The Book Of The Bush by George Dunderdale (top fiction books of all time .TXT) 📖
- Author: George Dunderdale
Book online «The Book Of The Bush by George Dunderdale (top fiction books of all time .TXT) 📖». Author George Dunderdale
Lived To A Good Old Age.
Story 12 ( Wanted, A Cattle Market.) Pg 173
Rentoul, Had No Meat, And Dared Not Kill Any Without Orders; So
Mcmillan And Davy Fried The Pigeons, And Ate One Each For Supper.
Next Morning They Shot Some Ducks For Breakfast, And Then Proceeded
On Their Journey. They Called At Mewburn Park, Arrived At Bushy Park
(Mcmillan's Own Station), And Davy Began Making The Sails The Same
Evening. Next Morning He Crossed The River In A Canoe, Made Out Of A
Hollow Log, To Boisdale, Lachlan Macalister's Station, And Went To
The Milking Yard. The Management Was Similar To That Of Dancer At
Greenmount. Eleven Men And Women Were Milking About One Hundred And
Fifty Cows, Superintended By Nine Highlanders, Who Were Sitting On
The Toprails Discoursing In Gaelic. One Of Them Was Jock Macdonald,
Who Was Over Eighteen Stone In Weight, Too Heavy For Any Ordinary
Horse To Carry; The Rest Were Macalisters, Gillies, And Thomsons.
The Stockmen Were Convicts, And They Lived With The Highlanders In A
Big Building Like The Barracks For Soldiers. Every Man Seemed To Do
Just What He Liked, To Kill What He Liked, And To Eat What He Liked,
And It Was Astonishing To See So Little Discipline On A Station Owned
By A Gentleman Who Had Seen Service Both In The Army And In The
Border Police.
The Blacks Were At This Time Very Troublesome About The New Stations.
They Began To Be Fond Of Beef, And In Order To Get It They Drove Fat
Cattle Into The Morasses And Speared Them. This Proceeding Produced
Strained Relations Between The Two Races, And The Only Effectual
Remedy Was The Gun. But Many Of The Settlers Had Scruples About
Shooting Blackfellows Except In Self-Defence, And It Could Hardly Be
Called Self-Defence To Shoot One Or More Of The Natives Because A
Beast Had Been Speared By Some Person Or Persons Unknown. John
Campbell, At Glencoe, Tried A Dog, A Savage Deerhound, Which He
Trained To Chase The Human Game. This Dog Acquired Great Skill In
Seizing A Blackfellow By The Heel, Throwing Him, And Worrying Him
Until Campbell Came Up On His Horse. When The Dog Had Thus Expelled
The Natives From Glencoe, Campbell Agreed To Lend Him To Little
Curlewis For Three Months In Order To Clear Holey Plains Station.
Curlewis Paid Ten Heifers For The Loan Of The Dog, And Campbell
Himself Went To Give Him A Start In The Hunt, As The Animal Would Not
Own Any Other Man As Master. But The Blacks Soon Learned That
Campbell And His Dog Had Left Glencoe Unprotected, And The Second
Night After His Departure They Boldly Entered The Potato Patch Near
His Hut, And Bandicooted The Whole Of His Potatoes.
When The Sails Were Made, The Two Boats Were Provisioned With Tea,
Sugar, Flour, And A Keg Of Whisky; The Meat Was Carried In The Shape
Of Two Live Sheep, To Be Killed When Required. The Party Consisted
Of Eight Men, And Each Man Was Armed With A Double-Barrelled Gun.
Mcmillan, Mclennan, Loughnan, And Davy Went In One Boat, And In The
Other Boat Were William Pearson, John Reeve, Captain Orr, And
Sheridan, Who Was Manager For Raymond At Stratford. Sheridan Was A
Musical Man, And Took His Flute With Him. When Everything Was Ready
They Dropped Down The River To Lake Wellington, And Took Note Of The
Soundings During The Whole Of The Voyage As They Went Along.
Wherever They Approached Either Shore, They Saw Natives Or Found
Traces Of Them. Every Beach Was Strewn With The Feathers Of The
Ducks, Swans, And Other Birds They Had Killed, And It Was Difficult
Story 12 ( Wanted, A Cattle Market.) Pg 174To Find Sufficient Dead Wood Near The Water To Make A Fire, The
Blacks Having Used So Much Of It At Their Numerous Camping Places.
The Gins Had An Ingenious System Of Capturing The Ducks. They Moved
Along Under Water, Leaving Nothing But Their Nostrils Visible Above
The Surface, And They Were Thus Able To Approach The Unsuspecting
Birds. As Opportunity Offered They Seized Them By The Legs, Drew
Them Quickly Under Water, And Held Them Until They Were Drowned.
When They Had Secured As Many As They Could Hold In One Hand They
Returned To Land.
One Of The Explorers Always Kept Guard While The Others Slept, The
First Watch Of Each Night Being Assigned To Davy, Who Baked The
Damper For The Next Day. One Of The Sheep Was Killed Soon After The
Voyage Commenced; And The Duty Of Taking Ashore, Tethering, And
Guarding The Other Sheep At Each Landing Place Was Taken In Turn By
Pearson And Loughnan. At The Lower End Of The Lakes The Water Was
Found To Be Brackish, So They Went Ashore At Several Places To Look
For Fresh Water. They Landed On A Flat At Reeve's River, And Davy
Found An Old Well Of The Natives, But It Required Cleaning Out, So He
Went Back To The Boat For A Spade. It Was Loughnan's Turn That Day
To Tether The Sheep On Some Grassy Spot, And To Look After It; The
Animal By This Time Had Become Quite A Pet, And Was Called Jimmy. On
Coming Near The Boats Davy Looked About For Jimmy, But Could Not See
Him And Asked Loughnan Where He Was.
"Oh, He Is All Right," Said Loughnan, "I Did Not Tether Him, But He
Is Over There Eating The Reeds."
"Then He's Gone," Replied Davy.
Every Man Became Seriously Alarmed And Ran Down To The Reeds, For
Jimmy Carried Their Whole Supply Of Meat. They Found His Tracks At
The Edge Of The Water, And Followed Them To The Foot Of A High Bluff,
Which They Ascended, Calling As They Went Repeatedly For Jimmy. They
Looked In Every Direction, Scanning Especially The Tops Of The Reeds
To See If Jimmy Was Moving Amongst Them, But They Could See No Sign
Of The Sheep That Was Lost. The View Of Land And River, Mountain And
Sea, Was Very Beautiful, But They Were Too Full Of Sorrow For Jimmy
To Enjoy It. On Going Away They Agreed To Call The Bluff Jimmy's
Point, But Other Voyagers Came Afterwards Who Knew Nothing Of Jimmy,
And They Named It Kalimna, The Beautiful. Near The Shore A Number Of
Sandpipers Were Shot, And Stewed For Dinner In The Large Iron Pot
Which Was Half Full Of Mutton Fat. Then The Party Pulled Down To The
Entrance Of The Lakes At Reeve's River, Went Ashore, And Camped For
The Night.
Next Day They Found An Outlet To The Ocean, And Sounded It As They
Went Along, Finding Six Feet Of Water On The Bar At Low Tide. But
The Channel Proved Afterwards To Be A Shifting One; The Strong
Current Round Cape Howe, And The Southerly Gales, Often Filled It
With Sand, And It Was Not Until Many Years Had Passed, And Much Money
Had Been Expended, That A Permanent Entrance Was Formed. In The
Meantime All The Trade Of Gippsland Was Carried On First Through The
Story 12 ( Wanted, A Cattle Market.) Pg 175Old Port, And Then Through The New Port Albert. For Ten Years All
Vessels Were Piloted Without Buoy Or Beacon; In One Year One Hundred
And Forty Having Been Entered Inwards And Outwards.
The Party Now Started On The Return Voyage. In Going Up The Lakes A
Number Of Blacks Were Observed On The Port Beach, And The Boats Were
Pulled Towards The Land Until They Grounded, And Some Of The Men Went
Ashore. The Natives Were Standing Behind A Small Sand Hummock
Calling Out To The Visitors. One Of Them Had Lost An Eye, And
Another Looked Somewhat Like A White Man Browned With The Sun And
Weather, But Only The Upper Part Of His Body Could Be Seen Above The
Sand. One Of The Men On Shore Said, "Look At That White-Fellow."
That Was The Origin Of The Rumour Which Was Soon Spread Through The
Country That The Blacks Had A White Woman Living With Them, The
Result Being That For A Long Time The Blackfellows Were Hunted And
Harassed Continually By Parties Of Armed Men. When The Natives
Behind The Sand Hummock Saw That The White Men Had No Arms, They
Began To Approach Them Without Their Spears. Sheridan Took Up His
Flute, And They Ran Back To The Scrub, But After He Had Played A
While They Came Nearer Again And Listened To The Music.
After Pulling Two Or Three Miles, Another Party Of Natives Was Seen
Running Along The Sands, And The Explorers Went Ashore Again At A
Point Of Land Where Seven Or Eight Men Had Appeared, But Not One Was
Now Visible. Davy Climbed Up A Honeysuckle Tree, And Then He Could
See Them Hiding In The Scrub. Several Of Them Were Seized And Held
By The White Men, Who Gave Them Some Sugar And Then Let Them Go.
The Boats Then Sailed Away With A Nice Easterly Breeze, And In
Mclennan's Straits Hundreds Of Blackfellows Were Seen Up In The Trees
Shouting And Shaking Their Spears; But The Boats Were Kept Away In
Mid-Stream, Out Of Reach Of The Weapons.
That Night The Camp Was Made At Boney Point, Near The Mouth Of The
River Avon; The Name Was Given To It On Account Of The Large Quantity
Of Human Bones Found There. No Watch Was Kept, As It Was Believed
That All The Blacks Had Been Left Behind In Mclennan's Straits.
There Was Still Some Whisky Left In The Keg; And, Before Going To
Sleep, Orr, Loughnan, And Sheridan Sang And Drank Alternately Until
The Vessel Was Empty. At Daylight They Pulled Up The Avon And Landed
At Clydebank, Which Was At That Time One Of Macalister's Stations,
But Afterwards Belonged To Thomson And Cunningham. After Breakfast
They Walked To Raymond's Station At Stratford, And Then To Mcmillan's
At Bushy Park.
The Cattle Brought Over The Mountains Into Gippsland Soon Grew Fat,
And The First Settlers Sold Some Of Them To Other Men Who Came To
Search For Runs; But The Local Demand Was Soon Supplied. In Two
Years And A Half All The Best Land Was Occupied. An Intending
Settler, Who Had Driven A Herd Of Cattle Seven Hundred Miles, Had
Some Bitter Complaints To Make About The Country In June, 1843. He
Said: "The Whole Length Of Gippsland, From The Bore Of The Mountains
In Which The Road Comes, Is 110 Miles, And The Breadth About Fifteen
Miles, The Whole Area 1650 Square Miles,
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