Narrative and Successful Result of a Voyage in the South Seas: Performed by Order of the Government of British India, to Ascertain the Actual Fate of La Pérouse's Expedition, Interspersed with Accounts of the Religion, Manners, Customs, and Cannibal Practices of the South Sea Islanders, Bind 2Hurst, Chance, and Company, St. Paul's Church-Yard, 1829 |
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Side 32
... Dillon. nourable in themselves , but are universally con- sidered so by the natives . Thus we must not deny that they ... Captain Cook and his officers off Lefroga , the 18th of May 1777 , and putting to death their acknowledged great and ...
... Dillon. nourable in themselves , but are universally con- sidered so by the natives . Thus we must not deny that they ... Captain Cook and his officers off Lefroga , the 18th of May 1777 , and putting to death their acknowledged great and ...
Side 93
... Dillon. I am of opinion that in most places , at from one mile and a half to two miles from the shore , between the ... captain's certificate to that effect . He also stated that about eight months ago he watered another whaler , which ...
... Dillon. I am of opinion that in most places , at from one mile and a half to two miles from the shore , between the ... captain's certificate to that effect . He also stated that about eight months ago he watered another whaler , which ...
Side 99
... Dillon. offended person and his party fall upon that to which they belong , and sometimes punish them with death ... Captain Bren , the master of a whaler , that a whale - ship called the Rochester of London , commanded by Captain Warth ...
... Dillon. offended person and his party fall upon that to which they belong , and sometimes punish them with death ... Captain Bren , the master of a whaler , that a whale - ship called the Rochester of London , commanded by Captain Warth ...
Side 100
... Dillon. Shortly after Parker ( one of the mutineers ) had come on board this morning , he was fol- lowed by Young , the captain's brother - in - law ; and notwithstanding these men's characters were so bad , I had no alternative left but ...
... Dillon. Shortly after Parker ( one of the mutineers ) had come on board this morning , he was fol- lowed by Young , the captain's brother - in - law ; and notwithstanding these men's characters were so bad , I had no alternative left but ...
Side 101
... Dillon. nearly exhausted when taken up by her com- panions . Not wishing to ... Captain E. Edwards , in August 1791 , when in search of the mutineers ... Captain R. Siddons , touched there on his way from the Feejee Islands to Port Jackson ...
... Dillon. nearly exhausted when taken up by her com- panions . Not wishing to ... Captain E. Edwards , in August 1791 , when in search of the mutineers ... Captain R. Siddons , touched there on his way from the Feejee Islands to Port Jackson ...
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anchor appeared arms arrived arrows Astrolabe Bay of Islands Bayley's Bay Bengal boats Bolotoo brass brig Calcutta canoes Cape Cape Wilson Captain Dillon cava Chaigneau chief coast cocoa-nuts command copper crew daylight Denimah Diemen's Land distance east eastward expedition Feejee feet five four French friends gods guns head honour inches informed inquired iron bolt island La Pérouse lascar latitude letter longitude Mannicolans Mannicolo Mariner Martin Bushart mataboole miles morning natives night noon observed officer Otooboa Paiow passage Pérouse Pérouse's persons Peter Dillon piece of iron Port Port Jackson present procured Rathea reef remain Research Rothuma round sail sent shewed ship ship's shore side sight South Wales steered stood supposed SYDNEY GAZETTE tara things tion Tonga Tooitonga trades tree Tucopia Tytler Van Diemen's Land vessel village visited voyage weather Whannow wind wrecked yams Zealand
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Side 57 - Ye shall not round the corners of your heads, neither shalt thou mar the corners of thy beard. 28 Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you : I am the LORD.
Side 49 - Sometimes the fibres of the fau are heard to crack with the increasing tension, yet the mass is seen whole and entire, becoming more thin as it becomes more twisted, while the infusion drains from it in a regularly decreasing quantity, till at length it denies a single drop.
Side 14 - Ignorant of the place where they were, and being much in want of provisions, —seeing the country abound in all sorts of fruit, the crew landed, and proceeded to pluck some bread-fruit, but, to their unspeakable astonishment, they could no more lay hold of it than if it were a shadow; they walked through the trunks of the trees, and passed through the substance of the houses, (which were built like those of Tonga), without feeling any resistance.
Side 47 - ... pointing downwards, and the palm presenting outwards. He does this slowly, from side to side, gradually descending deeper and deeper, till his fingers meet each other at the bottom, so that nearly the whole of the fibres of the root are by these means enclosed in...
Side 54 - Two men then tightened the cord by pulling at each end, and the guiltless and unsuspecting victim was soon relieved of its painful struggles. The body was then placed upon a sort of hand-barrow, supported upon the shoulders of four men, and carried in a procession of priests, chiefs, and Matabooles clothed in mats, with wreaths of green leaves round their necks. " In this manner it was conveyed to various houses consecrated to different gods, before each of which it was placed on the ground, all...
Side 49 - ... crack with the increasing tension, yet the mass is seen whole and entire, becoming more thin as it becomes more twisted, while the infusion drains from it in a regularly decreasing quantity, till at length it denies a single drop. He now gives it to a person on his left side, and receives fresh J<xo from another in attendance on his right, and begins the operation anew, with a view to collect what before might have escaped him; and so on...
Side 4 - The term fahe-gehe means split off, separate, or distinct from, and is applied to signify a priest, or man, who has a peculiar or distinct sort of mind or -soul, differing from that of the generality of mankind, which disposes some god occasionally to inspire him.
Side 15 - Island), at which place they wanted to touch before they got to Tonga. Having remained at Hamoa two or three days, they sailed for Tonga, where they arrived with great speed : but, in the course of a few days, they all died, not as a punishment for having been at Bolotoo, but as a natural consequence ; the air of Bolotoo, as it were, infecting mortal bodies with speedy death.
Side 35 - ... them attention and kind regard ; they are therefore not subjected to hard labour, or any very menial work. Those that are nobles rank like the men according to the superiority of their relationship. If a woman, not a noble, is the wife or daughter of a mataboole, she ranks as a mataboole ; if she be a noble, she is superior in rank to him, and so are the children, male and female ; but in domestic matters she submits entirely to his arrangements. Notwithstanding this, however, she never loses...
Side 23 - You shall be black, because your minds are " bad, and shall be destitute ; you shall not be " wise in useful things, neither shall you go to " the great land of your brothers ; how can " you go with your bad canoes ? But your " brothers shall come to Tonga, and trade