The diggings, the bush and Melbourne : or, Reminiscences of three years' wanderings in Victoria

audiobook

The diggings, the bush and Melbourne : or, Reminiscences of three years' wanderings in Victoria

by James Armour

EN·~2 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

PREFACE.

1:07
2

Chapter I. MARCH TO BENDIGO.

17:44
3

Chapter II. THE DIGGINGS.

16:35
4

Chapter III. BULLOCK CREEK.

19:37
5

Chapter IV. AVOCA.

39:42
6

Chapter V. COOK AND HUTKEEPER.

23:51
7

Chapter VI. MELBOURNE.

14:25
8

Chapter VII. COURTSHIP AND MARRIAGE.

22:24
9

APPENDIX.

8:17
10

ERRATUM.

0:38

Description

A young immigrant’s eyes open onto the chaotic wharves of 1850s Melbourne, where hundreds of hopefuls spill from a cramped ship into a city teeming with makeshift shelters, leaky roofs, and the restless energy of a burgeoning gold rush. The narrator sketches the stark contrast between bustling crowds and the quiet desperation of families huddled under threadbare shawls, while describing the rag‑tag camaraderie that forms among strangers eager to chase fortune beyond the harbor.

Soon the party sets out for the Bendigo diggings, lugging heavy swags, tin pots and tomahawks across muddy tracks that test their resolve at every step. Along the way, the story captures the gritty reality of life on the road—the constant adjustments, the shared jokes, and the looming uncertainty of what lies ahead—offering a vivid portrait of ambition, hardship, and the raw spirit of those early pioneers.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Full title

The diggings, the bush and Melbourne : or, Reminiscences of three years' wanderings in Victoria or, Reminiscences of Three Years' Wanderings in Victoria

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (157K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from scans of public domain works at The National Library of Australia.)

Release date

2018-07-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JA

James Armour

A vivid firsthand observer of Australia’s gold-rush era, this 19th-century writer turned his travels in Victoria into a lively account of hardship, movement, and colonial life. His work blends memoir-like detail with an easy, conversational style that still feels close to the ground.

View all books

You may also like