Historical Account of the Most Celebrated Voyages, Travels, and Discoveries: From the Time of Columbus to the Present Period ...E. Newbery, 1797 - Discoveries in geography |
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Page 25
... Scarcely a feafon paffes without the Jofs of lives and fhips , and frequently attended with circumftances of peculiar calamity . D3 VOYAG OF CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . TUMEROUS are the difafters to SINGULAR SHIPWRECK . 25.
... Scarcely a feafon paffes without the Jofs of lives and fhips , and frequently attended with circumftances of peculiar calamity . D3 VOYAG OF CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . TUMEROUS are the difafters to SINGULAR SHIPWRECK . 25.
Page 25
... CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . TUMEROUS are the difafters to which mari- N ners are expofed , and the fortitude with which many of them have undergone the most mournful reverses of fortune , teaches an useful lef- fon of patience or ...
... CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . TUMEROUS are the difafters to which mari- N ners are expofed , and the fortitude with which many of them have undergone the most mournful reverses of fortune , teaches an useful lef- fon of patience or ...
Page 25
... Scarcely a seafon paffes without the lofs of lives and ships , and frequently attended with circumstances of peculiar calamity . 3 VOYAG OF CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . UMEROUS are the difafters to SINGULAR SHIPWRECK . 25.
... Scarcely a seafon paffes without the lofs of lives and ships , and frequently attended with circumstances of peculiar calamity . 3 VOYAG OF CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . UMEROUS are the difafters to SINGULAR SHIPWRECK . 25.
Page 27
... CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . UMEROUS are the difafters to which mari- ners are expofed , and the fortitude with which many of them have undergone the most mournful reverses of fortune , teaches an useful lef- fon of patience or refignation ...
... CAPTAIN GEORGE ROBERTS . UMEROUS are the difafters to which mari- ners are expofed , and the fortitude with which many of them have undergone the most mournful reverses of fortune , teaches an useful lef- fon of patience or refignation ...
Page 28
... captains threaten- ed to fhoot him through the head ; and after having infulted him in the moft inhuman man- ner ... Captain Roberts , who braved death rather than fubmit to an in- fignificant form . Sullen obftinacy is fometimes ...
... captains threaten- ed to fhoot him through the head ; and after having infulted him in the moft inhuman man- ner ... Captain Roberts , who braved death rather than fubmit to an in- fignificant form . Sullen obftinacy is fometimes ...
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Common terms and phrases
affiftance almoſt appeared Arabs baidar boat cacique Cape Captain Cheap coaft companions confiderable courſe crew defired difcovered difcovery diftance diftrefs Dutch efcaped Engliſh eſcaped fafe faid fame fand favages faved Fayall fcarcely fecured feemed feen feized fent ferved feven feveral fhip fhipwrecked fhore fhort fhould fide fire firft firſt fituation fleep fmall foldiers fome fomething fometimes foon France ftill ftrong fuch fuffered fupply fupport himſelf houſe Hynes ifland Ifle Ifle Pacif ignorant band laft land laſt leaft leagues leaſt loft mafter Maldives mifery moft Mogador morning moſt muft muſt myſelf natives night obferved obliged occafion Ocean ourſelves paffage paffed party perfon poffible prefent prefervation profpect provifions reached refolution reft rocks Ruffians Senegal ſeveral ſhip ſmall ſpot Swellendam thefe themſelves theſe thip thofe thoſe tion uſe veffel vifit voyage weather whofe wind wreck yawl
Popular passages
Page 25 - I am sure no people ever endured more. In the morning the weather grew moderate, the wind having shifted to the southward, as we discovered by the sun.
Page 25 - ... to get in, and many jumping into the water. Mr. Baylis, a young gentleman fifteen years of age, leaped from the chains, after the boat had got off, and was taken in.
Page 25 - I found a bag of bread, a fmall ham, a fingle piece of pork, two quart bottles of water, and a few of French cordials. The wind continued to the fouthward for eight or nine days, and providentially never blew fo...
Page 26 - ... till at length one of them broke out into a most immoderate swearing fit of joy, which I could not restrain, and declared he had never seen land in his life if what he now saw was not land.
Page 38 - ... of the East! Next day, as they were advancing, a party of natives came down upon them, and plundered them, among other things, of their tinder-box, flint and steel, which proved an irreparable loss. Every man was now obliged to travel, by turns, with a fire-brand in his hand; and before the natives retired, they showed more insolence than...
Page 25 - Matthews, quartermaster, the stoutest man in the boat, perished from hunger and cold: on the day before he had complained of want of strength in his throat, as he expressed it, to swallow his morsel, and in the night drank saltwater, grew delirious, and died without a groan.
Page 55 - Grosvenor, with a humanity which does them infinite honor, despatched a large party in quest of the unhappy wanderers. This detachment consisted of one hundred Europeans, and three hundred Hottentots, attended by a great number of waggons, each drawn by eight bullocks. The command was given to Captain Muller...
Page 25 - ... which by accident had been put there. Thefe were fpread when it rained, and when thoroughly wet, w.rung into the kidd with which we bailed the boat. With this...
Page 25 - ... running! It was now five o'clock in the evening, and in half an hour we lost sight of the ship.
Page 72 - Garland, they were muftered, and found to amount to feventy-four, out of rather more than two hundred and forty, which was about the number of the crew and paflengers in the fhip when Ihe failed through the Downs.