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<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
<h4>A Description of the Natives of New South Wales, and our
Transactions with them.</h4>
<p>I doubt not my readers will be as glad as I feel myself, to
conclude the dull detail of the last chapter. If they please,
they may turn from the subtle intricacies of the law, to
contemplate the simple, undisguised workings of nature, in her
most artless colouring.</p>
<p>I have already said, we had been but very few days at Port
Jackson, when an alteration in the behaviour of the natives was
perceptible; and I wish I could add, that a longer residence in
their neighbourhood had introduced a greater degree of cordiality
and intermixture between the old, and new, lords of the soil,
than at the day on which this publication is dated subsists.</p>
<p>From their easy reception of us in the beginning, many were
induced to call in question the accounts which Mr. Cook had given
of this people. That celebrated navigator, we were willing
believe, had somehow by his conduct offended them, which
prevented the intercourse that would otherwise have taken place.
The result, however, of our repeated endeavours to induce them to
come among us has been such as to confirm me in an opinion, that
they either fear or despise us too much, to be anxious for a
closer connection. And I beg leave at once, to apprize the
reader, that all I can here, or in any future part of this work,
relate with fidelity of the natives of New South Wales, must be
made up of detached observations, taken at different times, and
not from a regular series of knowledge of the customs and manners
of a people, with whom opportunities of communication are so
scarce, as to have been seldom obtained.</p>
<p>In their persons, they are far from being a stout race of men,
though nimble, sprightly, and vigorous. The deficiency of one of
the fore teeth of the upper jaw, mentioned by Dampier, we have
seen in almost the whole of the men; but their organs of sight so
far from being defective, as that author mentions those of the
inhabitants of the western side of the continent to be, are
remarkably quick and piercing. Their colour, Mr. Cook is inclined
to think rather a deep chocolate, than an absolute black, though
he confesses, they have the appearance of the latter, which he
attributes to the greasy filth their skins are loaded with. Of
their want of cleanliness we have had sufficient proofs, but I am
of opinion, all the washing in the world would not render them
two degrees less black than an African negro. At some of our
first interviews, we had several droll instances of their
mistaking the Africans we brought with us for their own
countrymen.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the disregard they have invariably shewn for
all the finery we could deck them with, they are fond of adorning
themselves with scars, which increase their natural hideousness.
It is hardly possible to see any thing in human shape more ugly,
than one of these savages thus scarified, and farther ornamented
with a fish bone struck through the gristle of the nose. The
custom of daubing themselves with white earth is also frequent
among both sexes: but, unlike the inhabitants of the Islands in
the Pacific Ocean, they reject the beautiful feathers which the
birds of their country afford.</p>
<p>Exclusive of their weapons of offence, and a few stone
hatchets very rudely fashioned, their ingenuity is confined to
manufacturing small nets, in which they put the fish they catch,
and to fish-hooks made of bone, neither of which are unskilfully
executed. On many of the rocks are also to be found delineations
of the figures of men and birds, very poorly cut.</p>
<p>Of the use or benefit of cloathing, these people appear to
have no comprehension, though their sufferings from the climate
they live in, strongly point out the necessity of a covering from
the rigour of the seasons. Both sexes, and those of all ages, are
invariably found naked. But it must not be inferred from this,
that custom so inures them to the changes of the elements, as to
make them bear with indifference the extremes of heat and cold;
for we have had visible and repeated proofs, that the latter
affects them severely, when they are seen shivering, and huddling
themselves up in heaps in their huts, or the caverns of the
rocks, until a fire can be kindled.</p>
<p>Than these huts nothing more rude in construction, or
deficient in conveniency, can be imagined. They consist only of
pieces of bark laid together in the form of an oven, open at one
end, and very low, though long enough for a man to lie at full
length. There is reason, however, to believe, that they depend
less on them for shelter, than on the caverns with which the
rocks abound.</p>
<p>To cultivation of the ground they are utter strangers, and
wholly depend for food on the few fruits they gather; the roots
they dig up in the swamps; and the fish they pick up along shore,
or contrive to strike from their canoes with spears. Fishing,
indeed, seems to engross nearly the whole of their time, probably
from its forming the chief part of a subsistence, which,
observation has convinced us, nothing short of the most painful
labour, and unwearied assiduity, can procure. When fish are
scarce, which frequently happens, they often watch the moment of
our hauling the seine, and have more than once been known to
plunder its contents, in spite of the opposition of those on the
spot to guard it: and this even after having received a part of
what had been caught. The only resource at these times is to shew
a musquet, and if the bare sight is not sufficient, to fire it
over their heads, which has seldom failed of dispersing them
hitherto, but how long the terror which it excites may continue
is doubtful.</p>
<p>The canoes in which they fish are as despicable as their huts,
being nothing more than a large piece of bark tied up at both
ends with vines. Their dexterous management of them, added to the
swiftness with which they paddle, and the boldness that leads
them several miles in the open sea, are, nevertheless, highly
deserving of admiration. A canoe is seldom seen without a fire in
it, to dress the fish by, as soon as caught: fire they procure by
attrition.</p>
<p>From their manner of disposing of those who die, which will be
mentioned hereafter, as well as from every other observation,
there seems no reason to suppose these people cannibals; nor do
they ever eat animal substances in a raw state, unless pressed by
extreme hunger, but indiscriminately broil them, and their
vegetables, on a fire, which renders these last an innocent food,
though in their raw state many of them are of a poisonous
quality: as a poor convict who unguardedly eat of them
experienced, by falling a sacrifice in twenty-four hours
afterwards. If bread be given to the Indians, they chew and spit
it out again, seldom choosing to swallow it. Salt beef and pork
they like rather better, but spirits they never could be brought
to taste a second time.</p>
<p>The only domestic animal they have is the dog, which in their
language is called Dingo, and a good deal resembles the fox dog
of England. These animals are equally shy of us, and attached to
the natives. One of them is now in the possession of the
Governor, and tolerably well reconciled to his new master. As the
Indians see the dislike of the dogs to us, they are sometimes
mischievous enough to set them on single persons whom they chance
to meet in the woods. A surly fellow was one day out shooting,
when the natives attempted to divert themselves in this manner at
his expense. The man bore the teazing and gnawing of the dog at
his heels for some time, but apprehending at length, that his
patience might embolden them to use still farther liberties, he
turned round and shot poor Dingo dead on the spot: the owners of
him set off with the utmost expedition.</p>
<p>There is no part of the behaviour of these people, that has
puzzled us more, than that which relates to their women.
Comparatively speaking we have seen but few of them, and those
have been sometimes kept back with every symptom of jealous
sensibility; and sometimes offered with every appearance of
courteous familiarity. Cautious, however, of alarming the
feelings of the men on so tender a point, we have constantly made
a rule of treating the females with that distance and reserve,
which we judged most likely to remove any impression they might
have received of our intending aught, which could give offence on
so delicate a subject. And so successful have our endeavours
been, that a quarrel on this head has in no instance, that I know
of, happened. The tone of voice of the women, which is pleasingly
soft and feminine, forms a striking contrast to the rough
guttural pronunciation of the men. Of the other charms of the
ladies I shall be silent, though justice obliges me to mention,
that, in the opinion of some amongst us, they shew a degree of
timidity and bashfulness, which are, perhaps, inseparable from
the female character in its rudest state. It is not a little
singular, that the custom of cutting off the two lower joints of
the little finger of the left hand, observed in the Society
Islands, is found here among the women, who have for the most
part undergone this amputation. Hitherto we have not been able to
trace out the cause of this usage. At first we supposed it to be
peculiar to the married women, or those who had borne children;
but this conclusion must have been erroneous, as we have no right
to believe that celibacy prevails in any instance, and some of
the oldest of the women are without this distinction; and girls
of a very tender age are marked by it.</p>
<p>On first setting foot in the country, we were inclined to hold
the spears of the natives very cheap. Fatal experience has,
however, convinced us, that the wound inflicted by this weapon is
not a trivial one; and that the skill of the Indians in throwing
it, is far from despicable. Besides more than a dozen convicts
who have unaccountably disappeared, we know that two, who were
employed as rush cutters up the harbour, were (from what cause we
are yet ignorant) most dreadfully mangled and butchered by the
natives. A spear had passed entirely through the thickest part of
the body of one of them, though a very robust man, and the skull
of the other was beaten in. Their tools were taken away, but some
provisions which they had with them at the time of the murder,
and their cloaths, were left untouched. In addition to this
misfortune, two more convicts, who were peaceably engaged in
picking of greens, on a spot very remote from that where their
comrades suffered, were unawares attacked by a party of Indians,
and before they could effect their escape, one of them was
pierced by a spear in the hip, after which they knocked him down,
and plundered his cloaths. The poor wretch, though dreadfully
wounded, made shift to crawl off, but his companion was carried
away by these barbarians, and his fate doubtful, until a soldier,
a few days afterwards, picked up his jacket and hat in a native's
hut, the latter pierced through by a spear. We have found that
these spears are not made invariably alike, some of them being
barbed like a fish gig, and others simply pointed. In repairing
them they are no less dexterous than in throwing them. A broken
one being given by a gentleman to an Indian, he instantly
snatched up an oyster-shell, and converted it with his teeth into
a tool with which he presently fashioned the spear, and rendered
it fit for use: in performing this operation, the sole of his
foot served him as a work-board. Nor are their weapons of offence
confined to the spear only, for they have besides long wooden
swords, shaped like a sabre, capable of inflicting a mortal
wound, and clubs of an immense size. Small targets, made of the
bark of trees, are likewise now and then to be seen among
them.</p>
<p>From circumstances which have been observed, we have sometimes
been inclined to believe these people at war with each other.
They have more than once been seen assembled, as if bent on an
expedition. An officer one day met fourteen of them marching
along in a regular Indian file through the woods, each man armed
with a spear in his right hand, and a large stone in his left: at
their head appeared a chief, who was distinguished by being
painted. Though in the proportion of five to one of our people
they passed peaceably on.</p>
<p>That their skill in throwing the spear sometimes enables them
to kill the kangaroo we have no right to doubt, as a long
splinter of this weapon was taken out of the thigh of one of
these animals, over which the flesh had completely closed; but we
have never discovered that they have any method of ensnaring
them, or that they know any other beasts but the kangaroo and
dog. Whatever animal is shewn them, a dog excepted, they call
kangaroo: a strong presumption that the wild animals of the
country are very few.</p>
<p>Soon after our arrival at Port Jackson, I was walking out near
a place where I observed a party of Indians, busily employed in
looking at some sheep in an inclosure, and repeatedly crying out,
'kangaroo, kangaroo!' As this seemed to afford them pleasure, I
was willing to increase it by pointing out the horses and cows,
which were at no great distance. But unluckily, at the moment,
some female convicts, employed near the place, made their
appearance, and all my endeavours to divert their attention from
the ladies became fruitless. They attempted not, however, to
offer them the least degree of violence or injury, but stood at
the distance of several paces, expressing very significantly the
manner they were attracted.</p>
<p>It would be trespassing on the reader's indulgence were I to
impose on him an account of any civil regulations, or ordinances,
which may possibly exist among this people. I declare to him,
that I know not of any, and that excepting a little tributary
respect which the younger part appear to pay those more advanced
in years, I never could observe any degrees of subordination
among them. To their religious rites and opinions I am equally a
stranger. Had an opportunity offered of seeing the ceremonies
observed at disposing of the dead, perhaps, some insight might
have been gained; but all that we at present know with certainty
is, that they burn the corpse, and afterwards heap up the earth
around it, somewhat in the manner of the small tumuli, found in
many counties of England.</p>
<p>I have already hinted, that the country is more populous than
it was generally believed to be in Europe at the time of our
sailing. But this remark is not meant to be extended to the
interior parts of the continent, which there is every reason to
conclude from our researches, as well as from the manner of
living practised by the natives, to be uninhabited. It appears as
if some of the Indian families confine their society and
connections within their own pale: but that this cannot always be
the case we know; for on the north-west arm of Botany Bay stands
a village, which contains more than a dozen houses, and perhaps
five times that number of people; being the most considerable
establishment that we are acquainted with in the country. As a
striking proof, besides, of the numerousness of the natives, I
beg leave to state, that Governor Phillip, when on an excursion
between the head of this harbour and that of Botany Bay, once
fell in with a party which consisted of more than three hundred
persons, two hundred and twelve of whom were men: this happened
only on the day following the murder of the two convict rush
cutters, before noticed, and his Excellency was at the very time
in search of the murderers, on whom, could they have been found,
he intended to inflict a memorable and exemplary punishment. The
meeting was unexpected to both parties, and considering the
critical situation of affairs, perhaps not very pleasing to our
side, which consisted but of twelve persons, until the peaceable
disposition of the Indians was manifest. After the strictest
search the Governor was obliged to return without having gained
any information. The laudable perseverance of his Excellency to
throw every light on this unhappy and mysterious business did
not, however stop here, for he instituted the most rigorous
inquiry to find out, if possible, whether the convicts had at any
time ill treated or killed any of the natives; and farther,
issued a proclamation, offering the most tempting of all rewards,
a state of freedom, to him who should point out the murderer, in
case such an one existed.</p>
<p>I have thus impartially stated the situation of matters, as
they stand, while I write, between the natives and us; that
greater progress in attaching them to us has not been made, I
have only to regret; but that all ranks of men have tried to
effect it, by every reasonable effort from which success might
have been expected, I can testify; nor can I omit saying, that in
the higher stations this has been eminently conspicuous. The
public orders of Governor Phillip have invariably tended to
promote such a behaviour on our side, as was most likely to
produce this much wished-for event. To what cause then are we to
attribute the distance which the accomplishment of it appears at?
I answer, to the fickle, jealous, wavering disposition of the
people we have to deal with, who, like all other savages, are
either too indolent, too indifferent, or too fearful to form an
attachment on easy terms, with those who differ in habits and
manners so widely from themselves. Before I close the subject, I
cannot, however, omit to relate the following ludicrous
adventure, which possibly may be of greater use in effecting what
we have so much at heart, than all our endeavours.</p>
<p>Some young gentlemen belonging to the Sirius one day met a
native, an old man, in the woods; he had a beard of considerable
length, which his new acquaintance gave him to understand, by
signals, they would rid him of, if he pleased; stroaking their
chins, and shewing him the smoothness of them at the same time;
at length the old Indian consented, and one of the youngsters
taking a penknife from his pocket, and making use of the best
substitute for lather he could find, performed the operation with
great success, and, as it proved, much to the liking of the old
man, who in a few days after reposed a confidence in us, of which
we had hitherto known no example, by paddling along-side the
Sirius in his canoe, and pointing to his beard. Various arts were
ineffectually tried to induce him to enter the ship; but as he
continued to decline the invitation, a barber was sent down into
the boat along-side the canoe, from whence, leaning over the
gunnel, he complied with the wish of the old beau, to his
infinite satisfaction. In addition to the consequences which our
sanguine hopes led us to expect from this dawning of cordiality,
it affords proof, that the beard is considered by this people
more as an incumbrance than a mark of dignity.</p>
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