Journals Of Two Expeditions Of Discovery In North West And Western Australia Volume 1 (Of 2), George Grey [robert munsch read aloud txt] 📗
- Author: George Grey
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Excursion Was To Endeavour To Identify These Inlets With Some I Had Seen
On My First Trip To The Southward.
Scenery And Thunderstorm.
On The Northern Bank Lofty Mountains, Crowned With Castellated Summits,
Rear Their Sterile Heads Over The Broad Waters, And Fling Their Giant
Shadows On The Bosom Of The Basin, Forming A Scene Of Surpassing Beauty.
We Had Entered The More Contracted Channel Of The River, When There Came
On A Tremendous Squall Of Wind, Rain, Thunder, And Most Vivid Lightning.
The Pealing Echoes Of The Thunder As They Bounded From Height To Height
And From Cliff To Cliff Was Awfully Magnificent; Whilst The Rugged
Mountains Which Had Just Before Looked Golden In The Bright Light Of The
Setting Sun Were Now Shrouded In Gloomy Mists, And Capped With Dark
Clouds From Which Issued Incessant And Dazzling Flashes Of Lightning.
During This Grand And Terrific Elemental Convulsion Our Little Boat Was
Driven Powerless Before The Blast. The Impenetrable Forests Of Mangroves
Which Clothed The Riverbanks Obliging Us To Run Far Up The Stream Until
At Last A Convenient Opening Enabled Us To Land Upon The Southern Shore.
Delusive Appearance On The Rocks.
We Had Not Long Landed When The Rain Ceased And, As We Found Several
Natural Caverns In The Rock And Plenty Of Dead Mangrove Trees, We
Proceeded To Make Ourselves Comfortable For The Night; But The Men Soon
Reported That They Saw The Smoke Of A Native Fire Close To Us, And
Captain Browse And Myself, Under The Conviction That Such Was The Case,
Darted With Mr. Walker To Endeavour To Gain An Interview. But, As We
Proceeded Over The Rocks, The Smoke Appeared Gradually To Retire, Always
Volume 1 Chapter 7 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 80Keeping About The Same Distance From Us: And We At Last Ascertained That
What Had Appeared To Us To Be Smoke Was Nothing But The Rising Vapour
Occasioned By The Cold Rain Falling On Sandstone Rocks, Which Had During
The Whole Day Been Exposed To The Burning Rays Of A Tropical Sun.
We Had Now Become So Much Accustomed To Sleeping Without Any Covering,
And Upon Hard Rocks, That We Should Not Have Minded Our Exposure Had It
Not Been For The Rain Which Fell During The Night And Beat In Under The
Rocks, Beneath Which We Had Crept For Shelter. The Cold Air Of The
Morning Awoke Us Long Before Daylight; And Mr. Walker And Myself, Having
Explored The Country To The Southward And Climbed A High Hill From Which
We Had An Extensive View, We Started On Our Return To The Schooner. In
Proceeding Down The River We Landed On An Island, Situate At The
South-Eastern Extremity Of St. George's Basin, Just Where The River Runs
Into It. The Presence Of Large Dead Trees On This Island, Which Had
Evidently Been Swept Down The River In The Time Of Floods And Washed Up
Far Above The Usual Water-Mark, Showed That Prince Regent's River Is
Subject To The Same Sudden Inundations As All Other Rivers In Australia
Which I Have Seen. During Our Passage Down The River We Saw No Extent Of
Good Land In Any One Place.
State Of The Stock.
For The Next Few Days We Had Almost Uninterrupted Bad Weather. The Party
Were All Occupied In Preparing The Saddles, Etc. The Ponies Having Eaten
Off The Grass In The Ravine, We Were Compelled, About The 28th, To Move
Them To The Higher Grounds. These At Our First Arrival On This Coast Were
Perfectly Dry And Burnt Up; But Since The Heavy Rains Had Set In They
Teemed With Running Springs, Along The Margins Of Which Grew A Scanty
Coating Of Grass. Being Obliged To Send The Horses To A Distance To Graze
Delayed Us A Great Deal For One Portion Of Our Party Was Occupied In
Attending Upon Them. Our Sheep Also Now Began To Die Off: They Had Up To
This Time Improved Rapidly And Were Doing Very Well, Having, During The
Absence Of The Vessel, Been Regularly Tended And Driven To The High Dry
Ground To Feed; But Now The Pressure Of Business Was So Great That We
Were Compelled In Some Degree To Neglect Them, And From This They
Suffered. The Goats Had From Some Cause Never Succeeded Well.
From The Period Of Their Being Landed Many Of The Horses Had Declined
Very Much, And Several Of Them Were By This Time Reduced To A Very Weakly
State. This Originated From The Heavy Rains And The Excessive Cold Which
Accompanied Them, As Well As From Some Food They Had Eaten Which Had Not
Agreed With Them. On The 28th And 29th The Rains Increased In Violence
And Duration; But We Still Continued Our Occupations Of Completing The
Packsaddles And Arranging The Stores In Such Small Packages That They
Could Easily In Case Of Necessity Be Transported On Men's Shoulders.
Final Arrangements For The March.
Having Provided Every Requisite For The Party, Such As Food, Working
Utensils, Soap, Tobacco, Etc., All Of Which Were Arranged In Their
Respective Packages, I Issued An Order That Nothing But Certain Articles
Volume 1 Chapter 7 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 81Of Clothing For Each Individual Were To Be Put Upon The Ponies. This Step
Was Rendered The More Necessary From Their Weakness And Their Diminutive
Size Having Greatly Abridged Our Intended Means Of Transport. Numerous
Requests Were Now Made To Me To Be Allowed To Put Various Articles Upon
The Horses, All Of Which I Felt Myself Obliged To Meet By A Steady
Refusal; But This Refusal, Dictated Entirely By The Necessity Of The
Case, Raised Angry And Discontented Feelings, Tending To Diminish
Materially The Individual Zeal And Energy Which Were So Much Required At
This Juncture To Ensure Our Success.
Departure For The Interior. Difficulties Of The Route.
On The 29th We Began In The Afternoon To Load Our Horses. Mr. Walker's
Pathway Was Completed By Means Of A Number Of Circuitous And Sharp
Turnings: It Led Directly Up The Face Of Cliffs Which Were Almost
Precipitous And 180 Feet In Height. To Commemorate The Completion Of This
Really Laborious Undertaking I Named The Valley Walker's Valley.
Troublesome Ascent From The Valley. Sickness And Mortality Among The
Horses And Stock.
The Ponies, Though Weak, Bore Their Burdens And Submitted To The
Packsaddles Better Than I Had Hoped. The First Horse Was Led Up By The
Stock-Keeper In Safety, With Its Saddle And Load On It; I Followed With
The Second, But Was Not So Fortunate. I Had Accomplished About
Three-Fourths Of The Ascent When, Turning One Of The Sharp Corners Round
A Rock, The Load Struck Against It And Knocked The Horse Over On Its
Side. I Thought For A Moment That The Poor Beast Would Have Fallen Down
The Precipice, But Luckily Its Roll Was Checked In Time To Prevent This.
There It Lay However On A Flat Rock, Four Or Five Feet Wide, A Precipice
Of 150 Feet On One Side Of It, And The Projecting Rock Against Which It
Had Struck On The Other, Whilst I Sat Upon Its Head To Prevent It From
Moving. Its Long Tail Streamed In The Wind Over The Precipice; Its Wild
And Fiery Eye Gleamed From Its Shaggy Mane And Forelock; And, Ignorant Of
Its Impending Danger, It Kicked And Struggled Violently, Whilst It
Appeared To Hang In Mid-Air Over The Gloomy Depth Of This Tropical
Ravine. Anxious As I Felt For The Safety Of My Pony I Could Not Be
Unconscious Of The Singular Beauty Of The Scene During The Few Minutes
That Elapsed Whilst I Was Repressing Its Struggles On A Narrow Ledge Of
Rock, Of Which The Dark Brow Projected Threateningly Above Me, Whilst The
Noise Of A Rushing Torrent Was Audible Far Below. I Cut The Girths Of The
Saddle, Which Then With Its Load Rolled Over The Precipice, And Pitched
With A Heavy Crash On A Rock Far Down. Even Then, If The Brute Had Not
Been A Denizen Of A Wild And Mountainous Country, It Must Have Been Lost;
But Now It No Sooner Felt Itself Freed From Its Encumbrance Than, Looking
Sagaciously Around And Then Raising Itself Cautiously Up, It Stood
Trembling By My Side Upon The Narrow Terrace.
Volume 1 Chapter 7 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 82
Warned By This Misfortune We Managed To Make Another Turn In The Path, By
Which This Awkward Rock Was Avoided, And The Remainder Of The Horses,
With Their Loads, Reached The Tableland In Safety. But So Rocky Was This
Country That, Even After Having Mastered The Ascent, We Found Great
Difficulty In Getting The Loaded Ponies Half A Mile Further To A Point I
Had Fixed On For Our Camp. We Had This Night A Continued Succession Of
Heavy Showers, Accompanied With Thunder And Lightning.
January 30.
This Morning It Was Reported To Me That Several Sheep Were Dead, And That
The Horses Were Beginning To Suffer Much From Constant Exposure To The
Heavy Cold Rains, For The Trees Were So Small, And Their Foliage So
Slight, That They Afforded No Shelter Whatever From Tropical Showers. On
Repairing To The Ravine I Found That The Stream Which Even Yesterday Was
Much Swollen Had Now Become An Impetuous Torrent, So Much So That Even To
Swim Across It Was Not An Easy Matter. A Tree Was Soon Felled And A
Temporary Foot-Bridge Thus Formed; And As The Rain Cleared Off A Little
Towards The Afternoon We Managed, In This Interval Of Fine Weather, To
Load The Ponies And Carry Some Stores Up The Cliffs, But The Poor Beasts
Were So Much Weakened Since Yesterday That We Were Obliged To Diminish
Their Loads Considerably. They All Appeared To Be Gradually Declining In
Health, Strength, And Condition, But From What Cause Except Exposure I
Could Not Tell.
Impediments From Bad Weather.
January 31.
During Last Night We Had Heavy Storms, The Torrent Was Still More Swollen
And, Although We Laboured Hard All Day, We Accomplished Very Little;
Several Sheep Died During The Day, And The Ponies Appeared To Be Worse. I
Became Now Very Anxious As To The Result Of The Expedition; My Worst
Apprehensions As To The Rainy Season Setting In Before We Had Got Clear
Of The Sandstone Ranges Had Already Been Fully Realized; Every Endeavour
To Hasten Our Preparations And To Prevent This Occurrence Had Been Used,
Though Unsuccessfully; It Appeared Now The Better Course To Bear Up
Against Evils That Could Not Be Avoided Than To Lose Time In Murmuring; I
Therefore Kept All Hands Constantly Employed
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