Narrative of a Voyage Round the World: Comprehending an Account of the Wreck of the Ship "Governor Ready" in Torres Straits; a Description of the British Settlements on the Coasts of New Holland, More Particularly Raffles Bay, Melville Island, Swan River, and King George's Sound; Also to Manners and Customs of the Aboriginal Tribes ... |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 83
Page 4
... miles of us . The ship " Woodlark " foundered this year in nearly the same place , lat . 28 ° . 8 ' . S. long . 52 ° . 40 ' . E. and within two days of the same time , February 11th , having encountered the same kind of weather that we ...
... miles of us . The ship " Woodlark " foundered this year in nearly the same place , lat . 28 ° . 8 ' . S. long . 52 ° . 40 ' . E. and within two days of the same time , February 11th , having encountered the same kind of weather that we ...
Page 7
... mile north , and ten miles east of it , according to chronometer corrected from Kent's group ; but satisfactory lunar observations placed us twenty miles farther to the eastward . The course was , there- fore , altered a little more to ...
... mile north , and ten miles east of it , according to chronometer corrected from Kent's group ; but satisfactory lunar observations placed us twenty miles farther to the eastward . The course was , there- fore , altered a little more to ...
Page 9
... ; the north - east ex- tremity of the reef ( which , according to Flinders , is in latitude 10 ° 2 ′ and longitude 145 ° 45 ′ ) bearing west ; distant from two to three miles . The chronometer 10 BOOT REEF - PORTLOCK REEF . placed us forty.
... ; the north - east ex- tremity of the reef ( which , according to Flinders , is in latitude 10 ° 2 ′ and longitude 145 ° 45 ′ ) bearing west ; distant from two to three miles . The chronometer 10 BOOT REEF - PORTLOCK REEF . placed us forty.
Page 10
... miles too far west1 . It afforded us much gratification to find the observations , which we had taken so frequently , and with great care , prove so correct ; as we could now with confidence lay down on the chart our true track ...
... miles too far west1 . It afforded us much gratification to find the observations , which we had taken so frequently , and with great care , prove so correct ; as we could now with confidence lay down on the chart our true track ...
Page 13
... miles in the boats , through , to us , an unknown sea , before we could reach the nearest pro- bable place of obtaining succour , many of them , —those particularly who had wives and children , -began to despair ; they were rallied out ...
... miles in the boats , through , to us , an unknown sea , before we could reach the nearest pro- bable place of obtaining succour , many of them , —those particularly who had wives and children , -began to despair ; they were rallied out ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aborigines accompanied Amity appeared APPENDIX arrived ascertain bank Batavia beach boat breeze brig camp canoe Cape Captain Barker Captain Laws Captain Stirling Captain Young chronometer circumstance colony Commandant considerable Coupang course crew Davis daylight directed discovered disease distance eastward endeavoured exceedingly excursion favourable fired formed Governor Phillips Governor Ready Holland informed Isle kangaroo King George's Sound latitude Lieutenant long-boat longitude Malays Melville Island ment meridian altitude Miago miles Mimaloo Mokǎrē morning Murray's Island named natives night noon north coast northward observed obtained party passage passed perceived Port Essington Port Jackson present prisoners proas proceeded prudent Raffles Bay received reef round sail sailors settlement settlers ship shore short skiff soon South Wales southward spears Straits Success Swan River Sydney taken Timor tion took trees trepang vessel voyage walked weather Wednesday Island Wellington wind wood
Popular passages
Page 258 - Had in her sober livery all things clad; Silence accompanied ; for beast and bird, They to their grassy couch, these to their nests, Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale ; She all night long her amorous descant sung: Silence was pleased. Now...
Page 36 - They moved in tracks of shining white, And when they reared, the elfish light Fell off in hoary flakes. Within the shadow of the ship I watched their rich attire: Blue, glossy green, and velvet black, They coiled and swam; and every track Was a flash of golden fire.
Page 258 - Now came still evening on, and twilight grey Had in her sober livery all things clad; Silence accompanied; for beast and bird, They to their grassy couch, these to their nests Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale ; She all night long her amorous descant sung , Silence was...
Page 312 - One had the form of a parrot's head, with a ruff round the neck, and was not ill done. Their canoes are about fifty feet in length, and appear to have been hollowed out of a single tree ; but the pieces which form the gunwales are planks sewed on with the fibres of the cocoa nut, and secured with pegs. These vessels are low, forward, but rise abaft; and, being narrow, are fitted with an outrigger on each side, to keep them steady. A raft, of. greater breadth than the canoe, extends over about half...
Page 123 - ... places, on which a few years ago, settlements, by direction of our government, were formed, but which have since been abandoned, as Dr. Wilson argues, and shews, from very insufficient and mistaken causes. The principal object in forming a settlement on the coast in question, as the author states, was to establish a commercial intercourse with the natives of various islands in the Indian Archipelago, and which, it was imagined, might be brought about through the means of the Malays, who annually...