Will you kindly take an opportunity of mentioning to
Lord Carnarvon that on my return to this office I find that under any
circumstances the balance of the ammunition and 3 or 4 boxes of
Books for the men (the whole a trifle of tonnage say 5 or 6 tons
quite at the outside) must go with the men in the
Euphrates. I
have left instructions that
if if anything beyond the Provisions would
have to be left out of the
Briseis
it must be left behind altogether,
and to provide for such a contingency I have ordered
that the 2 Pontoons (small) with their apparatus shall be
selected for that purpose.
I hope sincerely that the twelvemonths provisions may not have
to be left behind. Experience has taught me the grave importance
of having Provisions in advance well secured—we ought to keep a
twelvemonth ahead. Security of food is of the first importance
in all enterprises.
P.S. If Boydell's Traction Engine be taken it would have to go on the
Euphrates. (They would like to take it in the
Briseis as they want
dead weight, and they are now taking in Iron & Bricks and other
things not belonging to us because our foods are light and they must
have
weight. It would not be well however to detain the loading
of the
Briseis until it was ascertained whether we could have the
Engine and whether it could be taken in her without displacing other
goods.)