and I should question the fact seriously.]
The word is sometimes used in India [and by the Malays, see
above] for a torch, because torches are formed of rags dipped in it. This is perhaps the use which
accounts for Haexs explanation below.
1584.Demnar (for demmar) from Siacca and Blinton (i.e. Siak and Billiton).Barret, in Hakl. ii.
43.
1631.In Haexs Malay Vocabulary: Damar, Lumen quod accenditur.
1673.The Boat is not strengthened
with Knee-Timbers as ours are, the bended Planks are sowed together with Rope-yarn of the Cocoe,
and calked with Dammar (a sort of Rosin taken out of the sea).Fryer, 37.
The long continued Current
from the Inland Parts (at Surat) through the vast Wildernesses of huge Woods and Forests, wafts great
Rafts of Timber for Shipping and Building: and Damar for Pitch, the finest sented Bitumen (if it be not a
gum or Rosin) I ever met with.Ibid. 121.
1727.Damar, a gum that is used for making Pitch and Tar
for the use of Shipping.A. Hamilton, ii. 73; [ed. 1744, ii. 72].
c. 1755. A Demar-Boy (Torch-boy).Ives,
50.
1878.This dammar, which is the general Malayan name for resin, is dug out of the forests
by the Malays, and seems to be the fossilised juices of former growth of jungle.McNair, Perak, &c.,
188.
1885.The other great industry of the place (in Sumatra) is dammar collecting. This substance,
as is well known, is the resin which exudes from notches made in various species of coniferous and
dipterocarpous trees
out of whose stem
the native cuts large notches up to a height of 40 or 50 feet from
the ground. The tree is then left for 3 or 4 months when, if it be a very healthy one, sufficient dammar
will have exuded to make it worth while collecting; the yield may then be as much as 94 Amsterdam
pounds.H. O. Forbes, A Naturalists Wanderings, p. 135.