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A09429 A true discourse of the late voyages of discouerie, for the finding of a passage to Cathaya, by the Northvveast, vnder the conduct of Martin Frobisher Generall deuided into three bookes. In the first wherof is shewed, his first voyage ... Also, there are annexed certayne reasons, to proue all partes of the worlde habitable, with a generall mappe adioyned. In the second, is set out his second voyage ... In the thirde, is declared the strange fortunes which hapned in the third voyage ... VVith a particular card therevnto adioyned of Meta Incognita ... Best, George, d. 1584. 1578 (1578) STC 1972; ESTC S104566 113,756 182

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places a fruitefull ●oy●e and is not yet thorowly discouered but onl●e seene and touched on the North edge therof by the trauaile of the Portingales and Spaniards in their voyages to their East and Weast Indies It is included almost by a Paralell passing at .40 degrées in South latitude yet in some places it reacheth into the Sea with greate Promontories euen vnto the Tropicke Capricornus Onely these partes of it are beste knowen as euer against Capo d'buona Speranza ●where the Portingales 〈◊〉 Popingayes commonly of a wonderfull greatnesse and againe it is knowen at the South side of the straight of Magellanus and is called Terra del Fueg● It is thoughte this Southlande about the pole Antar●●ke is farre bigger than the North land aboute the pole Articke but whe●her it be so or not we haue no certaine k●ow●●dge for we haue no particular description hereof as w● h●ue of the lande vnder and aboute the North p●le Thus I haue briefly ●utted bounded out all the parts o● the Earth according vnto thys latter diuision into si●e p●rts Which that i● might be more apparant sensible to euery mans vnderstāding● I haue here vnto adioyned an vniuersall Map wherein my minde was to make knowne ●o the eye what Countries haue béene discouered of late yeares and what before of olde time The olde knowne partes haue their boun●es traced and drawen with whole lines the new● dis●ou●r●d C●u●tri●s 〈…〉 ●oun●s draw●n w●th po●nts or broke● l●n●● w●●rb● the 〈◊〉 sh●ll at the firste sight see both the shape and fa●h●on of the whole vn●uersall face of the Earth compared al●●og●ther and also all the seuerall partes the●●of w●ether ●hey were of old tim● discouered or of l●te yeares th● w●●ch M●ppe though it be roughly fram●d w●thoute degrees of Longitude or L●titude yet is it suffic●ent for the purpose it w●s ordeyned for heerein as in all the rest of this di●co●rse of the thrée voyages of our wo●th● Generall Capt●●ne F●obisher my intente is more to sette out simply the true and playne procéeding and handling of th● whol● m●tter than to vse circumstance of many words o● f●ne ●loquent phrases wherein if I shoulde once goe about to ●n●angle my selfe it would doe nothing else but bewray my owne ignorance and lacke of Schole sk●ll The●efore of me there is nothing else to be loked for but such playne talke and writing as Souldyers and Marriners doe vse in theyr dayly méetings and voyages and this of necess●t●e must anye man vse that will deale with suche a m●tter as thys is although he w●re curious to the contr●rie By this discourse and Mappe is to be séene the v●liante cour●ges of men in this later age within th●s● 8● yeares that haue so muche enlarged the bound●● o● the Wo●lde● that now we haue twice and thrice so mu●●e s●o●e for ●ure earthlie p●●●grination as we haue had●e in 〈…〉 so th●t nowe men neede no more content●ou●●● to 〈◊〉 for ro●me to bui●d an house on or for a little 〈…〉 of one acre or two when greate Countr●●s 〈…〉 Worldes offer and reache out themselues 〈…〉 will first voutsa●e to possesse inhabite and 〈…〉 there are Countreys yet remayning 〈…〉 and possessors whiche are fertile to b●●●g forth 〈…〉 of corne and grayne infinite sortes of lande 〈…〉 Horse Elephantes Kin● Shéepe great varietie 〈…〉 Fowles of the ayre as Ph●sants Partridge Quayle Po●●ngeys Ostridges c. infinit● kinde of fruts as Almonds ●ates Quinces Pomgranats Oringes c. holesome mediem●ble and delectable Greate varietie of floures c●ntinu●llie springing Winter and Sommer beautifull for couloure odorif●rous and comfortable Abundance of faire hilles and valleys furnished with all maner woddes and pleasante riuers Millions of newe fashions and strange beastes a●d fishes both in Sea and fresh waters Mountaines bringing forth a●l maner of Mettals as gold siluer yron● c. All sorts of pretious stones and spices in al which land wa●teth nothing that may be desired eyther for pleasur● p●ofite or ●ecessarie vs●s which sundry Countreys to possesse and obte●ne as it is an easie thi●g so would I not haue our Englishe Nation to be slacke therein le●st perh●ppes agayne they ouershoote themselues in refusing oc●casion offered as it was in the time of King Henry the seauenth when all the West Indies were firste pr●fered to the Englis●men to be giuen into their handes whiche they little regarding was aft●●w●rd offer●d to the Spany●rdes who presently a●cepted th● occasion and now enioy the infinite treasure and commo●itie thereof I would not wishe Englishme● to b● newe vnlike themselues ●or in all the later discouerie● the Englishe n●tion hath bin as forw●rd as an● other ●s first●● by their Nauigations North●●stward the boūds of Europe wer made perf●ct on the North syde for Ptolomie St●abo and al other Geogr●phers ●e●te it des●ribed but onel● to the Ilandes Orcad●s i● I●elande and Hyperboreos Montes in Sarma●i● a●d finding the l●nd on ●he North sid● o● ●●rm●ny Poland Moscouia and Asia 〈◊〉 e●tend Northw●●d ●hey le●t ●on●u●●dly ● kn●w ●ot whether it re●c●ed to the Pol● as one 〈…〉 or 〈…〉 voyage hath since bin perfected by the two bréethren the Borowes other valiant yong mē of our time Eastward beyonde the great Riuer Obij as farre as the Empire of the great Cam or Cane of Tartari● as ●ppéereth in my general Map by the pricked boūds therof Th●t voyage was then takē in hand of the valiant Knight with pretēce to haue gone Eastward to the rich Coūtrey of Cat●ya was groūded briefely vpon these reasons First bicause ther was a Unicornes horne found vpon the coast of Tarta●ia by the Riuer Obij which said he was like by no other ways to come thither but frō India or C●taya where the saide Unicornes are only foūd that by some sea bringing it thither Also a fishermā of Tartari● reported that he sailed verye farre South eastward found no end of sea or likelyhoode therof Lastly a Tartarian inhabiting néere the Scithian Se● reported such a streame and currant to runne there cōtinually● towards the West that if you cast any thing therein it would presently be caried out of your sight towards the West whereby necessaril● foloweth ther should be some passage to some larg●r sea wherin this cō●inua●l streame might emptie it self And by the experience of this vo●age it w●s found that the frosen ●ones were not fros●n bu● h●b table and nauigable a thing that almost all the old Philosophers did deny went about with sundry reasons ●o impugne ●or ●n this voyage to Moscoui● our men passed be●ond .72 degrées in No●th Latitude wheras the frosen Zone beginneth at .66 d●grées a halfe This enterprise althogh it t●ke not eff●ct to find the passage to Cataya Eastw●rd b●c●use the worthy knight the chiefe Author therof dyed in the way thither yet hath it bin very beneficiall to England in finding out the trade to S. Nicholas both for the mainten●nce of the N●u●e the yerely profit is reaped therby
in durance at Edenburgh by the Regents commaundement of Scotlande After we had prouided vs héere of matter sufficiente for our voyage the eyght of Iune we sette sayle agayne and passing through Saint Magnus sounde hauing a merrie winde by night came cléere and lost sight of all the lande and kéeping oure course West Northwest by the space of two dayes the winde shifted vpon vs so that we lay in trauerse on the Seas with contrarie making good as néere as we could our course to the Westward and sometime to the Northward as the winde shifted And héereabout we met with thrée Sayle of English fishermen from Iseland boūd homewarde by whome we wrote our letters vnto oure friends in England We trauersed these Seas by the space of .26 dayes without sight of any land and met with much drift wodde and whole bodyes of trées We saw many monsterous Fishe and strange Fowle whyche sémed to liue only by the Sea being there so farre distant from anye land At length God fauoured vs with more prosperous windes and after we hadde sayled foure dayes with good wind in the P●upe the fourth of Iuly the Michaell being formost a head shotte off a péece of Ordinance and stroke all hir sayles supposing that they descryed land whyche by reason of the thicke mistes they could not make perfit howbeit as wel our accompt as also the greate alteration of the water whiche became more blacke and smooth dyd playnely declare we were not farre off the coast Our Generall sent his Maister aboorde the Michaell who had bin within the yeare before to beare in with the place to make proofe thereof who des●ryed not the land perfecte but sawe sundrie huge Ilands of Ise which we déemed to be not past twelue leagues frō the shore for about tenne of the clocke at night being the fourth of Iuly the weather being more cléere we made the land perfect and knew it to be Fréeseland And the heigth being taken héere we founde oure selues to be in the Latitude of .60 Degrées and a halfe and were fallen with the Southermost parte of this land Betwéene Orkney and Freeseland are reckned leagues This Freeseland sheweth a ragged and high lande hauing the Mountaynes almost couered ouer with Snow alongst the coast full of drift Ise and séemeth almost inaccessible is thought to be an Iland in bignesse not inferior to England and is called of some Authours Weast Freeseland I thinke bycause it lyeth more Weast then anye part of Europe It extendeth in Latitude to the Northward verie farre as séemed to vs and appeareth by a description set out by two bréethren Venetians Nicholaus and Antonius Genoa who being driuen off from Ireland with a violent tempest made Shipwracke héere and were the first knowen Christians that discouered this lande aboute thrée hundred yeares sithence and they haue in their Sea-Cardes set out euerie part thereof and described the condition of the inhabitants declaring them to be as ciuill and Religious people as we And for so much of this land as we haue sayled alongst comparing their Carde with the coast we find it very agréeable This coast séemeth to haue good fishing for we lying becalmd let fall a hooke without anye bayte and presently caught a great fish called a Hollibut which serued the whole companie for a dayes meate and is dangerous meate for surfetting And sounding about fyue leagues off frō the shore our leade brought vp in the tallow a kind of Corrall almost white and small stones as bright as Christall it is not to be doubted but that this lād may be found very rich and beneficiall if it were throughly discouered although we saw no creature there but little birds It is a maruellous thing to behold of what great bignesse and depth some Ilandes of I se be héere some .70 some .80 fadome vnder water besides that which is aboue séemyng Ilands more than halfe a mile in circuite All these Ise are in tast freshe and séeme to be bredde in the sounds thereaboutes or in some land néere the pole and with the wind tides are driuen alongst the coastes We foūd none of these Ilands of Ise salt in tast wherby appeareth they were not congealed of the Ocean Sea water which is always salt but of some standing or little mouing lakes or great fresh waters néere the shore caused eyther by melted snow frō tops of Mountaines or by continuall accesse of fresh riuers frō the lād and intermingling with the Sea water bearing yet the dominion by the force of extreame frost may cause some part of salt water to fréese so with it so séeme a little brackish but otherwise the maine sea fréeseth not therefore there is no Mare Glaciale or frosen Sea as the opinion hytherto hath bin Our General proued lāding here twice but by the suddaine fall of mistes wherevnto this coast is much subiect he was like to lose sight of his Ships being greatly endangered with the driuing Ise alongst the coast was forced aboord and faine to surceasse his pretēce till a better oportunitie might serue and hauing spent .4 days nights sailing alongst this lād finding the coast subiect to such bitter cold continuall mistes he determined to spend no more time therin but to beare out his course towards the streights called Frobishers straightes after the Generals name who being the firste that euer passed beyonde .58 degrées to the Northwards for any thing hath bin yet knowē of certainty of New found lād otherwise called the continent or firme lād of America discouered the said streights this last yeare .1576 and hopeth that there wil be found a thorough passage into the sea which lieth on the back side of the said new found lād called Mare pacificum or Mare de Sur by the which we maye go vnto Cataya China the East India and all the dominiōs of the Great Cane of Tartaria Betwéene Freeseland the straights we had one great storme wherin that Michael was somewhat in dāger hauing hir Stéerage broken hir top Mastes blowē ouer bord being not past .50 leagues short of the straights by our accōpt we strooke sayle lay a hull fearing the cōtinuance of the storme the wind being at the Northeast and hauing lost company of the Barkes in that flaw of wind we happily mette againe the .17 day of Iuly hauing the euening before séene diuers Ilandes of fléeting Ise which gaue an argument that we were not farre from land Our Generall in the morning frō the maine top the weather being reasonable cléere descried lād but to be better assured he sent the two Barkes two cōtrarie courses wherby they might discrie either the South or North forlande the Ayde lying off on at Sea with a small saile by an Iland of Ise whiche was the marke for vs to méete togither agayne And aboute noone the weather being more cléere
in the mouth of Frobishers straytes whiche coulde by no meanes haue bin so brought thither neyther by winde nor tide being lost so many leagues off if by force of the sayde Currant the same had not bin violently brought For if the same hadde bin brought thither by the tyde of fludde looke how farre in the said fludde had caried it the ebbe woulde haue recaryed it as farre backe agayne and by the winde it could not so come to passe bycause it was then sometime calme and most times contrary And some Marriners doe affyrme that they haue diligently obserued that there runneth in this place nine houres floud to thrée ebbe which may thus come to pass● by 〈◊〉 o● the saide currant for whereas the Sea in most places o● the world doth more or lesse ordinarily ebbe and flow once euery twe●ue houres with sixe houres ebbe and si●e houres floud so also would it doe there were it not for the violen●e of this hastning currant which forceth the ●loud to m●ke appearance to beginne before his ordinary time one houre and a halfe and also to continue longer than his natural course by an other houre and a halfe ●ntil the fo●ce of the ebbe be so greate that it will no longer b● resisted according to the saying Naturam expellas furca li●●t ●●men vsq recurrit Although nature and n●turall courses be forced and resisted neuer so muche yet at l●ste it will haue their own sway ●ga●ne Moreouer it is not possible that so great course of flouds and currant so highe swelling tides with continuaunce of so déepe waters can be digested here without vnburdening themselues into some open Sea beyonde th●s place which argueth the more likelihood of the pass●ge to be hereaboutes Also we suppose these great indrafts do growe and are made by the reue●beration and reflection of that same Currant whiche at oure comming by Irelande mette and crossed us of whiche in the firste parte of this discourse I spake whyche comming from the bay of Mexico passing by and washing the Southweast parts of Ireland reboūdeth ouer to the Northest parts of the world as Norway Islande c. where not finding any passage to an open Sea but rather is there encreased by a new accesse and another Currant meéeting with it from the Scythian Sea passing the bay of Saint Nicholas Westwarde doeth once againe rebound backe by the coasts of Groenland and from thence vppon Frobishers straites being to the Southwestwardes of the same 5 And if that principle of Philosophie be true that Inferiora corpora reguntur à superioribus that is if inferior bodies be gouerned ruled and caried after the maner and course of the superiors thē the water being an inferior Element muste néedes be gouerned after the superior Heauen and so to followe the course of Primum mobile from East to Weast 6 But euerye man that hathe written or considered anye thing of this passage hath more doubted the retourne by the same way by reason of a greate downefall of water whyche they imagine to be thereaboutes which we also by experience partly find than any mistruste they haue of the same passage at all For we find as it were a great downfall in this place but yet not suche but that we may return althoughe with muche adoe For we were easilyer caried in in one houre than we coulde gette forth againe in thrée Also by an other experience at an other time we founde thys currant to deceiue vs in this sort That whereas we supposed to bée 15. leagues off and lying a hull we were brought within .2 leagues of the shoare contrarie to al expectation Oure menne that sayled furthest in the same mistaken straites hauing the maine lande vppon their starboorde side affyrme that they mette with the outlet or passage of water whiche commeth thorowe Frobyshers straites and followeth as all one into this passage Some of oure companye also affyrme that they hadde sight of a continēt vpon their larbordside being .60 leagues within the supposed straites howbeit excepte certaine Ilandes in the entraunce hereof we could make no part perfect thereof All the foresaid tract of land séemeth to be more fruitful and better stored of Grasse Déere Wilde foule as Partridges Larkes Seamews Guls Wilmots Falcōs and tassell Gentils Rauens Beares Hares Foxes and other things than any other parte we haue yet discouered is more populous And here Luke Ward a Gentleman of the company traded merchandise did exchange kniues bells looking glasses c. with those countrey people who brought him foule fishe beares skinnes and suche like as their coūtrey yéeldeth for the same Here also they saw of those greater boates of the Country with twentie persons in a péece Nowe after the Generall hadde bestowed these manye dayes here not without many daungers he returned backe againe And by the way sayling alongest this coaste being the backeside of the supposed continent of America and the Queenes forelande he perceiued a great sounde to goe thorowe into Frobyshers straites Wherevppon he sente the Gabriell the one and twentith of Iuly to proue whether they mighte go thorowe and méete againe with him in the straites whiche they did and as we imagined befo●e so the Queenes forelande proued an Ilande as I thinke most of these supposed continentes will. And so he departed towardes the straites thinking it were highe time nowe to recouer hys Porte and to prouide the fléete of their lading wherof he was not a little carefull as shall by the processe and his resolute attempts appeare And in his returne with the rest of the fléete he was so entangled by reason of the darke fogge amongest a number of Ilandes and broken ground that lyeth of this coast that many of the ships came ouer the top of rocks which presently after they might perc●iue to ly a drie hauyng not halfe a foote water more than some of their ships did draw And by reason they coulde not with a small gale of wind stem the force of the floud wherby to go cleare of the rocks they were faine to let an ancker fall with twoo bent of Cable togither at a C. and odde fadome deapth where otherwise they hadde bin by the force of the tides caried vpon the rocks again perished so that if God in these fortunes as a merciful guyde beyond the expectatiō of man had not caried vs thorow we had surely more than .x. M. times perished amiddest these dangers For being many times driuen harde aboorde the shoare withoute any sighte of lande vntill we were readye to make shipwracke thereon héeyng forced commonlye with oure boates to sounde before oure shippes leaste we might light thereon before we coulde discerne the same It pleased God to giue vs a cleare of Sunne and light for a shorte time to sée and auoide thereby the daunger hauing bin continuallye darke before and presently after Manye times also by meanes of fogge and currants
Captayne hée dreamed that he was cast ouerboorde and that the Boateson hadde hym by the hande and coulde not saue hym and so immediately vppon the ende of hys tale hys Dreame came right euelly to passe and in déede the Boateson in like sort helde him by one hande hauyng hold on a rope with the other vntill hys force fayled and the Mayster drowned The heygth being taken we found oure selues to bée in the Latitude of Degrées and a halfe and reckned our selues from the Quéenes Cape homeward about two hundreth leagues The last of August aboute midnighte we had two or thrée great and suddayne flawes or stormes The firste of September the storme was growne very great and continued almoste the whole day and night and lying a hull to tarry for the barkes our ship was much beaten with the Seas euery Sea almoste ouertaking oure poope that we were constrained with a bunte of oure saile to try it out and ease the rolling of oure shippe And so the Gabriel not able to beare any saile to kéepe company with vs and oure shippe being higher in the poope and a tall shippe whereon the winde had more force to driue went so faste awaye that we loste sight of them and lefte them to God and their good fortune of Sea. The seconde daye of September in the morning it pleased God of hys goodnesse to sende vs a calme whereby we perceiued the Rudder of oure shippe torne in twaine and almost ready to fal away Wherfore taking the benefite of the time wée slung halfe a dosen couple of our best men ouerboord who taking great paines vnder water driuing plancks and binding wyth ropes did wel strengthen and mend the matter who returned the most parte more than halfe deade out of the water and as Gods pleasure was the Sea was calme vntill the worke was finished The fifth of September the height of the sterne being taken wée founde our selues to be in the latitude of degrées and a half In all this voyage we took the latitude of the place by the height of the sunne bycause the long day taketh away the light not only of the Polar but also of all other fixed Starres And here the North Starre is so muche eleuated aboue the Horizon that with the Staffe it is hardly to be wel obserued and the degrées in the Astrolobe are too small to obserue minutes Therefore we alwaies vsed the Staffe and the Sunne as fittest instrumentes for this vse Hauing spent foure or fiue dayes in trauerse of the seas with contrarye winde making oure Souther way good as neare as we could to raise oure degrées to bring our selues with the latitude of Sylley wée tooke the height the tenth of September and founde our selues in the latitude of degrées and ten minutes The eleauenth of September about sixe a clocke at night the winde came good sowthwest we were shot and set our course southest And vpon Thursday the twelfth of September taking the height we were in the latitude of and a halfe and reckened oure selues not paste one hundred and fiftie leagues shorte of Sylley the weather faire the winde large at westsouthwest we kepte our course southest The thirtéenth daye the height being taken we founde our selues to be in the latitude of ● degrées the wind westsouthwest then being in the height of Sylley we kept our course East to run in with the sléeue or channell so called being our narrow Seas and reckened vs shorte of Sylley twelue leagues Sonday the fiftéenth of September aboute foure of the clocke wée beganne to sounde with oure lead and hadde grounde at .61 fadome depth white small sandie grounde and reckned vs vpon the backe of Sylley and set our course Easte and by North Easte Northeast and Northeast among The sixtéenth of September about eight of the clocke in the morning sounding we had .65 fadome osey sande and thought our selues thwart of Saint Georges channell a little within the bankes And bearing a small saile all nighte wée made many soundings whiche were aboute fortie fadome and so shallowe that wée coulde not well tell where we were The seauentéenth of September we sounded and had fortie fadome and were not farre off the landes and branded sande with small wormes and Cockle shells and were shotte betwéen Sylley and the landes ende and being within the baye we were not able to double the pointe wyth a South and by East way but were fayne to make another boorde the wynde béeyng at Southweast and by Weast and yet coulde not double the poynte to come cléere of the landes ende to beare along the Channell and the weather cléered vp when we were hard aboorde the shore and wée made the landes ende perfite and so put vp alongst Sainte Georges Channell And the weather béeyng very foule at Sea we coueted some harborough bycause our Stéeradge was broken and so came to Ancker in Padstowe roade in Cornewall But riding there a very daungerous roade we were aduised by the Countrey to put to Sea agayne and of the two euils to choose the lesse for there was nothing but present perill where we roade where vppon we plyed along the Channell to gette to Londy from whence we were agayne driuen being but an open roade where our Ancker came home and with force of weather put to Seas agayne and aboute the thrée and twentith of September arriued at Milforde Hauen in Wales whyche béeyng a very good harborough made vs happy men that we hadde receyued suche long desired safetie And more happie we helde our selues not for the safetie of our selues so muche as the comforte that we had that oure Countrey shoulde thereby haue perfecte knowledge of oure discouerie to the greate benefyte of oure common wealth Aboute one moneth after oure arriuall héere by order from the Lordes of the Counsell the Shippe came vp to Bristowe where the Ore was committed to kéeping in the Castell there Héere we founde the Gabriell one of the Barkes arriued in good safetie who hauing neuer a man within boorde very sufficient to bring home the Shyppe after the Mayster was lost by good fortune when shée came vpon the coast mette with a Shyppe of Bristowe at Sea who conducted hir in safetie thither Héere we heard good tidings also of the arriuall of the other Barke called the Michaell in the North partes whyche was not a little ioyfull vnto vs that it pleased God so to bring vs to a safe méeting agayne and lost in all the voyage only one man besydes one that dyed at Sea whiche was sicke before he came aboorde and was so desirous to followe this enterprise that he rather chose to dye therein than not to be one to attempte so notable a voyage FINIS ¶ The thirde voyage of Captayne Frobisher pretended for the discouerie of Cataya by Meta Incognito Anno Do. 1578. THE GEnerall béeing returned from the second Uoyage immediatlye a●ter hys arriual in Englande repayred with all
foote vpon that ground and therefore the Generall toke possession thereof to the vse of our Soueraigne Lady the Quéenes Maiestie and discouered héere a goodly harborough for the Shippes where were also certaine little Boates of that Countrey And being there landed they espyed certayne tents and people of that Countrey which were as they iudge in all sorts very like those of Meta Incognita as by theyr apparell and other things whych wée found in theyr tentes appeared The sauage and simple people so soone as they perceyued our men comming towards them supposing there had bin no other Worlde but theirs fledde fearefully away as men muche amazed at so strange a sight and creatures of humane shape so farre in apparell complexion and other things different from themselues They left in their tents all their furniture ●or haste behinde them where amongst other things were founde a boxe of small nayles and certayne redde Hearings boordes of Fyrre trée well cutte with dyuers other things artificially wroughte whereby it appeareth that they haue trade with some ciuill people or else are in déede themselues artificiall workemen Oure menne broughte awaye wyth them onelye twoo of theyr Dogges leauing in recompence belles looking-glasses and dyuers of oure Countrey toyes behynde them This Countrie no doubte promiseth good hope of great commoditie and riches if it maye be well discouered The discription whereof you shall finde more at large in my seconde booke Page .5 Some are of opinion that this Weaste Englande is firme lande with the Northeast partes of Meta Incognita or else with Groenlande And their reason is bicause the people apparell boates and other thinges are so like to theirs and an other reason is the multitude of Ilandes of Ise whyche laye betwéene it and Meta Incognita doeth argue that on the North side there is a b●y why●h cannot be but by cōioyning of these two lands togither And hauing a fayre and large winde wée departed from thence towardes Frobyshers straites the thrée and twentith of Iune But fyrste we gaue name to a byghe clyffe in Weast England the laste that was in oure sight and for a certaine similitude we called it Charing Crosse. Then we bare Southerly towards the Sea bycause to the Northwardes of this coaste wée mette wyth muche driuing Ise whyche by reason of the thicke mistes and weather might haue bin some trouble vnto vs. On Monday the laste of Iune wée mette with manye greate Whales as they hadde béene Porposes This same daye the Salamander being vnder both hir corses and bonets hapned to strike a gr●●te Whale with hir ●ull stemme wyth suche a blow that the ship stoode stil and stirred neither forwarde nor backeward The Whale thereat made a great and vgly noise and caste vp his body and tayle and so went vnder water and within twoo dayes after there was founde a greate Whale dead swimming aboue water which we supposed was that the Salamander stroke The seconde daye of Iuly early in the morning wée hadde sighte of the Quéenes forelande and bare in with the lande all the daye and passyng thorow great quantitie of Ise by nighte were entered somewhat within the straites perceiuing no waye to passe further in the whole place being fro●en ouer from the one side to the other and as it were with many walles mountaines and bulwarkes of yse choaked vppe the passage and denied vs entraunce And yet doe I not thinke that this passage or the Sea hereaboutes is frosen ouer at anye time of the yeare albeit it séemed so vnto vs by the abundaunce of Ise gathered togyther whyche occupyed the whole place But I doe rather suppose these Ise to bée bredde in the hollowe soundes and freshets thereaboutes whyche by the heate of the Sommers Sunne béeyng loosed doe emptie themselues wyth the ebbes into the Sea and so gather in great abundance there togither And to speake somewhat here of the auntiente opinion of the frosen Sea in these partes I doe thinke it to be rather a bare coniecture of menne than that euer anye manne hathe made experience of anye suche Sea. And that whiche they speake of Mare Glaciale may be truely thought to be spoken of these partes for this maye well be called in deede the ysie Sea but not the frosen Sea for no Sea consisting of salte water cā be frosen as I haue more at large herein shewed my opiniō in my seconde booke page .6 for it seemeth impossible for any Sea to be frosen which hath his course of ebbing and flowing especiallye in those places where the tides doe ebbe and flowe aboue tenne fad●me And also all these aforesaide Ise which we sometime met a hundreth mile from lande being gathered out of the salt Sea are in taste fresh and being dissolued become swéet and holesome water The cause why thys yeare we haue béene more combred with Ise than at other times before may be by reason of the Easterly and Southerly windes whyche brought vs more timely thither now than wee looked for Whiche blowing from the Sea directlye vppon the place of our straites hath kept in the Ise and not suffered them to be caryed out by the ebbe to the maine Sea where they woulde in more shorte time haue béene dissolued And all these fléeting Ise are not onelye so daungerous in that they winde and gather so neare togither that a man maye passe sometimes tenne or twelue myles as it were vpon one firme Ilande of Ise But also for that they open and shutte togither againe in suche sorte wyth the tydes and Sea-gate that whilest one Shyppe followeth the other with full sayles the Ise whyche was open vnto the foremoste will ioyne and close togyther before the latter can come to followe the fyrste whereby manye tymes oure Shippes were broughte into greate daunger as béeyng not able so sodainelye to take in oure sayles or staye the swifte waye of oure Shippes Wée were forced manye tymes to stemme and strike great rockes of Ise and so as it were make way through mightie mountaines By which means some of the fléete where they founde the yse to open entred in and pas●ed so farre within the daunger thereof with continuall desire to recouer their port that it was the greatest wonder of the world that they euer escaped safe or were euer heard of againe For euen at this present we missed two of the fléete that is the Iudyth wherein was the Lieuetenaunt general Captaine Fenton and the Michael whome both wée suppoposed hadde bene vtterlye lost hauing not heard any tydings of them in moe than twentie dayes afore And one of our fléete named the Barke Dennys being of an hundereth Tunne burden séeking way in amongst these Ise receiued such a blowe with a rocke of Ise that she sunke downe therewith in the sighte of the whoale fléete Howbeit hauing signified hir daunger by shooting of a péece of great ordinaunce newe succour of other shippes came so readily vnto them that
forward the Ship and so the Ship bearing before hir the yse so one yse driuing forward another should at lēgth get scope searoome And hauing by this meanes at length put their enimies to slight occupyed the cléere place for a prettie season among sundry Mountaynes and Alpes of Ise. One there was founde by measure to be .65 fadome aboue water which for a kind of similitude was called Salomons porch Some thinke those Ilands eight times so muche vnder water as they are aboue bycause of their mōstrous weight But now I remēber I saw very strange wonders men walking running leaping shoting vpon the maine seas .40 miles from any land without any Shippe or other vessell vnder them Also I saw fresh Riuers running amidst the salt Sea a hundred myle from land which if any man will not beléeue let him know that m●ny of our company lept out of their Shippe vppon Ilandes of Ise and running there vppe and downe did shoote at buttes vppon the Ise and with their Caliuers did kill greate Ceales whic●e v●e to lye and sléepe vpon the Ise and th●s Ise melting aboue at the toppe by re●lection of the Sunne came downe in sundrye streames whyche vniting togither made a prettie brooke able to driue a Mill. The sayd Captayne Fenton recouered his Porte tenne dayes before any man and spente good time in searchyng for mine and found good store thereof which bycause it proued good was after called Fentons Fortune He also discouered aboute tenne Miles vp into the Countrey where he perceyued neyther Towne Uillage nor likelyhode of habitati●n but séemeth as he sayth barrennous as the other parts which as yet we haue entred vpon but their victuals and prouision went so scante with them that they had determined to returne homeward within seauen dayes after if the Fléete had not then arriued The Generall after his arriual in the Coūtesses sound spent no time in vayne but immediately at his first lāding called the chiefe Captaynes of his Councell togither and consulted with them for the spéedier executiō of such things as then they had in hand As first for searching and finding out good Minerall for the Miners to be occupyed on Then to giue good orders to be obserued of the whole company on shore And lastly to consider for the erecting vp the Forte and House for the vse of them whiche were to abide there the whole yeare For the better handling of these and all other like important causes in this seruice it was ordeined from hir Maiestie and the Councell that the Generall should call vnto him certayne of the chiefe Captaynes and Gentlemē in councell to cōferre consult and determine of al occurrēts in this seruice whose names are here as folow Captayne Fenton Captayne Yorke Captayne Best Captayne Carew Captayne Philpot. And in Sea causes ●o haue as assistants Christopher H●l and C●arles Iackmā ●eing both very goo● Pylo●s 〈…〉 ficient Mariners whe●eof ●he one was chi●f● Pylot of ●he voyage and the other for the discouerie From the place o● our habitation weastward Maister Selm●n was appointed Notarie to register the whole manner of procéeding ●n these affaires that true relation thereof might be made i● it pleased hir Mai●stie to require it The first of August euery Captaine by order from the General his counsell was commaunded to bring ashore vnto the Coun●esses Iland al such g●ntlemen soul●iou●s and Myners as were vnder their charge with such● prouision as they had of victuals tents and things necessarye for the spéedie getting togither of Mine and fraught for the shippes The Muster of the men being taken and the victuals with all other things viewed and considered euery mā was set to his charge as his place and office required The Myners were appointed where to worke and the Mariners discharged their shippes Uppon the seconde of August was published and proclaymed vppon the Countesse of Warwickes Iland with sound of Trumpet certain orders by the general and hys counsel appointed to be obserued of the companye during the time of their abiding there The copie whereof here followeth Orders set down by M. Frobisher Esquire Captaine Generall for the voyage to Cataya to be obserued of the companie during the tim● of th●ir abode in Meta Incognit● P●bl●shed the second day of August Anno .1578 1 IN primis the Generall in hir Maiesties name straightly chargeth and commaundeth that no person or persons with Boate nor Pinnesse shall go ashoare for any cause but to the Countesse of Warwickes Ilande and Winters Fornace without licence of the general or his deputies And if they fortune at anye time hauing licence to méete with any of the Countrey people that they shall not enter into any conference or armes wyth them vntyl they haue giuen intelligence thereof to the Generall or hys Lieutenaunt 2 Item that no person of what calling soeuer he bée shal make an assay of any maner of mettal matter or Ore in the partes nowe called Meta Incognita but only suche as shal be appointed by the General or in his absence by his Lieutenaunt to doe the same nor that anye person shall take vp and kepe to his priuate vse anye parte or parcel of Ore pretious stone or other matter of commoditie to be had or founde in that lande but he the sayde person so seased of such Ore stone or other matter of commoditie shall with al spéede as soone as he can detect the same and make deliuerie thereof to the Generall or his Lieuetenaunt Generall vppon paine to forfaite for euerye suche ounce thereof the value treble of anye wages he is to receiue after the daye of such offence committed And further to receyue suche punishmente as to hyr Maiestie shall séeme good 3 Item that no shippe or shippes shall take vppon them to loade any manner of Ore without licence of the General or he that shal be appointed deputie for him for the view of the same 4 Item that all the Maisters of euerye shippe or shippes within the Fleete shal vpon Mundaye next comming by foure of the clocke in the morning wyth all the moste parte of theyr companies make theyr repayre to the Countesses Ilande aforesayde there to viewe and make suche places for loading and vnloading of Ore and other thyngs as shall be moste commodious and méete for that purpose 5 Item that no person or persons within this seruice by sea or l●nde shall vse anye discouered spéeches swearyng brauling or cursing vppon payne of imprysonmente 6 Item that no person or persons eyther by Sea or lande shal drawe his or theyr weapons in quarrellyng manner to the intente to offende or disturbe the quiete of anye person or persons wythin thys seruice vppon paine that being so taken he or they whatsoeuer immediately to loose his right hande 7 Item that no person or persons shall washe their handes or anye other things in the Spring vppon the Countesses Ilande where the water is vsed and preserued for the dressing
ouer within The● thought it now very hie time to consider of their estates and sa●eties that were yet left togither And herevppon the Captaines and maisters of these shippes desired the Captaine of the Anne Frances to enter into consideration with thē of these matters wherfore Captaine Tanfield of the Thomas of Ipswich with his Pylot Richard Coxe and Captaine Vpcote of the Moone with his maist●r Iohn Lakes came aboorde the Anne Frances the eight of August to consult of these causes And being assembled togither in the Captaynes Cabin sundrie doubtes were there alleaged For the fearefuller sorte of Mariners being ouertyred with the continuall labour of the former daungers coueted to returne homewarde saying that they woulde not againe tempte God so muche who hadde giuen them so manye warnings and deliuered them from so wonderfull daungers that they rather desired to loose wages fraughte and all than to continewe and followe 〈◊〉 desperate fortunes Again their shippes were so leake 〈◊〉 the men so we●rie that to 〈…〉 ●he one and refresh the other they mu●●e of neces●it●●●●●ke into harborough But on the o●her side it wa● argued ag●ine to the contrarie that to séeke into ha●b●row thereabou●es was but to subiect themselues to double daungers for if happilye they escape the daungers of rockes in their entring yet being in they were neuerthelesse subiect there to the daunger of the Ise which with the swift tydes and currantes is caried in and out in most harborowes thereaboutes and may thereby gaule their Cables asunder driue them vppon the shoare and bring them to muche trouble Also the coast is so much subiect to broken ground rockes especially in the mouth and entraunce of euerye harborow that albeit the channell be sounded ouer and ouer againe yet are you neuer the neare to discerne the daungers For the bottome of the sea holding like sh●pe and forme as the lande beyng full of hilles dales and ragged rockes suffereth you not by your soundings to knowe and kéepe a true gesse of the depth For you shall sounde vpon the side or hollownesse of one hil or rocke vnder water and haue a hundreth fiftie or fourtie fadome depth and before the next cast ere you shal bée able to haue your lead againe you shall be vppon the toppe thereof and come agrounde to your vtter confusion Another reason against going to harborowe was that the colde ayre did threaten a sodaine fréesing vppe of the sounds séeing that euery night there was new congealed Ise euen of that water which remayned within their shippes And therefore it should séeme to be more safe to lye off and on at sea than for lacke of winde to bring them forth of harborow to hazard by sodaine frostes to be shut vppe the whole yeare After many such daungers and reasons alleaged large debating of these causes on both sides the Captayne of the Anne Fr●nces deliuered his opinion vnto the company to this eff●ct First cōcerning the question of returning home he thought i● so much dishonorable as not to grow in any farther question and a●ayne to returne home at length as at length they must needes and not to be able to bring a certayne report of the Fléete whether they were liuing or lost or whether any of them had recouered their porte or not in the Countesses founde as it was to be thoughte the most part would if they were liuing he sayd that it would be so great an argumēt eyther of wante of courage or discretion in them as he resolued rather to fall into any danger than so shamefully to consent to returne hom● protesting that it should neuer be spoken of him that he wou●de euer returne withoute doing his endeauour to finde the Fléete and knowe the certaynetie of the Generals safetie He put his company in remembrance of a pinnesse of fiue tunne burthen which he had within his Ship whiche was caryed in péeces and vnmade vp for the vse of those whiche should inhabite there the whole yeare the whiche if they coulde fynde meanes to ioyne togither hée offered himselfe to proue before therewith whether it were possible for any Boate to passe for Ise whereby the Shippe myghte bée broughte in after and mighte also thereby gyue true notice if any of the Fléete were arriued at theyr porte or not But notwithstanding for that he well perceyued that the most parte of hys companye were addicted to put into harborough he was willing the rather for these causes somewhat to enclu●● therevnto As first to search alongst the same coast and the soundes thereaboutes he thoughte it to be to good purpose for that it was likely to fynd some of the Fléete there whi●he béeing leake and sore brused with the Ise was the rather thought lykely to be put into an yll harborough beyng distressed with foule weather in the last storme than to hazarde theyr vncertayne safeties amongst the Ise for about this place they lost them and lefte the Fléete then doubtfully questioning of harborough It was lykely also that they mighte fynde some fitte harborough thereaboutes whiche myghte bée houefull for them againste another tyme It was not likewise impossible to fynde some Ore or Myne thereaboutes wherewithall to fraughte theyr Shyppes whiche woulde bée more commodious in this place for the néerenesse to Seawarde and for a better outlette than further within the straytes béeyng lykely héere alwayes to loade in a shorter tyme howsoeuer the strayte shoulde be pestered wyth Ise within so that if it myghte come to passe that thereby they mighte eyther fynd the Fléete Mine or conuenient harborough any of these thrée woulde well serue theyr presente turnes and gyue some hope and comforte vnto theyr companyes whiche nowe were altogyther comfortlesse But if that all fortune shoulde fall out so contrarye that they coulde neyther recouer theyr Porte nor anye of these aforesayde helpes that yet they woulde not departe the coast as long as it was possible for them to tarrie there but woulde lye off and on at Sea athwart the place Therefore hys finall conclusion was sette downe thus Firste that the Thomas of Ipswiche and the Moone shoulde consorte and kéepe companye togyther carefully wyth the Anne Frances as néere as they could and as true Englishmen and faythfull friends should supplye one anothers want in all fortunes and dangers In the morning following euery Shippe to sende of hys Boate with a sufficiente Pylot to searche out and sounde the harboroughes for the safe bringing in of theyr Shippes And béeyng arriued in harborough where they mighte finde conuenient place for the purpose they resolued forthwith to ioyne and set togyther the Pinnesse wherewythall the Captayne of the Anne Frances might accordyng to his former determination discouer vp into the straytes After these determinations thus sette downe● the Thomas of Ipswiche the nyghte following lost company o● the other Shyppes and afterwarde shaped a contrarye course homewarde whyche fell out as it manyfestlie appeared very muche agaynste
places where she stingeth They haue snowe and hayle in the beste time of their Sommer and the ground frosen thrée fadome déepe These people are greate inchaunters and vse manye charmes of Witchcraft for when their heads do ake they tye a great stone with a string vnto a sticke and with certaine prayers wordes done to the sticke they litte vp the stone frō ground which sometimes wyth all a mans force they cannot stir sometime againe they lifte as easily as a feather and hope thereby with certaine ceremonious words to haue ease and helpe And they made vs by signes to vnderstand lying groueling with their faces vppon the grounde and making a noise downewarde that they worshippe the Diuell vnder them They haue great store of Déere Beares Hares Foxes and innumerable numbers of sundry sortes of wilde Foule as Seamews Gulles Wilmotes Duckes c. wherof our men killed in one day fiftéene hundred They haue also store of Hawkes as Falcons Tassels c. whereof two alighted vpon one of our Shippes at theyr returne were brought into England which some thinke wil proue very good They haue also great heards of Dogs which they vse for theyr ready prouision to eate There are also greate store of Rauens Larkes and Partridges whereof the Countrey people féede All these Fowles are farre thicker clothed with downe and feathers and haue thicker skinnes than anye in England haue for as that Countrey is colder so nature hathe prouided a remedie therevnto Our men haue eaten of their Beares Hares Partriches Larkes and of their wilde Fowle and find them reasonable good meate but not so delectable as oures Their wilde Fowle must be all fleyne their skinnes are so thicke and they tast best fryed in pannes The Countrie séemeth to be muche subiecte to Earthquakes The ayre is very subtile piercing and searching so that if any corrupted or infected body especially with the disease called Morbus Gallicus come there it will presentlye breake forth and shewe it selfe and cannot there by anye kinde of salue or medicine be cured Their longest Sommers day is of greate length without any darke night so that in Iuly all the night long we might perfitely and easilie wright reade whatsoeuer had pleased vs which lightsome nightes were very beneficiall vnto vs being so distressed with abundance of Ise as wee were The Sunne setteth to them in the Euening at a quarter of an houre after tenne of the clocke and riseth agayne in the morning at thrée quarters of an houre after one of the clocke so that in Sommer theyr Sunne shineth to them twentie houres and a halfe and in the nighte is absent but thrée houres a halfe And although the Sunne be absent these 3 ½ houres yet is it not darke that time for that the Sunne is neuer aboue thrée or foure degrées vnder the edge of their Horizon the cause is that the Tropicke Cancer doth cutte their Horizon at very vneauen and oblique Angles But the Moone at any time of the yeare béeing in Cancer hauing North Latitude doth make a full reuolution aboue their Horizon so that sometimes they sée the Moone aboue .24 houres togither Some of oure companie of the more ignorant sort thought we mighte continually haue séene the Sunne and the Moone had it not bin for two or thrée high Mountaynes The people are nowe become so warye and so circumspecte by reason of their former losses that by no means we can apprehend any of them althoughe we attempted often in the laste voyage But to saye truth we could not bestowe any great time in pursuing them bycause of oure greate businesse in lading and other things To conclude I finde in all the Countrie nothing that maye be to delite in either of pleasure or of accompte only the shewe of Mine bothe of golde siluer stéele yron and blacke lead with diuers preaty stones as blewe Saphyre very perfect and others whereof we founde great plentie maye giue encouragement for men to séeke thyther And there is no doubt but being well looked vnto and thorowly discouered it wyll make our Countrie both rich and happye and of these prosperous beginnings will growe hereafter I hope moste happye endings Whiche GOD of hys goodnesse graunte to whom be all Prayse and Glorie Amen Cicero O●fi●● Lib. 1. Astronomie This is the flourishing age Abundance of all things To what end Man is created Printing of Bookes The arte of Warre Nauigation The Stone called Magnes Two and thirt● poynts of the compasse The variation of the Needle Newe discoueries The W●east 〈◊〉 of ●●e 〈…〉 The E●st ●nd o●●●e old Worl●● The ende of the old ●orld Southward The end of the olde ●orld Northward The greate discoueries of late yeres The Earthe de●ided into syxe partes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As●● Terra S●p●●ntriona●●s A●●ri●a 〈…〉 In Iune is greater heat at Paris than vnder the Equinoctial The Twylights are shorter and the nights darker vnder the Equinoct●al● al than at Paris They vse and haue neede of fire vnder the Equinoctiall The complexion of the people of Meta Incognica The cause of the Ethiopiās blackenesse The Arke of Noe. Chus y sonne of Cham accursed A●frica was called Chamesis Under the Equinoctiall is greatest generation Greatest heare vnder the Tropiks Cuba Hispaniola Under the Tropickes is a mode●nte temperature Nine Climates A comparison betweene Marochus and England Al the North regions are habitable Elephant Orange tree ●●uses 〈◊〉 Hote nightes neere● 〈◊〉 Colde nights vnder the Equinoctiall One day of sixe moneths The Sunne neuer letteth in a 18● da●es Horizon and Equinoctial al on vnder the Pole. London Cōmo●io●s d●elli●● vnder y Poles The nightes vnder the Pole The twylights gyue light vnder the Pole almoste al the Winter The ending of twylight But sixe weekes dark vnder the Pole. The Creatures of that Countrie are are prouided for the colde An obiection of Meta Incognita Meta Incognita inhabited Captayne Frobi●her Frobishers first voyage Captayne Frobisher pretended this discouerie aboue .xv. yeares agoe Furniture for the firste voyage Gabriell and Michaell The Pinnesse lost The Michaell returned home Queene Elizabeths forlande Frobishers first entrance ●ithin in the s●reightes Frobish●rs s●reytes Deere The first sight of the Saluage Salmon Fiue Englishmen intercepted and raken Ta●●ng of y ● ●irs● Sa●age Frobishers returne The taking possession of Meta Incognita ● ●ow the Ore was ●ounde ●● c●aunce Many aduentures In the secōd voyage commission was giuen only for the bringing of Ore. The number of men in this voyage The cōdemned men discharged The first ariuall after our departing from Englande ●●●ne of Siluer ●ound in O●●ney Kyrway the chiefe towne of Orkney Saint Magnus sound why so called Great bodies of trees dryuing in the Seas Mons●rous fis● strange Fowle ●yuiug only by the Sea. Water beeyng blacke and smooth signifyeth lād to be neere Ilandes of Ise. The f●rste fyght of Freeselande Freeseland des●rib●d On easie kind of Fishing Whyte Corrall
gotte by sounding Monstrous Isles of Ise in ●ast freshe wherehence they are supposed to come The opinion of the frosen Seas is destroyed by experience F●obishers streigh●es The Steerage of the Micha●ll broken by Tempest The first entrance of the straightes Halles Ilād The description of the streyghtes No more gold ore foūd in the fyrste Ilande E●ges and Fowles of Meta Incognita Snares sette to catche birds withal The building of a Columne called Mount warwicke The firste sight of the countrie people wafting with a Flag ●he meting apart of two Englishmen with two of that Countr The order of thei● tr●f●icke Another mee●ing of two of our men with two of the●● The Englishemen chesed to their boates One of that Count●u●en taken The A●de set on fire The great daunger of those rockes Ise. Night without darknes in that countrey Our first commyng on the Southerland of the sayde stra●ghtes A Myne of Blacklead Iackmans sounde ●m●th● Iland The fyndyng of an Unicornes horne Thirtie leagues discouered within the straytes A good president of a good Captaine shewed b● Captayne F●obi●her The maner 〈…〉 hou●●● in 〈◊〉 Co●n●rey Wh●l●s bones ●sed in 〈◊〉 of timber 〈…〉 people A signe se● vp by the sauage Cap●i●e and the meaning thereof The sauage captiue amazed of his Countrey-mans picture Y●●●●● soūde The apparell ●ound againe of o●●e En●lis●m●n wh●●che the ●eare before were taken captiue A good de●ic● of ca●t●ine Yorke A good de●●●● of Cap●●●●● York● T●● Sauages haue Bo●●es of ●undry big●●●●● The English men p●rsue ●hose people of that countrey The swift ro●ing of those people The bloudy poynt A bote skirmish betwene the Englishe and them of that countrey The desperat nature of those people The taking of the woman and hir child A prettie kind of Surgerie ●●yche nature teacheth The narrowest place of the ●●raig●ts is .9 leagues ouer The Quene● Cape The manner of the meeting o● 〈◊〉 Captiues and their entertaynement The shame fastnesse and chastitie of those sauage Captiues Another appearance of that Countrey people These people know the vse of writing ● Letter sent vnto ●he fyue English Cap●tiues The cause why F●obishe● entred no further within the straights this yeare Bestes Bulwarke Their King called Catchoe How he is honoured A bladder changed for a ●o●ing glasse No newes of the Englishe Cap●iues To what end the blather was deliuered Those people daunsing vpon the hill toppes● A skirmishe shewed to th●se people Their Flags made of b●athe●s Great offers Snow ha●f● a foote deepe in ●ugust The Mayster of the Gabriell stricken ouerboorde The Rudder of the Ay●e torne in twaine How the Latitudes were alwayes takē in this voyage rather wyth the Staffe than astrolobe The arriuall of the Ayde at Padstow in Cornewall Our comming to Milford Hauen The arriuall of the Gabriell at Bristow The Michael arriued in the North parts Only one man dyed in this voyage 〈◊〉 cōm●nded of hir Mai●s●ie The Gentlemen c●mēded Commissioners appointed ●o 〈◊〉 the goodnesse of ●he Ore. A name giuē to the place newe discouer●d The hope of the pas●age to Cataya 〈…〉 A hundreth men appointed to inhab●tn there Fifteene Sayle● A cheyne of gold ●iuen to ●robishe● A charitable deede Mark● thys Currant Weast Englande Charing Crosse. A Whale mo●e a ship Frobishers straites choaked vp wyth Ise. Salte water cannot freese Bar● Den●is sunke Part of the house lost Another assault● Fogge snow and mi●●es hinder the Marriners markes A Currant● Iames Beare a good Mariner Christopher Hall chiefe Pylot Hard shiftes to saue mens liues Mistaken straytes Pr●bisher could ●aue passed to Cataya Faire open way Reasons to prooue a passage heere Great indraftes Currant Nine houres 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 ho●res eb●e● The sea moueth from East to Oest continuallye Authoritie Harde but yet possible turning back againe Trafficke Returne out of t●● mistaken s●raites Great daungers Anne F●aun●●e● met ●ith some of ●he ●●ee●e● Fraunces of Foy. Bri●gewater Shippe Straightes f●osen ouer A valiaunt mynde of F●ob●sher Snowe in I●ly E●●reame 〈◊〉 G●●at heate in 〈…〉 Unconstant weather The Generall recouereth his port Mayster Wolfall Preacher The aduentures of captayne Fenton and his company Extremitie causeth men to deuise new ar●●s and remedies Hard shiftes Strange wonders 〈…〉 The Moon● The Anne F●ances the T●omas of Ipswich and the Moone consult Ca●●a●ne 〈◊〉 resol●●i●n Bestes blessing Anne Frances in daunger The Moone in harborough Hattons Hedlande A Pinnesse there builte Gabriels Ilād● Proximus ●●m ●gome● mihi Captaine York arriue● None of the people wil be ●aken ● house builded and lef●e there Consultation for a further discouerie Returne homeward 〈…〉 discoue●ed A 〈…〉 M●t● In●ognita Their Kettls and Pannes Frost and Snow Inchanters Store of wild Fowle The qualitie of theyr The length of their day●● AT LONDON Printed by Henry Bynnyman Anno Domini 1578. Decembris 10.