A
corroboree—Discomforts of camp life—Treatment of the natives—
The native police—British pluck and Christian
courage—How the blacks are dealt
with.
One
evening after a tremendous meal of turtle-flesh
and shell-fish, with wild plums by way of dessert, and
with the promise of several bottles of grog and a
pipeful of tobacco for each man, the tribe numbering from
sixty to seventy men, turned out in full fighting
costume, consisting simply of streaks of white
pipeclay daubed in eccentric patterns over the rude wiry
frame, with here and there a hideous blotch of red
clay or yellow ochre to relieve
the monotony of the more simple
black and white. One or two, whose native
modesty or sartorial resources were greater than those
of their poorer brethren, added a few cockatoo
plumes to their spiral ringlets,
and stood forth magnificently
arrayed in nature's garments. Standing in a circle,
with fires of bark gleaming fitfully all through the
camp ; the sombre mass of shadow from the pathless
bush forming a weird background; the rows of
ragged, haggard, withered "gins"
squatting on their hams, with
their rags around them, more repulsive in their
dirt and ugliness than any mob of ourang-outangs, the
picture was truly a wild one. They have no musical
instruments; but the gins, in a shrill treble,
begin a wailing song, with
long-drawn cadences, abrupt stops, and sudden rises and falls, ending in a
prolonged half- guttural hum and
peculiar liquid half-ringing sound,
like y'ling, y'ling, y'ling, not at all unlike in
modulation and tone, to the faint far-off murmur of a church
bell.
The men,
with their deep bass, then join in, and
each cadence is so distinctly graduated, each sudden
break so entirely in accord, each stamp of the
foot, each motion of the body so
homogeneous, that the time is
absolutely perfect. It seems, however, to come
naturally to them. Next the gins beat time, by slapping
a folded piece of cloth held tightly between the
thighs, whilst some of them clash two boomerangs
together with a sharp click, which sounds
something like the music of rude
castanets.
They go
through all sorts of antics—stamp the foot
on the ground like a deer when it is alarmed; sway
the body from side to side; raise, extend,
depress, or wave their hands and
arms; but all act in the most
complete concert, and all seem actuated by but one
idea. "When the leader makes a faint chirruping sound,
the men stop singing, but redouble their violent
antics, whilst the excitement
gets greater and greater. Leaving the ranks, they spin round, toss their
arms, stamp their feet, shout
out hoarse cries of encouragement and
approbation to each other; the shrill wailing treble of
the women audible through it all. The dusky forms,
with their streaks of ghastly white, whirl and
gyrate in quaint outlandish
evolutions. The camp-fires flicker
and flare, and while the dance and sOng culminate in
a fierce outburst of cries and howls, the myriads
of stars look down on the lonely
bush, and the cold night- wind
sweeps by in moaning gusts. At the end of each
corroboree the men go through any amount of laughing
criticism on each other's performances, and then
they prepare for the next representation. Each
corroboree is a complete act in itself, and is supposed to
represent some event in their daily life. It was
to me one of the most absorbing
sights I had ever seen; and the
evident interest we took in their doings seemed
much to delight the poor savages.
Camping-out, however, is not without its reverse
side; it is a hard, uncomfortable life. Sandflies and
mosquitoes, when one is without curtains at night,
are most intolerable plagues.
The humpies are, after all, but
poor substitutes for a neat little well-furnished
cottage. There is not a chair in the camp, sheets are
a luxury unknown, and if you expect to have your
' boots blacked, the nearest approach to that
operation will be to rub them
yourself with a piece of putrid
shark's fat.
When a
shark gets into the nets, the haul is certainly
exciting; and the shooting at rabbit, Wonga-pigeon,
or bush-turkey is not bad : but the long walk
through the mud, with the hot
sun scorching you; the weary
pull out to the nets and back, with black, rank tobacco
as your only standby, rather takes the romance out
of the affair. One soon gets a
surfeit of it, and begins to
long again for the comforts and conveniences of
city life.
The
treatment of the poor dusky aborigines, by the
Queensland government, indeed their treatment by the
Australian governments generally, is not a matter
for much pride or
congratulation. We occasionally hear
with a thrill of horror, that another parcel of redskins
have been " wiped out " by the United States
soldiers. Well-meaning
philanthropists make spasmodic but
abortive efforts at intervals • to get government to
interfere actively in abrogating slavery in Cuba, but
few, very few, ordinary newspaper readers, we
imagine, at home, ever give a
thought to the poor "black fellows" of Queensland, and yet the Queensland
government stands charged with a callous disregard of their
first duty towards these fast-lessening tribes of
savages, and with the systematic
perpetration of abominable
cruelties, that would disgrace even Tartar, Zulu, or
Bashi-Bazouk. The facts are well known among
Queen slanders themselves. But the black fellows
are repulsive clients. They are
not interesting proteges to the
squatter aristocracy, the money-grubbing storekeepers, or the polemical
sectaries who in many cases
represent religion. The working man has not arisen
in his might, to claim them on the platform of Man
and Brother. " Let it slide," says expediency and
indifference; and so the poor savages are fast
being "improved off" the face of
the earth. There is no room for
them on their native soil. Civilization in the
shape of cattle and sheep, stockriders, wandering
diggers, and goldsprospectors, find that their presence is
incompatible with its requirements, and the
survival of the fittest receives
another illustration of its stern
logic.
A clever
and authoritative writer in The Australian
magazine, on this subject says,—
"Probably
no worse system of dealing with aboriginal races has ever been adopted than
that in use in Australia; and
the system is probably worse at the
present time than it ever was. Our authorities maintain,
systematically, one function of government, and
one only, in dealing with the first residents, and that
is, extermination. This action, as a policy, is of
course neither professed nor
acknowledged, very likely the circumstances in connexion with it are not
even known to many of the
functionaries who conduct the formal
official routine; but still the work goes on regularly."
He goes on
to describe the modus operandi, with all
the graphic vividness of one who knows his facts, and
can vouch for their accuracy. His expose amounts
to a virtual impeachment of the
Queensland government. The
superintendent of the absentee squatter is a man
who may never have seen a black fellow in his life.
"His instructions, if he have any," pursues the
writer, "are, if he anticipates
annoyance from the blacks, to
send for the native police. If he should chance on
signs of their being in the neighbourhood, he sends for
the officer in charge at once. If a travelling
tribe has crossed the run, it is
possible that they may have
startled the cattle off their camps, and in the season
when bullocks are 'topping up,' such a scare may
take from off the fat mob—say
three hundred beasts—something like four pounds of tallow each, worth four
pence per pound; a value of some
twenty pounds sterling, a very
serious matter."
Therefore
the missive is sent, and Lieutenant Blood,
with Gigwa, Wabrigan, and the rest of the gang, ride
up some day soon. Each of the troopers has one
spur only; consequently, one
side of the horse goes faster
than the other, and the result is a peculiar amble,
called the "Policeman's jog."
They
arrive at the "station."
Next
morning they take a circuit of ten miles, and
quarter the ground back and forward till they hit on a
solitary track; they run this track with a speed
and certainty that the trained
bloodhound alone can equal, no impress on the soil, no bent blade of grass
escapes them; presently more
tracks join, all going in the
same direction; they dismount and hobble their horses
in a hollow. Wabrigan and Charley peel themselves
of every rag of uniform, and glide on a-head,
crawling and dodging; they come
back in an hour, there is a camp
of blacks on the edge of a scrub two miles off.
By the first streak of day the party is mounted, and.
they push quietly but rapidly over the ground.
When the smoke of the fires is
seen, they rush in at the gallop,
The alarm is given: the camp is empty in a few seconds;
but the troopers are off their horses and into
the scrub carbine in hand, throwing off their clothes
as they go in hot pursuit. The Lieutenant waits
outside, smoking his pipe, and meditating over the deal
for the " azeppa" colt, which he has opened with
the Super.
"Shots are
heard; the troopers come back after an
interval; they have cut off some half-dozen of the last
of the fugitives, and their dead bodies are lying
in nameless gullies under bush
and thicket.
"The
leading men of the tribe have, of course, escaped; broken-hearted women and
wailing children shriek to
heaven and appeal against the horrible
' white-fellow.' { They had touched neither him nor
his bullocks—what a fearful God is the God of the
white man—what a powerful fiend he must be!'
"'Walli,
walli, areiro! the days of the blacks are
numbered. We are slaughtered to feed the dogs, to
fatten the bullocks of the white man!'
"Now, it
is possible enough that Brown himself never
pulled a trigger on a black, and it is as likely as not
that he may never even hear of what Blood's men
have done in the way of 'duty.'
Besides, he would be infinitely shocked and indignant if any one proposed to
hold him accountable for what took place at the
edge of that scrub.
"Moreover,
his proprietors never know anything
about the matter, and being merely business speculators,
working the station with bank-money, they
consider that questions of policy and humanity in
reference to the blacks are the very last matters that
they have anything to do with. Blacks on our
property! why, then, they are trespassing. It's clearly
the business of the authorities to turn them off.'
That's all they know or understand about the
matter.
"Meantime,
these half-dozen bronze corpses lie in
their blood in that acacia thicket, and so it is because
the tribe they belong to, or some other tribe
unknoiv?i, are suspected of
leaving gone near the Gondary cattle-camp.
"Of course
this is no business of the station-owners,
or of any one else—their concern with Gondary is simply
one of pounds, shillings, and pence, and as long
as the money comes out right,
what more is wanted?
"So the
station is sold at a profit to somebody else,
who works on in the same way, and Brown's proprietors
pocket each 10,000L clear gain; and they are
generally complimented on their ' pluck and enterprise,'
and at public dinners they invariably reply to
all toasts given to pioneers and squatters.
"And this
is the way that our standard religion of
the nineteenth century deals with the facts of life and
humanity."
The above
is written by a hard-headed, practical
Scotchman, who knows the country well, and has lived
in the interior for many years. He is not likely
to under-estimatc the predatory
proclivities and treacherous, bloodthirsty character of the aborigines, but
surely his picture, which-is on overdrawn sketch, constitutes a grave
impeachment of a professedly Christian
and civilized government, and steps should surely be
taken by the Queensland executive to remove this
heavy reproach from their door.
That the
picture is not overdrawn, my own experience and knowledge bear witness. Not
long ago near Cooktown, almost
within gunshot of a populous
town, a whole tribe of poor black fellows were shot
down in cold blood. Several of the wretched creatures,
to escape the bullets of the police, swam out to
sea and never returned to shore.
The sharks probably had a feast.
Out of a party of thirty-five men, women,
and children, if I remember rightly, only three women
and one child were allowed to escape the revolvers
and "persuasions" of the police.
On another
occasion in northern Queensland, two
white men had been speared. The whites met and
determined to hunt the blacks out of the district. A party
was organized. They were armed with revolvers.
Well mounted and fully equipped, they set out on
their expedition. They were not
desirous of making captives. They did not know the guilty parties. Their
object was to take black lives, and they cared not
a jot whether the innocent
suffered with the guilty. Could
the fiercest' Corsican vendetta, stretched to its
extremest limit, equal this? Our brave guerillas then
went forth on their mission of blood. They were
sober British subjects, not Indians on the
war-path, not Zulus or Arab
slave-stealers, but Queensland borderers. They came upon' a tribe of blacks
camped near a water-hole, as the
lagoons or desert pools are
there called. Fearful of reprisals, if they were the
guilty parties, or apprehensive of danger at the
hands of the whites, the black
men, many of them, took to the
water, and diving like water-fowl, tried to elude
the bullets of their foes. It was a vain hope. Our
gallant band of white men surrounded the
water-hole and deliberately
"potted" the poor wretches, as they
swam about in wild terror, and in that one water-hole
fifty black fellows were murdered in cold blood by
these heroic pioneers of progress.
The white
man has ousted the black fellow from
his own ancestral domain. In nine cases out of ten,
he is himself the aggressor. In any case he is the
more educated, the stronger, the more enlightened;
to his eternal infamy be it
said, he is often the more
bloodthirsty, cruel, treacherous, and savage. My story
is true. My informant had it from the unblushing
lips of a participant in the dastardly deed.
The
commissioner of police in his report for last
year, 1878, says, "The complaints of cattle-killing
and hut-robbing by the blacks along the northern
coast, from Cairns to the north
of Cooktown, are never ending, and never will cease as long as there are
blachs there." The italics are
mine. "The whole coast from the
Mulgrave to the Mossman, is studded with timber-getters and settlers, by
whom the blacks are disturbed
and prevented from obtaining their natural food in
that direction, while on the other side of the range the
country is all occupied by small cattle-stations,
which again cut them off from their hunting and fresh-water
fishing-grounds. The intervening scrub is small,
affording but a scanty supply of fruits in their
season, and the natives are thus
literally starving, and take
advantage of the cover afforded by the scrub to make
sudden raids on the cattle and huts, which is
rendered more easy by the carelessness of the owners, the huts
being left unguarded and the stations
insufficiently looked after. Too
much dependence is placed on the
police, and too much expected from them, the ordinary
precautions that all persons should take for the
safety of their lives and
property being almost systematically
neglected."
The last
paragraph, part of an extract from "The
Queenslander," is pregnant with meaning, and affords
but one more instance of the cursed system of
centralization, and beggarly dependence on government,
in every affair of life, from building a bridge or
courthouse, down to putting up a fence or locking a stable-door, which is
one of the most contemptible characteristics of colonial national life. But
of this more anon. |