Page:History of Australia, Rusden 1897.djvu/412

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GOXTSRNOR KINGS CAREER, might be known. He duly submitted the whole case to Lord Hobart, and if that nobleman had risen to his duty he would thereupon have laid down rules which might have averted the irregular conduct which led to Bligh's deposition. Though the repression of traffic in spirits and the pre- vention of the striking of eouvicts by their military masters made many enemies, the}^ did not detract from the general rewpect in which Kin<^ was held, and after 1804, when the corps was called into the held under Johnston, we find no further dispute between the civil and military authorities. Lords Camden and Castlereagh, wiser than Lord Hobart, kept King at the post from which Lord Hobart had been about to withdraw- him. For the fouiidmg of the new era which was to create a market for Australian products, though it happened under his sway, King cannot claim credit. He fostered whaling and seal-hshing and kept away foreign intruders, but to the sagacity of Macarthur and the goodwill of Lord Camden, must be attributed the success wdiich made King's reign the seed-time of the harvest which was to justify Macarthur's predictions. It was probably in consequence of Macarthur's movements that the attention of settlers of education and possessed of worldly means was first prac- tically directed to the colony. Phillip had sighed for such a class, and King earnestly pointed out the need of them. But they did not arrive until Macarthur^s ideas had become known, and Lord Camden had sanctioned the granting of i considerable tracts of land for pastoral uses, ' No man could immigrate to New South Wales without permission from the government* In July 1805 Lord Castlereagh accorded that permission to two brothers of the I name of Blaxland, and acceded to their request to be P^allowed to choose 8000 acres subject to King*s approval. It was also arranged that free passages should be given to the family, and the emigrants were to be allowed to pay for live stock (selected from government herds and tlocks) by bills on the English Treasury. For these and some minor advantages the brothers stipulated, on their part, to employ a capital of not less than jEOOOO in New 'i Wales. The aid to be extended in the colony (Lord