We Passed By Many Small Islands, And Among Many Dangerous Shoals
Without Any Remarkable Occurrence Till The 4th Of February, When We
Got Within Three Leagues Of The North-West Cape Of New Guinea,
Called By The Dutch Cape Mabo.
Off this cape there lies a small
woody island, and many islands of different sizes to the north and
north-east of it.
This part of New Guinea is high land, adorned
with tall trees, that appeared very green and flourishing. The cape
itself is not very high, but ends in a low sharp point, and on
either side there appears another such point at equal distances,
which makes it resemble a diamond. This only appears when you are
abreast of the middle point, and then you have no ground within
three leagues of the shore.
In the afternoon we passed by the cape and stood over for the
islands. Before it was dark we were got within a league of the
westernmost, but had no ground with fifty fathom of line: however,
fearing to stand nearer in the dark, we tacked and stood to the east
and plied all night. The next morning we were got five or six
leagues to the eastward of that island, and, having the wind
easterly, we stood in to the northward among the islands, sounded,
and had no ground; then I sent in my boat to sound, and they had
ground with fifty fathom near a mile from the shore. We tacked
before the boat came aboard again, for fear of a shoal that was
about a mile to the east of that island the boat went to, from
whence also a shoal-point stretched out itself till it met the
other:
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