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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1797
  • Page 9
  • WEST INDIA CRUELTY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1797: Page 9

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    Article SlNGULAR CUSTOM IN DEVONSHIRE. Page 1 of 1
    Article WEST INDIA CRUELTY. Page 1 of 1
Page 9

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

Slngular Custom In Devonshire.

SlNGULAR CUSTOM IN DEVONSHIRE .

THE southern part of Devonshire is remarkable for producing excellent cyder . In order to ensure a good harvest , the following custom is generally observed in that quarter . On the eve of the Epiphany , the farmer and his men take with them a large pitcher of cyder to the orchard , and there circling one of the best trees , they drink the following toast three times : 1 Here's to theeold le-tree '

, app ; Whence thou may ' st bud and whence thou may ' st blow I And whence thou may ' st bear apples enow ! Hats full 1 Caps full ! "Bushel—bushel—sacks full ! And my pockets full too ! Huzza , huzza , huzzal ' This donethey return to the housethe doors of which are fastened

, , by the women , who are inexorable to all entreaties to open them , till one of the men has guessed what is on the spit , which is generally ' tome nice thing difficult to be hit on , and is the reward of him who names it first . Some are so superstitious as to believe , that if they neglect , this custom , the trees will bear no apples that year . w .

West India Cruelty.

WEST INDIA CRUELTY .

% li . \ TVD BY THE BAIIOH DE W IM'Trr * . * , ! N * UlS VOYAGE TO * T . DOM 1 NS 0 , IN I 7 QO , & l \

A YOUNG lady , and one of the handsomest in the island , gave a ¦ *^ - grand dinner . Furious at seeing a dish of pasty brought to the table overdone , she ordered her negro cook to be seized , and thrown into tbe own , yet glowing ivitb heat !—and this horrible Megaera , this infernal fiend , whom public execration ought to drive with every mark of abhorrence from society—this worth y rival of the too famous ChaperonIs followed and admired—for she is rich and beautiful !

, So much for what I have heard , and now for what I have seen . The day after my return , I was walking before the casa of a planter with one of his nei g hbours , when we overheard him bid a negro go into the enclosure of this very neighbour , pull up two young trees which he pointed out to him , and replant them immediately in a terrace he was forming . The negro went : the neig hbour followed

him , surprized him in the fact , and brought him to his master . Conceive , Sir , what passed in my mind , when , on the complaint of the neighbour , I heard the master coldly order another of his negroei to tie the pretended culprit to a ladder , and g ive him an hundred lashes , ' We were both of us struck' with such astonishment , thatstupifiedpaleand shudderingwhile the unhappy negro

re-, , , , ceived the barbarous chastisement in silence , we looked at one another without being able to utter a single word . And' he who thus punished his own crime on the blind instrument of his will is here one of the first organs of the law , the official proteftor of innocence 1

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-10-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101797/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE LIFE OF DAVID GARRICK, ESQ. Article 4
SlNGULAR CUSTOM IN DEVONSHIRE. Article 9
WEST INDIA CRUELTY. Article 9
A REVIEW OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EDMUND BURKE. Article 10
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 16
DESCRIPTION OF THE PEAK OF TENERIFFE. Article 18
ON THE PECULIAR EXCELLENCIES OF HANDEL'S MUSIC. Article 20
THE COLLECTOR. Article 22
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 27
ON THE MASONIC CHARACTER. Article 35
A VINDICATION OF MASONRY. Article 37
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 55
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 72
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Page 9

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

Slngular Custom In Devonshire.

SlNGULAR CUSTOM IN DEVONSHIRE .

THE southern part of Devonshire is remarkable for producing excellent cyder . In order to ensure a good harvest , the following custom is generally observed in that quarter . On the eve of the Epiphany , the farmer and his men take with them a large pitcher of cyder to the orchard , and there circling one of the best trees , they drink the following toast three times : 1 Here's to theeold le-tree '

, app ; Whence thou may ' st bud and whence thou may ' st blow I And whence thou may ' st bear apples enow ! Hats full 1 Caps full ! "Bushel—bushel—sacks full ! And my pockets full too ! Huzza , huzza , huzzal ' This donethey return to the housethe doors of which are fastened

, , by the women , who are inexorable to all entreaties to open them , till one of the men has guessed what is on the spit , which is generally ' tome nice thing difficult to be hit on , and is the reward of him who names it first . Some are so superstitious as to believe , that if they neglect , this custom , the trees will bear no apples that year . w .

West India Cruelty.

WEST INDIA CRUELTY .

% li . \ TVD BY THE BAIIOH DE W IM'Trr * . * , ! N * UlS VOYAGE TO * T . DOM 1 NS 0 , IN I 7 QO , & l \

A YOUNG lady , and one of the handsomest in the island , gave a ¦ *^ - grand dinner . Furious at seeing a dish of pasty brought to the table overdone , she ordered her negro cook to be seized , and thrown into tbe own , yet glowing ivitb heat !—and this horrible Megaera , this infernal fiend , whom public execration ought to drive with every mark of abhorrence from society—this worth y rival of the too famous ChaperonIs followed and admired—for she is rich and beautiful !

, So much for what I have heard , and now for what I have seen . The day after my return , I was walking before the casa of a planter with one of his nei g hbours , when we overheard him bid a negro go into the enclosure of this very neighbour , pull up two young trees which he pointed out to him , and replant them immediately in a terrace he was forming . The negro went : the neig hbour followed

him , surprized him in the fact , and brought him to his master . Conceive , Sir , what passed in my mind , when , on the complaint of the neighbour , I heard the master coldly order another of his negroei to tie the pretended culprit to a ladder , and g ive him an hundred lashes , ' We were both of us struck' with such astonishment , thatstupifiedpaleand shudderingwhile the unhappy negro

re-, , , , ceived the barbarous chastisement in silence , we looked at one another without being able to utter a single word . And' he who thus punished his own crime on the blind instrument of his will is here one of the first organs of the law , the official proteftor of innocence 1

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