Harris handed him the whip and turned to the doctor. ‘We are ready to yer count, sir.’
The doctor nodded to Ikey to commence and Ikey, uttering a low moan, raised the whip and brought it down upon Billygonequeer’s back. The blow was so ineffectual that it brought a sudden gale of laughter from the onlookers. One of the knots at the end of the cord must have entered a festering pit in Billy’s back, for a thin trickle of blood ran from it. Ikey gave a soft moan and fainted dead away to the hilarious laughter of the prisoners.
The doctor examined Ikey then took smelling salts from his bag which revived him. But it was clear Ikey was not up to the task of flagellation. The doctor turned to Harris.
‘We do not have a trooper who is corporal by rank among us. You will have to complete the flogging yourself.’ There was a sudden and complete silence among the prisoners as they watched Harris.
‘I am not inclined, sir. Can it not wait for Mr Manning? Some other day perhaps?’
‘Nonsense, man! I have just seen how well you take to the task by the way you approached the whipping post. Get to it. I have but little time to waste in this tedious matter.’
‘Sir, I shall lose respect among my men,’ Harris tried again.
‘Nay!’ several prisoners shouted. ‘That you will not! G’warn, Mr Harris, do the deed!’
‘Be silent, you!’ Harris snarled at the ranks, grateful to have a chance to vent his spleen.
‘There you are, Harris, you have the full support of your men.’ The doctor stooped and picked up the cat o’ nine tails. ‘Can’t ask for more than that now, can you?’ He handed the whip to Harris. ‘Be a good person and do your duty in the name of the King.’
Harris seemed suddenly to lose all control and his face took on a fierce and desperate look. He lifted the whip and ran at Billygonequeer, and brought the cat down with all his might across the black man’s back. He rained blow after blow on Billy, grunting and frothing at the mouth, so that long before he had completed the one hundred strokes he was exhausted and bowed down for want of energy. His hands were clasped upon his knees and his breath came in great gasps. Specks of flesh and blood splattered his blouse and face and hair.
‘Why you are the consummate flagellator, Mr Harris. Taken to the art like a duck to water, eh?’ the surgeon said calmly, then added, ‘That be quite enough, cut the prisoner down.’
Throughout the terrible beating Billygonequeer did not once flinch or cry out. Nor did he register any expression when a trooper splashed his back with brine before cutting him from the triangle. He spat the leather mouthpiece out, strips of raw flesh hanging from his back, and stood rigid, eyes glazed, the yellow palms of his hands turned outwards. He then howled three times, the eerie call of the Tasmanian tiger dog, and the Irishmen among the prisoners were seen to cross themselves.
Billygonequeer was not placed in solitary confinement, as was the custom after a flogging, but chained once again to the wall in the courtyard. He stayed there for two weeks on bread and water until his back was sufficiently healed for him to return to the cart.
Each evening Ikey would go to the gaoler Mr Dodsworth and beg for liniment and clean rags, and he would clean out the wounds on Billy’s back and to the back of his head, wincing and gagging as he cleared the maggots the flies had laid in the festering craters during the day. Billy had long since come out of his trance and he would smile as Ikey approached. Silently he’d allow Ikey to clean his wounds and rub the sulphur ointment into his back without flinching, though the pain must have been excruciating.
Ikey could not explain to himself this voluntary act of caring. He knew it to be completely contrary to his character and he was not aware of having undergone any change in his nature. In fact he seldom thought of Hannah and his children, and cared even less about their welfare. He would lie awake at night plotting to get Hannah’s set of numbers for the safe, and told himself that, if ever he should succeed, he would escape his wife forever.
Occasionally, in a moment of sentimentality, he thought fondly of Mary, though he harboured no future ambitions for a reunion with her. He told himself he wished only for a future life as a rich man, a life far removed from any he had previously led, and he was determined not to bring any of the past into his future.
Though it may be said that every heart on earth is kindled to love, Ikey had so early in his life been denied affection that he was dulled to its prospect. He had never felt the singular need to love. He felt he had loved Mary, if only briefly, but he had no notion of what he might expect from such an emotion. He did not care if he himself were liked, for he had come to expect the opposite. Now that the sycophancy on which he depended as a rich man was no longer available to him, he fully expected that he would be greatly disliked. That he himself should be loved was not a thought which ever entered his head. And so Ikey’s feelings for Billygonequeer were hard for him to understand, and filled him with apprehension.
Almost every day as he laboured at the cart he would decide to ignore the black man on his return to the prison that night. But he was never able to do so. Billygonequeer would smile at him, his gleaming white teeth filling his astonishing coal-black face, and Ikey, inwardly cursing himself for his foolishness, would be off to Mr Dodsworth for liniment and cloth.
Ikey, as was his natural manner, talked to Billygonequeer at great length. To this torrent of words Billy would sometimes grunt, or smile, adding little more than sounds and nods to this one-way dialogue. Occasionally Billy would clutch Ikey’s hand or pat him on his face and say, ‘Good pella, Ikey.’ Then he might grin and repeat, ‘Much, much, good pella, Ikey.’ It was as though, by Ikey’s mannerisms and the few words Billy had at his disposal, he could grasp what his companion was saying.
Sometimes Billygonequeer would hear a bird cry and say aloud its Aboriginal name until Ikey could pronounce it clearly. He’d gather fruit or nuts, or grub for roots, and always share what he found. Ikey got used to the fat white grubs Billy would find under the bark of fallen trees and found them delicious when roasted. Whenever they came upon wild honey they would feast on it secretly for days. In these ways Billy supplemented their prison diet with bush tucker, and there were some days on the road gang when the four men on the cart counted their stomachs more full than empty. It was a wondrous thing to see Billy’s willingness to share everything he found, and the smallest wild morsel would be meticulously divided.
Ikey had spent his life in acquisition, sharing as little as possible, and keeping as much for himself as he could. It would be nice to think that Billygonequeer might have changed this aspect of his nature, that the primitive savage could teach Ikey the highest achievement of civilisation, the equitable sharing of the combined resources of any society.
Alas, this is not the lesson Ikey took from the black man. Instead he came to realise that it was this very characteristic which would lead to the ultimate demise of the Van Diemen’s Land savage. The rapacious white tribe who were arriving in increasing numbers, not only as convicts but also as settlers, wanted to own everything they touched. They slashed and burned the wilderness so that they might graze their sheep and grow their corn. They erected fences around the land they now called their own and which henceforth they were prepared to defend with muskets and sometimes even their lives. They built church steeples and prison walls and homes of granite hewn from the virgin rock and timber cut from the umbrageous mountain forests. They possessed everything upon the island, the wild beasts that grazed upon its surface, the birds that flew over it, the fish that swam in its rushing river torrents and the barking seals resting in the quiet bays and secluded inlets. Everything they thought worthwhile was attached to the notion of ownership.
Against this urgent and anxious desire for appropriation stood a handful of savages who seldom even built a shelter against the weather. They dressed in a single kangaroo skin, and believed that all they could see and walk upon was owned by all who moved across the land, and yet by none. A people who did not comprehend that one
person could own, or wish to own, more than any other.
Ikey understood at once that the Aboriginal tribes in Van Diemen’s Land must surely perish because they lacked the two things that had made human progress possible, the existence of greed and the desire to possess property. Ikey understood acquisition as the only guarantee of his survival. He saw that Billygonequeer’s people were doomed, for they had not learned this fundamental lesson. Without the need to own there is no need to compete and an uncompetitive society can only exist if it is allowed to develop in isolation. For Billy’s people, the isolation had come to an end.
Ikey was aware that Billygonequeer probably did not understand what he was saying, but he said it nonetheless. He would talk as he cleaned Billy’s wounds and rubbed salve into his back. ‘You must become like us, you must learn our ways, your ways are over, my dear!’ Ikey would repeat this over and over, but all he got from Billygonequeer was a big smile. A big white smile in a very black face and always the same response.
‘You good pella, Ikey!’
It was not three weeks after Billygonequeer had taken his place again beside Ikey on the cart when Harris began to suffer stomach pains. He would be shouting at the prisoners, or simply walking along, when suddenly he would grab at his stomach, doubling over with pain as each spasm came to him.
The road gang did not need to be told that he was dying. ‘Harris’s gone queer,’ they’d say gleefully among themselves. A month later the overseer was dead, and it was rumoured that all the same symptoms, self-laceration of the stomach and howling in the manner of Billygonequeer, were in attendance at his death bed. Furthermore, the coroner conducting the autopsy could find no fault with his stomach and intestines.
The gang was now working too far from Richmond Gaol to return at night so they proceeded from a new out station, a series of rough buildings erected beside the road. These were infested with lice and fleas, with the addition of other vermin when the weather grew colder. A new overseer, James Strutt, who had come out from Launceston, proved not too harsh by the standards of the day, dealing with trouble only when he found it.
It was from Strutt that Ikey first learned the true extent of the range war which was being waged against the island’s native people. Strutt was a member of a part-time militia unit, formed independently of the government troopers, and he spoke with great enthusiasm of the tactics to be employed in the killing of blacks. He had been a member of the Black Line in October the previous year, and spoke disparagingly of the bumbling manner in which this manoeuvre had been conducted. The Black Line was a government sponsored operation intended to drive the Aboriginals out of the settled areas. The plan was to drive the blacks south and east towards East Bay Neck, through the Forestier Peninsula, and into the Tasman Peninsula, where it was proposed a permanent Aboriginal reserve would be set up.
The task force consisted of two thousand men, five hundred of these soldiers, seven hundred convicts and eight hundred free settlers and involved a thousand muskets and three hundred pairs of handcuffs. Three weeks later this avenging army returned having captured one old Aboriginal man and a young boy.
Strutt dismissed the operation as an example of how not to go about the task of eliminating the blacks. ‘Government and soldier be not the way. It be a question of us agin them, free men agin savages and, by God, we’ll settle it soon enough!’ he’d boast.
The Church talked of the salvation of the noble savage. For its part, the government talked increasingly of saving these primitive creatures from extinction by rounding them all up and placing them on a suitable island, which was yet to be found, where they would be out of harm’s way.
It was estimated that a thousand natives still existed of the original three thousand who were thought to be on the island when it had been declared a penal settlement. As it turned out, this calculation was incorrect. A white man’s respiratory disease had struck the tribes and only a few hundred Aboriginals still existed on the land they had traditionally occupied.
But it should not be supposed that the Tasmanian native was without courage. With wooden spears against muskets they valiantly fought back and caused great consternation among the settlers. During the four-year period of martial law they killed eighty-nine Europeans, while of the two hundred Aboriginals thought to be within the settled areas, fewer than fifty survived.
The government now believed that the natives might be persuaded to accept a safe haven. They appointed George Augustus Robinson, a religious zealot who spoke the main Aboriginal language, to peaceably round up what remained of the tribes for resettlement. In this task Robinson enlisted the help of an Aboriginal female, Truganini. She was his guide, and it was her influence which he hoped might persuade her people to capitulate, though the settlers thought the word ‘guide’ a very curious one for what they insisted was the true relationship between Robinson and the young and shapely Aboriginal woman.
If Church and State professed compassion for the Van Diemen’s Land natives, the settlers held no such Christian or noble motives. They called openly for the elimination of the Tasmanian Aboriginal race and, in that duplicity so common to government, where a wink is as good as a nod, the authorities turned a blind eye as the settlers worked to bring that elimination about.
Governor Arthur issued a famous poster, which was nailed to trees in the wilderness, in which he showed the Aboriginals, by means of comic pictures, that there would be equal justice under British law. That a native killed by a white settler would see the culprit hanged as surely as if a black were to murder a white. Yet although hundreds of Aboriginal women and children were openly slaughtered, not a single European settler was ever hanged for the murder of a black.
Martial law was declared in 1828 which gave the military the right to apprehend or shoot on sight any Aboriginal found in the settled areas. The military proved ineffective in this task, and roving parties of settlers were formed under the pretence of a militia such as the one to which Strutt belonged. A bounty was introduced for the capture of Aboriginals, five pounds being paid for every adult and two pounds for each child. It was open season, and though few natives were captured, many were murdered with as little concern for the consequences as if they were kangaroos or a flock of marauding cockatoos.
To the settlers, Robinson, ‘the Black Shepherd’, was a bad joke and Strutt would often expostulate, ‘While that Abo fucker George Robinson be playing sheepdog we be playin’ huntin’ dog. Before he can muster them black bastards, they’ll all be on the roll call for the dead. They’s vermin, scum, they’s not human like us, a single fly-blown sheep be worth five o’ them and a good huntin’ hound worth ten!’
Whereupon Strutt would tell with alacrity one of his numerous stories of the hunting trips undertaken to kill the blacks. The men in Ikey’s road gang thought these stories a great entertainment. Two favourites were the tale of Paddy Hexagon, a stock-keeper who lived near Deloraine, who shot and killed nineteen Aboriginals with a swivel gun filled with nails, and another which the prisoners on the road gang called ‘Stuffing Leaves’.
‘G’warn then, Mr Strutt, tell us the one about the woman and the stuffin’ o’ leaves!’ one of the prisoners asked one night when they’d moved from Richmond Gaol, and were accommodated at the out station in the bush.
They were sitting around a fire, Ikey seated next to the always silent Billygonequeer. Billy appeared not to listen to or even understand these horror stories. Instead he sat on his haunches with his back turned to the fire, and seemed more interested in the sound of the wind in the gum trees and the call of the frogs from a nearby stream.
This stream ran into a small wetland and Billygonequeer seemed to take an unusual interest in the frogs which resided there. Every once in a while he would cup his hands to his mouth and precisely imitate a call, though at a slightly deeper pitch. Whereupon all the frogs would grow suddenly silent. Then he would carry on in a froggy language as though he were delivering an address, pause, then deliver a single, though somewhat diffe
rent note, and the frogs would continue their croaking chatter.
At first this was seen by the men as a great joke. But Billygonequeer would continue in earnest conversation in frog language until the gang got so used to his nightly routine of croaking and ribet-ribet-ing with nature that they took no more notice than if a loud belch or fart had taken place among one of their number.
‘Oh aye, the woman with leaves, that be a most pleasin’ hunt,’ Strutt chuckled in reply. ‘The women be the worst. They’ll scratch your eyes out soon as look at you.’ Strutt stroked his beard as though reviewing all the details of the tale before he began. ‘There be three of us, Paddy Hexagon, Sam O’Leary and yours truly, and we’s huntin’ kangaroo in the Coal River area when we seen this gin who were pregnant like. “Oi!” we shouts, thinkin’ her too fat to make a run for it, and five pound in the bounty bag if you please and very nice too! And if the child be near to born, another two for what’s inside her belly.’ He paused and the men laughed and one of them, a wit named Cristin Puding, known of course as ‘Christmas Pudding’, made a customary crack.
‘That I needs to see! A government bounty man what pays two pound for what’s not yet come outside to be properly skinned and cured!’
‘Well we shouts again,’ Strutt continued, casting a look of annoyance at Puding, for he did not wish him to steal even the smallest rumble of his thunder, or tiny scrap of the laughter yet to come. ‘And she sets off, waddlin’ like a duck and makin’ for the shelter o’ some trees not twenty yards away. She’s movin’ too, movin’ fast for the fat black duck she’s become.’ This brought a laugh, for the gang had heard it often enough and were properly cued to respond.
‘We sets off to get to her, but the grass ‘tween her and us be high and she be into the trees. By the time we gets there she ain’t nowhere to be seen. High ‘n low we searches and we’s about to give it away when we hears a cry up above. We looks up and there she be, up fifty feet or more in the branches of a gum tree, well disguised behind the leaves and all. How she gone and got up in her state I’m buggered if I knows. It were no easy climb.’
Potato Factory Page 48