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Various

"Volume 10, No. 285, December 1, 1827"


_Nov_. 25. 1827. S.P.J.
* * * * *

ON A SQUINTING POETESS.

To no _one_ muse does she her glance confine,
But has an eye at once, to _all the nine!_
* * * * *

MANNERS & CUSTOMS OF ALL NATIONS.
No. XVI.

* * * * *

FISHING IN THE RIVER YEOU.

[Illustration: Fisherman]
The fishery of the Yeou, in Bornou, is a very considerable source of
commerce to the inhabitants of its banks; and the manner of fishing (as
represented in the above engraving) is ingenious though simple. The
Bornouese make very good nets of a twine spun from a perennial plant
called _kalimboa_: the implements for fishing are two large gourds
nicely balanced, and fixed on a large stem of bamboo, at the extreme
ends; the fisherman launches this on the river, and places himself
astride between the two gourds, and thus he floats with the stream, and
throws his net. He has also floats of cane, and weights, of small
leathern bags of sand: he beats up against the stream, paddling with his
hands and feet, previous to his drawing the net, which, as it rises from
the water, he lays before him as he sits; and with a sort of mace, which
he carries for the purpose, the fish are stunned by a single blow.


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