The Aborigines of Australia, with
whom Europeans have come in contact, present a striking
similarity to each other in physical appearance and
structure; and also in their general character, habits,
and pursuits. Any difference that is found to
exist is only the consequence of local circumstances
or influences, and such as might naturally be expected
to be met with among a people spread over such an
immense extent of country. Compared with other
aboriginal races, scattered over the face of the globe,
the New Hollander appears to stand alone.
The male is well built and muscular,
averaging from five to six feet in height, with proportionate
upper and lower extremities. The anterior lobes
of the brain are fairly developed, so as to give a
facial angle, far from being one of the most acute
to be found amongst the black races. The eyes
are sunk, the nose is flattened, and the mouth wide.
The lips are rather thick, and the teeth generally
very perfect and beautiful, though the dental arrangement
is sometimes singular, as no difference exists in
many between the incisor and canine teeth. The
neck is short, and sometimes thick, and the heel resembles
that of Europeans. The ankles and wrists are
frequently small, as are also the hands and feet.
The latter are well formed and expanded, but the calves
of the legs are generally deficient. Some of
the natives in the upper districts of the Murray,
are, however, well formed in this respect. In
a few instances, natives attain to a considerable
corpulency. The men have fine broad and deep
chests, indicating great bodily strength, and are remarkably
erect and upright in their carriage, with much natural
grace and dignity of demeanour. The eye is generally
large, black, and expressive, with the eye-lashes
long.
When met with for the first time in
his native wilds there is frequently a fearless intrepidity
of manner, an ingenuous openness of look, and a propriety
of behaviour about the aboriginal inhabitant of Australia,
which makes his appearance peculiarly prepossessing.
In the female the average height is
about five feet, or perhaps a little under. The
anterior part of the brain is more limited than in
the male; the apex of the head is carried further
back; the facial angle is more acute; and the extremities
are more attenuated. The latter circumstance
may probably be accounted for from the fact, that the
females have to endure, from a very early age, a great
degree of hardship, privation, and ill-treatment.
Like most other savages the Australian looks upon his
wife as a slave. To her belongs the duty of collecting
and preparing the daily food, of making the camp or
hut for the night, of gathering and bringing in firewood,
and of procuring water. She must also attend to
the children; and in travelling carry all the moveable
property and frequently the weapons of her husband.
In wet weather she attends to all the outside work,
whilst her lord and master is snugly seated at the
fire. If there is a scarcity of food she has to
endure the pangs of hunger, often, perhaps, in addition
to ill-treatment or abuse. No wonder, then, that
the females, and especially the younger ones, (for
it is then they are exposed to the greatest hardships,)
are not so fully or so roundly developed in person
as the men. Yet under all these disadvantages
this deficiency does not always exist. Occasionally,
though rarely, I have met with females in the bloom
of youth, whose well-proportioned limbs and symmetry
of figure might have formed a model for the sculptor’s
chisel. In personal appearance the females are,
except in early youth, very far inferior to the men.
When young, however, they are not uninteresting.
The jet-black eyes, shaded by their long, dark lashes,
and the delicate and scarcely-formed features of incipient
womanhood give a soft and pleasing expression to a
countenance that might often be called good-looking occasionally
even pretty.
The colour of the skin, both in the
male and female, is generally black, or very darkly
tinged. The hair is either straight or curly,
but never approaching to the woolliness of the negro.
It is usually worn short by both sexes, and is variously
ornamented at different periods of life. Sometimes
it is smeared with red ochre and grease; at other times
adorned with tufts of feathers, the tail of the native
dog, kangaroo teeth, and bandages or nets of different
kinds.
When the head of the native is washed
clean, and purified from the odour of the filthy pigment
with which it is bedaubed, the crop of hair is very
abundant, and the appearance of it beautiful, being
a silken, glossy, and curly black. Great pains
are, however, used to destroy or mar this striking
ornament of nature.
Without the slightest pride of appearance,
so far as neatness or cleanliness is concerned, the
natives are yet very vain of their own rude decorations,
which are all worn for effect. A few feathers
or teeth, a belt or band, a necklace made of the hollow
stem of some plant, with a few coarse daubs of red
or white paint, and a smearing of grease, complete
the toilette of the boudoir or the ball-room.
Like the scenery of a panorama, they are then seen
to most advantage at a distance; for if approached
too closely, they forcibly remind us of the truth of
the expression of the poet, that “nature unadorned
is adorned the most.”
The body dress is simple; consisting
of the skins of the opossum, the kangaroo, or the
wallabie, when they can be procured. A single
garment only is used, made in the form of an oblong
cloak, or coverlet; by the skins being stretched out
and dried in the sun, and then sewn together with
the sinews of the emu, etc. The size of the
cloak varies according to the industry of the maker,
or the season of the year. The largest sized
ones are about six feet square, but the natives frequently
content themselves with one not half this size, and
in many cases are without it altogether. The
cloak is worn with the fur side outwards, and is thrown
over the back and left shoulder, and pinned on in front
with a little wooden peg; the open part is opposite
the right side, so as to leave the right arm and shoulder
quite unconfined, in the male; the female throws it
over the back and left shoulder, and brings it round
under the right arm-pit, and when tied in front by
a string passing round the cloak and the back, a pouch
is formed behind, in which the child is always carried. In either if the skin be
a handsome one, the dress is very pretty and becoming.
On the sea coast, where the country
is barren, and the skins of animals cannot readily
be procured, sea-weed or rushes are manufactured into
garments, with considerable ingenuity. In all
cases the garments worn by day constitute the only
covering at night, as the luxury of variety in dress
is not known to, or appreciated by, the Aborigines.
No covering is worn upon the head,
although they are continually exposed to the rays
of an almost tropical sun. In extreme seasons
of heat, and ’when they are travelling, they
sometimes gather a few green bunches or wet weeds
and place upon their heads; but this does not frequently
occur.
The character of the Australian natives
is frank, open, and confiding. In a short intercourse
they are easily made friends, and when such terms are
once established, they associate with strangers with
a freedom and fearlessness, that would give little
countenance to the impression so generally entertained
of their treachery. On many occasions where I
have met these wanderers in the wild, far removed
from the abodes of civilization, and when I have been
accompanied only by a single native boy, I have been
received by them in the kindest and most friendly
manner, had presents made to me of fish, kangaroo,
or fruit, had them accompany me for miles to point
out where water was to be procured, and been assisted
by them in getting at it, if from the nature of the
soil and my own inexperience. I had any difficulty
in doing so myself.
I have ever found them of a lively,
cheerful disposition, patiently
putting up with inconveniences and privations, and
never losing that natural good temper which so strongly
characterizes them. On the occasion of my second
visit from Moorunde, to the Rufus natives in 1841,
when I had so far overcome the ill-feelings and dread,
engendered by the transactions in that quarter, in
1840, as to induce a large body of them to accompany
me back to the station, they had to walk a distance
of 150 miles, making daily the same stages that the
horses did, and unprovided with any food but what they
could procure along the road as they passed, and this
from the rapidity with which they had to travel, and
the distance they had to go in a day, was necessarily
limited in quantity, and very far from sufficient to
appease even the cravings of hunger, yet tired, foot-sore,
and hungry as they were, and in company with strangers,
whose countrymen had slain them in scores, but a few
months before, they were always merry at their camps
at nights, and kept singing, laughing, and joking,
to a late hour.
On falling in with them in larger
numbers, when I have been travelling in the interior
with my party, I have still found the same disposition
to meet me on terms of amity and kindness. Nor
can a more interesting sight well be imagined, than
that of a hundred or two hundred natives advancing
in line to meet you, unarmed, shouting and waving green
boughs in both hands, men, women, and children, the
old and the young, all joining in expressing their
good feelings and pacific intentions. On such
occasions I have been often astonished at the facility
with which large bodies, have by a little kindness
and forbearance been managed, and kept from being
troublesome or annoying, by a party of only six or
seven Europeans. I have occasionally had upwards
of 150 natives sitting in a long line, where I placed
them, and as orderly and obedient almost as a file
of soldiers.
At other times, when riding with only
a native boy over the plains of the interior, I have
seen the blue smoke of the native fires, curling up
through the distant line of trees, which marked some
yet unvisited watercourse, and upon making towards
it, have come suddenly upon a party encamped in the
hollow, beneath the banks upon which I stood.
Here I have remained, observing them for a few moments,
unseen and unthought of. A single call would
arouse their attention, and as they looked up, would
draw from them a wild exclamation of dismay, accompanied
by a look of indescribable horror and affright, at
beholding the strange, and to them incomprehensible
beings who stood before them. Weapons would hastily
be seized, baggage gathered up, and the party so lately
buried in repose and security, would at once be ready
either to fight or to evacuate their camps, as circumstances
might seem to render most expedient. A few friendly
gestures and a peaceable demeanour would however soon
dissipate their terror, and in a few moments their
weapons would be thrown aside, and both invaders and
invaded be upon intimate and confiding terms.
I have always found the natives ready
to barter their nets, weapons, or other implements,
for European articles, and sometimes they will give
them unsolicited, and without any equivalent; amongst
themselves they constantly do this.
In their intercourse with each other,
natives of different tribes are exceedingly punctilious
and polite, the most endearing epithets are passed
between those who never met before; almost every thing
that is said is prefaced by the appellation of father,
son, brother, mother, sister, or some other similar
term, corresponding to that degree of relationship
which would have been most in accordance with their
relative ages and circumstances. In many instances,
too, these titles are even accompanied by the still
more insinuating addition of “dear,” to
say nothing of the hugs and embraces which they mutually
give and receive.
The natives are very fond of the children
they rear, and often play with, and fondle them; but
husbands rarely shew much affection for their wives.
After a long absence, I have seen natives, upon their
return, go to their camp, exhibiting the most stoical
indifference, never take the least notice of their
wives, but sit down, and act, and look, as if they
had never been out of the encampment; in fact, if
any thing, they are more taciturn and reserved than
usual, and some little time elapses before they enter
into conversation with freedom, or in their ordinary
manner.
Upon meeting children after a long
absence, I have seen parents “fall upon their
necks, and weep” bitterly. It is a mistaken
idea, as well as an unjust one, that supposes the
natives to be without sensibility of feeling.
It may often be repressed from pride or policy, but
it will sometimes break forth uncontrolled, and reveal,
that the best and genuine feelings of the heart are
participated in by savage in common with civilized
man. The following is an instance in point: A
fine intelligent young boy, was, by his father’s
consent, living with me at the Murray for many weeks;
but upon the old man’s going into Adelaide, he
took his son away to accompany him. Whilst there,
the boy died, and for nearly a year I never saw any
thing more of the father, although he occasionally
had been within a few miles of my neighbourhood.
One day, however, I was out shooting about three miles
from home, and accidentally fell in with him.
Upon seeing me he immediately burst into tears, and
was unable to speak. It was the first time he
had met me since his son’s death, and my presence
forcibly reminded him of his loss. The same circumstance
occurred when he accompanied me to the house, where
every thing he saw recalled the memory of his child.
Innate propriety of behaviour is also
frequently exhibited by the Aborigines in their natural
state, in the modest unassuming manner in which they
take their positions to observe what is going on, and
in a total absence of any thing that is rude or offensive.
It is true that the reverse of this is also often
to be met with; but I think it will usually be found
that it is among natives who have before been in contact
with Europeans, or where familiarities have been used
with them first, or an injudicious system of treatment
has been adopted towards them.
Delicacy of feeling is not often
laid to the charge of the Aborigines, and yet I was
witness to a singular instance of it at King George’s
Sound. I was looking one evening at the natives
dancing, and who were, as they always are on these
occasions, in a state of complete nudity. In the
midst of the performance, one of the natives standing
by a spectator, mentioned that a white woman was passing
up the road; and although this was some little distance
away, and the night was tolerably dark, they all with
one accord crossed over to the bushes where their cloaks
were, put them on, and resumed their amusement.
It has been said, and is generally
believed, that the natives are not courageous.
There could not be a greater mistake, at least as far
as they are themselves concerned, nor do I hold it
to be any proof that they are cowards, because they
dread or give way before Europeans and their fire-arms.
So unequal a match is no criterion of bravery, and
yet even thus, among natives, who were labouring under
the feelings, naturally produced by seeing a race
they were unacquainted with, and weapons that dealt
death as if by magic, I have seen many instances of
an open manly intrepidity of manner and bearing, and
a proud unquailing glance of eye, which instinctively
stamped upon my mind the conviction that the individuals
before me were very brave men.
In travelling about from one place
to another, I have always made it a point, if possible,
to be accompanied by one or more natives, and I have
often found great advantage from it. Attached
to an exploring party they are frequently invaluable,
as their perceptive powers are very great, and enable
them both to see and hear anything at a much greater
distance than a European. In tracking stray animals,
and keeping on indistinct paths, they display a degree
of perseverance and skill that is really wonderful.
They are useful also in cutting bark canoes to cross
a river, should such impede the progress of the party,
and in diving for anything that may be lost in the
water, etc. etc. The Aborigines generally,
and almost always those living near large bodies of
water, are admirable swimmers and divers, and are
almost as much at home in the water as on dry land.
I have known them even saw a small log or root at
the bottom of a deep river. In a locality, however,
which is badly watered, it sometimes happens that
they cannot swim. At Meerkap, in Western Australia,
while crossing with some friends, from the Sound to
Swan River, we met with some who were in this predicament,
and who seemed a good deal astonished at our venturing
into the small ponds at that place. I have been
told that the natives at the Sound could not swim
before that settlement was occupied by Europeans this
seems hardly probable, however, upon the sea-coast;
at all events, be this as it may, they all swim now.
In habit they are truly nomadic, seldom
remaining many weeks in one locality, and frequently
not many days. The number travelling together
depends, in a great measure, upon the period of the
year, and the description of food that may be in season.
If there is any particular variety more abundant than
another, or procurable only in certain localities,
the whole tribe generally congregate to partake of
it. Should this not be the case, then they are
probably scattered over their district in detached
groups, or separate families.
At certain seasons of the year, usually
in the spring or summer, when food is most abundant,
several tribes meet together in each other’s
territory for the purpose of festivity or war, or to
barter and exchange such food, clothing, implements,
weapons, or other commodities as they respectively
possess; or to assist in the initiatory ceremonies
by which young persons enter into the different grades
of distinction amongst them. The manner and formalities
of meeting depend upon the cause for which they assemble.
If the tribes have been long apart, many deaths may
have occurred in the interim; and as the natives do
not often admit that the young or the strong can die
from natural causes, they ascribe the event to the
agency of sorcery, employed by individuals of neighbouring
tribes. This must of course be expiated in some
way when they meet, but the satisfaction required
is regulated by the desire of the injured tribe to
preserve amicable relations with the other, or the
reverse.
The following is an account of a meeting
which I witnessed, between the natives of Moorunde
(comprising portions of several of the neighbouring
tribes) and the Nar-wij-jerook, or Lake Bonney tribe,
accompanied also by many of their friends. This
meeting had been pre-arranged, as meetings of large
bodies of natives never take place accidentally, for
even when a distant tribe approaches the territory
of another unexpectedly, messengers are always sent
on in advance, to give the necessary warning.
The object of the meeting in question was to perform
the initiatory ceremonies upon a number of young men
belonging to both of the tribes. In the Murray
district, when one tribe desires another to come from
a distance to perform these ceremonies, young men
are sent off with messages of invitation, carrying
with them as their credentials, long narrow news,
made of string manufactured from the rush. These
nets are left with the tribe they are sent to, and
brought back again when the invitation is responded
to.
Notice having been given on the previous
evening to the Moorunde natives of the approach of
the Nar-wij-jerook tribe, they assembled at an early
hour after sunrise, in as clear and open a place as
they could find. Here they sat down in a long
row to await the coming of their friends. The
men were painted, and carried their weapons, as if
for war. The women and children were in detached
groups, a little behind them, or on one side, whilst
the young men, on whom the ceremonies were to be performed,
sat shivering with cold and apprehension in a row
to the rear of the men, perfectly naked, smeared over
from head to foot with grease and red-ochre, and without
weapons. The Nar-wij-jerook tribe was now seen
approaching. The men were in a body, armed and
painted, and the women and children accompanying them
a little on one side. They occasionally halted,
and entered into consultation, and then, slackening
their pace, gradually advanced until within a hundred
yards of the Moorunde tribe. Here the men came
to a full stop, whilst several of the women singled
out from the rest, and marched into the space between
the two parties, having their heads coated over with
lime, and raising a loud and melancholy wail, until
they came to a spot about equi-distant from both,
when they threw down their cloaks with violence, and
the bags which they carried on their backs, and which
contained all their worldly effects. The bags
were then opened, and pieces of glass and shells taken
out, with which they lacerated their thighs, backs,
and breasts, in a most frightful manner, whilst the
blood kept pouring out of the wounds in streams; and
in this plight, continuing their wild and piercing
lamentations, they moved up towards the Moorunde tribe,
who sat silently and immoveably in the place at first
occupied. One of the women then went up to a strange
native, who was on a visit to the Moorunde tribe and
who stood neutral in the affair of the meeting, and
by violent language and frantic gesticulations endeavoured
to incite him to revenge the death of some relation
or friend. But he could not be induced to lift
his spear against the people amongst whom he was sojourning.
After some time had been spent in mourning, the women
took up their bundles again, and retiring, placed
themselves in the rear of their own party. An
elderly man then advanced, and after a short colloquy
with the seated tribe, went back, and beckoned his
own people to come forward, which they did slowly and
in good order, exhibiting in front three uplifted
spears, to which were attached the little nets left
with them by the envoys of the opposite tribe, and
which were the emblems of the duty they had come to
perform, after the ordinary expiations had been
accomplished.
In advancing, the Nar-wij-jerooks
again commenced the death wail, and one of the men,
who had probably sustained the greatest loss since
the tribes had last met, occasionally in alternations
of anger and sorrow addressed his own people.
When near the Moorunde tribe a few words were addressed
to them, and they at once rose simultaneously, with
a suppressed shout. The opposite party then raised
their spears, and closing upon the line of the other
tribe, speared about fifteen or sixteen of them in
the left arm, a little below the shoulder. This
is the generally understood order of revenge; for
the persons who were to receive the wounds, as soon
as they saw the weapons of their assailants poised,
at once put out the left foot, to steady themselves,
and presented the left shoulder for the blow, frequently
uttering the word “Leipa” (spear), as the
others appeared to hesitate.
Whilst this was going on, the influential
men of each tribe were violently talking to each other,
and apparently accusing one another of being accessory
to the death of some of their people. Disclaimers
passed on each side, and the blame was imputed to
other and more distant tribes. The manes of the
dead having been appeased, the honour of each party
was left unsullied, and the Nar-wij-jerooks retired
about a hundred yards, and sat down, ready to enter
upon the ceremonies of the day, which will be described
in another place.
If the meeting of the tribes be for
the purpose of war, a favourable situation is selected
by one of the parties, and notice is sent to the other,
who then proceed to the place of meeting, where both
draw out their forces in opposing parallel lines.
Day-break, or nearly about sunset in the evening,
are the times preferred for these engagements, as
the softened light at those hours does not so much
affect the eyesight, and the spears are more easily
seen and avoided. Both parties are fully armed
with spears, shields, and other weapons, and the fight
sometimes lasts for three or four hours, during which
scarcely a word is spoken, and but little noise of
any kind is heard, excepting a shrill cry now and
then, when some one is wounded or has a narrow escape.
Many are injured generally on both sides, and some
severely so; but it rarely happens that more than
one or two are killed, though hundreds may have been
engaged.
The fights are sometimes witnessed
by men who are not concerned in them, by the women
and the children. The presence of the females
may be supposed probably to inspire the belligerents
with courage and incite them to deeds of daring.
The most dangerous and fatal affrays
in which the natives engage are those which occur
suddenly amongst tribes who have been encamped near
one another on amicable terms, and between whom some
cause of difference has arisen, probably in relation
to their females, or some recent death, which it is
imagined the sorcerers have been instrumental in producing.
In the former case a kind of melee sometimes takes
place at night, when fire-brands are thrown about,
spears launched, and bwirris
bran-dished in indescribable confusion. In the
latter case the affray usually occurs immediately
after the body is buried, and is more of a hand-to-hand
fight, in which bwirris are used rather than spears,
and in which tremendous blows are struck and frightful
wounds inflicted.
In wars males are always obliged to
join their relatives by blood and their own tribe.
Women frequently excite the men to engage in these
affrays to revenge injuries or deaths, and sometimes
they assist themselves by carrying spears or other
weapons for their husbands. I am not aware that
women or children are ever butchered after a battle
is over, and I believe such is never the case.
Single camps are sometimes treacherously surprised
when the parties are asleep, and the males barbarously
killed in cold blood. This generally takes place
just before the morning dawns, when the native is
most drowsy, and least likely to give his attention
to any thing he might hear. In these cases the
attack is generally made under the belief that the
individual is a desperate sorcerer, and has worked
innumerable mischiefs to their tribe. In their
attacks upon European parties I believe the natives
generally advance in a line or crescent, beating their
weapons together, throwing dust in the air, spitting,
biting their beards, or using some other similar act
of defiance and hostility. I have never witnessed
any such collision myself, but am told that the attack
is always accompanied by that peculiar savage sound
produced by the suppressed guttural shout of many voices
in unison, which they use in conflicts amongst themselves,
and which is continued to the moment of collision,
and renewed in triumph whenever a weapon strikes an
opponent.
When hostilely disposed from either
fear or from having been previously ill-treated, I
have seen the natives, without actually proceeding
to extremities, resort to all the symptoms of defiance
I have mentioned, or at other times, run about with
fire-brands in their hands, lighting the bushes and
the grass, either as a charm, or in the hope of burning
out the intruders. When much alarmed and rather
closely pressed, they have run up the trees like monkeys,
and concealed themselves among the boughs, evidently
thinking they were secure from pursuit there.
If tribes meet simply for the purpose
of festivity, and have no deaths to avenge on either
side, although they appear in warlike attitude, painted
and bearing spear and shield, yet when they approach
each other, they all become seated upon the ground.
After which, the strangers, should there be any, undergo
a formal introduction, and have their country and lineage
described by the older men. At these meetings
all occurrences of interest are narrated, information
is given as to the localities in which food is most
abundant, and invitations are issued by the proprietors
of these districts, to their relations and friends
to accompany them thither.
The position of one tribe towards
another, whether on friendly terms or otherwise, is
talked about, and consultations are held on the existing
state of affairs, whether hostilities shall be continued
or withdrawn, and future plans of operation are marked
out.
Whilst the men are occupied in discussing
these matters, the females engage in a narration of
family occurrences, such as births of children, marriages,
deaths, etc., not omitting a sprinkling of gossip
and scandal, from which, even these ebon sisters of
a fairer race, are not altogether exempt.
In the evening, the huts of the different
tribes are built as near to each other as practicable,
each tribe locating itself in the direction from whence
it came. The size and character of the huts, with
the number of their occupants, vary according to the
state of the weather, and the local circumstances
of their position. In fine weather, one hut will
contain from two to five families, in wet weather more,
each family however having a separate fire.
The amusements of the natives are
various, but they generally have a reference to their
future occupations or pursuits. Boys who are very
young, have small reed spears made for them by their
parents, the ends of which are padded with grass,
to prevent them from hurting each other. They
then stand at a little distance, and engage in a mimic
fight; and by this means acquire early that skill
in the use of this weapon, for which, in after life,
they are so much celebrated. At other times round
pieces of bark are rolled along the ground, to represent
an animal in the act of running, at which the spears
are thrown for the sake of practice.
Another favourite amusement among
the children, is to practise the dances and songs
of the adults, and a boy is very proud if he attains
sufficient skill in these, to be allowed to take part
in the exhibitions that are made before other tribes.
String puzzles are another species
of amusement with them. In these a European would
be surprised to see the ingenuity they display, and
the varied and singular figures which they produce.
Our juvenile attempts in this way, are very meagre
and uninteresting compared to them.
Other gratifications enjoyed by children,
consist in learning the occupations and pursuits of
after life, as to make twine, and weapons; to ascend
trees; to procure food; to guide the canoe, and many
other things, which enter into the pursuits of a savage.
The elder boys engage more extensively
in similar occupations, as they are more particularly
interested in them, and by their exertions have to
provide chiefly for their own support. Mock combats
frequently take place amongst them, in which they
are encouraged by the adults, that they may acquire
the dexterities of warfare, in which they are soon
to be more seriously engaged.
An amusement of the adults, is a large
bunch of emu feathers tied together, (fi.
P.) which is held out and shaken as if in defiance,
by some individual, whilst the others advance to try
to take it out of his hands. This occasions an
amusing struggle before the prize is gained, in which
it is not uncommon to see from ten to twenty strong
and lusty men rolling in a heap together. This
is a sort of athletic exercise amongst them, for the
purpose of testing each other’s strength.
On such an occasion they are all unarmed and naked.
At nights, dances or plays are performed
by the different tribes in turn, the figures and scenes
of which are extensively varied, but all are accompanied
by songs, and a rude kind of music produced by beating
two sticks together, or by the action of the hand
upon a cloak of skins rolled tightly together, so
as to imitate the sound of a drum. In some of
the dances only are the women allowed to take a part;
but they have dances of their own, in which the men
do not join. At all times they are the chief
musicians, vocal and instrumental. Sometimes,
however, they have an old man to lead the band and
pitch the tunes; and at others they are assisted by
the old and young men indiscriminately.
The natives have not any war-dance,
properly so called, though sometimes they are decorated
in all the pomp and circumstance of war. Being
excellent mimies, they imitate in many of their dances
the habits and movements of animals. They also
represent the mode of hunting, fighting, love-making,
etc. New figures and new songs are constantly
introduced, and are as much applauded and encored,
as more refined productions of a similar kind in civilized
communities; being sometimes passed from tribe to
tribe for a considerable distance. I have often
seen dances performed to songs with which I was acquainted,
and which I knew to belong to distant parts of the
country where a different dialect was spoken, and
which consequently could not be understood where I
heard them. Many of the natives cannot even give
an interpretation of the songs of their own districts, and most of the explanations
they do give are, I am inclined to think, generally
very imperfect, as the measures or quantities of the
syllables appear to be more attended to than the sense.
Of these amusements the natives are
passionately fond; and when once they have so far
overcome their naturally indolent disposition as to
be induced to engage in them there is no knowing when
they will give over. Dances are sometimes held
during the day, but these are of rare occurrence,
and seem to be in some way connected with their ceremonial
observances or superstitions, since rude figures, and
lofty branches of trees, decorated with tufts of feathers,
emu plumes, swan’s down and red ochre, occupy
a prominent part in the exhibition, although never
met with in the dances by night.
The dances vary a great deal among
the different tribes, both as to figures and music;
the painting or decoration of their persons, their
use of weapons, and the participation of the females
in them. Throughout the entire continent, as
far as it is known, there are many points of resemblance
in the dances of all the Aborigines, such as the practice
of painting the body with white and red ochre, carrying
boughs in their hands, or tying them round their limbs;
adorning the head with feathers or down, bearing bunches
of feathers, tied in tufts in their hands, the women
singing and beating time upon folded skins, the men
beating time upon sticks or some of their smaller
weapons, an old man acting as leader of the band,
and giving the time and tune to the others; the dances
representing the actions of animals, the circumstances
of the chase, of war, or of love; and the singular
and extraordinary quivering motion of the thighs when
the legs are distended, a peculiarity probably confined
to the natives of the continent of Australia.
The most interesting dances are those
which take place at the meeting of different tribes.
Each tribe performs in turn, and as there is much
rivalry, there is a corresponding stimulus to exertion.
The dances usually commence an hour or two after dark,
and are frequently kept up the greater part of the
night, the performers becoming so much excited that,
notwithstanding the violent exercise required to sustain
all their evolutions, they are unwilling to leave
off. It is sometimes difficult to induce them
to commence a dance; but if they once begin, and enter
into the spirit of it, it is still more difficult
to induce them to break up.
The females of the tribe exhibiting,
generally sit down in front of the performers, either
irregularly, in a line, or a semicircle, folding up
their skin cloaks into a hard ball, and then beating
them upon their laps with the palm of their hand,
and accompanying the noise thus produced with their
voices. It is surprising to see the perfect time
that is kept in this way, and the admirable manner
in which the motions of the dancers accord with the
music. There is no confusion, irregularity, or
mistake. Each person is conversant with his part;
and all exhibit a degree of elasticity and gracefulness
in their movements which, in some of the dances, is
very striking and beautiful.
In many of the figures, weapons are
carried, such as the waddy, the shield, the spear,
etc. and in these it is amazing to behold the
facility and skill with which they form in close array,
spread into open rank, change places, and thread through
the mazes of the dance, without ever deranging their
plans, or coming in contact with each other.
The tribes who are not engaged in
dancing, are seated in a large semicircle as spectators,
occasionally giving a rapturous exclamation of delight,
as any part of the performance is well gone through
or any remarkable feat of activity exhibited.
Where natives have not much acquaintance with Europeans,
so as to give up, in some measure, their original
habits, if there is any degree of jealousy between
the respective tribes, they are sometimes partitioned
off from each other by boughs of trees, whilst they
look at the dance. On one occasion I saw five
tribes met together, and the evening was of course
spent in dancing. Each tribe danced in turn,
about forty being engaged at once, besides sixteen
females, eight of whom were at each corner of the male
performers. The men were naked, painted in various
devices with red and white, and had their heads adorned
with feathers. The women wore their opossum cloaks,
and had bands of white down round their foreheads,
with the long feathers of the cockatoo sticking up
in front like horns. In the dance the men and
women did not intermingle; but the two sets of women
who were dancing at the corners of the line, occasionally
changed places with each other, passing in this transit,
at the back of the men. All sung, and the men
beat time upon their smaller weapons whilst dancing,
the whole making up a wild and piercing noise, most
deafening and ungrateful to the ears.
The natives of the Rufus and Lake
Victoria (Tar-ru) have a great variety of dances
and figures. One of these, which I witnessed,
representing the character, habits, and chase of the
kangaroo was admirably performed, and would have drawn
down thunders of applause at any theatre in Europe.
One part of this figure, where the whole of the dancers
successively drop down from a standing to a crouching
posture, and then hop off in this position with outstretched
arms and legs, was excellently executed. The
contrast of their sable skins with the broad white
stripes painted down their legs; their peculiar attitudes,
and the order and regularity with which these were
kept, as they moved in a large semicircle, in the
softening light of the fire, produced a striking effect;
and in connection with the wild and inspiriting song,
which gave an impulse to their gesticulation, led
me almost to believe that the scene was unearthly.
In some of the dances the music varies
rapidly from slow to quick, and the movements alter
accordingly. In some they are altogether measured
and monotonous, in others very lively and quick, keeping
the performers almost constantly at a double quick
march, moving in advance and retreat, crossing past
or threading through the ranks, and using a kind of
motion with the feet in unison with the music, that
bears a strong resemblance to the European mode of
dancing. At particular points the figures terminate
by some simultaneous motion of the whole performers,
accompanied by a deep, gutteral “Waugh,” uttered by all together;
at others by the actors closing in a dense circle,
and raising and pointing their weapons upwards with
the same exclamation.
The “Paritke,” or natives
inhabiting the scrub north-west of Moorunde, have
quite a different form of dancing from the river natives.
They are painted or decorated with feathers in a similar
way; but each dancer ties bunches of green boughs
round the leg, above the knees, whilst the mode of
dancing consists in stamping with the foot and uttering
at each motion a deep ventral intonation, the boughs
round the knees making a loud rustling noise in keeping
with the time of the music. One person, who directs
the others in the movements of this dance, holds in
his hands an instrument in the form of a diamond,
made of two slight sticks, from two and a half to
three feet long, crossed and tied in the middle, round
this a string, made of the hair of the opposum, is
pressed from corner to corner, and continued successively
towards the centre until there is only room left for
the hand to hold the instrument. At each corner
is appended a bunch of cockatoo feathers. With
this the chief performer keeps a little in advance
of the dancers, and whisking it up and down to the
time of the music, regulates their movements.
In another dance, in which women are
the chief performers, their bodies are painted with
white streaks, and their hair adorned with cockatoo
feathers. They carry large sticks in their hands,
and place themselves in a row in front, whilst the
men with their spears stand in a line behind them.
They then all commence their movements, but without
intermingling, the males and females dancing by themselves.
There is little variety or life in this dance, yet
it seems to be a favourite one with the natives.
The women have occasionally another
mode of dancing, by joining the hands together over
the head, closing the feet, and bringing the knees
into contact. The legs are then thrown outwards
from the knee, whilst the feet and hands are kept
in their original position, and being drawn quickly
in again a sharp sound is produced by the collision.
This is either practised alone by young girls, or
by several together for their own amusement.
It is adopted also when a single woman is placed in
front of a row of male dancers to excite their passions;
for many of the native dances are of a grossly licentious
character. In another figure they keep the feet
close together, without lifting them from the ground,
and by a peculiar motion of the limbs advance onwards,
describing a short semicircle. This amusement
is almost exclusively confined to young females among
themselves.
It has already been remarked, that
the natives, on particular occasions, have dances
which they perform in the day-time, which are different
from others, and seem to have some connection with
their ceremonial observances or superstitions.
I have only witnessed one of these. It took place
at Moorunde, in March 1844, on the occasion of a large
number of distant natives coming to visit the place;
and the visitors were the performers. The Moorunde
natives were seated upon the brow of a sand-bank;
the strangers, consisting of two tribes, down in a
hollow a little way off, among a few bushes.
When ready, they advanced in a line towards the others,
dancing and singing, being painted and decorated as
usual, some having tufts of feathers placed upon their
heads like cockades and others carrying them in their
hands tied to short sticks. Nearly all the males
carried bunches of green boughs, which they waved
and shook to the time of the song. The women were
also painted, and danced in a line with the men, those
of each tribe stationing themselves at opposite ends
of the line. Dancing for a while, they retired
again towards the hollow, and after a short interval
advanced as before, but with a person in the centre
carrying a curious, rude-looking figure, raised up
in the air. This singular object consisted of
a large bundle of grass and reeds bound together,
enveloped in a kangaroo skin, with the flesh side
outwards, and painted all over in small white circles.
From the top of this projected a thin stick, with
a large tuft of feathers at the end to represent the
head, and sticks were stuck out laterally from the
sides for the arms, terminating in tufts of feathers
stained red to represent the hands. From the
front, a small stick about six inches long was projected,
ending with a thick knob, formed of grass, around which
a piece of old cloth was tied. This was painted
white and represented the navel. The figure was
about eight feet long, and was evidently intended
to symbolise a man. It was kept in its elevated
position by the person who carried it, and who advanced
and retired with the movements of the dancers.
The position of the latter was alternately erect and
crouching, whilst they sang and beat time with the
green boughs. Sometimes they stretched out their
right arms simultaneously, and at other times their
left, apparently for the purpose of marking the time
at particular parts of the song. After dancing
for a while in this way, they again retired to the
hollow, and for a few moments there was another pause;
after which they again advanced as before, but without
the image. In the place of this two standards
were exhibited, made of poles, about twelve feet long,
and borne by two persons. These were perfectly
straight, and for the first eight feet free from boughs;
above this nine branches were left upon each pole,
having at their ends each a bunch of feathers of the
hawk or owl. On the top of one of the standards
was a bunch of emu feathers. The branches were
stripped of all their smaller twigs and leaves, and
of their bark. They were painted white, and wound
round with the white down of the black swan, twisted
into a rope. This also extended for a considerable
distance down the pole, below the undermost branch.
Having again retired towards the hollow,
they remained there for a few minutes, and then advanced
for the third time. On this occasion, however,
instead of the image or standards, they all carried
their spears. After dancing with these for some
time, they went forward towards the Moorunde natives,
who sprang upon their feet, and seizing their weapons,
speared two or three of the strangers in the shoulder,
and all was over. I was anxious to have got hold
of the rude figure to have a drawing made of it, but
it had been instantly destroyed. The standards
I procured.
This dance took place between nine
and ten in the morning, and was quite unlike any thing
I had seen before. A stranger might have supposed
it to be a religious ceremony, and the image the object
of worship. Such, however, I am convinced was
not the case, although I believe it to have had some
connection with their superstitions, and that it was
regarded in the light of a charm.
Before the country was occupied by
Europeans, the natives say that this dance was frequently
celebrated, but that latterly it has not been much
in use. No other instance of it ever came under
my own observation in any part of New Holland.
The songs of the natives are of a
very rude and unmeaning character, rarely consisting
of more than one or two ideas, which are continually
repeated over and over again. They are chiefly
made on the spur of the moment, and refer to something
that has struck the attention at the time. The
measure of the song varies according to circumstances.
It is gay and lively, for the dance; slow and solemn
for the enchanter; and wild and pathetic for the mourner.
The music is sometimes not unharmonious; and when
heard in the stillness of the night and mellowed by
distance, is often soothing and pleasing. I have
frequently laid awake, after retiring to rest, to
listen to it. Europeans, their property, presence,
and habits, are frequently the subject of these songs;
and as the natives possess great powers of mimicry,
and are acute in the observation of anything that
appears to them absurd or ludicrous, the white man
often becomes the object of their jests or quizzing.
I have heard songs of this kind sung at the dances
in a kind of comic medley, where different speakers
take up parts during the breaks in the song, and where
a sentence or two of English is aptly introduced,
or a quotation made from some native dialect, other
than that of the performers. It is usually conducted
in the form of question and answer, and the respective
speakers use the language of the persons they are
supposed to represent. The chorus is, however,
still the same repetition of one or two words.
The following specimens, taken from
a vocabulary published by Messrs. Teichelmann, and
Schurmann, German Missionaries to the Aborigines, will
give an idea of the nature of the songs of the Adelaide
tribe.
KADLITPIKO PALTI.
Pindi mai birkibirki parrato, parrato. (DE CAPO BIS.)
Captain JACK’S song.
The European food, the pease, I wished to eat, I wished
to eat.
MULLAWIRRABURKARNA PALTI. Natta
ngai padlo ngaityarniappi; watteyernaurlo tappandi
ngaityo parni tatti. (Da Capo.)
King john’s song.
Now it (viz. the road or track) has tired me;
throughout Yerna there is here unto me a continuous
road.
WILTONGARROLO kundando
Strike (him, viz. the dog) with the tuft of eagle
feathers.
Kadlottikurrelo paltando
Strike (him) with the girdle
Mangakurrelo paltando
Strike (him) with the string round the head
Worrikarrolo paltando
Strike (him) with the blood of circumcision
Turtikarrolo paltando
Strike (him) with the blood of the arm, etc.
etc.
Kartipaltapaltarlo padlara kundando
Wodliparrele kadlondo
Kanyamirarlo kadlondo
Karkopurrelo kadlondo
“This curse or imprecation is
used in hunting a wild dog, which, by the mysterious
effects of those words, is induced to lie down securely
to sleep, when the natives steal upon and easily kill
him. The first word in each line denotes things
sacred or secret, which the females and children are
never allowed to see.
KAWEMUKKA minnurappindo Durtikarro minnurappindo
Tarralye minnurappindo Wimmari minnurappindi
Kirki minurappindo Wattetarpirri minnurappindo
Worrikarro minurappindo
“These sentences are used in
hunting opossums, to prevent their escape, when
the natives set fire to hollow trees in which the opossums
are living.
Karro karro wimmari Karra yernka makkitia
Karro karro kauwemukka Makkitia mulyeria
Karro karro makkitia
“These words are rapidly repeated
to the NGULTAS, while undergoing the painful operation
of tattooing; they are believed to be so powerful as
to soothe the pain, and prevent fatal consequences
of that barbarous operation.”
Another specimen may be given from
the Vocabulary published by Mr. Meyer, another of
the German Missionaries at Encounter Bay.
“Miny-el-ity yarluke an-ambe
what is it road me for Aly-..el-..arr’
yerk-in yangaiak-ar! here are they standing up hill
. . .
What a fine road is this for me winding between the
hills!
“The above words compose one
of the native songs. It refers to the road between
Encounter Bay and Willunga. All their songs appear
to be of the same description, consisting of a few
words which are continually repeated. This specimen,
it will be observed, consists of two regular verses:
“This may, however, be accidental.”
I have not thought it worth while
to give any specimens of the songs I have collected
myself, because I could not be quite certain that I
should give the original words with strict accuracy,
neither could I be satisfied about the translations.
The assemblage of several tribes at
one place for any of the objects I have described,
rarely continues uninterrupted for any great length
of time, for even where it has taken place for the
most pacific purposes, it seldom terminates as it
began; and the greater the number of natives present,
the less likelihood is there that they will remain
very long in a state of quiescence.
If not soon compelled to separate
by the scarcity of food, or a desire to follow some
favourite pursuit, for which the season of the year
is favourable, they are generally driven to it by
discord and disagreements amongst themselves, which
their habits and superstitions are calculated to foment.