Page:A colonial autocracy, New South Wales under Governor Macquarie, 1810-1821.djvu/292

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A COLONIAL AUTOCRACY.

"has been by no means so rigid as that in regard to the other."[1]

Though Macquarie freely admitted their right to act as they pleased in drawing up rules for their mess, he felt "that a courtesy was due to me as their General and Governor of this territory, in regard to making my table the rule or standard for the admission of persons into society, and I could not but feel chagrined that a courtesy so usual and so becoming should have been withheld by a corps of officers to whom I had shown a particular inclination to pay every personal respect and attention within my power. The officers of the 46th Regiment in adopting a Rule of Exclusion, previous to their having acquired any local knowledge of the country, could not impress me with a very high opinion either of their good sense or their liberality: but I was peculiarly hurt at the consideration that Colonel Molle, in whose friendship and candour I had so fully reposed, and who constantly expressed himself in terms of admiration of the principles I was acting upon, should have privately lent himself to a measure which he was either ashamed to avow, or had not candour enough to make me acquainted with."[2]

Outwardly all remained on friendly terms until Captain Sanderson of the 46th joined the regiment from England in 1815. This officer came before the magistrates for some petty misdemeanour and treated their authority with contempt. For this he was "reproved and admonished privately" by Macquarie, whose admonitions had the result of turning Sanderson into the leader of what Macquarie called a faction against him. The truth was that amongst a certain set of officers it became the correct thing to make fun of the Governor and his friends and all that they did. Even Molle, who was on intimate terms with those colonists who were least friendly towards Macquarie with Bent, Harris, Jamison and others, sometimes had to lecture his officers on the "bold license they gave to their tongues".[3] Finally a young ensign, spending a dull day on duty at the

  1. See D. 27, 25th July, 1817. Enclosure to Commander-in-Chief. R.O., MS.
  2. D. 27, 25th July, 1817. R.O., MS. Probably this means no more than that Molle refrained from adverse comment. Macquarie would be quite ready to take that for approval. See, e.g., his belief that Lord Bathurst approved of his emancipist policy. Chapter VI. and later in this chapter.
  3. See Macquarie to Commander-in-Chief, above.