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Voyages in the Southern Hemisphere, Vol. IVoyaging Accounts
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Streight of Magellan to Cape Monday


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Streight of Magellan to Cape Monday (continued)

once more abreast of Cape Monday, and at five, we anchored in a bay on the east side of it. The pitch of the Cape bore N.W. distant half a mile, and the extream points of the bay from E. to N. by W. We lay at about half a cable’s length from the nearest shore, which was a low island between the ship and the Cape.

At six o’clock the next morning, we weighed, and found that the palm was gone from the small bower anchor. The wind was at W.N.W. with hard rain: at eight o’clock, we found a strong current setting us to the eastward, and at noon, Cape Monday bore W.N.W. distant two miles. The Tamar being to windward of us, fetched into the bay, and anchored again. We continued to lose ground upon every tack, and therefore, at two o’clock, anchored upon the southern shore in sixteen fathom, about five miles to the eastward of Cape Monday. At three, however, I weighed again, for the boat having sounded round the ship, found the ground rocky. The wind was N.W. with hard rain, and we continued working all the rest of the day, and all night, every man on board being upon deck the whole time, and every one wet to the skin, for the rain, or rather sheets of water that came down, did not cease a moment.

In the morning, we had again the mortification to find that, notwithstanding all our labour, we had lost ground upon every tack, in consequence of the current, which continued to set with great force to the eastward. At eight o’clock, we bore away, and at nine, anchored in the same bay from which we sailed on the 15th.

The wind continued W. and W.N.W. without any tide to the westward, all the 18th and 19th, and the weather was exceedingly bad, with hard squalls and heavy rain. In the mean time I had sent an officer with a boat to sound a bay


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© Derived from Volume I of the London 1773 Edition: National Library of Australia call no. FERG 7243, page 73, 2004
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