Produced by Col Choat and Stuart Kidd
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A NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION TO BOTANY BAY
by Watkin Tench
INTRODUCTION
In offering this little tract to the public, it is equally the writer's wish to conduce to their amusement and information.
The expedition on which he is engaged has excited much curiosity, and given birth to many speculations, respecting the consequences to arise from it. While men continue to think freely, they will judge variously. Some have been sanguine enough to foresee the most beneficial effects to the Parent State, from the Colony we are endeavouring to establish; and some have not been wanting to pronounce the scheme big with folly, impolicy, and ruin. Which of these predictions will be completed, I leave to the decision of the public. I cannot, however, dismiss the subject without expressing a hope, that the candid and liberal of each opinion, induced by the humane and benevolent intention in which it originated, will unite in waiting the result of a fair trial to an experiment, no less new in its design, than difficult in its execution.
As this publication enters the world with the name of the author, candour will, he trusts, induce its readers to believe, that no consideration could weigh with him in an endeavour to mislead them. Facts are related simply as they happened, and when opinions are hazarded, they are such as, he hopes, patient inquiry, and deliberate decision, will be found to have authorised. For the most part he has spoken from actual observation; and in those places where the relations of others have been unavoidably adopted. He has been careful to search for the truth, and repress that spirit of exaggeration which is almost ever the effect of novelty on ignorance.
The nautical part of the work is comprized in as few pages as possible. By the professional part of my readers this will be deemed judicious; and the rest will not, I believe, be dissatisfied at its brevity. I beg leave, however, to say of the astronomical calculations, that they may be depended on with the greatest degree of security, as they were communicated by an officer, who was furnished with instruments, and commissioned by the Board of Longitude, to make observations during the voyage, and in the southern hemisphere.
An unpractised writer is generally anxious to bespeak public attention, and to solicit public indulgence. Except on professional subjects, military men are, perhaps, too fearful of critical censure. For the present narrative no other apology is attempted, than the intentions of its author, who has endeavoured not only to satisfy present curiosity, but to point out to future adventurers, the favourable, as well as adverse circumstances which will attend their settling here. The candid, it is hoped, will overlook the inaccuracies of this imperfect sketch, drawn amidst the complicated duties of the service in which the Author is engaged, and make due allowance for the want of opportunity of gaining more extensive information.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany-Bay
- 2: Immediately on their being embarked
- 3: They were hailed and told from the Sirius
- 4: He prefers residing at Teneriffe
- 5: Having remained a week at Teneriffe
- 6: And stood in to gain an anchorage in Port Praya Bay
- 7: Are little flattering to Portugueze beauty
- 8: I was one evening walking with a Portuguese officer
- 9: Poultry is not remarkably cheap
- 10: When contrasted with Rio de Janeiro
- 11: From the excessive dearness of many of the articles
- 12: Which Captain Furneaux named the Mewstone and Swilly
- 13: And an Account of the Country about Botany Bay
- 14: And our apprehensions banished
- 15: And afterwards felt his cloaths
- 16: With the Disembarkation of the Marines and Convicts
- 17: With a large body of convicts encamped near him
- 18: To the latitude of 10 deg 37 min south
- 19: And consisted of the judge Advocate
- 20: For the trial of offences committed on the high seas
- 21: A Description of the Natives of New South Wales
- 22: Than these huts nothing more rude in construction
- 23: Which in their language is called Dingo
- 24: Or that they know any other beasts but the kangaroo and dog
- 25: For on the north west arm of Botany Bay stands a village
- 26: Than honourable to Monsieur De Perrouse
- 27: Longitude 159 deg 4 min east of Greenwich
- 28: By proceeding on a more contracted scale
- 29: To take on board turtle for the settlement
- 30: As a convict of the name of Corbet
- 31: Commend my soul to the Divine mercy
- 32: A variety of flowering shrubs abound
- 33: Whose account of the emu is the only one I can refer to
- 34: When young the kangaroo eats tender and well flavoured
- 35: Temporary wooden storehouses covered with thatch or shingles
- 36: And the centinels called out on their posts All's well
- 37: Were it indeed possible to transport that of Norfolk Island
- 38: By some flax dressers among us
