The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation: Made by Sea Or Over-land to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compasse of These 1600 Yeeres, Том 10J. MacLehose and sons, 1904 |
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Страница viii
... leagues up Rio dolce , and homeward by Newfoundland , 1596 . The voyage of M. William Parker of Plimmouth to Mar- garita , Jamaica , Truxillo , Puerto de cavallos , & c . with his surprize of Campeche , the chiefe towne of Iucatan . An ...
... leagues up Rio dolce , and homeward by Newfoundland , 1596 . The voyage of M. William Parker of Plimmouth to Mar- garita , Jamaica , Truxillo , Puerto de cavallos , & c . with his surprize of Campeche , the chiefe towne of Iucatan . An ...
Страница 10
... leagues to the Northward of Cape Finister , he having put roomer , not being able to double the Cape , in that there rose a contrary winde at Southwest . The 25. the wind continuing contrary , hee put into a place in Galicia , called ...
... leagues to the Northward of Cape Finister , he having put roomer , not being able to double the Cape , in that there rose a contrary winde at Southwest . The 25. the wind continuing contrary , hee put into a place in Galicia , called ...
Страница 11
... leagues ahead of us , kept on her course to Teneriffe , having better sight thereof then the other had , and by that ... league from the shoare : but as hee pretended to have landed , suddenly there appeared upon the two points of the ...
... leagues ahead of us , kept on her course to Teneriffe , having better sight thereof then the other had , and by that ... league from the shoare : but as hee pretended to have landed , suddenly there appeared upon the two points of the ...
Страница 12
... leagues off , came to him , and gave him as gentle intertainment as if he had bene his owne brother . speake somewhat of these Ilands , being called in olde time Insulæ fortunate , by the meanes of the flourishing thereof , the ...
... leagues off , came to him , and gave him as gentle intertainment as if he had bene his owne brother . speake somewhat of these Ilands , being called in olde time Insulæ fortunate , by the meanes of the flourishing thereof , the ...
Страница 13
... is in heigth by The pike of their reports twentie leagues , having both winter and Teneriffe . summer abundance of snowe in the top of it : this Pike Of 1564 . may bee seene in a cleere day fiftie 13 SIR JOHN HAWKINS A.D..
... is in heigth by The pike of their reports twentie leagues , having both winter and Teneriffe . summer abundance of snowe in the top of it : this Pike Of 1564 . may bee seene in a cleere day fiftie 13 SIR JOHN HAWKINS A.D..
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aboord anker barke Berreo boat Cabo called Canoas Cape Captaine Carapana caried Cartagena Cayo Romano chanell citie coast comming countrey Cuba dayes departed divers Domingo Dominica doth East enemie English entred farre fathome fleete frigats gallies Generall golde Governour Guiana harbour hath Havana Hispaniola Iago Indians inhabitants Island Isle Juan king land leagues litle lyeth majestie moneth mountaines neere Negros night Nombre de Dios North Northeast Nueva Espanna ordinance Orenoque Panama Peru pinnesse port Puerto Puerto Bello Puerto rico rest returne river saile sayd sayle selfe sent shew shippes ships shoald shore shot side Sierras sight Sir Walter Ralegh souldiers South Southwest Spaine Spaniards Spanish standeth stirre thence thereof thither Thomas Baskervil thou shalt goe Tierra firma tooke towne Trinidad Truxillo tunnes unto victuals voyage warre West Indies winde yeelded yeere yere yland
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Страница 327 - But Moses' hands were heavy ; and they took a stone, and put it under him, and he sat thereon ; and Aaron and Hur stayed up his hands, the one on the one side, and the other on the other side ; and his hands were steady until the going down of the sun.
Страница xiv - A Summarie and True Discourse of Sir Francis Drake's West Indian Voyage.
Страница 384 - ... our stomachs began to gnaw apace; but whether it was best to return or go on, we began to doubt, suspecting treason in the pilot more and more; but the poor old Indian ever assured us that it was but a little...
Страница xvi - He was a handsome, personable man, tall of stature, red-hair'd and of admirable comport, and above all, noted for riding the great horse, for tilting, and for his being the first of all that taught a dog to sit in order to catch partridges.
Страница 357 - ... until they be all shining from the foot to the head ; and in this sort they sit drinking by twenties and hundreds, and continue in drunkenness sometimes six or seven days together...
Страница 30 - Spaniards is marveilous : for they chuse for their refuge the mountaines and woodes where the Spaniards with their horses cannot follow them, and if they fortune to be met in the plaine where one horseman may overrunne 100.
Страница xii - Captain's return brought unto his [friends ?] did so speedily pass over all the church, and surpass their minds with desire and delight to see him that very few or none remained with the preacher, all hastening to see the evidence of God's love and blessing towards our Gracious Queen and country, by the fruit of our Captain's labour and success.
Страница 364 - ... builded for the purpose, and so came with the current downe the river of Meta, and so into Baraquan. After he entred that great & mighty river, he began dayly to lose of his companies both men and horse ; for it is in many places violently swift, and hath forcible eddies, many sands, and divers Islands sharpe pointed with rocks : but after one whole yeere, journeying for the most part by river, and the rest by land, he grew dayly to fewer numbers ; for both by sicknesse, and by encountring with...
Страница 352 - Dorado, that for the greatness, for the riches, and for the excellent seat, it far exceedeth any of the world, at least of so much of the world as is known to the Spanish nation.
Страница 51 - Their houses are not many together, for in one house an hundred of them do lodge ; they being made much like a great barne...