 
       
      "By the firelight," answered Herbert, coming
close again.
"Look at me."
"I do look at you, my dear boy."
"Touch me."
"I do touch you, my dear boy."
"You are not afraid that I am in any fever, or
 that my head is much disordered by the accident
 of last night?"
"N-no, my dear boy," said Herbert, after
 taking time to examine me. "You are rather
 excited, but you are quite yourself."
"I know I am quite myself. And the man
 we have in hiding down the river, is Estella's
Father."
A TWO-YEAR OLD COLONY.
FAITH in the youngest child, is a family failing.
 Mother Britannia has a large family of colonies,
 some of them old enough to be established in the
 world as independent heads of households; but
 at present she is more than a little proud of her
 youngest daughter, whose birthday is in this
 present month. She was born in the London
 Gazette on the third of June, two years ago.
By official proclamation, bearing that date,
 Moreton Bay was taken as a new colony, named
 Queensland, out of the northern territory of
 New South Wales, just as Port Phillip had been
 taken, as a new colony named Victoria, from
 its southern territory eight years before. On
 the tenth of December, Sir George Bowen, the
governor, arrived at Brisbane, the new colonial
 capital, and proclaimed Moreton Bay a colony
 under the new name, which was, he said,
"entirely the happy thought and inspiration of her
 Majesty herself." On the tenth of December,
 then, only a year and a half ago, this last-born of
 the colonies began to run alone.
Among all disputants as to the direction
 in which we may look for new supplies of
cotton, the claim of Queensland almost alone
 passes unquestioned. The colony lies partly
 within the tropics, but the average climate is
 about that of Madeira; the whole territory, when
 its boundaries are finally determined (as they are
 not yet), will probably be about three times as
 large as France. The settled districts are already
 as large as the mother country, meaning thereby
 not Great Britain only, but Great Britain and
 Ireland. Our last quarter of the year is Queensland
spring, our spring is Queensland autumn,
 and the winter there begins on our Midsummerday.
There is magnificent timber and much
 coal; the vine and olive grow there; so do maize,
 cotton, and sugar-cane; wheat, oranges, and
 nutmegs. On the coast are pearls. There is
 also a fishery for the dugong, which yields a
 valuable oil, good meat like veal or pork, and
 very marketable bones for the turner, solid as
 ivory. But of all this great land of plenty, the
 population is at present only about thirty thousand,
which is less by seven thousand than that
 of the English Ipswich, after which one of the
 Queensland settlements is named.
There is, perhaps, no part of the Australian
 continent so well watered and supplied with
 navigable rivers as this Queensland. There is
 Clarence River, navigable for vessels of two
 hundred and fifty tons, fifty miles up. The Richmond,
though only a hundred miles from source
 to mouth, has three hundred miles of navigable
 water on the main river and its various branches
 or arms. There are the rivers watering a
 strip of boundary that Queensland claims but
 New South Wales at present holds. There
 is the Tweed, up which small vessels penetrate
twenty or thirty miles, on behalf of the colonial
 cedar trade. There are the Arrowsmith and
 the Logan; there is the Brisbane River
navigated by large steam-boats for sixty-five miles;
 the Pine, the Black Swan, and the Mary Rivers,
 the Boyne, the Fitzroy, and so forth; and all
 these rivers are fed by a network of little streams
 that fertilise the land.
Then there is Moreton Bay, which, until lately,
 gave its name to the whole region. That was
 discovered ninety-one years ago by Captain
 Cook, and nine years afterwards was examined
 by Captain Flinders, who overlooked the mouth of
Brisbane River, hidden by two flat islands. He
 had previously anchored four-and-twenty hours
 in Shoal Bay, into which the Clarence River flows,
 and supposed that he saw only a shoal bay, with
 gloomy mangrove trees upon its shores. The
 Clarence River was accidentally discovered by
 some sawyers, in search of cedar, only twenty
 three years ago. Brisbane and the Boyne Rivers
 had been also fallen upon by accident, fifteen years
 earlier. The Australian rivers, in fact, bring down
much earth, and form their mouths in such a
 way that from the deck of a vessel on the coast
 they are often not to be detected. Moreton
 Bay is made not by a reach of land, but by
three islands, so disposed as to form a sort of
inland sea, sixty miles long, and about twenty
 wide, studded with islands, especially towards
 the south, where it narrows into a mere river.
A suggestive hint of the fertility of the soil
 in the southern or least tropical parts of the
 Queensland, is given by the Rev. Dr. Lang, of
 Sydney, a member of the parliament of New
 South Wales, who has been an active and effectual
promoter of the secession both of Victoria
 and Queensland, and who is the author of a new
book on Queensland, from which we derive the
 best part of our information. In a garden near
 Grafton, on Clarence River, his attention was
 attracted by a young peach tree, about eight
 feet high, covered with blossom. The tree had
 grown from a stone planted on the preceding
 January, only eight months before. Dr. Lang
 does not like to find in such a region settlements
 called Deptford or Casino. He has a rhyme as
 well as a reason against it. "I like," he says:
"I like the native names, as Paramatta,
And Illawarra, and Woolloomoolloo.
Toongabbee, Mittagong, and Coolingatta,
And Yurumbon, and Coodgiegang, Meroo.
Euranarina, Jackwa, Bulkomatta,
 Nandowra, Tumbarumba, Woogaroo;
The Wollondilly and the Wingycarribbee.
The Warragumby, Daby, and Bungarribbee."
Dickens Journals Online 