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the south. With gales and strong winds blowing across the channel now known as Bass Strait, they made their
way along the coast--the northern shores of Van Diemen's Land--till they found a wide inlet. Here they found
a quantity of black swans, which they ate with joy, and also kangaroos, mussels, and oysters. This inlet they
CHAPTER LVIII 190
called Port Dalrymple, after the late hydrographer to the Admiralty in England. On 9th December, still
coasting onward, they passed Three-Hummock Island and then a whole cluster of islands, to which, "in
honour of His Excellency the Governor of New South Wales, I gave the title of Hunter's Isles." And now a
long swell was noticed from the south-west. "It broke heavily upon a small reef and upon all the western
shores, but, although it was likely to prove troublesome and perhaps dangerous, Mr. Bass and myself hailed it
with joy and mutual congratulation, as announcing the completion of our long-wished-for discovery of a
passage into the southern Indian Ocean."
Calling the point where the island coast turned Cape Grime, they sailed along the western shores, their little
boat exposed to the swell of the southern ocean. Sailing joyfully from point to point and naming them at will,
the two explorers reached the extreme west, which they called South-West Cape. This had been already
sighted by one of Cook's party in 1773. South Cape and Tasman's Head had been likewise charted as points at
the extreme south of New South Wales. So the explorers sailed right round the island on which Tasman had
landed one hundred and fifty-six years before, and after an absence of five months they reached Sydney with
their important news. Bass now disappears from the annals of exploration, but his friend Flinders went off to
England and found in our old friend Banks a powerful friend. He was given a stout north-country ship, H.M.S.
Investigator of three hundred and thirty-four tons, with orders to return to New Holland and make a complete
survey of the coast, and was off again in July 1801 with young John Franklin, his nephew, aboard.
The Investigator arrived at Cape Leuwin in December and anchored in King George's Sound, discovered by
Vancouver some ten years before. By the New Year he was ready to begin his great voyage round the Terra
Australis, as the new country was still called. Indeed, it was Flinders who suggested the name of Australia for
the tract of land hitherto called New Holland. His voyage can easily be traced on our maps to-day. Voyaging
westward through the Recherches group of islands, Flinders passed the low, sandy shore to a cape he named
Cape Pasley, after his late Admiral; high, bleak cliffs now rose to the height or some five hundred feet for a
distance of four hundred and fifty miles--the great Australian Bight. Young Franklin's name was given to one
island, Investigator to another, Cape Catastrophe commemorated a melancholy accident and the drowning of
several of the crew. Kangaroo Island speaks for itself. Here they killed thirty-one dark-brown kangaroos. "The
whole ship's company was employed this afternoon skinning and cleaning the kangaroos, and a delightful
regale they afforded after four months' privation from almost any fresh provisions. Half a hundredweight of
heads, forequarters, and tails were stewed down into soup for dinner, and as much steaks given to both
officers and men as they could consume by day and night."
[Illustration: CAPE CATASTROPHE. From Flinders' Voyages.]
In April 1802 a strange encounter took place, when suddenly there appeared a "heavy-looking ship without
any top-gallant masts up," showing a French ensign. Flinders cleared his decks for action in case of attack, but
the strangers turned out to be the French ship Le Geographe, which, in company with Le Naturaliste, had left
France, 1800, for exploration of the Australian coasts.
Now it was well known that Napoleon had cast longing eyes upon the Terra Australis--indeed, it is said that
he took with him to Egypt a copy of Cook's Voyages. Flinders, too, knew of this French expedition, but he
was not specially pleased to find French explorers engaged on the same work as himself. The commanders
met as friends, and Baudin, the French explorer, told how he had landed also near Cape Leuwin in May 1801,
how he had given the names of his two ships to Cape Naturaliste and Geographe Bay, and was now making
his way round the coast. Flinders little guessed at this time that the French were going to claim the south of
New South Wales as French territory under the name of Terra Napoleon, though it was common knowledge
that this discovery was made by Englishmen.
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