The
Shore Was Lined Thick With Many Other Sorts Of Very Strange And
Beautiful Shells For Variety Of Colour And Shape, Most Finely
Spotted With Red, Black, Or Yellow, Etc., Such As I Have Not Seen
Anywhere But At This Place.
I brought away a great many of them,
but lost all except a very few, and those not of the best.
There are also some green turtle weighing about two hundred pounds.
Of these we caught two, which the water ebbing had left behind a
ledge of rock which they could not creep over. These served all my
company two days, and they were indifferent sweet meat. Of the
sharks we caught a great many, which our men ate very savourily.
Among them we caught one which was eleven feet long. The space
between its two eyes was twenty inches, and eighteen inches from one
corner of his mouth to the other. Its maw was like a leather sack,
very thick, and so tough that a sharp knife could scarce cut it, in
which we found the head and bones of a hippopotamus, the hairy lips
of which were still sound and not putrified, and the jaw was also
firm, out of which we plucked a great many teeth, two of them eight
inches long and as big as a man's thumb, small at one end, and a
little crooked, the rest not above half so long. The maw was full
of jelly, which stank extremely. However, I saved for awhile the
teeth and the shark's jaw. The flesh of it was divided among my
men, and they took care that no waste should be made of it.
It was the 7th of August when we came into Shark's Bay, in which we
anchored at three several places, and stayed at the first of them
(on the west side of the bay) till the 11th, during which time we
searched about, as I said, for fresh water, digging wells, but to no
purpose. However, we cut good store of firewood at this first
anchoring-place, and my company were all here very well refreshed
with raccoons, turtle, shark, and other fish, and some fowls, so
that we were now all much brisker than when we came in hither. Yet
still I was for standing farther into the bay, partly because I had
a mind to increase my stock of fresh water, which was begun to be
low, and partly for the sake of discovering this part of the coast.
I was invited to go further by seeing from this anchoring-place all
open before me, which therefore I designed to search before I left
the bay. So on the 11th about noon I steered further in, with an
easy sail, because we had but shallow water. We kept, therefore,
good looking out for fear of shoals, sometimes shortening, sometimes
deepening the water. About two in the afternoon we saw the land
ahead that makes the south of the bay, and before night we had again
sholdings from that shore, and therefore shortened sail and stood
off and on all night, under two topsails, continually sounding,
having never more than ten fathom, and seldom less than seven.
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