In Short,
Such Was Their Confusion That They Made But Three Trips That Day,
Carrying Over To The Island 180 Persons, Twenty Barrels Of Bread,
And Some Small Casks Of Water.
The master returned on board towards
evening, and told the captain that it was to no purpose to send more
provisions on shore, since the people only wasted those they had
already.
Upon this the captain went in the shallop, to put things
in better order, and was then informed that there was no water to be
found upon the island; he endeavoured to return to the ship in order
to bring off a supply, together with the most valuable part of their
cargo, but a storm suddenly arising, he was forced to return.
The next day was spent in removing their water and most valuable
goods on shore; and afterwards the captain in the skiff, and the
master in the shallop, endeavoured to return to the vessel, but
found the sea run so high that it was impossible to get on board.
In this extremity the carpenter threw himself out of the ship, and
swam to them, in order to inform them to what hardships those left
in the vessel were reduced, and they sent him back with orders for
them to make rafts, by tying the planks together, and endeavour on
these to reach the shallop and skiff; but before this could be done,
the weather became so rough that the captain was obliged to return,
leaving, with the utmost grief, his lieutenant and seventy men on
the very point of perishing on board the vessel. Those who were got
on the little island were not in a much better condition, for, upon
taking an account of their water, they found they had not above 40
gallons for 40 people, and on the larger island, where there were
120, their stock was still less. Those on the little island began
to murmur, and to complain of their officers, because they did not
go in search of water, in the islands that were within sight of
them, and they represented the necessity of this to Captain Pelsart,
who agreed to their request, but insisted before he went to
communicate his design to the rest of the people; they consented to
this, but not till the captain had declared that, without the
consent of the company on the large is land, he would, rather than
leave them, go and perish on board the ship. When they were got
pretty near the shore, he who commanded the boat told the captain
that if he had anything to say, he must cry out to the people, for
that they would not suffer him to go out of the boat. The captain
immediately attempted to throw himself overboard in order to swim to
the island. Those who were in the boat prevented him; and all that
he could obtain from them was, to throw on shore his table-book, in
which line wrote a line or two to inform them that he was gone in
the skiff to look for water in the adjacent islands.
He accordingly coasted them all with the greatest care, and found in
most of them considerable quantities of water in the holes of the
rocks, but so mixed with the sea-water that it was unfit for use;
and therefore they were obliged to go farther. The first thing they
did was to make a deck to their boat, because they found it was
impracticable to navigate those seas in an open vessel. Some of the
crew joined them by the time the work was finished; and the captain
having obtained a paper, signed by all his men, importing that it
was their desire that he should go in search of water, he
immediately put to sea, having first taken an observation by which
he found they were in the latitude of 28 degrees 13 minutes south.
They had not been long at sea before they had sight of the
continent, which appeared to them to lie about sixteen miles north
by west from the place they had suffered shipwreck. They found
about twenty-five or thirty fathoms water; and as night drew on,
they kept out to sea; and after midnight stood in for the land, that
they might be near the coast in the morning. On the 9th of June
they found themselves as they reckoned, about three miles from the
shore; on which they plied all that day, sailing sometimes north,
sometimes west; the country appearing low, naked, and the coast
excessively rocky; so that they thought it resembled the country
near Dover. At last they saw a little creek, into which they were
willing to put, because it appeared to have a sandy bottom; but when
they attempted to enter it, the sea ran so high that they were
forced to desist.
On the 10th they remained on the same coast, plying to and again, as
they had done the day before; but the weather growing worse and
worse, they were obliged to abandon their shallop, and even throw
part of their breath overboard, because it hindered them from
clearing themselves of the water, which their vessel began to make
very fast. That night it rained most terribly, which, though it
gave them much trouble, afforded them hopes that it would prove a
great relief to the people they had left behind them on the islands.
The wind began to sink on the 11th; and as it blew from the west-
south-west, they continued their course to the north, the sea
running still so high that it was impossible to approach the shore.
On the 12th, they had an observation, by which they found themselves
in the latitude of 27 degrees; they sailed with a south-east wind
all that day along the coast, which they found so steep that there
was no getting on shore, inasmuch as there was no creek or low land
without the rocks, as is commonly observed on seacoasts; which gave
them the more pain because within land the country appeared very
fruitful and pleasant.
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