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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1795
  • Page 56
  • TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1795: Page 56

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    Article SOME ACCOUNT OF BOTANY BAY, ← Page 2 of 2
    Article TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . Page 1 of 2 →
Page 56

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Some Account Of Botany Bay,

garden at Paramatta is so situated by nature , that , in my opinion , it is impossible for art to form so rural a scene . Five miles from Paramatta is another village ; at this place Government have a great deal of land in cultivation ; every * mile you travel inland the soil improves ; at fourteen miles from the village of Irongabber is another settlementcalled the Hawkesburyat which

, , place is a spacious fresh water river , and the soil rich ; and I have not a doubt but in a short time this place will be very flourishing . The farmers are now gathering their wheat ; it may appear to you extraordinary , but true it is , that the summers will produce two crops of vegetables . The quantity of timber surpasses all description , though the country has been so much cleared since I came ;

a great number of boats have been built , which supply us with plenty of fish , and the oysters are the largest I ever saw . About nine days sail from Sydney is Norfolk Island , a most fertile place , about the size of the Isle of Wight . The natives in general of Botany Bay are tali and slender , have very black , curly hair , flat faces ,, and very large mouths ; some of them run sticks through their noses

; they draw the front tooth in tribute to their chief ; are much scarified on the back and breast , done by an oyster-shell cemented with gum at the end of the whornmora ( or throwing-stick ); they talk very quick ; dance by raising their arms and wheeling in a circle , at sometimes singing or making a confused noise . One of the females sits thumping her stomachwhich ives a droll sound . They burn their

, g dead ; are very expert in throwing their spears , and with exactness , at a great distance ; their canoes are formed of solid bark , which they carve from the trees , by means of a stone axe ; they fight in a jmosfc savage manner ; their subsistence is chiefly on fish , the women being very expert at this duty ; their lines are curiously platted from the bark of treesand the hook is a iece of barkthey assemble in small

, p ; tribes , each having a different fire : the children when young ride on the parents shoulders , holding by the hair of the head ; after death they expect a removal to the sun , which they worshi p ; they are a very dirty and lazy set of people .

To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine .

TO THE .EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE

SIR , AMONG the various societies that are established in this metropolis , there is one that has not yet been noticed by any of the public writers , though it is almost as numerous as that of the " Bucks , and full as ancient as the Free Masons ; it is indeed thought to have been instituted before the Roman empire , and it is honoured with a deity of the Greeks for its patron ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-08-01, Page 56” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081795/page/56/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY . Article 4
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 7
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 10
CHARACTER OF BERNARD GILPIN, Article 14
THE KHALIF AND HIS VISIER, AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 18
ANECDOTES OF HENRI DUC DE MONTMORENCI. Article 20
EXTRAORDINARY INSTANCES OF GRATITUDE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM A CURIOUS MANUSCRIPT, CONTAINING DIRECTIONS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD OF HENRY VIII. Article 25
BON MOT. Article 27
THE STAGE. Article 28
CHARACTER OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH. Article 29
A THIEF RESCUED BY AN ELEPHANT. AN AUTHENTIC ANECDOTE. Article 31
ANECDOTES OF THE LIFE OF THEODORE, KING OF CORSICA*. Article 32
ORIGIN OF ST. JAMES'S PALACE. Article 33
THE UNION OF LOVE TO GOD AND LOVE TO MAN, A SERMON, Preached in St. Andrew's Church, New Town, Edinburgh, Article 34
ACCOUNT OF AN EXTRAORDINARY NATURAL GENIUS, Article 42
PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES. Article 47
CURIOUS METHOD OF PROTECTING CORN. Article 50
ON COMPASSION. Article 50
ON MODESTY, AS A MASCULINE VIRTUE. Article 53
SOME ACCOUNT OF BOTANY BAY, Article 55
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . Article 56
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 58
ON POVERTY. Article 60
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 64
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, A SKETCH. Article 67
TO INDUSTRY. Article 67
WRITTEN IN MEMORY OF MY FATHER, Article 68
PORTRAIT OF AN HYPOCRITE. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
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Page 56

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Some Account Of Botany Bay,

garden at Paramatta is so situated by nature , that , in my opinion , it is impossible for art to form so rural a scene . Five miles from Paramatta is another village ; at this place Government have a great deal of land in cultivation ; every * mile you travel inland the soil improves ; at fourteen miles from the village of Irongabber is another settlementcalled the Hawkesburyat which

, , place is a spacious fresh water river , and the soil rich ; and I have not a doubt but in a short time this place will be very flourishing . The farmers are now gathering their wheat ; it may appear to you extraordinary , but true it is , that the summers will produce two crops of vegetables . The quantity of timber surpasses all description , though the country has been so much cleared since I came ;

a great number of boats have been built , which supply us with plenty of fish , and the oysters are the largest I ever saw . About nine days sail from Sydney is Norfolk Island , a most fertile place , about the size of the Isle of Wight . The natives in general of Botany Bay are tali and slender , have very black , curly hair , flat faces ,, and very large mouths ; some of them run sticks through their noses

; they draw the front tooth in tribute to their chief ; are much scarified on the back and breast , done by an oyster-shell cemented with gum at the end of the whornmora ( or throwing-stick ); they talk very quick ; dance by raising their arms and wheeling in a circle , at sometimes singing or making a confused noise . One of the females sits thumping her stomachwhich ives a droll sound . They burn their

, g dead ; are very expert in throwing their spears , and with exactness , at a great distance ; their canoes are formed of solid bark , which they carve from the trees , by means of a stone axe ; they fight in a jmosfc savage manner ; their subsistence is chiefly on fish , the women being very expert at this duty ; their lines are curiously platted from the bark of treesand the hook is a iece of barkthey assemble in small

, p ; tribes , each having a different fire : the children when young ride on the parents shoulders , holding by the hair of the head ; after death they expect a removal to the sun , which they worshi p ; they are a very dirty and lazy set of people .

To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine .

TO THE .EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE

SIR , AMONG the various societies that are established in this metropolis , there is one that has not yet been noticed by any of the public writers , though it is almost as numerous as that of the " Bucks , and full as ancient as the Free Masons ; it is indeed thought to have been instituted before the Roman empire , and it is honoured with a deity of the Greeks for its patron ,

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