[Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M. Gould]@TWC D-Link book
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine

CHAPTER IX
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Only fear of the traveler's weapons prevented them from slaying him, and more than once he had a narrow escape.

One of the first of them whom he employed looked more like a brute than a man.

'When he talked,' says the doctor, 'he rubbed his belly with complacency, as if the sight of me made his mouth water.' This individual was regarded with much respect by his fellows because of his success in procuring human flesh to eat.

These aborigines say that the white man's flesh is salt and occasions nausea.

A Chinaman they consider as good for eating as a black man, his food being chiefly vegetable.
"The most horrible development of cannibalism among the Australian blacks is the eating of defunct relatives.


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