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
Other Lives, Except In Matters Of Feeling And Intelligence. Indeed The
Power Of Manifesting Myself Properly Was A Very Late Accomplishment With
Me, And Was, In Fact, Not Gained Until Long After The Recommencement Of
My Present Educational Work.[63] I Cannot Now Remember, During All The
Time Of This Educational Work, That My Personal Life Stood Out In Any
Way From The Usual Ordinary Existence Of Men; But Before I Can Speak
With Certainty Upon This Point I Must Procure Information As To The
Circumstances Of My Earlier Life. This Much Is Clear, That My Life At
The Time I Am Speaking Of Has Remained In My Memory Only In Its General
Ordinary Human Aspect. It Is True, However, That Then, As Always In My
Later Life, It Was And Ever Has Been Very Difficult To Me To Separate In
Thought My Inner Life From My Outer, And To Give Definite Form And
Outward Expression To The Inner Life, Especially As To Religious
Matters.
I Dare Not Deny, That Although The Definite Religious Forms Of The
Church Reached My Heart Readily Bal Of One Bushel
Of Wheat To The Acre. For Some Time The Township Of Tarraville Was A
Favourite Place Of Residence, Because The Swamps Which Surrounded
Port Albert Were Impassable For Drays During The Winter Months; The
Roads To Maneroo And Melbourne Mentioned In Mr. Reeve's Advertisement
Were As Yet In The Clouds. Captain Moore Came From Sydney In The
Revenue Cutter 'Prince George' To Look For Smugglers, But He Did Not
Find Any. He Was Afterwards Appointed Collector For Gippsland, And
He Came Down Again From Sydney With A Boat's Crew Of Six Prisoners, A
Free Coxswain, And A Portable House, In Which He Sate For The Receipt
Of Customs.
For A Time The Commissioner Resided At Tarraville, And Then He Went
To The Lakes And Surveyed A Township At Flooding Creek, Now Called
Sale. His Black Troopers Were In Some Cases Useful, In Others They
Were Troublesome; They Indulged In Irregularities; There Was No Doubt
That They Drank Rum Procured In Some Inexplicable Manner. They Could
Not Be Confined In Barracks, Or Remain Continually Under The Eye Of
Their Chief, And It Was Not Always Possible To Discover In What
Manner They Spent Their Leisure Hours. But Occasionally Some
Evidence Of Their Exploits Came To Light, And Mr. Tyers Became Aware
That His Black Police Considered Themselves As Living Among Hostile
Tribes, In Respect Of Whom They Had A Double Duty To Perform, Viz.,
To Track Cattle Spearers At The Order Of Their Chief, And On Their
Own Account To Shoot As Many Of Their Enemies As They Could
Conveniently Approach.
There Were Now Ladies As Well As Gentlemen In Gippsland, And One Day
The Commissioner Sailed Away In His Boat With A Select Party. After
Enjoying The Scenery And The Summer Breezes For A Few Hours, He Cast
His Eyes Along The Shore In Search Of Some Romantic Spot On Which To
Land. Dead Wood And Dry Sticks Were Extremely Scarce, As The Blacks
Used All They Could Find At Their Numerous Camps. He Was At Length
So Fortunate As To Observe A Brown Pile Of Decayed Branches, And He
Said, "I Think We Had Better Land Over There; That Deadwood Will Make
A Good Fire"; And The Boat Was Steered Towards It. But When It
Neared The Land The Air Was Filled With A Stench So Horrible That Mr.
Tyers At Once Put The Boat About, And Went Away In Another Direction.
Story 14 (Gippsland Under The Law..) Pg 201Next Day He Visited The Spot With His Police, And He Found That The
Dead Wood Covered A Large Pile Of Corpses Of The Natives Shot By His
Own Black Troopers, And He Directed Them To Make It A Holocaust.
The White Men Brought With Them Three Blessings For The Natives--
Rum, Bullets, And Blankets. The Blankets Were A Free Gift By The
Government, And Proved To The Eyes Of All Men That Our Rule Was Kind
And Charitable. The Country Was Rightfully Ours; That Was Decided By
The Supreme Court; We Were Not Obliged To Pay Anything For It, But
Out Of Pure Benignity We Gave The Lubras Old Gowns, And The Black Men
Old Coats And Trousers; The Government Added An Annual Blanket, And
Thus We Had Good Reason To Feel Virtuous.
We Also Appointed A Protector Of The Aborigines, Mr. G. A. Robinson,
At A Salary Of 500 Pounds Per Annum. He Took Up His Residence On The
Then Sweet Banks Of The Yarra, And Made Excursions In Various
Directions, Compiling A Dictionary. He Started On A Tour In The
Month Of April, 1844, Making Alberton His First Halting-Place, And
Intending To Reach Twofold Bay By Way Of Omeo. But He Found The
Country Very Difficult To Travel; He Had To Swim His Horse Over Many
Rivers, And Finally He Returned To Melbourne By Way Of Yass, Having
Added No Less Than 8,000 Words To His Vocabulary Of The Native
Languages. But The Public Journals Spoke Of His Labours And His
Dictionary With Contempt And Derision. They Said, "Pshaw! A Few
Mounted Police, Well Armed, Would Effect More Good Among The
Aborigines In One Month Than The Whole Preaching Mob Of Protectors In
Ten Years."
When A Race Of Men Is Exterminated Somebody Ought To Bear The Blame,
And The Easiest Way Is To Lay The Fault At The Door Of The Dead; They
Never Reply.
When Every Blackfellow In South Gippsland, Except Old Darriman, Was
Dead, Mr. Tyers Explained His Experience With The Government
Blankets. They Were Now No Longer Required, As Darriman Could Obtain
Plenty Of Old Clothes From Charitable White Men. It Had Been The
Commissioner's Duty To Give One Blanket Annually To Each Live Native,
And Thus That Garment Became To Him The Queen's Livery, And An Emblem
Of Civilisation; It Raised The Savage In The Scale Of Humanity And
Encouraged Him To Take The First Step In The March Of Progress. His
Second Step Was Into The Grave. The Result Of The Gift Of Blankets
Was That The Natives Who Received Them Ceased To Clothe Themselves
With The Skins Of The Kangaroo, The Bear Or Opossum. The Rugs Which
They Had Been Used To Make For Themselves Would Keep Out The Rain,
And In Them They Could Pass The Wettest Night Or Day In Their
Mia-Mias, Warm And Dry. But The Blankets We Kindly Gave Them By Way
Of Saving Our Souls Were Manufactured For The Colonial Market, And
Would No More Resist The Rain Than An Old Clothes-Basket. The
Consequence Was That When The Weather Was Cold And Wet, The
Blackfellow And His Blanket Were Also Cold And Wet, And He Began
To Shiver; Inflammation Attacked His Lungs, And Rheumatism His Limbs,
And He Soon Went To That Land Where Neither Blankets Nor Rugs Are
Required. Mr. Tyers Was Of Opinion That More Blacks Were Killed By
The Blankets Than By Rum And Bullets.
Story 14 (Gippsland Under The Law..) Pg 202
Government In Gippsland Was Advancing. There Were Two Justices Of
The Peace, The Commissioner, Black And White Police, A Collector Of
Customs, A Pilot, And Last Of All, A Parson--Parson Bean--Who
Quarrelled With His Flock On The Question Of Education. The Sheep
Refused To Feed The Shepherd; He Had To Shake The Dust Off His Feet,
And The Salvation Of Souls Was, As Usual, Postponed To A More
Convenient Season. At Length Mr. Latrobe Himself Undertook To Pay A
Visit To Gippsland. He Was A Splendid Horseman, Had Long Limbs Like
King Edward Longshanks, And Was In The Habit Of Making Dashing
Excursions With A Couple Of Troopers To Take Cursory Views Of The
Country. He Set Out In The Month Of May, 1844, And Was Introduced To
The Settlers In The Following Letter By "A Brother Squatter":
"Gentlemen, Look Out. The Jackal Of Your Oppressor Has Started On A
Tour. For What Purpose? To See The Isolated And Miserable Domiciles
You Occupy And The Hard Fare On Which You Subsist? No! But To See
If The Oppressor Can Further Apply The Screw With Success And
Impunity. You Have Located Yourselves Upon Lands At The Risk Of Life
And Property, Paying To The Government In License And Assessment Fees
For Protection Which You Have Never Received, And Your Quiesence
Under Such A System Of Robbery Has Stimulated Your Oppressor To Levy
On You A Still Greater Amount Of Taxation, Not To Advance Your
Interests, But To Replenish His Exhausted Treasury. Should You
Strain Your Impoverished Exchequer To Entertain Your (In A Family
Sense) Worthy Superintendent, Depend Upon It He Will Recommend A
More Severe Application Of The Screw. Give Him, Therefore, Your
Ordinary Fare, Salt Junk And Damper, Or Scabby Mutton, With A Pot Of
Jack The Painter's Tea, In A Black Pot Stirred With A Greasy Knife."
Mr. Latrobe And Sir George Bore All The Weight Of Public Abuse, And
It Was Heavy. Now It Is Divided Among Many Ministers, Each Of Whom
Carries His Share With Much Patience, While Our Governor's Days In
The "Sunny South" Are "Days Of Pleasantness, And All His Paths Are
Peace."
No Gentleman Could Accept Hospitality Like That Suggested By "A
Brother Squatter," And Mr. Latrobe Sought Refuge At The Port Albert
Hotel, Glengarry's Imported House. Messrs. Tyers, Raymond, Mcmillan,
Macalister, And Reeve Were Pitching Quoits At The Rear Of The
Building Under The Lee Of The Ti-Tree Scrub. Davy, The Pilot, Was
Standing Near On Duty, Looking For Shipping With One Eye And At The
Game With The Other. The Gentlemen Paused To Watch The Approaching
Horsemen. Mr. Latrobe Had The Royal Gift Of Remembering Faces Once
Seen; And He Soon Recognised All Those Present, Even The Pilot Whom
He Had Seen When He First Arrived In Melbourne. He Shook Hands With
Everyone, And Enquired Of Davy How He Was Getting On With The
Piloting. He Said: "Now Gentlemen, Go On With Your Game. I Like
Quoits Myself And I Should Be Sorry To Interrupt You." Then He Went
Into The Hotel And Stayed There Until Morning. He No Doubt Obtained
Some Information From Mr. Tyers And His Friends, But He Went No
Further Into The Country. Next Morning He Started With His Two
Troopers On His Return To Melbourne, And The Other Gentlemen Mounted
Their Horses To Accompany Him; But The "Worthy Superintendent" Rode
Story 14 (Gippsland Under The Law..) Pg 203So Fast That He Left Everyone Behind And Was Soon Out
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