[The Life of Captain Matthew Flinders by Ernest Scott]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Captain Matthew Flinders

CHAPTER 7
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The coast was searched sixty miles to the north and forty to the south; but the convicts, with the breeze in their sail and the hope of liberty in their hearts, had all the advantage on their side, and eluded their gaolers.
In April, 1797, news had been brought to the settlement of the wreck of the ship Sydney Cove on an island to the southward.

If the Irish prisoners could reach this island, float the ship on the tide, and repair her rents, they considered that they had an excellent chance of escape.
The provisions which they had on their boat, with such as they might find on the ship, would probably be sufficient for a voyage.

It was a daring enterprise, but it may well have seemed to offer a prospect of success.
Some of the prisoners at the settlement, as appears from a "general order" issued by Hunter, had "picked up somehow or other the idle story of the possibility of travelling from hence to China, or finding some other colony where they expect every comfort without the trouble of any labour." It may have been the alluring hope of discovering such an earthly paradise that flattered these men.

As a matter of fact, some convicts did escape from New South Wales and reached India, after extraordinary perils and hardships.

They endeavoured to sail up the River Godavery, but were interrupted by a party of sepoys, re-arrested, and sent to Madras, whence they were ordered to be sent back to Sydney.* (* See Annual Register 1801 page 15.) But the party whom Bass found never discovered the place of the wreck upon which they reckoned.


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