Page:The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation 16.djvu/183

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

the streigts, and there to ride, and water, and trimme our ships.

The 12 in the afternoone M. Maddox, M. Hall, M. Bannister, and others came aboord to visite M. Walker. After a time of abode with him, they returned to the gallion all againe, except M. Maddox who remained with M. Walker here aboord.

This night M. Maddox and I, behelde many constellations in the firmament, and set downe certaine newe starres raised to the Southwards. All day and night wee went South, and South by East among.

The seuenteenth day in the afternoone wee shot off three peeces of ordinance in honour of our Queenes Maiestie. This day after dinner came master Maddox, and Captaine Drake with others to take their leaue of Master Walker, as I with all my company had done before, supposing him past hope of recouerie.

19 degrees of Southerly latitude. At foure of the clocke, finding ourselues in nineteene degrees to the Southwards of the line and cleare of the shoalds called by us Powles, wee went hence Southsouthwest all night following.

The 18 day being Sunday, after dinner the Generall, M. Maddox, Captaine Parker, and many other came aboord, and visited M. Walker: which done, they dranke, and departed aboord againe. All this day and night, we went our course Southwest by South, with a franke gale.

Cold euenings. The 19 day about noone, the Sun was in our Zenith, being declined to the Southwards 21 degrees and 33 minutes, where wee found the aire fresh and temperate as in England in Iune, when a fresh gale of winde doeth blow in the heate of of the day, but the euening, the night, and the morning are more fresh and colder here, then it is in England either in Iune or Iulie.

The first of December, about sixe of the clocke in the morning, wee sawe lande on the coast of Brasil, in the height of 28 degrees or there abouts, which bare Northwest, and was eight leagues from vs very high land.

Diuers Ilands. Wee stood in with it, being much winde, and comming neere, found diuers Islands: and seeing the Francis would not come roome nor run ahead vs, wee stood in with the shore, and sounded in 30 fathom oaze three leagues off the lande, bearing from the Westnorthwest to the Northnorthwest of vs, and so stoode still till it shoalded orderly into seuen fathom, within a mile of a head