Australia Twice Traversed - The Romance Of Exploration, Through Central South Australia, And Western Australia, From 1872 To 1876 By Ernest Giles
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How Much
Longer And Farther The Expedition Could Have Gone On Without Water We
Were Now Saved The Necessity Of Guessing, But This I May Truly Say,
That Sir Thomas Elder's South Australian Camels Are Second To None In
The World For Strength And Endurance.
From both a human and humane
point of view, it was most fortunate to have found this spring, and
With it a respite, not only from our unceasing march, but from the
terrible pressure on our minds of our perilous situation; for the
painful fact was ever before us, that even after struggling bravely
through hundreds of miles of frightful scrubs, we might die like dogs
in the desert at last, unheard of and unknown. On me the most severe
was the strain; for myself I cared not, I had so often died in spirit
in my direful journeys that actual death was nothing to me. But for
vanity, or fame, or honour, or greed, and to seek the bubble
reputation, I had brought six other human beings into a dreadful
strait, and the hollow eyes and gaunt, appealing glances that were
always fixed on me were terrible to bear; but I gathered some support
from a proverb of Solomon: "If thou faint in the day of adversity, thy
strength is small." Mount Churchman, the place I was endeavouring to
reach, was yet some 350 miles distant; this discovery, it was
therefore evident, was the entire salvation of the whole party.
During our march for these sixteen or seventeen days from the little
dam, I had not put the members of my party upon an actual short
allowance of water.
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