Terre Napoleon. A History Of French Explorations And Projects In Australia By Ernest Scott














































































 -  When the
navigator Flinders was wrecked in the Porpoise in August 1803 - his own
exploring ship, the Investigator, being by - Page 23
Terre Napoleon. A History Of French Explorations And Projects In Australia By Ernest Scott - Page 23 of 299 - First - Home

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When The Navigator Flinders Was Wrecked In The Porpoise In August 1803 - His Own Exploring Ship, The Investigator, Being By

This time unseaworthy - Governor King had no other craft to give him for his return voyage than the decrepit Cumberland,

A mere leaky little barge hardly fit for better uses than ferrying a placid lake. The colony was, in short, simply a kraal for yarding British undesirables and housing their keepers; its remoteness was an advantage for the purpose in view; and it never seemed to strike the officials in England who superintended its affairs, that the adequate defence of a gaol against foreign aggression was an undertaking that called for exertion or forethought. The unreluctant retrocession of the Cape to the Dutch in 1800 indicates that the interest of defending Australia was lost sight of in the midst of what appeared to be more pressing considerations.

It has been remarked above that there was a period when the peace of Australia was imperilled. The danger was obviated, certainly not because of the efficiency of the defence, but rather through lack of enterprise on the part of the Admiral in command of the French squadron in the Indian Ocean. It will be well to narrate the circumstances, together with an incident which illustrates in an amusing manner the kind of man this officer was.

After the signing of the Treaty of Amiens, Bonaparte sent out a squadron commanded by Rear-Admiral Linois, conveying General Charles Decaen, who was commissioned to administer the former French possessions in India, which, under the terms of the treaty, were to be surrendered to France. But when the expedition arrived at Pondicherry, the Governor-General of India, Lord Wellesley, gave orders to his subordinates that no concessions were to be made to the French without his express authority; and as he stubbornly refused to give his warrant for surrendering an inch of territory, there was nothing for General Decaen to do but sail away to Mauritius, then, as already remarked, a French colony.

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