hope to see the Morumbidgee all that it had been described
to me, yet I felt that on its first appearance I should
in some measure ground my anticipations of ultimate
success. When I arrived on the banks of the Macquarie,
it had almost ceased to flow, and its current was
so gentle as to be scarcely perceptible. Instead,
however, of a river in such a state of exhaustion,
I now looked down upon a stream, whose current it would
have been difficult to breast, and whose waters, foaming
among rocks, or circling in eddies, gave early promise
of a reckless course. It must have been somewhat
below its ordinary level, and averaged a breadth of
about 80 feet. Its waters were hard and transparent,
and its bed was composed of mountain debris, and large
fragments of rock. As soon as the morning dawned,
the tents were struck and we pursued our journey.
We followed the line of the river, until we found
ourselves in a deep bight to the S.E. The hills
that had been gradually closing in upon the river,
now approached it so nearly, that there was no room
for the passage of the drays. We were consequently
obliged to turn back, and, moving along the base of
the ranges, by which we were thus apparently enclosed,
we at length found a steep pass, the extreme narrowness
of which had hidden it from our observation.
By this pass we were now enabled to effect our escape.
On gaining the summit of the hills, we travelled south
for three or four miles, through open forests, and
on level ground. But we ultimately descended
into a valley in which we halted for the night.
On a closer examination of the neighbourhood, it appeared
that our position was at the immediate junction of
two valleys, where, uniting the waters of their respective
creeks, the main branch declines rapidly towards the
river. One of these valleys extended to to the
S.W., the other to the W.N.W. It was evident
to us that our route lay up the former; and I made
no doubt we should easily reach Whaby’s station
on the morrow.
Adjacent country.
We were now far beyond the acknowledged limits of
the located parts of the colony, and Mr. Whaby’s
station was the last at which we could expect even
the casual supply of milk or other trifling relief.
Yet, although the prospect of so soon leaving even
the outskirts of civilization, and being wholly thrown
on our own resources, was so near, it never for a moment
weighed upon the minds of the men. The novelty
of the scenery, and the beauty of the river on which
they were journeying, excited in them the liveliest
anticipations of success. The facility with which
we had hitherto pushed forward blinded them to future
difficulties, nor could there be a more cheerful spectacle
than that which the camp daily afforded. The
animals browzing in the distance, and the men talking
over their pipes of the probable adventures they might
encounter. The loads had by this time settled
properly, and our provisions proved of the very best
quality, so that no possible improvement could have
been made for the better.