Authors: Nicholas Shakespeare
âDo you miss North Motton?'
âNo, there's too much going on. That is the past, isn't it? You've got to look forward. This is our home now and that's what we're trying to do, getting it to suit us.'
There was a roar outside and then two chimes. Ivy pulled a face.
âThat'll be Nevin,' I said.
Â
He had brought spare leathers and a helmet, and I changed into them while Ivy, excited, got out her chart and magnifying glass.
âThey're our cousins!' she said.
âWho are?'
âHis brother's wife and us.'
âOf course, they are,' I said, and tried on the helmet.
Heather had a gift for me: a jar with a purple jelly inside.
âBet you've never eaten this before.'
âWhat is it?'
âLaurel jam.' Their mother had taught her how to make it out of the berries, a recipe handed down from grandmother Hordern. âSome people don't like it and some people love it.'
The jar reminded me of what I had forgotten, and I went to collect it from the car. For the journey here, I had wrapped it in damp newspaper, as I had seen Ivy do.
âWhat do you think?' I asked. âCould you strike a cutting?'
Ivy studied the stem that I had snapped from the laurel tree at Stoke Rivers. I thought â from her expression â that she was going to say it was impossible or that I had damaged it beyond hope. She said: âI'll grow it for you if you like, but we don't want that big thing here.'
âReady?' asked Nevin.
Minutes later, from behind a rampart of phlox, the three sisters watched Nevin start up his motorbike. Ivy's face was a mixture of fascination alternating with terror, and I knew that she was thinking of her unfortunate schoolfriend Margaret Viney.
âEver been on a motorbike?' I asked.
âNo, don't think I have.'
âMe neither,' I said, kissing her goodbye. âBut you should listen to Mr Jones. You should come to the east coast and see us.'
âToo far for us, I reckon.'
âAnyway, I think you're very lucky to live in Tasmania.'
She grinned. âSupposed to be special isn't it? We won't tell them what it is, what it's like, because too many will want to come.'
âJust lean into the corners,' said Nevin.
4
I had spent the night before in a bed and breakfast outside Wynyard where there was a locally published history of Tasmania which began: âFor Europeans, it represents the literal end of the world: if you travel any further you are on your way home again.' On his arrival in 1849, Thomas Arnold had written to his mother: âI look upon Hobart Town as one step on the road to England.' So far, my journey in Tasmania resembled the trajectory of the flat, crescent-shaped hardwood that my grandmother had given me as a boy in Oxford, which if hurled as far as possible into the air actually comes back and lands in your hand.
The three sisters waved.
Nervous at first, I held on to the grab bars as Nevin thundered out of the cul-de-sac and up Ulverstone main street, onto the Devonport highway. I felt every bump on the road, but was also a part of the road. My attention was fixed with greatest concentration on the two wing-mirrors. On a motorbike, I swiftly realised, you live by the mirror, in which the white roadmarks appear to be ripping into the sky like a trail of artillery flak, chasing you. I was conscious of the road in other ways. Gravel hitting the visor; butterflies; the smells of paddocks and cows and damp earth. And the cameraderie of other bikers. Whenever we passed one, they raised a gloved hand or nodded. It did not matter where you came from, who you were, where you were going. On your âhoon'.
As soon as we reached the highway, Nevin opened up. The whoosh of the air rushing over my helmet mimicked the sound of a wind tunnel. It was exhilarating, as if Nevin was giving me a passage back into the present and I was hurtling forward 200 years.
So we roared past Squeaking Point over the Rubicon, past Glengarry Protestant church to Exeter and Beaconsfield. The reflections of the sky and trees converged into the back of his blue helmet, and I was as far away from meandering around with old documents as I could possibly be. And as we passed Kemp's Parade at the Port Dalrymple Yacht Club on Beauty Point and headed towards York Town, I looked forward to abdicating my role as keeper of the ledger. What this other N. Shakespeare did with what I was about to tell him was out of my hands.
I am indebted to the following for reading the work in progress and giving suggestions and corrections: Paul Edwards, Damon Hawker, Michael Roe, Dan Sprod. I would like to thank the staff of the Tasmaniana Library and the Archives Office of Tasmania, Hobart, and in particular Gillian Winter and Tony Marshall.
For permission to quote from the Thomas Arnold papers, I am grateful to the Master and Fellows of Balliol College, Oxford and to Mrs Janet Davies. The poem âOff the Map' is quoted by kind permission of the Shoestring Press. The verse from âBlue Eyes Crying in the Rain' recorded by Willie Nelson, words and music by Fred Rose is quoted by permission of Campbell Connelly & Company Ltd., © Copyright 1945 Milene Music Incorporated, USA. All rights reserved. International Copyright Secured. I am grateful to David Higham Associates for permission to quote from both Graham Greene's
Monsignor Quixote
, Jonathan Cape, 1982; and
The Comedians
, Jonathan Cape, 1976. To The Random House Group Ltd. and to Barbara Mobbs Literary Agency for permission to quote from Patrick White's
A Fringe of Leaves
, Jonathan Cape, 1976. To the Estate of Vladimir Nabokov to quote from
Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited
. All rights reserved. To The Random House Group for permission to quote from Günther Grass'
The Tin Drum
, Martin Secker & Warburg, 1975. To the Carmen Balcells Agency for permission to quote from Gabriel GarcÃa Marquez's
Living to Tell the Tale
, Jonathan Cape, 2003. I have made every effort to trace copyright holders. I greatly regret any omissions, but these will be rectified in any future edition.
I would also like to thank Judy Anderson, Murray Bail, Rebecca Chambers, Pat Cleveland, James Cox, John and Jo Fenn-Smith, Bill Howroyd, Gillian Johnson, Gillian Kemp, Tom Keneally, Matthew Kneale, Christopher MacLehose, Caroline Michel, Delia Nicholls, Margaret-Ann Oldmeadow, Chris Pearce, Cassandra Pybus, Anne and Trevor Rood, Rachael Rose, Michael Stutchbury and Becky Toyne.
Â
Part of the Kemp material has already appeared in different form in
Granta
74, 2001.
Abbreviations used in Sources section:
J.R.A.H.S. | Journal of the Royal Australia Historical Society |
T.H.R.A | Tasmanian Historical Research Association |
T.L.S. | Times Literary Supplement |
Part I: Father of Tasmania
Based on conversations with Anna Agnarsdottir, Murray Bail, Peter Chapman, Kaia Davey, Richard Davey, John Dent, Zelda Dick, Peter Donaldson, Tim Dwyer, Paul Edwards, John and Jo Fenn-Smith, Patricia Greenhill, Damon Hawker, Pete Hay, Judy Humphries, Murray Kemp, Tom Keneally, George Masterman, Margaret-Ann Oldmeadow, Barrie Paterson, Ian Pearce, Bill Penfold, Pat Quilty, Henry Reynolds, Andrew Sant, Dan Sprod, Robert Tiley.
Unpublished sources:
John Shakespeare, Adrian Potter, Penelope Eaton-Hart, Murray Kemp, Herbert de Hamel, Balliol College, Guildhall, Tasmaniana Library.
Newspapers:
Bent's News
,
Britannia
,
Colonial Times
,
The Historian: Journal of the West Tamar Historical Society
,
Hobart Mercury
,
Hobart Town Courier
,
Hobart Town Gazette
,
Launceston Examiner
,
Sydney Gazette
,
Tasmanian Times
,
True Colonist
.
Books and articles:
The Historical Records of New South Wales
, ed. F.M. Bladen, Sydney, Library Committee of the Commonwealth Parliament, 1921; the
Australian Dictionary of Biography
; the records of the Tasmanian Historical Research Association;
The History of Tasmania
, by John West, Launceston, 1852;
A History of Tasmania
, by Lloyd Robson, Vol. I, Oxford, 1983, Vol. II, 1990;
A Short History of Tasmania
, by Lloyd Robson, updated by Michael Roe, Oxford, 1997;
The Fatal Shore
, by Robert Hughes, Harvill, 1987;
Step Across this Line
, by Salman Rushdie, Vintage, 2003;
In Sunshine or in Shadow
, by Martin Flanagan, Picador, 2002;
Australia and New Zealand
, by Anthony Trollope, Chapman & Hall, 1873;
More Tramps Abroad
, by Mark Twain, Chatto & Windus, 1897;
On the Beach
, by Nevil Shute, William Heinemann, 1957; âDarwin in Hobart, 1836', by Michael Roe,
Island 16
; âGarden of Antarctic Delights', by Pat Quilty,
Australian Garden History
, Vol. 11, No. 1, 1999; âTasmania and Antarctic: a Long Association', by Pat Quilty,
Australian Gemmologist
, 19, 1996;
An Autobiography
, by Agatha Christie, Berkley, 1991;
The Journal of Mrs. Fenton: A Narrative of Her Life in India, the Isle of France & Tasmania During the Years 1826â1830
, by Bessie Fenton, Edward Arnold, 1901;
The Diaries and Letters of G.T.W.B. Boyes, Volume 1, 1820â1832
, ed. Peter Chapman, Oxford, 1985;
Down Home: Revisiting Tasmania
, by Peter Conrad, Chatto & Windus, 1988;
Vandiemonian Essays
, by Pete Hay, Walleah Press, 2002;
The Islanders
, by Andrew Sant, Shoestring Press, 2002;
Beer, Blood and Water
, by Bernard Lloyd, Hobart, 1998;
Journal of A Voyage from New South Wales to England
, by Elizabeth Kent,
Athenaeum
, July 1808;
A Voyage to Terra Australis
, by Matthew Flinders, ed. Tim Flannery, Text, Melbourne, 2001;
George Bass
, by Keith Macrae Bowden, Oxford, 1952;
Geographic and Descriptive Delineations of the Island of Van Diemen's Land
, by Charles Jeffreys, London, J.M. Richardson, 1820;
Godwin's Emigrant Guide to Van Diemen's Land, more properly called Tasmania
, London, 1823;
An account of the colony of Van Diemen's Land, principally designed for the use of emigrants
, by Edward Curr, London, 1824;
Medical Hints for Emigrants
, R. Druitt, London, 1850;
Bennelong, First Notable Aborigine
, by John Kenny, J.R.A.H.S, 1973;
The journal of a voyage from Calcutta to Van Diemen's Land: comprising a description of that colony during a six months' residence
, by A. Prinsep, London, 1833;
Sydney Cove 1789â90
, by John Cobley, Angus & Robertson, 1963;
A colonial regiment: new sources relating to the New South Wales Corps, 1789â1810
, by P. Statham, Canberra, 1992;
Memoirs of Joseph Holt
, London, 1838;
John Macarthur
, by M.H. Ellis, Sydney, 1955;
Rum Rebellion
, by H.V. Evatt, Sydney, Angus & Robertson, 1937;
Terre Napoléon
, by Ernest Scott, Methuen, 1910;
The French Reconnaissance: Baudin in Australia 1801â1803
, by Frank Horner, Melbourne, 1987;
Voyage de découvertes aux Terres Australes, Historique, Vol. 1
, by François Péron, Paris, 1807;
Australian Navigators: Picking up shells and catching butterflies in an age of revolution
, by Robert Tiley, Kangaroo Press, 2002;
The Explorers
, ed. Tim Flannery, Text, 1998;
The New South Wales Freemason
, July 1956;
Europeans in Australia
, by Alan Atkinson, Oxford, 1997; âRemarks on Settlement of Port Dalrymple', by John Oxley, in
Historical Records of Australia, Series III, Vol. I
;
The Story of Port Dalrymple
, by L.S. Bethell, Hobart, 1957;
The Life of Vice-Admiral William Bligh
, by George Mackaness, Angus & Robertson, 1951;
Report of the Commissioner of Enquiry on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land
, by J.T. Bigge, London, 1823;
Obliged to Submit: Wives & Mistresses of colonial governors
, by Alison Alexander, Montpelier, 1999;
Knopwood: A Biography
, by Geoffrey Stephens, Hobart, 1990;
The diary of the Reverend Robert Knopwood 1803â1838
, ed. Mary Nicholls, T.H.R.A., 1977;
The Hermit in Van Diemen's Land
, by Henry Savery, ed. Cecil Hadgraft and Margriet Roe, Queensland, 1964;
Captain Anthony Fenn Kemp
, by Murray C. Kemp and Thérèse B. Kemp, J.R.A.H.S., 51, March 1965;
Of Yesteryear and Nowadays
, by P.B. Edwards, Edwards, 1994;
Van Diemen's Land; or Settlers and Natives
, by William Thomas Moncrieff, John Dicks, 1830;
Michael Howe, the Last and Worst Bushranger of Van Diemen's Land
, by T.E. Wells, Platypus, Hobart, 1966;
The First; the Worst? Michael Howe and associated bushrangers
, by R.F. Minchin, Hobart, 2001;
A Blood-thirsty banditti of wretches: informations on oath relating to Michael Howe and others between 1814 and 1818
, Adelaide, Sullivan's Cove, 1985;
Mike Howe, the bushranger of Van Diemen's Land
, by James Bonwick, London, 1873;
Observations upon secondary punishments
, by Sir George Arthur, Hobart, 1833;
The Sarah Island Conspiracies: being an account of twelve voyages to Macquarie Harbour & Sarah Island, 1822â1838
, by Richard Innes Davey, Strahan, 2002;
Gould's Book of Fish
, by Richard Flanagan, Picador, 2003;
English Passengers
, by Matthew Kneale, Hamish Hamilton, 2002;
The Great Shame
, by Thomas Keneally, Chatto & Windus, 1998;
Representing Convicts
, edited by I. Duffield & J. Bradley, London, 1997;
Convicts and Colonies
, by A.G.L. Shaw, Melbourne, 1973;
Nine Years in Van Diemen's Land
, by James Syme, Dundee, 1848;
Alexander Pearce of Macquarie Harbour: Convict-Bushranger-Cannibal
, by Dan Sprod, Cat and Fiddle, 1977;
Hell's Gates
, by Paul Collins, South Yarra, 2002;
The Usurper: Jorgen Jorgenson and his turbulent life in Iceland and Van Diemen's Land, 1780â1841
, by Dan Sprod, Blubber Head, 2001;
Jorgen Jorgenson and the Aborigines of Van Diemen's Land
, by N.J.B. Plomley, Blubber Head, 1991;
The Convict King, being the life and adventures of Jorgen Jorgenson
, retold by James Francis Hogan, Hobart, 1891;
Loitering in a tent: Jorgenson in the High Country
, by John Mitchell, Hobart, 1995;
Journal of a Tour in Iceland in the Summer of 1809
, by William Jackson Hooker, John Murray, 1813;
Great Britain and Iceland 1800â1820
, by Anna Agnarsdottir, PHD thesis, LSE, 1989;
A shred of autobiography
, by Jorgen Jorgenson, Adelaide, Sullivan's Cove, 1981;
The convict probation system in Van Diemen's Land, 1839â1954
, by Ian Brand, Blubber Head, 1990;
Highway in Van Diemen's Land
, by G. Hawley Stancombe, Sydney, National Trust of Australia, 1968;
Edward Markham's voyage to Van Diemen's Land 1833
, by Edward Markham, Launceston, 1952;
A Fringe of Leaves
, by Patrick White, Viking, 1976;
Point Counter Point
, by Aldous Huxley, Chatto & Windus, 1928;
Wainewright, the Poisoner
, by Andrew Motion, Faber, 2000;
New Zealand Letters of Thomas Arnold the Younger
, ed. James Bertram, Oxford, 1966;
A Victorian Wanderer: The Life of Thomas Arnold the Younger
, by Bernard Bergonzi, Oxford, 2003;
Thomas Arnold the Younger in Van Diemen's Land
, by P.A. Howell, Hobart, 1964;
Passages in a Wandering Life
, by Thomas Arnold, London, 1900;
The Life of Mrs Humphry Ward
, Janet Trevelyan, London, 1923;
A Writer's Recollections
, by Mrs Humphry Ward, London 1918;
Mrs Humphry Ward: Eminent Victorian, Pre-eminent Edwardian
, by John Sutherland, Oxford, 1990.
Part II: Black Lines
Based on conversations with Ruth Amos, Patsy Cameron, Peter Chapman, John Clark, Clem, Bernice Condie, John Cusick, Tom and Cynthia Dunbabin, Ilewka, Greg Lehman, James and Lyndsay Luddington, Mary Mactier, Furley Mansell, George Masterman, David Montgomery, Margaret-Ann Oldmeadow, Henry Reynolds, Frances Rhodes, Anne Rood, Andrew Sant, Toly Sawenko, Julie Spotswood, Edith Stanfield, Emily Stoddart, Daniel Thomas, Liz Turner, Edna Webb, Dusty Willcox.
Unpublished source material:
Swansea History Room.
Books and articles:
âSome recollections of the Tasman Memorial Controversy, 1922-24', by John Reynolds, T.H.R.A., vol. 13, 1966; âTasman and a Dutch Discovery', by Peter Chapman,
Australian Natural History
, vol. 20, 2;
The Voyages of Abel Janszoon Tasman
, by Andrew Sharp, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1968; âImagining Australia: a case of fact being as strange as fiction', by Murray Bail, T.L.S, 1978;
Some account of the wars, extirpation, habits & c., of the native tribes of Tasmania
, by James Erskine Calder, Henn & Co, 1875;
Tasmanian Aborigines and their descendants
, Bill Mollison and Coral Everitt, Mollison, 1978;
Pride against prejudice
, by Ida West, Canberra, 1984;
Friendly Mission: The Tasmanian Journals and Papers of George Augustus Robinson 1829-1834
, ed. N.J.B. Plomley, T.H.R.A., 1966;
Weep in silence: a history of the Flinders Island Aboriginal settlement; with the Flinders Island journal of George Augustus Robinson, 1835-1839
, ed. N.J.B. Plomley, Blubber Head, 1987;
The Last of the Tasmanians; or the Black War of Van Diemen's Land
, by James Bonwick, London, 1870;
The Aborigines of Tasmania
, by H. Ling Roth, Halifax, 1899;
After the Dreaming
, by W.E.H. Stanner, 1968 Boyer Lectures, Australian Broadcasting Commission, Sydney, 1969;
Community of Thieves
, by Cassandra Pybus, Minerva, Melbourne, 1992;
Black Robinson: Protector of Aborigines
, by Vivian Rae-Ellis, Melbourne, 1988;
Trucanini: Queen or Traitor
, by Vivian Rae-Ellis, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra, 1981;
The Aboriginal Tasmanians
, by Lyndall Ryan, Queensland, 1996;
Fate of a Free People
, by Henry Reynolds, Penguin, 1995;
The Fabrication of Aboriginal History, Volume I, Van Diemen's Land 1803-1847
, by Keith Windschuttle, Macleay, 2003;
Whitewash: On Keith Windschuttle's Fabrication of Aboriginal History
, ed. Robert Manne, Black Inc., 2003; âBetter to be Mistaken than to Deceive': the Fabrication of Aboriginal History and the Van Diemonian Record, by James Boyce in
Island 96
;
The Freycinet Line, 1831: Tasmanian History and the Freycinet Peninsula
, by Emily Stoddart, Freycinet Experience Pty Ltd, 2003;
The Aboriginal people of Tasmania
, by Julia Clark, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, 1983;
The East Coasters: the early pioneering history of the east coast of Tasmania
, by Lois Nyman, Regal Publications, 1990;
Pioneers of the East Coast from 1642
, by Karl von Steiglitz, Launceston, 1955;
The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Montgomery
, Collins, 1958;
H.H. Montgomery â the Mutton Bird Bishop
, by Geoffrey Stephens, Hobart, 1985;
Living to Tell the Tale
, Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez, Cape, 2003.
Part III: Elysium
Based on conversations with Madge Brett, Jill Cainey, Paul Edwards, Bernard Eisele, Mick Evans, Greg Lehman, Wendy Newton, Vivien Van Dam, Laurie Porter, Bob and Molly Shepheard, Petre Tamlyn, Imogen Vignoles, Randall Wheaton. Some of the names have been changed.
Unpublished source material:
Imogen Vignoles, Ivy.
Newspapers and journals:
The Advocate
,
Launceston Advertiser
,
The Northern Standard
,
North-West Post
,
Tasmanian Tramp
.