Australian Search Party - A Record Of Discovery, Geography, And Adventure By Charles Henry Eden














































































 -   Slinging his tomahawk and a
fishing-line round his neck, he got inside the hoop, and allowing it to
rest - Page 60
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Slinging His Tomahawk And A Fishing-Line Round His Neck, He Got Inside The Hoop, And Allowing It To Rest Against The Small Of His Back, He Pressed Hard Against The Tree With His Knees And Feet.

This raised him several inches, when with a dexterous jerk he moved the portion of the hoop furthest away

From him a good foot up the stem, and thus - somewhat on the same principle that boys climb a chimney, for the hoop represented the chimney - he worked himself upward, and in much less time than I have taken to describe it, was astride on the lowest branch, and chopping vigorously at the hollow which contained the golden store. The use of the fishing-line now became apparent, for we bent on to its end a small tin billy (round can), used for making tea, and by hauling this up and filling it, Larry soon supplied us with honey enough to fill our bucket and the boat's baler. As perhaps my readers may be tempted to wonder why the bees did not attack the naked hide of the robber who was thus rudely despoiling them, I must state that the wild Australian bee is stingless. It is a harmless little insect, not much larger than the common house-fly, and though it produces abundance of honey and wax, it has not been subjected to domestication, and from its diminutive proportions and its habit of building on very high trees, probably never will be. The English bee has been most successfully introduced into Queensland; and many of the farms in the neighbourhood of Brisbane make a good thing out of their honey and wax.

A meeting was held the next day, at which it was agreed that all further search would be useless, and, indeed, I am certain that every possible measure had been attempted for the discovery of the missing men. There seems every reason to think that the ill-fated 'Eva' was sunk in the cyclone. Most likely she went down in deep water, and all on board her were drowned. Such was the supposition that received most favour at the time, and with it we must rest content until the great day when all secrets are revealed.

End of Australian Search Party, by Charles Henry Eden

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