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A71305 Purchas his pilgrimes. part 3 In fiue bookes. The first, contayning the voyages and peregrinations made by ancient kings, patriarkes, apostles, philosophers, and others, to and thorow the remoter parts of the knowne world: enquiries also of languages and religions, especially of the moderne diuersified professions of Christianitie. The second, a description of all the circum-nauigations of the globe. The third, nauigations and voyages of English-men, alongst the coasts of Africa ... The fourth, English voyages beyond the East Indies, to the ilands of Iapan, China, Cauchinchina, the Philippinæ with others ... The fifth, nauigations, voyages, traffiques, discoueries, of the English nation in the easterne parts of the world ... The first part. Purchas, Samuel, 1577?-1626. 1625 (1625) STC 20509_pt3; ESTC S111862 2,393,864 1,207

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His purpose altered Stron●●●ream Herd of white Deere The Riuer searched Noua Zembla pleasant to the eye Cause of much Ice in those Seas which make no nauigable passage Willoughbies Land a conceit of Card-makers it seeming to be no other then Newland or Greenland as is before obserued cap. 2. as Costing Sarch of Brunell is to others Noua Zembla Note Greene Sea Thunder No night in ten weekes See Hak. 10.3 May 5. stilo nouo Beala 〈◊〉 Wardhouse They doubled the North Cape Assumption Point Zen●● Lofoote No variatio● A great current setting to the North-east Farre Iles set 14. leagues to farre West Stromo Iune m The Bittacle is a close place in which the Compasse standeth Busse Iland Their first sight of stars for further North they 〈◊〉 continuall Sun-light Change of water A strange current out of the South-west Note well Bonets are those which are laced and eeked to the sayles to enlarge them with reference whereto the mayne course missen course fore course is vnderstood of those sayles without their Bonets A current from the North. Variation one point East Latitude 48. degrees 6. minutes * To spend the Mast is vnderstood of breaking it by foule weather only * That is bare no more sayle but the mayne sayle c. Variation Iuly The Banke of New found Land Variation west 17. degrees French-men Fishing on the Banke Variation 15. degrees North-west Variation 13. degrees Foggie and thick weather Many great Cods taken Many great Scoales of Herrings To sound is to trie the depth by Line and Lead or Pole c. Variation 17. degrees Land being low white and sandie 43. degrees 25. minutes Sight of Land againe and of two Ships Fiue Ilands Sixe Saluages come aboord them A large Riuer 44. Degrees 10. minutes The trade of the French with the Saluages They spoyle Houses of the Saluages Variation 10. degrees toward the North-west Variation 6. degrees to the West Variation 5. a halfe degrees A great current and many ouer-fals A great Rut. A current to the South-west and South-west by West with ouer-fals August They goe on Land neere Cape Cod. Sauages This dangerous Riffe is in 41. degrees 10 minutes and lyeth off East from Cape Cod into the Sea The Flats A current setting to the North. Variation one point Variation 10. degrees 37. Degrees 25. minutes 37. Degrees 6. minutes A low Land with a white sandie shoare 37. degrees 26. minutes Barre of Virginia Kings Riuer Note 37. degrees 22. minutes Variation 4. degrees Westward The Banke of Virginia The Coast lyeth South South-west and North North-west Latitude 37. degrees 15. minutes This agreeth with Robert Tyndall The Point of the Land A great Bay and Riuers A small Shallop needfull The Norther Land is full of shoalds Many Ilands They strike Latitude 39. degrees 5. minutes Latitude 38. degrees 39. minutes Deceitfull streames September Latitude 39. degrees 3. minutes The Land like broken Ilands The course along the Land from the mouth of one Riuer to the mouth of the Norther Bay or Lake Variation 8. degrees neere the Hills 2. degrees variation off at Sea High and a bold shoare Three great Riuers The Northermost barred An excellent Riuer Latitude 40. degrees 30. minutes A very good Harbour The people of the Countrey come aboord they are very ciuill Yellow Copper Tall Oakes The great Bay in 40. degrees and 30. minut● Dryed Currants Mantles of Feathers Furs Hempe Red Copper Another Riuer foure leagues to the Northward A narrow Riuer to the Westward Colman slaine and two more hurt Colmans Point Treacherous Sauages Good Harbour 28. Canoes full of men Oysters and Beanes Copper Pipes Variation 13. degrees The Riuer a mile broad Very high and mountainous Land Very louing people Maiz Pompions and Tabacco Shoalds and small Ilands Grapes and Pompions Beauers and Otters skins Oration End of the Riuers N●uigablenesse They returne downe the Riuer Store of Chest-nuts Okes Wal-nut trees Chest-nut trees Ewe trees Cedar trees c. Mountaines Small skins A pleasant place to build a Towne on Likelihood of Minerals October Treacherie of these Sauages A skirmish and slaughter of the Sauages A Myne of Copper or Siluer The Countrey of Manna-hata The great mouth of the great Riuer They leaue the Coast of Virginia Aprill 17. May. The Iles of Orkney Note Farre Ilands 62 degrees 24. minutes Westmony Iune Groneland Frobishers Streights Desolation A current West North-west East entrance into the Streights Iuly Desire prouoketh Iles of Gods Mercies Hold with Hope A mightie growne Sea Magna Britannia August Salisburies fore-land A great and whurling Sea A Streight which led vs into the deepe Bay of Gods great Mercies Cape Worsenholme Cape Digs Orkney Farre Iles. Island The South-east part of Island Westmonie Iland Mount Hecla casteth out fire A mayne of Ice * Or Diraford Lousie Bay An hot Bath The first of Iune Iland of Desolation Store of Whales Iland of Ice ouerturneth Danger by Ice Hudson entred 100. leagues further then any had been Discontents Desire prouokes Exercises of pleasure and profit on the Ice Difference of Tydes and Bayes Ice aboue 100. fathome A dangerous Rocke Iles of Gods Mercie Partridges Drift-wood Three Capes Prince Henries Cape King Iames his Cape Queene Annes Cape Note Mount Charles Cape Salsburie Deepes Cape Worsenhams Cape Deere Store of fowle and grasse Sorell and Scuruy grasse Fowles hanged Discord see Widhouse his Relations following Michaelmasse Day and Bay Anchor lost Sea of two colours Footing of a man Sticke on a Rocke Last of October Nouember the tenth frozen in Iohn Williams dyeth Henry Greenes bad conditions Greenes conspiracie Their hand wintring Store of Partridg●s Other Fowles succeeding in their seasons Miserable diet Medicinable budde A Sauage Turke Fishing Belly straits Wilson Green their wickednesse Robert Iuet 〈◊〉 Widhouses notes Oath abused The Carpenter spared They bind the Master The Carpenter let goe The names of the company exposed in the Shallop L●st sight of the Shallop Foure Ilands The wicked flee where none pursueth Cockle grasse A Rocke Note Iuly 27. Sauages Sauages manner of fowling Greenes confidence Sauages dogges Sauages trecherie Trecherie iust to vniust Traytors Greene slaine Wicked and wretched end of wretched wicked men Miserie pursueth the rest Poore Diet. Robert Iuets death A sayle of Fowy Bere Hauen in Ireland They arriue at Plimouth Ilanders poore The cause of their stay as Island They are related by Master Hakluit in his 3. vol pag 121. Friesland Saint Thomas Monasterie in Greenland Hote Spring and the strange effects thereof Estotiland Drogio Abrah Ortel Chart. 6. Hak. vol. 3. Botero Maginus Hondius c. * There is also the relation hereof by Quirino himseife extant together with this in R●musio Tom. 2. Out of which I haue heere added diuers annotations * The Italians call the sayling into the Mediterranean the Leuant or East and thence int● the Spanish Ocean and these parts the Ponent or West * These are particularly related by Quirino the
but fish thereon wherefore presently weighing Anchor we sayled West to see if we could haue any true obseruation the next day which wee had and found our selues to bee in 74. degrees 30. minutes The same day directing our course for London where we arriued the tenth of September by Gods helpe in health and safetie CHAP. XIIII Diuers Voyages and Northerne Discoueries of that worthy irrecouerable Discouerer Master HENRY HVDSON His Discouerie toward the North Pole set forth at the charge of certaine Worshipfull Merchants of London in May 1607. Written partly by IOHN PLAYSE one of the Company and partly by H. HVDSON ANno 1607. Aprill the nineteenth at Saint Ethelburge in Bishops Gate street did communicate with the rest of the Parishioners these persons Seamen purposing to goe to sea foure dayes after for to discouer a Passage by the North Pole to Iapan and China First Henry Hudson Master Secondly William Colines his Mate Thirdly Iames Young Fourthly Iohn Colman Fiftly Iohn Cooke Sixtly Iames Benbery Seuenthly Iames Skrutton Eightly Iohn Pleyce Ninthly Thomas Baxter Tenthly Richard Day Eleuenthly Iames Knight Twelfthly Iohn Hudson a Boy The first of May 1607. we weyed Anchor at Graues●nd and on Tuesday the sixe and twentieth day in the morning we made the Iles of Shotland and at noone we were in 60. degrees 12. minutes and sixe leagues to the Eastward of them the Compasse had no variation We had sixtie foure fathomes at our sounding blacke ozie sandie with some yellow shels Our ship made more way then we did suppose On Saturday the thirtieth of May by our obseruation we were in 61. degrees 11. minutes This day I found the Needle to incline 79. degrees vnder the Horizon For foure dayes space we made very little way by contrary winds On Thursday the fourth of Iune we were by our obseruation still in 61. degrees and 14. minutes eight and twentie or thirtie leagues from the Norther part of Shotland the Land bearing by our Accompt East and by North off vs I found variation in fiue degrees Westerly The seuenth of Iune wee were in 63. degrees 25. minutes The eighth all the fore-noone we had a fresh gale Southerly we steered away North and by West and by obseruation we were in 65. degrees 27. minutes The eleuenth wee saw sixe or seuen Whales neere our shippe wee were in sixtie seuen degrees thirtie minutes About fiue of the clocke the winde came vp at North-east and by East wee steered away North North-west with a fresh gale all the night at East The twelfth the winde was at East North-east a stiffe gale wee steered away as afore and accounted wee had runne by this day noone thirtie leagues In the after-noone wee steered away North and by West fifteene leagues all the night prooued a great fogge with much wind The thirteenth betweene one and two in the morning we saw some Land on head of vs and some Ice and it being a thicke fogge we steered away Northerly and hauing much wind wee stood away South and by East sixe or eight leagues Our sayle and shroudes did freeze At eight in the morning it cleered vp the wind being at North-east and by East with much wind wee were hardly able to maintayne a sayle This was a very high Land most part couered with Snow The neather part was vncouered At the top it looked reddish and vnderneath a blackish Clay with much Ice lying about it The part which we saw when wee cast about trended East and West And the Norther part which we saw trended North-east and by North and North-east and the length which wee saw was nine leagues wee saw much Fowle Also wee saw a Whale close by the shoare We called the Head-land which we saw Youngs Cape and neere it standeth a very high Mount like a round Castle which wee called the Mount of Gods Mercie All the after-noone and all the Eeuening it rained At eight in the Eeuening we cast about and steered all night North and by West and sometimes North North-west The fourteenth being neere the Land we had Snow At foure in the morning the wind vering Northerly we cast about and stood South-east and by South This day wee had much wind and raine we shorted sayle being neere the Land The fifteenth in the morning it blowed so much wind at North-east that wee were not able to maintayne any sayle wee then strooke a hull and let our ship driue wayting for a fit●er wind this night was very much raine The sixteenth was much wind at North-east The seuenteenth we set sayle at noone we steered away East and by South and East South-east The eighteenth in the afternoone a fine gale South-east which toward the Eeuening increased and we steered North-east three Watches twelue leagues The nineteenth we steered away North North-east sixteene leagues At noone wee had raine with fogge From twelue to foure we steered North North-east eight leagues and did account our selues in seuentie degrees neerest hand purposing to see whether the Land which we made the thirteenth day were an Iland or part of Groneland But then the fogge increased very thicke with much wind at South which made vs alter our course and to shorten our sayle and we steered away North-east Being then as we supposed in the Meridian of the same land hauing no obseruation since the eleuenth day and lying a hull from the fifteenth to the seuenteenth day wee perceiued a current setting to the South-west This day wee saw three Whales neere our ship and hauing steered away North-east almost one watch fiue leagues the Sea was growne euery way we supposed wee were thwart of the North-east part of that Land which we made the thirteenth day and the current setting to wind-ward The reason that mooued vs to thinke so was that after we had sayled fiue or sixe leagues in this Sea the wind neither increasing nor dulling we had a pleasant and smooth Sea All this night was foggie with a good gale of wind we steered away North-east vntill the next day at noone and sayled in that course twentie leagues The twentieth all the morning was a thicke fogge with the winde at South wee steered North-east till noone Then we changed our course and steered away North North-east hoping for an open Sea in our course to fall with the bodie of Newland This day at two in the afternoone it cleered vp and wee saw the Sunne which wee had not seene since the second of this moneth Hauing steered North North-east two watches and an halfe fifteene or sixteene leagues wee saw Land on our Larboord about foure leagues off vs trending as wee could ghesse North-east and South-west We steered away East North-east the wind at South a good gale but reasonable cleere wee saw many Birds with blacke backes and white bellies in forme much like a Ducke we saw also many pieces of Ice driuing at the Sea We loofed for one and went roomer for another And
and we supposed Beares had beene heere by their footing and dung vpon the Ice This day many of my Companie were sicke with eating of Beares flesh the day before vnsalted The twelfth for the most part was thicke fogge we steered betweene South and by East and South South-east 2. 1 ● leagues to cleere vs of the Ice Then we had the wind at South we steered till noone North-east fiue leagues This morning we had our shrouds frozen At noone by our accompt we were in 80. degrees being little wind at West South-west almost calme with thicke fogge This after-noone we steered away North and sometimes North-east Then we saw Ice a head off vs we cast about and stood South-east with little wind and fogge Before we cast about by meanes of the thicke fogge we were very neere Ice being calme and the Sea setting on to the Ice which was very dangerous It pleased God at the very instant to giue vs a small gale which was the meanes of our deliuerance to him be praise therefore At twelue this night it cleered vp and out of the top William Collins our Boat-swaine saw the Land called Newland by the Hollanders bearing South South-west twelue leagues from vs. The thirteenth in the Morning the wind at South and by East a good gale we cast about and stood North-east and by East and by obseruation we were in 80. degrees 23. minutes This day we saw many Whales This fore-noone proued cleere weather and we could not see any signe of Ice out of the top Betweene noone and three of the clocke we steered away North-east and by East fiue leagues then we saw Ice on head off vs we steered East two Glasses one league and could not be cleare of the Ice with that course Then we steered away South-east two leagues ½ after we sayled East and by North and East foure leagues till eight the next morning The foureteenth in the morning was calme with fogge At nine the wind at East a small gale with thicke fogge we steered South-east and by East and running this course we found our Greene Sea againe which by proofe we found to be freest from Ice and our Azure Blue Sea to be our Icie Sea At this time we had more Birds then we vsually found At noone being a thicke fogge we found our selues neere Land bearing East off vs and running farther we found a Bay open to the West and by North Northerly the bottome and sides thereof being to our sight very high and ragged Land The Norther side of this Bayes mouth being high land is a small Iland the which we called Collins Cape by the name of our Boat-swaine who first saw it In this Bay we saw many Whales and one of our company hauing a Hooke and Line ouer-boord to trie for Fish a Whale came vnder the Keele of our ship and made her held yet by Gods mercie we had no harme but the losse of the hooke and three parts of the line At a South-west Sunne from the North-west and by North a flood set into the Bay At the mouth of this Bay we had sounding thirtie fathoms and after sixe and twentie fathoms but being farther in we had no ground at an hundred fathoms and therefore judged it rather a Sound then a Bay Betweene this high ragged in the swampes and vallies lay much snow Heere wee found it hot On the Souther side of this Bay lye three or foure small Ilands or Rockes In the bottome of this Bay Iohn Colman my Mate and William Collins my Boat-swaine with two others of our company went on shoare and there they found and brought aboord a payre of Morses teeth in the jaw they likewise found Whales bones and some dosen or more of Deeres Hornes they saw the footings of Beasts of other sorts they also saw Rote-geese they saw much drift Wood on the shoare and found a streame or two of Fresh water Here they found it hot on the shoare and dranke water to coole their thirst which they also commended Here we found the want of a better Ship-boate As they certified me they were not on the shoare past halfe an houre and among other things brought aboord a Stone of the Countrey When they went from vs it was calme but presently after we had a gale of wind at North-east which came with the Flood with fogge We plyed too and againe in the Bay waiting their comming but after they came aboord we had the wind at East and by South a fine gale we minding our Voyage and the time to performe it steered away North-east and North North-east This night proued cleere and we had the Sunne on the Meridian on the North and by East part of the Compasse from the vpper edge of the Horizon with the Crosse-staffe we found his height 10. degrees 40. minutes without allowing any thing for the Semidiameter of the Sunne or the distance of the end of the staffe from the Center in the Eye From a North Sunne to an East Sunne we sayled betweene North and North North-east eight leagues The fifteenth in the morning was very cleere vveather the Sunne shining vvarme but little vvind at East Southerly By a South-east Sunne vve had brought Collins Cape to beare off vs South-east and we saw the high Land of Newland that part by vs Discouered on our starboord eight or ten leagues from vs trending North-east and by East and South-west and by West eighteene or twentie leagues from vs to the North-east being a very high Mountaynous land like ragged Rockes vvith snow betweene them By mine account the Norther part of this Land which now vve saw stretched into 81. degrees All this day proued cleere vveather little Wind and reasonable vvarme The sixteenth in the morning warme and cleere weather the vvind at North. This morning we saw that vve vvere compassed in with Ice in abundance lying to the North to the North-vvest the East and South-east and being runne toward the farthest part of the Land by vs discouered which for the most part trendeth nearest hand North-east and South-west vvee saw more Land ioyning to the same trending North in our sight by meanes of the cleernesse of the vveather stretching farre into 82. degrees and by the bowing or shewing of the skie much farther Which when I first saw I hoped to haue had a free Sea betweene the Land and the Ice and meant to haue compassed this Land by the North. But now finding by proofe it vvas vnpossible by means of the abundance of Ice compassing vs about by the North and ioyning to the land and seeing God did blesse vs with a faire wind to sayle by the South of this Land to the North-east vve returned bearing vp the Helme minding to hold that part of the Land vvhich the Hollanders had discouered in our fight and if contrary vvindes should take vs to Harbour there and to trie what vve could finde to the charge of
Riuer Ob from the South to trade at Surgout and Tobolsca The Country of King Alteen An Altine is six pence a Dingo is a penie Hawkes as white as snow Russe Money A course Hamborough Cloth Nouember 1614. His Iourney within 30. leagues of Ob and neere to Bersoma The Riuer Coy falling into Pechor● The Riuer Shapkina falling into Pechora The Riuer Nougorotka falling into Shapkina Habeaga Riuer falling into Pechora December The Riuer Haryena falling into Coluoy The Riuer Coluoy falling into Ouse Saint Nicholas Bay A small Riuer falling into Sandauets Terrible Frost The Riuer Hoseda falling into Azua The Riuer Azua falling into Ouse The Mountain Yangoda The Riuer Rogauaya Mensha falling into Ouse The Riuer Rogauaya Bolsha falling into Ouse Altitude and Variation Ianuarie Returne Wilde Deere Aprill Riuer increasing May. Oust-zilma Glouboka is 67. degrees 55. minutes Iuly Apparell of Samoyeds Sleds Deere swiftnesse Women Tent and Chappell Superstition No Townes Marrie Wiues bought and sold. Marriages Rings and Bels. Diuorce Religion Funerals Their yeere but halfe a yeere Iudgement or Oath Their persons Diuination Womens hardinesse * This was Master Bennets second Voyage thither His first Voyage thither A. 1603. I haue added at the end of this Chapter after Pooles Relations this being set before I saw that A Morse Cherie Iland described Store of fowles Morses roring Abundance of Sea-fowles found on shoare Small 〈◊〉 74. 〈…〉 minutes Not● The 〈◊〉 Teeth Abundance of Drift Wood. A thousand Morses found 1603. Lead Vre was found Pechingo Cola. Why the Iland was called Cherie Iland Assumption Iuly 2. Cherie Iland Many Morses killed with shot and Iauelings The fight of the Morse Oyle made of the fat of the Morses Eleuen tuns of Oyle A M●ne of Lead Extreame cold the 25. of Iuly Abundance of driuing Ice Mount Misery A monstrous fogge August 24. A Ship and Pinnasse set forth The Assumption Much Ice 55. leagues from the North Cape Ice within 45. leagues of the North Cape A Beare on Ice 27. leagues from any land Iuly 2. Part of Cherie Iland in 74. degrees and ●5 minutes The floud commeth from the South-west The thirteenth of Iuly The nature of the Morses A great white Beare Seuen or eight hundred beasts slayne in sixe houres A great Frost the 24. of Iuly May 21. Ward-house Tipany Iune 13. Cherie Iland A Beare slaine Another Beare slayne Great he●te the 20. and 21. of Iune 1000. Morses killed in seuen houres Iuly 3. A Voyage set out by Master Duppa to Cherie Iland 1607. A liuing Morse brought into England Lofoot Zenam May 2. They arriue at Cherie Iland the 8. of May Fowle Three Beares Qualitie of Beares Feare a Traitor A Beare slaine 17. Beares in sight Young Beare-whelps A Beare slayn the skin wherof was 13. foot A third Beare slayne The tenth day Sixe Beares slayne All the Beares fl●yed Frost the 16. of May. Snow Snow Fiue Seales Snow A ship of Hull Frosty wether Snow frost 26. Seales A Beare killed on the Ice Two young white Beares brought into England Iune 1. Frost The Hull man 20. leagues North-west off the Iland No fog in a moneths space The first thaw Fogges The Beares slaine on the North side Three Beares slaine powdered and eaten Possession taken of Cherie Iland for the Muscouie Company Drift wood on the East side The Coue. They feed on Beares flesh Nine Foxes found Three Mynes of Lead found on Gull-Iland Good Sea-coles found on the Iland Two Beares slaine An huge compasse of Ice Another Beare slaine Another Beare slaine Their Ship got in the second time The Matthew The Marie Margarite Iuly Logan and Edge Fowle their chiefest food in extreamitie A Beare slaine Another Beare slaine Snow and Frost Some Minerall Lead digged Aboue twentie Foxes eaten Dangers by the Ice l A warpe is a Rope commonly a Hawser vsed to warpe a ship that is with an Anchor bent to the Hawser and layd out to hale the ship forward which is done when they want wind to carrie out or into a Harbour m A Bitter is a turne of the Cable about the Bitts for when they come to Anchor they take a turne with it about the Bitts two mayne square pieces of Timber which stand Pillar wise in the loose of the ship to make fast the Cable vnto that they may by little and little vere it out at ease otherwise if a stopper faile the Cable would runne out end for end that is altogether but thus stopped the shippe is said to bee brought to a Bitter The Bitter end is that end of the Cable within boord at the Bites August Note An Iland May. The Iles of Shotland No variation 61. degrees 11. minutes The inclination of the Needle Iune 65. degrees 27. minutes 67. degrees 30. minutes Youngs Cape The Mount of Gods mercie Snow Note Land on their Larboord Many Fowles Much drift Ice * To loofe is to keepe close to the wind roomer co●t * To tacke the ship is to bring her head about to lye the other way Land not couered with Snow The Land of Hold with Hope in 73. degrees A mayne high Land 75. Degrees Land not farre off 76. degrees 38. minutes Greenland or Newland discouered 78. Degrees Vogel Hooke Temperat● ayre Iuly 78. degrees 4● minutes The great Inl●t 78. Degrees 56. Minutes 78. degrees 33. minutes The shroudes and sayles frozen The mouth of the Inlet 77. degrees 30. minutes 78. degrees The end of the Sacke A Blacke and open Sea Much Drift-wood Many Seales Morses From hence it seemeth i● taken out of Hen. Hudsons owne Notes Blue and Greene Seas 79. degrees 17. minutes Sick of Beares flesh vnsalted 80. degrees Newland or Greenland of which the Hollanders hath made a little Discouerie by Barents as before is deliuered but neither so farre nor so exact nor so vsefull nor first as before is obserued of Sir H. Willoughbies English exactet Discoueries finding the Whale and Morse benefit they also enterloped Greene Sea freest of Ice and the Blue Sea Icie Collins Cape Whale danger A Sound is a greater and deeper indraught then a Bay Heat beyond 80. degrees Sunne 10. degrees 40. min. high about mid-night 81. degrees Land stretching into 82. degrees They returned Abundance of Seales 77. degr 26. m. Danger escaped Whales Bay Cherie Iland * I haue Robert Iuets Iournall also for breuitie omitted Aprill May. Lowfoot Sun 5. degrees 35. minutes at mid-night Iune North Cape Variation west 11. degrees Needles inclination 84. degrees and a halfe 74. degrees 30. minutes Darke blue Sea Mermaide seene and described Current Needles inclination 89. degrees and a halfe in 75. degrees 22. min. Beares roaring Store of Seals Sunne at mid-night high 7. degrees 40. minutes in 74. degrees 33. minutes Iuets notes tell of a sudden variation of the Compasse from the North to the East one point which had been two imediately before No passag● that way Swart Cliffe● They goe a● shoare Riuer and Iland Iuly