The Shoal These Whales Were Upon Had Depth Of
Water Sufficient, No Less Than Twenty Fathom, As I Said, And It Lies
In Latitude 22 Degrees 22 Minutes.
The shore was generally bold all
along.
We had met with no shoal at sea since the Abrohlo shoal,
when we first fell on the New Holland coast in the latitude of 28
degrees, till yesterday in the afternoon and this night. This
morning also, when we expected by the draught we had with us to have
been eleven leagues off shore, we were but four, so that either our
draughts were faulty, which yet hitherto and afterwards we found
true enough as to the lying of the coast, or else here was a tide
unknown to us that deceived us, though we had found very little of
any tide on this coast hitherto; as to our winds in the coasting
thus far, as we had been within the verge of the general trade
(though interrupted by the storm I mentioned), from the latitude of
28 degrees, when we first fell in with the coast, and by that time
we were in the latitude of 25 degrees, we had usually the regular
trade wind (which is here south-south-east) when we were at any
distance from shore; but we had often sea and land breezes,
especially when near shore and when in Shark's Bay, and had a
particular north-west wind or storm that set us in thither. On this
18th of August we coasted with a brisk gale of the true trade wind
at south-south-east, very fair and clear weather; but hauling off in
the evening to sea, were next morning out of sight of land, and the
land now trending away north-easterly, and we being to the northward
of it, and the wind also shrinking from the south-south-east to the
east-south-east (that is, from the true trade wind to the sea
breeze, as the land now lay), we could not get in with the land
again yet awhile so as to see it, though we trimmed sharp and kept
close on a wind. We were this 19th day in latitude 21 degrees 42
minutes. The 20th we were in latitude 19 degrees 37 minutes, and
kept close on a wind to get sight of the land again, but could not
yet see it. We had very fair weather, and though we were so far
from the land as to be out of sight of it, yet we had the sea and
land breezes. In the night we had the land breeze at south-south-
east, a small gentle gale, which in the morning about sun-rising
would shift about gradually (and withal increasing in strength) till
about noon we should have it at east-south-east, which is the true
sea breeze here. Then it would blow a brisk gale so that we could
scarce carry our top-sails double-reefed; and it would continue thus
till three in the afternoon, when it would decrease again. The
weather was fair all the while, not a cloud to be seen, but very
hazy, especially nigh the horizon. We sounded several times this
20th day, and at first had no ground, but had afterwards from fifty-
two to forty-five fathom, coarse brown sand, mixed with small brown
and white stones, with dints besides in the tallow.
The 21st day also we had small land breezes in the night, and sea
breezes in the day, and as we saw some sea-snakes every day, so this
day we saw a great many, of two different sorts or shapes. One sort
was yellow, and about the bigness of a man's wrist, about four feet
long, having a flat tail about four fingers broad. The other sort
was much smaller and shorter, round, and spotted black and yellow.
This day we sounded several times, and had forty-five fathom, sand.
We did not make the land till noon, and then saw it first from our
topmast head; it bore south-east by east about nine leagues
distance, and it appeared like a cape or head of land. The sea
breeze this day was not so strong as the day before, and it veered
out more, so that we had a fair wind to run in with to the shore,
and at sunset anchored in twenty fathom, clean sand, about five
leagues from the Bluff point, which was not a cape (as it appeared
at a great distance), but the easternmost end of an island about
five or six leagues in length, and one in breadth. There were three
or four rocky islands about a league from us, between us and the
Bluff point, and we saw many other islands both to the east and west
of it, as far as we could see either way from our topmast-head, and
all within them to the south there was nothing but islands of a
pretty height, that may be seen eight or nine leagues off; by what
we saw of them they must have been a range of islands of about
twenty leagues in length, stretching from east-north-east to west-
south-west, and, for aught I know, as far as to those of Shark's
Bay, and to a considerable breadth also, for we could see nine or
ten leagues in among them, towards the continent or mainland of New
Holland, if there be any such thing hereabouts; and by the great
tides I met with awhile afterwards, more to the north-east, I had a
strong suspicion that here might be a kind of archipelago of
islands, and a passage possibly to the south of New Holland and New
Guinea into the great South Sea eastward, which I had thoughts also
of attempting in my return from New Guinea, had circumstances
permitted, and told my officers so; but I would not attempt it at
this time, because we wanted water, and could not depend upon
finding it there.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 29 of 50
Words from 29192 to 30204
of 50938