lawn than the bed of a river. It had two gum-trees
in the centre of its channel, in one of which the
floods had left the trunk of a large tree. We
could discover where it narrowed and its banks rose,
but, as we intended to make a closer examination before
we left the neighbourhood, we continued our journey
down the principal channel. The ground exhibited
an abundance of pasture in its immediate neighbourhood,
but the distant country was miserably poor and bare.
At about three miles, we came upon the fresh traces
of some natives, which led us to the channel again,
from which we had wandered unintentionally. In
it we found there had been water very lately, and
it appeared that the natives had dug holes at the bottom
to insure a longer supply. These were now exhausted,
but still retained the appearance of moisture.
At a mile and a half beyond these, we were led to
some similar holes, by observing a number of birds
flying about them. The water was too muddy for
us to drink, but the horses emptied them successively.
We now kept sufficiently near the channel to insure
our seeing any pool that might still remain in it,
but rode for about seven miles before we again saw
water, and even here, although it was a spring, we
were obliged to dig holes, and await their filling,
before we could get sufficient for our use. Having
dined, we again pursued our journey, and almost immediately
came upon a long narrow ditch, full of water, and lined
by bulrushes. The creek or river had for some
time kept the centre of a deep alluvial valley, in
which there was plenty of food for the cattle, and
which, at this place, was apparently broader than anywhere
else. The situation being favourable, we returned
to the camp, and reached it late.
Depression of the men.
I do not know whether I was wrong in my conjecture,
but I fancied, about this time, that the men generally
were desponding. Whether it was that the constant
fatigue entailed on myself and Mr. Hume, and that our
constant absence, or the consequent exhaustion it
produced, had any effect on their minds, or that they
feared the result of our perseverance, is difficult
to say; but certainly, they all had a depression of
spirits, and looked, I thought, altered in appearance;
nor did they evince any satisfaction at our success—at
least, not the satisfaction they would have shown at
an earlier period of our journey.
Before moving forward, it remained for us to ascertain
if the channel from the junction was the Castlereagh,
or only a creek. The intersection of so many
channels in this neighbourhood, most of them so much
alike, made it essentially necessary that we should
satisfy ourselves on this point. Mr. Hume, therefore,
accompanied me, as had at first been intended the
morning of our return to the place at which we had
slept. We took fresh horses, but dispensed with
any other attendants, and indeed went wholly unarmed.
Camp of natives.