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: they brought with them such a cockle as I have mentioned in
my "Voyage Round the World" found near Celebes, and they saw many
more, some bigger than that which they brought aboard, as they said,
and for this reason I named it Cockle Island. I sent them to sound
again, ordering them to fire a musket if they found good anchoring;
we were then standing to the southward, with a fine breeze. As soon
as they fired, I tacked and stood in; they told me they had fifty
fathom when they fired. I tacked again, and made all the sail I
could to get out, being near some rocky islands and shoals to
leeward of us. The breeze increased, and I thought we were out of
danger, but having a shoal just by us, and the wind failing again, I
ordered the boat to tow us, and by their help we got clear from it.
We had a strong tide setting to the westward.
At one o'clock, being past the shoal, and finding the tide setting
to the westward, I anchored in thirty-five fathom coarse sand, with
small coral and shells. Being nearest to Cockle Island, I
immediately sent both the boats thither, one to cut wood, and the
other to fish. At four in the afternoon, having a small breeze at
south-south-west, I made a sign for my boats to come on board. They
brought some wood, and a few small cockles, none of them exceeding
ten pounds' weight, whereas the shell of the great one weighed
seventy-eight pounds; but it was now high water, and therefore they
could get no bigger. They also brought on board some pigeons, of
which we found plenty on all the islands where we touched in these
seas: also in many places we saw many large bats, but killed none,
except those I mentioned at Pub Sabuda. As our boats came aboard,
we weighed and made sail, steering east-south-east as long as the
wind held. In the morning we found we had got four or five leagues
to the east of the place where we weighed. We stood to and fro till
eleven; and finding that we lost ground, anchored in forty-two
fathom coarse gravelly sand, with some coral. This morning we
thought we saw a sail.
In the afternoon I went ashore on a small woody island, about two
leagues from us. Here I found the greatest number of pigeons that
ever I saw either in the East or West Indies, and small cockles in
the sea round the island in such quantities that we might have laden
the boat in an hour's time. These were not above ten or twelve
pounds' weight. We cut some wood, and brought off cockles enough
for all the ship's company; but having no small shot, we could kill
no pigeons. I returned about four o'clock, and then my gunner and
both mates went thither, and in less than three-quarters of an hour
they killed and brought off ten pigeons. Here is a tide: the flood
sets west and the ebb east, but the latter is very faint and but of
small continuance, and so we found it ever since we came from Timer:
the winds we found easterly, between north-east and east-south-east,
so that if these continue, it is impossible to beat farther to the
eastward on this coast against wind and current. These easterly
winds increased from the time we were in the latitude of about 2
degrees south, and as we drew nigher the line they hung more
easterly: and now being to the north of the continent of New
Guinea, where the coast lies east and west, I find the trade-wind
here at east, which yet in higher latitudes is usually at north-
north-west and north-west; and so I did expect them here, it being
to the south of the line.
The 7th, in the morning, I sent my boat ashore on Pigeon Island, and
stayed till noon. In the afternoon my men returned, brought twenty-
two pigeons, and many cockles, some very large, some small: they
also brought one empty shell, that weighed two hundred and fifty-
eight pounds.
At four o'clock we weighed, having a small westerly wind and a tide
with us; at seven in the evening we anchored in forty-two fathom,
near King William's Island, where I went ashore the next morning,
drank His Majesty's health, and honoured it with his name. It is
about two leagues and a half in length, very high and
extraordinarily well clothed with woods; the trees are of divers
sorts, most unknown to us, but all very green and flourishing; many
of them had flowers, some white, some purple, others yellow:
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