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W. Ramsay Smith

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W. Ramsay Smith



Average rating: 3.47 · 30 ratings · 5 reviews · 16 distinct works
Myths and Legends of the Au...

3.45 avg rating — 29 ratings — published 1932 — 13 editions
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The Inca Bone: Its Homology...

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Energy from Forest Biomass

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1982 — 2 editions
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The Theory and Practice of ...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2015 — 15 editions
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Woman and Her Possibilities...

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Medical Jurisprudence from ...

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In southern seas;: Wanderin...

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The place of the Australian...

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Myths & legends of the Aust...

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On race-culture and the con...

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More books by W. Ramsay Smith…
Quotes by W. Ramsay Smith  (?)
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“Now the pillars of dust were about a mile from the multitude. They rose till they were about a mile above the hilltop. Then they gradually formed themselves into the shape of a huge mushroom. It remained stationary for an hour, and then it gradually descended toward the hill-top. The eagle-hawk jumped down from his place on the rock, and joined the multitude. The stem gradually came down until it touched the spot on the rock where the eagle-hawk had stood. Suddenly the mushroom-like cloud began to take the shape of a water-spout, curving over and over the top, and dropping spray-like water earthward, and dwindling in length until it measured only about twenty feet. Then a thunderbolt shot out of the clear sky down into the centre of the spout, causing a flame of fire. Within this flame of fire there became visible the perfect form of man as he is to-day. The flame gradually faded away, and left the figure standing in all its perfection, crowned with the glory of intelligence. The Sun Goddess remained for one day midway between the zenith and the western horizon, gazing with a satisfied smile upon her work of conception. This was the only occasion on which the Sun Goddess rested on her journey through the sky. She did this in order to shed a smiling beam of love and approval upon her work, and to show that man should rule the earth and all that remained upon the earth and sea. Then man stepped down from the rock and mingled with the creatures, and conversed with the kangaroo, the emu, the goanna, the eagle-hawk, and that most”
W. Ramsay Smith, Myths and Legends of the Australian Aborigines

“A fully developed aboriginal has, in his own way, a vast amount of knowledge. Although it may not be strictly what is called scientific, still, it is very exact knowledge; and his powers of physical observation are developed to the utmost. For instance, an aboriginal living under primitive conditions knows the anatomy and the haunts and the habits of every animal in the bush. He knows all the birds, their habits, and even their love-language—their mating notes. He knows from various signs the approach of the different seasons of the year, as well as from the positions of the stars in the heavens. He has developed in the highest degree the art of tracking the human footprint. He knows the track of every individual member of the tribe. There is as much difference and individuality in footprints as in fingerprints. There is a whole science of footprints.”
W. Ramsay Smith, Myths and Legends of the Australian Aborigines

“The aboriginals say that the stars are the children of the sons and daughters of the morning star and the lady moon, who were created by the Sun Goddess. Bajjara and Arna, the prophets of the Spirit World, said, “You, my children, shall remember to whom you owe your birth, and you shall not seek to change your state like the animals, the birds, the reptiles, the insects, and the fishes. Remember, also, that you are superior to the creatures, and that you and your children and your children’s children will all return to the Great All Father, the Eternal Spirit.”
W. Ramsay Smith, Myths and Legends of the Australian Aborigines



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