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CHAP. XIV - AUSTRALIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

Pacing the deck with difficulty, as the ship tore through the lava-covered seas, before a favouring gale that caught us off Cape Lewin, some of us discussed the prospects of the great Southland as a whole.

In Australia, it is often said, we have a second America in its infancy; but it may be doubted whether we have not become so used to trace the march of empire on a westward course, through Persia and Assyria, Greece and Rome, then by Germany to England and America, that we are too readily prepared to accept the probability of its onward course to the Pacific.

The progress of Australia has been singularly rapid. In 1830, her population was under 40,000; in 1860, it numbered 1,500,000; nevertheless, it is questionable how far the progress will continue. The natural conditions of America in Australia are exactly reversed. All the best lands of Australia are on her coast, and these are already taken up by settlers. Australia has three-quarters the area of Europe, but it is doubtful whether she will ever support a dense population throughout even half her limits. The uses of the northern territory have yet to be discovered, and the interior of the continent is far from being tempting to the settler. Upon the whole, it seems likely that almost all the imperfectly-known regions of Australia will in time be occupied by pastoral Crown tenants, but that the area of agricultural operations is not likely to admit of indefinite extension.

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Greater Britain , pp. 140 - 147
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1868

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