In European naval folklore, it was considered to portend | The author has been identified as John Howison fl |
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He embarked on the convict transport Active which sailed from on 27 March 1791 and arrived at Sydney , just to the north of , on 26 September, having anchored briefly at in very late June | Serbo-Croatian: Cyrillic: m Roman: m• Published in Epistles, Odes, and other poems London, 1806• See George Barrington's Voyage to Botany Bay edited by Suzanne Rickard Leicester University Press, 2001 |
See Alan Lang Strout: A Bibliography of Articles in Blackwood's Magazine 1817—1825 1959, p.
20: Nautical Myths and Superstitions | |
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Zealandic: Noun [ ] plural• A Voyage to Botany Bay and A Voyage to New South Wales, both issued in 1795, were revamped versions of An Impartial and Circumstantial Narrative of the Present State of Botany Bay, which had appeared in 1793—94, but which did not include the Flying Dutchman reference | George Barrington originally Waldron was tried at the in in September 1790 for picking pockets and sentenced to for seven years |
A mythical - that is very fast sailing, and never makes it to , seen on the , where upon being , request information on persons long dead, or leave messages for said people.
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