Page:The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation 15.djvu/378

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Take this for a warning that if thou goe for Cape de la Vela by night by the course abouesayd, and commest into a whitish water, then sound and thou shalt find 40. fathoms, and thy sound will be certaine smal sandy white oaze, and some smal weeds.

Rio de Palominos. And then thou mayest make account that thou art North and South with the riuer called Rio de Palominos, which commeth out of the midst of the Sierras Neuadas. And being benighted thou shalt go Westnorthwest, or West and by North vntil day: and being day then thou mayest hale in with sight of the land Southwest, because thou mayest be sure to come right in with it.

Morro hermoso.


Rio grande. If thou goe from Cape del Aguja for Cartagena, if it bee by day, thou shall goe West and by South, and shalt goe to haue sight of Morro Hermoso, that is The faire mountaine, which lyeth to the Westward of Rio grande.

Isla de Arenas. Samba or Zamba. And being alone, and with a good ship of saile, and drawing towards night, then thou must come to anker behind Morro hermoso: and after the first watch thou must set saile, and go out West and by North, because thou must be sure to keepe a seaboord from the Island de Arenas, which lyeth 2 leagues to seaward right against Samba.

And if thou goe from Cape del Aguja by night thou shall goe West and by North: and so thou shalt goe without the force of the water of Rio Grande. And being by day thou shalt goe along the coast, and shall see Morro hermoso, which, as I haue sayd, lyeth to the West of Rio Grande, and hath for markes, a face of a blacke land not very hie, and it is round. And if thou depart by day from Morro hermoso, thou must goe West, and must take heede, as I sayde before, of the Isle de Arenas, which lyeth North and South of Samba. Samba hath for marke as it were a gallie towed.

El Buio del Grato.

Punta de la canoa. And going this way by day, thou shalt see El buio del Gato which is an high land with certaine white cliffes to the seaward: and also more to the West thou shalt see the poynt called Punta de la Canoa, which is a low land euen with the water: and there endeth the coast which lyeth East and West.

Cartagena And the Bay that goeth to Cartagena beginneth here, and lyeth Northeast and Southwest.

And take this for a warning, that if thou be benighted against Samba, thou shall take in thy sailes and lye off to the offward