Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 261 pages of information about Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia — Volume 2.

Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 261 pages of information about Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia — Volume 2.
but the channel had become so narrow that, although the banks were not of increased height, we were involved in comparative darkness, under a close arch of trees, and a danger was hardly seen ere we were hurried past it, almost without the possibility of avoiding it.  The reach at the head of which we stopped, was crowded with the trunks of trees, the branches of which crossed each other in every direction, nor could I hope, after a minute examination of the channel, to succeed in taking the boats safely down so intricate a passage.

Dangerous navigation of the Morumbidgee.

We rose in the morning with feelings of apprehension, and uncertainty; and, indeed, with great doubts on our minds whether we were not thus early destined to witness the wreck, and the defeat of the expedition.  The men got slowly and cautiously into the boat, and placed themselves so as to leave no part of her undefended.  Hopkinson stood at the bow, ready with poles to turn her head from anything upon which she might be drifting.  Thus prepared, we allowed her to go with the stream.  By extreme care and attention on the part of the men we passed this formidable barrier.  Hopkinson in particular exerted himself, and more than once leapt from the boat upon apparently rotten logs of wood, that I should not have judged capable of bearing his weight, the more effectually to save the boat.  It might have been imagined that where such a quantity of timber had accumulated, a clearer channel would have been found below, but such was not the case.  In every reach we had to encounter fresh difficulties.  In some places huge trees lay athwart the stream, under whose arched branches we were obliged to pass; but, generally speaking, they had been carried, roots foremost, by the current, and, therefore, presented so many points to receive us, that, at the rate at which we were going, had we struck full upon any one of them, it would have gone through and through the boat.  About noon we stopped to repair, or rather to take down the remains of our awning, which had been torn away; and to breathe a moment from the state of apprehension and anxiety in which our minds had been kept during the morning.  About one, we again started.  The men looked anxiously out ahead; for the singular change in the river had impressed on them an idea, that we were approaching its termination, or near some adventure.  On a sudden, the river took a general southern direction, but, in its tortuous course, swept round to every point of the compass with the greatest irregularity.  We were carried at a fearful rate down its gloomy and contracted banks, and, in such a moment of excitement, had little time to pay attention to the country through which we were passing.  It was, however, observed, that chalybeate-springs were numerous close to the water’s edge.  At 3 p.m., Hopkinson called out that we were approaching a junction, and in less than a minute afterwards, we were hurried into a broad and noble river.

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Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.