Page:Admiral Phillip.djvu/253

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CHAPTER XV


THE DISPOSAL OF CROWN LANDS—PHILLIP'S SUGGESTIONS—THE CONVICT ASSIGNMENT SYSTEM—THE FIRST BONA-FIDE EMIGRANTS—THE INCEPTION OF THE WHALING INDUSTRY—PHILLIP'S FAILING HEALTH—HIS DEPARTURE FOR ENGLAND


'Whenever I want a thing well done in a distant part of the world, when I want a man with a good head, a good heart, lots of pluck and plenty of common sense, I always send for a captain of the Navy.'

Lord Palmerston, when Minister for Foreign Affairs, is alleged to have more than once used these words in the Council Chamber, and English ministers were apparently of this opinion long before his time, for during the first dozen years of Australian colonisation three naval commanders—Phillip, Hunter and King — were at different periods appointed to govern the distant colony.

If, in Palmerston's day, the shade of Lord Sydney ever lingered near his old chair at the council-table, one can imagine an approving whisper, 'Hear, hear! my appointment of Phillip proved that long ago.'

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