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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1793
  • Page 69
  • DOGE'S MARRYING THE SEA AT VENICE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1793: Page 69

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    Article BATTLE BETWEEN A BUFFALO AND SERPENT. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 69

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

Battle Between A Buffalo And Serpent.

I have bought of our hunters , a stag of a moderate size was found quite entire , with the skin and all the members of it in the belly of one of them . In another was found a wild he-goat , with his great horns , and no part of his body was wanting ; and in a third an hedge-hog armed with all its prickles . In the island of Amboyna a woman with child was destroyed'by one of these serpents . Thus they swallow up whole animals , \ vhich they compass in the manner following :

When hunger presses them , they lie in ambush , and endeavour . to surprise some animal , and when they have seized it , they twine and twist about its body so closely , that they break its bones by squeezing it . If the animal is strong , and makes great resistance , and the serpent cannot stifle him in the first position of laying hold of him , he tries to grapple with some trunk of a tree , which he surrounds with his tail , and thereby gains an additional strengthand redoubles his effortstil ! he has

, , stifled him . At the same time he seizes him by the nostrils with hiss teeth , and so not only intercepts his respiration , but the deep wounds that he g ives with his bites , occasions a great effusion of blood , and at last kills the largest animals . Persons of credit assured me of having seen in the kingdom of Arachan , on the frontiers of that of Bengal ,-a combat

between ' an enormous Serpent of this kind and a pjuffalo ( a prodigious large animal in those parts , and at least as large as an Ox when wild , which was killed and devoured by the Serpent . His bones made so great a noise while the Serpent was breaking them , by twining about his belly and breaking them , that it was heard within cannon shot by some , who were witnesses of this spectacle ; it seems astonishing that those serpents whose throat is so very narrowin proportion to the rest of their bod ^

, y can swallow so large an animal entire , and without tearing it in pieces as dogs and lions , but they succeed effectually , and the way is this : When these serpents , whose throat is very narrow , but susceptible of great dilation , have killed some animal and shattered his bones , so as that nothing appears but a shapeless mass , they begin by stretching' liim with the tongue as much as possible , and by licking to smooth and polish him as well as they candown the hair . They afterwards besmear the whole

, skin with a glutinous mucosity , so that the animal appears glistening as if varnished over , and when he is sufficiently prepared , and in a condition of being devoured by the serpent , which lays hold of him by the head , and at last swallows him by strong reiterated suctions ; but he sometimes takes two days and even more to go through his work , according to the bigness of the animal .

Doge's Marrying The Sea At Venice.

DOGE'S MARRYING THE SEA AT VENICE .

DURING the government of Ziani , one of the Doges , that singular ceremony of espousing the sea was instituted . Pope Alexander HI , to avoid the resentment of the Emperor Frederic

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-12-01, Page 69” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121793/page/69/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON : Article 3
ADVERTISEMENT. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL and COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 5
THE CHARGE Article 19
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 23
NARRATIVE OF THE EXTRAORDINARY PROCEEDINGS OF THE INQUISITION OF PORTUGAL, AGAINST THE FREEMASONS. Article 23
NARRATIVE. Article 25
COMMENTS ON STERNE. Article 28
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY, Esq. Article 36
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 41
LORD BOLINGBROKE. Article 45
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF THE CHEVALIER RUSPINI, G. S. B. Article 46
CHARITY. Article 49
NOBLE EXAMPLE OF FIDELITY IN A FREE MASON OF VIENNA. Article 52
ON DETRACTION. Article 53
ON MODERATION. Article 54
PRIVATE ANECDOTES. Article 55
ANECDOTE OF O. CROMWEL AND MR. GUNNING. Article 56
ANECDOTES OF THE LONG PARLIAMENT. Article 56
ON RICHES. Article 57
SHOCKING DEATH OF SANTEUIL. Article 59
SELFISHNESS AND BENEVOLENCE COMPARED. Article 60
AN ADDRESS TO YOU TH. Article 62
A PRAYER, Article 66
ON CHRISTMAS-DAY. Article 66
BATTLE BETWEEN A BUFFALO AND SERPENT. Article 68
DOGE'S MARRYING THE SEA AT VENICE. Article 69
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 70
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 71
AVARICE PROVIDENTIALLY PUNISHED. Article 73
A DOG's WONDERFUL SAGACITY AND AFFECTION. Article 73
VANITY OF A PECULIAR KIND. Article 74
CONTEMPLATIONS OF A PHILOSOPHER. Article 75
NEW THOUGHTS ON CIVILITY. Article 76
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 78
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 79
ANECDOTE OF GRAVINA, A CELEBRATED WRITER. Article 80
POETRY. Article 81
AMINTA. Article 82
INJUR'D INNOCENCE. Article 84
SONG. Article 85
MYRA. Article 86
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 87
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 89
INDEX. Article 91
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Page 69

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

Battle Between A Buffalo And Serpent.

I have bought of our hunters , a stag of a moderate size was found quite entire , with the skin and all the members of it in the belly of one of them . In another was found a wild he-goat , with his great horns , and no part of his body was wanting ; and in a third an hedge-hog armed with all its prickles . In the island of Amboyna a woman with child was destroyed'by one of these serpents . Thus they swallow up whole animals , \ vhich they compass in the manner following :

When hunger presses them , they lie in ambush , and endeavour . to surprise some animal , and when they have seized it , they twine and twist about its body so closely , that they break its bones by squeezing it . If the animal is strong , and makes great resistance , and the serpent cannot stifle him in the first position of laying hold of him , he tries to grapple with some trunk of a tree , which he surrounds with his tail , and thereby gains an additional strengthand redoubles his effortstil ! he has

, , stifled him . At the same time he seizes him by the nostrils with hiss teeth , and so not only intercepts his respiration , but the deep wounds that he g ives with his bites , occasions a great effusion of blood , and at last kills the largest animals . Persons of credit assured me of having seen in the kingdom of Arachan , on the frontiers of that of Bengal ,-a combat

between ' an enormous Serpent of this kind and a pjuffalo ( a prodigious large animal in those parts , and at least as large as an Ox when wild , which was killed and devoured by the Serpent . His bones made so great a noise while the Serpent was breaking them , by twining about his belly and breaking them , that it was heard within cannon shot by some , who were witnesses of this spectacle ; it seems astonishing that those serpents whose throat is so very narrowin proportion to the rest of their bod ^

, y can swallow so large an animal entire , and without tearing it in pieces as dogs and lions , but they succeed effectually , and the way is this : When these serpents , whose throat is very narrow , but susceptible of great dilation , have killed some animal and shattered his bones , so as that nothing appears but a shapeless mass , they begin by stretching' liim with the tongue as much as possible , and by licking to smooth and polish him as well as they candown the hair . They afterwards besmear the whole

, skin with a glutinous mucosity , so that the animal appears glistening as if varnished over , and when he is sufficiently prepared , and in a condition of being devoured by the serpent , which lays hold of him by the head , and at last swallows him by strong reiterated suctions ; but he sometimes takes two days and even more to go through his work , according to the bigness of the animal .

Doge's Marrying The Sea At Venice.

DOGE'S MARRYING THE SEA AT VENICE .

DURING the government of Ziani , one of the Doges , that singular ceremony of espousing the sea was instituted . Pope Alexander HI , to avoid the resentment of the Emperor Frederic

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