State Library of NSW
Georges Island
do the Office of Physicians & their prescriptions consists in performing some religious ceremony before the sick person, they likewise Crown the Eare de hi or King, in the performing of which we are told much form & Ceremony is used after which every one is at liberty to treat & play as many tricks with the new King as he pleaseth during the remainder of the day --- Strange Custom at the Burial of their Dead There is a ceremony which they perform at or after the Funerals of the Dead which I had forgot to mention at the time we hapned to see it some time before we left the Island, an old Woman a relation of Toobouratomit's hapned to die& was interr'd in the usual manner, for several successive evenings after one of her relations dressed himself in a very odd dress which I cannot tell how to describe or to convey a better idea of it than to suppose a man dressed with plumes of feathers something in the same manner as those worn by Coaches, Hearses, Horses etc at the Funerals in London, it was very neatly of black or brown & white cloth, black & white feathers & pearl Oyster Shells it coverd the head, face & body as low as the Calf of the Legs or lower & not only looked grand but awful likewise. The man thus equip'd & attended by 2 or 3 more men & women with their faces & bodys besmear'd with soot & a Club in their hands would about sun set take a Compass of near a mile running here & there & where ever they came the people would fly from them as tho' they had been so many Hobgolblins not one daring to come in their way. I know not the reason for their performing this ceremony which they call Heiva a name they give most of their divertisements ----- Manner of counting time They compute time by the Moon which they call Malama reckning 30 days to each moon 2 of which they say the moon is Mattee that is dead & this is at the time of new moon when she cannot be seen, the day they divide into smaller portions not less than 2 hours. Their computation is by units, tens & Scores up to ten Scores or 200 etc. in counting they generally hake hold on their fingers one by one shifting from one hand to the other until they come to the number they want to express, but if it be a high number instead of their fingers they use peices of Leaves etc. In conversation one with another they frequently join signs to their words in which they are so expressive that a stranger will very soon comprehend their meaning by their actions ---- Having now done with the People I must once more return to the Island before I quit it altogether, which not withstanding nature hath been so very bountiful to it yet it doth not produce any one thing of intrinsick value or that can
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