Continuation of the Voyage from the Harbour of Comol to Toro or Al
Tor.
Three hours after midnight of the 7th April 1541[299], we left the
harbour of Comol, using our oars for a small way, and then hoisting
sail we proceeded along the coast; but an hour before day-light some of
our barks struck upon certain rocks and shoals, on which we again struck
sails and took to our oars till day-light. At day-light, being then the
8th, we came to a spacious bay, of which to the north and north-west we
could see no termination, neither any cape or head-land in that
direction. We accordingly sailed forwards in that open sea or bay, but
which had so many shoals on each side that it was wonderful we could
make any profit of a large wind; for, now going roamour, and now upon
a tack, sometimes in the way and sometimes out of it, there was no way
for us to take certain and quiet[300]. About sunset we came to a very
great shelf or reef, and fastening our barks to its rocks we remained
there for the night. The morning of the 9th being clear, we set sail
from this shelf, and took harbour within a great shelf called
Shaab-al-Yadayn[301]. After coming to anchor, we noticed an island to
seaward, called Zemorjete. This port and shelf trend N.E. by E. and
S.W. by W. From the cape of the mountains[302], to another cape beyond
it on which there are a quantity of shrubs or furzes; the coast runs
N.E. by N. and S.W. by S. the distance between these capes being about
three and a half or four leagues.
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