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<hr>
<h3>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
<h4>The Departure of the French from Botany Bay; and the Return
of the 'Supply' from Norfolk Island; with a Discovery made by
Lieutenant Ball on his Passage to it.</h4>
<p>About the middle of the month our good friends the French
departed from Botany Bay, in prosecution of their voyage. During
their stay in that port, the officers of the two nations had
frequent opportunities of testifying their mutual regard by
visits, and every interchange of friendship and esteem. These
ships sailed from France, by order of the King, on the 1st of
August, 1785, under the command of Monsieur De Perrouse, an
officer whose eminent qualifications, we had reason to think,
entitle him to fill the highest stations. In England,
particularly, he ought long to be remembered with admiration and
gratitude, for the humanity which marked his conduct, when
ordered to destroy our settlement at Hudson's Bay, in the last
war. His second in command was the Chevalier Clonard, an officer
also of distinguished merit.</p>
<p>In the course of the voyage these ships had been so
unfortunate as to lose a boat, with many men and officers in her,
off the west of California; and afterwards met with an accident
still more to be regretted, at an island in the Pacific Ocean,
discovered by Monsieur Bougainville, in the latitude of 14 deg 19
min south, longitude 173 deg 3 min 20 sec east of Paris. Here
they had the misfortune to have no less than thirteen of their
crews, among whom was the officer at that time second in command,
cut off by the natives, and many more desperately wounded. To
what cause this cruel event was to be attributed, they knew not,
as they were about to quit the island after having lived with the
Indians in the greatest harmony for several weeks; and exchanged,
during the time, their European commodities for the produce of
the place, which they describe as filled with a race of people
remarkable for beauty and comeliness; and abounding in
refreshments of all kinds.</p>
<p>It was no less gratifying to an English ear, than honourable
to Monsieur De Perrouse, to witness the feeling manner in which
he always mentioned the name and talents of Captain Cook. That
illustrious circumnavigator had, he said, left nothing to those
who might follow in his track to describe, or fill up. As I
found, in the course of conversation, that the French ships had
touched at the Sandwich Islands, I asked M. De Perrouse what
reception he had met with there. His answer deserves to be known:
"During the whole of our voyage in the South Seas, the people of
the Sandwich Islands were the only Indians who never gave us
cause of complaint. They furnished us liberally with provisions,
and administered cheerfully to all our wants." It may not be
improper to remark, that Owhyee was not one of the islands
visited by this gentleman.</p>
<p>In the short stay made by these ships at Botany Bay, an Abbe,
one of the naturalists on board, died, and was buried on the
north shore. The French had hardly departed, when the natives
pulled down a small board, which had been placed over the spot
where the corpse was interred, and defaced everything around. On
being informed of it, the Governor sent a party over with orders
to affix a plate of copper on a tree near the place, with the
following inscription on it, which is a copy of what was written
on the board:</p>
<p>Hic jacet L. RECEVEUR, E.F.F. minnibus Galliae, Sacerdos,
Physicus, in circumnavigatione mundi, Duce De La Perrouse. Obiit
die 17 Februarii, anno 1788.</p>
<p>This mark of respectful attention was more particularly due,
from M. De Perrouse having, when at Kamschatka, paid a similar
tribute of gratitude to the memory of Captain Clarke, whose tomb
was found in nearly as ruinous a state as that of the Abbe.</p>
<p>Like ourselves, the French found it necessary, more than once,
to chastise a spirit of rapine and intrusion which prevailed
among the Indians around the Bay. The menace of pointing a
musquet to them was frequently used; and in one or two instances
it was fired off, though without being attended with fatal
consequences. Indeed the French commandant, both from a regard to
the orders of his Court as well as to our quiet and security,
shewed a moderation and forbearance on this head highly
becoming.</p>
<p>On the 20th of March, the 'Supply' arrived from Norfolk
Island, after having safely landed Lieutenant King and his little
garrison. The pine-trees growing there are described to be of a
growth and height superior, perhaps, to any in the world. But the
difficulty of bringing them away will not be easily surmounted,
from the badness and danger of the landing place. After the most
exact search not a single plant of the New Zealand flax could be
found, though we had been taught to believe it abounded
there.</p>
<p>Lieutenant Ball, in returning to Port Jackson, touched at a
small island in latitude 31 deg 36 min south, longitude 159 deg 4
min east of Greenwich, which he had been fortunate enough to
discover on his passage to Norfolk, and to which he gave the name
of Lord Howe's Island. It is entirely without inhabitants, or any
traces of any having ever been there. But it happily abounds in
what will be infinitely more important to the settlers on New
South Wales: green turtle of the finest kind frequent it in the
summer season. Of this Mr. Ball gave us some very handsome and
acceptable specimens on his return. Besides turtle, the island is
well stocked with birds, many of them so tame as to be knocked
down by the seamen with sticks. At the distance of four leagues
from Lord Howe Island, and in latitude 31 deg 30 min south,
longitude 159 deg 8 min east, stands a remarkable rock, of
considerable height, to which Mr. Ball gave the name of Ball's
Pyramid, from the shape it bears.</p>
<p>While the 'Supply' was absent, Governor Phillip made an
excursion to Broken Bay, a few leagues to the northward of Port
Jackson, in order to explore it. As a harbour it almost equals
the latter, but the adjacent country was found so rocky and bare,
as to preclude all possibility of turning it to account. Some
rivulets of fresh water fall into the head of the Bay, forming a
very picturesque scene. The Indians who live on its banks are
numerous, and behaved attentively in a variety of instances while
our people remained among them.</p>
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<hr>
<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
<h4>Transactions at Port Jackson in the Months of April and
May.</h4>
<p>As winter was fast approaching, it became necessary to secure
ourselves in quarters, which might shield us from the cold we
were taught to expect in this hemisphere, though in so low a
latitude. The erection of barracks for the soldiers was
projected, and the private men of each company undertook to build
for themselves two wooden houses, of sixty-eight feet in length,
and twenty-three in breadth. To forward the design, several
saw-pits were immediately set to work, and four ship carpenters
attached to the battalion, for the purpose of directing and
completing this necessary undertaking. In prosecuting it,
however, so many difficulties occurred, that we were fain to
circumscribe our original intention; and, instead of eight
houses, content ourselves with four. And even these, from the
badness of the timber, the scarcity of artificers, and other
impediments, are, at the day on which I write, so little
advanced, that it will be well, if at the close of the year 1788,
we shall be established in them. In the meanwhile the married
people, by proceeding on a more contracted scale, were soon under
comfortable shelter. Nor were the convicts forgotten; and as
leisure was frequently afforded them for the purpose, little
edifices quickly multiplied on the ground allotted them to build
upon.</p>
<p>But as these habitations were intended by Governor Phillip to
answer only the exigency of the moment, the plan of the town was
drawn, and the ground on which it is hereafter to stand surveyed,
and marked out. To proceed on a narrow, confined scale, in a
country of the extensive limits we possess, would be
unpardonable: extent of empire demands grandeur of design. That
this has been our view will be readily believed, when I tell the
reader, that the principal street in our projected city will be,
when completed, agreeable to the plan laid down, two hundred feet
in breadth, and all the rest of a corresponding proportion. How
far this will be accompanied with adequate dispatch, is another
question, as the incredulous among us are sometimes hardy enough
to declare, that ten times our strength would not be able to
finish it in as many years.</p>
<p>Invariably intent on exploring a country, from which curiosity
promises so many gratifications, his Excellency about this time
undertook an expedition into the interior parts of the continent.
His party consisted of eleven persons, who, after being conveyed
by water to the head of the harbour, proceeded in a westerly
direction, to reach a chain of mountains, which in clear weather
are discernible, though at an immense distance, from some heights
near our encampment. With unwearied industry they continued to
penetrate the country for four days; but at the end of that time,
finding the base of the mountain to be yet at the distance of
more than twenty miles, and provisions growing scarce, it was
judged prudent to return, without having accomplished the end for
which the expedition had been undertaken. To reward their toils,
our adventurers had, however, the pleasure of discovering and
traversing an extensive tract of ground, which they had reason to
believe, from the observations they were enabled to make, capable
of producing every thing, which a happy soil and genial climate
can bring forth. In addition to this flattering appearance, the
face of the country is such, as to promise success whenever it
shall be cultivated, the trees being at a considerable distance
from each other, and the intermediate space filled, not with
underwood, but a thick rich grass, growing in the utmost
luxuriancy. I must not, however, conceal, that in this long
march, our gentlemen found not a single rivulet, but were under a
necessity of supplying themselves with water from standing pools,
which they met with in the vallies, supposed to be formed by the
rains that fall at particular seasons of the year. Nor had they
the good fortune to see any quadrupeds worth notice, except a few
kangaroos. To their great surprize, they observed indisputable
tracks of the natives having been lately there, though in their
whole route none of them were to be seen; nor any means to be
traced, by which they could procure subsistence so far from the
sea shore.</p>
<p>On the 6th of May the 'Supply' sailed for Lord Howe Island, to
take on board turtle for the settlement; but after waiting there
several days was obliged to return without having seen one, owing
we apprehended to the advanced season of the year. Three of the
transports also, which were engaged by the East India Company to
proceed to China, to take on board a lading of tea, sailed about
this time for Canton.</p>
<p>The unsuccessful return of the 'Supply' cast a general damp on
our spirits, for by this time fresh provisions were become
scarcer than in a blockaded town. The little live stock, which
with so heavy an expense, and through so many difficulties, we
had brought on shore, prudence forbade us to use; and fish, which
on our arrival, and for a short time after had been tolerable
plenty, were become so scarce, as to be rarely seen at the tables
of the first among us. Had it not been for a stray kangaroo,
which fortune now and then threw in our way, we should have been
utter strangers to the taste of fresh food.</p>
<p>Thus situated, the scurvy began its usual ravages, and
extended its baneful influence, more or less, through all
descriptions of persons. Unfortunately the esculent vegetable
productions of the country are neither plentiful, nor tend very
effectually to remove this disease. And, the ground we had turned
up and planted with garden seeds, either from the nature of the
soil, or, which is more probable, the lateness of the season,
yielded but a scanty and insufficient supply of what we stood so
greatly in need of.</p>
<p>During the period I am describing, few enormous offences were
perpetrated by the convicts. A petty theft was now and then heard
of, and a spirit of refractory sullenness broke out at times in
some individuals: one execution only, however, took place. The
sufferer, who was a very young man, was convicted of a burglary,
and met his fate with a hardiness and insensibility, which the
grossest ignorance, and most deplorable want of feeling, alone
could supply.</p>
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<hr>
<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
<h4>From the Beginning of June, to the Departure of the Ships for
Europe.</h4>
<p>Hours of festivity, which under happier skies pass away
unregarded, and are soon consigned to oblivion, acquire in this
forlorn and distant circle a superior degree of acceptable
importance.</p>
<p>On the anniversary of the King's birthday all the officers not
on duty, both of the garrison and his Majesty's ships, dined with
the Governor. On so joyful an occasion, the first too ever
celebrated in our new settlement, it were needless to say, that
loyal conviviality dictated every sentiment, and inspired every
guest. Among other public toasts drank, was, Prosperity to Sydney
Cove, in Cumberland county, now named so by authority. At
day-light in the morning the ships of war had fired twenty-one
guns each, which was repeated at noon, and answered by three
vollies from the battalion of marines.</p>
<p>Nor were the officers alone partakers of the general
relaxation. The four unhappy wretches labouring under sentence of
banishment were freed from their fetters, to rejoin their former
society; and three days given as holidays to every convict in the
colony. Hospitality too, which ever acquires a double relish by
being extended, was not forgotten on the 4th of June, when each
prisoner, male and female, received an allowance of grog; and
every non-commissioned officer and private soldier had the honor
of drinking prosperity to his royal master, in a pint of porter,
served out at the flag staff, in addition to the customary
allowance of spirits. Bonfires concluded the evening, and I am
happy to say, that excepting a single instance which shall be
taken notice of hereafter, no bad consequence, or unpleasant
remembrance, flowed from an indulgence so amply bestowed.</p>
<p>About this time (June) an accident happened, which I record
with much regret. The whole of our black cattle, consisting of
five cows and a bull, either from not being properly secured, or
from the negligence of those appointed to take care of them,
strayed into the woods, and in spite of all the search we have
been able to make, are not yet found. As a convict of the name of
Corbet, who was accused of a theft, eloped nearly at the same
time, it was at first believed, that he had taken the desperate
measure of driving off the cattle, in order to subsist on them as
long as possible; or perhaps to deliver them to the natives. In
this uncertainty, parties to search were sent out in different
directions; and the fugitive declared an outlaw, in case of not
returning by a fixed day. After much anxiety and fatigue, those
who had undertaken the task returned without finding the cattle.
But on the 21st of the month, Corbet made his appearance near a
farm belonging to the Governor, and entreated a convict, who
happened to be on the spot, to give him some food, as he was
perishing for hunger. The man applied to, under pretence of
fetching what he asked for, went away and immediately gave the
necessary information, in consequence of which a party under arms
was sent out and apprehended him. When the poor wretch was
brought in, he was greatly emaciated and almost famished. But on
proper restoratives being administered, he was so far recovered
by the 24th, as to be able to stand his trial, when he pleaded
Guilty to the robbery with which he stood charged, and received
sentence of death. In the course of repeated examinations it
plainly appeared, he was an utter stranger to the place where the
cattle might be, and was in no shape concerned in having driven
them off.</p>
<p>Samuel Peyton, convict, for having on the evening of the
King's birth-day broke open an officer's marquee, with an intent
to commit robbery, of which he was fully convicted, had sentence
of death passed on him at the same time as Corbet; and on the
following day they were both executed, confessing the justness of
their fate, and imploring the forgiveness of those whom they had
injured. Peyton, at the time of his suffering, was but twenty
years of age, the greatest part of which had been invariably
passed in the commission of crimes, that at length terminated in
his ignominious end. The following letter, written by a fellow
convict to the sufferer's unhappy mother, I shall make no apology
for presenting to the reader; it affords a melancholy proof, that
not the ignorant and untaught only have provoked the justice of
their country to banish them to this remote region.</p>
<p>Sydney Cove, Port Jackson, New South Wales, 24th June,
1788.</p>
<p>"My dear and honoured mother!</p>
<p>"With a heart oppressed by the keenest sense of anguish, and
too much agitated by the idea of my very melancholy condition, to
express my own sentiments, I have prevailed on the goodness of a
commiserating friend, to do me the last sad office of acquainting
you with the dreadful fate that awaits me.</p>
<p>"My dear mother! with what agony of soul do I dedicate the few
last moments of my life, to bid you an eternal adieu! my doom
being irrevocably fixed, and ere this hour to-morrow I shall have
quitted this vale of wretchedness, to enter into an unknown and
endless eternity. I will not distress your tender maternal
feelings by any long comment on the cause of my present
misfortune. Let it therefore suffice to say, that impelled by
that strong propensity to evil, which neither the virtuous
precepts nor example of the best of parents could eradicate, I
have at length fallen an unhappy, though just, victim to my own
follies.</p>
<p>"Too late I regret my inattention to your admonitions, and
feel myself sensibly affected by the remembrance of the many
anxious moments you have passed on my account. For these, and all
my other transgressions, however great, I supplicate the Divine
forgiveness; and encouraged by the promises of that Saviour who
died for us all, I trust to receive that mercy in the world to
come, which my offences have deprived me of all hope, or
expectation of, in this. The affliction which this will cost you,
I hope the Almighty will enable you to bear. Banish from your
memory all my former indiscretions, and let the cheering hope of
a happy meeting hereafter, console you for my loss. Sincerely
penitent for my sins; sensible of the justice of my conviction
and sentence, and firmly relying on the merits of a Blessed
Redeemer, I am at perfect peace with all mankind, and trust I
shall yet experience that peace, which this world cannot give.
Commend my soul to the Divine mercy. I bid you an eternal
farewell.</p>
<p>"Your unhappy dying Son,</p>
<p>"SAMUEL PEYTON."</p>
<p>After this nothing occurred with which I think it necessary to
trouble the reader. The contents of the following chapters could
not, I conceive, be so properly interwoven in the body of the
work; I have, therefore, assigned them a place by themselves,
with a view that the conclusions adopted in them may be more
strongly enforced on the minds of those, to whom they are more
particularly addressed.</p>
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