General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr














































































































 -  I considered, he informs us, the bottom of this
sound to be about eighteen leagues distant, but its entrance was - Page 693
General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr - Page 693 of 1007 - First - Home

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"I Considered," He Informs Us, "The Bottom Of This Sound To Be About Eighteen Leagues Distant, But Its Entrance Was

Completely blocked up by ice." Here again, a sound which seemed to promise fair to lead them into the great

Polar Sea was left undiscovered, and in fact unapproached; for at the distance of eighteen leagues, in that deceptive climate, nothing could be really known of its real state or practicability. Had Captain Ross made the attempt; had he spent but a couple of days, and actually encountered serious obstacles, even though he had not experienced that those obstacles were insurmountable, he would have had some excuse; but it is impossible not to censure him for approaching no nearer than eighteen leagues to a sound such as this, and pronouncing at this distance that the ice blocked it up completely. His reasoning to support his belief that this sound afforded no passage, and to defend his not having explored it, is weak and inconclusive; but we shall not examine it, because the commander to whom such an expedition is entrusted, should never reason, where he can prove by actual observation and experiment. It is unsafe in him to reason, because he will most assuredly be tempted to make his line of conduct bend to his hypothesis and reasoning.

Captain Ross returned down the western side of Baffin's Bay. On the 21st an opening was seen, which answered to the description of Alderman Jones Sound, given by Baffin; but here again the ice and fog prevented them from approaching near; as if the fog might not have cleared up in a day or two, and the ice might not either have been drifted off in as short a space, or, if it could not, have been passed by the crew, so far, at least, as to have gained a nearer and better view of this sound.

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