The Book Of The Bush - George Dunderdale (tharntype novel english .txt) 📗
- Author: George Dunderdale
Book online «The Book Of The Bush - George Dunderdale (tharntype novel english .txt) 📗». Author George Dunderdale
Utmost Ceremony. The 21st Fusiliers Escorted Him To The Wharf. As
He Entered His Barge His Friends Cheered, And His Enemies Groaned, And
Then Went Home And Illuminated The Town, To Testify Their Joy At
Getting Rid Of A Tyrant. He Was The Model Governor Of A Crown
Colony, And The Crown Rewarded Him For His Services. He Was Made A
Baronet, Appointed Governor Of Canada And Of Bombay, Was A Member Of
Her Majesty's Privy Council, A Colonel Of The Queen's Own Regiment,
And He Died On September 19th, 1854, Full Of Years And Honours, And
Worth 70,000 Pounds.
Laming Was Left An Orphan By The Death Of Lizard Skin. The Chief Had
Grown Old And Sick, And He Sat Every Day For Two Years On A Fallen
Puriri Near The White Man's Pah, But He Never Entered It. His Spear
Was Always Sticking Up Beside Him. He Had A Gun, But Was Never Known
To Use It. He Was Often Humming Some Ditty About Old Times Before
The White Man Brought Guns And Powder, But He Spoke To No One. He
Was Pondering Over The Future Of His Tribe, But The Problem Was Too
Much For Him. The White Men Were Strong And Were Overrunning His
Land. His Last Injunction To His Warriors Was, That They Should
Listen To The Words Of His Pakeha, And That They Should Be Brave That
They Might Live.
When The British Government Took Possession Of New Zealand Without
Paying For It, They Established A Land Court To Investigate The
Titles To Lands Formerly Bought From The Natives, And It Was Decided
In Most Cases That A Few Axes And Hoes Were An Insufficient Price To
Pay For The Pick Of The Country; The Purchases Were Swindles. Laming
Had Possession Of Three Or Four Hundred Acres, And To The Surprise Of
The Court It Was Found That He Had Paid A Fair Price For Them, And
His Title Was Allowed. Moreover, His Knowledge Of The Language And
Customs Of The Maoris Was Found To Be So Useful That He Was Appointed
A Judge Of The Land Court.
The Men Who Laid The Foundations Of Empire In The Great South Land
Were Men Of Action. They Did Not Stand Idle In The Shade, Waiting
For Someone To Come And Hire Them. They Dug A Vineyard And Planted
It. The Vines Now Bring Forth Fruit, The Winepress Is Full, The Must
Is Fermenting. When The Wine Has Been Drawn Off From The Lees, And
Time Has Matured It, Of What Kind Will It Be? And Will The Lord Of
The Vineyard Commend It?
Story 2 (First Settlers.) Pg 20
The First White Settler In Victoria Was The Escaped Convict Buckley;
But He Did Not Cultivate The Country, Nor Civilise The Natives. The
Natives, On The Contrary, Uncivilised Him. When White Men Saw Him
Again, He Had Forgotten Even His Mother Tongue, And Could Give Them
Little Information. For More Than Thirty Years He Had Managed To
Story 2 (First Settlers.) Pg 21Live--To Live Like A Savage; But For Any Good He Had Ever Done He
Might As Well Have Died With The Other Convicts Who Ran Away With
Him. He Never Gave Any Clear Account Of His Companions, And Many
People Were Of Opinion That He Kept Himself Alive By Eating Them,
Until He Was Found And Fed By The Blacks, Who Thought He Was One Of
Their Dead Friends, And Had "Jumped Up A White Fellow."
While Buckley Was Still Living With The Blacks About Corio Bay, In
1827, Gellibrand And Batman Applied For A Grant Of Land At Western
Port, Where The Whalers Used To Strip Wattle Bark When Whales Were
Out Of Season; But They Did Not Get It.
Englishmen Have No Business To Live Anywhere Without Being Governed,
And Colonel Arthur Had No Money To Spend In Governing A Settlement At
Western Port. So Australia Felix Was Unsettled For Eight Years
Longer.
Griffiths & Co., Of Launceston, Were Trading With Sydney In 1833.
Their Cargo Outward Was Principally Wheat, The Price Of Which Varied
Very Much; Sometimes It Was 2s. 6d. A Bushel In Launceston, And 18s.
In Sydney. The Return Cargo From Port Jackson Was Principally Coal,
Freestone, And Cedar.
Griffiths & Co. Were Engaged In Whaling In Portland Bay. They Sent
There Two Schooners, The 'Henry' And The 'Elizabeth', In June, 1834.
They Erected Huts On Shore For The Whalers. The 'Henry' Was Wrecked;
But The Whales Were Plentiful, And Yielded More Oil Than The Casks
Would Hold, So The Men Dug Clay Pits On Shore, And Poured The Oil
Into Them. The Oil From Forty-Five Whales Was Put Into The Pits, But
The Clay Absorbed Every Spoonful Of It, And Nothing But Bones Was
Gained From So Much Slaughter. Before The 'Elizabeth' Left Portland
Bay, The Hentys, The First Permanent Settlers In Victoria, Arrived In
The Schooner 'Thistle', On November 4th, 1834.
When The Whalers Of The 'Elizabeth' Had Been Paid Off, And Had Spent
Their Money, They Were Engaged To Strip Wattle Bark At Western Port,
And Were Taken Across In The Schooner, With Provisions, Tools, Six
Bullocks And A Dray. During That Season They Stripped Three Hundred
Toc SPELL, THE GOVERNOR HOPED TO GET POSSESSION OF ALL THE OLD CANNON,
POWDER AND BALLS, RUSTY SWORDS AND MUSKETS, AND EVERY THING ELSE THAT
WOULD BE SERVICEABLE IN KILLING FRENCHMEN. DRUMS WERE BEATEN IN ALL THE
VILLAGES OF MASSACHUSETTS, TO ENLIST SOLDIERS FOR THE SERVICE. MESSAGES
WERE SENT TO THE OTHER GOVERNORS OF NEW ENGLAND, AND TO NEW YORK AND
PENNSYLVANIA, ENTREATING THEM TO UNITE IN THIS CRUSADE AGAINST THE FRENCH.
ALL THESE PROVINCES AGREED TO GIVE WHAT ASSISTANCE THEY COULD.
Story 2 (First Settlers.) Pg 22
BUT THERE WAS ONE VERY IMPORTANT THING TO BE DECIDED. WHO SHALL BE THE
GENERAL OF THIS GREAT ARMY? PEACE HAD CONTINUED SUCH AN UNUSUAL LENGTH OF
TIME, THAT THERE WAS NOW LESS MILITARY EXPERIENCE AMONG THE COLONISTS,
THAN AT ANY FORMER PERIOD. THE OLD PURITANS HAD ALWAYS KEPT THEIR WEAPONS
BRIGHT, AND WERE NEVER DESTITUTE OF WARLIKE CAPTAINS, WHO WERE SKILFUL IN
ASSAULT OR DEFENCE. BUT THE SWORDS OF THEIR DESCENDANTS HAD GROWN RUSTY BY
DISUSE. THERE WAS NOBODY IN NEW ENGLAND THAT KNEW ANY THING ABOUT SIEGES,
OR ANY OTHER REGULAR FIGHTING. THE ONLY PERSONS, AT ALL ACQUAINTED WITH
WARLIKE BUSINESS, WERE A FEW ELDERLY MEN, WHO HAD HUNTED INDIANS THROUGH
THE UNDERBRUSH OF THE FOREST, IN OLD GOVERNOR DUMMER S WAR.
IN THIS DILEMMA, GOVERNOR SHIRLEY FIXED UPON A WEALTHY MERCHANT, NAMED
WILLIAM PEPPERELL, WHO WAS PRETTY WELL KNOWN AND LIKED AMONG THE PEOPLE.
AS TO MILITARY SKILL, HE HAD NO MORE OF IT THAN HIS NEIGHBORS. BUT, AS THE
GOVERNOR URGED HIM VERY PRESSINGLY, MR. PEPPERELL CONSENTED TO SHUT UP HIS
LEGER, GIRD ON A SWORD, AND ASSUME THE TITLE OF GENERAL.
MEANTIME, WHAT A HUBBUB WAS RAISED BY THIS SCHEME! RUB-A-DUB-DUB!
RUB-A-DUB-DUB! THE RATTLE OF DRUMS, BEATEN OUT OF ALL MANNER OF TIME, WAS
HEARD ABOVE EVERY OTHER SOUND.
NOTHING NOW WAS SO VALUABLE AS ARMS, OF WHATEVER STYLE AND FASHION THEY
MIGHT BE. THE BELLOWS BLEW, AND THE HAMMER CLANGED CONTINUALLY UPON THE
Story 2 (First Settlers.) Pg 23ANVIL, WHILE THE BLACKSMITHS WERE REPAIRING THE BROKEN WEAPONS OF OTHER
WARS. DOUBTLESS, SOME OF THE SOLDIERS LUGGED OUT THOSE ENORMOUE He Had Built A Hut And Planted A Garden With
Potatoes And Other Vegetables. Flesh Meat He Obtained From The
Kangaroos And Seals. Their Skins He Took To Launceston In His Boat,
And In It He Brought Back Supplies Of Flour And Groceries. He Had
Observed Dead Bodies Of Women And Men, And Pieces Of A Wrecked Vessel
Cast Up By The Sea, And Had Travelled Along The Shore With His
Family, Looking For Anything Useful Or Valuable Which The Wreck Might
Yield. After Hearing The Story, And Seeing The Miserable Plight Of
The Castaways, He Invited Them To His Home. On Arriving At The Hut
Scott And His Lubras Prepared For Their Guests A Beautiful Meal Of
Kangaroo And Potatoes. This Was Their Only Food As Long As They
Remained On King's Island, For Scott's Only Boat Had Got Adrift, And
His Flour, Tea, And Sugar Had Been All Consumed. But Kangaroo Beef
And Potatoes Seemed A Most Luxurious Diet To The Men And Women Who
Had Been Kept Alive For Three Weeks On Nothing But Shellfish.
Scott And His Hounds Hunted The Kangaroo, And Supplied The Colony
With Meat. The Liver Of The Kangaroo When Boiled And Left To Grow
Cold Is A Dry Substance, Which, With The Help Of Hunger And A Little
Imagination, Is Said To Be As Good As Bread.
In The Month Of July, 1835, Heavy Gales Were Blowing Over King's
Island. For Fourteen Days The Schooner 'Elizabeth', With Whalers For
Port Fairy, Was Hove To Off The Coast, Standing Off And On, Six Hours
One Way And Six Hours The Other. Akers, The Captain, And His Mate
Got Drunk On Rum And Water Daily. The Cook Of The 'Industry' Was On
Board The 'Elizabeth', The Man Whom Captain Blogg Was Flogging When
His Crew Seized Him And Threw Him Overboard. The Cook Also Was Now
Pitched Overboard For Having Given Evidence Against The Four Men Who
Had Saved Him From Further Flogging.
At This Time Also Captain Friend, Of The Whaling Cutter 'Sarah Ann',
Took Shelter Under The Lee Of New Year's Island, And He Pulled Ashore
To Visit Scott The Sealer. There He Found The Shipwrecked Men And
Women Whom He Took On Board His Cutter, And Conveyed To Launceston,
Except One Woman And Two Men. It Was Then Too Late In The Season To
Take The Whalers To Port Fairy. Captain Friend Was Appointed Chief
District Constable At Launceston; All The Constables Under Him
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