A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions: Undertaken Chiefly for the Purpose of Discovering a North-east, North-west, Or Polar Passage Between the Atlantic and Pacific : from the Earliest Periods of Scandinavian Navigation to the Departure of the Recent Expeditions Under the Orders of Captains Ross and BuchanJohn Murray, 1818 - 427 sider |
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Side 110
... Cape Farewell ; coasted the west side of Greenland , and from hence they had much intercourse with the natives , who came off to their ships sometimes in an “ hun- dred canoes at a time , sometimes fourtie , fiftie , more and less as ...
... Cape Farewell ; coasted the west side of Greenland , and from hence they had much intercourse with the natives , who came off to their ships sometimes in an “ hun- dred canoes at a time , sometimes fourtie , fiftie , more and less as ...
Side 112
... Cape Farewell , ordered the Sunshine and the North Star to seek a passage northward between Greenland and Ice- land as far as lat . 80 ° , if not interrupted by land . On the 12th June the two latter vessels put into Iceland and ...
... Cape Farewell , ordered the Sunshine and the North Star to seek a passage northward between Greenland and Ice- land as far as lat . 80 ° , if not interrupted by land . On the 12th June the two latter vessels put into Iceland and ...
Side 172
... Cape Farewell , where he was visited by a number of the " savages , " as they are called , though very far from deserving that appellation . Wine , it is said , was offered to them , and not being to their taste was refused ; but they ...
... Cape Farewell , where he was visited by a number of the " savages , " as they are called , though very far from deserving that appellation . Wine , it is said , was offered to them , and not being to their taste was refused ; but they ...
Side 175
... Cape Farewell , as the Danish chronicle says , from mountains of ice obstructing their passage ; but Hall gives a more probable reason . " I have also , " says Purchas , " Master Hall's voyage of the next yeere 1607 , to Greenland from ...
... Cape Farewell , as the Danish chronicle says , from mountains of ice obstructing their passage ; but Hall gives a more probable reason . " I have also , " says Purchas , " Master Hall's voyage of the next yeere 1607 , to Greenland from ...
Side 206
... Cape Farewell on the 6th of May , from which time to the 17th , in proceeding westerly , they were much hampered with ice , and , on that day in parti- cular , passed many great islands of ice , some of which are stated to be more than ...
... Cape Farewell on the 6th of May , from which time to the 17th , in proceeding westerly , they were much hampered with ice , and , on that day in parti- cular , passed many great islands of ice , some of which are stated to be more than ...
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A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions: Undertaken ... John Barrow Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1818 |
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appeared arrived attempt August Baffin Barentz boat called Cape Farewell Captain coast of America coast of Greenland cold command Company continued Cortereal covered crew discovered discovery distance ducats Dutch east eastward England enterprize expedition farther fell fish Frisland frozen gave the name Greenland Hakluyt Hans Egede harbour hope Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company Hugh Willoughby hundred Iceland Indians inlet island July June King Labrador land latitude leagues Lieutenant longitude masses of ice master miles mountains mouth natives navigation Newfoundland night North Pole north-east north-west passage northern northward Nova Zembla observed passed pilot pinnace Portugueze proceeded Purchas reached river says set sail ships shore side sledges snow Sound South Sea southward Spain Spitzbergen stood Strait of Anian supposed Thomas Button tide tons vessels voyage ward weather westward whales wigwams William Baffin wind winter Zichmni
Populære avsnitt
Side 99 - Besides, for solace of our people, and allurement of the savages, we were provided of music in good variety; not omitting the least toys, as morrisdancers, hobby-horse, and May-like conceits to delight the savage people, whom we intended to win by all fair means possible.
Side 308 - An Act for giving a public Reward to such Person or Persons, being His Majesty's Subject or Subjects, as shall discover a Northern Passage for Vessels by Sea between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and also unto such as shall first approach by Sea . within One Degree of the Northern Pole...
Side 314 - At ten at night the weather becoming clear, we had an opportunity of seeing at the same moment the remarkable peaked hill near Cape Prince of Wales, on the coast of America, and the east Cape of Asia, with the two connecting islands of Saint Diomede between them.
Side 293 - ... either all feasting, or all famine ; sometimes we had too much, seldom just enough, frequently too little, and often none at all. It will be only necessary to say that we have fasted many times two whole days and nights ; twice upwards of three days ; and once, while at She-than-nee, near seven days, during which we tasted not a mouthful of anything, except a few cranberries, water, scraps of old leather, and burnt bones.
Side 237 - Majesties of 40 pieces ordnance hee could not strike his flagg; (keepe it up then, quoth I) but you are out of the way to Japon, for this is not it ;" — and a great deal more of such stuff.
Side 259 - ... in a Greenland ship that summer) told him, that their ship went not out to fish that summer, but only to take in the lading of the whole fleet, to bring it to an early market. But, said he, before the fleet had caught fish enough to lade us, we, by order of the Greenland Company, sailed unto...
Side 31 - ... before, by this fame and report there increased in my heart a great flame of desire to attempt some notable thing.
Side 316 - Clerke's resolutions were made known. We were all heartily sick of a navigation full of danger, and in which the utmost perseverance had not been repaid with the smallest probability of success. We therefore turned our faces toward home, after an absence of three years, with a delight and satisfaction, which, notwithstanding the tedious voyage we had still to make, and the immense distance we had to run, were as freely entertained, and perhaps as fully enjoyed, as if we had been already in sight...
Side 272 - A sickness and famine occasioned such havock among the English that, by the setting in of the second winter, their number was reduced to twenty. That winter, 1720, some of the Esquimaux took up their abode on the opposite side of the harbour to that on which the English had built their houses, and frequently supplied them with such provisions as they had, which chiefly consisted of whale's blubber, and seal's flesh, and train oil.
Side 57 - ONE master Hore of London, a man of goodly stature and of great courage, and given to the studie of Cosmographie...