Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- MEMOIR
- INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- CHAPTER I BOMBAY TO JUBBULPORE
- CHAPTER II HYDERABAD AND POONA
- CHAPTER III BOMBAY
- CHAPTER IV BOMBAY TO GOA
- CHAPTER V COLOMBO
- CHAPTER VI RANGOON
- CHAPTER VII LABUAN
- CHAPTER VIII ELEOPURA
- CHAPTER IX CELEBES
- X WESTERN AUSTRALIA
- XI ALBANY TO ADELAIDE
- XII ADELAIDE
- XIII VICTORIA
- XIV NEW SOUTH WALES
- XV NEW SOUTH WALES (continued)
- XVI QUEENSLAND
- XVII THE EAST COAST
- XVIII EAST COAST (continued)
- XIX PRINCE OF WALES' ISLAND
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
APPENDIX
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- MEMOIR
- INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- CHAPTER I BOMBAY TO JUBBULPORE
- CHAPTER II HYDERABAD AND POONA
- CHAPTER III BOMBAY
- CHAPTER IV BOMBAY TO GOA
- CHAPTER V COLOMBO
- CHAPTER VI RANGOON
- CHAPTER VII LABUAN
- CHAPTER VIII ELEOPURA
- CHAPTER IX CELEBES
- X WESTERN AUSTRALIA
- XI ALBANY TO ADELAIDE
- XII ADELAIDE
- XIII VICTORIA
- XIV NEW SOUTH WALES
- XV NEW SOUTH WALES (continued)
- XVI QUEENSLAND
- XVII THE EAST COAST
- XVIII EAST COAST (continued)
- XIX PRINCE OF WALES' ISLAND
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
PART I
VOYAGE FROM DARNLEY ISLAND TO PORT DARWIN, MAURITIUS, CAPE OF GOOD HOPE, AND ENGLAND
The pen having fallen from her hand, the task which a brave yet gentle spirit was struggling so hard to complete must be accomplished by one who does not possess her gifts. For obvious reasons, the description of the remainder of the voyage will be compressed within the closest limits.
The ‘Sunbeam’ sailed from Thursday Island on September 1st. For three days the winds were favourable, from the eastward. The next two days being calm, the voyage was pursued under steam.
On September 5th, in the evening, the ‘Sunbeam’ was navigated, not without difficulty, through the intricate channels of Clarence Strait. On the 6th, at an early hour the anchor was dropped off the settlement of Palmevston. Our arrival at Port Darwin took place under such circumstances as render it impossible to offer any description from personal observation.
Palmerston, the name given to the settlement at Port Darwin, is beautifully situated on wooded headlands, jutting out into the harbour, in whose ample waters it is no figure of speech to say the navies of Europe could be anchored. The buildings have been erected with considerable taste. A fine esplanade has been laid out along the sea front. The electric wire connects Palmerston with all the great colonies of Australia.
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- The Last Voyage, to India and Australia, in the Sunbeam , pp. 427 - 478Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1889