History of Tasmania. John West
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Название: History of Tasmania

Автор: John West

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Документальная литература

Серия:

isbn: 4064066392697

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ least the merit of truthfulness:—

      VISIT OF HOPE TO SYDNEY COVE.

      Written by the author of the Botanic Garden, 1791.

      Where Sydney Cove her lucid bosom swells,

       Courts her young navies, and the storm repels;>

       High on a rock, amid the troubled air,

       Hope stood sublime, and wav'd her golden hair.

       "Hear me," she cried, "ye rising realms record

       Time's opening scenes, and Truth's unerring word:

       There shall broad streets their stately walls extend,>

       The circus widen, and the crescent bend;

       There, ray'd from cities o'er the cultur'd land,

       Shall bright canals and solid roads expand.

       Embellish'd villas crown the landscape scene,

       Farms wave with gold, and orchards blush between;

       While with each breeze approaching vessels glide,

       And northern treasures dance on every tide!"

       Then ceas'd the nymph: tumultuous echoes roar,

       And Joy's loud voice was heard from shore to shore.

       Her graceful stops descending press'd the plain,

       And Peace, and Art, and Labor, joined the train.

      —Governor Phillip's Voyage to Botany Bay.

      FROM 1803 TO 1824

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The establishment of a settlement in Van Diemen's Land, perhaps thus hastened by the jealousy of a rival power, was at first chiefly intended to relieve Port Jackson. Fifteen years had elapsed since its foundation, and from six to seven thousand prisoners had been transported thither: dispersion became necessary to security—to repress alike the vices of the convicts, and the growing malversation of their taskmasters. The want of prisons, or places of punishment, and the indolence and intemperance of emancipist settlers, endangered authority.

      In 1800, the transportation of the defenders from Ireland, appears to have created continual anxiety: a committee of officers was formed to examine persons suspected, when Harold, a priest, was arrested, and accused his fellow prisoners. His testimony was insidious, and discredited; but the alarm led to the formation of a volunteer company of a hundred persons, who armed for the suppression of rebellion. The more distrusted of the Irish prisoners were conveyed to Norfolk Island; there, some months after, a conspiracy was detected to massacre the officers, and seize the island. On the night fixed for action, the plot was discovered. An Irish servant, muttering words of compassion, was overheard by his master: he was induced to explain, and was immediately taken to Major Foveaux, the officer in command. The danger was imminent: the warmth of the season (December) had tempted the soldiers to slumber with open doors, and it was said that the sentinels were implicated who that night kept watch. These being changed, and other precautions adopted, the plotters postponed their design; and next day were marched to church without suspicion. The door was beset with soldiers: the leaders were arrested; one executed—and on the following day, the blacksmith, charged with fabricating arms, was also hung. The necessity for dispensing with the forms of law was not made out, and these summary punishments were censured. That the danger was not imaginary, may, however, be inferred from the after attempts at Port Jackson.

      The military force of New South Wales, drawn together by a love of adventure, or the hope of gain, when their own status was assailed, were often exacting and severe: but they slightly sustained the moral strength of the government. To select mistresses from the female prisoners was one of their earliest and most valued prerogatives, who, standing in this equivocal relation, became their agents and sold their rum.

      The Governor, after struggling to abate the abuses around him, yielded to a pressure which seemed irresistible. He endeavoured to mollify by his liberality, those he could not govern by restraint: he multiplied licenses for the sale of rum, and emancipists aspired to commercial rivalry with the suttlers in commission. The chief constable was himself a publican, and the chief gaoler shared in the lucrative calling, and sold spirits opposite the prison.

      The moral laxity which prevailed, produced its natural consequences—violations of discipline, which led to great crimes. The offenders, to escape immediate punishments, retreated to the remote districts; occasionally sheltered by the emancipist cotters. The feeble resistance offered to their depredations, inspired, and almost justified the prisoners in the hope, that the common bondage might be broken. A large agricultural establishment, belonging to the government, at Castle-hill, Parramatta, employed many Irishmen implicated in the recent disorders of their country. These prompted the rest to attempt to recover their liberty, but they were subdued by the military under Major Johnstone: some were shot, and several executed.

      "And in the lowest deep, a lower deep!"

      Lieutenant Bowen, in the Lady Nelson, set sail from Sydney, and in August, 1803, landed at Risdon, on the east bank of the Derwent: his party included a few soldiers and prisoners, and Dr. Mountgarrat, the surgeon. A far more important immigration soon followed.

      The establishment of a settlement at Port Phillip being determined on by the ministry of Great Britain, an expedition was forwarded, СКАЧАТЬ