Page:History of Australia, Rusden 1897.djvu/78

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had been about to sail for Norfolk Island in March, 1790, an order was issued to prevent the further destruction of live stock '* until some necessary regulations could be pub- lished, but the officers and people about to embark were not included in the prohibition.*' The mention of futiu-e ' I regulations alarmed the convicts lest they should lose the benefits of their ownership in some manner, and Collins adds that, **imder colour of its belonging to those who were exempted in the late order, nearly all the stock in the settlement was in the course of a few nights destroyed ; a wound being thereby given to the independence of the colony that could not easily be salved, and whose injurious effects time and much attention alone could remove/* Many an bom' of anxious care Phillip bestowed on the lives of his dumb subjects, on whose increase so much depended ; and many times his care was thwarted* In April, 1788, on returning from exploration, he learned that five ewes and a lamb had been destroyed at the govern- ment farEi, in May, 1788, there were two bulls and live cows at the settlement. In the end of that month, "by some strange and unpardonable neglect" of the convict herdsman (who did not report the loss at once), two bulls and four cows wandered away, and no search party was successful in recovering them. In Oct,, 1788, the sole remaining cow, becoming wild and dangerous, was con- demned to be shot. And in March, 1790, the convicts madly destroyed the greater part of the sheep, pigs, and fowls, because they dreaded, perhaps without cause, that they might lose some rights of separate ownership. Commanders of expeditions in Arctic regions have found that amusements have lightened the toils and foiled the hardships undergone by their companions. Philhp resorted to the same expedient. In June, 1789, on the King's yjermitted t!ie convicts to perform the ** Ke- birthday, cruiting Officer" in a hut fitted up to serve as a theatre. But though he might temporarily cheer his motley subjects m ^' Though this fact is reconled hy CoUiiis (in his **New South Wales," 17981, who was on the spot^ immerous wi iters have repeated a mistake whiuh Jiscribea the first theatrical perforiiianee to a later |>eriod, 179f>. In J't^^ the performers modestly said their aim was *Minmbly to exuitc a