John Lort Stokes

Discoveries in Australia (Vol. 1&2)


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      Examination of the Fitzroy River.

       Excursion into the interior.

       Alarm of the Natives.

       Ascent of the River.

       Sufferings from Mosquitoes.

       Red Sandstone.

       Natives again surprised.

       Appearance of the Country.

       Impediments in the River.

       Return of the boats.

       An Alligator.

       Stokes' Bay.

       Narrow escape of an Officer.

       Change of Landscape.

       Pheasant-Cuckoos.

       A new Vine.

       Compass Hill.

       Port Usborne.

       Explore the eastern shore of King's Sound.

       Cone Bay.

       Native Fires.

       Whirlpool Channel.

       Group of Islands.

       Sterile aspect of the Coast.

       Visited by a Native.

       Bathurst Island.

       Native Hut and Raft.

       Return to Port Usborne.

       Native Spears.

       Cascade Bay.

       Result of Explorations in King's Sound.

       Interview with Natives.

       Coral Reefs.

       Discover Beagle Bank.

       Arrival at Port George the Fourth.

       Examination of Collier Bay in the boats.

       Brecknock Harbour.

       The Slate Islands.

       Freshwater Cove.

       An Eagle shot.

       Its singular nest.

       Rock Kangaroos.

       A Conflagration.

       Sandstone Ridges.

       Doubtful Bay.

       Mouth of the Glenelg.

       Remarkable Tree.

       Fertile Country near Brecknock Harbour.

       Return to the Ship.

       Meet with Lieutenant Grey.

       His sufferings and discoveries.

       Visit the Encampment.

       Timor Ponies.

       Embarkation of Lieutenant Grey's Party.

       Sail from Port George the Fourth.

       Remarks on position of Tryal Rock.

       Anecdotes of Miago.

       Arrival at Swan River.

       Directions for entering Owen's Anchorage.

      March 7, 1838.

      We spent the morning in making the necessary preparations, and in the afternoon started to resume our examination of Fitzroy River. Captain Wickham and Lieutenant Eden in the gig, and myself, accompanied by Mr. Tarrant, in one of the whaleboats; we reached the mangrove isles at sunset, and spent the night between them and the eastern shore. On the 8th the tide suited us but badly, and we were only able to proceed about four miles beyond Escape Point, where we secured the boats in a creek out of the influence of the tide. We found much less water off Escape Point than on our former visit.

      EXCURSION INTO THE INTERIOR.

      In the evening we made an excursion into the interior. It was one vast unbroken level, covered with a strong and wiry grass, intersected with numerous watercourses, which the tide filled at high-water, there were also indications of more important, but less regular, visits from the sea. Here and there a solitary tree assisted us in estimating the distance we had walked. We saw two emus in this plain, which appeared also a favourite resort of quail and a bronze-winged pigeon. We could not get within shot of the wary emus, but the quail and pigeons afforded us good sport, notwithstanding the ceaseless attacks of the mosquitoes, which swarmed in the long grass, and defied anything less impenetrable than Mackintosh leggings, encumbrances not desirable for a pedestrian with the thermometer at 87 degrees, particularly when worn over a pair of Flushing trousers. Thus defended, I could, in some degree, defy these tormenting assailants, and at night, under the additional security afforded by a large painted coat, contrived to secure two or three hours of unbroken rest--a luxury few of my companions enjoyed.

      It was with much disappointment that we found the channel occupied, at low-water, by a mere rivulet, draining the extensive mud flats then left uncovered. Hope, however, though somewhat sobered, was not altogether destroyed by this malapropos discovery, and we still looked forward with an interest but little abated, to the results of a complete survey of our new discovery.

      March 9.

      We moved on when the tide served, keeping close to the eastern bank of the river, where there appeared at low-water, the largest stream, then barely two feet deep. Following the sinuosity of the shore, our general direction was south, and after we had thus proceeded two miles, we found the width of the river suddenly contract from three miles to one. The banks were low and covered with a coarse grass.

      NATIVES.

      Here we saw three natives, stretching their long spare bodies over the bank, watching the leading boat with the fixed gaze of apparent terror and anxiety. Sso rivetted was their attention, that they allowed my boat to approach unnoticed within a very short distance of them; but when they suddenly caught sight of it, they gave a yell of mingled astonishment and alarm, and flinging themselves back into the long grass, were almost instantly out of sight. They were evidently greatly alarmed, and as Miago, whose presence might have given them confidence, was not with us, it seemed hopeless to attempt any communication with them, much as we should have liked to convince them, that these strange white creatures were of a race of beings formed like themselves, though even of our existence they could have had no previous idea.

      EXPLORATION OF THE RIVER.

      Six miles from our last night's bivouac, still keeping our southerly direction, brought us to some low, grassy islets, extending almost across the river, and leaving only confined and shallow channels; through one of which we had, at half tide, some difficulty in finding a passage for the boats. The river now widened out a little, and we found the deep water near the western bank, the appearance of the country remaining unaltered. We landed to pass the night at a rocky point on the east side of the river, one mile south from the most western islet of the chain just described as almost preventing our ascent. The depth of the river at this point was about twelve feet at low-water; and its breadth some four or five hundred yards. We found the water fresh at all times of tide, which here rose only eight feet; being ten feet less than its greatest rise eight miles nearer the mouth, where the time of high-water at the full and change of the moon occurs at 4 hours 10 minutes P.M.

      This was the first rock formation we had noticed since leaving Point Torment, a distance of nearly thirty miles; it was a very fine-grained red sandstone, darkened and rendered heavy by the presence of ferruginous particles. The appearance of the country now began to improve, the eastern bank was thickly wooded, and a mile higher up, the western appeared clothed in verdure. I noticed here the same kind of tree, seen for the first time behind our last night's bivouac; it was small and shrubby-looking, with a rough bark, not unlike that of the common elm, and its little pointed leaf, of a deep, dark green, contrasted with the evergreen Eucalypti by which it was surrounded, reminded me of the various tints that give the charm of constant variety to our English woods, and lend to each succeeding season a distinctive and characteristic beauty.*

      (*Footnote. The diameter of the largest tree of this kind was only eight inches: it was exceedingly hard, and of a very dark red colour, except a white rim about an inch in thickness. This wood worked and looked the best, in a table I had made out of various