Polynesian Researches: During a Residence of Nearly Eight Years in the Society and Sandwich Islands, Volume 3Fisher, Son, & Jackson, 1832 |
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Page 43
... individual who had undergone this operation , but , from the concur- rent testimony of the people , I have no doubt they have performed it . It is also related , although I confess I can scarcely believe it , that on some occasions ...
... individual who had undergone this operation , but , from the concur- rent testimony of the people , I have no doubt they have performed it . It is also related , although I confess I can scarcely believe it , that on some occasions ...
Page 46
... individual was affected with any disorder , he was considered as under the ban of the gods : by some crime , or the influence of some enemy , he was supposed to have become obnoxious to their anger , of which his malady was the result ...
... individual was affected with any disorder , he was considered as under the ban of the gods : by some crime , or the influence of some enemy , he was supposed to have become obnoxious to their anger , of which his malady was the result ...
Page 50
... individuals under similar circumstances , in order to strengthen our conviction of the incalculable diminution of misery which has resulted from their reception of the gospel , and the temporal blessings it has imparted . During the ...
... individuals under similar circumstances , in order to strengthen our conviction of the incalculable diminution of misery which has resulted from their reception of the gospel , and the temporal blessings it has imparted . During the ...
Page 51
... individual who offered his services to the Missionary Society , and was among the first who landed from the Duff in 1796. He remained in Tahiti till the civil war in 1808 drove him and his companions from the islands , at which time he ...
... individual who offered his services to the Missionary Society , and was among the first who landed from the Duff in 1796. He remained in Tahiti till the civil war in 1808 drove him and his companions from the islands , at which time he ...
Page 59
... individuals , who in the judgment of charity we had every rea- son to believe were sincere Christians , then met us , and , after imploring the blessing of the great Head of the church , offering a suitable address , and receiving their ...
... individuals , who in the judgment of charity we had every rea- son to believe were sincere Christians , then met us , and , after imploring the blessing of the great Head of the church , offering a suitable address , and receiving their ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Polynesian Researches: During a Residence of Nearly Eight Years in ..., Volume 3 William Ellis Affichage du livre entier - 1831 |
Polynesian Researches: During a Residence of Nearly Eight Years in ..., Volume 2 William Ellis Affichage du livre entier - 1836 |
Polynesian Researches: During a Residence of Nearly Eight Years in ..., Volume 3 William Ellis Affichage du livre entier - 1833 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
afterwards Aimata appeared arrival attended baptism baptized Barff boat Borabora brought canoe captain ceremony chapel chiefs chieftain Christ Christian church circumstances civil cloth cocoa-nut conduct crime death desire district Divine dwellings Eimeo endeavoured father favourable feeling frequently friends furnished gods gospel governor harbour hope Huahine idolatry idols individual influence inhabitants judge kind king king of Tahiti labour land laws Leeward Islands magistrate ment miles mind Mission Missionaries murder nation native teachers Nott occasion owner Papeete parents parties person Pomare Pomare II Port Jackson prayer present priests principal proceeded punishment raatiras Raiatea received regarded regulation rendered residence respect Rimatara Rurutu Sabbath sacred sailed Sandwich Islands scriptures sent settlement ship shore sionaries Society Islands sometimes soon South Sea Islands South Wales spirit station supposed Tahaa Tahiti Tahitian tataued temple tion tree Tubuai vessel visited voyage wife worship Zealand
Fréquemment cités
Page 3 - Saviour comes ! by ancient bards foretold ! Hear Him, ye deaf; and all ye blind, behold ! He from thick films shall purge the visual ray, And on the sightless eyeball pour the day: 'Tis he the obstructed paths of sound shall clear, And bid new music charm th' unfolding ear: The dumb shall sing, the lame his crutch forego, And leap exulting, like the bounding roe.
Page 161 - Lo, the poor Indian ! whose untutored mind Sees GOD in clouds, or hears Him in the wind ; His soul proud science never taught to stray Far as the solar walk or Milky Way...
Page 22 - I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me.
Page 297 - In these regions may be seen islands in every stage of their formation : " some presenting little more than a point or summit of a branching coralline pyramid, at a depth scarcely discernible through the transparent waters ; others spreading, like submarine gardens or shrubberies, beneath the surface ; or presenting here and there a little bank of broken coral and sand, over which the rolling wave occasionally breaks...
Page 128 - Missionaries illustrated the general principles of scripture, that in all the public stations they sustained , they were to do unto others as they would that others should do unto them...
Page 59 - These meetings were exceedingly interesting, from the simple yet unequivocal evidences often afforded of the operation of the Spirit of the Almighty upon the hearts of the people. Our little church, from time to time, received considerable accessions of such as we had reason to hope were also members of the church of the first-born, whose names are written in heaven.
Page 65 - If it is not proper you must tell me. But I do greatly desire to dwell with you in the fold of Christ.
Page 65 - This is the reason why I hope I have a new heart. The heart I have now is not like the heart I formerly had. The one I have now is very bad, it is unbelieving, and inclined to evil. But it is not like the one I formerly had. Yes; I think I have a new heart.
Page 96 - The ground on which they even accidentally trod, became sacred ; and the dwelling under which they might enter, must for ever after be vacated by its proprietors, and could be appropriated only to the use of these sacred personages. No individual was allowed to touch the body of the king or queen; and every one who should stand over them, or pass the hand over their heads, would be liable to pay for the sacrilegious act with the forfeiture of his life.
Page 207 - Pomare, visited Huahine. Her attendants, who followed in her train from Tahiti, requiring a piece of timber, she directed them to cut down a bread-fruit tree growing in the garden of a poor man on the opposite side of the bay, near which her own residence stood.