Cattle Chosen: The Story of the First Group Settlement in Western Australia, 1829 to 1841Situated near Busselton; Chapter on the Bussels relations with the natives 1834; Govt. law at Augusta. |
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Page 1
... Lenox , the navy . What was to be done for Charles , Vernon and Alfred , aged at their father's death nine , six , and four ? The girls , Mary , Frances , and Elizabeth would presum- B ably marry in due course . Their father had ...
... Lenox , the navy . What was to be done for Charles , Vernon and Alfred , aged at their father's death nine , six , and four ? The girls , Mary , Frances , and Elizabeth would presum- B ably marry in due course . Their father had ...
Page 2
... Lenox , as a young naval officer on Mediterranean stations , seem to have been less than true . Mother and daughters , living largely with relatives in the Thames Valley , at Portsea and at Plymouth , kept up appearances and practised ...
... Lenox , as a young naval officer on Mediterranean stations , seem to have been less than true . Mother and daughters , living largely with relatives in the Thames Valley , at Portsea and at Plymouth , kept up appearances and practised ...
Page 28
... Lenox Bussell and his sisters , Frances and Bessie , to join their brothers in Australia , suggests that of Mr. Greatheart and his companions on their way to join Christian in the Celestial City . They set out in the sailing ship ...
... Lenox Bussell and his sisters , Frances and Bessie , to join their brothers in Australia , suggests that of Mr. Greatheart and his companions on their way to join Christian in the Celestial City . They set out in the sailing ship ...
Page 29
... Lenox's experience , the ship's com- pany all found the fruits of the landing - party's exertions a very agreeable variety in their diet . Penguins , too , were brought off from St. Paul's . They are , ' thinks Miss Fanny quite solemnly ...
... Lenox's experience , the ship's com- pany all found the fruits of the landing - party's exertions a very agreeable variety in their diet . Penguins , too , were brought off from St. Paul's . They are , ' thinks Miss Fanny quite solemnly ...
Page 30
... Lenox at the Swan , Mrs. Bussell in England was learning , from another source , of the high esteem in which John and his brothers stood . George Miller , a surgeon , re- ported from London having fallen in with a naval officer from ...
... Lenox at the Swan , Mrs. Bussell in England was learning , from another source , of the high esteem in which John and his brothers stood . George Miller , a surgeon , re- ported from London having fallen in with a naval officer from ...
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Common terms and phrases
aboriginal acres Adelphi arrived Augusta Barsey beautiful Bessie Bessie's Blackwood Blackwood River boat boys breakfast brothers brought Bussell family Bussell's Busselton butter Cape Leeuwin Capel Carter Captain Molloy Captain Toby Cattle Chosen Chapmans Charlotte colonists colony commenced cows Dawson dear diary dinner dogs Ellen England Fanny Bussell Fanny's farm fire fish flour forest Fremantle garden Gaywal Geographe Bay Governor Stirling Green hope horse J. G. Bussell jarrah John Bussell John Garrett Bussell John's kangaroo King George's Sound labour land Larkham Layman Lenox Leschenault letter living look Mamma Mary McDermott miles Miss morning natives night party Pearce Perth Pinjarra pork pounds savage servant settlement settlers sheep ship soldiers spear Sunday Swan River things timber trees Turner Vasse Vasse River Vernon and Alfred Western Australia whalers wheat William Marchant Yulika
Popular passages
Page 140 - Their scent, and rustle down their perfumed showers Of bloom on the bent grass where I am laid, And bower me from the August sun with shade*; And the eye travels down to Oxford's towers. And near me on the grass lies Glanvil's book — Come, let me read the oft-read tale again ! The story of the Oxford scholar poor, Of pregnant parts...
Page 41 - Yes, this is easy; but to help the young soul, add energy, inspire hope, and blow the coals into a useful flame; to redeem defeat by new thought, by firm action, that is not easy, that is the work of divine men.
Page 107 - I OFT have heard of Lydford law, How in the morn they hang and draw, And sit in judgment after : At first I wondered at it much; But since I find the reason such, As it deserves no laughter.
Page 50 - The sound of rushing waters proclaimed a rapid near. Walking therefore a short distance up the stream we found what we sought, a passage over. ' Here was a spot that the creative fancy of a Greek would have peopled with Dryad and Naiad and all the beautiful phantoms and wild imagery of his sylvan mythology. Wide waving lawns were sloping down to the water's edge. Trees thick and entangled were stooping over the banks. One in the centre of the rapids had taken root...
Page 50 - ... in colour ; grass was plentiful, and the clover I have noted above, with its bright scarlet and yellow flower, the daisy, buttercup, and a purple marygold. The whole effect reminded me of that confusion of rich tints that are produced in the Indian loam, and as I looked upon it, I could not feel but inclined to believe that such a scene as this must have presented to the imagination of the Hindoo, the high colouring of his fabric, and the prototype of the gaudy chintz. Half a mile brought us...
Page 33 - Off I went to tear down the books. Ally and Len pulled out the piano, tables and chairs. Emma got everything out of the kitchen. I ran to look after my dear crockery. Len cut down your cot. I was endowed with some unnatural strength, took your mattress, my own and our bedding, and rushed out of the room.
Page 51 - ... over which the waters tumbled ; its bended trunks and tortuous roots seemed to indicate that it had struggled more than once to gain the perpendicular form, from which it had been thrust by the rude torrents, which at certain periods evidently pour down this obstruction to the free flow of the river. About a hundred or two hundred yards on the other side, we obtained a sight of the sea bearing NW The country here was so clear that a farmer could hardly grudge the fine spreading trees of the red...
Page 31 - Instead of anyone or anything for the Swan, I should say selectness and refinement are more prevalent than in England. Yet no one scruples to assist in the duties of the
Page 122 - Bay a distance of fourteen miles. I did the best for them that I could in the way of meals and shakesdown, but my arrangements gave me more trips up the ladder to our upper storey than I quite liked. When they took their leave of me next morning I certainly thought that their backs were cordial. The Frenchman, I am sure, expected that 1 should have required his attendance before morning... " Just two years after settling at Candyup the Taylors' quiet existence was shattered.
Page 122 - Cheyne, Mr Morley, Mr Drake, and the doctor of a French whaler. They were all dreadfully tired and famished with hunger, having been lost in the bush since daylight, coming from Two People Bay, a distance of 14 miles.