The Bibbulmun race was the largest homogeneous group in all Australia. Their country extended for many hundreds of square miles, and comprised the extreme triangle of the south-west, its base drawn8 from about Jurien Bay, slightly south of Geraldton on the West Coast, to Esperance on the Great Australian Bight. The Perth groups occupied a wide area, towards Northam, Toodyay, Gin Gin and Southern Cross on the north, and south to Bunbury and The Vasse. The last of the uncircumcised hordes9, gradually driven down by a lustier, fiercer people, and finding by chance the wealthiest and most fertile corner of the State, “sat down” in the forests by rivers and water-holes of rich flora10 and teeming11 fauna12, sharing them with the birds and animals and reptiles13 that they, believed to be their “elder brothers” or that became, in the passage of the centuries, their ancestor-gods.
The word bibbulmun signifies many breasts, a name derived14, perhaps, from the fecundity15 of that region, or from the unusually great proportion of women and children among them. There were more than seventy groups in the Bibbulmun area linked by one language with local variations. They had neither chiefs or kings nor overlords, and although they were innocent of arts and crafts, they were by no means savage17, and accorded their women more of initiative liberty than the circumcised. They were the finest groups in all West Australia. [Probably their prototypes were to be found in the New South Wales and Victorian coastal tribes, which disappeared equally rapidly.] The Manitchmat and Wordungmat, the fair and dark people of the White Cockatoo and Crow, always kept their marriages within the four class subdivisions of these two primary divisions, which I believe to be fundamental and Australia-wide. These tribes were not cannibals. Infanticide was rarely practised except in the case of twins and then only because of the magic of “two heads” coming where one was expected. Such was their simple philosophy that the facts of birth were unknown to them. Their only deity18 was a woggal or serpent-god, that dominated the earth, the sky, the sea, and punished evil-doers. They believed that the spirits of the dead were taken to Kur’an’nup, a land beyond the western sea.
The only raiment was a fur-skin cloak, made from the skins of seven kangaroos. Their tools were palaeolithic, with a later intrusion of the neolithic19 scarcely evident-a koja, or stone axe20 with wooden handle fastened with wattle gum and a rough knife of serrated stone. It is a question whether to any great extent they used the boomerang, which I believe to have been an importation, as it was useless in such thickly timbered country. They had no fighting-shields. The spear, miro, or spear-thrower, and the club, were their weapons, and spear-dodging was a consummate21 art among them. The women carried a wanna, or digging stick, the usual bark or wooden scoop22, and a kangaroo-skin bag. A camp-fire for winter warmth, and a bough23 shade for shelter from the sun were their only homes, fire being made by the friction24 of a stick applied25 drill fashion to the flower-stem of the resinous26 “black-boy” tree-fern.
These southern people had a sense of hereditary27 group ownership of their land, upon which no other tribe might trespass28, but all were generously invited to share its special products in times of plenty, a hospitality unknown in the poverty-stricken wastes of the great north-west and centre. The sea-coasts, estuaries29 and rivers were full of fish, and the inlanders and hill-folk were always welcome visitors in the spawning30 and crabbing31 seasons. The tall timber country, of which the magnificent jarrah and karri now occupy a pride of place among the world’s hardwoods, was alive with bird and animal life, and rich with numerous fruits of shrub32 and vine, a meeting-place of tribes within hundreds of miles when the wild potato was in harvest there.
When I came upon the remnants of the Bibbulmun, they had been in contact with civilization for some seventy years, and in that short time it had reduced the native inhabitants of the city of Perth and its environs to one old man, Joobaitch, and an older-looking niece, Balbuk. On this old man’s group area, at the foot of the Darling Ranges, the first reserve had been established by Lord (then Mr.) Forrest in the nineties, and here were gathered all that were left of the tribes.
The desire of the Government was that I should base my investigation33 upon history and existing data, and build upon the anthropology34 premises35 accumulated by cultured and well-informed men such as Sir George Grey, Bishop36 Salvado, G.F. Moore and others. For two years I studied every note of the bibliography37 at my disposal regarding the aboriginal38 tribes of West Australia, with augmented39 information from South Australia, Victoria and other states. I found that in many essentials these Western Australian authorities contradicted each other, and that it was difficult to come to a conclusion. So I made the suggestion that I should begin at the beginning, and seek the truth at the fountain-head.
My first camp was established on the Maamba Reserve near the present National Park, a few miles from Cannington, today an outer suburban40 area of great fertility, set with orchards41 and vineyards, but in the early years of this century a beautiful kingdom of bush still rich in native foods and fruits. The Bibbulmun race was represented by some thirty or forty stragglers, and these would gladly have gone back to their own various grounds; but their health and sight had failed.
It is saddening indeed to wander the vast expanse of hill and dale and cliff and grove42, and find not one of its own people remaining. They have vanished from the face of earth as completely as the extinct sthenurus, of which their far-off ancestors were contemporaries.
The first landing of the white man was the beginning of the end. Often have I heard the story, a never-failing marvel43 to the three generations who survived it, of the landing on the banks of the Swan River in 1829. In his camp by a little spring called Goordandalup, a wilderness45 of bush that is now the metropolitan46 subdivision of Crawley on the highway of the Mount’s Bay Road, Yalgunga lay dozing47 in the heat of mid-afternoon. He did not know that it was 1829, or hear the death-knell of his people. He knew only that the world was blue and smiling, and the rock-holes filling with fish in the incoming tide, and that the sun was good. Suddenly he heard a new sound on the river, a soft continuous sound, and coming closer. He rose to this feet and looked about instinctively48 for his spears. His women crouched49 round him, and his children ran to him afraid. Round the bend came an open boat, and the phenomenon of jang-ga, spirits of the dead who had come back as white men, borne upon the waters. Spears were useless. Yalgunga waited. Walking as other men, the strangers stepped ashore50 and came to him, speaking words that meant nothing. Then one of them put out a hand in greeting. Yalgunga gratefully clasped it in his own, and with his other hand made a gesture to his camp and his spring-they were all he had to offer. That evening he gathered his family, his spears, and all his belongings51, and wandered away to the swamp at Goobabbilup, which is now Monger’s Lake, never to return to the leafy home and the curve of bush and beach that had been his alone. So easily had the white man won.
There must have been some tradition handed down from Yalgunga’s forefathers52 of Vlaming and other earlier arrivals of jang-ga who moved over the waters in their strange ships, and walked about unafraid, and returned to Ku’ran’nup. Yalgunga did not know that these later jang-ga had come to stay. The gazettes of the early thirties made frequent reference to his peaceable and kindly53 disposition54. It was Maiago, whose camp was where the Perth Town Hall now stands, who later travelled with Stokes on his explorations, and who introduced the white man’s flour and rice to the natives, the first instalment of payment for their country. The rice they buried in the earth, but the flour they appreciated, calling it always “barragood”-the nearest they could get to the assurance of “very good” with which it was given to them.
The belief of the Bibbulmun that the first white men were the returned spirits of their own dead relatives, led to friendly feeling towards the “spirits” from their first encounter.
A peculiarity55 of gait, a slight deformity, a scar, a missing toe, finger, tooth, etc., singled out some white person for special recognition and friendship. When Sir George Grey was Governor, word came to him that the old woman Delyungur had recognized in him her long-lost son, and cried and wept unceasingly in that she could not see him or touch him.
Grey appointed a day for a Native Levee on which all the natives of the district came to the appointed place and approached the spot where he and his staff were standing56.
A great wailing57 was presently heard, and as the natives opened their ranks along the cleared space came old Delyungur, crying and peering to find the face of her long-dead son. She walked slowly up until her eyes could see the Governor clearly. Her step became quicker, stronger. She looked at Sir George, who was looking kindly towards her, and in a moment she had him in her embrace, crying, “Boondoo, boondoo! bala ngan-ya Kooling” (True, true, he is my son), as she fondled the face and form of her long-lost son and wept for joy at their re-union.
Sir George Grey’s gentle sufferance of her embraces strengthened immeasurably the friendly bond between the black and white in those early days. His kindly reception of old Delyungur, who was sister to Yalgunga’s dead mother Windera, became known to every group throughout the metropolitan area.
What a surprise the fences, and the sheep and horses and cattle within their boundaries, and the telegraph line with its magic messages swifter and truer than smoke signals, and the ships sailing into the estuaries, and the jetties and wharves58 built out to meet them! Who shall say what vague despair and unrest entered these primitive59 minds as the natives beheld60 one after another of their cherished homing spots ruthlessly swept away in the resistless march of civilization, and the winding61 tracks to their various food grounds obliterated62 by houses and streets?
They could no longer seek for the goonoks in their season, their mungaitch honey-groves were cut down to make way for flocks and herds63. Could they hunt for the bai-yoo nuts of the Zamia, the warrain, and the joobok roots on the slopes, when the white men had fenced them in, and driven their old friends beyond the pale? On their own country they were trespassers. There was no more happy wandering in the interchange of hospitality. Sources of food supply slowly but surely disappeared, and they were sent away to unfamiliar64 places, compelled to change completely their mode of life, to clothe themselves in the attire65 of the strangers, to eat foods unfitted for them, to live within walls.
Their age-old laws were set aside for laws they could not understand. The younger generations, always wilful66, now openly flouted67 the old, and defied them, and haunted the white man’s homes, protected by his policeman. A little while, and they resorted to thieving-where theft had been unknown-and sycophancy68, and sold their young wives to the depraved and foreign element. Half-castes came among them, a being neither black nor white, whom they detested69. They died in their numbers of the white man’s diseases, measles70, whooping-cough, influenza71, and the results of their own wrong-doing.
Change of food, environment, outlook, the burying of the old traditions and customs, inhibitions and the breakdown72 of the laws all conspired73 to bring degeneration, first to the individual and then to the race. Can we wonder that they faded so swiftly? Can we blame them for the sudden reactions that found vent16 in violence in certain instances few and far between, punished sometimes with terrible reprisals74 on the part of the white man?
The pioneers of Western Australia were noble men and women, and nearly all of them were above reproach and more than kindly in their treatment of the aboriginal. There is evidence that they did everything in their power for the preservation75 and betterment of the race. Schools were established as early as 1831, and reserve sanctuaries76, with interpreters and ration-givers and government inspectors77. There were innumerable systematic78 schemes on the part of religious organizations, and social organizations and private persons, from King George’s Sound north to Geraldton, with no encouraging results. Missions of all kinds were established throughout the Bibbulmun area. The most outstanding of these was undoubtedly79 the great Benedictine Mission of New Norcia, 80 miles north of Perth, founded by Don Salvado in 1846, among the dingo-totem tribes of the Victoria Plain.
As a young and earnest evangelist, Bishop Salvado journeyed into this then remote country, camped with the natives at a water-hole to gain their confidence, then gathered them to him in the name of Christianity. In a fertile valley he established his church and his colony, later sponsored by the Queen of Spain, and destined80 to become the great Spanish monastery81 it is today, a seat of the arts and sciences with its colleges of secular82 and religious education, a railway-town of considerable importance with its far-flung and prosperous agricultural and pastoral estates, a jewel of the south-west.
Bishop Salvado fed and clothed the natives. He built a tidy little Continental83 village of stone houses, twenty-eight in all, laid out in streets, and induced them to live in them. He saw that each man had his own allotment of land. For the preliminary work done upon it the Bishop paid him, and put the money in the bank, and purchased implements84 for further development, and educated his children. He taught them handicrafts and stockwork and telegraphy and accountancy and music and languages, every one of which they could absorb and absorb well. He went further. He selected five promising85 young aboriginal boys, and took them with him to Rome to study for the priesthood in a Benedictine seminary there. Among them were two who received the names of John and Francis Xavier, and the habit of the Order from the Pope himself All died in Europe, with the exception or one, who returned to New Norcia, promptly86 flung away his habit made for the bush and died there.
Children of the woodland, dwelling87 in a squalor that could not be avoided in their stone-walled houses, closed in from the air that was their breath of life, in the heat of summer and the dank cold of winter, they lost all touch with their native earth. They slept on beds-but they could not learn cleanliness. They wore clothing, and developed chest complaints and fevers. They died, and the dead were carried out of the little houses, and others sent to live in them-a superstitious88 people with a horror of the dead, there they too died. Alas89 for the poor “little brothers of the dingo”-civilization was a cloak that they donned easily enough, but they could not wear it and live. Bishop Salvado had counted 250 members of the Victoria Plains group in 1846. The last of these, Monnup, died in 1913.
It was the same story everywhere, a kindness that killed as surely and as swiftly as cruelty would have done. The Australian native can withstand all the reverses of nature, fiendish droughts and sweeping90 floods, horrors of thirst and enforced starvation-but he cannot withstand civilization.
In 1883, a commission was appointed in West Australia to control native conditions of living and employment, and in 1886 all aborigines of the State were brought directly under the guardianship91 of the Government. In the early nineteen hundreds a special Aborigines’ Department was created, with protectors travelling throughout West Australia, and a Chief Protector in authority in Perth.
There is no hope of protecting the Stone Age from the twentieth century! When the native’s little group area is gone, he loses the will to live, and when the will to live is gone, he dies.
The West Australian Government treated the natives generously, each fortnight sending them liberal rations44 of flour, tea, sugar and tobacco, with meat and jam added, and provided them with little wooden huts, each with a fireplace, a bed, a spring-mattress92, warm cosy93 blankets and even crockery. There was a well in the centre of the reserve which was fenced into individual areas that they might grow flowers and vegetables and keep goats. The natives were intensely proud and even jealous of their little villas94 and built themselves mias (bush shelters) outside them, where they slept with the dogs. They broke through the fences for a shorter route when they went to visit each other. Every now and then, those who were able wandered restlessly away to their own kalleep (group area and “home” land), in the seasons of its fruitfulness and old-time ceremonies, and finding no friendly fires, and the houses and fences of the white man everywhere, they fled in panic back to the city to sell clothes-props or to beg, to pick up scraps95 of charity and vices96 and disease. Too often the white man’s sympathy was expressed in beer and whisky, and so they drifted in and out of gaol97, and back to the reserve again.
A circular tent, 14 ft. in diameter, sagging98 about me in the wet and ballooning in the wind, was my home for two years in that little patch of bushland bright with wild flowers, overlooking the beautiful valley of Guildford and the winding river. There by a camp-fire when the dampers were cooking, or in the winter sitting on the ground by a fire inside their mia, I would be on duty from night till morning, collecting scraps of language, old legends, old customs, trying to conjure99 a nation of the past from these few and homeless derelicts, always in haste, as they died about me one by one, in fear lest I should be too late.
Dirty and degraded as they all were, they were very human. Joobaitch of the kangaroo tribe of Perth, a Wordungmat or dark-type crowman, had been born in Stirling’s time, and was the son of that Yalgunga who ceded100 his spring on the banks of the Swan to Lieutenant101 Irwin. Joobaitch, who was then nearly 50 years of age, was, a protege of Bishop Hale and at one time a native trooper. He had had contact with only the best of the white families, neither drank nor smoked, and had no affinity102 with the poor depraved and drink-sodden old men and women who “sat down” at Maamba.
There was Baaburgurt, blind and feeble. Once a “brother” of the Kalda (sea mullet) in the Capel River, he would sit all day long, the tears streaming from his sightless eyes, singing songs of his lost country. There were Woolberr, last of the Kuljak (black swan) of Gin Gin; Monnop, last of the dingo-totem of the Victoria Plains; Moorangan, of Wagin’s emu; Genburdohg, of Kellerberrin’s snake people; Nyalyert, a woman of the whitebait of Pinjarra; and Ngilgi, of the kangaroo of Busselton; Kajjaman, of the edible103 gum; and Dool, a Nanitchmat of York. Other sad old pilgrims of the White Cockatoo and Crow came and went. The only stranger among them was Bimba, a member of one of the circumcised groups east of Kellerberrin, but nobody ever wanted to hear about his totem.
The last Perth woman, Balbuk, or Fanny Balbuk, as she was called, was a comic, if tragic104, character, and a general nuisance of many years’ standing. To the end of her life she raged and stormed at the usurping105 of her beloved home ground. One of her favourite annoyances106 was to stand at the gates of Government House, reviling107 all who dwelt within, because the stone gates guarded by a sentry108 enclosed her grandmother’s burial ground. She would trail the streets shouting her curses upon them, and impose on all the members of the “first families” with whom she had played as a child. Balbuk had been born on Huirison Island at the Causeway, and from there a straight track had led to the place where once she had gathered jilgies and vegetable food with the women, in the swamp where Perth railway station now stands. Through fences and over them, Balbuk took the straight track to the end. When a house was built in the way, she broke its fence-palings with her digging stick and charged up the steps and through the rooms. Time and again she was arrested, but her childhood playmates, now in high positions, would pay the fine for her, and Balbuk would be free to get drunk again, and shout scandal and maledictions from the street corners.
To the end of her life, Balbuk would not have a half-caste near the place-she said they smelt109 worse than the white people.
Her matrimonial lapses110 evoked111 many a delighted grin, for Balbuk had a past. A Wordungmat, or Crow, in her young days, she had attached herself to another Crow, and when his sister resented the unlawful union and fought her, Balbuk’s rage was so intense that she drove her digging stick through the woman’s body, killing112 her instantly. She fled from justice to the boundary of the Bibbulmun and the circumcised tribes. There she saw human meat eaten, and was offered a thigh113, which she refused. Being young and fat and possibly succulent, she promptly fled back to the Victorian plains. So attractive was her personality that in the ensuing seven years, wandering from group to group, she contracted seven marriages, most of them illegal, from the aboriginal point of view, though some were celebrated114 in the chapel115 of New Norda by unwitting priests, who did not remember that they had seen her before. The fame of her fury had travelled far, and none of the New Norda natives dared to tell.
Her old crime forgotten, Balbuk at last returned to her own Perth country. Although she had broken every law of her group, she had broken none of the totem food-laws, and never failed to perform propitiatory116 services to the magic snake or the spirits in rocks and caves and hills. She knew every sacred totem spot, and all the devils that haunted them, from the mouth of the Swan to the ranges, and even when she was a fat old woman, and her seven husbands, and numerous lovers had long preceded her to the Bibbulmun heaven of Kur’an’nup, she assiduously avoided every “baby stone” from which a babe might come to her.
When she lay dying in her shelter at Maamba, a female kangaroo, her totem, suddenly made its appearance among the bushes some yards away. With dimmed eyes she looked upon it “My borunggur has come for me; I go now,” she said. She died a few days later in Perth Hospital. Just at the end the doctor came into the room. Balbuk recognized him. “Ninety-nine!” she hurled117 at him facetiously118 with her last breath.
Ngilgi was the rich widow of the camp. She had been born at Busselton, just at the moment when her mother was caught red-handed robbing a potato-patch, and her unexpected arrival made the potato-patch her ground thereafter, and she became an amusing protegee of the white people who owned it. At Maamba, she was the proud possessor of seven goats, twelve fowls119 and thirty-two dogs, incredible mongrels all. To watch the procession enter her house at night, in single file, with Ngilgi bringing up the rear, was a never-failing entertainment. The fowls roosted on the bed’s head, the dogs and young kids formed a living blanket on the mattress, and goats filled the floor and the fire-place. In the morning they emerged in the same order, unless Ngilgi had a laundry appointment at Guildford. On those days the livestock120 were left closed in the little hut, where their howls and crowing made day hideous121 until her return.
Monnop, and Woolberr, Baaburgurt and Bimba were all suitors for her hand and possessions. Woolberr and Baaburgurt, being blind, could not fight. Monnop and Bimba were active rivals, and ribs122 and jaws123 were often broken. A half-caste named Jimmie, young enough to be her grandson, made his appearance with her one evening, and joined the livestock within the hut. The arrangement was that Ngilgi would be breadwinner while Jimmie acted as overseer. Next morning four raging suitors were on the doorstep waiting for Jimmie. Woolberr began to “sing magic” at him. Blind Baaburgurt raised his stick in readiness for the half-caste odour which would tell him Jimmie was near, and Monnop and Bimba presented a combined front of battle. Jimmie dodged124, and did not stop running till he reached Guildford. Ngilgi shut up her shack125 and followed him. A few days later when she returned forlorn, Baaburgurt slily brought up the rear of the fowls and goats to console her. The three rivals again gathered to revile126 the union.
“Baaburgurt’s Cockatoo, and so is Ngilgi. I am Crow, and her proper husband,” said Monnop. “So am I!” said Woolberr. Both glared at Bimba, who was neither Bibbulmun nor Wordungmat, and a fight would have followed had not the door of Ngilgi’s house at that moment violently opened, and from it emerged Baaburgurt closely followed by a bucket of cold water. Presently there came a shrill127 wailing-Ngilgi’s lament128 for the faithless Jimmie. Next morning they were preparing to turn their backs on each other to eat, when the door opened again, and from it came a repentant129 Ngilgi, with damper and jam and tea for Baaburgurt.
“I don’t want you for my husband,” she said, “but I threw water at you, so I bring you food.” Content with her flocks and herds, Ngilgi tried no further matrimonial experiments. Her dogs, in spite of their physical infirmities and mixed breeds, were notorious fowl-hunters of the Cannington district, but she could sense a policeman’s visit well beforehand, huddled130 the moody131 pack into chaff-bags, slung132 them over her shoulder, and betook herself to a cave in the hills when he came to Maamba. When she was caught at last, and the policeman mercifully destroyed all save the single whole specimen133, she shook the dust of the reserve from her shapely feet and retired134 to the outskirts135 of Guildford, where she busied herself cleaning and washing for the white man.
Nyalyert and Kajjaman drank themselves to death. Woolberr made a valiant136 effort to reach his home at Gin Gin when the black swans were nesting, but following the track of the railway line, lost in memories of the distributions and ceremonies of long ago, he was struck by a train and killed. Baaburgurt, blind and feeble, continually cried and mourned for his kalleep at Wonnerup until at last some members of a well-known family in the south-west, whose father had been murdered in the early days by Baaburgurt’s father, took pity on the poor old man, and cared for him till the end.
All of these natives had been in close contact with Christianity during most of their lives, but little it penetrated137 their consciousness. Joobaitch considered that the eagle on the lectern of St. Georges Cathedral had been provided by the white man as a totem for him, a totem he accepted with amiability138 but no enthusiasm, while Monnop pinned his new-found faith to the dove in the Benedictine built chapel, now St. Mary’s Cathedral in Perth.
As I sat at the feet of my first Bibbulmun teachers one of the most important lessons was communicated to me unconsciously, but so important and significant was it that I remembered and acted upon it through all the years.
When I began my camp life at Maamba Reserve in the early 1900’s Sir Frederick Bedford, the then Governor, and Lady Bedford honoured us with a visit. An old and fine sailor, Sir Frederick wished to see every detail of my camp life and walked through and into my living-and dressing-tents on his tour of inspection139. The same evening as we were seated round a fire discussing the visit of our Queen’s Representative, Ngilgi said: “The Governor is like the Great Queen’s son, and the Queen can go everywhere and so can the Governor, but no man can go into your mia (tent, shelter) unless he is your husband (korda). That is Bibbulmun law.” I never forgot or ceased to obey that fundamental law. And, so, when Bishop White of Willochra visited me at my Ooldea camp in the late 1920’s I received him outside my breakwind, and taking out three kerosene140 cases, we had tea and a friendly talk while sitting on our primitive stools. It was interesting to hear from the Bishop that this fundamental social “law” was not known either to himself or to any of the Missionaries141 in charge of his Native Missions in Queensland and elsewhere, but it is one of the most important “laws” in the whole native system; not a law having a moral foundation in the native social system, but an economic foundation. The woman is an economic asset to the man who owns her. He can lend her but in barter142 always. He can exchange her for another woman, or for weapons or some such as payment, and he may even dispose of her finally for a price and scrupulously143 keep his agreement in that transaction. She then ceases to be his economic asset, the important fact that counted in native domestic relations being that sexual jealousy144 was secondary to what might be called economic jealousy.
It was always a part of my work amongst them to endeavour to give them a little insight into our own social system, but to the end of their lives they failed to understand it.
The moment the low white entered their lives all native social and sexual tabus were broken. When the first white man took the young native woman he fancied, his status in her family and group was adjusted according to native law. He chose his woman and automatically became her husband’s brother with all the rights and obligations of the husband’s brother, son-inlaw, etc. So long as the white man took other women from among his new brothers’ wives he incurred145 no bodily risk, and the foods he gave were distributed according to the food laws in this respect. But when his lustful146 eyes fell upon women and girls who were tabu to him in his new “native” relationship, he committed a breach147 of native law punishable with death. Many a white man has been killed for this offence, of which he may have been ignorant or defiant148.
When they saw the white man living in the same hut as his mother. mother-inlaw, grown-up sisters (grown-up sisters and brothers were always tabu to each other); when they perceived that every native law regarding tabus was apparently149 set at naught150 by white people, the law-abiding native groups attached the odium of group marriage and promiscuity151 to the white people!
Among the Bibbulmun, who had kept their laws intact until the coming of the white man, this apparent promiscuity of the whites had a disastrous152 effect. They broke their age old tabus, and no “magic” punishment resulting, the young men took whom they willed and hugged the white settlements for safety. The elders of the groups lost their magic powers through the white man’s drink; the evil example was set and the groups became like dingoes. But as in every human heart there is a sort of relative conscience, so every Bibbulmun who took his sister, mother or daughter to wife knew in his heart that he was committing a dreadful offence, and this feeling was no small factor in their quick extinction153.
Joobaitch clung steadily154 to Maamba, his own ground; even when the doctor urged his removal to hospital. “No,”’ said Joobaitch, “I shall die on my own ground, and not in a white man’s house. When I die, I shall go down through the sea to Kur’an’nup, where all my people will be waiting on the shore with meat food, my mother and my woman, my father, and my brothers. Before it sets out on its journey, my spirit must be free to rest on the kaanya tree. Since nyitting (cold) times all Bibbulmun spirits have rested on this tree on their way to Kur’an’nup, and I have never broken a branch or flower, or sat in the shade of the tree, because it is the tree of the dead, the sacred tree.”
One day the cart came to take Joobaitch to hospital. “Don’t let them take me!” he pleaded. I said, “It is all right, Joobaitch. You will die before you pass the kaartya tree at Karragullen, and your soul will rest there before it goes to the sea.” Joobaitch died as the cart crossed the little creek155 near Maamba, as he had wished it, still on his own ground, close to the kaanya tree.
So the last of the Perth tribe was buried in the aboriginal section of the old Guildford cemetery156, which formed part of his people’s home. He had had fifty years of Christianity, but he died in the faith of the Bibbulmun, looking westward157 to Kur’an’nup.
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10 flora | |
n.(某一地区的)植物群 | |
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11 teeming | |
adj.丰富的v.充满( teem的现在分词 );到处都是;(指水、雨等)暴降;倾注 | |
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12 fauna | |
n.(一个地区或时代的)所有动物,动物区系 | |
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13 reptiles | |
n.爬行动物,爬虫( reptile的名词复数 ) | |
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14 derived | |
vi.起源;由来;衍生;导出v.得到( derive的过去式和过去分词 );(从…中)得到获得;源于;(从…中)提取 | |
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15 fecundity | |
n.生产力;丰富 | |
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16 vent | |
n.通风口,排放口;开衩;vt.表达,发泄 | |
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17 savage | |
adj.野蛮的;凶恶的,残暴的;n.未开化的人 | |
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18 deity | |
n.神,神性;被奉若神明的人(或物) | |
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19 neolithic | |
adj.新石器时代的 | |
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20 axe | |
n.斧子;v.用斧头砍,削减 | |
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21 consummate | |
adj.完美的;v.成婚;使完美 [反]baffle | |
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22 scoop | |
n.铲子,舀取,独家新闻;v.汲取,舀取,抢先登出 | |
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23 bough | |
n.大树枝,主枝 | |
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24 friction | |
n.摩擦,摩擦力 | |
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25 applied | |
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用 | |
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26 resinous | |
adj.树脂的,树脂质的,树脂制的 | |
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27 hereditary | |
adj.遗传的,遗传性的,可继承的,世袭的 | |
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28 trespass | |
n./v.侵犯,闯入私人领地 | |
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29 estuaries | |
(江河入海的)河口,河口湾( estuary的名词复数 ) | |
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30 spawning | |
产卵 | |
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31 crabbing | |
v.捕蟹( crab的现在分词 ) | |
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32 shrub | |
n.灌木,灌木丛 | |
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33 investigation | |
n.调查,调查研究 | |
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34 anthropology | |
n.人类学 | |
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35 premises | |
n.建筑物,房屋 | |
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36 bishop | |
n.主教,(国际象棋)象 | |
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37 bibliography | |
n.参考书目;(有关某一专题的)书目 | |
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38 aboriginal | |
adj.(指动植物)土生的,原产地的,土著的 | |
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39 Augmented | |
adj.增音的 动词augment的过去式和过去分词形式 | |
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40 suburban | |
adj.城郊的,在郊区的 | |
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41 orchards | |
(通常指围起来的)果园( orchard的名词复数 ) | |
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42 grove | |
n.林子,小树林,园林 | |
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43 marvel | |
vi.(at)惊叹vt.感到惊异;n.令人惊异的事 | |
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44 rations | |
定量( ration的名词复数 ); 配给量; 正常量; 合理的量 | |
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45 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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46 metropolitan | |
adj.大城市的,大都会的 | |
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47 dozing | |
v.打瞌睡,假寐 n.瞌睡 | |
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48 instinctively | |
adv.本能地 | |
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49 crouched | |
v.屈膝,蹲伏( crouch的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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50 ashore | |
adv.在(向)岸上,上岸 | |
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51 belongings | |
n.私人物品,私人财物 | |
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52 forefathers | |
n.祖先,先人;祖先,祖宗( forefather的名词复数 );列祖列宗;前人 | |
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53 kindly | |
adj.和蔼的,温和的,爽快的;adv.温和地,亲切地 | |
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54 disposition | |
n.性情,性格;意向,倾向;排列,部署 | |
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55 peculiarity | |
n.独特性,特色;特殊的东西;怪癖 | |
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56 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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57 wailing | |
v.哭叫,哀号( wail的现在分词 );沱 | |
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58 wharves | |
n.码头,停泊处( wharf的名词复数 ) | |
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59 primitive | |
adj.原始的;简单的;n.原(始)人,原始事物 | |
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60 beheld | |
v.看,注视( behold的过去式和过去分词 );瞧;看呀;(叙述中用于引出某人意外的出现)哎哟 | |
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61 winding | |
n.绕,缠,绕组,线圈 | |
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62 obliterated | |
v.除去( obliterate的过去式和过去分词 );涂去;擦掉;彻底破坏或毁灭 | |
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63 herds | |
兽群( herd的名词复数 ); 牧群; 人群; 群众 | |
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64 unfamiliar | |
adj.陌生的,不熟悉的 | |
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65 attire | |
v.穿衣,装扮[同]array;n.衣着;盛装 | |
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66 wilful | |
adj.任性的,故意的 | |
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67 flouted | |
v.藐视,轻视( flout的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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68 sycophancy | |
n.拍马屁,奉承,谄媚;吮痈舐痔 | |
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69 detested | |
v.憎恶,嫌恶,痛恨( detest的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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70 measles | |
n.麻疹,风疹,包虫病,痧子 | |
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71 influenza | |
n.流行性感冒,流感 | |
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72 breakdown | |
n.垮,衰竭;损坏,故障,倒塌 | |
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73 conspired | |
密谋( conspire的过去式和过去分词 ); 搞阴谋; (事件等)巧合; 共同导致 | |
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74 reprisals | |
n.报复(行为)( reprisal的名词复数 ) | |
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75 preservation | |
n.保护,维护,保存,保留,保持 | |
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76 sanctuaries | |
n.避难所( sanctuary的名词复数 );庇护;圣所;庇护所 | |
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77 inspectors | |
n.检查员( inspector的名词复数 );(英国公共汽车或火车上的)查票员;(警察)巡官;检阅官 | |
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78 systematic | |
adj.有系统的,有计划的,有方法的 | |
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79 undoubtedly | |
adv.确实地,无疑地 | |
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80 destined | |
adj.命中注定的;(for)以…为目的地的 | |
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81 monastery | |
n.修道院,僧院,寺院 | |
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82 secular | |
n.牧师,凡人;adj.世俗的,现世的,不朽的 | |
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83 continental | |
adj.大陆的,大陆性的,欧洲大陆的 | |
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84 implements | |
n.工具( implement的名词复数 );家具;手段;[法律]履行(契约等)v.实现( implement的第三人称单数 );执行;贯彻;使生效 | |
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85 promising | |
adj.有希望的,有前途的 | |
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86 promptly | |
adv.及时地,敏捷地 | |
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87 dwelling | |
n.住宅,住所,寓所 | |
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88 superstitious | |
adj.迷信的 | |
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89 alas | |
int.唉(表示悲伤、忧愁、恐惧等) | |
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90 sweeping | |
adj.范围广大的,一扫无遗的 | |
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91 guardianship | |
n. 监护, 保护, 守护 | |
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92 mattress | |
n.床垫,床褥 | |
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93 cosy | |
adj.温暖而舒适的,安逸的 | |
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94 villas | |
别墅,公馆( villa的名词复数 ); (城郊)住宅 | |
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95 scraps | |
油渣 | |
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96 vices | |
缺陷( vice的名词复数 ); 恶习; 不道德行为; 台钳 | |
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97 gaol | |
n.(jail)监狱;(不加冠词)监禁;vt.使…坐牢 | |
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98 sagging | |
下垂[沉,陷],松垂,垂度 | |
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99 conjure | |
v.恳求,祈求;变魔术,变戏法 | |
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100 ceded | |
v.让给,割让,放弃( cede的过去式 ) | |
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101 lieutenant | |
n.陆军中尉,海军上尉;代理官员,副职官员 | |
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102 affinity | |
n.亲和力,密切关系 | |
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103 edible | |
n.食品,食物;adj.可食用的 | |
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104 tragic | |
adj.悲剧的,悲剧性的,悲惨的 | |
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105 usurping | |
篡夺,霸占( usurp的现在分词 ); 盗用; 篡夺,篡权 | |
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106 annoyances | |
n.恼怒( annoyance的名词复数 );烦恼;打扰;使人烦恼的事 | |
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107 reviling | |
v.辱骂,痛斥( revile的现在分词 ) | |
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108 sentry | |
n.哨兵,警卫 | |
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109 smelt | |
v.熔解,熔炼;n.银白鱼,胡瓜鱼 | |
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110 lapses | |
n.失误,过失( lapse的名词复数 );小毛病;行为失检;偏离正道v.退步( lapse的第三人称单数 );陷入;倒退;丧失 | |
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111 evoked | |
[医]诱发的 | |
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112 killing | |
n.巨额利润;突然赚大钱,发大财 | |
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113 thigh | |
n.大腿;股骨 | |
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114 celebrated | |
adj.有名的,声誉卓著的 | |
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115 chapel | |
n.小教堂,殡仪馆 | |
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116 propitiatory | |
adj.劝解的;抚慰的;谋求好感的;哄人息怒的 | |
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117 hurled | |
v.猛投,用力掷( hurl的过去式和过去分词 );大声叫骂 | |
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118 facetiously | |
adv.爱开玩笑地;滑稽地,爱开玩笑地 | |
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119 fowls | |
鸟( fowl的名词复数 ); 禽肉; 既不是这; 非驴非马 | |
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120 livestock | |
n.家畜,牲畜 | |
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121 hideous | |
adj.丑陋的,可憎的,可怕的,恐怖的 | |
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122 ribs | |
n.肋骨( rib的名词复数 );(船或屋顶等的)肋拱;肋骨状的东西;(织物的)凸条花纹 | |
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123 jaws | |
n.口部;嘴 | |
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124 dodged | |
v.闪躲( dodge的过去式和过去分词 );回避 | |
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125 shack | |
adj.简陋的小屋,窝棚 | |
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126 revile | |
v.辱骂,谩骂 | |
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127 shrill | |
adj.尖声的;刺耳的;v尖叫 | |
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128 lament | |
n.悲叹,悔恨,恸哭;v.哀悼,悔恨,悲叹 | |
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129 repentant | |
adj.对…感到悔恨的 | |
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130 huddled | |
挤在一起(huddle的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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131 moody | |
adj.心情不稳的,易怒的,喜怒无常的 | |
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132 slung | |
抛( sling的过去式和过去分词 ); 吊挂; 遣送; 押往 | |
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133 specimen | |
n.样本,标本 | |
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134 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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135 outskirts | |
n.郊外,郊区 | |
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136 valiant | |
adj.勇敢的,英勇的;n.勇士,勇敢的人 | |
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137 penetrated | |
adj. 击穿的,鞭辟入里的 动词penetrate的过去式和过去分词形式 | |
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138 amiability | |
n.和蔼可亲的,亲切的,友善的 | |
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139 inspection | |
n.检查,审查,检阅 | |
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140 kerosene | |
n.(kerosine)煤油,火油 | |
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141 missionaries | |
n.传教士( missionary的名词复数 ) | |
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142 barter | |
n.物物交换,以货易货,实物交易 | |
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143 scrupulously | |
adv.一丝不苟地;小心翼翼地,多顾虑地 | |
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144 jealousy | |
n.妒忌,嫉妒,猜忌 | |
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145 incurred | |
[医]招致的,遭受的; incur的过去式 | |
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146 lustful | |
a.贪婪的;渴望的 | |
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147 breach | |
n.违反,不履行;破裂;vt.冲破,攻破 | |
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148 defiant | |
adj.无礼的,挑战的 | |
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149 apparently | |
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎 | |
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150 naught | |
n.无,零 [=nought] | |
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151 promiscuity | |
n.混杂,混乱;(男女的)乱交 | |
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152 disastrous | |
adj.灾难性的,造成灾害的;极坏的,很糟的 | |
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153 extinction | |
n.熄灭,消亡,消灭,灭绝,绝种 | |
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154 steadily | |
adv.稳定地;不变地;持续地 | |
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155 creek | |
n.小溪,小河,小湾 | |
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156 cemetery | |
n.坟墓,墓地,坟场 | |
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157 westward | |
n.西方,西部;adj.西方的,向西的;adv.向西 | |
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