Status Updates From After the Bounty: A Sailor'...
After the Bounty: A Sailor's Account of the Mutiny, and Life in the South Seas by
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Steven Shaw
is on page 193 of 270
"[The priests] are the only people who have any knowledge, and it is their business to keep the lower classes in ignorance." (171) "Don't we see some die, and some born every day, the rivers run to the sea, the trees rot, and the rocks fall from the mountains? All this has continued from the beginning of the world, and yet they are not diminished." (167, 168)
— Mar 31, 2018 01:39AM
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Steven Shaw
is on page 154 of 270
“The berries and leaves being gathered, several hands begin and nip them till they emit a drop of yellow juice… the juice put into a shell…fibers of the moo’oo is then procured to dip in the paint…In this manner they paint it in many fanciful forms.” “Part Two: An account of the Island of Tahiti and the Customs of the Islanders”, though very interesting for the anthropologist, is significantly more laborious a read.
— Feb 13, 2018 03:09PM
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Steven Shaw
is on page 138 of 270
"...the taste is not like anything that I recollect in Europe, America, or India."
— Jan 30, 2018 05:38PM
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S Shah
is on page 138 of 270
“…they lose their too by lightning—which they often do, more than any other trees.”
— Jan 30, 2018 04:40PM
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Steven Shaw
is on page 134 of 270
“—but all the officers were saved”
— Jan 26, 2018 02:13PM
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Steven Shaw
is on page 74 of 270
Although Morrison’s account of the actual voyage, and subsequent mutiny are fairly cursory, dwelling primarily on provisions and other supplies, his observations of Tubaian, Tahitian, and Tongan cultural differences make for an interesting anthropological study.
— Jan 20, 2018 06:52PM
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S Shah
is on page 59 of 270
"An extra half a pint of porter was served twice a day."
— Jan 16, 2018 08:14AM
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