[Journals Of Expeditions Of Discovery Into Central Australia And by Edward John Eyre]@TWC D-Link book
Journals Of Expeditions Of Discovery Into Central Australia And

CHAPTER IX
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This is the principle that invariably guides the native in his relations with other native tribes around him, and it is generally the same that he acts upon in his intercourse with us.

Shall we then arrogate to ourselves the sole power of acting unjustly, or of judging of what is expedient?
And are we to make no allowance for the standard of right by which the native is guided in the system of policy he may adopt?
Weighing candidly, then, the points to which reference has been made, can we wonder, that in the outskirts of the colony, where the intercourse between the native and the European has been but limited, and where that intercourse has, perhaps, only generated a mutual distrust; where the objects, the intentions, or the motives of the white man, can neither be known nor understood, and where the natural inference from his acts cannot be favourable, can we wonder, that under such circumstances, and acting from the impression of some wrong, real or imagined, or goaded on by hunger, which the white man's presence prevents him from appeasing, the native should sometimes be tempted to acts of violence or robbery?
He is only doing what his habits and ideas have taught him to think commendable.

He is doing what men in a more civilized state would have done under the same circumstances, what they daily do under the sanction of the law of nations--a law that provides not for the safety, privileges, and protection of the Aborigines, and owners of the soil, but which merely lays down rules for the direction of the privileged robber in the distribution of the booty of any newly discovered country.

With reference to the particular case in question, the murder of Master Hawson, it appears from Dr.Harvey's report (already quoted), that in addition to any incentives, such as I have described, as likely to arise in the minds of the natives, there had been the still greater provocation of their having been fired at, but a short time previously, from the same station, and by the murdered boy's brother.

We may well pause, therefore, ere we hastily condemn, or unjustly punish, in cases where the circumstances connected with their occurrence, can only be brought before us in a partial and imperfect manner.
The 7th was spent in preparing my despatches for Adelaide.


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