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  • Sept. 2, 1876
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  • THE WANDERING FREEMASON.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 2, 1876: Page 4

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The Wandering Freemason.

that if tho importation of the Kanakas cost only tho expense of bringing them , the concession would prove uncommonly remunerative to tho speculator as well as to tho p hilanthropist . I did not fail to call upon the Doctor ' s wife , whom I soon

began to regard as " touched in the head . ' She talked ot seeing visions in crystals and mirrors ( of which she had a supply in regular sets ) , of holding long conversations with her dear grandmother , and similar eccentricities . She told me , ono day , that feeling anxious about her husband , she had

sought a vision of him , and had seen him in a small boat , Towing off with Carter from » tropical island fringed with cocoa-nut trees . She had seen them go on board a vessel which Jay at anchor , and had wanted to see Blake , but " could not find him anywhere . "

In less than two months from the date of the " Ade

lante ' s " departure , she was telegraphed as asrain anchored off Callao . Marvelling greatly over her speedy return , and feeling intensely interested in tho expedition , I took the next train and repaired on board . A crowd of dark faces clustered about the bulwarks , hailing every new comer with

p laudits of unbounded delig ht . They wero both male and female , and eyed their new loose cotton clothes with evident pride aud bewilderment . As I passed over the side , I was overwhelmed by their well-meant but obtrusive caresses and handshakings . Carter appeared , and formall y

presented me to the chief— " King Bungay —an old savage , on the broad grin . Women and children were

littered over the decks . I quite forgot to make enquiry as to the cause of their unexpectedly quick passage , in dismay at the intelligence of Blake ' s death , which had occurred on the return trip .

At Carter ' s request , I took away with me to Lima the son and daughter of King Bungay , aged about 10 or 12 years . I narrowly watched the effect made upon them by the succession of novel sights through which they passed . The landing-place , the railway station , the start of the

train . Through all these strange scenes they went with absolute stolidity , not a muscle of thoir countenances moved . Only the sig ht of a smart Zamba wench , in wide crinoline and bright yellow parasol , evoked an exclamation from the girl . On the railway journey , they noted

in the distance ( near Bellavista ) a solitary palm-tree , and brightened up when I assured them , in the marine lingo which they had begun to pick up , that , " by ' m-bye , plenty moar . " 1 first exhibited them as curiosities at our Legation , and then left them at Carter ' s old quarters at the Hotel .

This was my last personal intercourse with this drama and its actors . Blake ' s papers and effects were deposited with the Consul at Callao , where it transpired that of late years he had borne an indifferent character , and had been

made a bankrupt in Australia . I could not but surmise that he had been only a show puppet in the hands of Carter , who pulled the wires for the promotion of schemes for which he found the capital .

The expedition of the " Adelantc must have paid 800 per cent , profit to tho benefit of those concerned . The immigrants were eagerly competed for at from 100 to 500 dollars a head , being drafted off to various plantations

where , if rumour may be credited , their treatment was not always humane . Whence they had been brought , I could not ascertain with ceitainty , as Carter and his companions maintained profound secrecy on that score . Blake ' s stories of his concessions at the New Hebrides and New Caledonia

must have been mere blinds to throw enquirers off the true scent . I believe , however , the fact was this . Carter , in his trips over the South Seas , had found a p lace , probably the Island of Penrhyn , one of the Marquesas group , where a failure of the cocoa-nut crop was apprehended and

famine imminent . He had conceived the scheme I have detailed , and after gaining the confidence of the natives , had put it into execution with the help of Blake , fetching

away the islanders out of the throes of want . Those he brought were probabl y but a small instalment of the numbers he had similarly in reserve , and the ground plan of the scheme , thas far , cannot be considered reprehensible .

But the tragedy was to come . The concession granted to Miles Blake became void b y his death . Carter ' s and Yriarte ' s exclusive privileges were consequently abrogated . The profit of the first venture was publicl y notorious , and

a score of speculators , associated with as many members of Congress , immediately procured permits to import immigrants likewise . These vied with each other in fitting out vessels with despatch . In their frantic haste , some left

The Wandering Freemason.

Callao only partially equipped or seaworthy ; the masters of all of thtm ( being ignorant of Carter ' s happy huntinggrounds ) without goal , or with only indefinite ideas of their destination . Their instructions were to procure immigrants , by fair means ( doubtless ) , but not to return

without a cargo . The profits of the several ventures being- thus entirely dependent upon the celerity with which that object could be accomplished , it is not surprising that the tenonr

of their instructions was construed by reckless adventurers in the loosest way , conscious that pecuniary success would , in the eyes of their patrons , condone everything . Thus was let loose over the South Pacific a flotilla of filibusters

eager for prey . The first and most successful commander adopted a simple expedient ; he anchored off a charming island , and attracted by means of barter , a considerable number of the natives on board . Whilst occupied and unsuspecting , they were seized and huddled below , when the

vessel setting sail brought them off to Callao in triumph . At another place , a captain , whose vessel apparently did not inspire sufficient confidence , feigned to set sail from a roadstead after planting an ambuscade on shore . When the

inhabitants had crowded to the beach to watch the stranger ' s white wings expand , up started the ambuscade throwing a cordon around them , from which those who tried to escape were mercilessly shot down , tho remainder being bound captive .

Such unprincipled and inhuman depredations did not pass unnoticed or unpunished . The French squadron , whose rendezvous is Tahiti , sped after the offenders ; some were taken as p irates , others driven ashore . I had left Peru before any of them returned to port , but 1 know

that some came disabled by misadventure and disastrous weather , and believe that those convicted of malpractice were despoiled and punished as they deserved . Their horrible outrages had roused the public feeling of humanit y ; the ingress of the immigrants was stopped , all who had

participated in equipping the expeditions being regarded as branded men ; nor will time clear their name of infamy . The enterprise of Carter was , so far as I know , the first instance of what may be termed the Coolie system in the South Seas , the barbarous abuses of which by wretches

whom we are forced to acknowledge to be our countrymen have been frequently instanced of late years , but which , I hope and believe has now been suppressed . * Well founded rumours of the white man ' s treachery , borne b y

stray canoes from isle to isle , are in great part answerable for numerous murders and atrocities , those of the late lamented Bishop Patterson and the noble Goodenough amongst the number .

I have veiled certain names in the foregoing narrative , but the particulars may be verified out of public newspapers and the archives of H . M . ' s Legation at Lima .

* Even whilst I write , tho following appears in the Echo : — " News reaches us from Australia that several vessels engaged in the ' Labour Trade' havo lately been taken possession of by natives of the South Seas , and their crews murdered . We aro much afraid that 'I 3 Iack Eircling' of an illegal kind still goes on , in spite of

cruisers and the Kidnapping Act , and that nnder other flags , espe . cially the American , it is carried out to an extent little dreamt of in this conntry . In fact the latest discoveries of science have been brought to bear by some of the smart Yankee captains , in the shape of the nsc of dynamite for this purpose . They got the native boats

well round the ship ; a boat ' s crew is stationed at tho falls of the long boat hoi ted up astern ; the captain is on the bridge . He takes out a cigar , calls to the steward to bring him a light , applies tho end of his cigar to a piece of dynamite , throws it into the water , a panio ensnes , the native boats aro upset , and in the confusion , the

long boat , which has iu tho meantime been lowered , picks up the natives struggling in the water . Considering the treatment the natives have experienced , and are experiencing at the hands of such men , it is not surprising that murders of unoffending Europeans occasionally take place , such as that of Bishop

Patterson unci Commodore Goodenough , for a native looks upon every white man ho comes across as a fair victim for reprisals for any murder committed on the tribes by any of his race . The South Sea will , consequently , for many years to come , remain a dangerous cruising ground , and it will be a long time before such

atrocities as thoso committed by the notorious Carl will fade out of the native mind . The rianm of one of the vessels , the crew of which have been lately massacred , the Dancing Wave , was identified with

the very worst period of the traffic , ami is frequently referred to by Consul March in his despatch . Whethor some of the returned natives recognised the vessel in which they had been kidnapped , and so exercised retributive justice will remain to be seen . "

Madame Louise attracted a large and fashionable audience on Saturday , at the Royal Aquarium , Brig hton , by her singing . She was loudly and deservedly applauded .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-09-02, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_02091876/page/4/.
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MASONIC TWADDLE. Article 1
OPERATIVE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
THE WANDERING FREEMASON. Article 3
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION OF GRAND LODGE. Article 5
DEATH OF BRO. T. SOLOMON, OF TRURO. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE TREDEGAR LODGE, No. 1625. Article 6
BUCKINGHAM GALLERY OF FINE ARTS. Article 6
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REVIEWS. Article 7
IS MASONRY DOING ITS DUTY? Article 7
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OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
VISIT OF H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES TO GLASGOW. Article 10
Old Warrants. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 13
Untitled Article 14
Untitled Article 14
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK MASONS FOR SURREY. Article 14
NEW ZEALAND. Article 14
FUNERAL OF THE LATE BRO. J. H. LEVIEN, OF NELSON. Article 14
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 14
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The Wandering Freemason.

that if tho importation of the Kanakas cost only tho expense of bringing them , the concession would prove uncommonly remunerative to tho speculator as well as to tho p hilanthropist . I did not fail to call upon the Doctor ' s wife , whom I soon

began to regard as " touched in the head . ' She talked ot seeing visions in crystals and mirrors ( of which she had a supply in regular sets ) , of holding long conversations with her dear grandmother , and similar eccentricities . She told me , ono day , that feeling anxious about her husband , she had

sought a vision of him , and had seen him in a small boat , Towing off with Carter from » tropical island fringed with cocoa-nut trees . She had seen them go on board a vessel which Jay at anchor , and had wanted to see Blake , but " could not find him anywhere . "

In less than two months from the date of the " Ade

lante ' s " departure , she was telegraphed as asrain anchored off Callao . Marvelling greatly over her speedy return , and feeling intensely interested in tho expedition , I took the next train and repaired on board . A crowd of dark faces clustered about the bulwarks , hailing every new comer with

p laudits of unbounded delig ht . They wero both male and female , and eyed their new loose cotton clothes with evident pride aud bewilderment . As I passed over the side , I was overwhelmed by their well-meant but obtrusive caresses and handshakings . Carter appeared , and formall y

presented me to the chief— " King Bungay —an old savage , on the broad grin . Women and children were

littered over the decks . I quite forgot to make enquiry as to the cause of their unexpectedly quick passage , in dismay at the intelligence of Blake ' s death , which had occurred on the return trip .

At Carter ' s request , I took away with me to Lima the son and daughter of King Bungay , aged about 10 or 12 years . I narrowly watched the effect made upon them by the succession of novel sights through which they passed . The landing-place , the railway station , the start of the

train . Through all these strange scenes they went with absolute stolidity , not a muscle of thoir countenances moved . Only the sig ht of a smart Zamba wench , in wide crinoline and bright yellow parasol , evoked an exclamation from the girl . On the railway journey , they noted

in the distance ( near Bellavista ) a solitary palm-tree , and brightened up when I assured them , in the marine lingo which they had begun to pick up , that , " by ' m-bye , plenty moar . " 1 first exhibited them as curiosities at our Legation , and then left them at Carter ' s old quarters at the Hotel .

This was my last personal intercourse with this drama and its actors . Blake ' s papers and effects were deposited with the Consul at Callao , where it transpired that of late years he had borne an indifferent character , and had been

made a bankrupt in Australia . I could not but surmise that he had been only a show puppet in the hands of Carter , who pulled the wires for the promotion of schemes for which he found the capital .

The expedition of the " Adelantc must have paid 800 per cent , profit to tho benefit of those concerned . The immigrants were eagerly competed for at from 100 to 500 dollars a head , being drafted off to various plantations

where , if rumour may be credited , their treatment was not always humane . Whence they had been brought , I could not ascertain with ceitainty , as Carter and his companions maintained profound secrecy on that score . Blake ' s stories of his concessions at the New Hebrides and New Caledonia

must have been mere blinds to throw enquirers off the true scent . I believe , however , the fact was this . Carter , in his trips over the South Seas , had found a p lace , probably the Island of Penrhyn , one of the Marquesas group , where a failure of the cocoa-nut crop was apprehended and

famine imminent . He had conceived the scheme I have detailed , and after gaining the confidence of the natives , had put it into execution with the help of Blake , fetching

away the islanders out of the throes of want . Those he brought were probabl y but a small instalment of the numbers he had similarly in reserve , and the ground plan of the scheme , thas far , cannot be considered reprehensible .

But the tragedy was to come . The concession granted to Miles Blake became void b y his death . Carter ' s and Yriarte ' s exclusive privileges were consequently abrogated . The profit of the first venture was publicl y notorious , and

a score of speculators , associated with as many members of Congress , immediately procured permits to import immigrants likewise . These vied with each other in fitting out vessels with despatch . In their frantic haste , some left

The Wandering Freemason.

Callao only partially equipped or seaworthy ; the masters of all of thtm ( being ignorant of Carter ' s happy huntinggrounds ) without goal , or with only indefinite ideas of their destination . Their instructions were to procure immigrants , by fair means ( doubtless ) , but not to return

without a cargo . The profits of the several ventures being- thus entirely dependent upon the celerity with which that object could be accomplished , it is not surprising that the tenonr

of their instructions was construed by reckless adventurers in the loosest way , conscious that pecuniary success would , in the eyes of their patrons , condone everything . Thus was let loose over the South Pacific a flotilla of filibusters

eager for prey . The first and most successful commander adopted a simple expedient ; he anchored off a charming island , and attracted by means of barter , a considerable number of the natives on board . Whilst occupied and unsuspecting , they were seized and huddled below , when the

vessel setting sail brought them off to Callao in triumph . At another place , a captain , whose vessel apparently did not inspire sufficient confidence , feigned to set sail from a roadstead after planting an ambuscade on shore . When the

inhabitants had crowded to the beach to watch the stranger ' s white wings expand , up started the ambuscade throwing a cordon around them , from which those who tried to escape were mercilessly shot down , tho remainder being bound captive .

Such unprincipled and inhuman depredations did not pass unnoticed or unpunished . The French squadron , whose rendezvous is Tahiti , sped after the offenders ; some were taken as p irates , others driven ashore . I had left Peru before any of them returned to port , but 1 know

that some came disabled by misadventure and disastrous weather , and believe that those convicted of malpractice were despoiled and punished as they deserved . Their horrible outrages had roused the public feeling of humanit y ; the ingress of the immigrants was stopped , all who had

participated in equipping the expeditions being regarded as branded men ; nor will time clear their name of infamy . The enterprise of Carter was , so far as I know , the first instance of what may be termed the Coolie system in the South Seas , the barbarous abuses of which by wretches

whom we are forced to acknowledge to be our countrymen have been frequently instanced of late years , but which , I hope and believe has now been suppressed . * Well founded rumours of the white man ' s treachery , borne b y

stray canoes from isle to isle , are in great part answerable for numerous murders and atrocities , those of the late lamented Bishop Patterson and the noble Goodenough amongst the number .

I have veiled certain names in the foregoing narrative , but the particulars may be verified out of public newspapers and the archives of H . M . ' s Legation at Lima .

* Even whilst I write , tho following appears in the Echo : — " News reaches us from Australia that several vessels engaged in the ' Labour Trade' havo lately been taken possession of by natives of the South Seas , and their crews murdered . We aro much afraid that 'I 3 Iack Eircling' of an illegal kind still goes on , in spite of

cruisers and the Kidnapping Act , and that nnder other flags , espe . cially the American , it is carried out to an extent little dreamt of in this conntry . In fact the latest discoveries of science have been brought to bear by some of the smart Yankee captains , in the shape of the nsc of dynamite for this purpose . They got the native boats

well round the ship ; a boat ' s crew is stationed at tho falls of the long boat hoi ted up astern ; the captain is on the bridge . He takes out a cigar , calls to the steward to bring him a light , applies tho end of his cigar to a piece of dynamite , throws it into the water , a panio ensnes , the native boats aro upset , and in the confusion , the

long boat , which has iu tho meantime been lowered , picks up the natives struggling in the water . Considering the treatment the natives have experienced , and are experiencing at the hands of such men , it is not surprising that murders of unoffending Europeans occasionally take place , such as that of Bishop

Patterson unci Commodore Goodenough , for a native looks upon every white man ho comes across as a fair victim for reprisals for any murder committed on the tribes by any of his race . The South Sea will , consequently , for many years to come , remain a dangerous cruising ground , and it will be a long time before such

atrocities as thoso committed by the notorious Carl will fade out of the native mind . The rianm of one of the vessels , the crew of which have been lately massacred , the Dancing Wave , was identified with

the very worst period of the traffic , ami is frequently referred to by Consul March in his despatch . Whethor some of the returned natives recognised the vessel in which they had been kidnapped , and so exercised retributive justice will remain to be seen . "

Madame Louise attracted a large and fashionable audience on Saturday , at the Royal Aquarium , Brig hton , by her singing . She was loudly and deservedly applauded .

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