
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II VOYAGE FROM CORUNNA TO TENERIFFE
- CHAPTER III ISLAND OF TENERIFFE
- CHAPTER IV PASSAGE FROM TENERIFFE TO CUMANA
- CHAPTER V CUMANA
- CHAPTER VI RESIDENCE AT CUMANA
- CHAPTER VII MISSIONS OF THE CHAYMAS
- CHAPTER VIII EXCURSION CONTINUED, AND RETURN TO CUMANA
- CHAPTER IX INDIANS OF NEW ANDALUSIA
- CHAPTER X RESIDENCE AT CUMANA
- CHAPTER XI VOYAGE FROM CUMANA TO GUAYBA
- CHAPTER XII CITY OF CARACCAS AND SURROUNDING DISTRICT
- CHAPTER XIII EARTHQUAKES OF CARACCAS
- CHAPTER XIV JOURNEY FROM CARACCAS TO THE LAKE OF VALENCIA
- CHAPTER XV JOURNEY ACROSS THE LLANOS, FROM ARAGUA TO SAN FERNANDO
- CHAPTER XVI VOYAGE DOWN THE RIO APURE
- CHAPTER XVII VOYAGE UP THE ORINOCO
- CHAPTER XVIII VOYAGE UP THE ORINOCO CONTINUED
- CHAPTER XIX ROUTE FROM ESMERALDA TO ANGOSTURA
- CHAPTER XX JOURNEY ACROSS THE LLANOS TO NEW BARCELONA
- CHAPTER XXI PASSAGE TO HAVANNAH, AND RESIDENCE IN CUBA
- CHAPTER XXII VOYAGE FROM CUBA TO CARTHAGENA
- CHAPTER XXIII BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE JOURNEY FROM CARTHAGENA TO QUITO AND MEXICO
- CHAPTER XXIV DESCRIPTION OF NEW SPAIN OR MEXICO
- CHAPTER XXV STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF NEW SPAIN CONTINUED
- CHAPTER XXVI MINES OF NEW SPAIN
- CHAPTER XXVII PASSAGE FROM VERA CRUZ TO CUBA AND PHILADELPHIA, AND VOYAGE TO EUROPE
- CHAPTER XXVIII JOURNEY TO ASIA
CHAPTER II - VOYAGE FROM CORUNNA TO TENERIFFE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II VOYAGE FROM CORUNNA TO TENERIFFE
- CHAPTER III ISLAND OF TENERIFFE
- CHAPTER IV PASSAGE FROM TENERIFFE TO CUMANA
- CHAPTER V CUMANA
- CHAPTER VI RESIDENCE AT CUMANA
- CHAPTER VII MISSIONS OF THE CHAYMAS
- CHAPTER VIII EXCURSION CONTINUED, AND RETURN TO CUMANA
- CHAPTER IX INDIANS OF NEW ANDALUSIA
- CHAPTER X RESIDENCE AT CUMANA
- CHAPTER XI VOYAGE FROM CUMANA TO GUAYBA
- CHAPTER XII CITY OF CARACCAS AND SURROUNDING DISTRICT
- CHAPTER XIII EARTHQUAKES OF CARACCAS
- CHAPTER XIV JOURNEY FROM CARACCAS TO THE LAKE OF VALENCIA
- CHAPTER XV JOURNEY ACROSS THE LLANOS, FROM ARAGUA TO SAN FERNANDO
- CHAPTER XVI VOYAGE DOWN THE RIO APURE
- CHAPTER XVII VOYAGE UP THE ORINOCO
- CHAPTER XVIII VOYAGE UP THE ORINOCO CONTINUED
- CHAPTER XIX ROUTE FROM ESMERALDA TO ANGOSTURA
- CHAPTER XX JOURNEY ACROSS THE LLANOS TO NEW BARCELONA
- CHAPTER XXI PASSAGE TO HAVANNAH, AND RESIDENCE IN CUBA
- CHAPTER XXII VOYAGE FROM CUBA TO CARTHAGENA
- CHAPTER XXIII BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE JOURNEY FROM CARTHAGENA TO QUITO AND MEXICO
- CHAPTER XXIV DESCRIPTION OF NEW SPAIN OR MEXICO
- CHAPTER XXV STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF NEW SPAIN CONTINUED
- CHAPTER XXVI MINES OF NEW SPAIN
- CHAPTER XXVII PASSAGE FROM VERA CRUZ TO CUBA AND PHILADELPHIA, AND VOYAGE TO EUROPE
- CHAPTER XXVIII JOURNEY TO ASIA
Summary
The wind having come round to the north-east, the Pizarro set sail on the afternoon of the 5th of June 1799, and after working out of the narrow passage passed the Tower of Hercules, or lighthouse of Corunna, at half-past six. Towards evening the wind increased, and the sea ran high. They directed their course to the north-west, for the purpose of avoiding the English frigates which were cruising off the coast, and about nine spied the fire of a fishing-hut at Lisarga, which was the last object they beheld in the west of Europe. As they advanced, the light mingled itself with the stars which rose on the horizon. “Our eyes,” says Humboldt, “remained involuntarily fixed upon it. Such impressions do not fade from the memory of those who have undertaken long voyages at an age when the emotions of the heart are in full force. How many recollections are awakened in the imagination by a luminous point, which in the middle of a dark night, appearing at intervals above the agitated waves, marks the shore of one's native land!”
They were obliged to run under courses, and proceeded at the rate of ten knots, although the vessel was not a fast sailer. At six in the morning she rolled so much that the fore topgallant-mast was carried away. On the 7th they were in the latitude of Cape Finisterre, the group of granitic rocks on which, named the Sierra de Torinona, is visible at sea to the distance of 59 miles.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Travels and Researches of Alexander von HumboldtBeing a Condensed Narrative of his Journeys in the Equinoctial Regions of America, and in Asiatic Russia; Together with Analyses of his More Important Investigations, pp. 25 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1832