Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria.

Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria.

There was comparatively little damage during the day of smaller things, prior to the gold.  Still, even then, the characteristics told, in the reluctance to resolve upon action in any departure from the red tape of the beaten track, in a young settlement of men nearly all in the exuberant prime of life, and almost daily called upon, amongst Australian peculiarities, to confront their novel circumstances.  For instance, upon rumours, oft repeated, that there was good workable coal at Western Port, a party is formed, with capital in readiness, to give the case a thorough testing; and they, as of course, apply to the Government to give them all those aids and concessions, or, at least, a sufficiency of them, which could most easily have been given in that quarter, for Mr. La Trobe was practically the Government.  He referred the matter to Mr. Crown-Solicitor Croke, to ascertain what might be the legal impediments.  Impediments, obstacles, difficulties!  But who had asked for them?  The application had been for facilities.  Of course, Mr. C.S.  Croke, as instructed, and with all the facility of any lawyer worth his salt, duly found the required impediments; and so the disturbing enemy was defeated, and the Government left at rest.

But when the goldfields’ grand drama of progress opened, when thousands promptly flowed into Victoria from neighbouring colonies, and, a little later on, ten thousands from Home, this chariness of action, this resolute irresolution, or, in Ollivier’s description of his master Napoleon, before he, in an unlucky moment, swayed over to his side, this “obstinate indecision,” proved sadly damaging to the colony, although indeed, under all the circumstances, it was hardly possible for any obstacle whatever to arrest materially its marvellous growth.  Of course, the interest of a colony, thus enviably favoured, was to settle as best it could this throng of enterprising humanity over its vast and all but empty areas, and that could only have been done by prompt and adequate access to the land.  But some current differences as to the bearing or rights of squatting leases gave the Governor—­the Superintendent being now in that higher position—­the too ready excuse for his infirmity of indecision.  Even the squatting difficulty, which could have been easily removed by a reserve of compensation for whatever of it might have been real, was only one part, perhaps not even the chief part, of the wretched case.  Acres by the million, on either side, along the busy highways, and around the many goldfield outbreaks, small and great, from which the live stock, where there had been any, were now all driven away, might have been brought to market at once without real injury to any interest.  The squatters, naturally enough, sided with the Governor, giving him an encouraging semblance of public principle; for did not the one-third of united Crown Officials and Crown Nominateds, plus the Crown Tenants, in our first so-called representative Legislature, show, on this question, a small majority for “the Crown?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.