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Language: 
Biyal Biyal
Australian: 
Go-nang-goo-lie
English: 
After the murder of Yel-lo-way by Wat-te-wal, his widow Noo-rooing being obliged, according to the custom of her country, to avenge her husbandÕs death on some of the relations of the murderer, meeting with a little girl named Go-nang-goo-lie, who was someway related to Wat-tewal, walked with her and two other girls to a retired place, where with a club and a pointed stone they beat her so cruelly, that she was brought into the town almost dead. In the head were six or seven deep incisions, and one ear was divided to the bone, which, from the nature of the instrument with which they beat her, was much injured. This poor child was in a very dangerous way, and died in a few days afterwards. ------- .The little victim of her revenge was, from her quiet tractable manners, much beloved in the town; and what is a singular trait of the inhumanity of this proceeding, she had every day since Yel-lo-wayÕs death requested that Noo-rooing might be fed at the officerÕs hut, where she herself resided.
Category: 
name of person
Sub-category: 
female
Source: 
Collins 1
Page: 
488
Line: 
26
Respelt: 
Gånang-Guli
Part of speech: 
noun
Date: 
1798
Meaning Clue: 
‘Curnoomgully’: -gali = ‘curnoom, stumps, gully, place of’: AnthSoc 456:42: Walker [47:11.2]
Source Details: 
David Collins (17.32 This proposal, he thought, could not be considered otherwise than as fair and reasonable, when they recollected that the means by which individuals had so far improved their farms had arisen from the very liberal manner in which government had given up the labour of so great a number of its own servants, to assist the industry of others. If this representation should not have the effect which he hoped and expected, by a reduction of the present high price of grain, he thought it his duty to propose, that those who were assisted with servants from government, should at least undertake to furnish those servants with bread. To those who had farms on the banks of the Hawkesbury he thought it necessary to observe, that, there not being any granaries in that district belonging to government, the expense of conveying their grain from thence to this part of the settlement rendered it absolutely necessary that they should lower their prices; otherwise they must be at that expence themselves, and bring their surplus corn to market either at Sydney or Parramatta, where government had stores where in to deposit it, and where only the commissary could be permitted to receive it. 254 David Collins Page numbers follow textCollins left the hospital determined to trust to nature.* * And he did not trust in vain. We saw him from time to time for several weeks walking about with the spear unmoved, 89) 1975: An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales Vol. 1: Originally published 1798) ------------------------ Collins, David. 1975 [1798]. An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales, With Remarks on the Dispositions, Customs, Manners. etc., of the Native Inhabitants of that Country: Volume I. Edited by B. H. Fletcher. First ed. 2 vols. Vol. I. Sydney: A.H. & A.W. Reed in association with the Royal Australian Historical Society. Original edition, 1798, published by T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davies, London. JS LOCATION: Personal volume on study bopkshelves
Comment: 
COULD -gali MEAN ’having’ [?JS]

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