Page:Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia, Volume 2.djvu/152

 cos ov &b'. 131 ing Jack, who wes privileged to come end go u m. he liked, whic si it did not appr oeat I. any jealousy mng his compsakm, enabled us ham' safety, who was busily engMp in add'roW to his collections from the. country in the vicinity of the vessel,. In the.evening, Jack e!!hed the ti u high as  topmast.head, muh   muse- mst. of. his omps. uicm, but to the mifictim d und, who had.nv m coum o The .water-hols yielded bout a ton of water a day; but a stresm .was found in ths study by to the eaetwvl of the entrain2, over ths beach, which ws used whsn ths hols w'e emptied of tiir contra3; the latter wets, boweve, lrrrred, since our,ppl worksd.  vmsel's deck Near the stream we found some Our wateriag continued to proceed without mo- Iraslim fim t!2 natives; the number of whom !d irsed to twenty-nine, besides sonm whom we had before seen that wers now abseut. D,- in the afternoon of the th the wind �reshened t thb place the Slit Antol5 merchant brig wooded and

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