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Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- PHYSICAL CHARACTER
- MENTAL CHARACTER
- NUMBERS AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE ABORIGINES
- BIRTH AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN
- MARRIAGE
- DEATH, AND BURIAL OF THE DEAD
- A NATIVE ENCAMPMENT AND THE DAILY LIFE OF THE NATIVES
- FOOD
- DISEASES
- DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS
- ORNAMENTATION
- OFFENSIVE WEAPONS
- DEFENSIVE WEAPONS
- WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS OF THE WEST AUSTRALIAN
- IMPLEMENTS AND MANUFACTURES
- STONE IMPLEMENTS
- NETS AND FISH-HOOKS
- METHODS OF PRODUCING FIRE
- CANOES
- MYTHS
- Plate section
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- PHYSICAL CHARACTER
- MENTAL CHARACTER
- NUMBERS AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE ABORIGINES
- BIRTH AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN
- MARRIAGE
- DEATH, AND BURIAL OF THE DEAD
- A NATIVE ENCAMPMENT AND THE DAILY LIFE OF THE NATIVES
- FOOD
- DISEASES
- DRESS AND PERSONAL ORNAMENTS
- ORNAMENTATION
- OFFENSIVE WEAPONS
- DEFENSIVE WEAPONS
- WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS OF THE WEST AUSTRALIAN
- IMPLEMENTS AND MANUFACTURES
- STONE IMPLEMENTS
- NETS AND FISH-HOOKS
- METHODS OF PRODUCING FIRE
- CANOES
- MYTHS
- Plate section
Summary
PUND-JEL
Pund-jel or Bun-jil created all things, but he made no women. Pund-jel has a wife named Boi-boi, whose face he has never seen. Yet he has a son whose name is Bin-beal, and a brother named Pal-ly-yan. Though Pund-jel was the creator of all things, he had help from Bin-beal and Pal-ly-yan. Pund-jel always carries a large knife or sword (Bul-li-to kul-pen-kul-pen gye-up), and when he made the earth (Beek) he went all over it, cutting it in many places, and thereby formed creeks and rivers, and mountains and valleys. All these things are believed by the Boo-noo-rong or Coast tribe.
The Aborigines of the Yarra (the Wa-woo-rong tribe) say that Bun-jil made the earth (Beek-warreen) and all things besides. He had two wives, and he gave one of them to his brother Boo-err-go-en. He had two sons, Ta-jerr and Tarrn-nin, and these he sent very frequently to destroy bad men and bad women–wicked men and women who had killed and eaten blacks.
Boo-err-go-en, the brother of Bun-jil, was very wild, and though he had had given to him one wife, he was not satisfied. Bun-jil had a sword or knife (Warra-goop), and also an instrument named Ber-rang, with which he could open any place or any thing, and in such a way as to make it impossible for any one to know how or whether or not it had been opened.
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- Information
- Aborigines of VictoriaWith Notes Relating to the Habits of the Natives of Other Parts of Australia and Tasmania Compiled from Various Sources for the Government of Victoria, pp. 423 - 484Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1878