
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXIX: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE TWENTY-NINTH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE AUSTEN FORREST ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE E. I. C.'S MARINE SERVICE.
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF RICHARD INCLEDON BURY, ESQ. REAR-ADMIRAL OF THE RED SQUADRON
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN EDWARDS LLOYD GRAHAM, OF H.M.S. ALCMENE
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- INDEX
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXIX: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE TWENTY-NINTH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE AUSTEN FORREST ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE E. I. C.'S MARINE SERVICE.
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF RICHARD INCLEDON BURY, ESQ. REAR-ADMIRAL OF THE RED SQUADRON
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN EDWARDS LLOYD GRAHAM, OF H.M.S. ALCMENE
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNT. VICE-ADMIRAL OF ENGLAND, IN THE YEAR 1588
- INDEX
Summary
NEAR this harbour they touched at some islands, where they found great numbers of seals, and despairing now to find any passage through the northern parts, he, after a general consultation, determined to steer away to the Moluccas, and setting sail July 25th, he sailed for sixty-eight days without sight of land; and, on September 30th, arrived within view of some islands, situate about eight degrees northward from the line, from whence the inhabitants resorted to them in canoes, hollowed out of the solid trunk of a tree, and raised at both ends so high above the water, that they seemed almost a semi-circle; they were burnished in such a manner, that they shone like ebony, and were kept steady by a piece of timber, fixed on each side of them, with strong canoes, that were fastened at one end to the boat, and at the other to the end of the timber.
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- The Naval ChronicleContaining a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects, pp. 441 - 512Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1813