A NEW VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD,
BY A Course never sailed before.
BEING
A VOYAGE undertaken by some MERCHANTS, who afterwards proposed the Setting up an _East-India_ Company in FLANDERS.
_LONDON:_
Printed for A. BETTESWORTH, at the _Red-Lyon_, in _Pater-Noster-Row_; and W. MEARS, at the _Lamb_, without _Temple-Bar_. M.DCC.XXV.
NEW VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD.
It has for some ages been thought so wonderful a thing to sail the tour or circle of the globe, that when a man has done this mighty feat, he presently thinks it deserves to be recorded like Sir Francis Drake's. So soon as men have acted the sailor, they come ashore and write books of their voyage, not only to make a great noise of what they have done themselves, but pretending to show the way to others to come after them, they set up for teachers and chart makers to posterity. Though most of them have had this misfortune, that whatever success they have had in the voyage, they have had very little in the relation; except it be to tell us, that a seaman when he comes to the press, is pretty much out of his element, and a very good sailor may make but a very indifferent author.
I do not in this, lessen the merit of those gentlemen who have made such a long voyage as that round the globe; but I must be allowed to say, as the way is now a common road, the reason of it thoroughly known, and the occasion of it more frequent than in former times, so the world has done wondering at it; we no more look upon it as a mighty thing, a strange and never heard of undertaking; this cannot be now expected of us, the thing is made familiar, every ordinary sailor is able to do it, if his merchants are but qualified to furnish him for so long a voyage; and he that can carry a ship to Lisbon, may with the same ease carry it round the world.
Some tell us, it is enough to wonder at a thing nine days, one would reasonably then conclude, that it is enough that sailing round the world has been wondered at above a hundred years. I shall therefore let the reader know, that it is not the rarity of going round the world that has occasioned this publication, but if some incidents have happened in such a voyage, as either have not happened to others, or as no other people, though performing the same voyage have taken notice of, then this account may be worth publishing, though the thing, viz. The Voyage round the World, be in itself of no value.
It is to be observed, of the several navigators whose Voyages round the World have been published, that few, if any of them, have diverted us with that variety which a circle of that length must needs offer. We have a very little account of their landings, their diversions, the accidents which happened to them, or to others by their means; the stories of their engagements, when they have had any scuffle either with natives, or European enemies, are told superficially and by halves; the storms and difficulties at sea or on shore, have nowhere a full relation; and all the rest of their accounts are generally filled up with directions for sailors coming that way, the bearings of the land, the depth of the channels, entrances, and bars, at the several ports, anchorage in the bays, and creeks, and the like things, useful indeed for seamen going thither again, and how few are they? but not at all to the purpose when we come expecting to find the history of the voyage.
Another sort of these writers have just given us their long journals, tedious accounts of their log-work, how many leagues they sailed every day; where they had the winds, when it blew hard, and when softly; what latitude in every observation, what meridian distance, and what variation of the compass. Such is the account of Sir John Narborough's Voyage to the South Seas, adorned with I know not how many charts of the famous Strait of Magellan, a place only now famous for showing the ignorance of Sir John Narborough, and a great many wise gentlemen before him, and for being a passage they had no need to have troubled themselves with, and which nobody will ever go through anymore.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A New Voyage Round the World by a Course Never Sai
- 2: And a sufficient number of French seamen
- 3: And went directly over to the coast of Flanders
- 4: And so to the East Indies then
- 5: We went away for the river of Plata
- 6: Captain Merlotte smiled at that
- 7: And the manner of living of Englishmen
- 8: Not only in the discovery of it by Magellan
- 9: Or in other places in the Indies
- 10: Who brought those goods by so many stages to Acapulco
- 11: That when we had sold our cargo at the Philippines
- 12: And he talks with one of the midshipmen in the same dialect
- 13: One of the midshipmen followed the mate
- 14: And one or two of the midshipmen
- 15: And I appointed only the supercargo
- 16: Upon which he asked Captain Merlotte if he spoke English
- 17: Ordered the long boat and the shallop
- 18: To know if they were Englishmen
- 19: Cleared the steerage behind me
- 20: Some bold rogues upon the forecastle
- 21: Merely because they came upon the forecastle
- 22: That as I had freely forgiven what was past
- 23: And go to the men in the steerage
- 24: Though they had forfeited them by their mutiny
- 25: I mean so as not to come among the seamen afore the mast
- 26: Fearing his sloop would be taken
- 27: That we made the south point of the island of Madagascar
- 28: But I was soon informed by a Dutchman
- 29: And to retrieve his circumstances by his future fidelity
- 30: On shore among the pirates as spies
- 31: Whatever his opinion should be
- 32: About six leagues farther north
- 33: Except a double pallisadoe round their camp
- 34: So the gunner called back the boat
- 35: The gunner being thus empowered to treat with my mate
- 36: The shallop returned the next day
- 37: And the brigantine did the same
- 38: Had committed hostilities against them
- 39: After the ambassadors were gone
- 40: Nor near enough to parley with them
- 41: Which with the gunner and his twenty one men
- 42: Finding a quantity of rice on board
- 43: Having stolen a long pair of scissors
- 44: And the gravel and stones scattering
- 45: And standing directly for Achen
- 46: Provided himself with a halter
- 47: One piece of fine French drugget
- 48: Captain Merlotte was made to understand
- 49: And desired to see the supercargo
- 50: For our supercargo left nothing
- 51: A boat came from the town of Manilla
- 52: Passed the Straits between that island and Mindora
- 53: Going from New Spain to Manilla
- 54: And Captain Merlotte as commander
- 55: The sixteenth day after we parted from the Ladrones
- 56: So I ordered out our pinnace with six oars
- 57: And about their arms like bracelets
- 58: But first they fired two muskets
- 59: Taking a string of beads and some toys
- 60: Being at least four hundred leagues
- 61: When they took the beads off the stick
- 62: In exchange for an old rusty hatchet
- 63: To take all that for the hatchet
- 64: But our other shallop had much better luck
- 65: The king understood them presently
- 66: Of large handsome white glass beads
- 67: It hung down her back and upon her shoulders very gracefully
- 68: They gave the two fawns to our men
- 69: A fine spotted robe of deer skins
- 70: Our men having thus finished their traffick
- 71: Including the gold our shallop brought
- 72: To go and assist our brigantine
- 73: For we had done little to them since we came from Madagascar
- 74: And we gave them strings of beads
- 75: Being making a bargain with him
- 76: In the most solemn manner imaginable
- 77: And bracelets of beads about its wrists
- 78: If I would give them the sloop
- 79: In return for these manufactures
- 80: As well in repairing our brigantine and careening
- 81: In six and twenty to thirty fathoms
- 82: And found ourselves in the latitude of 50 deg
- 83: I ordered all our boats out a dredging
- 84: Without anticipating their wages
- 85: Why the magnetic influence directs to the poles
- 86: That night it froze extremely hard
- 87: And before the arrack was put into it
- 88: Except some of the old he goats
- 89: Not going away east to the Ladrones
- 90: We concluded they had conversed with other nations
- 91: Lie in the latitude of 40 to 48 deg
- 92: The Spaniard was a good sailer
- 93: And into the Madagascar ship also
- 94: As make that aversion continually increase
- 95: Nor fearing injury from any but the Spaniards
- 96: Jago is the capital city of Chili
- 97: Our next trading port was Coquimbo
- 98: And that we were loaden with calicoes
- 99: At Lima to buy some drugs and medicines
- 100: And those the surgeon interpreted
- 101: Which was not Captain Merlotte
- 102: Came down to Callao on a mule in the night
- 103: Finding his habit a little offensive to our rude seamen
- 104: Which we had also taken in a very good store of at Lima
- 105: And then to ply to the northward
- 106: We asked them what countrymen they were
- 107: And the captain of the Madagascar ship in return
- 108: While we were now sailing for the coast of Chili
- 109: And two thousand five hundred in Chili
- 110: And told him he was disposed to jest with his countrymen
- 111: That he would procure mules for me at Baldivia
- 112: As was the case in the Rio de la Plata
- 113: As near to Carthagena as he could
- 114: About a league to the south of Tucapel
- 115: And such expedition the messenger made
- 116: The Spaniard had not a piece of plate
- 117: Then he pulled out another drawer
- 118: It seems the town adjacent is called Villa Rica
- 119: Yet he had not capitulated for time
- 120: My midshipman returned with the horses and servants
- 121: Fifteen pieces of eight per ell
- 122: According to its proper latitude
- 123: Though the Spaniards were but few
- 124: As well as the rills and brooks on the sides
- 125: The more difficult and impracticable it was
- 126: The entrance lay inclining a little south
- 127: My patron led me into the first tent
- 128: But charged my midshipmen to mark the place
- 129: And at the bottom of those gulleys
- 130: Here we parted with the first Chilian that I mentioned
- 131: Then the Chilian came towards me
- 132: Which are daily cast out of the mouths of those volcanoes
- 133: Where we got a plentiful draught of Chilian wine
- 134: My patron sent off two of his men
- 135: Our goat's flesh being reduced into so many sorts of venison
- 136: That all this vast treasure lies unregarded by them
- 137: If he leaves the country unpossessed
- 138: Higher up in the Rio de la Plata
- 139: I took this opportunity to ask my midshipmen
- 140: What with hallooing and running
- 141: Which they call the Golden Lake
- 142: Which the Chilian had shot while we were gone
- 143: And for their supply of provisions
- 144: Give me leave to go and fetch my hostages
- 145: Now made captain L1000To the midshipmen
- 146: The heaviest part of their baggage
- 147: Which is in the latitude of 50 deg
- 148: The fowls we shot were duck and mallard
- 149: The penguins are so easily killed
- 150: And at night fired some rockets
- 151: And afterwards by the wealthy Chilian
- 152: With mules and horses to carry their baggage
- 153: They had resolved to rob this Chilian
- 154: Seeing a hut or house of a Chilian at some distance
- 155: Compared to the great mountains
- 156: The carpenters and their assistants
- 157: And put all their baggage on board the other two
- 158: In this gust of their greedy appetite
- 159: The country lying low and flat for such a breadth
- 160: By swimming and wading together
- 161: And having refreshed themselves
- 162: The waters of the lake swelled again to a frightful height
- 163: The banks being overflowed both ways very considerably
- 164: That till the land waters were abated
- 165: Having wounded several young bulls very much
- 166: While these canoes were making
- 167: They went to view the waterfall
- 168: To see if there were any more waterfalls
- 169: With which they might tow their large float or barge
- 170: As in the country about Salisbury
- 171: And took out their own rockets
- 172: They answered the rockets punctually
- 173: Having made this capitulation with them
