Tuesday, December 1, 2015

BONNIE PRINCE CHARLES'S SWORD SWALLOWED IN AUSTRALIA

Clairvoyant   warned   against  sailing  on  Gothenburg.

After a hurried  round of op shops and  garage sales in the steamy north , this twitchy  book and ephemera addicted blogger tottered  home  with  several  bags of  books, old sheet  music , some 45  records  and  a  rusty saw, the  latter only costing a  buck and may be useful for something one day...carving up a turkey or  slicing open grandma's Christmas pudding   ?   One  book , bearing  the  title  A Strange Bird On The Lagoon, by Margaret Reeves  , Boolarong Publications , Brisbane , 1985 , dealing with the  pioneering  of  Queensland's  Barcoo region , centred around two families, the Camerons  and  Crombies ,  turned  out  to  be  a  gem . 

One of  the  many fascinating tales  tells how "Sir Ewen" Cameron was  knighted  for  distinguished  gallantry  by  Bonnie  Prince Charles on the field of  battle at Falkirk. The  prince asked  Ewen for  his sword  to perform the ceremony, but  all that was left of the weapon  was  the   bloodied hilt, the blade having been shattered in  the fierce  fighting.

The story goes that Prince Charles used his own walking stick to perform the honours  in  place of  a  sword  and  presented it  to Sir Ewen as a  souvenir. Passed down as a family treasure , it was brought to Australia  by a Cameron descendant . While  he was away pioneering in Queensland , he left the walking stick in a  packing  case of  books  stored  under a tarpaulin . Opened months later, it was found that  white ants had  riddled  the  lot .

Author Reeves  was brought  up  as a child on Caledonia, a cattle station  near Aramac, Queensland. She cites instances of "second sight"... Sir Ewen,  for example, a fierce fighter  who ,"wolf-like", tore out the throat of an  English officer  in  mortal combat  and remarked:" The sweetest mou'ful  I ever  tasted!"

Sir  Ewen, it seems , was clairvoyant  and in an incident like something out of Macbeth, is  said to have met a famous witch with the power of second sight  who warned  him against keeping a  rendezvous  over  a  boundary dispute. Heeding  her advice, he went and got 65  of his Cameron  warriors, who hid in the heather  at  the  trysting spot, and probably averted his  murder  because the  other party had a  much  smaller  group hidden  nearby and the discussion became  very heated . A  recurring  dream  saved  him  from  English soldiers .

Reeves wrote  that because of  a premonition ,  a grandfather cancelled his booking on  the  S.S. Gothenburg  which, on the Darwin to Adelaide  run ,  hit the Great Barrier Reef  in  February 1875  with the loss of  102 lives , a brother and a  family  he knew with four children  were among  those who perished .

One of the worst maritime disasters on the Australian east coat, the dead included Captain  R.G.A.Pearce ; a South Australian  judge, Mr Justice Wearing;the Acting South Australian Crown Solicitor, J.J.Whitby ; former South Australian Premier ,Thomas Reynolds and his wife ; Judge's Associate, Lionel Pelham ; the wife and six children of a future Government Resident, E.W.Price ; the French vice consul , E.Durand ; Darwin newspaper editor , Richard Wells .   

A number of  honeymooners were aboard the ill fated vessel, the loss described as a terrible calamity. The book contains a wide range of additional  information about   Scottish  history ,  Australian  pioneering , Aborigines ( their skills , customs  and  one who could  speak Latin ), the  Palmer River Goldfields, trade  with  Java. 

*White Bird paper sculpture photograph on  cover by Tex  Moeckel, Moss Vale , NSW.