I cleaned the fat gizzard of a bustard
to grill it on the embers, and the idea of the fat
dainty bit made my mouth water. But alas! whilst
holding it in my hand, a kite pounced down and carried
it off, pursued by a dozen of his comrades, eager
to seize the booty.
We killed our little steer in the
afternoon of the 10th, and the next day we cut the
meat into slices, and hung it out on a kangaroo net:
the wind was high, the sun warm, and our meat dried
most perfectly. Whilst we were in the midst of
our work, some natives made their appearance.
I held out a branch as a sign of peace, when they
ventured up to hold a parley, though evidently with
great suspicion. They were rather small, and the
tall ones were slim and lightly built. They examined
Brown’s hat, and expressed a great desire to
keep it. In order to make them a present, I went
to the tents to fetch some broken pieces of iron; and
whilst I was away, Brown, wishing to surprise them,
mounted his horse, and commenced trotting, which frightened
them so much, that they ran away, and did not come
again. One of them had a singular weapon, neatly
made, and consisting of a long wooden handle, with
a sharp piece of iron fixed in at the end, like a
lancet. The iron most probably had been obtained
from the Malays who annually visit the gulf for trepang.
Some of their spears were barbed.
July 12. The meat had dried
so well, that I started this morning; having completed
the operation of drying in rather more than a day.
It was, of course, necessary to spread the meat out
for several days, to prevent its becoming mildewed.
This was done every day after arriving at our camping-place.
Our killing camp was about five miles
south-west from the Van Diemen; and we travelled in
the same direction about eight miles farther, through
a most beautiful country, consisting of an open forest
timbered with the box-tree, apple-gum, and white-gum;
it was well grassed, and abundantly supplied with
water. We crossed a small river with a course
west by north; it had a broad sandy bed, numerous
pools of water, and steep banks: the latter were
covered with Sarcocephalus and drooping tea-trees.
I called it the “Gilbert,” after my unfortunate
companion. Five miles farther, we came to a fine
creek, at which we encamped. Its water-holes
were surrounded by the Nelumbiums of the Mackenzie,
and by a fine yellow Ipomoea, with larger flowers
than that described as growing at the Mitchell.
We gathered a considerable quantity of Nelumbium seeds,
which were very palatable, and, when roasted and pounded,
made a most excellent substitute for coffee.
July 13. Our horses had
enjoyed the green feed round the lagoons near our
killing camp, so much, that they returned to it during
the night, and caused a delay until noon, when we
resumed our journey. The first part of the stage
was over fine well-watered forest land. We crossed
two creeks, with good water-holes, in one of which
was a fishing weir. The country to the south
of the last creek changed to a succession of plains
of various sizes, extending mostly to the westward,
and very open undulations scattered over with rather
stunted trees of Grevillea mimosoides, G. ceratophylla,
Terminalia, Bauhinia, and Balfouria? an apocynaceous
tree. And again we passed over box and apple-gum
flats, which, by their rich verdure, refreshed the
eye tired with the uniform yellow colour of the dry
grass, in which the whole country was clothed.
We saw the bush fires of the natives every where around
us; and many large tracts which had been recently
burnt. The sun was getting very low, and my patients
were very tired, and yet no water was to be seen.
Cumuli, which had been gradually collecting from
one o’clock in the afternoon, cast their shadows
over the forest, and deceived the eye into the belief
that the desired creek was before us. At last,
however, to our infinite satisfaction, we entered
into a scrub, formed of low stunted irregularly branched
tea-trees, where we found a shallow water-course, which
gradually enlarged into deep holes, which were dry,
with the exception of one which contained just a sufficient
supply of muddy water to form a stepping-stone for
the next stage. Our latitude was 17 degrees 19
minutes 36 seconds.
July 14. We travelled about
eleven miles S.S.W. to latitude 17 degrees 28 minutes
11 seconds, over an immense box-flat, interrupted only
by some plains and by two tea-tree creeks; the tea-trees
were stunted and scrubby like those of our last stage.
At the second creek we passed an old camping place
of the natives, where we observed a hedge of dry branches,
and, parallel to it, and probably to the leeward, was
a row of fire places. It seemed that the natives
sat and lay between the fires and the row of branches.
There were, besides, three huts of the form of a bee-hive,
closely thatched with straw and tea-tree bark.
Their only opening was so small, that a man could
scarcely creep through it; they were four or five
feet high, and from eight to ten feet in diameter.
[A hut of this description, but of smaller dimensions,
is described by Capt. King, at the North Goulburn
Island. King’s Voyage, vol.
I. .] One of the huts was storied, like those
I noticed on the banks of the Lynd. It would
appear that the natives make use of these tents during
the wet and cold season, but encamp in the open air
in fine weather.
A brown wallabi and a bustard were
shot, which enabled us to save some of our meat.
We encamped at a fine long water-hole, in the bed of
a scrubby creek.
July 15. Mr. Roper’s
illness increased so much that he could not even move
his legs, and we were obliged to carry him from one
place to another; I therefore, stopt here two days,
to allow him to recover a little.
July 17. We travelled about
ten miles south 55 degrees west over an almost uninterrupted
box and Melaleuca flat, free from melon-holes and
grassy swamps, but full of holes, into which our horses
and bullocks sank at every step, which sadly incommoded
our wounded companions.
About two miles and a half from our
camp, we came to the Caron River (Corners Inlet),
which deserved rather the name of a large creek.
Its sandy and occasionally rocky bed, was dry; but
parallel lines of Nymphaea lagoons extended on both
sides. The drooping tea-tree was, as usual, very
beautiful. We skirted a tea-tree scrub, without
a watercourse, about two miles and a half south of
the “Caron,” and passed some undulations,
with Grevillea forest. To the south-west of these
undulations, we came to a chain of lagoons; from which
several white cranes and a flight of the black Ibis
rose. Brown shot one of the latter, which, when
picked and cleaned for cooking, weighed three pounds
and a half; it was very fat, and proved to be excellent
eating. Cytherea shells were again found, which
showed that the salt water was not very far off.
Charley gave a characteristic description
of this country, when he returned from a ride in search
of game: “It is a miserable country! nothing
to shoot at, nothing to look at, but box trees and
anthills.” The box-forest was, however,
very open and the grass was good; and the squatter
would probably form a very different opinion of its
merits. When we were preparing to start in the
morning some natives came to look at us; but they
kept within the scrub, and at a respectable distance.
July 18. We travelled south-west
by west, over a succession of plains, and of undulating
Grevillea forest, which changed into tea-tree thickets,
and stunted tea-tree scrubs, on a sandy soil with Salicornia,
Binoe’s Trichinium, and several other salt plants.
At about five miles from the camp, we came to salt-water
inlets, densely surrounded by mangroves, and
with sandy flats extending along their banks, encrusted
with salt. Charley rode through the dry mangrove
scrub, and came on a sandy beach with the broad Ocean
before him. We had a long way to go to the east
and S.S.E. to get out of the reach of the brackish
water, and came at last to grassy swamps, with a good
supply of fresh water. We encamped in la
degrees 41 minutes 52 seconds; about ten miles south
by west from our last camp. Charley was remarkably
lucky to-day, in catching an emu, and shooting six
teals, a brown wallabi of the Mitchell, and a kangaroo
with a broad nail at the end of its tail. Brown
also shot a sheldrake and a Malacorhynchus membranaceus.
During the time that we were travelling to the southward,
we had a north-east wind during the forenoon, which
in the afternoon veered round to the east and south.
Such a change, in a locality like ours, was very remarkable;
because, in the neighbourhood of the sea, it was natural
to expect a sea breeze, instead of which, however,
the breeze was off the land. The cause can only
be attributed to a peculiar formation of the country
south and south-east of the gulf.
July 19. We travelled seven
miles and a half due south, through a succession of
stunted tea-tree thickets and tea-tree forests, in
which the little bread-tree of the Lynd was common.
We passed two creeks with rocky beds, the one with
salt water, and the other fresh. The natives had
been digging here, either for shells or roots.
We came to a fine river with salt water about two
hundred and fifty or three hundred yards broad, with
low banks fringed with stunted mangroves.
The well beaten foot-path and the numerous fire-places
of the natives, proved how populous the country must
be. In following a foot-path, we came to some
large lagoons, but containing very little water; the
natives had been digging in the dry parts, perhaps
for the roots of Nymphaea. We encamped at one
of them in la degrees 49 minutes.
The country along the river was an
open box-forest. Natives cooeed around us; and
we saw a man and his gin, and farther on two others
busily occupied in burning the grass. When Charley
came to the lagoon he saw a black boy, who immediately
retreated out of sight. Two straw-necked Ibises
and seven ducks were shot. Mr. Roper had suffered
much by the long rides of the last stages; but his
health was improving, notwithstanding. The Nonda
tree had disappeared north of the Van Diemen, and the
emu here feeds on the fruit of the little Severn tree,
which is so excessively bitter, as to impart its quality
to the meat, and even to the gizzard and the very
marrow.
As we approached the salt water, the
various species of Eucalyptus, with the exception
of the box, disappeared, and various species of tea-tree
(Melaleuca) took their place; they grew even on the
sands with incrustations of salt, and gave way
only to the mangroves, which were bathed by the
brine itself.
We now commenced collecting the gum
of the broad-leaved Terminalia of the upper Lynd,
and boiled it for Mr. Roper, who liked it very much.
We recognised one of the kites (Milvus
isiurus), which had followed us from our last killing
camp, down to the head of the gulf.
July 20. This morning,
the bullocks had strayed farther than usual, and,
whilst we were waiting for them, some natives came
to the rocks opposite our camp; and one of them beckoned
me to come over to him. They had been observing
our camp last night, for some time after the rising
of the moon, and I had caused Brown to discharge his
gun, in order to drive them away. They did not,
however, trouble us then any farther, but encamped
at a neighbouring lagoon; showing evidently that they
expected no harm from us. When the bold fellow
invited me to come over to him, I hesitated at first,
as they might have disturbed us when loading our bullocks;
but, as the animals did not appear, I took my reconnoitring
bag with some iron nose rings, and made Brown follow
me at some distance with the double barrelled gun,
and went over to them. After much hesitation,
four of them approached me. I made them presents,
which gained their confidence, and they began to examine
and admire my dress, my watch, etc. It was
singular that the natives were always most struck
with our hats. We made them understand where
we came from and whither we were going, and it seemed
that they understood us better than we could understand
them. When the bullocks arrived, we returned
to our camp, accompanied by the natives, who had lost
all fear after the tokens of friendship they had received:
and when we started, they joined our train and guided
us on their foot-path (Yareka) along the salt water
creek (Yappar.) They very much admired our horses
and bullocks, and particularly our kangaroo dog.
They expressed their admiration by a peculiar smacking
or clacking with their tongue or lips. The fine
river changed very soon into a salt water creek, coming
from south by west. We passed some very beautiful
rocky lagoons under the abrupt terminations of low
sandstone hills, which were openly timbered at the
top, but surrounded by thickets of the little Severn
tree. The box-tree grew on the flats which separated
the ridges from the creek, with the small bread-tree,
the bloodwood and pandanus. As the Mangrove
disappeared, the drooping tea-tree took its place.
Several rocky bars crossed the “Yappar,”
which seemed to be the name by which the natives called
it; but only one was broad enough to allow us to cross
safely with our horses and bullocks. Here our
black friends took their leave of us; they seemed
very desirous of showing us their whole country, and
of introducing us to their tribe, which was probably
very numerous. After crossing the creek in la degrees 54 minutes or 55 minutes, and longi
degrees 45 minutes approx., we travelled due west,
and came at once into an undulating hilly country.
The hills were composed of iron-sandstone; their summits
were generally very openly timbered with apple-gum
and a new white-barked tree; but their bases were covered
with thickets of the little Severn tree. The
intervening flats bore either a box-tree with a short
trunk branching off immediately above the ground;
or a middle-sized tea-tree, with a lanceolate leaf,
or thickets of stunted tea-tree. We travelled
full thirteen miles without water, or any decided
water-course. We passed several dry water-holes
shaded by the broad-leaved Terminalia; and saw many
Acacias twenty-five and thirty feet in height,
with a slender trunk, and an elegant drooping foliage:
it very much resembled the Acacia of Expedition Range;
but the drooping habit and more distant leaflets of
its bipinnate leaves, showed at once their difference.
We had travelled five hours and a half, and Mr. Roper
rode up to me several times, to complain of his inability
to go any farther. I encouraged him, however,
and at sunset, we reached a creek, but it was dry;
and, although we travelled until dark along its winding
course, and saw many deep holes on its flats, and
although fresh burnings showed that the natives had
been there, yet no water was to be found, and we were
obliged to encamp without it. We, therefore, hobbled
and tethered all the horses, and watched the bullocks.
Charley followed the creek for some distance in search
of water, but returned without finding any.
July 21. When Charley was
riding after our hobbled horses, he came, at about
two miles N. E., from our camp, to another watercourse,
with well filled rocky water-holes. When he brought
this welcome intelligence, we immediately loaded our
bullocks, and moved to these water-holes; on which
it appeared some natives had encamped very lately.
The country around was broken and scrubby; but in
general it was well-grassed, with a sound soil.
Our latitude was 17 degrees 52 minutes 53 seconds.
The wind, during the last two days,
was from the southward in the forenoon, and from the
westward in the afternoon. The nights were calm
and clear, but very cold.
Mr. Calvert had happily recovered
so much as to be able to resume his duties; and, notwithstanding
the fatigues of the last long stage, Mr. Roper had
slightly improved.
July 22. Last night was
beautifully clear and calm, until midnight, when a
cold south wind set in, which made us all shiver with
cold. I had not felt it so much since the night
of Mr. Gilbert’s death, nor since we left the
upper Lynd and the table land of the Burdekin.
The wind was equally strong in the morning from the
south-east, and veered in the course of the day to
the south and south-west.
We travelled about eight miles and
a half W.N.W. to la degrees 50 minutes 28 seconds,
at first passing over a scrubby country, which changed
into box flats when we approached the waterless creek,
at which we encamped on the night of the 20th.
To the westward of this creek, box flats alternated
with tea-tree thickets; and opened at last into a large
plain, which we crossed at its southern termination,
where it was three miles broad; it appeared boundless
to the northward. Plains of the same character
had been dimly seen through the open forest to the
northward, for some time before we came to the one
we crossed. This was not covered with the stiff
grass, nor the dry wind-grass of the plains north of
the Staaten; but it bore a fine crop of tender grasses,
which rendered them infinitely more valuable for the
pasture of horses and cattle. At the west side
of the plain, we found a chain of fine long lagoons,
surrounded by Polygonum, and apparently well stocked
with fish.
Charley and Brown caught an emu, with
the assistance of the dog, which became every day
more valuable to us.
Since Mr. Gilbert’s death, the
arrangements of our camp have been changed. I
now select an entirely open space, sufficiently distant
from any scrub or thicket, even if we have to go a
considerable distance for water. Our pack-saddles
are piled in two parallel lines close together, facing
that side from which a covered attack of the natives
might be expected. We sleep behind this kind
of bulwark, which of itself would have been a sufficient
barrier against the spears of the natives. Tired
as we generally are, we retire early to our couch;
Charley usually takes the first watch, from half-past
six to nine o’clock; Brown, Calvert, and Phillips
follow in rotation; whilst I take that portion of the
night most favourable for taking the altitude.
John Murphy has his watch from five to six. We
generally tethered three horses, and kept one bridled;
and, with these arrangements, we slept as securely
and soundly as ever; for I felt sure that we had nothing
to fear, as long as our tinkling bell-horse, and perhaps
a second horse, was moving near us. The natives
considered our animals to be large dogs, and had frequently
asked whether they would bite (which I affirmed, of
course); so that they themselves furnished us with
a protection, which otherwise I should not have thought
of inventing.
July 23. When Charley returned
this morning with the horses, he told me, that a fine
broad salt-water river was again before us. I
kept, therefore, at once to the southward, and feared
that I should have to go far in that direction before
being able to ford it. After travelling about
two miles, we came in sight of it. It was broad
and deep, with low rocky banks. Salicornia grew
along the small gullies into which the tide flowed;
some struggling stunted mangroves were on the
opposite side; and the plains along the right side
of the river were occupied by a scanty vegetation,
consisting of Phyllanthus shrubs, scattered box, and
the raspberry-jam trees. We had travelled, however,
more than a mile on its bank, when we came to a broad
rocky barrier or dam extending across the river, over
which a small stream of brackish water rippled, and,
by means of this, we crossed without difficulty.
I now steered again north-west by west, and passed
at first some fine shady lagoons, and for the next
six miles, over an immense plain, apparently unlimited
to the north and north-east. At its west side
we again found Polygonum lagoons, which were swarming
with ducks, (particularly Malacorhynchus membranaceus),
and teal (Querquedula). Box, raspberry-jam trees,
and Acacia, (Inga moniliformis, D.C.) formed a shady
grove round these lagoons, which continued towards
the south-east. Their latitude was 17 degrees
49 minutes 35 seconds. Smoke was visible in every
part of the horizon. Charley, Brown, and John,
shot fourteen ducks, and increased this number towards
evening to forty-six ducks, five recurvirostris, one
small red-shank, and two spoon-bills: the latter
were particularly fat, and, when ready for the spit,
weighed better than three pounds; the black ducks weighed
a pound and three-quarters. The Malacorhynchus
was small, but in good condition, and the fat seemed
to accumulate particularly in the skin of the neck.
The south wind, as usual, visited
us again last night, and made it exceedingly cold.
This intense cold is probably owing to the large plains,
over which the wind passes. We were never so much
troubled by swarms of flies, as during the last two
days; it was impossible to get rid of them by any
means.
July 24. We travelled about
six miles north-west to latitude 17 degrees 48 minutes,
and crossed several plains separated by belts of open
forest, and came to a fine salt-water river; the banks
were steep but not high, and stunted mangroves
grew on the water’s edge: the raspberry-jam
tree covered the approaches to the river. Salicornia
and Binoe’s Trichinium grew round the dry ponds,
and along the small water-courses, into which the
tide flowed. We found a good crossing place at
a fishery of the natives; who to judge
by the number of their tracks through the soft mud,
and by the two large camps on both sides of the river,
which were covered with fish-bones must
be very numerous. We continued our journey for
about a mile and a half from the river, and came to
some grassy fresh-water lagoons, although the Salicornias
at first made me think they were brackish.
Shortly after starting this morning,
we saw a brood of thirteen émus, on the plain
which we were about to cross. John, Charley, and
the dog pursued them, and killed the old one; which,
however, severely wounded poor Spring in the neck.
When we came up to them with the train, the twelve
young ones had returned in search of their mother;
upon which Brown gave chase with Spring, and killed
two. This was the greatest sport we ever had
had on our journey. Upon making our camp, we cut
part of their meat into slices, and dried it on green
hide ropes; the bones, heads, and necks were stewed:
formerly, we threw the heads, gizzards, and feet away,
but necessity had taught us economy; and, upon trial,
the feet of young émus was found to be as good
and tender as cow-heel. I collected some salt
on the dry salt ponds, and added it to our stew; but
my companions scarcely cared for it, and almost preferred
the soup without it. The addition, however, rendered
the soup far more savoury, at least to my palate.
July 25. We travelled degrees W. and, at two miles, reached a salt-water
creek, which we crossed at a fishing place of the natives.
Soon afterwards we came on other shallow half dry salt-water
creeks, the dry parts of which were covered with thick
incrustations of salt, some of which we collected.
Our bullocks were very seriously bogged in crossing
one of them. After passing this intricate meshwork
of boggy channels, we entered upon an immense plain,
with patches of forest appearing here and there in
the distance. It was well grassed, but its sandy
patches were covered with Salicornia. This plant
abounded particularly where the plain sloped into
the system of salt-water creeks; the approaches of
which were scattered over with the raspberry-jam tree.
A west-north-west and west course led me constantly
to salt water; and we saw a large expanse of it in
the distance, which Charley, to whose superior sight
all deference was paid, considered to be the sea.
I passed some low stunted forest, in which a small
tree was observed, with stiff pinnate leaves and a
round fruit of the size of a small apple, with a rough
stone, and a very nauseous rind, at least in its unripe
state. To the westward of this belt of forest,
we crossed extensive marshes covered with tender, though
dry grass, and surrounded by low Ironstone ridges,
openly timbered with stunted silver-leaved Ironbark,
several white gums, and Hakea lorea, R. Br. in
full blossom. We had not seen the latter for a
long time, although Grevillea mimosoides, with which
it was generally associated, had been our constant
companion.
Beyond the ridges, we came again on
salt-water creeks, and saw sheets of sand, which looked
like the sea from the distance. I turned to the
south and even south-east; and, finding no water,
we were compelled to encamp without it, after a very
long and fatiguing stage. Whilst we were occupied
in tethering and hobbling our horses, and eating our
supper, Charley, whose watch it was, allowed the bullocks
to stray in search of water, and the next morning
he was so long absent whilst looking for them, that
my exhausted companions became impatient; and I thought
it advisable to send them back to our last camp with
as many pack-horses as we could muster, myself remaining
alone to guard the rest of our property. They
found three of the bullocks on the plain, in the most
wretched condition, and met Charley returning with
four others, which had made an immense round along
all the salt-water creeks. My companions, however,
were fortunate enough to find a fresh water lagoon
about three miles west of our last camp. John
and Charley returned after moon-rise, with three pack-horses,
and arrived at my camp at a quarter to seven in the
morning. I had been in a state of the most anxious
suspense about the fate of our bullocks, and was deeply
thankful to the Almighty when I heard that they were
all safe. I had suffered much from thirst, having
been forty-eight hours without water, and which had
been increased by a run of two miles after my horse,
which attempted to follow the others; and also from
a severe pain in the head, produced by the impatient
brute’s jumping with its hobbled forefeet on
my forehead, as I was lying asleep with the bridle
in my hand; but, after drinking three quarts of cold
tea which John had brought with him, I soon recovered,
and assisted to load our horses with the remainder
of our luggage, when we returned to join our companions.
The weather was very hot during the day, but a cool
breeze moved over the plains, and the night, as usual,
was very cold.
Yesterday morning, John and Brown
rode down to a hollow to look for water, whilst we
were waiting for the bullocks. At their return,
they stated that they had come to two salt-water creeks,
all full of salt, of which they brought several lumps.
I started immediately with Mr. Calvert and Brown,
and, sure enough! I found the broad bed of a creek
one mass of the purest and whitest salt. Lumps
of it had crystallized round stems of grasses which
the wind had blown into the water. A little higher
up the creek, a large pool of water was full of these
lumps, and in less than ten minutes we collected more
than sufficient to supply us for the rest of the journey.
Ship loads of pure salt could have been collected here
in a very short time, requiring nothing but drying
and housing, until it could be removed. Its appearance
was quite new and wonderful to me, who had been so
busily employed in scraping the incrustations
full of mud from the dry beds of the creeks.
Yesterday, Brown shot a black-winged
pelican; the pectoral muscles and the extremities
of which proved good eating; but the inside and the
fat were of a nauseously fishy taste. Charley
shot a bustard, and John a black ibis. The smoke
of the Black-fellows’ fires was seen to the
southward. The fresh grass of recent burnings
extended over all the plains, and even near our waterle
encampment, where its bright verdure made us believe
that we approached a fresh water swamp.
July 27. I stopped at this
camp to allow our cattle to recover from their fatigue;
intending afterwards to proceed up the river until
I came into the zone of fresh water, which we had
left, and then to continue my course to the west and
north-west. During our stay in this place, Mr.
Calvert found a piece of pack canvass, rolled round
some utensils of the natives.
July 28. We travelled about
ten miles south by east; but were soon compelled by
the salt-water creeks to leave the river, which seemed
to come from south-south-east. We crossed several
mangrove creeks, one of which contained a weir formed
by many rows of dry sticks. These creeks were
too boggy to be forded in any part where the tide reached,
and we had to follow them up for several miles, until
their beds divided into lagoons. Here the drooping
tea-tree re-appeared, which I considered to indicate
the presence of fresh water, at least for a part of
the year. I found them, however, at times, on
salt-water rivers, not on the level of the salt water,
but high on the banks within the reach of the freshes
during the rainy season. In turning again towards
the river, we crossed a large plain, from which pillars
of smoke were seen rising above the green belt of
raspberry-jam trees which covered the approaches to
the river. After passing some forest of Moreton
Bay ash, bloodwood, clustered box, Acacia (Inga moniliformis),
and a few Bauhinias, we came to another salt-water
creek, with a sandy bed and deposits of fine salt.
Very narrow flats extended along both sides of the
creek, and rose by water-torn slopes into large treeless
plains. The slopes were, as usual, covered with
raspberry-jam trees. I saw smoke to the south-ward,
and, on proceeding towards it, we came to a fine lagoon
of fresh water in the bed of the creek.
July 29. We travelled about
five miles and a half south-south-east up the creek,
and encamped in latitude 18 degrees 2 minutes.
The character of the country was the same. When
about two miles from our last camp, we came upon a
tribe of natives fishing in a water-hole, near which
a considerable quantity of large and small fish was
heaped. The men made a tremendous noise, which
frightened our bullocks, and hastened to the place
where their gins were. The latter, among whom
was a remarkably tall one, decamped at our approach.
A fine shell of Dolium was in their camp, which
we passed through. After we had passed by, the
natives followed us; upon which I returned towards
them, and hung a nose ring on the branch of a small
tree. This sign of friendly disposition on my
side, emboldened them to approach me and demand a
parley. I, therefore, dismounted, and, accompanied
by Charley, divided some empty tin canisters among
them, with which they seemed highly satisfied.
They were altogether fine men. Three or four
old men with grey beards were amongst them; and they
introduced a young handsome lad to me, with a net
on his head and a quill through his nose, calling
him “Yappar.” He was probably a youth
of the Yappar tribe who had been sent forward as a
messenger to inform them of our having passed that
country. Seeing my watch, they pointed to the
sun; and appeared to be well acquainted with the use
of my gun.
Further up the creek, we again saw
some storied gunyas of the natives.
July 30. We travelled about
ten miles west by south, over an immense plain, with
here and there a solitary tree, or a small patch of
forest. It was full of melon-holes, and much
resembled the plains of the Condamine. Salicornia
and Binoe’s Trichinium were wanting. At
the west side of the plain, a green belt of forest
stretched from north to south. Before we entered
into it, and into the valley of the creek, along which
it extended, we passed some open forest of stunted
silver-leaved Ironbark. On the slopes of the
plains we met, as usual, the raspberry-jam tree thickets,
and on the flats and hollows along the creek, the
clustered box; whilst, on the banks of the creek, grew
the broad-leaved Terminalia and Acacia (Inga moniliformis).
Following the creek up about half a mile, we found
a fine rocky water-hole. The rock was a clayey
Ironstone.
When entering upon the plain in the
morning, we saw two émus on a patch of burnt
grass. Brown and Charley gave chase to them; but
Brown’s horse stumbled and threw him, and unfortunately
broke the stock of the double barrelled fowling piece,
and bent the barrels. Spring took hold of the
emu, which dragged him to the lagoon we had left, pursued
by Charley on foot. The emu plunged into the
water, and, having given Spring and Charley a good
ducking, made its escape, notwithstanding its lacerated
thigh. Three harlequin pigeons, and six rose-breasted
cockatoos (Cocatua Eos, Gould.), were shot on
the plains.
The weather was delightful; a fine
breeze from the east cooled the air.
July 31. We made about
ten miles due west, the latitude of our camp being
18 degrees 6 minutes 42 seconds. After passing
some Ironstone ridges, covered with stunted silver-leaved
Ironbark, we entered upon a large plain, from which
we saw some low ranges to the south, and smoke to
the degrees S. I followed this course about seven
miles; but the smoke was still very distant, and,
perceiving a belt of forest to the westward, I took
that direction, passed the head of a small creek which
went to the southward, crossed some box forest and
Ironbark ridges, and came into an open country, with
alternating plains and ridges, which, even at the
present season, was very pretty, and must, when clothed
in the garments of Spring, be very beautiful.
The creek which we had met at the east side of the
forest, had swept round the ridges, and was now again
before us, pursuing a north-west course. A fine
plain extended along it, on which I observed Acacia
Farnesiana of Darling Downs, the grass of the Isaacs,
and several grasses of the Suttor. The holes of
the creek were shaded by large Terminalias, and by
a white gum, with slightly drooping foliage of a pleasing
green colour. We followed the creek down, and
soon came again to Ironstone ridges.
I had sent Charley forward to look
for water, and, when he joined us again, he told me
that there was a water-hole, but that natives, for
the greater part gins, were encamped on it. I
could not help taking possession of it, as there were
none besides, to our knowledge; and our bullocks and
horses were fatigued by a long stage. I, therefore,
rode up to it alone; the gins had decamped, but a
little urchin remained, who was probably asleep when
his mother went. He cried bitterly, as he made
his way through the high grass, probably in search
for his mother. Thinking it prudent to tie an
iron ring to his neck, that his parents might see we
were peaceably inclined, I caught the little fellow,
who threw his stick at me, and defended himself most
manfully when I laid hold of him. Having dismissed
him with an angry slap on his fat little posteriors,
he walked away crying, but keeping hold of the iron
ring: his mother came down from the ridge to
meet him, laughing loud, and cheering with jokes.
I observed ironstone pebbles, and
large pieces of a fine grained flaggy sandstone on
the first plains we crossed; the sandstone was excellent
to sharpen our knives.