I was in no instance able to descend; their brinks
were perfectly steep and overhanging, and in many
places enormous masses appeared severed by deep cracks
from the main land, and requiring but a slight touch
to plunge them into the abyss below. As far as
I have yet been along these cliffs, I have seen nothing
in their appearance to lead me to suppose that any
portion of them is composed of chalk. Immediately
along their summits, and for a few hundred yards back,
very numerous pieces of pure flint are lying loosely
scattered upon the surface of the limestone. How
they obtained so elevated a position, or whence they
are from, may admit, perhaps, of some speculation.
Back from the sea, and as far as the eye could reach,
the country was level and generally open, with some
low prickly bushes and salsolaceous plants growing
upon it; here and there patches of the gum scrub shewed
themselves, and among which a few small grassy openings
were interspersed. The whole of this tract was
thickly covered by small land shells, about the size
of snail shells—and some of them somewhat
resembling those in shape. There were no sudden
depressions or abrupt elevations anywhere; neither
hills, trees, or water were to be observed; nor was
there the least indication of improvement or change
in the general character of this desolate and forbidding
region. The natives we met with at the head of
the Bight were very friendly, and readily afforded
us every information we required—as far
as we could make them comprehend our wishes.
“We most distinctly understood from them, that
there was no water along the coast, westerly, for
ten of their days’ journeys; and that inland,
there was neither fresh nor salt water, hills or timber,
as far as they had ever been; an account which but
too well agreed with the opinion I had myself formed,
upon ascertaining that the same dreary, barren region
I had been traversing so long, still continued at a
point where I had ever looked forward to some great
and important change taking place in the features
of the country, and from which I had hoped I might
eventually have accomplished the object for which the
expedition was fitted out. Such, however, was
not the case; there was not any improvement in the
appearance of the country, or the least indication
that there might be a change for the better, within
any practicable distance. I had already examined
the tract of country from the longitude of Adelaide,
to the parallel of almost 130 degrees E. longitude;
an extent comprising nearly 8 1/2 degrees of longitude;
without my having found a single point from which
it was possible to penetrate for into the interior;
and I now find myself in circumstances of so embarrassing
and hopeless a character, that I have most reluctantly
been compelled to give up all further idea of contending
with obstacles which there is no reasonable hope of
ever overcoming. I have now, therefore, with much
regret completely broken up my small but devoted party.
Two of my men returned to Adelaide in the Waterwitch,
five weeks ago.