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This genus is said by Guenther to be exclusively Australian. "Protective resemblance attains its highest degree of development," he says, in this genus. "Not only their colour closely a.s.similates that of the particular kind of sea-weed which they frequent, but the appendages of their spines seem to be merely part of the fucus to which they are attached. They attain a length of twelve inches." (`Study of Fishes,' p. 683.) The name, in England, is given to other and different fishes. The species P. foliatus is called the Superb Dragon (q.v.), from the beauty of its colours.
See under Dugong-oil.
1853. S. Sidney, `Three Colonies of Australia,' p. 267:
"The aborigines eagerly pursue the dugong, a species of small whale, generally known to the colonists as the sea-pig."
1882. Rev. J E. Tenison-Woods, `Fish of New South Wales,'
p. 82:
"The Sergeant Baker in all probability got its local appellation in the early history of the colony (New South Wales), as it was called after a sergeant of that name in one of the first detachments of a regiment; so were also two fruits of the Geebong tribe (Persoonia); one was called Major Buller, and the other Major Groce, and this latter again further corrupted into Major Grocer."
1896. F. G. Aflalo, `Natural History of Australia,' p. 114:
"From its habit of starting its discordant paean somewhere near sunrise and, after keeping comparatively quiet all through the hotter hours, cackling a `requiem to the day's decline,' the bird has been called the Settler's clock. It may be remarked, however, that this by no means takes place with the methodical precision that romancers write of in their letters home."
1896. H. Lawson, `When the World was Wide,' p. 84:
"In the silence of the darkness and the playing of the breeze, That we heard the settlers' matches rustle softly in the trees."
1896. `The Australasian,' June 13, p. 1133, col. 1:
"Re settlers' matches, torches, the blacks in the South-east of South Australia always used the bark of the she-oak to carry from one camp to another; it would last and keep alight for a long time and show a good light to travel by when they had no fire. A fire could always be lighted with two gra.s.s trees, a small fork, and a bit of dry gra.s.s. I have often started a fire with them myself."
Plate Phalacrocorax Carboides, Gould, Australian Cormorant, Black s.h.a.g, Colonists of W.A. . . . . . 66
P. Hypoleucus, Pied C., Black and White s.h.a.g, Colonists of W. A. . . . . . . . . . 68
P. Melanoleucus, Vieill., Pied C., Little s.h.a.g, Colonists of W.A. . . . . . . . . . 70
P. Punctatus, Spotted C., Crested s.h.a.g (Cook), Spotted s.h.a.g (Lapham) . . . . . . . . . 71
P. Leucogaster, Gould, White-breasted C. . . 69
P. Stictocephalus, Bp., Little Black C. . . 67
1847. L. Leichhardt, `Overland Expedition,' p. 185:
"s.h.a.gs started from dead trees lying half immersed."
1877. W. Pratt, `Colonial Experiences of Incidents of Thirty-four Years in New Zealand,' p. 234:
"In the `Dream of a s.h.a.groon,' which bore the date Ko Matinau, April 1851, and which first appeared in the `Wellington Spectator' of May 7, the term `Pilgrim' was first applied to the settlers; it was also predicted in it that the `Pilgrims'
would be `smashed' and the s.h.a.groons left in undisputed possession of the country for their flocks and herds."
1855. W. Howitt, `Two Years in Victoria,' vol. ii. p. 9:
"The tent of a surgeon was `shook,' as they style it--that is, robbed, during his absence in the daytime."
1878. `The Australian,' vol. i. p. 418:
"Crimean shirts, blankets, and all they `shake,'
Which I'm told's another name for `take.'"
See Clover.
1889. J. H. Maiden, `Useful Native Plants,' p. 143:
"It is the `Australian shamrock' of Mitch.e.l.l."
1863. `The Leader,' Oct. 24, p. 17, col. 1:
"Turn, turn thy shanghay dread aside, Nor touch that little bird."
1875. `Spectator' (Melbourne), May 15, p. 22, col. 1:
"The lads had with them a couple of pistols, powder, shot, bullets, and a shanghai."