A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 1 - By Robert Kerr


















































































































 -  From thence,
in ten days, they arrive at Senef, where is fresh water, and from whence
comes the aromatic wood - Page 89
A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 1 - By Robert Kerr - Page 89 of 810 - First - Home

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From Thence, In Ten Days, They Arrive At Senef, Where Is Fresh Water, And From Whence Comes The Aromatic Wood Which We Call Hud Al Senefi.

Here is a king; the inhabitants are black, and they wear two striped garments.

Having watered at this place, it is ten days passage to Sanderfulat, an island which has fresh water. They then steer through the sea of Sanji, and so to the gates of China; for so they call certain rocks and shallows which form a narrow strait in that sea, through which the ships are obliged to pass. It requires a month to sail from Sanderfulat to China, and it takes eight whole days to steer through among the rocks and shoals.

When a ship has got through the before mentioned gates, she goes with the flood tide into a fresh water gulf, and drops anchor in the chief port of China, which is called Canfu[8], where they have fresh water, both from springs and rivers, as also in most of the other cities of China. The city is adorned with large squares, and is supplied with every thing necessary for defence against an enemy, and in most of the other provinces of the empire there are cities of strength similarly fortified. In this port the tide ebbs and flows twice in twenty-four hours; but, whereas from Basra to the island of Bani Kahouan it flows when the moon is at full, and ebbs when she rises and when she sets; from near Bani Kahouan quite to the coast of China it is flood tide when the moon rises, and ebb when she is at her height; and so on the contrary, when she sets, it is flowing water, and when she is quite hidden under the horizon, the tide falls.

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