Page:Life with the Esquimaux - 1864 - Volume 2.djvu/181

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162
LIFE WITH THE ESQUIMAUX.

rust of three centuries had firmly cemented it to the sand and stones in which it had lain.

The piece of iron[1] was of the same character as that found at Tikkoon, less than one mile from Kodlunarn, and also as that obtained on "Look-out" Island, Field Bay; and the origin of it, as well as its significance, may be gathered from the following facts:—

Of the one hundred men sent out from England with Frobisher in 1578, the majority were "miners," sent for the express purpose of digging for the rich ore of which Frobisher had carried specimens home on his return from his second voyage, and which was supposed to be very valuable. The miners made "proofs," as they are called, in various parts of the regions discovered by him. Some of these "proofs" are doubtless what I found, and they furnish clear evidence, in connexion with other circumstances noted in the course of this narrative, that I was, when at Kodlunarn, on the precise spot of Frobisher's "Countess of Warwick's Mine."

FROBISHER RELICS IN MY OLD STOCKINGS.

Delighted with my discoveries, and gathering up as many relics as I could carry, placing them in my old stockings,

  1. The same, together with a case of some of the other Frobisher relics which I discovered and brought home, I sent to the British government early in the year 1863, through the Royal Geographical Society of London.