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  • Oct. 1, 1793
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1793: Page 38

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    Article MERMAIDS NOT FABULOUS, ← Page 4 of 7 →
Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mermaids Not Fabulous,

from Batavia to Europe , in the year 1714 . " In 12 deg . 3 8 . min . south latitude , on the first day of May , about eleven o ' clock in the forenoon , I , the captain , purser , and mate of the wat & h , and a great many of the ship ' s company , it being very calm and the sea smooth as glass , saw , about the distance of thrice the length of the ship from us , very distinctly , on the surface of the water , ' seemingly sitting with his back to usand half the bodabove the water

, y , " a creature of a grizlish or grey colour , like that of a cod-fish skin . It appeared like a sailor , or a man sirring on something ; and the more like a sailor , as on its head there seemed to be something like an English cap of the same grey colour . He sat somewhat " bent , and we observed him to move his head from one side to the other * upwards of five and twenty times ; so that we all agreed that it

must certainly be some shipwrecked person . I , after looking- some time , begged the captain to order them to steer the ship more direct towards it , being somewhat on the starboard side ; which was done accordingly ; and . we had got within a ship ' s length of him , when the people on the forecastle made such a noise , that he plunged downhead foremostand got presentlout of our siht

, * y g . But the man who was on the watch at the mast-head , declared he saw him for the space of 200 yards , and that he had a monstrous long tail . " I shall now only mention , that in the year 1716 , the news * papers were every where full of a sea-man , who appeared in the month of January , near Raguza , a small city on the Adriatick Sea , the like

of whom I ' never heard or read of . It had much the resemblance of a man , but it was near fifteen feet long . Its head was very large , and its feet and arms were well proportioned to its body . It appeared for several days running , and commonly came out of the sea about three o ' clock in the afternoon , and walked with monstrous strides * sometimes in one , sometimes in another place , along the shore .

" People from far and near went to look at it ; but they were so much afraid , that they kept a good distance from it , and many looked with spy-glasses . It often carried its hand above its head . The hideous noise that it made could be heard at half a mi | e ' s distance , so that people in the neighbourhood were sore afraid of it . The various accounts given by those who saw it are so uniforml y the samethat there is no room left to question the veracity of the

, story . " Mr . Valentyrt- theii concludes with saying , "If , after all this , there shall be found those who disbelieve the existence of such creatures as a Sea-man or Mermaids , of which we have at least given great reason to believe that there are , let them please themselves ; I shall give myself no more trouble about them . "

To these accounts of Mermaidsgiven by Valentyn may be added What Bartholinus relates in bis Centuria Hisioiiarum Anatomicarum Variarum , printed at Haphnia 1654 , p . 18 S , where he informs us , ' -l hat there was in li is time one of these animals catched upon the coast 3 E

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-10-01, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101793/page/38/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' 'MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
THE LIGHT AND TRUTH OF MASONRY EXPLAINED, BEING THE SUBSTANCE OF A CHARGE Article 8
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 11
ANECDOTES OF DR. GOLDSMITH. Article 13
THOUGHTS ON THE FOUNDERING OF SHIPS. Article 19
SIR PETER PARKER, BART. D.G.M. Article 20
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF THOMAS DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. P.G.M. Article 23
ANECDOTE OF M. DE MONTESQUIEU. Article 28
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 29
Untitled Article 29
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, Article 32
Untitled Article 33
FAITH. Article 34
MERMAIDS NOT FABULOUS, Article 35
ON THE DISCIPLINE OF THE UNIVERSITY. Article 41
INSTANCE OF THE SEVERITY OF THE PENAL LAWS Article 43
ON THE BENEFITS OF LITERATURE. Article 45
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 47
THE GENERAL HISTORY OF CHINA: Article 51
A PICTURE OF PIETY AND ŒCONOMY. Article 56
ANTIENT CHARTERS. Article 58
ON FRIENDSHIP. Article 60
Untitled Article 62
COMMENTS ON STERNE. Article 63
DR. JOHN HUNTER, THE LATE JUSTLY CELEBRATED ANATOMIST. Article 68
TRAITS IN THE LIFE OF THE LATE UNFORTUNATE QUEEN OF FRANCE. Article 70
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 73
POETRY. Article 76
THE FORSAKEN FAIR. Article 78
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 79
THE QUEEN OF FRANCE's LAMENTATION, BEFORE HER EXECUTION. Article 80
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 81
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 82
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Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mermaids Not Fabulous,

from Batavia to Europe , in the year 1714 . " In 12 deg . 3 8 . min . south latitude , on the first day of May , about eleven o ' clock in the forenoon , I , the captain , purser , and mate of the wat & h , and a great many of the ship ' s company , it being very calm and the sea smooth as glass , saw , about the distance of thrice the length of the ship from us , very distinctly , on the surface of the water , ' seemingly sitting with his back to usand half the bodabove the water

, y , " a creature of a grizlish or grey colour , like that of a cod-fish skin . It appeared like a sailor , or a man sirring on something ; and the more like a sailor , as on its head there seemed to be something like an English cap of the same grey colour . He sat somewhat " bent , and we observed him to move his head from one side to the other * upwards of five and twenty times ; so that we all agreed that it

must certainly be some shipwrecked person . I , after looking- some time , begged the captain to order them to steer the ship more direct towards it , being somewhat on the starboard side ; which was done accordingly ; and . we had got within a ship ' s length of him , when the people on the forecastle made such a noise , that he plunged downhead foremostand got presentlout of our siht

, * y g . But the man who was on the watch at the mast-head , declared he saw him for the space of 200 yards , and that he had a monstrous long tail . " I shall now only mention , that in the year 1716 , the news * papers were every where full of a sea-man , who appeared in the month of January , near Raguza , a small city on the Adriatick Sea , the like

of whom I ' never heard or read of . It had much the resemblance of a man , but it was near fifteen feet long . Its head was very large , and its feet and arms were well proportioned to its body . It appeared for several days running , and commonly came out of the sea about three o ' clock in the afternoon , and walked with monstrous strides * sometimes in one , sometimes in another place , along the shore .

" People from far and near went to look at it ; but they were so much afraid , that they kept a good distance from it , and many looked with spy-glasses . It often carried its hand above its head . The hideous noise that it made could be heard at half a mi | e ' s distance , so that people in the neighbourhood were sore afraid of it . The various accounts given by those who saw it are so uniforml y the samethat there is no room left to question the veracity of the

, story . " Mr . Valentyrt- theii concludes with saying , "If , after all this , there shall be found those who disbelieve the existence of such creatures as a Sea-man or Mermaids , of which we have at least given great reason to believe that there are , let them please themselves ; I shall give myself no more trouble about them . "

To these accounts of Mermaidsgiven by Valentyn may be added What Bartholinus relates in bis Centuria Hisioiiarum Anatomicarum Variarum , printed at Haphnia 1654 , p . 18 S , where he informs us , ' -l hat there was in li is time one of these animals catched upon the coast 3 E

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