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      <div>
         <head>A VOYAGE round the WORLD.</head>
         <div>
            <head>BOOK I.</head>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. I.</l>
                  <l>Departure - Passage from Plymouth to Madeira - Description of that Island.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1772. June.][Thursday 11.]</date>A VOYAGE to explore the high southern
                  latitudes of our globe was resolved upon, soon after the return of the Endeavour
                  in 1771. Two stout vessels, the Resolution and the Adventure, were fitted as
                  King's sloops for that purpose, and the command of them given to Capt. James Cook
                  and Capt. Tobias Furneaux. On the 11th of June, 1772, my father and myself were
                  appointed to embark in this expedition, in order to collect, describe, and draw
                  the objects of natural history which we might expect to meet with during our
                  course. We prepared with the utmost alacrity for this arduous undertaking, and in
                  the <date>[Saturday 20.]</date>space of nine days sent all our baggage on board
                  the Resolution, then at Sheerness, but which failed from thence <date>[Monday
                     22.]</date>for Plymouth on the 22d of June.</p>

               <p>We left London on the 26th, and in two Days reached Plymouth, where the Resolution
                  was not yet arrived. The 1st of July, we went on board the Augusta Yacht, and
                  waited on the Earl of Sandwich, then First Lord Commissioner for executing the
                  office of High Admiral. His Lordship expecting the Resolution to come into
                  Plymouth Sound that day, desired us to be on board of her, between the hours of
                  five and six in the evening. However, to our great disappointment, she did not
                  appear, and his Lordship left Plymouth the next morning.</p>

               <p><date>[1772. July.][Friday 3.]</date>The 3d of July early, we saw the Resolution
                  lying in the Sound, where she had arrived the night before. Captain Cook purposed
                  to stay here eight or ten days, and gave orders, that some necessary shelves
                  should be fixed up in our cabins previous to our reception on board. The desire of
                  letting pass no opportunity for the improvement of science, and for our own
                  instruction, prompted us to pass these leisure hours in visiting the tin mines in
                  Cornwall. Having satisfied our curiosity, and being both highly <date>[Wednesday
                     8.]</date>entertained and much instructed by the sight of the rich extensive
                  works at Poldyce and Kenwyn, we returned to Plymouth on the 8th of July.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 11.]</date>On Saturday the 11th, we went on board the Resolution
                  sloop, which was now to sail with the first fair wind. <date>[Sunday
                  12.]</date>The next day it blew a fresh gale; and my father, walking on the
                  quarter-deck, observed our vessel to alter her position considerably in regard to
                  the Adventure (which was to accompany us on our voyage) and to a mast-ship, both
                  at anchor in the Sound; at the same time taking notice that she approached the
                  rocks under the castle. He immediately communicated his apprehensions to Mr.
                  Gilbert, the master, who happened to be upon deck with him. The master found, that
                  the vessel having been moored to one of the transport buoys in the Sound, the
                  buoy, not intended to support such a violent strain, had broke from its ground
                  tackle, and was adrift together with the sloop. In an instant all hands were on
                  deck, the sails spread, and the cables cleared. We shot past the Adventure and
                  mast-ship, and came to an anchor, after escaping the most imminent danger of being
                  dashed against the rocks under the fort. Our seamen looked upon this fortunate
                  event, as an omen favourable to the success of the voyage, while we could not
                  avoid reflecting on the tutelar guidance of divine Providence, which had thus
                  manifested itself in a critical moment, that might easily have put an effectual
                  stop to our projects . We shall, in the course of this history, find frequent
                  instances of impending destruction, where all human help would have been
                  ineffectual, if our better fortune had not prevailed under the superior direction
                  of him, without whose knowledge not a single hair falls from our heads. We are
                  ever ready to give due applause and do full justice to the great skill and good
                  conduct of our able circumnavigators, but we cannot avoid attributing every thing
                  to its proper source, and that especially to a higher power, which human art,
                  though aided by effrontery and irreligion, dares not vindicate to itself.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 13.]</date>Early on Monday the 13th, we set sail from Plymouth
                  Sound, in company with the Adventure. I turned a parting look on the fertile hills
                  of England, and gave way to the natural emotions of affection which that prospect
                  awakened; till the beauty of the morning, and the novelty of gliding through the
                  smooth water attracted my attention, and dispersed the gloominess of former ideas.
                  We soon passed by Eddistone lighthouse, a lofty and well-contrived tower, which is
                  of the greatest advantage to navigation and commerce. It was impossible to look at
                  it, without shuddering with apprehensions for the lonely keepers, who are often
                  obliged to pass three months there, deprived of all communication with the
                  main-land. The fate of Winstanley, who was really crushed by the downfall of a
                  former structure, which he himself had built on this rock, and the vibrations of
                  the present tower, when winds and waves assail it, must give them strong fears of
                  a dreadful and sudden end.</p>

               <p>In proportion as we stood off shore, the wind encreased, the billows rose higher,
                  and the vessel rolled violently from side to side. Those who were not used to the
                  sea, nay some of the oldest mariners, were affected by the sea-sickness, in
                  various degrees of violence. It was of different duration with different persons,
                  and after it had continued three days amongst us, we found the greatest relief
                  from red port wine mulled, with spices and sugar.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 20.]</date>On the 20th, we fell in with Cape Ortegal , on the coast
                  of Gallicia in Spain; the natives call it Ortiguera, and it was probably the
                  Promontorium Trileucum of the ancients. The country hereabouts is hilly; where the
                  naked rock appears it is white, and the tops of the mountains are covered with
                  wood. I also observed some corn-fields almost ripe, and some spots which seemed to
                  be covered with heath. The eagerness with which every body gazed at this land,
                  powerfully persuaded me, that mankind were not meant to be amphibious animals, and
                  that of course our present situation was an unnatural one; an idea that seems to
                  have occurred to Horace, when he says.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 22.]</date>On the 22d, we saw the lighthouse near Corunna , or,
                  as our sailors absurdly call it, the Groyn. It was perfectly calm, the water
                  smooth as a mirror, and the hilly prospect very agreeably varied by corn-fields,
                  inclosures, small hamlets, and gentlemen's seats, every thing conspiring to banish
                  the remains of the sea-sickness entirely from amongst us, and to bring back that
                  chearfulness which could not well keep company with empty stomachs and a
                  tempestuous sea. In the evening we were near a small tartan, which we took to be a
                  fishing vessel from the Spanish coast; and in that persuasion, a boat was hoisted
                  out and sent towards her, in order, if possible, to purchase some fresh fish. In
                  going thither we observed the whole surface of the sea every where covered with
                  myriads of little crabs, not above an inch in diameter, which we found were of the
                  species called cancer depurator by Linæus. The little vessel proved to be a French
                  tartan from Marseilles, of about 100 tons burden, freighted with flour for Ferrol
                  and Corunna. The people in her begged for a small supply of fresh water, having
                  been driven far from their course by contrary winds during two months, by which
                  means this necessary article had been exhausted above a fortnight ago, and they
                  were reduced to live upon bread and a little wine. Whilst they continued in this
                  distressful situation, they had met with several ships at sea, and especially with
                  several Spanish men of war, though none had been humane enough to alleviate their
                  sufferings. When the officer who commanded our boat heard this account, he sent
                  their empty barrels on board our vessel to be filled with fresh water, and their
                  eyes sparkled with the liveliest expression of joy when they received it. They
                  thanked Heaven and us, and rejoiced that they should now be able to light their
                  fire again, and be comforted with some boiled provisions, after their long
                  abstinence. So true is it, that a man with a feeling humane heart, may often, at a
                  very cheap rate, indulge the inclination to assist his fellow-creatures.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 23.]</date>The next afternoon, three Spanish men of war passed us
                  standing in for Ferrol. One of them seemed to be a 74 gun ship, and the two others
                  carried about 60 guns each. The sternmost first hoisted English colours, but when
                  we shewed ours, she hauled them down, fired a gun to leeward, and hoisted the
                  Spanish ensign. Soon after she fired a shot at the Adventure; but as we kept
                  standing on, the Spaniard put about, and fired another shot just a-head of her. In
                  consequence of this, our vessel brought to, and the Adventure now seemed only to
                  follow our example. The Spaniard then hailed the Adventure in English, and asked "
                  what frigate that was a-head," (meaning our sloop); and having been satisfied in
                  that particular, he would not answer a question of the same nature, which was put
                  to him, but always replied, " I wish you a good voyage." We continued our course,
                  after a scene so humiliating to the masters of the sea, and passed Cape Finisterre
                  during night.</p>

               <p>Several porpesses passed us on the 25th, all swimming against the wind, which had
                  been north-easterly ever since we had left Cape Finisterre. At night the sea
                  appeared luminous, particularly the tops of the waves and part of the ship's wake,
                  which were illuminated by a mass of pure light: but, independent of that, there
                  appeared numerous little sparks infinitely brighter than any other part of this
                  phӕnomenon.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 28.]</date>On the 28th, at six of the clock in the morning, we
                  discovered Porto-Santo, which is about five or six leagues long, barren and thinly
                  inhabited. It has only one Villa or town, of the same name, situated on the
                  eastern side, in a valley which is entirely cultivated, and appeared to have a
                  fine verdure from the numerous vineyards it contains. This little island is under
                  the orders of the governor of Madeira, and the number of its inhabitants amounts
                  to about seven hundred.</p>

               <p>Soon after we made Madeira and the Ilhas Desertas, corruptly called the Deserters
                  by our seamen. The town of Santa Cruz in Madeira was abreast of us at six in the
                  afternoon. The mountains are here intersected by numerous deep glens and vallies.
                  On the sloping ground we observed several country-houses pleasantly situated
                  amidst surrounding vineyards and lofty cypresses, which give the country
                  altogether a romantic appearance. We were towed to the road of Funchal in a
                  perfect calm, and came to an anchor in the dark.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 29.]</date>Early on the 29th, we were agreeably surprised with
                  the picturesque appearance of the city of Funchal, which is built round the bay,
                  on the gentle ascent of the first hills, in form of an amphitheatre. All its
                  public and private buildings are by this means set off to advantage. They are in
                  general entirely white, many of them two stories high, and covered with low roofs,
                  from whence they derive that elegant eastern stile, and that simplicity, of which
                  our narrow buildings with steep roofs, and numerous stacks of chimnies are utterly
                  destitute. On the sea side are several batteries and platforms with cannon. An old
                  castle, which commands the road, is situated on the top of a steep black rock,
                  surrounded by the sea at high-water, and called by the English Loo-rock . On a
                  neighbouring eminence above the town there is another, called San Joao do Pico ,
                  or St. John's castle. The hills beyond the town serve to complete the beauty of
                  the landscape, being covered with vineyards, inclosures, plantations, and groves,
                  interspersed with country-houses and several churches. The whole seemed to raise
                  the idea of a fairy-garden, and enabled us to form some conception of the hanging
                  gardens of queen Semiramis .</p>

               <p>About seven o'clock a boat came off to us called the Pratique-boat, having on
                  board a Capitan do Sal , who is once of the two Guarda-Mores of the board of
                  health, appointed to regulate the quarantine of such ships as come from the coast
                  of Barbary, the Arches, and other parts suspected of infectious distempers. This
                  gentleman enquired into the state of health of our ship's company, and the place
                  we came from, and returned on shore with satisfactory information on this
                  subject.</p>

               <p>After breakfast we landed, and went with the captains to the house of Mr.
                  Loughnan, a British merchant, who supplied the king's ships, as contractor, with
                  all the necessaries. The consul, Mr. Murray, lately appointed, was not yet
                  arrived, but Mr. Loughnan received us with such hospitality and elegance, as do
                  honour to himself and to the nation in general.</p>

               <p>The city is far from answering the expectations which may be formed from its
                  appearance towards the road. Its streets are narrow, ill-paved, and dirty; the
                  houses are built of freestone, or of brick, but they are dark, and only a few of
                  the best, belonging to English merchants or principal inhabitants, are provided
                  with glass-windows; all the others have a kind of lattice work in their stead,
                  which hangs on hinges and may be lifted up occasionally. The ground floors are
                  mostly appropriated for the use of servants, for shops, and store-houses.</p>

               <p>The churches and monasteries are very plain buildings, without any display of the
                  architectonic art: their inside exhibits a striking want of taste; the little
                  light which is admitted into them, serving only to display heaps of tinsel
                  ornaments, arranged in a manner which is truely Gothic. The convent of Franciscan
                  friars is clean and spacious, but their gardens seemed not to be kept in the best
                  order. The nuns of Santa Clara politely received us at their grate, but afterwards
                  deputed some old women, to offer the artificial flowers of their manufacture for
                  sale.</p>

               <p>We walked with Mr. Loughnan to his country-seat, which is situated on the hills,
                  about a mile from the city. We there met an agreeable company of the principal
                  British merchants established at Madeira. The captains returned on board in the
                  evening, but we accepted of Mr. Loughnan's obliging offer of his house during our
                  short stay.</p>

               <p>Our excursions began the next morning, and were continued on the following day.
                     <date>[Friday 31.]</date>At five o'clock in the morning we went upwards along
                  the course of a stream, to the interior hilly part of the country. About one
                  o'clock in the afternoon we came to a chesnut grove, somewhat below the highest
                  summit of the island, having walked about six miles from Mr. Loughnan's house. The
                  air was here remarkably cooler than below, and a fine breeze contributed to its
                  temperature. We now engaged a negro to become our conductor, and after a walk of
                  at least an hour and a half, we returned to our hospitable mansion.</p>

               <p><date>[1772. August.][Saturday 1.]</date>The next day we prepared for our
                  departure. It was with regret that I left this delightful spot, and such generous
                  friends, who know how to enjoy the unspeakable pleasure of communicating happiness
                  to their fellow-citizens of the world. My heart still preserves those sentiments
                  of gratitude and esteem, which made me loth to part from hence, and to resign
                  myself to the common fate of travellers. I was however, pleased to find British
                  hospitality existing abroad, which Smollet could no longer trace in England . </p>

               <p>Before I leave this island, I shall offer such remarks, as I had an opportunity of
                  collecting during my stay; and I am induced to believe they will prove acceptable,
                  as they were communicated by sensible Englishmen, who had been inhabitants of
                  Madeira for many years, and are therefore of the best authority. I am aware
                  indeed, that an account of Madeira may by some be looked upon as a superfluous
                  work; but if, upon a candid perusal, it is found to contain such observations as
                  have not yet appeared in the numerous journals of navigators, I hope I shall not
                  need a farther apology. It is very natural to overlook that which is near home,
                  and as it were within our reach, especially when the mind looks forward, on
                  discoveries which it reckons more important, in proportion as they are more
                  remote.</p>

               <p>The island of Madeira is about 55 English miles long, and ten miles broad, and was
                  first discovered on the 2d of July, in the year 1419, by Joao Gonzales Zarco ,
                  there being no historical foundation for the fabulous report of its discovery by
                  one Machin an Englishman. It is divided into two capitanias, named Funchal and
                  Maxico , from the towns of those names. The former contains two judicatures, viz.
                  Funchal and Calhetta , the latter being a town with the title of a county,
                  belonging to the family of Castello Melhor . The second capitania likewise
                  comprehends two judicatures, viz. Maxico (read Mashico) and San Vicente .</p>

               <p> Funchal is the only cidade or city in this island, which has also seven villas or
                  towns; of which there are four, Calhetta, Camara de Lobos, Ribiera braba , and
                  Ponta de Sol in the capitania of Funchal, which is divided into twenty-six
                  parishes. The other three are in the capitania of Maxico, which consist of
                  seventeen parishes; these towns are called Maxico, San Vicente , and Santa Cruz
                  .</p>

               <p>The governor is at the head of all the civil and military departments of this
                  island, of Porto-Santo, the Salvages , and the Ilhas Desertas , which last only
                  contain the temporary huts of some fishermen, who resort thither in pursuit of
                  their business. At the time when I was at Madeira, the governor was Don Joao
                  Antonio de Saa Pereira . He was esteemed a man of good sense and temper, but
                  rather reserved and cautious.</p>

               <p>The law department is under the corregidor, who is appointed by the king of
                  Portugal, commonly sent from Lisbon, and holds his place during the king's
                  pleasure. All causes come to him from inferior courts by appeal. Each judicature
                  has a senate, and a Juiz or judge, whom they choose, presides over them. At
                  Funchal he is called, Juiz da Fora, and in the absence, or after the death of the
                  corregidor, acts as his deputy. The foreign merchants elect their own judge,
                  called the Providor, who is at the same time, collector of the king's customs and
                  revenues, which amount in all to about one hundred and twenty thousand pounds
                  sterling. Far the greatest part of this sum is applied towards the salaries of
                  civil and military officers, the pay of troops, and the maintenance of public
                  buildings. This revenue arises, first from the tenth of all the produce of this
                  island belonging to the king, by virtue of his office as grand master of the order
                  of Christ; secondly, from ten per cent. duties laid on all imports, provisions
                  excepted; and lastly, from the eleven per cent. charged on all exports.</p>

               <p>The island has but one company of regular soldiers of a hundred men: the rest of
                  the military force is a militia consisting of three thousand men, divided into
                  companies, each commanded by a captain, who has one lieutenant under him, and one
                  ensign. There is no pay given to either the private men, or the officers of this
                  militia, and yet their places are much sought after, on account of the rank which
                  they communicate. These troops are embodied once a year, and exercised during one
                  month. All the military are commanded by the Serjeante Môr . The governor has two
                  Capitanos de Sal about him, who do duty as aides-de-camp.</p>

               <p>The secular priests on the island are about twelve hundred, many of whom are
                  employed as private tutors. Since the expulsion of the Jesuits, no regular public
                  school is to be found here, unless we except a seminary where a priest, appointed
                  for that purpose, instructs and educates ten students at the king's expence. These
                  wear a red cloak over the usual black gown, worn by ordinary students. All those
                  who intend to go into orders, are obliged to qualify themselves by studying in the
                  university of Coimbra, lately re-established in Portugal. There is also a dean and
                  chapter at Madeira, with a bishop at their head, whose income is considerably
                  greater than the governor's; it consists of one hundred and ten pipes of wine, and
                  of forty muys of wheat, each containing twenty-four bushels; which amounts in
                  common years to three thousand pounds sterling. Here are likewise sixty or seventy
                  Franciscan friars, in four monasteries, one of which is at Funchal. About three
                  hundred nuns live on the island, in four convents, of the orders of Merci, Sta.
                  Clara, Incarnaçao, and Bom Jesus. Those of the last-mentioned institution may
                  marry whenever they choose, and leave their monastery.</p>

               <p>In the year 1768, the inhabitants living in the forty-three parishes of Madeira,
                  amounted to 63,913, of whom there were 31,341 males, and 32,572 females. But in
                  that year 5243 persons died, and no more than 2198 children were born; so that the
                  number of the dead exceeded that of the born by 3045. It is highly probable that
                  some epidemical distemper carried off so disproportionate a number in that year,
                  as the island would shortly be entirely depopulated, if the mortality were always
                  equal to this. Another circumstance concurs to strengthen this supposition,
                  namely, the excellence of the climate. The weather is in general mild and
                  temperate: In summer the heat is very moderate on the higher parts of the island,
                  whither the better sort of people retire for that season; and in winter the snow
                  remains there for several days, whilst it is never known to continue above a day
                  or two in the lower parts. The accuracy of the numbers of dead and born, may
                  however be entirely depended upon, as a complete list extracted from the parish
                  books was procured for us, from the governor's secretary.</p>

               <p>The common people of this island are of a tawny colour, and well shaped, though
                  they have large feet, owing perhaps to the efforts they are obliged to make in
                  climbing the craggy paths of this mountainous country. Their faces are oblong,
                  their eyes dark; their black hair naturally falls in ringlets, and begins to crisp
                  in some individuals, which may perhaps be owing to intermarriages with negroes; in
                  general they are hard featured, but not disagreeable. Their women are too
                  frequently ill-favoured, and want the florid complexion, which, when united to a
                  pleasing assemblage of regular features, gives our Northern fair ones the
                  superiority over all their sex. They are small, have prominent cheek-bones, large
                  feet, and ungraceful gait, and the colour of the darkest brunette. The just
                  proportions of their body, the fine form of their hands, and their large, lively
                  eyes, seem in some measure to compensate for those defects. The labouring men in
                  summer, wear linen trowsers, a coarse shirt, a large hat, and boots; some had a
                  short jacket made of cloth, and a long cloak, which they sometimes carried over
                  their arm. The women wear a petticoat, and a short corselet or jacket, closely
                  fitting their shape, which is a simple, and often not inelegant dress. They have
                  also a short, but wide cloak, and those that are unmarried, tie their hair on the
                  crown of their head, on which they wear no covering.</p>

               <p>The country people are exceeding sober and frugal; their diet in general
                  consisting of bread and onions, or other roots, and little animal food. However,
                  they avoid eating tripe, or any offals, because it is proverbially said of a very
                  poor man, " he is reduced to eat tripe." Their common drink is water, or an
                  infusion on the remaining rind or skin of the grape (after it has passed through
                  the winepress) which when fermented, acquires some tartness and acidity, but
                  cannot be kept very long. The wine for which the island is so famous, and which
                  their own hands prepare, seldom if ever regales them.</p>

               <p>Their principal occupation is the planting and raising of vines, but as that
                  branch of agriculture requires little attendance during the greatest part of the
                  year, they naturally incline to idleness. The warmth of the climate, which renders
                  great provision against the inclemencies of weather unnecessary, and the ease with
                  which the cravings of appetite are satisfied, must tend to indolence, wherever the
                  regulations of the legislature do not counteract it, by endeavouring with the
                  prospect of encreasing happiness, to infuse the spirit of industry. It seems the
                  Portuguese government does not pursue the proper methods against this dangerous
                  lethargy of the state. They have lately ordered the plantation of olive-trees
                  here, on such spots as are too dry and barren to bear vines; but they have not
                  thought of giving temporary assistance to the labourers, and have offered no
                  premium by which these might be induced to conquer their reluctance to
                  innovations, and aversion to labour.</p>

               <p>The vineyards are held only on an annual tenure, and the farmer reaps but four
                  tenths of the produce, since four other tenths are paid in kind to the owner of
                  the land, one tenth to the king, and one to the clergy. Such small profits, joined
                  to the thought of toiling merely for the advantage of others, if improvements were
                  attempted, entirely preclude the hopes of a future increase. Oppressed as they
                  are, they have however preserved a high degree of chearfulness, and contentment;
                  their labours are commonly alleviated with songs, and in the evening they assemble
                  from different cottages, to dance to the drowsy music of a guittar.</p>

               <p>The inhabitants of the towns are more ill-favoured than the country people, and
                  often pale and lean. The men wear French cloaths, commonly black, which do not
                  seem to fit them, and have been in fashion in the polite world about half a
                  century ago. Their ladies are delicate, and have agreeable features; but the
                  characteristic jealousy of the men still locks them up, and deprives them of a
                  happiness which the country women, amidst all their distresses, enjoy. Many of the
                  better people, are a sort of petite noblesse, which we would call gentry, whose
                  genealogical pride makes them unsociable and ignorant, and causes a ridiculous
                  affectation of gravity. The landed property is in the hands of a few ancient
                  families, who live at Funchal, and in the various towns on the island.</p>

               <p>Madeira consists of one large mountain, whose branches rise every where from the
                  sea towards the centre of the isle, converging to the summit, in the midst of
                  which, I was told, is a depression or excavation, called the Val by the
                  inhabitants, always covered with a fresh and delicate herbage. The stones on the
                  isle, which we examined, seemed to have been in the fire, were full of holes, and
                  of a blackish colour; in short, the greater part of them were lava. A few of them
                  were of the kind which the Derby-shire miners call dunstone. The soil of the whole
                  island is a tarras mixed with some particles of clay, lime, and sand, and has much
                  the same appearance as some earths we since found on the isle of Ascension From
                  this circumstance, and from the excavation of the summit of the mountain, I am
                  induced to suppose, that in some remote period, a volcano has produced the lava,
                  and the ochreous particles, and that the Val was formerly its crater. At first
                  sight of Madeira I was of a different opinion; but the black Loo-rock, the cliff
                  on which St. John's castle stands, the nature of the soil and stones, and the
                  situation of the Val, convinced me, that the whole had formerly undergone a
                  violent change by fire.</p>

               <p>Many brooks and small rivulets descend from the summits in deep chasms or glens,
                  which separate the various parts of the isle. We could not however perceive any
                  plains mentioned by others , through which the waters would probably have taken
                  their course, if any such had existed. The beds of the brooks are in some places
                  covered with stones of all sizes, carried down from the higher parts by the
                  violence of winter rains or floods of melted snow. The water is conducted by wears
                  and channels into the vineyards, where each proprietor has the use of it for a
                  certain time; some being allowed to keep a constant supply of it, some to use it
                  thrice, others twice, and others only once a week. As the heat of the climate
                  renders this supply of water to the vineyards absolutely necessary, it is not
                  without great expence that a new vineyard can be planted; for the maintenance of
                  which, the owners must purchase water at a high price, from those who are
                  constantly supplied, and are thus enabled to spare some of it.</p>

               <p>Wherever a level piece of ground can be contrived in the higher hills, the natives
                  make plantations of eddoes (arum esculentum, Linn.) enclosed by a kind of dyke to
                  cause a stagnation, as that plant succeeds best in swampy ground. Its leaves serve
                  as food for hogs, and the country people use the roots for their own
                  nourishment.</p>

               <p>The sweet potatoe (convolvulus batatas) is planted for the same purpose, and makes
                  a principal article of diet; together with chesnuts, which grow in extensive
                  woods, on the higher parts of the island, where the vine will not thrive. Wheat
                  and barley are likewise sown, especially in spots where the vines are decaying
                  through age, or where they are newly planted. But the crops do not produce above
                  three months provisions, and the inhabitants are therefore obliged to have
                  recourse to other food, besides importing considerable quantities of corn from
                  North-America in exchange for wine. The want of manure, and the inactivity of the
                  people, are in some measure the causes of this disadvantage; but supposing
                  husbandry to be carried to its perfection here, I believe they could not raise
                  corn sufficient for their consumption. They make their threshing-floors of a
                  circular form, in a corner of the field, which is cleared and beaten solid for the
                  purpose. The sheaves are laid round about it, and a square board stuck full of
                  sharp flints below, is dragged over them by a pair of oxen, the driver getting on
                  it to encrease its weight. This machine cuts the straw as if it had been chopped,
                  and frees the grain from the husk, from which it is afterwards separated.</p>

               <p>The great produce of Madeira is the wine, from which it has acquired fame and
                  support. Where the soil, exposure, and supply of water will admit of it, the vine
                  is cultivated. One or more walks, about a yard or two wide, intersect each
                  vineyard, and are included by stone-walls two feet high. Along these walks, which
                  are arched over with laths about seven feet high, they erect wooden pillars at
                  regular distances, to support a lattice-work of bamboos, which slopes down from
                  both sides of the walk, till it is only a foot and a half or two feet high, in
                  which elevation it extends over the whole vineyard. The vines are in this manner
                  supported from the ground, and the people have room to root out the weeds which
                  spring up between them. In the season of the vintage they creep under this
                  lattice-work, cut off the grapes, and lay them into baskets: some bunches of these
                  grapes I saw, which weighed six pounds and upwards. This method of keeping the
                  ground clean and moist, and ripening the grapes in the shade, contributes to give
                  the Madeira wines that excellent flavour and body for which they are remarkable.
                  The owners of vineyards are however obliged to allot a certain spot of ground for
                  the growth of bamboos; for the lattice-work cannot be made without them; and I was
                  told some vineyards lay quite neglected for want of this useful reed.</p>

               <p>The wines are not all of equal goodness, and consequently of different prices. The
                  best, made of a vine imported from Candia, by order of the Infante of Portugal,
                  Don Henry, is called Madeira Malmsey, a pipe of which cannot be bought on the spot
                  for less than 40 or 42 l. sterling. It is an exceeding rich sweet wine, and is
                  only made in a small quantity. The next sort is a dry wine, such as is exported
                  for the London market, at 30 or 31 l. sterling the pipe. Inferior sorts for the
                  East India, West India, and North-American markets, fell at 28, 25, and 20 l.
                  sterling. About thirty thousand pipes, upon a mean, are made every year, each
                  containing one hundred and ten gallons. About thirteen thousand pipes of the
                  better sorts are exported, and all the rest is made into brandy for the Brazils,
                  converted into vinegar, or consumed at home.</p>

               <p>The enclosures of the vineyards consist of walls, and hedges of prickly pear,
                  pomegranates, myrtles, brambles, and wild roses. The gardens produce peaches,
                  apricots, quinces, apples, pears, walnuts, chesnuts, and many other European
                  fruits; together with now and then some tropical plants, such as bananas, goavas,
                  and pine-apples. </p>

               <p>All the common domestic animals of Europe are like wise found at Madeira; and
                  their mutton and beef, though small, is very well tasted. Their horses are small,
                  but sure-footed; and with great agility climb the difficult paths, which are the
                  only means of communication in the country. They have no wheel-carriages of any
                  kind; but in the town they use a sort of drays or sledges, formed of two pieces of
                  plank joined by cross pieces, which make an acute angle before; these are drawn by
                  oxen, and are used to transport casks of wine, and other heavy goods, to and from
                  the warehouses.</p>

               <p>The animals of the feathered tribe, which live wild here, are more numerous than
                  the wild quadrupeds; there being only the common grey rabbet here, as a
                  representative of the last-mentioned class. We observed the sparrow-hawk, (falco
                  nisus); several crows, (corvus corone); magpies, (corvus pica); sky and
                  wood-larks, (alauda arvensis, &amp; arborea); starlings, (sturnus vulgaris);
                  yellow hammers, (emberiza citrinella); common and mountain sparrows, (fringilla
                  domestica &amp; montana); yellow wagtails and robin redbreasts, (motacilla flava
                  &amp; rubecula); and wild pigeons, of which we could not determine the species. We
                  likewise saw the house-swallow and swift, (hirundo rustica &amp; apus); and some
                  gentlemen of the British factory assured us they had also seen the martin, (h.
                  urbica). This last genus of birds lives here all the winter, and only disappears
                  for a few days in very cold weather, retiring to clifts and crevices of the rocks,
                  and returning on the first fair sunny day. The red-legged partridge, (tetrao
                  rufus), is likewise common in the interior parts of the isle, where it is not much
                  disturbed. In Mr. Loughnan's aviary I saw waxbills, (loxia astrild), chaffinches,
                  goldfinches, yellowfinches, and canary-birds, (fringilla coelebs, carduelis,
                  butyracea, &amp; canaria); all of which had been caught upon this island. Tame
                  birds, such as turkies, geese, ducks, and hens, are very rare, which is perhaps
                  owing to the scarcity of corn.</p>

               <p>There are no snakes whatsoever in Madeira; but all the houses, vineyards, and
                  gardens swarm with lizards. The friars of one of the convents complained, that
                  these vermin destroyed the fruit in their garden; they had therefore placed a
                  brass kettle in the ground to catch them, as they are constantly running about in
                  quest of food. In this manner they daily caught hundreds, which could not get out
                  on account of the smooth sides of the kettle, but were forced to perish.</p>

               <p>The shores of Madeira, and of the neighbouring Salvages and Desertas, are not
                  without fish; but as they are not in plenty enough for the rigid observance of
                  Lent, pickled herrings are brought from Gothenburg in English bottoms, and salted
                  cod from New-York and other American ports, to supply the deficiency.</p>

               <p>We found a few insects here, and might perhaps have collected more, if our stay
                  had been of longer duration; those we met with were of known sorts, and in no
                  great variety. On this occasion I shall mention a general remark, which ought to
                  be applied to all the islands we have touched at during the course of our voyage.
                  Quadrupeds, amphibious reptiles, and insects, are not numerous in islands, at some
                  distance from a continent, and the first are not to be met with at all, unless
                  they were formerly transported thither by men. Fishes and birds, which are able to
                  pass through water or air, are more frequent, and in greater variety. Continents,
                  on the other hand, are rich in the above-mentioned classes of animals, as well as
                  in those of birds and fishes, which are more universal. Africa, which we visited
                  during this voyage, in a few weeks supplied us with a great variety of quadrupeds,
                  reptiles, and insects, whilst all the other lands where we touched, afforded no
                  new discoveries in those classes.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. II.</l>
                  <l>The Passage from Madeira to the Cape Verd Islands, and from thence to the Cape
                     of Good Hope. </l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1772. August.]</date>LATE in the evening on the first of August, we got
                  under sail, in company with the Adventure. A North-east wind forwarded our course
                  so well, that we got sight <date>[Tuesday 4.]</date>of Palma on the fourth, early
                  in the morning. This island is one of the group now called the Canaries, known to
                  the ancients by the name of Insulӕ Fortunatœ, one of them being already at that
                  time distinguished by the name of Canaria . They were entirely forgotten in
                  Europe, till towards the end of the fourteenth century, when the spirit of
                  navigation and discovery was revived. Some adventurers then found them again, and
                  the Biscayans landed on Lanzarota, and carried off one hundred and seventy of the
                  natives. Luis de la Cerda, a Spanish nobleman of the royal family of Castile, in
                  consequence of a bull from the Pope, in the year 1344, assumed the title of Prince
                  of the Fortunate Islands, but never went to take possession of his estates.
                  Lastly, John, Baron de Bethencourt of Normandy, visited these islands again in the
                  year 1402, took possession of several, and called himself King of the Canaries.
                  His nephew ceded his claims upon them to Don Henry, Infante of Portugal; but they
                  were afterwards left to the Spaniards, who now possess them.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 5.]</date>The next day at five o'clock in the morning, we passed
                  the isle of Ferro, remarkable only from this circumstance, that several
                  geographers have reckoned their first meridian from its westermost extremity. The
                  same day, being in about 27 deg. N. latitude, we observed several flying fishes,
                  pursued by bonitos and dolphins, rising out of the water in order to escape from
                  them. They were flying in all directions, and not against the wind only, as Mr.
                  Kalm seems to think. Neither did they confine themselves to a strait-lined course,
                  but frequently were seen to describe a curve. When they met the top of a wave as
                  they skimmed along the surface of the ocean, they passed through, and continued
                  their flight beyond it. From this time, till we left the torrid zone, we were
                  almost daily amused with the view of immense shoals of these fishes, and now and
                  then caught one upon our decks when it had unfortunately taken its flight too far,
                  and was spent by its too great elevation above the surface of the sea. In the
                  uniform life which we led between the tropics, where we found weather, wind, and
                  sea, almost constantly favourable and agreeable, the mind catched at every little
                  circumstance that could give the hint to a reflection. When we saw the most
                  beautiful fishes of the sea, the dolphin and bonito, in pursuit of the flying
                  fish, and when these forsook their native element to seek for shelter in air, the
                  application to human nature was obvious. What empire is not like a tumultuous
                  ocean, where the great in all the magnificence and pomp of power, continually
                  persecute and contrive the destruction of the defenceless? - Sometimes we saw this
                  picture continued still farther, when the poor fugitives met with another set of
                  enemies in the air, and became the prey of birds , by endeavouring to escape the
                  jaws of fishes.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 8.]</date>On the 8th we observed the sea to be of a whitish
                  colour, and tried for soundings, but found none with fifty fathoms of line. In the
                  evening we crossed the tropic of cancer. About this time, the captain ordered the
                  ship to be fumigated with gunpowder and vinegar, having taken notice that all our
                  books, and utensils became covered with mould, and all our iron and steel though
                  ever so little exposed, began to rust. Nothing is more probable than that the
                  vapours, which now filled the air, contained some saline particles, since moisture
                  alone does not appear to produce such an effect . If it be asked how any saline
                  particles, generally so much heavier than the aqueous, can be raised in vapours, I
                  leave it to the philosophers to determine, whether the numerous animal parts which
                  daily putrefy in the ocean, do not supply enough of the volatile alkali, by the
                  assistance of which the above phӕnomenon might be explained. The great heat
                  between the tropics seems to volatilise the marine acid contained in the brine and
                  common salt: for it has been observed, that on rags dipped in a solution of any
                  one of the alkalies, and suspended over one of the pans where brine is evaporated
                  and salt is prepared, crystals are soon formed of a neutral salt, compounded of
                  the marine acid and the alkali in which the rags had been immersed; hence perhaps
                  we may be allowed to infer, that the marine acid is by the heat of the tropical
                  sun volatilised, and in that aërial or vaporous form attacks the surface of iron
                  and steel; nay, this little quantity of acid may perhaps, imbibed by the lungs,
                  and pores of the skin, become salutary; in the first case to people under
                  pulmonary diseases; and in the second by gently bracing the habit of bodies
                  relaxed by a tropical heat, and moderating the too violent perspiration.</p>

               <p>The inspissated essence of beer, of which we had several casks on board, was
                  observed to be in motion before we left Madeira, and now began to burst the casks
                  and run out. The captain ordering it to be brought on deck, its fermentation was
                  encreased by the addition of fresh air, and several of the casks had their heads
                  forced out by the fermenting liquor, with an explosion like that of a
                  fowling-piece. A kind of vapour, like smoke, always preceded the eruption. A
                  vessel, strongly fumigated with sulphur, was, by my father's advice, filled with
                  this essence, by which means the fermentation was stopped for a few days, but
                  returned afterwards, especially in casks exposed to the free access of air. Some
                  casks, which had been buried in the ballast-shingle, were preserved and prevented
                  from bursting. Perhaps the admixture of double-distilled spirit, might have
                  hindered the progress of fermentation in this essence. The beer made of it, by the
                  simple addition of warm water, was very good and palatable, though it had a little
                  empyreumatic taste, caused by the inspissation.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 11.]</date>August the 11th we discovered Bonavista, one of the
                  Cape-Verd islands. The next morning, the weather cleared up, after a shower of
                  rain, and presented to our sight the isle of Mayo. About noon we approached the
                  isle of San Jago, and anchored at three o'clock in the afternoon in
                  Porto-Praya.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 13.]</date>Early the next morning, we went on shore, and visited
                  the commandant of the fort, Don Joseph de Sylva, a good-natured man, who spoke the
                  French imperfectly, and introduced us to the governor-general of the Cape-Verd
                  islands. This gentleman, whose name was Don Joachim Salama Saldanha de Lobos,
                  commonly resides at St. Jago, the capital of the island; but as he was very
                  sickly, which his complexion witnessed for him, he had retired hither about two
                  months ago, where the air is reckoned more salubrious. He occupied the apartments
                  of the commandant, who was now obliged to dwell in a wretched cottage, and who
                  gave us some information relative to these islands.</p>

               <p>In 1449, Antonio Nolli, probably by others named Antoniotto, a Genoese in the
                  service of Don Henry, Infante of Portugal, discovered some of the Cape-Verd
                  islands, and on the first of May landed on one of them, which had its name from
                  thence. St. Jago was seen at the same time. In 1460, another voyage was undertaken
                  in order to settle them; and on this occasion the remaining islands were likewise
                  discovered. San Jago is the greatest of them, and about seventeen leagues in
                  length. The capital, of the same name, lies in the interior parts of the country,
                  and is the see of the bishop of all the Cape-Verd islands. This isle is divided
                  into eleven parishes, and the most populous of these contains about four thousand
                  houses, so that it is but very thinly inhabited.</p>

               <p>Porto-Praya stands on a steep rock, to which we climbed by a serpentine path. Its
                  fortifications are old decayed walls on the sea side, and fences, scarce
                  breast-high, made of loose stones, towards the land. A small church is inclosed
                  within these walls, towards the sea; but, besides it, there are only a few
                  cottages. A tolerable building, at a little distance from the fort, belongs to a
                  company of merchants at Lisbon who have the exclusive right to trade to all the
                  Cape-Verd islands, and keep an agent here for that purpose. When we made
                  application to this indolent Don, by the Governor's direction, to be supplied with
                  live cattle, he indeed promised to furnish as many as we wanted, but we never got
                  more than a single lean bullock. The company perfectly tyrannizes over the
                  inhabitants, and sells them wretched merchandize at exorbitant prices.</p>

               <p>The natives of St. Jago are few in number, of a middle stature, ugly, and almost
                  perfectly black, with frizzled woolly hair, and thick lips, like the most
                  ill-looking kind of negroes. The ingenious and very learned Canon Pauw, at Xanten,
                  in his Recherches Philosophiques fur les Americains, vol. I. p. 186. seems to take
                  it for granted, that they are the descendants of the first Portuguese settlers,
                  gradually degenerated through nine generations (three hundred years) to their
                  present hue, which we found darker than he describes it. But whether, according to
                  his and the Abbé de Manet's opinion, this change of complexion was effected merely
                  by the heat of the torrid zone, or whether they have acquired their sable colour
                  by intermarriages with negroes from the adjacent coast of Africa, is a question
                  which I do not venture to decide, though so able and judicious an investigator of
                  nature as Count Buffon, asserts, that " the colours of the human species depend
                  principally on the climate." See Histoire Naturelle, in 12mo, vol. VI. p. 260. At
                  present there are very few white people among them, and I believe we did not see
                  above five or six, including the governor, commandant, and company's agent. In
                  some of the islands, even the governors and priests are taken from among the
                  blacks. The better sort of them wear ragged European cloaths, which they have
                  obtained by barter from ships that touched here, previous to the establishment of
                  the monopolizing company. The rest content themselves with a few separate articles
                  of dress, either a shirt, or a waistcoat, or a pair of breeches, or a hat; and
                  seem to be well pleased with their own appearance. The women are ugly, and wear a
                  long strip of striped cotton over the shoulders, hanging down to the knees before
                  and behind; but children are perfectly naked till the age of puberty. Despotic
                  governors, bigotted priests, and indolence on the part of the court of Lisbon,
                  will always keep these people in a wretched situation, beneath that of any
                  community of negroes in Africa, and prevent them from increasing their numbers,
                  which are the real wealth of a nation. It is natural for people whose solids are
                  relaxed in a fervid climate, to incline to sloth and laziness; but they are
                  confirmed in these vices, and must become indifferent to improvement, when they
                  know the attempt would only make their situation more irksome. With a kind of
                  gloomy insensibility they give themselves up to beggary, the only state which can
                  protect them from the greedy clutches of tyrannical masters; and they shun every
                  labour, which must encrease the treasures of others without benefit to themselves;
                  and which only breaks in upon those hours of rest, that are now the solace of
                  their precarious condition. Such clouded prospects, that never admit a gleam of
                  happiness, cannot be incitements to marriage, and the difficulty of supporting a
                  wretched existence, is a sufficient reason to decline the cares annexed to the
                  relation of parents. Let us add to this, that the dry soil, whose fertility
                  depends on the stated return of annual rains, is parched up whenever a drought
                  takes place; all vegetation is then destroyed, and an inevitable famine succeeds.
                  It may be reasonably supposed, that the experience of such fatal periods, deters
                  the inhabitants from indulging in the sweets of conjugal connections, when they
                  must apprehend that misery, and perhaps the horrors of slavery, await their
                  unhappy offspring .</p>

               <p>The Cape-Verd islands in general are mountainous, but their lower hills which are
                  covered with a fine verdure, have a very gentle declivity, and extensive vallies
                  run between them. They are ill supplied with water, which in many of them is only
                  found in pits or wells. St. Jago has, however, a tolerable river running into the
                  sea at Ribiera Grande, a town which takes its name from thence. At Porto-Praya
                  there was only a single well set round with loose stones, and containing muddy
                  brackish water, in such small quantities, that we drew it quite dry twice a day.
                  The valley by the side of the fort seems to have some moisture, and is planted
                  here and there with cocoa-nut-palms, sugar-canes, bananas, cotton, goava, and
                  papaw-trees; but the greatest part of it is over-run with various sorts of
                  brushwood, and another is left for pastures.</p>

               <p>We may perhaps conclude from hence, that the Cape-Verd islands in the hands of an
                  active, enterprising, or commercial nation, would become interesting and useful,
                  and might be cultivated to the greatest advantage. The cochineal-plant, indigo,
                  some spices, and perhaps coffee, would thrive particularly well in this hot and
                  parched climate; and these productions would be sufficient to supply the natives
                  not only with the necessaries, but likewise with the conveniences and luxuries of
                  life, under the benign influence of a free and equal government, like that under
                  which we have the happiness to live in this country. Instead of feeding on a
                  scanty allowance of roots, we should see their board heaped with plenty, and
                  convenient houses would then supply the place of wretched hovels.</p>

               <p>Some of the lower hills were dry and barren, scarce any plants growing upon them;
                  but others had still some verdure on them, though we were now at the end of the
                  dry season. They are all covered with abundance of stones, which appear to have
                  been burnt, and are a species of lava. The foil, which is fertile enough in the
                  vallies, is a kind of rubbish of cinders, and ochreous ashes; and the rocks on the
                  sea-shore are likewise black and burnt. It is therefore probably, that this island
                  has undergone a change from volcanic eruptions; and it will not be deemed
                  unreasonable to form the same opinion of all the Cape-Verd islands, when we
                  consider that one of them, the island of Fuogo, still consists of a burning
                  mountain. The interior mountains of the country are lofty, and some of them appear
                  steep and craggy, being perhaps of a more ancient date than the volcanic parts
                  which we could examine.</p>

               <p>In the evening we returned on board; but as the surf ran considerably higher than
                  at our landing, we were obliged to strip in order to wade to our boats, which our
                  best swimmers had loaded with water-casks, and such refreshments as could be
                  purchased on shore; not without some danger of being hurt by sharks, which are
                  numerous in the harbour. The captains, astronomers, and masters, had spent this
                  day in making astronomical observations upon the little islet in the harbour,
                  named Ilha dos Codornizes or Quail island, from the birds which are in great
                  plenty upon it. The commandant of the fort informed us, that the officers of a
                  French frigate had likewise made astronomical observations on this identical spot
                  some time ago, having several watches of a new construction on board .</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 14.]</date>The next day captain Cook invited the governor-general,
                  and the commandant to dinner, and we staid on board, in order to act as
                  interpreters on this occasion. The captain sent them his own boat; but when it
                  came on shore, the governor begged to be excused, because he was always affected
                  with sickness on board any vessel, whether at sea or in harbour. The commandant
                  promised to come, but having at first neglected to ask the governor's leave, the
                  latter retired to take his siesta (or afternoon's repose) and no one ventured to
                  disturb him.</p>

               <p>The extreme scarcity of refreshments made our stay at Porto-Praya very short. We
                  were therefore obliged to content ourselves with a few casks of brackish water, a
                  single bullock, a few long-legged goats, with strait horns and pendulous ears,
                  some lean hogs, turkies, and fowls, and a few hundreds of unripe oranges, and
                  indifferent bananas. The researches we had made the preceding day, furnished us
                  with a few tropical plants, mostly of known species, with some new kinds of
                  insects and of fish. We also observed several sorts of birds, and among them
                  guinea-hens, which seldom fly, but run very swiftly, and which, when old, are very
                  tough and dry eating. Quails and red-legged partridges are likewise common,
                  according to the report of the natives, though we did not see any; but the most
                  remarkable bird we found is a species of Kingfisher , because it feeds on large
                  land-crabs of a blue and red colour, whose numerous habitations are round and deep
                  holes in the dry and parched soil. Our sailors, who catch at every thing that may
                  afford them diversion, purchased about fifteen or twenty monkies, known by the
                  name of St. Jago, or green monkies (simia sabœa); which were a little bigger than
                  cats, and of a greenish-brown colour, with black faces and paws. On each side of
                  their mouth, they had a kind of pouch (like many others of the monkey tribe) which
                  the English in the West-Indian colonies, call by their Spanish name alforjes. The
                  antic tricks of these little monkies were amusing for some days, while their
                  novelty lasted; but they soon became insipid companions, were neglected, sometimes
                  cruelly bandied about the vessel, and starved to death for want of fresh food, so
                  that only three of them reached the Cape of Good Hope. A harmless race of animals,
                  dragged from the happy recess of native shades, to wear out the rest of their
                  lives in continual anguish and torment, deserve a pitying remembrance, though
                  humanity would fain have drawn the veil of all acts of iron-hearted insensibility,
                  and wanton barbarism.</p>

               <p>We got under sail in the evening and steered to the southward, having mild weather
                  with frequent showers of rain on the following days, and the wind blowing from
                  N.E. by N. to N.N.E. <date>[Sunday 16.]</date>On the 16th, at eight o'clock in the
                  evening, we saw a luminous fiery meteor, of an oblong shape and blueish colour,
                  and having a very quick descending motion: its course was N.W. and it disappeared
                  in the horizon after a momentary duration. Our distance from St. Jago was
                  fifty-five leagues at noon, notwithstanding which, we saw a swallow following our
                  vessel, and making numberless circles round it. The necessary manoeuvres of
                  trimming the sails, in the evening disturbed it from its roost on one of the
                  gun-ports, upon which it took shelter in the carved work of the stern.
                     <date>[Tuesday 18.]</date>The two following days it continued to attend the
                  ship on her course. During this time we observed many bonitos in the sea around
                  us, which frequently shot past us with great velocity; but notwithstanding our
                  endeavours to catch them with hooks, and strike them with harpoons, we could not
                  take a single one. The crew were more successful in hooking a shark of about five
                  feet in length. Its common attendants, the pilot-fish (gasterosteus ductor) and
                  sucking-fish (echeneis remora), likewise appeared with it; but with this
                  difference, that the former carefully avoided being caught; and swam about very
                  nimbly; but the latter stuck so fast to the shark's body, that four of them were
                  hauled on deck with it. We dined on part of the shark the next day, and found it a
                  tolerable food when fried, but rather of difficult digestion on account of its
                  fat.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 20.]</date>Two days after, Henry Smock, one of the carpenter's
                  crew, being employed on the sides of the ship, was suddenly missed, and probably
                  had fallen over-board and was drowned. His good-natured character, and a kind of
                  serious turn of mind caused him to be regretted even among his shipmates, and must
                  embitter his loss to those, whom the tender ties of parental or conjugal affection
                  had united to him. Humanity stole a tear from each feeling traveller, the tribute
                  due to a rational fellow creature of a gentle and amiable disposition.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 21.]</date>We had frequent showers after leaving St. Jago, and
                  experienced a remarkable heavy fall of rain on the <date>21st</date>, during which
                  we caught up seven puncheons of fresh water in our spread awnings. This supply,
                  though we were not distressed for want of it, was however very seasonable,
                  inasmuch as we were now enabled to give large allowance of this necessary element
                  to the crew. Captain Cook's remark deduced from long experience, that abundance of
                  fresh water contributes to the preservation of health in long voyages, is
                  extremely judicious, and seems to be founded on the known principles of
                  physiology. If seamen have plenty of water to drink, and some to wash themselves
                  and their linen, this essential precaution will in a great measure prevent the
                  sea-scurvy from gaining ground among them. Their blood is diluted, and the waste
                  of fluids caused by profuse perspiration in hot climates, is restored by plentiful
                  drinking, and the insensible perspiration likewise goes on without a check, when
                  the people frequently shift their linen, and wash off any uncleanliness that may
                  obstruct the pores. It is evident that the greatest danger of putrid distempers is
                  thus precluded; since the reimbibing of perspired matter, and the violence of
                  perspiration without a fresh supply to temper and dilute the saline and caustic
                  quality of the remaining fluids, (which are often supposed to be the causes of
                  inflammatory fevers) are both in a great measure prevented.</p>

               <p>The heavy rains of this morning, entirely soaked the plumage of the poor swallow,
                  which had accompanied us for several days past; it was obliged therefore to settle
                  on the railing of the quarter-deck, and suffered itself to be caught. I dried it,
                  and when it was recovered, let it fly about in the steerage, where, far from
                  repining at its confinement, it immediately began to feed upon the flies, which
                  were numerous there. At dinner we opened the windows, and the swallow retook its
                  liberty; but about six in the evening, it returned into the steerage and cabin,
                  being sensible that we intended it no harm. Having taken another repast of flies,
                  it went out again, and roosted that night somewhere on the outside of the vessel.
                  Early the next morning our swallow returned into the cabin once more, and took its
                  breakfast of flies. Emboldened by the shelter which we afforded it, and the little
                  disturbance it suffered from us, the poor little bird now ventured to enter the
                  ship at every port and scuttle which was open; some parts of the morning it passed
                  very happily in Mr. Wales's cabin; but after having left that it entirely
                  disappeared. It is more than probable that it came into the birth of some
                  unfeeling person, who caught it in order to provide a meal for a favourite
                  cat.</p>

               <p>From the history of this bird, which was of the common species, or a house-swallow
                  (hirundo rustica Lin.) we may deduce the circumstances that bring solitary
                  land-birds a great way out to sea. It seems to be probable, that they begin with
                  following a ship, from the time she leaves the land; that they are soon lost in
                  the great ocean, and are thus obliged to continue close to the ship, as the only
                  solid mass in this immense fluid expanse. If two or more ships are in company, it
                  is also easy to account for the expression of meeting with land-birds at a great
                  distance from land; because they may happen to follow some other ship from the
                  shore, than that which carries the observer; thus they may escape observation for
                  a day or two, or perhaps longer, and when noticed, are supposed to be met with at
                  sea. However, great storms are sometimes known to have driven single birds, nay
                  vast flocks out to sea, which are obliged to seek for rest on board of ships, at
                  considerable distances from any land . I shall venture another reflection on this
                  incident. In the long solitary hours of an uniform navigation, every little
                  circumstance becomes interesting to the passenger; it is therefore not to be
                  wondered at, if a subject so trifling in itself as putting to death a harmless
                  bird, should affect a heart not yet buffeted into insensibility.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 23.]</date>On the 23d, several ceraceous fish, from fifteen to
                  twenty feet long passed the ship, directing their course to the N. and N.W. They
                  were supposed to be grampusses, (delphinus orca). <date>[Tuesday 25.]</date>Two
                  days after the same kind of fish, and a number of lesser ones of a brownish
                  colour, called skip-jacks, from leaping frequently out of the water, were
                  observed. The wind for several days past had blown from the N.W. and obliged us to
                  take a S.E. course, so that we were now got to the southward of the coast of
                  Guinea. Several of our navigators, who had frequently crossed the Atlantic, looked
                  upon this as a singular circumstance; and indeed it fairly proves, that though
                  nature in the torrid zone commonly produces regular and constant winds,
                  nevertheless it sometimes deviates even there from general rules, and admits of
                  several exceptions. In this situation we also observed several man-of-war birds,
                  (pelecanus aquilus). It is a common belief among sailors that their appearance
                  denotes a vicinity of land; but we were at present above a hundred leagues from
                  any shore, so that this opinion seems to have no better support than many old
                  prejudices. Each eradication of one of these is a gain to science; and each vulgar
                  opinion, proved to be erroneous, is an approximation to truth, which alone is
                  worthy of being recorded for the use of mankind.</p>

               <p><date>[1772. September.][Tuesday 1.]</date>On the first of September, several
                  dolphins, (coryphœna hippurus), were seen; and we likewise took notice of a large
                  fish close to us, perfectly resembling the figure of a fish given in Willoughby's
                  Histor. Piscium, appendix pag. 5. tab. 9. f. 3. which is taken from John
                  Nieuhoff's account, and which the Dutch call zee-duyvel, or sea-devil. In its
                  external shape it was similar to the genus of rays, but seems to be a new species;
                  from whence it is evident, that even in the most frequented seas, such as the
                  Atlantic, many new discoveries in natural history might be made, if those who can
                  distinguish unknown from known objects, had always opportunities of enquiring into
                  them.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 3.]</date>On the third of September great numbers of flying-fishes
                  were observed, and a bonito (scomber pelamys) was caught, whose meat we found to
                  be dry and less palatable than it is generally represented. <date>[Saturday
                     5.]</date>We were lucky enough two days after to take a dolphin (coryphœna
                  hippurus), which is likewise dry meat; but the inimitable brightness of its
                  colours, which continually change from one rich hue to another whilst it is
                  drying, is, in my opinion, one of the most admirable appearances which can occur
                  to the voyager's view during a tropical navigation.</p>

               <p>A boat was this day hoisted out in order to find the direction of the current, and
                  to determine the temperature of the sea-water at a great depth. We sounded with
                  250 fathoms without finding any bottom. The thermometer in the air stood at 75 1/2
                  deg. dipped under the surface of the sea it shewed 74 deg. and after being let
                  down to the depth of 85 fathoms and hauled up again, it was fallen to 66 deg. It
                  staid 30' under water, and was 27 1/2° in hawling up. Our latitude at noon was 0°
                  52' north. The boat being out, we had an opportunity of examining that kind of
                  blubber, or sea-nettle, which Linnӕus has named medusa pelagica; together with
                  another submarine animal called doris lœvis, and employed ourselves in making
                  drawings of them, and more minute descriptions than have hitherto been
                  published.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 9.]</date>On the 9th, having passed the line with a light air,
                  our crew ducked such of their shipmates as had never crossed it before, and did
                  not care to redeem themselves by paying a certain forfeit of brandy. Those who had
                  been obliged to undergo the briny submersion, changed their linen and clothes; and
                  as this can never be done too often, especially in warm weather, the ducking
                  proved a salutary operation to them. The quantity of strong liquors, arising from
                  the forfeits of the rest, served to heighten the jovial humour, which is the
                  predominant characteristic of sailors. This day we likewise obtained a southerly
                  wind, which gradually came round to S. by E. and S.S.E. and settled into the usual
                  trade-wind.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 14.]</date>This day we caught several dolphins, and a flying-fish
                  one foot long fell on the quarter-deck. Ever since the 8th we had daily observed
                  several aquatic birds, such as man of war birds, boobies (pelecanus aquilus &amp;
                  sula) petrels, gulls, and tropic-birds (phaëton œthereus). We had also at various
                  intervals, found the sea covered with animal belonging to the class of mollusca,
                  one of which, of a blue colour, in shape like a snail, with four arms, divided
                  into many branches, was named glaucus atlanticus; another, transparent like a
                  crystal, and often connected in a long string with individuals of the same
                  species, was referred to the genus named dagysa, mentioned in Lieut. Cook's voyage
                  in the Endeavour . Two other species of mollusca, which seamen call sallee, and
                  Portuguese men of war, (medusa velella &amp; holothuria physalis) likewise
                  appeared about our vessel in great abundance.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 27.]</date>On the 27th we tried the direction of the currents, and
                  the temperature of the sea again, with nearly the same result as before. The
                  thermometer, which in open air flood at 72 1/2 deg. and under the surface of the
                  sea at 70 deg. after being let down 80 fathom, sunk to 68 deg. It continued 15
                  min. under water, and was hauled up in 7 min. We likewise took up a new species of
                  the blubber (medusa). For two days past, we had observed a bird, which we were
                  this day enabled to examine, when we knew it to be the common shear-water
                  (procellaria puffinus). Having now reached the latitude of twenty-five degrees
                  south, we found the wind gradually coming round from E. by S. to E. by N. and to
                  N.E. which enabled us to steer to the south-eastward. Our bodies, which the heat
                  of the torrid zone had in a great degree relaxed, now began to feel a considerable
                  alteration in the climate, and though the thermometer was not above ten degrees
                  different from what it used to be near the line, yet I contracted a violent cold,
                  attended with the tooth-ach, swelled gums, and cheeks.</p>

               <p><date>[1772. October.][Sunday 4.]</date>On the fourth of October, we observed
                  great numbers of the common little petrel, of a sooty brown, with white rumps
                  (procellaria pelagica), and found the air cold and sharp. The next day the
                  albatross, (diomedea exulans) and the pintadas (procellaria capensis), made their
                  first appearance.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 11.]</date>On the 11th it was mild and almost calm, after several
                  days of hazy and squally weather, which had probably sharpened the appetite of the
                  sea birds, and especially the pintadas; for these last eagerly swallowed hooks
                  baited with pieces of pork or mutton, and no less than eight of them were caught
                  in a short time. In the evening we observed an eclipse of the moon, of which the
                  end at a medium happened at 6h. 58' 45'' p. m. our latitude at noon being 34° 45'
                  south.</p>

               <p>The next day we tried the current and the temperature of the sea a third time. We
                  let down the thermometer 100 fathoms, where it continued 20 min. was hauled up in
                  7 min. more, and then shewed 58 deg. At the surface it stood at 59 deg. and in the
                  air at 60 deg. It being calm, we employed ourselves in the boat with shooting
                  sea-fowl; among which were a small tern, a shear-water, a new species of
                  albatross, and a new petrel: Several animals of the mullusca-tribe likewise came
                  within our reach, together with the helix janthina, a violet-coloured shell,
                  remarkable for the extreme thinness of its texture, which breaks with the least
                  pressure, and seems therefore entirely calculated to keep the open sea, or at
                  least to shun rocky shores , agreeably to the observation in Lieutenant Cook's
                  voyage in the Endeavour. Albatrosses, pintadas, and petrels of all kinds, amongst
                  which was also the fulmar, (procellaria glacialis), were now daily observed.</p>

               <p>On the <date>17th</date>, we had an alarm that one of our crew was overboard, upon
                  which we immediately put about, but seeing nothing, the names of all persons on
                  board the vessel were called over, and none found missing, to our great
                  satisfaction. Our friends on board the Adventure, whom we visited a few days
                  after, told us they had indeed suspected by our manoeuvre, the accident which we
                  had apprehended, but that looking out on the sea, Capt. Furneaux had plainly
                  observed a sea-lion, that had been the cause of this false alarm.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 19.]</date>On the <date>19th</date> we had a great southern swell,
                  and saw a large whale, and likewise a fish of the shark genus, of a whitish
                  colour, with two dorsal-fins, and its length about eighteen or twenty feet. As we
                  had been a considerable time at sea, the Captain had for some weeks past ordered
                  sour-krout (or cabbage sliced and fermented) to be regularly served to the crew,
                  at a pint per man on meat-days, which was four times a week. The Lords of the
                  Admiralty, attentive to every circumstance which bids fair to preserve the health
                  of seafaring men, had ordered a very considerable quantity of this salutary and
                  palatable food to be put on board both of the ships, and the event has proved that
                  it is one of the best prophylactics against the sea-scurvy.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 24.]</date>On the 24th, the Adventure being a great way astern,
                  the captain ordered a boat to be hoisted out, and several officers and other
                  gentlemen went a shooting, which gave us a fresh opportunity of examining the two
                  sorts of albatrosses, and a large black species of shear-water, (procellaria
                  œquinoctialis). Our navigation, which for nine weeks past had been out of sight of
                  any land, began to appear dull and tedious, and seemed to be distressing to many
                  who were not used to an uniform recluse life on board a ship, without any
                  refreshments or variety of scenes. We should have found this long passage equally
                  disagreeable, if it had not supplied us with employment from time to time, and
                  nursed the hope of making many interesting discoveries relative to the science of
                  nature.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 29.]</date>On the 29th, early in the morning, we discovered the
                  land of the extremity of Africa, covered with clouds and fog; and several gannets
                  and small diving-petrels, together with some wild ducks, came out to sea from
                  thence. Soon after the land disappeared entirely, and we could not see it again
                  till three o'clock in the afternoon, when its parts were much plainer, though the
                  clouds still involved them. The wind blowing fresh, and the Adventure being a
                  great way a-stern, we could not venture to get into the Table bay during night,
                  but stood off and on till the next morning, having thick squally weather, and
                  heavy showers of rain.</p>

               <p>The night was scarcely begun, when the water all round us afforded the most grand
                  and astonishing sight than can be imagined. As far as we could see the whole ocean
                  seemed to be in a blaze. Every breaking wave had its summit illuminated by a light
                  similar to that of phosphorus, and the sides of the vessel, coming in contact with
                  the sea, were strongly marked by a luminous line. Great bodies of light moved in
                  the water along our side, sometimes slower, sometimes quicker; now in the same
                  direction with our course, now flying off from it; sometimes we could clearly
                  distinguish their shape to be that of fishes, which when they approached any
                  smaller ones, forced these to hasten away from them. Desirous of enquiring into
                  the cause of this astonishing phӕnomenon, we procured a bucket full of the
                  illumined sea-water. The most accurate attention to it proved, that innumerable
                  minute sparks, of a round shape, communicated this luminous appearance to the
                  water, and moved about in it with great briskness and velocity. After the water
                  had been standing for a little while, the number of sparks seemed to decrease; but
                  on being stirred again, the whole became as luminous as before. Again, as the
                  water gradually subsided the sparks were observed to move in directions contrary
                  to the undulations of the water, which they did not before, whilst the agitation
                  was more violent, and seemed to carry them along with its own motions. We
                  suspended the bucket, to prevent its being too much affected by the motion of the
                  ship; the bright objects by this means betrayed more and more a voluntary motion,
                  independent of the agitation of the water caused by our hands, or by the rolling
                  of the vessel. The luminous appearance always gradually subsided, but on the least
                  agitation of the water, the sparkling was renewed, in proportion as the motion was
                  encreased. As I stirred the water with my hand, one of the luminous sparks adhered
                  to my finger. We examined it by the common magnifier of Mr. Ramsden's improved
                  microscope, and found it to be globular, transparent like a gelatinous substance,
                  and somewhat brownish: by the greatest magnifier we discovered the orifice of a
                  little tube, which entered the body of this little atom, within which were four or
                  five intestine bags connected with the tube. Having examined several of them,
                  which had much the same appearance, I endeavoured to catch some in water, and
                  bring them under the microscope in a concave glass, where its nature and organs
                  might be better examined: but these minute objects were always hurt with our touch
                  before we could place them in the concave g lass, and when dead only appeared as
                  an indistinct mass of floating filaments. In about two hours time the water had
                  lost its luminous appearance. We had another bucket full of it drawn before that
                  time, but all our attempts to catch one of the little atoms in the glass proved
                  ineffectual. Accordingly we hastened to draw the appearance of the first globule,
                  and to write down our observations. The most probable conjecture which we could
                  form concerning these little atomical animalcules was, that they might be the
                  young fry of some species of medusa or blubber, though it may likewise be
                  possible, that they are beings of a distinct genus.</p>

               <p>There was a singularity, and a grandeur in the display of this phӕnomenon, which
                  could not fail of giving occupation to the mind, and striking it with a
                  reverential awe, due to Omnipotence. The ocean covered to a great extent, with
                  myriads of animalcules; these little being, organized alive, endowed with
                  locomotive power, a quality of shining whenever they please, of illiminating every
                  body with which they come in contact, and of laying aside their luminous
                  appearance at pleasure: all these ideas crouded upon us, and bade us admire the
                  Creator, even in his minutest works. It is the natural fault of young people to
                  think too well of mankind; but I hope I shall not have formed too favourable an
                  opinion of my readers, if I expect that the generality will sympathize with me in
                  these feelings, and that none will be found ignorant or depraved enough to despise
                  them.</p>

               <p>The next morning, after a very rainy night, we sailed into Table bay. The
                  mountains at the bottom of it, now appeared clear of clouds, and surprised us with
                  their prodigious craggy, steep, and barren appearance. As we advanced farther into
                  the bay, we discovered the town at the foot of the black Table mountain, and soon
                  came to an anchor. After saluting the fort, and receiving the visit of several
                  officers in the service of the Dutch East-India company, we went on shore with
                  captains Cook and Furneaux, being prepared to meet with many new acquisitions to
                  science, on a continent so distant from our own, and situated in an opposite
                  hemisphere.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. III.</l>
                  <l>Stay at the Cape of Good Hope. - Account of that Settlement.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1772. October.]</date>We were no sooner landed than we all went to wait
                  upon the governor, baron Joachim van Plettenberg, a man of a very liberal
                  education, and extensive knowledge, whose politeness and affability immediately
                  gave us a good opinion of him. From him we proceeded to the other members of the
                  council, and at last retired to take up our lodgings at Mr. Brand's now commander
                  at False bay, whose house at the Cape town is commonly frequented by the English
                  captains who happen to touch there. Almost every inferior officer of the Dutch
                  Company's government, the members of the council excepted, let their supernumerary
                  apartments to the officers and passengers in the various English, French, Danish,
                  and Swedish ships, which annually put in here, either on their voyage from or back
                  to Europe.</p>

               <p>We were not a little pleased with the contrast between this colony, and the
                  Portuguese island of St. Jago. There we had taken notice of a tropical country,
                  with a tolerable appearance, and capable of improvement, but utterly neglected by
                  its lazy and oppressed inhabitants; here, on the contrary, we saw a neat
                  well-built town, all white, rising in the midst of a desart, surrounded by broken
                  masses of black and dreary mountains; or in other words, the picture of successful
                  industry. Its appearance towards the sea-side, is not quite so picturesque as that
                  of Funchal. The store-houses of the Dutch East-India company, are all situated
                  nearest the water, and the private buildings lie beyond them on a gentle ascent.
                  The fort which commands the road, is on the east side of the town, but seems not
                  to be of great strength; besides which, there are several batteries on both sides.
                  The streets in the town are broad, and regular; all the principal ones are planted
                  with oaks, and some have in their middle a canal of running water, which on
                  account of its small quantity, they are obliged to husband by sluices, so that
                  parts of it are sometimes entirely drained, and occasion no very pleasant smell.
                  The national character of the Dutch strongly manifests itself in this particular;
                  their settlements being always supplied with canals, though reason and common
                  sense evidently prove their noxious influence on the health of the inhabitants,
                  especially at Batavia.</p>

               <p>The houses are built of brick, and many of them are white washed on the outside.
                  The rooms are in general lofty and spacious, and very airy, which the hot climate
                  requires. There is but one church in the whole town, and that is extremely plain,
                  and seems to be rather too small for the congregation. That spirit of toleration,
                  which has been so beneficial to the Dutch government at home, is not to be met
                  with in their colonies. It is but very lately that they have suffered even the
                  Lutherans, to build churches at Batavia, and at this place; and at the present
                  time, a clergyman of that persuasion is not tolerated at the Cape, but the
                  inhabitants are obliged to content themselves with the chaplains of Danish and
                  Swedish East-India-men, who give them a sermon, and administer the sacrament once
                  or twice a year, and are very handsomely rewarded. The government, and the
                  inhabitants do not give themselves the trouble to attend to a circumstance of so
                  little consequence in their eyes, as the religion of their slaves, who in general
                  seem to have none at all. A few of them follow the Mahommedan rite, and weekly
                  meet in a private house belonging to a free Mahomedan, in order to read, or rather
                  chaunt several prayers, and chapters of the Koran. As they have no priest among
                  them, they cannot partake of any other acts of worship .</p>

               <p>The slaves belonging to the company, who amount to several hundreds, are lodged
                  and boarded in a spacious house erected for that purpose, where they are likewise
                  kept at work. Another great building serves as an hospital for the sailors
                  belonging to the Dutch East-India ships, which touch here, and commonly have
                  prodigious numbers of sick on board, on their voyage from Europe towards India.
                  The vast number of men, sometimes six, seven, or eight hundred, which these ships
                  carry out to supply the military in India, the small room to which they are
                  confined, and the short allowance of water and salt provision, they receive on a
                  long voyage through the torrid zone, generally make considerable havock among
                  them: it is therefore no uncommon circumstance at the Cape, that a ship on her
                  passage thither from Europe, loses eighty or a hundred men, and sends between two
                  and three hundred others dangerously ill to the hospital. A fact no less
                  deplorable than certain, is, that the small expence and facility with which the
                  ziel-verkoopers actually carry on their infamous trade of supplying the India
                  company with recruits, makes them less attentive to the preservation of health
                  among these poor people. Nothing is more common, in this and other Dutch colonies,
                  than to meet with soldiers in the company's service who, upon enquiry, acknowledge
                  they have been kidnapped in Holland. There is an apothecary's shop belonging to
                  the hospital, where the most necessary remedies are prepared, but no expensive
                  drug is to be found in it, and the method of administering to all the patients
                  indiscriminately out of two or three huge bottles, full of different preparations,
                  suffice to convince us, that the fresh air of the land, and fresh provisions here,
                  contribute much more to the recovery of the sick, than the skill of their
                  physicians. Patients who are able to walk, are ordered to go up and down the
                  streets every fair morning; and all kinds of greens, pot-herbs, sallads, and
                  antiscorbutics are raised for their use in an adjacent garden belonging to the
                  company. Travellers have sometimes praised and sometimes depreciated this garden,
                  according to the different points of view in which it has been considered. It is
                  true, a few regular walks of indifferent oaks, encompassed with elm and myrtle
                  hedges, are not objects engaging enough to those who are used to admire the
                  perfection of gardening in England, or who contemplate in Holland and France
                  cypress, box, and yew trees cut out into vases, statues, and pyramids, or
                  charmilles turned into pieces of architecture! <date>[1772. November.]</date>But
                  considering that the trees were planted in the beginning of this century, more for
                  use than ornament; that they shelter the kitchen-herbs for the hospital, against
                  the destructive violence of storms; and that they form the only shady and airy
                  walks, comfortable to voyagers and sick persons in this hot climate, I cannot
                  wonder that some should extoll as " a delightful spot ," what others
                  contemptuously call " a friar's garden ." </p>

               <p><date>[Saturday l.]</date>The day after our arrival, the astronomers of both
                  ships, Mr. Wales and Mr. Baily, fixed their instruments ashore, within a few yards
                  of the identical spot where Messrs. Mason and Dixon had formerly made their
                  astronomical observations. The same day we began our botanical excursions in the
                  country about the town. The ground gradually rises on all sides towards the three
                  mountains which lie round the bottom of the bay, keeping low and level only near
                  the sea-side, and growing somewhat marshy in the isthmus between the False and
                  Table bays, where a salt rivulet falls into the latter. The marshy part has some
                  verdure, but is intermixed with a great deal of sand. The higher grounds, which
                  from the sea side have a parched and dreary appearance, are however covered with
                  an immense variety of plants, amongst which are a prodigious number of shrubs, but
                  scarce one or two species that deserve the name of trees. There are also a few
                  small plantations wherever a little run of water moistens the ground. Abundance of
                  insects of every sort, several species of lizards, land-tortoises, and serpents
                  frequent the dry shrubbery, together with a great variety of small birds. We daily
                  brought home ample collections of vegetables and animals, and were much surprised
                  to find a great number, especially among the latter, entirely unknown to natural
                  historians, though gathered in fields adjacent to a town, from whence the cabinets
                  and repositories of all Europe have been repeatedly supplied with numerous and
                  valuable acquisitions to the science.</p>

               <p>One of our excursions was directed to the Table mountain. The ascent was very
                  steep, fatiguing, and difficult, on account of the number of loose stones which
                  rolled away under our feet. About the middle of the mountain we entered a bold
                  grand chasm, whose walls are perpendicular and often impending rocks, piled up in
                  strata. Small rills of water oozed out of crevices, or fell from precipices in
                  drops, given life to hundreds of plants and low shrubs in the chasm. Another kind
                  of vegetables, growing on a drier soil, that seemed to concentrate their juices,
                  spread a fine aromatic scent, which a gentle breeze wafted towards us from the
                  chasm. At last, after three hours walk, we reached the summit of the mountain. It
                  was nearly level, very barren, and bare of soil; several cavities were however
                  replete with rain-water, or contained a little vegetable earth, from whence a few
                  odoriferous plants drew their nourishment. Some antelopes, howling baboons,
                  solitary vultures, and toads are sometimes to be met with on the mountain. The
                  view from thence is very extensive and picturesque. The bay seemed a small pond or
                  bason, and the ships in it dwindled to little boats: the town under our feet, and
                  the regular compartments of its gardens, looked like the work of children. The
                  Lion's Rump now seemed an inconsiderable ridge; we looked down on the spiry Lion's
                  Head, and only Charles' Mount rose as it were in competition with the Table. To
                  the northward, Robben island, the Blue hills, the Tyger hills, and beyond them a
                  noble chain of mountains, loftier than that on which we stood, bounded our view. A
                  group of broken rocky masses inclosed Hout baay (Wood bay) to the west, and
                  continuing to the southward formed one side of the Table bay, and terminated in
                  the famous stormy cape which king Manoel of Portugal named the Cape of Good Hope.
                  To the south-east our view extended across the low isthmus between the two bays;
                  beyond it we discerned the colony of Hottentot Holland, and the mountains about
                  Stellenbosch; and on this side we were delighted with a number of plantations
                  insulated by the vast heath, and finely contrasting their verdure with the rest of
                  the country: Among them we distinguished Constantia, famous in the annals of
                  modern epicures. After a stay of two hours, finding the air very cold and sharp on
                  the mountain, we descended, very well pleased with our excursion, and amply
                  rewarded for the toilsome part of it, by the beauty and extent of the
                  prospect.</p>

               <p>The country on the S.E. side of the Table mountain attracted our particular
                  attention, on account of the number of plantations on the sloping grounds, and the
                  variety of plants which that part produced. Its appearance, especially near the
                  hills, is the pleasantest on this side of the isthmus. By the side of every little
                  rivulet a plantation is situated, consisting of vineyards, corn-fields, and
                  gardens, and commonly surrounded with oaks from ten to twenty feet high, which
                  enlived the country, and afford shelter against storms. The late governor Tulbagh,
                  who is looked upon as a father to this colony, rebuilt several houses and gardens
                  here, for the use of the governors, at Rondebosch and Nieuw-land. They are plain,
                  and have nothing particular to recommend them, but that they are kept in the best
                  order, consist of shady walks, and are well supplied with water. The company's
                  granges or sheds are also erected hereabouts; and a little farther on there is a
                  brewery, belonging to a private man, who has the exclusive privilege of brewing
                  beer for the Cape. In a fine valley, on the side of the mountain, lies the
                  plantation called Paradise, remarkable for its delightful grove, and for producing
                  several fruits, especially such as belong to tropical climates, which come to
                  great perfection there. Alphen, the seat of Mr. Kerste, (at that time commander in
                  False bay) was the boundary of our excursions on this side. We were here received
                  with real hospitality, which our worthy host had brought from Germany, his native
                  country. During a few days it was the centre of our botanical rambles, which
                  always furnished us with an abundant harvest, and gave us the greatest
                  apprehensions that with all our efforts, we alone would be unequal to the task of
                  collecting, describing, drawing, and preserving (all at the same time) such
                  multitudes of species, in countries where every one we gathered would in all
                  probability be a non-descript. It was therefore of the utmost importance, if we
                  meant not to neglect any branch of natural knowledge, to endeavour to find an
                  assistant well qualified to go hand and hand with us in our undertakings. We were
                  fortunate enough to meet with a man of science, Dr. Sparrman, at this place, who
                  after studying under the father of botany, the great Sir Charles Linné, had made a
                  voyage to China, and another to the Cape in pursuit of knowledge. The idea of
                  gathering the treasures of nature in countries hitherto unknown to Europe, filled
                  his mind so entirely, that he immediately engaged to accompany us on our
                  circumnavigation; in the course of which, I am proud to say, we have found him an
                  enthusiast in his science, well versed in medical knowledge, and endowed with a
                  heart capable of the warmest feelings, and worthy of a philosopher. But far from
                  meeting with such great discoveries in natural history, as had been made in Lieut.
                  Cook's first voyage on a new continent , we were obliged to content ourselves with
                  the produce of a few small islands, which we could imperfectly investigate in the
                  short spaces of sometimes a few hours, or a few days, or to the utmost of a few
                  weeks, in unfavourable seasons.</p>

               <p>During our stay at the Cape, the people on board our ship set up the rigging,
                  scrubbed and payed the sides, and took in store some brandy and other necessary
                  articles of provision for the crew, together with several sheep for the captains
                  and officers. Several rams and ewes were likewise brought aboard, intended as
                  presents to the natives of the South-Sea; but the length of the voyage, and our
                  run to the frozen zone, reduced them so much, that this useful purpose was
                  entirely defeated. In order to pursue our researches after natural knowledge, with
                  greater certainty of success, we likewise bought a water-spaniel here, in hopes
                  that this animal would prove useful in fetching any game which fell out of our
                  reach. It was with great difficulty we could meet with one, and we were obliged to
                  pay an exhorbitant price for it; though it afterwards proved of little service. It
                  may seem superfluous to mention so trifling an occurrence as this, but I believe
                  it is hardly imagined, how great a number of little objects are to be attended to
                  among many weightier concerns, by a traveller who means to improve his time to the
                  utmost advantage.</p>

               <p>On the <date>22d</date> we brought all our baggage on board, and the same day we
                  sailed from Table bay. Previous to the mention of farther occurrences, I shall
                  here endeavour to give a succinct account of the state of this Dutch colony, which
                  it is hoped will afford satisfactory instruction to my readers.</p>

               <p>The southermost extremity of Africa circumnavigated so early as the times of the
                  Egyptian king Necho, and again in the reign of Ptolemӕus Lathyrus , was once more
                  discovered in later times, by Bartolemeo Diaz, a Portuguese navigator, in the year
                  1487. Vasco de Gama was the first who made a voyage to India round it in 1497,
                  which was looked upon as a kind of prodigy. It remained however useless to
                  Europeans till the year 1650, when Van-Riebeck, a Dutch surgeon, first saw the
                  advantage that would accrue to the East-India Company in Holland, from a
                  settlement at so convenient a distance both from home and from India. The colony
                  which he founded, has ever since continued in the hands of the Dutch, and
                  increased in value for a considerable time after his decease.</p>

               <p>The governor depends immediately upon the East-India Company, and has the rank of
                  an Edele Heer, the title given to the members of the supreme council of Batavia.
                  He presides here over a council consisting of the second, or deputy governor, the
                  fiscal, the major (who commands the fort), the secretary, the treasurer, the
                  comptroller of provisions, the comptroller of liquors, and the book-keeper; each
                  of which has a branch of the Company's commerce assigned to his care. This council
                  has the whole management of the civil and military departments, but the
                  deputy-governor presides over another, named the court of justice, which tries all
                  offences and crimes, and consists of some of the members of the former; but no two
                  relations can fit and have vote in the same council, to prevent the influence of
                  parties.</p>

               <p>The income of the governor is very considerable, for besides a fixed appointment,
                  and the use of houses, gardens, proper furniture, and every thing that belongs to
                  his table, he receives about ten dollars for every leagre of wine which the
                  Company buy of the farmer, in order to be exported to Batavia. The company allows
                  the sum of forty dollars for each leagre, of which the farmer receives but
                  twenty-four; what remains is shared between the governor, and second or deputy,
                  the former taking two thirds, which sometimes are said to amount to 4000 dollars
                  per annum. The second governor has the direction of the company's whole commerce
                  here, and signs all orders to the different departments under him, as well as the
                  governor to others. He and the fiscal have the rank of upper koopman. The fiscal
                  is at the head of the police, and sees the penal laws put in execution; his income
                  consists of fines, and of the duties laid on certain articles of commerce, but if
                  he be strict in exacting them, he is universally detested. The found policy of the
                  Dutch have likewise found it necessary to place the fiscal as a check, to over-awe
                  the other officers of the company, that they may not counteract the interests of
                  their masters, or infringe the laws of the mother country. He is to that end,
                  commonly well versed in juridical affairs, and depends solely upon the mother
                  country. The major (at present Mr. Von Prehn, who received us with great
                  politeness) has the rank of koopman or merchant: this circumstance surprises a
                  stranger, who in all other European states, is used to see military honours confer
                  distinction and precedence, and appears still more singular to one who knows the
                  contrast in this particular between Holland and Russia, where the idea of military
                  rank is annexed to every place, even that of a professor at the university. The
                  number of regular soldiers at this colony amounts to about 700, of which 400 form
                  the garrison of the fort, near the Cape town. The inhabitants capable of bearing
                  arms form a militia of 4000 men, of whom a considerable part may be assembled in a
                  few hours, by means of signals made from alarm places in different parts of the
                  country. We may from hence make some estimate of the number of white people in
                  this colony, which is at present so extensive, that the distant settlements are
                  above a month's journey from the Cape; but these remote parts lie sometimes more
                  than a day's journey from each other, are surrounded by various nations of
                  Hottentots, and too frequently feel the want of protection from their own
                  government at that distance. The slaves in the colony are at least in the
                  proportion of five or more, to one white person. The principal inhabitants at the
                  Cape have sometimes from 20 to 30 slaves, which are in general treated with great
                  lenity, and sometimes become favourites with their masters, who give them very
                  good cloathing, but oblige them to wear neither shoes nor stockings, reserving
                  these articles to themselves. The slaves are chiefly brought from Madagascar, and
                  a little vessel annually goes from the Cape thither on that trade; there are
                  however, besides them, a number of Malays and Bengalese, and some negroes. The
                  colonists themselves are for the greatest part Germans, with some families of
                  Dutch, and some of French protestants. The character of the inhabitants of the
                  town is mixed. They are industrious, but fond of good living, hospitable, and
                  sociable; though accustomed to hire their apartments to strangers , for the time
                  they touch at this settlement, and used to be complimented with rich presents of
                  stuffs, &amp;c. by the officers of merchant ships. They have no great
                  opportunities of acquiring knowledge, there being no public schools of note at the
                  Cape; their young men are therefore commonly sent to Holland for improvement, and
                  their female education is too much neglected. A kind of dislike to reading, and
                  the want of public amusements, make their conversation uninteresting and too
                  frequently turn it upon scandal, which is commonly carried to a degree of
                  inveteracy peculiar to little towns. The French, English, Portuguese, and Malay
                  languages are very commonly spoken, and many of the ladies have acquired them.
                  This circumstance, together with the accomplishments of singing, dancing, and
                  playing a tune on the lute, frequently united in an agreeable person, make amends
                  for the want of refined manners and delicacy of sentiment. There are however among
                  the principal inhabitants, persons of both sexes, whose whole deportment,
                  extensive reading, and well-cultivated understanding would be admired and
                  distinguished even in Europe . Their circumstances are in general easy, and often
                  very affluent, on account of the cheap rate at which the necessaries of life are
                  to be procured; but they seldom amass such prodigious riches here as at Batavia,
                  and I was told the greatest private fortune at the Cape did not exceed one hundred
                  thousand dollars, or about twenty-two thousand five hundred pounds sterling.</p>

               <p>The farmers in the country are very plain hospitable people; but those who dwell
                  in the remotest settlements seldom come to town, and are said to be very ignorant;
                  this may easily be conceived, because they have no better company than Hottentots,
                  their dwellings being often several days journey asunder, which must in a great
                  measure preclude all intercourse. The vine is cultivated in plantations within the
                  compass of a few days journey from the town; which were established by the first
                  colonists, and of which the ground was given in perpetual property to them and
                  their heirs. The company at present never part with the property of the ground,
                  but let the surface to the farmer for an annual rent, which, though extremely
                  moderate, being only twenty-five dollars for sixty acres , yet does not give
                  sufficient encouragement to plant vineyards. The distant settlements therefore
                  chiefly raise corn and rear cattle; nay many of the settlers entirely follow the
                  latter branch of rustick employment, and some have very numerous flocks. We were
                  told there were two farmers who had each fifteen thousand sheep, and oxen in
                  proportion; and several who possessed six or eight thousand sheep, of which they
                  drive great droves to town every year; but lions and buffaloes, and the fatigue of
                  the journey, destroy numbers of their cattle before they can bring them so far.
                  They commonly take their families with them in large waggons covered with linen or
                  leather, spread over hoops, and drawn by eight, ten, and sometimes twelve pair of
                  oxen. They bring butter, mutton-tallow, the flesh and skins of sea-cows
                  (hippopotamus), together with lion and rhinoceros' skins, to fell. They have
                  several slaves, and commonly engage in their service several Hottentots of the
                  poorer sort, and (as we were told) of the tribe called Boschemans or Bushmen, who
                  have no cattle of their own, but commonly subsist by hunting or by committing
                  depredations on their neighbours. The opulent farmers set up a young beginner by
                  intrusting to his care a flock of four or five hundred sheep, which he leads to a
                  distant spot, where he finds plenty of good grass and water; the one half of all
                  the lambs which are yeaned fall to his share, by which means he soon becomes as
                  rich as his benefactor.</p>

               <p>Though the Dutch company seem evidently to discourage all new settlers, by
                  granting no lands in private property, yet the products of the country have of
                  late years sufficed not only to supply the Isles of France and Bourbon with corn,
                  but likewise to furnish the mother country with several ship loads. These exports
                  would certainly be made at an easier rate than at present, if the settlements did
                  not extend so far into the country, from whence the products must be brought to
                  the Table bay by land carriage, on roads which are almost impassable. The
                  intermediate spaces of uncultivated land between the different settlements are
                  very extensive, and contain many spots fit for agriculture; but one of the chief
                  reasons why the colonists are so much divided and scattered throughout the
                  country, is to be met with in another regulation of the company, which forbids
                  every new settler to establish himself within a mile of another. It is evident
                  that if this settlement were in the hands of the commonwealth, it would have
                  attained to a great population, and a degree of opulence and splendor, of which it
                  has not the least hopes at present: But a private company of East-India merchants
                  find their account much better in keeping all the landed property to themselves,
                  and tying down the colonist, left he should become too great and powerful.</p>

               <p>The wines made at the Cape are of the greatest variety possible. The best, which
                  is made at M. Vander Spy's plantation of Constantia, is spoken of in Europe, more
                  by report than from real knowledge; thirty leagres at the utmost are annually
                  raised of this kind, and each leagre sells for about fifty pounds on the spot. The
                  vines from which it is made were originally brought from Shiraz in Persia. Several
                  other sorts grow in the neighbourhood of that plantation, which produce a sweet
                  rich wine, that generally passes for genuine Constantia in Europe. French plants
                  of burgundy, muscade, and frontignan have likewise been tried, and have succeeded
                  extremely well, sometimes producing wines superior to those of the original soil.
                  An excellent dry wine, which has a slight agreeable tartness, is commonly drank in
                  the principal families, and is made of Madeira vines transplanted to the Cape.
                  Several low sorts, not entirely disagreeable, are raised in great plenty, and sold
                  at a very cheap rate, so that the sailors of the East-India ships commonly indulge
                  themselves very plentifully in them whenever they come ashore.</p>

               <p>The products of the country supply with provisions the ships of all nations which
                  touch at the Cape. Corn, flour, biscuit, salted beef, brandy, and wine are to be
                  had in abundance, and at moderate prices; and their fresh greens, fine fruits ,
                  good mutton and beef, are excellent restoratives to seamen who have made a long
                  voyage. The climate is likewise so healthy, that the inhabitants are rarely
                  troubled with complaints, and strangers soon recover of the scurvy and other
                  distempers. The winters at the Cape are so mild that they hardly ever have ice
                  about the town: but on the mountains, and especially those far in the country,
                  they have hard frosts with snow and hail storms; nay a strong south-easterly storm
                  sometimes brings on a frost during night even in the month of November, which is
                  their spring. The only inconvenience which they frequently suffer are colds,
                  brought on by the frequent change of air from strong winds, to which the Cape is
                  subject at all seasons. But notwithstanding the heat, which is sometimes
                  excessive, the inhabitants of Dutch origin seem to have preserved their native
                  habit of body, and both sexes are remarkably corpulent, to which their good living
                  may greatly contribute.</p>

               <p>The Hottentots or aboriginal inhabitants of this country, have retired into the
                  interior parts, and their nearest kraal or village, is about a hundred miles from
                  the Cape town From thence they sometimes come down with their own cattle, or
                  attend the Dutch farmers who conduct their flocks to town for sale. We had no
                  opportunity to make new observations upon them, as we only saw a few individuals,
                  in whom we could not discern any pecularities but such as have already been
                  described by Peter Kolben, in his Present State of the Cape of Good Hope, &amp;c.
                  The circumstantial accounts given by this intelligent man, have been confirmed to
                  us by the principal inhabitants of the Cape town. It is true, that he has been
                  misinformed in regard to some circumstances; and that others, chiefly relative to
                  the colony, have at present another appearance than in his time: but he still
                  remains the best author that can be consulted on the subject, and as such we will
                  venture to refer our readers to him.</p>

               <p>We have had an occasion to observe several facts alledged in Kolben, and we
                  likewise find them mentioned in Lieutenant Cook's voyage. See Hawkesworth's
                  compilation Vol. III. p. 789, &amp;c. The Abbé de la Caille, an astronomer, in the
                  account of his voyage, which was published soon after his death, has endeavoured
                  to ruin the credit of Kolben's book, without giving us any thing better in its
                  stead. We should not have ventured to mention so superficial a performance, as
                  that of the Abbé, were it not necessary to vindicate from his aspersions, the
                  character of Kolben, as a faithful and accurate observer. The Abbé lived with a
                  family at the Cape, who were of a party directly opposite to that which had
                  supported Kolben. He daily heard invectives against him, and never failed to write
                  them down, in order to give himself importance at the expence of the other.</p>

               <p>The extremity of Africa towards the south is a mass of high mountains, of which
                  the outermost are black, craggy, and barren, consisting of a coarse granite, which
                  contains no heterogeneous parts, such as petrified shells, &amp;c. nor any
                  volcanic productions. The cultivated spots which we saw had a stiff clay mixed
                  with a little sand and small pieces of stone; but the plantations towards False
                  bay are almost entirely on a sandy soil. The colony of Stellenbosch is said to
                  have the most fertile soil of all at the Cape, and the different plantations
                  thrive there incomparably better than any where else, particularly the European
                  oaks, which are said to have attained a considerable height and flourishing
                  appearance, whilst they do not seem to succeed near the town, where the tallest we
                  saw was not above thirty feet high. The interior mountains are certainly metallic,
                  and contain iron and copper; specimens of ores of both kinds were shewn to us by
                  Mr. Hemmy, and some tribes of Hottentots melt both these metals; from whence we
                  may conclude, that the ores they employ must be rich and easy of fusion. Hot
                  springs are likewise found at several places in the interior country; and the
                  inhabitants of the Cape Town resort to one of them at the distance of about three
                  days journey, which is famous for curing cutaneous and other distempers, and is
                  probably of a sulphureous nature.</p>

               <p>The variety of plants in this country is surprising. In the little time we staid
                  there, we observed several new species growing in the environs of the town, where
                  we should least have expected them. And though the collections of former botanists
                  from hence are very ample, yet Dr. Sparrman and the learned Dr. Thunberg have
                  gathered above a thousand species entirely unknown before. The animal kingdom is
                  proportionably rich in the variety of its productions. The greatest quadrupeds,
                  the elephant, the rhinoceros, and the giraffe or camelopard, inhabit this
                  extremity of Africa; the two first were formerly found within fifty miles of the
                  Cape, but have been so much pursued and hunted, that they are rarely seen at
                  present within many days journey. The rhinoceros particularly is so scarce, that
                  the government have issued an order to prevent its being entirely extirpated. The
                  hippopotamus, there called a sea-cow, which formerly used to come as far as
                  Saldanha bay, is likewise so seldom seen at present, that none must be killed
                  within a considerable distance of the Cape. Its meat is eaten here, and reckoned a
                  great dainty: the taste in my opinion is that of coarse beef, but the fat rather
                  resembles marrow. This animal feeds entirely on vegetables, and we were told can
                  only dive a short space, not exceeding thirty yards. The wild buffalo is another
                  huge quadruped, which now inhabits the more remote settlements of the Cape, and is
                  said to have prodigious strength and ferocity. Its horns resembles those of the
                  American wild ox (bison), and are represented in the ixth vol. of M. de Buffon's
                  Natural History. They often attack the farmers travelling in the country, and kill
                  many of their cattle, which they trample upon with their feet. Dr. Thunberg lost
                  his horses in one of these rencounters, and his fellow-traveller, the Dutch
                  company's gardener, narrowly escaped between two trees. A young one, about three
                  years old, belonging to the second governor, was put before a waggon, with six
                  tame oxen, but his strength was such that they could not move him out of his place
                  . Besides this there is another species of wild ox, called by the natives gnoo,
                  which has slender horns, a mane, and brushes of hair on the nose and wattles, and
                  in the slender make of its limbs seems to resemble an horse or an antelope, more
                  than its cogeneric animals. This species we have drawn and described, and it has
                  been brought over to the menagerie of the Prince of Orange. Africa has always been
                  known as the country of the beautiful genus of gazelles or antelopes, and the
                  different names which have been improperly given to its species, have hitherto not
                  a little contribute to obscure our knowledge of them. A number of the fiercest
                  beasts of prey likewise infest the Cape, and the colonists can never be at
                  sufficient pains to extirpate them. Lions, leopards, tyger-cats, striped and
                  spotted hyӕnas, (Pennant's Syn. of Quadr.) jackals, and several others, live on
                  the numerous species of antelopes, on hares, jerbuas, caviӕ, and many lesser
                  quadrupeds with which the country abounds. The number of birds is likewise very
                  great, and among them many are arrayed in the brightest colours. I cannot help
                  mentioning, in confirmation of Kolben's accounts, that we have seen two species of
                  swallows at the Cape, though the Abbé de la Caille censures him for speaking of
                  them, because they did not occur to himself. The Abbé also commits a mistake with
                  regard to the knorhan, which is not a gelinote or grous, as he calls it, but the
                  African bustard. Upon the whole, it would be easy to refute almost every criticism
                  which the Abbé has passed on Kolben, if a work of so little merit deserved so much
                  attention. Reptiles of all kinds, serpents, (among which are many whose bite is
                  mortal), and a variety of insects swarm about the Cape; and its shores likewise
                  abound in well-tasted fishes, nay of which are not yet known to the naturalist. In
                  short, notwithstanding the many spoils of the vegetable and animal kingdom, which
                  have been brought from Africa, its immense interior countries remain almost
                  entirely unknown to the present time, and still contain great treasures of natural
                  knowledge, which wait the future investigation of another Thunberg or another
                  Bruce.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. IV.</l>
                  <l>Run from the Cape to the Antarctic Circle; first season spent in high Southern
                     Latitudes. - Arrival on the Coast of New Zeeland.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1772. November.][Sunday 22.]</date>We sailed from Table bay, about four in
                  the afternoon, on the 22d of November, after having saluted the fort. The wind
                  blew in hard squalls, which continued all night, and gave us once more a rough
                  reception on the boisterous element; while the same luminous appearance, which we
                  had observed before our coming into this bay, was perceived again, though in a
                  much slighter degree. <date>[Monday 23.]</date> The next day towards eight in the
                  morning, we lost sight of the Cape, and directed our course to the southward. As
                  we were now entering on an unexampled navigation, not knowing when we might meet
                  with a new place of refreshment, the captain gave the strictest orders to prevent
                  the waste of fresh water; to this end a centry was placed at the scuttled-cask ,
                  and a regular allowance of water was daily served out to the crew, besides which
                  they were permitted to drink at the cask, but not to carry any water away. The
                  captain himself washed with salt-water, and all our company were obliged to
                  conform to this necessary restriction. The distilling machine improved by Mr.
                  Irving, was likewise constantly employed, to supply at least some part of the
                  quantity daily consumed.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 24.]</date>On the 24th in the afternoon, the weather being fair and
                  moderate, after a hard gale we caught nine albatrosses with a line and hook,
                  baited with a bit of sheep's skin. Several of them measured above ten feet from
                  tip to tip, between the expanded wings. The younger ones seemed to have a great
                  mixture of brownish feathers, whereas the full-grown were almost entirely white
                  except their wings, which were blackish, and their scapulars which were barred and
                  sprinkled with dotted lines of black.</p>

               <p>A large brown fish resembling the sun fish (tetrodon mola), was likewise seen
                  close to the ship for a short space of time.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 29.]</date>On the 29th the wind, which had for three or four days
                  past blown a very strong gale, now encreased so much, that we ran during the last
                  twenty-four hours, almost under the bare fore-sail. The sea at the same time ran
                  very high, and frequently broke over the sloop, in which none of the cabins were
                  prepared for such bad weather, our course from England to the Cape having been
                  remarkably free of storms. The people, and especially persons not brought up to
                  sea-affairs, were ignorant how to behave in this new situation; the prodigious
                  rolling of the vessel therefore daily made great havock among cups, saucers,
                  glasses, bottles, dishes, plates, and every thing that was moveable; whilst the
                  humorous circumstances sometimes attending the general confusion, made us bear
                  these irreparable losses with greater composure than might have been expected. The
                  decks, and the floors of every cabin were however continually wet; and the howl of
                  the storm in the rigging, the roar of the waves, added to the violent agitation of
                  the vessel, which precluded almost every occupation, were new and awful scenes,
                  but at the same severely felt, and highly disagreeable. The air was likewise
                  unpleasantly sharp and cold about this time, our latitude being now about 42°
                  south; and frequent rains contributed to make the service of the seamen hard and
                  comfortless. To secure them in some measure against the inclemencies of the
                  weather, the captain ordered a general distribution of clothes to be made, which
                  had been expressly provided at the expence of the Admiralty to serve this purpose.
                  Every person whose duty exposed him to the severity of southern climates, from the
                  lieutenant to the sailor, was provided with a jacket and a pair of trowsers of the
                  thickest woolen stuff called fearnought , or strong flannel, which kept out the
                  wet for a long time, and had this only fault, in common with every thing the navy
                  provides, viz. that they were supplied by contract, and therefore generally too
                  short for our people. If we consider the distresses to which M. de Bougainville's
                  crew were reduced for want of cloathing, we cannot help reflecting on the better
                  fortune of English seamen, who, under an equitable government, may expect to be
                  treated with peculiar care; and who, on perilous expeditions, are humanely and
                  attentively supplied with necessaries to face the dangers of the sea, and support
                  their spirits in adversity. A trying moment frequently occurs, where the
                  despondence caused by ill-treatment and heavy sufferings, must have the most fatal
                  consequences, since its direct opposite, an undaunted resolution is then most
                  necessary; such a moment we experience in this night. A petty officer in the
                  forepart of the vessel, awaking suddenly, heard a noise of water streaming through
                  his birth, and breaking itself against his own and his mess-mates chests; he
                  leaped out of his bed, and found himself to the middle of the leg in water. He
                  instantly acquainted the officer of the quarter-deck with this dreadful
                  circumstance, and in a few moments almost every person in the ship was in motion;
                  the pumps were employed, and the officers encouraged the seamen with an alarming
                  gentleness, to persevere in their work; notwithstanding which the water seemed to
                  gain upon us; every soul was filled with terror, encreased by the darkness of the
                  night.</p>

               <p>The chain-pumps were now cleared, and our sailors laboured at them with great
                  alacrity; at last one of them luckily discovered that the water came in through a
                  scuttle (or window) in the boatswain's store-room, which not having been secured
                  against the tempestuous southern ocean, had been staved in by the force of the
                  waves. It was immediately repaired, and closely shut up, and we escaped for this
                  time with the greatest part of the clothes and effects of the sailors and officers
                  thoroughly soaked in salt water. We should have found it difficult, if not utterly
                  impossible, to clear the ship of the water, if the midshipman had not
                  providentially awaked before it had gained too much upon us: the presence of mind
                  of our officers, and the spirit of our seamen would have been exerted in vain, and
                  we must perhaps have gone down to the bottom, in the midst of a very dark night
                  and turbulent ocean, which would have effectually prevented our consort from
                  giving us assistance. A distribution of fishing-hooks and lines was made about
                  this time to every person on board, as was uncertain how soon we might meet with
                  land, and consequently with an opportunity of making use of them. </p>

               <p><date>[1772. December.][Saturday 5.]</date>The stormy weather continued,
                  intermixed with frequent rains and fogs, till the fifth of December , when we set
                  the top-gallant sails for the first time, after leaving the Cape of Good Hope, and
                  observed the latitude at noon, in 47° 10' south. In the afternoon, however, the
                  showers returned, and a western swell announced a wind from that quarter, which
                  actually came on during night, blowing at about S. W. and chilled the air so
                  considerably, that the thermometer sunk from 44° to 38° during the night, and some
                  snow began to fall the next morning. <date>[Monday 7.]</date>The wind soon
                  encreased to a storm again; so that on the 7th in the afternoon, we had only a
                  single sail set. A variety of birds of the petrel and tern genus, had attended us
                  in greater or lesser numbers ever since we had left the Cape, and the high sea and
                  winds seemed to have no other influence on them, than that of bringing more of
                  them about us. The principal sorts were the Cape-petrel, or pintada (procellaria
                  capensis), and the blue petrel, so called from its having a blueish-grey colour,
                  and a band of blackish feathers across the whole wing. We likewise saw the two
                  before mentioned species of albatrosses from time to time, together with a third,
                  less than the others, which we named the sooty, and our sailors called the quaker
                  bird, from its having a greyish-brown colour. <date>[Tuesday 8.]</date>Many birds
                  of all these different species surrounded us on the 8th of December, the wind
                  still continuing very high, and the sea very turbulent. We now likewise saw
                  pinguins for the first time, and some bunches of sea-weed, of the species called
                  the sea-bamboo (sucus buccinalis Lin.). These appearances greatly favoured the
                  hope of meeting with land, as it had hitherto been held uncontroverted that weeds,
                  especially rockweeds, (such as these were) and pinguins were never to be met with
                  at a great distance from shores; but experience has shewn that these prognostics
                  are not to be relied upon, and probably derive all their credit from single
                  accidental proofs in their favour, supported by the name of some celebrated
                  mariner. Future observations on the nature of floating rock-weeds, and drift-wood,
                  might perhaps lead to some more determinate conclusions; for as these weeds must
                  have been at first detached from the rocks on which they grew, it is probable that
                  from the degree of freshness or of putridity which they have when found, the time
                  they have been adrift, and in some rare instances, the distances from land, may be
                  conjectured; but the direction and force of the winds and waves, and other
                  accidental circumstances, must in that case be carefully taken into
                  consideration.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 9.]</date>The wind abated during night, so that we set out
                  courses on the 9th in the morning. The thermometer at eight o'clock was however
                  fallen to 35°, and only rose one degree at noon, being then in 49° 45' of south
                  latitude. Towards night it grew colder again, and at half an hour past ten, we
                  found the thermometer on deck very near 32°, and the edges of the scuttled-cask,
                  filled with fresh water, were freezing. This great cold preceded the sight of ice
                  floating in the sea, which we fell in with on the next morning. <date>[Thursday
                     10.]</date>The first we saw, was a lump of considerable size, so close to us,
                  that we were obliged to bear away from it; another of the same magnitude a little
                  more a-head, and a large mass about two leagues on the weather-bow, which had the
                  appearance of a white head-land, or a chalk-cliff.</p>

               <!-- AN April 7: This is one of the coordinates where Forster puts 'of' between coordinate & direction. -->

               <p>In the afternoon we passed another large cubical mass about 2000 feet long, 400
                  feet broad, and at least as high again as our main-top-gallant-mast head, or 200
                  feet high. According to the experiments of Boyle and Mairan , the volume of ice is
                  to that of sea-water, nearly as ten to nine: consequently, by the known rules of
                  hydrostatics, the volume of ice which rises above the surface of the water, is to
                  that which sinks below it, as one to nine. Supposing the piece which we now saw to
                  be entirely of a regular figure, its depth under water must have been one thousand
                  eight hundred feet, and its whole height two thousand feet, allowing its length as
                  abovementioned two thousand feet, and its breadth four hundred feet, the whole
                  mass must have contained one thousand six hundred millions cubic feet of ice.</p>

               <p>These prodigious pieces of ice, in all probability, drift but very slowly and
                  imperceptibly, since the greatest part of them being under water, the power of
                  winds and waves can have but little effect; currents perhaps are the principal
                  agents which give them motion, though I much question, whether their velocity is
                  ever considerable enough to carry them two miles in four-and-twenty hours. At the
                  time we met with this first ice, all our conjectures about its formation could not
                  amount to more than bare probabilities, and had not sufficient experience to
                  support them: but after we have made the tour of the globe, without finding the
                  Southern Continent, the existence of which has been so universally believed in
                  Europe; it seems in the highest degree reasonable to suppose this floating ice to
                  have been formed in the sea ; an idea the more probable, as repeated and decisive
                  experiments have evinced, that salt-water may be frozen.</p>

               <p>This ice likewise served to shew us the great difference between the temperature
                  of the northern and southern hemisphere. We were now in the midst of December,
                  which answers to our June, and the latitude observed at noon gave only 51° 5'
                  south, notwithstanding which we had already passed several pieces of ice, and the
                  thermometer stood at 36°. The want of land in the southern hemisphere seems to
                  account for this circumstance, since the sea, as a transparent fluid, absorbs the
                  beams of the sun, instead of reflecting them.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 11.]</date>On the 11th of December, about three o'clock in the
                  afternoon, we passed to leeward of a large piece, or island of ice, at least half
                  a mile in length. The thermometer on deck, which had been at 36° about two
                  o'clock, was risen to 41°, on account of the fair sunshine, which continued all
                  the afternoon: when we came abreast of the ice, the wind directly blowing from
                  thence, it gradually sunk to 37 1/3; however we had no sooner passed it, than the
                  mercury regained its former station of 41°. We also found that this difference of
                  four degrees, very perceptibly affected our bodies, and concluded that the large
                  masses of ice greatly contributed to refrigerate the general temperature of the
                  air in these inhospitable seas. The waves dashed with great violence against the
                  island of ice, as against a fixed body; sometimes they broke entirely over it,
                  notwithstanding its height, which was not much inferior to that of the
                  beforementioned piece, and we frequently saw the spray rise very high above it, a
                  phӕnomenon, which, on account of the fair weather, had a remarkable fine effect.
                  The sea-water by this means washed upon the ice, is probably congealed there, and
                  serves to encrease the mass; a circumstance very materially conducive to ascertain
                  the history of its formation.</p>

               <p>Notwithstanding the coldness of this climate, our sloops were still surrounded by
                  birds of the petrel genus, albatrosses and pinguins. We particularly observed a
                  petrel, about the size of a pigeon, entirely white, with a black bill and blueish
                  feet; it constantly appeared about the icy masses, and may be looked upon as a
                  sure fore-runner of ice. Its colour induced us to call it the snowy-petrel. A
                  grampus and several whales likewise made their appearance among the ice, and in
                  these chilling regions served to vary the dismal scene, and gave us some idea of a
                  southern Greenland.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 13.]</date>The number of icy masses encreased around us every day,
                  so that we numbered upwards of twenty of a vast size on the 13th in the afternoon.
                  One of them was full of black spots, which were taken for seals by some, and for
                  aquatic birds by others, though we could not find that they even shifted their
                  places. However seals being hitherto looked upon as certain signs of land, we
                  sounded in the evening with a line of one hundred and fifty fathoms, but found no
                  bottom. The latitude we were now in, was that in which Captain Lozier Bouvet had
                  placed his pretended discovery of Cape Circumcision, and our longitude was only a
                  few degrees to the eastward of it: the general expectation of seeing land, was
                  therefore very great, and every little circumstance like the preceding roused all
                  our attention; the clouds a-head were curiously examined at every moment, since
                  every one was eager to be the first to announce the land. We had already had
                  several false alarms from the fallacious conformation of fog-banks, or that of
                  islands of ice half hid in snow storms, and our consort the Adventure had
                  repeatedly made the signals for seeing land, deceived by such appearances: but
                  now, the imagination warmed with the idea of M. Bouvet's discovery, one of our
                  lieutenants, after having repeatedly been up to the mast-head, (about six o'clock
                  in the morning on the 14th) <date>[Monday 14.]</date>acquainted the captain that
                  he plainly saw the land. This news soon brought up all upon deck: We saw an
                  immense field of flat ice before us, broken into many small pieces on the edges, a
                  vast number of islands of ice of all shapes and sizes rose beyond it as far as the
                  eye could reach, and some of the most distant considerably raised by the hazy
                  vapours which lay on the horizon, had indeed some appearance of mountains. Several
                  of our officers persisted in the opinion that they had seen land here, till
                  Captain Cook, about two years and two months afterwards (in February 1775 on his
                  course from Cape Horn towards the Cape of Good Hope sailed over the same spot,
                  where they had supposed it to lie, and found neither land nor even ice there at
                  that time. Numbers of pinguins, pintadas, fulmars, snowy and blue petrels attended
                  this vast extent of ice, and different species of cetaceous animals spouted up the
                  water around us: two of them, shorter than other whales, were particularly
                  noticed, in respect of their bulk and of a white or rather fleshy colour. A great
                  degree of cold in these icy regions entirely precluded the idea of a summer, which
                  we had expected at this time of the year; our thermometer stood at 31° in the
                  morning, and did not rise beyond 33° at noon, though the latitude we observed this
                  day was only 54° 55' south. We passed through quantities of broken ice in the
                  afternoon, and saw another extensive ice-field, beyond which several of our people
                  still persisted in, taking fog-banks for land. It snowed a good deal during night,
                  and in the morning it was almost calm, but very foggy. A boat was hoisted out to
                  try the direction of the current. Mr. Wales the astronomer, and my father, took
                  this opportunity to repeat the experiments on the temperature of the sea at a
                  certain depth. The fog encreased so much while they were thus engaged, that they
                  entirely lost sight of both the ships. Their situation in a small four-oared boat,
                  on an immense ocean, far from any inhabitable shore, surrounded with ice, and
                  utterly destitute of provisions, was truly terrifying and horrible in its
                  consequences. They rowed about for some time, making vain efforts to be heard, but
                  all was silent about them, and they could not see the length of their boat. They
                  were the more unfortunate, as they had neither mast nor sail, and only two oars.
                  In this dreadful suspence they determined to lie still, hoping that, provided they
                  preserved their place, the sloops would not drive out of sight, as it was calm. At
                  last they heard the jingling of a bell at a distance; this sound was heavenly
                  music to their ears; they immediately rowed towards it, and by continual hailing,
                  were at last answered from the Adventure, and hurried on board, overjoyed to have
                  escaped the danger of perishing by slow degrees, through the inclemencies of
                  weather and through famine. Having been on board some time, they fired a gun, and
                  being within hail of the Resolution, returned on board of that sloop, to their own
                  damp beds and mouldering cabins, upon which they now set a double value, after so
                  perilous an expedition. The risks to which the voyager is exposed at sea are very
                  numerous, and danger often arises where it is least expected. Neither can we trace
                  the care of Providence more evidently in storms among hidden rocks and shoals, and
                  where water or fire threaten destruction, than in these little circumstances,
                  which the traveller and the reader are both too apt to forget or pass lightly
                  over, if they come to a favourable issue.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 18.]</date>The quantity of impenetrable ice to the south did not
                  permit us to advance towards that quarter; therefore, after several fruitless
                  attempts, we stood on to the eastward, along it, frequently making way through
                  great spots covered with broken ice, which answered the description of what the
                  northern navigators call packed ice. Heavy hail showers and frequent falls of snow
                  continually obscured the air, and only gave us the reviving sight of the sun
                  during short intervals. Large islands of ice were hourly seen in all directions
                  around the sloops, so that they were now become as familiar to us as the clouds
                  and the sea; their frequency however still led to new observations, which our long
                  acquaintance with them served to confirm. We were certain of meeting with ice in
                  any quarter where we perceived a strong reflexion of white on the shirts of the
                  sky near the horizon. However the ice is not always entirely white, but often
                  tinged, especially near the surface of the sea, with a most beautiful sapphirine
                  or rather berylline blue, evidently reflected from the water; this blue colour
                  sometimes appeared twenty or thirty feet above the surface, and was there probably
                  owing to some particles of sea-water which had been dashed against the mass in
                  tempestuous weather, and had penetrated into its interstices. We could likewise
                  frequently observe in great islands of ice, different shades or casts of white,
                  lying above each other in strata of six inches or one foot high. This appearance
                  seems to confirm the opinion concerning the farther encrease and accumulation of
                  such huge masses by heavy falls of snow at different intervals. For snow being of
                  various kinds, small grained, large grained, in light feathery locks, &amp;c. the
                  various degrees of its compactness account for the different colours of the
                  strata.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 22.]</date>We did not lose sight of our destination to explore the
                  southern frigid zone, and no sooner perceived the sea more open than before, than
                  we stood once more to the south-ward. We made but small advances at first, the
                  wind being very faint, and almost falling calm in the morning on the 23d.
                     <date>[Wednesd. 23.]</date>We seized this opportunity to hoist out a boat, and
                  continue the experiments on the current, and on the temperature of the sea. The
                  species of petrels which were numerous about us, were likewise examined,
                  described, and drawn this day, having been shot as they hovered with seeming
                  curiosity over our little boat.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 24.]</date>We continued standing southerly, and even made a good
                  deal of westing, the wind being S. S. E. <date>[Friday 25.]</date>The next morning
                  the wind blew pretty fresh, and carried us past several islands of ice; some
                  whales, and a number of birds appearing about us. Our first Christmas day during
                  this voyage, was spent with the usual chearfulness among officers and passengers;
                  but among the sailors, notwithstanding the surrounding rocks of ice, with savage
                  noise and drunkenness, to which they seem to have particularly devoted the day.
                     <date>[Saturday 26.]</date>The next morning we sailed through a great quantity
                  of packed or broken ice, some of which looked dirty or decaying. Islands of ice
                  still surrounded us, and in the evening, the sun setting just behind one of them,
                  tinged its edges with gold, and brought upon the whole mass a beautiful suffusion
                  of purple. A dead calm which succeeded on the 27th, gave us an opportunity of
                  hoisting the boat out, and going to shoot pinguins and petrels. The chace of
                  pinguins proved very unsuccessful, though it afforded great sport; the birds dived
                  so frequently, continued so long under water, and at times skipped continually
                  into and out of the water, making way with such amazing velocity in a strait line,
                  that we were obliged to give over the pursuit. At last we came near enough to one,
                  to wound it; but though we followed it closely, and fired above ten times with
                  small shot, which we could observe to hit, yet we were at last obliged to kill it
                  with ball. When we took it up, we perceived that its hard, glossy plumage, had
                  continually turned the shot aside. This plumage is extremely thick, and consists
                  of long narrow feathers, which lie above each other as closely as scales, and
                  secure these amphibious birds against the wet, in which they almost constantly
                  live. Their very thick skin and their fat seem wisely appropriated to them by
                  nature, to resist the perpetual winter of these unhospitable climates; their broad
                  belly, the situation of their feet far behind, and their fins, which supply the
                  place of wings, are constructed with equal wisdom to facilitate the progress of
                  their otherwise lumpish bodies through the water. The one that we had now shot
                  weighed eleven pounds and a half. The blue petrels which are seen throughout this
                  immense ocean, and which now settled in flocks of several hundreds on the smooth
                  surface of the water, were not worse fitted out against the cold than the
                  pinguins. Their plumage was amazingly abundant, and increased their bulk in a
                  great proportion; and two feathers instead of one, proceeded out of every root,
                  lying within each other, and formed a very warm covering. As they are almost
                  continually in the air, their wings are very strong, and of a great length to
                  support them. On the ocean, between New Zeeland and America, we have found them
                  above seven hundred leagues from any land; a distance which it would have been
                  impossible for them to have passed, without an amazing strength in their bones and
                  muscles, and the assistance of long wings. Possibly these birds spreading over the
                  whole ocean far from any land, may live a considerable time without fresh supplies
                  of food; that being the case with many animals of prey, both in the class of
                  quadrupeds and that of birds. Our experience should seem in some measure to
                  contradict, and in some degree to confirm, this supposition. For whenever we lamed
                  any of them, they disgorged a quantity of viscid food, to all appearance recently
                  digested, which the rest immediately swallowed up with such avidity as seemed to
                  indicate a long fast. Therefore it may be probably, that several sorts of blubbers
                  (mollusca) inhabit these icy seas, which may come to the surface in fair weather,
                  and supply the weary birds with food. We were glad to meet with subjects from
                  whence these little reflections could be drawn. They afforded us a momentary
                  relief from that gloomy uniformity with which we slowly passed dull hours, days,
                  and months in this desolate part of the world. We were almost perpetually wrapt in
                  thick fogs, beaten with showers of rain, sleet, hail, and snow, the temperature of
                  the air being constantly about the point of congelation in the height of summer;
                  surrounded by innumerable islands of ice against which we daily ran the risk of
                  being shipwrecked, and forced to live upon salt provisions, which concurred with
                  the cold and wet to infect the mass of our blood. These severities naturally
                  inspired a general wish for a happier change of situation and climate, though our
                  seamen coming fresh and strong from England, were not yet dispirited amidst the
                  numberless fatigues and inclemencies to which they were exposed. The
                  prophylactics, with which we had been supplied, and which were regularly served to
                  the crew, namely portable broth, and sour krout, had a wonderful effect in keeping
                  them free from the sea-scurvy. Two or three men however, of a bad habit of body,
                  could not resist this dreadful disease; one of them in particular, George Jackson,
                  a carpenter, fell ill ten days after leaving the Cape; his gums were ulcerous, and
                  his teeth so loose, as to lie sideways. A marmalade of carrots, which had been
                  much recommended was tried, but without success, it having no other effect than
                  that of keeping him open. Our surgeon, Mr. Patton, then began the cure with fresh
                  wort, i.e. the infusion of malt, by which he gradually recovered, and in the space
                  of a few weeks, was perfectly cured, his teeth fast, and his gums entirely
                  renewed. As the efficient cause of his complaint still existed, he was obliged to
                  continue the use of wort even after his cure, and by that means was kept free from
                  all scorbutic symptoms. The encomiums on the efficacy of malt cannot be
                  exaggerated, and this useful remedy ought never to be forgotten on board of ships
                  bound on long voyages; nor can we bestow too much care to prevent its becoming
                  damp and mouldy, by which means its salutary qualities are impaired, as we
                  experienced during the latter part of our voyage.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. January.][Friday 1.]</date>The new year began with snow-showers and
                  fresh cold gales, which carried us to the westward, under the meridian, where M.
                  Bouvet placed the discovery, which he called Cape Circumcision. The sight of seals
                  and pinguins once more revived the hopes of some of our fellow-voyagers, who bid
                  us look out for land, which by their account could not be far off. Our course
                  however soon disappointed their expectations, and only served to invalidate their
                  testimonies of the proximity of land.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 3.]</date>The wind shifted to the north-westward in the night, and
                  we stood back again to the east, having first proceeded beyond the meridian of M.
                  Bouvet's discovery. We passed the spot where we had met with much ice on the 31st
                  of December, and found it drifted away from thence; after which we continued our
                  course to the S. E. </p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 9.]</date>On the 9th, in the morning, we saw a large island of
                  ice, surrounded with many small broken pieces, and the weather being moderate we
                  brought to, hoisted out the boats, and sent them to take up as much of the small
                  ice as they could. We piled up the lumps on the quarter-deck, packed them into
                  casks, and after dinner melted them in the coppers, and obtained about thirty days
                  water, in the course of this day, and in the latitude of 61° 36' south. Two days
                  afterwards we had another opportunity of supplying our sloops with ice, which our
                  people performed with great alacrity, notwithstanding the excoriation of their
                  hands, which the cold and the sharpness of the sea produced. A picturesque view of
                  some large masses of ice, and of our ships and boats employed in watering from
                  small ice, is inserted in Captain Cook's account of this voyage. Some white whales
                  of a huge size, seemingly sixty feet long, were observed here, and many pinguins
                  floated past us, standing upright on small bits of ice. The water we melted out of
                  this ice was perfectly fresh, and had a purer taste than any which we have on
                  board. If any fault could be found with it, it was that the fixed air was expelled
                  from it, by which means almost every one who used it was affected with swellings
                  in the glands of the throat. Water melted from snow or ice is known always to have
                  this effect, and the constant use of it in mountainous countries produces those
                  enormous wens (goîtres) which are common among Alpine nations, and are become so
                  habitual that they are looked upon as ornamental. Several persons on board,
                  unacquainted with natural philosophy, were very seriously afraid that the ice,
                  when it began to melt, would burst the casks in which it was paced, not
                  considering that its volume must be greater in its frozen than in its melted
                  state, since it floated on the surface. The Captain, to undeceive them, placed a
                  little pot filled with stamped ice in a temperate cabin, where it gradually
                  dissolved, and in that state took up considerably less space than before. Ocular
                  demonstration always goes farther than the clearest arguments; but reasoning never
                  has less weight than with sailors.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 17.]</date>On the 17th, in the forenoon, we crossed the antarctic
                  circle, and advanced into the southern frigid zone, which had hitherto remained
                  impenetrable to all navigators. Some days before this period we had seen a new
                  species of petrel, of a brown colour, with a white belly and rump, and a large
                  white spot on the wings, which we now named the antarctic petrel, as we saw great
                  flights of twenty or thirty of them hereabouts, of which we shot many that
                  unfortunately never fell into the ship. About five o'clock in the afternoon, we
                  had sight of more than thirty large islands of ice a-head; and perceived a strong
                  white reflexion from the sky over the horizon. Soon after we passed through vast
                  quantities of broken ice, which looked honey-combed and spungy, and of a dirty
                  colour. This continually thickened about us, so that the sea became very smooth,
                  though the wind was fresh as before. An immense field of solid ice extended beyond
                  it to the south, as far as the eye could reach from the mast-head. Seeing it was
                  impossible to advance farther that way, Captain Cook ordered the ships to put
                  about, and stood north-east by north, after having reached 67° 15' south latitude,
                  where many whales, snowy, grey, and antarctic petrels, appeared in every
                  quarter.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 20.]</date>On the 19th and 20th we saw a bird, which a gentleman,
                  who had been at Falkland's islands, called a Port-Egmont hen , and which proved to
                  be the skua or great northern gull (larus catarractes), common in the high
                  latitudes of both hemispheres. The appearance of this bird, was likewise construed
                  into a prognostick of land; but our disappointments had already been so frequent
                  in this respect, that we were not easily led to give credit to bare assertions. We
                  saw a bird of this species again on the 27th, when we had a great variety of all
                  kinds of petrels and albatrosses around us. It always soared up to a great height,
                  perpendicularly over our heads, and looked down upon us, as it should seem with
                  great attention, turning its head now on one side, and now on the other. This was
                  a novelty to us, who were used to see all the other aquatic birds of this climate
                  keep near the surface of the sea. The next evening, and on the 29th, we had
                  several porpesses passing by us with amazing swiftness in all directions. They
                  were pied, and had a large blotch of white on the sides, which came almost up to
                  the back behind the dorsal fin. Their velocity was at least triple that of our
                  vessels, though we now went at the rate of seven knots and a half. In the
                  afternoon we saw a small black and white bird, which some called an ice-bird, and
                  others a murr, and which seldom or never go out of sight of land; but as we could
                  not come near enough to examine it more accurately, we rather believed that it
                  might be a species of petrel. We stood however off and on this night and the next,
                  finding the sea very moderate, though the wind blew very fresh. We were the more
                  induced to take this precaution as we had received intelligence at the Cape of
                  Good Hope of a discovery of land hereabouts, by the French captains M. de
                  Kerguelen and M. de St. Allouarn in January 1772.</p>

               <p>As the journal of that voyage has been suppressed in France, I shall here insert
                  such particulars as were communicated to us by several French officers at the Cape
                  of Good Hope. M. de Kerguelen, a lieutenant in the French navy, commanding the
                  vessel (flute) la Fortune, and having with him a smaller vessel (gabarre) le Gros
                  Ventre, commanded by M. de St. Allouarn, sailed from the Isle of France or
                  Mauritius the latter end of 1771. On the 13th of January 1772, he saw two isles,
                  which he called the Isles of Fortune; and the next morning one more, which from
                  its shape they called Isle Ronde. Almost about the same time, M. de Kerguelen saw
                  land, of a considerable extent and height, upon which he sent one of the officers
                  of his ship a-head in the cutter to sound. But the wind blowing fresh, M. de St.
                  Allouarn in the Gros Ventre shot ahead of the boat, and finding a bay, which he
                  called the Gros Ventre's bay sent his own yawl to take possession of the land
                  which was performed with the utmost difficulty. Both the boats then returned
                  aboard the Gros Ventre, and the cutter was cut adrift on account of the bad
                  weather. M. de St. Allouarn then spent three days in quest of M. de Kerguelen, who
                  had been driven sixty leagues to leeward, on account of his weak masts, and was
                  returned towards the Isle of France. M. de St. Allouarn continued to take the
                  bearings of this land, and doubled its northern extremity beyond which it tended
                  to the south-eastward. In this direction he coasted it for the space of twenty
                  leagues, and seeing it was very high, inaccessible, and destitute of trees, he
                  left it, standing over to the coast of New Holland, from thence to Timor and
                  Batavia, and at last back to the Isle of France, where he died soon after his
                  arrival. On M. de Kerguelen's return to Europe, he was immediately sent out again
                  with a 64 gun ship called the Roland, and the frigate l'Oiseau, captain Rosnevet;
                  but after having just seen the land, which he had discovered in his former voyage,
                  he returned without making farther discoveries. The northern coast of the land
                  which he discovered, is situated in about 48 degrees south latitude, and about 82
                  degrees east longitude from Ferro, or 6 degrees east of the Isle of France, (i.e.
                  in about 64° 20' east from Greenwich).</p>
               <!-- AN April 7:Forster wrote out degrees. -->
               <p>M. de Marion in his expedition of 1772, in January, fell in with small islands in
                  three different places, about the latitude of 46 1/2° and 47 1/2° , and about the
                  longitudes of 37°, 46 1/2° , and 48 1/2° east from Greenwich. These islands were
                  all of inconsiderable extent, high, rocky, destitute of trees, and almost entirely
                  barren. M. de Marion had two ships under his command, one the Mascarin, captain
                  Crozet, the other the Castrie, captain Du Clesmure. They proceeded to the southern
                  extremity of New Holland, or Diemen's land, first seen by Tasman; and from thence
                  to the bay of islands in New Zeeland, where M. de Marion was killed with 28 of his
                  men by the natives, of which more shall be said in the sequel. After this loss M.
                  de Crozet, on whom the command devolved, passed through the western part of the
                  South Sea to the Philippinas, from whence he returned to the Isle de France.
                  Agreeably to these accounts, the discoveries of the French voyagers have been laid
                  down in an excellent <date>[1773. February.]</date>chart of the southern
                  hemisphere, by M. de Vaugondy, under the direction of the duke de Croy, and
                  published in March 1773.</p>

               <p>On the 31st in the evening, our latitude being nearly that of 50° south, we passed
                  by a large island of ice, which at that instant crumbled to pieces with a
                  tremendous explosion. <date>[Monday 1.]</date>The next morning a bundle of sea
                  weeds was seen floating past the sloop; and in the afternoon, captain Furneaux in
                  the Adventure having hailed us, acquainted captain Cook that he had seen a number
                  of divers, resembling those in the English seas, and had past a great bed of
                  floating rock-weeds. In consequence of these observations we stood off and on
                  during night, and continued an easterly course the next morning. <date>[Tuesday
                     2.]</date>We saw many petrels and black shear-waters, some rock-weed, and a
                  single tern (sterna) or as the seamen call it an egg-bird, which had a forked
                  tail. At noon we observed in 48° 36' south latitude, which was nearly the same in
                  which the French discoveries are said to be situated. After noon we stood
                  south-westward, but the next day the gale encreased to such a degree, as obliged
                  us to hand our topsails, and stand on under the courses all night: however, at
                  eight o'clock on the 4th, we found a smooth sea gain, and set more sail, changing
                  our course to the north-westward at noon. On the 6th our latitude at noon was
                  nearly 48 degrees south, about 60 degrees east from Greenwich, when not seeing any
                  land, we gave over the attempt to stand in search of it, and directed our course
                  once more to the south-eastward, to the main object of our voyage. The smoothness
                  of the sea, whilst we had strong easterly gales, however persuaded us, that there
                  was probably some land near us to the eastward, and the situation given to the
                  French discoveries, in M. Vaugondy's late chart, has confirmed our supposition;
                  for, according to it, we must have been at least 2 degrees of longitude to the
                  west of it, on the second of February, when we were farthest to the east in the
                  given latitude. Though we did not fall in with the land itself, yet we have done
                  so much service to geography by our track, as to put it beyond a doubt, that the
                  French discovery is a small island, and not, what it was supposed at first to be,
                  the north cape of a great southern continent.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 8.]</date>On the 8th in the morning, we had an exceeding thick fog,
                  during which we lost sight of the Adventure, our consort. We fired guns all that
                  day and the next, at first every half hour, and afterwards every hour, without
                  receiving any answer; and at night we burnt false fires, which likewise proved
                  ineffectual.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 10.]</date>On the 10th in the morning, notwithstanding all our
                  endeavours to recover our consort, we were obliged to proceed alone on a dismal
                  course to the southward, and to expose ourselves once more to the dangers of that
                  frozen climate, without the hope of being saved by our fellow-voyagers, in case of
                  losing our own vessel. Our parting with the Adventure, was almost universally
                  regretted among our crew, and none of them ever looked around the ocean without
                  expressing some concern on seeing our ship alone on this vast and unexplored
                  expanse, where the appearance of a companion seemed to alleviate our toils, and
                  inspired cheerfulness and comfort. We were likewise not entirely without
                  apprehensions, that the Adventure might have fallen in with land, as the sight of
                  pinguins, of little diving petrels, and especially of a kind of grebe, seemed to
                  vindicate its vicinity. Indeed, according to the chart of M. Vaugondy we must have
                  been but very little to the south of it at that time.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 17.]</date>On the 17th we were near 8 degrees south, and took up a
                  great quantity of small ice, with which we filled our water casks. A variety of
                  petrels and albatrosses, had attended us continually; and from time to time the
                  skua, or great northern gull (larus catarractes), which our people called a Port
                  Egmont hen, many pinguins, some seals, and some whales had made their appearance
                  near us. A beautiful phӕnomenon was observed during the preceding night, which
                  appeared again this and several following nights. It consisted of long columns of
                  a clear white light, shooting up from the horizon to the eastward, almost to the
                  zenith, and gradually spreading on the whole southern part of the sky. These
                  columns sometimes were bent sideways at their upper extremity, and though in most
                  respects similar to the northern lights (aurora borealis) of our hemisphere, yet
                  differed from them, in being always of a whitish colour, whereas ours assume
                  various tints, especially those of a fiery, and purple hue. The stars were
                  sometimes hid by, and sometimes faintly to be seen through the substance of these
                  southern lights, (aurora australis), which have hitherto, as far as I can find,
                  escaped the notice of voyagers. The sky was generally clear when they appeared,
                  and the air sharp and cold, the thermometer standing at the freezing point.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 24.]</date>On the 24th, being in about 62 degrees sgouth latitude,
                  we fell in once more with a solid field of ice, which confined our progress to the
                  south, very much to the satisfaction of every body on board. We had now been long
                  at sea, without receiving any refreshment; the favourable season for making
                  discoveries towards the frozen zone, drew to an end; the weather daily became more
                  sharp, and uncomfortable, and presaged a dreadful winter in these seas; and,
                  lastly, the nights lengthened apace, and made our navigation more dangerous than
                  it had hitherto been. It was therefore very natural, that our people, exhausted by
                  fatigues and the want of wholesome food, should wish for a place of refreshment,
                  and rejoice to leave a part of the world, where they could not expect to meet with
                  it. <date>[1773. March.][Wednesd. 17.]</date>We continued however from this day
                  till the 17th of March to run to the eastward, between 61° and 58°of s outh
                  latitude, during which time we had a great share of easterly winds, which commonly
                  brought fogs, and rains with them, and repeatedly exposed us to the most imminent
                  danger of being wrecked against huge islands of ice. The shapes of these large
                  frozen masses, were frequently singularly ruinous, and so far picturesque enough;
                  among them we passed one of a great size, with a hollow in the middle, resembling
                  a grotto or cavern, which was pierced through, and admitted the light from the
                  other side. Some had the appearance of a spire or steeple; and many others gave
                  full scope to our imagination, which compared them to several known objects, by
                  that means attempting to overcome the tediousness of our cruize, which the sight
                  of birds, porpesses, seals, and whales, now too familiar to our eyes, could not
                  prevent from falling heavily upon us. Notwithstanding our excellent preservatives,
                  especially the sour-krout, several of our people had now strong symptoms of
                  sea-scurvy, such as bad gums, difficult breathing, livid blotches, eruptions,
                  contracted limbs, and greenish greasy filaments in the urine. Wort was therefore
                  prescribed to them, and those who were the most affected drank five pints of it
                  per day; the contracted limbs were bathed in it, and the warm grains applied to
                  them. By this means we succeeded to mitigate, and in some individuals entirely to
                  remove the symptoms of this horrid disease. The rigours of the climate likewise
                  violently affected the live sheep, which we had embarked at the Cape of Good Hope.
                  They were covered with eruptions, dwindled to mere skeletons, and would hardly
                  take any nourishment. Our goats and sows too, miscarried in the tempestuous
                  weather, or their off-spring were killed by the cold. In short, we felt, from the
                  numerous concurrent circumstances, that it was time to abandon the high southern
                  latitudes, and retire to some port, where our crew might obtain refreshments, and
                  where we might save the few sheep, which were intended as presents to the natives
                  of the South-sea islands.</p>

               <!-- AN April 7:Forster wrote out degrees & separated with 'of'.-->

               <p>On the 16th, being in about 58 degrees of south latitude, we saw the sea luminous
                  at night, though not to such a degree as we had observed it near the Cape, but
                  only by means of some scattered sparks. This phӕnomenon was however remarkable, on
                  account of the high latitude we were in, and the cold weather, our thermometer
                  being at 33 1/4° at noon. We saw the southern lights again during the nights of
                  the 16th and 19th; and this last time, the columns formed an arch across the sky,
                  rather brighter than any we had hitherto seen. We now stood to the north-eastward,
                  in order to reach the south end of New-Zeeland; and on this course we had strong
                  gales, and frequently saw weeds, especially rock-weeds, together with numbers of
                  petrels, and other birds. We were much amused by a singular chace of several skuas
                  or great grey gulls, after a large white albatross. The skuas seemed to get the
                  better of this bird, notwithstanding its length of wings, and whenever they
                  overtook it, they endeavoured to attack it under the belly, probably knowing that
                  to be the most defenceless part; the albatross on these occasions had no other
                  method of escaping, than by settling on the water, where its formidable beak
                  seemed to keep them at bay. The skuas are in general very strong and rapacious
                  birds, and in the Ferro Islands frequently tear lambs to pieces, and carry them
                  away to their nests. The albatrosses do not seem to be so rapacious, but live upon
                  small marine animals, especially of the mollusca, or blubber class. They appeared
                  in great numbers around us, as we came to the northward of 50 degrees south, only
                  few solitary birds having gone so far to the south as we had penetrated; from
                  whence it may be inferred, that they are properly inhabitants of the temperate
                  zone.</p>

               <p>As we stood to the northward, we also observed more seals every day, which came
                  from the coast of New Zeeland. A large trunk of a tree, and several bunches of
                  weeds <date>[Thursday 25.]</date>were seen on the 25th, and greatly exhilarated
                  the spirits of our sailors. Soon after, the land was descried, bearing N. E. by E.
                  at a vast distance. About five o'clock in the afternoon we were within a few miles
                  of it, and saw some high mountains inland, and a broken rocky coast before us,
                  where several inlets seemed to indicate an extensive bay or sound. We tried
                  soundings in 30 fathoms, but found none; however, at the mast-head they observed
                  sunken rocks close to us, on which we immediately tacked, and stood off shore, as
                  the weather was growing dark and misty. The next morning we found this part of New
                  Zeeland lay to the southward of Cape West, and had not been explored by captain
                  Cook, in the Endeavour.</p>

               <p>Thus ended our first cruize in the high southern latitudes, after a space of four
                  months and two days, out of sight of land, during which we had experienced no
                  untoward accident, and had been safely led through numerous dangers by the guiding
                  hand of Providence, which preserved our crew in good health during the whole time,
                  a few individuals excepted. Our whole course, from the Cape of Good Hope to New
                  Zeeland, was a series of hardships, which had never been experienced before: all
                  the disagreeable circumstances of the sails and rigging shattered to pieces, the
                  vessel rolling gunwale to, and her upper works torn by the violence of the strain;
                  the concomitant effects of storms, which have been painted with such strong
                  expression, and blackness of Colorit, by the able writer of Anson's Voyage, were
                  perhaps the least distressing occurrences of ours. We had the perpetual severities
                  of a rigorous climate to cope with; our seamen and officers were exposed to rain,
                  sleet, hail, and snow; our rigging was constantly encrusted with ice, which cut
                  the hands of those who were obliged to touch it; our provision of fresh water was
                  to be collected in lumps of ice floating on the sea, where the cold, and the sharp
                  saline element alternately numbed, and scarified the sailors' limbs; we were
                  perpetually exposed to the danger of running against huge masses of ice, which
                  filled the immense Southern ocean: the frequent and sudden appearance of these
                  perils, required an almost continual exertion of the whole crew, to manage the
                  ship with the greatest degree of precision and dispatch. The length of time which
                  we remained out of sight of land, and the long abstinence from any sort of
                  refreshment were equally distressful; for our hooks and lines distributed in
                  November (See pag. 90.) had hitherto been of no service, on account of our
                  navigation in high southern latitudes, and across an unfathomable ocean, where we
                  saw no fish except whales, and where it is well known no others can be expected;
                  the torrid zone being the only one where they may be caught out of soundings.</p>

               <p>We may add to these the dismal gloominess which always prevailed in the southern
                  latitudes, where we had impenetrable fogs lasting for weeks together, and where we
                  rarely saw the cheering face of the sun; a circumstance which alone is sufficient
                  to deject the most undaunted, and to sour the spirits of the most cheerful. It is
                  therefore justly to be wondered at, and ought to be considered as a distinguishing
                  mark of divine protection, that we had not felt those ill effects which might have
                  been expected, and justly dreaded as the result of such accumulated
                  distresses.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. V.</l>
                  <l>Stay at Dusky Bay; description of it, and account of our transactions
                     there.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. March.]</date>AFTER an interval of one hundred and twenty-two days,
                  and a run of above three thousand five hundred leagues, out of sight of land, we
                  entered Dusky Bay on the 26th of March about noon. <date>[Friday 26.]</date>This
                  bay is situated a little to the northward of Cape West, and captain Cook, in his
                  voyage in the Endeavour, had discovered and named it without entering into it .
                  The soundings gave about 40 fathoms in the entrance, but as we advanced, we had no
                  ground with 60, and therefore were obliged to push on farther. The weather was
                  delightfully fair, and genially warm, when compared to what we had lately
                  experienced; and we glided along by insensible degrees, wafted by light airs, past
                  numerous rocky islands, each of which was covered with wood and shrubberies, where
                  numerous evergreens were sweetly contrasted and mingled with the various shades of
                  autumnal yellow. Flocks of aquatic birds enlivened the rocky shores, and the whole
                  country resounded with the wild notes of the feathered tribe. We had long and
                  eagerly wished for the land and its vegetable productions, and therefore could not
                  but eye the prospect before us with peculiar delight, and with emotions of joy and
                  satisfaction which were strongly marked in the countenance of each individual.</p>

               <p>About three o'clock in the afternoon, we dropped an anchor under a point of an
                  island, where we were in some measure sheltered from the sea, and so near the
                  shore, as to reach it with a hawser. The sloop was no sooner in safety, than every
                  sailor put his hook and line overboard, and in a few moments numbers of fine fish
                  were hauled up on all parts of the vessel, which heightened the raptures we had
                  already felt at our entrance into this bay. The real good taste of the fish,
                  joined to our long abstinence, inclined us to look upon our first meal here, as
                  the most delicious we had ever made in our lives. The view of rude sceneries in
                  the style of Rosa, of antediluvian forests which cloathed the rock, and of
                  numerous rills of water, which every where rolled down the steep declivity,
                  altogether conspired to complete our joy; and so apt is mankind, after a long
                  absence from land, to be prejudiced in favour of the wildest shore, that we looked
                  upon the country at that time, as one of the most beautiful which nature
                  unassisted by art could produce. Such are the general ideas of travellers and
                  voyagers long exhausted by distresses; and with such warmth of imagination they
                  have viewed the rude cliffs of Juan Fernandez, and the impenetrable forests of
                  Tinian!</p>

               <p>Immediately after dinner two boats were sent out to reconnoitre different parts of
                  the bay, and chiefly to look for a safe harbour for our vessel, the first
                  anchoring-place being open, inconvenient, and only serving the necessity of the
                  moment. We improved these opportunities of pursuing our researches in natural
                  history, and separated in order to profit by both excursions. Each of the parties
                  found convenient and well-sheltered harbours, with plenty of wood and water; and
                  wherever they went they met with such abundance of fish and water-fowl, that they
                  entertained hopes of a constant supply of refreshments during their stay in these
                  parts. This prospect prevailed upon Capt. Cook, who had but cursorily examined the
                  southern extremities of New-Zeeland in his former voyage, to spend some time
                  there, in order to gain a more competent knowledge of its situation and
                  productions. On our part, we perceived a new store of animal and vegetable bodies,
                  and among them hardly any that were perfectly similar to the known species, and
                  several not analogous even to the known genera. With these therefore we hoped to
                  be wholly employed during our stay, in spight of the approach of autumn, which
                  seemed to threaten the vegetable creation.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 27.]</date>Early the next morning, a small boat having been sent
                  out towards the shore, returned in three hours time with as many fishes, caught by
                  the hook, as supplied a plentiful dinner to all on board. The best and most
                  savoury fish was a species of the cod, which, from its external colour, our
                  sailors called a coal-fish: besides this we caught several species of excellent
                  flat cavalhas (sciœnœ;), some scorpens, mullets, horse-mackrel, and many other
                  sorts of a fine taste, which were entirely unknown in Europe. At nine o'clock we
                  got under sail and went into Pickersgill harbour one of those examined the
                  preceding day, where the ship was moored head and stern in a small creek, and so
                  near the shore, that we could reach it by means of a stage of a few planks. Nature
                  had assisted us for this purpose with a large tree, projecting in an horizontal
                  position over the water, of which we placed the top on our gunwale, connecting our
                  planks with it. This situation facilitated all our operations, and was
                  particularly adapted to the conveniency of wooding and watering, for our sloop's
                  yards were locked in the branches of surrounding trees, and about half a musket
                  shot a-stern we had a fine stream of fresh water.</p>

               <p>We now began the clear away the woods from a neighbouring hill, in order to fix
                  the astronomer's observatory upon it, and to establish our forge there, as our
                  iron-works wanted repairs. Near the watering-place we pitched tents for the
                  sail-makers, coopers, waterers, and wood-cutters. These occupations served to
                  lower the great idea which our people had conceived of this country; for the
                  prodigious intricacy of various climbers, briars, shrubs, and ferns which were
                  interwoven throughout the forests, rendered the task of clearing the ground
                  extremely fatiguing and difficult, and almost precluded the access to the interior
                  parts of the country. It is indeed reasonable to suppose, that in the southern
                  parts of New-Zeeland, the forests have never been touched by human industry, but
                  have remained in the rude unimproved state of nature since their first existence.
                  Our excursions into them gave us sufficient grounds for this supposition; for not
                  only the climbing plants and shrubs obstructed our passage, but likewise numbers
                  of rotten trees lay in our way, felled by winds and old age. A new generation of
                  young trees, of parasitic plants, ferns, and mosses sprouted out of the rich mould
                  to which this old timber was reduced by length of time, and a deceitful bark
                  sometimes still covered the interior rotten substance, whereon if we attempted to
                  step, we sunk in to the waist. The animal creation afforded another proof that
                  this country had not yet undergone any changes from the hands of mankind, and
                  indeed at first raised the idea, that Dusky Bay was wholly uninhabited. Numbers of
                  small birds which dwelt in the woods were so little acquainted with men, that they
                  familiarly hopped upon the nearest branches, nay on the ends of our
                  fowling-pieces, and perhaps looked at us as new objects, with a curiosity similar
                  to our own. This little boldness in reality at first protected them from harm,
                  since it was impossible to shoot them when they approached so near; but in a few
                  days it frequently proved the means of their destruction; for a sly cat on board,
                  had no sooner perceived so excellent an opportunity of obtaining delicious meals,
                  than she regularly took a walk in the woods every morning, and made great havock
                  among the little birds, that were not aware of such an insidious enemy.</p>

               <p>As we had plenty of fish, and saw a number of water-birds which might afford us a
                  variety of animal food, some of our botanical excursions were in a great measure
                  instituted in search of useful vegetables, to be eaten as greens. From thence the
                  most salutary effects might be expected, by a set of people who had been above
                  seventeen weeks at sea, and whose blood must have been more or less corrupted by
                  living so long on salt provisions.</p>

               <p>On the first day after our arrival we found a beautiful tree in flower, something
                  related to the myrtle-genus, of which an infusion had been drank instead of tea in
                  Capt. Cook's former voyage. We immediately repeated the experiment with great
                  eagerness, as we had not yet seen any plant which was fit to be used at our
                  tables. Its leaves were finely aromatic, astringent, and had a particular pleasant
                  flavour at the first infusion; but this fine taste went off at the next filling up
                  of the tea-pot, and a great degree of bitterness was then extracted. We therefore
                  never suffered it to be twice infused. The use of this plant, which became general
                  among our crew, probably contributed greatly to restore their strength, and to
                  remove all scorbutic symptoms. A plant, which might be of service to future
                  navigators, deserved to be drawn, in order that they might know it again. We have
                  therefore very readily permitted Captain Cook to make use of our drawing of it,
                  from which a plate has been engraved by order of the Admiralty, intended to
                  accompany his own account of this voyage. In a fine soil in thick forests it grows
                  to a considerable tree, sometimes thirty or forty feet high, and above a foot in
                  diameter; on a hilly arid exposure I have, on the contrary, found it as a little
                  shrub, six inches high, which bore flowers and seed; but its usual size is about
                  eight or ten feet, and about three inches in diameter. In that case its stem is
                  irregular and unequal, dividing very soon into branches which rise at acute
                  angles, and only bear leaves and flowers at top. The flowers are white and very
                  ornamental to the whole plant. Another tree, which grew in great plenty round
                  about us, was likewise tried, and afforded a good infusion; but the resemblance it
                  bore to the trees of the fir tribe, and a kind of resinous taste, soon convinced
                  us that it was fitter to serve the purposes of the American spruce-tree, and that
                  a palatable and wholesome liquor might be brewed from it, as a kind of substitute
                  for spruce-beer . In effect, with the addition of the inspissated juice of wort,
                  and of some molasses, we brewed a very good sort of beer, which we improved very
                  considerably afterwards, by correcting the too great astringency of our new
                  spruce, with an equal quantity of the new tea-tree. Its taste was pleasant, and
                  something bitter; and the only fault we could observe in it was, that being taken
                  on an empty stomach, it frequently caused a nausea or sickness; but in all other
                  respects it proved a very salutary drink. The spruce of New-Zeeland is a very
                  beautiful tree, and conspicuous on account of its pendant branches, which are
                  loaded with numerous long thread-like leaves, of a vivid green. It frequently
                  grows to the height of fifty or sixty, and even one hundred feet, and has above
                  ten feet in girth. Though the spruce and the tea-trees alone afforded articles of
                  refreshment in Dusky Bay; yet we found the woods full of trees of various kinds,
                  very fit for the use of shipwrights, joiners, and other mechanics; and Capt. Cook
                  was of opinion that, except in the river Thames on the northern island, he had not
                  observed a finer growth of timber on all New-Zeeland.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 28.]</date>We had not been above two days in this bay, before we
                  found that our opinion of its being uninhabited was premature. On the 28th in the
                  morning several of our officers went a shooting in a small boat, and on entering a
                  cove two or three miles from the ship, perceived several natives upon a beach, who
                  were about to launch their canoe. The New Zeelanders halloo'd at their approach,
                  and seeming by this means more numerous than they really were, the officers
                  thought proper to return and acquaint the captain with their discovery; a step
                  which they found the more necessary, as the weather was very rainy, and might, in
                  case of danger, have prevented their pieces from going off. They were scarcely
                  returned on board, when a canoe appeared off a point, at about a mile's distance
                  from the sloop; there were seven or eight people in it, who looked at us for some
                  time, but notwithstanding all the signs of friendship which we could make, such as
                  calling to them to come to us, waving a white cloth, and promising beads, they did
                  not care to come nearer, and paddled back again the same way they came. They
                  appeared to be dressed in mats, and had broad paddles with which they managed
                  their canoe, like the inhabitants in the northern parts of New Zeeland. Captain
                  Cook resolved to visit them in the afternoon, in order to quiet the apprehension
                  which they seemed to have entertained. We went in two boats, accompanying him and
                  several of the officers into the cove, where the natives had been first seen. Here
                  we found a double canoe hauled upon the shore, near some old, low huts, about
                  which we saw vestiges of fire places, some fishing-nets, and a few scattered fish.
                  The canoe which appeared to be old and in bad order, consisted of two troughs or
                  boats joined together with sticks, tied across the gunwales with strings of the
                  New Zeeland flax-plant . Each part consisted of planks sowed together with ropes
                  made of the flax-plant, and had a carved head coarsely representing a human face,
                  with eyes made of round pieces of ear-shell, which somewhat resembled mother of
                  pearl. This canoe contained two paddles, a basket full of berries of the coriaria
                  ruscifolia Lin. and some fishes; but the natives were not to be seen or heard,
                  which gave us reason to believe that they had retired into the woods. To
                  conciliate their good will, we left some medals, looking-glasses, beads, &amp;c.
                  in the canoe, and embarked again after a short stay. We then rowed to the head of
                  the cove, in order to survey it, where we found a fine brook of fresh water coming
                  down on a flat beach, from whence the water continued shallow to a considerable
                  extent, so that our boat ran aground several times. Ducks, shags, black
                  oyster-catchers, and some sorts of plovers were very numerous here. At our return
                  we visited the canoe again, added a hatchet to the other presents which we had
                  left before, and to shew the use of it, we cut several chips out of a tree, and
                  left it sticking there. No natives appeared this second time, though we imagined
                  they could not be far off, as we thought we could smell the smoke of a fire.
                  However, captain Cook desisted at present from searching in the woods, since they
                  purposely avoided us, and choosing to leave it to time and their own free will to
                  cultivate an intercourse with us, <date>[Monday 29.]</date>he returned on board
                  late in the evening.</p>

               <p>Heavy showers of rain fell all the next morning, but intermitted in the afternoon,
                  giving us an opportunity of going into the woods above our cove, where the rains
                  had so thoroughly soaked the soil, that together with the other impediments in
                  walking in this country, the prodigious slipperiness rendered our excursion
                  laborious and fatiguing. We met however with a few plants, which still shewed some
                  late blossoms, notwithstanding the advanced season; but we were at the same time
                  greatly tantalized by the appearance of numerous trees and shrubs, which had
                  already lost their flowers and fruits, and only served to give us an idea of the
                  great profusion of new vegetables in this country.</p>

               <p>The two following days we were entirely confined on board, on account of the rain
                  and stormy weather; which not a little damped our spirits, and gave us reason to
                  fear we should spend the remainder of our time very disagreeably. <date>[1773.
                     April.] [Thursday 1.]</date>However, on the 1st of April in the afternoon, we
                  took the advantage of a lucid interval to make another visit to the cove where we
                  had seen the Indians. We found every thing in the same situation as we had left
                  it, and it did not appear that any person had been near the canoe since that time.
                  The weather being now fair, we saw this cove in all its perfection. It is so
                  spacious that a whole fleet of ships may lie at anchor in it, and some of the
                  loftiest hills in all the bay encompass it on the south-west side, and are
                  entirely covered with woods from the summit to the water's side. The different
                  projecting points, and the various islands in the bay, form altogether a
                  picturesque and pleasing scene. The smoothness of the water, illumined by the
                  setting sun, the different degrees of verdure, and the various notes of birds
                  which resounded throughout the whole cove during this calm evening, greatly
                  softened the rude, uncultivated outlines of this landscape.</p>

               <p>The pleasure we had enjoyed in the evening, induced us to return to the cove again
                  the next day, which continued to be perfectly fair. We set out at sun-rise, and
                  did not return till late in the evening, with a considerable acquisition of new
                  birds, and plants. We had a young dog with us at this time, which the officers had
                  taken on board at the Cape of Good Hope, and intended to try, whether we could not
                  train him up to the gun: but we had no sooner discharged the first fowling-piece,
                  than he ran into the woods, and would not return, though we used all possible
                  means to recover him. Captain Cook likewise took the opportunity of the fair
                  weather, to examine different parts of the bay; and touched at a little rock, near
                  our first anchoring place, which had already at that time acquired the name of
                  Seal-rock, from the animals that came to sleep upon it. Here he found a number of
                  seals, and killed three of them, among which one afforded him great sport: for
                  having been repeatedly wounded, it became quite furious, and attacked the boat,
                  where it was at last killed. It weighed 220 pounds, was about six feet long, and
                  very lean. After he had passed several isles, he reached the north-west part of
                  the bay, formed by the land of Point Five-fingers: there, at the bottom of a fine
                  cove, he found a great variety of acquatic birds, of which he killed and brought
                  on board a considerable number.</p>

               <p>Another rainy pause of three days followed this excursion, confining us to our
                  ship, where a sort of little crane-flies (tipula alis incumbentibus), which had
                  plagued us ever since our entrance into Dusky Bay, became remarkably troublesome
                  during the bad weather. They were numerous in the skirts of the woods, not half so
                  large as gnats or musketoes, and our sailors called them sand-flies. Their sting
                  was extremely painful, and as often as the hand or face grew warm, caused a
                  troublesome itching, the least irritation of which brought on a very violent
                  swelling, attended with great pain. We were, however, not all equally affected;
                  myself in particular, never felt any great inconvenience from them; others, on the
                  contrary, suffered in a very violent degree, especially my father, who could not
                  hold a pen to write down the common occurrences in a journal, and fell into a high
                  fever at night. Various remedies were tried, but all proved ineffectual, except
                  the simple unction with soft pomatum, and the constant use of gloves.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 6.]</date>Early on the 6th, several of the officers went into the
                  cove, which the captain had discovered on the 2d; and the latter, accompanied by
                  Mr. Hodges, Dr. Sparrman, my father, and myself proceeded in another boat, to
                  continue the survey of the bay, to copy views from nature, and to search for the
                  natural productions of the country. We directed our course to the north side,
                  where we found a fine spacious cove, from which we had not the least prospect of
                  the sea. Along its steep shores we observed several small but beautiful cascades,
                  which fell from vast heights, and greatly improved the scene; they gushed out
                  through the midst of the woods, and at last fell in a clear column, to which a
                  ship might lie so near, as to fill her casks on board with the greatest safety, by
                  means of a leather tube, which the sailors call a hose. At the bottom there was a
                  shallow muddy part, with a little beach of shell-sand, and a brook, as in all the
                  greater coves of the bay. In this fine place we found a number of wild fowl, and
                  particularly wild ducks of which we shot fourteen, from whence we gave it the name
                  of Duck Cove. As we were returning home, we heard a loud hallooing on the rocky
                  point of an island, which on this occasion obtained the name of Indian Island; and
                  standing in to the shore, we perceived one of the natives, from whom this noise
                  proceeded. He stood with a club or battle-axe in his hand, on a projecting point,
                  and behind him, on the skirts of the wood we saw two women, each of them having a
                  long spear. When our boat came to the foot of the rock, we called to him, in the
                  language of Taheitee, tayo, harre maï, " friend, come hither;" he did not,
                  however, stir from his post, but held a long speech, at certain intervals
                  pronouncing it with great earnestness and vehemence, and swinging round his club,
                  on which he leaned at other times. Captain Cook went to the head of the boat,
                  called to him in a friendly manner, and threw him his own and some other
                  handkerchiefs, which he would not pick up. The captain then taking some sheets of
                  white paper in his hand, landed on the rock unarmed, and held the paper out to the
                  native. The man now trembled very visibly, and having exhibited strong marks of
                  fear in his countenance, took the paper: upon which Captain Cook coming up to him,
                  took hold of his hand, and embraced him, touching the man's nose with his own,
                  which is their mode of salutation. His apprehension was by this means dissipated,
                  and he called to the two women, who came and joined him, while several of us
                  landed to keep the captain company. A short conversation ensued, of which very
                  little was understood on both sides, for want of a competent knowledge of the
                  language. Mr. Hodges immediately took sketches of their countenances, and their
                  gestures shewed that they clearly understood what he was doing; on which they
                  called him óä-óä, that term being probably applicable to the imitative arts. The
                  man's countenance was very pleasing and open; one of the women, which we
                  afterwards believed to be his daughter, was not wholly so disagreeable as one
                  might have expected in New Zeeland, but the other was remarkably ugly, and had a
                  prodigious excrescence on her upper lip. They were all of a dark brown or olive
                  complexion; their hair was black, and curling, and smeared with oil and ruddle;
                  the man wore his tied upon the crown of the head, but the women had it cut short.
                  Their bodies were tolerably well proportioned in the upper part; but they had
                  remarkable slender, ill-made, and bandy legs. Their dress consisted of mats made
                  of the New Zeeland flax-plant , interwoven with feathers; and in their ears they
                  wore small pieces of white albatross skins stained with ruddle or ochre. We
                  offered them some fishes and wild fowl, but they threw them back to us, intimating
                  that they did not want provisions. The approaching night obliged us to retire, not
                  without promising our new friends a visit the next morning. The man remained
                  silent, and looked after us with composure and great attention, which seemed to
                  speak a profound meditation; but the youngest of the two women, whose vociferous
                  volubility of tongue exceeded every thing we had met with, began to dance at our
                  departure, and continued to be as loud as ever. Our seamen passed several coarse
                  jests on this occasion, but nothing was more obvious to us than the general drift
                  of nature, which not only provided man with a partner to alleviate his cares and
                  sweeten his labours, but endowed that partner likewise with a desire of pleasing
                  by a superior degree of vivacity and affability.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 7.]</date>The next morning we returned to the natives, and
                  presented them with several articles which we had brought with us for that
                  purpose. But so much was the judgment of the man superior to that of his
                  countrymen, and most of the South Sea nations , that he received almost every
                  thing with indifference, except what he immediately conceived the use of, such as
                  hatchets and large spike-nails. At this interview he introduced his whole family
                  to us, consisting of two women, whom we supposed to be his wives; the young woman,
                  a boy of about fourteen years of age, and three smaller children, of which the
                  youngest was at the breast. One of the wives had the excrescence or wen on the
                  upper lip, and was evidently neglected by the man, probably on account of her
                  disagreeable appearance. They conducted us soon after to their habitation, which
                  lay but a few yards within the wood, on a low hill, and consisted of two mean
                  huts, made of a few sticks thatched with unprepared leaves of the flax-plant, and
                  covered with the bark of trees. In return for our presents they parted with
                  several of their ornaments and weapons, particularly the battle-axes, but they did
                  not choose to give us their spears. When we were preparing to re-embark, the man
                  came to the water-side, and presented to Captain Cook a dress made of the flax
                  plant, a belt of weeds, some beads made of a little bird's bones, and some
                  albatross skins. We were at first of opinion that these were only intended as a
                  retribution for what he had received, but he soon undeceived us by shewing a
                  strong desire of possessing one of our boat-cloaks . We were not charitable enough
                  to part with our cloaths, when we knew the deficiency could not be supplied again;
                  but as soon as we came on board, Captain Cook ordered a large cloak to be made of
                  red baize, which we brought to the man at our next visit.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 8.]</date>The rain prevented our going to him the next morning,
                  but in the afternoon, the weather being a little more promising, we returned to
                  Indian Island. However, at our approach, instead of being welcomed by the natives
                  on the shore, we saw none of them, and received no answer when we shouted to them.
                  We landed therefore, and having proceeded to their habitation, soon found the
                  reason of this unusual behaviour. They were preparing to receive us in all their
                  finery, some being already completely adorned, and others still busy in dressing.
                  Their hair was combed, tied on the crown on the head, and anointed with some oil
                  or grease; white feathers were stuck in at the top; some had fillets of white
                  feathers all round the head, and others wore pieces of an albatross skin, with its
                  fine white down in their ears. Thus fitted out, they shouted at our approach, and
                  received us standing, with marks of friendship and great courtesy. The captain
                  wore the new cloak of baize on his own shoulders, and now took it off and
                  presented the man with it; he, on his part, seemed so much pleased with it, that
                  he immediately drew out of his girdle a pattoo-pattoo, or short flat club made of
                  a great fish's bone, and gave it to the Captain in return for so valuable an
                  acquisition. We endeavoured to enter into conversation; but, though Captain Cook
                  had taken Gibson, the corporal of marines, with him for that purpose, he being
                  supposed to know more of the language than any other person on board, yet all our
                  attempts to be understood proved fruitless, because it seemed this family had a
                  peculiar harshness of pronunciation. We therefore took leave of them, and
                  proceeded to survey different parts of the bay, fishing at intervals, shooting
                  birds, and collecting shells, and other marine productions among the rocks. The
                  weather was cloudy all this time, though it did not rain where we were; but when
                  we returned to our ship's cove, we were told it had rained there incessantly in
                  our absence. The same observation we had frequent opportunities of making during
                  our sojourn in Dusky Bay. The probable cause of this difference of weather at such
                  little distances, are the high mountains which run along the south shore of the
                  bay, gradually sloping towards the west cape. These mountains being almost
                  constantly capped with clouds, our cove, which lay immediately under, and was
                  surrounded by them, was of course exposed to the vapours, which perpetually
                  appeared moving with various velocities along the sides of the hills, involving
                  the tops of the trees over which they passed in a kind of white semi-opaque mist,
                  and descending upon us at last in rains or in fogs which wetted us to the skin.
                  The isles in the northern part not having such high hills to attract and stop the
                  clouds coming from the sea, permitted them to pass freely on to the very bottom of
                  the bay to the Alps, which we saw covered with perpetual snow. The two next days
                  the rains were so heavy that no work could be done; the perpetual moisture which
                  descended in this place caused such a dampness in all parts of our vessel, as
                  could not fail to become very unwholesome, and to destroy all the collections of
                  plants which had been made. Our sloop lying so near the shore, which was steep and
                  shaggy with over-hanging woods, was involved in almost constant darkness, even in
                  fair weather, and much more so during the fogs and rains, so that we were obliged
                  to light candles at noon. But the constant supply of fresh fish considerably
                  alleviated these disagreeable circumstances, and, together with the spruce-beer
                  and the myrtle-tea, contributed to keep us healthy and strong even in this damp
                  climate. We were now indeed become perfect ichthyophagi, for many amongst us
                  entirely lived upon fish. The fear of being cloyed with this delicious food, often
                  set us at work to invent new methods of preparing it, in order to deceive the
                  palate; and we accordingly made soups, and pasties, boiled, fried, roasted, and
                  stewed our fishes. But it was pleasant to observe, that all the arts of cookery
                  only tended to surfeit the sooner, for those who wisely confined themselves to
                  plain boiling in sea water, always did honour to their meals;</p>

               <p>But what was more singular than all, was, that in order to prevent any dislike to
                  our food, we confined ourselves, among a great variety of different sorts, chiefly
                  to one species of fishes, which our sailors from its dark colour, called the
                  coal-fish, and which in taste nearly resembled our English cod, being of the same
                  genus. Its meat was firm, juicy, and nutritive; but not so rich and fat as that of
                  many other species, which we found very delicious, but could not continually feed
                  upon. A very fine species of crayfish (cancer homarus Lin.) larger than the
                  lobster, some shell-fish, and now and then a cormorant, duck, pigeon, or parrot
                  gave us an agreeable variety at our table, which, compared to its appearance when
                  at sea, was now luxurious and profuse.</p>

               <p>Every person in our sloop experienced the good effects of this change of diet; nay
                  every animal on board seemed to be benefited by it, except our sheep, which were
                  not likely to fare so well as ourselves. The nature of the country accounts for
                  this disagreeable circumstance. The whole southern extremity of Tavai-poe-namoo,
                  or the southern island of New Zeeland, and especially the land about Dusky Bay
                  consists entirely of steep rocky mountains, with craggy precipices, clad with
                  thick forests, and either barren or covered with snow on their summits. No meadows
                  and lawns are to be met with, and the only flat land we found, was situated at the
                  head of deep coves, where a brook fell into the sea, which probably by depositing
                  the earth and stones it brought from the hills, had formed this low and level
                  ground. But even there the whole was over-run with woods and briars, and we could
                  not find a single spot of ground which might have afforded pasture, the grass
                  which grew on some beaches being very hard and coarse. However, after we had taken
                  pains to furnish our sheep with the freshest sprouts which we could meet with, we
                  were surprised that they would not touch any of them: but upon examination we
                  found that their teeth were loose, and that many of them had every symptom of an
                  inveterate sea scurvy. Of four ewes and two rams which captain Cook brought from
                  the Cape of Good Hope, with an intent to put them on shore in New Zeeland, we had
                  only been able to preserve one of each sex, and these were in so wretched a
                  condition, that their further preservation was very doubtful. If future navigators
                  means to make such valuable presents, as cattle of any sort to the inhabitants of
                  the South Sea, the only probable method of bringing them safely thither, would be
                  to take the shortest route possible from the Cape to New Zeeland, in the middle
                  latitudes, and in the best of seasons, when they may expect a quick passage, and
                  no severe cold.</p>

               <p>On the 11th, the sky being clear and serene promised a fair day, which was very
                  much wanted, in order to dry our sails and linen, as we had not been able to do
                  either since our arrival in this bay. We likewise obtained the use of a boat, in
                  order to increase the number of our observations on the productions of nature. We
                  directed our course to the cove where we had seen the first canoe of the natives,
                  and particularly to a water-fall, which we had observed from afar a few days ago,
                  and which had induced us to call this inlet Cascade Cove. This water-fall, at the
                  distance of a mile and a half, seems to be but inconsiderable, on account of its
                  great elevation; but after climbing about two hundred yards upwards, we obtained a
                  full prospect of it, and found indeed a view of great beauty and grandeur before
                  us. The first object which strikes the beholder, is a clear column of water,
                  apparently eight of ten yards in circumference, which is projected with great
                  impetuosity from the perpendicular rock, at the height of one hundred yards.
                  Nearly at the fourth part of the whole height, this column meeting a part of the
                  same rock, which now acquires a little inclination, spreads on its broad back into
                  a limpid sheet of about twenty-five yards in width. Here its surface is curled,
                  and dashes upon every little eminence in its rapid descent, till it is all
                  collected in a fine bason about sixty yards in circuit, included on three sides by
                  the natural walls of the rocky chasm, and in front by huge masses of stone
                  irregularly piled above each other. Between them the stream finds its way, and
                  runs foaming with the greatest rapidity along the slope of the hill to the sea.
                  The whole neighbourhood of the cascade, to a distance of an hundred yards around,
                  is filled with the steam or watery vapour formed by the violence of the fall. This
                  mist however was so thick, that it penetrated our clothes in a few minutes, as
                  effectually as a shower of rain would have done. We mounted on the highest stone
                  before the bason, and looking down into it, were struck with the sight of a most
                  beautiful rainbow of a perfectly circular form, which was produced by the meridian
                  rays of the sun refracted in the vapour of the cascade. Beyond this circle the
                  rest of the steam was tinged with the prismatic colours, refracted in an inverted
                  order. The scenery on the left consists of steep, brown rocks, fringed on the
                  summits with over-hanging shrubs and trees; on the right there is a vast heap of
                  large stones, probably hurried down from the impending mountain's brow, by the
                  force of the torrent. From thence rises a sloping bank, about seventy-five yards
                  high, on which a wall of twenty-five yards perpendicular is placed, crowned with
                  verdure and shrubberies. Still farther to the right, the broken rocks are clothed
                  with mosses, ferns, grasses, and various flowers; nay several shrubs, and trees to
                  the height of forty feet, rise on both sides of the stream, and hide its course
                  from the sun. The noise of the cascade is so loud, and so repeatedly reverberated
                  from the echoing rocks, that it drowns almost every other sound; the birds seemed
                  to retire from it to a little distance, where the shrill notes of thrushes, the
                  graver pipe of wattle-birds, and the enchanting melody of various creepers
                  resounded on all sides, and completed the beauty of this wild and romantic spot.
                  On turning round we beheld an extensive bay, strewed as it were with small
                  islands, which are covered with lofty trees; beyond them on one side, the
                  mountains rise majestic on the main land, capt with clouds and perpetual snow; and
                  on the other, the immense ocean bounded our view. The grandeur of this scene was
                  such, that the powers of description fall short of the force and beauty of nature,
                  which could only be truly imitated by the pencil of Mr. Hodges, who went on this
                  voyage with us; and whose performances do great credit and honour to his judgment
                  and execution, as well as to the choice of his employers. Satisfied with the
                  contemplation of this magnificent sight, we directed our attention next to the
                  flowers which enlivened the ground, and the small birds which sung very cheerfully
                  all round us. We had as yet found neither the vegetable nor animal creation so
                  beautiful, or so numerous, in any part of this bay; perhaps, because the strong
                  refraction of the sun-beams from the perpendilar walls of rock, and the shelter
                  from storms, made the climate considerably more mild and genial in this spot than
                  in any other part. The soil was in nothing different here from that in other parts
                  round the bay, but seemed to be the same vegetable mould; and the rocks and stones
                  about the cascade consisted of masses of granite, or moor-stone (saxum), and of a
                  kind of brown talcous clay-stone, in strata, which is common to all New
                  Zeeland.</p>

               <p>We returned on board before sun-set, well pleased with our acquisitions during
                  this excursion. At our return we were told, that the Indian family, whom we had
                  seen paddling into the cove, in the morning, in their best attire, had gradually
                  approached the ship with great caution. Captain Cook meeting them in a boat,
                  quitted it, and went into their canoe, but could not prevail on them to come along
                  side of the ship, and was obliged to leave them to follow their own inclination.
                  At length they went ashore, in a little creek hard by ours, and afterwards came
                  and sat down on the shore abreast of the vessel, to which they were near enough to
                  be heard, and spoken to. The captain gave orders to play the fife and bagpipe, and
                  to beat the drum; but they entirely disregarded the two first, and were not very
                  attentive to the last, nor could any thing induce them to come on board. Several
                  of our officers and seamen then going on shore to them, were received with great
                  good-nature, and attempted to converse with them by signs, which were for the most
                  part unintelligible, or misunderstood. However, the young woman shewed a great
                  partiality to a young seaman, and from her gestures it was supposed she took him
                  for one of her own sex; but whether he had taken some improper liberties, or
                  whether she had any other reason to be disgusted, she would never suffer him to
                  come near her afterwards. We likewise went on shore to them, after returning from
                  our excursion, and the man desiring us to sit down by him, frequently pointed at
                  our boats that plyed between the ship and the shore, and it appeared that he was
                  desirous of possessing one of them. They staid all night about a hundred yards
                  from our watering place, lighted a fire, and dressed some fish there, thus
                  evidently placing great confidence in us. In the evening a party of officers set
                  out in a small boat, to the north side of the bay, where they intended to pass the
                  night, and continue shooting all the next day.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 12.]</date> Captain Cook, accompanied by my father, went in his boat
                  the next morning, to survey the rocks and isles in the mouth of the bay. They
                  entered a fine snug cove, on the S. E. side of the island, under which we had
                  found our first anchorage, and which was therefore named Anchor Island. Here they
                  sat down by the side of a pleasant brook, and made a slight repast on some boiled
                  craw-fish, which they had brought with them. From thence they proceeded to the
                  outermost islands, where they discovered a number of seals on the rocks, shot
                  fourteen of them with ball, which they carried away with them, and might have
                  killed many more had the surf permitted them to land upon all the rocks in safety.
                  The seals in Dusky Bay are all of the species called sea-bears , which professor
                  Steller first described on Bering's Island near Kamtchatka, and which are
                  consequently common to both hemispheres. They are very numerous on the southern
                  extremities of the continents of America and Africa, likewise at New Zeeland, and
                  on Diemen's Land. The only difference we could perceive between these at Dusky
                  Bay, and those described at Kamtchatka, consisted in the size, in respect of which
                  ours were inferior. They found it difficult to kill them, and many, though
                  grievously wounded, escaped into the sea, and tinged the rocks and the water with
                  their blood. Their meat, which is almost black, and their heart and liver were
                  eatable, the former, by the help of a good appetite, and a little imagination,
                  might be eaten for beef, and the last were perfectly similar to a calf's pluck. We
                  were, however, obliged to cut away every bit of fat, before we dressed the meat,
                  which otherwise had an insupportable taste of train-oil. Captain Cook availed
                  himself of this opportunity of laying in a provision of lamp-oil, which was boiled
                  out of the seals fat: he also ordered the skins to be made use of for repairing
                  our rigging.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 13.]</date>The success of the preceding day encouraged him to make
                  another trip to the Seal Islands, on which my father accompanied him again; but
                  the sea ran so very high, that it was by no means practicable to come near, and
                  much less to land on them. With a great deal of difficulty they weathered the S.W.
                  point of Anchor Island, where the sea tumbled in with great impetuosity, and was
                  so much agitated, as to affect the mariners with sickness. They then rowed along
                  the north shore of that island, where the captain landed to take the bearings of
                  different points. It happened very fortunately, that they had taken this route;
                  for they now discovered the small boat adrift, which set off from the sloop on the
                  11th in the evening, and laid hold of it the moment before it was going to be
                  dashed against the rocks. The boat was immediately secured in a small creek, and
                  after refreshing the people with some provisions which they found in it, captain
                  Cook proceeded to the place where he supposed the party of officers to be, from
                  whom it was drifted away. Between seven and eight in the evening they reached the
                  cove, and found them on a small island, to which they could not then approach,
                  because the tide had left it. They landed therefore on an adjacent point, and
                  after many fruitless attempts, at length succeeded in making a fire. Here they
                  broiled some fish, and after supper lay down; the stony beach was their bed, and
                  their covering the canopy of heaven.</p>

               <p>At three o'clock in the morning the tide permitted them to take the sportsmen from
                  their barren island; after which they immediately sailed with a fair wind,
                  accompanied with showers of rain, to the cove where they had secured the other
                  boat. Here they found an immense number of petrels of the bluish species, common
                  over the whole southern ocean , some being on the wing, and others in the woods,
                  in holes under ground formed between the roots of trees and in the crevices of
                  rocks, in places not easily accessible, where they probably had their nests and
                  young. In day time, not one of them was to be seen there, the old ones then being
                  probably out at sea in quest of food. they now saw them going out for that
                  purpose, and two days ago they had been observed at the Seal Islands, returning in
                  the evening in order to feed their young with the food which they had collected.
                  They now heard a great variety of confused sounds coming from the sides of the
                  hill, some very acute, others like the croaking of frogs, which were made by these
                  petrels. At other times we have found innumerable holes on the top of one of the
                  Seal Islands, and heard the young petrels making a noise in them; but as the holes
                  communicated with each other it was impossible to come at one of them. We had
                  already frequently observed the old petrels flying about us in the evening, when
                  we returned late from our excursions, but till now they had always been taken for
                  bats. They have a broad bill, and a blackish stripe across their bluish wings and
                  body, and are not so large as the common shear-water or Mank's petrel of our seas.
                  The instinct is very wonderful which actuates these birds to burrow holes under
                  ground for their young, to roam all over the ocean in quest of food for their
                  support, and to find their way to the shore when they are several hundred leagues
                  distant from it.</p>

               <p>Having replaced the sportsmen in their boat, they all proceeded to the ship, which
                  they reached at seven in the morning, not a little fatigued from the night's
                  expedition. The natives, probably foreseeing the bad weather, which continued all
                  this day, had left the place they occupied near the ship on the preceding night,
                  and had retired to their habitations on Indian Island.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 15.]</date>The weather cleared up a little on the 15th in the
                  morning. Captain Cook therefore set out to continue his survey of the N. W. part
                  of the bay, and we accompanied a party of officers to the cove in that part where
                  we intended to take up our quarters for the next night. In our way we rowed
                  along-side of our fishing-boat, which constantly went out in the morning to
                  provide all our crew with their dinner, and took in a sail which we stood in need
                  of. We were surprised to see the young black dog in the boat with them, which ran
                  away from us on the 2d instant; and were told, that, taking their station near the
                  shore, at day-break they had heard a very piteous howling on the next point, and
                  had found the dog, which came into the boat very readily as soon as they put in
                  shore. Though this animal had been in the woods during a fortnight, yet it was by
                  no means famished, but on the contrary looked well fed and very sleek. A large
                  species of rails, which we called water-hens, and which are very numerous in this
                  part of New Zeeland, with perhaps some shell-fish on the rocks, or some dead fish
                  thrown up by the sea, had in all probability afforded it sufficient support. We
                  may from hence conclude, that as there is abundance of food for carnivorous
                  animals in New Zeeland, they would probably be very numerous if they existed there
                  at all, and especially if they were endowed with any degree of sagacity, like the
                  fox, or cat tribes. In that case they could not have escaped the notice of our
                  numerous parties, nor of the natives, and the latter would certainly have
                  preserved their furrs, as a valuable article of dress in their most and raw
                  climate, for want of which they now wear the skins of dogs and of birds. The
                  question, whether New Zeeland contained any wild quadrupeds, had engaged our
                  attention from our first arrival there. One of our people, strongly persuaded that
                  so great a country could not fail of possessing new and unknown animals, had
                  already twice reported that he had seen a brown animal, something less than a
                  jackal or little fox, about the dawn of morning, sitting on a stump of a tree near
                  our tents, and running off at his approach. But as this circumstance has never
                  been confirmed by any subsequent testimony, nothing is more probable than that the
                  want of day-light had deceived him, and that he had either observed one of the
                  numerous wood-hens, which are brown, and creep through the bushes very frequently;
                  or that one of our cats, on the watch for little birds, had been mistaken for a
                  new quadruped.</p>

               <p>Having taken the sail on board, we continued our course, and began our researches
                  in the cove, where we killed many ducks of four different species. One of them was
                  remarkably beautiful, and of the size of the eider duck. Its plumage was of a
                  blackish brown, elegantly sprinkled with white; all the coverts of the wing were
                  white, the rump and vent ferruginous, the quill and tail-feathers black, and the
                  secondaries green. Another species was nearly of the size of our mallard, but all
                  of a light-brown, every feather being edged with a yellowish white, of which there
                  was a line on the cheek and eye-brows; the eyes of this sort had irides of a
                  bright yellow, and on the wings there was a spot of fine bluish green inclosed in
                  black lines. The third sort was a bluish grey whistling duck, about the size of a
                  wigeon; its bill had a remarkable membranaceous substance at the extremity on both
                  sides, probably because the bird is intended to live by sucking the worms, &amp;c.
                  in the mud, when the tide retires from the beaches. Its breast was sprinkled with
                  ferruginous feathers, and on the wings it had a large white spot. The fourth and
                  most common sort is a small brown duck, which is nearly the same as the English
                  gadwall. A little before dark, the captain, having examined all the harbours which
                  lay in his way, shot a number of wild fowl, and caught fish sufficient for all our
                  party, arrived at our rendezvous, where we had erected a tent, by means of the
                  sails and oars. Our keen appetites dispensed with the arts of cookery, and our
                  fish broiled à l'Indienne, over a strong fire, on a bit of a stick, tasted as
                  deliciously as we could desire. With this supper, and a draught of spruce-beer, of
                  which we had carried a small keg with us, we composed ourselves to sleep, and
                  contrived to pass the night, though not quite so comfortably as in our beds. The
                  next morning a boat went up to the head of the cove to start the game, which was
                  done so effectually that almost all the wild-ducks escaped, the rain having wetted
                  all our fire-arms. The captain now landed in the cove, and walked across a narrow
                  isthmus, which separates it from another cove on the north side of the Five-finger
                  Land. Here he found a prodigious number of the water-hens before mentioned, and
                  brought away ten couple of them, which recompensed him for the trouble of crossing
                  the isthmus, through intricate woods, where the water was frequently up to the
                  waist. At nine o'clock we were all assembled again, and set out on our return to
                  the ship; but as we continued examining every creek and harbour which we found on
                  our way, and encreasing our collection of wild-fowl, we did not return till seven
                  o'clock in the evening. We brought seven dozen of various sorts of birds with us,
                  among which were near thirty ducks, and immediately distributed them to the
                  several messes of officers, petty-officers, and seamen, as far as they would go.
                  We may take this opportunity to observe, that there is no part of New Zeeland so
                  well stocked with birds of all kinds as Dusky Bay. We found several sorts of
                  wild-ducks, shags, corvorants, oyster-catchers or sea-pies, water or wood-hens,
                  albatrosses, gannets, gulls, pinguins, and others of the aquatic kind. The
                  land-birds were hawks, parrots, pigeons, and many lesser ones of new and unknown
                  species. The parrots were of two sorts; one small and green, and the other very
                  large, greyish-green, with a reddish breast. As the birds of that genus are
                  commonly confined to the warmer climates, we were much surprised to find them in
                  the latitude of 46°, exposed to the raw rainy weather, which the height of the
                  mountains almost constantly produces in Dusky Bay.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 18.]</date>The next day was so rainy, that none of us could venture
                  to stir out of the sloop; but the day after proving a very fine one, my father
                  went up the hill, along the course of the brook, from which we filled our casks.
                  About half a mile upwards, through ferns, rotten trees, and thick forests, he came
                  to a fine lake of fresh water nearly half a mile in diameter. Its water was limpid
                  and well tasted, but had acquired a brownish hue, from the leaves of trees which
                  dropped into it on all sides, he observed no other inhabitant in it than a small
                  species of fish (esox), without scales, resembling a little trout; its colour was
                  brown, and mottled with yellowish spots in the shape of some ancient Asiatic
                  characters. The whole lake was surrounded by a thick forest, consisting of the
                  largest trees, and the mountains rose all round it in a variety of forms. The
                  environs were deserted and silent, not the least note of the common birds was
                  heard, for it was rather cold at this elevation; and not a single plant had
                  blossoms. The whole scene was perfectly fitted to inspire a kind of pleasing
                  melancholy, and to encourage hermit-meditation. The fine weather induced our
                  friends the natives to pay us another visit; they took up their quarters on the
                  same spot, where they had been this day sevennight, and when they were again
                  invited to come on board, they promised to come the next morning. In the mean
                  while they had a quarrel among themselves, the man beat the two women who were
                  supposed to be his wives; the young girl in return struck him, and then began to
                  weep. What the cause of this disagreement was, we cannot determine; but if the
                  young woman was really the man's daughter, which we could never clearly
                  understand, it should seem that the filial duties are strangely confounded among
                  them; or which is more probable, that this secluded family acted in every respect,
                  not according to the customs and regulations of a civil society, but from the
                  impulses of nature, which speak aloud against every degree of oppression.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 19.]</date>In the morning, the man resolved to come on board with
                  the young woman, but sent the rest of his family a-fishing in the canoe. He walked
                  with her round the cove, to the place where we had made a stage or temporary
                  bridge from the vessel to the shore. Before they entered upon this, they were
                  conducted to a place on the hill, where we kept our sheep and goats, which they
                  seemed to be much surprised with, and desired to possess; but as we foresaw that
                  they must die for want of proper food if we left them here, we could not comply
                  with this request. Captain Cook, and my father met them at the stage, and this man
                  after saluting them with his nose against theirs, gave each of them a new cloak or
                  piece of cloth made of the flax-plant, curiously interwoven with parrot's
                  feathers, and presented the captain with a piece of green nephritic stone, or
                  jadde , which was formed into the blade of a hatchet. Before he stepped on the
                  bridge, he turned aside, put a piece of a bird's shin with white feathers through
                  the hole in one of his ears, and broke off a small green branch from a
                  neighbouring bush. With this he walked on, and stopping when he could just reach
                  the ship's sides with his hand, struck them and the main-shrouds several times
                  with his branch. He then began to repeat a kind of speech or prayer, which seemed
                  to have regular cadences, and to be metrically arranged as a poem; his eyes were
                  fixed upon the place he had touched, his voice was raised, and his whole behaviour
                  grave and solemn. The young woman, though at other times laughing and dancing, now
                  kept close to the man and was serious all the while he spoke, which lasted about
                  two or three minutes; at the close of his speech he struck the ship's side again,
                  threw the branch into the main chains, and came abroad. This manner of delivering
                  solemn orations, and making peace, is practised by all the nations which have been
                  seen in the South Sea before our voyage, as appears from the testimonies of
                  various voyagers. But the man and woman had a spear in their hands when they were
                  conducted on the quarter-deck; there they admired every thing they saw: a few
                  geese in our coops particularly attracted their attention; a handsome cat, was
                  likewise much courted, but they always stroked it the wrong way, so as to make the
                  hair stand upright, though we showed them to do it in a contrary direction;
                  probably they admired the richness of the furr. The man looked upon every new
                  object with surprize, but as his attention could not be fixed to any one object
                  for more than a single moment, many of our works of art must have appeared to him
                  as incomprehensible, as those of nature. However, the number and strength of our
                  decks and of other parts of our vessel engrossed his admiration more than any
                  thing else. The girl, seeing Mr. Hodges, whose pencil she had much admired, made
                  him a present of a piece of cloth, of the same kind as those which the man had
                  given to captain Cook and my father. This custom of making presents is not so
                  usual in other parts of New Zeeland, as in the tropical islands: but it appears on
                  the whole, that this family were not always guided by national customs, but took
                  such measures as prudence and integrity suggested in their situation, which left
                  them at the mercy of a greater force. We desired them to come into the cabin, and
                  after a long debate among themselves, they accepted the invitation, and descended
                  by the ladder. Here they admired every thing, and were particularly pleased to
                  learn the use of chairs, and that they might be removed from place to place. They
                  were presented with hatchets by the captain and my father, and received a great
                  number of trinkets of less value. These last the man laid down in a heap, and
                  would have gone away without them, had we not reminded him of them; whereas he
                  never let a hatchet or spike-nail go out of his hand, after he had once taken hold
                  of it. They saw us sit down to our breakfast, and were seated near us; but all our
                  intreaties could not prevail on them to touch our victuals. They likewise
                  expressly inquired where we went to sleep, and the captain showed them his cot,
                  which was suspended, at which they were mightily pleased. From the cabin they
                  proceeded to the gun-room, on the deck below; and having received several presents
                  there, they returned to the captain again. The man now pulled out a little leather
                  bag, probably of seals skin, and having, with a good deal of ceremony, put in his
                  fingers, which he pulled out covered with oil, offered to anoint captain Cook's
                  hair; this honour was however declined, because the unguent, though perhaps held
                  as a delicious perfume, and as the most precious thing the man could bestow, yet
                  seemed to our nostrils not a little offensive; and the very squalid appearances of
                  the bag in which it was contained, contributed to make it still more disgustful.
                  Mr. Hodges did not escape so well; for the girl, having a tuft of feathers, dipt
                  in oil, on a string round her neck, insisted upon dressing him out with it, and he
                  was forced to wear the odoriferous present, in pure civility. We left them to
                  amuse themselves in the other parts of the ship, and set out in two boats, with
                  the captain and several officers, to examine a long inlet, which ran to the
                  east-ward, in sight of our cove. In proportion as we receded from the sea, we
                  found the mountains much higher, more steep, and barren: the trees gradually
                  diminished in height and circumference, and dwindled to shrubs, contrary to what
                  is observed in other parts of the world, where the inland countries have finer
                  forests and better timber than the sea shores. The interior ranges of mountains
                  called the Southern Alps, appeared very distinctly, of a great height, and covered
                  with snow on their summits. We passed by a number of shady islands, which
                  contained little coves and rivulets; and on one of the projecting points, opposite
                  the last island, we saw a fine cascade falling into the water, over a steep rock,
                  clothed with thick bushes and trees. The water was perfectly calm, polished, and
                  transparent; the landscape was distinctly reflected in it, and the various
                  romantic shapes of the steep mountains, contrasted in different masses of light
                  and shade, had an admirable effect. About noon we put into a small cove, where we
                  caught some fish, and shot a few birds. From thence we rowed again till dusk, when
                  we entered a fine cove, at the extremity of this long arm, and were obliged to
                  take up our quarters on the first beach we could land upon, after being prevented
                  by shoals from proceeding to the head of the cove. There we thought we perceived
                  something similar to a smoke, but finding nothing to confirm this opinion, and
                  especially seeing no fire at night, we readily acquiesced in the idea of having
                  been deceived by some misty vapour, or other object, which we might have
                  indistinctly seen. We prepared with great alacrity to pass the night here, and no
                  one was excepted from his task on these occasions. As it may be curious to know
                  the nature of our marooning parties, as our seamen called them, I shall here give
                  some account of our proceedings this night. Having found a beach to land on, with
                  a brook, and a wood close to it, our first care was to bring on shore the oars,
                  sails, cloaks, guns, hatchets, &amp;c. not forgetting a little keg of spruce-beer,
                  and perhaps a bottle of strong liquor. The boats were next secured at a grappling,
                  and with a rope made fast to a tree on shore. Some of us were then busied in
                  collecting dry pieces of wood for fuel, which in such a wet country as New
                  Zeeland, was sometimes very difficult; some erected a tent or wigwam, made of the
                  oars and sails together with strong branches of trees, in a convenient dry spot,
                  sheltered as much as possible, in case of wind and rain. Others lighted the fire
                  in front of the tent, by burning some oakum, in which they had previously rubbed a
                  quantity of gun-powder. The preparations for supper were very short: some of the
                  sailors cleaned our fishes, skinned the water-fowl, split, and lastly broiled
                  them; when they were dressed, one of the boat's gang-boards, washed clean,
                  answered the several purposes of a table, of dishes, and plates; and our fingers
                  and teeth did yeoman's service, instead of knives and forks. A keen appetite,
                  procured by strong exercise, and excited by the sharp air of the country, soon
                  taught us to overcome the ideas of indelicacy, which civilized nations connect
                  with this way of living; and we never so strongly felt how little is wanting to
                  satisfy the cravings of the stomach, and to support the existence of human beings,
                  as on these occasions. After supper we listened a while to the original comic vein
                  of our boat's crew, who huddled round the fire, made their meal, and recited a
                  number of droll stories, intermixed with hearty curses, oaths, and indecent
                  expressions, but seldom without real humour. Then strewing our tent with heaps of
                  fern leaves, and wrapping ourselves in our boat-cloaks, with our guns and
                  shooting-bags for our pillows, we composed ourselves to sleep.</p>

               <p>At day-break Captain Cook and my father, with two men, went in a small boat to
                  take a view of the head of the cove, where they saw some flat land. They went on
                  shore upon it at one corner, and ordered the boat to meet them at the opposite
                  point. They had not walked a great way before they saw some wild-ducks, and, by
                  creeping through the bushes, came near enough to fire and kill one of them. The
                  moment they had fired they heard a hideous shout of several loud and piercing
                  voices round about them from different quarters. They shouted in their turn, and
                  taking up the duck retired towards the boat, which was full half a mile off. The
                  natives continued their clamours, but did not follow them; for indeed a deep
                  branch of a river was between them, and their numbers were too inconsiderable to
                  attempt hostilities; but these circumstances we only learnt in the sequel. We had
                  in the mean while taken a ramble into the woods in search of plants; but hearing
                  the shout of the natives, we embarked immediately in the remaining boat and joined
                  the other, which by this time had taken Captain Cook and my father on board. We
                  therefore proceeded up into a river, which was deep enough for the boats, and
                  amused ourselves with shooting ducks, which were here in great plenty. We now saw
                  a man, woman, and child on the left shore, and the woman waved to us with a white
                  bird's skin, probably in sign of peace and friendship. On this occasion I could
                  not help admiring, that almost all nations on our globe have tacitly agreed upon
                  the while colour, or upon green branches, as tokens of a peaceable disposition,
                  and that with these in their hands they confidently rely on a stranger's
                  placability. Perhaps this general agreement had its origin anterior to the
                  universal dispersion of the human species; this will seem the more probable when
                  it is considered, that neither the white colour, nor the green boughs of a tree,
                  have any intrinsic character, to which the idea of amity is naturally and
                  necessarily referred. Our boat being nearest to these natives, Captain Cook
                  desired the officer in it to land, and accept their proferred friendship, whilst
                  he meant to take the advantage of the tide to get as high up in the river as
                  possible. Whether the officer did not understand Captain Cook's meaning, or
                  whether he was too deeply engaged with duck-shooting, we did not land; and the
                  poor people, to all appearance apprehensive of the worst consequences, from a set
                  of men who rejected their proposals of peace, fled into the woods with the utmost
                  precipitation. The Captain in the mean while rowed about half a mile higher, where
                  his boat was stopped by the violence of the stream, and by several huge stones
                  which lay across the bed of the river, and redoubled the rapidity of the water.
                  Here, however, he found a new species of ducks, the fifth we had observed in Dusky
                  Bay. Its size was something less than that of a teal, the colour of a shining
                  greenish black above, and a dark sooty grey below; it had a purple cast on the
                  head, a lead-coloured bill and feet, a golden eye, and a white bar in the lesser
                  quill feathers. On Captain Cook's return to us, we perceived two men in the woods
                  along the bank opposite to that where we had seen the friendly family. The captain
                  endeavoured to form an acquaintance with them, but when the boat came close along
                  shore, they always retired into the woods, which were so thick, that they not only
                  covered them from our sight, but also made it unadviseable to follow them. The
                  ebbing tide obliged us to retire out of this river to the place where we had spent
                  the night; and, after breakfasting there, we embarked in order to set out on our
                  return to the Resolution. However, when we had scarce put off, we perceived the
                  two natives, who had walked across the woods to an open spot, from whence they
                  halloo'd to us. The captain immediately ordered both the boats to row up to them,
                  and coming into shallow water, he got out unarmed, attended by two men, and waded
                  to the shore, with a sheet of white paper in his hand. The two natives stood about
                  one hundred yards from the water's side, each of them with a long spear in his
                  hand. When the captain advanced with his two men they retired; he then proceeded
                  alone, but could not prevail on them to lay aside their spears. At last one of
                  them stuck his spear in the ground, and taking a bunch of grass in his hand met
                  the captain, and giving him one end of the grass to hold while he kept the other,
                  he pronounced a solemn speech in a loud tone of voice, during a minute or two, in
                  which he made several pauses, perhaps waiting for a reply. As soon as this
                  ceremony was over, they saluted each other, and the New Zeelander took a new
                  garment from his own shoulders and presented it to the captain, for which he
                  received a hatchet in return. Peace and friendship being thus firmly established,
                  the other man likewise came up to salute the captain, and was presented with a
                  hatchet; and several of us came ashore to them, at which they were not the least
                  alarmed, but received every new comer with great cordiality. We now perceived
                  several other natives, probably women, on the skirts of the wood, and the two men
                  earnestly intreated us to go up to their habitations, intimating by signs, that
                  they would give us something to eat there; but the tide and other circumstances
                  did not permit us to accept their invitation. When we had taken leave of them, the
                  two men followed us to our boats, where they desired us to remove the muskets
                  which lay across the stern, and having complied with their request, they came
                  along-side, and assisted us to launch the boats, which were aground on account of
                  the ebb. We found however that it was necessary to have an eye upon them, because
                  they seemed to covet the possession of every thing they saw or could lay hands on,
                  except the muskets, which they would not touch, being taught to respect them as
                  instruments of death, on account of the havock they had seen us make among the
                  wild-fowl. We observed no canoes among them, and their only means of transporting
                  themselves across the river, was on a few logs of wood connected together into a
                  kind of raft, which was perfectly sufficient for that purpose. Fish and wild-fowl
                  were in such plenty here, that they can have little occasion to roam to any
                  distance in quest of them, as their numbers did not seem to exceed three families;
                  and the whole bay being almost entirely destitute of inhabitants, one single
                  family more excepted, they need not be apprehensive of disturbance from bad
                  neighbours. The features of these men were rather wild, but not ill-favoured;
                  their complexion resembled that of the family on Indian Island, of a mahogany
                  brown; their hair bushy, and their beards frizled and black. They were of a
                  middling stature and stout, but their legs and thighs very slender, and their
                  knees too much swelled in proportion. Their dress and general behaviour seemed to
                  be the same as that of the other family before mentioned. The courage of this
                  people has something singular in it, for it should seem, that in spight of their
                  inferiority of force, they cannot brook the thought of hiding themselves, at least
                  not till they have made an attempt to establish an intercourse, or prove the
                  principles of the strangers who approach them. It would have been impossible for
                  us, among the numerous islands and harbours, and in the mazy forests upon them, to
                  have found out the family which we saw on the Indian Island, if they had not
                  discovered themselves, and thus made the first advances. We might also have
                  departed from the cove without knowing that it was inhabited, if the natives had
                  not shouted at the discharge of our muskets. In both cases a certain openness and
                  honesty, appear strongly to mark their character; for if it had the least
                  admixture of treachery, they would have tried to fall upon us unawares, as they
                  could not have failed of meeting with frequent opportunities of cutting off our
                  numerous small parties, when dispersed in different parts of the woods.</p>

               <p>It was noon when we left these two men, and proceeded down on the north side of
                  the long arm, of which captain Cook took the bearings in his way. The night
                  overtook us before he had completed his survey; so that we were forced to leave
                  another arm unexplored, and to hasten to the vessel, which we reached about eight
                  o'clock at night. We were told that the native with his companion, the young
                  woman, had staid on board till noon, after our departure; and having been
                  informed, that we had left some presents in his double canoe in Cascade Cove, he
                  employed some of his people to bring them away from thence, after which the whole
                  family remained in the neighbourhood of the ship till this morning. They then took
                  their departure, and we never saw them again, which was the more extraordinary, as
                  they never went away empty handed from us, but had at different times received
                  nine or ten hatchets, and four times that number of large spike nails, besides
                  other articles. As far as these things may be counted riches among them, this man
                  was the wealthiest in all New Zeeland, being possessed of more hatchets, than
                  there were in the whole country besides, before the second arrival of British
                  vessels. The thin population in this part of the island makes it probable, that
                  the few families in it lead a nomadic or wandering life, and remove according as
                  the season, the conveniency of fishing, and other circumstances render it
                  necessary. We were therefore of opinion, that our friendly family had only removed
                  upon this principle; but we were likewise told that before they went away, the man
                  had made signs of going to kill men, and employing the hatchet as an offensive
                  weapon. If this circumstance was rightly understood, we cannot sufficiently wonder
                  that a family so secluded from all the rest of the world, in a spacious bay, where
                  they have a superfluity of food, and of all the necessaries of life, the fewness
                  of their wants considered, should still have a thought of warring with their
                  fellow-creatures, when they might live peaceably and happily in their retirement.
                  The pleasing hope of facilitating the œconomical operations of these people, and
                  of encouraging some degree of agriculture among them, by presenting them with
                  useful tools, was defeated by this determination. The state of barbarism, in which
                  the New Zeelanders may justly be said to live, and which generally hearkens to no
                  other voice than that of the strongest, might make them more liable than any other
                  nation to resolve upon the destruction of their fellow-citizens, as soon as an
                  opportunity offered; and their innate and savage valour may probably assist them
                  to put such projects in execution. On this occasion, I cannot omit mentioning a
                  remarkable instance of courage which characterised the old man who had now left
                  us; our officers having fired several musquets in his presence, he became desirous
                  of discharging one himself, which they easily granted; the young woman, supposed
                  to be his daughter, fell prostrate on the ground before him, and entreated him,
                  with the strongest marks of fear, to desist from his undertaking; but he was not
                  to be diverted from his purpose, and fired the musquet with the greatest
                  resolution, repeating it afterwards three or four times. This warlike disposition,
                  together with the irascible temper of the whole nation, that cannot brook the
                  least injury, is probably the cause which has induced his single family, and the
                  few in the long inlet we had visited, to separate from the rest of their
                  fellow-creatures. All the disputes of savage people commonly terminate in the
                  destruction of one of their parties, unless they evade it by a well-timed flight:
                  this may have been the case of the inhabitants of Dusky Bay, and admitting it,
                  their design of going to fight, is no more than a project of being revenged on
                  their foes and oppressors.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 23.]</date> On the 23d, early in the morning, several officers,
                  accompanied by Dr. Sparrman, went to Cascade Cove, in order to ascend one of the
                  highest mountains in the bay, which was situated on one side of it. About two
                  o'clock they reached the summit, which they made known to us by lighting a great
                  fire there. We should have accompanied them on this excursion, but a violent flux
                  attended with gripes confined us on board. It was owing to the carelessness of our
                  cook, who had suffered our copper kitchen-furniture to become full of verdigrise.
                  In the evening however, we went to meet our travellers in Cascade Cove, and after
                  searching the woods some time for plants and birds, we brought them on board with
                  us. At night the fire had spread in a bright circular garland all round the summit
                  of the mountain, and made a very elegant illumination in honour of St. George's
                  day. Our party related that they had a prospect of the whole bay, and of the sea
                  beyond the mountains to the south, S. W. and W. N. W. for more than twenty leagues
                  all round them, the weather being remarkably fine and clear. The inland mountains
                  were very barren, and consisted of huge broken and craggy masses, all covered with
                  snow on their summits; the top of that on which they stood, afforded several low
                  shrubs and various alpine plants, which we had seen no where else. A little lower
                  down they saw a taller shrubbery; below this a space covered with dry or dead
                  trees, and next to those the living woods began, which increased in size as they
                  descended. The ascent had been fatiguing enough, on account of the intricacy of
                  briars and climbers, but the descent also was dangerous, because of many
                  precipices which they met on their way, and along most of which they contrived to
                  slide down by the help of trees and bushes. At a considerable height they met with
                  three or four trees, which they took for palms, and of which they cut down one,
                  and used its middlemost shoot for their refreshment. These trees, however, were
                  not the true cabbage palms, nor did they belong at all to the class of palms,
                  which are generally confined to more temperate climates. They were properly
                  speaking, a new species of dragon-trees, with broad leaves, (dracœna australis) of
                  which the central shoot when quite tender, tastes something like an almond's
                  kernel, with a little of the flavour of cabbage. We afterwards observed more of
                  them in other parts of this bay.</p>

               <p>The next morning I accompanied captain Cook to the cove on the N.W. part of the
                  bay, which from the transaction of this day, received the name of Goose Cove. We
                  had five tame geese left, of those which we had taken on board at the Cape of Good
                  Hope, and these we intended to leave in New Zeeland to breed, and run wild. This
                  cove was looked upon as the most convenient place for that purpose, since there
                  were no inhabitants to disturb them, and because it afforded an abundance of
                  proper food. We set them on shore, and they immediately ran to feed in the mud, at
                  the head of the cove where we left them, pronouncing over them the crescite &amp;
                  multipliciamini, for the benefit of future generations of navigators and New
                  Zeelanders. There can be little doubt indeed, but that they will succeed in this
                  secluded spot, and in time spread over the whole country, answerable to our
                  original intention. The rest of this day was spent in shooting, and among the
                  different birds killed was a white heron (ardea alba), common to Europe.</p>

               <p>The fair weather, which had lasted eight days successively, was entirely at an end
                  on <date>[Sunday 25.]</date>the 25th, when the rain set in again towards evening,
                  and continued till the next day at noon. <date>[Monday 26.]</date>We had reason to
                  believe such a continuance of dry weather very uncommon in Dusky Bay, and
                  particularly at this season, because we never experienced above two fair days one
                  after another, either before or after this week. We had, however, improved this
                  opportunity to complete our wood and water, and put the sloop in condition to go
                  out to sea, and having taken on board all our men, we cast off our bridge, and
                  removed out of the creek, into the middle of our cove, ready to sail with the
                  first fair wind. The superiority of a state of civilization over that of barbarism
                  could not be more clearly stated, than by the alterations and improvements we had
                  made in this place. In the course of a few days, a small part of us had cleared
                  away the woods from a surface of more than an acre, which fifty New Zeelanders,
                  with their tools of stone, could not have performed in three months. This spot,
                  where immense numbers of plants left to themselves lived and decayed by turns, in
                  one confused inanimated heap; this spot, we had converted into an active scene,
                  where a hundred and twenty men pursued various branches of employment with
                  unremitted ardour:</p>

               <p>We felled tall timber-trees, which, but for ourselves, had crumbled to dust with
                  age; our sawyers cut them into planks, or we split them into billets for fuel. By
                  the side of a murmuring rivulet, whose passage into the sea we facilitated, a long
                  range of casks, which had been prepared by our coopers for that purpose, stood
                  ready to be filled with water. Here ascended the steam of a large cauldron, in
                  which we brewed, from neglected indigenous plants, a salutary and palatable
                  potion, for the use of our labourers. In the offing, some of our crew appeared
                  providing a meal of delicious fish for the refreshment of their fellows. Our
                  caulkers and riggers were stationed on the sides and masts of the vessel, and
                  their occupations gave life to the scene, and struck the ear with various noises,
                  whilst the anvil on the hill resounded with the strokes of the weighty hammer.
                  Already the polite arts began to flourish in this new settlement; the various
                  tribes of animals and vegetables, which dwelt in the unfrequented woods, were
                  imitated by an artist in his noviciate; and the romantic prospects of this shaggy
                  country, lived on the canvas in the glowing tints of nature, who was amazed to see
                  herself so closely copied. Nor had science disdained to visit us in this solitary
                  spot: an observatory arose in the centre of our works, filled with the most
                  accurate instruments, where the attentive eye of the astronomer contemplated the
                  motions of the celestial bodies. The plants which clothed the ground, and the
                  wonders of the animal creation, both in the forests and the seas, likewise
                  attracted the notice of philosophers, whose time was devoted to mark their
                  differences and uses. In a word, all around us we perceived the rise of arts, and
                  the dawn of science, in a country which had hitherto lain plunged in one long
                  night of ignorance and barbarism! But this pleasing picture of improvement was not
                  to last, and like a meteor, vanished as suddenly as it was formed. We re-imbarked
                  all our instruments and utensils, and left no other vestiges of our residence,
                  than a piece of ground, from whence we had cleared the wood. We sowed indeed a
                  quantity of European garden seeds of the best kinds; but it is obvious that the
                  shoots of the surrounding weeds will shortly stifle every salutary and useful
                  plant, and that in a few years our abode no longer discernible, must return to its
                  original chaotic state.</p>

               <p>A new passage out to sea, to the northward, was discovered on the 27th; and it
                  being more convenient for our purpose, than that by which we entered, we weighed
                  on <date>[Thursday 29.]</date>the 29th in the afternoon, in order to stand up the
                  bay towards it. However, the wind falling calm, we were obliged to come to again
                  in 43 fathom, under the north side of an island which we named Long Island, about
                  two leagues from our cove. <date>[Friday 30.]</date>At nine the next morning we
                  proceeded with a light breeze at west, which with all our boats towing a-head, was
                  scarce sufficient to stem the current; for after struggling till six in the
                  evening, we had gained no more than five miles, and anchored under the same
                  island, only a hundred yards from the shore.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. May.][Saturday 1.]</date>At daylight the next morning we attempted to
                  work to windward, having a gentle air down the bay, but the breeze dying away, we
                  lost ground, and came with the stern so close to the shore, that our ensign-staff
                  was entangled in the branches of trees, on a perpendicular rock, close to which we
                  could find no bottom. We were towed off without receiving any damage, and dropt an
                  anchor below the place we set out from, in a little cove on the north side of Long
                  Island. Here we found two huts, and two fireplaces, which seemed to prove that the
                  place had lately been inhabited. During our stay here, we discovered several new
                  birds and fish; and indeed caught some fish which are common to Europe, viz. the
                  horse-mackarel, the greater dog-fish, and the smooth hound . The captain was taken
                  ill of a fever and violent pain in the groin, which terminated in a rheumatic
                  swelling of the right foot, contracted probably by wading too frequently in the
                  water, and sitting too long in the boat after it, without changing his
                  cloaths.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 4.]</date> We were detained in this cove by calms, attended with
                  continual rains, till the 4th in the afternoon, when, assisted by a light breeze
                  at S. W. we entered the reach or passage leading out to sea. The breeze coming
                  a-head just at that time obliged us to anchor again under the east point of the
                  entrance, before a sandy beach. These little delays gave us opportunities of
                  examining the shores, from whence we never failed to bring on board new
                  acquisitions to the vegetable and animal system. During night we had heavy squalls
                  of wind, attended with rain, hail, and snow, and some loud thunder claps.
                     <date>[Wednesday 5.]</date>Day-light exhibited to our view all the tops of the
                  hills round us covered with snow. At two o'clock in the afternoon a light breeze
                  sprung up at S. S. W. which carried us down the passage, though not without the
                  help of our boats, to the last point near the opening into the sea, where we
                  anchored at eight in the evening. The shores on both sides of the passage were
                  steeper than any we had seen before, and formed various wild landscapes,
                  ornamented with numerous little cascades, and many dragon-trees (dracœna).</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 6.]</date>The captain being confined to the cabin by his
                  rheumatism, sent an officer, accompanied by my father and myself, to explore the
                  southernmost arm, which ran up eastward from our new passage into the interior
                  country. During our absence he ordered the Resolution to be well cleaned and aired
                  with fires between decks, a precaution which ought never to be neglected in a
                  moist and raw climate.</p>

               <p>We rowed up this new inlet, were delighted with many cascades on both sides of it,
                  and found a number of good anchoring places, with plenty of fish and wild-fowl.
                  However, the woods consisted chiefly of shrubberies, and began to look very bare,
                  the leaves being mostly shed, and what remained looking faded of a pale yellow
                  colour. These strong marks of approaching winter seemed to be peculiar to this
                  part of the bay, and it is probable that the adjacent high mountains, all which
                  were now crowned with snow, caused their premature appearance. We put into a
                  little cove about two o'clock to broil a few fishes for our dinner, and then went
                  on till it was dark, taking up our night's quarters on a little beach, almost at
                  the head of the inlet. Here we made a fire, but slept very little on account of
                  the cold of the night and the hardness of our pillows. <date>[Friday 7.]</date>The
                  next morning we saw a cove, with a little flat land, to the north of us, which
                  formed the end of this spacious inlet or arm, about eight miles from its entrance.
                  Here we amused ourselves with shooting for some time, and then set out to return
                  towards the Resolution; but the fair weather which had favoured us hitherto, was
                  now succeeded by a storm at N. W, which blew in hard squalls, attended with
                  violent showers of rain. We made shift to row down the arm into the entrance which
                  led to the sloop, and there sharing the remains of a bottle of rum among our
                  boat's crew, by way of encouragement, we entered the hollow sea in the passage.
                  The violence of the wind, and the height of the short waves were such, that in
                  spight of our utmost efforts we were thrown above half a mile to leeward in a few
                  minutes, and narrowly escaped being swamped. With the greatest difficulty we
                  regained the inlet out of which we had passed, and about two o'clock in the
                  afternoon we put into a small snug cove, at its north entrance. After securing our
                  boat in the best manner possible, we climbed on a bleak hill, where we made a fire
                  on a narrow rock, and attempted to broil some fishes; but though we were soaked
                  with rain, and severely cut by the wind, yet it was impossible for us to keep near
                  our fire, of which the flames were continually whirled about in a vortex by the
                  storm, so that we were forced to change our places every moment, in order to
                  escape being scorched or burnt. The storm now encreased to such a violence, that
                  we could hardly stand on this barren spot; and therefore it was resolved, for our
                  own and the boat's greater safety, to cross the cove, and take up our night's
                  quarters in the woods immediately under the lee of the high mountains. Every one
                  of us seized a firebrand and stepped into the boat, where we made a formidable
                  appearance, as if we were bound on some desperate expedition. To our great
                  disappointment the woods were almost worse than the rock we had left, being so wet
                  that it was with the utmost difficulty our fire would burn; we had no shelter from
                  the heavy rains which came down upon us in double portions from the leaves; and
                  the wind not allowing the smoke to ascend, we were almost stifled with it. Here we
                  lay down on the moist ground, wrapped in wet cloaks thoroughly soaked and cold,
                  supperless, and tormented with rheumatic pains; and, notwithstanding all these
                  inconveniences, fell asleep for a few moments, being entirely exhausted with
                  fatigue. But about two o'clock we were roused by a loud thunder-clap. The storm
                  was now at its height, and blew a perfect hurricane. The roar of the waves at a
                  distance was tremendous, and only overcome at times by the agitation of the
                  forests, and the crashing fall of huge timber-trees around us. We went to look
                  after our boat, and at that instant a dreadful flash of lightning illuminated the
                  whole arm of the sea; we saw the billows foaming, and furiously rolled above each
                  other in livid mountains; in a word, it seemed as if all nature was hastening to a
                  general catastrophe.</p>

               <p>The lightning was instantaneously followed by the most astonishing explosion we
                  had ever heard, reverberated from the broken rocks around us; and our hearts sunk
                  with apprehension lest the ship might be destroyed by the tempest or its
                  concomitant ӕtherial fires, and ourselves left to perish in an unfrequented part
                  of the world. In this dismal situation we lingered out the night, which seemed the
                  longest we had ever known. <date>[Saturday 8.]</date>At last about six in the
                  morning the violence of the storm abated, we embarked about day break, and reached
                  the vessel soon after, which had been obliged to strike yards and top-masts. The
                  inlet we had now surveyed, received the name of Wet Jacket Arm, from the dreadful
                  night we passed in it. There now remained only one inlet to the northward of this
                  unexplored; and captain Cook, finding himself recovered, set out, immediately
                  after our return, to examine it. He proceeded up about ten miles, and saw nearly
                  the end of this arm, which like the other, contains good harbours and plenty of
                  fresh water, wood, fish, and wild fowl. On his return his people had the wind and
                  heavy rains to struggle with, and all returned on board thoroughly wet, at nine in
                  the evening. <date>[Sunday 9.]</date>The next morning the sky being clear, but the
                  wind unfavourable for going out to sea, we accompanied captain Cook once more on a
                  shooting party up the new arm, where we spent the whole day, and met with
                  tolerable good sport; but another party, who had taken a different route, came
                  back almost empty-handed.</p>

               <p>The wind continuing westerly and blowing very hard, the captain did not think it
                  adviseable to put to sea; but it falling moderate in the afternoon, he made an
                  excursion to an island in the entrance, on which were abundance of seals. He and
                  his party killed ten of them, of which they took five on board, leaving the rest
                  behind them.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 11.]</date>The next morning it was pretty clear, the air very cold
                  and sharp, and all the hills covered with snow almost half way down to the water,
                  so that the winter was now fairly set in. A boat was sent to fetch off the seals
                  killed last night, which had been left behind; and in the mean time we weighed and
                  sailed from Dusky Bay, getting clear of the land at noon.</p>

               <p>The stay which we had made here for six weeks, and four days, together with the
                  abundance of fresh provisions which we enjoyed, and the constant exercise we used,
                  had contributed to recover all those who had been ill of the scurvy at our
                  arrival, and given new strength to the rest. However it is much to be doubted,
                  whether we should have preserved our health so well as we did, without the use of
                  the fermented liquor or spruce-beer which we brewed. The climate of Dusky Bay, is
                  I must own, its greatest inconvenience, and can never be supposed a healthy one.
                  During the whole of our stay, we had only one week of continued fair weather, all
                  the rest of the time the rain predominated. But perhaps the climate was less
                  noxious to Englishmen than to any other nation, because it is analogous to their
                  own. Another inconvenience in Dusky Bay is the want of celery, scurvy-grass, and
                  other antiscorbutics, which may be found in great plenty at Queen Charlotte's
                  sound, and many parts in New Zeeland. The intricate forests which clothe the
                  ground, the prodigious steepness of the hills, which on that account are almost
                  incapable of cultivation, and the virulent bite of sand-flies, which causes ulcers
                  like the small-pox, are certainly disagreeable circumstances; but of small
                  consequence to those who only put in here for refreshment, when compared to the
                  former. With all its defects, Dusky Bay in one of the finest places in New
                  Zeeland, for a set of people to touch at in our situation, exhausted with labours
                  and hardships of long continuance, and deprived of the sight of land above four
                  months. Nothing is more easy than to sail into it, there being no danger except
                  what is visible above water, and so many harbours and coves existing in every part
                  of it, that it is impossible to miss a convenient anchoring-place, where wood,
                  water, fish, and wild-fowl are to be found in plenty.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VI.</l>
                  <l>Passage from Dusky Bay to Queen Charlotte's Sound - Function with the
                     Adventure. - Transactions during our stay there.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. May.][Tuesday 11.]</date>HAVING hoisted in our boat, which returned
                  loaden with seals, we stood to the northward, with a heavy S. W. swell, and
                  numerous footy albatrosses and blue petrels attending us. As we advanced along
                  shore, the mountains seemed to decrease in height, and in four and twenty hours
                  the thermometer rose 7 1/2degrees, having been at 46° on the day after we left
                  Dusky Bay, and standing at 53 1/2° the next morning at eight
                     o'clock.<date>[Thursday 13.]</date>
               </p>

               <p>On the 14th, being off Cape Foul-wind, our favourable gale left us, as if it meant
                  to authenticate the propriety of the denomination, and we really had a contrary
                  wind. It blew a hard gale all the 16th, <date>[Sunday 16.]</date>attended with
                  heavy rains, and we kept plying the whole day, making one of our boards close in
                  shore under Rock's Point. </p>

               <p>At four o'clock in the morning on the 17th we stood to the eastward with a fair
                  wind, so that we were abreast of Cape Farewell at eight o'clock. Here we saw the
                  land appearing low and sandy near the sea-shore, though it rose into high
                  snow-capt mountains in the interior parts. Vast flocks of the little diving
                  petrel, (procellaria tridactyla), were seen fluttering on the surface of the sea,
                  or sitting on it, or diving to considerable distances with amazing agility. They
                  seemed exactly the same which we had seen on the 29th of January and the 8th of
                  February, in the latitude of 48° S. when we were in search of M. Kerguelen's
                  Islands.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon, about four o'clock, we were nearly opposite Cape Stephensined on
                  all the southern parts of that cape. On a sudden a whitish spot appeared on the
                  sea in that quarter, and a column arose out of it, looking like a glass tube;
                  another seemed to come down from the clouds to meet this, and they made a
                  coalition, forming what is commonly called a water-spout. A little while after we
                  took notice of three other columns, which were formed in the same manner as the
                  first. The nearest of all these was about three miles distant, and its apparent
                  diameter, as far as we could guess, might be about seventy fathom at the base. We
                  found our thermometer at 56 1/2 when this phӕnomenon first took its rise. The
                  nature of water-spouts and their causes being hitherto very little known, we were
                  extremely attentive to mark every little circumstance attendant on this
                  appearance. Their base, where the water of the sea was violently agitated, and
                  rose in a spiral form in vapours, was a broad spot, which looked bright and
                  yellowish when illuminated by the sun. The column was of a cylindrical form,
                  rather encreasing in width towards the upper extremity. These columns moved
                  forward on the surface of the sea, and the clouds not following them with equal
                  rapidity, they assumed a bent or incurvated shape, and frequently appeared
                  crossing each other, evidently proceeding in different directions; from whence we
                  concluded, that it being calm, each of these water-spouts caused a wind of its
                  own. At last they broke one after another, being probably too much distended by
                  the difference between their motion and that of the clouds. In proportion as the
                  clouds came nearer to us, the sea appeared more and more covered with short broken
                  waves, and the wind continually veered all round the compass, without fixing in
                  any point. We soon saw a spot on the sea, within two hundred fathom of us, in a
                  violent agitation. The water, in a space of fifty or sixty fathoms, moved towards
                  the centre, and there rising into vapour, by the force of the whirling motion,
                  ascended in a spiral form towards the clouds. Some hailstones fell on board about
                  this time, and the clouds looked exceedingly black and louring above us. Directly
                  over the whirl-pool, if I may so call the agitated spot on the sea, a cloud
                  gradually tapered into a long slender tube, which seemed to descend to meet the
                  rising spiral, and soon united with it into a strait column of a cylindrical form.
                  We could distinctly observe the water hurled upwards with the greatest violence in
                  a spiral, and it appeared that it left a hollow space in the centre; so that we
                  concluded the water only formed a hollow tube, instead of a solid column. We were
                  strongly confirmed in this belief by the colour, which was exactly like any hollow
                  glass-tube. After some time the last water-spout was incurvated and broke like the
                  others, with this difference, that its disjunction was attended with a flash of
                  lightning, but no explosion was heard. Our situation during all this time was very
                  dangerous and alarming; a phӕnomenon which carried so much terrific majesty in it,
                  and connected as it were the sea with the clouds, made our oldest mariners uneasy
                  and at a loss how to behave; for most of them, though they had viewed water-spouts
                  at a distance, yet had never been so beset with them as we were; and all without
                  exception had heard dreadful accounts of their pernicious effects, when they
                  happened to break over a ship. We prepared indeed for the worst, by cluing up our
                  topsails; but it was the general opinion that our masts and yards must have gone
                  to wreck if we had been drawn into the vortex. It was hinted that firing a gun had
                  commonly succeeded in breaking water-spouts, by the strong vibration it causes in
                  the air; and accordingly a four-pounder was ordered to be got ready, but our
                  people being, as usual, very dilatory about it, the danger was past before we
                  could try this experiment. How far electricity may be considered as the cause of
                  this phӕnomenon, we could not determine with any precision; so much however seems
                  certain, that it has some connection with it, from the flash of lightning, which
                  was plainly observed at the bursting of the last column. The whole time, from
                  their first appearance to the dissolution of the last, was about three quarters of
                  an hour. It was five o'clock when the latter happened, and the thermometer then
                  stood at 54° or 2 1/2degrees lower, than when they began to make their appearance.
                  The depth of water we had under us was thirty-six fathom. The place we were in was
                  analogous to most places where water-spouts have been observed, inasmuch as it was
                  in a narrow sea or strait. Dr. Shaw and Thevenot saw them in the Mediterranean and
                  Persian Gulph; and they are common in the West-Indies, the Straits of Malacca, and
                  the Chinese sea. Upon the whole, we were not fortunate enough to make any
                  remarkable discoveries in regard to this phӕnomenon; all our observations only
                  tend to confirm the facts already noticed by others, and which are so largely
                  commented upon by the learned Dr. Benjamin Franklin, F.R.S. His ingenious
                  hypothesis, that whirlwinds and water-spouts have a common origin, has not been
                  invalidated by our observations. We refer our philosophical readers to his papers,
                  as containing the most complete and satisfactory account of water-spouts .</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 18.]</date>About five o'clock the next morning we opened Queen
                  Charlotte's Sound, and about seven we saw three flashes rising from the south end
                  of the Motu-Aro, where a hippah, or strong hold of the natives, was situated,
                  which is described in Lieutenant Cook's voyage in the Endeavour . We immediately
                  conceived that they were signals made by Europeans, and probably by our friends in
                  the Adventure; and upon firing some four-pounders, had the pleasure of being
                  answered out of the Ship Cove, opposite the island. Towards noon we could discern
                  our old consort at anchor; and soon after were met by several of her officers, who
                  brought us a present of fresh fish, and gave us an account of what had happened to
                  them after our separation. In the afternoon it fell calm, so that we were obliged
                  to be towed into the cove, where we anchored at seven in the evening. In the mean
                  time Captain Furneaux came on board, and testified his satisfaction at rejoining
                  us, by a salute of thirteen guns, which our people cheerfully returned. Those who
                  have been in situations similar to ours, may form an adequate idea of the
                  reciprocal pleasure which this meeting produced. It was heightened on both sides,
                  by the recent impressions of accumulated dangers to which our separate courses had
                  exposed us, and which under Providence we had happily escaped. </p>

               <p>The Adventure, after losing our company, had continued her course to the northward
                  of us, between the latitudes of 50° and 54° south, experiencing very heavy gales
                  from the westward during the whole time. On the 28th of February, being in about
                  122° of longitude west from Greenwich, Captain Furneaux thought it adviseable
                  gradually to descend into the latitude of Diemen's Land, or the extremity of New
                  Holland, discovered by Abel Janssen Tasman in November 1642. On the 9th of March
                  he fell in with the S. W. part of this coast, and running along its southern
                  extremity, came to an anchor on the 11th in the afternoon, in a bay on the east
                  side, which he called Adventure Bay, and which is probably the same where Tasman
                  lay at anchor, distinguished by the name of Frederick Henry Bay. The southern
                  extremities of this coast consisted of large broken masses of barren and blackish
                  rocks, resembling the extreme points of the African and American continents. The
                  land round the bay rose in sandy hillocks, of which the innermost were covered
                  with various sorts of trees, rather remote from each other, and without any
                  brush-wood. They also found a lake of fresh water on the west side, covered with
                  great flocks of wild-ducks and other aquatic fowls. Several islands in the offing
                  to the N. E. along shore, were of a moderate height, and likewise covered with
                  wood. Tasman probably took them for one great island, which in his charts bears
                  the name of Maria's Island. The Adventure lay only three days in this bay, during
                  which Captain Furneaux took in a small quantity of fresh water, and collected
                  several curious animals, among which was a species of Viverra, and a fine white
                  hawk. Our Europeans perceived no inhabitants during their stay, but thought they
                  observed some smoke at a great distance in the country.</p>
               <!--AN April 7: Forster used 'of'.-->

               <p>On the 15th in the evening they weighed and sailed out of Adventure Bay, standing
                  along shore to the northward. They found it consisted of sandy hills of a moderate
                  height, but saw at the same time some much higher in the interior country. At
                  different parts of this coast they met with several islands, particularly those
                  which Tasman named Schouten's and Vander Lyn's Islands. About the latitude of 41°
                  15' south, they opened a little bay, which, on account of several fires, probably
                  lighted by the natives, they named the Bay of Fires. They continued examining the
                  coast, not without running some danger from numerous shoals, till the 19th of
                  March at noon, when being in the latitude of 39° 20' south, and still seeing the
                  land about eight leagues to the north-westward, they concluded that Diemen's Land
                  was connected with the continent of New Holland and directed their course towards
                  the rendezvous at New Zeeland. However, as they had been obliged, by the frequency
                  of shoals, to keep out of sight of the coast several times, and there remained a
                  space of twenty leagues from the northernmost land they had seen, to Point Hicks,
                  the southern boundary of captain Cook's discoveries in the Endeavour; it is still
                  undetermined, whether a strait or passage does not exist between the main of New
                  Holland and Diemen's Land, though the appearance of quadrupeds upon the latter,
                  rather seems to favour the idea of their being connected together. Be this as it
                  may, there is perhaps no part of the world which so well deserves future
                  investigation as the great continent of New Holland, of which we do not yet know
                  the whole outline, and of whose productions we are in a manner entirely ignorant.
                  Its inhabitants, from the accounts of all the voyagers who have visited them, are
                  but few in number, probably dwell on the sea-coasts only, go perfectly naked, and
                  seem by all description to lead a more savage life than any nation in warm
                  climates. There is consequently a vast interior space of ground, equal to the
                  continent of Europe, and in great measure situated between the tropics, entirely
                  unknown, and perhaps uninhabited: nothing is more certain, from the vast variety
                  of animal and vegetable productions, collected on its sea-coasts in captain Cook's
                  voyage in the Endeavour, than that the inner countries contain immense treasures
                  of natural knowledge, which must of course become of infinite use to the civilized
                  nation, which shall first attempt to go in search of them. The south-west corner
                  of this continent, which hitherto remains wholly unexplored, may perhaps open a
                  way to the heart of the country; for it is not likely, that so great an extent of
                  land, situated under the tropic, should be destitute of a great river, and no part
                  of the coast seems better situated than that for its passage into the sea.</p>

               <p>After leaving this coast, the Adventure continued fifteen days at sea, on account
                  of contrary winds, and at length made the coast of New Zeeland, near Rock's Point,
                  on the southern island, on the third of April, at six in the morning, and came to
                  an anchor at Ship Cove, Queen Charlotte's Sound, on the 7th.</p>

               <p>During their stay here, they had made the same establishments on shore as we had
                  done at Dusky Bay, except the brewery, which they were not yet acquainted with.
                  They had found the hippah, or strong-hold of the natives, at the southern end of
                  Motu-Aro forsaken, and their astronomer had fixed his observatory upon it. The
                  inhabitants of this sound, who amount to some hundred persons, in several distinct
                  and independent parties, often at variance with each other, had begun an
                  intercourse with them, and paid them several visits, coming from the interior
                  parts. They had been extremely well received, and did not hesitate to come on
                  board, where they eat freely of the sailor's provisions, showing a particular
                  liking to our biscuits, and pease-soup. They had brought with them great
                  quantities of their clothing too, and weapons, which they eagerly exchanged for
                  nails, hatchets and cloth.</p>

               <p>On the 11th of May, being the same day we sailed out of Dusky Bay, several of the
                  Adventure's people, who were at work on shore, or dispersed on shooting parties,
                  distinctly felt a shock of an earthquake; but those who remained on board, did not
                  perceive any thing of it. This circumstance may serve to evince the probability of
                  volcanoes on New Zeeland, as these two great phӕnomena on our globe seem to be
                  closely connected together.</p>

               <p>We arrived in Queen Charlotte's Sound, at the time when the Adventure's crew began
                  to despair of ever meeting with us again, and had made preparations to spend the
                  whole winter in this harbour, in order to proceed to the eastward, with the
                  ensuing spring, to explore the South Sea in high latitudes. Captain Cook, however,
                  was by no means inclined to lie inactive during so many months, especially as he
                  knew, that considerable refreshments were to be had at the Society Isles, which he
                  had visited in his former voyage. He therefore gave directions to put both sloops
                  in condition to go to sea, as soon as possible; and the Resolution being entirely
                  prepared for that purpose, her crew assisted that of the Adventure for the sake of
                  greater dispatch.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 19.]</date>We began our excursions the day after our arrival, and
                  found the productions of the forests very similar to those of Dusky Bay, but the
                  season and climate infinitely more favourable to our botanical researches. We were
                  fortunate enough to meet with several species of plants still in flower, and also
                  found some birds, which we had not seen before. But the antiscorbutic plants,
                  which grew on every beach, gave this port the most distinguished advantage over
                  our first place of refreshment. We immediately gathered vast quantities of wild
                  celery, and of a well-tasted scurvy-grass (lepidium) which were daily boiled with
                  some oat-meal or wheat for breakfast, and with pease-soup for dinner; and the
                  people on board the Adventure, who had hitherto not known the use of these greens,
                  now followed our example. We also found a species of sow-thistle (sonchus
                  oleraceus), and a kind of plant which our people called lamb's quarters,
                  (tetragonia cornuta ), which we frequently used as sallads; and if we had not such
                  plenty of wild-fowl and fishes as at Dusky Bay, we were amply recompensed by these
                  excellent vegetables. The spruce and the tea-tree of New Zeeland likewise grew in
                  great plenty hereabouts, and we taught our friends to make use of both for their
                  refreshment.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 20.]</date>The next day we went to the Hippah, or fortification of
                  the natives, where Mr. Bailey, the astronomer of the Adventure had fixed his
                  observatory. It is situated on a steep insulated rock, which is accessible only in
                  one place, by a narrow difficult path, where two persons cannot go abreast. At the
                  top it had been surrounded by some palisadoes, but these were in most parts
                  removed, and had been used for fuel by our people. The huts of the natives stood
                  promiscuously within the enclosure, and had no walls, but consisted only of a
                  roof, which rose into a steep ridge. The inner skeletons of these huts were
                  branches of trees plaited so as to resemble hurdles; on these they had laid the
                  bark of trees, and covered the whole with the rough fibres of the flag, or New
                  Zeeland flax-plant. We were told, that the people from the Adventure had found
                  them exceeding full of vermin, and particularly fleas, from which it should seem
                  that they had been but lately inhabited; and indeed it is not unlikely, that all
                  these strong places are only the occasional abode of the natives, in case of
                  danger from their enemies; and that they forsake them, whenever their personal
                  safety does not require their residence. Our fellow-voyagers likewise found
                  immense numbers of rats upon the Hippah rock, so that they were obliged to put
                  some large jars in the ground, level with the surface, into which these vermin
                  fell during night, by running backwards and forwards; and great number of them
                  were caught in this manner. It is therefore very probable, that rats are
                  indigenous in New Zeeland, or at least that their arrival there, is prior to its
                  discovery by European navigators. Captain Furneaux shewed us several spots of
                  ground on the top of this rock, which he had ordered to be dug, and on which he
                  had sown a great variety of garden-seeds; these succeeded so well that we
                  frequently had sallads, and many dishes of European greens at our table,
                  notwithstanding the season of winter was now far advanced. But the climate in this
                  part of New Zeeland is extremely mild, when compared to that of Dusky Bay; and
                  notwithstanding the vicinity of the snowy mountains, I am inclined to believe it
                  seldom freezes hard in Queen Charlotte's Sound; at least we experienced no frost
                  during our continuance there to the 6th of June.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 22.]</date>On the 22d we went over to an island in the sound, to
                  which captain Cook had given the name of Long Island in his former voyage. It
                  consists of one long ridge, of which the sides are steep, and the back or top
                  nearly level, though in most places very narrow. On its N. W. side we saw a fine
                  beach, surrounding a little piece of flat land, of which the greatest part was
                  marshy, and covered with various grasses; the rest was full of antiscorbutics, and
                  the New Zeeland flax-plant (phormium), growing round some old abandoned huts of
                  the natives. We cleared some spots of ground here, and sowed European garden seeds
                  on them, which we thought were likely to thrive in this place. We also climbed to
                  the top of the ridge, which we found covered with dry grasses, intermixed with
                  some low, shrubby plants; and among them a number of quails exactly like those of
                  Europe, had their residence. Several deep and narrow glens which ran down the
                  sides of the ridge to the sea, were filled with trees, shrubs, and climbers, the
                  haunt of numerous small birds, and of several falcons; but where the cliffs were
                  perpendicular, or hanging over the water, great flocks of a beautiful sort of
                  shags, built their nests on every little broken rock, or if possible in small
                  cavities about a foot square, which seemed in a few instances to be enlarged by
                  the birds themselves. The argillaceous stone, of which most of the hills about
                  Queen Charlotte's Sound consisted, is sometimes sufficiently soft for that
                  purpose. It runs in oblique strata, commonly dipping a little towards the south,
                  is of a greenish-grey, or bluish, or yellowish-brown colour, and sometimes
                  contains veins of white quartz. A green talcous or nephritic stone, is also found
                  in this kind of rock, and when very hard, capable of polish, and semi-transparent;
                  it is used by the natives for chissels, hatchets, and sometimes for
                  pattoo-pattoos: it is of the same species which jewellers call the jadde. Several
                  softer sorts of this stone, perfectly opaque, and of a pale green colour, are more
                  numerous than the flinty semi-transparent kind; and several species of horn-stone
                  and argillaceous slate likewise are seen running in great strata through some of
                  the mountains. The latter is commonly found in great quantity, and broken pieces,
                  on the sea beeches, and is what our seamen call shingle, by which name it is
                  distinguished in the account of captain Cook's former voyage. On these beaches we
                  also met with several sorts of flinty stones and pebbles, and some loose pieces of
                  black, compact, and ponderous basaltes, of which the natives form some of their
                  short clubs, called pattoo-pattoos. In many places we likewise saw strata of a
                  blackish saxum Lin. consisting of a black and compact mica or glimmer, intermixed
                  with minute particles of quartz. The argillaceous slate is sometimes found of a
                  rusty colour, which seems evidently to rise from irony particles; and from this
                  circumstance, and the variety of minerals just enumerated, there is great reason
                  to suppose that this part of New Zeeland contains iron ore, and perhaps several
                  other metallic bodies. Before we left this place, we found some small pieces of a
                  whitish pumice-stone on the sea-shore, which, together with the basaltine lava,
                  strongly confirm the existence of volcanoes in New Zeeland.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 23.]</date>On the 23d in the morning, two small canoes came towards
                  us, in which were five men of the natives, the first we had seen since the arrival
                  of our sloop in this harbour. Their appearance was nearly the same as that of the
                  Dusky Bay people, with this difference, that they seemed much more familiar and
                  unconcerned. We bought some fish of them, and likewise made them some presents,
                  conducting them into the cabin, as they did not hesitate to come on board. Seeing
                  us sit down to dinner, they freely partook of our provisions, but drank pure
                  water, refusing to touch either wine or brandy. They were so restless, that they
                  removed from our table to that of the officers in the steerage, where they
                  likewise eat with great appetite, and drank great quantities of water sweetened
                  with sugar, of which they were remarkably fond. Every thing they saw, or could lay
                  hands upon they coveted, but upon the least hint, that we either could not, or
                  would not part with what they had taken up, they laid it down without reluctance.
                  Glass bottles, which they called taw-haw, were however particularly valuable to
                  them; and whenever they saw any of them, they always pointed to them, and then
                  moved the hand to their breast, pronouncing the word mòkh, by which they used to
                  express their desire of possessing any thing. Among the variety of little presents
                  we made them they did not notice beads, ribbons, white paper, &amp;c. but were
                  very eager after iron, nails, and hatchets; a proof that the intrinsic value of
                  these tools cannot fail to make an impression on the minds of these people in the
                  long run, though they were at first indifferent to them, as not knowing their use
                  and durability. Some of our people having made use of their canoes in the
                  afternoon to transport themselves to the shore, they came into the cabin
                  complaining to the captain, whose authority over the rest they very well
                  conceived; and their embarkations being restored to them, they all went away
                  highly pleased.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 24.]</date>The next morning at day-break they returned, but brought
                  four other persons with them, one of them a woman, with some children, and traded
                  as usual about the ships. The captains embarked with us after breakfast, in order
                  to visit an extensive inlet on the northern shore of the sound, which was called
                  West Bay in the Endeavour's voyage. On our way we met a double canoe, manned with
                  thirteen persons, who, coming along side, made acquaintance with Captain Cook, and
                  seemed to recollect him, by enquiring for Tupaya, the native of O-Taheitee, whom
                  he had taken on board during his former voyage, and who had lived to visit this
                  country with him. When they were told that he was dead, they seemed much
                  concerned, and pronounced some words in a plaintive tone. We made signs for them
                  to go on board the vessels lying in Ship Cove; but when they saw us going on to
                  the south, they returned to the cove from whence they came.</p>

               <p>We found the country not quite so steep as at the southern extremity of New
                  Zeeland, and the hills near the sea-side were in general of an inferior height. In
                  most parts, however, they were covered with forests, equally intricate and
                  impenetrable as those of Dusky Bay, but containing a greater number of pigeons,
                  parrots, and small birds, which perhaps abandon that rude climate during the cold
                  season, and pass their winter in these milder regions. Oyster-catchers or
                  sea-pies, and various sorts of shags, likewise enlivened the sea shores here, but
                  ducks were extremely scarce. West Bay contains a number of fine coves, each of
                  which affords excellent anchorage; the hills rise gently all round it, covered
                  with shrubs and trees, and many of their summits are clear of woods, but overgrown
                  with a common species of fern, (acrosticum furcatum). This is likewise the case
                  with many islands in the sound, and great part of the south-east shore of the
                  sound from Cape Koamaroò to East Bay. After collecting a number of new plants,
                  among which was a species of pepper, very much resembling ginger in the taste, and
                  shooting many birds of all sorts, we returned on board late in the evening.</p>

               <p>The launch, which had been sent out in the morning to an adjacent cove, in order
                  to cut greens for the ship's company and some grass for our goats and sheep, did
                  not return that day; but staying out all the next likewise, we began to be very
                  uneasy about the twelve people in her, among whom were our third lieutenant, the
                  lieutenant of marines, Mr. Hodges, the carpenter, and the gunner. Our
                  apprehensions were the most just, as the wind and weather had been favourable for
                  their return from almost any part of the bay, till the morning of the 25th; soon
                  after which it began to be very rainy and stormy. On the day we had gone to West
                  Bay, a large canoe with twelve of the natives came from the north to our ship, and
                  after selling a variety of their dresses, some stone hatchets, clubs, spears, and
                  even paddles, they returned the way they came.</p>

               <p>On the 26th, after noon, the weather being somewhat cleared up, our launch arrived
                  on board, but all the people in her were exhausted with fatigue and hunger. All
                  the provision they had taken out with them consisted of three biscuits and a
                  bottle of brandy; and they had not been able to succeed in catching a single fish
                  during the tempestuous weather. After being tossed about by the waves, attempting
                  in vain to return to the vessels, they had put into a cove, on which they found a
                  few deserted huts of the natives, where they took shelter, and just kept
                  themselves from starving by eating a few muscles that adhered to the rocks.</p>

               <p>The next morning we made our researches round the bottom of the cove, in quest of
                  plants and birds; and in the afternoon we went out along the rocky shores towards
                  Point Jackson, to kill some shags, which we had now learnt to relish instead of
                  ducks. Between these two excursions we received another visit of the Indian
                  family, whom we had seen before, on the 23d. They seemed to be come for no other
                  purpose than that of eating with us, having brought nothing with them to exchange
                  for our iron-work. We now enquired for their names, but they were a long time
                  before they could understand us; however, comprehending our meaning at last, they
                  gave us a collection of words, which had a singular mixture of gutturals and
                  vowels. The oldest among them was called Towa-hà;ngha; the other Kotughâ-a,
                  Koghoäà, Khoäà, Kollàkh, and Taywaherùa. This last was a boy about twelve or
                  fourteen years of age, who had a very promising countenance, and seemed to be the
                  liveliest and most intelligent among them. He came into the cabin and dined with
                  us, eating very voraciously of a shag-pye, of which, contrary to our expectation,
                  he preferred the crust. The captain offered him some Madeira wine, of which he
                  drank something more than one glass, making a great many wry faces at first. A
                  bottle of a very sweet Cape wine being brought upon the table, a glass was filled
                  out to him, which he relished so well that he was continually licking his lips,
                  and desired to have another, which he likewise drank off. This draught began to
                  elevate his spirits, and his tongue ran on with great volubility. He capered about
                  the cabin, insisted on having the captain's boat-cloak, which lay on a chair, and
                  was much vexed at the refusal; he next desired one of the empty bottles, and this
                  request likewise proving fruitless, he went out of the cabin highly offended. On
                  deck he saw some of our servants folding up linen which had been hung out to dry,
                  and immediately seized on a table-cloth; but this being taken from him, his
                  passion was at the highest pitch, he stamped, threatened, then grumbled, or rather
                  grunted awhile, and at last became so sullen that he would not speak a word. The
                  impatient temper of this nation never appeared more distinctly than in this boy's
                  conduct; but at the same time we had room to consider, seeing the effect of strong
                  liquors upon him, how fortunate it was that they were used to no kind of
                  intoxicating draught, which would perhaps serve to make their temper still more
                  fierce and ungovernable than it is at present.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 29.]</date>About thirty natives surrounded us in several canoes
                  the next morning, and brought a few of their tools and weapons to sell, for which
                  they received great quantities of our goods in exchange, owing to the eagerness
                  with which our crews outbid each other. There were a number of women among them,
                  whose lips were of a blackish blue colour, by punctuation; and their cheeks were
                  painted of a lively red, with a mixture of ruddle and oil. Like those at Dusky
                  Bay, they commonly had slender and bandy legs, with large knees; defects which
                  evidently are deducible from the little exercise they use, and their mode of
                  sitting cross-legged and cramped up almost perpetually in canoes. Their colour was
                  of a clear brown, between the olive and mahogany hues, their hair jetty black, the
                  faces round, the nose and lips rather thick but not flat, their black eyes
                  sometimes lively and not without expression; the whole upper part of their figure
                  was not disproportionate, and their assemblage of features not absolutely
                  forbidding. Our crews, who had not conversed with women since our departure from
                  the Cape, found these ladies very agreeable; and from the manner in which their
                  advances were received, it appeared very plainly that chastity was not rigorously
                  observed here, and that the sex were far from being impregnable. However their
                  favours did not depend upon their own inclination, but the men, as absolute
                  masters, were always to be consulted upon the occasion; if a spike-nail, or a
                  shirt, or a similar present had been given for their connivance, the lady was at
                  liberty to make her lover happy, and to exact, if possible, the tribute of another
                  present for herself. Some among them, however, submitted with reluctance to this
                  vile prostitution; and, but for the authority and menaces of the men, would not
                  have complied with the desires of a set of people who could, with unconcern,
                  behold their tears and hear their complaints. Whether the members of a civilized
                  society, who could act such a brutal part, or the barbarians who could force their
                  own women to submit to such indignity, deserve the greatest abhorrence, is a
                  question not easily to be decided. Encouraged by the lucrative nature of this
                  infamous commerce, the New Zeelanders went through the whole vessel, offering
                  their daughters and sisters promiscuously to every person's embraces, in exchange
                  for our iron tools, which they knew could not be purchased at an easier rate. It
                  does not appear that their married women were ever suffered to have this kind of
                  intercourse with our people. Their ideas of female chastity are, in this respect,
                  so different from ours, that a girl may favour a number of lovers without any
                  detriment to her character; but if she marries, conjugal fidelity is exacted from
                  her with the greatest rigour. It may therefore be alledged, that as the New
                  Zeelanders place no value on the continence of their unmarried women, the arrival
                  of Europeans among them, did not injure their moral characters in this respect;
                  but we doubt whether they ever debased themselves so much as to make a trade of
                  their women, before we created new wants by shewing them iron-tools; for the
                  possession of which they do not hesitate to commit an action that, in our eyes,
                  deprives them of the very shadow of sensibility.</p>

               <p>It is unhappy enough that the unavoidable consequence of all our voyages of
                  discovery, has always been the loss of a number of innocent lives; but this heavy
                  injury done to the little uncivilized communities which Europeans have visited, is
                  trifling when compared to the irretrievable harm entailed upon them by corrupting
                  their morals. If these evils were in some measure compensated by the introduction
                  of some real benefit in these countries, or by the abolition of some other immoral
                  customs among their inhabitants, we might at least comfort ourselves, that what
                  they lost on one hand, they gained on the other; but I fear that hitherto our
                  intercourse has been wholly disadvantageous to the nations of the South Seas; and
                  that those communities have been the least injured, who have always kept aloof
                  from us, and whose jealous disposition did not suffer our sailors to become too
                  familiar among them, as if they had perceived in their countenances that levity of
                  disposition, and that spirit of debauchery, with which they are generally
                  reproached.</p>

               <p>Several of these people were invited into the cabin, where Mr. Hodges applied
                  himself to sketch the most characteristic faces, while we prevailed on them to sit
                  still for a few moments, keeping their attention engaged, by a variety of trifles
                  which we shewed, and some of which we presented to them. We found several very
                  expressive countenances among them, particularly some old men, with grey or white
                  heads and beards; and some young men, with amazing bushy hair, which hung wildly
                  over their faces, and increased their natural savage looks. The stature of these
                  people was middle-sized in general, and their form and colour almost entirely the
                  same as that of the Dusky Bay people; their dress was likewise made in the same
                  manner of the flax-plant, but never interwoven with feathers, in lieu of which
                  they had bits of dog-skin at the four corners of their cloaks, which the others
                  were not fortunate enough to possess. The boghee-boghee, or shaggy-cloak, which
                  hangs round their neck like a thatch of straw , was almost constantly worn by
                  them, on account of the season, during which the air began to be sharp, and rains
                  were very frequent. But their other kinds of cloth were here commonly old, dirty,
                  and not so neatly wrought as they are described in captain Cook's first voyage.
                  The men wore their hair hanging in a very slovenly manner about them, but the
                  women had theirs cut short, which seems to be the general practice among them.
                  They also wore the head-dress, or cap of brown feathers, mentioned in the account
                  of captain Cook's former voyage. After these people had been on board a few hours,
                  they began to steal, and secrete every thing they could lay their hands on.
                  Several of them were discovered in conveying away a large four-hour glass, a lamp,
                  some handkerchiefs, and some knives; upon which they were ignominiously turned out
                  of the sloop, and never permitted to come on board gain. They felt the whole
                  weight of shame, which this proceeding brought upon them; and their fiery temper,
                  which cannot brook any humiliation, was up in arms at this punishment; so that one
                  of them uttered threats, and made violent gestures in his canoe. In the evening
                  they all went on shore, abreast of the sloops, and made some temporary huts of the
                  branches of trees, near which they hawled their canoes on the dry land, and made
                  fires, over which they prepared their suppers. Their meals consisted of some fresh
                  fishes, which they had caught in their canoes not far from shore, with a kind of
                  scoop-net, described in captain Cook's former voyage, which they managed with a
                  dexterity peculiar to themselves.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 30.]</date>The next morning we had fine mild weather, and made a
                  trip over to Long Island, in order to look after some hay, which our people had
                  cut there, and to collect greens for the ship's company, near the huts which the
                  natives had abandoned. We were fortunate enough at the same time to find some new
                  plants, and shoot several little birds, different from those which had hitherto
                  fallen into our hands. In the afternoon, many of our sailors were allowed to go on
                  shore, among the natives, where they traded for curiosities, and purchased the
                  embraces of the ladies, notwithstanding the disgust which their uncleanliness
                  inspired. Their custom of painting their cheeks with ochre and oil, was alone
                  sufficient to deter the more sensible from such intimate connections with them;
                  and if we add to this a certain stench which announced them even at a distance,
                  and the abundance of vermin which not only infested their hair, but also crawled
                  on their clothes, and which they occasionally cracked between their teeth, it is
                  astonishing that persons should be found, who could gratify an animal appetite
                  with such loathsome objects, whom a civilized education and national customs
                  should have taught them to hold in abhorrence.</p>

               <p>Before they returned on board again, a woman stole a jacket belonging to one of
                  our sailors, and gave it to a young fellow of her own nation. The owner finding it
                  in the young men's hands, took it from him, upon which he received several blows
                  with the fist. These he believed were meant in joke, but as he was advancing to
                  the water-side, in order to step into the boat, the native threw several large
                  stones at him. The sailor was rouzed, and returning to the fellow, began to box
                  him after the English manner, and in a few moments had given the New Zeelander a
                  black eye, and bloody nose; upon which the latter, to all appearance much
                  terrified, declined the combat, and ran off.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook, who was determined to omit nothing which might tend to the
                  preservation of European garden-plants in this country, prepared the soil, sowed
                  seeds, and transplanted the young plants in four or five different parts of this
                  sound. He had cultivated a spot of ground on the beach of Long Island, another on
                  the Hippah rock, two more on the Motu-Aro, and one of considerable extent at the
                  bottom of Ship Cove, where our vessels lay at anchor. He chiefly endeavoured to
                  raise such vegetables as have useful and nutritive roots, and among them
                  particularly potatoes, of which we had been able to preserve but few in a state of
                  vegetation. He had likewise sown corn of several sorts, beans, kidney-beans, and
                  pease, and devoted the latter part of his stay in great measure to these
                  occupations.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. June.][Tuesday 1.]</date>Early on the first of June several canoes
                  full of natives came on board, whom we had not seen before. Their canoes were of
                  different sizes, and three of them had sails, which are but seldom seen among
                  them. The sail consisted of a large triangular mat, and was fixed to a mast, and a
                  boom joining below in an acute angle, which could both be struck with the greatest
                  facility. The upper edge, or broadest part of the sail, had five tufts of brown
                  feathers on its extremity. The bottom of these canoes consisted of a long hollow
                  trunk of a tree, and the sides were made of several boards or planks above each
                  other, which were united by means of a number of strings of the New Zeeland
                  flax-plant, passed through small holes, and tied very fast. The seams between them
                  are caulked with the downy or woolly substance of the reed-mace (typha latifolia).
                  Some of the canoes were double, that is, two fastened along side of each other, by
                  means of transverse sticks, lashed on with ropes; but where that was not the case,
                  they had an outrigger, or narrow piece of plank fixed parallel to one side of the
                  canoe, by means of transverse poles, to prevent their oversetting. All those we
                  now saw had not that profusion of carving and fine workmanship, mentioned in
                  captain Cook's first voyage, which he observed in the canoes of the northern
                  islands; but seemed rather old, and worn out; they were not, however, different in
                  the general conformation from those described there, and always had the distorted
                  human face at the head, the high stern, and the neat sharp-pointed paddles. The
                  people in them brought for sale several ornaments, which were new to us,
                  especially pieces of green nephritic stone, cut into various forms. Some were of a
                  flat shape, with a sharp edge, and served as the blades of hatchets, or adzes;
                  some were formed into long pieces, which are hung into the ear; others were little
                  chissels, inserted in a wooden handle, and again others were cut out with great
                  labour into a contorted and squatted figure, something resembling the carricature
                  of a man, in which a pair of monstrous eyes were inserted, made of the mother of
                  pearl of an ear-shell. This last, which they called ê teeghee, was worn by persons
                  of both sexes, hanging on the breast, from a string passed about the heck, and may
                  perhaps relate to some religious matters. They sold us an apron, made of their
                  close-wrought cloth, covered with red feathers, faced with white dog-skin, and
                  ornamented with pieces of the ear-shell, which is said to be worn by the women in
                  their dances. They brought a number of their fish-hooks, which are of a remarkable
                  clumsy form, made of wood, and barbed with a piece of bone, which was jagged, and
                  which they assured us was human bone. Several rows of human teeth, drawn on a
                  thread, hung on their breasts, in the place of, or along with the teeghee, but
                  they readily sold them to us, in exchange for iron tools, or trinkets. A good many
                  dogs were observed in their canoes, which they seemed very fond of, and kept tied
                  with a string, round their middle; they were of a rough long-haired sort, with
                  pricked ears, and much resembled the common shepherd's cur, or count Buffon's
                  chien de berger (see his Hist. Nat.). They were of different colours, some
                  spotted, some quite black, and others perfectly white. The food which these dogs
                  receive is fish, or the same as their masters live on, who afterwards eat their
                  flesh, and employ the fur in various ornaments and dresses. They sold us several
                  of these animals, among which the old ones coming into our possession, became
                  extremely sulky, and refused to take any sustenance, but some young ones soon
                  accustomed themselves to our provisions. Several of the New Zeelanders came into
                  the vessel, and some were conducted into the cabin, where they received some
                  presents; but none of them shewed that astonishment, and that degree of reflection
                  and attention, which our old friend at Dusky Bay had manifested on coming aboard.
                  Some of them were strangely marked in the face with deeply excavated spiral lines;
                  and one of them in particular, a tall and strong man, and nearly middle-aged, had
                  these marks very regular on his chin, cheeks, forehead, and nose, so that his
                  beard, which would otherwise have been very thick, now consisted only of a few
                  straggling hairs. This man's name was Tringho-Waya, and he seemed to have some
                  authority with his people, which was more than we had hitherto observed among the
                  small number who had visited us. The chief object of their commerce were shirts
                  and bottles, of which last they were remarkably fond: perhaps because they have
                  nothing in which to keep liquids, except a minute kind of calabash or gourd, which
                  grows only in the northern island, and was extremely scarce among the people in
                  Queen Charlotte's Sound. They were not inclined however to make disadvantageous
                  bargains, and demanded the best price for every little trifle which they offered
                  for sale, though they were never offended with a refusal. Some of them being in
                  remarkable good spirits, gave us a heiva, or dance, on the quarter-deck. They
                  placed themselves in a row, and parted with their shaggy upper garments: one of
                  them sung some words in a rude manner, and all the rest accompanied the gestures
                  he made, alternately extending their arms, and stamping with their feet in a
                  violent and almost frantic manner. The last words which we might suppose the
                  burden of the song, or a chorus, they all repeated together; and we could easily
                  distinguish some sort of metre in them, but were not sure they had rhimes. The
                  music was extremely rough, and of no great extent in these kinds of songs. In the
                  evening they all went off again, and returned to the upper part of the sound from
                  whence they came.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 2.]</date>The next morning we accompanied the captains Cook and
                  Furneaux to East Bay, and Grass Cove, where they intended to collect a load of
                  antiscorbutic greens. We had not only endeavoured to leave useful European roots
                  in this country, but we were likewise attentive to stock its wilds with animals,
                  which in time might become beneficial to the natives, and to future generations of
                  navigators. To this purpose captain Furneaux had already sent a boar and two sows
                  to Canibal Cove, where they had been turned into the woods to range at their own
                  pleasure; and we now deprived ourselves, with the same view, of a pair of goats,
                  male and female, which we left in an unfrequented part of East Bay. These places
                  had been fixed upon, in hopes that our new colonists would there remain unmolested
                  by the natives, who indeed were the only enemies they had to fear, as their
                  inconsiderate and barbarous temper would not suffer them to make any reflection on
                  the advantages which future ages might reap from the propagation of such a
                  valuable race of animals. On this excursion we saw a large animal in the water
                  about Grass Cove, which seemed to be a sea-lion by its magnitude, but which we
                  could not get a shot at. We had already discovered a small species of bats in the
                  woods, so that the list of the indigenous quadrupeds in New Zeeland was increased
                  to five, including the domestic dog of the natives; and it is much to be doubted
                  whether it is possible to add a sixth to that number. After we had ranged the
                  woods in different parts, collected several plants, shot a few birds, and taken in
                  a great load of wild celery and scurvy-grass, we returned late on board.</p>

               <p>On the third of June, we sent some boats to Long Island to fetch our hay on board;
                  and having laid in a sufficient quantity of wood and water, put the ship in a
                  condition to go to sea, and refreshed our crews with vast quantities of greens, we
                  were ready to sail with the first opportunity. One of our boats in returning saw a
                  large double canoe, and another in which they counted about fifty men, who
                  immediately chaced them: but our people not being armed, hoisted sail, and soon
                  got away from them, so that the New Zeelanders gave over the pursuit, and returned
                  towards East Bay from whence they came. We can by no means pretend to assert that
                  their intentions were hostile in any degree, but prudence naturally suggested to
                  our people, not to place themselves in the power of a set of uncivilized men, who
                  follow their own caprice instead of laws.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 4.]</date>The next morning we hoisted St. George's colours, the jack
                  and pennant in honour of His Majesty's birth-day, which we prepared to celebrate
                  with the usual festivities. The family of natives, whose name I have mentioned
                  page 209, and who by living constantly in a neighbouring cove, were now intimate
                  with us, came on board very early, and breakfasted with us. Whilst we were sitting
                  in the steerage, an officer acquainted the captain with the approach of a large
                  double canoe, well manned with New Zeelanders, coming from the northward. We
                  immediately went on deck, and saw the canoe about a musket shot from us,
                  containing twenty-eight men, making towards our sloop, which from her size they
                  probably took to be the commanding one. Our friends on board very earnestly told
                  us they would be our enemies, and persisted to fire at them; nay Towahanga, the
                  head of the family jumped on the arm chest, which was placed on our quarter deck,
                  and taking hold of a stick, made a number of warlike motions with it, and soon
                  after spoke to them very violently, but with some degree of solemnity, at the same
                  time brandishing, as it seemed in defiance, a large hatchet of green nephritic
                  stone, which he had never shewn us before. In the mean time the canoe approached,
                  without taking much notice of our friend, whom we persuaded at last to be silent.
                  Two people of a fine stature, one at the stern, and another about the middle of
                  the canoe stood upright, while all the rest continued seated. The former had a
                  perfect black cloak of the close wrought kind, patched in compartments with
                  dog-skin; he held a green plant of the New Zeeland flag in his hand, and now and
                  then spoke a few words. But the other pronounced a long speech well articulated,
                  loud, and very solemn, and gave his voice great variety of falls and elevations.
                  From the various tones in which he spoke, and a few gestures with which he
                  accompanied his words, he appeared by turns to question, to boast, to threaten, to
                  challenge, and to persuade us; he was sometimes running on in a moderate tone,
                  then all at once breaking out into violent exclamations; after which he made short
                  pauses in order to recover his breath. Having finished his oration, he was invited
                  to come on board by the captain, who came to the ship's side; he seemed at first
                  dubious and mistrustful, but his natural spirit soon overcoming that diffidence,
                  he ventured on board, and was presently followed by all his people, who traded
                  with the greatest eagerness for our iron wares. They immediately saluted the
                  family of natives on board, with the usual application of noses, or as our sailors
                  expressed it, they nosed each other, and paid every one of us upon the
                  quarter-deck the same compliment. The two speakers were taken into the cabin,
                  where we learnt the second orator's name was Teiratu, and that he came from the
                  opposite shore of the northern island, called Teera Whittee. They immediately
                  enquired for Tupia ( Tupaya ), and, like those mentioned p. 206, seemed much
                  concerned, and pronounced some words in a mournful or plaintive voice on hearing
                  of his death. So much had this man's superior knowledge, and his ability to
                  converse in their language rendered him valuable, and beloved even among a nation
                  in a state of barbarism. Perhaps with the capacity which Providence had allotted
                  to him, and which had been cultivated no farther than the simplicity of his
                  education would permit, he was more adapted to raise the New Zeelanders to a state
                  of civilization similar to that of his own islands, than ourselves, to whom the
                  want of the intermediate links, which connect their narrow views to our extended
                  sphere of knowledge, must prove an obstacle in such an undertaking.</p>

               <p>Teiratu and all his companions were a taller race of people than we had hitherto
                  seen in New Zeeland, none of them being below the middle size, and many above it.
                  Their dress, ornaments, and arms were richer than any we had observed among the
                  inhabitants of Queen Charlotte's Sound, and seemed to speak a kind of affluence,
                  which was entirely new to us. Among their dresses were several cloaks entirely
                  lined with dog-skin, upon which they set a high value, and which indeed gave them
                  a very comfortable appearance in the cold weather that now began to be felt. Many
                  of their cloaks, made of the fibres of the New Zeeland flag (phormium), were new,
                  and had elegant borders, very symmetrically wrought in red, black, and white; so
                  that they might have passed for the work of a much more polished nation . The
                  black is so strongly fixed upon their stuffs, that it deserves the attention of
                  our manufacturers, who greatly want a lasting dye of that colour on vegetable
                  productions; but the little progress we could make in their language, rendered it
                  impossible to gain intelligence from them on this point. Their cloaks are square
                  pieces, of which two corners were fastened on the breast by strings, and stuck
                  together by a bodkin of bone, whalebone, or green jadde. A belt of a sort of close
                  matting of grass, confined the lower extremities of their cloak to their loins,
                  beyond which it extended at least to the middle of the thigh, and sometimes to the
                  mid-leg. Notwithstanding this superiority over the natives of Queen Charlotte's
                  Sound, they resembled them perfectly in their uncleanliness, and swarms of vermin
                  marched about in their cloaths. Their hair was dressed in the fashion of the
                  country tied on the crown, greased, and stuck with white feathers; and several of
                  them had large combs, of some cetaceous animal's bone, stuck upright just behind
                  the bunch of hair on the head. Many of them were strongly carved with spirals in
                  the face; several had painted it with red ochre and oil, and were always much
                  pleased when we laid some vermilion on their cheeks. We likewise saw some little
                  calabashes among them, neatly carved, in which they kept some stinking oil; but
                  whether it was animal or vegetable I could never learn. All their tools were very
                  elegantly carved, and made with great attention. They sold us a hatchet, of which
                  the blade was of the finest green jadde, and the handle curiously ornamented with
                  fretwork. They also brought some musical instruments, among which was a trumpet,
                  or tube of wood, about four feet long, and pretty strait; its small mouth was not
                  above two inches, and the other not above five in diameter; it made a very uncouth
                  kind of braying, for they always sounded the same note, though a performer on the
                  French horn might perhaps be able to bring some better music out of it. Another
                  trumpet was made of a large whelk, (murex tritonis), mounted with wood, curiously
                  carved, and pierced at the point where the mouth was applied; a hideous bellowing
                  was all the sound that could be procured out of this instrument. The third went by
                  the name of a flute among our people, and was a hollow tube, widest about the
                  middle, where it had a large opening, as well as another at each end. This and the
                  first trumpet were both made of two hollow semicyclinders of wood, exactly fitted
                  and moulded together, so as to form a perfect tube. Their double canoe was about
                  fifty feet long, and seemed to be new; both the high stern and the head were very
                  curiously carved with fretwork and spiral lines, as described in Capt. Cook's
                  former voyage. A mishapen thing, which with some difficulty we perceived was meant
                  to represent a human head, with a pair of eyes of mother of pearl, and a long
                  tongue lolling out of its mouth, constituted the foremost extremity or prora of
                  the canoe. This figure is the most common in all their ornaments, and principally
                  in every thing that relates to warlike affairs. The custom of lolling out the
                  tongue in contempt and defiance of the enemy, seems to have given rise to the
                  frequent representations of it; the figure of the tongue forms the heads of their
                  war-canoes, it is placed on the narrow extremity of their battle-axes, and they
                  wear it on their breast, tied to a string round the neck; nay they carve it on
                  their very scoops with which they bale the water, and on the paddles with which
                  they manage their canoes.</p>

               <p>These people made but a very short stay with us, for seeing it began to blow
                  fresh, they all embarked and paddled over to the Motu-Aro. The captain,
                  accompanied by several gentlemen, followed them about noon, and found seven canoes
                  there hauled on shore, which had carried about ninety persons to that island, who
                  were all busied making huts for their temporary shelter. Our people were received
                  with every mark of friendship, and the captain distributed many presents to them.
                  Among these was a number of brass medals, gilt, about one inch and three quarters
                  in diameter, which had been struck on purpose to be left as a memorial of this
                  voyage among the nations we should meet with: on one side was the head of his
                  present majesty, with the inscription, george iii. king of great britain, france
                  and ireland, &amp;c. On the reverse, the representation of two men of war, with
                  the names resolution and adventure over them; and the exergue sailed from england
                  march mdcclxxii . Some of these medals had already been given to the natives of
                  Dusky Bay, and those of Queen Charlotte's Sound. In exchange for iron, cloth, and
                  beads, our people collected a great number of arms, tools, dresses, and ornaments,
                  as curiosities among them, they having greater quantities of these things than any
                  New Zeelanders we had seen. The captain and his company perceived that Teiratu
                  seemed to be the principal or chief among them, by a certain degree of regard
                  which the rest paid to him: they could not, however, determine any thing with
                  precision on this subject. Respect is always paid to the old men among them, who
                  may be supposed to owe their consequence to the long experience they have gained.
                  But their chiefs, such as we believed this Teiratu to be, are strong, active,
                  young men, in the prime and flower of their age. These are perhaps elected, as
                  among the North American savages; being men of avowed courage, strength, and
                  military sagacity; from a consciousness that a body of men, in case of war,
                  necessarily requires a leader to animate them as a soul, and upon whose superior
                  talents they may consistently place all their hopes. The more we consider the
                  warlike disposition of the New Zeelanders, and the numerous small parties into
                  which they are divided, this form of government will appear indispensible; for it
                  must be evident to them that the qualifications of a chief are not to be
                  inherited, or propagated from father to son; and it is likewise probable, that
                  this free people may have had opportunities of making the obvious reflection, that
                  hereditary government has a natural tendency towards despotism.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook, apprehensive lest the natives should find our garden and destroy it,
                  not knowing for what purpose it was intended, conducted Teiratu thither, and
                  shewed him every plant in it, especially the potatoes. He expressed a great liking
                  to the last, and seemed to know them very well, evidently because a similar root,
                  the Virginian or sweet potatoe, (convolvulus batatas), is planted in some parts of
                  the Northern Island, from whence he came. The captain parted from him, after
                  obtaining the promise that he would not destroy his plantations, but leave every
                  thing to grow up and propagate, and returned aboard the Resolution, where the
                  marines fired three vollies, and our crews gave three heerty cheers in token of
                  affection to their king.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 7.]</date>The wind freshened considerably after noon, and continued
                  to blow very hard for two days following, so that we were obliged to lie at anchor
                  till the 7th in the morning, when we weighed and sailed out of Ship Cove, in
                  company with the Adventure. Our stay here had proved so beneficial to our crews,
                  that they might now be said to be to the full as healthy as when they left
                  England; and we had only a single sick man, a marine, on board our sloop, who had
                  laboured under a consumption and dropsy ever since we had left England.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VII.</l>
                  <l>Run from New Zeeland to O-Taheitee.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. June.]</date> WE entered Cook's Strait after noon, and standing down
                  to the southward, beheld the immense ocean before us, which goes by the name of
                  the South Sea. This vast expanse of sea, through which many former navigators had
                  passed, in the happy climate of the torrid zone, but whose middle latitudes no
                  European vessel, except the Endeavour bark, had hitherto attempted to explore, has
                  always been believed to contain a large tract of land, distinguished by
                  geographers with the name of a Southern Continent. Previous to the Endeavour's
                  voyage, New Zeeland was thought the western coast of this unknown land, and
                  certain pretended discoveries near America were asserted as its eastern shores.
                  Captain Cook in that voyage having cut off both these by his course, and even
                  penetrated to 40 degrees of south latitude without finding land, the southern
                  continent was restrained within narrower limits, though these were still
                  considerable enough to engage the attention of future nagivators. We were now to
                  enter on this unexplored part, and running to the eastward between the 50th and
                  40th degrees of sgouth latitude, to search for undiscovered countries in the depth
                  of winter. Many among our fellow-voyagers proceeded on this dangerous expedition
                  in the firm belief that we should speedily find the coasts we went in quest of,
                  whose novelty and valuable productions would amply reward our perseverance and
                  fatigues. But captain Cook, and several others, judging from what had been done in
                  the former voyage, and what they had already experienced on this, were far from
                  expecting to discover new lands, and greatly doubted the existence of a southern
                  continent.</p>
               <!-- AN April 7: Wrote 'of' and wrote out 'degrees'.-->

               <p><date>[Tuesday 8.]</date> We were still in the mouth of the strait at eight the
                  next morning, and saw the high mountains of the southern isle loaded with snow,
                  from whence they had their name, whilst the weather below was clear and mild, our
                  thermometer being about 51° in the shade. Great shoals of cetaceous fish, of a
                  perfectly black colour, with a white spot before the back fin, passed by us. They
                  were fired at from our vessel, and one of them being shot through the head, could
                  no longer plunge under water, but began to beat about furiously on the surface,
                  and tinged the sea with its blood. It seemed to be about three yards long, and was
                  slender and blunt-headed, from whence our sailors called it the bottle-nose, a
                  name which Dale applies to a very different fish, the beaked whale, of which the
                  beak or nose resembles the neck of a bottle . We went at the rate of three knots
                  and a half at this time, so that it was not thought proper to bring to, for the
                  sake of taking up the dead fish.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 9.]</date>An infinite number of albatrosses, of all the three
                  species, hovered about us, after we were out of sight of the land. The common or
                  large sort were of diverse colours, which we believed to differ according to age,
                  and that the oldest were almost wholly white, those next them somewhat more
                  sprinkled with brown, and the youngest quite brown. Some of our sailors, who had
                  formerly sailed on board of East-India ships, after comparing the facility of
                  those voyages to the hardships of the present, propagated the ludicrous idea among
                  their messmates, that these birds contained the departed souls of old India
                  captains; who now, exiled to a part of the ocean which they shunned before, were
                  forced to gather a precarious subsistence instead of enjoying their former
                  affluence, and were made the sport of storms which they had never felt in their
                  cabbins. This stroke, which may pass for witty enough, confirms what I have before
                  observed of the original humour of sea-faring men.</p>

               <p>The officers, who could not yet relish their salt provisions, after the
                  refreshments of New Zeeland, had ordered their black dog, mentioned p. 135, to be
                  killed, and sent the captain one half of it; this day therefore we dined for the
                  first time on a leg of it roasted, which tasted so exactly like mutton, that it
                  was absolutely undistinguishable. In our cold countries where animal food is so
                  much used, and where to be carnivorous perhaps lies in the nature of men, or is
                  indispensibly necessary to the preservation of their health and strength, it is
                  strange that there should exist a Jewish aversion to dogs-flesh, when hogs, the
                  most uncleanly of all animals are eaten without scruple. Nature seems expressly to
                  have intended them for this use, by making their offspring so very numerous, and
                  their encrease so quick and frequent. It may be objected, that the exalted degree
                  of instinct, which we observe in our dogs, inspires us with great unwillingness to
                  kill and eat them. But it is owing to the time we spend on the education of dogs,
                  that they acquire those eminent qualities which attach them so much to us. The
                  natural qualities of our dogs may receive a wonderful improvement, but education
                  must give its assistance, without which the human mind itself, though capable of
                  an immense expansion, remains in a very contracted state. In New Zeeland, and
                  (according to former accounts of voyages) in the tropical isles of the South Sea,
                  the dogs are the most stupid, dull animals imaginable, and do not seem to have the
                  least advantage in point of sagacity over our sheep, which are commonly made the
                  emblems of silliness. In the former country they are fed upon fish, in the latter
                  on vegetables, and both these diets may have served to alter their disposition.
                  Education may perhaps likewise graft new instincts; the New Zeeland dogs are fed
                  on the remains of their masters' meals; they eat the bones of other dogs, and the
                  puppies become true cannibals from their birth. We had a young New Zeeland puppy
                  on board, which had certainly had no opportunity of tasting any thing but the
                  mother's milk before we purchased it; however it eagerly devoured a portion of the
                  flesh and bones of the dog, on which we dined to-day; while several others of the
                  European breed taken on board at the Cape, turned from it without touching it.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 16.]</date>We kept standing to the south-eastward till the 16th at
                  noon, attended by numerous birds of the petrel and albatross kind, together with
                  now and then a skua, or Port-Egmont hen. Beds of sea-weeds frequently were seen
                  floating on the sea, but we were now too much accustomed to their appearance, to
                  attempt to draw any conclusions from it. The thermometer, which at our departure
                  from New Zeeland, stood at 51° at eight o'clock in the morning, sunk in proportion
                  as we came to the southward to 48°, and sometimes to 47° at the same time of day;
                  but the temperature of the air upon the whole was extremely variable, and the
                  weather equally unsettled. From thence it arose, that we daily observed rainbows,
                  or parts of them about the horizon, especially in the morning. The wind during
                  this time was likewise very changeable, and veered round the compass in a
                  direction contrary to the course of the sun, that is, from west round by the north
                  towards east, and so further on; but it chiefly prevailed from the easterly
                  quarter, where we least expected it, so that our situation became tedious, and was
                  made more irksome by frequent fogs, rains, and heavy swells. Having reached the
                  latitude of 46° 17' south, we directed our course to the north-eastward, as much
                  as the wind would permit.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 23.]</date>On the 23d, the weather being mild and the wind very
                  moderate, captain Furneaux came on board, and dined with us. He acquainted captain
                  Cook, that all his people continued in good health, except one or two, who were
                  infected with a nauseous disease, which is propagated by connections with the
                  other sex. This information gave us great uneasiness, it being evident that the
                  distemper had already reached New Zeeland, since our men must have received it
                  there. Struck with the horrid consequences which this evil would entail on the New
                  Zeelanders, we recapitulated the opportunities which those people had of catching
                  the infection from Europeans. The first discoverer of this country, in 1642, Abel
                  Janssen Tasman had not the least amicable intercourse with the inhabitants, and
                  none of his people appear to have been ashore upon it. Captain Cook, the next
                  navigator, who visited it in the Endeavour Bark, 1769 and 1770, came from
                  O-Taheitee and the Society Isles where several of his people had contracted
                  venereal complaints. However, as his passage lasted nearly two months, the surgeon
                  reported, when they made the coast, that no man had any symptoms of the distemper
                  about him. Notwithstanding this assurance captain Cook had the precaution, not to
                  suffer any person to go on shore, who had been under cure, and might be suspected
                  to have some latent remains of this infectious evil; and to preclude the
                  possibility of communicating it to a guiltless people, he never suffered the women
                  to come on board. M. de Surville, a French navigator, sailed from Pondichery in
                  the St. Jean Baptiste, passed through the Straits of Malacca, touched at the
                  Bashee Isles, went round Manila, saw land to the S. E. of New Britain, about the
                  latitude of 10 3/4°, and longitude 158° east, which he called Port Surville;
                  touched at New Zeeland, and proceeded to Callao, in South America in order to
                  trade there; but being drowned in the landing, and all his letter of
                  recommendation being lost with him, the ship was detained near two years, and then
                  sent to France, with all her merchandize. M. de Surville lay in Doubtless Bay, on
                  the 9th of December, 1769, and saw the Endeavour standing past him, though captain
                  Cook could not see his vessel, which lay under the land. What stay M. de Surville
                  made there, and upon what terms he was with the natives, I know not; but the
                  distance between this place and Queen Charlotte's Sound, and the want of
                  intercourse between the inhabitants of both ports, make it improbable, even
                  supposing the complaint to have existed among his crew, that it could have reached
                  so far south.</p>

               <p>The same thing may be said with regard to M. de Marion and captain Crozet, two
                  French officers, whose expedition, in 1772, I have mentioned page 112; for the
                  communications which their crews had with the natives, was confined to the
                  environs of the Bay of Islands, in the northernmost part of the northern isle. Our
                  two sloops were the next in order, which touched at New Zeeland; but we had not
                  the least reason to suppose, that they carried any venereal complaint to that
                  country. They had left the Cape of Good Hope, the last place where it is possible
                  the sailors might contract this disorder, six months before they came to Queen
                  Charlotte's Sound, five of which they had been at sea; an interval in which a
                  radical cure may be expected, unless the disease be of too inveterate a nature.
                  However, they were far from having any patients of this sort on board, and it is
                  not likely that the poison could lay dormant during that long interval of time, in
                  a set of men who had no other than salt provisions to live upon, and spirituous
                  liquors to drink, and who were exposed to wet and cold, and all the rigours of
                  southern climates. We therefore concluded, that from all the concurring
                  circumstances, the venereal disease was indigenous in New Zeeland, and not
                  imported by Europeans; and we have hitherto had no reason to alter our opinion on
                  this subject. But if, in spite of appearances, our conclusions should prove
                  erroneous, it is another crime added to the score of civilized nations, which must
                  make their memory execrated by the unhappy people, whom they have poisoned.
                  Nothing can in the least atone for the injury they have done to society, since the
                  price at which their libidinous enjoyments were purchased, instils another poison
                  into the mind, and destroys the moral principles, while the disease corrupts and
                  enervates the body. (see pag. 212). A race of men, who admidst all their savage
                  roughness, their fiery temper, and cruel customs, are brave, generous, hospitable,
                  and incapable of deceiving, are justly to be pitied, that love, the source of
                  their sweetest and happiest feelings, is converted into the origin of the most
                  dreadful scourge of life.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. July.]</date>The wind still continued as changeable as before, till
                  the beginning of July, having veered all round the compass against the sun, more
                  than four times. During this space albatrosses, petrels, and sea-weeds, were
                  frequently seen; rainbows also appeared almost every morning, nay one night we
                  observed this phӕnomenon pretty strong, caused by the refracted light of the
                  moon.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 9.]</date>On the 9th of July we were nearly in the same longitude,
                  where captain Cook, in the Endeavour, had reached 40° 22' south , but our latitude
                  was about two degrees and a quarter more southerly. Here we lost a young he-goat,
                  which fell over board, and notwithstanding all possible means were tried for his
                  recovery, such as chasing, injecting clysters of the fumes of tobacco, &amp;c. our
                  endeavours proved entirely ineffectual.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 17.]</date>July 17th having past the longitude of 227° east, and
                  being in about 40° south latitude, we began to run due north, after a very tedious
                  course in search of the southern continent, the existence of which, in the
                  latitudes we had now passed through, had been positively asserted. The
                  uncomfortable season of the year, the many contrary winds, and the total want of
                  interesting incidents united to make this run extremely tedious to us all, and the
                  only point we had gained by it, was the certainty that no great land was situated
                  in the South Sea about the middle latitudes. In five days time our latitude being
                  31° south, we began to lose sight of albatrosses and petrels, and the thermometer
                  was risen to 61 1/2, so that we began to change our winter clothes for others,
                  considerably thinner, for the first time after leaving the Cape of Good Hope. The
                  spirits of all our people were much exhilarated in proportion as we approached to
                  the tropics, and our sailors diverted themselves with a variety of plays every
                  evening. The genial mildness of the air was so welcome to us, after a long absence
                  from it, that we could not help preferring the warm climates as the best adapted
                  for the abode of mankind. <date>[Sunday 25.]</date>We saw a tropic bird on the
                  25th in the afternoon, a sure sign that we were arrived into the temperate
                  climates below 30° of latitude. The setting sun illumined the clouds with the most
                  brilliant tints of gold, which confirmed us in the opinion that the colours of the
                  sky are no where so rich and beautiful as between or near the tropics.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 28.]</date>On the 28th we spoke with the Adventure, and heard that
                  they had buried their cook three days ago, and that about twenty of her people
                  were very ill of the scurvy. This was the more surprising to us, as we had but
                  very few people affected with any symptoms of that disorder, and only one who was
                  dangerously sick. The next day captain Cook sent one of his seamen with a warrant
                  to act as cook on board the Adventure; and several of our gentlemen took the
                  opportunity of going to dine with their friends. They found captain Furneaux and
                  some others very ill of a rheumatic complaint, and many of the people had fluxes.
                  Their carpenter was remarkable ill of the scurvy, and had great livid blotches on
                  his legs. This difference between the salubrity of the two vessels probably arose
                  from the want of fresh air in the Adventure, our sloop being higher out of the
                  water, so that we could open more scuttles in bad weather than our consort. Our
                  people likewise made a greater consumption of sour-krout and wort, and
                  particularly applied the grains of the latter to all blotches and swelled parts, a
                  regimen which had been omitted by those in the Adventure. On this occasion it is
                  not improper to remark, that the scurvy is more dangerous and virulent in warm
                  climates than in cold. As long as we had kept in high latitudes it did not make
                  its appearance, or was at least confined to a few individuals, who were naturally
                  of a bad habit of body; but we had scarcely had ten days of warm weather when one
                  man died, and a number of others were affected with the worst symptoms of this
                  dreadful distemper, on board the Adventure. It should therefore seem that the heat
                  contributes to inflammation and putrefaction; and its general effect, even among
                  those who had no dangerous scorbutic complaints, was a great degree of languor and
                  debility.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. August.][Wednesday 4.]</date>On the 4th of August a young bitch, of
                  the terrier breed, taken on board at the Cape of Good Hope, and covered by a
                  spaniel, brought ten young ones, one of which was dead. The New Zeeland dog,
                  mentioned above, which devoured the bones of the roasted dog, now fell upon the
                  dead puppy, and ate of it with a ravenous appetite. This is a proof how far
                  education may go in producing and propagating new instincts in animals. European
                  dogs are never fed on the meat of their own species, but rather seem to abhor it.
                  The New Zeeland dogs, in all likelihood, are trained up from their earliest age to
                  eat the remains of their master's meals; they are therefore used to feed upon
                  fish, their own species, and perhaps human flesh; and what was only owing to habit
                  at first, may have become instinct by length of time. This was remarkable in our
                  cannibal-dog, for he came on board so young, that he could not have been weaned
                  long enough to acquire a habit of devouring his own species, and much less of
                  eating human flesh; however, one of our seamen having cut his finger, held it out
                  to the dog, who fell to greedily, licked it, and then began to bite into it.</p>

               <p>On the 6th, in the afternoon, being in about 19 1/2 deg. of south latitude, we got
                  the easterly trade-wind, which set in fresh after several calms, attended with
                  heavy showers of rain. The sun being at this time still in the opposite
                  hemisphere, was probably the cause of our meeting with this wind so much later
                  than usual, the tropics being generally reckoned its limits. Agreeable to the
                  observation which we now made, we had found the trade-wind, in August 1772, at
                  Madeira, though that island is situated in 33° of north latitude. But the most
                  remarkable occurrence in our run was the nature of the winds previous to our
                  obtaining the trade-wind. We had expected that, by going in a middle latitude
                  between 50 and 40 deg. south, we should meet with regular westerly winds, which
                  are common in our seas during the winter months; instead of this we found them
                  veering around the compass in two or three days time, never settling in any other
                  than the eastern quarter, and sometimes blowing with great violence. Thus the name
                  of Pacific Ocean, which has formerly been given to the whole South Sea, is, in my
                  opinion, applicable only to a part of it between the tropics, where the winds are
                  steady and uniform, the weather in general fair and mild, and the sea not so much
                  agitated as in higher latitudes.</p>

               <p>Albecores, bonitos, and dolphins gave chace to many shoals of flying-fish, in the
                  same manner as we had observed them in the Atlantic; while several large
                  black-birds, with long wings and forked tails, which are commonly called men of
                  war (pelecanus aquilus, Linn.) soared at a vast height in the air, and sometimes
                  descending into a lower region, viewed a fish swimming under them, and darted down
                  with amazing velocity, never failing to strike the fish with their bill. It is a
                  well known fact, that gannets, which are birds of the same genus in the English
                  seas, catch fish in a similar manner. The fishermen on the coast frequently fix a
                  pilchard or herring on the point of a knife fastened to a floating board, and the
                  bird darting down upon it transfixes itself on the knife.</p>

               <p>On the 11th, in the morning, we discovered a low island to the southward of us,
                  which seemed about four miles long, and about six miles distant. It appeared to be
                  almost level with the sea, only some groups of trees rose above the horizon, and
                  among them a few cocoa-nut palms out-topped the rest. To people in our situation,
                  exhausted with a tedious passage, the bare sight of land was sufficient to give
                  some consolation, though we could not expect to reap any benefit from its
                  productions; and therefore this island, though divested of every thing strikingly
                  beautiful, yet pleased the eye by the simplicity of its form. Our thermometer was
                  now constantly between 70 and 80 degrees in the morning; but the heat was far from
                  being troublesome, as the fair weather was accompanied by a strong pleasant
                  trade-wind, and our awnings were spread over the quarter-deck. This island, which
                  was called Resolution Island, seems to have been seen by M. de Bougainville. Its
                  latitude is 17° 24' south, and its longitude 141° 39' west from Greenwich. Our
                  observation at noon was 17° 17' south, our course being nearly east. In the
                  evening, at half past six o'clock, we saw another island of the same nature as the
                  preceding, about four leagues distant, which was named Doubtful Island. It being
                  after sun-set, we stood to the northward till we had passed by it. <date>[Thursday
                     12.]</date>The next morning, before day-break, we were alarmed by the sudden
                  appearance of breakers within half a mile a-head of us. We changed our course
                  instantly, apprized our consort of the danger by proper signals, and then stood
                  along the reef. As soon as it was light we distinguished an island of a circular
                  form, including a large bason or lagoon of sea-water; the northern shores were
                  covered with trees and palms in various clusters, which had a very elegant
                  appearance; but all the rest was a narrow ledge of rocks, over which the surf beat
                  with great violence; within it the lagoon was shallow near us, but deeper under
                  the wooded part; a difference which could easily be distinguished by the whiter or
                  the bluer colour of the water. Captain Cook gave this isle the name of Furneaux
                  Island; it is situated in 17° 5' south latitude, and 143° 16' west longitude.
                  Standing along this reef we saw a canoe sailing near the northern part of the
                  isle, and by the help of glasses we observed six or seven men in it, one of which
                  was placed at the stern steering with a paddle. They did not seem to have embarked
                  in order to reconnoitre us, as they did not approach the southern reef, but kept
                  close in with the wooded part of the island. We proceeded all day with a
                  favourable breeze and fair weather till sun-set; but the navigation between these
                  low islands and reefs being extremely dangerous, because they can only been seen
                  at short distances, we were obliged to bring to at night in order to avoid meeting
                  with them unawares. <date>[Friday 13.]</date> Early the next morning we left
                  another island of this kind on our starboard quarter, which was called Adventure
                  Island; it lies in 17° 4' south latitude, and 144° 30' west longitude. We spoke
                  with the Adventure about the same time, and were told she had above thirty men on
                  the sick list, most of them ill of the scurvy. Our sloop still kept rather free of
                  this distemper, and every precaution was taken to preserve our crew in health by a
                  plentiful use of sour-krout, by airing the hammocks every day, and frequently
                  smoaking the ship with gunpowder and vinegar.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we saw an island right a-head, consisting of several clumps of
                  trees, united by one reef, and from its situation we judged it was the same which
                  Captain Cook named Chain Island in his former voyage . To prevent losing our time
                  by bringing the sloops to at night, we hoisted a boat out, and sent it to sail
                  ahead of our vessels, with a light, and to make signals in case of danger. The
                  South Sea between the tropics, contains many low islands, singularly constructed,
                  which are level with the sea in most places, and at the utmost a yard or two above
                  it. They have frequently a circular form, including a lagoon or bason of sea-water
                  in their centre, and the depth of the sea all round them is unfathomable, the
                  rocks rising perpendicularly from the bottom. Their productions must be few, and
                  cocoa nut-trees are probably the most useful which they contain; but
                  notwithstanding this circumstance and their small size, many of them are
                  inhabited. The question how such little spots came to be peoples is not easily to
                  be answered; but it is not easier to determine how the higher islands in the South
                  Sea have acquired their inhabitants. Commodore (now Admiral) Byron, and Captain
                  Wallis, who sent some of their people on shore upon these low islands, found their
                  inhabitants shy and jealous of strangers; a disposition which is perhaps owing to
                  the difficulty of preserving their existence from the scanty provisions on their
                  narrow circle, and which may be heightened by the consciousness that their small
                  numbers render them liable to oppression. The language of these people, and their
                  customs, are therefore still unknown, and these are the only circumstances from
                  which the origin of nations, who have no records among them, can be traced.</p>

               <p>Early on the 15th of August we saw a high peak with a flattish summit, first
                  discovered by Captain Wallis, who called it Osnabruck Island, and afterwards by M.
                  de Bougainville, in whose chart it has the names of Pic de la Boudeuse, or le
                  Boudoir. The mountain appeared of a considerable height, and its top was broken or
                  excavated perfectly like the crater of a volcano, which seemed evidently to have
                  existed here. The island was nearly of a circular form, and the mountain rose
                  steep to a conical shape from all parts of the sea-shore, there being but little
                  level land round its foot. The whole mountain was green, and the bottom or low
                  land was covered with trees. While we eagerly feasted our eyes with this pleasing
                  prospect, one of our officers, who had formerly been sent close in shore there by
                  Captain Wallis, told us that the trees were of the kind which bear the
                  bread-fruit, so much extolled in the voyages of Anson, Byron, Wallis, and Cook. He
                  acquainted us at the same time, that the natives were of the same race as those
                  who dwell on O Taheitee and the Society Isles, of which the first is within half a
                  day's sail; and that they give the name of Maâtea to their own island. We never
                  came nearer than four leagues to it, which was probably the reason that no canoes
                  came off to visit us. Having very little wind we hoisted a boat out, which went on
                  board the Adventure, and brought Captain Furneaux to dine with us. We had the
                  pleasure to learn from him, that the flux among his crew was ceased, and that none
                  of his people were in any imminent danger from the scurvy; we hoped therefore,
                  from our vicinity to O-Taheitee, to have a speedy opportunity of restoring their
                  health by a wholesome vegetable diet.</p>

               <p>In the evening, about sun-set, we plainly saw the mountains of that desirable
                  island, lying before us, half emerging from the gilded clouds on the horizon.
                  Every man on board, except one or two who were not able to walk, hastened eagerly
                  to the forecastle to feast their eyes on an object, of which they were taught to
                  form the highest expectations, both in respect of the abundance of refreshments,
                  and of the kind and generous temper of the natives, whose character has pleased
                  all the navigators who have visited them. The first discoverer was probably a
                  Spaniard, Pedro Fernandez de Quiros, who sailed from Lima in Peru, on the 21st of
                  December 1605. He made an island on the 10th of February 1606, calling it la
                  Sagittaria , which, from all the concurring circumstances, seems to have been
                  O-Taheitee. He found no harbours on the south part, where he fell in with it; but
                  the people he sent ashore were treated with the greated marks of friendship and
                  kindness. Captain Wallis next found this island on the 18th of June 1767, and
                  called it George the Third's Island. Some unhappy misunderstanding arising between
                  him and the natives at first, he fired upon them, killed about fifteen, and
                  wounded a great number; but these good tempered people, forgetting the great loss
                  they had sustained, and the wounds their brethren had received, made peace with
                  him soon after, and furnished him with a profusion of refreshments, consisting of
                  several roots, many sorts of rich fruit, fowls, and hogs. M. de Bougainville
                  arrived in the eastern part on the 2d of April 1768, or about nine months and a
                  half after the departure of Captain Wallis, and discovered the true indigenous
                  name of this island; sensible of the amiable character of the inhabitants, he
                  staid ten days among them, giving and receiving frequent marks of friendship and
                  regard. Captain Cook, in the Endeavour, arriving here in April 1769, to observe
                  the transit of Venus, circumnavigated the whole island in a boat; and, during a
                  stay of three months, had daily opportunities of confirming the observations
                  already made upon this subject.</p>

               <p>We stood on towards this island all night, and the favourable ideas which were
                  raised by the accounts of former navigators, made us pass some happy hours in
                  expectation of the morning. We resolved to forget our fatigues and the
                  inclemencies of southern climates; the clouds which had hitherto hung lowering
                  upon our brows were dispersed; the loathed images of disease and the terrors of
                  death were fled, and all our cares at rest.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VIII.</l>

                  <l>Anchorage in O-Aitepeha harbour, on the lesser peninsula of O-Taheitee -
                     Account of our stay there. - Removal to Matavai Bay.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. August.][Monday 16.]</date>IT was one of those beautiful mornings
                  which the poets of all nations have attempted to describe, when we saw the isle of
                  O-Taheite, within two miles before us. The east-wind which had carried us so far,
                  was entirely vanished, and a faint breeze only wafted a delicious perfume from the
                  land, and curled the surface of the sea. The mountains, clothed with forests, rose
                  majestic in various spiry forms, on which we already perceived the light of the
                  rising sun: nearer to the eye a lower range of hills, easier of ascent, appeared,
                  wooded like the former, and coloured with several pleasing hues of green, soberly
                  mixed with autumnal browns. At their foot lay the plain, crowned with its fertile
                  bread-fruit trees, over which rose innumerable palms, the princes of the grove.
                  Here every thing seemed as yet asleep, the morning scarce dawned, and a peaceful
                  shade still rested on the landscape. We discerned however, a number of houses
                  among the trees, and many canoes hauled up along the sandy beaches. About half a
                  mile from the shore a ledge of rocks level with the water, extended parallel to
                  the land, on which the surf broke, leaving a smooth and secure harbour within. The
                  sun beginning to illuminate the plain, its inhabitants arose, and enlivened the
                  scene. Having perceived the large vessels on their coast, several of them hastened
                  to the beach, launched their canoes, and paddled towards us, who were highly
                  delighted in watching all their occupations.</p>

               <p>The canoes soon passed through the openings in the reef, and one of them
                  approached within hale. In it were two men almost naked, with a kind or turban on
                  the head, and a sash round their waist. They waved a large green leaf, and
                  accosted us with the repeated exclamation of tayo ! which even without the help of
                  vocabularies, we could easily translate into the expression of proffered
                  friendship. The canoe now came under our stern, and we let down a present of
                  beads, nails, and medals to the men. In return, they handed up to us a green stem
                  of a plantane, which was their symbol of peace, with a desire that it might be
                  fixed in a conspicuous part of the vessel. It was accordingly stuck up in the main
                  shrouds, upon which our new friends immediately returned towards the land. In a
                  short time we saw great crouds of people on the seashore gazing at us, while
                  numbers in consequence of this treaty of peace, which was now firmly established,
                  launched their canoes, and loaded them with various productions of their country.
                  In less than an hour we were surrounded by an hundred canoes, each of which
                  carried one, two, three, and sometimes four persons, who placed a perfect
                  confidence in us, and had no arms whatsoever. The welcome sound of tayo resounded
                  on all sides, and we returned it with a degree of heart-felt pleasure, on this
                  favourable change of our situation. Coco-nuts, and plantanes in great quantity,
                  bread-fruit and several other vegetables, besides some fresh fish were offered to
                  us, and eagerly exchanged for transparent beads, and small nails. Pieces of cloth,
                  fish-hooks, hatchets of stone, and a number of tools, were likewise brought for
                  sale and readily disposed of; and many canoes kept plying between us and the
                  shore, exhibiting a picture of a new kind of fair. I immediately began to trade
                  for natural productions through the cabin-windows, and in half an hour had got
                  together two or three species of unknown birds, and a great number of new fishes,
                  whose colours while alive were exquisitely beautiful. I therefore employed the
                  morning in sketching their outlines, and laying on the vivid hues, before they
                  disappeared in the dying objects.</p>

               <p>The people around us had mild features, and a pleasing countenance; they were
                  about our size, of a pale mahogany brown, had fine black hair and eyes, and wore a
                  piece of cloth round their middle of their own manufacture, and another wrapped
                  about the head in various picturesque shapes like a turban. Among them were
                  several females, pretty enough to attract the attention of Europeans, who had not
                  seen their own country-women for twelve long months past. These wore a piece of
                  cloth with a hole in the middle, through which they had passed the head, so that
                  one part of the garment hung down behind, and the other before, to the knees; a
                  fine white cloth like a muslin, was passed over this in various elegant turns
                  round the body, a little below the breast, forming a kind of tunic, of which one
                  turn sometimes fell gracefully across the shoulder. If this dress had not entirely
                  that perfect form, so justly admired in the draperies of the ancient Greek
                  statues, it was however infinitely superior to our expectations, and much more
                  advantageous to the human figure, than any modern fashion we had hitherto seen.
                  Both sexes were adorned, or rather disfigured, by those singular black stains,
                  occasioned by puncturing the skin, and rubbing a black colour into the wounds,
                  which are mentioned by former voyagers. They were particularly visible on the
                  loins of the common men, who went almost naked, and exhibited a proof how little
                  the ideas of ornament of different nations agree, and yet how generally they all
                  have adopted such aids to their personal perfection. It was not long before some
                  of these good people came aboard. That peculiar gentleness of disposition, which
                  is their general characteristic, immediately manifested itself in all their looks
                  and actions, and gave full employment to those, who made the human heart their
                  study. They expressed several marks of affection in their countenance, took hold
                  of our hands, leaned on our shoulder, or embraced us. They admired the whiteness
                  of our bodies, and frequently pushed aside our clothes from the breast, as if to
                  convince themselves that we were made like them.</p>

               <p>Many of them seeing us desirous of learning their language, by asking the names of
                  various familiar objects, or repeating such as we found in the vocabularies of
                  former voyagers, took great pains to teach us, and were much delighted when we
                  could catch the just pronunciation of a word. For my own part, no language seemed
                  easier to acquire than this; every harsh and sibilant consonant being banished
                  from it, and almost every word ending in a vowel. The only requisite, was a nice
                  ear to distinguish the numerous modification of their vowels, which must naturally
                  occur in a language confined to few consonants, and which, once rightly
                  understood, give a great degree of delicacy to conversation. Amongst several other
                  observations, we immediately found that the O or E with which the greatest part of
                  the names and words in lieutenant Cook's first voyage, begin, is nothing else than
                  the article, which many eastern languages affix to the greater part of their
                  substantives. In consequence of this remark, I shall always in the sequel either
                  omit this prefix, or separate it from the word itself by a hyphen: and I cannot
                  help taking notice that M. de Bougainville has been fortunate enough to catch the
                  name of the island without the additional O, and expressed it as well as the
                  nature of the French language will permit, by Taïti, which, with the addition of a
                  slight aspirate, we pronounce Taheâtee or Tahitee.</p>

               <p>Seeing an opening in the reef before us, which was the entrance to the harbour of
                  Whaï-Urua, in the lesser peninsula of O-Taheitee, we sent a boat to sound in it,
                  which found convenient anchorage. The boat afterwards proceeded to the shore,
                  where a croud of the natives gathered round it, and we heard the squeaking of
                  pigs, which was at this time a more welcome sound to us, than the music of the
                  most brilliant performer. Our people, however, were not so fortunate as to
                  purchase any of them, all their offers being constantly refused, under the pretext
                  that these animals belonged to the aree, or king.</p>

               <p>A canoe now came alongside, of a somewhat larger size than the rest, and brought a
                  handsome man, above six feet high, and three women, who all came on board. The man
                  who immediately informed us, that his name was O-Taï, seemed to be a person of
                  some consequence in this part of the island, and we supposed he belonged to that
                  class of vassals, or freeholders, who are called Manahounas in the first voyage of
                  captain Cook. He came on the quarter-deck, to all appearance thinking, that a
                  place where our chiefs were stationed, best became him. He was remarkable fairer
                  than any of the natives we had yet seen, and resembled in colour the West Indian
                  Mestizos. His features were really handsome and regular; he had a high forehead,
                  arched eyebrows, large black eyes, sparkling with expression, and a
                  well-proportioned nose; there was something remarkably sweet and engaging about
                  his mouth; the lips were prominent, but not disagreeably large; and his beard was
                  black, and finely frizzled; his hair was of a jetty colour, and fell in strong
                  curls down his neck; but seeing that we all had ours queued, he made use of a
                  black silk neckcloth, which Mr. Clerke made him a present of, to imitate our
                  fashion. The body was in general well proportioned, though somewhat too lusty, and
                  his feet were rather too large to harmonize perfectly with the rest. By the help
                  of vocabularies we asked this man several questions. One of the first was, whether
                  Tootahàh was well? to this we were answered, that he was dead, being killed by the
                  men of Tiarraboo, or the smaller peninsula, and that O-Aheatua was e‑aree or the
                  king of the latter; which was confirmed by all the other natives. Of his three
                  female companions, one was his wife, and the other two his sisters: the latter
                  took great pleasure in teaching us to call them by their names, which were both
                  sufficiently harmonious, one was called Maroya, and the other Maroraï. They were
                  still fairer than O-Taï, but their stature was small in comparison to his, being
                  at least nine or ten inches less. The last mentioned was a graceful figure, with
                  the most delicate and beautiful contours, in the hands and all above the zone.
                  Their face was round, and their features far from being so regular as those of the
                  brother; but an ineffable smile sat on their countenances. They seemed never to
                  have been aboard of a ship before, so much were they struck with admiration on
                  beholding its variety of objects. They did not content themselves with looking
                  around the deck, but descended into the officers cabins, whither a gentleman
                  conducted them, and curiously examined every part. Maroraï took a particular fancy
                  to a pair of sheets which she saw spread on one of the beds, and made a number of
                  fruitless attempts to obtain them from her conductor. He proposed a special favour
                  as the condition; she hesitated some time, and at last with seeming reluctance
                  consented; but when the victim was just led to the altar of Hymen, the ship struck
                  violently on the reef, and interrupted the solemnity. The affrighted lover, more
                  sensible of the danger than his fair mistress, flew in haste upon deck, whither
                  all the rest of our people crowded from their several occupations. The tide,
                  during a perfect calm, had driven us by insensible degrees towards the reef of
                  rocks; and actually set us upon it, before we could come into the entrance of the
                  harbour, which was as it were within our reach. Repeated shocks made our situation
                  every moment more terrifying; however, providentially there was no swell which
                  broke with any violence on the rocks, and the sea breeze, which must have brought
                  on absolute destruction to us, did not come in all day. The officers, and all the
                  passengers, exerted themselves indiscriminately on this occasion, hoisted out the
                  launch, and afterwards by heaving upon an anchor, which had been carried out to a
                  little distance, succeeded in bringing the vessel afloat. The natives on board,
                  seeing us work so hard, assisted us in manning the capstan, hauling in ropes, and
                  performing all sorts of labour. If they had had the least spark of a treacherous
                  disposition, they could not have found a better opportunity of distressing us; but
                  they approved themselves good-natured, and friendly in this, as on all other
                  occasions. The heat during this violent exertion of our strength was immense; the
                  thermometer being upwards of ninety degrees in the shade, and the sun blazing in a
                  perfectly clear sky. The Adventure was close to us, and escaped sharing the same
                  distresses, by dropping an anchor in time. It was another fortunate circumstance,
                  that the reef shelved in this place so as to admit of anchorage, which is indeed
                  rarely the case, the coral rock being perpendicular in most parts. It was about
                  three o'clock when we were afloat again, after working for about an hour and a
                  half. We now took some refreshments in a hurry, and as our situation was still
                  extremely precarious, in case an easterly wind had come on, we manned the boats of
                  both sloops, and were towed off to sea, where we felt a land-breeze gently
                  swelling our sails, about five o'clock. As soon as we were sure of it, we
                  dispatched the boats to the assistance of the Adventure; but she had already
                  slipped her cables, in order to take advantage of the favourable wind, and
                  followed us. We stood off and on all night, and saw the dangerous reefs
                  illuminated by a number of fires, by the light of which the natives were fishing.
                  One of the officers retiring to rest, found his bed deprived of the sheets, which
                  in all probability the fair Maroraï had taken care of, when forsaken by her lover;
                  though she must have managed this little concern with considerable ingenuity, as
                  she had appeared on deck before any suspicion had fallen upon her.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 17.]</date>The next morning we resumed our course towards the
                  shore, and stood in along the north part of the lesser peninsula. We were in a
                  short time surrounded, as the day before, by the natives, who in a great number of
                  canoes brought us abundance of vegetable, but no animal food, and whose clamours
                  were sometimes loud enough to stun our ears. These canoes very frequently overset,
                  but the natives were not much discomposed by such accidents, as both sexes were
                  expert swimmers, and re-established themselves in a moment. Seeing that I enquired
                  for plants, and other natural curiosities, they brought off several, though
                  sometimes only the leaves without the flowers, and vice versa; however, among them
                  we saw the common species of black night-shade, and a beautiful erythrina, or
                  coral-flower; I also collected by these means many shells, coralines, birds,
                  &amp;c.</p>

               <p>About eleven o'clock we anchored in a little harbour called O-Aitepeha, on the
                  north-east end of the southern or lesser peninsula of Taheitee, named Tiarraboo.
                  Here the concourse of natives still increased, and we saw their canoes coming
                  towards us from all parts. They were eager to obtain our beads, nails, and knives,
                  for which an immense quantity of their cloth, mats, baskets, and various tools, as
                  well as abundance of coco-nuts, bread-fruit, yams, and bananas were exchanged.
                  Many of them came on deck, and took the opportunity of conveying away a number of
                  trifles; nay, some went so far as privately to throw over board the coco-nuts,
                  which we had already purchased, to their comrades, who immediately picked them up,
                  and sold them to our people again. To prevent our being imposed upon for the
                  future in this manner, the thieves were turned out of the vessel, and punished
                  with a whip, which they bore very patiently.</p>

               <p>The heat was as great as it had been the day before, the thermometer standing at
                  90° in the shade, when the sky was covered with clouds; the wind likewise dying
                  away again at noon to a perfect calm. Notwithstanding the waste of fluids which
                  the weather occasioned, we could not say that we found the climate affected us too
                  much, or was very disagreeable. On the contrary, allowing for the violent exercise
                  we had undergone at the striking of the ship, we found ourselves more refreshed by
                  the bare proximity of the shore, than we could have expected. The bread-fruit and
                  yams proved a luxurious and most welcome substitute for worm-eaten biscuit; while
                  plantanes, and a fruit of the shape of an apple, called e-vee by the natives,
                  furnished out a delicious desert. Our only remaining wish, with regard to
                  eatables, was to be able to purchase some hogs and fowls, which might supply the
                  place of salt beef.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon the captains, accompanied by several gentlemen, went ashore the
                  first time, in order to visit O-Aheatua, whom all the natives thereabouts
                  acknowledged as aree, or king. Numbers of canoes in the mean while surrounded us,
                  carrying on a brisk trade with vegetables, but chiefly with great quantities of
                  the cloth made in the island. The decks were likewise crouded with natives, among
                  whom were several women who yielded without difficulty to the ardent
                  sollicitations of our sailors. Some of the females who came on board for this
                  purpose, seemed not to be above nine or ten years old, and had not the least marks
                  of puberty. So early an acquaintance with the world seems to argue an uncommon
                  degree of voluptuousness, and cannot fail of affecting the nation in general. The
                  effect, which was immediately obvious to me, was the low stature of the common
                  class of people, to which all these prostitutes belonged. Among this whole order
                  we saw few persons above the middle size, and many below it; an observation which
                  confirms what M. de Buffon has very judiciously said on the subject of early
                  connections of the sexes, (see his Histoire Naturelle). Their features were very
                  irregular, and in general very ordinary, except the eyes, which were always large
                  and full of vivacity; but a natural smile, and a constant endeavour to please, had
                  so well replaced the want of beauty, that our sailors were perfectly captivated,
                  and carelessly disposed of their shirts and cloaths to gratify their mistresses.
                  The simplicity of a dress which exposed to view a well proportioned bosom and
                  delicate hands, might also contribute to fan their amorous fire; and the view of
                  several of these nymphs swimming nimbly all round the sloop, such as nature had
                  formed them, was perhaps more than sufficient entirely to subvert the little
                  reason which a mariner might have left to govern his passions. A trifling
                  circumstance had given cause to their taking the water. One of the officers on the
                  quarter-deck intended to drop a bead into a canoe for a little boy about six years
                  old; by accident it missed the boat and fell into the sea; but the child
                  immediately leaped overboard, and diving after it brought it up again. To reward
                  his performance we dropped some more beads to him, which so tempted a number of
                  men and women, that they amused us with amazing feats of agility in the water, and
                  not only fetched up several beads scattered at once, but likewise large nails,
                  which, on account of their weight, descended quickly to a considerable depth. Some
                  of them continued a long while under water, and the velocity with which we saw
                  them go down, the water being perfectly clear, was very surprising. The frequent
                  ablutions of these people, already mentioned in Captain Cook's former voyage, seem
                  to make swimming familiar to them from their earliest childhood; and indeed their
                  easy position in the water, and the pliancy of their limbs, gave us reason to look
                  on them almost as amphibious creatures. They continued this sport, and their other
                  occupations about us, till sun-set, when they all withdrew by degrees to the
                  shore.</p>

               <p>In the evening the captains with their company returned on board, without having
                  seen the king, who, perhaps mistrusting their intentions, had sent word, that he
                  intended to visit us the next day. They had taken a walk along the shore to the
                  eastward, attended by a great croud of the natives, who insisted on carrying them
                  on their shoulders over a fine brook. After they had passed it, the natives left
                  them, and they proceeded accompanied by one man, who guided them to an
                  uncultivated projecting point, where different kinds of plants grew in wild
                  luxuriance among several sorts of shrubs. On coming out of the shrubbery they saw
                  a building of stones, in form of the frustum of a pyramid; the base might measure
                  about twenty yards in front, and the whole consisted of several terraces or steps
                  above each other, which were ruinous and overgrown with grasses and shrubs,
                  especially on the back or inland part. This the native said was a burying-place
                  and place of worship, marài, and distinguished it by the name of marai no-Aheatua
                  , the burying-place of Aheatua, the present king of Tiarroboo. Around it were
                  placed perpendicularly, or nearly so, fifteen slender pieces of wood, some about
                  eighteen feet long, in which six or eight diminutive human figures of a rude
                  unnatural shape were carved, standing above each other, male or female
                  promiscuously, yet so that the uppermost was always a male. All these figures
                  faced the sea, and perfectly resembled some which are carved on the sterns of
                  their canoes, and which they call e-tee. Beyond the morai they saw a kind of
                  thatch erected on four posts, before which a lattice of sticks was placed in the
                  ground, hung with bananas and cocoa-nuts no t'Eatua, " for the Divinity" . They
                  sat down to rest themselves under the shade of this roof, and their guide seeing
                  them a good deal exhausted, took several of the bananas and offered them, with the
                  assurance that they were mâa maitai, " good eating" . They accepted them after
                  this recommendation, and finding them really as delicious as they had been
                  described, made no scruple to feast with the gods. As the evening was now
                  advancing, they returned to the sea-shore, well pleased with their reception among
                  these good-natured people, and brought on board a few plants, which we soon
                  recognized as the productions common to tropical countries.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 18.]</date>We contemplated the scenery before us early the next
                  morning, when its beauties were most engaging. The harbour in which we lay was
                  very small, and would not have admitted many more vessels besides our own. The
                  water in it was as smooth as the finest mirrour, and the sea broke with a snowy
                  foam around us upon the outer reef. The plain at the foot of the hills was very
                  narrow in this place, but always conveyed the pleasing ideas of fertility, plenty,
                  and happiness. Just over against us it ran up between the hills into a long narrow
                  valley, rich in plantations, interspersed with the houses of the natives. The
                  slopes of the hills, covered with woods, crossed each other on both sides,
                  variously tinted according to their distances; and beyond them, over the cleft of
                  the valley, we saw the interior mountains shattered into various peaks and spires,
                  among which was one remarkable pinnacle, whose summit was frightfully bent to one
                  side, and seemed to threaten its downfall every moment. The serenity of the sky,
                  the genial warmth of the air, and the beauty of the landscape, united to
                  exhilarate our spirits.</p>

               <p>The launches of both ships were sent to o Whai-urua , to fetch the anchors which
                  we had left there when we struck on the reef. A party of marines and seamen were
                  ordered on shore at the same time, to carry on a trade for provisions, and to fill
                  our empty casks with fresh water. For this purpose they occupied the remains of an
                  abandoned shed or cottage on the beach, which at once gave them shelter from the
                  sun, and secured them against the thievish disposition of the people. Before
                  captain Cook went ashore he received a visit from a man of some note, called
                  o-Poòe, who brought his two sons on board. They presented the captain with some of
                  their cloth and some little trifles, and in return they received knives, nails,
                  beads, and a shirt, in which having dressed themselves, they accompanied us to the
                  shore.</p>

               <p>Our first care was to leave the dry sandy beach, which could afford us no
                  discoveries in our science, and to examine the plantations, which from the ships
                  had an enchanting appearance, notwithstanding the brownish cast which the time of
                  the year had given. We found them indeed to answer the expectations we had formed
                  of a country described as an elysium by M. de Bougainville, (see the English
                  edition, p. 228). We entered a grove of bread-trees, on most of which we saw no
                  fruit at this season of winter, and followed a neat but narrow path, which led to
                  different habitations, half hid under various bushes. Tall coco-palms nodded to
                  each other, and rose over the rest of the trees; the bananas displayed their
                  beautiful large leaves, and now and then one of them still appeared loaded with
                  its clustering fruit. A sort of shady trees, covered with a dark-green foliage,
                  bore golden apples, which resembled the anana in juiciness and flavour. Betwixt
                  these the intermediate space was filled with young mulberry-trees (morus
                  papyrifera), of which the bark is employed by the natives in the manufacture of
                  their cloth; with several species of arum or eddies, with yams, sugar-canes, and
                  other useful plants.</p>

               <p>We found the cottages of the natives scattered at short distances, in the shade of
                  fruit-trees, and surrounded by various odoriferous shrubs, such as the gardenia,
                  guettarda, and calophyllum. The next simplicity of their structure gave us no less
                  pleasure than the artless beauty of the grove which encompassed them. The pandang
                  or palm-nut tree had given its long prickly leaves to thatch the roofs of the
                  buildings, and these were supported by a few pillars made of the bread-tree, which
                  is thus useful in more respects than one. As a roof is sufficient to shelter the
                  natives from rains and nightly dews, and as the climate of this island is perhaps
                  one of the happiest in the world, the houses seldom have any walls, but are open
                  on all sides. We saw, however, a few dwellings constructed for greater privacy,
                  which were entirely enclosed in walls of reeds, connected together by transverse
                  pieces of wood, so as to give us the idea of large bird-cages. In these there was
                  commonly a hole left for the entrance, which could be closed up with a board.
                  Before every hut, on the green turf or on dry grass, we observed groups of
                  inhabitants lying down or fitting in the eastern stile, and passing their happy
                  hours away in conversation or repose. Some of them got up at our approach, and
                  joined the croud that followed us; but great numbers, especially those of a mature
                  age, remained in their attitude, and only pronounced a kind tayo as we passed by
                  them. Our attendant croud seeing us gather plants, were very ready to pluck and
                  offer the same sorts to us, which they found attracted our notice. Indeed a
                  variety of wild species sprung up amidst the plantations, in that beautiful
                  disorder of nature, which is so truly admirable when checked by the hand of
                  industry, and infinitely surpasses the trimness of regular gardens. Among them we
                  found several species of grasses, which though thinner than in our northern
                  countries, yet by growing always in the shade, looked fresh and formed a soft bed
                  of verdure. The soil was by their means kept sufficiently moist to give
                  nourishment to the trees, and both were in a thriving state, owing to the
                  reciprocal assistance which they gave each other. Various little birds dwelt in
                  the shade of the bread-fruit and other trees, and had a very agreeable note,
                  though common report among Europeans has denied the powers of harmony (I know not
                  on what grounds) to the birds of warm climates. The heads of the tallest
                  coco-trees were the usual residence of a kind of very small perroquets of a
                  beautiful sapphirine blue, while another sort of a greenish colour, with a few red
                  spots, were more common among the bananas, and appeared frequently tame in the
                  houses of the natives, who seemed to value them for their red feathers. A king's
                  fisher, of a dark-green, with a collar of the same hue round his white throat, a
                  large cuckoo, and several sorts of pigeons or doves, were frequently seen hopping
                  from branch to branch, and a bluish heron gravely stalked along the sea side,
                  picking up shell-fish and worms. A fine brook, rolling over a bed of pebbles, came
                  down a narrow valley, and supplied our waterers at its discharge into the sea. We
                  followed its stream for a little while till we were met by a great croud of
                  natives at the heels of three men, dressed in various pieces of their red and
                  yellow cloth, and provided with elegant turbans of the same. Each of them had a
                  long stick or wand in his hand, and one of them was accompanied by a woman, whom
                  upon enquiry we found to be his wife. We demanded what their appearance meant, and
                  were answered they were the Te-apoo-nee; but when they observed we did not
                  understand enough of their language to comprehend this term, they added that they
                  were Tata-no-t'Eatooa, men belonging to the divinity, and to the Marai, or
                  burying-place; I suppose we might call them priests. We stopped with them some
                  time, but as we did not see that any religious, or other ceremony was performed,
                  we returned to the beach. About noon captain Cook re-imbarked with us, and with
                  the two sons of O-Poe mentioned page 269, without having seen Aheatua, who for
                  reasons unknown to us, still refused to admit us to his presence.</p>

               <p>The two young fellows sat down to dinner with us, and partook of the vegetables,
                  but did not touch our salt provisions. After dinner, one of them took an
                  opportunity of stealing a knife and a pewter spoon, not contented with a number of
                  presents which he had received from the captain, without having made any return on
                  his part, and which ought to have prevented him from infringing the laws of
                  hospitality. The theft being discovered, he was kicked from the deck, jumped
                  overboard, and swam to the next canoe, where he seated himself, perhaps in
                  defiance of our power. Captain Cook fired a musket over his head, upon which he
                  took to the water again, and overset the canoe. A second musket was levelled at
                  him, but he dived when he saw the flash, and did the same when the third was
                  discharged. Captain Cook now manned his boat, and went to take the canoe, under
                  which the man took shelter; but he soon abandoned it, and swam to a double canoe
                  near the first, which was accordingly pursued. This canoe however got ashore
                  through the surf, and the natives on the beach took up stones, which they levelled
                  at our boat's crew, who thought it adviseable to retreat. However, a four pounder
                  directed towards the shore, frightened the inhabitants sufficiently, so that our
                  people could seize large double canoes, and bring them along-side of the ship.</p>

               <p>We left the ship after this disturbance, in order to take an afternoon's walk
                  ashore near the watering-place, and to restore the confidence of the people, who
                  had entirely forsaken us on account of our open hostilities. We pursued a
                  different path from that which we had taken in the morning, and found great
                  quantities of bananas, yams, eddies, &amp;c. planted round every cottage,
                  inhabited by friendly good-natured people, who seemed however a little more shy or
                  reserved than usual, on account of what had happened. At last we arrived at a
                  large house, neatly constructed of reeds, which we were told belonged to Aheatua,
                  who was in another district at present. Here we saw a hog, and a couple of fowls,
                  the first which the natives exposed to our sight, having hitherto been very
                  careful to conceal them, and always refusing to part with them, under the pretext
                  that they were the property of the aree or king. They made use of the same excuse
                  at present, though we offered a hatchet, which in their eyes was the most valuable
                  merchandise we had. After a short stay, we returned the same way we came, and
                  brought a small collection of new plants on board. About sun-set a boat was sent
                  off, out of the harbour. to bury in the sea one Isaac Taylor, a marine, who died
                  this morning of a complication of disorders. Ever since we had left England, this
                  man had been feverish, consumptive, and asthmatic; his complaints always kept
                  increasing, and at last turned to a dropsy, which carried him off. All our people
                  on board were now well, except one, whose remarkable scorbutic habit of body
                  always laid him up as soon as we came out to sea, where prophylactics and wort
                  could but just keep him alive. However this man, as well as the Adventure's crew,
                  who were much affected with the scurvy when they came in here, recovered amazingly
                  by walking on shore, and eating quantities of fresh fruit.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 19.]</date>Early the next morning some of the natives came off to
                  us in a small canoe, and begged for the restitution of those larger ones which had
                  been taken from them on the day before. Captain Cook, who perceived the trade to
                  have slackened in consequence of that seizure, none of the inhabitants coming to
                  the ship, and few to the watering-place, returned the canoes, as the best means to
                  reconcile us to the confidence of the natives; and though the effects of his
                  indulgence were not instantaneous, yet in a day or two our trade was perfectly
                  re-established.</p>

               <p>After this peaceful prelude we went on shore, in pursuit of botanical discoveries.
                  A smart shower of rain which had fallen over night, had cooled the air
                  considerably, and made our walk extremely pleasant, before the sun could become
                  troublesome. The whole country had profited by this rain, for every plant and tree
                  seemed revived by it, and the groves exhaled a sweet refreshing smell. Whether it
                  was owing to the early hour of our excursion, or to the beauty of the morning, our
                  ear was saluted by the song of many small birds, which enlivened this delightful
                  country. We had not walked far, when we heard a loud noise in the wood, which
                  resembled the strokes of a carpenter's hammer. We followed the sound, and at last
                  came to a small shed, where five or six women were sitting on both sides of a long
                  square piece of timber, and beat the fibrous bark of the mulberry-tree here, in
                  order to manufacture it into cloth. The instrument they used for this purpose was
                  a square wooden club, with longitudinal and parallel furrows, which run smaller
                  and closer together on the different sides . They ceased a little while to give us
                  time to examine the bark, the mallet, and the timber on which they performed their
                  operations. They also shewed us a kind of glutinous water in a coco-nut shell,
                  which was made use of from time to time, to make the pieces of bark cohere
                  together. This glue, which, as we understood, was made of the hibiscus esculentus,
                  is indispensibly necessary in the manufacture of those immense pieces of cloth,
                  sometimes two or three yards wide, and fifty yards long, which are composed of
                  little bits of bark, taken from trees never so thick as the wrist. We carefully
                  examined their plantations of mulberry-trees, but never found a single old one
                  among them; as soon as they are of two years growth they are cut down, and new
                  ones spring up from the root, for fortunately this tree is one of the most
                  prolific in nature, and if suffered to grow till it flowered and could bear
                  fruits, might perhaps totally over-run the country. The bark must always be taken
                  from young trees; and these are carefully drawn into long stems, without any
                  branches, except just at the top, so that the bark is as entire as possible. The
                  method of preparing it before it comes under the mallet, we were not yet
                  acquainted with at this time. The women employed in this manner, were dressed in
                  old and dirty rags of their cloth, and had very hard and callous hands. We
                  proceeded a little farther up in a narrow valley, where a well-looking man invited
                  us to sit down in the shade before his house. There was a little area paved with
                  broadish stones, on which he spread banana leaves for us, and brought out a little
                  stool made of the bread tree-wood, cut out of one piece, on which he desired one
                  of us to sit down, whom he took to be the principal person. Seeing us all seated
                  he ran into his house, and brought out a quantity of bread-fruit baked, which he
                  laid before us on fresh banana leaves. To this he added a matted basket full of
                  the vee, or Taheitee apples, a fruit of the spondias genus, which resembles the
                  anâna, or pine-apple in the taste, and entreated us to partake of these
                  refreshments. We breakfasted with a hearty appetite, sharpened by the exercise we
                  had taken, the fine air of the morning, and the excellence of the provisions. We
                  found the Taheitee method of dressing bread-fruit and other victuals, with heated
                  stones under ground, infinitely superior to our usual way of boiling them; in the
                  former all the juices remained, and were concentrated by the heat; but in the
                  latter, the fruit imbibed many watery particles, and lost a great deal of its fine
                  flavour and mealiness. To conclude this treat our host brought us five fresh
                  coco-nuts, which he opened by pulling the fibres off with his teeth. The cool
                  limpid liquor contained in them he poured into a clean cup, made of a ripe coco
                  nut-shell, and offered that to each of us in our turns. The people in this country
                  had on all occasions been good-natured and friendly, and for beads sometimes sold
                  us coco-nuts and fruit, if we called for them; but we had not yet seen an instance
                  of hospitality exercised in so complete a manner during our short stay. We
                  therefore thought it our duty to recompense our friend as much as lay in our
                  power, and presented him with a number of transparent beads and iron nails, with
                  which he was highly satisfied and contented.</p>

               <p>We continued our walk into the country from this seat of patriarchal hospitality,
                  notwithstanding the uneasiness which many of the natives expressed, among the
                  croud that followed us. When they saw us persist in our expedition, the greatest
                  part of them dispersed to their different habitations, and only a few of them
                  attended us, who made it their business to act as our guides. We came to the foot
                  of the first hills, where we left the huts and plantations of the natives behind
                  us, and ascended on a beaten path, passing through an uncultivated shrubbery mixed
                  with several tall timber-trees. Here we searched the most intricate parts, and
                  found several plants and birds hitherto unknown to natural historians. With these
                  little acquisitions we returned towards the sea, at which our friends the natives
                  expressed their satisfaction. We found a vast concourse of inhabitants on the
                  beach at our trading place, and saw that our people had brought a great quantity
                  of large eddies and other roots, but few bread-fruits, which were now very scarce,
                  only a few trees bearing them so late in the season, while most of the others were
                  already shooting forth the embryo of a new crop. The excessive heat of the sun,
                  now tempted us to bath in a branch of the adjacent river, which formed a deep pond
                  of some extent; and being refreshed with this bath we returned on board to dinner.
                  In the afternoon we had heavy rains, attended with wind, during which the
                  Adventure drove from her moorings, but was brought up again by a timely manœvre.
                  This bad weather confined us on board, where we arranged the plants and animals
                  which we had hitherto collected, and made drawings of such as were not known
                  before. Our three days excursions had supplied us only with a small number of
                  species, which in an island so flourishing as Taheitee, gave a convincing proof of
                  its high cultivation; for a few individual plants occupied that space, which in a
                  country entirely left to itself, would have teemed with several hundred different
                  kinds in wild disorder. The small size of the island, together with its vast
                  distance from either the eastern or western continent, did not admit of a great
                  variety of animals. We saw no other species of quadrupeds than hogs, and dogs
                  which were domestic, and incredible numbers of rats, which the natives suffered to
                  run about at pleasure, without ever trying to destroy them. We found however a
                  tolerable number of birds, and when the natives gave themselves the trouble to
                  fish, we commonly purchased a considerable variety of species, as this class of
                  creatures can easily roam from one part of the ocean to the other, and
                  particularly in the torrid zone, where certain sorts are general all round the
                  world.</p>

               <p>If the scarcity of spontaneous plants was unfavourable to the botanist, still it
                  had the most salutary effects with regard to the whole company on board of both
                  our vessels, since their place was occupied by great quantities of wholesome
                  vegetables. We daily bought abundance of yams, eddies, and Taheitee apples;
                  together with some bananas and bread-fruit, which, on account of the season, were
                  grown very scarce. The wholesome regimen which we had by this means been able to
                  keep, had visibly, and I might almost say miraculously, operated to restore to
                  their health, all those who were ill of the scurvy at our arrival; and the only
                  inconvenience we felt from it was a kind of flux, owing to the sudden change of
                  diet, with which a few of the people were afflicted. Not content with this
                  fortunate supply, we could not help casting longing eyes towards the hogs which we
                  saw in great numbers on all our excursions into the country, though the natives
                  were always careful to hide them in low styes, covered over with boards, forming a
                  kind of platform, on which they sat or lay down. We tried all possible means to
                  engage the people to sell some of them to us, and offered hatchets, shirts, and
                  other goods of value to the Taheitians, but still without success, their constant
                  answer being, that these animals were the king's (aree's) property. Instead of
                  acquiescing in this refusal, and acknowledging the kind disposition of the
                  natives, who furnished us at least with the means of recovering our strength, and
                  restoring our sick, a proposal was made to the captains, by some persons in the
                  ships, to sweep away by force a sufficient number of hogs for our use, and
                  afterwards to return such a quantity of our goods in exchange to the natives, as
                  we should think adequate to the spoil we had taken. This proposal, which nothing
                  but the most tyrannical principles, and the meanest selfishness could have
                  dictated, was received with the contempt and indignation which it justly
                  deserved.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 20.]</date>Our acquisitions in natural history being hitherto so
                  inconsiderable, we had leisure every day to ramble in the country in search of
                  others, as well as to pick up various circumstances which might serve to throw a
                  light on the character, manners, and present state of the inhabitants.</p>

               <p>On the 20th towards noon, I directed my walk, in company with several officers, to
                  the eastern point of the harbour. We soon came to a rivulet, which was wide and
                  deep enough to admit a canoe upon it, by means of which we ferried over to the
                  opposite shore, where we perceived a house of some extent, among the bushes.
                  Before it we saw a quantity of the finer sorts of Taheitee cloth spread out on the
                  grass, which the natives told us, had been washed in the river; and close to the
                  house, suspended on a pole, we observed a target of a semicircular form, made of
                  wicker-work, and plaited strings (of the coco-nut fibres), covered with the glossy
                  bluish-green feathers of a kind of pigeon, and ornamented with many shark's teeth,
                  displayed in three co-centric semicircles; I enquired whether it was to be
                  purchased, but was answered in the negative, and concluded that it was only
                  exposed to the air, in the same manner as we are used to do from time to time,
                  with things which we preserve in close boxes. A middle-aged man, who lay stretched
                  at his ease in the hut, invited us to sit down by him, and curiously examined my
                  dress; he had long nails on his fingers, upon which he valued himself not a
                  little, and which I found were a mark of distinction, since only such persons, as
                  had no occasion to work, could suffer them to grow to that length. The Chinese
                  have the same custom, and pride themselves as much in it; but whether the
                  Taheitians derive it from them, or whether chance has led them both to the same
                  idea, without any communication with each other, is possibly beyond the art of
                  Needham and Des Guignes to determine. In different corners of the hut we saw some
                  women and some men, separately eating their dinner of bread-fruit and bananas, and
                  both parties, as we approached them, desired us to partake of their provisions.
                  The singular custom, which forces the sexes to shun each others company at their
                  meals, is already mentioned by former voyagers, who have been equally unsuccessful
                  with ourselves in discovering its cause.</p>

               <p>We left this hut, and strolled through an odoriferous shrubbery to another, where
                  we found O-Taï, his wife, and children, and his sisters Maroya and Maroraï. The
                  officer who had lost his bed-sheets was with us, but thought it to no purpose to
                  enquire for them, and rather tried to ingratiate himself with the fair one. Beads,
                  nails, and various trifles were presented to her, which she readily accepted, but
                  remained inexorable to the passionate sollicitations of her lover. As she had in
                  all probability obtained the possession of the sheets, which she coveted, and for
                  which alone she could have submitted to prostitution, it seems nothing could
                  afterwards tempt her to admit the transient embraces of a stranger. This is the
                  most likely construction we could put upon her conduct, and it became more
                  probable to us, when we considered, that she belonged to a family of some note,
                  and that, during captain Cook's long stay on the island in the Endeavour, there
                  had been few, if any instances, that women among the better sort of people had
                  demeaned themselves so far. After a short stay with them, I returned to our
                  trading place, but finding all our boats gone off, ventured to embark in a single
                  canoe, without an outrigger, and was safely brought on board the Resolution for a
                  single bead, which was all I had left after this excursion.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 21.]</date>At day-break the next morning we went ashore again, on
                  another walk to the eastward. We observed the plain to widen, as we advanced
                  beyond the east point of Aitepèha harbour, and of course growing richer in
                  bread-fruit and coco-nut trees, bananas, and other vegetable productions, on most
                  of which we saw the buds of a future crop. The houses of the natives were likewise
                  found to be more numerous, and many seemed to us neater and newer than those near
                  our anchoring-place. In one of them, which was of the closer sort, walled in with
                  reeds, we saw a great many bundles of cloth, and cases for targets suspended from
                  the roof, all which, as well as the house itself, we were informed belonged to
                  Aheatua. We walked about two miles in the most delightful groves or plantations of
                  fruit-trees, where the natives were just returning to their various employments.
                  Among them we easily noticed the manufacturers of cloth, by the hollow sound of
                  the mallet. However, it must not be supposed, that the necessities of these people
                  urgently required their constant application to work; for our appearance soon
                  gathered a croud of them about us, who followed us all day as far as we went, and
                  sometimes even neglected their meals on our account. It was not without some
                  interested motives, that they attended upon us. Their general behaviour towards us
                  was good-natured, friendly, and I may say officious; but they watched every
                  opportunity of conveying away some trifles with amazing dexterity, and many among
                  them, whenever we returned the kind looks they gave us, or smiled upon them,
                  thought that a proper time to take advantage of our good disposition, and
                  immediately with a begging tone said, tayo, pòë, "friend, a bead!" which, whether
                  we complied with or refused, did not alter their good temper. When these petitions
                  became too frequent, we used to mock them, by repeating their words in the same
                  tone, which always produced a general peal of good-humoured laughter amongst them.
                  Their conversation was commonly loud, and it seemed that our appearance was their
                  principal topick; every new-comer was immediately made acquainted by the others
                  with our names, which they reduced to a few vowels and softer consonants, and was
                  entertained with a repetition of what we had said or done that morning. His first
                  request was generally to hear a musket fired off, which we complied with on
                  condition that he should shew us a bird as a mark. However, we were frequently at
                  a loss how to behave, when he pointed out a bird at four or five hundreds yards
                  distance, as they had no idea that the effects of our fire-arms were limited to a
                  certain space. As it was not prudent to let them into this mystery, we always
                  pretended that we could not see the bird, till we came near enough to shoot it.
                  The first explosion frightened them considerably, and on some produced such
                  violent consternation that they dropped down on the ground, or ran back about
                  twenty yards from us, where they remained till we quieted their fears by
                  professions of friendship, or till their more courageous brethren had picked up
                  the bird which we had killed. But they soon became more familiar, and though they
                  always expressed some sudden emotion, yet they conquered by degrees the appearance
                  of fear.</p>

               <p>Notwithstanding the friendly reception which we met with on all sides, the natives
                  were very anxious to keep their hogs out of sight, and whenever we enquired for
                  them seemed uneasy, and either told us they had none, or assured us they belonged
                  to Aheatua their king. As we perceived their reluctance to part with these
                  animals, we thought it best to take no farther notice of them, and though we saw
                  great numbers of them confined in pigstyes almost in every hut, we pretended not
                  to know that there were any, or not to care for them; this proceeding we always
                  found had the good effect of encreasing the confidence of the people towards
                  us.</p>

               <p>Having advanced a mile or two, we sat down on a few large stones, which formed a
                  kind of paved area before one of the cottages, and desired the inhabitants to
                  bring us some bread-fruit and coco-nuts, in exchange for beads. They very readily
                  supplied us with a quantity of each, on which we breakfasted. The croud who
                  followed us, sat down at a distance from us, at our desire, in order that they
                  might have no opportunity of snatching up any of our arms, or other apparatus,
                  which we were obliged to lay out of our hands, while we made our meal. To add to
                  our good cheer, we were presented with a coco-nut shell full of a kind of
                  diminutive fresh fish, which the natives are used to eat raw, without any other
                  sauce than salt water. We tasted them, and found them far from disagreeable;
                  however, as we were not used to eat them without being dressed, we distributed
                  them, with the remains of the fruit, to our favourites among the croud.</p>

               <p>Thus refreshed, we continued our walk, but turned towards the hills,
                  notwithstanding the importunities of the natives, who urged us to continue on the
                  plain, which we easily perceived arose merely from their dislike to fatigue. We
                  were not to be diverted from our purpose; but leaving behind us almost the whole
                  croud, we entered, with a few guides, a chasm between two hills. There we found
                  several wild plants which were new to us, and saw a number of little swallows
                  flying over a fine brook, which rolled impetuously along. We walked up along its
                  banks to a perpendicular rock, fringed with various tufted shrubberies, from
                  whence it fell in a crystalline column, and was collected at the bottom into a
                  smooth limpid pond, surrounded with many species of odoriferous flowers. This
                  spot, where we had a prospect of the plain below us, and of the sea beyond it, was
                  one of the most beautiful I had ever seen, and could not fail of bringing to
                  remembrance the most fanciful descriptions of poets, which it eclipsed in beauty.
                  In the shade of trees, whose branches hung over the water, we enjoyed a pleasant
                  gale, which softened the heat of the day, and amidst the solemn uniform noise of
                  the waterfall, which was but seldom interrupted by the whistling of birds, we sat
                  down to describe our new acquisitions before they withered. Our Taheitian
                  companions seeing us employed, likewise rested among the bushes, viewing us
                  attentively and in profound silence. We could have been well pleased to have
                  passed the whole day in this retirement; however, after finishing our notes, and
                  feasting our eyes once more with the romantick scenery, we returned to the plain.
                  Here we observed a great croud of the natives coming towards us, and at their near
                  approach perceived two of our ship-mates, Mr. Hodges and Mr. Grindall, whom they
                  surrounded and attended on their walk. We soon joined them, and resolved to
                  continue our excursion together. A youth, of a very promising countenance, who had
                  distinguished himself by shewing a particular attachment for these gentlemen, was
                  entrusted with Mr. Hodges's port-folio, where he preserved the sketches and
                  designs, which he had frequent opportunities of making on his walk. No favour, or
                  mark of affection could I believe have given this youth so much real pleasure, as
                  the confidence they had placed in him, upon which he seemed to value himself among
                  his countrymen. Perhaps this circumstance, joined to the peaceable appearance of
                  our gentlemen, who walked without arms of any kind, had a general effect upon all
                  the people that surrounded us, as their familiarity and affection seemed much
                  encreased. We entered a spacious hut together, where we saw a large family
                  assembled. An old man, with a placid countenance, lay on a clean mat, and rested
                  his head on a little stool, which served as a pillow. His head, which was truly
                  venerable, was well furnished with fine locks of a silvery grey, and a thick beard
                  as white as snow descended to his breast. His eyes were lively, and health sat on
                  his full cheeks. His wrinkles, which characterize age with us, were few and not
                  deep; for cares, trouble, and disappointment, which untimely furrow our brows,
                  cannot be supposed to exist in this happy nation. Several little ones, whom we
                  took to be his grand-children, and who, according to the custom of the country,
                  were perfectly naked, played with their aged ancestor, while his actions and looks
                  convinced us, that the simple way of living to which he had been used, had not yet
                  blunted his senses. Several well-made men and artless nymphs, in whom youth
                  supplied the want of beauty, surrounded the old man, and as we came in seemed to
                  be in conversation after a frugal meal. They desired us to sit down on the mats
                  among them, and we did not give them time to repeat their invitation. Their
                  curiosity, which had perhaps never before been gratified with the sight of
                  strangers, now prompted them to examine our dress and our arms, without bestowing
                  their attention longer than a moment on any single object. They admired our
                  colour, pressed our hands, seemed to wonder that we had no punctures on them, nor
                  long nails on our fingers, and eagerly enquired for our names, which when known,
                  they were happy to repeat. These names, as they pronounced them, were not so like
                  the originals that an etymologist could easily have deduced them, but in return
                  they were more harmonious, and easily pronounced. Forster was changed in Matara ,
                  Hodges into Oreo , Grindall into Terino , Sparrman into Pamanee , and George into
                  Teoree . The hospitality which we had found under every roof, was not wanting
                  here, and we were offered some coco-nuts and e-vees to quench our thirst after the
                  last walk. One of the young men had a flute made of a bamboo, which had but three
                  holes; he blew it with his nostrils , whilst another accompanied him with the
                  voice. The whole music, both vocal and instrumental, consisted of three or four
                  notes, which were between half and quarter notes, being neither whole tones nor
                  semi-tones. The effect of these notes, without variety or order, was only a kind
                  of drowsy hum, which could not indeed hurt the ear by its discordant sounds, but
                  made no pleasing impression on our minds. It is surprising that the taste for
                  music should be so general all over the world, when the ideas of harmony among
                  different nations are so distinct! Charmed with the picture of real happiness,
                  which was thus exhibited before us, Mr. Hodges filled his port-folio with several
                  sketches, which will convey to future times the beauties of a scene, of which
                  words give but a faint idea. While he was drawing, all the natives looked on with
                  great attention, and were highly pleased to find out the resemblance between his
                  performances and different persons among them. Our acquaintance with their
                  language, which we were at great pains to improve, was as yet very imperfect, and
                  deprived us of the pleasure which we might have received from a conversation with
                  these good people. A few separate words, and an interlude of dumb mimickry, was
                  all that we had to supply the place of a coherent speech. However, even this was
                  sufficient to amuse the natives, and our docility and endeavours to please seemed
                  to be at least as agreeable to them, as their social temper and willingness to
                  give instruction appeared to us. The old man, without changing his attitude, and
                  continuing to recline his head on the stool, asked us several little questions,
                  such as the captain's name, the name of the country we came from, how long we
                  should stay, whether we had our wives on board, &amp;c. It seemed that he was
                  already apprised of all these things by common report, but wished to have them
                  confirmed from our own mouths. We satisfied his curiosity as well as we could on
                  these points, and after distributing little presents of beads, medals, and other
                  trifles to his family, we set forwards once more on our excursion. The many pauses
                  which we made at the hospitable huts of the natives, always refreshed us so much,
                  that we felt no manner of inconvenience, and could with ease have walked round the
                  whole island in the same manner. The plain at the foot of the mountains offered no
                  impediment to our progress; on the contrary, its paths were well beaten, and its
                  whole surface perfectly level, and covered in many places with a fine growth of
                  grasses. Not a single noxious animal appeared to deter us, and not even a gnat or
                  musketoe hummed unpleasantly about us, or made us apprehensive of its bite. The
                  bread-fruit groves, with their abundant foliage, intercepted the rays of the
                  meridian sun, whose action was greatly mitigated by a fresh sea-breeze. The
                  inhabitants however, who were used to pass the middle of the day in repose, dropt
                  off one by one in the bushes, so that only a few remained with us. After we had
                  walked about two miles farther to the south eastward, we came to the sea-shore at
                  a place where it formed a little inlet. Here, surrounded on all sides with
                  plantations, we met with a glade or lawn, in the midst of which we saw a maraï
                  (burying-place) built up of three ranges of stones, like steps, each about three
                  feet and a half in height, and covered with grasses, ferns, and small shrubs.
                  Towards the country, at some distance from the building, there was an oblong
                  enclosure round it made of stone, about three feet high, within which two or three
                  solitary coco-palms and some young casuarinas, with their weeping branches, gave
                  an air of solemnity and pleasing melancholy to the scene. At a little distance
                  from the maraï, surrounded by a thick shrubbery, we saw an inconsiderable hut or
                  shed, (tupapow), where, on a kind of stage about breast high, a corpse was placed,
                  covered with a white piece of cloth, which hung down in various folds. Young
                  coco-trees and bananas were springing up, and dragon-trees blossoming around it.
                  Near this we saw another hut, where a quantity of eatables lay for the divinity,
                  (eatua), and a pole was stuck in the ground, on which we saw a dead bird wrapped
                  in a piece of a mat. In this last hut, which stood on a small eminence, we
                  observed a woman sitting in a pensive attitude, who got up at our approach, and
                  would not suffer us to come near her. We offered her a small present, but she
                  refused to touch it. We understood from the natives who were with us, that she
                  belonged to the maraï, and that the dead corse was also a woman's, whose obsequies
                  the first perhaps was performing.</p>

               <p>After Mr. Hodges had made several drawings we returned from this place, which had
                  really something grand in its appearance, and seemed calculated to favour
                  religious meditation. In our return we kept along the sea-shore, till we came to a
                  spacious house, very pleasantly situated amidst a grove of low coco-palms, loaded
                  with fruit. Two or three fried little fishes, which one of the natives sold us for
                  a few beads, were here shared among us, to stay our appetite, grown very keen
                  again since our breakfast. Several of our company likewise bathed in the sea, as a
                  farther refreshment in this warm climate, and having afterwards bought some pieces
                  of cloth, (ahow's) of the country fabrick, dressed in them, after the Taheitee
                  fashion, to the infinite pleasure of the natives. Our walk continued along the
                  shore beyond another marai, much like the first, to a neat house, where a very fat
                  man, who seemed to be a chief of the district, was lolling on his wooden pillow.
                  Before him two servants were preparing his desert, by beating up with water some
                  bread-fruit and bananas, in a large wooden bowl, and mixing with it a quantity of
                  the fermented sour paste of bread-fruit, (called maheî). The consistence of this
                  mixture was such, that it could properly be called a drink, and the instrument
                  with which they made it, was a pestle of a black polished stone, which appeared to
                  be a kind of basaltes . While this was doing, a woman who sat down near him,
                  crammed down his throat by handfuls the remains of a large baked fish, and several
                  bread-fruits, which he swallowed with a voracious appetite. His countenance was
                  the picture of phlegmatic insensibility, and seemed to witness that all his
                  thoughts centred in the care of his paunch. He scarce deigned to look at us, and a
                  few monosyllables which he uttered, were only directed to remind his feeders of
                  their duty, when we attracted their attention. The great degree of satisfaction
                  which we had enjoyed on our different walks in this island, and particularly the
                  pleasure of this day's excursion, was diminished by the appearance and behaviour
                  of the chief, and the reflections which naturally arose from thence. We had
                  flattered ourselves with the pleasing fancy of having found at least one little
                  spot of the world, where a whole nation, without being lawless barbarians, aimed
                  at a certain frugal equality in their way of living, and whose hours of enjoyment
                  were justly proportioned to those of labour and rest. Our disappointment was
                  therefore very great, when we saw a luxurious individual spending his life in the
                  most sluggish inactivity, and without one benefit to society, like the privileged
                  parasites of more civilized climates, fattening on the superfluous produce of the
                  soil, of which he robbed the labouring multitude. His indolence, in some degree,
                  resembled that which is frequent in India and the adjacent kingdoms of the East,
                  and deserved every mark of indignation which Sir John Mandeville expressed in his
                  Asiatic travels. That worthy knight, who, top-full of chivalry, and the valourous
                  spirit of his time, devoted his life to constant activity, was highly incensed at
                  the sight of a monster of laziness, who passed his days " withouten doynge of ony
                  dedes of armes" , and lived " evermore thus in ese, as a swyn that is fedde in
                  sty, for to ben made fatte" .</p>

               <p>On leaving this Taheitian drone we separated, and I accompanied Mess. Hodges and
                  Grindall, whose good-natured friend, the carrier of the port-folio, had earnestly
                  invited us to his habitation. We arrived here towards five in the evening, and
                  found it a small but cleanly cottage, before which a great abundance of fresh
                  leaves were spread on a stony place, and a prodigious quantity of the best
                  coco-nuts and well-roasted bread-fruit were laid out in fine order. He immediately
                  ran to two elderly persons, who were busy in frightening the rats from this
                  plentiful store of provisions, and introduced them to us as his parents. They
                  expressed great joy on seeing the friends of their son, and entreated us to sit
                  down to the meal which lay before us. We were at first struck with astonishment on
                  finding it entirely prepared at our arrival, but we soon recollected that our
                  friend had sent off one of his comrades several hours beforehand, very probably
                  with directions to provide for our entertainment. As this was the first regular
                  meal to which we sat down this day, it will easily be conceived that we fell to
                  with a good appetite, and gave infinite satisfaction to the good-natured old
                  people and the generous-minded youth, who all seemed to think themselves happy in
                  the honour which we did to their excellent cheer. With such a venerable pair
                  ministring to us, if I may be allowed to indulge in a poetical idea, we ran some
                  risk of forgetting that we were men, and might have believed ourselves feasted by
                  the hospitable Baucis and Philemon, if our inability to reward them had not
                  reminded us of mortality. However, all the beads and nails which we could muster
                  amongst us were offered to them, rather as a mark that we preserved a grateful
                  sense of their good heart, than as any retribution. The youth went on with us to
                  the beach opposite to our vessels, and brought on board a great quantity of
                  provisions, which we had left unconsumed at our dinner. He was there presented
                  with a hatchet, a shirt, and various articles of less value by his friends, and
                  returned that very evening on shore to his parents, being probably enriched beyond
                  his warmest expectation.</p>

               <p>The usual trade had been carried on about the ships, and on the beach opposite to
                  them, during our absence, without any material incident, except Captain Cook's
                  meeting with Tuahow, the same native who had accompanied him a considerable way
                  when he made the circuit of Taheitee in a boat, in the course of his first voyage
                  . We found him and two of his countrymen on board at our return, they having
                  resolved to take up their night's lodging with us, which, though usual at Matavaï
                  Bay during the Endeavour's voyage, none had hitherto ventured upon in this place.
                  Tuahow being already familiarized with our way of living, and acquainted with the
                  various objects which commonly struck his countrymen with wonder, eagerly entered
                  into discourse with us, as he found us attentive to his questions. He enquired
                  after Tabane , Mr. Banks; Tolano , Dr. Solander; Tupaya , (Tupia) and several
                  persons in the Endeavour whose names he recollected. He rejoiced to hear that Mr.
                  Banks and Dr. Solander were well, and having often renewed his question, always
                  received the same answer to it; upon which he asked whether they would not come
                  back to Taheitee, accompanying it with a look which strongly expressed the wish of
                  seeing them again. When he heard of Tupaya's death, he was desirous of being
                  informed whether it had been violent or natural, and was well pleased to hear from
                  such circumstances as we could by broken words and signs communicate to him, that
                  sickness had put a period to his life. In return, we questioned him concerning the
                  death of Tootahàh , who had appeared as the acting chief of the island in Captain
                  Cook's former voyage. We plainly understood that a great naval fight had happened
                  between that chief and old Aheatua , the father of the present king of Tiarraboo
                  in which neither party had gained a decisive advantage; but that Tootahàh
                  afterwards marching his army across the isthmus, which separates the two
                  peninsulas, had been defeated in an obstinate engagement, in which himself,
                  Tuboraï-Tamaide, and many other persons of distinction on his side were slain. A
                  peace was soon after concluded with O-Too the king of O-Taheitee , who, after
                  Tootahàh's decease, had assumed the power of the sovereignty, of which before he
                  had only enjoyed the title. Old Aheatua, according to Tuahow's account, died but a
                  few months after this peace, and his son, of the same name, who, according to the
                  custom of this country, had already, during his father's life-time, borne the
                  title of te-aree (the king), and received the honours annexed to that dignity, now
                  likewise succeeded to its more essential part, the management of affairs.</p>

               <p>This subject being exhausted, we took out the map of O-Taheitee, (engraved for
                  captain Cooke's former voyage) and laid it before Tuahow, without telling him what
                  it was. He was however too good a pilot, not to find it out presently; and
                  overjoyed to see a representation of his own country, immediately with his finger
                  pointed out the situation of all the whennuas or districts upon it, naming them at
                  the same time in their order, as we saw them written on the chart. When he came to
                  O-Whai-urua the next district with a harbour, to the south of our present
                  anchoring-place, he pulled us by the arm to look on attentively, and related that
                  there had been a ship (paheï) which he called paheï no Peppe, and which had lain
                  there five days; that the people in her had received ten hogs from the natives,
                  and that one of the crew ran away from the ship, and now lived upon the island.
                  From this account we concluded that the Spaniards had sent another vessel to
                  examine O-Taheitee, probably first discovered by their navigators, and which of
                  late years had been so frequently visited by the English, as might justly rouse
                  their attention, on account of the proximity of their own extensive possessions in
                  South America. Strange as it may seem, the name of Peppe confirmed us in our
                  conjectures, notwithstanding its vast difference from España, from whence we
                  supposed it originated; because we were by this time well acquainted with the
                  custom of mutilating all foreign names, which the Taheitians possess, even in a
                  higher degree than the French and English. We put several questions relative to
                  this ship to Tuahow, but could never obtain any farther intelligence from him,
                  except that the man who had left it, always accompanied Aheatua, and had given him
                  the advice not to furnish us with any hogs. Whatever selfinterested or bigoted
                  motives that man may have had to give Aheatua such an advice, yet it seems to have
                  been in reality the most friendly and valuable which he could have offered to his
                  protector. The way to keep the riches of his subjects, among which are their hogs
                  in the country, and to prevent new wants from prevailing among a happy people, was
                  to get rid of us as soon as he could, by denying us the refreshments of which we
                  stood most in need. It were indeed sincerely to be wished, that the intercourse
                  which has lately subsisted between Europeans and the natives of the South Sea
                  islands may be broken off in time, before the corruption of manners which
                  unhappily characterises civilized regions, may reach that innocent race of men,
                  who live here fortunate in their ignorance and simplicity. But it is a melancholy
                  truth, that the dictates of philanthropy do not harmonize with the political
                  systems of Europe!</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 22.]</date>Several of our people having taken a walk on shore, the
                  next day returned on board with the news, that they had met with Aheatua, who was
                  at last come to this district in order to give us an audience. They had been
                  admitted into his presence without any ceremony, and his majesty, in the midst of
                  all his court, had given up one half of his stool (pappa), to Mr. Smith, one of
                  our mates, who was of the party. He had at the same time graciously assured him,
                  that he wishes to speak to captain Cook, and had as many hogs to give him, as he
                  had hatchets to pay for them, which was by far the most agreeable news we had
                  heard for some time. They also reported that they had seen a man resembling an
                  European in colour and feature, but that upon speaking to him, he had retired into
                  the croud. Whether this was really an European, or whether the story which Tuahow
                  had told us the evening before, had wrought upon the fancy of our men we cannot
                  determine; so much however is certain, that none of us ever saw him
                  afterwards.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 23.]</date>In consequence of Aheatua's declaration, the captains,
                  with several officers, Dr. Sparrman, my father, and myself, went on shore early on
                  the 23d. We proceeded about a mile along the river from which we filled our casks,
                  being conducted by Opao one of the natives, who had lodged on board. A great croud
                  coming down towards us, those who surrounded us pulled off their upper garments,
                  so as to uncover their shoulders, which is a mark of respect due to the king. We
                  presently joined the croud, in the midst of whom Aheatua sat down on a large
                  stool, cut out of solid wood, which one of his people had hitherto carried. He
                  immediately recollected captain Cook, and made room for him on his stool, while
                  captain Furneaux, and the rest of us, chose large stones for our seats. An immense
                  number of natives thronged about us on all sides, and included us in a very narrow
                  circle, increasing the heat to such a degree, that the king's attendants were
                  frequently obliged to keep them back, by beating them.</p>

               <p>O-Aheatua, the king of O-Taheitee-eeteespan&gt;, (Little Taheitee) which is
                  otherwise called Tiarraboo, was a youth of seventeen or eighteen years of age,
                  well-made, about five feet six inches high, and likely to grow taller. His
                  countenance was mild, but unmeaning; and rather expressed some sign of fear and
                  distrust at our first meeting, which suited ill with the ideas of majesty, and yet
                  are often the characteristics of lawless power. His colour was of the fairest of
                  his people, and his lank hair of a light-brown, turning into reddish at the tips,
                  or being what is commonly called sandy. He wore at present no other dress than a
                  white sash, (marro) round the waist to the knees, made of the best kind of cloth,
                  and his head as well as all the rest of his body was uncovered. On both sides of
                  him sat several chiefs and nobles, distinguishable by their superior stature,
                  which is the natural effect of the immense quantity of food which they consume.
                  One of them was punctured in a surprising manner, which we had never seen before,
                  large black blotches of various shapes, almost covering his arms, legs, and sides.
                  This man, whose name was E-Tee, was also remarkable for his enormous corpulence,
                  and for the deference which the aree (king) paid to him, consulting him almost
                  upon every occasion. The king, during the time he sat on the stool, which was his
                  throne, preserved a grave or rather stiff deportment, scarce to be expected at his
                  years, though it seemed to be studied and assumed, only to make our meeting more
                  solemn. This may be looked upon as a kind of recommendation by some men, but it is
                  unhappily a mask of hypocrisy, which we should hardly have expected at Taheitee.
                  After the first salutation, captain Cook presented Aheatua with a piece of red
                  baize, a bed-sheet, a broad axe, a knife, nails, looking-glasses, and beads; and
                  my father gave him similar presents, among which was an aigrette or tuft of
                  feathers fixed on a wire, and dyed of a bright crimson; upon this his majesty set
                  a particular value, and at the sight of it the whole croud gave a general shout of
                  admiration, expressed by the word awhay! The king now enquired for Mr. Banks,
                  which only Tuahow had done before him, and then asked how long we intended to
                  stay, expressing at the same time, that he wishes we might remain five months.
                  Captain Cook's answer was, that as he did not receive sufficient supplies of
                  provisions, he must sail immediately. The king confined his first request to one
                  month, and at last to five days, but captain Cook persisted in his resolution;
                  Aheatua then promised to send us hogs the next day, but as this had been
                  repeatedly said without any consequence, we took no notice of it now; for even in
                  a state so little refined as Tiarraboo, we found that the real benevolence of the
                  middle class, which manifested itself towards us in hospitality and a number of
                  good and noble actions, gave us no right to trust the specious politeness of the
                  court and courtiers, who fed our hopes with empty promises.</p>

               <p>During this conference the croud, amounting at least to five hundred persons, was
                  so excessively noisy, that it was impossible at times to distinguish a word; and
                  on those occasions some of the king's attendants with a Stentor's voice called out
                  mamoò! (be silent), and enforced his command by dealing out hearty blows with a
                  long stick. The aree seeing that captain Cook was not to be persuaded to prolong
                  his stay in this harbour, got up, and walked down along the river with us, while
                  his attendants carried his wooden stool, and the kingly presents which he had
                  received. On this walk he laid aside the gravity, which was not natural to him,
                  and talked with great affability to our common people. He desired me to tell him
                  the names of all the persons from on board both sloops, who were present, to which
                  he added the question, whether they had their wives on board! Being answered in
                  the negative, his majesty in a fit of good humour desired them to look for
                  partners among the daughters of the land, which they understood it was meant at
                  present, in the light of a mere compliment. He sat down soon after close to a
                  house of reeds, into which we all retired, when the sun appeared through the
                  clouds. Here he called for some coco-nuts, and began to tell the story of the
                  Paheï no Peppe, or Spanish ship, of which Tuahow had given us the first
                  intimation. According to the king's account it seemed clear, that the ship had
                  been at Whaï Urua five months before us, and had lain there ten days. He added,
                  that the captain had hanged four of his people, and that the fifth had escaped the
                  same punishment by running away. This European, whom they named O-Pahoòtu, we
                  enquired after to no purpose, for a long while; till his majesty's attendants
                  seeing us very eager to become acquainted with him, assured us he was dead. We
                  have since heard that about the time mentioned by the natives, Don Juan de Langara
                  y Huarte, sent out from the port of Callao in Peru,had visited O-Taheitee, but
                  what the particulars of that voyage are, has never transpired. While we remained
                  in the house E-Tee, the fat chief, who seemed to be the principal counsellor of
                  the king, very seriously asked us, whether we had a God (Eatuâ) in our country,
                  and whether we prayed to him (epoore)? When we told him, that we acknowledged a
                  Divinity, who had made every thing, and was invisible, and that we also were
                  accustomed to address our petitions to him, he seemed to be highly pleased, and
                  repeated our words with notes of his own to several persons who sat round him. To
                  us he seemed to signify, that the ideas of his country-men corresponded with ours
                  in this respect. Every thing concurs indeed to convince us, that this simple and
                  only just conception of the Deity, has been familiar to mankind in all ages and in
                  all countries, and that only by the excessive cunning of a few individuals, those
                  complex systems of absurd idolatry have been invented, which disgrace the history
                  of almost every people. The love of empire, or the pursuit after voluptuousness
                  and indolence, seem to have inspired the numerous branches of heathen priests with
                  the idea of keeping the minds of the people in awe, by awakening their
                  superstition. The natural love of the miraculous has made it easy for them not
                  only to put their projects in execution, but likewise to weave their prejudices so
                  firmly into the web of human knowledge, that to this moment the greater part of
                  mankind pay them homage, and blindly suffer themselves to be cheated in the
                  grossest manner.</p>

               <p>While E-Tee was conversing on religious matters, king Aheatua was playing with
                  Captain Cook's watch. After curiously examining the motion of so many wheels, that
                  seemed to move as it were spontaneously, and shewing his astonishment at the noise
                  it made, which he could not express otherwise than by saying it " spoke" (parou),
                  he returned it, and asked what it was good for. With a great deal of difficulty we
                  made him conceive that it measured the day, similar to the sun, by whose altitude
                  in the heavens he and his people are used to divide their time. After this
                  explanation, he called it a little sun, to shew us that he perfectly understood
                  our meaning. We were just getting up to return towards the beach, when a man
                  arrived who brought a hog along with him, which the king presented to the captain,
                  at the same time promising to give him another. With this small beginning we
                  rested satisfied, and taking our leave, without any troublesome ceremony, only
                  pronouncing a hearty tayo, (friend), which had more meaning in it than many a
                  studied speech, we returned on board.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon the captains went on shore with us again to the king, whom we
                  found where we had left him in the morning. He took that opportunity of requesting
                  the captains again to prolong their stay at least a few days; but he received the
                  same answer as before, and was plainly told, that his refusing to provide us with
                  live-stock was the reason of their intended departure. Upon this he immediately
                  sent for two hogs, and presented one to each of the captains, for which he
                  received some iron-wares in return. A highlander, who was one of our marines, was
                  ordered to play the bagpipe, and its uncouth music, though almost insufferable to
                  our ears, delighted the king and his subjects to a degree which we could hardly
                  have imagined possible. The distrust which we perceived in his looks at our first
                  interview was now worn off; and if we had staid long enough, an unreserved
                  confidence might have taken its place, to which his youth and good-nature seemed
                  to make him inclinable. The studied gravity which he had then affected, was
                  likewise laid aside at present, and some of his actions rather partook of
                  puerility, among which I cannot help mentioning his amusement of chopping little
                  sticks and cutting down plantations of bananas with one of our hatchets. But,
                  instead of cultivating any farther acquaintance with him, we took our last leave
                  towards the close of the evening, and returned to the sloops, which unmoored
                  before night.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 24.]</date>The inhabitants seeing us prepare for sailing the next
                  morning, came off in a vast number of small canoes, loaded with coco-nuts and
                  other vegetable provisions, which they sold excessively cheap, rather than miss
                  the last opportunity of obtaining European goods. The taste for baubles, which
                  unaccountably prevails all over the world in different degrees, was so extravagant
                  here, that a single bead was eagerly purchased with a dozen of the finest
                  coco-nuts, and sometimes preferred even to a nail, though the last might be of
                  some use, and the bead could serve merely as an insignificant ornament. We
                  observed that the trade was carried on much fairer this time than at our arrival,
                  the natives being perhaps apprehensive that any little fraud might break off a
                  commerce, in which they now appeared deeply interested. They accompanied us for
                  this purpose till we were a mile or two without the reefs, and then returned to
                  the beach, where we had left lieutenant Pickersgill with a boat, in order to take
                  advantage of their present disposition.</p>

               <p>We were now able to breathe a little, after the continual hurry which had been the
                  necessary consequence of the multiplicity of new objects around us, and of the
                  short space of time which we had to observe them. This interval of repose was the
                  more acceptable, as it gave us leisure to indulge the reflections which had
                  crouded upon us during our stay. The result of these was a conviction, that this
                  island is indeed one of the happiest spots on the globe. The rocks of New Zeeland
                  appeared at first in a favourable light to our eyes, long tired with the constant
                  view of sea, and ice, and sky; but time served to undeceive us, and gave us daily
                  cause of dislike, till we formed a just conception of that rude chaotic country.
                  But O-Taheitee, which had presented a pleasing prospect at a distance, and
                  displayed its beauty as we approached, became more enchanting to us at every
                  excursion which we made on its plains. Our long run out of sight of land might
                  have been supposed at first to have had the same effect as at New Zeeland but our
                  stay confirmed instead of destroying the emotions which we had felt at the first
                  sight; even though we had no room to be so well pleased with the refreshments we
                  had obtained, which were not by far so plentiful as the fish and wild-fowl of New
                  Zeeland, and still obliged us to have recourse to salt provisions. The season of
                  the year, which answered to our month of February, had naturally brought on a
                  scarcity of fruits; for though it does not manifest itself here by refrigerating
                  the air, as in countries remote from the tropics, yet it is the season when all
                  vegetation recovers the juices which have formed the late crop, and prepares them
                  for a new one. At this time several trees entirely shed their leaves, several
                  plants died away to the very root, and the remaining ones looked parched on
                  account of the want of rain, which commonly takes place then, because the sun is
                  in the opposite hemisphere. The whole plain therefore was arrayed in a sober
                  brownish and sometimes sallow colour. Only the lofty mountains preserved richer
                  tints in their forests, which are supplied with more moisture from the clouds that
                  hang on their summits almost every day. From thence, among other things, the
                  natives brought great quantities of wild plantanes (vehee), and that perfumed wood
                  (e-ahaï), with which they give their coco-nut oil (monòë), a very fragrant smell.
                  The shattered state in which we saw the tops of these mountains, seemed to have
                  been the work of an earthquake; and the lavas, of which many of the mountains
                  consist, and of which the natives make several tools, convinced us of the
                  existence of former volcanoes on this island. The rich soil of the plains, which
                  is a vegetable mould, mixed with volcanic decays, and a black irony sand, which is
                  often found at the foot of the hills, are farther proofs of this assertion. The
                  exterior ranges of hills are sometimes entirely barren, and contain a great
                  quantity of yellowish clay, mixed with iron-ochre; but others are covered with
                  mould, and wooded like the higher mountains. Pieces of quartz are sometimes met
                  with here, but we never saw indications of precious minerals or metals of any
                  kind, iron excepted, and of that there were but small remains in the lavas which
                  we picked up; but the mountains may perhaps contain some iron-ore rich enough for
                  fusion. As to the piece of salt-petre, as big as an egg, which Captain Wallis
                  mentions as a product of Taheitee , with all respect for his nautical abilities, I
                  beg leave to doubt of its existence; since native salt-petre has never yet been
                  found in solid lumps, as appears from Cronstedt's Mineralogy.</p>

               <p>The view of O-Taheitee, along which we now sailed to the northward, suggested
                  these cursory observations on its fossil productions, while our eyes remained
                  eagerly fixed on the spot which had afforded us such a fund of real amusement and
                  instruction. Our reflections were only interrupted by the summons to dine on fresh
                  pork, which was instantly obeyed with an alacrity, that sufficiently proved our
                  long abstinence. We were agreeably surprised to find this pork entirely free from
                  the luscious richness which makes it resist the stomach so soon in Europe; the fat
                  was to be compared to marrow, and the lean had almost the tender taste of veal.
                  The vegetable diet which the hogs are used to at O-Taheitee, seems to be the
                  principal cause of this difference, and may have had some influence even on the
                  natural instincts of these animals. They were of that small breed which is
                  commonly called the Chinese, and had not those pendulous ears, which according to
                  the ingenious count de Buffon, are the characters of slavery in animals. They were
                  likewise much cleanlier than our European hogs, and did not seem to have that
                  singular custom of wallowing in the mire. It is certain that these animals are a
                  part of the real riches of the Taheitians, and we saw great numbers of them at
                  Aitepèha, though the natives took great pains to conceal them. But they are so far
                  from being their principal dependence, that I believe their total extirpation
                  would be no great loss, especially as they are now entirely the property of the
                  chiefs. They kill their hogs very seldom, perhaps only on certain solemn
                  occasions; but at those times the chiefs eat pork with the same unbounded
                  greediness, with which certain sets of men are reproached at the turtle-feasts in
                  England; while the common sort rarely, if ever taste a little bit, which is always
                  held as a great dainty among them. Notwithstanding this, all the trouble of
                  breeding, bringing up, and fattening the hogs is allotted to the lowest class of
                  people.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 25.]</date>We were becalmed in the evening, and during a great
                  part of the night, but had a S.E. wind the next morning, so that we stood in shore
                  again, in sight of the northern-most part of O-Taheitee and of the adjacent isle
                  of Eimeo. The mountains here formed larger masses, which had a more grand effect
                  than at Aitepeha. The slopes of the lower hills were likewise more considerable,
                  though almost entirely destitute of trees or verdure; and the ambient border of
                  level land, was much more extensive hereabouts, and seemed in some places to be
                  above a mile broad. Towards ten o'clock we had the pleasure to see several canoes
                  coming off from the shore towards us. Their long narrow sails, consisting of
                  several mats sowed together, their streamers of feathers, and the heap of
                  coco-nuts and bananas on board, had all together a picturesque appearance. For a
                  few beads and nails they disposed of their cargoes, and returned on shore to take
                  in another. About noon our boat arrived with lieutenant Pickersgill, who had been
                  very successful in trading at Aitepeha, having purchased nine hogs and a quantity
                  of fruit. His majesty, Aheatua, had been present at the trading-place the whole
                  time, and after seating himself near the heap of iron wares, which our people had
                  brought on shore, desired to market for them, and was extremely equitable in
                  giving hatchets of different kinds for hogs of proportionate sizes. In the
                  intervals however, he amused himself as he had done the evening before, with
                  chopping small sticks, with which our sailors were much entertained, and after
                  their manner made many shrewd observations on triflers. Mr. Pickersgill having
                  expended his stock in trade, put off from Aitepeha in the afternoon, and came the
                  same evening to Hiddea, the district of O-Rettee (Ereti) where M. de Bougainville
                  lay at an anchor in 1768. Here he was hospitably entertained by the worthy old
                  chief, who is so justly celebrated by that gallant French navigator; and the next
                  morning his brother Tarooree embarked with our officer, in order to visit the
                  ships which they saw in the offing. When he came on board we found he had a kind
                  of impediment in his organs of speech, by which means he substituted a K wherever
                  the language required a T; a fault which we afterwards observed in several other
                  individuals. He favoured us with his company at dinner, as well as another native
                  named O-Wahow, who was the first that had come aboard from this part of the
                  island, and to whom my father had immediately presented a few beads and a small
                  nail, merely to try his disposition. In return he produced a fish-hook neatly made
                  of mother of pearl, which he gave to his new friend. A larger nail was the reward
                  of this good-natured action; and on the receipt of this he sent his boy to the
                  shore in his canoe. Towards four o'clock the canoe returned, and brought on board
                  this man's brother, and a present of a number of coco-nuts, several bunches of
                  bananas, and a clothing-mat. There was something so generous in O-Wahow's way of
                  acting, above all the little ideas of bartering, that we could not fail to express
                  the highest regard for him. A much more considerable present was returned to him,
                  rather to confirm him in his noble sentiments, than as a compensation for his
                  gift. With that he retired in the evening, promising to return to us again, and
                  expressing such extravagant emotions of joy as are commonly the effects of
                  unexpected good fortune.</p>

               <p>In the mean while we gradually approached the shore, a faint breeze helping us on,
                  and the evening-sun illuminating the landscape with the richest golden tints. We
                  now discerned that long projecting point, which from the observation made upon it,
                  had been named Point Venus, and easily agreed, that this was by far the most
                  beautiful part of the island. The district of Matavaï, which now opened to our
                  view, exhibited a plain of such an extent as we had not expected, and the valley
                  which we traced running up between the mountains, was itself a very spacious
                  grove, compared to the little narrow glens in Tiarraboo. We hauled round the point
                  about three o'clock, and saw it crouded with a prodigious number of people, who
                  gazed at us with fixed attention; but as soon as we came to an anchor, in the fine
                  bay which it shelters, the greater part of them ran very precipitately round the
                  whole beach, and across One-tree-hill to O-Parre, the next district to the
                  westward. Among the whole croud, we saw only a single man whose shoulders were
                  covered with a garment, and he, according to our friend O-Wahow's testimony, was
                  O-Too, the king of O-Taheitee-Nue ,(the Greater Taheitee). His person was tall,
                  and very advantageously proportioned, but he ran very nimbly along with his
                  subjects, which the natives on board attributed to his apprehensions on our
                  account.</p>

               <p>Though it was near sun-set when we came to an anchor, yet our decks were in a
                  short time crouded with natives of all ranks, who recognized their old friends in
                  many of our officers and sailors, with a degree of reciprocal joy, which cannot
                  easily be described. Among them was the old, venerable O-Whaw, whose peaceable
                  character and good offices to our people, are taken notice of in the account of
                  Lieutenant Cook's first voyage, particularly upon the occasion when one of the
                  natives was murdered . He immediately recollected Mr. Pickersgill, and calling him
                  by his Taheitean name, Petrodero enumerated on his fingers, that this was the
                  third visit he made to the island, that gentleman having been here both in the
                  Dolphin and the Endeavour. A chief, named Maratata , paid captain Cook a visit
                  with his lady, (Tedua)-Erararee, who was a very well-looking young woman, and both
                  received a number of presents, though it appeared that these were the sole motives
                  for coming on board. A very tall, fat man, the father-in-law of Maratata,
                  accompanied them, and was equally fortunate in collecting presents amongst us,
                  which he took no other method to obtain, than down-right begging. They all
                  exchanged names with us in sign of friendship, every one choosing a particular
                  friend, to whom he was attached; customs which we had never observed in our former
                  anchoring place, where the natives were infinitely more reserved, and in some
                  degree diffident of our intentions. Towards seven o'clock they left the ship, not
                  without promising to return the next morning, which, from the good reception they
                  had met with, did not seem to admit of a doubt.</p>

               <p>All night the moon shone clear in a cloudless sky, and silvered over the polished
                  surface of the sea, while the landscape lay before us like the gay production of a
                  fertile and elegant fancy. A perfect silence reigned in the air, which was
                  agreeably interrupted by the voices of several natives that had remained on board,
                  and enjoyed the beauty of the night with their friends, whom they had known in a
                  former voyage. They were seated at the sides of the vessel, and discoursed on
                  several topics, making their words more intelligible by different signs. We
                  listened to them, and found that they chiefly put questions concerning what had
                  happened to our people since their last separation, and gave accounts in their
                  turn of the tragical fate of Tootahah, and his friends. Gibson, the marine, who
                  was so much delighted with this island, in captain Cook's former voyage, that he
                  made an attempt to stay behind , was now chiefly engaged in this conversation, as
                  he understood more of the language than the rest of the crew, and was on that
                  account greatly valued by the natives. The confidence which these people placed in
                  us, and their familiar, unreserved behaviour, gave us infinite satisfaction, as it
                  contrasted so well with the conduct of the people of Aitepèha. We now saw the
                  character of the natives in a more favourable light than ever, and were convinced
                  that the remembrance of injuries, and the spirit of revenge, did not enter into
                  the composition of the good and simple Taheitians. It must surely be a comfortable
                  reflection to every sensible mind, that philanthropy seems to be natural to
                  mankind, and that the savage ideas of distrust, malevolence, and revenge, are only
                  the consequences of a gradual depravation of manners. There are few instances
                  where people, who are not absolutely sunk to a state of barbarism, have acted
                  contrary to this general peaceable principle. The discoveries of Columbus, Cortez,
                  and Pizarro in America, and those of Mendanna, Quiros, Schouten, Tasman , and
                  Wallis in the South Sea, agree in this particular. It is highly probable, that the
                  attack which the Taheitians made upon the Dolphin, took its origin from some
                  outrage unknowingly committed by the Europeans; and supposing it did not, if
                  self-preservation be one of the first laws of nature, surely from all appearances
                  these people had a right to look on our men as a set of invaders, and what is more
                  than all, to be apprehensive that even their liberty was at stake. When, after a
                  fatal display of superior European force, they were convinced that nothing farther
                  than a short stay for refreshment was intended, that the strangers who came among
                  them were not entirely destitude of humane and equitable sentiments; in short,
                  when they found that Britons were not more savage than themselves, they were ready
                  to open their arms to them, they forgot that they had had a difference, and bid
                  them partake of each kindly production of their isle. They all exerted themselves
                  in acts of hospitality and testimonies of friendship from the lowest subject to
                  the queen, that every one of their guests might have reason to say, he regretted
                  his departure from this friendly shore:</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. IX.</l>

                  <l>Account of our Transactions at Matavaï Bay.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. August.][Thursday 26.]</date> CAPTAIN Cook in his voyage in the
                  Endeavour, had observed that, in order to obtain a sufficient supply of
                  refreshments at Matavaï Bay, it was absolutely necessary to conciliate the favour
                  of the sovereign, unless peaceable measures were entirely to be rejected, and the
                  tragedies of former times be repeated. With this view he resolved to begin his
                  operations here in the morning, by going to the province of O-Parre, where king
                  O-Too resided. He did not, however, leave the ship till Maratata and his wife had
                  been on board agreeable to their promise. In return for the presents which they
                  had received the evening before, they gave some pieces of their best cloth to the
                  captain, and were very proud to be admitted into the great cabin, while the rest
                  of their countrymen were obliged to stay without. As soon as Captain Furneaux was
                  come on board from the Adventure, Captain Cook embarked in the pinnace with him,
                  accompanied by Doctor Sparrman, my father, and myself. Maratata, without any
                  ceremony, likewise came in with his wife, and immediately occupied the best place
                  in the stern. A croud of attendants followed them, till the boat was so full, that
                  our people found it impossible to ply their oars. The greater part of these
                  unbidden guests were therefore obliged to leave it, to their visible
                  disappointment; for they seemed to have set a great value upon the liberty of
                  sitting in our boat, which was fresh painted, and had a pleasant green awning to
                  skreen us from the sun. We rowed across the bay, and approached the shore near a
                  point where a thick shrubbery surrounded a maraï of stone, such as we had already
                  observed in Aitepèha. This cemetery and place of worship was known to Captain Cook
                  by the name of Tootahah's marai, but when he called it by this name, Maratata
                  interrupted him, intimating that it was no longer Tootahah's after his death, but
                  was known at present as O-Too's maraï. A fine moral for princes, daily reminding
                  them of mortality whilst they live, and teaching them that after death they cannot
                  even call the ground their own which their dead corse occupies! - The chief and
                  his wife on passing by it, took their upper garment from their shoulders, which is
                  a mark of respect indiscriminately paid at the maraï by all ranks of people, and
                  seems to annex a particular idea of sanctity to these places. Perhaps they are
                  supposed to be favoured with the more immediate presence of the Deity, agreeably
                  to the opinion that has been entertained of public places of worship at all times
                  and among all nations.</p>

               <p>After passing the maraï, we rowed for some time close along one of the finest
                  districts of O-Taheitee, where the plains seemed to be very spacious, and the
                  mountains ran with a very easy slope into a long point. A prodigious number of
                  inhabitants lined the shores, which were covered with grasses, and shaded with
                  numerous palms close to the water's edge. Here we landed, amidst the joyful
                  acclamations of the multitude, and were conducted to a group of houses, hid under
                  spreading fruit-trees. Before one of the largest we saw an area twenty or thirty
                  yards square, surrounded by an enclosure of reeds, not above eighteen inches high,
                  in the middle of which the king was seated cross-legged on the ground, in a great
                  circle of persons of both sexes, who seemed to be of the highest rank in the
                  island from their stature, colour and deportment. Some of our sailors laid down a
                  number of presents before him, which served as Captain Cook's credentials. We all
                  followed, and were intreated to sit down around the king. The respect which was
                  paid to the sovereign by all ranks of people, and which consisted in uncovering
                  the shoulders in his presence, did not prevent hem from thronging around us on all
                  sides with the greatest eagerness of curiosity. The croud was beyond comparison
                  more numerous than at our interview with Aheatua, and the king's attendants in
                  different corners of the area were obliged to exert themselves in order to keep
                  them within bounds. One in particular displayed his activity in a furious manner
                  to clear the way for us, by beating them unmercifully, breaking several sticks on
                  their heads, and no doubt breaking their heads too.</p>

               <p>Notwithstanding this severe treatment, they returned as obstinately to the charge
                  as an English mob, but bore the insolence of the king's officers with more
                  patience. The king of O-Taheitee had never seen our people during captain Cook's
                  first voyage, probably in consequence of the political views of his uncle
                  Tootahah, who at that time had the whole management of affairs in his hands, and
                  who might be apprehensive of losing his consequence among the Europeans, if they
                  should once know that he was not the greatest man on the island. Whether
                  Tootahah's power was to be considered as an usurpation, or not, is not easily to
                  be determined; so much however may be alledged against him, that the king himself
                  seemed to us to be a man of twenty-four or twenty-five years of age. O-Too was the
                  tallest man whom we saw on the whole island which he governs, measuring six feet
                  and three inches in height. His whole body was proportionately strong and
                  well-made, without any tendency to corpulence. His head, notwithstanding a certain
                  gloominess which seemed to express a fearful disposition, had a majestic and
                  intelligent air, and there was great expression in his full black eyes. He wore
                  strong whiskers, which with his beard, and a prodigious growth of curled hair,
                  were all of a jetty black. His portrait is engraved from Mr. Hodges's drawing, for
                  captain Cook's account of this voyage. The same habit of body, and the same
                  singular quantity of hair, which stood puffed up all about the head intricately
                  entwined and curled, characterised his brothers, one a youth of about sixteen,
                  another ten years of age, and likewise his sisters, of which the eldest now
                  present seemed about twenty-six. The women of O-Taheitee in general, cut their
                  hair rather short; it was therefore a very uncommon appearance on the heads of
                  these ladies, and may, for ought we know, be a privilege reserved only to those of
                  the royal family. Their rank however did not exclude them from the general
                  etiquette of uncovering the shoulders in the king's presence, a ceremony which
                  afforded the whole sex numberless opportunities of displaying an elegant figure to
                  the greatest advantage. The simple drapery of a long white piece of cloth, like a
                  muslin, was to be turned an hundred different ways, according to the convenience,
                  or the talents and fine taste of the wearer; no general fashions force them to
                  disfigure, instead of adorning themselves, but an innate gracefulness was the
                  companion of simplicity. The only person exempted from the general custom of
                  uncovering the shoulder was the king's hòa, one of his servants, whom we could not
                  better compare than to the lord in waiting, and of whom we understood there were
                  twelve who officiated by turns. Some of them were the same gentlemen who had
                  displayed their dexterity before, by dealing out hearty blows to the crowd. The
                  number of uncles, aunts, cousins, and other relations of his majesty, amongst whom
                  we were seated, vied with each other in bestowing kind looks upon us, making
                  professions of friendship, and - begging for beads and nails. The methods to
                  obtain these trifles from us were very different, and consequently not always
                  equally successful. When we distributed a few beads to one set of people, some
                  young fellows would impudently thrust their hands in between them, and demand
                  their share, as though it had been their due; these attempts we always made it our
                  business to discourage by a flat refusal. It was already become difficult to deny
                  a venerable old man, who with a hand not yet palsied by age, vigorously pressed
                  ours, and with a perfect reliance upon our good nature, whispered the petition in
                  our ears. The elderly ladies in general made sure of a prize, by a little artful
                  flattery. They commonly enquired for our names, and then adopted us as their sons,
                  at the same time introducing to us the several relations, whom we acquired by this
                  means. After a series of little caresses, the old lady began, Aima poe-èetee no te
                  tayo mettua? " Have you not a little bead for your kind mother?" Such a trial of
                  our filial attachment always had its desired effect, as we could not fail to draw
                  the most favourable conclusions from thence in regard to the general kind
                  disposition of the whole people: for to expect a good quality in others, of which
                  we ourselves are not possessed, is a refinement in manners peculiar to polished
                  nations. Our other female relations in the bloom of youth, with some share of
                  beauty, and constant endeavours to please, laid a claim to our affections by
                  giving themselves the tender name of sisters; and all the world will agree that
                  this attack was perfectly irresistible.</p>

               <p>In a little time we met with an ample return for our presents, especially from the
                  ladies, who immediately sent their attendants (Towtows) for large pieces of their
                  best cloth, dyed of a scarlet, rose, or straw colour, and perfumed with their
                  choicest fragrant oil. These they put over our cloathes, and loaded us so well
                  that we found it difficult to move in them. A variety of questions concerning
                  Tabane (Mr. Banks), Tolano (Dr. Solander), and many of their former acquaintances,
                  immediately followed the more material business of receiving presents; but Tupaya
                  (Tupia) or as he was more commonly called Parua, notwithstanding the extensive
                  knowledge of which he seems to have been possessed, and which we expected should
                  have endeared him to his countrymen; was only mentioned by one or two persons, who
                  received the news of his death with perfect indifference. Whilst we were engaged
                  in this conversation, our Highlander performed on the bag-pipe to the infinite
                  satisfaction of all the Taheitians, who listened to him with a mixture of
                  admiration and delight. King O-Too in particular was so well pleased with his
                  musical abilities, which I have already observed were mean enough, that he ordered
                  him a large piece of the coarser cloth as a reward for his trouble.</p>

               <p> As this visit was merely a visit of ceremony, we soon got up to return to our
                  boat, but were detained a little longer by the arrival of E-Happaï the father of
                  the sovereign. He was a tall, thin man, with a grey beard and hair, seemed to be
                  of a great age, but was not yet entirely worn out. He received the presents which
                  our captains made him, in a cold careless manner, which is natural to old people
                  whose senses are considerably impaired. The accounts of former voyagers had
                  already apprised us of that strange constitution, by virtue of which the son
                  assumes the sovereignty in his father's life time , but we could not without
                  surprize, behold the aged Happaï, naked to the waist in his son's presence,
                  conform to the general custom. Thus the ideas universally annexed to
                  consanguinity, are suppressed in order to give greater weight to the regal
                  dignity, and I cannot help thinking that such a sacrifice to political authority,
                  argues a greater degree of civilization than has been allowed to the Taheitians by
                  our former navigators. However, though Happaï was not invested with the supreme
                  command, his birth and rank entitled him to deference from the common people, and
                  to a proper support from the king. The province or district of O-Parre, was
                  therefore under his immediate orders, and supplied not only his wants, but those
                  also of his attendants. After a very short stay with this old chief, we parted
                  from him, and from the king his son, and returned on board in the pinnace, which
                  Maratata had occupied during the whole time of our interview, priding himself very
                  much on his supposed interest with us. During our absence several tents had been
                  erected on Point Venus, for the convenience of our wood-cutters and waterers, and
                  the sick of the Adventure. The astronomers of both vessels had likewise fixed
                  their observatory nearly on the same spot, where Mr. Green and captain Cook had
                  observed the transit of Venus. We found a great number of inhabitants about the
                  vessels, and among the rest several of the better sort of people, who having
                  access to all parts of the ship, followed every body with their petitions for
                  beads and other presents. The captains to evade their endless importunities went
                  on shore to the tents, and thither we accompanied them in order to see what
                  natural productions the country afforded. Another excursion of the same kind was
                  made in the afternoon, but as both were confined to an inconsiderable distance,
                  our discoveries only consisted of a few plants and birds which we had not seen at
                  Aitepèha.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 27.]</date>The next morning very early, a number of canoes came to
                  the ship from Parre, and in one of the smallest, the king in person brought many
                  presents to captain Cook. A live hog, a very large fish called a cavalha (scomber
                  hippos), and an albecore ready dressed, about four feet long, with many baskets of
                  palm-leaves containing bread-fruit and bananas, were handed up to the deck
                  successively. Captain Cook stood on the ship's side, entreating his majesty to
                  come on board, but he did not stir from his seat, till an immense quantity of the
                  best cloth of the country had been wrapped round the captain, encreasing his bulk
                  to a prodigious dimension. After this ceremony, Too, with a countenance which
                  betrayed a good deal of diffidence, ventured to come upon the quarter-deck, and
                  embraced the captain, who in conjunction with his officers and ourselves, devised
                  all possible means to quiet these apprehensions. Our quarter-deck was now so
                  crouded with the king's relations, that he was requested to come into the cabin;
                  but the descent between decks was so hazardous an enterprize according to his
                  ideas, that he could by no means be prevailed on to attempt it, till he had sent
                  down his brother, a fine active youth about sixteen years of age, who placed a
                  perfect confidence in us. Having reconnoitred the cabin, and finding it to his
                  liking, he made his report accordingly to the king, who immediately ventured down.
                  He received a great number of valuable presents from captain Cook, who began to
                  find himself very warm under his load of cloth. The principal people accompanied
                  his majesty into the cabin, but they crouded in so fast, that it was almost
                  impossible to stir for them. Every one of these, as I have already mentioned,
                  chose his particular friend amongst us, and reciprocal gifts sealed every new
                  connection. Captain Furneaux being arrived on board, we took an opportunity of
                  sitting down to our breakfast, when they seemed perfectly easy, having prevailed
                  on them to seat themselves on chairs, which struck them with their novelty and
                  convenience. The king paid great attention to our breakfast, which was a mixture
                  of English and Taheitian provisions, and was much surprised to see us drink
                  hot-water , and eat bread-fruit with oil . Though he could not be persuaded to
                  taste our food, several of his attendants were not so cautious, but eat and drank
                  very heartily of whatever we set before them. After breakfast O-Too saw my
                  father's spaniel, a fine dog, but in very bad order at that time, and very dirty
                  from the pitch, tar, and other uncleanliness on board the ship. Notwithstanding
                  these defects, the king expressed a great desire of becoming his master, and made
                  a request to that purpose, which was readily complied with. He immediately
                  commanded one of the lords in waiting, or hòas, to take the dog into his custody;
                  and in conformity to his orders, this man ever after carried the dog behind his
                  majesty. The king soon after told captain Cook that he wished to return on shore,
                  and went on deck with all his attendants, carrying with him the presents which he
                  had received. Captain Furneaux took that opportunity of presenting to him a fine
                  pair of goats, male and female, which he had brought from on board his own vessel
                  the same morning. We succeeded very well in our attempt to make him comprehend the
                  value of these animals, and the manner of treating them; for he promised that he
                  would never kill nor separate them, and take great care of their offspring. The
                  pinnace was now ready, and the king embarked in it, with the captains and several
                  other gentlemen, and proceeded to the royal residence at O-Parre. During this
                  passage he appeared highly contented, asked a number of questions, and seemed to
                  have entirely conquered his former fears. His enquiries chiefly concerned the
                  goats, which had attracted all his attention, and we could never tell him too
                  often what they should feed upon, and how they were to be managed. As soon as we
                  came on shore, we pointed out to him a fine spot of ground, covered with a good
                  bed of grasses, in the shade of bread-fruit trees, and desired that the goats
                  might always be kept in such places. At our landing the shore was crouded with
                  people, who expressed their joy on seeing their sovereign by loud acclamations.
                  Among them we discerned the late Tootahah's mother, a venerable grey-headed
                  matron, who, on seeing captain Cook, ran to embrace him, as the friend of her
                  deceased son, and wept aloud at the remembrance of her loss. We paid the tribute
                  of admiration due to such sensibility, which endears our fellow-creatures to us
                  wherever it is met with, and affords an undeniable proof of the original
                  excellence of the human heart.</p>

               <p>From hence we hastened away to our tents at Point Venus, where the natives carried
                  on a regular trade with vegetables of all sorts, which sold at very low rates, a
                  single bead being given for a basket of bread-fruit or a bunch of coco-nuts. My
                  father there met his friend O-Wàhow, who presented him with a great quantity of
                  fruit, some fish, some good cloth, and some mother of pearl hooks. This present
                  deserved a compensation, but the generous Taheitian absolutely refused to take any
                  thing, saying that he gave these things as a friend, and without any lucrative
                  view. It seemed as if every thing had conspired this day to give us a favourable
                  idea of the amiable nation among whom we resided.</p>

               <p>We returned on board to dinner, and passed the afternoon there in the occupations
                  of describing and drawing objects of natural history. The decks in the mean while
                  were constantly crouded with natives of both sexes, prying into every corner, and
                  stealing whenever they found an opportunity. In the evening we beheld a scene new
                  and striking to ourselves, though familiar to those who had been at Taheitee
                  before. A great number of women of the lowest class, having been previously
                  engaged by our sailors, remained on board at sun-set, after the departure of all
                  their country people to the shore. We had observed instances of the venality of
                  the Taheitian females at Aitepèha; but whatever might have been their
                  condescension towards our people in day-time, they had never ventured to pass a
                  night on board. The women of Matavai had studied the dispositions of British
                  seamen much better, and knew that they ran no risk by entrusting themselves to
                  their care; but on the contrary might make sure of every bead, nail, hatchet, or
                  shirt which their lovers could muster. This evening was therefore as completely
                  dedicated to mirth and pleasure, as if we had lain at Spithead instead of
                  O-Taheitee. Before it was perfectly dark the women assembled on the forecastle,
                  and one of them blowing a flute with the nostrils, all the rest danced a variety
                  of dances usual in their country, amongst which there were some that did not
                  exactly correspond with our ideas of decency. However, if we consider that the
                  simplicity of their education and of their dress, makes many actions perfectly
                  innocent here, which, according to our customs, would be blameable, we cannot
                  impute that degree of unbounded licentiousness to them, with which the prostitutes
                  of civilized Europe are unhappily reproached. As soon as it was dark they retired
                  below decks, and if their lovers were of such a quality as to afford them fresh
                  pork, they supped without reserve, though they had before refused to eat in the
                  presence of their own countrymen, agreeably to that incomprehensible custom which
                  separates the sexes at their meals. The quantities of pork which they could
                  consume were astonishing, and their greediness plainly indicated that they were
                  rarely if ever indulged with that delicious food in their own families. The
                  instances of sensibility in Tootahah's mother and in O-Wahow, and the favourable
                  ideas which we had from thence formed of the Taheitians were so recent in our
                  memories, that we were much hurt at the sight of these creatures, who had entirely
                  forgot the duties of life, and abandoned themselves to the brutal sway of the
                  passions. That there should exist so great a degree of immorality in a nation,
                  otherwise so happy in its simplicity, and in the fewness of its wants, is a
                  reflection very disgraceful to human nature in general, which, viewed to its
                  greatest advantage here, is nevertheless imperfect. Is it not to be lamented, that
                  the best gifts of a benevolent Creator seem to be the most liable to frequent
                  abuse, and that nothing is so easy to mankind as error?</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 28.]</date>Early the next morning O-Too, with his sister
                  Tedua-Towraï, and several relations, came along-side, and sent up a hog and a
                  large albecore into our vessel, but would not come on board. He had a similar
                  present for captain Furneaux, but refused to go to the Adventure till my father
                  went with him. The ceremony of swaddling the captain in O-Taheitee cloth was
                  performed again before his majesty ventured on board; but that being over, he
                  seemed to think himself safe amongst us, and came on the deck, where captain
                  Furneaux gave him a variety of presents. His sister Tedua-Towraï was on board the
                  Resolution in the mean while, and all the women paid her the same respect by
                  uncovering the shoulders, which the whole nation owes to the king. The active
                  youth T'-Aree Watow, who was with the king his brother, had the same honours paid
                  to him; and it appeared to us that the title Aree, though common to all the chiefs
                  of districts, and the nobility in general, was yet applied by way of excellence to
                  the persons of the royal family. O-Too soon left the Adventure, rejoined his
                  sister on board the Resolution, and was accompanied by both the captains to
                  Parre.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 29.]</date>On the 29th at day-break we landed at our tents, and
                  proceeded into the country with an intention to examine its productions. A copious
                  dew, which had fallen during night, had refreshed the whole vegetable creation,
                  and contributed, together with the early hour of the morning, to make our walk
                  extremely pleasant. We found but few natives at the tents, some of whom attended
                  us to the ford in the river, and for a bead a-piece carried us across, where it
                  was twenty yards wide, without our wetting a foot. As we entered the grove, we
                  perceived the inhabitants in their houses just getting up, and saw many of them
                  performing their customary ablution in the adjacent river of Matavaï. There can be
                  no doubt, that frequent bathing in this warm climate is extremely salutary, and
                  particularly in the morning, when the water, being fresh and cool, cannot but be
                  highly instrumental in bracing the fibres, which might otherwise become too much
                  relaxed. The cleanliness which results from this custom, is certainly one of the
                  best preservatives against putrid disorders, and has the farther advantage of
                  making these people enjoy the comforts of society in a higher degree than those
                  savages who seem to shun the water, and become indifferent to each other, and
                  loathsome to strangers by their squalid appearance, and fetid exhalations. We
                  walked on till we came to a little hut, the lowly dwelling of a poor widow with a
                  numerous family. Her eldest son, Noona, a lively boy about twelve years old, had
                  always been particularly attached to the Europeans, and being extremely quick of
                  apprehension, understood us much better at half a word, than many of his
                  countrymen with all the gestures we could invent, and after we had ransacked our
                  vocabularies. This boy, who, with a dark almost chesnut-brown colour, combined a
                  set of pleasing, good-natured features, had agreed the evening before, to become
                  our guide on this day's excursion. At our approach we found his mother, who had
                  provided a number of coco-nuts and some other provisions for us, sitting on the
                  stones before her cottage, and her children assembled about her, the youngest of
                  which was not above four years old. She seemed to be active enough, but however of
                  such an age, that we had some difficulty to believe her the mother of such young
                  children, in a country where we knew that the commerce of the sexes begins at an
                  early age. The arrival of a well-looking woman, about three or four and twenty
                  years old, who was Noona's eldest sister, soon accounted for the wrinkles on her
                  mother's brow. Instead of verifying the general observation, that women in hot
                  countries lose their sightliness much sooner than with us, we had now reason to be
                  surprised, that they should be so prolific here, as to bear children during a
                  period of almost twenty years. It was natural that our thoughts should return to
                  the happy simplicity in which the life of the Taheitians smoothly rolls along, and
                  which, undisturbed by cares and wants, is the cause of the great population of
                  their island.</p>

               <p>A stout fellow, whom we hired for a few beads, carried the provisions which the
                  hospitable old woman had offered us, suspending them in equal portions on the two
                  extremities of a strong pole, about four feet long, which he placed on his
                  shoulder. Young Noona, and his little brother Toparree, about four years old,
                  cheerfully accompanied us, after we had enriched the whole family with beads,
                  nails, looking-glasses, and knives.</p>

               <p>The first part of our march was a little difficult, on account of a hill on which
                  we mounted, in hopes of meeting with something to reward our trouble. But,
                  contrary to our expectations, we found it entirely destitute of plants, two
                  dwarfish shrubs, and a species of dry fern excepted. Here, however, we were much
                  surprised to see a large flock of wild ducks rising before us, from a spot which
                  was perfectly dry and barren, without our being able to imagine what had brought
                  them thither from the reeds and marshy banks of the river, where they commonly
                  resided. We soon crossed another hill, where all the ferns and bushes having
                  lately been burnt, blackened our clothes as we passed through them. From thence we
                  descended into a fertile valley, where a fine rivulet, which we were obliged to
                  cross several times, ran towards the sea. The natives had placed several stone
                  weirs across this rivulet, in order to raise the water, which might by that means
                  be introduced into their plantations of the tarro, or eddy-root (arum esculentum),
                  that requires a very marshy, and sometimes an inundated soil. We found two species
                  of it, one of which has large glossy leaves, and roots about four feet long, but
                  is very coarse; the other with velvet leaves and small, but more palatable roots.
                  Both are excessively pungent and caustic, till boiled in several waters; however,
                  hogs eat them raw without any reluctance. The valley became narrower as we
                  advanced up along the rivulet, and the hills which included it were much steeper,
                  and covered with forests. Every part of the level ground was, however, planted
                  with coco-nut, apple, and bread-fruit trees, with bananas, cloth-trees, and
                  various roots, and a number of houses were conveniently situated at short
                  distances from each other. In different parts we met with immense beds of loose
                  pebble-stones in the rivulet and on its banks, which seemed to have been washed
                  out of the mountains, and worn into round or oblong shapes, by the continual
                  motion and agitation of the water. On the sides of the hills we gathered several
                  new plants, sometimes at the risk of breaking our necks, on account of the pieces
                  of rock which rolled away under our feet. A great number of inhabitants assembled
                  about us, and among them several who brought us abundance of coco-nuts,
                  bread-fruit, and apples for sale. We bought as much as we thought necessary for
                  our provision, and hired some of the natives to carry it. After proceeding up
                  about five miles from the sea-side we sat down in the shade of a number of trees,
                  on a pleasant green turf, and made our meal, which consisted of the fruit we had
                  purchased, and of some pork and fish which we had taken from on board. The natives
                  formed a circle round us; but those who had been our guides and assistants were
                  permitted to sit by us, and partook of our cheer with a very good appetite. They
                  were most surprised at the salt, which we had taken care to provide, and which
                  they saw us eat with all sorts of victuals, bread-fruit not excepted. Some of them
                  were desirous of tasting it, and among these there were a few who relished it very
                  well, because they are used to employ sea-water as a sauce both to fish and to
                  pork . </p>

               <p>It was about four o'clock in the afternoon, when we thought of returning to the
                  sea-side with our acquisitions. About this time a number of inhabitants came
                  across the hills with loads of horse-plantanes, a coarse sort, which grows almost
                  without cultivation, and which they brought for sale to our ships. We followed
                  them along the side of the rivulet to a place where some children offered us a few
                  little prawns picked out between the stones in the bed of the river. We had no
                  sooner taken them as a curiosity, and rewarded the children with beads, than
                  upwards of fifty persons of different ages and sexes set about the same
                  employment, and brought us so many of these little creatures, that we were soon
                  obliged to refuse them. In the space of two hours we reached our tents on Point
                  Venus, where we found O-Wahow, the generous native who had brought my father
                  another present of provisions. In the course of this walk, we had observed more
                  idle persons than at Aitepèha; the houses and plantations appeared more ruinous
                  and neglected, and from several people instead of invitations, or marks of
                  hospitality, we only received importunate petitions for beads and nails. Still
                  upon the whole we had great reason to be contented with our reception among them,
                  and the liberty of roaming at pleasure through all parts of their delightful
                  country. We had now and then experienced their disposition to theft, but had never
                  lost any thing of value; for our handkerchiefs, which were the easiest to come at,
                  were made of their own thinner cloth, so that they found themselves disappointed
                  as often they had dextrously picked our pockets, and with great good humour
                  returned them to us. In my opinion this vice is not of so heinous a nature among
                  the Taheitians, as amongst ourselves. People whose wants are so easily satisfied,
                  and in whose manner of living there is so much equality, can have very few motives
                  to steal from each other, and their open houses without doors and bars, are so
                  many proofs of mutual safety. The blame then lies in a great measure upon us, for
                  bringing temptations in their way too powerful to be withstood. They seem indeed
                  not to think their transgressions of great signification, perhaps from a
                  reflection that they do not materially injure us by any little larceny.</p>

               <p>During our absence the captains had paid a visit to the king at Parre, where they
                  were highly entertained by the sight of a dramatic dance, which her royal highness
                  Towraï performed, in a dress exactly described in captain Cook's former voyage,
                  and with the same gestures which are there mentioned . Two men danced at different
                  intervals, when the princess rested, and, with many strange distortions, spoke or
                  sung some words, probably relative to the subject of their dance, which was
                  unintelligible to our people. The whole entertainment lasted about an hour and a
                  half, during which Tedua Towraï displayed a wonderful activity, which surpassed
                  every thing that had been seen at the isle of Ulietea in the former voyage.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 30.]</date>Early the next morning captain Cook sent lieutenant
                  Pickersgill to the south-west part of the island, in order to purchase some fresh
                  provision, and particularly some hogs, of which we had hitherto received only two
                  from the king. We continued on board the whole day, describing the plants which we
                  had found on our last excursion. In the evening, about ten o'clock, we heard a
                  great noise on shore abreast of our vessels, apparently occasioned by some of our
                  men. The captains immediately sent their boats ashore, with proper officers, who
                  brought on board several marines and a sailor. They had obtained leave to take a
                  walk from the commanding officer at the tents, but had exceeded their time, and
                  beaten one of the natives. They were immediately secured in irons, as it was of
                  the utmost consequence towards continuing upon an amicable footing with this
                  nation, to punish them in an exemplary manner. O-Too had promised to come on board
                  with his father the next morning, but this noise, of which he had received advice
                  within half an hour after it had happened, made him so justly diffident of our
                  intentions, that he sent his messenger or ambassador (Whanno no t'aree ), who was
                  one of the principal lords of his court, named E-Tee, to make an apology for his
                  non-appearance. Before he came on board, however, Dr. Sparrman went on shore with
                  me near the place where the disturbance had happened, with a view to make another
                  excursion into the interior parts of the country. O-Whaw , the old man, who had on
                  former occasions shewed his pacific disposition, met us on the beach, and spoke of
                  the offence of the last night not without expressing some displeasure; but when we
                  assured him that the offenders were in irons, and would be severely punished, he
                  seemed perfectly satisfied. As we had nobody from the vessel to assist us, we
                  desired O-Whaw to point out a native whom we might entrust with the botanizing
                  apparatus. Several people having offered their services, he chose a strong
                  well-made man, who was immediately furnished with an empty bag, for the reception
                  of plants, and with some baskets full of Taheitee apples, which we had purchased
                  on the spot. We crossed One-tree-hill, and descended into one of the first vallies
                  of O-Parre, where we were gratified with the sight of one of the most beautiful
                  trees in the world, which we called the Barringtonia. It had a great abundance of
                  flowers, larger than lilies and perfectly white, excepting the tips of their
                  numerous chives, which were of a bright crimson. Such a quantity of these flowers
                  were already dropped off, that the ground underneath the tree was intirely strewed
                  with them. The natives called the tree huddoo, and assured us that the fruit,
                  which is a large nut, when bruised, mixed up with some shell-fish, and strewed
                  into the sea, intoxicates or poisons the fish for some time, so that they come to
                  the surface of the water and suffer themselves to be taken with the hands. It is
                  singular that various maritime plants in tropical climates have such a quality;
                  the cocculi indici, in particular, are well known and used for that purpose in the
                  East-Indies. We were unwilling to defer the examination of so remarkable a plant
                  till after our return on board, and therefore retired to a neat house, built up of
                  reeds, round which several odoriferous shrubs and some very fine coco-trees were
                  planted. The owner, with that hospitality which I have already often celebrated,
                  sent a boy up one of the tallest palms to procure us some of the nuts, which he
                  performed with surprizing agility. He tied a piece of the tough rind of a banana
                  stalk to both his feet, in such a manner that they could just encompass the tree
                  on both sides, the piece of rind serving as a sort of step or rest, whilst he
                  lifted himself higher with his hands. The natural growth of the coco-palm, which
                  annually forms a kind of elevated ring on the stem, certainly facilitated the
                  boy's ascent, but the quickness and ease with which he walked up and down were
                  really admirable. We should have ill deserved this mark of kindness and attention
                  if we had not made our host a little present at parting, and rewarded the boy for
                  the pleasure which we had felt in observing his dexterity.</p>

               <p>From hence we proceeded up the valley, which having no rivulet in its middle,
                  began to rise in proportion as we advanced. We resolved therefore to go upon the
                  steep hill on our left, and with much difficulty accomplished our plan. Our
                  Taheitian friend laughed at us, when he saw us faint with fatigue, and sitting
                  down every moment to recover our breath. We heard him blow or breathe slowly but
                  very hard, with open mouth, as he walked behind us; we therefore tried the same
                  experiment, which nature had probably taught him, and found it answered much
                  better than our short panting, which always deprived us of breath. At last we
                  reached the ridge of the hill, where a fine breeze greatly refreshed us, after our
                  fatiguing ascent. When we had walked upwards along that ridge for some time,
                  exposed to the burning rage of the sun, reverberated from all parts of the barren
                  soil, we sat down under the scanty shade of a solitary pandang, or palm-nut tree ,
                  which was at this time acceptable even to our friendly native. The prospect from
                  hence was delightful; the reef which surrounded O-Taheiotee, the bay with the
                  ships, and numerous canoes, and the whole plain of Matavaï with its beautiful
                  objects, lay as it were under our feet, while the meridian sun threw a steady and
                  calm light on the whole landscape. At the distance of about six leagues, the low
                  island called Tedhuroa, appeared before us, forming a little circular ledge of
                  rocks, covered with a few palms; and far beyond it the immense ocean bounded the
                  view. The Taheitian who was with us, pointed out the direction of all the
                  neighbouring islands which were not in sight at present, and informed us of their
                  produce, whether they were high or low, inhabited or only occasionally visited.
                  Tedhuroa, which we saw was of the last sort, and two canoes with their sails set,
                  were at that time returning from thence, where our guide informed us they often
                  went to catch fish in the lagoon. Having rested a little while, we advanced up
                  towards the interior mountains, which now appeared distinctly before us. The rich
                  groves which crowned their summits, and filled the vallies between them, invited
                  us to advance, and promised to reward our preseverance with a load of new
                  productions. But we soon perceived a number of barren hills and vallies which lay
                  between us and those desireable forests, and found it was in vain to attempt to
                  reach them this day. We consulted amongst ourselves, whether we should venture to
                  pass a night on these hills, but this was unadviseable, on account of the
                  uncertainty of the time when our ships were to sail, and likewise impracticable
                  for want of provisions. - Our Taheitian told us, we should meet with no
                  inhabitants, dwelling, or provisions on the mountains, and pointed out a narrow
                  path which led down the steep side of the hill into the valley of Matavaï. We
                  began to descent therefore, but found it more dangerous than when we came up: we
                  stumbled every moment, and in many places were obliged to slide down on our backs.
                  Our shoes were rather a disadvantage to us, being made extremely slippery by the
                  dry grasses over which we had walked, while the native with his bare feet was
                  surprisingly surefooted. In a short time we gave him our fowling-pieces, to enable
                  us to make use of our hands, and at last we resumed them again, and letting him go
                  before, leaned on his arm in the most difficult places. When we were about
                  half-way down, he hallooed very loud to some people whom he saw in the valley; but
                  we did not believe at that time that they had heard him, especially because he
                  received no answer. However, presently after we observed several people coming up
                  towards us, who ascended very fast, so as to meet us in about half an hour. They
                  brought us three fresh coco-nuts, which, whether they were really excellent in
                  their kind, or whether our great fatigue recommended them to our taste, we looked
                  upon as the best we had ever emptied. The natives bid us rest a while, and told us
                  that a little farther down they had left a number of coco-nuts, which they would
                  not bring up lest we should drink too hastily at first. Their precaution was very
                  laudable, but our thirst made us very impatient till they would permit us to move
                  forward. At last we set out, and coming on a more level ground, entered a
                  delicious little shrubbery, where we sat down in the fresh grass, and indulged
                  with the cool nectar which our friends had provided. This draught enabled us to
                  come down into the valley, where we were presently surrounded by a croud of the
                  natives, and prepared to return with them over the plain to the sea-side; when a
                  well-looking man, accompanied by his daughter, a young girl about sixteen, invited
                  us to his house, which lay farther up, where he wished to entertain us with a
                  dinner. Though we were much exhausted with fatigue, we agreed not to disappoint
                  him, and returned about two miles along the delightful banks of the river Matavai,
                  through groves of coco, bread-fruit, apple, and cloth-trees, and numerous
                  plantations of bananas and eddoes. The river formed various windings in the valley
                  from side to side, so that we were obliged to cross it several times, and our new
                  host with one of his servants always insisted upon carrying us over on their
                  backs. At last we arrived at his house, which was situated on a little eminence,
                  where the river gently murmured over a bed of pebbles. An elegant mat was spread
                  for us on the dry grass in a corner of the house, which was of the closer sort,
                  being walled in with reeds. We were immediately surrounded by a great number of
                  our friend's relations, who seated themselves near us; and his daughter, who in
                  elegance of form, clearness of complexion, and agreeable features, equalled, if
                  not surpassed the Taheitian beauties we had hitherto seen, together with some of
                  her young companions, were very assiduous in their endeavours to be agreeable. The
                  most efficacious remedy they employed besides their smiles, to recover us from the
                  great weariness which we felt, was to chafe our arms and legs with their hands,
                  squeezing the muscles gently between the fingers and the palm. Whether this
                  operation facilitated the circulation of the blood through the minuter vessels, or
                  restored the over-strained muscles to their natural elasticity, I cannot
                  determine; but its effect was certainly so salutary, that our strength was
                  perfectly restored, and we did not feel the least remaining inconvenience from the
                  fatiguing journey of the day. Captain Wallis mentions a similar instance of the
                  excellence of this remedy, and of the beneficence of the inhabitants of Taheitee ;
                  and Osbeck, in his voyage to China, describes this operation as a common practice
                  among Chinese barbers, who are said to be very expert at it . Mr. Grose too, in
                  his voyage to the East Indies, gives a very circumstantial account of the art of
                  champing, which seems to be a luxurious refinement upon this wholesome
                  restorative. It deserves to be mentioned here, that this ingenious author has
                  given quotations from Martial and Seneca, which make it evident that the Romans
                  were acquainted with this practice . </p>

               <p>We had no longer reason to complain of the want of appetite which had been the
                  consequence of our fatigue; but as soon as our dinner was placed before us,
                  consisting of vegetable food, suitable to the frugal simplicity of the natives, we
                  partook of it very heartily, and soon found ourselves in as good spirits as we had
                  set out with in the morning. We passed about two hours with this hospitable
                  family, and during that time distributed the greatest part of the beads, nails,
                  and knives which we had brought from the ship to our generous host, to his fair
                  daughter, and her companions, whose care had restored our strength much sooner
                  than we had a right to expect after so laborious an expedition. About three
                  o'clock we set out on our return, and walked past numerous dwellings, whose
                  inhabitants enjoyed the beauty of the afternoon in various parties, under the
                  shade of their fruit-trees. In one of these houses we observed a man at work, in
                  preparing a red dye, for some cloth made of the bark of the paper-mulberry, which
                  we commonly called the cloth-tree. Upon enquiring for the materials which he made
                  use of, we found to our great surprize that the yellow juice of a small species of
                  fig, which they call mattee, and the greenish juice of a sort of fern, or
                  bind-weed, or of several other plants, by being simply mixed together, formed a
                  bright crimson, which the women rubbed with their hands if the whole piece was to
                  be uniformly of the same colour, or in which they dipped a bamboo reed, if it was
                  to be marked or sprinkled in different patterns. This colour fades very soon and
                  becomes of a dirty red, besides being liable to be spoiled by rain and other
                  accidents; the cloth, however, which is dyed or rather stained with it, is highly
                  valued by the Taheitians, and only worn by their principal people. We bought
                  several pieces of cloth of different kinds for beads and small nails, and then
                  walked on till we arrived at the tents, which stood at least five miles from the
                  place where we had dined. Here we discharged our trusty friend whom O-Whaw had
                  recommended, and who had behaved with a degree of attachment and fidelity to us,
                  which from the thievish character of the nation we had no room to expect. This
                  behaviour was the more meritorious as our situation frequently had afforded him
                  excellent opportunities of running off with all our nails and knives, and with one
                  of our fowling-pieces; temptations which required an uncommon degree of honesty to
                  withstand. We next embarked in one of the canoes which plied between the ships and
                  the shore, and for a couple of beads were safely brought on board. Here we found
                  the captain and my father just returned from a long excursion to the westward.
                  E-Tee, the king's ambassador, who arrived on board immediately after our
                  departure, had brought a present of a hog and some fruit, but acquainted the
                  captain that O-Too was matòw, a term which at once expressed that he was afraid
                  and displeased. To convince him that the outrages of last night were not approved
                  of, the offenders were brought to the gangway, and received a dozen of lashes in
                  his presence, to the great terror of all the Taheitians on board. Captain Cook
                  then ordering three wether-sheep from the Cape, which were all we had left, to be
                  put in his boat, embarked with captain Furneaux and my father, in order to regain
                  the confidence of O-Too, without which he knew that no provisions were to be
                  bought in the country. When they arrived at Parre, they were told that he was gone
                  to the westward; accordingly they went after him, about four or five miles
                  farther, and landing in a district called Tittahàh, waited several hours for him
                  there; his fears having been so strong, as actually to make him remove about nine
                  miles farther from us than usual. There was something in this conduct seemingly
                  too much allied to cowardise; but we should likewise consider, that the power of
                  Europeans had formerly been displayed here in the terrific shape of destruction.
                  It was three o'clock in the afternoon before he arrived with his mother; he
                  expressing the most manifest signs of fear and distrust, and she with her eyes
                  swimming in tears. The report of E-Tee, the present of a new kind of animals, and
                  all possible assurances of friendship on the part of our people, succeeded to
                  quiet their apprehensions. At the king's desire, the bagpiper was ordered to play
                  before him, and his performance produced an effect similar to that of David's
                  harp, whose harmonious sounds soothed the atrabilarious temper of Saul. He sent
                  for a hog, which was presented to captain Cook; and soon after for another, which
                  he gave to captain Furneaux. The captains believing this to be the last
                  opportunity of obtaining presents from him, desired that a third might be brought
                  for Matarra (my father's Taheitian name). A little pig was given him, at which our
                  people expressed some dislike; upon this, one of the king's relations, in the
                  ascending line, who are all styled Medooa (Father), stepped forward from the
                  throng, and spoke very loud, with many violent gestures, to O-Too, pointing at our
                  people, at the sheep they had presented, and at the little pig which they had
                  received. As soon as his speech was finished, the pig was taken back again, and
                  after a short interval a large hog brought in its stead. Our people then produced
                  their iron wares and a variety of trinkets, which they distributed very freely;
                  and in return were wrapped up in several ahòws, or pieces of Indian cloth. They
                  then took their leave of the whole court, and returned to their vessels about five
                  o'clock.</p>

               <p><date>[1773. September.][Wednesday 1.]</date>Preparations were made for sailing
                  from this island the next morning, whilst the natives crouded about us with fish,
                  shells, fruit, and cloth, of which we purchased all that was to be had. Lieutenant
                  Pickersgill returned from his excursion to the westward about three in the
                  afternoon. He had advanced beyond the fertile plains of Paparra, where O-Ammo ,
                  who had once been the king of all Taheitee, resided with his son the young T'-Aree
                  Derre . He took up his first night's lodging on the borders of a small district,
                  which was now the property of the famous queen O-Poorea ( Oberea ). As soon as she
                  heard of his arrival she hastened to him, and met her old acquaintance with
                  repeated marks of friendship. She had separated from her husband some time after
                  the departure of captain Wallis, and was now entirely deprived of that greatness
                  which had once rendered her conspicuous in story, and august in the eyes of
                  Europeans . The civil wars between the two peninsulas of the island had stripped
                  her, as well as the whole district of Paparra, of the greatest part of her wealth,
                  so that she complained to the lieutenant that she was poor, (teètee), and had not
                  a hog to give her friends. The next morning therefore they left her, and in their
                  return touched at Paparra, where they saw Ammo, who, after parting with O-Poorea,
                  had taken one of the handsomest young women of the country to his bed, and
                  appeared to be aged and indolent. His fair one gave a hog to our people, and, with
                  some of her female attendants, stepped into the boat at their departure, and went
                  the whole day with them, her own canoe attending to take her back again. On this
                  excursion she expressed a great degree of curiosity, which seemed never to have
                  been gratified before by the sight of Europeans, insomuch that she was doubtful
                  whether they were formed at all points like her own country-men, till her eyes
                  removed every doubt. With her they landed at Attahooroo, where a chief named
                  Potatow received them very cordially, and entertained them at his own house during
                  the second night. He too had parted with his wife Polatehèra, and taken a younger
                  to his bed, while the lady had provided herself with a lover or a husband, and
                  they all continued to live very peaceably in the same family. The next morning at
                  parting Potatow promised to accompany Mr. Pickersgill to Matavaï, in order to
                  visit captain Cook, provided he might be sure of good treatment. Mr. Pickersgill
                  assured him of the best reception; but the chief, for greater safety, produced a
                  few small yellow feathers, tied together into a little tuft, which he desired Mr.
                  Pickersgill to hold, whilst he repeated his promise, " that Toòte (captain Cook)
                  would be the friend of Potatow." This done, he carefully wrapped the feathers into
                  a bit of Indian cloth, and put it in his turban. We knew, from former accounts,
                  that red and yellow feathers were employed by the inhabitants of this island to
                  fix their attention while they prayed to the Deity; but this ceremony conveyed an
                  idea of a solemn affirmation or oath, which was quite new to us. Potatow was so
                  well satisfied of the integrity of his friends, after this ceremony, that he and
                  his wives, and several of their attendants, carrying with them two hogs and
                  abundance of cloth, marched towards the boat, amidst an immense croud of people.
                  He was, however, no sooner arrived at the water's side, than the whole multitude
                  eagerly pressed him not to venture amongst our people, and clinging to his feet
                  endeavoured to hold him back; several women, with a flood of tears, repeatedly
                  cried aloud that Toote would kill him as soon as he came on board; and an old man,
                  who, by living at the chief's own house, seemed to be a faithful servant to the
                  family, drew him back by the skirts of his garment. Potatow was moved; for a
                  moment he expressed some marks of diffidence; but instantly arming himself with
                  all the resolution he was master of, he thrust the old man aside, exclaiming "
                  Toote aipa matte te tayo" , (Cook will not kill his friends!) and stepped into the
                  boat with an air of undaunted majesty, that struck our Britons with astonishment.
                  As soon as he was on board the ship, he descended into the cabin, accompanied by
                  his wife Whainee-òw , his former wife, and her friend, and brought his presents to
                  captain Cook. Potatow was one of the tallest men we had seen upon the island, and
                  his features were so mild, comely, and at the same time majestic, that Mr. Hodges
                  immediately applied himself to copy from them, as from the noblest models of
                  nature. His portrait is inserted in captain Cook's own account of this voyage. His
                  whole body was remarkably strong and heavily built, so that one of his thighs
                  nearly equalled in girth our stoutest sailor's waist. His ample garments, and his
                  elegant white turban, set off his figure to the greatest advantage, and his noble
                  deportment endeared him to us, as we naturally compared it with the diffidence of
                  O-Too. Polatehera, his former wife, was so like him in stature and bulk, that we
                  unanimously looked upon her as the most extraordinary woman we had ever seen. Her
                  appearance and her conduct were masculine in the highest degree, and strongly
                  conveyed the idea of superiority and command. When the Endeavour bark lay here,
                  she had distinguished herself by the name of captain Cook's sister, (tuaheine no
                  Toote); and one day, being denied admittance into the fort on Point Venus, had
                  knocked down the sentry who opposed her, and complained to her adopted brother of
                  the indignity which had been offered to her. After a short stay, being told that
                  we intended to get under way immediately, they asked, with every demonstration of
                  friendship and with tears in their eyes, whether we intended to return. Captain
                  Cook promised to be here again in the space of seven months, with which they
                  rested perfectly satisfied, and departed immediately to the westward, their own
                  canoes having followed our boat all the way.</p>

               <p>In the mean while a young Taheitian, of the common class, who was very well made,
                  and about seventeen years old, having talked to the captain of going no te whennua
                  tei Bretane, (to the land of Britain), for several days past, had arrived on board
                  with his father. His whole equipment consisted of a small piece of the Indian
                  cloth wrapped about his loins; so entirely did he depend upon our care and
                  protection. Captain Cook gave his father, who seemed to be a middle aged man, a
                  hatchet and some presents of lesser value, with which he descended into his canoe
                  with great composure and firmness, without manifesting any signs of grief. We had
                  scarce cleared the reefs, when a canoe arrived with two or three natives, who
                  demanded the youth back in the name of O-Too, and shewed some pieces of cloth
                  which they intended as presents to the captain: but as they could not produce the
                  iron-work which he had bestowed on the poor fellow's account, they were obliged to
                  return without him. The youth, whose name was Porèa , spoke to them, but would not
                  leave us, though, to terrify him, we understood that they presaged his death
                  amongst us. However, when they were at some distance, he looked wishfully after
                  them, leaned over the railing on the quarter-deck, and shed a flood of tears in an
                  agony of grief. To divert him from his gloomy mood, we took him into the cabin,
                  where he complained that he must surely die, and that his father would weep for
                  his loss. Captain Cook and my father comforted him, saying they would be his
                  fathers, upon which he hugged and kissed them, and passed from the extreme of
                  despondence by a quick transition to a great degree of chearfulness. About sun-set
                  he ate his supper, and lay down on the floor of the cabin; but seeing that we did
                  not follow his example, he got up again, and remained with us till we had
                  supped.</p>

               <p>It was with great regret that we daparted from this delightful island, at a time
                  when we were just become acquainted with its happy inhabitants. We had only passed
                  fourteen days on its coast, two of which had been spent in removing from one port
                  to the other. During this short space of time, we had lived in a continual round
                  of tumultuous occupations, which had left us little leisure to study the nature of
                  the people. An immense variety of objects relative to their œconomy, their customs
                  and ceremonies, all which appeared new and interesting to us, had engaged our
                  attention; but we afterwards found most of them had been observed by former
                  navigators. These therefore, for fear of presuming too far on the indulgence of my
                  readers, I have omitted in this narrative, and refer for the particular
                  descriptions of the dwellings, dress, food, domestic amusements, boats and
                  navigation, diseases, religion, and funeral rites, wars, weapons, and government,
                  to the history of captain Cook's voyage in the Endeavour bark, compiled by Dr.
                  Hawkesworth (vol. II. from page 184 to page 248). All the merit of the preceding
                  pages concerning the isle of Taheitee, must therefore consist in a few gleanings
                  and elucidations on several subjects. However, I am in hopes that the particular
                  point of view in which I have beheld, and consequently represented circumstances
                  already familiar to the reader from former accounts, will not prove uninteresting,
                  and may in several instances suggest new and valuable reflections.</p>

               <p>The breeze with which we sailed was so moderate, that we continued near the shore
                  the whole evening, and were able to distinguish the exuberant scenery of the
                  plain, beautiful enough, even at this dead season of winter, to vie with the
                  richest landscapes, which nature has lavished on different parts of the globe. Its
                  fertile soil, and genial climate, which produces all sorts of nutritive vegetables
                  almost spontaneously, insures the felicity of its inhabitants. Allowing for the
                  imperfect state of sublunary happiness, which is comparative at best, there are
                  not, I believe, many nations existing whose situation is so desirable. Where the
                  means of subsistence are so easy, and the wants of the people so few, it is
                  natural that the great purpose of human life, that of multiplying the number of
                  rational beings, is not loaded with that multitude of miseries which are attendant
                  upon the married state in civilized countries. The impulses of nature are
                  therefore followed without restraint, and the consequence is a great population,
                  in proportion to the small part of the island which is cultivated. The plains and
                  narrow vallies are now the only inhabited parts, though many of the hills are very
                  fit for culture, and capable of supporting an infinite number of people. Perhaps,
                  in course of time, if the population should encrease considerably, the natives may
                  have recourse to these parts, which are now in a manner useless and superfluous.
                  The evident distinction of ranks which subsists at Taheitee, does not so
                  materially affect the felicity of the nation, as we might have supposed. Under one
                  general sovereign, the people are distinguished into the classes of aree,
                  manahoùna, and towtow, which bear some distant relation to those of the feudal
                  systems of Europe. The simplicity of their whole life contributes to soften these
                  distinctions, and to reduce them to a level. Where the climate and the custom of
                  the country do not absolutely require a perfect garment; where it is easy at every
                  step to gather as many plants as form not only a decent, but likewise a customary
                  covering; and where all the necessaries of life are within the reach of every
                  individual, at the expence of a trifling labour, ambition and envy must in a
                  greater measure be unknown. It is true, the higher classes of people possess some
                  dainty articles, such as pork, fish, fowl, and cloth almost exclusively; but the
                  desire of indulging the appetite in a few trifling luxuries, can at most render
                  individuals, and not whole nations, unhappy. Absolute want occasions the miseries
                  of the lower class in some civilized states, and is the result of the unbounded
                  voluptuousness of their superiors. At O-Taheitee there is not, in general, that
                  disparity between the highest and the meanest man, which subsists in England
                  between a reputable tradesman and a labourer. The affection of the Taheitians for
                  their chiefs, which they never failed to express upon all occasions, gave us great
                  room to suppose that they consider themselves as one family, and respect their
                  eldest-born in the persons of their chiefs. Perhaps the origin of their government
                  was patriarchal, and the king might only be dignified by virtue of being
                  considered as the father of his people, till by degrees the constitutions settled
                  into its present form. Still there remains much ancient simplicity in that
                  familiarity between the sovereign and the subject. The lowest man in the nation
                  speaks as freely with his king as with his equal, and has the pleasure of seeing
                  him as often as he likes. This intercourse would become more difficult as soon as
                  despotism should begin to gain ground. The king at times amuses himself with the
                  occupations of his subjects, and not yet depraved by the false notions of an empty
                  state, often paddles his own canoe, without thinking such an employment derogatory
                  to his dignity. How long such an happy equality may last, is uncertain; since the
                  indolence of the chiefs is already, notwithstanding the exuberant fertility of the
                  soil, a step towards its destruction. Though cultivation is a labour scarce felt
                  at present by the towtows, to whom it is allotted; yet by insensible degrees it
                  will fall heavier upon them, as the number of chiefs must naturally increase in a
                  much greater proportion, than their own class, for this obvious reason, because
                  the chiefs are perfectly unemployed. This addition of labour will have a bad
                  effect on their bodies, they will grow ill-shaped, and their bones become
                  marrowless: their greater exposure to the action of a vertical sun, will blacken
                  their skins, and they will dwindle away to dwarfs, by the more frequent
                  prostitution of their infant daughters, to the voluptuous pleasures of the great.
                  That pampered race, on the contrary, will preserve all the advantages of an
                  extraordinary size, of a superior elegance of form and features, and of a purer
                  colour, by indulging a voracious appetite, and living in absolute idleness. At
                  last the common people will perceive these grievances, and the causes which
                  produced them; and a proper sense of the general rights of mankind awaking in
                  them, will bring on a revolution. This is the natural circle of human affairs; at
                  present there is fortunately no room to suppose, that such a change will take
                  place for a long series of years to come; but how much the introduction of foreign
                  luxuries may hasten that fatal period, cannot be too frequently repeated to
                  Europeans. If the knowledge of a few individuals can only be acquired at such a
                  price as the happiness of nations, it were better for the discoverers, and the
                  discovered, that the South Sea had still remained unknown to Europe and its
                  restless inhabitants.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. X.</l>

                  <l>Account of our Transactions at the Society Islands.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. September.]</date>THE wind with which we sailed from O-Taheitee,
                  freshened after sun-set, and favoured our departure from that happy island, which
                  we still discerned by moonlight.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 2.]</date>The next day, at eleven o'clock, we saw the isle of
                  Huahine, which is about twenty-five leagues from Taheitee, and was first
                  discovered by captain Cook, on the 11th of July, 1769. A number of our people now
                  felt the effects of their intercourse with the women at Matavaï Bay, and had
                  symptoms of a disagreeable complaint. All the patients, however, without
                  exception, had this disease only in a very slight and benign degree. The question
                  which has been agitated between the French and English navigators, concerning the
                  first introduction of this evil to Taheitee, might be decided very favourably for
                  them both, by supposing the disease to have existed at Taheitee previous to their
                  arrival. The argument, that none of captain Wallis's people received the
                  infection, does not seem to controvert this supposition, but only proves, that the
                  women, who prostituted themselves to his crew, were free from it: which was
                  perhaps owing to a precaution of the natives, who might be apprehensive of
                  exposing themselves to the anger of the strangers, by conferring such a desperate
                  gift upon them . We heard, however, of another disease of a different nature,
                  whilst we staid upon the island; and which they called o-pay-no-Peppe, (the sore
                  of Peppe), adding, that it was brought by the ship which they designed by that
                  name, and which, according to different accounts, had either been two, three, or
                  five months before us at Taheitee. By the account of the symptoms, it seemed to be
                  a kind of leprosy. Nothing is more easy than to imagine, how the strangers
                  (Spaniards), who visited Taheitee in that ship, might be innocently charged with
                  introducing that disease. In order to give rise to a general error of this sort,
                  it is sufficient that it broke out nearly about the time of their arrival, and
                  that some distant connections between them and the persons affected, could be
                  traced. This is the more probably, as it is certain, that there are several sorts
                  of leperous complaints existing among the inhabitants, such as the elephantiasis,
                  which resembles the yaws; also an eruption of the whole skin, and lastly a
                  monstrous rotting ulcer, of a most loathsome appearance. However, all these very
                  seldom occur, and especially the last; for the excellence of their climate, and
                  the simplicity of their vegetable food, which cannot be too much extolled, prevent
                  not only these, but almost all dangerous and deadly disorders.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 3.]</date>Towards sun-set we brought to within two leagues of
                  Huahine; and the next day, at four o'clock, doubled the north end of that island,
                  and then bore up for the harbour of O-Wharre. Huahine is divided by a deep inlet
                  into two peninsulas, connected by an isthmus entirely overflowed at high-water.
                  Its hills are much inferior to those of Taheitee in height, but their appearance
                  strongly indicated them as the former seats of a volcano. The summit of one of
                  them had much the appearance of a crater, and a blackish spungy rock was seen on
                  one of its sides, which seemed to be lava. At sun-rise we beheld some of the other
                  Society Isles, called O-Raietea (Ulietea), O-Taha, and Borabora (Bolabola. The
                  last forms a peak like Maâtea, but infinitely higher and more considerable, on the
                  top of which there appeared also the crater of a volcano. There are two entrances
                  to O-Wharre harbour; of these we chose the southermost, and having a very steady
                  breeze off shore, our navigators tried their skill in working in. The entrance
                  might be about three or four hundred yards long, and barely a hundred yards wide
                  between two reefs. However in this space we made six or seven trips with amazing
                  dexterity, each trip lasting about two or three minutes. We had not yet worked in,
                  when the Adventure came in after us, but unfortunately approached too near one of
                  the reefs, just as she was putting about, and leaned on the side of the coral
                  rock. We were for the present intent only in saving our own ship for fear of the
                  worst that might happen, and soon after came to an anchor. As soon as that was
                  done, our boats were dispatched to the assistance of our consort, and she was
                  towed into the harbour. Her bottom being examined, it was found that she had
                  suffered no damage, which was likewise the case with the Resolution, when she
                  struck on the coast of Tiarraboo.</p>

               <p>The appearance of the country was exactly the same here as at Taheitee, but upon a
                  much smaller scale; the circumference of the whole isle being only about seven or
                  eight leagues. The plains are therefore very inconsiderable, and there are hardly
                  any intermediate hills between them and the higher mountains, which take their
                  rise immediately from the skirts of the plain. The country, however, contained a
                  variety of pleasant little spots. Not a single canoe came off to us here beyond
                  the reefs, but we had not been long at anchor before a few of them arrived loaded
                  with coco-nuts, bread-fruit, and large fowls. We were very glad to meet with these
                  birds, having obtained only a single pair at Taheitee, where they had been
                  entirely swept away by former navigators. Amongst the natives who came on board,
                  there was one who had a monstrous rupture or hernia, which did not seem to
                  incumber him much, as he came up the sides of the ship with great agility. The
                  natives spoke the same language, had the same features, and wore the same cloth,
                  made of bark, as those of Taheitee; but none of their women appeared. They
                  bartered very fairly for our beads and nails, and in a little time had sold us a
                  dozen of very large cocks, of a beautiful plumage; but it may be remarked, that
                  they seldom brought the hens for sale. Towards eleven o'clock the captains went on
                  shore to a large shed, of which the sides reached to the ground, and which gave
                  shelter to a double canoe. Here they appointed a person to trade with the natives,
                  which they did so regularly that we collected upwards of twenty hogs this day for
                  large spike nails or small hatchets, and about a dozen of dogs, which seemed to be
                  the most stupid animals of their kind, but were reckoned excellent provision by
                  the natives. During our first walk we found two plants which we had not seen
                  before; and we took notice that all the bread-trees in that part had already young
                  fruit, of the size of small apples, which, as the natives said, would not be ripe
                  in less than four months. The district where we landed seemed to be entirely
                  destitute of bananas; the natives, however, brought us some bunches of this fruit
                  from other parts, which proves that they have the art of managing some of their
                  plantations so as to produce at different seasons; but these late crops are, as
                  may be easily conceived, very trifling in quantity, and reserved for the luxury of
                  their chiefs.</p>

               <p>We returned on board to dinner, and afterwards made another excursion on shore,
                  where we were told, that the chiefs of the island would make their appearance the
                  next day. We were not much incommoded by the inhabitants on our rambles, our train
                  seldom exceeding fifteen or twenty, except near a place of general resort, such as
                  the shed where our trade was carried on. The smallness of the island might be the
                  principal cause of the difference from what we had experienced at Taheitee; but it
                  must be added, that the natives here were not well enough acquainted with our
                  disposition to expect to reap any advantage from following us; and did not, upon
                  the whole, express that degree of curiosity, nor of fear, which was inherent in
                  the Taheitians, who had had sufficient cause to dread the superior power of our
                  fire-arms.</p>

               <p>Our Taheitian friend Porea went ashore with us in a linen frock and a pair of
                  trowsers, and carried captain Cook's powder-horn and shot-pouch. He told us that
                  he was desirous to be looked upon as one of our people, and therefore never spoke
                  the Taheitian language, but continued to mutter some unintelligible sounds, which
                  actually imposed upon the multitude. To favour the illusion, he would no longer
                  hearken to his Taheitian name Porea, but desired to have an English one; the
                  sailors immediately called him Tom, with which he was extremely well pleased, and
                  soon learnt the usual answer of Sir, which he expressed Yorro. What aim he
                  proposed to himself in assuming this disguise, we could not conceive, unless it
                  was, that he expected to have greater consequence in the character of an English
                  sailor, than that of a Taheitian towtow.</p>

               <p>The next day my father accompanied the captains to the trading-place, and from
                  thence to the north part of the harbour, where they found the acting chief, Oree,
                  who was the uncle of the present king Territarea (perhaps T'-Aree-Tarea). They put
                  ashore near a house on the waterside, where Oree was seated amidst a number of his
                  attendants. Two of the natives who were in the boat, seeing our gentlemen
                  preparing to land, desired them to sit still a while, till they had brought some
                  plantane-stems, in sign of peace and friendship. They presented two of these to
                  our people, and desired them to ornament them with large nails, looking-glasses,
                  medals, &amp;c. This request being complied with, the stems thus loaded were
                  brought on shore and presented, whilst they bid our people pronounce to the first
                  no t'Eatua, " for the Divinity," and to the second, na te tayo O-Toote no Oree, "
                  from the friend, Cook, to Oree." This done, our people received in their turn five
                  plantane-stalks successively under the following denominations.</p>

               <p>1. The first, accompanied with a pig, no t'Aree " from the king," (meaning
                  T'aree-tarea who was a boy about seven or eight years old).</p>

               <p>2. The second, with another pig, no t'Eatua, " for the divinity." </p>

               <p>3. The third, no te Toimoe. This term was entirely unintelligible to our people at
                  that time, but it appeared from subsequent explanations, to signify " a welcome." </p>

               <p>4. The fourth with a dog, no te Toura, " from the rope." Here, though the words
                  were understood, the meaning was, if possible, more obscure than in the preceding
                  article, and what is worse, we could never obtain any light upon the subject.</p>

               <p>5. The last with a pig, na te tayo O-Oree no Toote, " from the friend Oree to
                  Cook." </p>

               <p>To conclude this ceremony, the same man who brought all these things, likewise
                  presented a red bag, containing a piece of pewter with this inscription, " His
                  Britannic Majesty's ship, Endeavour. Lieutenant Cook commander, 16th of July 1769.
                  Huahine," together with a counter . This testimony of captain Cook's first visit
                  to the island of Huahine, which he had left to Oree with an injunction never to
                  part with it, was probably laid before him at present, to shew that his directions
                  had been strictly adhered to. As soon as he had received it, he stepped ashore
                  with all his company, and embraced Oree, who was an old man between fifty and
                  sixty, thin, and very blear-eyed. He received our people very cordially as known
                  friends, and presented several large bales of cloth to the captain; after which
                  the inhabitants flocked in great numbers to his house, with abundance of fowls,
                  hogs, and dogs, which they eagerly sold for the trifling consideration of nails,
                  knives, and small hatchets.</p>

               <p>In the mean while Dr. Sparrman and myself, after landing at the trading-place,
                  proceeded to Oree's house by land. On this walk we saw great numbers of hogs,
                  dogs, and fowls. The last roamed about at pleasure through the woods, and roosted
                  on fruit-trees; the hogs were likewise allowed to run about, but received regular
                  portions of food, which were commonly distributed by old women. We observed one of
                  them in particular, feeding a little pig with the sour fermented bread-fruit
                  paste, called mahei; she held the pig with one hand, and offered it a tough pork's
                  skin, but as soon as it opened the mouth to snap at it, she contrived to throw a
                  handful of the sour paste in, which the little animal would not take without this
                  stratagem. The dogs in spite of their stupidity, were in high favour with all the
                  women, who could not have nursed them with a more ridiculous affection, if they
                  had really been ladies of fashion in Europe. We were witnesses of a remarkable
                  instance of kindness, when we saw a middle aged woman, whose breasts were full of
                  milk, offering them to a little puppy which had been trained up to suck them. We
                  were so much surprised at this sight, that we could not help expressing our
                  dislike of it; but she smiled at our observation, and added, that she suffered
                  little pigs to do the same service. Upon enquiry however, we found that she had
                  lost her child, and did her the justice amongst ourselves to acknowledge that this
                  expedient was very innocent and formerly practised in Europe . The dogs of all
                  these islands were short, and their sizes vary from that of a lap-dog to the
                  largest spaniel. Their head is broad, the snout pointed, the eyes very small, the
                  ears upright, and their hair rather long, lank, hard, and of different colours,
                  but most commonly white and brown. They seldom if ever barked, but howled
                  sometimes, and were shy of strangers to a degree of aversion.</p>

               <p>We met with some of the birds here, which we had already seen at Taheitee and also
                  a blue white-bellied king's-fisher, and a greyish heron. We shot some of each
                  sort, but found a number of people among the croud, who annexed an idea of
                  holiness to these birds, and called them eatooas, which is the same name by which
                  they design God. There were however at all times, at least an equal, if not
                  greater number of people who desired us to shoot them, and were very ready to
                  point them out. Neither did any of them express a mark of disapprobation after we
                  had killed the birds. It is certain that they do not look upon them as divinities,
                  because these according to their ideas are invisible; but the name of eatooa which
                  they bestow on them, seems to convey an idea of a much greater veneration, than
                  that which protects swallows and other birds in England, against the mischievous
                  pursuit of unlucky boys. Here and in many other circumstances relative to civil,
                  political, and religious institutions, we are entirely at a loss; and on account
                  of our short continuance among these islanders, as well as for want of knowing
                  their language, could never obtain any satisfactory information.</p>

               <p>With the acquisitions which we had made, we continued our excursion to the
                  northern arm of the harbour, where Mr. Smith, one of our mates, superintended the
                  waterers. We found a number of natives assembled about him, who brought so many
                  hogs for sale, that we were plentifully supplied with fresh meat, and could serve
                  it every day to both ships companies. Vegetables on the other hand were so scarce
                  here, that we rarely got plantanes, bread-fruit, and coco-nuts, but contented
                  ourselves with some good yams, which when boiled supplied the place of bread.
                  Towards noon we reached Oree's house, after walking along a beach of small white
                  shell sand, amidst a low kind of coco-palms, affording a good deal of shade, which
                  is always acceptable in these climates. Captain Cook had been more successful in
                  trading than all the other parties, so that when we returned into the boat, we had
                  scarce room enough to fit in it. In the afternoon we returned to Oree's house,
                  where we found him surrounded by a great number of the principal people of the
                  island. They appeared to be so exactly like the Taheitians, that we could perceive
                  no difference, nor could we by any means verify that assertion of former
                  navigators, that the women of this island were in general fairer and more handsome
                  ; but this may vary according to circumstances. They were however not so
                  troublesome in begging for beads and other presents, nor so forward to bestow
                  their favours on the new comers, though at our landing and putting off, some of
                  the common sort frequently performed an indecent ceremony, which is described in
                  the accounts of former voyagers, but without any of the preparatory circumstances
                  which Ooratooa had practised . We had likewise much less reason to extol the
                  hospitality of the inhabitants, their general behaviour being rather more
                  indifferent, and the Taheitian custom of reciprocal presents almost entirely
                  unknown. On our walks we were unmolested, but their conduct was bolder and more
                  unconcerned than that of the Taheitians, and the explosion, as well as the effects
                  of our fowling-pieces did not strike them with fear and astonishment. These
                  differences were certainly owing to the various treatment which the people of both
                  islands had met with on the part of Europeans. There were, however, not wanting
                  instances of hospitality and good-will even here. A chief, named Townùa, entreated
                  my father to come to his house, which lay in the interior part of the plain. He
                  accepted the invitation, and was very well entertained; besides having an
                  opportunity of purchasing one of those targets or breast-plates which I have
                  already mentioned.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 5.]</date> Oree came on board early the next morning with his sons,
                  the eldest of them a handsome little boy, about eleven years old, who received our
                  presents with great indifference; but he, as well as all the people of the island,
                  were highly delighted with the bagpipe, and required it to be constantly played.
                  With Oree who now went by the name of Cookee, as he had done whilst the Endeavour
                  lay here , we returned on shore, where we dispersed in search of plants and other
                  curiosities. In the evening we all met together again, when Dr. Sparrman, who had
                  been entirely by himself towards the north point of the isle, acquainted us that
                  he had met with a large lagoon of salt-water, which extended several miles
                  parallel to the coast, and had an intolerable stench on account of putrid mud
                  which lay on its shores. Here he had met with several plants, which are common
                  enough in the isles and coasts of the East Indies, but not so frequent in other
                  parts of the South Sea islands. A single native, whom he had entrusted with his
                  plant-bag, had proved extremely faithful to him. Whenever the doctor sat down to
                  describe, the native seated himself behind him, and took both the skirts of his
                  coat, containing his pockets, in his hand, in order, as he said, to prevent the
                  thieves from coming at them. By this means the doctor had not lost any thing when
                  he came on board; several of the natives, however, seeming to think him in their
                  power, had bestowed upon him some ill-natured looks and opprobrious names.</p>

               <p>The next day he ventured out again entirely by himself, while we remained at the
                  trading-place with captain Cook. One of the natives, named Tubaï, a tall man,
                  dressed in several large pieces of the cloth of bark, stained with red, and who
                  had several bundles of birds feathers hanging at his girdle, prohibited the sale
                  of hogs and bread-fruit, and actually seized a bag of nails which the captain's
                  clerk held in his hand. However, when the latter called for assistance, he let it
                  go again, and perceiving one of our young gentlemen trying to strike a bargain for
                  a large fowl, he took a nail from him by force, and threatened to beat him with
                  his club. A complaint being made to captain Cook, just as he was going aboard in a
                  boat, he returned ashore, and bid Tubaï to leave the place. Upon his refusal, the
                  captain went up to him and seized two large clubs which the native had in his
                  hand; but the latter struggled with him, till captain Cook drew his hanger, on
                  which he made off. The clubs, which were made of the casuarina wood, were broken
                  and the pieces thrown into the sea, by the captain's order, while he recalled the
                  rest of the natives, who began to be alarmed, and were preparing to leave the
                  trading-place. They all agreed that this Tubaï was a bad man, (tata-eeno), and
                  seemed to think that we had done him justice. However, as captain Cook was going
                  to send his boat on board for a party of marines to protect our traders, the whole
                  croud dispersed at once and left us alone. We had not been above two minutes at a
                  loss to account for their behaviour, when Dr. Sparrman arrived almost stripped
                  naked, and with the marks of several violent blows. He had been accosted on his
                  walk by two of the natives, who had invited him to proceed farther into the
                  country, with many protestations of friendship, and repetitions of the word tayo.
                  At once, taking the advantage of an unguarded moment, they tore from his side a
                  hanger, the only weapon he had, and gave him a blow over his head as he was
                  stooping to arm himself with a stone. He stumbled, and they tore a black satin
                  waistcoat and several loose parts of dress from him. However, disengaging himself,
                  he ran towards the beach and outstripped them, when some bind-weeds caught his
                  feet, and detained him till the villains came up. They gave him repeated blows
                  over his temples and shoulders, which stunned him; stripped his shirt over his
                  head, and were just preparing to cut his hands, because the sleeve-buttons held
                  the shirt, when he fortunately opened them with his teeth, and they made off with
                  their booty. Not above fifty yards farther on, some natives were at dinner, who,
                  seeing him passing by, came out and invited him to stop, but he hurried on towards
                  the sea. In his way, however, he met two natives, who immediately took off their
                  own cloth, (ahòw), dressed him in it, and attended him to the trading-place. These
                  honest people were rewarded to the best of our power with various presents, and we
                  all hurried on board to reinforce our party. Dr. Sparrman being dressed again,
                  accompanied us to Oree's house to whom we made our complaint. The old chief
                  immediately resolved to assist captain Cook in the search after the thieves, but
                  his noble resolution filled all his relations with terror. Upwards of fifty people
                  of both sexes began to weep when he stepped into the boat; some with the most
                  pathetic and moving gestures tried to dissuade him; and others held him back and
                  embraced him; but he was not to be prevailed upon, and went off with us, saying,
                  that he had nothing to apprehend, because he was not the guilty person. My father
                  offered to remain on shore as an hostage, but he would not admit of it, and took
                  only one of his relations in the boat with him. We rowed up a deep creek opposite
                  the ships, where this villainy had been committed, and afterwards took a long walk
                  into the country to no purpose; for all Oree's messengers, who were sent to
                  apprehend the robbers, did not perform their duty. At last we returned to the
                  boat, where Oree reembarked with us, notwithstanding the tears of an old lady and
                  of her handsome daughter. The young woman, in a fit of frantic grief, took up some
                  shells and cut herself on the head with them, but her mother tore them out of her
                  hands, and actually accompanied Oree to the ship. Here he dined with us very
                  heartily, but the woman, according to the custom of the country, would not touch
                  our provisions. After dinner we brought him back to his house, which was crouded
                  with different groups of the principal families on the island, who sat on the
                  ground, and many of whom shed tears plentifully. We sat down amongst these
                  disconsolate people, and with all the Taheitian oratory we were masters of,
                  endeavoured to sooth them into content and good humour. The women, in particular,
                  shewed a great sensibility, and could not recover for a long while. At last we
                  succeeded to appease their violence of grief; and, as some of us could not behold
                  their distress, without admiring the excellence of their hearts, we naturally
                  sympathized with them, with a degree of sincerity which entirely regained their
                  confidence. It is indeed one of the happiest reflections which this voyage has
                  enabled us to make, that instead of finding the inhabitants of these isles wholly
                  plunged in sensuality, as former voyagers have falsely represented them, we have
                  met with the most generous and exalted sentiments among them, that do honour to
                  the human race in general. Vicious characters are to be met with in all societies
                  of men; but for one villain in these isles, we can shew at least fifty in England,
                  or any civilized country.</p>

               <p>In a little time the trade went on as briskly as ever, and we were particularly
                  fortunate in obtaining a supply of vegetables. Towards evening two of Oree's
                  messengers arrived with the hanger and a part of Dr. Sparrman's waistcoat, which
                  were restored to him, and with these soon after we returned on board.</p>

               <p>In the morning, at day-break, the captains went to Oree's house, and returned the
                  piece of pewter on which the commemoration of the first discovery was engraved. At
                  the same time they gave him a piece of copper, with this inscription: his
                  britannick majesty's ships resolution and adventure, september 1773. to which they
                  added a number of medals, and desired him to shew it to any strangers that
                  happened to touch here. As soon as they were on board again, the seamen hove the
                  anchor, and we got under sail, in company with the Adventure. The quantity of live
                  stock which we had purchased during our three days stay was amazing, and shewed
                  how great a value the natives had set upon our iron-work. The Resolution alone had
                  two hundred and nine live hogs, thirty dogs, and about fifty fowls on board, when
                  she sailed, and the Adventure had not much less. We were scarce got under way when
                  Oree arrived along-side in a small canoe, and came on board; he acquainted us that
                  the robbers, and the things they had carried off, were taken, and desired both the
                  captains, as well as Dr. Sparrman, to come on shore, in order to see the villains
                  punished. But unfortunately his story was misunderstood, and we lost an
                  opportunity of seeing their method of inflicting punishments. Captain Cook
                  believing that Oree spoke of some of his countrymen who were embarked in the
                  Adventure against his will, immediately dispatched his boat to bring them back;
                  but that vessel being a great way ahead, and we driving out to sea very fast, Oree
                  became impatient, took a cordial leave of us all, and returned on shore in his
                  little canoe, with only one of his countrymen to assist him. A little while after
                  our boat returned from the Adventure, and brought on board O-Maï , the only native
                  who had embarked in that vessel with a view to go to England. He staid on board
                  our ship till we reached Raïetea, whither we now directed our course. As soon as
                  we were come to an anchor there, he returned on board the Adventure, and
                  afterwards came to England in her, and has for some time engrossed the attention
                  of the curious. He seemed to be one of the common people at that time, as he did
                  not aspire to the captain's company, but preferred that of the armourer and the
                  common seamen. But when he reached the Cape of Good Hope, where the captain
                  dressed him in his own clothes, and introduced him in the best companies, he
                  declared he was not a towtòw, which is the denomination of the lowest class, and
                  assumed the character of a hòa, or attendant upon the king. The world hath been
                  amused at times with different fabulous accounts concerning this man, among which
                  we need only mention the ridiculous story of his being a " Priest of the Sun;" a
                  character which has never existed in the islands from whence he came. His stature
                  was tall, but very slim, and his hands remarkably small. His features did not
                  convey an idea of that beauty which characterizes the men at O-Taheitee; on the
                  contrary, we do him no injustice to assert that, among all the inhabitants of
                  Taheitee and the Society Isles, we have seen few individuals so ill-favoured as
                  himself. His colour was likewise the darkest hue of the common class of people,
                  and corresponded by no means with the rank he afterwards assumed. It was certainly
                  unfortunate that such a man should be selected as a specimen of a people who have
                  been justly extolled by all navigators, as remarkably well featured and coloured,
                  considering the climate in which they live. The qualities of his heart and head
                  resembled those of his countrymen in general; he was not an extraordinary genius
                  like Tupaia, but he was warm in his affections, grateful, and humane; he was
                  polite, intelligent, lively, and volatile. For a further account of O-Maï, I refer
                  the reader to the preface, where I have mentioned his stay in England, his
                  progress in knowledge, and his equipment at his return.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesday 8.]</date>Having left Huahine we sailed to the westward, and
                  doubled the south end of an island, discovered by captain Cook in 1769, which all
                  the natives of Taheitee, and the Society Isles call O-Raietea, but which (upon
                  what foundation I know not) is named Ulietea in captain Cook's charts . The next
                  morning we anchored in an opening of the reef, and spent the whole day in warping
                  into Hamaneno harbour. The country hereabouts afforded a prospect much resembling
                  Taheitee; for the island being about three times the size of Huahine, had much
                  broader plains, anad loftier hills. The natives surrounded us in a number of
                  canoes, and brought a few hogs; but our people looked at them with a careless
                  indifference, and offered very low prices, being difficult to please, since their
                  success at Huahine. In one of the canoes a chief came on board, named Oruwherra, a
                  native of the adjacent isle of Borabora (Bolabola). He was very athletic, but his
                  hands very small, and the punctuation, which the natives call tattow, consisted of
                  the most singular square blotches on his arms, and of large black stripes across
                  the breast, belly, and back. His loins and thighs were uniformly black. He brought
                  some green branches, and a little pig which he presented to my father, being
                  neglected by every body else. Having received a few iron-tools as a return, he
                  descended immediately into his canoe, and was paddled to the shore. But in a
                  little time, another canoe arrived from him with coco-nuts and bananas, which his
                  servants offered to his new friend, refusing at the same time to accept of any
                  retribution. The pleasure which we felt from this circumstance, can easily be
                  conceived. Philanthropy is never better rewarded, than when its objects are
                  endowed with good and amiable qualities.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon another chief, a native of the same isle of Borabora, came on
                  board, and exchanged names with my father. His name was Herea, and his person the
                  most corpulent we ever saw in the South Sea islands; round his waist he measured
                  no less than fifty-four inches, and one of his thighs was thirty-one inches and
                  3/4" in girth. His hair was likewise remarkable; for it hung down in long black
                  wavy tresses to the small of his back, and in such quantity that it encreased the
                  apparent bulk of his head considerably. His corpulence, his colour, and his
                  punctures, like those of Oruwherra, were very distinguishing marks of his rank, to
                  which indolence and luxury are annexed here as well as at Taheitee. It may perhaps
                  want some explanation, how both these chiefs, who were natives of the adjacent
                  isle of Borabora, could have any authority and possessions on Raietea. Already, in
                  captain Cook's former voyage, it was known that O-Poonee the king of Borabora, had
                  conquered not only the isle of Raietea, but likewise that of O-Taha, which is
                  included in the same reef, and that of Mowrua which lies about fifteen leagues to
                  the westward . The warriors who had served under him in these expeditions had been
                  rewarded with ample possessions, and a great number of his subjects had received
                  grants in the conquered islands. The king of Raietea Oo-Ooroo, was however
                  confirmed in his dignity, though his power was confined to the district of Opoa;
                  but at Taha, Poonee had placed a viceroy, named Boba, who was nearly related to
                  him. Many of the natives of the conquered islands had retreated to Huahine and
                  Taheitee, preferring a voluntary exile, to a submission to the conqueror, and
                  hoping one day to rescue their country from oppression. It seems, this was the
                  motive which prompted Tupaïa and O-Maï, who were both natives of Raietea, to
                  embark in British ships, as both of them always expressed a hope of obtaining a
                  quantity of our fire-arms. Tupaia might perhaps have carried his scheme into
                  execution, if he had lived; but O-Maï's understanding was not sufficiently
                  penetrative, to acquire a competent idea of our wars, or to adapt it afterwards to
                  the situation of his countrymen. He was, however, so fond of the thought of
                  freeing his country from the Borabora men, that he has frequently said, in
                  England, if captain Cook did no assist him in the execution of his plan, he would
                  take care that his countrymen should not supply him with refreshments. In this
                  opinion he persisted till near the time of his departure, when he was persuaded to
                  adopt more peaceable principles. We were at a loss to conceive the motives which
                  could have induced a native of one of these islands to become a conqueror. If we
                  believed the accounts of the Borabora men, their native island was as fertile and
                  desireable as these of which they had taken possession; therefore nothing but a
                  spirit of ambition could have stimulated them to contentions. Such a spirit ill
                  agreed with the simplicity and generous character of the people, and it gave us
                  pain to be convinced, that great imperfections cannot be excluded from the best of
                  human societies.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 9.]</date>On the day after our arrival, the captains went on shore
                  with us to a large house, close to the water's side, which he knew to be the
                  residence of Orèa, the chief of the district. We found him sitting in his house,
                  with his wife, son, daughter, and a great number of persons of distinction.
                  Immediately after our arrival we sat down by them, and were shut in on all sides
                  by a thick croud of the natives, who made the place excessively hot. Orèa was a
                  middle-sized, lusty man, with a very lively intelligent countenance, and thin
                  redish-brown beard. He joked and laughed very heartily with us, and entirely
                  banished all kinds of ceremony and affectation. His wife was an elderly woman, but
                  his son and daughter, about twelve and fourteen years old. The latter was of a
                  very white colour, and her features had not much of the general character of the
                  nation, particularly her nose, which was remarkably well-shaped, and her eyes,
                  which gave her some resemblance to a Chinese. Her stature was low, but her body
                  elegantly proportioned, and her hands graceful beyond description; only the legs
                  and feet were too large for the rest of the figure, and the custom of cutting the
                  hair short, appeared to be a great disadvantage. Her manners were very engaging,
                  and she had a pleasing soft voice, like most of her country-women, so that she
                  could not be refused, when she asked for beads or other trinkets. As it did not
                  agree with our occupations, to stay in the house, we took a walk into the groves,
                  where we shot a few birds, and collected some plants. We found here, to our great
                  satisfaction, that confidence and familiarity amongst the common people, which we
                  had not experience at Huahine, and we were happy at the same time not to be
                  importuned by them, in the begging strain of the Taheitians. In the afternoon we
                  made another excursion, and shot several king-fishers. As soon as we had shot the
                  last, we met Orèa, and his family walking through the plain with captain Cook; the
                  chief took no notice of the bird which we had in our hands, but his fair daughter
                  lamented the death of her eatua, and ran from us, when we attempted to touch her
                  with it. Her mother, and most of the women, seemed likewise to be grieved at this
                  accident, and at stepping into the boat, the chief desired us with a very serious
                  air, not to kill the king-fishers and herons on his island, allowing at the same
                  time the liberty of shooting any other sorts of birds. We tried again to discover
                  the nature of their veneration for these two species, but all our enquiries were
                  as fruitless as they had been before.</p>

               <p>We walked to the top of one of the neighbouring hills <date>[Friday 10.]</date>the
                  next day, and found several new plants in the vallies, between them. The soil at
                  the top was a kind of stone marle; on the sides we found some scattered flints,
                  and a few small pieces of a cavernous or spungy stone-lava, of a whitish colour,
                  which seemed to contain some remains of iron. This metal, which is of general and
                  extensive utility, is dispersed through almost all parts of the world, by the
                  benevolent hand of nature, and may perhaps even here be contained in the
                  mountains, in great quantity. The lava indicated the existence of former volcanoes
                  in this island, which we had indeed suspected, because all the adjacent isles, we
                  had hitherto seen, strongly, and sometimes evidently bore the marks of changes by
                  subterraneous fire. One of natives who had attended us, and carried some
                  refreshments, pointed out the direction of several islands in the neighbourhood,
                  but which lay out of sight. About due west, he said, the isle of Mopeehàh was
                  situated, and about S. by W. another, named Whennua òwrah. Both these, according
                  to his accounts, were not inhabited, and consisted only of circular ledges of
                  coral, with palms on them, but were occasionally visited from this and the
                  adjacent isles. They seem to be Lord Howe's Island, and the Scilly Isles,
                  discovered by captain Wallis. We descended about noon, and found that captains
                  Cook and Furneaux had just left the shore, after seeing a great dramatic dance, or
                  heèva, performed by some of the principal women in the island. We hastened on
                  board, as the day proved very hot, and found both our vessels surrounded by a
                  great number of canoes, in which were several persons of distinction of both
                  sexes, who brought vast quantities of cloth, made of the mulberry-tree's bark, and
                  offered them in exchange for small nails. Our beads were much valued by the ladies
                  as ornaments, but by no means current like the nails, so that we could not even
                  purchase fruit with them. The Taheitians set a much higher value on these trifles,
                  which have no intrinsic worth; may we not conclude therefore, that a greater
                  degree of general opulence is the cause of their particular affection for
                  trinkets, especially as affluence commonly tends to luxury?</p>

               <p>The heat of the day prevented us from going on shore till near sun-set. We landed
                  at the watering-place, where we found a little tupapow, or shed, under which a
                  dead body was deposited on a stage, and a thick grove of various shady trees
                  surrounded it on all sides. As I had never seen the remains of the dead carelessly
                  exposed to all kinds of accidents in these islands, I was a little surprised to
                  find the ground strewed with sculls and bones about this shed; nor could I meet
                  with any native at this time, from whom I could receive the least information on
                  this subject. I rambled about here for some time entirely alone, all the
                  inhabitants having repaired to the chief's house, where the drums gave notice of
                  another heeva, or public dance; for they are so fond of this amusement, that they
                  croud together from a considerable distance to have the pleasure of seeing it
                  performed. The stillness of the evening, and the beauty of the spot made this walk
                  extremely pleasant, while the absence of the inhabitants encouraged some ideas of
                  an enchanted country. Before we returned to our boat, we met, however, with a few
                  of the natives, amongst whom one, a very intelligent man, gave us an account of
                  nine islands in the neighbourhood, with most of which we were unacquainted. Their
                  names were, 1. Mopeehàh , 2. Whennua-Oùrah , 3. Adeéha , 4. Towtèepa , 5. Wouwòu ,
                  6. Oo-bòroo , 7. Tubooài , 8. Awhàow , and 9. Rorotòa . The two first we had
                  already heard of in the morning, but of the rest he asserted that they all had
                  their own inhabitants, except Adeéha, which is occasionally visited. Oobòrroo he
                  said was a whennua or high land, but all the rest he called mòtoo, that is low
                  islands, or such as consist of ledges of coral.</p>

               <p>Our curiosity was so much raised by these accounts, that we applied for farther
                  information to the chief Orèa, who came on board the next morning with his son
                  Tehaïura, and several other chiefs. They enumerated the first, second, seventh and
                  ninth islands of the preceding account; but their relations differed in this
                  respect, as they told us the second was regularly inhabited. besides these they
                  spoke of two more, one called Woreèo or Woureèa, a large island, and Oreèmatàrra
                  another, both which had settled inhabitants. The accounts of the situation and
                  distances of these isles were so various and so vague, that we could by no means
                  depend upon them, for we never met with any man who had visited them; however,
                  they served to convince us, that the natives of the Society Isles have sometimes
                  extended their navigation farther than its present limits, by the knowledge they
                  have of several adjacent countries. Tupaya, the famous man who embarked at
                  Taheitee in the Endeavour, had enumerated a much more considerable list of names,
                  and had actually drawn a map of their respective situations and magnitudes, of
                  which lieutenant Pickersgill obligingly communicated a copy to me. In this map we
                  found all the names above-mentioned, except Oobòrroo and Tubooài: but if his
                  drawing had been exact, our ships must have sailed over a number of the islands
                  which he had laid down. It is therefore very probably that the vanity of appearing
                  more intelligent than he really was, had prompted him to produce this fancied
                  chart of the South Sea, and perhaps to invent many of the names of islands in it,
                  which amounted to more than fifty.</p>

               <p>The chief and his son breakfasted with us, and went ashore with a number of
                  presents in return for some of theirs. We followed soon after, and were invited by
                  him to become spectators of a dramatic dance or heeva; which was the more readily
                  accepted by us, as we had never seen one before. The place where it was performed
                  was an area, about twenty-five yards long and ten wide, enclosed between two
                  houses which stood parallel to each other. The one was a spacious building,
                  capable of containing a great multitude of spectators; but the other was only a
                  narrow hut, which was supported on a row of posts, and open towards the area, but
                  perfectly closed up with reeds and mats on the opposite sides; one corner of it
                  was matted on all sides, and this was the dressing-room of the performers. The
                  whole area was spread with three large mats of the best workmanship, striped with
                  black on the edges. In the open part of the smaller hut we saw three drums of
                  different sizes, cut out of solid wood, and covered with shark's skin, which were
                  continually struck with the fingers only by four or five men with amazing
                  dexterity. The largest of these drums was about three feet high and one in
                  diameter. We had already sat some time under the opposite roof, amidst the
                  principal ladies of the island, when the actresses appeared. One of them was
                  Poyadua, the fat daughter of the Chief Orèa, and the other a tall well shaped
                  lady, of very agreeable features, and likewise a very fair complexion . Their
                  dress was remarkably different from the usual fashion of these islands. It
                  consisted of a piece of the brown cloth, of the country fabrick; or, instead of
                  that, of a piece of blue European cloth, closely wrapped round the breast, so as
                  to resemble the close dresses which our ladies wear; a kind of ruff of four rows
                  of their cloth, alternately red and white, rested on their hips, being tied on
                  with a string; and from thence a great quantity of white cloth descended to the
                  feet, forming an ample petticoat, which we expected, from its length, would be a
                  considerable impediment to their agility, as it fairly trailed on the ground on
                  all sides. The neck, shoulders, and arms were left uncovered, but the head was
                  ornamented with a kind of turban, about eight inches high, made of several skains
                  of plaited human hair, which they call tamòw. These being laid above each other in
                  circles, which enlarged towards the top, there was a deep hollow left in the
                  middle, which they had filled up with a great quantity of the sweet-scented
                  flowers of the (gardenia) Cape jasmine. But all the front of the turban was
                  ornamented with three or four rows of a small white flower, which formed little
                  stars, and had as elegant an effect on the jetty black hair as if it had been set
                  out with pearls. They moved to the sound of the drums, and to all appearance under
                  the direction of an old man, who danced with them, and pronounced several words,
                  which, from the tone of his voice, we took to be a song. Their attitudes and
                  gestures were much varied, and sometimes might admit of being construed into
                  wantonness; but they were entirely free from that positive degree of gross
                  indecency which the chaste eyes of English ladies of fashion are forced to behold
                  at the opera. The movement of their arms is certainly very graceful, and the
                  continual gesticulation of their fingers has something extremely elegant. The only
                  action which gives offence to all our ideas of gracefulness and harmony, is the
                  frightful custom of writhing their mouths into the strangest distortions, which it
                  was impossible for any one of us to imitate. They screwed their mouth into a
                  slanting direction, and at last threw the lips into a waving or undulated form,
                  which seemed to us to be performed by means of an habitual and sudden convulsion.
                  After they had danced for about ten minutes, they retired into the part of the
                  house which I called their dressing-room, and five men, dressed in mats, took
                  their place, performing a kind of drama. This consisted of dancing in an indecent
                  manner, and of a dialogue which had some cadence, and in which they sometimes
                  pronounced a few words shouting all together. This dialogue seemed to be closely
                  connected with their actions. One of them kneeled down, and another beat him and
                  plucked him by the beard, repeating the same ceremony with two others; but the
                  last seized and beat him in his turn with a stick. After this they withdrew, and
                  the drummers gave notice of the second act of dancing, which the two ladies
                  performed with little variation from the first. The men took their turn a second
                  time; the ladies succeeded them again, and concluded with a fourth act. Then they
                  sat down to rest themselves, appearing fatigued to a great degree, and in a most
                  profuse perspiration; one of them in particular, being rather lustier and of a
                  lively disposition, had a suffusion of red in her cheeks, which was the strongest
                  proof of her fair complexion. The other, Orèa's daughter, had performed her part
                  to admiration, notwithstanding the fatigue of the preceding day, when she had
                  acted both in the morning and evening. The officers of both ships, who were
                  present, and ourselves, loaded them with a great variety of beads and ornaments,
                  which they had so well deserved.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon Oo-òoroo, the kind of the isle of Raietea, came on board with
                  Orèa and several ladies, to visit captain Cook. He brought a hog as an
                  introductory present, and was well repaid with a great quantity of European goods.
                  Among the ladies was one of the dancers, named Teina or Teinamai, who had
                  performed in the morning, and whose complexion we had much admired. She now
                  appeared to much greater advantage than in the cumbrous dress which she wore
                  during the ceremony. Her own hair, which fortunately was not cut, formed finer
                  ebon ringlets than ever the luxuriant fancy of a painter produced, and a narrow
                  fillet of white cloth was carelessly passed between them. Her eyes were full of
                  fire and expression, and an agreeable smile sat in her round face. Mr. Hodges took
                  this opportunity of drawing a sketch of her portrait, which her vivacity and
                  restless disposition rendered almost impossible. This was, perhaps, the reason
                  that he was less successful than usual, as the representation which is inserted in
                  captain Cook's own account of this voyage, is infinitely below the delicacy of the
                  original, notwithstanding the excellence of Mr. Sherwin's engraving. But though it
                  has lost the resemblance to Teinamai, it may serve as a specimen of the generality
                  of features in this and the neighbouring islands, and gives a tolerable idea of a
                  Taheitian boy about ten years old. Towards sun-set, all our noble visitors
                  returned ashore, extremely well pleased with the reception which they had met
                  with; a number of women of the lowest rank, however, remained on our decks, with a
                  complaisance equal to that of the Taheitian girls (see pag. 336).</p>

               <p>It was remarkable that they were not without some degree of vanity, as they never
                  gave themselves any other name than that of tedùa, (lady), which is the title of
                  their female nobility, and which, by way of eminence, is particularly applied to
                  the princesses of these islands. If the king's sister happened to pass by while we
                  sat in a house at Taheitee, the natives who surrounded us were warned to uncover
                  their shoulders, by some one who spied her at a distance, simply saying tedua
                  harremai, (the lady comes hither!) or else they only said aree! which on such
                  occasions always denoted one of the royal family. Our sailors, who did not
                  understand the language, took it for granted that their dulcineas were all of one
                  name, which frequently occasion some pleasant mistakes.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 12.][Monday 13.]</date>We spent the two next days in various rambles
                  along the shores, in which we found many deep creeks towards the northern part,
                  with marshes at the bottom, where wild-ducks and snipes resided in great plenty.
                  These birds were more shy than we expected, which we soon learnt was owing to
                  their being much pursued by the natives, who looked upon them as dainty bits. On
                  the first of these days we were likewise entertained with another heeva or
                  dramatic dance, by the same persons who had performed it before. It was in every
                  respect the same with that which we saw on the <date>1th</date>, only its duration
                  was much shorter.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 14.]</date>On the 14th, at day-break, captain Cook sent his launch,
                  and captain Furneaux another boat, to the isle of O-Tahà, which was two or three
                  leagues distant, and inclosed in the same reef within which we lay at anchor. They
                  were in hopes of purchasing some fruit there, which was very scarce at Raietea,
                  and to that purpose provided lieutenant Pickersgill and Mr. Rowe the mate of the
                  Adventure, with a quantity of beads and nails. Dr. Sparrman and my father,
                  unwilling to miss this opportunity of examining another island, likewise embarked
                  with them.</p>

               <p>Orea, the chief of this part of the island, having invited us to come and dine on
                  shore, the captains, with several officers and passengers of both ships, and
                  myself, went on shore about noon, taking with us a little pepper and salt, some
                  knives, and a few bottles of wine. A great part of the chief's spacious house was
                  spread with quantities of leaves, which served as a table-cloth, round which we
                  seated ourselves, with the principal inhabitants. We had not waited long, before
                  one of the common people arrived with a hog smoking on his shoulders, roasted
                  whole, and wrapped in a large bundle of plantane-leaves, which he threw upon the
                  floor in the midst of us: a second tossed a smaller to us in the same manner; and
                  these were followed by several others bringing baskets, full of bread-fruit,
                  bananas, and the fermented paste of bread-fruit, called mahei. Our host now
                  desired us to help ourselves, and in a short time we had cut the two hogs in
                  pieces. All the women, and the common sort of people, applied to us with a begging
                  tone for portions, and what we distributed was handed from our neighbours, to the
                  remotest persons in the croud. The men consumed their share with every mark of a
                  good appetite, but the women carefully wrapped theirs up, and preserved it till
                  they should be alone. The eagerness with which they repeated their importunities,
                  as well as the envious looks of the chiefs, whenever we granted the request,
                  convinced us, that the commonalty were in this island deprived of all sorts of
                  luxuries and dainties. We all agreed that the pork which was set before us, tasted
                  infinitely better, than if it had been dressed after the European manner. It was
                  much juicier than our boiled, and beyond comparison more tender than roasted meat.
                  The equal degree of heat with which it stews under-ground, had preserved and
                  concentrated all its juices. The fat was not luscious and surfeiting, and the skin
                  instead of being hard as a stone, which is always the case with our roasted pork,
                  was as tender as any other part. After dinner our bottles and glasses were brought
                  in, and our friend Orèa drank his share without flinching, which appeared to us
                  rather extraordinary, since almost all the natives of these islands expressed a
                  great dislike to our strong liquors. Sobriety is a virtue almost universal with
                  them, and particularly among people of inferior rank. They are however acquainted
                  with an intoxicating beverage, which is much admired by some of the old chiefs. It
                  is made in the most disgustful manner that can be imagined, from the juices
                  contained in the root of a species of pepper-tree. This root is cut small, and the
                  pieces chewed by several people, who spit the macerated mass into a bowl, where
                  some water (milk) of coco-nuts is poured upon it. They then strain it through a
                  quantity of the fibres of coco-nuts, squeezing the chips, till all their juices
                  mix with the cocoa-nut-milk; and the whole liquor is decanted into another bowl.
                  They swallow this nauseous stuff as fast as possible; and some old topers value
                  themselves on being able to empty a great number of bowls. I was present at the
                  whole process one of the first days after our arrival at this island. Our
                  passenger, Porea, who was not so reserved with the natives here as he had been at
                  Huahine, brought one of his new acquaintances into the captain's cabin, and
                  immediately sat down with him to perform the operation. He drank about a pint,
                  which in less than a quarter of an hour made him so dead drunk, that he lay down
                  on the floor without motion; his face was inflamed, and his eyes swelled out of
                  his head. A sound sleep of several hours was necessary to restore him to his
                  senses; but as soon as he had recovered them, he appeared thoroughly ashamed of
                  his debauch. The pepper-plant is in high esteem with all the natives of these
                  islands as a sign of peace; perhaps, because getting drunk together, naturally
                  implies good fellowship. It seems, however, that drunkenness here is punished,
                  like all other excesses, by disease. The old men who make a practice of it are
                  lean, covered with a scaly or scabby skin, have red eyes, and red blotches on all
                  parts of the body. They acknowledge these evils to be the consequence of drinking;
                  and to all appearance, the pepper-plant, which they call awa, tends to produce
                  leprous complaints.</p>

               <p>As soon as we had dined, our boat's crew and servants feasted on the remains; and
                  the same croud who had profited by our liberality before, now paid their court to
                  them. The sailors were complaisant only to the fair sex; and giving way to their
                  natural disposition for sensuality, for every piece of pork required the
                  performance of an indecent denudation. To complete our entertainment this day, the
                  chief gave orders for performing another heeva, and we were admitted (behind the
                  scenes) to see the ladies dressing for that purpose. They obtained some strings of
                  beads on this occasion, with which we took it into our heads to improve upon their
                  ornaments, much to their own satisfaction. Among the spectators we observed
                  several of the prettiest women of this country; and one of them was remarkable for
                  the whitest complexion we had ever seen in all these islands. Her colour resembled
                  that of white wax a little sullied, without having the least appearance of
                  sickness, which that hue commonly conveys; and her fine black eyes and hair
                  contrasted so well with it, that she was admired by us all. She received at first
                  a number of little presents, which were so many marks of homage paid at the shrine
                  of beauty; but her success, instead of gratifying, only sharpened her love of
                  trinkets, and she incessantly importuned every one of us as long as she suspected
                  we had a single bead left. One of the gentlemen fortunately happened to have a
                  little padlock in his hand, which she begged for as soon as she had perceived it.
                  After denying it for some time, he consented to give it her, and locked it in her
                  ear, assuring her that was its proper place. She was well pleased for some time;
                  but finding it too heavy, desired him to unlock it. He flung away the key, giving
                  her to understand at the same time, that he had made her the present at her own
                  desire, and that if she found it incumbered here, she should bear it as a
                  punishment for importuning us with her petitions. She was disconsolate upon this
                  refusal, and weeping bitterly, applied to us all to open the padlock; but if we
                  had been willing, we were not able to comply with her request for want of the key.
                  She applied to the chief; and he as well as his wife, son and daughter, joined in
                  praying for the release of her ear; they offered cloth, perfume-wood, and hogs,
                  but all in vain. At last a small key was found to open the padlock, which put an
                  end to the poor girl's lamentation, and restored peace and tranquility among all
                  her friends. Her adventure had however this good effect, that it cured her and
                  some of her forward country-women of their idle habit of begging. In the evening
                  we returned on board, highly pleased with the hospitality and general good
                  disposition of the natives towards us. We were therefore surprised the next
                  morning, that not a single canoe would come off to us, and going to Orèa's house,
                  in order to enquire the reason of this sudden change of behaviour, we to our
                  farther astonishment found it abandoned by him and his family. A few of the
                  natives, who came to us with a good deal of diffidence, told us that he had
                  retired towards the north point of the island, being afraid that we meant to take
                  him prisoner. It was immediately resolved upon to follow, in order to undeceive
                  him, and give him fresh assurance of friendship. We rowed along shore for several
                  miles, till we came to the place to which he had retired. At our interview all
                  were in tears, so that we were obliged to have recourse to a variety of caresses,
                  to inspire them with new confidence towards us, and our beads, nails, and
                  hatchets, were not the least efficacious arguments. They told us they believed
                  captain Cook would confine them, in order to force their country-men to bring back
                  those people who were run away from us to O-Taha. We now saw through their
                  mistake, and assured them that our party had not run away, but was sent on
                  purpose, and would certainly return this night. Orèa not yet satisfied, named each
                  of the principal persons in that party singly, and enquired concerning every one,
                  whether he would come back, and the positive answers which we returned, at last
                  quieted his apprehensions. While we were sitting in a circle with them, Porea our
                  Taheitian, who intended to go to England, came running to the captain, returned
                  the powder-horn, which he had hitherto carried for him, and said he would come
                  back to us presently. We waited in vain a good while, and at last were obliged to
                  return on board without him; nor did we see him again during the little time we
                  remained on the island. From the natives we could gather but little information,
                  and the captain fearing lest they should take new alarm, if he interested himself
                  too strongly in his behalf, entirely dropped the enquiry. After dinner I
                  accompanied him to the shore again, on a visit to Orèa. A very handsome youth,
                  about seventeen years of age, who went by the name of O-Hedeedee, and who appeared
                  to be of the better sort of people by his complexion and good garments, addressed
                  himself to me, expressing a desire to embark for England. I was not inclined to
                  believe at first, that he would forsake the easy way of life, which persons of his
                  rank enjoyed in these islands, and smiling at his proposal, told him the
                  disagreeable circumstances to which he exposed himself by leaving his country.
                  But, though I represented to him the rigours of climate which we had to endure,
                  and the bad provisions to which he should be reduced in time, he was not to be
                  dissuaded from his resolution, and a number of his friends joined with him to
                  desire his admittance into our ship. Upon this I presented him to captain Cook,
                  and he having granted his request, we all returned on board together. Before
                  sun-set our boats returned from O-Taha, where they had collected a load of bananas
                  and coco-nuts, and a few hogs. They landed there on the 14th in the morning, after
                  a few hours sail, in a fine bay on the east side, called O-Hamene. The country and
                  its inhabitants perfectly resembled those of the other islands in this
                  archipelago. Their productions, vegetable and animal, were in general the same,
                  varying only in the abundance or scarcity of some articles. Thus, for instance,
                  the tree, which our sailors called the apple-tree, (spondias), was plentiful at
                  Taheitee, extremely rare at Raietea and Huahine, and not very common at Tahà;
                  fowls were hardly to be met with at Taheitee, but common in the Society Isles; and
                  rats, which infested Taheitee in numberless myriads, were not quite so numerous at
                  O-Tahà; still less frequent at Raietea, and seen in very inconsiderable numbers at
                  Huahine.</p>

               <p>After our party had dined in O-Hamene harbour, they removed to the next creek to
                  the north, and walked to the house of a chief named O-Tàh, where the natives said
                  there would be a heeva or public dance. The crowd increased prodigiously as they
                  approached it, and in their way they saw a woman at a considerable distance,
                  dressed in a singular habit , and blacked all over. They were told she performed
                  the burial rite, or mourned for a dead person. They found the aree, who was an
                  elderly man, sitting on a wooden stool, of which he offered one half to my father.
                  The dance was begun some time after by three young girls, the eldest not exceeding
                  ten, and the youngest about five years of age. The usual music was performed on
                  three drums, and in the intervals of the dance three men performed something of a
                  pantomime drama, which represented travellers asleep, and thieves dextrously
                  conveying away their goods, round which they had, for greater security, placed
                  themselves. During their performance the croud made way for several people who
                  advanced towards the house in pairs, but stopped at the entrance. They were well
                  dressed, with sashes of their red cloth round their loins, and skains of the tamòw
                  or plaited hair round their heads, and the whole upper part of their body was
                  naked and anointed with coco-nut oil. Some among them were grown men and some
                  boys. O-Tàh called them the O-Da-widdee , which, from the gestures he made to
                  explain himself, our people understood to be mourners. When they appeared the area
                  of the entrance was spread with cloth of bark, which was, however, taken up
                  immediately and given to the drummers. One of the latter quarrelled with another
                  native, and they fought, pulling each other by the hair, and giving some hearty
                  blows. However, that the entertainment might not be interrupted, another drummer
                  was substituted, and the boxers turned out of the house. Towards the end of the
                  dance the croud made way, and the O-Da-widdee appeared once more, but stood still,
                  as they had done at first, without performing any other particular rite.</p>

               <p>A great number of canoes were hauled up along the shore before the chief's house,
                  and in one of them, which had a roof or covering, there was a dead corse, for
                  which the mourning rites were instituted. Our gentlemen were obliged, therefore,
                  to lay up their boats a little farther on, where they passed the night under
                  shelter of a good house, whilst it blew and rained excessively hard.</p>

               <p>The next morning the chief, O-Tah, went into the boat with them, and they sailed
                  round the north point of the isle, seeing a number of long low islands, covered
                  with palm and other trees, which lay in the reef. They bought a quantity of good
                  bananas about ten o'clock, and dined a little farther to the southward, near the
                  house of the greatest chief in the island, whose name was Boba, and who governed
                  it as a viceroy for O-Poonee, the king of Borabora, (Bolabola) but was not on the
                  island at that time. After dinner they missed a bag, which contained a number of
                  nails, some looking-glasses, and several strings of beads, being their whole stock
                  in trade. After a short debate, the officers resolved to seize as much of the
                  property of the inhabitants as possible, in order to force them to a restitution.
                  They immediately began at the place where they traded, and took away a hog, some
                  mother of pearl shells, and a quantity of cloth, not without being obliged to
                  threaten with fire-arms. The party was then divided; some guarded the boats, some
                  the goods which were seized, and some, with the lieutenant at their head, advanced
                  into the country in quest of greater seizures. The old chief, O-Tah, accompanied
                  them, and was under the strongest influence of fear, which manifested itself like
                  that of the dogs in the fable . Wherever they came the inhabitants hurried away
                  before them, and drove their hogs into the mountains. The officer ordered three
                  muskets to be fired to frighten them, upon which a chief, who had one leg and foot
                  swelled to an enormous size by the elephantiasis, returned and surrendered his
                  hogs and several large bales of cloth. Our people next proceeded to Boba's house,
                  which they stripped of two targets and a drum, and with these spoils they retired
                  to the house which they had occupied before. O Tàh left them in the evening, but
                  returned soon after with the stolen bag, containing about one half of the nails,
                  beads, &amp;c. which were taken away with it, and passed the night among our
                  party. Early the next morning the proprietors of the goods which our people had
                  seized, were told that every thing should be restored on condition that they
                  procured the remaining beads and nails. In the mean time they advanced towards O
                  Herurua Bay on the S. W. part of the island, and, on their way, the chief,
                  O-Tàhupon which our people gave up the cloth, hogs, targets, &amp;c. which had
                  hitherto remained in their hands, and rewarded the owner of the hut, where they
                  had passed the night, as well as the old chief, for their fidelity and kindness.
                  The beads which they had recovered, enabled them to purchase a quantity of bananas
                  in the district of Herurua, and afterwards in a bay called A-Poto-Poto or the
                  Round Bay, where they saw one of the largest houses in all the Society Isles. It
                  was full of inhabitants, many of whom lodged with their families in different
                  parts of it; the whole appearing to be rather a public building, erected for the
                  casual shelter of travellers, like the carvansaras of the East, than a private
                  dwelling-house. Here they dined, and after disposing of every bead and nail which
                  they had brought with them, set out on their return to the ships, where they
                  arrived about four o'clock in the afternoon, thoroughly wet by the waves which
                  beat into their boats.</p>

               <p>The next morning, the chief Orèa with his family came to take leave of us, and the
                  ship was filled with the friends of O-Hedeedee, who embarked with us, bringing him
                  cloth of the country fabric, and a sea provision of their balls of fermented
                  bread-fruit (mahei) which they are very fond of, and which is one of the most
                  nutritive substances in the world. The daughter of Orèa, who had never ventured to
                  visit us before, came on board on this occasion, to beg for the green awning of
                  the captain's boat, which had mightily struck her fancy. She received abundance of
                  presents, but the captain could not possibly grant her request. The trade for
                  their tools, cloth, &amp;c. was very brisk all round the ship about this time,
                  till the anchor was weighed. Our friends parted from us, with the sincerest
                  expressions of grief, and shedding floods of tears, reproached some of us with a
                  want of sensibility. Our civilized education in general tends to stifle the
                  emotions of our heart; for as we are too often taught to be ashamed of them, we
                  unhappily conquer them by custom. On the contrary, the simple child of nature, who
                  inhabits these islands, gives free course to all his feelings, and glories in his
                  affection towards the fellow-creature.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

               <p>A VOYAGE round the WORLD.</p>

            </div>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>BOOK II.</head>

            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. I.</l>

                  <l>Run from the Society Isles to the Friendly Isles, with an Account of our</l>
                  <l> Transactions there.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. September.]</date>WE cleared the reefs of Hamaneno towards ten
                  o'clock, and steered to the W.S.W. having the islands of Raietea, Tahà, and
                  Borabora in sight. Only one month had elapsed since our arrival at Taheitee, and
                  yet we found ourselves recovered from the effects of a long uncomfortable cruize
                  in cold wet climates, and during the worst of seasons; and all those who had the
                  strongest symptoms of the scurvy at that time, were now as perfectly restored to
                  their health as the rest. The vegetables of this delightful group of islands had,
                  in all likelihood, principally effected our cure, especially as we left our first
                  place of refreshment, Aitepèha, in a tolerable state of convalescence, though we
                  had not then tasted any fresh animal food. Our prospect for the next month to come
                  promised a continuance of health, for we carried with us between two and three
                  hundred hogs in each ship, besides a number of fowls and some dogs, together with
                  a great quantity of bananas, which formed a kind of orchard on our poop. It is
                  true the want of room occasioned the death of several hogs, and the obstinacy of
                  the old dogs in refusing to take any sustenance, deprived us of the greatest
                  number of those animals. But we soon took an effectual method of saving our
                  provisions by killing all the hogs which were weakened by confinement, and
                  strewing the meat with salt. By this means it was preserved, and remained
                  palatable and juicy without being so unwholesome as the pickled meat we brought
                  from England, which was now so penetrated with salt, that if we attempted to
                  sweeten it in water, we extracted all the remaining juices. The only inconvenience
                  which the stay among these isles had brought upon our seamen, was a complaint
                  which arose from their own intemperance, in carrying on a free connection with
                  common women. But this, though many of them were affected with it, was fortunately
                  of so slight a nature, that it did not, in general take them from their duty, and
                  yielded quickly to the gentlest remedies.</p>

               <p>Our young friend Hedeèdee, whom we had taken with us instead of the Taheitian
                  Porèa, felt himself much affected with the sea-sickness, occasioned by the motion
                  of the ship, to which he was not accustomed. He told us, however, as we were
                  looking at the high peak of Borabòra, that he was born in that island, and was
                  nearly related to O-Poonee, the great king who had conquered Tahà and Raietea. He
                  acquainted us, at the same time, that his own name was properly Mahine, he having
                  exchanged it for that of Hedeedee with a chief in Eimeo a custom which, as I have
                  already observed in another place, is common in all these islands. His relation,
                  king O-Poonee, was at present, according to his account, at Mowràa, an island
                  which we passed in the afternoon. It consisted of a single mountain, of a conic
                  form, rising into a sharp point; and from the reports of the inhabitants of
                  Raietea, some of whom had frequently visited it, we had reason to conclude that
                  its productions are perfectly similar to those of all the other isles in this
                  group.</p>

               <p>Our poor friend did not recover his appetite till the next afternoon, when he
                  feasted on part of a dolphin of twenty-eight pounds weight, which had been caught
                  by one of our seamen. We offered to have it dressed for him immediately, but he
                  assured us it tasted much better raw; and accordingly we provided him with a bowl
                  of sea-water, in which he dipped the morsels as in a sauce, and eat them with
                  great relish, alternately biting into a ball of maheî, or sour bread-fruit paste,
                  instead of bread. Before he sat down to his meal, however, he separated a little
                  morsel of the fish and a bit of the maheî, as an offering to the Eatua or
                  Divinity, pronouncing a few words at the same time, which we understood to be a
                  short prayer. He performed the same ceremony two days after, <date>[Monday
                     20]</date>when he dined on a raw piece of shark. These instances served to
                  convince us, that his countrymen have certain fixed principles of religion, and
                  that a kind of ceremonial worship takes place among them, which they have perhaps
                  preserved ever since their first separation from their ancestors on the
                  continent.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 23.]</date>We continued our course without any event worthy of
                  notice till the 23d, in the morning, when a low island appeared on our larboard
                  bow. We steered towards it, and about noon found it was divided into two parts;
                  the latitude which we observed at that time was 19° 8' south. We soon
                  distinguished a quantity of shrubs and tufted trees upon it, over which rose a
                  prodigious number of coco-palms. By the help of our glasses we observed that the
                  shore was sandy, but here and there over-run with verdure, which probably was
                  occasioned by the common bindweed of these climates (convolvulus Brasiliensis). A
                  reef as we apprehended, connected the two parts of the island together, which
                  notwithstanding its agreeable appearance, seemed to be entirely uninhabited.
                  Captain Cook gave it the name of Hervey's Isle, in honour of the present earl of
                  Bristol. A bird which resembled a sand-piper in its flight, and note, had appeared
                  about the ship, the day before we made this island, and might be said to have
                  announced its proximity, but though we observed another of the same sort
                     <date>[Sunday 26.]</date>on the 26th which actually settled in the rigging, yet
                  we did not fall in with another island. We held a westerly course from Hervey's
                  Isle, which lies in 19° 18' south latitude and 158° 54' west longitude from
                  Greenwich, till <date>[1773. October.][Friday 1.]</date>the first of October when
                  we saw land before us about two o'clock in the afternoon. In four hours time we
                  came within two or three leagues of it, and found it of a moderate height; the
                  hills were covered with trees, and offered a pleasing, though not magnificent
                  prospect. At the south-west extremity we observed a small rocky islet, and to the
                  northward a low land of greater extent. From thence we judged, that the isle
                  before us was the same which Abel Janssen Tasman named Middleburg Isle, in 1643,
                  and that the other to the north, was that of Amsterdam, discovered by the same
                  navigator. We lay to <date>[Saturday 2.]</date>all night, and with day-break
                  passed round the S. W. point of Middleburg Isle, and ranged its western coast.
                  There appeared to be some low land at the bottom of the hills, which contained
                  plantations of fine young bananas, whose vivid green leaves contrasted admirably
                  with the different tints of various shrubberies, and with the brown colour of the
                  coco palms, which seemed to be the effect of winter. The light was still so faint,
                  that we distinguished several fires glimmering in the bushes, but by degrees we
                  likewise discerned people running along the shore. The hills which were low, and
                  not so high above the level of the sea as the Isle of Wight, were agreeably
                  adorned with small clumps of trees scattered at some distance, and the
                  intermediate ground appeared covered with herbage, like many parts of England. It
                  was not long before we perceived some of the inhabitants busied in launching
                  several canoes, and paddling towards us. We threw a rope into one of these canoes
                  which ran up close to us, and one of the three people in her came on board, and
                  presented a root of the intoxicating pepper-tree of the South Sea Islands, touched
                  our noses with his like the New Zeelanders, in sign of friendship, and then sat
                  down on the deck without speaking a word. The captain presented him with a nail,
                  upon which he immediately held it over his own head, and pronounced fagafetai,
                  which was probably an expression of thanksgiving. He was naked to the waist, but
                  from thence to the knees he had a piece of cloth wrapped about him, which seemed
                  to be manufactured much like that of Taheitee, but was covered with a brown
                  colour, and a strong glue, which made it stiff, and fit to resist the wet. His
                  stature was middle-sized, and his lineaments were mild and tolerably regular. His
                  colour was much like that of the common Taheitians , that is, of a clear mahogany
                  or chestnut brown; his beard was cut short or shaven, and his hair was black, in
                  short frizzled curls, burnt as it were at the tips. He had three circular spots on
                  each arm, about the size of a crown piece, consisting of several concentric
                  circles of elevated points, which answered to the punctures of the Taheitians, but
                  were not blacked; besides these, he had other black punctures on his body. A small
                  cylinder was fixed through two holes in the lap of his ear, and his left hand
                  wanted the little finger. He continued his silence for a considerable while, but
                  some others, who ventured on board soon after him, were of a more communicative
                  turn, and after having performed the ceremony of touching noses, spoke a language
                  which was unintelligible to us at that time. In the mean while we arrived at the
                  N. W. point of the island, where we struck soundings on a good bottom, in an open
                  road, and let go our anchors about nine in the morning. We were presently
                  surrounded by a number of canoes, each containing three or four people, who
                  offered great quantities of their cloth for sale. The canoes were small, about
                  fifteen feet long, very sharp built, and decked or covered at each extremity. Most
                  of them had out-riggers made of poles, like the small canoes at Taheitee, but the
                  workmanship of these boats was infinitely preferable, as they were joined together
                  with an exactness which surprised us, and the whole surface had received an
                  excellent polish. Their paddles had short broad blades, something like those of
                  Taheitee, but more neatly wrought, and of better wood. They made a great deal of
                  noise about us, every one shewing what he had to sell, and calling to some one of
                  us, who happened to look towards them. Their language was not unpleasing, and
                  whatever they said, was in a singing kind of tone. Many were bold enough to come
                  on board, without expressing the least hesitation, and one of these seemed to be a
                  chief, or a man of some quality, and was accordingly treated with a number of
                  presents, which he severally laid on his head, when he received them, saying
                  fagafetai every time. Our English cloth and linen he admired most, and iron wares
                  in the next degree. His behaviour was very free and unconcerned; for he went down
                  into the cabin, and where-ever we thought fit to conduct him. He likewise told us,
                  upon our enquiry, that the island near which we lay at anchor, (the same which
                  Tasman called Middleburg) was called Ea-Oowhe among his country-men; and that the
                  other to the north (or Tasman's Amsterdam island) bore the name of Tonga-Tabboo.
                  We consulted several of the natives, in order to have greater certainty on this
                  point, and always received the same names in answer.</p>

               <p>After breakfast, the captains went on shore with us and the chief, who had
                  continued on board all that time. A bed of coral rocks surrounded the coast,
                  towards the landing-place; but many canoes occupied the deep channels between
                  these rocks, and a great number of inhabitants in them as well as on the shore,
                  shouted for joy at our approach. The canoes immediately came along side the boat,
                  and the natives threw great bales of cloth into it, without asking for any thing
                  in return; while many of both sexes swam about perfectly naked, holding up some
                  trifles, such as rings of tortoise-shell, fish-hooks of mother of pearl, and the
                  like, for sale. As soon as we could make way through the throng of canoes, we
                  approached as near as possible to the shore, and were carried to it out of our
                  boat, for which the natives very readily offered their backs. The people thronged
                  about us with every expression of friendship, and offered a few fruits, with a
                  variety of arms and utensils. The cordial reception which we met with, was such as
                  might have been expected from a people well acquainted with our good intentions,
                  and accustomed to the transitory visits of European ships. But these kind
                  islanders had never seen Europeans among them, and could only have heard of Tasman
                  who visited the adjacent Amsterdam island, by imperfect tradition. Nothing was
                  therefore more conspicuous in their whole behaviour than an open, generous
                  disposition, free from any mean distrust. This was confirmed by the appearance of
                  a great number of women in the croud, covered from the waist downwards, whose
                  looks and smiles welcomed us to the shore. Mr. Hodges designed this memorable
                  interview in an elegant picture, which has been engraved for captain Cook's
                  account of this voyage. The same candour with which I have made it a rule to
                  commend the performances of this ingenious artist, whenever they are
                  characteristic of the objects which he meant to represent, obliges me to mention,
                  that this piece, in which the execution of Mr. Sherwin cannot be too much admired,
                  does not convey any adequate idea of the natives of Eaoowhe or of Tonga Tabbo. The
                  plates which ornamented the history of captain Cook's former voyage, have been
                  justly criticised, because they exhibited to our eyes the pleasing forms of
                  antique figures and draperies, instead of those Indians of which we wished to form
                  some idea. But it is also greatly to be feared, that Mr. Hodges has lost the
                  sketches and drawings which he made from Nature in the course of the voyage, and
                  supplied the deficiency in this case, from his own elegant ideas. The connoisseur
                  will find Greek contours and features in this picture, which have never existed in
                  the South Sea. He will admire an elegant flowing robe which involves the whole
                  head and body, in an island where the women very rarely cover the shoulders and
                  breast; and he will be struck with awe and delight by the figure of a divine old
                  man, with a long white beard, though all the people of Ea-oowhe shave themselves
                  with muscle-shells.</p>

               <p>We soon left the landing place, and followed the chief, who invited us up into the
                  country. The ground from the water's side rose somewhat steep for a few yards,
                  above which it flattened into a beautiful green lawn, surrounded by tall trees and
                  tufted shrubberies, and open only to the sea. At the bottom of it, which might be
                  about one hundred yards from the landing-place, we saw a very neat well-looking
                  house, of which the roof sloped down within two feet of the ground. We advanced
                  across the delightful green, which was so smooth, that it put us in mind of the
                  finest spots in England, and were entreated to sit down in the house, which was
                  most elegantly laid out with mats of the best workmanship. In one corner of it we
                  saw a moveable partition of wicker-work standing upright, and, from the signs of
                  the natives collected, that it separated their bed-place. The roof, sloping down
                  on all sides, was formed of a great number of spars and round sticks very firmly
                  connected, and covered with a sort of matting made of banana leaves.</p>

               <p>We were no sooner seated in the house, surrounded by a considerable number of
                  natives, not less than a hundred, than two or three of the women welcomed us with
                  a song, which, though exceedingly simple, had a very pleasing effect, and was
                  highly musical when compared to the Taheitian songs. They beat time to it by
                  snapping the second finger and thumb, and holding the three remaining fingers
                  upright. Their voices were very sweet and mellow, and they sung in parts. When
                  they had done they were relieved by others, who sung the same tune, and at last
                  they joined together in chorus. A very ingenious gentleman, who was on this voyage
                  with us, has favoured me with one of the tunes which he heard in this island,
                  which may serve as a specimen to the musical part of my readers.</p>

               <p>[Some music notes]</p>

               <p>In this little specimen the music is in the minor key, (a flat third). They varied
                  the four notes without ever going lower than A or higher than E; singing them
                  rather slow, and sometimes ending with the chord [some music notes].</p>

               <p>The kindness of the people was expressed in every look and gesture, and they
                  freely offered us some coco-nuts, of which we found the liquor very palatable. We
                  were likewise regaled with a most delicious perfume in this place, which the
                  breeze wafted towards us. It was a considerable time before we discovered from
                  whence it proceeded; but at last having looked at some shady trees at the back of
                  the house, we perceived they were of the lemon tribe, and covered with beautiful
                  branches of white flowers, which spread this fragrant smell. The natives soon
                  brought us some of the fruits, which we knew to be of the kind called shaddocks in
                  the West-Indies, and pomplemoses at Batavia and the adjacent East-Indian isles.
                  Their shape was perfectly globular, their size almost as large as a child's head,
                  and their taste extremely pleasant.</p>

               <p>On both sides of the lawn we took notice of a fence or enclosure made of reeds,
                  diagonally plaited in an elegant taste. A door, which consisted of several boards,
                  and was hung on a rope instead of hinges, gave admittance into a plantation on
                  each side. We separated, in order to examine this beautiful country, and at every
                  step had reason to be well pleased with our discoveries. The door was so contrived
                  as to shut after us without any assistance, and the enclosures were over-run with
                  climbers, and especially a bind-weed, having flowers of a beautiful sky-blue. The
                  prospect now changed into an extensive garden, where we saw a number of tufted
                  shaddock-trees, tall coco-palms, many bananas, and a few bread-fruit trees. In the
                  midst of this spot the path led us to a dwelling-house, like that on the lawn,
                  surrounded by a great variety of shrubs in blossom, whose fragrance filled the
                  air. We roamed through these bushes, and collected a variety of plants which we
                  had never met with in the Society Isles. The inhabitants seemed to be of a more
                  active and industrious disposition than those of Taheitee, and instead of
                  following us in great crouds wherever we went, left us entirely by ourselves,
                  unless we entreated them to accompany us. In that case we could venture to go with
                  our pockets open, unless we had nails in them, upon which they set so great a
                  value that they could not always resist the temptation. We passed through more
                  than ten adjacent plantations or gardens, separated by enclosures, communicating
                  with each other by means of the doors before mentioned. In each of them we
                  commonly met with a house, of which the inhabitants were absent. Their attention
                  to separate their property seemed to argue a higher degree of civilization than we
                  had expected. Their arts, manufactures, and music were all more cultivated,
                  complicated, and elegant than at the Society Islands. But, in return, the
                  opulence, or rather luxury, of the Taheitians seemed to be much greater. We saw
                  but few hogs and fowls here, and that great support of life, the bread-tree,
                  appeared to be very scarce. Yams, therefore, and other roots, together with
                  bananas, are their principal articles of diet. Their cloathing too, compared to
                  that of Taheitee, was less plentiful, or at least not converted into such an
                  article of luxury as at that island. Lastly, their houses, though neatly
                  constructed, and always placed in a fragrant shrubbery, were less roomy and
                  convenient. We made these reflections as we advanced towards the landing place,
                  where several hundred natives were assembled; and their appearance immediately
                  struck us with the idea, that if they did not enjoy so great a profusion of the
                  gifts of nature as the Taheitians, those gifts were perhaps distributed to all
                  with greater equality. We advanced among them, and were accosted with caresses by
                  old and young, by men and women. They hugged us very heartily, and frequently
                  kissed our hands, laying them on the breast, with the most expressive looks of
                  affection that can be imagined. The general stature of the men was equal to our
                  middle size, from five feet three to five feet ten inches. The proportions of the
                  body were very fine, and the contours of the limbs extremely elegant, though
                  something more muscular than at Taheitee, which may be owing to a greater and more
                  constant exertion of strength in their agriculture and œconomy. Their features
                  were extremely mild and pleasing, and differed from the Taheitian faces, in being
                  more oblong than round; the nose sharper, and the lips rather thinner. Their hair
                  was generally black and strongly curled, and the beard shaven or rather clipt by
                  means of a couple of sharp muscle shells, (mytili). The women were, in general, a
                  few inches shorter than the men, but not so small as the lower class of women at
                  Taheitee and the Society Isles. Their body was exquisitely proportioned down to
                  the waist, and their hands and arms were to the full as delicate as those of the
                  Taheitian women; but like them they had such large feet and legs as did not
                  harmonize with the rest. Their features, though without regularity, were as
                  agreeable as we had in general observed them at the Society Isles; but we
                  recollected many individuals there, especially of the principal families, to which
                  none of these could be compared. The complexion of both sexes here was the same, a
                  light chestnut-brown, which had commonly the appearance of perfect health. That
                  difference of colour and corpulence, by which we immediately distinguished the
                  ranks at Taheitee, was not to be met with in this island. The chief, who had
                  visited us on board and accompanied us to the shore, was in nothing different from
                  the common people, not even in his dress; it was only from the obedience which was
                  paid to this orders that we concluded his quality. The custom of puncturing the
                  skin and blacking it, was in full force among the men, and their belly and loins
                  were very strongly marked in configurations more compounded than those of the
                  Taheitians. The tenderest parts of the body were not free from these punctures,
                  the application of which, besides being very painful, must be extremely dangerous
                  on glandulous extremities, and justly excited our astonishment.</p>

               <p>The women, however, were exempted from this custom of disfiguring themselves, and
                  had only a few black dots on their hands. But besides these, both sexes had three
                  spots on the arms, consisting of concentric circles of punctures, without any
                  blacking, which I have mentioned before. The men in general went almost naked,
                  having only a small bit of cloth round the loins. Some, however, wore a dress
                  nearly resembling that of the women. This was a long piece of cloth made of bark,
                  in the same manner as the Taheitee cloth, but afterwards painted chequer-wise, or
                  in patterns nearly resembling our painted floor-cloths, and covered with a size,
                  which turned the wet for a long while. This they wrapped round their waist, the
                  men nearly about their middle, the women more immediately under the breast, and in
                  both it commonly descended below the knees. Instead of the cloth they likewise
                  substituted mats, extremely well wrought, in form resembling those of Taheitee,
                  and sometimes, though rarely, covered even their shoulders and breasts with them.
                  The men frequently wore a string round their necks, from which a mother of pearl
                  shell hung down on the breast. The women often had loose necklaces, consisting of
                  several strings of small shells, intermixed with seeds, teeth of fishes, and in
                  the middle of all the round operculum, or cover of a shell, as large as a
                  crown-piece. Both their ears were perforated, and sometimes with two holes, and a
                  little cylinder cut out of tortoise-shell or bone, was stuck through both the
                  holes. Sometimes these cylinders were only of reed, filled with a red solid
                  substance, painted and lacquered with different colours in regular compartments.
                  The most singular circumstance which we observed among these people was, that many
                  of them wanted the little finger on one and sometimes on both hands; the
                  differences of sex or age did not exempt them from this amputation; for even
                  amongst the few children, whom we saw running about naked, the greater part had
                  already suffered this loss. Only a few grown people, who had preserved both their
                  little fingers, were an exception to the general rule. We immediately conjectured
                  that the death of a near relation or friend might require these strange
                  mutilations, in the same manner as is customary among the Hottentots, in Africa ;
                  the Guaranos, in Paraguay; and the Californians; and our enquiries, though
                  unsuccessful at first, afterwards confirmed the conjecture. Another singularity,
                  which we observed to be very general among these people, was a round spot on each
                  cheek-bone, which appeared to have been burnt or blistered. Some had it quite
                  recent, in others it was covered with a scurf, and many had a very slight mark of
                  its former existence. We could never learn how and for what purpose it was made;
                  but we supposed it could only be used like the Japanese moxa, as a remedy against
                  various complaints.</p>

               <p>Notwithstanding the engaging manners of the natives, we foreshaw that we should
                  make but a very short stay among them, because our captains could not obtain
                  refreshments in any considerable quantity; which might be owing not so much to
                  their scarcity upon the island, as to the difficulty of making our goods current
                  for such valuable articles, when they could obtain them in exchange for arms and
                  utensils. They had brought indeed a few yams, bananas, coco-nuts, and shaddocks
                  for sale, but they soon dropt that branch of trade. Our people purchased an
                  incredible number of fish hooks made of mother of pearl, barbed with
                  tortoise-shell, but in shape exactly resembling the Taheitee fish-hooks, called
                  witte-witte ; some of which were near seven inches long. They likewise bought
                  their shells, which hung on the breast, their necklaces, bracelets of mother of
                  pearl, and cylindrical sticks for the ear. They had the neatest ornamental combs
                  that can be imagined, consisting of a number of little flat sticks about five
                  inches long, of a yellow wood like box, most firmly and elegantly connected
                  together at the bottom by a tissue of the fibres of coco-nut, some of which were
                  of their natural colour, and others dyed black. These fibres were likewise
                  employed in making a great variety of baskets, wrought with regular compartments
                  of two colours, brown and black, or sometimes all brown, and ornamented with rows
                  of round flat beads, which were made by cutting pieces of shells into that shape.
                  The taste and the workmanship of these baskets were elegant in the highest degree,
                  and varied into different forms and patterns. Those little stools, which serve as
                  pillows for the head, were much more frequent here than at Taheitee; flattish
                  bowls, in which they place their meat, and spatulas with which they mix up the
                  bread-fruit paste, were likewise in great abundance, and made of the club-wood
                  (casuarina equistifeolia), which had this name from supplying all the islanders in
                  the South Sea with weapons. The clubs of the people of this isle, were of an
                  infinite variety of shapes, and many of them so ponderous that we could scarce
                  manage them with one hand; the most common form was quadrangular, so as to make a
                  rhomboid at the broad end, and gradually tapering into a round handle at the
                  other. But many were spatulated, flattish, and pointed: some had long handles and
                  a blade which resembled the blade of a fleam; others were crooked, knobbed,
                  &amp;c. But by far the greatest part were carved all over in many chequered
                  patterns, which seemed to have required a long space of time, and incredible
                  patience, especially when we consider, that a sharp stone, or a piece of coral,
                  are the only tools which the natives can employ in this kind of work. All the
                  different compartments were wrought and divided with a regularity which quite
                  surprised us, and the whole surface of the plain clubs was as highly polished, as
                  if our best workmen had made them with the best instruments. Besides clubs, they
                  had spears of the same wood, which were sometimes plain, sharp-pointed sticks, and
                  sometimes barbed with a sting-ray's tail. They had likewise bows and arrows, of a
                  peculiar construction. The bow which was six feet long, was about the thickness of
                  a little finger, and when slack, formed a slight curve. Its convex part was
                  channelled with a single deep groove, in which the bow string was lodged, and
                  which was likewise big enough sometimes to contain the arrow made of reed, near
                  six feet long, and pointed with hard wood. When the bow was to be bent, instead of
                  drawing it so as to encrease the natural curvature, they drew it the contrary way,
                  made it perfectly strait, and then formed the curve on the other side. The
                  bow-string by this means never needed to be tense, as the arrow received
                  sufficient moment by changing the natural bent of the bow; the recoil of which was
                  never violent enough to hurt the arm. Our seamen, unacquainted with the nature of
                  these weapons, broke several of them by drawing them like other bows. The immense
                  quantity of arms belonging to the natives, corresponded very ill with the pacific
                  disposition, which had strongly shone through their whole behaviour towards us,
                  and which still manifested itself in their readiness to dispose of them. It is
                  probable that they have sometimes quarrels amongst themselves, or wage war with
                  the neighbouring islands, but we could by no means discover any thing from their
                  conversation or signs, which might have served to throw a light on this subject.
                  The several articles above enumerated, together with all their sorts of cloth,
                  their elegant mats, which for workmanship and variety excelled even those of
                  Taheitee, and a great many other trifles too tedious to mention, they brought to
                  sell, and with great eagerness exchanged for small nails, and sometimes for beads.
                  But in respect of the latter their taste was different from that of the
                  Taheitians; for the latter always chose those that were transparent, but the
                  people of Ea-oowhe would take no other than black opaque beads, with red, blue,
                  and white stripes. We traded with them till dinner-time, and then re-embarked in
                  order to return on board the ships; but were obliged to sit down contented with
                  the loss of a grapnel, which the natives had contrived to steal almost as soon as
                  it was let down into the water. Their kind looks and acclamations followed us till
                  we returned on board, where a number of them traded in their canoes with the same
                  sorts of goods which we had purchased on shore. We saw several persons among them
                  afflicted with leprous complaints, in some of which the disorder had risen to a
                  high degree of virulence; one man in particular had his whole back and shoulders
                  covered with a large cancerous ulcer, which was perfectly livid within, and of a
                  bright yellow all round the edges. A woman was likewise unfortunate enough to have
                  all her face destroyed by it in the most shocking manner; there was only a hole
                  left in the place of her nose; her cheeks were swelled up and continually oozing
                  out a purulent matter; and her eyes seemed ready to fall out of her head, being
                  bloody and sore. These were some of the most miserable objects I recollect ever to
                  have seen; and yet they seemed to be quite unconcerned about their misfortunes,
                  traded as briskly as any of the rest, and what was most nauseous, had provisions
                  to sell.</p>

               <p>After dinner Dr. Sparrman remained on board with me, in order to arrange our
                  acquisitions of the morning, and my father again accompanied the captains to the
                  shore, with a view to collect a fresh supply. They returned about sun-set, and my
                  father gave the following account of this excursion.</p>

               <p>" At the landing-place the natives welcomed us with shouts as in the morning, and
                  the croud being as numerous as ever, the trade was carried on very briskly, but
                  provisions were scarce, and shaddocks in particular not at all to be had, as the
                  season was not yet sufficiently advanced. Mr. Hodges, myself, and one servant,
                  left the trading place with two of the natives, whom we engaged to become our
                  guides in case of necessity, and walked up the hill to view the interior part of
                  the country. Our walk lay through a number of rich plantations or gardens,
                  enclosed as before mentioned with fences of reeds, or with quick-hedges of the
                  beautiful coral flower, (erythrina corallodendron). Beyond these we entered into a
                  lane between two enclosures, and observed bananas and yams planted in rows on both
                  sides, with as much order and regularity as we employ in our agriculture. This
                  lane opened into a fine extensive plain, covered with rich grasses. Having crossed
                  it, we met with a most delightful walk about a mile in length, formed of four rows
                  of coco-nut trees, which ended in another lane between plantations of great
                  regularity, surrounded by shaddocks and other trees. It led through a cultivated
                  valley to a spot where several paths crossed each other or met in one. Here we saw
                  a fine lawn covered with a delicate green tuf, and surrounded by large shady trees
                  on all sides. In one corner of it there was a house, which was empty at present,
                  its inhabitants being probably by the water's side. Mr. Hodges sat down to draw
                  this delightful spot. We breathed the most delicious air in the world, fraught
                  with odours which might have revived a dying man; the sea-breeze played with our
                  hair and gently cooled us; a number of small birds twittered on all sides, and
                  many amorous doves cooed harmoniously in the deepest shade of the tree under which
                  we were seated. The tree was remarkable for its roots, which came out of the stem
                  near eight feet above the ground, and for its pods of more than a yard long, and
                  two or three inches broad. This secluded spot, so rich in the best productions of
                  nature, where we sat solitary with no other human being besides our two natives,
                  struck us with the idea of enchanted ground, which being the creation of our own
                  gay fancy, is commonly adorned with all possible beauties at once. In fact, there
                  could not have been a more desirable spot for a little place of retirement,
                  according to the elegant imagination of Horace, if it had only been supplied with
                  a crystal fountain or a little murmuring rill! But water is unfortunately the only
                  blessing denied this charming little island. To the left of this spot we
                  discovered a shady walk, that brought us to another grassy lawn, at the bottom of
                  which we perceived a little mount with two huts upon it. A number of reeds stuck
                  into the ground, at the distance of one foot asunder, encompassed this rising, and
                  several casuarinas, with their slender branches and thread-like leaves, were
                  planted before it. The natives, whom we had engaged to accompany us, would not
                  approach this mount; but we advanced and looked into the huts, though with great
                  difficulty, because the bottom of the roof was not above a span from the ground.
                  We found a corse in one of these huts, which had been lately deposited; but the
                  other was empty. Thus the casuarina or club-wood (tòa), here, as in the Society
                  Islands, pointed out the repositories of the dead. Its dull brownish-green colour,
                  and its long spreading branches, where the leaves are thinly scattered and hang
                  weeping down, certainly become these melancholy places to the full as well as the
                  funereal cypress. It is therefore probable that the same train of ideas, which
                  consecrated the latter in one part of the world to shade the tombs, might fix upon
                  the former in these regions for a similar purpose. The mount on which the huts
                  were placed was formed of small pieces of coral rock, like gravel, accumulated
                  without any particular order. From thence we proceeded a little farther, and still
                  found the same elegant plantations and the same kind of houses in the middle as
                  before. Our natives conducted us through one of them, where they entreated us to
                  sit down, and procured some coco nuts, which proved extremely refreshing. At our
                  return we found our boats just ready to put off, and embarked with them
                  immediately. We had only seen a few of the natives on our walk, who passed
                  unconcernedly by us towards the place were the captains traded; and I believe we
                  should have been entirely left to ourselves if we had not engaged two of them to
                  become our conductors. The discharge of our guns, and their effect, neither
                  excited their admiration nor their fear; but they always appeared kind and
                  courteous towards us. Their women were, in general, reserved, and turned with
                  disgust from the immodest behaviour of ungovernable seamen, some of them however,
                  appeared to be of easy virtue, and beckoned to our people with lascivious
                  gestures." </p>

               <p>The next morning early the captain went on shore with us, and presented the chief
                  with a variety of garden seeds, explaining by signs how useful they would prove to
                  him. This was a yet our only mode of conversation, though we had picked up a
                  number of words, which, by the help of the principles of universal grammar, and
                  the idea of dialects, we easily perceived had a great affinity with the language
                  spoken at Taheitee and the Society Isles. O-Mai and Mahine (or O-Hedeède), the two
                  natives of Raietea and Borabora who embarked with us, at first declared that the
                  language was totally new and unintelligible to them; however, when we explained to
                  them the affinity of several words, they presently caught the peculiar
                  modification of this dialect, and conversed much better with the natives than we
                  could have done after a long intercourse with them. They were extremely well
                  pleased with this country, but soon perceived its defects, and told us there was
                  but scanty provision of bread-fruit, few hogs and fowls, and no dogs, which was
                  really the case. In return, however, they liked the abundance of sugar-canes and
                  of intoxicating pepper, of which the drink had been offered to captain Cook.</p>

               <p>As soon as the captains had delivered their present, they returned to the ships,
                  and the chief came on board with us. Our anchor was weighed, our sails were spread
                  to the wind, and we forsook this happy island when he had scarce discovered its
                  beauties. The chief, after selling a number of fish-hooks for nails and beads,
                  hailed one of the canoes which were passing by, and left us with looks which spoke
                  his friendly, open disposition.</p>

               <p>We now sailed along the western shore of Tasman's Amsterdam island, which the
                  natives called Tonga-Tabboo and found it a very low flat land, compared with that
                  which we had left. The middle of this island is nearly in 21° 11'S. latitude, and
                  175° W. longitude. Its highest elevation above the level of the sea, appeared to
                  the eye never to exceed six or seven yards perpendicular. On the other hand, its
                  extent was much more considerable than that of Ea-oowhe, and by the help of our
                  spying-glasses, we discovered the same regular plantations which we had so much
                  admired there, and saw the shores crouded with inhabitants, who gazed at us,
                  probably with as much attention as we bestowed upon them. When we were about half
                  way between both islands, or nearly three leagues from each, we were met by
                  several canoes full of men, who attempted to come along-side, but as we happened
                  to be too far to windward, they could only fetch the Adventure, where they came on
                  board.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we approached the northernmost end of the island, and perceived
                  some small isles connected by reefs to the eastward. Their situation and that of
                  the shoal to the north-west, where the sea broke with great violence, convinced us
                  that we were now arrived at the very place where Tasman ancored in 1643, and which
                  he called Van Diemen's Road. Here we dropped an anchor upon a rocky bank, and were
                  immediately surrounded with numbers of the natives, some in canoes, and some
                  swimming, though we lay about a quarter of a mile from the shore. We found them to
                  be of the same nation which inhabited Ea-oowhe, and their mercantile turn prompted
                  them to bring an immense quantity of their cloth, mats, nets, utensils, arms, and
                  ornaments, which they eagerly exchanged for beads and nails. The ships were no
                  sooner moored, than a prohibition was made against purchasing curiosities, and the
                  natives were told to bring coco-nuts, bread-fruit, yams, and bananas, as well as
                  hogs and fowls, of which we had already learnt the names. We purchased a small
                  quantity of provisions the same evening, to give an example to the rest of the
                  inhabitants, who were obliged to take their merchandize on shore again. The good
                  effects of this step appeared the next morning, when the natives returned from
                  shore at day-break, and had loaded their canoes with vegetables and fowls. Many of
                  them came on board as freely as if we had been old acquaintances, and did not
                  appear to have the least idea of distrust. One of them, a well made man, with a
                  handsome open countenance, seemed to have some authority among them, like the
                  chief whom we had seen on Ea-oowhe. He descended into the cabin, acquainted us
                  that his name was Attahha, and received several presents, among which he sat a
                  high value on iron, and on red European broad-cloth. After breakfast he went on
                  shore with us in the pinnace. A coral reef surrounded the coast, at the distance
                  of a musket-shot, and a single narrow pass admitted us within it, were we found
                  the water so full of rocks and so shallow, that we were obliged to be carried out
                  of the boat. A party of the marines were posted on the beach in case of danger, to
                  protect the captain's clerk, who traded for provisions. The natives did not
                  express either surprize or dislike at this proceeding, perhaps because they were
                  unacquainted with its meaning. They received us with acclamations of joy as at
                  Ea-oowhe, and desired us to sit down with them on the rocks along shore, which
                  consisted of coral, and were covered with shell sand. We purchased several
                  beautiful parroquets, pigeons, and doves, which they brought to us perfectly tame;
                  and our young Borabora-man Mahine (or Hedèedee) traded with great eagerness for
                  ornaments made of bright red feathers, which he assured us had an extraordinary
                  value at Taheitee and the Society Islands. Here they were commonly pasted to
                  aprons used in their dances, and made of the fibres of coco-nut, or fixed upon
                  banana leaves, forming rhomboidal frontlets or diadems, &amp;c. With a degree of
                  extasy which gave the greatest weight to his assertion, he shewed us that a little
                  piece of feathered-work, as broad as two or three fingers, would purchase the
                  largest hog in his island. Both this youth and O-Mai were much pleased with the
                  inhabitants of these islands, and began to understand their language tolerably
                  well.</p>

               <p>We left the beach after the first acquaintance with the natives, and ascended a
                  few feet into a wild forest consisting of tall trees, intermixed with shrubberies.
                  This wood though narrow, being in many places not above one hundred yards wide,
                  was continued along the shore of Van Diemen's road, being more or less open in
                  various parts. Beyond it the whole island was perfectly level. We walked across a
                  piece of uncultivated land, about five hundred yards wide, which adjoined to the
                  wood. Part of it appeared to have been planted with yams, but the rest was full of
                  grass, and had a little swamp in the middle, where the purple water-hen, or poule
                  sultane, resided in great numbers. As soon as we left this, we entered into a lane
                  about six feet wide, between two fences of reed, which enclosed extensive
                  plantations on each side. Here we met many of the natives, who were travelling to
                  the beach with loads of provisions, and courteously bowed their heads as they
                  passed by us in sign of friendship, generally pronouncing some monosyllable or
                  other, which seemed to correspond to the Taheitian tayo. The enclosures,
                  plantations, and houses were exactly in the same style as at Ea-oowhe, and the
                  people had never failed to plant odoriferous shrubs round their dwellings. The
                  mulberry, of which the bark is manufactured into cloth, and the bread-tree, were
                  more scarce than at the Society Isles, and the apple of those islands was entirely
                  unknown, but the shaddock well supplied its place. The season of spring, which
                  revived the face of all nature, adorning every plant with blossoms, and inspiring
                  with joyful songs the feathered tribe, doubtless contributed in a great measure to
                  make every object pleasing in our eyes. But the industry and elegance of the
                  natives, which they displayed in planting every piece of ground to the greatest
                  advantage, as well as in the neatness and regularity of all their works, demanded
                  our admiration, whilst it gave us room to suppose, that they enjoyed a
                  considerable degree of happiness.</p>

               <p>One of the lanes between the enclosures led us to a little grove, which we admired
                  for its irregularity. An immense casuarina tree far out-topped the rest, and its
                  branches were loaded with a vast number of blackish creatures, which we took for
                  crows at a distance, but which proved to be bats when we came nearer. They clung
                  to the twigs, by the hooked claws, which are at the extremity of their webbed
                  fingers and toes; sometimes they hung with the head downwards, and sometimes the
                  reverse. We shot at them, and brought down six or eight at once, besides wounding
                  several others which held fast on the tree. They were of the kind which is
                  commonly called the vampyre , and measured from three to four feet between the
                  expanded wings. A great number of them were disturbed at our firing, and flew from
                  the tree very heavily, uttering a shrill piping note; some likewise arrived from
                  remote parts at intervals to the tree, but the greatest number remained in their
                  position, and probably go out to feed only by night. As they live chiefly upon
                  fruit, it is likely that they commit great depredations in the orchards of the
                  natives, some of whom being present when we fired, seemed very well pleased with
                  the death of their enemies. We had seen some of them who had caught these bats
                  alive, and placed them in a cage of wickerwork very ingeniously contrived, with an
                  entrance like that of a fish-basket, where the animal could easily be put in, but
                  could not come out again. They likewise assured us the bats were very mordacious,
                  for which purpose they seemed indeed to be well provided with large sharp
                  teeth.</p>

               <p>We had already observed at Taheitee, at the Society Islands, and even at Ea-oowhe,
                  that wherever we met with a casuarina, a burying-place was at hand. Therefore, at
                  sight of this venerable tree, which was hung with ill-omened creatures, we
                  immediately conjectured that it would lead us to a cemetery or place of worship,
                  and the event shewed that we were not mistaken. We found a beautiful green lawn,
                  enclosed on all sides by shady bushes and trees, amongst which casuarinas,
                  pandangs, and wild sago-palms appeared with their various tints of green. A row of
                  Barringtonias, as big as the loftiest oaks, formed one side of it, and strewed it
                  with their large blushing flowers. At the upper end of it, there was a rising two
                  or three feet high, set out with coral-stones cut square. The area above was
                  covered with a green sod, like the rest of the lawn. Two steps, likewise of coral
                  rock, led up to this part, in the midst of which a house was situated, exactly
                  like that which we saw at Ea-oowhe. Its length was about twenty, the breadth
                  fifteen, and the height of the ridge ten feet. The roof descended sloping nearly
                  to the ground, and was made of banana leaves. We entered into this building with
                  only one of the natives, the rest keeping at some distance. We found the floor
                  covered with broken pieces of white coral rock, and in one corner a heap of
                  blackish pebbles, about eight feet long, which was elevated a foot above the white
                  stones. The native told us that a man lay buried there, and pointing to the place
                  where his little finger had formerly been cut away, he plainly signified that when
                  his maduas or parents died, they mutilated their hands. We found two pieces of
                  wood a foot long, carved into some resemblance of the human figure, like those
                  which are called e-tee at Taheitee, but they were treated in the same manner, that
                  is without the least degree of respect or veneration, being frequently trod upon
                  and kicked about. These burying-places, which are called a-Fayetooca in the
                  language of the country, are always delightfully situated on green lawns, and
                  surrounded withe the finest groves. That which I have here described, was drawn by
                  Mr. Hodges, and an exact representation of it is inserted in captain Cook's own
                  account of this voyage.</p>

               <p>We continued our walk through the plantations, and met with very few inhabitants,
                  they being almost all gone towards the trading-place. Those we saw passed by us,
                  or continued their occupations without stopping on our account. Neither curiosity,
                  nor distrust and jealousy excited them to prohibit our farther progress; on the
                  contrary, they always spoke in a kind tone to us, which sufficiently characterized
                  their disposition. We looked into many of the houses and found them empty, but
                  always laid out with mats, and delightfully situated among odoriferous shrubs.
                  Sometimes they were separated from the plantations by a little fence, through
                  which a door, like those of Ea‑oowhe, gave admittance, which could be shut on the
                  inside. In that case only the area, which this fence enclosed around the hut, was
                  planted with the odoriferous grove, which is so much in request with the natives.
                  A walk of three miles brought us to the eastern shore of the island, where it
                  forms a deep angle, which Tasman called Maria Bay. Where we fell in with it, the
                  ground sloped imperceptibly into a sandy beach; but as we walked along towards the
                  north point, we found it rose perpendicularly, and in some places it was excavated
                  and overhanging. It consisted, however, entirely of coral, which is a strong proof
                  of some great change on our globe, as this rock can only be formed under water.
                  Whether it was left bare by a gradual diminution of the sea, or perhaps by a more
                  violent revolution which our earth may formerly have suffered, I shall not venture
                  to determine. So much, however, may be assumed as a certainty, that if we suppose
                  a gradual diminution of the sea, at the rate which they pretend to have observed
                  in Sweden , the emersion of this island must be of so modern date, that it is
                  matter of astonishment how it came to be covered with soil, herbage, and forests:
                  so well stocked with inhabitants, and so regularly adorned as we really found it.
                  We picked up a quantity of shells at the foot of the steep rock, where we
                  sometimes waded in water to the knees upon a reef, on account of the flood tide
                  which was advancing. We likewise met with several natives returning from the
                  trading-place, who sold us a number of fish-hooks and ornaments, a fish-net made
                  like our casting-nets, knit of very firm though slender threads, some mats and
                  pieces of cloth. We likewise purchased of them an apron, consisting of many wheels
                  or stars of plaited coco-nut fibres, about three or four inches in diameter,
                  cohering together by the projecting points, and ornamented with small red feathers
                  and beads cut out of shells. Finding that the water encreased too fast upon us, we
                  looked out for an ascent to the top of the rock, and having with some difficulty
                  found one, we re-entered the plantations, where we observed the weeds rooted out
                  with great care and laid in heaps to dry. After a long walk, during which we
                  missed our way, and engaged one of the natives to become our guide, we entered a
                  long narrow lane between two fences, which led us directly to the Fayetòoca or
                  burying-place we had left before. Here we found captains Cook and Furneaux, and
                  Mr. Hodges, with a great number of natives, seated on the fine lawn. They were in
                  conversation with an old blear-eyed man, who had a good deal of weight among the
                  rest of the people, and was always accompanied by a number of them wherever he
                  went. We were told that he had conducted our gentlemen to two fayetòocas, and had
                  pronounced a solemn speech or prayer, with his face directed to the building, but
                  at times turning to captain Cook, and addressing the words to him, in a
                  questioning tone. In these moments he always made a short pause, as if he expected
                  an answer, and seeing a nod ensue, proceeded with his speech. Sometimes, however,
                  his memory seemed to fail, upon which he was prompted by another man who sat near
                  him. From this ceremony, and the place where it was performed, we conjectured that
                  he was a priest. However, as far as we could see into their religious notions, it
                  did not appear that they practised any kind of idolatry; neither did they seem to
                  have any particular veneration for birds like the Taheitians, but to worship a
                  supreme invisible Being. What may have induced them, as well as the people of
                  Taheitee and the Society Isles, to unite their repositories of the dead and their
                  places of worship in one, remains in obscurity. The religious tenets of a people
                  are the last things which strangers become acquainted with, whose knowledge of the
                  language is commonly too imperfect. Besides this, the dialect of the church
                  frequently differs from the common dialect, and thus religion is veiled in
                  mysteries, especially where there are priests to take advantage of the credulity
                  of mankind.</p>

               <p>From this place we returned to the sea shore, where a brisk trade for vegetables,
                  fowls, and hogs was carried on. Here we bought a large flat shield or
                  breast-plate, of a roundish bone, white and polished like ivory, about eighteen
                  inches in diameter, which appeared to have belonged to an animal of the cetaceous
                  tribe. We likewise found a new musical instrument, consisting of eight, nine, or
                  ten slender reeds, about nine inches long, joined to each other by some fibres of
                  coco-nut core. The length of its reeds seldom varied much, and the long and short
                  ones were placed promiscuously; a notch was formed at the top of each, and the
                  method of playing was only to slide the instrument backwards and forwards along
                  the lips. It had commonly not above four or five different notes, and we never met
                  with one which included a whole octave. Its resemblance to the syrinx, or Pan's
                  flute of the civilized Greeks, dignified it much more than any music which it
                  contained. From the method of playing it, the lovers of music will easily conceive
                  that this divine art is entirely in its infancy among the inhabitants. The vocal
                  part, which is the same as we had already observed it at Ea-oowhe, is very far
                  from being unharmonious, and the women beat time to it by snapping their fingers
                  very exactly; but its whole extent is only of four notes, and therefore cannot
                  admit of any variety. They had likewise a flute of a bamboo-reed, nearly of the
                  thickness of a German flute, which they played with the nostrils, like the
                  Taheitians. They commonly had ornamented it with various little figures, burnt in,
                  and pierced four or five holes in it, whereas the Taheitian flute had but three in
                  all. The method of ornamenting wood by burning figures into it, was frequently
                  observed in their bowls and various other utensils.</p>

               <p>It was near sun-set when we returned on board with our collection, and found the
                  vessels still surrounded by many canoes, and the natives swimming about extremely
                  vociferous. Among them were a considerable number of women, who wantoned in the
                  water like amphibious creatures, and were easily persuaded to come on board,
                  perfectly naked, without professing greater chastity than the common women at
                  Taheitee, and the Society Isles. Our seamen took advantage of their disposition,
                  and once more offered to our eyes a scene worthy of the Cyprian temples. A shirt,
                  a small piece of cloth, nay a few beads, were sometimes sufficient temptations,
                  for which some of the women of Tonga-Tabboo, prostituted themselves without any
                  sense of shame. This lubricity was, however, very far from being general, and we
                  had reason to believe that not a single married woman was guilty of infidelity. If
                  we had been acquainted with the distinction of ranks as at Taheitee, it is highly
                  probable, that we should have observed no other prostitutes than such as belonged
                  to the lowest class of people. Still it remains an unaccountable singularity in
                  the character of the nations of this part of our globe, that they suffer any of
                  their unmarried women to admit the promiscuous embraces of a multitude of lovers.
                  Can they imagine, that after giving such an unlimited course to the impulses of
                  nature, they will make better wives, than the innocent and the chaste? But it is
                  in vain that we endeavour to find reasons for the arbitrary whims of mankind.
                  Their opinions in respect of the sex in particular, have been infinitely various
                  in all ages and countries. In some parts of India, no man of consequence will
                  condescend to marry a virgin; in Europe she who has lost that character is
                  universally rejected. Turks, Arabs, Tartars, and Russians are jealous even of an
                  imaginary characteristic of virginity, which the native of Malabar bestows upon
                  his Idol.</p>

               <p>None of these women ventured to stay on board after sun set, but returned to the
                  shore to pass the night, like the greater part of the inhabitants, under the shade
                  of the wild wood which lined the coast. There they lighted numerous fires, and
                  were heard conversing during the greatest part of the night. It seems their
                  eagerness to continue the trade with us, would not permit them to return to their
                  dwellings, which were probably situated in the remotest part of the island. Our
                  goods were in great repute with them. Nails, which the natives commonly hung on a
                  string round the neck, or stuck through the ear, were very current for fowls, and
                  smaller ones for bunches of bananas, and coco-nuts. Their fowls were the largest
                  we had ever seen, and extremely well-tasted. Their plumage was commonly very
                  glossy, and beautifully coloured with red and gold. Our sailors bought numbers of
                  them, in order to enjoy the barbarous amusement of seeing them fight. From the
                  time of our leaving Huahine, they had daily followed the cruel occupation of
                  tormenting these poor birds, by trimming their wings, and incensing them against
                  each other. They had so well succeeded with those of Huahine, that some of them
                  fought with the most desperate fury of true game-cocks; but they were well
                  disappointed with those which they purchased at Tonga-Tabboo, and as they could
                  not make them fight, they were forced to eat them in revenge.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 5.]</date>Early the next morning, the captain's friend Attahha or
                  Attagha (see p.447.) came on board in one of the first canoes, and breakfasted
                  with us. He was drest in mats, one of which, on account of the coolness of the
                  morning, he had drawn over his shoulders. He resembled all other uncivilized
                  people in the circumstance that his attention could not be fixed to one object for
                  any space of time, and it was difficult to prevail on him to sit still, whilst Mr.
                  Hodges drew his portrait. An excellent print, executed by Mr. Sherwin, has been
                  made from his drawing, which expresses the countenance of this chief, and the mild
                  character of the whole nation, better than any description. It is inserted in
                  captain Cook's account of this voyage, and represents Attahha in the action of
                  thanksgiving, laying a nail on his head, which he had received as a present. After
                  breakfast, the captains and my father prepared to return to the shore with him;
                  but just as he was going out of the cabin, he happened to see a Taheitian dog
                  running about the deck; at this sight he could not conceal his joy, but clapped
                  his hands on his breast, and turning to the captain, repeated the word goorree
                  near twenty times. We were much surprised to hear that he knew the name of an
                  animal which did not exist in his country, and made him a present of one of each
                  sex, with which he went on shore in an extasy of joy. That the name of dogs should
                  be familiar to a people, who are not possessed of them, seems to prove either that
                  this knowledge has been propagated by tradition from their ancestors, who migrated
                  hither from other islands, and from the continent; or that they have had dogs upon
                  their island, of which the race, by some accident, is become extinct; or lastly,
                  that they still have an intercourse with other islands where these animals
                  exist.</p>

               <p>I remained on board all this day, to arrange the collection of plants and birds
                  which we had made upon our first excursion, and which was far from despicable,
                  considering the small size of the island. The natives continued to croud about our
                  vessels in a number of canoes, whilst many were swimming to and from the shore,
                  who were probably not rich enough to possess a canoe. These embarkations were of
                  different construction. The common small trading-canoes were sharp-bottomed, and
                  ended in a sharp edge at each extremity, which was covered with a board or deck,
                  because their narrow form frequently exposed these parts to an entire submersion,
                  which would have filled them with water without this precaution. They commonly had
                  a slight out-rigger or balancer, made of a few poles, to prevent their
                  oversetting. The body of the canoe consisted of several planks, of a hard brown
                  wood, sewed together with strings made of the fibrous coco-nut core, and so
                  artfully joined that they appeared to be remarkably tight. The Taheitians simply
                  bore holes in each plank, through which they pass their strings; but by this means
                  their canoes are always leaky. At Tongo-Tabboo they dub the inside of the plank in
                  such a manner as to leave a projecting lift or rim close to the edge, and through
                  this they pass their threads. Along the deck or narrow board at each extremity are
                  placed seven or eight knobs, which seem to be an imitation of the little fins,
                  (pinnulœ spuriœ) on the belly of bonitos, albecores, or mackarels; and I cannot
                  but conjecture that the natives have taken these swift fishes for their models in
                  the construction of their boats. Though these canoes are commonly fifteen or
                  eighteen feet long, yet they are as neatly and smoothly polished as our best
                  cabinet-work, which must appear the more surprising when we consider that the
                  tools of the natives are only wretched bits of coral, and rasps made of the skins
                  of rays. Their paddles were equally well polished, of the same wood as the canoe,
                  and had short rhomboidal broad blades, like those of Taheitee. The other sort of
                  canoes were constructed for sailing, and persons skilled in nautical matters
                  acknowledge that they were admirably well adapted for this purpose. We saw one of
                  them in Maria Bay, consisting of two joined together, of which the planks were
                  sewed in the same manner as in the common canoe; but they were covered all over,
                  and had a kind of elevated stage or platform, like the Taheitian war-canoes . Some
                  of them may carry one hundred and fifty men; and their sails, which are latine,
                  are made of strong mats, in which the rude figure of a tortoise or a cock, &amp;c.
                  is sometimes represented . As a farther detail would be tedious to most readers,
                  and instructive only to mariners, I omit it in this place, and refer those who
                  wish to be better acquainted with the subject to the accurate figures with which
                  Mr. Hodges has ornamented captain Cook's account of this voyage. I shall only
                  observe, that it appears probably from the good construction of the sailing-boats,
                  that the inhabitants of these islands are more experienced mariners than those of
                  Taheitee and the Society Isles.</p>

               <p>Among the great numbers of people who surrounded our ships, we observed several
                  whose hair seemed to be burnt at the ends, and were strewed with a white powder.
                  Upon examination we found that this powder was nothing else than lime, made of
                  shells or coral, which had corroded or burnt the hair. The taste of powdering was
                  at its height in this island. We observed a man who had employed a blue powder,
                  and many persons of both sexes who wore an orange powder, made of turmerick. St.
                  Jerom, who preached against the vanities of the age, very seriously reprehends a
                  similar custom in the Roman ladies: " Ne irrufet crines, et anticipet sibi ignes
                  Gehènnœ!" Thus, by an admirable similarity of follies, the modes of the former
                  inhabitants of Europe are in full force among the modern antipodes; and our
                  insipid beaux, whose only pride is the invention of a new fashion, are forced to
                  share that slender honour with the uncivilized natives of an isle in the South
                  Seas.</p>

               <p>My father did not return from his excursion till the evening, having proceeded a
                  considerable way towards the south end of the island. At noon a smart shower had
                  obliged him to retire into a plantation and to take shelter in a house.
                  Fortunately for him the owner of this cottage was at home, and immediately invited
                  him to sit down on the clean mats which covered the floor, whilst he went to
                  provide some refreshments. In a few moments he brought several coco-nuts, and
                  having opened his oven under ground, took out some bananas and fishes, wrapped in
                  leaves, which were perfectly well done and delicious to the taste. The manner of
                  cooking provisions is therefore exactly the same as at Taheitee; nor are the
                  natives less inclinable to acts of hospitality and benevolence, though these
                  virtues were not so frequently exercised towards us, because we commonly found the
                  country quite deserted, the inhabitants being drawn together towards our
                  trading-place. The hospitable man was rewarded with nails and beads, with which he
                  performed the fagafetai, by laying them on his head, and accompanied my father
                  back to the beach, carefully carrying a number of spears and clubs for him, which
                  he had purchased on the road.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 6.]</date>The harmless disposition of these good people could not
                  secure them against those misfortunes, which are too often attendant upon all
                  voyages of discovery. Our goods tempted them at least as much as they had tempted
                  the Taheitians, and they were consequently equally disposed to pilfer. The
                  captains had not been long on shore the next day, when one of the natives took an
                  opportunity of stealing a jacket out of our boat. In a few moments no less than
                  seven shot were fired, without the captain's orders, though in his presence, at
                  the thief, who first dived in the water, and at last ran into the croud, by which
                  means several innocent people were wounded. Notwithstanding this severity, the
                  good-nature of the people was such, that they did not forsake the trading-place,
                  or take umbrage at our proceeding, but heard with unconcern the balls whistling
                  about their ears. A few hours afterwards, one of them was equally nimble on board
                  our ship, and luckily slipping into the master's cabin stole from thence several
                  mathematical books, a sword, a ruler, and a number of trifles of which he could
                  never make the least use. He was seen making his escape in a canoe, and a boat
                  being dispatched after him, he threw all the stolen effects overboard. These were
                  picked up by another of our boats, whilst the first continued in the pursuit of
                  the thief. Our men fired a musket into the stern of his canoe, upon which he and
                  some others with him jumped into the sea. The thief was still hunted with
                  incredible eagerness, but displayed a most wonderful agility, diving several times
                  under the boat, and once unshipping the rudder. At last one of our people darted
                  the boat-hook at him, and catching him under the ribs, dragged him into the boat;
                  but he watched his opportunity, and notwithstanding his loss of blood, leaped into
                  the sea again, and escaped to some canoes, which came from the shore to his
                  assistance. It is remarkable that even such a disposition for cruelty, as had been
                  displayed in the pursuit of this poor wretch, did not deprive us of the confidence
                  and affection of his country-men. The captains brought Attagha and another chief
                  on board with them to dinner, and the trade was carried on as quietly as if
                  nothing had happened. The chief who came with Attagha appeared to be of a superior
                  rank, because the latter, who used to sit at table with us on former occasions,
                  now retreated a few steps, sat down on the floor, and could not be prevailed upon
                  to eat in his sight. He was a blear-eyed, elderly man, and having a great
                  influence on the people in the canoes, was called the admiral by our sea-men. His
                  dress did not in the least indicate his superior dignity, probably because these
                  islanders are little acquainted with the refinements of luxury, though on the
                  other hand they seem to behave with great submission to their men of rank,
                  directly contrary to what we had observed at the Society Isles. The respect which
                  Attagha paid to the other chief, was however trifling in comparison of that which
                  we heard of on shore after dinner. Here we found a well-looking middle-aged man,
                  sitting on the ground at the trading-place, and all the croud forming a circle
                  about him. Some of our sportsmen acquainted us, that they had met with him near
                  Maria Bay, where the other natives passing by had prostrated themselves on the
                  ground before him, kissed his feet, and put them on their necks. Upon enquiry,
                  they had been repeatedly told, that he was the chief of the whole island, in the
                  same manner as Cookee (captain Cook) was chief of our ships, and that they called
                  him Ko-Haghee-too-Fallango . Whether this was his name or his title I cannot
                  determine, as we never heard it mentioned again by the natives; but they all
                  agreed in telling us, that he was their Areeghee or king. They added that his name
                  was Latoo-Nipooroo, of which we concluded that the former part (Latoo) was a
                  title, it being same which Schouten and Le Maire, the Dutch navigators in the year
                  1616, found at the Cocos, Traytors, and Horne islands, which are situated in this
                  neighbourhood, only a few degrees to the northward . We were confirmed in this
                  opinion by the great correspondence of the vocabularies, which these intelligent
                  seamen have left us, with the language which was spoken at Tonga-Tabboo, and still
                  more so by the entire similarity in the behaviour and customs of these islanders.
                  The captains walked up to the Latoo, and made him a number of presents, which he
                  received with so much gravity and seeming indifference, as bordered upon
                  stupidity. Amongst other things they put a shirt on him, with a great deal of
                  trouble, because his behaviour was most aukwardly passive. He did not return any
                  thanks for the presents which he received, till an old woman sitting behind him,
                  had repeatedly excited him to express his gratitude. Upon this he held each
                  separate article over his head, and pronounced the word fagafetai, like the
                  meanest of his subjects. The priest, who had led our captains to the places of
                  worship, on the first day after our arrival, was seated in the same circle, and
                  drank vast quantities of the intoxicating pepper-water , which was served in
                  little square cups made of banana-leaves curiously folded. At his desire, we were
                  very politely presented with this dainty beverage, and in pure civility tasted of
                  it. It had a nauseous insipid taste, which was afterwards followed by a strong
                  pungency, and its colour was somewhat milky. The holy man took such large and
                  frequent draughts of this stuff every evening, as to become perfectly intoxicated.
                  No wonder then that his memory failed him, when he was at prayer (see p. 454.)
                  that his whole habit of body was lean and scabby, his face wrinkled, and his eyes
                  red, and " purging thick amber ." He had great authority among all the people,.
                  and a number of servants attended to supply him with replenished cups. The
                  presents which he received from us, he retained in his own custody, whereas
                  Attagha and several other chiefs, gave up to their superiors whatever the captains
                  had presented to them. The priest had a daughter, who received many presents from
                  our people. She was extremely well featured, and fairer than most of the women of
                  this country, who seemed to pay her some degree of deference. A fairer complexion,
                  and softer features than those of the common people, are the natural effects of an
                  easy inactive life, unexposed to the blaze of a tropical sun, and pampered with a
                  profusion of the best productions of the country. Must we not conclude therefore
                  that the beginnings of luxury will be introduced even here under the cloak of
                  religion, and that another nation will be added to the many dupes of voluptuous
                  priest-craft? So small a spark as the cunning of a single man may in time kindle a
                  dreadful and irresistible fire! The obedience and submission with which these
                  people revere their chiefs, are evident proofs that their government, though
                  perhaps not perfectly despotic, is yet far from being democratical; and this kind
                  of political constitution seems likely to facilitate the introduction of luxury.
                  This seems to hold good likewise in regard to many islands in the western part of
                  the Pacific Ocean, since the faithful descriptions of Schouten, Le Maire, and
                  Tasman, who visited them, correspond in every material particular with our own
                  observations. The general disposition for trading, and the kind and friendly
                  reception which strangers have almost constantly met with in every island
                  belonging to this group, prevailed upon us to give these discoveries of Schouten
                  and Tasman, the name of the Friendly Islands. Schouten's boats were indeed
                  attacked at Cocos, Traitors, Hope, and Horne Islands; but these attacks were
                  inconsiderable, though severely punished on the part of the Dutch navigator, who,
                  after the first disturbance at Horne Island, lay there nine days in perfect good
                  understanding with the natives. Tasman, who twenty-seven years afterwards saw
                  several islands near six degrees to the southward of those which Schouten has
                  visited, was received with every demonstration of peace and friendship, though he
                  was the first European that discovered them. Whether this behaviour was only a
                  consequence of the intelligence which the natives of Tonga-Tabboo and Ana-mocka,
                  (Ansterdam and Rotterdam Islands,) might have received from those of Cocos, Hope,
                  and Horne Islands, concerning the superior strength of the strangers and the
                  havock which they had made; or whether it was the natural effect of their
                  peaceable disposition, I cannot venture to determine, though I am inclined to
                  adopt the former opinion. Captain Wallis probably saw Cocos and Traitors Islands
                  in 1767, which he called Boscawen's and Keppel's Isles; but his people did the
                  natives no hurt, except frightening them with the discharge of a single musket. M.
                  de Bougainville saw some of the north-eastermost isles belonging to this group, of
                  which the inhabitants had the same general character. He called his discovery the
                  Archipel des Navigateurs , justly enough, as many ships have fallen in with it.
                  Since Tasman's time, no other navigator has had any intercourse with the isle of
                  Amsterdam, which he discovered, previous to our arrival. During a space,
                  therefore, of one hundred and thirty years, they have not materially changed their
                  manners, dresses, way of living, disposition, &amp;c. &amp;c. Our ignorance of
                  their language prevented our obtaining positive proof that they still preserved,
                  by tradition, the memory of former visitors; but they possessed some nails, which
                  must have been brought to the island in Tasman's time. We purchased one of these
                  nails, which was very small and almost consumed with rust, but had been carefully
                  preserved by being fixed on a wooden handle, probably to serve the purposes of a
                  googe or borer, and is now deposited in the British Museum. We likewise bought
                  some small earthen pots, perfectly black with soot on the outside, and suspected
                  them to be memorials of Tasman's voyage; but afterwards we rather believed that
                  they were manufactured by the natives themselves. The accounts of Schouten,
                  Tasman, and M. de Bougainville agree with ours, in respect of the agility with
                  which the natives committed petty thefts. Tasman and captain Wallis have likewise
                  observed their custom of cutting off the little finger; and according to
                  Schouten's and Le Maire's circumstantial narratives, the natives of Horne Island
                  were as submissive to their king as those of Tonga-Tabboo. The experience of the
                  superior power of the strangers, made them respectful even to servility towards
                  the Dutch; their king prostrated himself before a Dutch purser, and their chiefs
                  placed their necks under his foot . These excessive marks of submission seem to
                  border upon meanness and cowardice; but we never had reason to suppose them
                  tinctured with these vices. Their behaviour towards us was commonly accompanied
                  with that freedom and boldness which the rectitude of intentions inspires; and
                  though really polite, was never unbecoming. Here, however, as in all other
                  societies of men, we found exceptions to the general character, and had reason to
                  lament the behaviour of vicious individuals. Dr. Sparrman and myself having left
                  the beach where the Latoo attracted the attention of all our people, entered the
                  wood in pursuit of farther discoveries in our branch of science. The first
                  discharge of my fowling-piece at a bird brought three natives towards us, with
                  whom we entered into conversation, as far as our superficial knowledge of their
                  tongue would permit. Soon after, Dr. Sparrman stepped aside into a thicket in
                  search of a bayonet, which he had lost from the end of his musket. One of the
                  natives, finding the temptation of the moment irresistible, grasped my
                  fowling-piece, and struggled to wrest it from me. I called to my companion, and
                  the two other natives ran away, unwilling to become accomplices in this attack. In
                  the struggle our feet were entangled in a bush, and we both fell together; but the
                  native, seeing he could not gain his point, and perhaps dreading the arrival of
                  Dr. Sparrman, got up before me, and took that opportunity of running off. My
                  friend joined me immediately; and we concluded, that if there was something
                  treacherous or vicious in the behaviour of this fellow, our separation was also
                  imprudent, because it had furnished him with an opportunity to exercise his
                  talents. We continued strolling about for some time, without any sinister
                  accident, and returned to the trading-place on the beach, where we found almost
                  all the people whom we had left. Many of them were now seated in different little
                  groups, which appeared to be so many separate families, and consisted of persons
                  of various ages and sexes. They were all in conversation, of which no doubt the
                  arrival of our ships furnished the topics; and many of their women amused
                  themselves either with singing or playing at ball. There was a young girl in
                  particular, whose features were more regular than common, her eyes sparkling with
                  vivacity, her whole frame admirably proportioned, and, what was most remarkable
                  here, her long jetty hair hanging down in graceful curls on her neck. This girl,
                  lively and easy in all her actions, played with five gourds, of the size of small
                  apples, perfectly globular; she threw them up into the air one after another
                  continually, and never failed to catch them all with great dexterity, at least for
                  a quarter of an hour. The musical ladies again performed the same tune which we
                  had already heard at Ea-oowhe, the different voices falling in with each other
                  very harmoniously, and sometimes joining all together as in chorus. Though I never
                  saw the natives of these islands dance, yet we may add this amusement to the list
                  of those which they are acquainted with, from their own accounts and gestures
                  whenever they sold us their aprons made of stars of coco-nut core, and ornamented
                  with shell-work and red feathers, or such as were curiously wrought of mats in
                  resemblance of fret-work. From these gestures I have great reason to suppose that
                  their dances are of a dramatic kind, and public, like those which I have spoken of
                  in the Society Isles, (see pag. 398). Schouten and Le Maire likewise strongly
                  confirm this supposition by their account of the dances at Horne Island . It
                  appeared, upon the whole, that the customs and language of these islanders have a
                  great affinity with those of the Taheitians, and that it would not therefore be
                  very singular to find a coincidence even in their amusements. The greatest
                  differences between these two tribes, who must have originated from the same
                  stock, seem to be owing to the different nature of their islands. The Society
                  Isles are well furnished with wood, and the tops of their mountains are still
                  covered with inexhaustible forests. At the Friendly Isles this article is much
                  scarcer, the surface (at least of those which we have seen) being almost entirely
                  laid out in plantations. The natural consequence is, that the houses are lofty and
                  of immense extent in the first group of islands; but much smaller and less
                  convenient in the last. In one the canoes are numerous, I may almost say
                  innumerable, and many of a vast size; and, in the other, very few in number, and
                  much smaller. The mountains of the Society Isles continually attract the vapours
                  from the atmosphere, and many rivulets descent from the broken rocks into the
                  plain, where they wind their serpentine course and glide smoothly to the sea. The
                  inhabitants of those islands take advantage of this gift of bountiful nature, and
                  not only drink of the salutary element, but likewise bathe so frequently in it
                  that no impurity can long adhere to their skin. It is very different with a people
                  who are absolutely denied this blessing, and who must either content themselves
                  with putrid stagnant rain-water in a few dirty pools, or go entirely without it.
                  They are obliged to have recourse to expedients in order to preserve a certain
                  degree of cleanliness, which may preclude various distempers. They therefore cut
                  off their hair, and shave or clip their bears, which doubtless makes them look
                  more unlike the Taheitians than they would otherwise do. Still these precautions
                  are not sufficient, especially as they have no fluid for drinking in any quantity.
                  The body is therefore very subject to leprous complaints, which are perhaps
                  irritated by the use of the pepper-root water or awa. Hence also that burning or
                  blistering on the cheek-bones which we observed to be so general among this tribe,
                  that hardly an individual was free from it, and which can only be used as a remedy
                  against some disorders. The soil of the Society Isles in the plains and vallies is
                  rich, and the rivulets which intersect it, supply abundance of moisture. All sorts
                  of vegetables therefore thrive with great luxuriance upon it, and require little
                  attendance or cultivation. This profusion is become the source of that great
                  luxury among the chiefs which we do not meet with at Tonga-Tabboo. There the coral
                  rock is covered only with a thin bed of mould, which sparingly affords nourishment
                  to all sorts of trees; and the most useful of all, the bread-fruit tree, thrives
                  imperfectly on the island, as it is destitute of water, except when a genial
                  shower happens to impregnate and fertilize the ground. The labour of the natives
                  is therefore greater than that of the Taheitians, and accounts for the regularity
                  of the plantations, and the accurate division of property. It is likewise to this
                  source we must ascribe it, that they have always set a higher value on their
                  provisions than on their tools, dresses, ornaments, and weapons, though many of
                  these must have cost them infinite time and application. They very justly conceive
                  the articles of food to be their principal riches, of which the loss is absolutely
                  not to be remedied. If we observed their bodies more slender and their muscles
                  harder than those of the Taheitians, this seems to be the consequence of a greater
                  and more constant exertion of strength. Thus, perhaps, they become industrious by
                  force of habit, and when agriculture does not occupy them, they are actuated to
                  employ their vacant hours in the fabrick of that variety of tools and instruments
                  on which they bestow so much time, patience, labour, and ingenuity. This
                  industrious turn has also led them, in the cultivation of all their arts, to so
                  much greater perfection than the Taheitians. By degrees they have hit upon new
                  inventions, and introduced an active spirit and enlivening chearfulness even into
                  their amusements. Their happiness of temper they preserve under a political
                  constitution, which does not appear to be very favourable to liberty; but we need
                  not go so far from home to wonder at such a phӕnomenon, when one of the most
                  enslaved people in all Europe, are characterised as the merriest and most
                  facetious of mankind. Still there may be more sincerity in the chearfulness of the
                  natives of Tonga-Tabboo; for, exclusive of great and almost servile submission,
                  their king does not seem to exact any thing from them, which, by depriving them of
                  the means to satisfy the most indispensible wants of nature, could make them
                  miserable. Be this as it may, so much seems to be certain, that their systems of
                  politics and religion, from their similarity with the Taheitian, as far as we
                  could judge, must have had one common origin, perhaps in the mother country, from
                  whence both these colonies issued. Single dissonant customs, and opinions may have
                  acceded to the primitive ideas; in proportion as various accidents, or human
                  caprices have given rise to them. The affinity of their languages is still more
                  decisive. The greatest part of the necessaries of life, common to both groups of
                  islands, the parts of the body, in short the most obvious and universal ideas,
                  were expressed at the Society and Friendly Isles nearly by the same words. We did
                  not find that sonorousness in the Tonga-Tabboo dialect, which is prevalent in that
                  of Taheitee, because the inhabitants of the former have adopted the F, K, and S,
                  so that their language is more replete with consonants. This harshness is
                  compensated however by the frequent use of the liquid letters, L, M, N; and of the
                  softer vowels E and I, to which we must add that kind of singing tone, which they
                  generally retain even in common conversation. _________But it is time to return
                  from this digression.</p>

               <p>We did not part from our friends till sun-set, promising to return to them once
                  more the next morning. Our ships were well provided with bananas, yams, and
                  coco-nuts; and, considering the small size of the island, as well as our short
                  stay, sixty or eighty hogs, besides a vast number of large fowls, were a
                  surprising acquisition. During our stay we had searched the country in vain for
                  water, and the master had been sent to the eastward to survey Maria Bay, and the
                  low isles which shelter that harbour. The situation of these islands he found very
                  exactly represented in the charts of the ever accurate Tasman, and on one of them
                  where he landed, he saw an astonishing number of speckled water-snakes, with flat
                  tails, which are harmless, and distinguished in the system of Linnӕus, by the name
                  of colubri laticaudati. In our branch we had not been unsuccessful, this little
                  island having afforded us several new plants, among which was a new species of
                  jesuit's bark, or cinchona, of which the bitter bark may perhaps be equally
                  efficacious with that of Peru. We also collected several birds unknown before, and
                  purchased some live species, particularly of the parrot and pigeon tribe, of the
                  natives, who seem to be very expert fowlers. But it did not appear to us, that the
                  pigeons, which many carried perched on crooked sticks, were marks of distinction,
                  though Schouten at Horne Island where the same custom prevails, is of that opinion
                  . In the last boat which had brought our people on board in the evening, the Latoo
                  or king had sent a great quantity of vegetables, together with a whole hog
                  roasted, or dressed under ground, as a present to the captain. In the morning
                  therefore, we embarked early in the pinnace, and rowed to the shore to make a
                  present in return. We found the Latoo sitting at a little distance from the beach;
                  and captain Cook gave him a shirt, a saw, a hatchet, a brass kettle, and several
                  articles of less moment, all which he received with sullen gravity; this
                  deportment he never varied, except once, when he was seen to smile as he conversed
                  with Attagha. Among the croud, we observed a single man, who differed from all the
                  rest, by having suffered his hair to grow, and having twisted it into several
                  round bunches, which hung wildly about his ears. This man, and the young girl
                  mentioned page 468. were the only persons we met with, who had not conformed to
                  the general custom of cutting off the hair.</p>

               <p>After a short conversation with the natives, of whom we bought a variety of their
                  tools, on account of their elegant carving, we returned on board to breakfast, and
                  immediately after weighed the anchors and set sail. The provisions lying in
                  confused heaps on the decks, prevented our going into the open sea immediately. We
                  therefore kept standing off and on, under shelter of this island, and did not take
                  our departure till towards evening, when we shaped our course southerly.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 8.]</date>The next morning, the weather being nearly calm, we caught
                  a shark, eight feet long, consequently bigger than any we had seen before. In the
                  afternoon we saw the little isle which Tasman calls Pylstaerts Island. This name
                  refers to the birds, which the Dutch navigators observed there, and which in all
                  probability were tropic birds. Pylstaert literally signifying arrow-tail, alludes
                  to the two long feathers in the tail of this bird, from whence its French name of
                  paille-en-queue is likewise derived . Its latitude is 22° 26' S. and its longitude
                  170° 59' W. A contrary S. W. wind which sprung up towards evening, obliged us to
                  [Sunday 10.]cruize about till the 10th in the morning, when we came in sight of
                  this little islet again. It is of a moderate height, and has two hummocks, of
                  which the southernmost is the highest. We recovered the trade-wind by degrees, so
                  that we were out of sight of this island about two o'clock in the afternoon, and
                  having bid adieu to the tropical islands of this ocean, directed our course a
                  second time towards New Zeeland. We had now made such good use of the four months,
                  after our departure from thence, as to have crossed the South Sea in the middle
                  latitudes, in the depth of winter, examined a space of more than forty degrees of
                  longitude between the tropics, and refreshed our people at Taheitee, the Society
                  Islands, and the Friendly Islands during one and thirty days. The season for
                  prosecuting our discoveries in high southern latitudes advanced, and the savage
                  rocks of New Zeeland were only to give us shelter, whilst we changed our
                  fair-weather rigging, for such as might resist the storms and rigours of more
                  inhospitable climates.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. II.</l>

                  <l>Course from the Friendly Isles to New Zeeland. - Separation from the Adventure.
                     - Second stay in Queen Charlotte's Sound.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. October.]</date>WE had no sooner left the torrid zone, than flocks of
                  sea-fowls attended us on our course, and hovered lightly on the waves, which a
                  favourable gale had raised. <date>[Tuesday 12.]</date> On the 12th an albatross
                  appeared, among the rest of the inhabitants of the temperate zone, which never
                  dare to cross the tropic, but roam from thence even to the polar circle; so
                  carefully has nature allotted to each animal its proper place of abode.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 16.]</date> The weather continued fair till the 16th in the
                  morning, when we had a fall of rain. Some of the people who examined the
                  pump-well, found there a dog, which they brought upon deck. This creature, which
                  had been purchased at the island of Huahine, like many others of the same species,
                  had obstinately refused to take any nourishment, and in all probability had lived
                  ever since in that hole without the least support of food, for a space of
                  thirty-nine or forty days. The whole body was reduced to a mere skeleton, the legs
                  were contracted, and he voided blood at the anus. The torments in which this poor
                  animal must have lived, were a lesson to our people, to purchase only young
                  puppies of this race for the future, as the grown dogs constantly refused to eat
                  on board.</p>

               <p>The next night several blubbers passed by the ship, which were visible on account
                  of their phosphoric light. Their luminous quality was so great, that the bosom of
                  the sea, seemed to contain brighter stars than the ӕther.</p>

               <p>Sea-weed, sheer-waters, and albatrosses daily appeared, as we advanced towards New
                  Zeeland. On the 19th, the sea was luminous, and on the 20th, the diving petrels
                  arrived in flocks about us, and indicated the proximity of the land, which we saw
                  the next morning at five o'clock. <date>[Tuesday 21.]</date>We stood in shore all
                  the day, till four in the afternoon, when we were abreast of the Table Cape , and
                  Portland Island which adjoins to it by a ledge of rocks. The shores were white and
                  steep towards the sea, and we could perceive the huts and strong holds of the
                  natives, like eagles airies on the top of the cliffs. A great number of natives
                  ran along the rocks, in order to gaze at us, as we passed by them, and many seated
                  themselves at the point which extends to the southward, but did not care to come
                  off to us in their canoes. We sailed between the sunken rock and the land, and
                  continued our course across Hawke's Bay, and then along shore, as it was growing
                  dark.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 22.]</date>In the morning we were to the south of Cape Kidnappers,
                  and advanced to the Black Cape. After breakfast three canoes put off from this
                  part of the shore, where some level land appeared at the foot of the mountains.
                  They soon came on board as we were not very far from the land, and in one of them
                  was a chief, who came on deck without hesitation. He was a tall middle-aged man,
                  clothed in two new and elegant dresses, made of the New Zeeland flag or
                  flax-plant. His hair was dressed in the highest fashion of the country, tied on
                  the crown, oiled, and stuck with white feathers. In each ear he wore a piece of
                  albatross-skin covered with its white down, and his face was punctured in spirals
                  and curve lines. Mr. Hodges drew his portrait, and a print of it is inserted in
                  captain Cook's account of this voyage. His companions sold us some fish, while he
                  was entertained in the cabin. The captain presented him with a piece of red baize,
                  some garden-seeds, two young pigs of each sex, and likewise three pairs of fowls.
                  Our young Borabora man, Mahine, who did not understand the language of the New
                  Zeelanders at the first interview like Tupaya, hearing from us that these people
                  were not possessed of coco-nuts and yams, produced some of these nuts and roots
                  with a view to offer them to the chief; but upon our assuring him the climate was
                  unfavourable to the growth of palm-trees, he only presented the yams, whilst we
                  made an effort to convince the chief of the value of the presents which he had
                  received, and that it was his interest to keep the hogs and fowls for breeding,
                  and to plant the roots. He seemed at last to comprehend our meaning, and in return
                  for such valuable presents, parted with his mahèe-peh or battle-axe, which was
                  perfectly new, its head well carved, and ornamented with red parrot's feathers and
                  white dog's hair. After a short stay he returned on deck, where captain Cook
                  presented him with several large nails. He received those with so much eagerness
                  that he seemed to value them above any other present; and having observed that the
                  captain took them out of one of the holes in the capstan, where his clerk had put
                  them, he turned the capstan all round, and examined every hole to see if there
                  were not some more concealed. This circumstance plainly shews how much the value
                  of iron tools is advanced in the estimation of the New Zeelanders since the
                  Endeavour's voyage, when they would hardly receive them in many places. Before
                  their departure they gave us a heeva or warlike dance, which consisted of stamping
                  with the feet, brandishing short clubs, speakers, &amp;c. making frightful
                  contorsions of the face, lolling out the tongue, and bellowing wildly, but in tune
                  with each motion. From their manner of treating the fowls which we had given them,
                  we had no great reason to expect success in our plan of stocking this country with
                  domestic animals, and we much feared whether the birds would reach the shore
                  alive. We comforted ourselves, however, with the thoughts of having at least
                  attempted what we could not hope to see accomplished.</p>

               <p>The wind, which had shifted during our interview with these savages, blew right
                  off shore, and was very unfavourable. It encreased towards evening into a hard
                  gale, during which we hauled our wind, and stood on different tacks for fear of
                  being blown too far from the coast. Heavy rains attended this gale, and penetrated
                  every cabin in the ship. Squalls were likewise frequent, and split some old sails,
                  which were not fit to resist the violence of the tempest. We had not expected such
                  a rough reception in the latitude of 40° south, and felt the air from the bleak
                  mountains of New Zeeland very cold and uncomfortable, the thermometer
                     <date>[Saturday 23.]</date>being at 50 degrees in the morning. A few hours of
                  moderate and almost calm weather succeeded these boisterous beginning, after which
                  the gale freshened to the same height as the night before. By day it abated again,
                  and permitted us to run in shore, but every night it encreased and blew in furious
                  gusts, which demanded all our attention. On the 24th, in the evening, we had
                  reached the entrance of Cook's Strait, and saw Cape Palliser before us;
                     <date>[Monday 25.]</date>but the next morning a gale sprung up, which was
                  already so violent, at nine o'clock, that we were forced to hand our sails and lay
                  to, under a single one. Though we were situated under the lee of a high and
                  mountainous coast, yet the waves rose to a vast height, ran prodigiously long, and
                  were dispersed into vapour as they broke by the violence of the storm. The whole
                  surface of the sea was by this means rendered hazy, and as the sun shone out in a
                  cloudless sky, the white foam was perfectly dazzling. The fury of the wind still
                  encreased so as to tear to pieces the only sail which we had hitherto dared to
                  shew, and we rolled about at the mercy of the waves, frequently shipping great
                  quantities of water, which fell with prodigious force on the decks, and broke all
                  that stood in the way. The continual strain slackened all the rigging and ropes in
                  the ship, and loosened every thing, in so much that it gradually gave way and
                  presented to our eyes a general scene of confusion. In one of the deepest rolls
                  the arm-chest on the quarter-deck was torn out of its place and overset, leaning
                  against the rails to leeward. A young gentleman, Mr. Hood, who happened to be just
                  then to leeward of it, providentially escaped by bending down when he saw the
                  chest falling, so as to remain unhurt in the angle which it formed with the rail.
                  The confusion of the elements did not scare every bird away from us: from time to
                  time a black shear-water hovered over the ruffled surface of the sea, and artfully
                  withstood the force of the tempest, by keeping under the lee of the high tops of
                  the waves. The aspect of the ocean was at once magnificent and terrific: now on
                  the summit of a broad and heavy billow, we overlooked an unmeasurable expanse of
                  sea, furrowed into numberless deep channels; now on a sudden the wave broke under
                  us, and we plunged into a deep and dreary valley, whilst a fresh mountain rose to
                  windward with a foaming crest, and threatened to overwhelm us. The night coming on
                  was not without new horrors, especially for those who had not been bred up to a
                  seafaring life. In the captain's cabin the windows were taken out and replaced by
                  the dead-lights, to guard against the intrusion of the waves in wearing the ship.
                  This operation disturbed from its retreat a scorpion, which had lain concealed in
                  a chink, and was probably brought on board with fruit from the islands. Our friend
                  Mahine assured us that it was harmless, but its appearance alone was horrid enough
                  to fill the mind with apprehension . In the other cabins the beds were perfectly
                  soaked in water, whilst the tremendous roar of the waves, the creaking of the
                  timbers, and the rolling motion deprived us of all hopes of repose. To complete
                  this catalogue of horrors, we heard the voices of sailors from time to time louder
                  than the blustering winds or the raging ocean itself, uttering horrible vollies of
                  curses and oaths. Without any provocation to serve as an excuse, they execrated
                  every limb in varied terms, piercing and complicated beyond the power of
                  description. Inured to danger from their infancy, they were insensible to its
                  threats; and not a single reflection bridled their blasphemous tongues. I know of
                  nothing comparable to the dreadful energy of their curses, than that disgrace to
                  christianity the Anathema of Ernulphus . In this comfortless situation we
                  continued till two o'clock the next morning, when the wind died away suddenly, and
                  was succeeded in an hour's time by another from a favourable quarter. In the calm
                  interval between these two winds, the ship rolled more violently than ever, so
                  that the main-chains were repeatedly dipped under water, with part of the
                  quarter-deck.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 26.]</date>We sailed all this day towards the land, having been
                  driven off many leagues during the storm. Pintadas, black shear-waters, and other
                  petrels now surrounded us in great flocks, and we passed an albatross sitting fast
                  asleep in the water, perhaps fatigued by the violence of the preceding gale.</p>

               <p>The next day we were disappointed once more at the mouth of the strait, and got a
                  contrary wind, which blew a storm before night. The same weather continued for two
                  days following, almost without intermission. On the <date>[Friday 29.]</date>29th,
                  early in the morning, several water-spouts were seen by the officer at watch; and
                  soon after we had a slight shower and a favourable change of wind. In the evening
                  we lost sight of the Adventure our consort, whom we never rejoined again during
                  this voyage. The foul wind which in the morning on the 30th certainly contributed
                  to separate her from us entirely, she being so far astern that this wind must have
                  had infinitely more effect upon her than upon our ship.</p>

               <p>It would be useless and tedious to repeat the many changes from adverse tempests
                  to favourable gales which succeeded those already mentioned, and which made us
                  despair of ever coming to an anchor in New Zeeland again. We were buffetted about
                  for nine nights together, during which sleep scarce ever visited our eyes.
                     <date>[1773. November.][Monday 1.]</date>On the 1st of November we got into
                  Cook's Strait, but the weather proved so inconstant, that it became contrary to us
                  as soon as we had approached Cape Tera-wittee upon the Northern Island. Our
                  situation permitted us, however, the next day <date>[Tuesday 2.]</date>to come to
                  an anchor in a new bay, which we discovered immediately under this promontory to
                  the westward. The environs of this bay were dreary, blackish, barren mountains, of
                  a great height, almost wholly destitute of woods and shrubs, and running out into
                  long spits of sharp columnar rocks into the sea. The bay itself seemed to extend a
                  considerable way up between the mountains, and by its direction left us in doubt,
                  whether the land on which Cape Tera-wittee is situated, is not a separate island
                  from Eaheino mauwe. This miserable country was, however, inhabited, and we had not
                  been half an hour at anchor, before several canoes full of natives came on board.
                  They were very despicably habited in old shaggy cloaks, which they called
                  bòghee-bògghee. The smoke to which they are perpetually exposed in their wretched
                  habitations, and a load of impurities which they had probably never washed off
                  since their birth, perfectly concealed their real colour, and made them look of a
                  vile brownish yellow. The season of winter, which was just at an end, had in all
                  likelihood forced them at times to make their meals on putrid fishes, which,
                  together with the use of rancid oil for the hair, had so penetrated them with an
                  insufferable stench, that we could smell them at a distance. They brought a few of
                  their fish-hooks and some dried tails of craw-fish to sell, for which they eagerly
                  received our iron-ware and Taheitee cloth. Captain Cook likewise presented them
                  with two pair of fowls, with strong injunctions to keep them for breeding; but it
                  is hardly to be expected that these wretched savages will attend to the
                  domestication of animals. In their unthinking situation, the first moment they
                  have nothing ready at hand to satisfy the cravings of appetite, our fowls must
                  fall the victims to their voracity. If there are any hopes of succeeding in the
                  introduction of domestic animals in this country, it must be in the populous bays
                  to the northward, where the inhabitants seem to be more civilized, and are already
                  accustomed to cultivate several roots for their subsistence.</p>

               <p>About three o'clock in the afternoon the weather fell perfectly calm; but in a
                  little time a southerly wind came up the strait, at sight of which curling the
                  water at a distance, we weighed anchor and got out of the bay. And very fortunate
                  it was that we did so, for the gale encreased after a few minutes to such a
                  furious pitch, that we were hurried along with astonishing speed, and after
                  passing close to the dangerous rocks of the Brothers, on which a most dreadful
                  surf was breaking, we came to an anchor at night, under shelter of Cape Koa-maroo
                  in Queen Charlotte's Sound.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 3.]</date>The next day, about noon, we came safely into the
                  Ship-Cove, from whence we sailed on the 7th of June, near five months before. We
                  were in great hopes of being rejoined here by the Adventure, because captain Cook
                  intended to make some stay at this place, though the early season of the year did
                  not promise such abundance of refreshments as we had enjoyed at our first
                  visit.</p>

               <p>We had hardly dropped our anchor, before several of the inhabitants, who had been
                  out fishing, came to see us in their canoes, and disposed of the fish which they
                  had caught. We recollected them as some of our old friends, and called them by
                  their names, at which they expressed great satisfaction, doubtless because it
                  served to persuade them that we were particularly concerned for their welfare by
                  retaining them in memory. The weather was fair and warm, considering the season,
                  but our New Zeelanders were all covered with shaggy cloaks, which are their winter
                  dresses. We questioned them concerning the health of their absent countrymen, and
                  received various answers; but among the rest they acquainted us, that Goobaïa, one
                  of their old chiefs, had chaced the two goats which we had left in the woods of
                  Grass-Cove, and had killed and eaten them. This news was most unwelcome to us, as
                  it destroyed all our hopes of stocking the forests of this country with
                  quadrupeds.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we visited all the plantations which we had left on the beach in
                  Ship-Cove, on the Hippah-Rock, and on motu-Aro. We found almost all the radishes
                  and turneps shot into seed, the cabbages and carrots very fine, and abundance of
                  onions and parsley in good order; the peas and beans were almost entirely lost,
                  and seemed to have been destroyed by rats. The potatoes were likewise all
                  extirpated; but, from appearances, we guessed this to have been the work of the
                  natives. The thriving state of our European pot-herbs, gave us a strong and
                  convincing proof of the mildness of the winter in this part of New Zeeland, where
                  it seems it had never frozen hard enough to kill these plants, which perish in our
                  winters. The indigenous plants of this country were not yet so forward; the
                  deciduous trees and shrubs, in particular, were but just beginning to look green,
                  and the vivid colour of their fresh leaves well contrasted with the dark wintery
                  hue of the evergreens. The flag, of which the natives prepare their hemp, was
                  however in flower, together with some other early species. We collected all we
                  could find, gathered a quantity of celery and scurvy-grass, and shot some
                  water-fowl, with all which we returned on board in the evening. We immediately
                  made drawings and descriptions of all that was new to us, and particularly of the
                  flag, (phormium tenax.) which, on account of the excellent flax that may be
                  prepared from it, deserves to be more universally known. Desirous to promote every
                  improvement which may turn out a real benefit to mankind, we did not hesitate a
                  moment to permit an engraving to be made from our drawing, at the request of the
                  Earl of Sandwich, which is intended to ornament captain Cook's account of this
                  voyage.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 4.]</date>The natives returned the next morning in more canoes
                  than the preceding day, and among them was Teiratu, the chief, who had made
                  acquaintance with us on the fourth of June, and had pronounced a long harrangue
                  that day. He was now in his old clothes, or what the polite world would call
                  deshabillè; quite destitute of the finery of chequered mats edged with dog-skin,
                  and his hair carelessly tied in a bunch, instead of being combed smooth, and
                  delectably greased with stinking oil. In short, from being the orator and leader
                  of a troop of warriors, he seemed to be degraded to a simple fishmonger. It was
                  with some difficulty that we recognized his features under this disguise, upon
                  which he was taken into the cabin, and presented with some nails. Our iron ware,
                  and our provision of Taheitee cloth, were articles of such importance to Teiratu
                  and his people, that they resolved to establish themselves near us, in order to be
                  the first to profit by our commerce, and perhaps to lose no opportunity of laying
                  their hands on any thing which belonged to us. Our ship lay very near the beach
                  where we intended to fill our empty casks with fresh water. Here we had already
                  set up a tent for the people who were employed in this branch of our preparations;
                  another for our wood-cutters, and the astronomical observatory. We went on shore
                  at this place, both before and after-noon, and made our way through a labyrinth of
                  climbers which crossed from one tree to another. Mahine (or Hedeedee) likewise
                  came on shore with us, and roamed through its intricate forests, surprised at the
                  number of different birds, their sweet melody, and their beautiful plumage. One of
                  our gardens where the radishes and turneps were in flower, was remarkably full of
                  small birds, which sucked the nectareous juices of the blossoms, and not seldom
                  plucked them from the stalk. We shot several of them, and Mahine, who had never
                  made use of fire-arms in his life before, killed his bird at the first discharge.
                  The senses of all nations, not more polished than his countrymen, are infinitely
                  more acute than ours, which a thousand accidents tend to impair. We never were
                  more clearly convinced of this, than at Taheitee; it was very usual for the
                  natives there, to point out small birds to us in the thickest trees, or ducks and
                  other water-fowl between bushes of reeds, where not one of us could ever perceive
                  them.</p>

               <p>The weather, which was warm and pleasant, facilitated our zoological researches,
                  so that we brought home a number of birds in the evening.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 5.]</date>The first intelligence which we received from the shore
                  the next day, was a complaint against the natives, who had stolen during the
                  night, a watch-coat from the waterers tent, and a bag filled with linen. The
                  captain immediately went into the cove, where the savages had taken up their
                  quarters, which was only separated by a single hill from our watering-place, and
                  to which he had given the name of Indian Cove. Here he addressed himself to their
                  chief Teiratu, who sent for the stolen goods, and returned them without
                  hesitation, pretending that the theft was committed without his knowledge. Our
                  people were politic enough to believe him on his word, because the address of his
                  countrymen had hitherto supplied us with abundance of fish, for a very moderate
                  compensation of Taheitee cloth, whilst we caught them but very sparingly. In this
                  place they found one of the sows, which captain Furneaux had left in Canibal Cove;
                  and Teiratu being questioned concerning its two companions, pointed to different
                  quarters of the bay, whither he said they had been carried. Thus by separating the
                  animals, and dividing them as a spoil, these barbarians effectually destroy the
                  possibility of propagating the species. Too much occupied with the wants of the
                  present moment, they overlook the only means of securing a certain livelihood to
                  themselves, and reject every attempt to civilize them.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 6.]</date>They were joined by a strong party on the 6th in the
                  afternoon, who came from various parts of the bay, with a great quantity of fish,
                  and abundance of their clothes, arms, &amp;c. which they exchanged for Taheitee
                  cloth. In the evening they retired to a beach opposite the ship, where they hauled
                  their canoes ashore, made some temporary huts, lighted fires, and broiled some
                  fish for their suppers. Early the next morning <date>[Sunday 7.]</date>looking
                  about us, we found they were all gone off, not excepting those who had lived at
                  the Indian Cove. We were at a loss to guess the reason of their sudden departure,
                  till we perceived that they had taken away six small casks from our
                  watering-place, probably for the sake of the iron hoops. It is certain, that by
                  supplying us with fish for another day, they would have received three or four
                  times the value of this iron, manufactured for their use; but we have already
                  observed that they are not much troubled with reflections, and probably value a
                  bird in hand more than two in a bush. We were the greatest sufferers on this
                  occasion, being now reduced to catch fish for ourselves, though we could not spare
                  a sufficient number of hands, and were not acquainted with the haunts of the
                  fishes as well as the natives. Our people were occupied in cleaning, caulking, and
                  breaming the ship, setting up and repairing the rigging, and, in short, in fitting
                  her for the next southern cruize. A great party were on shore to fill our empty
                  casks with fresh-water, to make provision of fuel, and to revise the ship's
                  biscuit, which was in a very decayed condition. It had unfortunately been packed
                  into new, or what are called green casks, the staves of which being damp, had
                  communicated the moisture to the bread, a considerable part of which was perfectly
                  rotten, and all the rest, more or less covered with mould. To prevent the fatal
                  effects of this corruption, all the bread was carried ashore, the bad carefully
                  selected from that which was still eatable, and this last put into an oven and
                  baked over again, till it was thoroughly dried.</p>

               <p>The weather during this time was as boisterous and inconstant, as that which had
                  so long kept us out of this harbour. Scarce a day passed without heavy squalls of
                  wind, which hurried down with redoubled velocity from the mountains, and strong
                  showers of rain, which retarded all our occupations. The air was commonly cold and
                  raw, vegetation made slow advances, and the birds were only found in vallies
                  sheltered from the chilling southern blast. This kind of weather in all likelihood
                  prevails throughout the winter, and likewise far into the midst of summer, without
                  a much greater degree of cold in the former, or of warmth in the latter season.
                  Islands far remote from any continent, or at least not situated near a cold one,
                  seem in general to have an uniform temperature of air, owing perhaps to the nature
                  of the ocean which every where surrounds them. It appears from the meteorological
                  journals kept at Port Egmont on the Falkland Islands , that the extremes of the
                  greatest cold, and the greatest heat observed there throughout the year, do not
                  exceed thirty degrees on Fahrenheit's scale. The latitude of that port is 51° 25'
                  south; and that of Ship Cove in Queen Charlotte's Sound, only 41° 5'. This
                  considerable difference of site, will naturally make the climate of New Zeeland
                  infinitely milder than that of Falkland's Islands, but cannot affect the general
                  hypothesis concerning the temperature of all islands; and the immense height of
                  the mountains in New Zeeland, some of which are covered with snow throughout the
                  year, doubtless contributes to refrigerate the air, so as to assimilate it to that
                  of the Falkland's Isles, which are not so high.</p>

               <p>The inclemency of the season did not prevent the natives from rambling about in
                  this spacious sound. Having been entirely forsaken by them for three days
                  together, a party arrived near us on the 9th, in three canoes, one of which was
                  elegantly carved in fretwork on the stern. They sold us some curiosities, and then
                  went on shore abreast of the ship; but we did not remember having ever seen them
                  before. The next day two wretched canoes joined these in which was our friend
                  Towahanga with his family . He came immediately on board, with his little boy
                  Khoâa and his daughter Ko-parree, and disposed of a great number of green
                  nephritic stones wrought into chissels and blades of hatchets. He was introduced
                  into the cabin, where captain Cook gave him many little presents, and dressed his
                  little boy in one of his own white shirts. The boy was so overjoyed at his finery,
                  that we found it absolutely impossible to keep him in the cabin by fair words. He
                  was bent upon parading it before his countrymen on the deck, and persisted to
                  importune us till we let him out. His little vanity, however, had the most
                  disastrous consequences. An old he-goat, which went about our decks, to the great
                  terror of all the New Zeelanders, took offence at the ludicrous figure of poor
                  Khoâa, who was lost in the ample turns and folds of his shirt, and awkwardly
                  trotted along with self-complacency. The sturdy mountaineer stepped in his way,
                  and raising himself on his hind-legs, butted with his head full against him, and
                  laid him sprawling on the deck in an instant. The unsuccessful efforts which the
                  boy made to rise, together with his loud lamentations, so provoked the goat, that
                  he prepared to repeat the compliment, and would probably have silenced this knight
                  of the rueful countenance, if some of our people had not interposed. His shirt was
                  now sullied, and his face and hands covered with dirt; and in this pitiful plight
                  he returned into the cabin. His air was quite dejected, his eyes full of tears,
                  and he seemed to be perfectly cured of his vanity. He told his misfortune, crying,
                  to his father; but far from exciting pity, he provoked the savage's indignation,
                  and received several blows as a punishment of his folly, before we could make his
                  peace. We cleaned his shirt and washed him all over, which had perhaps never
                  happened to him before during his life, and thus succeeded to restore him to his
                  former tranquillity. However, his father, dreading a future misfortune, carefully
                  rolled up the shirt, and taking off his own dress, made a bundle of it, in which
                  he placed all the presents which he and his son had received.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 12.]</date> The natives continued to sell their artificial
                  curiosities and some fish to our people this day and the following, both which
                  proved very rainy. On the 12th, in the morning, the weather being clear again, Dr.
                  Sparrman, my father, and myself, went to the Indian Cove, which we found
                  uninhabited. A path, made by the natives, led through the forest a considerable
                  way up the steep mountain, which separates this cove from Shag Cove . The only
                  motive which could induce the New Zeelanders to make this path, appeared to be the
                  abundance of ferns towards the summit of the mountain, the roots of that plant
                  being an article of their diet. The steepest part of the path was cut in steps
                  paved with shingle or slate, but beyond that the climbers impeded our progress
                  considerably. About half way up, the forest ended, and the rest was covered with
                  various shrubs and ferns, though it appeared to be naked and barren from the ship.
                  At the summit we met with many plants which grow in the vallies and by the
                  sea-side at Dusky Bay, owing to the difference of climate, which is so much more
                  rigorous in that southern extremity of New Zeeland. The whole to the very top
                  consists of the same talcous clay which is universal all over the island, and of a
                  talcous stone, which when exposed to the sun and air, crumbles in pieces and
                  dissolves into lamellӕ. Its colour is whitish, greyish, and sometimes tinged with
                  a dirty yellowish-red, perhaps owing to irony particles. The south side of the
                  mountain is clad in forests almost to the summit. The view from hence was very
                  extensive and pleasing; we looked into East Bay as into a fish-pond, and saw Cape
                  Terà-wittee beyond the strait. The mountains in the south arose to a vast height,
                  and were capt with snow; and the whole prospect on that side was wild and chaotic.
                  We made a fire as a memorial of our expedition, and then came down the same path
                  by which we had ascended. The next morning we made an excursion to Long Island,
                  where we found a number of plants and some birds which were new to us. In the
                  woods on the east side we heard some petrels in holes under ground croaking like
                  frogs and cackling like hens; and we supposed them to be of the little diving
                  species, which I have noticed before. It seems to be a general custom of the
                  petrel tribe to make their nest in subterraneous holes, as we found the blue or
                  silvery sort lodged in the same manner at Dusky Bay.</p>

               <p>Ever since the 12th the weather was mild and very fair; the natives resided
                  abreast of the ship, and supplied us with plenty of fish, whilst our sailors
                  carried on their former amours with the women, amongst whom there was but one who
                  had tolerable features, and something soft and feminine in her looks. She was
                  regularly given in marriage by her parents to one of our shipmates, who was
                  particularly beloved by this nation, for devoting much of his time to them, and
                  treating them with those marks of affection which, even among a savage race,
                  endear mankind to each other. To-gheeree, for so the girl was called, proved as
                  faithful to her husband as if he had been a New Zeelander, and constantly rejected
                  the addresses of other seamen, professing herself a married woman, (tirra-tàne).
                  Whatever attachment the Englishman had to his New Zeeland wife, he never attempted
                  to take her on board, foreseeing that it would be highly inconvenient to lodge the
                  numerous retinue which crawled in her garments and weighed down the hair of her
                  head. He therefore visited her on shore, and only by day, treating her with plenty
                  of the rotten part of our biscuit, which we rejected, but which she and all her
                  countrymen eagerly devoured. Mahine, the native of Borabora, whom we had on board,
                  had been so much accustomed in his own country to obey every call of nature, that
                  he did not hesitate to gratify his appetites in New Zeeland, though he was too
                  clearsighted at the same time not to perceive the vast falling off from his own
                  country-women. The force of instinct triumphed over his delicacy, - and can we
                  wonder at it, when our civilized Europeans set him the example? His conduct
                  towards the New Zeelanders in general deserves to be commended. There needed not
                  much penetration to discover that their present existence was very wretched in
                  comparison of that of the tropical islanders; but he also frequently expressed his
                  pity, whilst he enumerated to us a variety of articles of which they were
                  ignorant. He distributed the roots of yams to those who visited the ship at the
                  Black Cape, and always accompanied the captain whenever he went to plant or sow a
                  piece of ground in this harbour. He was not, like Tupaya, so much a master of
                  their language as to converse freely with them, but he soon understood them much
                  better than any one of us, from the great analogy of their language to his own.
                  Our visit to the tropical islands had, however, contributed to make the New
                  Zeeland dialect more intelligible to us than before, and we plainly perceived that
                  it had a great affinity to that of the Friendly Isles, which we had just left.
                  From such little data we can only guess at the probable route by which a country,
                  so far to the south as New Zeeland, has been peopled.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 14.]</date>The weather continuing fair on the 14th at night, the
                  captain and my father went on shore to the observatory with telescopes, to observe
                  the emersion of one of Jupiter's satellites. The result of a great number of
                  observations, made at different times by our accurate and indefatigable
                  astronomer, Mr. William Wales, F. R. S. has ascertained the longitude of Queen
                  Charlotte's Sound to be 174° 25' egast from Greenwich.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 15.]</date>The next morning we accompanied the captain to East Bay,
                  where we visited several small parties of the natives, in three different places.
                  They received us very amicably, presented us with fish, which was always the most
                  valuable article they had to give, and sold us several large hoopnets for our iron
                  and Taheitee cloth. Towards the bottom of the bay we mounted on the same hill
                  which captain Cook had ascended in his first voyage , intending to look out on the
                  sea if we could perceive the Adventure. But when we reached the summit, we found
                  so thick a haze on the water, that we could see no farther than two or three
                  leagues. The monument which captain Cook had erected here formerly, consisting of
                  a pile of loose stones, under which some coins, bullets, &amp;c. had been buried,
                  was entirely demolished at present; the natives having probably suspected that a
                  treasure of European goods was deposited there. At the foot of this hill some
                  friendly people, like those of which captain Cook took notice at this place in his
                  first voyage, came to us, and disposed of many of their arms, utensils, and
                  dresses. In the afternoon we tried the hoopnets which we had bought of the
                  natives, and had tolerable success. These nets are made of the split leaves of the
                  flag, so often mentioned, after they have been dried and beaten. No plant promises
                  to become so useful to Europe by transplantation as this flag. The hemp of flax
                  which the New Zeelanders make of it, with their coarse materials, is excessively
                  strong, soft, glossy, and white; and that which has been prepared again in
                  England, has almost equalled silk in lustre. It grows on all kinds of soil, and,
                  being perennial, may be cut down to the root every year, and requires scarce any
                  attendance or care in the cultivation.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 17.]</date>On the 17th, we spent the forenoon in cutting down a
                  number of very tall trees, of which we wished to gather the flowers, but all our
                  efforts were in vain. We had no sooner cut a tree, than it hung in a thousand
                  bindweeds and climbers from top to bottom, from which it was not in our power to
                  disengage it. The three following days we had much rain, which confined us on
                  board; nor did we receive any visits from the natives during that time.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 21.]</date>On the 21st in the morning, none but women came from the
                  shore in two canoes, and seemed to be under great apprehensions for their men,
                  signifying to us that they were gone to fight with another party. From the
                  direction in which they pointed, we concluded that their enemies dwelt somewhere
                  in Admiralty Bay.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 22.]</date>On the 22d, the weather being mild and fair, the captain,
                  accompanied by Dr. Sparrman, my father, and myself, went into West Bay, and in its
                  deepest recess carried ashore two sows and a boar, with three cocks and two hens,
                  which we set at liberty a good way up in the woods. We flattered ourselves that
                  having chosen a marshy spot, which is not likely to be frequented by the
                  inhabitants, the animals would be left to multiply their species without any
                  molestation. A few natives only in a single canoe had seen us in the entrance of
                  the bay, and probably would not suspect that we were come on so particular an
                  errand. If therefore the southern isle of New Zeeland should in course of time be
                  stocked with hogs and fowls, we have great reason to hope that the care with which
                  we concealed them in the woods, has been the only means of preserving the
                  race.</p>

               <p>At our return seven or eight canoes arrived from the northward, some of which,
                  without paying any attention to us, went directly into Indian Cove, whilst the
                  rest came on board with a great variety of dresses and arms, which they sold to
                  our people. They were more dressed than we had commonly seen any, during this
                  second stay at Queen Charlotte's Sound, their hair was tied up, and their cheeks
                  painted red. All these circumstances conspired to confirm the account which the
                  women had given us the day before, that their husbands were gone to fight, as it
                  is usual for them to put on their best apparel on those occasions. I am much
                  afraid that their unhappy differences with other tribes, were revived on our
                  account. Our people not satisfied with purchasing all the hatchets of stone,
                  patoo-patoos, battle-axes, clothes, green jaddes, fish-hooks, &amp;c. of which the
                  natives of our acquaintance were possessed, continually enquired for more, and
                  shewed them such large and valuable pieces of Taheitee cloth, as would not fail to
                  excite their desires. It is not improbable that as soon as this appetite prevailed
                  among the New Zeelanders, they would reflect that the shortest way to gratify it,
                  would be to rob their neighbours of such goods, as the Europeans coveted. The
                  great store of arms, ornaments, and clothes which they produced at this time,
                  seemed to prove that such a daring and villainous design had really been put in
                  execution; nor was it to be supposed that this could have been accomplished
                  without bloodshed.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 23.]</date>In the morning, which was very foggy, the natives at our
                  watering-place were seen to eat a root boiled or baked by means of hot stones; and
                  Mr. Whitehouse the first mate brought some of it on board, which tasted rather
                  better than a turnep. My father returned on shore with him; for a few trifles
                  obtained some large pieces of this root, and with some difficulty prevailed on two
                  of the natives to accompany Mr. Whitehouse and him into the woods, in order to
                  point out to them the species of plant to which the root belonged. They walked up
                  a considerable way without any arms whatsoever, trusting to the honesty of their
                  guides. These men pointed out a species of fern-tree, which they called mamaghoo,
                  as having the eatable root; and at the same time shewed the difference between
                  this, and another kind of fern-tree, which they named ponga. The first is full of
                  a tender pulp or pith, which when cut exsudes a reddish juice of a gelatinous
                  nature, nearly related to sago. This is so much the less singular, as the real
                  sago-tree is a species of fern. The good nutritive root of the mamaghoo must not,
                  however, be confounded with that wretched article of New Zeeland diet, the common
                  fern-root, or acrostichum furcatum Linn. The latter consists of nothing but
                  insipid sticks, which after being broiled over the fire for some time, are beaten
                  or bruised on a stone with a piece of wood much resembling the Taheitian
                  cloth-beater, but round instead of square, and without any grooves. The bruised
                  mass is chewed, what little juice there may be in it sucked out, and the rest
                  thrown aside. The mamaghoo on the contrary is tolerably good eating, and the only
                  fault seems to be, that it is not plentiful enough for a constant supply. At their
                  return they were witnesses of an instance of the ferocity of manners of this
                  savage nation. A boy about six or seven years old demanded a piece of broiled
                  pinguin, which his mother held in her hands. As she did not immediately comply
                  with his demand, he took up a large stone and threw it at her. The woman incensed
                  at this action ran to punish him, but she had scarcely given him a single blow,
                  when her husband came forward, beat her unmercifully, and dashed her against the
                  ground, for attempting to correct her unnatural child. Our people who were
                  employed in filling water, told my father they had frequently seen similar
                  instances of cruelty among them, and particularly, that the boys had actually
                  struck their unhappy mother, whilst the father looked on lest she should attempt
                  to retaliate. Among all savage nations the weaker sex is ill-treated, and the law
                  of the strongest is put in force. Their women are mere drudges, who prepare
                  raiment and provide dwellings, who cook and frequently collect their food, and are
                  requited by blows and all kinds of severity. At New Zeeland it seems they carry
                  this tyranny to excess, and the males are taught from their earliest age, to hold
                  their mothers in contempt, contrary to all our principles of morality. I leave
                  this barbarity without a comment, in order to relate the remaining occurrences of
                  this day, which was pregnant in discoveries relative to the New Zeelanders. The
                  captain, with Mr. Wales, and my father, went to Motu-Aro in the afternoon, where
                  they looked after the plantations, collected greens for the ships, &amp;c. In the
                  mean while some of the lieutenants went to the Indian Cove, with a view to trade
                  with the natives. The first objects which struck them were the entrails of a human
                  corse lying on a heap a few steps from the water. They were hardly recovered from
                  their first surprize, when the natives shewed them several limbs of the body, and
                  expressed by words and gestures that they had eaten the rest. The head without the
                  lower jaw-bone, was one of the parts which remained, and from which it plainly
                  appeared, that the deceased was a youth about fifteen or sixteen years old. The
                  skull was fractured near one of the temples, as it seemed by the stroke of a
                  pattoo-pattoo. This gave our officers an opportunity of enquiring how they came in
                  possession of the body. The natives answered, that they had fought with their
                  enemies, and had killed several of them, without being able to bring away any of
                  the dead besides this youth. At the same time they acknowledged that they had lost
                  some of their friends, and pointed to several women who were seated apart, weeping
                  and cutting their foreheads with sharp stones, in commemoration of the dead. Our
                  former conjectures were now amply verified, our apprehensions that we were the
                  innocent causes of this disaster encreased, and the existence of anthropophagi
                  confirmed by another strong proof. Mr. Pickersgill proposed to purchase the head,
                  in order to preserve it till his return to England, where it might serve as a
                  memorial of this voyage. He offered a nail, and immediately obtained the head for
                  this price , after which he returned on board with his company, and placed it on
                  the taffarel . We were all occupied in examining it, when some New Zeelanders came
                  on board from the watering-place. At sight of the head they expressed an ardent
                  desire of possessing it, signifying by the most intelligible gestures that it was
                  delicious to the taste. Mr. Pickersgill refused to part with it, but agreed to cut
                  off a small piece from the cheek, with which they seemed to be well satisfied. He
                  cut off the part he had promised, and offered it to them, but they would not eat
                  it raw, and made signs to have it dressed. Therefore, in presence of all the
                  ship's company, it was broiled over the fire; after which they devoured it before
                  our eyes with the greatest avidity. The captain arriving the moment after with his
                  company, the New Zeelanders repeated the experiment once more in his presence. It
                  operated very strangely and differently on the beholders. Some there were who, in
                  spite of the abhorrence which our education inspires against the eating of human
                  flesh, did not seem greatly disinclined to feast with them, and valued themselves
                  on the brilliancy of their wit, while they compared their battle to a
                  hunting-match. On the contrary, others were so unreasonably incensed against the
                  perpetrators of this action, that they declared they could be well pleased to
                  shoot them all; they were ready to become the most detestable butchers, in order
                  to punish the imaginary crime of a people whom they had no right to condemn. A few
                  other suffered the same effects as from a dose of ipecacuanha. The rest lamented
                  this action as a brutal depravation of human nature, agreeably to the principles
                  which they had imbibed. But the sensibility of Mahine, the young native of the
                  Society Islands, shone out with superior lustre among us. Born and bred in a
                  country where the inhabitants have already emerged from the darkness of barbarism,
                  and are united by the bonds of society, this scene filled his mind with horror. He
                  turned his eyes from the unnatural object, and retired into the cabin, to give
                  vent to the emotions of his heart. There we found him bathed in tears; his looks
                  were a mixture of compassion and grief, and as soon as he saw us, he expressed his
                  concern for the unhappy parents of the victim. This turn which his reflections had
                  taken, gave us infinite pleasure; it spoke a humane heart, filled with the warmest
                  sentiments of social affection, and habituated to sympathize with its
                  fellow-creatures. He was so deeply affected, that it was several hours before he
                  could compose himself, and ever after, when he spoke on this subject, it was not
                  without emotion. Philosophers, who have only contemplated mankind in their
                  closets, have strenuously maintained, that all the assertions of authors, ancient
                  and modern, of the existence of men-eaters are not to be credited; and there have
                  not been wanting persons amongst ourselves who were sceptical enough to refuse
                  belief to the concurrent testimonies in the history of almost all nations in this
                  particular. But captain Cook had already, in his former voyage, received strong
                  proof that the practice of eating human flesh existed in New Zeeland; and as now
                  we have with our own eyes seen the inhabitants devouring human flesh, all
                  controversy on that point must be at an end. The opinions of authors on the origin
                  of this custom are infinitely various, and have lately been collected by the very
                  learned canon Pauw, at Xanten, in his Recherches Philosophiques fur les
                  Americains, vol. I. p. 207. He seems to think that men were first tempted to
                  devour each other from real want of food and cruel necessity . Many weighty
                  objections, however, may be made against this hypothesis; amongst which the
                  following is one of the greatest. There are very few countries in the world so
                  miserably barren as not to afford their inhabitants sufficient nourishment, and
                  those, in particular, where anthropophagi still exist, do not come under that
                  description. The northern isle of New Zeeland, on a coast of near four hundred
                  leagues, contains scarcely one hundred thousand inhabitants, according to the most
                  probable guess which can be made; a number inconsiderable for that vast space of
                  country, even allowing the settlements to be confined only to the sea-shore. The
                  great abundance of fish, and the beginnings of agriculture in the Bay of Plenty
                  and other parts of the Northern Isle, are more than sufficient to maintain this
                  number, because they have always had enough to supply strangers with what was
                  deemed superfluous. It is true, before the dawn of the arts among them, before the
                  invention of nets, and before the cultivation of potatoes, the means of
                  subsistence may have been more difficult; but then the number of inhabitants must
                  likewise have been infinitely smaller. Single instances are not conclusive in this
                  case, though they prove how far the wants of the body may stimulate mankind to
                  extraordinary actions. In 1772, during a famine which happened throughout all
                  Germany, a herdsman was taken on the manor of Baron Boineburg, in Hessia, who had
                  been urged by hunger to kill and devour a boy, and afterwards to make a practice
                  of it for several months. From his confession it appeared, that he looked upon the
                  flesh of young children as a very delicious food; and the gestures of the New
                  Zeelanders indicated exactly the same thing. An old woman in the province of
                  Matogrosso, in Brasil, declared to the Portuguese governor , that she had eaten
                  human flesh several times, liked it very much, and should be very glad to feast
                  upon it again, especially if it was part of a little boy. But it would be absurd
                  to suppose from such circumstances, that killing men for the sake of feasting upon
                  them, has ever been the spirit of a whole nation; because it is utterly
                  incompatible with the existence of society. Slight causes have ever produced the
                  most remarkable events among mankind, and the most trifling quarrels have fired
                  their minds with incredible inveteracy against each other. Revenge has always been
                  a strong passion among barbarians, who are less subject to the sway of reason than
                  civilized people, and has stimulated them to a degree of madness which is capable
                  of all kinds of excesses. The people who first consumed the body of their enemies,
                  seem to have been bent upon exterminating their very inanimate remains, from an
                  excess of passion; but, by degrees, finding the meat wholesome and palatable, it
                  is not to be wondered that they should make a practice of eating their enemies as
                  often as they killed any, since the action of eating human flesh, whatever our
                  education may teach us to the contrary, is certainly neither unnatural nor
                  criminal in itself. It can only become dangerous as far as it steels the mind
                  against that compassionate fellow-feeling which is the great basis of civil
                  society; and for this reason we find it naturally banished from every people as
                  soon as civilization has made any progress among them. But though we are too much
                  polished to be canibals, we do not find it unnaturally and savagely cruel to take
                  the field, and to cut one another's throats by thousands, without a single motive,
                  besides the ambition of a prince, or the caprice of his mistress! Is it not from
                  prejudice that we are disgusted with the idea of eating a dead man, when we feel
                  no remorse in depriving him of life? If the practice of eating human flesh makes
                  men unfeeling and brutal, we have instances that civilized people, who would
                  perhaps, like some of our sailors, have turned sick at the thought of eating human
                  flesh, have committed barbarities without example amongst canibals. A New
                  Zeelander, who kills and eats his enemy, is a very different being from an
                  European, who, for his amusement, tears an infant from the mother's breast, in
                  cool blood, and throws it on the earth to feed his hound </p>

               <p>The New Zeelanders never eat their adversaries, unless they are killed in battle;
                  they never kill their relations for the purpose of eating them; they do not even
                  eat them if they die of a natural death, and they take no prisoners with a view to
                  fatten them for their repast ; though these circumstances have been related, with
                  more or less truth of the American Indians. It is therefore not improbable, that
                  in process of time they will entirely lay aside this custom; and the introduction
                  of new domestic animals into their country might hasten that period, since greater
                  affluence would tend to make them more sociable. Their religion does not seem
                  likely to be an obstacle, because from what we could judge, they are not
                  remarkably superstitious, and it is only among very bigoted nations, that the
                  custom of offering human flesh to the gods, has prevailed after civilization.
                  Tupaya , the only man who could freely converse with the New Zeelanders, soon
                  learnt that they acknowledged a supreme Being; and this spark of divine revelation
                  probably remains amongst all nations on the globe. To this they add the belief of
                  some inferior divinities, so correspondent to those of the Taheitians, that their
                  system of polytheism must be of very ancient date, and seems to derive its origin
                  from their common ancestors. We never observed a single ceremony in New Zeeland,
                  which could be supposed to have a religious tendency; and I know of only two
                  circumstances which may be distantly construed to favour of superstition. The
                  first is the name of atuee, " the bird of the divinity," which they sometimes give
                  to a species of creeper (certhia cincinnata). This name seems to indicate a
                  veneration like that which is paid to herons, and kingfishers at Taheitee, and the
                  Society Isles; but I cannot say that they ever expressed the least wish to
                  preserve the life of this bird in preference to the rest. The second, is the
                  custom of wearing an amulet of green jadde on the breast, from a string round the
                  neck. This piece of stone is of the size of two crown-pieces, and carved so as to
                  bear a rude resemblance to a human being. These they call e-teeghee, a name which
                  is doubtless equivalent to the Taheitian e-tee . In that island, and the adjacent
                  group, e-tee signifies a wooden image of the human figure, erected on a pole at
                  their cemeteries, in memory of the dead, but to which no worship nor particular
                  respect is paid. The New Zeeland teeghee seems to be worn with a similar view, but
                  not to be better respected; for though they did not part with it for a trifle, yet
                  with half a yard of broad cloth or red kersey, which were our best goods in Queen
                  Charlotte's Sound, we never failed to purchase it. Besides this, they often wear
                  several rows of human teeth round the neck, but we understood that they were only
                  the memorials of their prowess, since they had belonged to the enemies whom they
                  had killed. It always appeared to us, that they have no priests or jugglers of any
                  kind among them, which accounts for their having so little superstition. When the
                  comforts of life are multiplied, it is possible that some individuals may be
                  artful enough to improve upon their present ideas of religion, in order to enjoy
                  exclusive advantages; for it has often been the fate of mankind, that the most
                  sacred, and most inestimable gift of heaven, has served as a cloak under cover of
                  which they have been deluded.</p>

               <p>Having fitted the ship to encounter the rigorous climate of the south, and
                  received on board her provision of fresh water and wood, as well as the biscuit
                  which had been baked over again, we re-imbarked all the tents from the
                     <date>[Wednesd. 24.]</date>shore, and on the 24th, early in the morning,
                  unmoored and rode by a single anchor. The natives immediately repaired to the
                  beach which we had left, and finding there a heap of bread-dust which had been
                  rejected as unfit for use at the revisal of our biscuit, they fell to, and
                  consumed it all, though our hogs had before refused to touch it. We could not
                  attribute this proceding to necessity, because they had plenty of fresh fish, of
                  which they daily sold us enough for our consumption. It was rather owing to the
                  diversity of their taste from ours, or to the natural inclination for variety,
                  which made them eat the worst of vegetable food, because it was a rarity, in
                  preference to fish, which is their constant diet. They had another motive for
                  visiting the place of our late establishment; this was, to pick up any little
                  trifles, such as nails, rags, &amp;c. which we might have left behind. Whilst they
                  were so employed, some others came from the interior parts of the bay, and offered
                  a great quantity of their tools and weapons to sell.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon, a boat was sent on shore to bury a bottle at the foot of a tree,
                  with a letter for captain Furneaux, in case he should come into the harbour after
                  our departure. Another boat, with several officers, and my father, went to Indian
                  Cove, where the entrails of the body still lay on the ground. The war-canoe, in
                  which the expedition had been made, had a carved head ornamented with bunches of
                  brown feathers, and a double-forked prong projected from it, on which the heart of
                  their slain enemy was tranfixed. Our gentlemen purchased a quantity of their
                  prepared hemp or flax, and many fish-hooks, armed with bone, which, according to
                  the account of the natives, was taken from the human arm.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 25.]</date>At four o'clock the next morning, a boat was sent to
                  the Motu-Aro, in order to take a few cabbages out of our plantations. My father
                  took that opportunity of searching the shore for the last time, and was fortunate
                  enough to find some plants which we had not seen before. In the mean while we hove
                  the anchor, set sail, and took up the boat on our way; but finding the current and
                  wind against us, we were forced to come to again about seven o'clock, between
                  Motu-Aro and Long Island. Here we lay an hour or two, and then set sail with a
                  more favourable breeze, which carried us into Cook's Strait.</p>

               <p>We stood close in shore under cape Tera-Wittee, and fired several guns to give the
                  Adventure notice of our approach, in case she had lain in one of the adjacent
                  harbours. Between the Capes Tera-Wittee and Palliser, we discovered a very deep
                  bay, of which the shores had every where a gentle slope, and especially towards
                  the bottom, where the hills were removed to such a distance, that we could but
                  just discern them. If there is a sufficient depth of water for ships in this bay,
                  and of that we had no room to doubt, it appears to be a most convenient spot for
                  an European settlement. There is a great stretch of land fit for cultivation, and
                  easily defensible; there is likewise plenty of wood, and almost certain
                  indications of a considerable river; and lastly, the country does not seem to be
                  very populous, so that there would be little danger of quarrels with the natives;
                  advantages which are not frequently to be met with jointly in many spots of New
                  Zeeland. The flag (phormium tenax) of which the natives make all their clothes,
                  mats, ropes, and nets, affords such an excellent kind of flax, which is at once
                  glossy, elastic, and strong, that it might become an article of commerce in India,
                  where cordage and canvas is wanted. Perhaps in future ages, when the maritime
                  powers of Europe lose their American colonies, they may think of making new
                  establishments in more distant regions; and if it were ever possible for Europeans
                  to have humanity enough to acknowledge the indigenous tribes of the South Sea as
                  their brethren, we might have settlements which would not be defiled with the
                  blood of innocent nations.</p>

               <p>We continued firing guns as we stood past this bay, and <date>[Friday
                  26.]</date>the next morning having doubled Cape Palliser, we ran along the coast
                  to the northward till the evening, likewise firing guns from time to time. Our
                  attempts to rejoin our consort were to no purpose; we heard no answer to all our
                  signals, though we hearkened with an attention, and an eagerness which plainly
                  shewed how unwillingly we ventured on a second cruize among numberless dangers
                  without a companion. We were forced at last to give up the thought of seeing her
                  again, and about six o'clock took our departure from Cape Palliser, steering to
                  the S. S. E.</p>

               <p>The scurvy, which had afflicted some of our people after the first tedious cruize
                  to the south, between the Cape of Good Hope and Dusky Bay, had been entirely
                  subdued by the wholesome diet on fish, and the drinking of spruce-beer in that
                  harbour; and afterwards by the excellent greens in Queen Charlotte's Sound. Our
                  disagreeable passage in winter from New Zeeland to Taheitee, had revived the
                  symptoms of the disease in many persons, and in some to a considerable degree; but
                  the continual supply of fresh vegetables, which we received at that island,
                  together with the provision of excellent pork at the Society and Friendly Isles,
                  had entirely re-established them. Our second stay at Queen's Charlotte's Sound had
                  likewise furnished us, as before, with abundance of celery and scurvy-grass, which
                  counteracted the noxious effects of salted meat; so that we were, to appearance,
                  in a good state of health at our second departure from thence. It may, however,
                  justly be questioned, whether the continual hardships and labours which we had
                  undergone, had not in reality made the shew of health deceitful, and impaired the
                  body so much that it was not able to resist so long as it had formerly done. The
                  officers and passengers entered upon this second cruize under several difficulties
                  which did not exist before. They had now no live-stock to be compared to that
                  which they took from the Cape of Good Hope; and the little store of provisions
                  which had supplied their table with variety in preference to that of the common
                  sailor, was now so far consumed, that they were nearly upon a level, especially as
                  the seamen were inured to that way of life by constant habit almost from their
                  infancy; and the others had never experienced it before. The hope of meeting with
                  new lands was vanished, the topics of common conversation were exhausted, the
                  cruize to the south could not present any thing new, but appeared in all its
                  chilling horrors before us, and the absence of our consort doubled every danger.
                  We had enjoyed a few agreeable days between the tropics, we had feasted as well as
                  the produce of various islands would permit, and we had been entertained with the
                  novelty of many objects among different nations; but, according to the common
                  vicissitudes of fortune, this agreeable moment was to be replaced by a long period
                  of fogs and frosty weather, of fasting, and of tedious uniformity. The late Abbé
                  Chappe, in his voyage to California, (or his compiler, M. Cassini, in his name),
                  observes , " that variety alone has charms for the traveller, who goes in quest of
                  her from one country to another." His philosophy is at the same time of such an
                  exalted nature, that he pronounces " the life which is led at sea to be tedious
                  and uniform only to those who are not accustomed to look round them, and who
                  behold all nature with the eye of indifference." Had the good Abbé been
                  unfortunate enough to make a visit to the antarctic circle, without the company of
                  several hundred fattened fowls, which kept him in good humour on his short trip
                  from Cadiz to Vera Cruz, his philosophy would not have taken so high a flight. But
                  though he found variety at sea, he was not so fortunate in Mexico . Here he
                  crossed great tracts of uncultivated country and extensive forests, he saw nature
                  in a savage state, allowed that she was rich and beautiful; but, in the space of a
                  few days, her multiplicity of charms became insipid and uniform in his eyes. And
                  yet this traveller assures us, that he was astronomer, botanist, zoologist,
                  mineralogist, chymist, and philosopher!</p>

               <p>We quitted the shores of New Zeeland with ideas very different from those of Abbé
                  Chappe; and if any thing alleviated the dreariness of the prospect with a great
                  part of our ship-mates, it was the hope of completing the circle round the
                  South-Pole in a high latitude during the next inhospitable summer, and of
                  returning to England within the space of eight months. This hope contributed to
                  animate the spirits of our people during the greatest part of our continuance in
                  bad weather; but in the end it vanished like a dream, and the only thought which
                  could make them amends, was the certainty of passing another season among the
                  happy islands in the torrid zone.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. III.</l>

                  <l>The second course towards the high southern latitudes from New Zeeland to
                     Easter Island.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1773. november.][Saturday 27.]</date>THE morning after we had taken our
                  departure, we had a N. N. W. wind, which raised the thermometer to 64 deg. The two
                  next days it stood at 54 deg. then at 48; and when we were in about 49° of south
                  latitude, at 44 1/2 deg. On the 28th of November, we observed a number of seals,
                  or perhaps sea-lions, passing by us at a distance towards the land which we had
                  left. From that time <date>[1773. December][Monday 6.]</date>to the 6th of
                  December we daily saw great flocks of blue and other petrels, together with the
                  different species of albatrosses, the skuas or grey gulls, many pinguins, and
                  abundance of sea-weed. About seven in the evening, on that day, we were in the
                  latitude of 51° 33' south, and long. 180°; consequently just at the point of the
                  antipodes of London. The remembrance of domestic felicity, and of the sweets of
                  society, called forth a sigh from every heart which felt the tender ties of filial
                  or parental affection. We are the first Europeans, and I believe I may add, the
                  first human beings, who have reached this point, where it is probable none will
                  come after us. A common report prevails indeed in England concerning Sir Francis
                  Drake, who is said to have visited the antipodes, which the legend expresses by "
                  his having passed under the middle arch of London-bridge:" but this is a mistake,
                  as his track lay along the coast of America, and probably originates from his
                  having passed the periœci, or the point in 180° long. on the same circle of north
                  latitude, on the coast of California.</p>
               <!--AN April 4: Forster wrote of between the coordinate and the direction.-->
               <p>In proportion as we advanced to the southward the thermometer <date>[Friday
                     10.]</date>fell; and on the 10th, in the morning, the wind coming more ahead,
                  it descended to 37°. At noon we had reached the latitude of 59° south, without
                  having met with any ice, though we fell in with it the preceding year on the 10th
                  of December, between the 50th and 51st deg. of south latitude. It is difficult to
                  account for this difference; perhaps a severe winter preceding our first course
                  from the Cape of Good Hope, might accumulate more ice that year than the next,
                  which is the more probable, as we learnt at the Cape that the winter had been
                  sharper there than usual; perhaps a violent storm might break the polar ice, and
                  drive it so far to the northward as we found it; and perhaps both these causes
                  might concur, with others, to produce this effect.</p>
               <!-- AN April 7: Wrote it as 50th & 51st.. -->

               <p>On the 11th, at night, the cold encreased, the thermometer standing at 34 deg. and
                  at four o'clock the next <date>[Sunday 12.]</date>morning a large island of
                  floating ice was seen ahead, which we passed an hour afterwards. At eight o'clock
                  the thermometer was already at 31 1/2 deg. the air being probably refrigerated by
                  the ice, though we did not see more than this one piece. At noon we found the
                  latitude to be 61° 46' south. The next morning the thermometer stood at 31 deg.
                  and we ran to the eastward with a fresh breeze, though we had a surprising fall of
                  snow, which filled the air to such a degree that we could not see ten yards before
                  us. Our friend Mahine had already expressed his surprize at several little snow
                  and hail showers on the preceding days, this phӕnomenon being utterly unknown in
                  his country. The appearance of " white stones," which melted in his hand, was
                  altogether miraculous in his eyes, and though we endeavoured to explain to him
                  that cold was the cause of their formation, yet I believe his ideas on that
                  subject were never very clear. The heavy fall of snow this day surprised him more
                  than what he had seen before, and after a long consideration of its singular
                  qualities, he told us he would call it the white rain when he came back to his
                  country. He did not see the first ice on account of the early hour of the morning;
                  but two days after, in about 65 deg. of south latitude, he was struck with
                  astonishment upon seeing one of the largest pieces, and the day following
                  presented him with an extensive field of ice, which blocked up our farther
                  progress to the south, and gave him great pleasure, supposing it to be land. We
                  told him that so far from being land, it was nothing but fresh water, which we
                  found some difficulty to convince him off at first, till we shewed him the ice
                  which was formed in the scuttled cask on the deck. He assured us, however, that he
                  would at all events call this the white land, by way of distinguishing it from all
                  the rest. Already, at New Zeeland, he had collected a number of little slender
                  twigs, which he carefully tied in a bundle, and made use of instead of journals.
                  For every island which he had seen and visited, after his departure from the
                  Society Isles, he had selected a little twig; so that his collection amounted at
                  present to nine or ten, of which he remembered the names perfectly well in the
                  same order as we had seen them, and the white land, or whennua tèatèa, was the
                  last. He enquired frequently how many other countries we should meet with in our
                  way to England, and formed a separate bundle of them, which he studied every day
                  with equal care as the first. The tediousness of this part of our voyage probably
                  made him so eager to know how it would end; and the salt provisions, together with
                  the cold climate, contributed to disgust him. His usual amusement was to separate
                  the red feathers from the aprons, used in dancing, which he had purchased at
                  Tonga-Tabboo, and to join eight or ten of them together into a little tuft, by
                  means of coco-nut core. The rest of his time he passed in walking on deck,
                  visiting the officers and petty officers, and warming himself by the fire in the
                  captain's cabin. We took this opportunity to improve in the knowledge of his
                  language, and, by degrees, revised the whole vocabulary which we had collected at
                  the Society Isles. By this method we became possessed of a fund of useful
                  intelligence concerning his country and the adjacent isles, which led us to make
                  many enquiries at our subsequent return to those islands.</p>
               <!-- AN April 3: Again, 'of' as well as deg. written out.-->
               <p>The ice-fields appeared, in different parts of the horizon, about us on the 15th
                  in the morning, so that we were in a manner embayed; and, as we saw no possibility
                  of advancing to the south, we ran to the N. N. E. to get clear of them. The
                  weather, which was already foggy, became thicker towards noon, and made our
                  situation, amidst a great number of floating rocks of ice, extremely dangerous.
                  About one o'clock, whilst the people were at dinner, we were alarmed by the sudden
                  appearance of a large island of ice just a head of us. It was absolutely
                  impossible either to wear or tack the ship , on account of its proximity, and our
                  only resource was to keep as near the wind as possible, and to try to weather the
                  danger. We were in the most dreadful suspense for a few minutes, and though we
                  fortunately succeeded, yet the ship passed within her own length to windward of
                  it. Notwithstanding the constant perils to which our course exposed us in this
                  unexplored ocean, our ship's company were far from being so uneasy as might have
                  been expected; and, as in battle the sight of death becomes familiar and often
                  unaffecting, so here, by daily experiencing such hair-breadth escapes, we passed
                  unconcernedly on, as if the waves, the winds, and rocks of ice had not the power
                  to hurt us. The pieces of ice had a variety of shapes, in the same manner as those
                  which we had observed to the southward of the Indian Ocean; and many pyramids,
                  obelisks, and church-spires appeared from time to time. Their height was not much
                  inferior to that which we had observed among the first islands of ice in 1772; and
                  many likewise resembled them in being of a great extent and perfectly level at
                  top.</p>

               <p>The number of birds which we had hitherto met with on our passage, would have
                  persuaded any other voyagers but ourselves of the approach of land. We were,
                  however, so much used to their appearance on the sea at present, as never once to
                  form any expectation of discovering land from that circumstance. Flocks of blue
                  petrels and pintadas, many albatrosses, with now and then a solitary skua had
                  attended us every day; and to these, since our approach to the ice, we could join
                  the snowy and antarctic petrels and the fulmars. However, pinguins, sea-weed, or
                  seals, had not been observed since the 10th.</p>

               <p>The weather, which was extremely moist and disagreeably cold, proved unfavourable
                  to the doves and pigeons which many people had purchased at the Society and
                  Friendly Islands, and to the singing-birds which they had been at great pains to
                  catch alive at New Zeeland. We had five doves at our departure from this country,
                  all which died one after another before the 16th of December, being much more
                  exposed to the cold in our cabins, than in the sailors births. The thermometer in
                  our cabins was never more than 5 deg. higher than in the open air on deck, and
                  their situation abreast of the main-mast, where the strain of the ship is
                  greatest, exposed them to currents of air, and made them admit water like
                  sieves.</p>

               <p>On the 16th, in the afternoon, and on the 17th, we <date>[Friday
                  17.]</date>hoisted out our boats and collected some loose pieces of ice to fill
                  our empty casks with fresh water. The ice which we picked up was old and spungy,
                  and impregnated with saline particles, from having long been in a state of decay;
                  therefore did not afford us very good water, but it was drinkable, particularly if
                  we let the pieces of ice lie on deck for some time, by which means the salt-water
                  was almost entirely drained off. From this time till the 20th we saw no birds
                  about us, which disappeared without any visible cause; but on that day some
                  albatrosses appeared again.</p>

               <p>Having left the ice behind which obstructed our passage, we had gradually advanced
                  to the southward again, that being our principal object, and on the <date>[Monday
                     20.]</date>20th in the afternoon, we crossed the antarctic circle the second
                  time during our voyage. The weather was wet and foggy, ice islands were numerous
                  around us, and the gale was very brisk. Many antarctic petrels, and a whale which
                  spouted up the water near us, seemed to indicate our entrance into the frigid
                  zone. At night two seals appeared, which we had not seen for fourteen days past,
                  and gave some faint hopes of seeing land to several of our shipmates; but our
                  course disappointed their expectations, by continuing within the circle as far as
                  67° 12' S. lat. for several days following.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 23.]</date>On the 23d in the afternoon, we were surrounded with
                  islands of ice, and the sea was in a manner covered with small fragments. The ship
                  was therefore brought to, the boats hoisted out, and a great quantity of good ice
                  taken on board. The birds were at present very numerous about us again, and some
                  antarctic and other petrels were shot and taken up, which we had an opportunity of
                  drawing and describing. About this time many persons were afflicted with violent
                  rheumatic pains, head-aches, swelled glands, and catarrhal fevers, which some
                  attributed to the use of ice-water. My father, who had complained of a cold for
                  several days past, was obliged to keep his bed today, having a severe rheumatism
                  with a fever. His complaint seemed rather to arise from the wretched
                  accommodations which he had on board, every thing in his cabin rotting in the wet
                  which it admitted, and being mouldy. The cold was so sensible there this day in
                  particular, that he found only a difference of two degrees and a half between the
                  thermometer there, and that upon the deck.</p>

               <p>After hoisting in our boats we made sail to the northward, as much as a contrary
                  wind permitted, during all the night and the next day. <date>[Saturday
                  25.]</date>On the 25th, the weather was clear and fair, but the wind died away to
                  a perfect calm, upwards of ninety large ice islands being in sight at noon. This
                  being Christmas-day, the captain according to custom, invited the officers and
                  mates to dinner, and one of the lieutenant's entertained the petty-officers. The
                  sailors feasted on a double portion of pudding, regaling themselves with the
                  brandy of their allowance, which they had saved for this occasion some months
                  before-hand, being sollicitous to get very drunk, though they are commonly
                  sollicitous about nothing else. The sight of an immense number of icy masses,
                  amongst which we drifted at the mercy of the current, every moment in danger of
                  being dashed to pieces against them, could not deter the sailors from indulging in
                  their favourite amusement. As long as they had brandy left, they would persist to
                  keep Christmas " like Christians," though the elements had conspired together for
                  their destruction. Their long acquaintance with a sea-faring life had inured them
                  to all kinds of perils, and their heavy labour, with the inclemencies of weather,
                  and other hardships, making their muscles rigid and their nerves obtuse, had
                  communicated insensibility to the mind. It will easily be conceived, that as they
                  do not feel for themselves sufficiently to provide for their own safety, they must
                  be incapable of feeling for others. Subjected to a very strict command, they also
                  exercise a tyrannical sway over those whom fortune places in their power.
                  Accustomed to face an enemy, they breathe nothing but war. By force of habit even
                  killing is become so much their passion, that we have seen many instances during
                  our voyage, where they have expressed a horrid eagerness to fire upon the natives
                  on the slightest pretences. Their way of life in general prevents their enjoying
                  domestic comforts; and gross animal appetites fill the place of purer
                  affections.</p>

               <p>Though they are members of a civilized society, they may in some measure be looked
                  upon as a body of uncivilized men, rough, passionate, revengeful, but likewise
                  brave, sincere, and true to each other.</p>

               <p>At noon the observation of the sun's altitude determined our latitude to be 66°
                  22' south, so that we were just returned out of the antarctic circle. We had
                  scarcely any night during our stay in the frigid zone, so that I find several
                  articles in my father's journal, written by the light of the sun, within a few
                  minutes before the hour of midnight. The sun's stay below the horizon was so very
                  short this night likewise, that we had a very strong twilight all the time. Mahine
                  was struck with the greatest astonishment at this phӕnomenon, and would scarcely
                  believe his senses. All our endeavours to explain it to him miscarried, and he
                  assured us he despaired of finding belief among his countrymen, when he should
                  come back to recount the wonders of petrified rain, and of perpetual day. The
                  first Venetians who explored the northern extremes of the European continent, were
                  equally surprised at the continual appearance of the sun above the horizon, and
                  relate that they could only distinguish day from night, by the instinct of the
                  sea-fowl, which went to roost on shore, for the space of four hours . As we were
                  in all likelihood far distant from any land, this indication failed us, and we
                  have often observed numerous birds on the wing about us all the night, and
                  particularly great flocks of different species, so late as eleven o'clock.</p>

               <p>At six in the evening, we counted one hundred and five large masses of ice around
                  us from the deck, the weather continuing very clear, fair, and perfectly calm.
                  Towards noon <date>[Sunday 26.]</date>the next day we were still in the same
                  situation, with a very drunken crew, and from the mast-head observed one hundred
                  and sixty-eight ice islands, some of which were half a mile long, and none less
                  than the hull of the ship. The whole scene looked like the wrecks of a shattered
                  world, or as the poets describe some regions of hell; an idea which struck us the
                  more forcibly, as execrations, oaths, and curses re-echoed about us on all
                  sides.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 27.]</date>A faint breeze sprung up in the afternoon, with which we
                  made slow advances to the northward, the number of ice islands decreasing in
                  proportion as we receded from the antarctic circle. About four the next morning,
                  we hoisted out our boats, and took in a fresh provision of ice. The weather
                  changed soon after, the wind coming about to the north-eastward, which brought on
                  much snow and sleet. My father, and twelve other persons were again much afflicted
                  with rheumatic pains, and confined to their beds. The scurvy did not yet appear
                  under any dangerous form in the ship, and all those who had any slight symptoms of
                  it, amongst whom I was one, drank plentifully of the fresh wort, quite warm, twice
                  a day, and abstained as much as possible from salt-diet. A general languor and
                  sickly look however, manifested itself in almost every person's face, which
                  threatened us with more dangerous consequences. Captain Cook himself was likewise
                  pale and lean, entirely lost his appetite, and laboured under a perpetual
                  costiveness. </p>

               <p><date>[1774. January.][Saturday 1.]</date>We advanced to the northward as much as
                  the winds would permit us, and lost sight of the ice on the first of January 1774,
                  in 59° 7' S. latitude. <date>[Tuesday 4.]</date>On the 4th, the wind blowing from
                  the westward was very boisterous, and obliged us to keep all our sails
                  double-reefed; the sea ran high, and the ship worked very heavily, rolling
                  violently from side to side. This continued till the 6th at noon, <date>[Thursday
                     6.]</date>when, having reached 51° of S.latitude, we bore away from the wind,
                  to the N. N. E. We were now within a few degrees of the track which we had made in
                  June and July last, in going from New Zeeland to Taheitee, and had directed our
                  course towards it, in order to leave no considerable part of this great ocean
                  unexplored. As far as we had hitherto advanced, we had found no land, not even
                  indications of land; our first track had crossed the South Sea in the middle
                  latitudes, or between 40 and 50 degrees. In our course till Christmas, we had
                  explored the greatest part of it between 60 degrees and the antarctic circle; and
                  the present course to the northward had crossed the space between the two former
                  runs. If any land has escaped us, it must be an island, whose distance from
                  Europe, and situation in an uncouth climate cannot make it valuable to this
                  country. It is obvious that to search a sea of such extent as the South Sea, in
                  order to be certain of the existence, or non-existence of a small island, would
                  require many voyages in numberless different tracks, and cannot be effected in a
                  single expedition. But it is sufficient for us, to have proved that no large land
                  or continent exists in the South Sea within the temperate zone, and that if it
                  exists at all, we have at least confined it within the antarctic circle.</p>
               <!-- AN April 4: Again, 'of'. -->
               <p>The long continuance in these cold climates began now to hang heavily on our crew,
                  especially as it banished all hope of returning home this year, which had hitherto
                  supported their spirits. At first a painful despondence, owing to the dreary
                  prospect of another year's cruize to the South, seemed painted in every
                  countenance; till by degrees they resigned themselves to their fate, with a kind
                  of sullen indifference. It must be owned however, that nothing could be more
                  dejecting than the entire ignorance of our future destination, which, without any
                  apparent reason, was constantly kept a secret to every person in the ship.</p>

               <p>We now stood to the north-eastward for a few days, till we came so far as 47° 52'
                  south latitude, where the thermometer rose to 52 degrees. On that day, which was
                  the 11th, <date>[Monday 11.]</date>at noon, the course was directed to the S. E.
                  again, though this frequent and sudden change of climate could not fail of proving
                  very hurtful to our health in general. <date>[Saturday 15.]</date>On the 15th the
                  wind encreased very much, and in a short time blew a tempestuous gale, which
                  took</p>

               <p>A nine o'clock a huge mountainous wave struck the ship on the beam, and filled the
                  decks with a deluge of water. It poured through the sky-light over our heads, and
                  extinguished the candle, leaving us for a moment in doubt, whether we were not
                  entirely overwhelmed and sinking into the abyss. Every thing was afloat in my
                  father's cabin, and his bed was thoroughly soaked. His rheumatism, which had now
                  afflicted him above a fortnight, was still so violent as to have almost deprived
                  him of the use of his legs, and his pains redoubled in the morning. <date>[Sunday
                     16.]</date>Our situation at present was indeed very dismal, even to those who
                  preserved the blessing of health; to the sick, whose crippled limbs were tortured
                  with excessive pain, it was insupportable. The ocean about us had a furious
                  aspect, and seemed incensed at the presumption of a few intruding mortals. A
                  gloomy melancholy air loured on the brows of our shipmates, and a dreadful silence
                  reigned amongst us. Salt meat, our constant diet, was become loathsome to all, and
                  even to those who had been bred to a nautical life from their tender years: the
                  hour of dinner was hateful to us, for the well known smell of the victuals had no
                  sooner reached our nose, than we found it impossible to partake of them with a
                  hearty appetite.</p>

               <p>It will appear from hence that this voyage was not to be compared to any preceding
                  one, for the multitude of hardships and distresses which attended it. Our
                  predecessors in the South Sea had always navigated within the tropic, or at least
                  in the best parts of the temperate zone; they had almost constantly enjoyed mild
                  easy weather, and sailed in sight of lands, which were never so wretchedly
                  destitute as not to afford them refreshments from time to time. Such a voyage
                  would have been merely a party of pleasure to us; continually entertained with new
                  and often agreeable objects, our minds would have been at ease, our conversation
                  cheerful, our bodies healthy, and our whole situation desirable and happy. Ours
                  was just the reverse of this; our southern cruizes were uniform and tedious in the
                  highest degree; the ice, the fogs, the storms and ruffled surface of the sea
                  formed a disagreeable scene, which was seldom cheered by the reviving beams of the
                  sun; the climate was rigorous and our food detestable. In short, we rather
                  vegetated than lived; we withered, and became indifferent to all that animates the
                  soul at other times. We sacrificed our health, our feelings, our enjoyments, to
                  the honour of pursuing a track unattempted before. This was indeed as the poet
                  says.</p>

               <p>The crew were as much distressed as the officers, from another cause. Their
                  biscuit, which had been sorted at New Zeeland, baked over again, and then packed
                  up, was now in the same decayed state as before. This was owing partly to the
                  revisal, which had been so rigorous, that many a bad biscuit was preserved among
                  those that were eatable, and partly to the neglect of the casks, which had not
                  been sufficiently fumigated and dried. Of this rotten bread the people only
                  received two thirds of their usual allowance, from œconomical principles; but, as
                  that portion is hardly sufficient, supposing it to be all eatable, it was far from
                  being so when nearly one half of it was rotten. However, they continued in that
                  distressful situation till this day, when the first mate came to the captain and
                  complained bitterly that he and the people had not wherewith to satisfy the
                  cravings of the stomach, producing, at the same time, the rotten and stinking
                  remains of his biscuit. Upon this the crew were put to full allowance. The captain
                  seemed to recover again as we advanced to the southward, but all those who were
                  afflicted with rheumatisms continued as much indisposed as ever.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 20.]</date>The first ice islands which we met with on this run
                  were in 62° 30' south, on the 20th, but they did not accumulate in number in
                  proportion to our progress, so that we <date>[Wednesd. 26.]</date>crossed the
                  antarctic circle again on the 26th, without seeing more than a few solitary
                  pieces. On that day we were amused with the appearance of land; for after standing
                  on towards it for some hours, it vanished in clouds. <date>[Thursday
                  27.]</date>The next day, at noon, we were in 67° 52' south; consequently to the
                  southward of any of our former tracks, and met with no ice to stop us. The blue
                  petrels, the little storm petrels, and the pintadas still accompanied us, but
                  albatrosses had left us some time ago. We were now once more in the regions of
                  perpetual day , and had sunshine at the hour of midnight.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 28.]</date>On the 28th, in the afternoon, we passed a large bed of
                  broken ice, hoisted out the boats, and took up a great quantity, which afforded a
                  seasonable supply of fresh water. At midnight the thermometer was not lower than
                  34°, and the next morning we enjoyed the mildest sunshine we had ever experienced
                  in the frigid zone. My father therefore ventured upon deck for the first time
                  after a month's confinement.</p>

               <p>We now entertained hopes of penetrating to the south as far as other navigators
                  have done towards the north pole; but on the 30th, about seven o'clock in the
                  morning, we discovered a solid ice-field of immense extent before us, which bore
                  from E. to W. A bed of fragments floated all round this field, which seemed to be
                  raised several feet high above the level of the water. A vast number of icy
                  masses, some of a very great height, were irregularly piled up upon it, as far as
                  the eye could reach. Our latitude was at this time 71° 10' south, consequently
                  less than 19 deg. from the pole; but as it was impossible to proceed farther, we
                  put the ship about, well satisfied with our perilous expedition, and almost
                  persuaded that no navigator will care to come after, and much less attempt to pass
                  beyond us. Our longitude at this time was nearly 106° W. The thermometer here was
                  at 32°, and a great many pinguins were heard croaking round us, but could not be
                  seen on account of the foggy weather which immediately succeeded.</p>

               <p>As often as we had hitherto penetrated to the southward, we had met with no land,
                  but been stopped sooner or later by a solid ice-field, which extended before us as
                  far as we could see. At the same time we had always found the winds moderate and
                  frequently easterly in these high latitudes, in the same manner as they are said
                  to be in the northern frozen zone. From these circumstances my father had been led
                  to suppose, that all the south pole, to the distance of 20 degrees, more or less,
                  is covered with solid ice, of which only the extremities are annually broken by
                  storms, consumed by the action of the sun, and regenerated in winter.</p>

               <p>This opinion is the less exceptionable, since there seems to be no absolute
                  necessity for the existence of land towards the formation of ice , and because we
                  have little reason to suppose that there actually is any land of considerable
                  extent in the frigid zone.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. February.][Saturday 5.]</date>We ran to the northward with moderate
                  winds till the 5th of February, when we got a fine fresh breeze after a short
                  calm. The day after it shifted to S. E. and freshened so as to blow very hard at
                  night, and split several sails. As it was favourable for the purpose of advancing
                  to the northward, the only circumstance that afforded us comfort, we were far from
                  being concerned at its violence, and in <date>[Tuesday 8.]</date>the next
                  twenty-four hours made upwards of three degrees of latitude. The same gale
                  assisted us till the 12th, when we observed the latitude to be 50° 15' south, our
                  thermometer being once more returned to the milder temperature of 48 degrees. We
                  were now told that we should spend the winter season, which was coming on apace,
                  among the tropical islands of the Pacific Ocean, in the same manner as we had
                  passed that immediately preceding. The prospect of making new discoveries, and of
                  enjoying the excellent refreshments which those islands afford, entirely revived
                  our hopes, and made us look on our continuance on the western side of Cape Horne
                  with some degree of satisfaction.</p>

               <p>A great number of our people were however afflicted with very severe rheumatic
                  pains, which deprived them of the use of their limbs; but their spirits were so
                  low, that they had no fever. Though the use of that excellent prophylactic the
                  sour krout, prevented the appearance of the scurvy during all the cold weather,
                  yet being made of cabbage, it is not so nutritive that we could live upon it
                  without the assistance of biscuit and salt-beef. But the former of these being
                  rotten, and the other almost consumed by the salt, it is obvious that no wholesome
                  juices could be secreted from thence, which might have kept the body strong and
                  vigorous. Under these difficulties all our patients recovered very slowly, having
                  nothing to restore their strength; and my father, who had been in exquisite
                  torments during the greatest part of our southern cruize, was afflicted with
                  tooth-aches, swelled cheeks, sore-throat, and universal pain till the middle of
                  February, when he ventured on deck perfectly emaciated. The warm weather which was
                  beneficial to him, proved fatal to captain Cook's constitution. The disappearance
                  of his bilious complaint during our last push to the south, had not been so
                  sincere, as to make him recover his appetite. The return to the north therefore
                  brought on a dangerous obstruction, which the captain very unfortunately slighted,
                  and concealed from every person in the ship, at the same time endeavouring to get
                  the better of it by taking hardly any sustenance. This proceeding, instead of
                  removing, encreased the evil, his stomach being already weak enough before. He was
                  afflicted with violent pains, which in the space of a few days confined him to his
                  bed, and forced him to have recourse to medicines. He took a purge, but instead of
                  producing the desired effect, it caused a violent vomiting, which was assisted
                  immediately by proper emetics. All attempts however to procure a passage through
                  his bowels were ineffectual; his food and medicines were thrown up, and in a few
                  days a most dreadful hiccough appeared, which lasted for upwards of twenty-four
                  hours, with such astonishing violence that his life was entirely despaired of.
                  Opiates and glysters had no effect, till repeated hot baths, and plasters of
                  theriaca applied on his stomach, had relaxed his body and intestines. This
                  however, was not effected till he had lain above a week in the most imminent
                  danger. Our servant fell ill about the same time with the captain, of the same
                  disorder, and narrowly escaped, but continued weak and unserviceable the greatest
                  part of our cruize between the tropics.</p>

               <p>During this time we advanced to the northward very <date>[Tuesday 22.]</date>fast,
                  so that on the 22d we reached 36° 10 S. latitude, where the albatrosses left us.
                  Our longitude being about 94 1/2 degrees west from Greenwich, we steered to the
                  south-westward, in quest of a supposed discovery of Juan Fernandez, which,
                  according to Juan Luis Arias, a Spanish author, is said to lie in 40° south
                  latitude, and by Mr. Dalrymple's chart in 90° west from London . We stood
                     <date>[Friday 25.]</date>on to the westward till the 25th at noon, where being
                  in 37° 50' S. and about 101° W. and seeing no signs of land, we altered our course
                  something to the northward. The dangerous situation of captain Cook, was perhaps
                  the reason, why our track was not continued farther to the south, so as to put
                  this matter entirely out of doubt for the future. It was indeed of the utmost
                  importance at present, to hasten to a place of refreshment, that being the only
                  chance to preserve his life.</p>
               <!-- AN April 7: Forster wrote out degree.. -->
               <p>On the 26th, captain Cook felt some relief from the medicines which had been
                  administered to him, and during the three following days, recovered so far as to
                  be able to sit up sometimes, and take a little soup. Next to Providence it was
                  chiefly owing to the skill of our surgeon, Mr. Patton, that he recovered to
                  prosecute the remaining part of our voyage, with the same spirit with which it had
                  hitherto been carried on. The care and assiduity with which this worthy man,
                  watched him during his whole illness, cannot be sufficiently extolled, as all our
                  hopes of future discoveries, as well as union in the ship, depended solely on the
                  preservation of the captain. The surgeon's extreme attention however, had nearly
                  cost him his own life. Having taken, no rest for many nights together, and seldom
                  venturing to sleep an hour by day, he was so much exhausted, that we trembled for
                  his life, upon which that of almost every man in the ship in great measure
                  depended. He was taken ill with a bilious disorder, which was dangerous on account
                  of the extreme weakness of his stomach, and it is more than probable, that if we
                  had not speedily fallen in with land, from whence we collected some slight
                  refreshments, he must have fallen a sacrifice to that rigorous perseverance and
                  extreme punctuality with which he discharged the several duties of his
                  profession.</p>

               <p>We had easterly winds ever since the 22d of February, which was probably owing to
                  the situation of the sun, still continuing in the southern hemisphere. The weather
                  was warm and comfortable again, the thermometer being at 70 degrees; and some grey
                  terns were seen from time to time, which according to our friend Mahine's account,
                  never went to a great distance from land. <date>[1774. March.][Tuesday
                  1.]</date>On the first of March, some bonitos appeared swiftly swimming past the
                  ship, and the next day, being in 30 1/2 degrees of latitude, we saw tropic birds
                  again.</p>
               <!-- AN April 4: Wrote out degrees. -->
               <p>The scurvy now appeared with very strong symptoms in the ship, and I was
                  particularly afflicted with it. Excruciating pains, livid blotches, rotten gums,
                  and swelled legs, brought me extremely low in a few days, almost before I was
                  aware of the disorder; and my stomach being very weak, through abstinence from an
                  unwholesome and loathed diet, I could not take the wort in sufficient quantity to
                  remove my complaint. The same case existed with regard to a number of other
                  people, who crawled about the decks with the greatest difficulty.</p>

               <p>We had almost calm weather from the 3d to the 6th, the sky was clear, and the
                  warmth and serenity of the weather remarkably pleasing; but we were impatient to
                  proceed to a place of refreshment, and this delay ill suited with our wishes.</p>

               <p>On the 5th, at night, we saw some towering clouds and a haze on the horizon to the
                  southward, from whence we hoped for a fair wind. Already, during night, we had
                  some smart showers, and at eight o'clock the next morning we saw the surface of
                  the sea curled to the south-eastward, upon which we trimmed our sails, and
                  advanced again with a fair wind. <date>[Monday 7.]</date>The next morning four
                  large albecores were caught, the least of which weighed twenty-three pounds. They
                  afforded us a most delicious repast, it being now an hundred days since we had
                  tasted any fresh fish. Shearwaters, terns, noddies, gannets, and men of war birds
                  appeared numerous about us, hunting the shoals of flying-fish which our ship, the
                  bonitos, albecores, and dolphins had frightened out of the water.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 8.]</date>We reached the 27th degree of S. latitude on the 8th at
                  noon, and then shaped our course due west in search of Easter Island, discovered
                  by Jacob Roggewein in 1722, and since visited by the Spaniards in 1770 , who gave
                  it the name of St. Charles's Island. <date>[Thursday 10.]</date>On the 10th, in
                  the morning, the birds of the grey tern-kind were innumerable about us, whilst we
                  advanced at the rate of seven miles an hour. We lay to during night, being
                  apprehensive of falling in with the land, which we actually discovered at five
                  o'clock the next morning. The joy which this fortunate event spread on every
                  countenance is scarcely to be described. We had been an hundred and three days out
                  of sight of land; and the rigorous weather to the south, the fatigues of continual
                  attendance during storms, or amidst dangerous masses of ice, the sudden changes of
                  climate, and the long continuance of a noxious diet, all together had emaciated
                  and worn out our crew. The expectation of a speedy end to their sufferings, and
                  the hope of finding the land stocked with abundance of fowls and planted with
                  fruits, according to the accounts of the Dutch navigator, now filled them with
                  uncommon alacrity and cheerfulness.</p>

               <p>We advanced but slowly towards the land by day, to the great disappointment of all
                  on board, who became more eager in proportion as new difficulties arose to prolong
                  their distresses. The land appeared of a moderate height, and divided into several
                  hills, which gently sloped from their summits; its extent did not seem to be
                  considerable, and we were at too great a distance to be able to form any
                  conjecture as to its productions. <date>[Saturday 12.]</date>The next morning we
                  were becalmed within five leagues of the island, which had then a black and
                  somewhat disagreeable appearance. We amused ourselves with catching sharks,
                  several of which swam about the ship, and eagerly swallowed the hook, which was
                  baited with salt pork or beef. In the afternoon a breeze sprung up, with which we
                  stood towards the shore, in great hopes of reaching an anchoring-place before
                  night. The land did not look very promising as we advanced, there being little
                  verdure, and scarcely any bushes upon it; but to us who had lingered so long under
                  all the distresses of a tedious cruize at sea, the most barren rock would have
                  been a welcome sight. In our way we perceived a great number of black pillars
                  standing upright, near two hummocks, and in different groups. They seemed to be
                  the same which Roggewein's people took for idols ; but we guessed already, at that
                  time, that they were such monuments, in memory of the dead, as the Taheitians and
                  other people in the South Seas erect near burying-places, and call E-Tee.</p>

               <p>The wind, which was contrary and very faint, the approach of night, and the want
                  of an anchoring-place on the east side of the island, disappointed us once more,
                  and forced us to pass another night under sail, during which we saw several fires
                  in the neighbourhood of the pillars above-mentioned. The Dutch, who likewise
                  observed them, called them sacrifices to the idols; but it seems to be more
                  probable that they were only lighted to dress the food of the natives.</p>

               <p>We passed the night in making several trips, in order to keep to windward of the
                  island and as near it as possible, resolving to pursue our search of anchorage the
                  next day. In the mean time we reflected on the excellent means of ascertaining the
                  longitude, with which our ship had been furnished, and which had carried us
                  exactly to this island, though several former navigators, such as Byron, Carteret,
                  and Bougainville had missed it, after taking their departure from islands at so
                  short a distance from it as those of Juan Fernandez. Captain Carteret it seems was
                  only misled by an erroneous latitude in the geographical tables which he
                  consulted; but this could not be the case with the rest. We had the greatest
                  reason to admire the ingenious construction of the two watches which we had on
                  board, one executed by Mr. Kendal, exactly after the model of that made by Mr.
                  Harrison, and the other by Mr. Arnold on his own plan, both which went with great
                  regularity. The last was unfortunately stopped immediately after our departure
                  from New Zeeland in June 1773, but the other went till our return to England, and
                  gave general satisfaction. It appears, however, that in a long run the
                  observations of distances of the moon from the sun or stars, are more to be
                  depended upon, if they be made with good instruments, than the watches or
                  time-keepers, which frequently change their rates of going. The method of deducing
                  the longitude from the distances of the sun and moon, or moon and stars, one of
                  the most valuable acquisitions to the art of navigation, must immortalize its
                  first inventors. Tobias Mayer a German, and professor at Gottingen was the first
                  who undertook the laborious task of calculating tables for this purpose, for which
                  his heirs received a parliamentary reward. Since his death the method was so much
                  facilitated by additional calculations, that the longitude will perhaps never be
                  determined with greater precision at sea by any other means.</p>

               <p>The latitude of Easter Island corresponds within a minute or two with that which
                  is marked in admiral Roggewein's own MS. journal , and his longitude is only one
                  degree erroneous, our observations having ascertained it in 109° 46' west from
                  Greenwich. The Spanish accounts of the latitude are likewise exact, but they err
                  in longitude about thirty leagues.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. IV.</l>

                  <l>An Account of Easter Island, and our Stay there.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. March.][Sunday 13.]</date>ON the 13th, early in the morning, we ran
                  close to the south point of the island, where the shore rose perpendicularly, and
                  consisted of broken rocks, whose cavernous appearance, and black or ferruginous
                  colour, seemed to have been produced by subterraneous fire. Two detached rocks lay
                  about a quarter of a miles off this point; one of them was singular on account of
                  its shape, resembling a huge column or obelisk, and both were the habitations of
                  numerous sea-fowls, which stunned our ears with their discordant screams. Soon
                  after we opened another point about ten miles distant from this, and as we
                  advanced we perceived the ground gently sloping to the sea. On the slope we
                  discovered several plantations by the help of our glasses; but the surface of the
                  isle in general appeared to be extremely dreary and parched, and these plantations
                  were so thinly scattered upon it, that they did not flatter our hopes of meeting
                  with considerable refreshments. However, our eyes, long unused to the enchanting
                  prospect of verdure, were constantly directed towards the shore, where we
                  distinguished a number of people nearly naked, hastily running down from the hills
                  towards the sea-side. We could not perceive that they had any arms, which we
                  immediately interpreted into a sign of a peaceable disposition. In a few minutes
                  we saw them launch a canoe, in which two men came off towards us. They were along
                  side in a short time, having paddled very briskly, and immediately called out for
                  a rope, naming it by the same word as the Taheitians. We had no sooner thrown them
                  the rope, than they tied a great cluster of ripe bananas to it, making signs for
                  us to haul it up. The sudden emotions of joy in every countenance, at the sight of
                  this fruit, are scarcely to be described; they can only be felt in their full
                  extent by people in the same wretched situation with ourselves at that time. At
                  least fifty persons endeavoured to begin a conversation with the people in the
                  canoe, who being addressed by so many at once, could not answer one of them.
                  Captain Cook sent for some ribbands, to which he tied some medals and beads, and
                  lowered them down in return for their present. They seemed to admire them much,
                  but hastened ashore with them immediately. In dropping astern, they fastened a
                  small piece of cloth to a fishing-line which we towed after us; it was immediately
                  hauled up, and appeared to be made of the same bark as the Taheitian cloth, and
                  coloured yellow. From a few words which they pronounced, we concluded their
                  language to be a dialect of the Taheitian, which we had now found in both
                  extremities of the South Sea. Their whole appearance confirmed us in this opinion,
                  and proved them issued from the same stock. They were of a middle stature, but
                  rather thin; their features resembled those of the Taheitians, but were less
                  agreeable: one of them had a beard, which was cut to the length of about half an
                  inch; the other was a youth of about seventeen. They had punctures of the same
                  nature with those used by the natives of the Society and Friendly Islands and of
                  New Zeeland; but their whole body, which was perfectly naked, was marked with
                  them. The greatest singularity which we observed about them was the size of their
                  ears, of which the lap or extremity was stretched out so as almost to rest on the
                  shoulder, and pierced by a very large hole, through which four or five fingers
                  might be thrust with ease. This circumstance entirely agreed with the description
                  which the serjeant-major of Roggewein's ship gives of these people . Their canoe
                  was another curiosity, being patched up of many pieces, each of which was not more
                  than four or five inches wide, and two or three feet long. Its length might be
                  about ten or twelve feet, its head and stern were raised considerably, but its
                  middle was very low. It had an outrigger or balancer made of three slender poles,
                  and each of the men had a paddle, of which the blade was likewise composed of
                  several pieces. This description also exactly corresponds with the Dutch account
                  of Roggewein's voyage, printed at Dort in 1728 ; and sufficiently proved that the
                  island is very destitute of wood, though the contrary is ascertained in the
                  serjeant-major's relation of that voyage . </p>

               <p>Though we struck soundings opposite the place from whence this canoe put off, yet
                  in hopes of finding a better place of anchorage, we ran along the coast of the
                  island, till we came in sight of its northern extremity, which we had already seen
                  the day before from the other side. But being disappointed in our expectation, we
                  put about with a view to return to the place which we had left. A great number of
                  black pillars stood along the shore, many of which were elevated on platforms
                  consisting of several ranges of stone. We could now distinguish something
                  resembling a human head and shoulders towards their upper end; but the lower part
                  appeared to be a rude stone, without being carved into a resemblance of the human
                  shape. Sometimes we perceived two, sometimes four, and even five together in a
                  row; but some were likewise placed by themselves. We saw but few plantations
                  towards the north end, the land being much more bluff or steep there, than about
                  the middle of the island, and we could easily perceive that there was not a tree
                  upon the whole island, which exceeded the height of ten feet.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we hoisted out a boat, and the master went towards the shore to
                  take soundings in the road, from whence the canoe had come off to us. As soon as
                  the natives perceived our boat on the water, they assembled along shore, near the
                  place to which our people seemed to direct their course. Among a croud of naked
                  men, we saw some who seemed to be dressed in a bright cloth of a yellow, or rather
                  orange colour, from whence we suspected that they were their principal people. We
                  now likewise began to discern their houses, which seemed to be extremely low and
                  long, highest in the middle, and sloping down towards both extremities. They much
                  resembled a canoe turned with the keel or bottom upwards. In the middle there
                  seemed to be a small entrance or door, which was so low, that a man of a common
                  size must stoop to get in. Towards evening we let go our anchor in about forty
                  fathom, gravelly bottom off the S. W. part of the island. The master returned
                  presently after, and brought one of the natives in the boat with him. This bold
                  fellow had jumped into the boat without any ceremony or invitation, while it was
                  close to the shore, and expressly desired to be brought on board. He was of the
                  middle size, about five feet eight inches high, and remarkably hairy on the breast
                  and all over the body. His colour was a chestnut brown, his beard strong, but
                  clipped short, and of a black colour, as was also the hair of his head, which was
                  likewise cut short. His ears were very long, almost hanging on his shoulders, and
                  his legs punctured in compartments after a taste which we had observed no where
                  else. He had only a belt round his middle, from whence a kind of net-work
                  descended before, too thin to conceal any thing from the sight. A string was tied
                  about his neck, and a flat bone, something shaped like a tongue, and about five
                  inches long, was fastened to it, and hung down on the breast. This, he told us,
                  was a porpoise's bone (eevee toharra), expressing it exactly by the same words
                  which a Taheitian would have made use of. To explain himself better, he also
                  called it eevee-eeka, which we well understood to signify the bone of a fish . He
                  was no sooner seated in the boat, than he complained of being cold by shivering,
                  and making various gestures of a very intelligible nature. Mr. Gilbert, the
                  master, therefore gave him a jacket, and put a hat on his head, and in that dress
                  he appeared upon deck. The captain and passengers presented him with nails,
                  medals, and strings of beads, the last of which, he desired to have tied round his
                  head. At the beginning he shewed some marks of fear or diffidence, asking whether
                  we should kill him as an enemy (matte-toa?) but upon being assured of good
                  treatment and friendship on our part, he seemed perfectly secure and unconcerned,
                  and talked of nothing but dancing (heeva). It was with some difficulty that we
                  understood him at first; but having enquired for the names by which he
                  distinguished the parts of the body, we soon found them to be nearly the same with
                  those which are used in the Society Isles. If we mentioned a word which he did not
                  comprehend, he repeated it several times with a look which strongly expressed his
                  ignorance of it. As night approached, he said he wanted to go to sleep, and
                  complained of cold. My father gave him a large Taheitee cloth of the thickest
                  sort, in which he wrapped himself, saying he found it comfortably warm. He was
                  afterwards conducted into the master's cabin, where he law down on a table, and
                  slept very quietly the whole night. Mahineur new visitor several times, but was
                  interrupted by the questions which many other persons in the ship put to him.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 14.]</date>We dragged our anchor during night, and drove off the
                  bank, so that we were obliged to set sail again, in order to recover our
                  situation. Immediately after breakfast, captain Cook went ashore with the native,
                  whose name was Maroowahai, together with Mahine, my father, Dr. Sparrman, and
                  myself, though my feet and legs were still swelled excessively, and I was hardly
                  able to walk. We found a snug cove for boats, among a number of rocks which
                  sheltered the landing-place from the mountainous swell that tumbled in upon the
                  shore. About a hundred, or a hundred and fifty natives were assembled on the spot
                  where we landed, almost all of them naked, some having only a belt round the
                  middle, from whence a small bit of cloth, six or eight inches long, or a little
                  net, hung down before. A very few of them had a cloak which reached to the knees,
                  made of cloth, resembling that of Taheitee in the texture, and stitched or quilted
                  with thread to make it the more lasting. Most of these cloaks were painted yellow
                  with the turmeric-root. The people did not make the least unfriendly motion at our
                  landing, but expressed a prodigious dread of our fire-arms, of which they seemed
                  to know the deadly effects. We saw but few arms among them; some however had
                  lances or spears, made of thin ill-shapen sticks, and pointed with a sharp
                  triangular piece of a black glassy lava (pumex vitreus, Linn.) commonly called
                  Iceland agate. One of them had a fighting club, made of a thick piece of wood
                  about three feet long, carved at one extremity; and a few others had short wooden
                  clubs, exactly resembling some of the New Zeeland patoo-patoos, which are made of
                  bone. We observed some who had European hats and caps, chequered cotton
                  handkerchiefs, and ragged jackets of blue woollen-cloth, which were so many
                  indubitable testimonies of the visit which the Spaniards had made to this island
                  in 1770. The general appearance of the natives seemed to argue a great sterility
                  of the country. They were inferior in stature to the natives of the Society and
                  Friendly Isles, and to those of New Zeeland, there being not a single person
                  amongst them, who might be reckoned tall. Their body was likewise lean, and their
                  face thinner than that of any people we had hitherto seen in the South Sea. Their
                  want of cloathing, and a great eagerness to obtain out goods without offering any
                  thing in return, seemed altogether to be sufficient marks of poverty. They were
                  all prodigiously punctured on every part of the body, the face in particular; and
                  their women, who were very small and slender limbed, had likewise punctures on the
                  face, which resembled the patches sometimes worn by our ladies. The number of
                  women in the croud did not exceed ten or twelve; they were seldom satisfied with
                  their natural clear brown colour, but painted the whole face with a reddish brown
                  ruddle, over which they laid on the bright orange of the turmeric-root; or
                  ornamented themselves with elegant streaks of white shell-lime. The art of
                  painting is therefore not confined to those ladies who have the happiness to
                  imitate French fashions. The women were all dressed in pieces of cloth, which
                  appeared scanty when compared to the Taheitian dresses. Both sexes had thin, but
                  not savage features, though the little shelter which their barren country offers
                  against the sun-beams, had contracted their brows sometimes, and drawn the muscles
                  of the face up towards the eye. Their noses were not very broad, but rather flat
                  between the eyes; their lips strong, though not so thick as those of negroes; and
                  their hair black and curling, but always cut short, so as not to exceed three
                  inches. Their eyes were dark brown, and rather small, the white being less clear
                  than in other nations of the South Seas. Their ears were remarkable for the great
                  length of the lap, which frequently hung on the shoulder, and was pierced with so
                  large a hole, that the extremity could be tucked up through it. In order to bring
                  it to this size, they wore a leaf of a sugar cane, which is very elastic, rolled
                  up in it like a scroll; by which means it was always on the stretch. The violent
                  action of the sun upon their heads has forced them to contrive various coverings
                  for that part. Many of the men wore a ring about two inches thick, strongly and
                  curiously plaited of grass, and fitting close round the head. This was covered
                  with great quantities of the long black feathers which decorate the neck of the
                  man of war bird. Others had huge bushy caps of brown gulls feathers, which were
                  almost as large as the full bottomed wigs of European lawyers; and still others
                  wore a simple hoop of wood, round which a number of the long white feathers of a
                  gannet hung nodding, and waved in the wind. The women wore a great wide cap, made
                  of very neat mat-work; it was pointed forwards, formed a ridge along the top, and
                  two large lobes behind on each side, which we found extremely cooling for the
                  head. Mr. Hodges drew the figure of a woman with this cap on, and of a man with
                  one of the other head dresses; both are extremely characteristic of the nation,
                  and have been engraved for captain Cook's account of this voyage. The only
                  ornaments which we saw among them, were the flat pieces of bone in the shape of a
                  tongue, or like a laurel leaf, which both sexes wore hanging on their breast,
                  together with some necklaces and ear-jewels made of shells.</p>

               <p>After staying among the natives for some time on the beach, we began to walk into
                  the country. The whole ground was covered with rocks and stones of all sizes,
                  which seemed to have been exposed to a great fire, where they had acquired a black
                  colour and porous appearance. Two of three shrivelled species of grasses grew up
                  among these stones, and in a slight degree softened the desolate appearance of the
                  country. About fifteen yards from the landing-place we saw a perpendicular wall of
                  square hewn stones, about a foot and a half or two feet long, and one foot broad.
                  Its greatest height was about seven or eight feet, but it gradually sloped on both
                  sides, and its length might be about twenty yards. A remarkable circumstance was
                  the junction of these stones, which were laid after the most excellent rules of
                  art, fitting in such a manner as to make a durable piece of architecture. The
                  stone itself of which they are cut is not of great hardness being a blackish brown
                  cavernous and brittle stony lava. The ground rose from the water's side upwards;
                  so that another wall, parallel to the first, about twelve yards from it and facing
                  the country, was not above two or three feet high. The whole area between the two
                  walls was filled up with soil and covered with grass. About fifty yards farther to
                  the south there was another elevated area, of which the surface was paved with
                  square stones exactly similar to those which formed the walls. In the midst of
                  this area, there was a pillar consisting of a single stone, which represented a
                  human figure to the waist, about twenty feet high, and upwards of five feet wide.
                  The workmanship of this figure was rude, and spoke the arts in their infancy. The
                  eyes, nose, and mouth were scarcely marked on a lumpish ill-shaped head; and the
                  ears, which were excessively long, quite in the fashion of the country, were
                  better executed than any other part, though a European artist would have been
                  ashamed of them. The neck was clumsy and short, and the shoulders and arms very
                  slightly represented. On the top of the head a huge round cylinder of stone was
                  placed upright, being above five feet in diameter and in height. This cap, which
                  resembled the head-dress of some Egyptian divinity, consisted of a different stone
                  from the rest of the pillar, being of a more reddish colour; and had a hole on
                  each side, as if it had been made round by turning. The cap together with the
                  head, made one half of the whole pillar which appeared above ground. We did not
                  observe that the natives paid any worship to these pillars, yet they seemed to
                  hold them in some kind of veneration, as they sometimes expressed a dislike when
                  we walked over the paved area or pedestals, or examined the stone of which it
                  consisted.</p>

               <p>A few of the natives accompanied us farther on into the country, where we had seen
                  some bushes at a distance, which we hoped would afford us something new. Our road
                  was intolerably rugged, over heaps of volcanic stones, which rolled away under our
                  feet, and against which we continually hurt ourselves. The natives, who were
                  accustomed to this desolate ground, skipped nimbly from stone to stone without the
                  least difficulty. In our way we saw several black rats running about, which it
                  seems are common to every island in the South Sea. Being arrived at the shrubbery
                  which we had in view, we found it was nothing but a small plantation of the paper
                  mulberry, of which here, as well as at Taheitee, they make their cloth. Its stems
                  were from two to four feet high, and planted in rows, among very large rocks,
                  where the rains had washed a little soil together. In the neighbourhood of these
                  we saw some bushes of the hibiscus populneus, Linn. which is common also in the
                  Society Isles, where it is one of the numerous plants made use of to dye yellow;
                  and likewise a mimosa, which is the only shrub that affords the natives sticks for
                  their clubs and pattoo-pattoos, and wood sufficient to patch up a canoe.</p>

               <p>We found the face of the country more barren and ruinous the farther we advanced.
                  The small number of inhabitants, who met us at the landing-place, seemed to have
                  been the bulk of the nation, since we met no other people on our walk; and yet for
                  these few we did not see above ten or twelve huts, though the view commanded a
                  great part of the island. One of the sightliest of these was situated on a little
                  hillock, about half a mile from the sea, which we ascended. Its construction was
                  such as evinced the poverty and wretched condition of its owners. The foundation
                  consisted of stones about a foot long, laid level with the surface in two curve
                  lines, converging at the extremities. These lines were about six feet asunder in
                  the middle, but not above one foot at the ends. In every stone of this foundation
                  we observed one or two holes, in each of which a stake was inserted. The
                  middlemost stakes were six feet high, but the others gradually diminished to two
                  feet. On the top the stakes all converged, and were tied by strings to transverse
                  sticks, by which they were kept together. A kind of thatch, made of small sticks,
                  and covered with a neat mat-work of sugar-cane leaves, leaned on each row of
                  stakes, forming a very sharp ridge or angle at the top, and resting firmly on the
                  ground at the bottom. A hole was left on one side, about eighteen inches or two
                  feet high, over which the people had built a round projecting funnel to keep off
                  the wet. We crept on all fours into this opening, and found the inside of the hut
                  perfectly naked and empty, there being not so much as a wisp of straw to lie down
                  upon. We could not stand upright in any part except just in the middle, and the
                  whole place appeared dark and dismal. The natives told us they passed the night in
                  these huts, and we easily conceived their situation to be uncomfortable,
                  especially as we saw so very few of them, that they must be crammed full, unless
                  the generality of the people lie in the open air, and leave these wretched
                  dwellings to their chiefs, or make use of them only in bad weather.</p>

               <p>Besides these huts, we observed some heaps of stones piled up into little
                  hillocks, which had one steep perpendicular side, where a hole went under ground.
                  The space within could be but very small, and yet it is probable that these
                  cavities likewise served to give shelter to the people during night. They may,
                  however, communicate with natural caverns, which are very common in the lava
                  currents of volcanic countries. Such caverns are very frequent in Iceland famous
                  for having been the dwelling-places of the ancient inhabitants. Mr. Ferber, the
                  first mineralogical historian of Vesuvius, has noticed such a subterraneous hole
                  in one of the modern lavas of that mountain. We should have been glad to have
                  ascertained this circumstance, but the natives always denied us admittance into
                  these places.</p>

               <p>A plantation of sugar-canes and one of bananas adjoined to the house we had
                  visited, and both were in excellent order, considering the stony quality of the
                  ground. The bananas were all growing in holes one foot deep, which we supposed to
                  be contrived for collecting the rain, and preserving it for a longer time about
                  the plant. The sugar-canes were about nine or ten feet high, even in this parched
                  country, and contained a very sweet juice, which the inhabitants presented to us
                  very frequently, and particularly whenever we asked for something to drink. We
                  concluded from thence that they had no water on the island; but coming back to the
                  landing-place we met captain Cook, whom the natives had conducted to a well very
                  close to the sea, which was cut deep into the rock, but full of impurities. When
                  our people had cleared it, they found the water in it rather brackish, but the
                  natives drank of it with much seeming satisfaction.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook had not been very fortunate in trading with the people. They seemed
                  indeed to be so destitute as to have no provisions to spare. A few matted baskets
                  full of sweet potatoes, some sugar-canes, bunches of bananas, and two or three
                  small fowls ready dressed, were the whole purchase which he had made for a few
                  iron tools, and some Taheitee cloth. He had presented the people with beads, but
                  they always threw them away with contempt, as far as ever they could. Whatever
                  else they saw about us, they were desirous of possessing, though they had nothing
                  to give in return. Their number was now decreased nearly to one half, many of them
                  having probably gone home to their dinners; however, the number of women was
                  always remarkably small in proportion to the men, there being not above twelve or
                  fifteen at our first landing, and about six or seven when we embarked again. They
                  were neither reserved nor chaste, and for the trifling consideration of a small
                  piece of cloth, some of our sailors obtained the gratification of their desires.
                  Their features were mild enough, and the large pointed cap gave them the air of
                  professed wantons.</p>

               <p>We returned on board the ship before noon, and found it at anchor, though we had
                  left it under sail. The fresh fruits and roots which we brought on board, were
                  immediately distributed as far as they would go, and proved a most reasonable
                  refreshment to our sick. We tasted the fowls, which seemed to have been dressed
                  under-ground, by means of hot stones being wrapped up in green leaves, in the
                  manner practised amongst all the nations of the South Sea, whom we had hitherto
                  visited. The potatoes were of a gold-yellow colour, and as sweet as carrots,
                  therefore not equally palatable to us all; however, they were extremely
                  nourishing, and very antiscorbutic. The juices of this, and all the other
                  vegetables on this island, seemed to have been concentrated by the dryness of the
                  soil. Their bananas were reckoned very delicious in their kind, by those who were
                  fond of this fruit, and their sugar-canes were sweeter than any we had tasted at
                  Taheitee.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we returned on shore again, and an officer went with another boat
                  to fill water at the well. We found but few natives near the landing-place, and
                  among them was one, who appeared to have some little authority, and readily
                  accompanied the captain wherever he went. He was not so timorous as the rest of
                  his countrymen, but walked boldly along with us, whilst the others were alarmed at
                  the least motion which appeared unusual to them. This disposition, however, did
                  not prevent them from picking our pockets, or stealing any thing which suited
                  them. We had not been half an hour on shore, when one of them came behind Mahine,
                  and very nimbly snatching a black cap from his head, ran off with the greatest
                  velocity over the heaps of rugged stones, where it was impossible to follow him.
                  Mahine was so surprised, that it was some time before he could find words to
                  complain to the captain; and when he did it, the thief was already at a great
                  distance. About the same time, as Mr. Hodges was fitting on a little eminence, and
                  sketching a view of the country, one of the natives ran off with his hat in the
                  same manner. Mr. Wales was standing by him with a musket in his hand, but very
                  justly reflected, that so slight a crime did not deserve the punishment of a
                  leaden bullet.</p>

               <p>In our walk along the sea-shore, we discovered a few stalks of the same species of
                  celery which is plentiful on the beaches of New Zeeland, and we also found two
                  other little plants common to that country. Whether these plants originally
                  existed on the island, or sprung up from seeds, which the current of the sea, or
                  birds by their plumage might transport from the opposite side of the ocean, I
                  cannot venture to determine. We likewise met with a plantation of yams (dioscorea
                  alata, Linn.) which in so poor a flora as that of Easter Island was a great
                  addition. The great correspondence in the features, customs, and languages of
                  these people, to those of other natives of the South Sea islands, gave us some
                  room to hope for such domestic animals among them, as we had observed at Taheitee
                  or New Zeeland. But notwithstanding the most diligent search, we never met with
                  any other than common fowls, which were of a very small breed, and had a dull
                  plumage. It is true we observed also two or three noddies, which were so tame as
                  to settle on the shoulders of the natives, but from these individuals we could not
                  conclude, that they kept a regular breed of them.</p>

               <p>About sun-set we left the watering-place, and walked to the cove where our boat
                  lay at a grapnel. In our way we passed over the area on which the single pillar
                  before-mentioned was placed. A few natives who still accompanied us, made signs
                  that we should descend, and walk in the grass at the foot of the pedestal; but
                  seeing that we did not care to understand their gestures, they made no other
                  attempt to oppose our progress. We put some questions to the most intelligent
                  persons among them, concerning the nature of these stones, and from what we could
                  understand, we concluded that they were monuments erected to the memory of some of
                  their areekees, or kings. This led us to believe that the pedestal was perhaps to
                  be considered as a burying-place, and on looking carefully round it, we found a
                  number of human bones, which confirmed our conjecture. The length of these bones
                  was exactly such as might be expected in persons of a middle stature, and a
                  thigh-bone which we measured, exactly corresponded with that of a person about
                  five feet nine inches high. To the westward of the cove, there was a range of
                  three pillars, standing on a very large elevated area or pedestal. This range the
                  natives distinguished by the name of hanga-roa, and the single pillar they called
                  obeena. About ten or twelve people were seated at a little distance from the last,
                  round a small fire, over which they had roasted a few potatoes. These served for
                  their supper, and they offered us some of them as we passed by. We were much
                  surprised with this instance of hospitality in so poor a country, especially when
                  we compared it to the customs of civilized nations, who have almost entirely laid
                  aside all tender feelings for the wants of their fellow-creatures. At the same
                  time we were very glad to be convinced, that the conjectures of the Dutch
                  concerning the fires which they saw on this island, were ill-founded, as we did
                  not see the least reason to suppose, that they were lighted for religious
                  purposes. We now embarked with a small quantity of potatoes, and with about six or
                  seven common plants, which we had gathered, and returned on board. Those only who
                  were ill of the scurvy, reaped some benefit from their visit to the shore. I who
                  went out in the morning with my legs excessively swelled, and so tender that I
                  could hardly stand upon them, returned on board much better; the swelling was
                  something reduced, and my pains at least were gone. I could not attribute this
                  sudden change to any thing else, than the exercise I had taken on shore, and
                  perhaps to those salutary antiscorbutic effluvia of the land, which it is said,
                  are alone sufficient to recover those, who have contracted the scurvy on a long
                  cruize at sea.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 15.]</date>Early the next morning, captain Cook appointed a party
                  of marines and sailors, under the command of lieutenants Pickersgill and
                  Edgecumbe, to reconnoitre the interior parts of the country, in order to be
                  convinced if possible, whether any other part was better cultivated, or more
                  closely inhabited than that which we had hitherto seen. Mr. Wales, Mr. Hodges, Dr.
                  Sparrman, and my father associated with them, so that the whole party consisted of
                  twenty-seven men.</p>

               <p>After breakfast I accompanied captain Cook and several officers ashore, where we
                  found about two hundred inhabitants assembled, amongst whom were fourteen or
                  fifteen women, and very few children. It was impossible for us to guess at the
                  cause of this disproportion in the number of the different sexes; but as all the
                  women we saw were very liberal of their favours, I conjectured at that time, that
                  the married and the modest, who might be supposed to form the greater part, did
                  not care to come near us, or were forced by the men to stay at their dwellings in
                  the remote parts of the island. Those few who appeared were the most lascivious of
                  their sex, that perhaps have ever been noticed in any country, and shame seemed to
                  be entirely unknown to them; our sailors likewise disclaimed all acquaintance with
                  modesty, for nothing but the shadow of the gigantic monument screened them from
                  the sun.</p>

               <p>Mr. Patton, lieutenant Clerke, and myself left the seaside, where the concourse
                  was greatest, and took a walk into the country. The heat of the sun was very
                  violent, the beams being reverberated from the broken ground, and there was not a
                  single tree to give us shelter. My companions had taken their fowling-pieces in
                  hopes of meeting with some birds; but they were greatly disappointed, there being
                  probably no other land-birds on the island than the common fowl, which were tame
                  and extremely scarce. We followed one of the paths which the natives had made,
                  till we came to a cultivated spot, consisting of several fields planted with sweet
                  potatoes, yams, and eddoes, together with a species of night-shade, which is made
                  use of at Taheitee and the neighbouring islands as a vulnerary remedy, (solanum
                  nigrum?) and may, for ought I know, be cultivated here for the same purpose. The
                  grass, which commonly springs up among the stones on the uncultivated soil, was
                  here carefully plucked up, and spread over the whole plantation as a manure, or
                  perhaps to preserve it in some measure from the parching beams of the sun. It
                  should seem from these circumstances that the natives are not altogether ignorant
                  of rural œconomy, and till the ground at a great expence of time and labour. At a
                  little distance from these fields we met with two huts, constructed exactly like
                  that which I have mentioned page 569, but much smaller. The entrance was stopped
                  up with a great quantity of small brushwood, and we at first imagined that we
                  heard the voices of women within, but after listening for some time we heard
                  nothing farther to confirm us in this belief. We rambled from thence to the top of
                  a hillock covered with shrubberies, which we found to consist of nothing but a
                  species of mimosa, that scarcely attained the height of eight feet, and afforded
                  us very little shelter from the sun. Here we rested a while, and then descended by
                  a different route into another set of fields, which were treated in the same
                  manner as the rest. None of them had any sort of enclosures, though the historians
                  of Roggewein's voyage, who seem to have consulted fancy more than truth, make
                  mention of them. The encreasing heat of the day had entirely exhausted us, when we
                  had still a considerable way to make down to the sea-side. Fortunately we passed
                  by a native who was at work, gathering potatoes in one of the fields. We
                  complained of great thirst to him, upon which, though he was an old man, he
                  immediately ran to a large plantation of sugar-canes, and brought us a great load
                  of the best and juiciest on his back. We made him some presents in return for
                  them, cut them into walking-sticks, and, as we went along, gradually peeled and
                  sucked them, finding their juice extremely refreshing.</p>

               <p>At our return to the landing-place we found captain Cook still occupied in trading
                  with the inhabitants, who brought him some fowls ready dressed, and some matted
                  baskets full of sweet potatoes, but sometimes deceived him by filling the basket
                  with stones, and only laying a few potatoes at the top. The most valuable article
                  of trade on our part were empty coco-nut shells, which we had received at the
                  Society and Friendly Islands; but they were not current, unless the hole in them
                  was very small, or unless they had a cover. The Taheitian and European cloths were
                  valued in the next degree according to the size of the pieces; and iron-ware bore
                  an inferior price. The greatest part of the natives who traded with us instantly
                  ran off with the cloth, nut-shell, or the nail which had been given in exchange
                  for their potatoes, as if they were apprehensive that we might repent of our
                  bargain, even though they dealt honestly with us. Some among them were bold enough
                  to run off with what they had received, as the price of their provisions, before
                  they had delivered up the goods for which we had bargained. From such
                  circumstances the deplorable condition of the natives became more and more
                  conspicuous. The scarcity of cloth among them was extremely great, most of the
                  people being forced to go naked; but this did not prevent their selling what
                  little cloth they had in exchange for that of Taheitee. The desire of possessing
                  this cloth prompted them to expose to sale several articles which perhaps they
                  would not have parted with so easily under other circumstances. Among these were
                  their different caps or head-dresses, their necklaces, ornaments for the ear, and
                  several human figures, made of narrow pieces of wood about eighteen inches or two
                  feet long, and wrought in a much neater and more proportionate manner than we
                  could have expected, after seeing the rude sculpture of the statues. They were
                  made to represent persons of both sexes; the features were not very pleasing, and
                  the whole figure was much too long to be natural; however, there was something
                  characteristic in them, which shewed a taste for the arts. The wood of which they
                  were made was finely polished, close-grained, and of a dark-brown, like that of
                  the casuarina. But as we had not yet seen this tree growing here, we eagerly
                  expected the return of our party, hoping they would make some discoveries to
                  explain this circumstance. Mahine was most pleased with these carved human
                  figures, the workman of which much excelled those of the e Tees in his country,
                  and he purchased several of them, assuring us they would be greatly valued at
                  Taheitee. As he took great pains to collect these curiosities, he once met with a
                  figure of a woman's hand, carved of a yellowish wood, nearly of the natural size.
                  Upon examination, its fingers were all bent upwards, as they are in the action of
                  dancing at Taheitee, and its nails were represented very long, extending at least
                  three fourths of an inch beyond the fingers' end. The wood of which it was made
                  was the rare perfume-wood of Taheitee, with the chips of which they communicate
                  fragrance to their oils. We had neither seen this wood growing, nor observed the
                  custom of wearing long nails at this island, and therefore were at a loss to
                  conceive how this piece of well-executed carving could be met with there; we
                  hoped, however, to unravel this circumstance also at the return of our party.
                  Mahine afterwards presented this piece to my father, who has in his turn made a
                  present of it to the British Museum. Mahine was likewise very eager to collect as
                  many feathered caps as he could meet with, especially those which had the feathers
                  of a man of war bird, that bird being very scarce about Taheitee, and much valued
                  on account of its glossy black colour.</p>

               <p>Whilst captain Cook continued in the cove, another trade for potatoes was carried
                  on at the watering-place. Here the desire of possessing our goods, made some of
                  the natives guilty of a crime against their own countryman. A field of sweet
                  potatoes was situated close to the well, and a considerable number of people of
                  different ages and sizes, busied themselves in digging them up, and bringing them
                  for sale to our people. They had carried on this occupation for some hours, when
                  another native arrived, who was in a vehement passion with them, and drove them
                  all away, remaining alone to dig the roots up himself. He was the owner of the
                  field, whom the rest had robbed of the fruits of his labour, finding an easy
                  method to dispose of their stolen goods. It is not to be doubted that these
                  offences against the laws of civil society, are sometimes committed even at the
                  Society Isles, because the inhabitants have often told us, that they inflicted a
                  capital punishment upon such offenders; but we never saw any instances of it
                  there. On this occasion at Easter Island, we did not observe that they annexed any
                  penalty to the crime, though we saw it committed. Perhaps this is owing to the
                  different degree of civilization of those two cogeneric tribes.</p>

               <p>We went on board at noon, where we dined on some fowls and potatoes, which we
                  found delicious after the fatigues of the morning. We observed a few natives on
                  board, who had ventured to swim off, though the ship lay about three quarters of a
                  mile from the shore. They expressed the most unbounded admiration at every thing
                  they saw, and every one of them measured the whole length of the vessel from head
                  to stern, with his extended arms; such a great quantity of timber of so stupendous
                  a size, being altogether incomprehensible to people whose canoes were patched of
                  many small bits of wood. Among them was one woman, who had arrived on board in the
                  same manner, and carried on a particular traffic of her own. She visited several
                  of the inferior officers, and then addressed herself to the sailors, emulating the
                  famous exploits of Messalina . A few English rags, and some pieces of Taheitee
                  cloth, were the spoils which she carried away with her, being fetched off by a man
                  in the patched canoe, which was perhaps the only one in the island. Another of her
                  country-women had visited our ship the day before, and been equally unbounded in
                  her revels. It remained a doubt with us, whether we should most admire their
                  success among a sickly crew, exhausted by the long continuance of a noxious diet,
                  or their own spirit and insatiate temper.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we returned to the shore again, and I walked on the hills to the
                  southward, which rose with a very easy slope. Here I met with a large plantation
                  of bananas, beyond which I found some remains of a stone wall, which was perhaps
                  once the base of a statue. From thence I crossed some fields, where I saw a family
                  of the natives at work, taking potatoes out of the ground. I walked up to their
                  hut, which was one of the smallest I had yet seen, and as they came about me, I
                  sat down among them. Their whole number amounted to six or seven persons, one of
                  whom was a woman, and two were young boys. They presented me with some
                  sugar-canes, and in return, I made them a present of a small piece of Taheitee
                  cloth, which they immediately wrapped about the head. They did not express that
                  great curiosity which we had observed among the people of the Society Isles, but
                  soon returned to their former occupation, in which all were employed without
                  exception. Some of them had head-dresses made of feathers, which they readily
                  offered to exchange for pieces of cloth no bigger than a handkerchief. About the
                  hut I perceived a few fowls, the only ones which I had seen alive on the island.
                  Their behaviour towards me was wholly inoffensive, agreeably to the general
                  character of the nations in the South Sea. From the expressions of the historians
                  of Roggewein's voyage, it should seem, that the Dutch very wantonly fired upon the
                  natives, who gave no provocation, and killed a considerable number of them,
                  intimidating the rest to a great degree. It is probable, that the terror with
                  which they looked upon the destructive arms of Europeans at that time, and during
                  the late visit of the Spaniards, was revived among them at our appearance, and had
                  an influence on their general timid behaviour towards us; but it is not to be
                  doubted, at the same time, that there is a mildness, fellow-feeling, and
                  good-nature in their disposition, which naturally prompts them to treat their
                  visitors kindly, and even hospitably, as far as their wretched country will
                  permit.</p>

               <p>I returned the same way by which I came, and soon after went on board the ship
                  with captain Cook. About nine o'clock a musket was fired on shore, as a signal for
                  a boat, and the pinnace being sent off, returned soon after with our party, who
                  had been to examine the island. My father being more fatigued than any body else,
                  on account of his long rheumatic complaint, was obliged to go to bed immediately;
                  but the other gentlemen supped with us, on a few fowls which we had purchased on
                  shore, and gave us some account of their travels. As it will be most agreeable to
                  see it in connection, I shall here insert that which I have extracted from my
                  father's journal.</p>

               <p>" Immediately after landing, we walked directly inland or across the country,
                  under the highest hill which lies towards the south, till we came to the other
                  side of the island. About an hundred natives, and among them four or five women,
                  accompanied us on our march, and sold us a quantity of potatoes and a few fowls,
                  which we added to our stock of provisions. We found the whole country strewed with
                  stones of various sizes, of a cavernous or spongy texture, and of a black, brown,
                  or reddish colour, which had indubitable marks of having been in a volcanic fire.
                  The paths through this rugged ground are in some measure cleared of the stones,
                  but so very narrow, that we were obliged to turn our toes inwards, at which the
                  natives are perfectly expert, and to set one foot exactly before the other. This
                  mode of walking was excessively fatiguing to us who were not used to it, so that
                  we continually hurt our feet or stumbled. On both sides the ground was covered
                  with a thing perennial Jamaica-grass (paspalum), which grew in bunches or tufts,
                  and was so slippery that we could not walk on it. We reached the east side of the
                  island, near a range of seven pillars or statues, of which only four remained
                  standing, and one of them had lost its cap. They stood on a common pedestal, like
                  those which we had seen on the other side, and its stones were square and fitted
                  exactly in the same manner. Though the stone of which the statue itself is formed
                  seems to be soft enough, being nothing but the red tufa which covers the whole
                  island, yet it was incomprehensible to me how such great masses could be formed by
                  a set of people among whom we saw no tools; or raised and erected by them without
                  machinery. The general appellation of this range was Hanga Tebòw; hanga being the
                  word which they prefix to every range. The names of the statues were Ko -Tomoaï,
                  Ko-Tomoèeree, Ko-Hòo-oo, Morahèena, Oomarèeva, Weenâboo, Weenapè.</p>

               <p>" From hence we continued our march to the northward along the sea, having a
                  precipice on our right. The ground was the same ferrugineous tufa for a
                  considerable way, covered with small fragments; but after some time we came to a
                  spot which was a single coherent rock or lump of black melted lava, which appeared
                  to contain some iron. There was not soil, grass, or plant whatsoever upon it.
                  Beyond it we passed through a number of plantations of bananas, potatoes, and
                  yams, and one of eddoes. The grass between the stones was plucked up and spread on
                  the land, to screen it from the sun, to keep the moisture of the rain in it, and
                  at last to manure it.</p>

               <p>" The natives continued to offer some potatoes for sale ready dressed, and, at a
                  hut where we halted, they sold us some fish. Some of them carried arms, which were
                  no other than the thin sticks we had seen before, and which were headed with a
                  black vitreous lava, carefully wrapped in a small piece of cloth. Only one of them
                  had a battle-axe, resembling that of the New Zeelanders, though much shorter. It
                  had a head carved on each side, and a small round portion of the black glass
                  above-mentioned instead of eyes. They had likewise some small crooked human
                  figures made of wood, of which we could not learn the use or signification; we did
                  not, however, think that our ignorance on this subject intitled us to call them
                  idols, which is too commonly the judgment passed upon the works of art of unknown
                  nations.</p>

               <p>" After leaving this hut we still advanced to the northward, without seeing any
                  new objects. A man and a woman met us from some neighbouring houses, each with a
                  large matted bag, of very neat workmanship, filled with hot potatoes, and placed
                  themselves by the side of the path where we were to pass. As we came on, the man
                  presented each of us with some of the roots, and having distributed a portion to
                  the whole party, he ran with amazing swiftness to the head of our file to share
                  out the rest, till he had given away the whole. He received a large piece of cloth
                  from me, which was the only requital for an instance of hospitality, of which I
                  never saw the like even at Taheitee. Soon after the natives told us their aree, or
                  hareekee, or king was coming towards us. Several men came on before him, and
                  distributed sugar-canes to us all in sign of friendship, at the same time
                  pronouncing the word heeo , which signifies friend. We now saw the king standing
                  on a hill, and walked up to him, Mr. Pickersgill and myself making him some
                  presents. We asked for his name, which he told us was Ko Toheetai, adding that he
                  was aree or king. We were desirous of knowing whether he was only the chief of a
                  district, or of the whole island; upon which he spread out his arms, as it were to
                  include the whole island, and said Waihu. To shew that we understood him, we laid
                  our hands on his breast, and, calling him by name, added his title, king of Waihu,
                  at which he expressed very great satisfaction, and conversed a great deal with his
                  people on that subject. He was a middle-aged man, rather tall; his face and whole
                  body strongly punctured. He wore a piece of cloth made of the mulberry bark,
                  quilted with threads of grass, and stained yellow with turmerick; and on his head
                  he had a cap of long shining black feathers, which might be called a diadem. We
                  did not perceive any great degree of homage or attention paid to him by the
                  people; and indeed in so poor a country there seems to be nothing which he could
                  have reserved for himself, without a manifest incroachment on the natural rights
                  of mankind, which might have produced dangerous effects. When we wanted to
                  continue our march he seemed to dislike it, and desired us to return, offering to
                  accompany us; but seeing our officer determined to proceed at all events he
                  desisted, and went with us.</p>

               <p>" We marched to an elevated spot, and stopped a little while to take some
                  refreshments, and to give Mr. Hodges time to draw some of the monuments, near one
                  of which we found an entire skeleton of a man. A good view of some of these
                  monuments is inserted in captain Cook's account of this voyage. Our people sat
                  down on the ground, and laid their bundles of provision before them, whilst the
                  officers, and other gentlemen with myself, conversed with the natives. One of our
                  sailors, who carried my plant-bag, in which were a few nails, &amp;c. being less
                  careful of his bundle than the rest, a native snatched it up and ran off with it.
                  None of us saw it, except lieutenant Edgecumb, who immediately fired his musket,
                  loaded with small shot, at the thief, and thus gave the alarm to us all. The
                  native being wounded threw down the bag, which our people recovered, but he fell
                  soon after; his countrymen took him up, and fled to a little distance, till we
                  beckoned to them to return, which almost all of them did. Though this was the only
                  instance of firing at a native during our stay at Easter Island, yet it is to be
                  lamented that Europeans too often assume the power of inflicting punishments on
                  people who are utterly unacquainted with their laws.</p>

               <p>" From this spot we continued our march a good way inland, and were conducted to a
                  deep well, which appeared to have been formed by art, and contained good fresh
                  water, though somewhat troubled. We all drank heartily of it, and then went on,
                  passing by several large statues, which had been overturned, till we came in sight
                  of the two hummocks, near which we had perceived the greatest number of pillars or
                  statues, from the ship, on the 12th. We mounted on an eminence in the
                  neighbourhood, from whence we beheld the sea on both sides of the island, across a
                  plain which we had likewise discovered from the ship at that time. We viewed the
                  whole eastern coast, and its numerous pillars, and were convinced that there was
                  no bay or harbour on that side of the island. With this information we returned
                  back to a large statue, which the natives called Mangototo, and in the shade of
                  which we dined. In its neighbourhood we met with another huge statue, which lay
                  overturned; it was twenty-seven feet long, and nine feet in diameter, exceeding in
                  magnitude every other pillar which we had seen on the island.</p>

               <p>" In returning, we stopped once more at the well, and quenched our thirst, which
                  the raging heat of the sun, reverberated from barren rocks, had excited. From
                  thence we directed our march something nearer the ridge of hills which run along
                  the middle of the island, but found the path more rugged and fatiguing than ever,
                  the country being strewed with volcanic cinders, and desolate all round us, though
                  we found many remaining proofs of its having been formerly cultivated. I now felt
                  how much I had been weakened by the long continuance of the rheumatism, which had
                  crippled all my limbs, and was hardly able to keep up with the rest, though I had
                  formerly, upon similar occasions, been indefatigable. The natives seeing us strike
                  into a difficult path had all left us, except one man and a little boy. Finding
                  that our officers with their party, went too much out of their way, by mistaking
                  the direction of our ship, I left them; and with Dr. Sparrman, a sailor, and the
                  two natives, pursued the nearest path, which the latter had plainly pointed out.
                  The man seeing me very faint, offered me his hand, and walking on the loose stones
                  by the side of the path, with amazing dexterity supported me for a considerable
                  way; the little boy going before, and picking up the stones which obstructed the
                  path. By resting several times, we were at last enabled to reach the summit of the
                  hill, from whence we saw the sea to the west, and the ship at anchor. The hill was
                  covered with a shrubbery of the mimosa, which grew here to the height of eight or
                  nine feet, and some of whose stems near the root, were about the thickness of a
                  man's thigh. We found another well hereabouts, of which the water was infected
                  with a putrid taste, and the smell of hepar sulphuris, but of which we drank,
                  notwithstanding its nauseousness. The sun set very soon after we had left this
                  well; so that we continued our walk downwards, for more than two hours entirely in
                  the dark, during which my Indian's assistance was particularly valuable to me. I
                  waited for Mr. Pickersgill and the rest of the party, having gained near three
                  miles upon them, and arrived safely at the sea-side with them, after walking at
                  the lowest computation, at least five and twenty miles on the most detestable
                  roads, where not a single tree appeared to give us shelter from the scorching sun.
                  I rewarded my friendly conductors with all the Taheitee cloth, and iron ware,
                  which I had about me, and arrived safely on board with the party." </p>

               <p>From this narrative it is evident, that the most diligent enquiries on our part,
                  have not been sufficient to throw a clear light on the surprising objects which
                  struck our eyes in this island. We may however, attempt to account for those
                  gigantic monuments, of which great numbers exist in every part; for as they are so
                  disproportionate to the present strength of the nation, it is most reasonable to
                  look upon them as the remains of better times. The nicest calculations which we
                  could make, never brought the number of inhabitants in this island beyond seven
                  hundred , who, destitute of tools, of shelter, and clothing, are obliged to spend
                  all their time in providing food to support their precarious existence. It is
                  obvious that they are too much occupied with their wants, to think of forming
                  statues, which would cost them ages to finish, and require their united strength
                  to erect. Accordingly, we did not see a single instrument among them on all our
                  excursions, which could have been of the least use in masonry or sculpture. We
                  neither met with any quarries, where they had recently dug the materials, nor with
                  unfinished statues which we might have considered as the work of the present race.
                  It is therefore probable, that these people were formerly more numerous, more
                  opulent and happy, when they could spare sufficient time to flatter the vanity of
                  their princes, by perpetuating their name by lasting monuments. The remains of
                  plantations found on the summits of the hills, give strength and support to this
                  conjecture. It is not in our power to determine by what various accidents a nation
                  so flourishing, could be reduced in number, and degraded to its present indigence.
                  But we are well convinced that many causes may produce this effect, and that the
                  devastation which a volcano might make, is alone sufficient to heap a load of
                  miseries on a people confined to so small a space. In fact, this island, which may
                  perhaps, in remote ages, have been produced by a volcano, since all its minerals
                  are merely volcanic, has at least in all likelihood been destroyed by its fire.
                  All kinds of trees and plants, all domestic animals, nay a great part of the
                  nation itself may have perished in the dreadful convulsion of nature: hunger and
                  misery must have been but too powerful enemies to those who escaped the fire. We
                  cannot well account for those little carved images which we saw among the natives,
                  and the representation of a dancing woman's hand, which, as I have mentioned
                  above, are made of wood, at present not to be met with upon the island. The only
                  idea which offers itself, is that they were made long ago, and have been saved by
                  accident or predilection, at the general catastrophe which seems to have happened.
                  All the women whom we saw in different parts of the island, did not amount to
                  thirty, though our people crossed it almost from one end to the other, without
                  seeing the least probability that the women had retired to any secluded part. If
                  there are really no more than thirty or forty women, among six or seven hundred
                  men, the whole nation is in a fair way of becoming entirely extinct in a short
                  space of time, unless all our physical principles on the plurality of husbands are
                  erroneous. The greater part of the women whom we saw gave us no reason to suppose
                  that they were accustomed to a single partner; on the contrary, they seemed
                  habitually to have arrived at the spirit of Messalina, or of Cleopatra. But this
                  disproportion is such a singular phӕnomenon in human nature, that we cannot
                  without difficulty give credit to it, and would willingly lay hold of any argument
                  which, though incumbered with difficulties, might restore the proportion between
                  the sexes. It is true our party did not see any valley or secluded glen, to which
                  the women might have confined themselves during our stay; but I must remind the
                  reader of those caverns mentioned before, to which the natives always refused to
                  admit us. The caverns of Iceland are spacious enough to contain several thousand
                  inhabitants; and nothing is more probable than that, in a similar volcanic
                  country, such caverns may afford room for a few hundreds. What reasons the Easter
                  Islanders may have to be more jealous of their women than the Taheitians, we know
                  not; but we are acquainted with the outrageous and wanton behaviour of the sailor,
                  wherever he has so great a superiority over the Indian, as the Dutch and Spaniards
                  must have had over the people of Easter Island. The principal objection against
                  this supposition is, however, the small number of children which we saw, there
                  being no reason to seclude them from our eyes, whatever might be thought necessary
                  with regard to the women. In short, this matter must remain unascertained, and if,
                  in fact, the number of women is inconsiderable, it must have been diminished by
                  some extraordinary accident, which none but the natives could have explained; but,
                  in all our doubts, our ignorance of their language prevented us from acquiring any
                  information.</p>

               <p>The next morning we sent a boat ashore to take in some water, and the weather
                  continuing calm, another went off to trade with the natives in order to encrease
                  our little stock of potatoes. One of the natives likewise plied between the ship
                  and the shore, bringing off potatoes and bananas in the patched canoe. In the mean
                  while a smart shower falling on board the ship, enabled our people to collect a
                  quantity of fresh water in the awnings and sails of the ship, which were spread to
                  catch it. Another boat went off to the shore in the afternoon, but towards evening
                  a faint breeze springing up, the ship fired a gun, in consequence of which the
                  boat came on board, and we sailed N. W. by W. from Easter Island.</p>

               <p>We had been greatly disappointed in the expectation which we had formed of this
                  island, as a place of refreshment. The only article of any importance was their
                  sweet potatoes; but after we had regularly shared out all we had purchased, the
                  common people had only a few scanty meals of them. As to the bananas, yams, and
                  sugar-canes which we had bought, they were in such inconsiderable quantities, that
                  they scarce deserve to be mentioned. All the fowls which we had obtained, and
                  which, in general, were of a very small breed, did not amount to fifty; and even
                  the quantity of water which we had filled was inconsiderable and ill tasted.
                  However, this small supply was so seasonable, that it preserved us from the too
                  violent attacks of the scurvy and bilious disorders, till we could reach a better
                  place of refreshment. Indeed, when I consider the wretched situation of the
                  inhabitants, I am surprised that they parted with a quantity of provisions to us,
                  of which the cultivation must have cost them great pains and labour. The barren
                  refractory soil of their island, the scarcity of domestic animals, and the want of
                  boats and proper materials for fishing, all concur to render their means of
                  subsistence extremely difficult and precarious. Yet the desire of possessing the
                  new toys and curiosities which strangers bring among them, hurried them away, and
                  prevented their reflecting on the urgency of their own most natural and
                  unavoidable wants. In this, as in numberless other circumstances, they agree with
                  the tribes who inhabit New Zeeland, the Friendly and the Society Islands, and who
                  seem to have had one common origin with them. Their features are very similar, so
                  that the general character may easily be distinguished. Their colour, a yellowish
                  brown, most like the hue of the New Zeelanders; their art of puncturing, the use
                  of the mulberry-bark for clothing, the predilection for red paint and red dresses,
                  the shape and workmanship of their clubs, the mode of dressing their victuals, all
                  form a strong resemblance to the natives of the islands above mentioned. We may
                  add to these, the simplicity of their languages, that of Easter Island being a
                  dialect which, in many respects, resembles that of New Zeeland, especially in the
                  harshness of pronunciation and the use of gutturals, and yet in other instances,
                  partakes of that of Taheitee. The monarchical government likewise strengthens the
                  affinity between the Easter Islanders and the tropical tribes, its prerogatives
                  being only varied according to the different degrees of fertility of the islands,
                  and the opulence or luxury of the people. Easter Island, or, as the natives call
                  it, Waihu, is so very barren, that the whole number of plants growing upon it does
                  not exceed twenty species, of which far the greater part is cultivated ; though
                  the space which the plantations occupy is inconsiderable, compared with that which
                  lies waste. The soil is altogether stoney, and parched by the sun, and water is so
                  scarce, that the inhabitants drink it out of wells which have a strong admixture
                  of brine; nay, some of our people really saw them drink of the sea-water when they
                  were thirsty. Their habit of body must, in some measure, be influenced by these
                  circumstances; they are meagre, and their muscles hard and rigid; they live very
                  frugally, and, in general, go almost wholly naked, only covering the head, which
                  is the most sensible of heat, with feathered caps, and puncturing or daubing the
                  rest with colours. Their ideas of decency are, of course, very different from
                  those of nations who are accustomed to clothing. They cut short their hair and
                  beards from motives of cleanliness, like the people of Tonga-Tabboo, but
                  fortunately seemed to be less subject to leprous complaints. It is easy to
                  conclude that the kind of such a people cannot have great and conspicuous
                  advantages of the commonalty, nor did our party observe any thing of that kind.
                  The religion of the Easter Islanders is still wholly unknown to us, because
                  abstract ideas are not to be acquired in so short a time as our stay. The statues,
                  which are erected in honour of their kings, have a great affinity to the wooden
                  figures, called Tee, on the chief's maraïs or burying-places at Taheitee; but we
                  could not possibly consider them as idols, though Roggewein's people would pass
                  them for such upon us. The fires which the Dutch interpret as sacrifices, were
                  only made use of by the natives to dress their meals; and though the Spaniards
                  suspected them to be a kind of superstition, they were, perhaps. equally mistaken,
                  because the scarcity of fuel obliged the inhabitants to be careful of it, and to
                  prevent their provisions being uncovered after they had once been put under ground
                  with heated stones.</p>

               <p>We are unacquainted with the amusements of the people of Easter Island, having
                  never seen them engaged in any kind of diversion, nor taken notice of a single
                  musical instrument among them. They cannot, however, be entire strangers to
                  amusement, since Maròo-wahai, who slept on board, talked a great deal of dancing,
                  as soon as we had quieted his fears with respect to the safety of his person. The
                  disposition of these people is far from being warlike; their numbers are too
                  inconsiderable, and their poverty too general, to create civil disturbances
                  amongst them. It is equally improbable that they have foreign wars, since hitherto
                  we know of no island near enough to admit of an intercourse between the
                  inhabitants; neither could we obtain any intelligence from those of Easter Island
                  upon the subject. This being premised, it is extraordinary that they should have
                  different kinds of offensive weapons, and especially such as resemble those of the
                  New Zeelanders; and we must add this circumstance to several others, which are
                  inexplicable to us in their kind.</p>

               <p>Upon the whole, supposing Easter Island to have undergone a late misfortune from
                  volcanic fires, its inhabitants are more to be pitied than any less civilized
                  society, being acquainted with a number of conveniencies, comforts, and luxuries
                  of life, which they formerly possessed, and of which the remembrance must embitter
                  the loss. Mahine frequently lamented their unhappy situation, and seemed to feel
                  for them more than he had done for the New Zeelanders, because he found them much
                  more destitute. He added another stick to the bundle which composed his journal,
                  and remembered Easter Island with this observation, tàta maïtaï, whennùa èeno,
                  that the people were good, but the island very bad; whereas at New Zeeland he had
                  found more fault with the natives than the country. His feelings were always warm
                  from the heart, which education had filled with real philanthropy; they were
                  likewise just, in general, because his senses were sound and acute, and his
                  understanding, though uncultivated, was free from many prejudices.</p>

            </div>
            <milestone/>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. V.</l>

                  <l>Run from Easter Island to the Marquesas - Stay in Madre-de-Dios harbour on
                     Waitahoo - Course from thence through the Islands to Taheitee.</l>
               </head>
               <p><date>[1774. March.][Thursday 17.]</date>THE breeze with which we sailed from
                  Easter Island was so gentle, that we were still in sight of it the next day at
                  noon, at the distance of fifteen leagues. The weather was rather sultry, and
                  captain Cook relapsed into his former bilious disorder, by having exerted himself
                  too much on shore, during the violent heat of noon. All those who had been on the
                  long excursion across the island, had their faces blistered by the sun, and
                  extremely painful in proportion as the skin peeled off. The short stay near the
                  land, and the use of a few vegetables from thence, had greatly restored to their
                  health those who were afflicted with the scurvy before; and several, though
                  excessively weak, felt no inconvenience at present. It is true, the little supply
                  at Easter Island served only as a whet to our appetite, and made us all extremely
                  eager in our wishes of reaching the Marquesas of Mendoça, whither we now directed
                  our course. Very fortunately for us the wind freshened the next day, and continued
                  so for some time, giving life to our hopes, and inspiring more chearfulness than
                  we had known for some months past.</p>

               <p>In a few days, however, we were much alarmed to find several people sickening
                  again, and particularly complaining of constipations and bilious disorders, which
                  are deadly in hot climates. Among these was our excellent surgeon himself, whose
                  illness gave us more pain than almost any thing else. The most unlucky
                  circumstance was, that the patients could not eat the potatoes which we had
                  brought from the shore, because they were too flatulent for their weakened
                  stomachs.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 24.]</date>A calm which happened on the 24th, our latitude being
                  about 17° south, was very disagreeable to the sick, and brought some of them very
                  low. Captain Cook himself was obliged to keep his bed again, being afflicted with
                  some alarming symptoms. However the wind returned in the afternoon, and freshening
                  considerably in a day or two, cooled the air very pleasantly. This weather was
                  very salutary to all the bilious patients; so that they appeared on deck, and
                  walked, or rather crawled about, though exceedingly emaciated.</p>

               <p>My father ordered his Taheitian dog, the only one which still remained alive after
                  our departure from the Friendly Islands, to be killed; it was cut into quarters,
                  which were served up to captain Cook during several days, and gave him some
                  nourishment, as he could not venture to taste the ship's provisions. By such small
                  helps we succeeded in preserving a life upon which the success of the voyage in a
                  great measure depended.</p>

               <p>We daily saw Tropic birds and shearwaters after leaving Easter Island, and
                  frightened many shoals of flying fish out of the water. These fish were remarkably
                  numerous on <date>[Saturday 27.]</date>the 27th, when we saw none but small ones,
                  the largest not exceeding the length of a finger, and the least scarcely so long
                  as one of its joints. Our latitude that day, at noon, was 13° 13' south.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. April.]</date>Since the calm on the 24th we had a fine steady gale
                  from the eastward, which speeded our course prodigiously. The weather in general
                  was serene, and the colour of the ocean a fine rich blue, bearing always a
                  considerable relation to that of the sky. Dolphins, bonitos, and sharks appeared
                  from time to time, and various birds at war with flying fishes enlivened the
                  scene. To add to our comfort, the heat of the sun became perfectly agreeable to
                  us, being tempered by the rapid motion of the air, and permitted us to walk about
                  the decks with some satisfaction. Nothing less was wanting to keep up our fainting
                  spirits, and to strengthen the sick, who might be said to feed entirely upon hope,
                  having no refreshments to restore their wasted strength. We had already consumed
                  all the vegetables which had been purchased at Easter Island; nothing therefore
                  remained, but either to return to the loathed diet of salted meat, of which the
                  juices were utterly destroyed, by lying in pickle for three years, or to starve on
                  a small quantity of bread, if the stomach could not digest those gross and
                  unprofitable fibres. We were therefore unanimous in our wishes of a speedy
                  deliverance; and in proportion as the breeze slackened or encreased, the
                  thermometer of our expectations fluctuated from abject despondence to the most
                  sanguine expectation. All our books which treated of Mendaça's Voyages were
                  consulted; and since the vague expressions, relative to the distance of the
                  Marquesas from Peru, gave us full scope for conjecture, every day produced a new
                  calculation of their longitude. For the space of five days we successively passed
                  over the different positions which our new geographers had allotted to those
                  islands, and overturned each new hypothesis, not without some diversion to the
                  rest, who either artfully concealed their own opinion, or candidly confessed that
                  the data were too uncertain to bear a superstructure. During this course we
                  enjoyed some beautiful evenings, and particularly observed the sky and clouds
                  tinged with different hues of green by the setting sun, on the 3d of April. This
                  colour has been observed by Frezier before, and is in fact nothing extraordinary,
                  especially if the air happens to be charged with vapours, which is frequently the
                  case between the tropics. The same day we had caught a small sucking fish,
                  adhering to a flying fish, with which we had baited a hook: a proof that these
                  little creatures are not always fixed to sharks. The same day we saw a large fish
                  of the genus of rays, which is called a sea-devil by some authors. It perfectly
                  resembled that which we had seen in the Atlantic, on the first of September, 1772.
                  (See vol. I. p. 47). The number of terns, tropic, and man of war birds, encreased
                  around us almost every day, as we ran to the westward, and approached the islands
                  which we expected to find. At last, on the 6th of April in the afternoon, we had
                  sight of a small bluff island; but the haze which involved it, and which thickened
                  as we advanced, prevented our examining the nature of the land, and building any
                  hopes of refreshment on its appearance. Quiros, who is supposed to have written
                  the account of the voyage of the Spanish Adelentado (or captain-general) Don
                  Alvaro Mendaça de Neyra, in the year 1595, gives a favourable account of the group
                  of islands discovered in that voyage, which were named the Islas Marquesas de
                  Mendoça, in honour of the viceroy of Peru, Don Garcia Hurtado de Mendoça, marquis
                  of Cañete, who had set on foot that expedition. We had recourse to this account,
                  in order to gain some information relative to the land which now engrossed all our
                  attention. <date>[Thursday 7.]</date>The next morning we stood in-shore, and
                  though the weather still continued hazy, we soon distinguished the different
                  islands which the Spaniards have called la Dominica, St. Pedro, and St. Christina.
                  We were convinced at the same time, that the small bluff island which we had first
                  fallen in with, had not been seen by Mendaça; and captain Cook gave it the name of
                  Hood's Island, from the person who first discovered it. La Dominica, which lay
                  nearest to us, was a high and mountainous island, of which the N. E. point was
                  very steep and barren; but farther to the north we observed some vallies filled
                  with trees, amongst which we now and then discovered a hut. As the haze cleared
                  away, we saw many craggy rocks like spires, and several hollow summits piled up in
                  the centre of the island, which proved that volcanoes and earthquakes had been
                  active there in changing the face of the country. All its eastern part is a
                  prodigious steep and almost perpendicular wall, of a great height, which forms a
                  sharp ridge, shattered into spires and precipices. St. Pedro is a small island, of
                  very moderate elevation, but did not appear either fertile or populous. St.
                  Christina, the westermost of all, had the most promising appearance; and, though
                  very high and steep, yet had several vallies, which widened towards the sea, and
                  were covered with fine forests to the summits of the mountain. About three o'clock
                  we entered the straits, between the south end of Dominica, and the N. E. part of
                  St. Christina, which is above two miles wide. We observed some pleasant spots on
                  both islands, between the clefts of the mountain; but saw no plains, like those
                  which so greatly embellish the Society Islands. The shore of St. Christina was,
                  however, sufficient to revive all our spirits, and inspired that cheerfulness
                  which every fertile and pleasing prospect gives to the weary mariner. We passed
                  several little coves, where the white foaming surf tumbled in upon the beach. The
                  two projecting points of every cove included a valley, filled with forests and
                  plantations, of a pleasing verdure. On every beach we saw some inhabitants running
                  about, or gazing at our ship. Sometimes they launched their canoes, and attempted
                  to come after us; but a strong breeze carried us so swiftly through the smooth
                  water, that we left them far behind. We found a harbour on the west side of the
                  island, which looked so tempting, that we eagerly wished to come to an anchor; but
                  just as we were turning about, in order to run into it, a heavy squall came over
                  the high mountain with prodigious violence, and laid the ship on her side, so that
                  we sprung our mizen-topmast, and narrowly escaped being driven against the
                  southern point of the harbour. After we had trimmed our sails again, we tacked,
                  and anchored about five o'clock in the entrance of the harbour. During the squall,
                  about fifteen canoes, putting off from different parts of the island, came near
                  the ship. Some were double, and contained fifteen men; others, on the contrary,
                  were small, and had from three to seven men. As soon as we were at anchor, we
                  invited the natives, by every sign of friendship, and by addressing them in the
                  Taheitian language, to come on board. This they did not venture to do; but at
                  first they brought their canoes close alongside, and offered us some pepper-roots,
                  which were doubtless signs of peace, as at the Society and Friendly Islands. After
                  we had fastened these roots to the shrouds, they sold us a few fish in exchange
                  for nails, and likewise some excellent large bread-fruit, perfectly ripe, at sight
                  of which our whole ship's company expressed the greatest marks of joy in their
                  countenances.</p>

               <p>The natives about us were a well-made, handsome people, of a good yellowish or
                  tawny colour, but looked almost black, by being punctured over the whole body.
                  They were all naked, having only a small piece of cloth, perfectly resembling that
                  made by the people of Taheitee, round their waist and loins. Their beards and hair
                  were of a fine jetty black, and their language much nearer the Taheitian, than any
                  other dialect in the South Sea, with this difference, that they could not
                  pronounce the r. Their canoes were thin, and formed of boards slightly sewed
                  together, and their paddles were made like those of Taheitee, with a knob at the
                  end. We continually enquired for hogs, and told them to bring us some; and towards
                  night we had the satisfaction to see a pig along-side, which we purchased for a
                  knife. As soon as it was dark, the canoes retired, according to the general custom
                  of all the nations in the South Sea we had hitherto seen, on whom the novelty of
                  an European ship cannot prevail to wake a single night. The vallies in our harbour
                  were very full of trees, and every part answered the graphical description which
                  the Spaniards have given, and by which we were well convinced that their harbour
                  of Madre de Dios was the same where we had anchored . Its situation, deduced from
                  astronomical observation, is in 9° 55' S. latitude, and 139° S. W. longitude. We
                  saw many fires through the trees, at a great distance from the water, and
                  concluded the country to be well inhabited. <date>[Friday 8.]</date>The next
                  morning early we had a full view of the land, clear of the clouds which rested on
                  it in the evening. On the south side rises a peak, which is very craggy and
                  inaccessible. All the north side is a black, burnt hill, of which the rock is
                  vaulted along the sea-shore, and the top clad to the summit with a shrubbery of
                  casuarinas. But the bottom of the harbour is filled up with a very high ridge,
                  level at top, and resembling the Table-mountain at the Cape of Good Hope. Several
                  vallies, perfectly filled with trees, lead up from two beaches to the very summit
                  of the mountain, which appears excessively steep. Along its uppermost edge we saw
                  a row of stakes or pallisadoes, closely connected together, like a fortification,
                  within which, by the help of our glasses, we discerned something like huts. These
                  places we supposed to be what the Spaniards have called intrenchments; but they
                  bore a great resemblance to the hippas of the New Zeelanders, which are commonly
                  situated on high ridges, and surrounded with pallisades.</p>

               <p>The natives, encouraged by the trade which we had begun the evening before, came
                  off in several canoes, soon after sun-rise, and brought great quantities of bread
                  fruit, which we bought for small nails. They likewise sold some bananas, and
                  traded very fair for some time, but without venturing to come on board. However,
                  after breakfast, it appeared that their disposition had but too much similarity
                  with that of the Taheitians. Some of them began to deal dishonestly with us,
                  receiving the nail for which they had offered a bread-fruit, without delivering it
                  in return. The captain, to intimidate them, fired a musket over their heads. This
                  had the desired effect, and they immediately handed up the fruit for which we had
                  bargained. Some others, after they had sold their goods, came on board to be gazed
                  at, and to gaze. While captain Cook prepared to go into his boat with my father,
                  one of these natives, finding the large iron stanchion loose, to which the
                  man-ropes on the ship's side, by which we ascended or descended, were fastened,
                  snatched it up, leaped overboard with it, and, notwithstanding its weight, swam
                  with great agility to his canoe, where he secured it. This hazardous enterprize
                  being reported to captain Cook, who was just stepping into the boat, he ordered a
                  musket to be fired over the native's head, whilst he meant to come round the ship,
                  to recover the stanchion. The musket was fired, but the man took no notice of it,
                  looking about him with great unconcern. The captain hearing it, ordered another to
                  be fired, and put off from the ship. The second shot had no other effect than the
                  first; upon which an officer, who that moment came upon deck, snatched up a
                  musket, and taking exact aim, shot the man through the head. His companion in the
                  same canoe instantly threw the iron into the sea, which had been the cause of this
                  unfortunate event. The captain in his boat came up, and saw the canoe full of
                  blood, and the dead corse lying in it. The other native baled the blood out into
                  the sea, and then retired to the shore with all the other canoes, and left us
                  perfectly alone. The natives on the beach hauled the canoe through the surf, and
                  carried the corse up into the woods. Presently after we heard drums beating, and
                  saw a considerable number of the inhabitants assembled on the beach, with spears
                  and clubs in their hands, which had a very unfriendly appearance, and rather
                  seemed to threaten that we had no farther refreshments to expect. We cannot but
                  lament, that the time in which this man was killed, by a person who was ignorant
                  of the nature of his offence, did not admit of any previous consideration. The
                  first discoverers and conquerors of America have often, and very deservedly, been
                  stigmatised with cruelty, because they treated the wretched nations of that
                  continent, not as their brethren, but as irrational beasts, whom it was lawful to
                  shoot for diversion; and yet, in our enlightened age, prejudice and rashness have
                  often proved fatal to the inhabitants of the South Sea. Mahine burst into tears,
                  when he saw one man killing another on so trifling an occasion. Let his feelings
                  put those civilized Europeans to the blush, who have humanity so often on their
                  lips, and so seldom in their hearts!</p>

               <p>Captain Cook, knowing the weak condition of his crew, was unwilling to relinquish
                  the hope of procuring refreshments at this island; and therefore, after directing
                  the ship to be removed deeper into the harbour, selected a party of marines and
                  sailors, and landed under the vaulted rocks to the northward, accompanied by Dr.
                  Sparrman, Mahine, my father, and myself. A great troop of the natives, consisting
                  of more than a hundred men, received us on these rocks with spears and clubs in
                  their hands, of which they did not attempt to make any use. We approached them
                  with demonstrations of friendship, which they returned; and our first request was
                  that they should sit down, to which they instantly agreed. We then endeavoured to
                  shew the best side of what had happened, and acquainted them that we had only shot
                  at one of their countrymen, because he had made free with our property; that we
                  were desirous of living as friends with them; and that we only came to take in
                  wood, water, and refreshments, for which we had nails, hatchets, and other curious
                  articles to offer in return. The natives were pacified by our specious reasonings;
                  they seemed to think their countryman had deserved his fate, and conducted us
                  round the beach to a fine brook, where we established our waterers, and began to
                  purchase some fruits, which were at first brought down very sparingly. For greater
                  security, the marines were drawn up in a line, under arms, and our return to the
                  water secured. But we had no occasion for these precautions; the people with whom
                  we dealt were too honest to break a peace to which they had consented, and of too
                  gentle a disposition to revenge the death of a man whom they could not entirely
                  acquit. In a short time our trade went on more briskly, and the natives came down
                  with loads of plantanes, bananas, and bread-fruit from the hills, which they sold
                  for a trifling consideration of iron ware. </p>

               <p>Among the croud we saw no women, they having probably retired to the mountains on
                  the first alarm; but there were some men better armed and ornamented than the
                  rest, who seemed to be their leaders. They were all without cloathing, having
                  nothing but a small piece of cloth to cover the loins. They were tall, and
                  extremely well limbed; not one of them unweildly or corpulent like a Taheitian,
                  nor meagre and shrivelled like a native of Easter Island. The punctuation which
                  almost entirely covered the men of a middle age, made it difficult to distinguish
                  their elegance of form; but among the youths, who were not yet marked or tattowed,
                  it was easy to discover beauties singularly striking, and often without a blemish,
                  such as demanded the admiration of all beholders. Many of them might be placed
                  near the famous models of antiquity, and would not suffer in the comparison:</p>

               <p>The natural colour of these youths was not quite so dark as that of the common
                  people in the Society Isles; but the men appeared to be infinitely blacker, on
                  account of the punctures which covered their whole body, from head to foot. These
                  punctures were disposed with the utmost regularity; so that the marks on each leg,
                  arm, and cheek, and on the corresponding muscles, were exactly similar. They never
                  assumed the determinate form of an animal or plant, but consisted of a variety of
                  blotches, spirals, bars, chequers, and lines, which had a most motley appearance.
                  Their countenances were pleasing, open, and full of vivacity; their eyes were
                  large and dark-coloured; their hair black, curled, and strong; a few excepted, who
                  had light-coloured or sandy hair. The beard however was thin in general, on
                  account of the numerous scars of punctures which commonly covered that part of the
                  face. The number of ornaments, in some measure, might be said to supply the want
                  of cloathing. On their heads many of them wore a kind of diadem; this consisted of
                  a flat bandage wrought of coco-nut core, on the outside of which several round
                  pieces of mother of pearl, some of them five inches in diameter, were fixed,
                  covered in the middle with a plate of tortoise-shell, perforated like fret-work.
                  Several tufts of long, black, and glossy cock's feathers formed the plumes to this
                  head-dress, which was really beautiful and noble in its kind. Some wore round
                  coronets of the small ligulated feathers of the man of war bird, and others a
                  circle, from whence several ranges of twisted strings of coco-nut core, about two
                  inches long, either of the natural colour, or dyed black, diverged round the head.
                  In their ears they sometimes placed two flat pieces of a light wood, of an oval
                  shape, about three inches long, covering the whole ear, and painted them white
                  with lime. Their leaders wore a kind of gorget round the neck, or rather on the
                  breast; it consisted of small portions of a light wood, like cork, glued together
                  with gum, in a semicircular form; a quantity of scarlet-beans (abrus precatorius,
                  Linn.) are glued all round it with the same gum, forming a great number of rows,
                  of the length of two or three inches. Those who were not possessed of this glaring
                  ornament, at least wore a string round the neck, and fastened it to a piece of
                  shell, which was cut and polished in the shape of a large tooth. They were also
                  fond of having bunches of human hair tied on a string round their waist, arms,
                  knees, and ancles. All these ornaments they freely parted with for a trifling
                  consideration, except the last, which they valued very highly, though they were
                  the usual residence of many vermin. It is probable that these bunches of hair were
                  worn in remembrance of their dead relations, and therefore looked upon with some
                  veneration; or else they may be the spoils of their enemies, worn as the
                  honourable testimonies of victory. However a large nail, or something which struck
                  their eyes, commonly got the better of their scruples.</p>

               <p>After we had made these observations on the people who surrounded us, we left the
                  beach, and rambled through the woods at a short distance from captain Cook's
                  station, collecting several plants, of which we had seen the greatest part at the
                  Society Islands. As we did not care to advance far into the country the first day,
                  we confined ourselves to the low land, which bordered upon the beach, and which we
                  found entirely uninhabited. However we met with a number of square compartments
                  among the trees, laid out with great stones, mostly of a regular square figure;
                  which we afterwards learnt, were the foundations of their houses. It may be
                  conjectured from thence, that these places have been abandoned, on account of some
                  inconvenience of the ground; or that they are only made use of at certain seasons.
                  All this part was destitute of plantations, and covered with forest-trees, some of
                  which seemed to be very good timber. The natives did not attempt to stop us, and
                  left us to pursue our walk entirely by ourselves. A little hill, covered with long
                  grass up to our middle, and broken into a perpendicular wall to the sea, juts
                  forward, and divides this beach from another to the southward. On the north side
                  of this hill we found a fine spring of clear water, in the very place where the
                  Spanish navigators have described it, which gushes out of the rock, and is
                  collected in a little bason, from whence it flows into the sea. A brook runs down
                  from the higher hills close to it; another more considerable descends on the
                  middle of the beach, and supplied us with water; and again another is to be met
                  with in the northern corner. This island is therefore extremely well watered; and
                  the vegetation, as well as the inhabitants, evidently derive great benefit from it
                  in this hot climate. We soon returned to the trading place with our acquisitions,
                  and conversed with the natives, who had now so far laid aside their distrust, as
                  to part with their arms to us for our iron tools. These weapons were all made of
                  the club-wood, or casuarina , and were either plain spears, about eight or ten
                  feet long, or clubs, which commonly had a large knob at one end. Captain Cook had
                  been very successful in the meanwhile, having procured a great quantity of fruit
                  and several hogs, with all which we embarked in our boats at noon. The weather
                  which had been very warm on shore, was really much cooler on board, where the wind
                  came down in strong gusts from the mountains, sometimes attended with small
                  showers.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon I remained on board, but my father accompanied the captain on
                  shore, and went up the hill a little way to a wretched hut; but finding no
                  inhabitants there, who had probably been alarmed by their shooting at birds, he
                  put several nails on a few bread-fruit, which he saw close to the hut, and then
                  descended to the beach with some botanical acquisitions.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 9.]</date>Seven canoes arrived about the ship from La Dominica the
                  next morning, whilst several others from St. Christina went up the strait. The
                  former seemed to be of the same nation with those with whom we were already
                  acquainted, and brought the same fruits to sell, which we had purchased in this
                  island. We went on shore after breakfast, and found our friendly natives assembled
                  on the beach. Among them was a chief, who was dressed in a cloak manufactured of
                  the paper-mulberry bark, like the Taheitian cloth, and who wore the diadem, the
                  gorget, the ear-pendants, and bunches of hair. We learnt that this man was the
                  king of the whole island, though he had not great respect shewn him. He presented
                  captain Cook with some fruits and hogs, and continued in the neighbourhood of our
                  people the whole day. He acquainted us that his name was Hònoo , and that he was
                  he-ka-aï, which was doubtless a title corresponding to the aree of Taheitee, and
                  areekee of the Friendly Islands. He seemed to be a very good-natured, intelligent
                  man, a character so prevalent in his countenance, that Mr. Hodges, who drew his
                  picture, could not fail of expressing it, as may be seen in the print of him, in
                  captain Cook's account of this voyage. We enquired for the name of this island and
                  the adjacent ones, and found that St. Christina was called Waitahoo, La Dominica
                  Heevaroa, and St. Pedro Onateyo. Mahine, who was excessively fond of these people,
                  on account of the vast similarity between their manners, language and persons, and
                  those of his nation, was continually engaged in conversation with them, and
                  purchased a great number of their ornaments. He shewed them many customs of his
                  country, with which they were unacquainted, and among these was the method of
                  lighting a fire, by rubbing together the dry sticks of the hibiscus tiliaceus, to
                  which they were extremely attentive. Captain Cook found a great quantity of
                  vegetables, some fowls and hogs, at the trading place, which he purchased for
                  small nails, knives, pieces of cloth, &amp;c. The red feathers of Tonga-Tabboo or
                  Amsterdam Island, were likewise in great repute here, and the natives gave many
                  head-dresses, and other ornaments, in exchange for them. We saw only one woman
                  this day, who sat down in the circle of her countrymen, and was dressed in a piece
                  of cloth made of bark, like the women of the Society Islands. She was an elderly
                  woman, and scarce distinguishable from a Taheitian. We walked this day about a
                  mile and a half, on the south side of the rivulet. After crossing a clear spot,
                  some whence we had a full prospect of the harbour, we entered a thick wood, where
                  we saw chiefly the ratta, or Taheitee nuttrees (inocarpus ) which grew to a
                  considerable size and height, and some fine bread-fruit trees; both which are
                  planted in the plains at Taheitee, the heat being less violent there than at these
                  islands. At last we came to one of the huts of the natives, which, in comparison
                  with the lofty houses of the Society Islands, was only a wretched hovel. It was
                  placed on an elevated platform of stones, which were not smooth and even enough to
                  form a very comfortable couch, though they were covered with mats. On this base
                  the natives had erected a quantity of bamboo-canes, closely connected together,
                  between five and six feet high, above which the roof rose in a ridge at top,
                  consisting of small sticks, thatched with the leaves of the bread-fruit and ratta
                  tree. The whole house might be about fifteen feet long, and eight or ten feet
                  broad, and the method of placing it on a foundation of stones, seemed to intimate
                  that the country is subject to heavy rains and inundations at certain seasons. We
                  saw some large wooden troughs here, and found pieces of bread-fruit, mixed with
                  water, in them. Three natives appeared near the hut, who, at our desire, went down
                  about a hundred yards to the brook, and brought us some fresh water to drink.
                  Having rewarded them for their readiness to serve us, we walked to the beach, and
                  from thence returned on board. In getting into our boat, we ran the greatest risk
                  in the world of being overset, and were wetted by the surf, which broke upon the
                  rocks. Mahine, who still remained on shore, plunged into the water, and swam to
                  the boat, to prevent our exposing ourselves once more to the same danger in taking
                  him in.</p>

               <p>Dr. Sparrman staid on board with me in the afternoon, describing and drawing some
                  plants which we had collected in the morning; but my father returned ashore with
                  the captain to the southern beach, where he found several habitations near the
                  sea, but saw no women. This was the same beach to which the natives had carried
                  the dead body of their countryman. They were conducted to a house, which had been
                  that unfortunate man's dwelling, and saw several hogs there, now the property of
                  his son, a youth of fifteen years, to whom they made several expiatory presents.
                  Our people enquired for his female relations, but were told they remained on the
                  top of the mountain, to weep and mourn for the dead. We had some reason to
                  suspect, from this account, that the pallisades or enclosures along the top of the
                  rock, surrounded the burying-places of the inhabitants. The captain purchased a
                  quantity of fruit, and several hogs, at this beach; and though he was in the midst
                  of the relations of a man whom our people had killed, he did not perceive the
                  least animosity or spirit of revenge amongst them.</p>

               <p>The next morning Dr. Sparrman went on shore with me to the watering place, where
                  the trade for provisions was very considerable. Our iron ware was however lowered
                  in value at least two hundred per cent. since our anchorage in the harbour. Our
                  small nails, which they had eagerly taken at first, were now no longer current;
                  and even the large ones were not much coveted. Beads were not esteemed at all; but
                  ribbons, cloth, and other trifles were more agreeable. Some large hogs were
                  purchased for pieces of the mulberry-bark, covered with red feathers, which we had
                  obtained at the island of Amsterdam or Tonga-Tabboo.</p>

               <p>The weather was exceedingly hot this day, for which reason many of the inhabitants
                  made use of large fans to cool themselves. These fans, of which they sold us a
                  great number, were formed of a kind of tough bark or grass, very firmly and
                  curiously plaited, and frequently whitened with shell-lime. Some also had large
                  feathered leaves, which answered the purpose of an umbrella, and upon examination,
                  were found to belong to the corypha umbraculi-fera, Linn. a kind of palm. The fans
                  are represented on a reduced scale on the same plate, with the head-dresses of
                  these people, and inserted in captain Cook's account of this voyage.</p>

               <p>Notwithstanding the immense heat of the day, we resolved to ascend the mountain,
                  in hopes of being well rewarded for the trouble, by the discoveries we should
                  make. The pallisades at the top were particularly what we aimed at, none of our
                  people having hitherto any idea of them. Mr. Patton and two other gentlemen were
                  of the party. We soon crossed the fine rivulet, at which our people watered, and
                  followed the path on the north side, seeing that the greatest number of
                  inhabitants had come down from thence. The ascent was at first not very fatiguing;
                  several gentle hills formed the fore-ground, which were almost level on the
                  summits, and contained several spacious plantations of bananas, in excellent
                  order. These spots always opened upon us unexpectedly, as the rest of our way lay
                  through a close tufted wood of fruit-trees, mixed with other sorts, extremely
                  pleasant to us, on account of the thick and cooling shade. Here and there we met
                  with a solitary coco-nut palm, which, far from lifting its royal head with
                  becoming pride, was out-topped and hid by meaner trees. In general these trees do
                  not thrive well upon mountains, preferring a low situation; insomuch that they
                  abound upon the coral-ledges, where they have scarcely soil sufficient to take
                  root. A few natives accompanied us, and some others met us with fruit, which they
                  carried to our trading place. In proportion as we ascended, we passed a number of
                  their houses, which were all built upon an elevated base of stones, and exactly
                  upon the plan of that which I have described, page 21. some of them seemed to be
                  very lately built, and looked very clean within; but we could not distinguish the
                  number of beds in them, of which the Spaniards make mention, and suspected that
                  they only meant different mats spread on the floor. The ground became much steeper
                  and rugged as we advanced. The rivulet frequently ran in a deep glen, on the brink
                  of which the path was rather dangerous. We were likewise obliged to cross the
                  water several times in our way; but always found the habitations more numerous
                  towards the top. We rested in several places, and were presented with fruit and a
                  little water by the natives, who resembled the Taheitians too much in other
                  respects, to be unlike them in hospitality. We never saw a single deformed, nor
                  even ill-proportioned man among them; all were strong, tall, well-limbed, and
                  active in the greatest degree. The nature of their country contributes towards
                  their activity; and the exercise which they are obliged to take, probably
                  preserves their elegance of form. Having advanced near three miles from the sea
                  side, we saw a young woman, who came out of a house before us, and hastened up the
                  hills as fast as we advanced. She was dressed in a piece of cloth, made of the
                  mulberry-tree's bark, and reaching to the knees. Her features were like those of
                  the Taheitee women, as far as we could discern at the distance of thirty yards,
                  which she took care to preserve between herself and us, and her stature was middle
                  sized. The natives made many signs to us to return, and seemed to be very uneasy
                  and much displeased at our progress. Dr. Sparrman and myself, desirous of
                  preserving the plants which we had collected, turned back, whilst Mr. Patton and
                  the rest went on about two miles farther, without seeing any thing more than
                  ourselves. We were the more easily persuaded to desist from our purpose, as the
                  heat of the day, our precarious state of health, and the fatigue of the ascent,
                  had entirely exhausted us, and as we saw no prospect of reaching the summit. It
                  appeared indeed at least three miles distant from the place where we stopped, the
                  greatest part of which seemed to be infinitely steeper than what we had hitherto
                  left behind us. The whole ground, as far as we had gone, was covered with a rich
                  mould, and contained excellent plantations, and groves of various fruit-trees. The
                  rocks under this mould, which appeared chiefly near the banks of the rivulet, or
                  on the broken sides of the path, contained volcanic productions, or different
                  kinds of lava, some of which are full of white and greenish sherls. These islands
                  are therefore similar, in regard to their origin and the nature of their minerals,
                  to the Society Islands, the greater part of which seem to have had burning
                  mountains. About the houses we frequently saw hogs, and fowls of a large sort, and
                  now and then some rats. The trees were likewise inhabited by several small birds,
                  which resembled those of Taheitee and the Society Islands; but they were not
                  frequent, and in no great variety. The Marquesas, upon the whole, so much resemble
                  the Society Islands, that they only seemed to want the beautiful ambient plain,
                  and the coral reef, which forms their excellent harbours. No people in the South
                  Sea, whom we had hitherto met with, were so much like each other in form, customs,
                  and language, as the inhabitants of both these groups of islands. The principal
                  difference seemed to lie in the different degrees of cleanliness. The Taheitians,
                  and their next neighbours of the Society Islands, are perhaps the cleanliest
                  people under the sun; they bathe two or three times a day, and wash their hands
                  and face before and after every meal. The inhabitants of the Marquesas did not
                  make their ablutions so frequently, and were besides very slovenly in the manner
                  of preparing their meals. Their principal food is bread-fruit, which they roast
                  over the fire, rarely baking it under ground; when it is sufficiently done, they
                  put it into a very dirty wooden trough, out of which their hogs are fed at other
                  times, and mix it up with water. This mixture they scoop out with their hands.
                  They also prepare fermented paste from their bread-fruit, of which they make the
                  same kind of acidulous pottage, which is a great dainty with the Taheitian chiefs.
                  Their bread-fruit is doubtless the largest and most delicious which we ever
                  tasted; and as we bought many of them perfectly ripe, we found them as soft as a
                  kind of custard, and in that state too luscious to be eaten. Their food consists
                  of the same variety of fruit and roots which are common at Taheitee, except the
                  apple (spondias). Their diet is chiefly vegetable; though they have hogs and
                  fowls, and catch abundance of fish at certain times. Their drink is purely water,
                  since coco-nuts are scarce, at least in the parts which we visited. It is however
                  to be suspected, that since they have the pepper-root, and make use of it as a
                  sign of peace, like the other islanders, they may also prepare the same dainty
                  beverage from it, with which the others intoxicate themselves. They are peculiarly
                  cleanly in regard to the egesta. At the Society Islands the wanderer's eyes and
                  nose are offended every morning, in the midst of a path, with the natural effects
                  of a sound digestion: but the natives of the Marquesas are accustomed, after the
                  manner of our cats, to bury the offensive objects in the earth. At Taheitee,
                  indeed, they depend on the friendly assistance of rats, who greedily devour these
                  odoriferous dainties; nay they seemed to be convinced that their custom is the
                  most proper in the world; for their witty countryman, Tupaya (Tupia), found fault
                  with our want of delicacy, when he saw a little building, appropriated to the
                  rites of Cloacina, in every house at Batavia.</p>

               <p>We hastened down to the sea-side, in order to reach it before our boats put off.
                  When we came to the ship, we found it surrounded with canoes from different parts,
                  who brought several hogs and plenty of bananas for sale. The alarm which our
                  unfortunate act of violence had spread among the natives on the first day, was now
                  forgotten, and they came into the ship in great numbers, conversing familiarly
                  with our people, and expressing great satisfaction at every thing which they saw.
                  They had even so far laid aside all thoughts of what had happened, that many began
                  to pilfer again, as often as an opportunity offered; however, if they were
                  detected, they never failed to return very quietly what they had taken. They
                  frequently danced upon the decks, for the diversion of our sailors; and in these
                  dances we observed a striking resemblance with those of Taheitee. It appeared
                  likewise that their music was nearly the same, especially as they had the same
                  kind of drums, of which Mahine purchased one. Their canoes were likewise very
                  similar to those of Taheitee, but of not great size. The heads commonly had some
                  flat upright piece, on which the human face was coarsely carved; and their sails
                  were made of mats, triangular, and very broad at the top. The paddles which they
                  used were made of a heavy hard wood, short, but sharp-pointed, and with a knob at
                  the upper end.</p>

               <p>I staid on board in the afternoon, and ranged the collections which we had
                  hitherto made. In the evening, captain Cook, with some officers, Mr. Hodges, Dr.
                  Sparrman, and my father, returned on board, having been out all the afternoon to
                  visit two coves to the south of our harbour. They found these places extremely
                  open, and exposed to the sea, and run great risk in landing and embarking, on
                  account of the prodigious surf on the beach. They met with abundance of
                  refreshments for their pains, and purchased several hogs. The natives were less
                  reserved in both places than in our harbour, and a considerable number of women
                  appeared among them, with whom the boat's crew soon became acquainted, since
                  several of them had as much complaisance as certain ladies at the Society and
                  Friendly Islands, New Zeeland, and Easter Island. They were inferior to the men in
                  stature, but well proportioned, and some in feature approached the pleasing
                  contour of the Taheitian women of quality. Their general colour was the same as
                  among the common people of the Society Islands, and only very few were a little
                  fairer than the rest. No punctures were observed on them, though the other sex are
                  so much accustomed to disfigure themselves with this unsightly ornament. One of
                  the handsomest consented to be drawn by Mr. Hodges, and an exact engraving, made
                  from his drawing, is inserted in captain Cook's account of this voyage. All the
                  women wore pieces of cloth of the mulberry bark, of different sorts; but the
                  variety of these cloths was very trifling, compared with what it is at Taheitee;
                  and it seemed the quantity was likewise inconsiderable, for, instead of being
                  wrapped up in that number of pieces, so common among the luxurious chiefs of that
                  island, they only wore a single ahòw or cloak, which covered them from the
                  shoulders to the knees. Round their necks they sometimes had a few loose strings,
                  which were not very ornamental; but our people took notice of no other finery
                  among them. After a short stay, our party prepared to return to their boat. One of
                  the sailors, having been inattentive to his duty, received several blows from the
                  captain. This trifling circumstance would not deserve a place in this narrative,
                  but for the observation, which the natives made upon it. As soon as they saw it,
                  they shewed it one to another, and exclaimed tapè a-hai te tina, " he beats his
                  brother." We were well convinced from other instances that they knew the
                  difference between the commander and his people; but it appeared at the same time,
                  that they looked upon us all as brethren. The most natural inference in my mind
                  is, that they only applied an idea to us in this case, which really exists with
                  regard to themselves. They probably look on themselves as one family, of which the
                  eldest born is the chief or king. As their community is not yet arrived at that
                  degree of civilization which the Taheitians enjoy, a difference of rank does not
                  take place among them and their political constitution has not acquired a settled
                  monarchical form. The nature of their country, which requires a greater labour and
                  culture than Taheitee, is one great cause of this difference; for since the means
                  of subsistence are not so easily attained, the population and the general luxury,
                  cannot be so considerable, and the people remain upon a level. Agreeable to this
                  observation, we have found that no particular honour or respect was paid to their
                  king Honoo, who visited us on the second day after our arrival. All his
                  pre-eminence seemed to consist in his dress, which was more complete than that of
                  many of his people, who by choice, or through indolence, go naked in a happy
                  tropical climate, where cloathing is not wanted.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 11.]</date>The next morning the captain went to the same cove again,
                  but was much less successful than on the preceding evening. The natives, who were
                  not yet sufficiently acquainted with the excellence and durability of our iron
                  ware, refused to take it any longer, and coveted a number of articles, which it
                  was not in our power to part with. In the afternoon, therefore, we weighed the
                  anchor, and stood out of the harbour of Madre de Dios, where we had lain something
                  less than four days. We had provided a considerable quantity of excellent water
                  during that time, and obtained a very salutary supply of refreshments from a
                  friendly and well-disposed people. Our acquisitions in natural history had been
                  but inconsiderable, from the great similarity of this island to Taheitee and the
                  adjacent group, and on account of our very short stay. The same causes had
                  likewise prevented our forming a more perfect acquaintance with the natives, who
                  seemed to be well worth the contemplation of philosophic travellers. We
                  particularly regretted, that it had not been in our power to examine those
                  enclosures on the summits of the mountain, which, as I still suspect, have some
                  connection with their religious rites. The Spaniards make mention of an oracle ,
                  which, from their accounts, seems to have been a burying place, like those of the
                  Society Islands; but we were likewise unfortunate enough not to meet with any
                  thing of this kind. The number of these good people cannot be very considerable,
                  on account of the small size of the islands which they inhabit. Waitahoo , or St.
                  Christina, is about eight leagues in circuit; O-Heeva-roa , or Dominica, fifteen
                  leagues; Onateyo, or St. Pedro, three leagues; and Magdalena, which we only saw at
                  a great distance, five leagues, according to the Spanish account. The natives of
                  these different islands, we have great reason to believe, are all of one of the
                  same tribe, like the people of Taheitee and the Society Isles; we may at least
                  affirm it with certainty of those of St. Christina and Dominica, having conversed
                  and traded with both. The island of Dominica, the largest of the Marquesas, is so
                  excessively steep and craggy in many parts, that its inhabitants cannot be so
                  numerous as those of St. Christina in proportion to its size. Such spots as are
                  fit for culture are very populous in these islands; but as they are all very
                  mountainous, and have many inaccessible and barren rocks, it is to be doubted
                  whether the whole population of this group amounts to fifty thousand persons. The
                  Spaniards, who discovered them, found their manners gentle and inoffensive, if we
                  except a trifling difference at Magdalena, which probably arose from some
                  misunderstanding, or from the impetuous temper of those navigators. When we
                  arrived amongst them, we were received with every mark of friendship. They
                  presented us with roots of pepper, and branches of tamannoo (calophyllum
                  inophyllum, Linn.) in sign of peace; they sold us their provisions; and though we
                  killed one of their brethren, they continued the same kind treatment, and
                  permitted us to roam about their country to a great distance without molestation.
                  This behaviour, their manners, their beautiful forms, their dresses, provisions,
                  embarkations, and their language, prove that they have the same origin with the
                  Taheitians, and only differ from them in a few respects, which the nature of their
                  country required. The advantages which the rich encircling plains bestow on the
                  Taheitians and their near neighbours, must drop in great measure at the Marquesas.
                  When they have cultivated as much ground as will afford them the means of
                  subsistence, there is none remaining for those extensive plantations of
                  mulberry-trees, which every where strike the eye at Taheitee: indeed if they had
                  the ground, they cannot afford to bestow the time which this branch of culture
                  requires. The great sources of Taheitian affluence and luxury, their profusion of
                  food, and their vast variety and quantity of cloth, do not exist in the Marquesas:
                  but the inhabitants have a competence; they are all equal among themselves; they
                  are active, very healthy, and beautifully made; there is nothing which can make
                  them unhappy, by debarring them the means of obeying nature's voice. The
                  Taheitians have more comforts and conveniencies; they have perhaps superior skill
                  in the arts, and these things give them a greater relish for the enjoyment of
                  life; but to balance these advantages, they are no longer upon a level; one part
                  lives by the labours of the other, and diseases already wait upon their
                  excesses.</p>

               <p>The fruits and fresh meat which we obtained at the Marquesas, may be considered as
                  the first restoratives after a cruize of four months and a half; during which we
                  visited the frozen zone to 71 deg. and the torrid to 9 1/2 deg. S. latitude. The
                  small supply of potatoes at Easter Island was only a medicine, which
                  providentially stopped the rapid progress of various diseases on board, but could
                  not prevent their return, when we approached the torrid zone; whose active heat
                  set our stagnant and putrid blood into a state fermentation. The wan look of all
                  on board sufficiently proved, that our meeting with the Marquesas prevented a
                  fatal and general attack of noxious distempers, which would have found us an easy
                  prey, and might, in a short space of time, have made great havock in our ship. It
                  must be allowed, at the same time, that, as far as human art, and a humane
                  beneficent disposition will go, our worthy surgeon, Mr. Patton , took the best
                  precautions possible to preserve the healths of all on board, by suggesting the
                  proper methods to captain Cook, and by watching over us with unremitted assiduity.
                  I will venture to affirm, that it is to him alone, under Providence, that many of
                  us are indebted for our lives; and that his country owes him the preservation of
                  those valuable and useful members of the commonwealth, who were sent out on this
                  dangerous expedition. Great commendations are likewise due to captain Cook, who
                  left no experiment untried which was proposed to him, and which seemed to promise
                  success. The fate of the voyage depended upon the health of the crew, and he had
                  the more merit in taking his measures agreeably to this reflection, since, however
                  obvious it may seem, it has seldom guided other naval commanders.</p>

               <p>The short stay at the Marquesas had not been sufficient to restore our patients to
                  perfect health, and those who had the bilious cholic were rather worse than
                  before, having ventured to eat flatulent fruits, which were extremely dangerous in
                  a weak stomach. Captain Cook himself was far from being recovered; for though he
                  had experienced the bad effects of exposing himself to the burning rays of the sun
                  at Easter Islands, he had been active all the time, in purchasing provisions, and
                  superintending his people on shore. The effort which I had made in climbing the
                  mountain, had likewise been too violent for my precarious state of health, and
                  threw me into a dangerous bilious disorder, which was the more mortifying, as it
                  happened just at a time, when the scene for my occupations was to open.</p>

               <p>We steered S. S. W. from St. Christina, and afterwards changed the course to S. W.
                  and W. 1/2°S. bringing to, every night, for greater safety, as we were now very
                  near the archipelago of low islands, which had always been looked upon as a very
                  intricate part of the Pacific Ocean. The Dutch navigators, in particular, have
                  given an unfavourable idea of it; for Schouten calls it the Bad Sea, and Roggewein
                  the Labyrinth. The latter lost one of his ships, the African Galley, on a low
                  island, which, from that unfortunate accident, he called Pernicious Island. This
                  circumstance having happened within the memory of man, is known among the Society
                  Isles; from whence we may conclude, that Pernicious Island cannot be at a great
                  distance from that group.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 17.]</date>On the 17th we discovered a low island, about ten o'clock
                  in the morning, and coming up with it about noon, we were convinced, from the
                  perspicuity of Mr. Byron's description, that it was the eastermost of King
                  George's Islands. We were also confirmed in this belief towards night, when we
                  perceived the other island, which he comprehended under that name. The island
                  before us was extremely low and sandy, and formed an elliptic rocky ledge, no less
                  than six leagues in its longest diameter, from north to south. Its latitude is 14°
                  28' S. and its longitude 144° 56' W. From space to space it was covered with
                  coco-nut trees in great numbers, which had a pleasing airy look. Various trees and
                  shrubberies sometimes concealed the stems of these palms to a great part of their
                  height, but their beautiful crown always towered above the rest. The intervals
                  between these green spots were so low, that the sea washed over them into the
                  lagoon within. The stillness of the water, confined by the ledge of rocks, and its
                  milky hue where it was shallow, contrasted very agreeably with the ruffled surface
                  of the berylline unfathomable ocean. We sailed close along the western side of the
                  island in the afternoon, and observed the rocks to be tinged with a fine scarlet
                  colour in many places, exactly as Mr. Byron had found them. Several canoes sailing
                  in the lagoon, smokes rising up between the clumps of trees, and armed men of a
                  dark hue running along shore, were objects which greatly encreased the pleasure of
                  the prospect. We likewise perceived women retiring to a remote part of the ledge,
                  with bundles on their backs; an evident sign that they expected no good from our
                  appearance on their coast. Indeed, having had the misfortune to lose some of their
                  countrymen in opposing Mr. Byron's boats, and having been expelled from their
                  habitation during a whole day by his people, who lived at discretion on their
                  coco-nuts, it is not surprising that they secured their small possessions against
                  the invasion of people who looked so like their enemies. Towards the S. W. end of
                  the island we perceived the passage into the lagoon, which Mr. Byron mentions, and
                  sent a boat to sound in its entrance, because at that time we were not yet
                  acquainted with his ill success in the same attempt. Our people found a bottom of
                  sharp corals, which made it impracticable for the ship to anchor. The natives, who
                  were assembled in arms on the north point of the passage, behaved very quietly,
                  and brought some coco-nuts, which were exchanged for nails. Upon this information,
                  another boat was hoisted out, and both sent to the shore again, in order to trade
                  with the natives, and to efface the sinister ideas which they seemed to have
                  conceived of us at first. My father, Dr. Sparrman, and myself were of the party;
                  though I was extremely ill of a bilious complaint. We landed without any
                  opposition, and immediately mixed among the natives, of whom there seemed to be
                  about fifty or sixty. They were all a set of stout men, of a dark brown, and had
                  some punctures on the breast, belly, and hands, chiefly in imitation of fishes,
                  which furnish a great part of their food. Their features were not disagreeable,
                  but more mild than those of the natives of all the high islands about them. They
                  went perfectly naked, having only a very small piece of cloth about their loins.
                  Their women did not come near us; but those whom we saw at a distance had the same
                  colour as the men, and their piece of cloth was enlarged to the size of a short
                  apron. The hair and beards were generally black and curling, but sometimes cut;
                  however I took notice of a single man, whose hair was quite yellowish at the
                  points. As soon as we landed they embraced us, touching our noses, after the
                  custom of New Zeeland, and began to bring coco-nuts and dogs for sale to the
                  boats. Mahine, who was with us, purchased several dogs for small nails, and some
                  for ripe bananas, which he had brought from the Marquesas. This fruit was much
                  valued by the people of the low island, who immediately knew it; it should seem
                  therefore that they have some acquaintance with the high islands, since bananas
                  never grow upon their barren coral-ledges. The dogs were not unlike those at the
                  Society Islands, but had fine long hair of a white colour. Mahine therefore was
                  eager to purchase them, because that very sort of hair is made use of in his
                  country to adorn the breast-plates of the warriors. We attempted to go directly
                  into the grove, under which the habitations were situated; but the natives
                  opposing it, we advanced along the point, picking various plants, and particularly
                  a scurvy-grass, which was common, and seemed to be very wholesome. The natives
                  shewed us that they bruised this plant, mixed it with shell-fish, and threw it
                  into the sea, wherever they perceive a shoal of fishes. This food intoxicates them
                  for some time, and thus they are caught on the surface, without any other trouble
                  than that of taking them up. The name which they give to this useful plant is
                  e-Now. We likewise met with plenty of purslane, resembling the common sort, which
                  the natives call e-Tooree. This plant likewise grows at the Society Islands, and
                  is there dressed under-ground, and eaten by the people. There were several sorts
                  of trees on this island which grow in the Society Isles, and likewise some plants
                  which we had not seen before. The soil was extremely scanty; the foundation
                  consisted of coral, very little elevated above the surface of the water. On this
                  we found a coarse white sand, mixed with fragments of coral and shells, and a very
                  thin covering of mould. We advanced insensibly round the point, so as to come
                  behind the habitations, and discovered another point jutting out into the lagoon,
                  and forming a kind of bay, of which the shore was perfectly covered with
                  shrubberies and groves. Between the two points the water was very shallow; and we
                  perceived a great body of the natives crossing over from the farthest point, and
                  dragging their spears after them. We immediately retired into the thicket, and
                  passed by the huts, of which all the inhabitants were on the beach. These huts
                  were very small and low, covered with a kind of matting of coco-nut branches. We
                  only saw some dogs in them. Their boat-houses were exactly of the same materials,
                  only a little larger. The canoes in them were very short, but stout, and pointed
                  at both ends, and had sharp keel. As soon as we came on the beach, we mixed among
                  the natives, who were rather surprised to see us come out of their village. We
                  acquainted the lieutenant who commanded our boats with the hostile appearances we
                  had seen, upon which our people were upon their guard, and prepared to reimbark.
                  In the mean time Mahine assisted us in conversing with the natives, who told us
                  that they had a chief or areekee, and that they called their island Teoukea. Their
                  language, upon the whole, approached very much to the Taheitian dialect, except
                  that their pronunciation was more coarse and guttural. The reinforcement now began
                  to appear in the bushes, armed with long clubs, or round short staves, and spears,
                  some fourteen feet, some nine feet long, pointed with the jagged tail of the
                  sting-ray. We therefore stepped into our boats, but the natives crouded about
                  them, and seemed in doubt whether they should detain us or not; however, as our
                  retreat had been too early for their scheme, they appeared contented with our
                  departure, and assisted us in pushing off the boats. Some threw small stones into
                  the water near us, and all seemed to glory in having, as it were, frightened us
                  off. They all talked a great deal, and very loud, after we were gone, and at last
                  seated themselves along the beach, in the shade of the trees. We were no sooner on
                  board, and had recited our adventures, than the captain ordered four or five
                  cannon-shot to be fired over their heads, and into the sea before them, to shew
                  what he could do. These balls, and especially the last, terrified them so much,
                  that they all ran away from this point with the greatest precipitation. The number
                  of coco-nuts which we obtained among them did not amount to more than thirty, and
                  the dogs were about five. Mr. Byron found wells on this island, which, though they
                  afforded but a small quantity of fresh water, may be sufficient to supply the few
                  inhabitants with this necessary element. That navigator likewise met with
                  burying-places of stone, in the grove, which have a very great affinity with the
                  Taheitian maraïs. The offerings of animal and vegetable food, hung on the branches
                  of trees around these cemeteries, strengthen that similarity. There is reason to
                  believe, from this circumstance, as well as from the form, manners, and language
                  of the people, that they are very nearly allied to the happier inhabitants of the
                  mountainous isles in the neighbourhood. The great lagoons within their circular
                  islands are probably plentiful reservoirs of fish, from whence they are supplied
                  with constant food. The sandy barren part of their ledges is a fit place upon
                  which turtles may deposit their eggs; and it appears from the fragments found by
                  the Dolphin's people, that they know how to catch these large creatures, whose
                  nutritive flesh and shell must be a delicious treat to them. The few plants which
                  thrive about them are very useful, and furnish them with the means of facilitating
                  the capture of fish; some trees are so large that their trunks may be used for
                  canoes, and their branches for weapons and tools. The coco-palm, which is the
                  principal support of many nations on the globe, is likewise of infinite service to
                  them, and almost every part of it is useful. The nuts which it bears, whilst they
                  are green, contain from a pint to a quart of limpid liquor, which has a very
                  pleasant sweetness, joined to a peculiar agreeable flavour; its coolness and
                  integrant particles, doubtless, make it a most delicious draught, powerful beyond
                  comparison in quenching thirst in a hot climate. When the nut grows older, the
                  kernel forms, which is at first like a rich cream, and afterwards grows firm and
                  very oily, like an almond, being extremely nutritious. The oil is frequently
                  expressed, and employed to anoint the hair and the whole body, at certain times.
                  The hard shell provides the natives with cups; and the fibrous coating round it
                  affords all kinds of cordage, which are strong, elastic, and not much impaired by
                  constant use. Several articles of Indian houshold furniture, and several sorts of
                  ornaments are made with it. The long feathered leaves or branches, which spread
                  from the top of the stem, are fit coverings for their houses; and when plaited,
                  make good baskets for provisions. The inner bark yields a kind of cloth,
                  sufficient for covering the body in a hot climate; and the stem itself, when grown
                  too old to bear, is at least fit to be used in the construction of a hut, or may
                  make the mast of a canoe. But besides fish and vegetable food, they have also
                  dogs, which live upon fish, and are reckoned excellent meat by the natives of the
                  Society Islands, to whom they are known. Thus Providence, in its wise
                  dispensations, made even these insignificant narrow ledges rich enough in the
                  productions of nature, to supply a whole race of men with the necessaries of life.
                  And here we cannot but express our admiration, that the minutest agents are
                  subservient to the purposes of the Almighty Creator. The coral is known to be the
                  fabrick of a little worm, which enlarges its house, in proportion as its own bulk
                  encreases. This little creature, which has scarce sensation enough to distinguish
                  it from a plant, builds up a rocky structure from the bottom of a sea too deep to
                  be measured by human art, till it reaches the surface, and offers a firm basis for
                  the residence of man! The number of these low islands is very great, and we are
                  far from being acquainted with them all. In the whole extent of the Pacific Ocean,
                  between the tropics, they are to be met with; however, they are remarkably
                  frequent for the space of ten or fifteen degrees to the eastward of the Society
                  Islands. Quiros, Schouten, Roggewein, Byron, Wallis, Carteret, Bougainville, and
                  Cook have each met with new islands in their different courses; and what is most
                  remarkable, they have found them inhabited at the distance of two hundred and
                  forty leagues to the east of Taheitee. Nothing is more probable than that on every
                  new track other islands of this kind will still be met with, and particularly
                  between the 16th and 17th degree of S. latitude, no navigator having hitherto run
                  down on that parallel towards the Society Islands. It remains a subject worthy the
                  investigation of philosophers, to consider from what probable principles these
                  islands are so extremely numerous, and form so great an archipelago to windward of
                  the Society Islands, whilst they are only scattered at considerable distances
                  beyond that group of mountainous islands? It is true, there is another archipelago
                  of coral ledges far to the westward; I mean the Friendly Islands; but these are of
                  a different nature, and appear to be of a much older date; they occupy more space,
                  and have a greater quantity of soil, on which all the vegetable productions of the
                  higher lands may be raised.</p>
               <!-- AN April 3: Another two coordinates written as '17th' and '16th'. -->

               <p><date>[Monday 18.]</date>After leaving Teoukea we stood off and on during night,
                  and then continued our course beyond the adjacent island, which is comprehended
                  under Mr. Byron's appellation of King George's Islands. It resembled Teoukea
                  perfectly, and only seemed to be larger. Its length from N. to S. appeared to be
                  near eight leagues, and the breadth of its lagoon five or six miles. It had
                  numerous clumps of bushes and trees, and was adorned with a great number of
                  coco-nut palms.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 19.]</date>The next morning, at eight o'clock, we decried another
                  island of the same nature, but which we suppose had not been seen before. Towards
                  noon another appeared to the westward, which we coasted all the afternoon. It was
                  about eight leagues long, and full of people, who ran along the shore with very
                  long spears in their hands. The lagoon within was very spacious, and several
                  canoes sailed about upon it. It appears to me, that the most elevated and richest
                  spots on the coral-ledges, are generally to leeward, sheltered from the violence
                  of the surf. In this sea, however, there are seldom such violent storms, as might
                  make these isles uncomfortable places of abode; and when the weather is fair, it
                  must be very pleasant sailing on the smooth water in the lagoon, whilst the ocean
                  without is disagreeably agitated. A third new island was seen in the evening,
                  which we left the next morning, after we had lain to all night. This group captain
                  Cook called Palliser's Islands; they are situated in about 15° 36' S. latitude,
                  and 146° 30' W.longitude. The northernmost of these islands seem to be the
                  Pernicious Islands on which Roggewein lost the African galley. As Mr. Byron found
                  a boat's rudder on Teoukea, which is at a short distance from these isles, that
                  circumstance serves to confirm my supposition .</p>

               <p>We now steered to the S. W. being clear of the low-islands, and continued standing
                  on, the following night, towards the island of Taheite. The general satisfaction
                  which this course gave to all on board can scarcely be described. Assured of the
                  good disposition of the inhabitants, we could look upon this island as our second
                  home. Our sick had some hopes of recovery, by having an opportunity of walking or
                  resting in its cool shades, and by using the light salubrious diet of the
                  islanders. The rest expected to acquire new strength and vigour, to enable them to
                  encounter those perils and hardships which were yet in reserve for them. The
                  captain was sure of meeting with that abundance of refreshments, which would
                  enable him to bring the voyage to a happy conclusion; the astronomer longed to fix
                  an observatory on shore, in order to determine the rate of going of the
                  time-keeper, which had not been settled since our departure from New Zeeland; and
                  we were not less desirous of returning to this island, in order to complete, in
                  some measure, a botanical collection, which our short stay in the winter season
                  had left but too imperfect.</p>

               <p>Our friend Mahine was perhaps more anxious than us all to see Taheitee, which he
                  had never visited, though many of his relations and friends resided there. As the
                  natives of the Society Islands allow it the first rank in affluence and power; and
                  as we had frequently confirmed this testimony to him, his curiosity was so much
                  the greater. But he had other motives which prompted him to wish himself
                  there.</p>

               <p>He had collected a considerable number of curiosities, which he was well convinced
                  would give him weight among his countrymen; and he had acquired such a variety of
                  new ideas, and seen so many distant and unknown countries, that he was persuaded
                  he would attract and demand their attention. The prospect of being courted by
                  every body, and the idea of distinguishing himself by his intimacy with us, by his
                  acquaintance with our manners, and above all, by making use of our fire arms for
                  his diversion, gave him infinite pleasure. It is not to be doubted, that it was
                  inhanced by the hope of being serviceable to all his shipmates, whom he loved with
                  the sincerest affection, and by whom he was generally esteemed in return.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 21.]</date>We discovered land about ten o'clock the next morning,
                  which in a few hours afterwards we knew to be part of Taheitee. We stood towards
                  it all the day, but could not reach it before it became dark, and were therefore
                  obliged to stay out another night. Every person on board gazed continually at this
                  queen of tropical islands; and though I was extremely ill of my bilious disorder,
                  I crawled on deck, and fixed my eyes with great eagerness upon it, as upon a place
                  where I hoped my pains would ease. Early in the morning I awoke, and was as much
                  surprised at the beauty of the prospect, as if I had never beheld it before. It
                  was indeed infinitely more beautiful at present, than it had been eight months
                  ago, owing to the difference of the season. The forests on the mountains were all
                  clad in fresh foliage, and gloried in many variegated hues; and even the lower
                  hills were not entirely destitute of pleasing sports, and covered with herbage.
                  But the plains, above all, shone forth in the greatest luxuriance of colours, the
                  brightest tints of verdure being profusely lavished upon their fertile groves; in
                  short, the whole called to our mind the description of Calypso's enchanted
                  island.</p>

               <p>With such a landscape before us, it cannot be doubted, but that our eyes were
                  continually fixed upon it. We had the farther pleasure to distinguish every
                  well-known spot as we sailed along. At last the beautiful scenery of Matavaï
                  opened to our view in all its grandeur; and we directed our course into the bay,
                  from whence we had sailed near eight months before.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VI.</l>

                  <l>An account of our second visit to the island of o-Taheitee.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. April.][Friday 22.]</date>WE were no sooner discovered from the
                  shore, than several canoes put off to welcome us with presents of fruit. Among the
                  first who came on board, were two young men of some note, whom we immediately
                  invited into the cabin, where they were made acquainted with Mahine. The
                  politeness of the nation required that they should make him a present of clothing;
                  accordingly they took off their own upper garments, which were of the best sort,
                  and put them on him. He gratified them in return with a sight of his rarities, and
                  made them a present of a few red feathers, which they valued very highly.</p>

               <p>At eight o'clock in the morning we dropped an anchor in Matavaï bay, and were
                  surrounded presently after by a whole fleet of canoes, in which our old friends
                  brought us fish, bread-fruit, apples, coco-nuts, and bananas, all which they sold
                  at low rates with the greatest readiness. Their fish were mullets and bonitos,
                  which they brought perfectly alive in a kind of trough, fixed between the two
                  hulls of a double canoe, and provided with wicker-work at both ends, where the
                  water freely entered.</p>

               <p>Some tents were now established once more on Point Venus, for the purpose of
                  making astronomical observations, as well as for the convenience of trading,
                  wooding, and watering. The captain, Dr. Sparrman, and my father went on shore,
                  whilst I remained on board so ill that I could scarcely crawl about. I amused
                  myself, however, in trading out of the cabin windows, and by that means collected
                  a number of curious fish, whilst they brought home nothing new from their
                  excursion. They had found the appearance of the whole country much improved; the
                  verdure luxuriant, many trees still loaded with fruit; the brooks full of water,
                  and a great number of new houses built. Mahine, who went on shore with them, did
                  not return at night, having found several of his relations, and particularly a
                  sister, named Teïòä, one of the prettiest women on the whole island, who was
                  married to a tall, well-made man, called Noona, of the better class of people, and
                  native of Raietea. His house was very large, and near our tents, being only about
                  a hundred yards beyond the river. Mahine had laid aside his European cloaths
                  before he went on shore, and put on the elegant new dresses his friends had
                  brought him, with a degree of pleasure and eagerness, in which a natural
                  predilection for the manners of his country was very conspicuous. There are many
                  instances among different nations in an imperfect state of civilization, and
                  likewise among savages, that the force of habit produces this effect. It is no
                  wonder that a native of the Society Isles should prefer the happy life, the
                  wholesome diet, and the simple dress of his countrymen, to the constant agitation,
                  the nauseous food, and the coarse aukward garments of a set of seafaring
                  Europeans; when we have seen Eskimaux return with the utmost ardour to their own
                  desolate country, to greasy seal-skins, and rancid train-oil, after having been
                  entertained with substantial viands, the pomp of dress, and the magnificence of
                  London. Mahine had indeed found the happiness and pleasure which he had expected.
                  He was courted and looked upon as a prodigy by all the Taheitians who saw him; he
                  was feasted with their choicest meats, he received several changes of dress, and
                  revelled among the nymphs of the land. Sensible to pleasure, like all the children
                  of nature, but debarred the sight of his pretty countrywomen for a long while, and
                  perhaps tinctured with a double relish for sensuality by his acquaintance with
                  sailors, the facility of gratifying every wish had endeared the country to him,
                  and captivated him more than any thing else. Besides these incitements, the ship,
                  in a warm climate, was but an uncomfortable abode at night. There he would have
                  been pent up in a narrow, close, ill-scented cabin; whereas on the shore he
                  breathed a pure air, deliciously perfumed by the exhalations of fragrant flowers,
                  and was continually fanned by a cooling gentle land-wind, exactly like young
                  Zephyr, who has such great obligation to the poets. Whatever the exalted degree of
                  pleasure might be, which fell to the share of the happy Mahine, there were those
                  on board who thought their situation worthy of envy. Immediately on the first
                  evening several women came on board, and the excesses of the night were
                  incredible. I have already observed before, that the women who made a practice of
                  this intercourse were all of the common or lowest class, and I shall only add at
                  present, that they were the same who had been so liberal of their favours during
                  our first stay at this island. It is therefore obvious, that the prostitutes are
                  only a particular set among the rest, and that the custom is far from being so
                  general as hath been hitherto supposed, on the faith of other accounts. It would
                  be singularly absurd, if o-Maï were to report to his countrymen, that chastity is
                  not known in England, because he did not find the ladies cruel in the Strand.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 23.]</date>The next day we had delightful weather, and a great
                  number of natives came on board. I ventured to go on shore to the tents in the
                  forenoon, but after walking about thirty yards, I was obliged to turn back and sit
                  down, in order to prevent my fainting away. The fine apples, which the natives
                  brought for sale, looked so extremely tempting, that I ventured to transgress the
                  positive order of the physician, and having regaled myself with one of them,
                  returned on board immediately. Not less than fifty large bonitos had been
                  purchased by our people during my short stay on shore, for spikenails and knives;
                  and besides these we had obtained such a quantity of fruit, that we were enabled
                  to serve it out in plentiful portions. At my return I found a native in irons, who
                  had already taken an opportunity to pilfer some nails in the ship. Several of the
                  better sort of people interceded very strongly, and presented a number of bonitos,
                  in order to procure his release. These were accepted, and he was set at liberty,
                  with a warning not to practise the same tricks again.</p>

               <p>The women who had passed the first night on board returned in the evening, and
                  several others came with them; so that every sailor had his partner. The night was
                  very fair and moon-light, and being dedicated to St. George, the tutelar saint of
                  England, the pleasures of Venus were joined to the usual orgies of the
                  festival.</p>

               <p>Dr. Sparrman and my father had been on shore the whole day, and returned after
                  sunset. They had walked across One-tree-hill into the province of Parre. There
                  they met with Tootahah's mother, and Happaï, the father of the king, to whom they
                  made some small presents. They were likewise accosted by a native there, who did
                  them several good offices, and particularly swam a considerable way in a pond
                  where they had shot some wild-ducks. They continued marching to the westward at
                  least ten miles from Point Venus to their new friend's dwelling. He prepared them
                  a very good meal of fruit, and baked them a rich and most delicious kind of
                  pudding, which is made of the kernel of coco-nuts and eddy-roots, scraped very
                  small, and mixed together. The trees about his hut furnished him with abundance of
                  fresh coco-nuts, of which he offered a great number to his guests. After dinner he
                  presented them with a perfumed dress of the best sort, and attended them back
                  again with a quantity of fruit, which remained untouched. He slept that night on
                  board, and went away the next morning highly delighted with several knives, nails,
                  and beads. As they returned they came near the king's house, and there saw the two
                  goats which captain Furneaux had presented to him. The she-goat had brought two
                  kids soon after our departure, which were almost full-grown. The whole breed was
                  in excellent order, extremely sleek and well fed, and their hair as soft as silk.
                  If the natives continue to take the same care of them, they will shortly be able
                  to turn them wild on the mountains, where they would propagate prodigiously, and
                  afford them a new and most valuable article of food.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 24.]</date>The next morning I found myself greatly relieved by the
                  apple which I had eaten; and captain Cook, who still had some remains of his
                  bilious complaint, had felt the same effect from the use of this excellent fruit.
                  We continued therefore to eat it; and recommended it to all the bilious patients.
                  Our recovery in consequence was much quicker than we had any reason to expect, and
                  in a few days no other symptom than a slight weakness remained.</p>

               <p>A number of chiefs came on board this day with large hogs, and canoes loaded with
                  fruit, all which were purchased for iron ware. Towards noon, the king, O-Too, with
                  his sister Towraï, and his brother came on board, though it had rained just
                  before. They brought a present of several hogs to captain Cook, and the king
                  seemed to have entirely laid aside that distrust, which had so strongly
                  characterised him before. They received some hatchets; but the principal thing for
                  which they enquired were red parrot's feathers, which they called oora. The
                  accounts of Mahine, and the little presents of this precious plumage which he had
                  made to his friends, had given rise to this enquiry. We immediately searched all
                  our collections from the Friendly Islands, and found a considerable quantity,
                  which we did not think proper to show all at once. O-Too and his sister were
                  gratified with a sight of a part of our riches, at which they seemed perfectly
                  amazed and delighted. I have already mentioned, when I spoke of purchasing these
                  feathers, that some were glued on a piece of cloth close to each other, and some
                  were dispersed on stars of coco-nut core wrought in fret-work. Our royal guests
                  received a small portion of the first sort, about the size of two fingers, beside
                  a star or two, with which, for the present, they went away contented, as it
                  seemed, beyond their warmest hopes. These red feathers, with which they ornament
                  the dress of their warriors, and which perhaps are made use of on some other
                  solemn occasions, are valued at an incredible rate in this island, and clearly
                  prove the existence of a great degree of luxury among the natives.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 25.]</date>On the next day we had a number of visits from different
                  chiefs, amongst whom was our friend Potatowhis wife Whainee-ow, and his former
                  wife Polatehera, whom the fame of our great riches of red feathers had reached.
                  They brought with them numbers of hogs, many of which were exchanged with the
                  utmost avidity for small pieces of cloth covered with red feathers. The difference
                  between the present opulence of these islanders, and their situation eight months
                  before, was very astonishing to us. It was with the utmost difficulty that we had
                  been able to purchase a few hogs during our first stay, having been obliged to
                  look upon it as a great favour, when the king or chief parted with one of these
                  animals. At present our decks were so crouded with them, that we were obliged to
                  make a hog-stye on shore. We concluded, therefore, that they were now entirely
                  recovered from the blow which they had received in their late unfortunate war with
                  the lesser peninsula, and of which they still felt the bad effects at our visit in
                  August 1773. In the morning we had continual hard showers, and such violent
                  thunder and lightning, that, for the sake of greater safety, a copper chain was
                  fixed to the maintop-gallant-mast-head. Just as a sailor was clearing it of the
                  shrouds, and had thrown the end over board, a terrible flash of lightning appeared
                  exactly over the ship, and the flame was seen to run down along the whole length
                  of the chain. A tremendous thunder-clap instantaneously followed, which shook the
                  whole ship, to the no small surprize of both the Europeans and Taheitians on
                  board. However we happily suffered not the least damage from this explosion. This
                  circumstance confirms the great use of the electrical chain, which had been so
                  clearly proved at Batavia, while captain Cook lay there in the Endeavour .</p>

               <p>The rain did not abate till the evening, when the showers became intermittent, and
                  entirely ceased the next morning. <date>[Tuesday 26.]</date>The first intelligence
                  which we received from our tents was, that several waistcoats and blankets
                  belonging to the captain had been stolen by the natives, from the man who was
                  washing them. The captain embarked therefore about ten o'clock, in order to visit
                  O-Too, by whose help he hoped to recover his bed-cloaths. I was now so well
                  recovered, that I ventured to accompany him in the boat, with my father, Dr.
                  Sparrman, and some others. When we approached O-Parre, we beheld one of the most
                  magnificent sights which it is possible to be entertained with in the South Sea.
                  This was a very numerous sleet of great war-canoes, lying arranged along the
                  shore, completely fitted out, and manned with rowers and warriors, dressed in
                  their robes, targets, and towering helmets. The shores were lined with crouds of
                  people, and a kind of solemn silence prevailed among them. We landed, and were met
                  by Tee, one of the king's uncles, who was going to lead captain Cook into the
                  country, when the commander in chief of the fleet stepped on shore and met them.
                  At sight of him the common people exclaimed, " Towhah is coming," and made room
                  for him with a degree of veneration which surprised us. The chief advanced to
                  captain Cook, and taking him by the hand, called him his friend, and desired him
                  to step into his canoe. It appeared to us at that time that Tee was uneasy, and
                  did not approve of captain Cook's going with Towhah; therefore, when we were just
                  abreast of his canoe, which was one of the largest, the captain stopped short, and
                  refused to go on board. Towhah left him very coolly, and, to all appearance hurt
                  at the refusal, stepped into one of the canoes. We then walked down along the
                  whole range of vessels, whose prows were turned to the shore. All our former ideas
                  of the power and affluence of this island were so greatly surpassed by this
                  magnificent scene, that we were perfectly left in admiration. We counted no less
                  than one hundred and fifty-nine great double war-canoes, from fifty to ninety feet
                  long betwixt stem and stern. When we consider the imperfect tools which these
                  people are possessed of, we can never sufficiently admire the patience and labour
                  with which they have cut down huge trees, dubbed the plank, made them perfectly
                  smooth, and at last brought these unweildy vessels to the great degree of
                  perfection in which we saw them. A hatchet, or, properly, an adze of stone, a
                  chissel, and a piece of coral, are their tools, to which they only add the rough
                  skin of a ray, when they smooth or polish their timber. All these canoes are
                  double, that is, two joined together, side by side, by fifteen or eighteen strong
                  transverse timbers, which sometimes project a great way beyond both the hulls,
                  being from twelve to four and twenty feet in length, and about three feet and a
                  half asunder. When they are so long, they make a platform, fifty, sixty, or
                  seventy feet in length. On the outside of each canoe there are, in that case, two
                  or three longitudinal spars, and between the two connected canoes one spar is
                  fixed to the transverse beams. The heads and sterns were raised several feet out
                  of the water, particularly the latter, which stood up like long beaks, sometimes
                  near twenty feet high, and were cut into various shapes. A white piece of cloth
                  was commonly fixed between the two beaks of each double canoe, in lieu of an
                  ensign, and the wind swelled it out like a sail. Some had likewise a striped
                  cloth, with various red chequers, which, as we afterwards learned, were the marks
                  of the divisions under the different commanders. At the head there was a tall
                  pillar of carved-work, on the top of which stood the figure of a man, or rather of
                  an urchin, whose face was commonly shaded by a board like a bonnet, and sometimes
                  painted red with ochre. These pillars were generally covered with bunches of black
                  feathers, and long streamers of feathers hung from them. The gunwale of the canoes
                  was commonly two or three feet above the water, but not always formed in the same
                  manner; for some had flat bottoms, and sides nearly perpendicular upon them,
                  whilst others were bow-sided, with a sharp keel, like the section drawn in captain
                  Cook's first voyage . A fighting stage was erected towards the head of the boat,
                  and rested on pillars from four to six feet high, generally ornamented with
                  carving. This stage extended beyond the whole breadth of the double canoe, and was
                  from twenty to twenty-four feet long, and about eight or ten feet wide. The rowers
                  sat in the canoe, or under the fighting stage on the platform, which consisted of
                  the transverse beams and longitudinal spars; so that wherever these crossed, there
                  was room for one man in the compartment. Those which had eighteen beams, and three
                  longitudinal spars on each side, besides one longitudinal spar between the two
                  canoes, had consequently no less than a hundred and forty-four rowers, besides
                  eight men to steer them, four of whom were placed in each stern. This however was
                  not the case with the greatest part of the canoes here assembled, which had no
                  projecting platforms, and where the rowers or paddlers sat in the hulls of the
                  canoe. The warriors were stationed on the sighting stage, to the number of fifteen
                  or twenty. Their dress was the most singular, and at the same time the most thewy
                  sight in the whole fleet. They had three large and ample pieces of cloth, with a
                  hole in the middle, put on one above another. The undermost and largest was white,
                  the next red, and the uppermost and shortest brown. Their targets or breast-plates
                  were made of wicker-work, covered with feathers and shark's teeth, and hardly any
                  of the warriors were without them. On the contrary, those who wore helmets, were
                  few in number. These helmets were of an enormous size, being near five feet high.
                  They consisted of a long cylindrical basket of wicker-work, of which the foremost
                  half was hid by a semicylinder of a closer texture, which became broader towards
                  the top, and there separated from the basket, so as to come forwards in a curve.
                  This frontlet, of the length of four feet, was closely covered with the glossy
                  bluish green feathers of a sort of pigeon, and with an elegant border of white
                  plumes. A prodigious number of the long tail feathers of tropic birds diverged
                  from its edges, in a radiant line, resembling that glory of light with which our
                  painters commonly ornament the heads of angels and saints. A large turban of cloth
                  was required for this huge unweildy machine to rest upon; but as it is intended
                  merely to strike the beholder with admiration, and can be of no service, the
                  warriors soon took it off, and placed it on the platform near them. The principal
                  commanders were moreover distinguished by long round tails, made of green and
                  yellow feathers, which hung down on the back, and put us in mind of the Turkish
                  bashas. Towhah, their admiral, wore five of them, to the ends of which several
                  strings of coco-nut core were added, with a few red feathers affixed to them. He
                  had no helmet on, but wore a fine turban, which sat very gracefully upon his head.
                  He was a man seemingly near sixty years of age, but extremely vigorous, tall, and
                  of a very engaging noble countenance.</p>

               <p>Having reached our boat again, we rowed along under the sterns of the canoes to
                  the end of the file. In each canoe we took notice of vast bundles of spears, and
                  long clubs or battle-axes, placed upright against the platform; and every warrior
                  had either a club or spear in his hand. Vast heaps of large stones were likewise
                  piled up in every canoe, being their only missile weapons. Besides the vessels of
                  war, which we found to consist of one hundred and fifty-nine double canoes, we
                  counted seventy smaller canoes without the ranks, most of which were double
                  likewise, with a roof on the stern, intended for the reception of the chiefs at
                  night, and as victuallers to the fleet. A few of them were seen, on which
                  banana-leaves were very conspicuous; and these the natives told us were to receive
                  the killed, and they called them e-vaa no t'Eatua, " the canoes of the Divinity."
                  The immense number of people thus assembled together was, in fact, more surprising
                  than the splendor of the whole shew. Upon a very moderate calculation, there could
                  not be less than fifteen hundred warriors, and four thousand paddlers, besides
                  those who were in the provision boats, and the prodigious crouds on the shore.</p>

               <p>We were at a loss to know the meaning of this armament, nor could we obtain any
                  information till we came back to our ship. The king having left O-Parre and gone
                  into the district of Matavaï, we returned on board about noon. There we found many
                  chiefs, and among the rest Potatow, who dined with us, and informed us, that the
                  whole armament was intended against the island of Eimeo, of which the chief, a
                  vassal of O-Too, had revolted. We learnt at the same time, to our greater
                  surprize, that the fleet which we had seen was only the naval force of the single
                  district of Atahooroo, and that all the other districts could furnish their quota
                  of vessels in proportion to their size. This account opened our eyes, in regard to
                  the population of the island, and convinced us in a few moments, that it was much
                  more considerable than we had hitherto supposed. The result of a most moderate
                  computation gave us one hundred and twenty thousand persons in the two peninsulas
                  of Taheitee .</p>

               <p>The number of districts in both peninsulas amounts to forty-three; we assumed at a
                  medium, that each could equip only twenty war-canoes, and we supposed each of
                  these to be manned only with thirty-five men. The sum of men employed in the
                  fleet, exclusive of the attending boats, would then be no less than thirty
                  thousand; and these we assume as the fourth part of the whole nation. What makes
                  this computation still more moderate is, that we suppose these thirty thousand to
                  be the whole number of persons capable of bearing arms, or fit for service; and
                  that the common proportion of these men, to the rest of the people, is much
                  smaller than one fourth, in all the countries of Europe.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook returned to O-Parre with us in the afternoon. The whole fleet had
                  already left that district, and the canoes were dispersed; but we found O-Too, and
                  were extremely well received. He conducted us to several of his houses, through a
                  country which perfectly resembled a garden; shady fruit-trees, shrubberies with
                  odoriferous flowers, and rivulets enlarged into limpid sheets of water,
                  continually varied before the eye. The houses were all kept in the best order;
                  some were surrounded with walls of reeds, but others were open like the usual
                  dwellings of the people. We passed several hours in his company, with some of his
                  relations, and principal attendants, who took every method to express their
                  friendship towards us. The conversation, though not yet very coherent, was however
                  extremely lively; and the women in particular laughed and chatted with the
                  greatest good humour. We often found them diverting each other by playing upon
                  words; and sometimes we were highly entertained with a real witty stroke, or a
                  humorous sally. It was near sunset when we departed, after sharing some part of
                  the happiness which seems to be so natural to this favoured island. The calm
                  contented state of the natives; their simple way of life; the beauty of the
                  landscape; the excellence of the climate; the abundance, salubrity, and delicious
                  taste of its fruits, were altogether enchanting, and filled the heart with
                  rapture. Surely the satisfaction which we naturally feel in the happiness of
                  others, is one of the most delightful sensations with which the human soul is
                  blessed.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 27.]</date>The next morning the captain and my father paid another
                  visit to O-Too at Parre, and found there the admiral of the fleet, Towhah, to whom
                  they were introduced by O-Too himself. They all came on board before noon, and
                  visited every part of the ship above and below decks, particularly to gratify the
                  curiosity of Towhah who had never seen a ship before in his life. He paid more
                  attention to the multitude of new objects on board, to the strength and size of
                  the timbers, masts, and ropes, than any Taheitian we had ever seen, and found our
                  tackle so exceedingly superior to that which is usual in his country, that he
                  expressed a wish to possess several articles, especially cables and anchors. He
                  was now dressed like the rest of the people in this happy island, and naked to the
                  waist, being in the king's presence. His appearance was so much altered from what
                  it had been the day before, that I had some difficulty to recollect him. He
                  appeared now very lusty, and had a most portly paunch, which it was impossible to
                  discern under the long spacious robes of war. His hair was of a fine silvery grey,
                  and his countenance was the most engaging and truly good-natured which I ever
                  beheld in these islands. The king and he staid and dined with us this day, eating
                  with a very hearty appetite of all that was set before them. O-Too had entirely
                  lost his uneasy, distrustful air; he seemed to be at home, and took a great
                  pleasure in instructing Towhah in our manners. He taught him to make use of the
                  knife and fork, to eat salt to his meat, and to drink wine. He himself did not
                  refuse to drink a glass of this generous liquor, and joked with Towhah upon its
                  red colour, telling him it was blood. The honest admiral having tasted our grog,
                  which is a mixture of brandy and water, desired to taste of the brandy by itself,
                  which he called e vaï no Bretannee, British water, and drank off a small glass
                  full, without making a wry face. Both he and his Taheitian majesty were extremely
                  chearful and happy, and appeared to like our way of living, and our cookery of
                  their own excellent provisions. They told us that their fleet was intended to
                  reduce the rebellious people of Eimeo (or York Island) and their chief,
                  Te-aree-Tabonooee, to obedience, adding, that they would make the attack in a
                  district of that island, called Morea. Captain Cook proposed, in jest, to
                  accompany them with his ship, and to fire upon the enemies of O-Too, which at
                  first they smiled at, and approved of; but presently after they talked among
                  themselves, and then changing their tone, said they could not make use of his
                  assistance, being resolved to go out against Eimeo the fifth day after our
                  departure. Whatever might be the real motive of this resolution, it certainly was
                  the most politic in their situation. We were too powerful an ally, not to be
                  formidable even to those for whom we should fight; and waving that consideration,
                  it was making the people of Eimeo too important, to bring our invincible
                  four-pounders against them; for to these only would the victory be ascribed, even
                  by the vanquished; and as soon as we should have left the island, the conquerors
                  would lose much of that importance which they had in the eyes of their enemies
                  before the battle. Such a degree of contempt might prove fatal to them in the
                  end.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 28.]</date>My father, with Dr. Sparrman, a sailor and a marine,
                  went on shore the next day in the afternoon, with an intent to go up to the summit
                  of the mountains. We had a great number of canoes about us all this time, and in
                  them there were always some chiefs of different districts, who brought on board
                  their hogs, and their most valuable possessions, in order to exchange them for red
                  feathers, on which they placed an extravagant value. These feathers produced a
                  great revolution in the connections which the women had formed with our sailors;
                  and happy was he who had laid in a sufficient stock of this useful and precious
                  merchandize at the Friendly Islands; the women crouded about him, and he had the
                  choice of the fairest. That our red feathers had infused a general and
                  irresistible longing into the minds of all the people, will appear from the
                  following circumstance. I have observed, in the former part of this narrative,
                  that the women of the families of chiefs never admitted the visits of Europeans;
                  and also that whatever liberties some unmarried girls might with impunity allow
                  themselves, the married state had always been held sacred and unspotted at
                  Taheitee. But such was the force of the temptation, that a chief actually offered
                  his wife to captain Cook, and the lady, by her husband's order, attempted to
                  captivate him, by an artful display of all her charms, seemingly in such a
                  careless manner, as many a woman would be at a loss to imitate. I was sorry, for
                  the sake of human nature, that this proposal came from a man, whose general
                  character was in other respects very fair. It was Potatow who could descend to
                  this meanness, from the high spirit of grandeur which he had formerly shewn. We
                  expressed great indignation at his conduct, and rebuked him for his frailty. It
                  was very fortunate for us, that a considerable quantity of this red plumage had
                  been disposed of by our sailors at the Marquesas, in exchange for artificial
                  curiosities, before they knew the high value which it bore at Taheitee. Had all
                  these riches been brought to this island, the price of provisions would in all
                  likelihood have been raised to such an unreasonable height, that we might have
                  fared even worse than during our first visit. A single little feather was a
                  valuable present, much superior to a bead or a nail, and a very small bit of
                  cloth, closely covered with them, produced such extatic joy in him who received
                  it, as we might suppose in an European, who should unexpectedly find the diamond
                  of the Great Mogol. Potatow brought on board his monstrous helmet of war of five
                  feet high, and sold it for red feathers; some others followed his example, and
                  targets without number were bought by almost every sailor. But much more
                  surprising than this, was their offering for sale those curious and singular
                  mourning dresses, which are mentioned in captain Cook's first voyage , and which
                  they would not part with on any account at that time. These dresses being made of
                  the rarest productions of their island, and of the surrounding sea, and being
                  wrought with the greatest care and ingenuity, must of course bear a very
                  considerable value among them. A number of complete mourning dresses, not less
                  than ten, were purchased by different persons on board, and brought to England.
                  Captain Cook has given one to the British Museum, and my father has had the honour
                  of presenting another to the University of Oxford, now deposited in the Ashmolean
                  Museum. This remarkable dress consists of a thin flat board, of a semicircular
                  form, about two feet long, and four or five inches broad. Upon these are fixed
                  four or five chosen mother of pearl shells, by means of strings of coco-nut core
                  passed through several holes which are pierced in the wood, and in the edges of
                  the shells. A larger shell of the same kind, fringed with bluish-green pigeon's
                  feathers, is fixed to each end of this board, of which the concave margin is
                  placed upwards. Upon the middle of the concave margin there are two shells, which
                  together form nearly a circle about six inches in diameter; and on the top of
                  these a very large piece of mother of pearl, commonly with its purple coating on,
                  is placed upright. It is of an oblong shape, enlarging rather towards the upper
                  end, and its height is nine or ten inches. A great number of long white feathers,
                  from the tropic bird's tail, form a radiant circle round it. From the convex
                  margin of the board hangs down a tissue of small pieces of mother of pearl, in
                  size and shape something like an apron. This consists of ten or fifteen rows of
                  pieces about an inch and a half long, and one-tenth of an inch in breadth, each
                  piece being perforated at both ends, in order to be fixed to the other rows. These
                  rows are made perfectly streight and parallel to each other; therefore the
                  uppermost are divided, and extremely short, on account of the semicircular shape
                  of the board. The lower rows are likewise commonly narrower, and from the ends of
                  each row a string hangs down, ornamented with opercula of shells, and sometimes
                  with European beads. A tassel or round tail of green and yellow feathers hangs
                  down from the upper ends of the board on the side of the apron, which is the most
                  shewy part of the whole dress. A strong rope is fixed on each side of that pair of
                  shells, which rests immediately upon the concave margin of the board, and this
                  string is tied about the head of the person who wears the dress. The whole piece
                  hangs down perpendicularly before him, the apron hides his breast and stomach, the
                  board covers his neck and shoulders, and the first pair of shells comes before his
                  face. In one of these shells there is a small hole cut out, through which the
                  wearer must look in order to find his way. The uppermost shell, and the long
                  feathers round it, extend at least two feet beyond the natural height of the man.
                  The other parts of his dress are not less remarkable. He puts on a mat or a piece
                  of cloth with a hole in the middle, like the usual dress of the country. Over this
                  he places another of the same sort, but of which the fore part hangs down almost
                  to the feet, and is beset with many rows of buttons made of pieces of coco-nut
                  shell. A belt, consisting of a twisted rope of brown and white cloth, is tied over
                  this dress round the waist; a large cloak of net-work, closely beset with great
                  bluish feathers, covers the whole back; and a turban of brown and yellow cloth,
                  bound with a great quantity of small twisted ropes of brown and white cloth, is
                  placed on the head. An ample hood of alternate parallel stripes of brown, yellow,
                  and white cloth descends from the turban to cover the neck and shoulders, in order
                  that as little as possible of the human figure may appear. Commonly the nearest
                  relation of the deceased wears this whimsical dress, and carries in one hand a
                  pair of large pearl-shells, which are clapped or beaten together continually, and
                  in the other a stick, armed with shark's teeth, with which he wounds any of the
                  natives who chance to come near him . What may have been the origin of this
                  singular custom we cannot determine; but to me it seems to be calculated to
                  inspire horror; and the fantastical dress in which it is performed, has so much of
                  that strange and terrifying shape which our nurses attribute to ghosts and
                  goblins, that I am almost tempted to believe some ridiculous superstition lurks
                  under this funeral rite. The spirit of the deceased, exacting a tribute of grief
                  and tears from its survivors, and therefore wounding them with the shark's teeth,
                  would not be an idea too extravagant for men to have adopted. Whatever it might
                  be, we never could obtain any intelligence from the natives on the subject; they
                  gave us an account of the ceremony, and of the dress, telling us the names of
                  every part; but it was impossible to make ourselves understood, as soon as we
                  wanted to know why it was so? The most singular fact with which Mahine acquaint
                  us, relative to the mourning rite, was, that at the death of a man, a woman
                  performs the ceremony; but when a woman dies, a man must go the rounds with the
                  scare-crow dress. In England the curiosity has been so great, that a Taheitian
                  mourning-dress, which a sailor brought over, has been sold for five and twenty
                  guineas. But in this respect the Taheitians are no way inferior to civilized
                  nations. In consequence of Mahine's relation to his adventures, the chiefs
                  continually importuned us to give them curiosities from Tonga-Tabboo, &gt;Waïhoo,
                  and Waitahoo , instead of English goods, in exchange for their provisions and
                  curiosities. The feathered head-dresses of the two last islands, and the baskets,
                  clubs, and painted cloth of the former, pleased them excessively; nay, they were
                  eager to possess the mats of Tonga-Tabboo, though in general they perfectly
                  resembled their own manufacture. Our sailors therefore frequently took advantage
                  of their disposition, and gave them the same mats under another name, which they
                  had formerly purchased in their own island, or in the Society Islands. Thus there
                  is a similarity in the general inclinations of human nature, and particularly in
                  the desires of all nations who are not in a state of savage barbarism, but have
                  the advantage of civilization. The resemblance will appear still more perfect, if
                  we relate with what eagerness the Taheitians listened to the accounts of their
                  youthful traveller. They always attended him in crouds, their oldest men esteemed
                  him highly, and the principal people of the island, not excepting the royal
                  family, courted his company. Besides the pleasure of hearing him, they had
                  likewise that of obtaining a number of valuable presents from him, which cost them
                  only a few kind expressions. His time was so agreeably taken up on shore, as he
                  found new friends in every hut, that he seldom came on board, unless to fetch a
                  new set of presents, or to shew the ship to his acquaintance, and to introduce
                  them to captain Cook and his shipmates. His stories, however, were too wonderful
                  sometimes to find ready belief among his audience, who now and then applied to us
                  for a confirmation of his account. The rain converted into stone, the solid white
                  rocks and mountains which we melted into fresh water, and the perpetual day of the
                  antarctic circle, were articles which even ourselves could not persuade them to
                  credit. The account of canibals in New Zeeland was more easily believed, though it
                  filled them with horror. He brought on board a company of the natives during my
                  father's absence on the hills, who were come on purpose to see the head of the New
                  Zeeland boy, which Mr. Pickersgill had preserved in spirits. He readily gratified
                  them with the sight, and their report brought great numbers to see it. I was
                  present when it was shewn, and it struck me to hear them give it a peculiar name
                  in their language. They unanimously called it te Tae-aï, which appears to be
                  equivalent to " man eater." The result of my enquiries among many of the chiefs
                  and most intelligent people, on this extraordinary circumstance, was the
                  following. They said they had a traditional report among them, that in an
                  indefinite but very remote period of time, there were man-eaters upon their
                  island, who made great havock among the inhabitants, and were a very strong robust
                  people; but that this race had long since been entirely extinct. The same account
                  was confirmed to me in the strongest terms, on my return to England, by o-Maï,
                  with whom I happened to converse upon the subject. The influence of this fact upon
                  the ancient history of Taheitee is very striking; but shall we conclude, that a
                  set of canibals have by some accident made a descent upon the island, and
                  committed depredations upon the indigenous people? or is it not rather evident,
                  that the original state of the whole nation is concealed in this tradition, and
                  that all the Taheitians were anthropophagi, before they arrived at that state of
                  civilization, which the excellence of the country and climate, and the profusion
                  of vegetables and animal food, has introduced? It is a fact no less surprising
                  than certain, that the more we examine the history of almost every nation, the
                  more we find this custom prevalent in the first periods of their existence. Traces
                  of anthropophagy are still extant at Taheitee. Captain Cook saw fifteen recent
                  jaw-bones hanging in one house . Might they not be preserved as trophies taken
                  from their enemies?</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 29.]</date>The next morning one of the natives, who had attempted to
                  steal a water-cask from our tents, was apprehended and confined. O-Too and Towhah
                  coming on board somewhat early, being made acquainted with his offence,
                  accompanied captain Cook on shore to see him punished. He was tied to a pole, and,
                  with their consent, received two dozen of very severe lashes. A great croud of
                  natives, who were spectators of this act, were so much terrified, that they began
                  to run off; but Towhah called them back, and, in a speech which lasted about four
                  or five minutes, pointed out the equity of our conduct, and the necessity of
                  punishing thefts. He represented, that though our power was infinitely superior to
                  theirs, yet we neither stole any thing, nor used any violence, but honestly paid a
                  proper price for every thing we received, and frequently gave presents where we
                  expected no return. That we had shown ourselves their best friends, and that to
                  steal from friends was a shameful action, which highly deserved to be punished.
                  The good sense and singleness of heart of this excellent old man, endeared him to
                  us, and his harangue carried persuasion among his audience. In the afternoon
                  Towhah came along side with his wife, and elderly woman, who seemed to have the
                  same excellent character as her husband. They were in a large double canoe, with a
                  roof built over the stern, and had eight rowers. The old couple invited Mr. Hodges
                  and myself to come into the canoe, and we accompanied them to Parre. Towhah asked
                  us a variety of questions during the time we were on the water, chiefly relating
                  to the nature and constitution of the country from whence we came. As he had never
                  seen any of our persons of high rank, he concluded that Mr. Banks could be no less
                  than the king's brother, and that captain Cook was high admiral. The information
                  which we gave him was received with the greatest marks of surprize and attention;
                  but when we told him we had neither their coco-nut nor bread-fruit trees, he
                  seemed to think but meanly of our country, though we enumerated all its other
                  advantages. We were no sooner landed, than he ordered a repast of fish and fruit
                  to be served up, and insisted on our partaking of it. We had just dined before we
                  left the ship, but unwilling to give offence, we sat down and ate of the
                  provisions, which were excellent. Indeed we could not but compare this happy
                  country to Mahomed's Paradise, where the appetite is never cloyed by being
                  gratified. The meal was already served, and we were going to help ourselves, when
                  Towhah desired us to stop. In a few moments one of his attendants brought a large
                  cook-knife, and some bamboo-sticks, instead of forks. Towhah carved the victuals,
                  and gave each of us a bamboo, saying he would eat in the English manner. Instead
                  of eating his bread-fruit by handfuls, he now cut it small, and took a bit of it
                  after every morsel of fish, to shew how exactly he remembered our custom since the
                  time of his dining with us. The good lady feasted apart some time afterwards,
                  according to the invariable custom of the country. We walked about and chatted
                  with them both till near sunset, when they embarked in their canoe, and returned
                  to the district called Atahooroo, part of which belonged to Towhah. They took
                  leave of us very cordially, and promised to return to the ship again in a few
                  days. We hired a double canoe for a nail, and returned on board before it was
                  dark. I found Dr. Sparrman and my father just returned from the mountains. Noona,
                  the same lively and intelligent boy whom I have already mentioned in the former
                  part of this narrative , had been their conductor. As they set out in the
                  afternoon (on the 28th) they only reached a small hut on the second ridge, having
                  crossed two deep vallies, and climbed two steep hills, rendered very slippery from
                  a smart shower which had fallen. Here they found a man with his wife and three
                  children. The man enlarged his cottage by means of branches of trees, and prepared
                  them a supper; after which, having previously made a fire, they watched and slept
                  by turns. The fire was seen on board our ship; and in return they heard the
                  ringing of the ship's bell at midnight, though they were upwards of a league
                  distant from it. The whole night was fair and cool; but their friendly host, whose
                  name was Tahéa, had a violent cough. At day break they resumed their march towards
                  the summits, and Tahea led the way, with a load of coco-nuts. The difficulties
                  increased as they ascended; the paths running along the narrow ridge of steep
                  hills, whose sides were almost perpendicular. The greatest danger arose from the
                  slipperiness, occasioned by the rains of the preceding day. When they had ascended
                  to a considerable height, they found thick shrubberies and woods on these steep
                  sides; and attempting to collect plants there, they frequently met with precipices
                  which are really tremendous. Still higher up the whole ridge was covered with a
                  forest, where they gathered a number of plants, which they had never seen in the
                  vallies below. After they had crossed the ridge, there fell a heavy shower of
                  rain; and they coming to a very dangerous part, Tahea said they could go no
                  farther. They resolved however to leave their heavy plant and provision bags
                  behind, and went up with a single musket to the summit of the mountain, which they
                  reached in about half an hour. Just about that time the clouds broke, and they had
                  a prospect of Huahine, Tethuroa, and Tabbuamanoo. The view of the fertile plain
                  under their feet, and of the valley of Matavaï, where the river makes innumerable
                  meanders, was delightful in the highest degree. Thick clouds however prevented
                  their discerning any thing on the south side of the island. In a few moments even
                  the other part was covered again, and they were involved in a mist which wetted
                  them to the skin. In their descent my father had the misfortune to fall in a very
                  rocky place, and bruised his leg in such a manner, that he nearly fainted away.
                  When he recovered, and attempted to proceed, he found that he had also received a
                  dangerous rupture, for which he now continues to wear a bandage. Tahea assisted
                  him in going down; and they all arrived on board about four o'clock in the
                  afternoon. The upper hills they found to consist of a kind of clay extremely
                  compact and stiff. The vegetation on the upper part of the mountains was
                  luxuriant, and the woods consisted of many unknown sorts of plants. They enquired
                  particularly for the perfume-wood, with which the natives perfume their oil. Tahea
                  shewed them several plants which are sometimes used as substitutes; but the most
                  precious sort itself he either could not, or would not, point out to them. O-Maï
                  has told me that there are at Taheitee no less than fourteen different sorts of
                  plants employed for perfuming; which shews how remarkably fond these people are of
                  fine smells.</p>

               <p>The number of common women on board our ship was considerably encreased since we
                  had begun to deal in red feathers; and this night in particular many strolled
                  about the decks who could not meet with partners. The abundance of pork likewise
                  attracted them; for being almost entirely deprived of that rich food in their own
                  houshold, they were eager to obtain it among our sailors, and sometimes consumed
                  incredible quantities. The goodness of their appetite and digestion exposed them
                  however to the inconvenience of restlessness, and often disturbed those who wished
                  to sleep after the fatigues of the day. On certain urgent occasions they always
                  required the attendance of their lovers; but as they were frequently refused, the
                  decks were made to resemble the paths in the islands. Every evening these women
                  divided into different troops, which danced on the quarter-deck, the forecastle,
                  and the main-deck. Their mirth was often extravagant and noisy; and sometimes
                  their ideas were so original as to give great amusement. We had a very weak
                  scorbutic patient when we arrived at Taheitee: this man being somewhat recovered
                  by means of fresh vegetable food, and animated by the example of the crew, wooed a
                  Taheitian girl; about dusk led her to his birth, and lighted a candle. She looked
                  her lover in the face, and finding he had lost one eye, she took him by the hand,
                  and conducted him upon deck again to a girl that was one-eyed likewise, giving him
                  to understand, that that person was a fit partner for him, but that for her part
                  she did not choose to put up with a blind lover.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. May.][Sunday 1.]</date>Two days after, my father, being in some
                  measure recovered from the fatigue of his late excursion, and from the bruise
                  which he had received, went on shore, and found there o-Rettee, the chief of
                  o-Hiddea, a district and harbour where M. de Bougainville lay at anchor. This
                  chief asked captain Cook, whether, on his return to England, he should see M. de
                  Bougainville whom he called Potavirree; and being answered in the negative, he put
                  the same question to my father. He replied, it was not impossible, though he lived
                  in a different kingdom. " Then," said o-Rettee, " tell him I am his friend, and
                  long to see him again at o-Taheitee; and in order that you may remember it, I will
                  give you a hog as soon as I return from my district, to which I am now going."
                  With that he began to relate, that his friend M. de Bougainville had had two
                  ships, and that on board of one there was a woman, but that she was ugly. He
                  rested a long while on this circumstance, and seemed to think it extraordinary
                  that a single woman should go on such an expedition. He likewise confirmed the
                  account of a visit from a Spanish ship, which we had learned during our first stay
                  at Taheitee; but he assured us that he and his countrymen had no great affection
                  for them. O-Rettee was a fine grey-headed man, but very healthy and vigorous, as
                  the old people of Taheitee in general seem to be; his countenance was the picture
                  of a lively, chearful, and generous man. He told us he had been in many battles,
                  and shewed us several wounds he had received, particularly a blow with a stone on
                  his temple, which had left a deep scar. He had fought by Tootahah's side, on the
                  day when that chief was killed.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 2.]</date>The next morning Dr. Sparrman went with me up the valley
                  of Matavaï, which the natives call Tooa-ooroo. This was the first excursion of any
                  length which I undertook after my illness: I was therefore highly delighted with
                  the beautiful appearance of the vegetable creation, which had been revived by the
                  late rainy season; and surprised at the vast improvements which I saw throughout
                  the whole district. Wherever I went, I saw new and extensive plantations, in
                  excellent order; I found numbers of new houses built, and the natives at work upon
                  new canoes in many places. It was plain, during our former stay, that the war
                  between the two peninsulas had been distressful to this part of the larger one;
                  but at present there was not the least trace of it remaining; the whole country
                  was a scene of plenty, where numbers of hogs grazed around every house, which none
                  of the natives attempted to conceal from us, as they had formerly done. I was much
                  pleased to observe an alteration in the behaviour of the natives, who never once
                  importuned us with begging for beads or nails, and who, instead of being backward
                  to part with their store, appeared eager to out-do each other in acts of
                  benevolence and hospitality. We did not pass a single hut, where we were not
                  invited to come in, and partake of some refreshment; and we never accepted their
                  invitation, without being made extremely happy by their unaffected kindness. About
                  ten o'clock we reached the mansion of that hospitable man, who had entertained us
                  so well during our former stay on the island, when we came from the hills
                  excessively fatigued . He treated us with a few coco-nuts, and we promised to come
                  and dine with him on our return down the valley. He gave his directions
                  accordingly, and accompanied us all the way. We found no habitations beyond his
                  house, as the mountains on both sides approached very close together, and were
                  excessively steep. Having advanced about a mile, we came to a place where the hill
                  on the east side formed a perpendicular wall, not less than forty yards high,
                  beyond which it had some inclination, and was crowned with shrubberies to a great
                  height. A fine cascade fell from this fringed part along the wall into the river,
                  and made the scene more lively, which in itself was dark, wild, and romantic. When
                  we came nearer, we observed that the perpendicular rock had many projecting
                  longitudinal angles, and on wading through the water to it, we found it to consist
                  of real columns of black compact basaltes, such as the natives manufacture into
                  tools. They stood upright, parallel, and joined to each other. Their diameter
                  seemed not to exceed fifteen or eighteen inches, and only one or two angles of the
                  same pillar projected or were visible. As it is now generally supposed that
                  basaltes is a production of volcanoes, we have here another strong proof that
                  Taheitee has undergone great changes by such subterraneous fires, where nature
                  produced the most wonderful chymical operations, upon a very extensive plan.
                  Beyond these columns the vale, for the space of two or three miles, is more and
                  more confined by mountains, so that we found it difficult to proceed, having been
                  obliged to cross the river near fifty times. At last we came to the same place
                  where Mr. Banks was obliged to stop in his excursion . We found it equally
                  impossible to proceed; and being much fatigued by continually clambering over
                  rocks and rugged ground, set out on our return. By the way we collected some
                  plants which we had not yet seen; and after a walk of two hours, reached the
                  dwelling of our hospitable friend. We dined heartily on vegetables, and rewarded
                  our host with red feathers to his heart's content; not forgetting to give him some
                  iron-ware, which would prove useful to him when the feathers were lost or
                  destroyed. His daughter, whom we had seen on our former visit, was now married to
                  a man in a remote district, our presents having made her a rich heiress in this
                  country. We came on board near sunset, having rambled very leisurely through the
                  plain of Matavaï, captivated by the beauty and fertility of the prospect, and the
                  additional lustre which a fine evening spread over it.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook, with my father and several officers, had been at Parre to visit
                  O-Too. They had been conducted to a place where a new war-canoe was building,
                  which the king intended to call O-Taheitee. But captain Cook made him a present of
                  an English jack , a grapnel, and a grapnel-rope, and desired that it might be
                  called the Britannia. The king immediately consented, the jack was hoisted, and
                  the people gave three cheers.</p>

               <p>I recommended it to Mr. Hodges to visit the cascade which I had found in the
                  valley; and accordingly the next day he went up with several gentlemen, and took a
                  view of it, and of the basalt-pillars under it. We ate of a large albecore
                  (scomber thynnus, Linn.) that day, which gave us all a sudden heat in the face,
                  and a violent head-ache. Some had likewise a purging; and a servant who had
                  entirely dined upon it, was violently affected with vomiting and purging. It is
                  probable that the fish was caught by means of some intoxicating plant, which had
                  perhaps communicated a noxious quality to the meat.</p>

               <p>We learnt about this time that Mahine had married the daughter of Toperree, a
                  chief of Matavaï. A midshipman acquainted us that he had been present on the
                  occasion, and that he had seen a number of ceremonies performed: but being
                  intreated to give the particulars, he said, that though they were extremely
                  curious, he could not remember one of them, and did not know how to relate them.
                  By this means we lost the opportunity of making a considerable discovery, in
                  regard to the customs of these islanders. It is pity that no intelligent observer
                  was present, who might at least have related what he had seen. Mahine came on
                  board with his bride, who was a very young girl, of a low stature, but not
                  remarkable for beauty. She was very well skilled in the art of begging for
                  presents, and went through the whole ship collecting a vast number of beads,
                  nails, shirts, and red feathers, for which she was indebted to the friendship
                  which every body felt for Mahine. This youth told us he had a great mind to settle
                  at Taheitee, since his friends had offered him land, house, and property of all
                  kinds there. He was received into an aree's family, esteemed by the king himself,
                  and respected by all the people; nay, one of his friends had given him an
                  attendant, or towtow, a boy who constantly waited on him wherever he went; who
                  punctually executed all his orders, and seemed to be but little different from a
                  slave.</p>

               <p>Though Mahine had laid aside the idea of going to England, yet the lively boy,
                  Noona, was very desirous of visiting that country, and spoke to my father and
                  several other gentlemen, in the most urgent terms, to take him on board. As my
                  father proposed to take him entirely at his own expence, captain Cook consented
                  immediately to his reception. The boy was however told, that he must never expect
                  to come back, since it was very doubtful whether another ship would be sent to
                  Taheitee again. Noona was too much bent upon going with us, to hesitate a moment
                  even at this difficulty. He resigned the hope of returning to his country, for the
                  pleasure of visiting ours. In the evening however of the same day captain Cook
                  declared he would not take him on board, and he was accordingly obliged to remain
                  at Taheitee. As it was intended to teach him the rudiments of the arts of the
                  carpenter and smith, he would have returned to his country at least as valuable a
                  member of society as O-Mai, who, after a stay of two years in England, will be
                  able to amuse his countrymen with the music of a hand-organ, and with the
                  exhibition of a puppet-show.</p>

               <p>We passed several days in visiting the plains of Matavaï, and the extensive valley
                  of Ahonnoo, which is one of the most fertile, and, at the same time, most
                  picturesque, in the whole island. <date>[Friday 6.]</date>On the 6th, in the
                  afternoon, my father and Dr. Sparrman went up to the hills a second time, and I
                  accompanied them, in hopes of meeting with some new plants there, since we had
                  entirely exhausted the Flora of the plains. We passed the night again in Tahea's
                  hut, with this difference, that we did not keep watch. Tahea was a merry humorous
                  fellow; and it was his constant request to us to call him medua (father), and his
                  wife o-pattèa (mother).</p>

               <p>We went up early the next day, but did not care to go quite to the summit. In the
                  forest we collected a number of new plants, and shot a swallow. As we set out
                  before sunrise, Tahea and his brother, who went up with us, caught some terns,
                  which slept on the bushes along the path. He told us that many aquatic-birds come
                  to rest on the mountains, after roaming all day over the sea in quest of food; and
                  that the tropic-bird in particular has its nest there. The long tail feathers,
                  which it annually sheds, are commonly found there, and much sought after by the
                  natives. We saw the clouds coming over the summit, and descending towards us;
                  therefore, in order to keep our plants dry, we hastened down, and at four o'clock
                  reached the ship, where we found the whole royal family assembled, and among them
                  Neehouraï, the eldest sister of O-Too, married to T'-aree-Derre, the son of Ammo .
                  T'-aree-Watow, the king's next brother, staid after they were all gone, and passed
                  the night on board. To amuse him we let off some false fires at the mast-head,
                  with which he was highly entertained. At supper, he enumerated to us all his
                  relations, and gave us some account of the history of Taheitee, which o-Maï
                  entirely confirmed to me, after my return to England. From his information we
                  learned, that Ammo, Happaï, and Tootahah were three brothers, and that Ammo, being
                  the eldest, was king of all Taheitee. He married o-Poorèa (Oberea) a princess of
                  the royal family, and had by her t'-Aree-Derre, who was immediately styled
                  Aree-rahaï, or king of Taheitee. During the period of Ammo's reign, captain Wallis
                  visited the island, and found o-Poorèa (Oberea) invested with regal authority.
                  About a year after his departure, a war broke out between o-Ammo and his vassal
                  Aheatua, the king of the lesser peninsula. Aheatua landed at Paparra, where Ammo
                  commonly resided, and after routing his forces with great slaughter, destroyed the
                  plantations and houses by fire, and carried off all the hogs and poultry which he
                  could find. Ammo and Poorea, with all their attendants, among whom o-Maï,
                  according to his own account, was one, fled to the mountains in December 1768. At
                  last the conqueror consented to a peace, on condition that Ammo should entirely
                  resign the government, and that the succession should be taken from his son, and
                  conferred upon o-Too, the eldest son of his brother Happaï. This was agreed to,
                  and Tootahah, the youngest brother of Ammo, was appointed regent. This revolution
                  bears a great resemblance to those which happen too frequently in the despotic
                  kingdoms of Asia. It is but seldom that the conqueror dares to govern the country
                  which he has subdued; in general he only plunders it, and appoints another
                  sovereign, whom he chooses from among the royal family of the land. O-Poorea soon
                  after quarrelled with her husband, and frequently beat him; upon which they
                  separated; he took a very handsome young women to his bed, and she heaped her
                  favours on Obadee and other lovers. Some infidelity on the part of Ammo seems to
                  have been the foundation of this quarrel. These accidents, which are not so
                  frequent at Taheitee as in England, are however not absolutely unusual in that
                  island, especially when the lady has lost the charms which rendered her amiable,
                  and yet demands the same attention as before. An instance similar to this happened
                  on board. Polatehera formerly the wife of Potatow, but now separated from him, had
                  taken a young husband or lover in his stead, as soon as her first lord had
                  provided himself with another partner. The young man had an affection for a
                  Taheitian girl, and our ship was the place of their rendez-vous. They did not
                  however contrive their amours so well, as to remain undiscovered. The masculine
                  Polatehera caught them one morning, gave her rival many hearty boxes on the ear,
                  and humbled the guilty lover with a severe reprimand.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook found the government of Taheitee in the hands of Tootahah, when he
                  arrived in the Endeavour. After his departure Tootahah, being greatly enriched by
                  the presents he had obtained, persuaded the chiefs of O-Taheitee-nue, or the Great
                  Peninsula, to go against Aheatua, whom he could not forgive on account of the
                  insult shewn to his family. They equipped a fleet, and went to Tiarraboo, where
                  Aheatua was prepared to receive them. He was an old man , desirous to end his days
                  in peace; and therefore sent to Tootahah, to assure him that he was his friend,
                  and always intended to continue so; and that he desired him to return to his
                  country, without attacking those who had an affection for him. Tootahah was not
                  dissuaded from his purpose, but gave orders to engage. The loss on both sides was
                  nearly equal, but Tootahah retired, in order to attack his enemy by land. Happaï,
                  with all his family, disapproved of this step, and remained at o-Parre; but
                  Tootahah took o-Too with him, and marched to the isthmus between the two
                  peninsulas. Here Aheatua met him, and a pitched battle ensued, which ended in the
                  total dispersion of Tootahah's army. Tootahah himself was killed. Some told us he
                  had been taken prisoner, and was put to death afterwards; but others, and among
                  them o-Maï, asserted that he had been slain in the heat of the engagement. O-Too
                  retired precipitately to the mountains with a few chosen friends, whilst Aheatua,
                  with his victorious forces, immediately marched to Matavaï and o-Parre. At his
                  arrival Happaï retired to the mountains, but Aheatua sent to assure him that he
                  had no quarrel with him or his family, and that his wish had always been for
                  peace. Those on the mountain enquired in their turn concerning the fate of
                  Tootahah and o-Too; they heard that the former was killed, and the no body knew
                  what was become of the other. Soon after o-Too arrived through many difficult
                  passes, and over precipices, and coming down from the highest summits, joined his
                  father, and all who were with him. A general peace was immediately concluded,
                  after which O-Too assumed the reins of government himself, and the vast
                  improvements in the country, which we noticed in eight months time, seem to prove
                  that he is a very intelligent man, who promotes the general good of his subjects.
                  Aheatua died soon after; and his son of the same name, whom we found at Aitepeha
                  in August 1773, succeeded him.</p>

               <p>Te-aree-Watow farther acquainted us, that his father had eight children. i. The
                  eldest, Tedua (princess) Neehouraï, who seemed to be about thirty years old, and
                  is married to the son of Ammo, called T'-aree-Derre. 2. The next Tedua (princess)
                  Towraï, was unmarried, about seven and twenty, and appeared to have almost as
                  great authority among the women, as the king her brother had in the whole island.
                  3. O-Too, aree-rahai, or king of Taheitee, is about twenty-six years of age;
                  Aheatua is obliged to uncover his shoulders in his presence, as before his
                  rightful paramount. 4. Tedua (princess) Tehamaï, who was the next to him, died
                  young. 5. T'-aree-Watow himself was the next in order, and appeared to be about
                  sixteen years of age; he told us he had another name, but which I have forgotten,
                  from whence I conclude, that this which I have mentioned is only his title. 6. His
                  next brother is Tubuaï-teraï, likewise called Mayorro, a boy of ten or eleven
                  years old. 7. Erreretua, a little girl of seven years; and 8. Tepaow, a boy of
                  four or five, are the two youngest. A healthy, but not corpulent habit of body,
                  and a large bushy head of hair, were extremely characteristic of the whole family.
                  Their features in general were pleasing, but their complexions rather brown,
                  except that of Neehouraï and O-Too. The whole family appeared to be very much
                  beloved among the nation, who in general are extremely fond of their chiefs. In
                  return, their behaviour to every body was so affable and kind, that it commanded a
                  general good-will. Tedua-Towraï commonly accompanied the king her brother when he
                  came to visit us on board; and did not think she demeaned herself by going to
                  trade for red feathers among the common sailors, in exchange for cloths and
                  various curiosities. She happened once to be in the cabin with O-Too, captain
                  Cook, and my father, looking over great heaps of iron ware, and other articles of
                  trade; but the captain being called out, she whispered something to her brother,
                  who immediately endeavoured to divert my father's attention by asking several
                  questions. My father took the hint, and the princess believing she was not
                  observed, concealed two large spike-nails in the folds of her garments. When
                  captain Cook returned, my father acquainted him with this little stratagem; but
                  they agreed that it was most politic not to take any notice of it. Before this
                  time, she had frequently expressed a particular desire to carry away with her one
                  or other article of our riches, and had never been refused; on the contrary, we
                  had commonly given more than she demanded. It was therefore extraordinary, that
                  she should be tempted to steal that which might so easily have been obtained by
                  fair means; it should seem as if she had a strange predilection for things
                  acquired by stealth, and for which she was only indebted to her own ingenuity.
                  Some of the women on board likewise accused her of admitting towtows, or men of
                  the lowest rank, to her bed at night privately, and unknown to her brother. In a
                  country where the impulses of nature are followed without restraint, it would be
                  extraordinary if an exception should be made, and still more so, if it should
                  confine those who are accustomed to have their will in most other respects. The
                  passions of mankind are similar every where; the same instincts are active in the
                  slave and the prince; consequently the history of their effects must ever be the
                  same in every country.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 8.]</date> O-Too came to the tents on Point Venus very early in the
                  morning, and acquainted the serjeant of marines that one of the natives had stolen
                  a musket from a centry, and was run off with it: he likewise dispatched Tee, his
                  messenger, on board to fetch his brother, who obeyed the summons, after
                  breakfasting with us. As soon as they returned on shore, O-Too, with all his
                  family, fled to the westward, being apprehensive that the musket would be
                  redemanded at their hands. Captain Cook seized several double travelling-canoes
                  belonging to different chiefs, and particularly that of Maratata, who was accused
                  of having ordered one of his attendants to commit the theft. This chief himself
                  was in his canoe, and hastened to convey it out of our reach; but the captain
                  firing several muskets at it, Maratata and all his rowers leaped into the sea, and
                  swam ashore. About noon Tee came on board, and acquainted us that the thief was
                  gone to the Lesser Peninsula, or Tiarraboo; upon which all the canoes, except
                  Maratata's were again restored to their owners. We kept quiet on board till the
                  afternoon, having but few of the natives with us, among whom there was not one
                  woman. Towards evening captain Cook went ashore, and soon after some natives
                  arrived in a most profuse perspiration, who brought no only the musket, but also a
                  bundle of cloaths and a two-hour-glass, which had been stolen at the same time.
                  They related, that having overtaken the thief, they had beaten him most severely,
                  and obliged him to shew where he had concealed the stolen goods in the sand.
                  Notwithstanding their appearance, we did not give much credit to their story,
                  especially as one of them had been so lately seen about the tents, that it was
                  impossible he could have run to any great distance. They received some presents,
                  however, to shew that we meant to reward their zeal in our service. The next day
                  there was no trade carried on; but Tee came on board again, desiring the captain
                  to visit the king at Parré, who was matòw, an ambiguous court-phrase, expressing
                  not only that he was afraid, but that he wished to be put into good humour with
                  presents. The captain and my father went to him, whilst Dr. Sparrman and myself
                  were put ashore at the tents. We found the people a good deal terrified at the
                  extraordinary steps which had been taken, on our part, to do justice to ourselves.
                  They had received strict orders from the king not to sell any provisions, however
                  they treated us with coco-nuts and other refreshments with their usual
                  hospitality. At noon we came on board, and the captain returned soon after, having
                  ratified the friendship with O-Too. No women came on board this night, the king
                  having prohibited it, lest they should give occasion to complaints, by stealing
                  from our people. <date>[Tuesday 10.]</date>However the next day they were
                  permitted to visit our sailors again; and with them came a number of canoes loaden
                  with vegetable provisions, and some with fresh fish. Captain Cook sent Mahine with
                  several presents to Towhah, into Atahooroo, in return for several hogs which he
                  had received. During his absence, O-Poorea (Oberea) once the queen of Taheitee,
                  came on board, and presented two hogs to captain Cook. The fame of our red
                  feathers had reached to the plains of Paparra, for she told us she was come to
                  have some of them. She appeared to be between forty and fifty; her person was
                  tall, large, and fat, and her features, which seemed once to have been more
                  agreeable, were now rather masculine. However something of her former greatness
                  remained; she had " an eye to threaten or command ," and a free and noble
                  deportment. She did not stay long on board, probably because she felt herself of
                  less consequence in our eyes than formerly. After enquiring for her friends of the
                  Endeavour, she went ashore in her canoe. O-Ammo likewise came to the ship about
                  this time, but was still less noticed than his late consort; and being little
                  known on board, was not permitted to come even into the captain's cabin. It was
                  with difficulty that he could dispose of his hogs, as we had now so many on board,
                  that we did not care to croud the decks with more. These two royal personages are
                  living examples of the instability of human grandeur.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 12.]</date>We contrived several diversions for O-Too on the 12th.
                  We fired our guns with round and grape-shot across the reef into the sea, at which
                  he and a croud of several thousand spectators were highly delighted. In the
                  evening we let off a few sky-rockets, and some air-balloons, which heightened
                  their raptures, and filled them with admiration. They looked upon us as
                  extraordinary people, who had fires and stars at command, and gave our fire-works
                  the name of Heiva-Bretannee, the British Festival.</p>

               <p>All the next day a number of people surrounded the ship, who brought no
                  provisions, but great quantities of cloth and curiosities, having observed that we
                  prepared to leave them. In the afternoon we went to O-Parre with captain Cook, and
                  found our worthy friend Towhah there with Mahine. Towhah had been dangerously ill
                  of a disorder similar to the gout, and his legs were still swelled, and
                  excessively painful. He was however come to take leave of us, and promised to
                  visit us the next morning. O-Too likewise met us there, and spoke of sending a
                  supply of bread-fruit, which we valued more than hogs at present. <date>[Saturday
                     14.]</date>Early the next morning we received the visit of a great part of the
                  nobility of the whole island. Among them was Happaï and all his children, except
                  O-Too. Towhah and his wife likewise came about eight o'clock, and brought great
                  loads of presents of all sorts to us. The good old admiral was so ill that he
                  could not stand on his legs; he was very desirous however to come upon deck; we
                  therefore flung a chair in ropes, and hoisted him up in it, to his great delight,
                  and to the astonishment of all his countrymen. We discoursed on the subject of the
                  intended expedition against Eimeo, which he still assured us would take place soon
                  after our departure. Notwithstanding his illness, he was determined to command the
                  fleet in person, saying it was of little consequence if they killed an old man,
                  who could no longer be useful. He was very chearful under his infirmities, and his
                  way of thinking was nobly disinterested, and seemed to be animated by true
                  heroism. He took leave of us with a degree of cordiality and emotion, which
                  touched the heart, and might have reconciled a misanthrope to the world. Mahine,
                  who came on board with him, resolved to go with us to Raietea to visit his
                  relations and friends in the Society Islands, and then to return to Taheitee, as
                  soon as he should meet with an opportunity. He considered, that having possessions
                  in several of those islands, it was his interest to return thither, and to dispose
                  of them to the greatest advantage. He introduced to captain Cook several natives
                  of Borabora, one of which was his brother; they desired a passage to the Society
                  Islands, which captain Cook readily granted. With a degree of exultation, he
                  imparted to us in confidence, that he had shared O-Poorea's bed the last night;
                  this he esteemed as a great honour and mark of eminence, and shewed us several
                  pieces of the best cloth, which she had presented to him. O-Poorea was therefore
                  not too old to relish sensual gratifications even in a warm climate, where the
                  epocha of maturity seems to happen at a much earlier age than in colder countries,
                  and where of course every stage of human life might be supposed to have only a
                  proportionate duration. O-Too not being arrived on board, we went to visit him
                  once more, and to view some war-canoes which lay at Parre. We found only
                  forty-four, all which belonged to Tittaha, the smallest district in the north-west
                  peninsula of Taheitee. O-Too ordered some military evolutions to be made before
                  us, which were performed with great dexterity. The chiefs were all dressed in
                  their habits, and had targets, but no helmets. There were also some little boys,
                  who wore the dresses, and parried the spears with as great agility as grown
                  people. Their method was to rest the point of a spear or long battle-axe on the
                  ground before them, so that it made an angle of about 25 or 30 deg. with the
                  ground. With the other end, which they held in their hand, they contrived to keep
                  the spear always in the middle, right before the body. By this means the spear of
                  the adversary always slid off on one side or the other, without ever coming near
                  the body. Some of the canoes likewise performed part of their manӕuvre. They came
                  singly one after another through the narrow entrance of the reef; but as soon as
                  they were within, they formed in a line, and joined close together. On the
                  middlemost canoe there was a man placed behind the fighting stage, who gave
                  signals with a green branch to the rowers, either to paddle to the right or left.
                  The movement in consequence of his command was in perfect tune, and so very
                  regular, that it seemed as if all the paddles were parts of the same machine which
                  moved some hundred arms at once. This man might be compared to the Keleuzhz in the
                  ships of the ancient Greeks: indeed, the view of the Taheitian fleet frequently
                  brought to our mind an idea of the naval force which that nation employed in the
                  first ages of its existence, and induced us to compare them together. The Greeks
                  were doubtless better armed, having the use of metals; but it seemed plain, from
                  the writings of Homer, in spight of poetical embellishment, that their mode of
                  fighting was irregular, and their arms simple, like those of Taheitee. The united
                  efforts of Greece against Troy, in remote antiquity, could not be much more
                  considerable than the armament of O-Too against the isle of Eimeo; and the boasted
                  mille carinœ, were probably not more formidable than a fleet of large canoes,
                  which require from fifty to an hundred and twenty men to paddle them. The
                  navigation of the Greeks in those days was not more extensive than that which is
                  practised by the Taheitians at present, being confined to short passages from
                  island to island; and as the stars at night directed the mariners through the
                  Archipelago at that time, so they still continue to guide others in the Pacific
                  ocean. The Greeks were brave; but the numerous wounds of the Taheitian chiefs, are
                  all proofs of their spirit and prowess. It seems to be certain, that in their
                  battles they rouze themselves into a kind of phrenzy, and that their bravery is a
                  violent fit of passion. From Homer's battles it is evident, that the heroism which
                  produced the wonders he records, was exactly of the same nature. Let us for a
                  moment be allowed to carry this comparison still farther. The heroes of Homer are
                  represented to us as men of supernatural size and force. The Taheitian chiefs,
                  compared to the common people, are so much superior in stature and elegance of
                  form, that they look like a different race . It requires a more than ordinary
                  quantity of food to satisfy stomachs of unusual dimensions. Accordingly we find,
                  that the mighty men at the siege of Troy, and the chiefs of Taheitee, are both
                  famous for eating; and it appears that pork was a diet no less admired by the
                  Greeks, than it is by the Taheitians at this day. Simplicity of manners is
                  observable in both nations; and their domestic character alike is hospitable,
                  affectionate, and humane. There is even a similarity in their political
                  constitution. The chiefs of districts at Taheitee are powerful princes, who have
                  not more respect for O-Too, than the Greek heroes had for the " King of men;" and
                  the common people are so little noticed in the Iliad, that they appear to have had
                  no greater consequence, than the towtows in the South Sea. In short, I believe the
                  similitude might be traced in many other instances; but it was my intention only
                  to hint at it, and not to abuse the patience of my readers. What I have here said
                  is sufficient to prove, that men in a similar state of civilization resemble each
                  other more than we are aware of, even in the most opposite extremes of the world.
                  I should be sorry to have made these slight remarks, if they should unfortunately
                  lead some learned schemer on a wrong scent. The itch of tracing the pedigree of
                  nations has lately made such havock in history, by endeavouring to combine the
                  Egyptians and Chinese, that the learned must sincerely wish, it may never become a
                  contagious distemper.</p>

               <p>O-Too came on board, and dined with us for the last time. He proposed to my father
                  and Mr. Hodges to stay at Taheitee, and promised very seriously to make them arees
                  or chiefs of the rich districts of Parre and Matavaï. Whether he had any
                  interested motives for this proposal, or whether it came merely from the fullness
                  of his heart, I cannot determine. As soon as the dinner was over we weighed our
                  anchor, and set sail. O-Too requested the captain to fire some cannon, and was the
                  last Taheitian who stepped into his canoe, after cordially embracing us all. The
                  noise of the cannon, by stunning our ears in some measure, diverted our thoughts
                  from taking that melancholy turn which is natural on these occasions. It prevented
                  our giving a loose to the soft feelings with which the worth of this simple and
                  beneficent nation had inspired us; but it was a favourable opportunity for one of
                  our seamen to make his escape to the island. He was observed swimming towards the
                  shore, and some canoes were seen paddling to his assistance, when we dispatched a
                  boat which brought him back, much against his inclinations. His frolic cost him a
                  fortnight's confinement in irons. There is great reason to suppose that a plan was
                  concerted between him and the natives, who perhaps had promised themselves as
                  great advantages from retaining an European, as that European might expect by
                  dwelling with them. If we fairly consider the different situations of a common
                  sailor on board the Resolution, and of a Taheitian on his island, we cannot blame
                  the former, if he attempted to rid himself of the numberless discomforts of a
                  voyage round the world, and preferred an easy life, free from cares, in the
                  happiest climate of the world, to the frequent vicissitudes which are entailed
                  upon the mariner. The most favourable prospects of future success in England,
                  which he might form in idea, could never be so flattering to his senses, as the
                  lowly hope of living like the meanest Taheitian. It was highly probable, that
                  immediately on his return to England, instead of indulging in repose those limbs
                  which had been tossed from pole to pole, he would be placed in another ship, where
                  the same fatigues, nocturnal watches, and unwholesome food, would still fall to
                  his share; or though he were allowed to solace himself for a few days, after a
                  long series of hardships, he must expect to be seized in the midst of his
                  enjoyments, and to be dragged an unwilling champion to the defence of his country:
                  to be cut off in the flower of his age, or to remain miserably crippled, with only
                  half his limbs, might be the alternatives to which he would be reduced. But
                  supposing he could escape these misfortunes, still he must earn his subsistence in
                  England, at the expence of labour, and " in the sweat of his brow," when this
                  eldest curse on mankind is scarcely felt at Taheitee. The drudgery of our country
                  people is continual, and their exertion of strength very violent. Before they can
                  make the least use of corn, they must undergo the various labours of ploughing,
                  reaping, thrashing, and grinding. They are obliged to cultivate an hundred times
                  more than they can consume, in order to support a breed of animals, whose
                  assistance in husbandry is absolutely necessary; and to pay for the liberty of
                  tilling the ground, for the articles of dress indispensable in a raw climate; for
                  their tools, and a variety of things, which they might easily make with their own
                  hands, if agriculture alone did not engross their time and attention. The
                  tradesman, the manufacturer, the artist, all are obliged to work with equal
                  assiduity, in order to furnish the goods, in return for which the farmer gives
                  them bread. How different from this, how indolent is the life of the Taheitian!
                  Two or three bread-fruit trees, which grow almost without any culture, and which
                  flourish as long as he himself can expect to live, supply him with abundant food
                  during three-fourths of the year. The superfluity is fermented and preserved, as a
                  wholesome, nourishing and palatable bread, for the remaining months. Those plants
                  which require the greatest attendance at Taheitee, the cloth-trees and eddo-roots,
                  are cultivated with much less trouble than our cabbages and kitchen-herbs, though
                  their uses are infinitely more extensive. The whole process necessary to plant a
                  bread-tree, is to break off a sound branch, and stick it in the ground. The
                  banana, whose rich clusters seem too great a weight for the herbaceous stem,
                  annually shoots afresh from the root. The royal palm, at once the ornament of the
                  plain, and a useful gift of nature to its inhabitants; the golden apple, whose
                  salutary effects we have so strongly experienced, and a number of other plants,
                  all thrive with such luxuriance, and require so little trouble, that I may venture
                  to call them spontaneous. The manufacture of dress is an agreeable pastime for the
                  women, and the building of houses and canoes, with the making of tools and arms,
                  are occupations which become amusing by being voluntary, and intended for the more
                  immediate use of the artificers. Most of their days are therefore spent in a round
                  of various enjoyments, in a country where nature has lavished many a pleasing
                  landscape; where the temperature of the air is warm, but continually refreshed by
                  a wholesome breeze from the sea; and where the sky is almost constantly serene.
                  This climate, and its salubrious productions, contribute to the strength and the
                  elegance of their form. They are all well-proportioned, and some would have been
                  selected by Phidias or Praxiteles, as models of masculine beauty. Their features
                  are sweet, and unruffled by violent passions. Their large eyes, their arched
                  eyebrows, and high forehead, give a noble air to their heads, which are adorned by
                  strong beards, and a comely growth of hair . These, as well as their beautiful
                  teeth, are the proofs of vigour, and of a sound habit of body. The sex, the
                  partners of their felicity, are likewise well-formed; their irregular charms win
                  the heart of their countrymen, and their unaffected smiles, and a wish to please,
                  insure them mutual esteem and love. A kind of happy uniformity runs through the
                  whole life of the Taheitians. They rise with the sun, and hasten to rivers and
                  fountains, to perform an ablution equally reviving and cleanly. They pass the
                  morning at work, or walk about till the heat of the day increases, when they
                  retreat to their dwellings, or repose under some tufted tree. There they amuse
                  themselves with smoothing their hair, and anoint it with fragrant oils; or they
                  blow the flute, and sing to it, or listen to the songs of the birds. At the hour
                  of noon, or a little later, they go to dinner. After their meals they resume their
                  domestic amusements, during which the flame of mutual affection spreads in every
                  heart, and unites the rising generation with new and tender ties. The lively jest,
                  without any ill-nature, the artless tale, the jocund dance and frugal supper,
                  bring on the evening; and another visit to the river concludes the actions of the
                  day. Thus contented with their simple way of life, and placed in a delightful
                  country, they are free from cares, and happy in their ignorance.</p>

               <p>It must be allowed, that these advantages are decisive with those, who have
                  nothing so much at heart as the gratification of their senses. No wonder then that
                  a sailor, perhaps less guided by reason than the rest of his comrades, should
                  hurry on headlong after the pleasures of the present moment. It is certain, at the
                  same time, that being born and bred up in an active sphere of life, acquainted
                  with numberless subjects, utterly unknown to the Taheitians, and accustomed to
                  extend his thoughts to past and future occurrences, he would shortly have been
                  tired of an uninterrupted tranquility and continual sameness, suited only to a
                  people whose notions are simple and confined.</p>

               <p>The ideas of happiness are infinitely various in different nations, according to
                  their manners, principles, and degrees of civilization. As the productions and
                  apparent good qualities of our globe, are either profusely or sparingly
                  distributed, on its different parts, the diversity of human opinions is a
                  convincing proof of that paternal love, and unerring wisdom, which, in the plan of
                  this world, has provided for the good of mankind, alike in the torrid and the
                  frigid zone.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VII.</l>

                  <l>The second stay at the Society Islands.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. May.][Saturday 14.]</date>A Brisk gale carried us swiftly from
                  Taheitee. We were still busied in contemplating its beautiful scenery, when an
                  unexpected object on our own decks attracted our attention. This was no other than
                  one of the finest women whom we had seen in the country, and who had resolved to
                  go with us to Raietea (Ulietea), her native island. Her parents, from whom she had
                  eloped to Taheitee with a favoured lover some years ago, were still alive, and the
                  force of affection urged her irresistibly to visit them. She was by no means
                  apprehensive of their anger, but on the contrary expected a kind reception. The
                  little youthful errors of the heart are easily forgiven, where interest and
                  ambition have so little sway. She had concealed herself on board during O-Too's
                  last visit, as he had expressly ordered that no woman should go with us; but being
                  safe at present, she ventured to make her appearance. Mahine's brother, his
                  servant, and two other natives of Borabora, likewise took a passage with us,
                  confidently relying on a people who had so faithfully brought one of their
                  countrymen back again, and who had endeavoured to shew him every kindness in their
                  power. Their company gave life to our conversation, and shortened the day of our
                  passage to Huahine. The girl was dressed in a suit of cloaths belonging to one of
                  the officers, and was so much pleased with her new garments, that she went ashore
                  in them as soon as she arrived at that island. She dined with the officers,
                  without the least scruple, and laughed at the prejudices of her country-men with
                  all the good sense of a citizen of the world.1 With a proper education she might
                  have shone as a woman of genius even in Europe; since, without the advantage of a
                  cultivated understanding, her great vivacity joined to very polite manners,
                  already were sufficient to make her company supportable.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 15.]</date>We sailed on all night; and the next morning, at day
                  break, the island of Huahine was in sight. In the afternoon we came to an anchor
                  in the northern branch of Wharre harbour, where we lay not more than fifty yards
                  from the shore. We were visited by some of the natives, who brought hogs to sell,
                  but demanded hatchets in return, which were now so scarce on board, that we
                  reserved them for great occasions. Oree, the regent of the island, came to us
                  before sunset in a small canoe, and brought a hog and a target of war to captain
                  Cook,2 for which he received a suitable present. He gave us some pepper-roots this
                  time, but without any of the ceremonies observed at our former visit to the island
                  . In the evening we had a perfect calm, and were highly delighted with viewing and
                  hearing the natives, who sat in their houses along the shore, around their
                  candles, which are oily nuts stuck on a slender stick. One of the first who came
                  on board the next day was Porea, the Taheitian youth, who had left that island
                  with us eight months ago, but had withdrawn himself from us at Raietea. He told
                  us, it was by no means with his consent that he staid behind. Having an amour with
                  a pretty girl, she had appointed a rendezvous, to which he had hastened, after
                  delivering the powder-horn to captain Cook. On his arriving at the place appointed
                  with his fair mistress, he had been attacked by her father, with some attendants,
                  who had stripped him of his European cloaths, beaten him soundly, and confined him
                  till after our departure. He had then taken the first opportunity of crossing over
                  to Huahine, where he had been supported by the hospitality of several friends, so
                  that he was now in a very good plight. From his story we may gather, that the
                  people of these islands do not always permit their daughters to follow their own
                  inclinations; though according to our ideas, Porea's attempt did not authorise the
                  father to rob him of his cloaths.</p>

               <p>We went on shore early, and rambled to the lagoons, which the sea forms to the
                  northward of the harbour. We found them surrounded by swamps, filled with a
                  variety of East Indian plants; and their shores consisted of a slimy mud, which,
                  from its appearance, and fetid smell, we thought to be of the same nature and
                  qualities with hepar sulphuris. There were great flocks of ducks upon the lagoon;
                  but we found it difficult to approach them, as we sunk into the mud, whenever we
                  ventured to walk through it. The prospect which this piece of water forms, is
                  however extremely pleasing and picturesque. The stinking effluvia of the lagoons
                  are probably esteemed unwholesome, as we observed but very few houses on their
                  banks. On the sea side they are inclosed by a narrow coral ledge covered with
                  sand, a little elevated, along which we found great number of coco-nut palms. The
                  marshes slope down from this immediately to the stagnant water. We were
                  entertained by one of the natives with coco-nuts, which were at present very
                  scarce upon the island. In returning home our servant,3 who carried a bag with
                  plants, and another with iron tools, was knocked down a few yards behind us, and
                  would have been robbed, if we had not turned back by chance; but at sight of us
                  the thieves ran off. This was the second time that our people were thus boldly
                  attacked by the natives of Huahine, who seem, upon the whole, to be more
                  licentious under the infirm government of old Oree, than those of Taheitee, and of
                  the other Society Islands.</p>

               <p>This old chief appeared to be much more indolent at this time than at our first
                  visit, and his intellects seemed to be considerably impaired. His eyes were red
                  and inflamed, and his whole body lean and scaly. We were not long at a loss to
                  account for this change, having observed that he was now much addicted to the
                  intoxicating pepper-draught, of which he drank great quantities, prepared
                  excessively strong. Mahine had the honour of drinking with him for several nights
                  together, and received such a share of his nauseous beverage, that he commonly
                  awoke the next morning with a violent head-ache.</p>

               <p>We made another excursion to the same place the next day, and brought back a
                  number of corals, shells, and echini, which the natives had gathered for us on the
                  sea-shore. We received presents of hogs and targets from different chiefs, who
                  came on purpose to visit their old acquaintances, and would not sell or part with
                  their goods, till they saw their friend for whom they were destined. The next day
                  we took a walk up one of the hills, which is every where planted with bread-trees,
                  pepper and mulberry-trees, yams and eddoes. The mulberry or cloth-trees were
                  cultivated with particular attention; the ground between them was carefully
                  weeded, and manured with broken decayed shells and coral, and the whole plantation
                  surrounded with a deep furrow or channel, in order to drain it. In many places
                  they had burnt away ferns and various shrubs, in order to prepare the ground for
                  future plantations. At a considerable height upon the hill we found a house, the
                  inhabitants of which, an old woman and her daughter, hospitably entertained us. We
                  gave them several beads and nails, and some red feathers, which last were rather
                  accepted as a curiosity, than as things of great value. This opinion was general
                  among the people of Huahine; they wanted hatchets in exchange for their hogs, and
                  smaller iron tools for other provisions, and as we were well stocked with animals,
                  we did not like their price, though it was the same which we had formerly given.
                  Since red feathers have really no intrinsic value, and are only used for ornament,
                  we have another convincing proof of the superior affluence and luxury of the
                  Taheitians, in the great eagerness which they expressed to purchase them.5 The
                  difference is obviously owing to the excellence of their country, compared to
                  Huahine, where the ambient plain is so narrow and inconsiderable, that the natives
                  are obliged to cultivate the hills.</p>

               <p>Several bold thefts were committed, during the following days, by the natives, for
                  which it was not in our power to obtain redress. Some other attempts however were
                  punished. A party of petty officers were gone to take the diversion of shooting on
                  a hill, and had a marine with them, who carried some hatchets and nails in a bag.
                  A native who attended them, seeing that their fowling-pieces missed fire several
                  times, took his opportunity, when the marine had laid down his bundle, to snatch
                  it up, and ran off with it. The day after the gentlemen went to see a heiva or
                  public dance, and luckily found the thief among the spectators. He confessed his
                  misdemeanour, but promised, if they would pardon him, to bring them some targets
                  in return, which were always reckoned equivalent to our hatchets. They were
                  contented with his submission, and the man punctually kept his word the next day;
                  which shews that he was by no means to be compared to our hardened sinners, but
                  was fully sensible of the generous treatment which he had met with. Another
                  attempted to steal a powder-horn, but he was detected, and requited by blows. Even
                  the poor girl, who came on board at Taheitee, tempted them by wearing an European
                  dress. A number of natives set upon her in a house, when she was least aware of
                  it, and began to strip off her cloaths; when some of our people fortunately came
                  by, who put the thieves to flight. This accident frightened her so much, that she
                  never ventured out of the ship alone for the future.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 19.]</date>On the 19th we took a walk towards the long inlet,
                  where Dr. Sparrman had been robbed about eight months before. The weather was
                  rainy at first, and the showers became so severe, that we retreated into a small
                  hut, to prevent our being wetted to the skin. We found here a friendly family, who
                  immediately offered us some fresh bread-fruit and some fishes to eat, that being
                  always the first mark of hospitality among the inhabitants of the South Sea. An
                  elderly woman, of some note, had likewise taken shelter under the same roof, with
                  one of her attendants, who led a hog to her home. As we set out together, when the
                  shower was over, the good woman presented the hog to us, and invited us to her
                  house, which lay at a considerable distance. We crossed the hill, and descended to
                  the sea shore on the opposite side of the island. Our way was extremely slippery;
                  but we collected a number of plants which had novelty to recommend them. The
                  weather changed before we reached the plain below, and became delightfully fair.
                  We found a bay, with an extensive shoal of coral, and a small islet, where great
                  flocks of wild-ducks, curlews, and snipes resided. We received several
                  refreshments from the natives, which our friendly old lady endeavoured to procure.
                  After we had amused ourselves for some time with shooting, we crossed the hills in
                  another direction, and passing through a fine valley, well inhabited, and rich in
                  all sorts of plantations, we came to the woman's dwelling on the sea shore. Here
                  we found an old man, her husband, and a large family, some of whom were grown up.
                  She treated us with stewed fowls, bread-fruit, and coco-nuts, and then sent us in
                  her own canoe to the ship, which lay about five miles off by sea, but at least
                  twice as far by land. There was a kind of assiduity to serve us in this good
                  woman's behaviour, which I had not often experienced in those numerous instances
                  of hospitality, daily obvious to the stranger in the South Sea islands. It is a
                  most convincing proof of the excellence of the human heart, in its simple state,
                  before ambition, luxury, and various other passions have corrupted it.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 20.]</date>We staid on board the next day till the afternoon, and
                  then went ashore with captain Cook to a long house, which was a common receptacle,
                  or carvansera,6 for many families, who travelled thither in order to be near us.
                  We found several inferior chiefs there; but Oree was gone to a different part of
                  the island. After conversing with them for some time, several natives arrived, who
                  brought an account that our first and second lieutenant, with one of the mates,
                  had been stripped by several robbers. A great number of the inhabitants
                  immediately fled, and all who remained expressed strong marks of fear. We could
                  not collect with certainty, from the information of different people, whether our
                  officers had been beaten or killed; the Taheitian word, matte, expressing both
                  these ideas. We were however soon relieved from this state of suspense, by the
                  appearance of the gentlemen, perfectly safe, with their arms and cloaths. They
                  informed us, that having been shooting near the lagoons, they had been attacked
                  unawares by some of the natives, who, upon their refusing to part with their
                  fowling-pieces, had beaten them, and wrested those arms out of their hands; that a
                  chief happening to pass by during the struggle, had come to their assistance, and
                  had effected the recovery of every article which had been taken from them. We
                  returned on board together, and observed that the natives forsook the adjacent
                  country. The next morning early, Mahine, who had slept on shore, brought a message
                  from Oree to captain Cook, importing that there were thirteen offenders, whom he
                  could not punish without the captain's assistance: he requested him therefore to
                  send twenty-two armed men, which he expressed by the same number of small sticks,
                  and promised to join them with some of his own warriors, who should go out to
                  chastise the rebels. Captain Cook went on shore with Mahine, in order to be more
                  fully assured of Oree's intention; but not understanding enough of the language,
                  he received very little intelligence. As soon as he returned on board, he
                  consulted with the officers; and, on this occasion, the second lieutenant
                  ingenuously confessed that they themselves had been the aggressors, and had drawn
                  upon them the severe revenge which the natives had taken. One of them having shot
                  a couple of ducks in the lagoon, desired a native, who attended him, to fetch them
                  out of the water. The man, who had repeatedly done him this good office before,
                  refused to serve as a spaniel any longer. Our officer beat him, however, till he
                  went in, and worked himself through the mud with great agility, in a motion
                  between swimming and walking. When he had reached the ducks, which lay at a
                  considerable distance from the shore, he swam off with them to the opposite side
                  of the lagoon, perhaps conscious that he deserved them for the trouble he had
                  taken. As this did not agree with the seaman's intentions, he loaded his musket
                  with ball, and fired, but fortunately missed him. He was preparing to load again,
                  when the croud about him, seeing the life of their countryman so wantonly sported
                  with, seized his arms. He called to his companions for help, but they were
                  likewise surrounded; and though one of them fired a load of shot into the thighs
                  of a native, this only exasperated them the more; so that he was beaten and
                  bruised without mercy. Mahine's attendant, or servant, a stout youth, of a very
                  low stature, accompanied our gentlemen, and fought desperately in their favour,
                  but was overpowered by numbers. After this consession, the case was greatly
                  altered; however, the captain resolved to question Oree once more, and to that
                  purpose desired my father to accompany him to the shore, being convinced that no
                  person on board was at this time so well versed in the language of the country.7
                  They soon learnt from Oree, that he intended we should march to the dwellings of
                  the natives who had thus done themselves justice, and who seemed to have withdrawn
                  themselves even from his power; and that he wished to take all their goods and
                  hogs, and give them to us. Captain Cook returned to the ship, and selected a party
                  of forty-seven Europeans, including the officers, Dr. Sparrman, my father, and
                  myself; not indeed to reduce the rebellious subjects of Oree to their duty, who
                  had so much reason to complain of injustice from our people, but perhaps to shew
                  that he did not entirely approve of their conduct. We landed, and marched with
                  Oree and a few of the natives towards the district where the robbery was
                  committed. In proportion as we advanced, the croud at our heels encreased in
                  number to several hundreds, and took up arms in the neighbouring houses. Oree
                  himself wielded a spear ten feet long, with a barbed tail of sting-ray at the
                  point. We halted at the distance of about two miles, and were now acquainted by
                  Mahine that the natives had formed the plan of surrounding and cutting us off.
                  Oree was desirous to stay behind; but captain Cook persuaded him and a few other
                  chiefs to go with us, whilst the rest of the croud were ordered to proceed no
                  further, under pretence, that in case of an engagement, we should not be able to
                  distinguish friends from foes. We marched about three miles to a place where the
                  path divided; we chose that which led across a very steep rock, in preference to
                  another at the foot of it. Steps were cut in the rock on the opposite side, where
                  we descended again on the plain. This pass was so dangerous, that captain Cook
                  proposed to leave a detachment of his petty army here; but seeing that the croud
                  advanced slowly after him, in spite of Oree's orders, he resolved to return, and
                  declared to the natives that the enemy was too far off to be pursued. We came back
                  to a spacious house, about halfway to the ship, where Oree regaled us with
                  coco-nuts. Whilst we remained there, some of the natives brought several
                  banana-stalks, two dogs, and a pig. They presented them to the captain, holding a
                  long speech on the occasion, which was mostly unintelligible, but seemed to relate
                  to the affair that had brought us into the field. A large hog was shewn to us at
                  the same time, but instead of being presented, it was led off again. From hence we
                  reached the sea-shore opposite the ship about noon, and then fired our muskets in
                  platoons over the sea. This manӕuvre surprised the natives prodigiously, as it
                  convinced them that we could keep up a constant fire, of which they had no idea
                  before, and shewed them to what vast distances our balls could be projected. Thus
                  ended our warlike expedition, to the wish of a few individuals amongst us, who had
                  too great an affection for all their brethren, to desire their destruction. It was
                  not so satisfactory to others, who, inured to the horrid scenes of war and
                  bloodshed, had acquired, by force of habit, a detestable eagerness to try their
                  skill in shooting at men, rather than at a mark!</p>

               <p>We saw but few natives about the ship all the next afternoon; some fruit was
                  however exchanged for small nails. Our friends visited us the next morning, with
                  many presents of different sorts. One of them, a chief, named Morurua, had singled
                  out my father as his friend, and came with his wife and family to see us. Several
                  articles were distributed to them, in return for those which the chief had
                  brought; but he thought our present so much more valuable than his, that he seemed
                  quite enchanted, and his eyes with peculiar eloquence expressed a lively sense of
                  gratitude. <date>[Monday 23.]</date>He returned therefore to us again the next
                  morning, when we were getting under sail, and after loading us with new presents,
                  dissolved in tears at parting.</p>

               <p>We left the three friends of Mahine on this island, but had taken on board another
                  native, who was sent from Oree with a message to O-Poonee, the king of Borabora.
                  This ambassador appeared to be a very stupid fellow; we could not however dive
                  into the secret of his mission, nor were any of us solicitous about it. His name
                  was Hurree-hurree, which, in its English acceptation, seemed to be remarkably well
                  chosen for a messenger.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 24]</date>The next day before noon we anchored in the entrance of
                  Hamaneno harbour, on the island of Raietea, and spent the rest of the day, till
                  after sun-set, in warping the ship into the bason. The chief O-Rea came on board,
                  and seemed highly delighted with our return. The appearance of Mahine and Hurree
                  doubtless strengthened his good opinion of us, and inspired all his people with
                  confidence. We went on shore to his house with captain Cook the next morning,
                     <date>[Wednesd. 25.]</date>and were met by his wife and his daughter Poyadua.
                  The wife cut her head with a shark's tooth, and received the blood on a bit of
                  cloth; and both wept and sobbed aloud together for some time.8 However when they
                  had concluded this ceremony, they were as merry as if nothing had happened. We
                  were confined to his house by heavy showers of rain till noon, when we returned to
                  the ship, which was now brought into a narrow creek, where she lay close to the
                  shore, for the convenience of watering.</p>

               <p>We walked along this creek in the afternoon, as far as the intermittent showers
                  would permit. The shore was lined with innumerable canoes, whilst every house and
                  shed was crouded with people, many of whom were preparing large and luxurious
                  dinners, from heaps of provisions which were every where accumulated. We were told
                  that a peculiar society or order of persons of both sexes, named Arreoy,9 existed
                  in these islands; and that they assembled at times from all parts, and travelled
                  through all the islands, feasting and carousing to excess. During the time we lay
                  at Huahine, we had observed no less than seventy canoes, with more than seven
                  hundred of these arreoys on board, crossing over to Raietea in one morning. We
                  were told that they had spent a few days on the east side of the island, and were
                  arrived on its western shore only a day or two before us. We took notice that they
                  were all persons of some consequence, and of the race of chiefs. Some of the men
                  were punctured in large broad blotches; and Mahine assured us, these were the most
                  eminent members of the society, and that the more they were covered with
                  punctures, the higher was their rank. They were in general stout and well made,
                  and all professed themselves warriors. Mahine had a very high veneration for this
                  society, and told us he himself was a member. They are united by the ties of
                  reciprocal friendship, and exercise hospitality towards each other in its greatest
                  latitude. As soon as an arreoy visits another, though he were unknown to him, he
                  is sure to have his wants supplied, and his desires gratified; he is introduced to
                  other members of the order, and they vie with each other in loading him with
                  caresses and presents. It was to this principle that Mahine ascribed all the
                  pleasures which he had enjoyed at Taheitee. The first people who saw him on board
                  were arreoys according to his account, and in that quality made him a present of
                  their garments, since he had no other than European cloaths. It appears, that one
                  or more persons of each little family of chiefs enter into this community, of
                  which the invariable and fundamental character is, that none of its members are
                  permitted to have any children. From the accounts of the most intelligent among
                  the natives, we have great room to suppose, that the original institution required
                  their living in perpetual celibacy. As this law was too repugnant to the impulses
                  of nature, which must be uncommonly strong in their climate, they soon
                  transgressed it; but preserved the intention of the prescribed abstinence, by
                  suffocating their unfortunate offspring immediately after birth.</p>

               <p>The arreoys enjoy several privileges, and are greatly respected throughout the
                  Society Islands and Taheitee; nay, they claim a great share of honour from the
                  very circumstance of being childless. Tupaya when he heard that the king of
                  England had a numerous offspring, declared he thought himself much greater,
                  because he belonged to the arreoys . In most other countries the name of a parent
                  gives honour and respect; but when an arreoy, at Taheitee, emphatically bestows
                  it, it is meant as a term of contempt and reproach. The arreoys keep great
                  meetings at stated times, travelling from one island to another. They feast on the
                  choicest vegetables, and on plenty of pork, dog's flesh, fish, and poultry, which
                  is liberally furnished by the towtows, or lower class, for their entertainment.
                  The pepper-root drink is prepared and swallowed in surprising quantities on these
                  occasions. Wherever they go, the train of sensual pleasure waits upon them. They
                  are amused with music and dances, which are said to be particularly lascivious at
                  night, when no other spectators besides themselves are admitted.</p>

               <p>In a country so far emerged from barbarism as Taheitee, it cannot be supposed that
                  a society would have maintained itself to the present time, which appears so
                  injurious to the rest of the nation, unless its advantages were so considerable,
                  as to require its continuance. Two reasons seem to favour the existence of
                  arreoys, and both are in some measure connected together. The first appears to be
                  the necessity of entertaining a body of warriors, to defend their fellow-citizens
                  from the invasions and depredations of enemies. This is confirmed by the
                  circumstance, that all the arreoys are warriors; but as love might be supposed to
                  enervate them, they were restrained to that celibacy, which they have since found
                  it too difficult to observe. The second reason for the association of the arreoys,
                  seems to be to prevent the too rapid propagation of the race of chiefs.10 An
                  intelligent man, who perhaps was once the law-giver of Taheitee, might foresee,
                  that the common people would at length groan under the yoke of this numerous and
                  ever-multiplying breed of petty-tyrants . To oblige a part of them to a single
                  life, was the shortest means of obtaining this end; but certain glaring advantages
                  were to be held out, to make them submit without reluctance to such a restraint.
                  From hence we may derive that high esteem with which the whole nation honours the
                  order of arreoy; and likewise account for their authority, and for their gluttony
                  in eating, which has been the privilege of warriors in every country, before they
                  became the tools of tyranny. When the arreoys had once so far departed from the
                  laws of their first institution, as to admit the commerce with the sex, it is easy
                  to conceive, that, by insensible degrees, they have almost wholly lost the
                  original chaste and sober spirit of the order. They are at present, without doubt,
                  the most luxurious set of people in the island; though I have not found the least
                  reason to charge them with a refinement in voluptuousness,11 which is at once
                  improbable, and inconsistent with the tenderness of the whole people. We have been
                  told a wanton tale of promiscuous embraces, where every woman is common to every
                  man: but when we enquired for a confirmation of this story from the natives, we
                  were soon convinced that it must, like many others, be considered as the
                  groundless invention of a traveller's gay fancy.</p>

               <p>Some arreoys are married to a woman, in the same manner as Mahine was to the
                  daughter of Toperree ; but others keep a temporary mistress. Many may perhaps
                  revel in the arms of several prostitutes, which are to be met with in all the
                  islands. This dissolute pleasure is however much more frequent in every civilized
                  country of Europe; but I apprehend it would not authorise an assertion, that in
                  Europe there exists a society of men and women, who practise a particular
                  refinement of sensuality . When we consider the whole character of the Taheitians;
                  when we recollect their gentleness, their generosity, their affectionate
                  friendship, their tenderness, their pity, we cannot reconcile these qualities to
                  the murder of their own offspring. We shudder at the stern inhumanity of the
                  father, but much more so at the obdurate heart of the mother, where the voice of
                  nature, and of powerful instinct, should cry aloud for mercy and protection. The
                  paths of virtue are but too easily forsaken; still we are at a loss to conceive,
                  how a people so much left to nature, could arrive at such a detestable pitch of
                  depravity: but custom.</p>

               <p>gradually blunts every feeling, and overcomes the stings of remorse. We had no
                  sooner learnt that such an unnatural and barbarous practice stigmatized the
                  society of arreoy, than we reprehended our young friend Mahine for valuing himself
                  on being a member of such a detestable body. We endeavoured to point out the
                  immorality and cruelty of this practice, and made use of every argument which our
                  reflections could furnish, or our words express. We easily succeeded in convincing
                  him, and obtained a promise that he would not kill his children, but separate from
                  the society as soon as he should receive the glorious name of father. To our great
                  satisfaction he assured us, that the instances of arreoys having children were
                  extremely rare. It seems that they choose their wives and mistresses among the
                  prostitutes; and from this circumstance, as well as from their great
                  voluptuousness, they have seldom reason to dread the intrusion of an unfortunate
                  infant. The answers of O-Maï, whom I consulted on this subject after my return to
                  England, gave me still greater pleasure, as they softened the transgression at
                  least of one part, and entirely freed the bulk of the nation from that share of
                  guilt, which the simple acquiescence in such a heinous crime might throw upon
                  them. He assured me, that the invariable laws of the community of arreoy required
                  the extinction of their offspring; that the pre-eminence and advantages which a
                  man enjoyed as arreoy were so valuable, as to urge him on against his own
                  feelings; that the mother was never willing to consent to the horrid murder, but
                  that her husband and other arreoys persuaded her to yield up the child; and that
                  when entreaties were not sufficient, force was sometimes employed. But above all,
                  he added, that this act was always performed in secret, and so that none of the
                  people, not even the towtows or attendants of the house, were present; because, if
                  it were seen, the murderers must be put to death. This being the case, we may
                  comfort ourselves with the reflection, that criminal individuals are not more
                  numerous in the Society Islands, than among other people; and that the votaries of
                  vice have no reason to triumph, in supposing a whole nation accustomed to commit
                  unnatural murders, without a sense of wrong .</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 26.]</date>The arreoys were no less hospitable than luxurious, and
                  it was not for want of invitation that we did not partake of their refreshments.
                  We rambled in the country till sunset, and then returned to the ship, which
                  Mahine, the woman, and the other Indian passengers had now left. The next morning
                  a great number of natives came to the ship in their canoes, among whom were many
                  women, who remained with the sailors. At Huahine the commerce of this kind had
                  been very inconsiderable, and chiefly confined to women who were only on a visit
                  to that island; it was therefore resumed here with the greatest eagerness by our
                  crew. We passed the day on an excursion to the northward, where we shot several
                  wild ducks, and met with a hospitable reception in different cottages.</p>

               <p>The next was a fine day, delightfully tempered by a strong easterly gale. We
                  received the visits of Orea and all his family, of Boba, the viceroy of the island
                  of O-Tahà, and of Teïna, the fair dancing-woman, whose picture Mr. Hodges had
                  formerly attempted to draw . Boba was a tall, handsome young man, a native of
                  Borabora, related to Poonee, the king of that island, and conqueror of Raietea and
                  Tahà. Mahine has frequently told us, that he is destined to be the successor of
                  O-Poone, whose only daughter Maïwherua, said to be a young beautiful princess,
                  twelve years old, he is to marry. Boba was at present an arreoy, and kept the
                  lively Teïna as his mistress, who was with child in consequence. We entered into
                  conversation with her on the custom of killing the offspring of an arreoy. The
                  short dialogue which passed between us was couched in the most simple expressions,
                  because we had not sufficient knowledge of the language to discourse of abstract
                  ideas. For the same reason all our rhetoric was exhausted in a few moments, and
                  had no other effect, than to draw the following concession from Teïna-maï: " that
                  our eatua (deity) in England might perhaps be offended by the practice of the
                  arreoys; but that her's was not displeased with it. She promised, however, if we
                  would come from England to fetch her child, she might perhaps keep it alive,
                  provided we gave her a hatchet, a shirt, and some red feathers." This was said in
                  such a laughing tone, that we had not the least room to believe her in earnest. It
                  was in vain to attempt to continue the conversation, since a variety of objects
                  diverted her attention: it was a wonder indeed that she had lent an ear to our
                  questions so long.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we went ashore, to see a dramatic dance performed by Orea's
                  daughter Poyadua, and found a great number of inhabitants assembled at the
                  play-house; this diversion being admired by all ranks of the people. Poyadua
                  displayed her agility as usual, and received great applause from the European
                  spectators. The interludes performed by the men were something different from
                  those we had seen before. We could plainly understand the name of captain Cook,
                  and of several of our shipmates, mentioned in their songs, and they seemed to
                  represent a theft committed by their people.13 Another of the interludes was the
                  invasion of the Borabora men, which they expressed by beating one another with a
                  thong or whip, which made a very loud smack. But still another was more curious
                  than all the rest: it represented a woman in labour, and provoked immoderate
                  pearls of laughter from the multitude. The man who acted this part went through
                  the gestures, which the Greeks were wont to admire in the groves of Venus-Ariadne,
                  near Amathus, where the same ceremony was acted on the second day of the month
                  Gorpiœus, in memory of Ariadne, who died in child-bed . Thus it appears, that
                  there is scarcely a practice, though ever so ridiculous, existing in any corner of
                  the world, that has not been hit upon by the extravagant fancy of men in some
                  other region. A tall stout fellow, dressed in cloth, personated the new born
                  infant in such a ludicrous style, that we could not refuse joining in the plaudits
                  which his countrymen bestowed upon him. Anatomists and midwives would have been
                  surprised to observe, that this overgrown babe had every necessary character of a
                  child newly born; but the natives were particularly delighted with his running
                  about the stage, whilst the rest of the dancers endeavoured to catch him. The
                  ladies were much pleased with this scene, which, according to the simplicity of
                  their ideas, had not the least indecency; they looked on, therefore,
                  unconcernedly, and were not obliged, like some European dames, to peep through
                  their fans.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 28.]</date>The next morning we travelled along the shore to the
                  southward, and met with a very fertile country, and hospitable people. We came
                  early to a large building of stone, which was called Maraï no Parua, Parua's
                  burying-place. I have already mentioned that this name was likewise given to
                  Tupaya, who went in the Endeavour; but I am doubtful whether the burying-place
                  relates to Tupaya, since it generally bears the appellation of some living chief.
                  Indeed it is not improbable that another Parua might be alive on the island, after
                  whom the maraï was named, especially as all the natives in the neighbourhood
                  strenuously asserted, that this Parua was an aree, which was not always allowed of
                  Tupaya. This monument was sixty yards long, and five wide; the walls were made of
                  large stones, and about six or eight feet high. We climbed over, and found the
                  space within covered with a heap of small coral stones.</p>

               <p>From thence we walked on several miles, till we arrived at a spacious bay, where
                  three little islands lie within the reef. The country round this bay was swampy,
                  and well stocked with ducks. Here we passed some time in shooting, and then
                  embarked in two small canoes, and were safely landed at one of the little islands.
                  We found a few coco palms and shrubs, but no fruit-trees upon it; and there was
                  only a single fisherman's hut, containing some nets, and other fishing-tackle. We
                  returned very soon to the main shore, having found no shells, though the hope of
                  meeting with some had principally induced us to cross the water. We dined with a
                  native who had invited us, and returned to the ship in a canoe about sun-set. The
                  chief Orea had dined on board with captain Cook during our absence, and had drank
                  about a bottle of wine, without appearing in the least intoxicated. He had
                  however, as usual, been extremely facetious, and had conversed chiefly of the
                  countries which we had lately visited, and of which he had received an account
                  from his countryman Mahine. After being satisfied in regard to many particulars,
                  he said, that though we had seen a great deal, he would tell us of an island which
                  we had not met with in our voyages. " It lies," said he, " but a few days sail
                  from hence, but it is inhabited by a monstrous race of giants, as tall as the
                  main-mast, and as thick about the middle as the drum-head of the capstan. They are
                  very good-natured people, but if they are ever incensed against any body, they
                  take him up, and throw him as far into the sea as I would throw a stone. If you
                  should happen to come there with your ship, they would perhaps wade up to it, and
                  carry it ashore on their backs." He added several other ludicrous circumstances,
                  and concluded with telling us the name of the island, Mirro mirro, in order to
                  give greater weight to his assertion. It appeared evidently to us, that his whole
                  story was a fine piece of irony, directed against those parts of our narrative
                  which he did not believe, and of which he could have no conception.14 We admired
                  the witty humour which was so conspicuous in this little flight of fancy, and with
                  M. de Bougainville looked up to its great source, the affluence of the country,
                  which produced contentment and pleasure .</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 29.]</date>During the next night some of the natives stole the
                  rudders, grapnels, and boat-hooks belonging to our boats, which were fastened to
                  the buoy. As soon as this theft was discovered in the morning, the captain
                  acquainted Orea with it, who immediately embarked with him in a boat, and rowed
                  several miles to the southward. In about an hour's time they landed, and almost
                  all the stolen articles being returned to our people, they came back to the ship
                  entirely satisfied. I had been on shore in the creek during this time, and saw a
                  heeva, or dance, performed by two little girls; but their dress was not so grand,
                  and their action much inferior to that of Poyadua. The tamow, or head-dress of
                  plaited hair, was not laid like a turban, but formed several large locks, which
                  had a pretty effect, and resembled in some measure the high heads of our modern
                  ladies.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon Poyadua performed a dance; and as if she meant to outshine the
                  other actresses, she had ornamented her dress more than usual, and wore a great
                  quantity of various sorts of European beads. Her wonderful agility, the graceful
                  motion of her arms, and the quick vibration of her fingers, were as much admired
                  there by the natives, as we applaud them in our dancers; and since all these
                  accomplishments are taught in the South Sea islands by nature only, it must be
                  confessed that Poyadua deserved the encomiums which all the spectators bestowed
                  upon her. The inhabitants were particularly delighted with the extraordinary
                  contortions into which she screwed her mouth; though we were so little of their
                  mind, that we could not help thinking them horridly frightful. The meeting of the
                  arreoys gave rise to these frequent dramatic entertainments; their presence seemed
                  to enliven the whole country, and to inspire all the people with extraordinary
                  cheerfulness. They frequently shifted their garments,17 made of their best kinds
                  of cloth; they passed their time in luxurious idleness, perfuming their hair with
                  fragrant oils, singing and playing on the flute, and passing from one
                  entertainment to another; in short, they enjoyed the blessings of their islands in
                  the utmost extent; and so much resembled the happy indolent people whom Ulysses
                  found in Phӕacia, that they could apply the poet's lines to themselves with
                  peculiar propriety:</p>

               <p>Our friend Mahine was perhaps the only person among the nobility who did not enjoy
                  that great degree of happiness which so visibly reigned among the rest. He was not
                  received with those distinguishing marks of favour which had been lavished upon
                  him at Taheitee; for it seems, even in the South Seas, a man is no where less
                  esteemed than in his own country. All his relations, who were extremely numerous,
                  expected presents as their due; whilst at Taheitee his liberality made him
                  friends, and procured him great advantages. As long as the generous youth had some
                  of those riches left, which he had collected at the peril of his life, on our
                  dangerous and dismal cruize, he was perpetually importuned to share them out; and
                  though he freely distributed all he had, some of his acquaintances complained that
                  he was niggardly. He was soon reduced to beg a supply of European wares from his
                  friends on board, having only saved a few red feathers, and some other
                  curiosities, as a present for O-Poonee, the king of Borabora, to whom he was
                  related. Under these disagreeable circumstances, he longed to return to Taheitee,
                  and told us he was resolved to settle there, as soon as he should have visited
                  Poonee and his other relations at Borabora. He would willingly have embarked with
                  us again for England, if we had given him the least hope of returning to the South
                  Sea; but captain Cook having told him, that no ship would ever be sent to his
                  islands again, he deprived himself of the pleasure of seeing our country, rather
                  than part for ever from his native groves. When we reflect on the fate of his
                  countryman, O-Maï, we have some reason to think this determination fortunate for
                  his heart and morals. The splendour of England remains unknown to him; but at the
                  same time he has no idea of those enormities which disgrace the opulent capitals
                  of the world.</p>

               <p>After the dance was over, Mahine invited us to the district in which his lands
                  were situated. He had frequently told us, that he had possessions in this island;
                  but as some of our people had doubted of his veracity, he was glad to take an
                  opportunity of justifying himself. <date>[Monday 30.]</date>The next morning
                  therefore, at day break, we set off in two boats, and taking on board Orea and all
                  his family, we arrived, after two hours sail, at Wharai-te-Vah, a district at the
                  north-east end of the island. We were welcomed by Mahine and two of his elder
                  brothers, and conducted to a spacious house. A fire was immediately made in a hole
                  in the ground, and some large stones heated. With the same preparations, which are
                  already described by captain Cook in his former voyage , a large hog was killed,
                  cleaned, wrapped in fresh leaves, and put into the hole or oven, and covered with
                  hot stones and a heap of earth. Whilst it continued to be stewed there, with a
                  quantity of fruit, my father, with Dr. Sparrman and myself, went up the
                  neighbouring hills, where we found nothing new, though we were at least seven or
                  eight miles from our ship. After a walk of two hours we returned, and in a short
                  time our dinner was served up on green leaves. The fat of the entrails, together
                  with the blood, had been wrapped up separately in a few leaves, and the fattest
                  chiefs and arreoys in company immediately seized upon, and swallowed them by
                  handfuls. The rest dined with an uncommon degree of voracity; whilst a great croud
                  of towtows, with their greedy looks, devoured the feast, of which they did not
                  taste a single morsel. Some share of the pork was given to Orea's wife and
                  daughter, who carefully wrapped it up, in order to eat it apart. Thus it seems,
                  that though the hog was wholly dressed, prepared, and distributed by men, yet this
                  did not make it improper for the women to partake of it. At other times, it
                  appears, that different persons cannot eat what has been touched by one or other
                  of the same family ; we are therefore unable to conceive by what rule their custom
                  of eating separately is conducted. The Taheitians are not the only people who do
                  not eat with their women; several nations of negroes, and even the natives of
                  Labrador, have adopted the same idea. From the general conduct of these African
                  and Eskimaux tribes, an unnatural contempt for the sex appears to be their motive
                  for this unsociable custom. But as the Taheitian women are very kindly treated,
                  and highly esteemed by the men, the custom must have some other origin among them,
                  which a connected series of accurate observations may perhaps in time lead us to
                  discover.</p>

               <p>The captain had taken with him a few bottles of brandy, which, mixed with water,
                  makes the favourite liquor of sailors, called grog. The arreoys and some other
                  chiefs, finding it strong, and almost as nauseous as their pepper-root drink,
                  drank very freely of it, and afterwards took some small cups of pure brandy, which
                  they relished so well, and repeated so often, that they were soon obliged to lie
                  down to sleep. We returned to the ship about five o'clock in the afternoon; and
                  the day being remarkably warm, we went ashore to bathe in a beautiful fountain,
                  which we had constantly made use of for that purpose during our stay. A fragrant
                  shrubbery hung round it, screening from the sun the water, which was temperately
                  cool, and perfectly limpid. We found the use of this bath extremely refreshing;
                  and the natives had probably experienced the same effect, as they constantly
                  resorted to it every morning and evening. Such pleasing spots are frequent in
                  these islands; they contribute greatly to their embellishment, and without doubt,
                  are instrumental in preserving the health of the inhabitants.</p>

               <p>We passed the next days in various excursions towards the hills, where we
                  collected a few plants, which we had not met with before. These hills exactly
                  resembled those of Taheitee, but were somewhat lower. We found a romantic valley
                  between them, surrounded by a forest of various trees and shrubs, and furnished
                  with a beautiful rivulet, which fell in many cascades over broken rocks and
                  precipices.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. June.][Thusday 2.]</date>On our returning from our last walk, we
                  received a very interesting piece of intelligence from the natives. One of them,
                  just arrived from the island Huahine, told us that two ships lay at anchor there,
                  one of them considerably larger than ours, but the other about the same size.
                  Captain Cook called the man into his cabin, where he repeated the same story to
                  us, and confirmed it, by asserting that he had been on board the lesser ship, and
                  had been made drunk there. We enquired for the names of the captains, and he told
                  us that of the greater ship was Tabane, and the other Tonno. These were the names
                  by which the natives designed Mr. Banks and captain Furneaux. Captain Cook was
                  therefore surprised to hear them named, and enquired of what stature these persons
                  were. The native very readily told us, that the one whom he called Tabane was a
                  tall man, but the other considerably less. This answer corresponded extremely well
                  with truth; but as it was very improbable that captain Furneaux would remain at
                  Huahine, after hearing that his senior officer lay so near him, we concluded that
                  the ships must belong to some other nation. At our return to the Cape of Good
                  Hope, we heard that captain Furneaux had sailed from that settlement long before
                  the time when he was supposed to be at Huahine, and that Mr. Banks had not left
                  Europe. We have since learnt that M. St. Denis a French navigator, has been in the
                  South Seas at the time in question with two ships.</p>

               <p>The chief, O-Rea, at first confirmed this news, but afterwards suspecting that it
                  might hasten our departure, he was unwilling to give his opinion, and seeming to
                  doubt of the truth of the report, always abruptly changed the subject of
                  conversation, with all the art of an European politician.</p>

               <p>The next day the natives came in great numbers to the ship with abundance of
                  provisions, which they sold very <date>[Friday 3.]</date>cheap, as captain Cook
                  proposed to sail the next day. His store of hatchets and knives had been expended
                  long ago; our armourer was therefore set to work to make new ones, which were
                  ill-shapen, and of very little worth, particularly the knives, which were made of
                  pieces of iron hoops. The natives were contented with them, not knowing how to
                  distinguish the good from the bad by the eye. They sometimes picked our pockets,
                  or stole what we did not sufficiently look after; but their simplicity now gave
                  room for a severe retaliation.</p>

               <p>Among the natives of the Society Islands there are a few men who preserve the
                  national traditions, together with all their ideas of mythology and astronomy.
                  Mahine, whilst we were at sea, had frequently spoken of them as the most learned
                  of his countrymen, and named them Tata-o-Rerro, which we would express by
                  teachers. After much enquiry, we found a chief, named Tootavaï, in the district of
                  Hamaneno, who was distinguished by this epithet. As our departure was so near at
                  hand, we regretted that we had not known him sooner; but my father determined to
                  employ his remaining time in making enquiries on a subject so interesting as the
                  history of religious opinions.</p>

               <p>Tootavaï was pleased with an opportunity of displaying his knowledge; he was
                  flattered with the attention which we paid to his words, and therefore continued
                  to converse on the same subject with much greater patience and perseverance, than
                  we could have expected from a lively inhabitant of these islands. The religion of
                  the islanders appears to be as singular a system of polytheism as ever was
                  invented. Few nations are so wretched, and so wholly occupied with the means of
                  preserving their existence, as to lay aside all ideas of a creator. These ideas
                  rather seem to have remained traditionally among mankind, ever since the first
                  ages, when the Deity revealed himself. Agreeably to this opinion, the people of
                  Taheitee and the Society Islands have preserved this spark of divine instruction,
                  and believe the existence of a Supreme Being, the maker and progenitor of all
                  things, visible and invisible. It has been the fate of most nations to investigate
                  more or less the qualities of this universal and incomprehensible spirit, and to
                  adopt absurdities, by overstepping the bounds prescribed by the Creator himself to
                  our senses and mental faculties. The different attributes of the Deity were soon
                  personified by narrow minds, which could not contain the vast idea of supreme
                  perfection. Gods and goddesses then became innumerable, and one error still gave
                  birth to many more. Man, in the course of education, received from his father the
                  knowledge of a God; and a spontaneous principle within him cherished this idea.
                  Population encreased, the distinctions of ranks took place, and proportionately
                  influenced the gratification of the senses. In every society, some individual or
                  other took advantage of the general propensity to adore, endeavoured to captivate
                  the judgment of the multitude, and by misrepresenting and separating the qualities
                  of the Almighty, converted the filial affection of mankind towards their
                  benefactor into a jealous dread of his anger. At the Society Islands I apprehend
                  this to be the case: they adore divinities of all sorts and qualities; but what is
                  most singular, every island has a separate theogony. This will appear more clearly
                  by comparing the following account with the observations on their religion in
                  captain Cook's first voyage . Tootavàï began with telling us, that in every island
                  of this group, they gave the supreme God, creator of earth and skies, a different
                  name; or, to express it more clearly, that in every island they believe a
                  different deity, though always one of those which are known to them all, to hold
                  the first rank. Thus at Taheitee and Eimeo, they say the Supreme Being is
                  O-Rooa-hattoo; at Huahine they maintain that it is Tanè; at Raietea, O-Roò; at
                  O-Tahà, Orra; at Bolabola, Taoòtoo; at Mowrua, O-Too; and at Tabbooa-mannoo (Sir
                  Charles Saunders's Island) Taròä. Thirteen divinities preside over the sea, and
                  govern it; viz. 1. Ooroohàddoo. 2. Tama-ooee. 3. Ta-apèe. 4. O-Tooareeònoo. 5.
                  Tanèea. 6. Tahou-meònna. 7. Orà-mauwe. 8. O-Whaï. 9. O-Whàtta. 10. Tahòoa. 11.
                  Te-ootya. 12. O-Mahooroo. 13. O-Whàddoo. But notwithstanding all these governors,
                  a different divinity, Oo-marrèo, is said to have created the sea. The same case
                  exists with regard to the sun, which was created by O-Maïwee, a powerful god, who
                  causes earthquakes. The divinity which resides in, and governs the sun, is called
                  Tootòomo-hororìrree. They have ventured to attribute to this deity a beautiful
                  human form, whose hair descends down to his feet. They assert, that the deceased
                  go thither to dwell with him, and are continually feasted there with bread-fruit
                  and pork, which need no preparation from the fire. They believe every man to have
                  a separate being within him, named Tee and lodges in the wooden images, which are
                  placed round the burying-places, and which are called by the same name, tee. Thus
                  the belief of a future existence, and that of the combination of matter and
                  spirit, have reached the remotest islands of the earth. Whether they have any idea
                  of rewards and punishments in a future state, we could not learn; but it is most
                  reasonable to suppose that such ideas have occurred to a nation so far advanced as
                  the Taheitians. The moon was created by a female divinity, named O-Heenna, who
                  likewise governs that planet, and resides in its black spot or cloud. The women
                  sing a short couplet, which seems to be an act of adoration paid to that divinity,
                  perhaps because they suppose her to have some influence upon their physical
                  œconomy.</p>

               <p>We may venture to suppose, that the Taheitian goddess of the moon is not the
                  chaste Diana of the ancients, but rather the Phœnician Astarte. The stars were
                  created by a goddess called Tettoo-mataròu, and the winds are governed by the god
                  Orree-òrree.</p>

               <p>Besides these greater divinities, they have a considerable number of inferior
                  orders, some of whom are said to be mischievous, and to kill men in their sleep.24
                  They are worshipped publicly at the principal maraïs, or monuments of stone, by
                  the Tahowa-rahaï, or high-priest of the island.25 The beneficent gods are
                  addressed in prayers, which are not pronounced aloud, but are distinguished and
                  made known only by the motion of the lips. The priest looks up to the skies, and
                  the eatua, or god, is supposed to come down and hold converse with him, unseen by
                  all the people, and heard by none but the priest himself. Surely this is an
                  evident mark of the influence of priestcraft, whose great aim is ever to veil
                  religion in mystery. From a principle directly opposite to this, the Christian
                  doctrine derives one of those incontestible characters of a divine origin, which
                  distinguish it from all the deceitful inventions of human understanding, and carry
                  persuasion to the mind. This religion does not wear the mysterious cloak, which
                  can only serve to cover darkness, but appears to us divested of all kinds of
                  trappings, and throws a pure and steady light around. It admits of no mystery, and
                  its true and venerable ministers have at all times assured and convinced us, that
                  they reserved no private knowledge for themselves, which was not communicated to
                  the meanest of those who bow the knee to their pure and divine Creator; " for all
                  shall know him, from the least to the greatest." Hebr. viii. ii.</p>

               <p>Offerings are made to the gods, of hogs and poultry roasted, and of all kinds of
                  eatables; but the inferior, and particularly the malevolent spirits, are only
                  revered by a kind of hissing. Some of these spirits are said to come into the
                  houses of the natives at night, and to kill them; others are said to inhabit a
                  certain deserted island named Mannua,26 where they are visible in the shape of
                  strong, tall men, with fiery eyes, and devour those who happen to approach their
                  coast: but this rather alludes to the anthropophagy, which, as I have before
                  observed, seems to have existed at these islands, previous to their present state
                  of civilization.27 A number of plants are particularly sacred to the deities. The
                  casuarina, the coco-palm, and the banana, are frequently planted near maraïs, or
                  public places of worship. A species of cratœva, a sort of pepper, the hibiscus
                  populneus, the dracœna terminalis, and the calophyllum, are all found in the same
                  places, and are alike considered as signs of peace and friendship. Some birds,
                  such as a species of heron, king's-fisher, and cuckoo, are also consecrated to the
                  deity; but I have already mentioned, that they are not held in equal veneration by
                  all the people; and it is also to be observed, that different islands protect
                  different birds.</p>

               <p>The priests of these islands continue in office during their life, and their
                  dignity is hereditary. The high-priest of every island is always an aree, who has
                  the highest rank after the king. They are consulted upon many important occasions,
                  partake largely of the good things of the country, and in short have found means
                  to make themselves necessary. Besides the priests, there is also in every district
                  one or two teachers, or tata-o-rerro, like Tootavaï, who are skilled in theogony
                  and cosmogony, and at certain times instruct the people in these things. The same
                  persons likewise preserve the knowledge of geography, together with their ideas of
                  astronomy and the division of time. They have the names of fourteen lunar months,
                  in the following order:28 1. O-Pororo-moòa. 2. O-Pororo-mooree. 3. Moorehàh. 4.
                  Oohee-eiya. 5. O-Whirre-ammà;. 6. Taòwa. 7. O-Whirre-erre-erre. 8. O-Tearree. 9.
                  Ote-tàï. 10. Wàrehoo. 11. Wàhou. 12. Pippirree. 13. E-Oonoònoo. 14. Oo-mannoo. The
                  first seven months collectively are called Ooroo, or a bread-fruit season; but in
                  what manner they arrange these months, in order to effect a complete cycle or a
                  year, is a mystery to us at present. It should seem that some of the months,
                  especially the second and seventh, are intercalary, from the resemblance of their
                  names to those of the first and fifth, and that they are inserted in different
                  years. Each of the lunations consists of twenty-nine days. During the two last
                  days of the lunation, they say the moon is dead, because it does not appear; it is
                  therefore plain that they begin to count from the moon's first appearance, and not
                  from the real time of the conjunction. The twenty-fifth day of the thirteenth
                  moon, E-Oonoonoo, was our third of June, when we obtained this information.</p>

               <p>The name of tahowa, which the Taheitians apply to priests, is not entirely
                  confined to them, but is also given to those persons who know the virtues of a few
                  plants, which are used as remedies against different disorders. Their medicines
                  are few, and very simple, but their diseases are not manifold and
                  complicated.</p>

               <p>As soon as we had obtained these accounts from Tootavaï, the ship unmoored, on the
                  fourth of June, about ten in the morning. The king of Raietea, Oo-ooroo, to whom
                  the conqueror O-Poonee had left the title and honour of royalty, visited us with
                  some of his relations, just before our departure. O-Rea with his family was
                  likewise on board, and Mahine with his relations came to take their leave. The
                  parting scene was extremely affecting; all our friends shed tears plentifully, but
                  poor Mahine's heart seemed torn to pieces by the violence of his grief. He ran
                  from cabin to cabin, and embraced every one of us, without being able to speak a
                  single word. His tears, his sighs and looks were eloquent beyond description. At
                  last the ship set sail; he got into his canoe, and continued standing upright,
                  whilst all his countrymen were seated. He looked at us, then hung down his head,
                  and hid it in his garments. When we had cleared the reefs, we still perceived him
                  to wave his extended arms; and he continued his addresses till we could no longer
                  discern him.</p>

               <p>Thus we left an amiable nation, who, with all their imperfections, are perhaps
                  more innocent and pure of heart, than those who are more refined and better
                  instructed. Without quoting the example of Mahine, we have often been witnesses to
                  reciprocal acts of kindness,. which convinced us, that the social virtues are
                  frequently exercised amongst themselves. I have seen a single bread-fruit, or a
                  few coco-nuts shared between a number of people, so that every one partook of
                  them. I have observed them parting with their cloaths, and doing several
                  charitable actions to each other, with the same good-will which they expressed
                  towards us. We should indeed be ungrateful, if we did not acknowledge the kindness
                  with which they always treated us; they were ready to carry us on their backs in
                  and out of our boats, to prevent the surf from wetting our feet; they often loaded
                  themselves with the curiosities which we had purchased; and rarely refused to go
                  into the water in quest of any bird which we had shot. If the rain caught us on
                  our excursions, or the heat of the sun and the fatigue of the journey oppressed
                  us, we were invited to repose in their dwellings, and feasted on their best
                  provisions; our friendly host stood at a distance, and never tasted any thing till
                  we entreated him; whilst some of the family were employed in fanning us with a
                  leaf, or the bough of a tree. Before we left the house we were commonly adopted,
                  according to our different ages, in the quality of fathers, brothers, or sons.30
                  This circumstance was owing to an opinion that we were all related. The chiefs in
                  all the Society Islands are descended from the same family; our officers,
                  therefore, and all those who dined or messed together, were by them considered as
                  relations. They supposed that captain Cook and my father were brothers, purely
                  from this reason; for, with all their good heart, they are but indifferent
                  physiognomists. Their hospitality towards us was frequently quite disinterested;
                  and gave us a right to form the most flattering conclusions in regard to their
                  conduct towards each other. They are hospitable without seeming to know it; and
                  leave to strangers who visit them, the pleasing and grateful task of recording
                  their virtues.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VIII.</l>

                  <l>Run from the Society to the Friendly Islands.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. June.]</date>WE fired a salute of several guns on leaving the island
                  of Raietea, <date>[Saturday 4.]</date>in honour of his majesty's birth day; and
                  this discharge of our artillery afforded no small entertainment to the
                  inhabitants. During the six weeks which we had spent at Taheitee and the Society
                  Islands, we had been well refreshed, and were perfectly recovered from our bilious
                  and scorbutic complaints: a venereal disorder was, however, the reward of those,
                  that</p>

               <p>Nearly one half of our crew were afflicted with this nauseous and shameful
                  disease; though it was in general less virulent than in Europe. Our conversations
                  with Mahine on its ravages, gave us the greatest reason to be convinced, that it
                  existed at Taheitee and the Society Islands previous to captain Wallis's voyage in
                  1768. Mahine frequently assured us, that several years before that period, his
                  mother died of this disease at Borabora. Its appearance has therefore been
                  attributed to a wrong cause in various parts of the world. For the space of near
                  three centuries the Spaniards have been accused by physicians, and detested by
                  moralists, for bringing the infection from America, which is now incontrovertibly
                  proved to have begun in Europe, previous to the discovery of America. The English
                  and French navigators have charged each other with the introduction of this
                  detestable disorder among the harmless and hospitable Taheitians; though they have
                  long been acquainted with it, and are not ignorant of the art of curing it . Nay,
                  it seems that their simple diet, the salubrity of their climate, and a long space
                  of time, have abated the acrimony of the virus, and brought it to that inactive
                  state to which it is now reduced in South America. I am far from supposing, that
                  the venereal complaint has been carried to America from Europe; no, the same
                  causes which could give birth to it in one part of the world, are sufficient to
                  produce it every where else. The commerce of our crews with the women of Tonga
                  Tabboo, and the Marquesas: nay, their remarkable connections with the salacious
                  females of Easter Island, had no sinister consequences. It may be inferred from
                  thence, that the infection has not yet broke out at those islands, though such
                  inferences are sometimes fallacious ; for captain Wallis left Taheitee without
                  having a single venereal patient, though the distemper is now proved to have
                  existed there before his arrival. It is also beyond a doubt, that the New
                  Zeelanders were afflicted with this disorder before any Europeans had an
                  intercourse with them.</p>

               <p>We passed the island of Mowrua in the afternoon, and stood to the westward with a
                  favourable trade-wind. On the 6th, at eleven in the morning, we descried an
                  island, which captain Wallis named after lord Howe. It is very low, consisting of
                  coral ledges, which enclose a lagoon; and by its direction, it appears to be the
                  same which the natives of the Society Islands call Mopeehàh. We found it situated
                  in 16° 46' S. lat. and 154° 8' W. Several birds, called boobies,3 were seen in the
                  neighbourhood of this little isle, which was to appearance uninhabited.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 7.]</date>The next day at noon the wind shifted, and became
                  contrary. During the whole afternoon it thundered and lightned, and we had several
                  smart showers. The night was calm; but we fixed the electric chain at the
                  mast-head, on account of the strong lightning which still continued. We had so
                  faint a breeze, with intervening calms, during the next three days, that we made
                  but slow advances. Tropic-birds and noddies visited us during this time; and our
                  crew had the mortification of losing a great shark, after they had hooked and shot
                  him with three bullets.</p>

               <p>On the 11th, in the morning, the wind freshened again, and pushed us on to the W.
                  S. W. for two days, at the expiration of which we had calms and foul winds to cope
                  with, and saw frequent flashes of lightning at night. Seafowl of different sorts,
                  and fishes, such as bonitos, dolphins, sharks, and grampusses, appeared about us
                  at different times.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 16.]</date>On the 16th, in the morning, at eight o'clock, we
                  discovered another low island. We were close to it about three in the afternoon,
                  and sailed round it, without finding a landing place or harbour. It consisted of
                  eight different isles, connected by reefs, and covered with trees, particularly
                  coco-palms, which made it look remarkably pleasant. Vast flocks of aquatic birds
                  appeared about it, from whence we concluded, that it was likewise uninhabited. In
                  some parts there were extensive sandy beaches, where turtles probably resort to
                  lay their eggs. The sea was also full of good fish, of different sorts, about us.
                  This pretty little spot was named Palmerston Island, and lies in 18° 4' S. lat.
                  and 163° 10' W. </p>

               <p><date>[Monday 20.]</date>We continued steering to the W. S. W. till the 20th, when
                  we saw an island in the afternoon,4 of some elevation, on which, before sunset, we
                  could discern the trees. We tacked all night to windward, and at the return of
                  daylight stood towards it. Having approached within about two miles, we ran along
                  the shore, which now appeared steep and rocky, with here and there a narrow sandy
                  beach at the foot of the rock. It was nearly level every where, and its greatest
                  height seemed not to exceed forty feet; but it was covered with woods and
                  shrubberies along the summit. About ten o'clock, we perceived seven or eight
                  people running close to the water's edge. They seemed to be of a blackish colour,
                  and were naked; something white was wrapped about their heads and loins, and each
                  had a spear, a club, or a paddle in his hand. In several chasms between the rocks,
                  we observed a few small canoes hauled upon the shore. We now likewise took notice
                  of some coco-nut trees, of no great height, which stood on the slope of the rocks.
                  Two boats were hoisted out, armed and manned, in which the captain, accompanied by
                  Dr. Sparrman, Mr. Hodges, my father, and myself, went ashore. A reef of coral
                  surrounds the whole coast at a short distance; but having found an opening, where
                  the surf was not dangerous, we landed, and climbed up one of the adjacent rocks,
                  where we posted some of our sailors and marines. It consisted entirely of sharp
                  and craggy coral, and was covered with a variety of small shrubby plants, common
                  to the low islands. Besides these, we found some new species, all which grew
                  between the crevices of the coral, without the least atom of soil. Some curlews,
                  snipes, and herons, of the same sort which we had observed at Taheitee, likewise
                  appeared on this island. Having walked among the bushes, at the distance of about
                  fifty yards from the water, we heard a loud halloo, upon which we retired to the
                  rock, where our people had taken post. We now learnt that captain Cook, having
                  walked up a long deep gulley, which lay before us, had entered the woods at a
                  little distance from us. He had not proceeded far, when he heard somebody tumbling
                  down from a tree. He supposed it was one of us, and called out to us, but was
                  presently undeceived by the shouts of the Indian. We now called to the natives in
                  those South Sea dialects which we were acquainted with, that we were friends, and
                  desired them to come down to us. They were heard talking and shouting to each
                  other for some time; and presently one of them appeared at the entrance of the
                  gulley. His body was blackened as far as the waist; his head was ornamented with
                  feathers placed upright, and in his hand he held a spear. Behind him we heard many
                  voices in the chasm, though the trees prevented our seeing the people. At last a
                  young man, to all appearance without a beard, stepped forward, and joined the
                  first. He was like him blackened, and had a long bow, like those of Tonga-Tabboo,
                  in his right hand. With the left he instantly flung a very large stone, with so
                  much accuracy, as to hit Dr. Sparrman's arm a violent blow, at the distance of
                  forty yards. The pain which it occasioned irritated my friend so much, that he let
                  fly at his enemy; but it did not appear that the small shot had any effect. Both
                  the natives retired soon after; and though we staid here for some time, performing
                  the idle ceremony of taking possession, we saw nothing more of the inhabitants.
                  After we had resumed our course along shore in the boats, we saw the people coming
                  to the water's side at the place which we had left. The appearance of the coast
                  was still the same as we advanced. We landed at the hazard of our necks in another
                  place, which we left as soon as the boat's crew called out, that they perceived
                  the natives above us. We continued till we came to a considerable chasm in the
                  rock, before which a flat reef, full of holes and cavities, extended about fifty
                  yards off shore. We drew up a line of sailors on the reef, and the captain with us
                  walked into the chasm, where we found four canoes. They were very nearly of the
                  same structure with those of Tonga-Tabboo, and had some carving, but were not so
                  neatly wrought. They were single, and had strong out-riggers. Some were covered
                  with coarse mats, and contained fishing-lines, spears, and pieces of wood, which
                  appeared to have served as matches for fishing at night. The captain laid a small
                  present of beads, nails, and medals on each canoe; but whilst he was so employed,
                  I perceived a troop of natives coming down the chasm, and instantly acquainting
                  our company of it, we all retired a few steps. Two of the natives, dressed with
                  feathers, and blackened as the other before mentioned, advanced towards us with
                  furious shouts, and spears in their hands. We called in friendly terms to them;
                  but to no purpose. The captain endeavoured to discharge his musket, but it missed
                  fire. He desired us to fire in our own defence, and the same thing happened to us
                  all. The natives threw two spears: captain Cook narrowly escaped one of them by
                  stooping; the other slid along my thigh, marking my cloaths with the black colour
                  with which it was daubed. We tried to fire again, and at last my piece, loaded
                  with small shot, went off, and Mr. Hodges fired a ball, which did no execution. At
                  the same time a regular firing began behind us from our party, who having observed
                  our retreat, had likewise viewed another troop of the natives coming down by a
                  different path to cut us off. The effect of the small shot fortunately stopped the
                  natives from rushing upon us, and gave us time to retreat to our men, who
                  continued to fire with great eagerness, while any of the natives remained in
                  sight. Two of these in particular, standing among the bushes, brandished their
                  weapons in defiance a considerable while, but at last retired, one of them
                  appearing to be wounded, by the dismal howl which we heard presently after. We now
                  embarked, and resolved to abandon a set of people, whom no entreaties could
                  prevail upon to become our friends. The nature of their country, which is almost
                  inaccessible, seems to have contributed to make their tempers so unsociable. The
                  whole island is purely a coral-rock, like that of the low islands, on which we saw
                  very few coco-palms, and no useful trees. I have therefore formed a conjecture,
                  that the interior parts are not so barren, but fit for the culture of nutritive
                  vegetables. The general resemblance of this island to a coral ledge raised out of
                  the water, almost leads me to suspect that it includes a fertile plain, which was
                  once a lagoon.5 Whether a convulsion of the globe, or any other cause, lifted such
                  a large piece of coral-rock forty feet above water, is a point which must be left
                  to future philosophers to determine. The boats and arms of the natives resembled
                  those of Tonga-Tabboo, and it is therefore probable that the people have the same
                  origin; but their numbers are inconsiderable, and their civilization little
                  advanced, since they are savage, and go naked. Their island seems to be about
                  three leagues long, and was called Savage Island. It is situated in 19° 1' S. and
                  169° 37' W. </p>

               <p>Having reached the ship, the boats were hoisted in, and the next morning we
                  continued our course to the westward. A large high-finned whale, which was seen
                  near the ship, spouted up the water, and several birds and fish attended us as
                  usual.</p>

               <p>On the twenty-fourth at night we lay to, as we expected to be very near A Namoka,
                  or Rotterdam Island, one of the Friendly Isles discovered by Tasman in 1643.
                  Breakers were heard a-head at two o'clock, and the land appeared at day-break.
                     <date>[Saturday 25.]</date>We stood for it, and soon found it to consist of
                  several low islands, connected by a vast reef. Another great reef lay to the
                  northward, and we passed between them. At noon a canoe came off towards us, though
                  the nearest land was above a league distant. We discerned two men in it, who stood
                  on a long while, but at last, seeing that the ship gained upon them, they put
                  about and returned. We could not help admiring the difference between this race,
                  and the savages whom we had so lately left, and agreed that the name Friendly was
                  very justly given to them. The wind slackened all the afternoon, and died away to
                  a perfect calm during night. We approached so near one of the reefs by this means,
                  that we ran great risk of being wrecked; but a breeze springing up in the morning,
                  we were out of danger in a short time.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 26.]</date>The next morning we sailed between reefs and small
                  islands, which made the water smooth. The islands had a little more elevation than
                  the common coral islands; they were covered with groves and tufts of trees, which
                  gave them a most enchanting appearance. The houses were seen in great numbers
                  among the trees on the beach, and the islands had an air of happiness and
                  affluence. One of these little gardens rose at its east end into a white
                  perpendicular cliff, with something like horizontal strata. At our distance it
                  looked like the bastion of a ruined fort, and being fringed with woods and palms,
                  formed altogether a romantic view. Towards noon the wind slackened, and canoes put
                  off from different islands to visit us, though they were above a league distant.
                  Some of them worked so hard, that they were near us in less than an hour; and when
                  they were about a musket-shot off, they began to call to us from time to time,
                  still continuing to paddle towards us. Three persons were in the canoe, exactly
                  like the natives of Eä-oowhe and Tonga-Tabboo, whom we had seen in October, 1773.
                  When they were along-side, a few beads and nails were presented to them, for which
                  they immediately sent a bunch of bananas, and some delicious shaddocks (citrus
                  decumanus) on the deck, besides a bunch of the red fruits of the palm-nut tree or
                  pandang (athrodactylis) which is a sign of friendship. This being done, they sold
                  us all the shaddocks and fruit which they had, and came on board. In the mean
                  while the other canoes arrived, and acted without the least caution, as if we had
                  been long acquainted. They taught us the names of all the islands in the
                  neighbourhood; that with the high cliff they called Terrefetchéâ; the other, which
                  we admired so much for its beauty, Tonooméa: both these lay to the eastward of us.
                  Mango-nooe (great) and Mango-eetee (little) were two islands to the west of us;
                  and to the S. W. beyond them lay Namoka-nooee and Namoka-eetee; the first of which
                  Tasman has called Rotterdam Island, or Anamocka.</p>

               <p>After dinner the breeze freshened, and we sailed towards Namoka, which was the
                  largest island of this group. The number of canoes encreased about us; they came
                  from all the neighbouring islands with fruit, fish, and pigs, all which they
                  disposed of for nails and rags.</p>

               <p>We had soundings all the day between these islands, at first in forty and fifty,
                  and afterwards, when we came nearer, in nine, twelve, fourteen, and twenty fathom.
                  About four o'clock, having hauled round the south end of Namoka, we came to, on
                  the lee or west side of it, where Tasman formerly lay. Our distance from the shore
                  was about a mile. The coast of the island rose fifteen or twenty feet nearly
                  perpendicular, after which it appeared almost level, having only a single hillock
                  near the middle. This steep shore had some resemblance to the coast of Savage
                  Island, which we had lately left, but the richness of its woods was infinitely
                  greater. Innumerable coco-nut palms out-topped the woods, and ornamented the
                  island on all sides.</p>

               <p>Whilst we were coming to an anchor, one of the natives caught the lead, and tore
                  the line which one of our people was heaving. He was desired to return it, but
                  took no notice of the captain who spoke to him. A musket with ball was fired
                  through his canoe; upon which he calmly removed to the other side of the ship. Our
                  demand was repeated, and proving ineffectual again, was enforced by a load of
                  small-shot, which made him smart. He instantly paddled to the head of the ship,
                  where a rope hung overboard, to which he tied the line and lead. His countrymen
                  were not satisfied with this restitution; they turned him out of his canoe, and
                  made him swim on shore, whilst they continued to trade with us. They sold us
                  coco-nuts, excellent yams, bread fruit, bananas, shaddocks, and other fruit. They
                  also brought purple water-hens6 alive, and a fine well-tasted sparus7ready dressed
                  in leaves; also a curious stringy root baked, which contained a very nourishing
                  pulp, of such a sweetness, as if it had been boiled in sugar. All these things
                  were eagerly bought for nails, which were esteemed according to their size, and
                  for pieces of our cloth. Their canoes, their persons, dress, customs and language
                  so entirely resembled those of Tonga-Tabboo, that we could perceive no difference.
                  As this island is at a short distance from Namoka, it is not improbable that the
                  inhabitants of the latter might have heard of our arrival there in October,
                  1773.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 27.]</date>The next morning captain Cook landed early in a sandy
                  cove, which is accurately described by Tasman.8 It is enclosed by a reef, and has
                  a narrow entrance for boats at the south end. It is so shallow, that our boats
                  could only come in at high water. The captain purchased a pig, and was conducted
                  to a pond of fresh water at a short distance from the beach, the same where Tasman
                  had supplied his ships with water. The hospitality of the natives was exercised in
                  its utmost extent, and one of the handsomest ladies of the island complimented the
                  captain with an offer, which was not accepted. Having examined the watering-place,
                  he returned on board to breakfast, and gave strict orders, that no person infected
                  with or lately cured of venereal complaints should be suffered to go on shore, and
                  that no woman should be admitted in the ship. A number of ladies came off in
                  several canoes, and seemed very desirous of making acquaintance with our sailors;
                  but after paddling about the ship for some time, they were obliged to return to
                  the shore, very much discontented. Immediately after breakfast, Dr. Sparrman, my
                  father and myself accompanied captain Cook to the shore, where a trade commenced
                  for shaddocks and yams, which the natives sold us in prodigious quantities.
                  Bananas and coco-nuts were scarce in proportion, and bread-fruit still more rare,
                  though the trees of these sorts were very numerous. All the men went nearly naked,
                  a slight covering on the loins excepted; a few of them, however, and most of the
                  women, were drest from the waist to the ancles, in a piece of stiff painted cloth
                  made of bark, wrapped several times round them, or in mats.</p>

               <p>As soon as our boats reached the shore, the clamours of all those who had
                  something to sell became so excessively loud, that we hastened into the country,
                  whose aspect was very inviting. A considerable variety of plants covered the
                  ground in wild luxuriance; and the great number of plantations of all sorts, made
                  the whole island resemble a beautiful garden. The fences which had confined the
                  view at Tonga-Tabboo, were here much less frequent, and only enclosed one side of
                  the path, leaving the other open to the eye. The ground was not perfectly level in
                  the interior parts, but rose in several little hillocks lined with hedges and
                  bushes, which formed a most agreeable prospect. The path which we met with,
                  sometimes went under long rows of lofty trees, planted at considerable distances,
                  between which the ground was covered with the richest verdure; sometimes a thick
                  and impenetrable arbour of fragrant shrubberies vaulted over it for a considerable
                  space, and hid it entirely from the sun; sometimes plantations, and sometimes
                  wilds appeared on both sides. The houses of the natives were of a singular
                  structure:9 their height was about eight or nine feet; but the walls, which were
                  not perpendicular, but converged towards the bottom, were not above three or four
                  feet from the ground, and very neatly made of reeds. The roof converged into a
                  ridge at the top; so that the section of the house resembled a pentagon. It was
                  thatched, and the roof projected beyond the sloping walls of the house. In one of
                  the long sides there was always an opening about two feet square, and eighteen
                  inches from the ground, which served instead of a door. The length of the house
                  never exceeded thirty feet, and the breadth was commonly eight or nine. The inside
                  of these houses was always filled with large roots of yams, which seem to be the
                  chief support of the natives. To sleep upon them must be extremely uncomfortable;
                  and yet a few mats are only spread over them at night, which custom has made
                  acceptable to these people. Those narrow little stools, on which the Taheitians
                  rest the head, are extremely frequent here, and serve the same purpose. We also
                  observed several open sheds, on a few posts, like some which we had seen at
                  Tonga-Tabboo. These were laid out with mats, and seemed to be intended for their
                  abode in the day-time. In our ramble we passed by a number of these habitations,
                  but saw very few inhabitants, they being mostly at the trading place. Those whom
                  we met were always very civil, and bowed their heads, saying, leleï (good), woä
                  (friend), or some such word, to mark their good temper and disposition.10 They
                  were our conductors; they brought us flowers from the highest trees, and birds out
                  of the water; they often pointed out the finest plants to us, and taught us their
                  names; we needed only to shew them a plant, of which we wished to have specimens,
                  and they would go to any distance to procure it. Coco-nuts and shaddocks they
                  readily offered to us; and willingly carried great loads for us; a nail, a bead,
                  or even a small rag of cloth, being considered as a valuable present in return. In
                  a word, they were on all occasions ready to oblige us.</p>

               <p>In the course of our walk we found a large lake or lagoon of salt-water, at the
                  north end of the island, which at one place reached within a few yards of the sea.
                  It was about three miles long, and one wide. Three little islands full of trees,
                  arranged in the most picturesque manner, served to ornament this fine piece of
                  water, of which the shores also captivated the eye by their variety and beauty.
                  The inverted landscape on the water,11 rendered this scene still more beautiful,
                  especially as our point of view was an eminence, where many tall trees and thick
                  shrubberies screened us from the sun.</p>

               <p>No island, which we had hitherto visited, had offered so great variety of views to
                  us in so small a space; nay, we had no where found such abundance of beautiful
                  flowers, so agreeably contrasting their various tints, and mingling their sweet
                  scents to perfume the air. The lake was full of wild-ducks, and the woods and
                  shores abounded with pigeons, parroquets, rails, and small birds, which the
                  natives brought for sale.</p>

               <p>At noon we returned to the trading place, where captain Cook had purchased a great
                  quantity of fruit and roots, a few fowls, and one or two small pigs. When we
                  arrived on board, we found they had been equally successful there in the purchase
                  of provisions. The whole poop was loaded with shaddocks, which we found a most
                  delicious fruit, of excellent flavour; and of yams we had laid in such a quantity,
                  that we eat of them every day for several weeks afterwards instead of biscuit.
                  Arms and utensils, the usual articles of trade of these islanders, had likewise
                  been plentifully sold, especially by several people who came in large double
                  sailing canoes from the neighbouring islands. While we were at dinner, one of our
                  shipmates was observed on shore, surrounded by a great croud of natives; but no
                  further notice was taken of him, though he made signals for a boat. One of our
                  trading boats, which was sent ashore as soon as the crew had dined, came near the
                  place where he was stationed, and took him on board. It proved to be our surgeon,
                  Mr. Patton, who had been in the most imminent danger of losing his life, by being
                  carelessly left upon the island without support. From his account it is very
                  plain, that even among these kind and well-disposed people, there were some
                  villains who greatly resembled the wretches that infest our civilized countries.
                  He had left the landing place, and engaging a single native in his service for a
                  few beads, had rambled over great part of the island. His success in shooting was
                  considerable; the native carried eleven ducks, with which he returned to the sandy
                  cove. The boats having already left that place, he was something disconcerted, and
                  the croud pressed about him, conscious that he was in their power. He walked
                  therefore to the rocky shore, just abreast of the ship, where our people saw him.
                  In going thither, the man who carried the ducks endeavoured to drop some of them;
                  but Mr. Patton luckily turning about at that moment, he picked them up again. The
                  croud now pressed close about him, and several of the men threatened him with
                  jagged spears, whilst nothing but the appearance of his fowling-piece kept them in
                  awe. Several women were set on by the men, to draw him off his guard, by a
                  thousand lascivious gestures and attitudes; but his situation was of too serious a
                  nature to permit him to attend to them. After some time a canoe arrived from the
                  ship, and Mr. Patton agreed with the owner to carry him aboard for a nail, the
                  last which he had left. Just as he was stepping into the canoe, they snatched his
                  fowling-piece from him, took all his ducks except three, and sent away the canoe.
                  He was greatly astonished and alarmed, and resolved to return to the top of the
                  rock, where he expected to be more easily distinguished from the ship, from whence
                  he hoped for assistance. The natives now laid aside all reserve, and began to
                  pluck at his cloaths. He readily suffered them to snatch his cravat and
                  handkerchief; but they also seized his coat, and resumed their threatening
                  gestures with such violence, that he expected every moment would be his last. His
                  anxiety and agony cannot well be painted. He put his hands in all his pockets to
                  search for some instrument, a knife or the like, with which to defend himself; he
                  found nothing but a wretched tooth-pick case; he opened it, and held it out upon
                  the croud, who perceiving it hollow, instantly slew back to the distance of two or
                  three yards: he continued to point this formidable weapon against the enemy, whose
                  spears were still lifted against him. The meridian sun shone burning hot upon him;
                  he had walked the whole day, was spent with fatigue, and began to despair of
                  saving his life, when a handsome young woman, remarkable for her flowing curls,
                  which hung down on her bosom, took pity on his wretched condition. She stepped
                  forward from the croud, with the greatest humanity and compassion expressed in her
                  eye; innocence and goodness were so strongly marked in her countenance, that it
                  was impossible to distrust her. She approached, and offered him a piece of
                  shaddock, which was eagerly and thankfully accepted; and gradually supplied him
                  with more, till he had consumed the whole fruit. At last the boats put off from
                  the ship, at sight of which the whole croud dispersed; only his generous
                  benefactress, and an old man, who was her father, remained sitting near Mr.
                  Patton, with that unconcern which a noble and virtuous conduct inspires. She
                  enquired for the name of her friend; he told her that which the Taheitians had
                  given him, Pateenee; and she immediately adopted it, changing it into Patseenee.
                  On stepping into the boat, he gave her father and her a few presents, which he
                  borrowed from the crew, and with these they returned to their groves highly
                  pleased. When Mr. Patton came on board, he acquainted captain Cook with the danger
                  to which he had been exposed; but though he had only followed the example of many
                  of his shipmates, by reposing confidence in the natives, yet the loss of his
                  fowling-piece was considered as a proper punishment for his imprudence. The
                  afternoon was spent in different rambles on shore. My father, with a single
                  sailor, walked over a considerable part of the island, without the least
                  molestation from the inhabitants, and brought on board a number of new plants. No
                  other complaints arose against the natives this day, except some petty thefts, at
                  which they were expert like their brethren of Tonga-Tabboo and the Society
                  Islands.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 28.]</date>The next morning early we discovered several islands to
                  the N. W. of us, which a haze in that quarter had hitherto screened from our
                  sight. The two westermost were high, one peaked, but the other12 more extensive. A
                  thick smoke arose from the last, on which, during the night, we had observed a
                  fire. The natives who came on board acquainted us that this fire was constant, so
                  that we concluded it to proceed from a volcano. They called this island Tofooa ,
                  and the peak close to it e-Ghao . To the northward of these two we discerned
                  thirteen low islands, each of which the natives named to us.</p>

               <p>We hastened ashore after breakfast, to resume our enquiries. We soon left the
                  beach, where the natives were again assembled in great numbers of both sexes. A
                  most beautiful kind of lily (crinum asiaticum) was the first plant which we met
                  with; and several others, not less valuable, were collected soon after. We came to
                  the watering-place, which was a pond about a hundred or a hundred and fifty yards
                  long, and fifty broad; it contained stagnant water, which was somewhat tainted
                  with a brackish taste, and might perhaps have subterraneous communications with
                  the salt lagoon, which in one place adjoined to it. Lieutenant Clerke, who
                  superintended the waters, told us that his musket had been nimbly snatched away by
                  one of the natives, who instantly ran off with it. We advanced to the salt lagoon,
                  and botanized among the spacious mangroves which surrounded it. These trees occupy
                  a vast space of ground, and grow more and more intricate by age. Their seeds do
                  not drop off, but shoot down from the top of the tree, till they reach the ground,
                  where they take root, and spread new branches. Whilst we were here, we heard three
                  great guns fired; but the sound being broken by many intervening objects, we
                  suspected that they were only muskets overcharged as usual, by some young
                  gentlemen on a shooting party. We left the lake soon after, and passed through a
                  plantation, where the natives bowed to us very kindly, and invited us to sit down
                  amongst them. We were desirous of making the most of our time, and therefore soon
                  left them, and returned to the fresh-water pond. Having fired a musket at some
                  wild-ducks, which were in great plenty, we were called to by Mr. Gilbert, the
                  master, who told us that a volley of small arms, and three cannon had been fired
                  to alarm and bring us back, because a fray had happened between the natives and
                  our people. We joined him in a few minutes, and found with him the captain, and a
                  file of marines, together with two natives, who sat on their hams, and from time
                  to time pronounced the word wòa, which signifies " friend" . We supposed that the
                  theft of Mr. Clerke's musket had given occasion to this disturbance; but this was
                  too trifling a circumstance to be resented. The cooper, in mending the water-cask,
                  was not sufficiently attentive to his adze, and one of the natives had snatched it
                  up, and conveyed it away. The captain, in order to recover this valuable
                  instrument, of which however there were no less than a dozen in the ship, ordered
                  his people to seize several large double canoes, which had probably arrived from
                  different adjacent islands. They performed his command, and Mr. Clerke's gun was
                  brought back by the astonished natives. But this was not sufficient, and another
                  canoe was seized. A native, who stood upon it, defended his property, which he had
                  forfeited by no offence, and took up a spear, which he seemed resolved to employ
                  with good effect. Captain Cook levelled his musket at him, and bid him lay down
                  his arms. He refused, and received a load of shot through his wrist and thigh, at
                  the distance of eight or nine yards, which immediately brought him to the ground.
                  The volley was now fired, and a boat sent off to the ship, where three canon,
                  directed against the highest point of the island, were fired off one after
                  another. It was thought that the natives would now have left us; but a great part
                  still remained on the beach conscious of their innocence, and some canoes
                  continued to ply about the ship. The behaviour of one of the natives upon this
                  occasion was so remarkably stoical, that our people could not help taking notice
                  of it. He had a small canoe in which he always met the other canoes before they
                  reached the ship, took out what he liked, and paid their owners, a certain small
                  price in European goods, which he had before obtained by barter. With his new
                  cargo he returned to the ship, and always made a considerable profit upon his
                  bargain. As he never failed to visit each canoe, our sailors called him a
                  Custom-house officer. He was lying close to the ship, baling the water out of his
                  canoe, when the guns were discharged not two yards over his head. Notwithstanding
                  the extraordinary concussion at so short a distance, he never once looked up, but
                  continued to bale, and afterwards to trade as if nothing had happened.</p>

               <p>We had not long rejoined the captain and his party, when the unlucky adze was
                  brought back, which had been the occasion of so much mischief. A middle-aged
                  woman, who seemed to have great authority, had dispatched some of the people after
                  it, and they returned at the same time a cartridge-box, and Mr. Patton's
                  fowling-piece, which appeared to have been concealed under water. The wounded man
                  was brought to us on a piece of wood carried by men. He seemed almost without
                  sensation; and was set on the ground, whilst the natives gradually returned, and
                  began to take courage. The women in particular, were very desirous of restoring
                  the general tranquility, and their timid looks seemed to charge the behaviour of
                  the strangers with cruelty. They seated themselves on a fine green turf, in a
                  group of fifty or more together, and invited several of us to sit by them. Each of
                  them had some shaddocks, which they broke in pieces, and distributed to us with
                  every mark of kindness and peace. Mr. Patton's friend was one of the foremost, and
                  indeed claimed the first rank among the beauties of those islands. Her stature was
                  graceful, and her form exquisitely proportioned. Her features were more regular
                  than any I had ever seen in these isles, full of sweetness and the charms of
                  youth. Her large dark eyes sparkled with fire, and her ebony curls floated on her
                  neck. She was of a lighter colour than the common people, and wore a brown cloth
                  which closely embracing the body immediately under the breast, but being somewhat
                  wider towards the feet, perhaps suited her better than the most elegant European
                  dress.</p>

               <p>Mr. Patton having been sent for, arrived with proper instruments, and dressed the
                  wounds of the poor native, whose countrymen brought many banana leaves, which were
                  laid on over the dressing. A bottle of brandy was given them, with directions to
                  wash the wounds with the liquor from time to time. The wound was not dangerous, as
                  it happened in a fleshy part; but as the distance was so short, the shot had torn
                  the flesh very much, and made the wound very painful to the poor man. After this
                  we distributed some beads, and departed making various signs of friendship. The
                  natives like those of Tonga-Tabboo, were strangers to resentment, and continued to
                  trade with our ship as before. They seemed to possess a truly mercantile spirit,
                  and spared no trouble to obtain some of our goods or curiosities. Among the rest,
                  they were much delighted with a great number of young puppies which we had taken
                  on board at the Society Islands, on purpose to stock such islands as were not
                  provided with them. We left two couple on Namoka, of which the natives promised to
                  take particular care. These people managed their canoes with surprising agility,
                  and swam with the greatest ease. Their common trading-canoes were neatly made, and
                  polished like those which I have already described. But those of the neighbouring
                  islands were of a great size, and some of them contained upwards of fifty people.
                  They always consisted of two large canoes, fastened by a transverse platform of
                  planks, in the midst of which they had erected a hut, where they placed their
                  goods, their arms, and utensils, and where they passed a great part of their time.
                  There were likewise holes, which gave admittance into the body of each canoe.
                  Their masts were stout poles which could be struck at pleasure, and their sails
                  were very large and triangular, but not very proper to sail by the wind. All their
                  cordage was excellent, and they had also contrived a very good ground tackle,
                  consisting of a strong rope with large stones at the end, by means of which they
                  came to an anchor.</p>

               <p>We went on shore again after dinner, as captain Cook proposed leaving this island
                  the next day. We passed through several fields and wild shrubberies, and collected
                  a number of valuable plants. We also made a purchase of several arms, such as
                  clubs, and spears, and of some utensils, viz. small stools, large wooden dishes
                  and bowls, in which the people prepare their victuals, and some earthern pots
                  which seemed to have been long in use. The great abundance of their arms, does not
                  agree with their good-nature and hospitable disposition, unless they quarrel with
                  their next neighbours, like the people of Taheitee and the Society Islands. But
                  they seemed to have spent too much time in ornamenting their clubs, to have
                  frequent occasion to use them.</p>

               <p>At day-break the next morning we unmoored and set sail, standing towards the
                  island of Tofooa, on which we had again observed the volcano burning during night.
                  A whole fleet of canoes followed us several miles, trading with a variety of
                  articles, particularly their dresses, utensils, and ornaments. Some of them
                  likewise brought fish of different sorts, which we had found very well-tasted.</p>

               <p>The island of Namoka, which we left after a stay of two days only, was not above
                  fifteen miles in circuit, but seemed to be remarkably populous. It lies in 20° 17'
                  S.14 and 174° 32' W. In the group of islands which appeared around it, its size
                  was the most considerable; but all seemed to be well inhabited, and very rich in
                  vegetable productions. They are situated on a kind of bank, on which there is from
                  nine to sixty and seventy fathom water, and the soil is probably the same in every
                  island. Namoka consists, like Tonga-Tabboo, of a coral-rock, covered with a rich
                  mould on which all sorts of vegetables thrive. We had no time to examine the
                  hillock in its centre, which seems to have had a different origin, and may perhaps
                  be volcanic. At present it is wholly covered with the richest groves, like the
                  rest of the island. The abundance of fresh water in the pond, is an advantage
                  which the people of Namoka enjoy in preference to those of Tonga-Tabboo; but it
                  does not appear that they bathe so regularly as the Taheitians, perhaps because
                  the stagnant water is not very inviting. Its advantage is however so much felt,
                  that the natives brought it to the ship in calabashes, and did the same to Tasman,
                  which implies that it is looked upon as a valuable article among them. The
                  abundance of water, and the richness of the soil likewise seems to be the reason,
                  that bread-fruit and shaddock trees are much more frequent, and all vegetation
                  infinitely more luxuriant than on Tonga-Tabboo. The fences on that account are not
                  laid out, and kept up with that extreme regularity, though they are still
                  preserved in part. The long walks of fruit-trees, and the delightful green turf
                  under them, were rather to be compared to the richest spots on Ea-oowhe, or
                  Middleburg Island. The tufted arbours which vaulted over the paths, are hung with
                  beautiful flowers of all kinds, many of which filled the air with fragrance. The
                  variety of scenes formed by many little risings, and different groups of houses
                  and trees, together with the lagoons, conspire to adorn this island. The fowls and
                  hogs which we saw in the neighbourhood of every dwelling, the prodigious number of
                  shaddocks which lay under every tree, hardly noticed by the natives, and the
                  quantities of yams which filled their houses, gave a picture of abundance and
                  affluence which delighted the eye and comforted the heart. At sight of a plenteous
                  prospect, human nature feels an instinctive satisfaction, and good humour and joy
                  are soon revived in the most dejected breast. Amidst the dismal scenes of our
                  voyage, these intervening moments are remarkably contrasted, and therefore had a
                  great effect upon us. It is so natural to dwell upon pleasing subjects, that I
                  hope, I need not apologize for my frequent descriptions; and I must refer the
                  reader to Mr. Hodges's view in the interior parts of Namoka </p>

               <p> The natives, who were happy enough to call these fertile groves their own, did
                  not appear to me to differ in any respect from those of Tonga-Tabboo, and
                  Ea-oowhe. Their stature was middle-sized, their colour a bright chestnut brown,
                  and their whole body well-proportioned, without being corpulent. Their punctures,
                  their dress, the customs of clipping the beard, and powdering the hair, their
                  arms, utensils, and canoes, their language and manners were exactly such as we had
                  noticed at Tonga-Tabboo. But in the short time which we staid on their island, we
                  could not observe any subordination among them, though this had strongly
                  characterised the natives of Tonga-Tabboo, who seemed to descend even to servility
                  in their obeisance to their king. At Namoka we could not distinguish any persons
                  of superior rank or authority, unless we except the man, whom our sailors called a
                  Custom-house officer, and who inspected all the canoes which came to the ship.16
                  The woman who sent for the stolen things, appeared also to have some sway among
                  them; and since there is reason to suppose, that women whose hair is allowed to
                  grow long, have some prerogatives above the rest in the South Sea , Mr. Patton's
                  friendly benefactress seems to have been a lady of a superior class, which her
                  whole deportment confirmed. She was the only woman with long hair whom we saw on
                  the island. I am far from concluding that the people of Namoka have no fixed
                  government; on the contrary, their vicinity and similarity to other islanders,
                  amongst whom a monarchical government takes place, and the example of all the
                  other islanders of the South Sea which former navigators have examined, give the
                  greatest room to suppose the same existing there. The general coincidence of their
                  manners with those of Tonga-Tabboo, strongly prove that they have the same origin,
                  and probably the same religious notions; but notwithstanding this agreement, I
                  never found a fayetooka or burying-place, during my rambles upon Namoka, nor did
                  any one of our shipmates meet with a place in any wise resembling the
                  burying-place which we found at Tonga-Tabboo.</p>

               <p> It appears, from the accounts of former voyagers, that between the meridians of
                  170° east from Greenwich, and 180°, there is a great number of islands, from the
                  10th to the 22d degree of latitude; all which, as far as they are known, seem to
                  be inhabited by one race of people, who speak the same dialect of the South Sea
                  tongue, and have the same social and mercantile disposition. All these then might
                  be added to the Friendly Islands. They are in general remarkably well inhabited,
                  particularly those which we visited. Tonga-Tabboo is almost one continual garden,
                  and Ea-oowe, Namoka, and the adjacent islands, are some of the most fertile spots
                  in the Pacific Ocean. We shall therefore be extremely moderate in our calculation,
                  if we suppose the number of inhabitants in all these islands does not exceed
                  200,000 persons.17 Their healthy climate, and its excellent productions, keep them
                  free from those numerous diseases, to which we fall an easy prey, and, according
                  to their plain and simple notions, satisfy all their wants. Their progress in the
                  arts, beyond other nations in the South Sea, and particularly their refinement in
                  music, serve to pass away their time agreeably, and give them taste to acknowledge
                  and discern the beauties of their own exquisite forms, from whence one of the
                  strongest ties of society is derived. Their general turn is active and
                  industrious, but their behaviour to strangers more polite than cordial. Their
                  peculiar propensity to trade seems to have substituted this insincere civility, in
                  the room of real friendship, from those interested and mercenary principles which
                  commerce inspires. Both these characters are in direct opposition to those of the
                  Taheitians, who delight in an indolent life, and are too hearty in their
                  affections to confine them to outward shew and specious appearances. However there
                  are many luxurious individuals (arreoys) at the Society Islands, whose moral
                  character appears to be somewhat depraved; whilst the people of the Friendly
                  Islands seem to be ignorant of vices, which can only have arisen from a superior
                  degree of opulence.</p>
               <!-- AN April 3: Another set with 'th' and 'nd'. -->

               <p>The canoes which accompanied us from Namoka returned at noon to several low
                  islands, all which seemed to be well inhabited and fertile, like so many beautiful
                  gardens. After dinner the wind became contrary, and abated, so that we rather lost
                  than gained ground. A few canoes came up with us again, for the natives spared no
                  labour to obtain our nails and rags of cloth. Towards evening we were surrounded
                  by a little fleet, and the trade was very brisk, chiefly for the utensils and arms
                  of the islanders, which are made with remarkable neatness.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 30.]</date>The canoes returned once more to us the next morning,
                  putting off at day-break from all the little islands in sight. Their appearance
                  and their sailing afforded us much entertainment. Before the wind they go
                  extremely swift, being well contrived for that purpose, and their broad triangular
                  sail gives them a very picturesque form at a distance. We left them in a short
                  time, when the breeze freshened, and sailed towards the two high islands, which we
                  had discovered whilst we lay at anchor. In the afternoon three canoes came up with
                  us again; and one of them, with 50 men on board, traded with us just as we were in
                  the narrow passage between both islands. The larger, to the southward, which is
                  called Tofoòa, appeared to be inhabited. Some of the natives on board our ship
                  told us it had fresh water, together with coco-nut, banana, and bread-fruit trees.
                  We saw indeed a number of palms, and a great quantity of the club-wood.18 The
                  whole island, though steep, was in some places covered with verdure or shrubbery.
                  Towards the sea, and especially towards the other island, the rocks seemed burnt,
                  and black sand covered the shore. We approached within a cable's length of it, but
                  found a depth of eighty fathom, which prevented our coming to an anchor. The rocks
                  towards the passage, which was not above a mile across, were cavernous, and in
                  some places had a rude columnar shape. The day was somewhat hazy, and the top of
                  the island was therefore covered with clouds. The smoke however rolled up with
                  impetuosity, and seemed, before we had passed the strait, to issue from the other
                  side of the mountain. As soon as we had passed it, it appeared to arise from the
                  side which we had just left. This deception proves, that the top of the mountain
                  was hollow, or formed a crater, from whence the vapour was thrown up. There was a
                  spot on the N. W. side of the island, somewhat below the place where we saw the
                  smoke come out, which had the appearance of being lately burnt: it was destitute
                  of verdure, though the mountain on both sides of it was covered with various
                  plants. When we came exactly into the line in which the smoke was carried by the
                  wind, we had a small shower of rain, and many of us felt it very biting and sharp,
                  when it dropped into our eyes. It is probable from thence, that it carried down
                  with it some particles which the volcano had ejected. The wind being at S. S. E.
                  and freshening, we left this island, without being able to make any farther
                  observations upon it; though it well deserved the attention of the learned, who
                  make the revolutions which our globe has undergone, the object of their useful and
                  curious enquiries.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. July.][Friday 1.]</date>We sailed to the W. S. W. and continued the
                  same course all the next day. The following day, very near noon, we discovered
                  land, which, from the direction of our track, had never been seen by other
                  navigators. We ran toward it, and before night approached pretty near it; but
                  found breakers before us, which obliged us to tack all night, for fear of an
                  accident. Several lights which appeared on shore as soon as it was dark, announced
                  to us that the island was inhabited.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 3.]</date>The next morning we bore down upon it again, and came
                  round its east end. It appeared to be about seven miles long,19 and had two small
                  hills of very gentle ascent, wholly covered with woods, like the rest of the
                  island. One end sloped into a flat point, on which we observed fine groves of
                  coco-palms, and fruit-trees,20 together with houses in their shade. A fine sandy
                  beach surrounded the shore, and at the distance of half a mile, a coral reef
                  encompassed the east side of the island, which at the points projected near two
                  miles from the shore. On this reef we soon perceived five blackish-brown men, with
                  clubs in their hands, looking at us very attentively. We hoisted a boat out, and
                  sent the master to sound an opening between the reefs which we saw before us. He
                  went on through the entrance towards the shore, where we observed upwards of
                  thirty inhabitants sitting. Amongst them ten or twelve were armed with spears; but
                  as soon as our boat came near, they hauled a canoe into the woods, which had
                  brought their five men to and from the reef, and all ran off when the master
                  landed. He laid some nails, a knife, and a few medals on the sandy beach, and
                  returned on board, to acquaint the captain that there was no bottom in the
                  entrance of the reef, and not sufficient depth within it. He had observed a dozen
                  or more large turtles swimming in the harbour; but being destitute of harpoons, or
                  other instruments, could not strike any of them. Our boat was hoisted in again,
                  and the hopes of botanizing on this island were entirely frustrated. We continued
                  standing along its reef, on which we observed some large single rocks of coral,
                  near fifteen feet above the surface of the water, narrow at the base, and
                  spreading out at the top. Whether an earthquake had raised them so high out of the
                  sea, in which they must have been formed, or whether some other cause ought to be
                  assigned for this curious fact, remains to be determined.</p>

               <p>A few miles to the westward of the island we found a great circular reef of coral,
                  including a lagoon. It was suspected that this lagoon might be the abode of
                  turtles, and two boats were hoisted out in the afternoon to go in quest of them.
                  The fishery proved very unsuccessful, not a single turtle being seen, and the crew
                  hoisted the boats in again before sunset. We then left this new discovery, which
                  was named Turtle Island, and is situated in 19° 48' S. and 178° 2' W.</p>

               <p>We ran to the W. S. W. with a fresh trade-wind by day, but tacked every night. No
                  birds attended us on this course, except now and then a white booby, or a man of
                  war bird. The fair weather, the yams of Namoka, and the hope of making new
                  discoveries in this part of the Pacific Ocean, which had never been visited
                  before, kept us all in very good spirits.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 9.]</date>On the 9th of July, having reached nearly 176° E. and
                  being in 20° S. we changed our course to the N. W. Our fresh gale continued
                  without any change till the 13th, <date>[Wednesd. 13.]</date>when it was somewhat
                  abated, and a few drops of rain fell both at night and in the morning. The second
                  anniversary of our departure from England, which happened on this day, was
                  celebrated by the sailors with their usual mirth. They drank plentifully, having
                  saved a part of their daily allowance, for this solemn occasion, and drowned every
                  gloomy idea in grog, the mariner's Lethe. One of them, of a fanatical22 turn,
                  composed a hymn on the occasion, as he had done the first year; and after
                  seriously exhorting his fellows to repentance, sat down and hugged the bottle
                  heartily; but like all the rest, he proved unequal to the conflict, and sunk under
                  the powerful influence of his adversary.</p>

               <p>The wind freshened very much the two following days, and on the third the weather
                  became hazy, with showers of rain. A calabash, which we observed drifting past the
                  ship, seemed to indicate the near approach of land; and indeed a few hours after,
                  about two o'clock in the afternoon, on the <date>[Saturday 16.]</date>16th, we
                  made it out at a little distance before us, being high, and of considerable
                  extent. The gale encreased towards night, and the ship rolled very much; the rains
                  were incessant at the same time, and coming through the decks into our cabins,
                  thoroughly soaked our books, cloaths, and beds, depriving us of rest. The same
                  heavy gales, with bad weather, continued all the next day, and so involved the
                  land in clouds, that we could scarce discern it, but were forced to stand off and
                  on. This weather was the more disagreeable, as it was unexpected in a sea, which
                  has always been termed Pacific. It proves, that no entire reliance may be had upon
                  general denominations; and, that though storms and hurricanes are perhaps very
                  seldom felt in this ocean, yet it is not wholly free from them. Its western part
                  is particularly known for strong gales. When captain Pedro Fernandez de Quiros
                  left his Tierra del Espiritù Santo; when M. de Bougainville was on the coast of
                  the Louisiade; and when captain Cook, in the Endeavour, explored the eastern coast
                  of New Holland, each of them met with stormy weather. Perhaps it may be owing to
                  the large lands which are situated in this part of the ocean; at least it is
                  known, that the stated winds of the torrid zone become variable in the
                  neighbourhood of high and extensive coasts.</p>

               <p>The weather was a little clearer the next morning, so that we could venture to run
                  in shore. We distinguished two islands, which were the Whitsun and Aurora
                  Islandsof M. de Bougainville, and ran for the northern extremity of the
                  latter.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 18.]</date>Thus, after spending two years in visiting the
                  discoveries of former voyagers, in rectifying their mistakes, and in combating
                  vulgar errors, we began the third, by investigating a group of islands which the
                  French navigator, pressed by necessity, and ill fitted out, had left with
                  precipitation. It was reserved for this last year to teem in new discoveries, and
                  to make amends for the two first. We had, it is true, no reason to complain, since
                  most of the countries we had visited, were scarcely known to the world, from the
                  vague and unphilosophical accounts of the discoverers. We had room to make a
                  variety of observations on men and manners, which, though they ought to be the
                  first objects of travellers, have still been postponed, even by those who have
                  aimed at being looked upon by the world as the most enlightened. But, as mankind
                  are ever captivated by the charms of novelty, the history of our transactions,
                  during the ensuing months, will have that advantage at least to recommend it to
                  their attention.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

               <p>E N D O F T H E S E C O N D B O O K.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

               <p>A VOYAGE round the WORLD.</p>

            </div>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>BOOK III.</head>

            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. I.</l>

                  <l>An account of our stay at Mallicollo, and discovery of the New Hebrides.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. July.]</date>WE reached the north-point of Aurora island at eight in
                  the morning <date>[Monday 18.]</date>on the 18th of July, and passing very close
                  to it, observed vast numbers of coco-nut-palms on all parts of it, not excepting
                  the high ridges of the island. The whole, as far as a thick haze permitted us to
                  see, was clad in thick forests which had a pleasing, but wild appearance. My
                  father had a momentaneous glimpse of a small rocky peak to the northward, which M.
                  Bougainville calls Pic de l'Etoile, or Pic d'Averdi; but the clouds which moved
                  with great velocity soon involved it.1 By the help of glasses some natives were
                  seen on Aurora, and as we approached nearer, we heard them calling to one another.
                  Having passed the north end of Aurora, we stood to the southward along its western
                  coast, as far as the wind would permit, which blew more southerly than easterly.
                  We had only this advantage, that being sheltered by the land on all sides, the
                  water was remarkably smooth, though the gale continued. The island which M. de
                  Bougainville named the Isle of Lepers, was right a-head of us, and we passed the
                  day in tacking between it and Aurora. At four o'clock in the afternoon, we
                  approached within a mile and a half of the former, and in spite of the clouds
                  which rested on its heights, saw so much of the lower grounds, that we had reason
                  to think it a very fertile island. The place where we approached it was very
                  steep, nor could we find bottom with one hundred and twenty fathoms. However, the
                  north-east point was lower, and covered with all sorts of trees. The palms in
                  particular were innumerable, and to our surprize grew on the hills, where we had
                  never seen them in other islands.2 Several considerable cascades rushed down the
                  precipices into the sea, amidst shrubberies which formed as rich an ornament as in
                  the landscapes of Dusky Bay.3 Having put about, we observed a turtle sleeping on
                  the water, which the violence of the wind did not seem to affect. We tacked all
                  night in order to gain to the southward, being desirous of passing between the
                  Isle of Lepers and Aurora. We came close under the former again <date>[Tuesday
                     19.]</date>at eight in the morning. Having put about, a small canoe ventured
                  out with a single in it. We made a short trip, and returned towards the shore,
                  where three men in another canoe were preparing to come to us. Several people sat
                  on the rocks and projecting bluff points. Some were blackened from the head
                  downwards, as far as the breast; they had something white on their heads, but went
                  naked, with a rope about the waist. Only one of them had a cloth across one
                  shoulder, which came under the opposite arm like a scarf, and then round his
                  loins; it seemed to be of a dirty white with a reddish border.4 All these people
                  were of a dark brown colour, and armed with bows and long arrows. Those who came
                  off in canoes, came very near us, talking loud and unintelligibly5 for some time,
                  but constantly refused to come on board. Having been obliged to put about the
                  ship, they left us, and returned to their countrymen on shore. In several places
                  we observed reeds like hurdles, standing up between the rocks, which seemed to be
                  so placed in order to catch fish.</p>

               <p>We now approached the isle of Aurora, where we observed a fine beach, and the most
                  luxuriant vegetation that can be conceived. The whole country was woody;
                  numberless climbers ran up the highest trees, and forming garlands and festoons
                  between them, embellished the scene. A neat plantation fenced with reeds, stood on
                  the slope of the hill, and a beautiful cascade poured down through the adjacent
                  forest.7 About two o'clock three canoes came off from the island of Aurora, when
                  we were close in shore, but as we could not stay for them, they returned like
                  those of Lepers Island. The island of Aurora is about twelve leagues long, but not
                  above five miles broad in any part, lying nearly north and south. The middle is in
                  15° 6' S. and 168° 24' E. Its mountain or ridge is sharp, and of considerable
                  height. Whitsun Island, which lies about four miles to the south of it, runs in
                  the same direction, and is of the same length, but appears to be somewhat broader
                  at its northern extremity. Its middle lies in 15° 45' S. and in 168° 28' east
                  longitude. The Isle of Lepers is almost as large as Aurora, but of greater
                  breadth, and its situation is nearly east and west; the middle lies in 15° 20'
                  south, and 168° 3' east.</p>

               <p>Whitsun Island, as well as the Isle of Lepers, having more sloping exposures than
                  Aurora, appear to be better inhabited, and to contain more plantations.8 At night
                  we observed many fires on them, particularly the first, where they extended to the
                  tops of the hills. This circumstance seems to prove, that they live in great
                  measure on agriculture; and since they have but few canoes, and their shores very
                  steep, fishing does not seem to employ them so much as other islanders.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 20.]</date>The island which M. de Bougainville has placed to the
                  southward of Whitsun Island, came in sight the next morning, but was still so much
                  involved in clouds, that we could not distinguish its form or height. We passed
                  all that day in working to windward, which we performed with better success, as
                  the gale had a little abated.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 21.]</date>The next morning we had moderate and fair weather, and
                  saw M. de Bougainville's southern island very distinctly. There was a passage
                  between it and the south end of Whitsun Island, about six miles in breadth. A long
                  low point extended from this southern island to the eastward; and all its north
                  side, though steep towards the sea, rose from thence with a gentle and gradual
                  ascent to the highest mountains in the centre. In the mountains, which were still
                  covered with clouds, we observed some volumes, as it appeared, of smoke, which
                  indicated a volcano. This island is about seven leagues in length, and its middle
                  lies in 16° 15' S. and 168° 20' E. </p>

               <p>Later in the day we discovered land to the westward, which proved to be the
                  south-westernmost land seen by M. de Bougainville. We advanced towards it,
                  overjoyed with the variety of new islands which presented themselves to our view.
                  Having reached the N. W. end of the former island, on which we suspected a
                  volcano, we were convinced of its existence, by columns of white smoke, which
                  rolled up with great violence from the summit of an inland mountain.10 The whole
                  south-west coast of this island sloped into a very fine and extensive plain, on
                  which innumerable smokes arose, between the richest groves which our eyes had
                  beheld since our departure from Taheitee. The populousness of the country was
                  strongly evinced by its fertile appearance, and by the number of fires.11 We
                  opened two other islands to the south-eastward, after passing the west end of this
                  land, one of which was a very high peak, which looked like a volcanic mountain.
                  Another island, with three high hills, also appeared to the south, at a great
                  distance. The western land, towards which we sailed, was not less beautiful than
                  that which we left. Its groves had the richest tints of verdure, and coco-palms
                  were scattered between them in vast numbers. The mountains rose far inland, and
                  before them lay several lower grounds, all covered with woods, and bounded by a
                  fine beach. At noon we came close in shore, and saw many natives wading into the
                  water to the waist, having clubs in their hands, but waving green boughs, the
                  universal signs of peace.12 One of them had a spear, and another a bow and arrows.
                  Contrary to their expectations, and perhaps their wishes, we put about again.
                  However after dinner two boats were hoisted out, and sent to sound in a little
                  harbour, which we observed from the ship. The whole south point of this little
                  bay, which was bounded by a coral reef, was lined by several hundred inhabitants,
                  of whom a few ventured out in their canoes towards the ship and the boats. They
                  did not approach near the ship whilst she staid out at sea; but the boats having
                  made the signal for good anchorage, we came in after them, into a narrow harbour,
                  with reefs at the entrance, but which seemed to go inland to a considerable
                  distance. Our boats returned on board, and the officer acquainted the captain,
                  that the natives had come within a few yards in their canoes, but had not offered
                  the least insult; on the contrary, they had waved green boughs, and dipping their
                  hands into salt water, had poured it on their heads.13 This compliment our officer
                  returned, much to their satisfaction, it being probably a sign of friendship. They
                  now approached the ship in their canoes, waving green plants, particularly the
                  leaves of the dracùna terminalis, and of a beautiful croton variegatum, and
                  repeating the word Tomarr or Tomarro continually, which seemed to be an expression
                  equivalent to the Taheitian Tayo (friend).14 The greater part of them were however
                  armed with bows and arrows, and a few with spears; being thus prepared, at all
                  events, both for peace and war. By degrees they ventured near the ship, and
                  received a few pieces of Taheitee cloth, which they eagerly accepted. Presently
                  they handed up some of their arrows in exchange; at first such as were pointed
                  with wood only, but soon after even such as were armed with points of bone, and
                  daubed with a black gummy stuff, on which account we suspected them to be
                  poisoned.15 A young Taheitian puppy was therefore wounded in the leg with one of
                  these arrows, to try its effect; but we perceived no dangerous symptoms.</p>

               <p>The language of these people was so utterly different from all the South Sea
                  dialects which we had hitherto heard, that we could not understand a single word
                  of it. It was much harsher than any of them, and the r, s, ch, and other
                  consonants abounded in it. The people themselves differed from any that we had
                  hitherto seen. They were all remarkably slender, and in general did not exceed
                  five feet four inches in height. Their limbs were often indifferently
                  proportioned, their legs and arms long and slim, their colour a blackish brown,
                  and their hair black, frizzled and woolly. Their features were more extraordinary
                  than all the rest. They had a flat broad nose and projecting cheek-bones of a
                  Negroe, and a very short forehead, which had sometimes an unusual direction, being
                  something more depressed than in well-formed men. Many of them were besides this
                  painted with a black colour in the face and over the breast, which disfigured them
                  more than their natural ugliness. A few had a small cap on the head, made of
                  matted work, but all went stark naked, and tied a rope so fast round their belly,
                  that it made a deep notch. Most other nations invent some kind of covering, from
                  motives of shame; but here a roll of cloth continually fastened to the belt,
                  rather displays than conceals, and is the very opposite of modesty.</p>

               <p>They continued about the ship, talking with great vociferation, but at the same
                  time in such a good-humoured manner, that we were much entertained. We had no
                  sooner looked at one of them, that he began to chatter without reserve, and
                  grinned almost like Milton's Death. This circumstance, together with their slender
                  form, their ugly features, and their black colour, often provoked us to make an
                  ill-natured comparison between them and monkies. We should be sorry, however, to
                  supply Rousseau, or the superficial philosophers who re-echo his maxims, with the
                  shadow of an argument in favour of the Orang-outang system.17 We rather pity than
                  despite these men, who can so far forget and abuse their own intellectual
                  faculties, as to degrade themselves to the rank of baboons.</p>

               <p>When it was dark the natives returned on shore, where they made a number of fires,
                  and were heard speaking as loud among themselves as they had done to us. About
                  eight, however, they all returned to the ship in their canoes, with burning
                  firebrands, in order to have another conversation. On their part they carried it
                  on with surprising spirit, but we did not reply with equal volubility. The evening
                  was very fine and calm, and the moon shone out at times. Seeing that we were not
                  so talkative as themselves, they offered to sell us their arrows and other
                  trifles;18 but captain Cook prohibited the trade, in order to get rid of them. We
                  were surprised with their behaviour, it being unusual to see any Indians awake and
                  active about the ship after sunset. Some though they only came as spies, to see
                  whether we were upon our guard; but their inoffensive behaviour seemed to free
                  them from this suspicion. When they found us resolved not to barter with them,
                  they retreated to the shore towards midnight. We heard them singing and beating
                  their drums all night, and could observe them sometimes dancing; so that we
                  concluded they were of a very chearful disposition.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 22.]</date>They gave us very little respite in the morning. At
                  day-break they came off in their canoes, and began to call to us, frequently
                  intermixing the word Tomarr in their noisy speeches. Four or five of them came on
                  board the ship without any arms: they soon became familiar, and with the greatest
                  ease climbed up the shrouds to the mast-head. When they came down again, the
                  captain took them into his cabin, and gave them presents of medals, ribbons,
                  nails, and pieces of red baize. They were the most intelligent people we had ever
                  met with in the South Seas;19 they understood our signs and gestures, as if they
                  had been long acquainted with them, and in a few minutes taught us a greater
                  number of their words. Their language was really as we had immediately suspected,
                  wholly distinct from that general language, of which several dialects are spoken
                  at the Society Isles, the Marquesas, the Friendly Isles, the Low Islands, Easter
                  Island, and New Zeeland. It was not difficult to pronounce, but contained more
                  consonants than any of the dialects here mentioned. The most singular sound was a
                  shaking or vibration of brrr together. Thus, for instance, one of our friends, was
                  called Mambrrùm, and the other Bonombrrooàï. Whatever they saw, they coveted; but
                  they never repined at a refusal. The looking-glasses which we gave them were
                  particularly admired, and they took great pleasure in looking at themselves; so
                  that these ugly people seemed to have more self-conceit, than the beautiful nation
                  at Taheitee and the Society Islands.20 They had perforated ears, and a hole in the
                  septum narium,21 into which they put a bit of stick, or two little pieces of white
                  selenite or alabaster, which are tied together in an obtuse angle. On the upper
                  arm they wore bracelets, very neatly wrought, of small pieces of black and white
                  shells.22 These bracelets fitted so closely, that it was plain they had been put
                  on whilst their owners were young; for at present it was quite impossible to draw
                  them over the elbow. Their skins were very soft and smooth, and of a sooty or
                  blackish-brown colour, which was heightened by black paint in the face.23 Their
                  hair was frizzled, and woolly to the touch, though not of the softest. Their
                  beards were frizzled, but not woolly, and well furnished with hair. They had no
                  punctures on their body, but indeed they could not have been seen on their black
                  skin at any considerable distance. Mr. Hodges took an opportunity of drawing their
                  portraits, one of which has been engraved for captain Cook's account of the
                  voyage. It is very characteristic of the nation; but we must lament, that a defect
                  in the drawing, has made it necessary to infringe the costume, and to throw a
                  drapery over the shoulder, though these people have no kind of cloathing.24 They
                  were easily persuaded to sit for their portraits, and seemed to have an idea of
                  the representations.</p>

               <p>We were deeply engaged in conversation with them, and they seemed happy beyond
                  measure, when the first lieutenant came into the cabin. He acquainted captain Cook
                  that one of the natives having been denied admittance into the ship, which was by
                  this time crouded with them, had pointed his arrow at the sailor in our boat, who
                  pushed back his canoe. Before he had done speaking, our acute natives guessed his
                  errand, and having before observed the windows open, one of them instantly jumped
                  out, and swam to his outrageous countryman to hold his hands. The captain went
                  upon deck presently, and took up a musket, which he pointed at the native, who
                  persisted in his attitude in spite of his fellows. Seeing that captain Cook had
                  levelled at him, he also pointed his arrows at him. At this moment, the rest of
                  the natives around the ship called to those in the cabin; these fearing the worst
                  consequences from the violence of their countryman, hurried out of the windows,
                  notwithstanding all our endeavours to quiet their apprehensions.25 We heard a
                  musket fired off the instant after, and repairing on deck, saw the native who had
                  received some small shot, very deliberately laying by his arrow, which was only
                  pointed with wood, and selecting one of those which we believed to be poisoned. As
                  soon as he had taken aim, the third lieutenant fired at him again; the small shot
                  which he received in his face, obliged him to give up all thoughts of fighting,
                  and he paddled quickly towards the shore. At the same moment an arrow was shot off
                  from the other side of the ship, which fell in the mizen shrouds. A ball was fired
                  after the native who sent it to us, but luckily without effect. Every canoe now
                  moved gradually towards the shore, and all who were on board flung themselves into
                  the sea; one in particular, who was at the mast-head when the fray began, not
                  thinking of any harm, came down with the greatest precipitation when the muskets
                  went off. To terrify these people, and to give them a specimen of our power, a
                  cannon was fired over their heads among the trees on shore. This accelerated their
                  retreat; the nearest to us jumped out of their canoes in a fright, and all reached
                  the shore in great confusion. Presently their drums began to beat in different
                  parts, to give the alarm, and the poor fellows were seen running along shore, and
                  huddling under the bushes together, in close consultation on this alarming crisis
                  of their affairs. In the mean while we went quietly to breakfast.</p>

               <p>At nine o'clock some canoes again made their appearance, rowing round the ship,
                  and very cautiously coming nearer. We waved to them with a branch of the dracœna
                  terminalis, which we had before received; and after they had dipped their hands in
                  the sea, and put them on their heads, they received a few presents which captain
                  Cook gave them, and went away to the shore.26 Two of our boats were now manned,
                  and a party of marines embarked with the captain, my father, Dr. Sparrman, myself,
                  and several others. A reef bounded the shore at the distance of thirty yards or
                  more. It was so shallow, that we were forced to step out, and wade to the beach,
                  where our marines formed without opposition. We were received by a croud of no
                  less than three hundred persons, all armed,27 but very friendly and inoffensive in
                  their behaviour towards us. A middle-aged man, rather stronger than the generality
                  of the people, gave away his bow and quiver to another, and came unarmed to shake
                  hands with us, in sign of peace and amity; he was perhaps a chief among them. A
                  pig was brought at the same time, and presented to the captain, apparently as a
                  kind of expiation for their countryman's ill behaviour; but perhaps it was only a
                  ratification of the peace which we had concluded.28 This interview is represented
                  in a fine plate, designed by Mr. Hodges and engraved for captain Cook's account of
                  this voyage.29 After we had received the pig, we expressed by signs that we wanted
                  wood, and they immediately pointed out some trees which grew close to the beach,
                  which we cut down, and sawed in pieces. The beach did not exceed fifteen yards in
                  breadth; and our situation was very precarious in case of an attack. The marines
                  therefore drew a line before them, which the natives were desired not to
                  transgress. They readily complied with this regulation; but their numbers
                  encreased from all parts continually. They were all armed with bows ready strung,
                  made of a tough dark-brown wood, finer than mahogany; and with arrows, which they
                  held in a cylindrical quiver, formed of leaves. All these arrows were made of
                  reeds about two feet long; those of the common sort had a point about a foot or
                  fifteen inches long, consisting of a polished jetty black wood, like ebony, but
                  excessively brittle;30 the rest, which were kept in quivers, were all pointed with
                  a short bit of bone, two or three inches long. This was inserted in a notch of the
                  reed, which was again curiously and firmly united together by means of single
                  coco-nut fibres, wound across each other, so as to form little rhomboidal
                  compartments, about 1/20 of an inch square, which were filled up with minute
                  attention, alternately with a reddish, green, and white earthy colour. The point
                  of bone itself was very sharp, and smeared, with a black resinous substance.</p>

               <p>We left our lines, and walked over amongst the natives, who conversed with us, and
                  with great good-will sat down on the stump of a tree to teach us their language.
                  They were surprised at our readiness to remember, and seemed to spend some time in
                  pondering how it was possible to preserve the sound by such means as pencil and
                  paper. They were not only assiduous in teaching, but had curiosity enough to learn
                  our language, which they pronounced with such accuracy, that we had reason to
                  admire their extensive faculties and quick apprehension. Observing their organs of
                  speech to be so flexible, we tried the most difficult sounds in the European
                  languages; nay, we had recourse to the compound Russian shtch, all which they
                  pronounced at the first hearing, without the least difficulty.31 We presently
                  taught them our numerals, which they repeated rapidly on their fingers; in short,
                  what they wanted in personal attraction, was amply made up in acuteness of
                  understanding. We began to trade with them for their arms, but they were at first
                  very loth to exchange them; however, a handkerchief, or piece of Taheitee cloth,
                  or English frieze, was of some value among them. They began to sell their common
                  arrows, and afterwards those which were poisoned; but advised us not to try the
                  points against our fingers, making us understand, by the plainest signs, that with
                  a common arrow, a man might be shot through the arm without dying, but that the
                  slightest scratch with one of the other sort was mortal. If notwithstanding this
                  information, we attempted to bring the point on our fingers, they caught hold of
                  our arm, with the most friendly gesture, to save us, as it were, from imminent
                  danger.32 Besides bows and arrows, they wore a club of the casuarina-wood, which
                  hung on their right shoulder, from a thick rope, made of a kind of grass.33 This
                  club was commonly knobbed at one end, and very well polished, like all their
                  manufactures. It did not exceed two feet and a half in length, and appeared to be
                  reserved for close engagement, after emptying the quiver. On the left wrist, they
                  wore a circular wooden plate neatly covered, and joined with straw, about five
                  inches in diameter, upon which they broke the violence of the recoiling
                  bow-string, and prevented it from hurting their arms. This kind of ruffle, and
                  their ornaments, such as the bracelets above mentioned, piece of shell cut in form
                  of large rings, which were also worn on the arm, the stone in their nose, and the
                  shell which hung on their breast, suspended by a string round the neck, they at
                  this time refused to sell.</p>

               <p>We observed no new plants on the borders of the beach where our people cut down
                  trees; but the country within looked very tempting, being one great forest. Dr.
                  Sparrman, and myself, observing a path which ascended into the wood behind some
                  bushes, went in unnoticed, and advanced about twenty yards, where we fortunately
                  found two fine new plants. But we had scarcely made this valuable acquisition,
                  when some of the natives appeared coming from the country, who at sight of us
                  stopped, and made repeated signs to us to return to the beach.34 We beckoned to
                  them, and shewed them the plants which we had collected, intimating as well as our
                  gestures could express it, that we had come for no other purpose. This pretence
                  availed us nothing; and as they continued to call us out of the wood, we complied
                  for fear of raising a new disturbance. The wood which we had thus suddenly
                  quitted, was very dark and interspersed with bushes. However, a broad mass of
                  light in the interior parts, seemed to indicate a plantation, which we should have
                  reached, if we had not been too early interrupted. The various voices of women and
                  children, which issued from that spot confirmed our conjecture. The trees which
                  grew in the wood, were in general of well known sorts; but among the under-woods
                  there appeared several sorts hitherto unnoticed. From the ship however, we had
                  perceived vast numbers of coco-palms, some bananas, bread-fruit, and other
                  valuable cultivated trees, of which the natives had given us the names.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook having in the mean while, asked for fresh water, the person whom we
                  supposed to be a chief, sent for a calabash full, which was very pure, and also
                  presented the captain with a coco-nut; but in spite of all our enquiries, we could
                  not prevail upon the natives to bring us any more. A few of them wore a small
                  bunch of greens on their arm, which we knew to be part of an odoriferous plant of
                  a new genus, named euodia (Forst. Nov. Gen.). Some suffered us to take and examine
                  it, but others took it out of our hands and threw it away, with an angry
                  expression, as if it was either noxious or ominous. We had frequently eaten the
                  seeds of this plant, which are finely aromatic, without suffering the least
                  inconvenience, and were well convinced, that the whole plant was very harmless;
                  but whether it might not be a sign of enmity or defiance, in the same manner as
                  many others are esteemed emblems of friendship, must remain in doubt.</p>

               <p>The tide was now so low, that the reef remained quite dry behind us, and a great
                  number of the natives had walked over it to our boats, where they traded with the
                  crew. Being in some measure surrounded by these people, the marines were placed
                  alternately towards the shore and the sea, in order to present a front both ways;
                  though it did not appear that the natives had the least intention of quarrelling
                  with us. We conversed very freely with them, and their tongues ran on with such
                  unremitted volubility, that we compared the noise about us, to the confused uproar
                  in a great fair. Our astonishment therefore, may sooner be conceived than
                  described, when this chattering ceased all at once, and a dead silence succeeded.
                  __We looked at each other, we threw our eyes wildly about, and joined the wings of
                  our corps de garde. The natives seemed to stand in expectation of some mischance;
                  but by degrees seeing us quiet, they began to talk again, and in a few minutes,
                  mutual confidence was restored. This circumstance which had given rise to this
                  alarm was trifling in itself, but expressed the good disposition of the natives
                  towards us. One of our boat's crew, had desired a native to shoot an arrow into
                  the air as high as he could. The man very readily complied, and had drawn his bow,
                  when some of his countrymen, recollecting that we might look upon this as an
                  infringement of the peace, called out to him to stop, and alarmed all the people
                  on the beach, by pronouncing a few words, which immediately produced universal
                  silence, expressing extreme jealousy35 in a most dreadful manner, and affording a
                  proper subject to exercise the talents of painters and poets. Affrighted
                  countenances, full of anxiety and horrid suspense; many a wild stare, many a
                  gloomy, mischievous look, and some undaunted steady glances; an infinite variety
                  of attitudes; a characteristic difference in the manner of handling the arms; the
                  scene, the groups of inhabitants, &amp;c. all conspired to furnish the proper
                  requisites for a good picture.</p>

               <p>As soon as this alarm was over, our wood-cutters resumed their occupations, and
                  the natives admired their skill. A few women now likewise came to our lines, but
                  remained at some distance. They were of small stature, and had the most
                  disagreeable features which we had observed in the South Sea. Those who were grown
                  up, and probably married, had short pieces of a kind of cloth, or rather matting
                  round their waists, reaching nearly to the knees; the rest had only a string round
                  the middle with a whisp of straw; and the younger ones, from infancy to the age of
                  ten years, went stark naked, like the boys of the same age. Some of these women
                  had covered their heads with the orange powder of turmeric-root; some had daubed
                  their face, and others their whole body with this colour, which on their dark
                  skins had a most filthy effect. But with their countrymen it is probably esteemed
                  an ornament, as the taste of mankind is astonishingly various. We did not observe,
                  that these women had any finery in their ears, round their neck, or arms; for it
                  seems it is fashionable in the island, only for the men to adorn themselves.
                  Wherever that is the case, the sex is commonly oppressed, despised, and in a
                  deplorable situation.36 They were seen with bundles on their backs, which
                  contained their children, and had a most miserable appearance. The men seemed to
                  have no kind of regard for them, would not permit them to come nearer; and as oft
                  as we went towards them, the women ran away.</p>

               <p>About noon a great part of the croud dispersed, probably to take their dinner.
                  Captain Cook received an invitation from the chief, to accompany him to his
                  dwelling in the woods, but declined it; and having continued on shore till one
                  o'clock, we all re-imbarked in the best order, without any molestation from the
                  natives, who remained on the beach till we were on board. M. de Bougainville had
                  not been so fortunate at the Isle of Lepers; the natives were very friendly to
                  appearance, till all his men were embarked; but a flight of arrows was then sent
                  after them, and revenged by a volley of musketry, which killed several natives. As
                  these islanders live in sight of each other, and M. de Bougainville's visit was so
                  recent, the natives with whom we had to deal, were probably apprised of the power
                  of Europeans, and therefore acted with caution.</p>

               <p>Immediately after dinner, captain Cook and my father went ashore on the north side
                  of the harbour, in quest of our buoy, which the natives had conveyed thither, and
                  which we saw on the beach by the help of our glasses. In the mean time the
                  southern shore, on which we had landed in the morning, was entirely clear of the
                  natives; but in the woods we heard the frequent squeaking of pigs, from whence it
                  may be concluded that the natives possess great numbers of these animals.37 Soon
                  after our boat's departure, several natives in their canoes came alongside to
                  trade with us. They readily sold us their bows and arrows, clubs and spears, for
                  old rags and other trifles, plying between the ship and the shore all the
                  evening.38 Their canoes were small, not exceeding twenty feet in length, of
                  indifferent workmanship, and without ornament, but provided with an outrigger. The
                  number which came to the ship never amounted to more than fourteen, which seems to
                  confirm that these people are no great fishermen.</p>

               <p>Our boat returned before sunset, with the buoy which they had taken as soon as
                  they landed, without any opposition on the part of the natives. Some trifling
                  appendages to it were lost, but these could easily be replaced. The inhabitants of
                  that part traded with the captain and his company, selling their arms and
                  ornaments for various trifles of no intrinsic worth. An old woman parted with two
                  semi-transparent bits of selenites, cut into a conical shape, and connected at the
                  pointed ends, by means of a ribbon made of leaves.39 The diameter of the broad end
                  was about half an inch, and the length of each bit three quarters of an inch. She
                  took it out of the hole in the cartilage of her nose, which was very broad, ugly,
                  and smeared with black paint. Our people took great pains to obtain refreshments
                  from the natives; but notwithstanding all their signs, they did not bring a single
                  article of food.40 Our goods, no doubt, did not seem valuable enough in their
                  eyes, to be considered as an equivalent to eatables, which are always the real
                  riches of mankind. Upon this plain principle the people of the South Sea always
                  acted; and from the value which they put on our goods, after they were acquainted
                  with their uses, we can with a degree of certainty judge of their opulence, or the
                  fertility of their country. From hence they still proceeded northward, towards the
                  exterior point of the harbour. Here they found some bananas, bread-fruit trees,
                  coco-palms, and other plants, separated by an enclosure; and near them some
                  dwellings of the natives, wretched hovels, of an inconsiderable size, and so low
                  that they could hardly stand upright in them. They consisted of a roof thatched
                  with palm-leaves, resting on a few posts. Here however they observed a great many
                  hogs, and some common poultry. The natives seemed to be convinced that our people
                  had no sinister intentions, and expressed much less curiosity than in the morning.
                  Their numbers were inconsiderable in this place; and though they did not entirely
                  approve of captain Cook's visit to their houses, they did not oppose it with
                  perseverance.41 From hence our gentlemen proceeded farther towards the point, till
                  they came in sight of the three islands to the eastward, of which they learnt the
                  names. The largest, on which we had observed the volcano, was called Ambrrym, the
                  high peek Pa-oòm, and the southernmost Apèe. This good success encouraged them to
                  point to the land on which they stood, and to enquire of the natives by what name
                  that was distinguished. The name of Mallicollo, which they immediately received in
                  answer, was so strikingly similar to Manicolo, which captain Quiros had received
                  and preserved above 160 years ago, that they rejoiced to obtain such indisputable
                  proof of his veracity.42 It appears from Quiros's account, that he never visited
                  Mallicollo himself, but only received intelligence of it from the natives;
                  however, that his Tierra del Espiritù Santo is a part of this group of islands,
                  seemed at present to be very clear. Having obtained this information, they
                  returned to their boats; but in their way one of them picked up an orange on the
                  shore, which he shewed to the natives. They told him the name which it bears in
                  their country, and thus gave another proof that the accounts of Quiros, relative
                  to the productions of the lands discovered by him, are not void of foundation. We
                  had found shaddocks in the Friendly Islands, but never met with oranges in any
                  island of the Pacific Ocean before. The ideas of the natural riches of the island
                  of Mallicollo were considerably raised after this confirmation of Quiros's
                  reports. Our people rowed into the harbour near two miles, and found its bottom
                  filled with mangroves, but could not meet with fresh water. A river probably
                  flowed into the sea among these mangroves, but it was in vain to attempt a passage
                  through the close tissue of their branches, which multiply out of every seed,
                  without forming a separate tree. The evening was very hot, and they returned on
                  board heartily tired. As they rowed along the shore, they heard the drums beating,
                  and saw the natives dancing to the sound by their trees. Their music, and that
                  which they made the preceding night, was not remarkable either for harmony or
                  variety, but seemed to be of a more lively turn that that of the Friendly
                  Islands.</p>

               <p>During night several of our people tried to fish, and some of them were
                  successful. One caught a shark nine feet long, which was now very acceptable, all
                  our fresh provisions being entirely consumed, excepting a few yams, which were
                  eaten instead of bread. Another took an Indian sucking-fish (echeneis naucrates)
                  near two feet long; and a third made prize of two large red fishes of the
                  sea-bream kind (probably the sparus erythrinus, Linn.) one of which he kept for
                  his messmates, and the other he presented to the lieutenants. The captain received
                  a share of the shark, on which we feasted the next day, when the whole ship's
                  company regaled themselves with a fresh meal. Sharks do not afford a very
                  palatable food, but it was at all times preferable to salt provisions, and
                  necessity taught us to relish it. This severe teacher reconciles the Greenlander
                  to whale-blubber, and the Hottentot to filthy intestines; and time makes these
                  indelicate viands acceptable and delicious to their taste. This shark, when cut
                  open, was found to have the bone point of a poisoned arrow sticking in his head,
                  having been shot quite through the skull. The wound was healed so perfectly, that
                  not the smallest vestige of it appeared on the outside. A piece of the wood still
                  remained sticking to the bony point, as well as a few fibres with which it had
                  been tied on; but both the wood and the fibres were so rotten, as to crumble into
                  dust at the touch. Fishes therefore are not affected by these arrows, which we
                  supposed to be poisoned.</p>

               <p>The next morning we weighed the anchor and set sail, having scarcely had time
                  sufficient to sketch a plan of the harbour, which was honoured with the title of
                  Port Sandwich. Its situation, deduced from astronomical observations, is in 16°
                  28' south lat. and 167° 56' east long. We were becalmed before we could clear the
                  reefs, and obliged to send out boats ahead to tow us out, which they performed
                  very slowly and with great difficulty. In the mean time the natives came to us
                  with all their fourteen canoes, and sold us great numbers of arrows of all kinds
                  and some clubs. They made several trips between the ship and the shore, as they
                  had done the preceding day, and seemed to be very eager to part with their arms
                  for Taheitee cloth. We repeated our demand for provisions; but they would not
                  listen to it, and only parted with what they could more easily spare or replace.43
                  Towards noon we got clear of the harbour, and left Mallicollo with the sea-breeze,
                  which then freshened, standing over to Ambrrym, or the Island of Volcanoes.
                  Whether we might have obtained some refreshments by staying a few days longer and
                  improving our acquaintance with the natives, is very uncertain; for since they set
                  no value on our iron-ware, we could offer no equivalent for their provisions.</p>

               <p>The island of Mallicollo is about twenty leagues long from north to south, and the
                  port which we had left lies in its south-east extremity. Its inland mountains are
                  very high, clad with forests, and without doubt contain many fine springs, though
                  we could not trace them between the trees. The soil, as far as we were able to
                  examine it, is a rich and fertile mould, like that which covers the plains of the
                  Society Islands; and the vicinity of the volcano at Ambrrym gave us great room to
                  suppose that Mallicollo is no stranger to the processes carried on in these
                  natural laboratories. Its vegetable productions seem to be luxuriant and in great
                  variety, and the useful plants not less numerous than in the islands we had before
                  visited. Coco-nuts, bread-fruit, bananas, sugar-canes, yams, eddoes, turmerick,
                  and oranges were seen on the island, and enumerated by the natives. Hogs and
                  common poultry are their domestic animals; to which we have added dogs, by selling
                  them a pair of puppies brought from the Society Islands. They received them with
                  strong signs of extreme satisfaction; but as they called them hogs, (brooàs),44 we
                  were convinced that they were entirely new to them. We did not find any other
                  quadruped during our short stay, nor is it probable that, on an island so far
                  remote from continents, there should be any wild animals of that class. In the
                  course of one day, and confined to a barren beach, it is not likely that we could
                  form a more adequate idea of the animals than of the vegetables of this country.
                  We saw enough, however, to be convinced, that the woods are inhabited by many
                  species of birds, among which there are doubtless some which have as yet escaped
                  the attention of naturalists.</p>

               <p>The productions of Mallicollo are, however, less remarkable and striking at first
                  sight than the race of its inhabitants. To judge of their numbers from the croud
                  we saw at Port Sandwich, I should conclude, that they are far from inconsiderable;
                  but considering the great size of the island, I cannot suppose it to be very
                  populous. Fifty thousand is, I think, the greatest number we can admit;45 and
                  these are not confined to the skirts of the hills, as at Taheitee, but dispersed
                  over the whole extent of more than six hundred square miles. We ought to figure
                  their country to ourselves as one extensive forest: they have only begun to clear
                  and plant a few insulated spots, which are lost in it, like small islands in the
                  vast Pacific Ocean. Perhaps if we could ever penetrate through the darkness which
                  involves the history of this nation, we might find that they have arrived in the
                  South Sea much later than the natives of the Friendly and Society Islands.46 So
                  much at least is certain, that they appear to be of a race totally distinct from
                  these. Their form, their language, and their manners strongly and completely mark
                  the difference. The natives on some parts of New Guinea and Papua seem to
                  correspond in many particulars with what we have observed among the Mallicollese.
                  The black colour and woolly hair in particular are characteristics common to both
                  nations. If the influence of climate be admitted, which is so strongly defended by
                  count Buffon, it offers another proof that Mallicollo has been but lately peopled
                  , since the interval of time has not been sufficient to work a change in the
                  colour and hair of the inhabitants.47 But I am far from being convinced of this
                  general and powerful influence of climates. I have only ventured out into the
                  great field of probabilities, and am ready to quit my opinion as soon as another
                  more just and more rational is offered.48 New Guinea and the islands adjacent, the
                  only countries from whence we can expect some light on this subject, still remain
                  unknown to us, not only in regard to their geographical situation, but more
                  especially as to their inhabitants. From the voyagers who have visited that part
                  of the world it appears that many distinct tribes dwell in its different parts.49
                  But it is particularly to be remarked, that besides the black race, there are also
                  some of a lighter colour, who, if we may judge from their customs, seem to be
                  related to the natives of the Society and Friendly Islands. Some other tribes
                  there are who may, in all probability, be a mixture of both races. The slender
                  form of the Mallicollese is a character, as far as I know, peculiar to them and
                  the New Hollanders; but that nation hath nothing in common with them in all other
                  respects. Their custom of tying a rope very fast round their belly is still more
                  singular, and would be fatal to a person unaccustomed from infancy to such an
                  absurd ligature. The rope was as thick as a man's finger, and cut such a deep
                  notch across the navel, that the belly seemed in a manner double, one part being
                  above and the other below the rope. The bracelets which press the upper arm so
                  closely, must have been put on while the natives are very young, and appear to
                  have been contrived upon the same principle. The features of these people, though
                  remarkably irregular and ugly, yet are full of great sprightliness, and express a
                  quick comprehension. Their lips and the lower part of their face are entirely
                  different from those of African Negroes; but the upper part, especially the nose,
                  is of a very similar conformation, and the substance of the hair the same. The
                  depression of their forehead may perhaps be artificial, as the heads of infants
                  may be squeezed into all kinds of forms.50 On the continent of America there are
                  many instances of nations who disfigure their heads to make them resemble the sun,
                  the moon, or some other object. But, upon the whole, this figure of the forehead
                  among the Mallicollese is not carried to excess, and does not remarkably encrease
                  their ugliness.</p>

               <p>The climate of Mallicollo, and the adjacent islands, is very warm, but perhaps not
                  at all times so temperate as at Taheitee, because the extent of land is infinitely
                  greater. However, during our short stay we experienced no unusual degree of heat,
                  the thermometer being at 76° and 78°, which is very moderate in the torrid zone.
                  Dress, in such a climate, is to be considered as an article of luxury, and cannot
                  properly be placed among the indispensible necessaries. At Mallicollo they have
                  not yet attained that degree of opulence which could have suggested the invention
                  of garments. In their tufted groves they neither feel the scorching beams of a
                  vertical sun, nor ever know the uncomfortable sensation of cold. Briars and
                  shrubberies oblige them to take some precaution, and the impulses of nature
                  towards the encrease of the species, have suggested the most simple means of
                  preserving the faculties51 and guarding against the dangers of mutilation, (see
                  pag. 206). We are too apt to look upon the principles which are early instilled
                  into our mind by education as innate, and have frequently mistaken a moral
                  sentiment for a physical instinct. From the contemplation of unpolished people,52
                  we find that modesty and chastity, which have long been supposed inherent in the
                  human mind, are local ideas, unknown in the state of nature, and modified
                  according to the various degrees of civilization. It is not likely that the
                  Mallicollese have ever thought of banishing unseasonable ideas from the mind, by a
                  contrivance which seems much more apt to provoke their desires.53 Nay, it is
                  uncertain whether the scanty dress of their women owes its origin to a sense of
                  shame, or to an artful endeavour to please.</p>

               <p>The ideas of beauty seem to be more obvious, though singular and different among
                  divers nations. The Mallicollese are not satisfied with the charms of their own
                  person, but think that a stone hung in the nose, a bracelet, a necklace of shells,
                  and a shining black paint, set them off to greater advantage. Their women, as far
                  as we could observe, have no trinkets, but paint themselves with the yellow colour
                  of turmerick, which has a peculiar aromatic smell. The natives of the Friendly
                  Isles powder their hair and the women of Easter Island likewise paint their face
                  and garments with it. It may therefore be employed, on account of its supposed
                  virtues, rather than for ornament. The Mallicollese differ very remarkably from
                  the lighter-coloured nation of the South Sea, by keeping their body entirely from
                  punctures, which characterize all the various tribes of that race.</p>

               <p>Their food seems to be principally vegetable, since they apply themselves to
                  agriculture. At times they may likewise feast on pork or fowls; and though we had
                  no time to observe any implements of fishing, yet, as they have canoes, it may be
                  supposed that they have not entirely neglected the produce of the ocean. Our short
                  stay did not give us an opportunity of seeing any of their tools; but from the
                  workmanship of their boats, and the construction of their houses, we have no great
                  reason to admire their skill in the arts. Their island being wholly covered with
                  forests, it must require a great deal of labour to cultivate a spot of ground
                  sufficient for their support. The country itself appears very fertile; but the
                  luxuriant growth of wild vegetables, easily conquers and destroys the more tender
                  shoots of those which are planted. This being the case, it may serve to account
                  for the custom of confining their limbs to a small and slender form, by ropes,
                  bracelets, &amp;c. Such monstrous contrivances to pinch and contract the body,
                  seem to be dictated by necessity, and in time may have been adopted as the marks
                  of beauty. As their agriculture is so toilsome, it is plain they have not time to
                  manufacture a dress, for which they have no immediate necessity. Repose and
                  indolence are the favourite principles of small uncivilized societies, and
                  necessity alone forces them to become industrious. We have observed that the
                  Mallicollese pass away a part of their time with music and dancing. Their
                  instruments are doubtless very simple; we heard no other than drums; and these,
                  together with whistles or pipes, are most easily invented.54 The common
                  transactions of domestic life are so quiet and regular, that human nature seems to
                  require some excentric movement to animate it. At times to be extravagant in the
                  motions and exercises of the body, to produce a variety of sounds from various
                  substances, and to strain the vocal organs beyond their usual scale, are functions
                  perhaps indispensibly necessary in the revolution of human life, to act as spurs
                  or stimuli, and to sweeten the labours of the day.</p>

               <p>The drums of the Mallicollese not only serve as a pastime, but are likewise
                  employed to sound an alarm in cases of danger. We have great reason to believe,
                  that they are frequently involved in quarrels with the islanders in the
                  neighbourhood; and it is not improbable, that living dispersed throughout the
                  island in small families, they frequently disagree amongst themselves. We never
                  saw the Mallicollese without their arms, (except those who came into the captain's
                  cabin); and it seems much more care and ingenuity has been bestowed on this part
                  of their manufactures than upon any other. Their bows are strong, elastic, and
                  nicely polished; their arrows well wrought; and those which we supposed to be
                  poisoned, were very neatly ornamented. The custom of poisoning the arrows is a
                  proof of their understanding; and the desire of revenge against unjust oppression,
                  may have suggested it. Their small stature, and slender make, seem indeed to
                  require some artifice to supply the place of strength; but it is at this moment
                  doubtful, whether their arrows are really poisoned. The dog on which we made the
                  experiment on the day of our arrival, recovered perfectly without any assistance,
                  though he was afflicted with the most dreadful illness from eating part of a
                  poisoned fish. Another experiment was tried in the sequel upon a different dog; an
                  incision was made in his leg with a lancet, and the gummy substance, supposed to
                  be the poison, was laid into it, and covered with a plaster. The dog was very lame
                  a few days, from the swelling and festering of the wound; but gradually recovered
                  like the first. The islanders of Santa Cruz , who killed a number of captain
                  Carteret's men, seem, according to his description, to be very like the
                  Mallicollese; and are likewise accused of having poisoned arrows , by the Spanish
                  navigator who first discovered that island. Their bows and arrows, according to
                  captain Carteret, are, however, of a remarkable length , and the latter pointed
                  with flints. Quiros also mentions poisoned arrows among the natives in the Bay of
                  St. Philip at St. Jago ; but from both instances it appears, that the supposed
                  poison was not very efficacious. The wooden ruffle, which secures the arms of the
                  Mallicollese against the recoil of the bow-string, seems to imply a frequent use
                  of their bows. Besides the missile weapons, such as arrows and spears, they have
                  also short clubs, seemingly for close engagement, and are thus well prepared for
                  all occasions. Their behaviour towards us was in general harmless, but cautious.
                  We received no invitations to stay with them; for they did not like the proximity
                  of such powerful people, being probably accustomed to acts of violence and ill
                  usage from the rest of their neighbours. In some of their countenances we thought
                  we could trace a mischievous, ill-natured disposition; but we might mistake
                  jealousy for hatred. It is probable, that being continually on their guard, and
                  engaged in wars, they have some chiefs and leaders in battle, who, like the
                  commanders at New Zeeland, are obeyed at the time of action.55 The only man whom
                  we supposed to be a chief, at Mallicollo, did not appear to be respected; and it
                  was only when he procured us some fresh water, that we could attribute to him any
                  authority at all. Remarks on the government of a people are seldom to be made at
                  the first interview, and therefore I only offer probabilities instead of facts.
                  Their religion is entirely unknown to us, as well as the particular customs of
                  domestic life; nor can it be supposed, that we could gather any intelligence
                  concerning their diseases. We did not take notice of any sick person among them
                  during our stay; however, according to Mr. de Bougainville's account, the natives
                  on an adjacent island are subject to the leprosy in such a high degree, that he
                  named it the Isle of Lepers.</p>

               <p>The general character of the Mallicollese ought to be considered with a retrospect
                  to their civilization. Dispersed into small tribes, who have frequent causes of
                  dispute, it is not surprising that they are cautious and distrustful. At the same
                  time, however, their behaviour towards us shewed, that they had not propensity to
                  quarrel without a cause, but wished to give no offence; and were in general much
                  displeased with a few individuals among themselves who attempted to infringe the
                  peace. Green boughs, their signs of friendship, confirmed this good disposition.
                  The ceremony of pouring water on their heads, is still more important, as it shews
                  a great similarity between them and the people of New Guinea. Dampier observed
                  exactly the same sign of amity at Pulo Sabuda, on the western coast of New Guinea
                  . The short conversations which we had with the Mallicollese, proved them to be a
                  people of quick perception; their senses are acute, and their intellects very open
                  to improvement. From their amusements it may be concluded, that they are chearful
                  and good-humoured; and if I may venture another conjecture, they only want the
                  impulse of an ambitious individual to bring them into a higher state of
                  civilization. After this detail, it is time to resume the thread of our
                  voyage.</p>

               <p>Having cleared the reefs of Port Sandwich, and standing towards the Isle of
                  Ambrrym, we gradually came in sight of the south-east extremity of Mallicollo,
                  where four or five small islands form a kind of bay. Ambrrym, on which the volcano
                  is situated, appears to be upwards of twenty leagues in circuit. The centre of the
                  island lies in 16° 15' S. and 168° 20' E. Pa-oom, the high peak to the south of
                  it, is of an inconsiderable size, but we were dubious whether the land which we
                  saw before, or to the westward of it, and which was of moderate height, is
                  connected with it or not. The whole circuit of both parts, supposing them to form
                  a single island, cannot exceed five leagues. The peak, according to our
                  observations, lies in 16° 25' S. and 168° 30' E. Apee, the island to the south of
                  this peak, is large, hilly, and of the same extent as Ambrrym, being nearly seven
                  leagues long. Its middle is situated in 16° 42' S. and 168° 36' E. The numerous
                  smokes which arose from all these islands, gave us reason to suppose, that the
                  natives dress their victuals above ground, by an open fire. At the Society and
                  Friendly Isles, where the inhabitants are accustomed to stew their food, by means
                  of heated stones under the ground, we rarely perceived either smoke or fire.</p>

               <p>The fresh meal with which all our ship's company regaled themselves this day, was
                  very near being fatal to some of them. All the lieutenants and their messmates,
                  together with one of the mates, several midshipmen, and the carpenter, having
                  eaten of the red sea breams (sparus erythrinus) of which two had been caught, were
                  in the space of a few hours, seized with violent symptoms of being poisoned.57 It
                  began with great heat in the face, acute head-ache, severe vomiting, and diarrhœa;
                  the arms, knees, and legs were so benumbed, that they could scarcely walk or
                  stand; the salival glands were swelled, and a most copious discharge ensued; they
                  were also troubled with acute pains, and spasms in the bowels. A hog, which had
                  eaten of the garbage was seized with similar symptoms, swelled to a great size,
                  and died at night. Several dogs on board, having received a share of the entrails,
                  and some being fed upon part of the boiled fish, were affected in the same manner;
                  they groaned most pitifully, had violent reachings, and could hardly drag their
                  limbs along. A little favourite parroquet from the Friendly Isles, which
                  familiarly hopped on its master's shoulder, having likewise tasted a morsel of the
                  fish, died the next day. In a word, the joy of having obtained a fresh meal was
                  suddenly converted into sorrow; and the only comfort in this misfortune was, that
                  our surgeon had dined with the captain this day, and by that means escaped the
                  fate of his messmates.</p>

               <p>We still continued in sight of Mallicollo, Ambrrym, Apee,and Pa-oom, <date>[Sunday
                     24.]</date>the next morning; but stood towards the southernmost island then in
                  sight, and discovered on the 21st, which from the three hills upon it, was named
                  Three-Hills Island (see p. 204). We approached within half a mile of it, and
                  observed it to be of the same nature with those already discovered. It was well
                  wooded, and probably well inhabited; for some of the natives appeared on the
                  shore, who resembled those of Mallicollo, and were armed like them with bows and
                  arrows. A very extensive reef runs out from the south point58 of the island, with
                  some rocks in it. The whole island seemed to be about five leagues in circuit; its
                  greatest extent was from north-east to south-west; and according to astronomical
                  observations, it is situated in 17° 4' S. latitude, and 168° 32' E. longitude. At
                  noon we put about, and stood for several small islands and broken lands, which
                  appeared off the S. E. end of the island of Apee, and now lay to the N. E. of us.
                  We likewise had sight of a peak to the S.E. and of some land beyond that, which
                  seemed very large, though at a great distance. The number of islands in this group
                  was very surprising; and their direction to the southward, gave us great hopes of
                  continuing to make discoveries, which might gradually lead us back once more to
                  New Zeeland.</p>

               <p>We stood on towards these north-easterly lands, and came among them in the
                  afternoon. They were of an inconsiderable size when compared to Mallicollo,
                  Ambryym, Apee, or even to Three-hills Island, and Pa-oom. Most of them, however,
                  were inhabited; which circumstance we collected particularly in the evening, when
                  we saw several fires, even on those which we had by day-light judged to have no
                  inhabitants. After sunset we were becalmed for several hours in the midst of these
                  isles; the darkness of the night, and several broken rocks close to us on all
                  sides, rendered our situation extremely critical. The navigator, who means to
                  explore new islands, and give an accurate account of their position, is often in
                  danger of losing his ship. It is impossible for him to form a just conception of
                  the coast, without approaching close to it; but he must necessarily be exposed to
                  the dangers of a sudden storm, a sunken rock, or a swift current, which are
                  sufficient, in a few moments, to destroy all his hopes of glory. Prudence and
                  caution are very necessary in the conduct of every great enterprize; but it seems,
                  that in a voyage of discovery, as in every undertaking of consequence, a certain
                  degree of rashness, and reliance on good fortune, become the principal roads to
                  fame, by being crowned with great and undeserved success.</p>

               <p>These dangerous islands received the name of Shepherd's Isles, from the Rev. Dr.
                  A. Shepherd, F. R. S. professor of astronomy in the university of Cambridge. We
                  obtained a fresh breeze the same night, and tacked off and on till the
                     <date>[Monday 25.]</date>next morning at day-break, when, being near the
                  southermost island, we stood away to the southward for the lands which we had
                  discovered the day before. We passed to the eastward of Three-hills Island,
                  towards two other isles a few leagues to the south of it, of a much smaller size,
                  but covered with verdure and groves in the same manner. We sailed between one of
                  them and a high columnar rock, which we named the Monument, from its remarkable
                  shape.59 The surf which had beaten upon it, had worn several deep furrows and
                  channels into it. It looked blackish, might be an hundred and fifty yards high,
                  and was not wholly destitute of verdure. A great number of boobies and terns were
                  seen flying about it, and seemed to have taken up their residence on it. The
                  larger island, near which it was situated, was called Two-hills Island, by captain
                  Cook, because it had only two elevations of any remarkable size.</p>

               <p>We now stood due south, towards the large land which appeared in that quarter, and
                  which we had already noticed on the 24th. A canoe, with a triangular sail, was
                  observed at a great distance, coming from the S. W. towards Three-hills Island.
                  The natives of these different islands have therefore, in all likelihood, a
                  friendly intercourse with each other, in the same manner as the different
                  inhabitants of the Society and Friendly Islands.60 In the afternoon we had almost
                  made the southern island, which now appeared to consist of two; and were preparing
                  to pass to windward of both, being near the eastermost of them, when the breeze
                  suddenly failed us, and we were carried to the west by the tide or current at a
                  great rate. Our situation this night was no less dangerous than on the preceding,
                  with this difference only, that the moon shone very bright, and we could judge of
                  the quick advances which we made towards the western island. Its northernmost
                  point was of a great height, rocky, black, and almost perpendicular, having only a
                  narrow beach, and a few scattered rocks at the bottom. We remained in the most
                  dreadful suspense till near ten o'clock, as the current was so strong, that
                  hoisting out our boats would scarcely have availed us any thing. The ship's head,
                  her stern, or her broad-side, were by turns directed towards the shore, on which
                  we heard the surf breaking with a much more dreadful sound than it had ever had
                  before, when unconnected with the ideas of immediate danger; at last we
                  fortunately drifted clear of the point at a short distance.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 26.]</date>The next morning a gentle breeze sprung up, with which
                  we advanced towards the land again. We now ran within the eastermost island,
                  which, though it was not above eight or nine miles in circuit, was however
                  inhabited, many of the people running along shore to gaze at us, with bows,
                  arrows, and darts in their hands. This isle had a hill of moderate height in its
                  centre, which appeared to be destitute of woods in most parts, the cultivated
                  lands and groves lying at its foot and on its first slope. They consisted of
                  coco-palms, bananas, and various other trees; amongst which we discerned a number
                  of small huts, and on the beach, several canoes hauled ashore. The land opposite
                  to the west was about four or five leagues distant from it, and now likewise
                  appeared to consist of two islands. One of these to the north, the same on which
                  we were near being lost, was small, not above twelve or fifteen miles in
                  circumference, but of moderate height, like the former, and with much the same
                  aspect. To the south of it, the main island appeared, which extended no less than
                  ten leagues from N. W. to S. E. It was of a moderate height, like the two others
                  near it, but very gently sloping in all parts, and presented to the eye many
                  beautiful prospects. Thick groves, and extensive tracts of clear ground, were very
                  agreeably varied, and the latter had a rich yellowish colour, which exactly
                  resembled the golden corn-fields of Europe. We all agreed that this island was one
                  of the finest we had hitherto seen in the new group, and seemed to be well
                  situated for the purpose of an European settlement.61 We kept at a considerable
                  distance from it; but it appeared to us to be more thinly inhabited than those
                  which we had left to the northward. This circumstance would facilitate the
                  establishment of a colony; and if the spirit of philanthropy could ever animate
                  the planters, they would here have an opportunity to become the benefactors of the
                  natives. From what we observed at Mallicollo, this race of men is very
                  intelligent, and would readily receive the improvements of civilization. There
                  appeared to be a bay towards the N. W. end of the island, which we did not
                  examine, on account of several small islands and reefs lying before it to the
                  eastward. It appeared to form a deep indenture on the shore, and to be more
                  accessible from the westward. Captain Cook named this extensive island Sandwich,
                  that to the north Hinchinbrook, and the other to the east Montagu. The middle of
                  Sandwich Island lies in 17° 40' S. lat. and 168° 30' E. long.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 27.]</date>We ran to the south-eastward all the afternoon and
                  night; but at day-break, the next morning, another island was seen ahead, about
                  fourteen leagues distant, Sandwich being still faintly in sight, nearly at the
                  same distance. Our ships now perfectly resembled an hospital; the poisoned
                  patients were still in a deplorable situation; they continued to have gripes, and
                  acute pains in all their bones: in the day time they were in a manner giddy, and
                  felt a great heaviness in their heads; at night, as soon as they were warm in bed,
                  their pains redoubled, and robbed them entirely of sleep. The secretion of saliva
                  was excessive; the skin peeled off from the whole body, and pimples appeared on
                  their hands. Those who were less afflicted with pain, were much weaker in
                  proportion, and crawled about the decks, emaciated to mere shadows. We had not one
                  lieutenant able to do duty; and as one of the mates, and several of the midshipmen
                  were likewise ill, the watches were commanded by the gunner and the other mates.
                  The dogs which had unfortunately fed upon the same fish, were in a still worse
                  condition, as we could not give them any relief. They groaned and panted most
                  piteously, drank great quantities of water, and appeared to be tortured with pain.
                  Those which had eaten of the entrails were infinitely more affected than the rest.
                  One of these poor creatures was doomed to be a martyr, being the same upon which
                  we tried the Mallicollese arrows; however, he luckily got the better of both these
                  attacks, and was brought to England. It is remarkable, that captain Quiros
                  complains of a sort of fish, which he calls pargos, that poisoned a great part of
                  his crew, in the bay of St. Philip and St. James. Nothing is more probable, than
                  that it was of the same species, pargos being the Spanish name of the sea-bream
                  (pagrus). It is to be suspected, at the same time, that these fishes are not
                  always poisonous, but, like many species in the West and East Indies, may acquire
                  that quality, by feeding on poisonous vegetables.62 The circumstance, that the
                  intestines were more poisonous than the rest, seems to confirm this supposition;
                  the greatest part of the venom remaining in the primœ viœ, whilst only a small
                  part was carried into the muscles, by the chyle63 and blood.</p>

               <p>We had had very mild weather after leaving Mallicollo, but the trade-wind had
                  blown fresh from time to time. At present, however, being in sight of this new
                  island, we were stopped by light airs and faint breezes. <date>[Thursday
                     28.]</date>All the next day we lay becalmed, and rolled about very
                  uncomfortably, being set to the northward several leagues by a current. In the
                  evening we discovered another island very far off to the south-eastward, of which
                  for the present we took no notice. <date>[Friday 29.]</date>The day after we
                  obtained a breeze towards noon, which continued <date>[Saturday 30.]</date>till
                  the next day in the evening, and brought us within six leagues of the land. In the
                  afternoon one of the dogs, less affected with the poison of the fish than the
                  rest, being quite recovered, we determined to try another experiment with the
                  poison of the Mallicollese arrows. An incision was made with a lancet in his
                  thigh, and the resinous substance sticking on the bony point of the arrow, as well
                  as the green earthy stuff which lodged in the compartments formed by the coco-nut
                  fibres, were scraped off, and laid into the wound, covered with a plaster, in
                  order to make the experiment as fair as possible. The dog, as I have already
                  mentioned, recovered as quickly as if nothing had been laid into the wound.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 31.]</date>The next morning it was absolutely calm again, and many
                  of our sailors observed, that the island before us was certainly enchanted,
                  because our attempts to come near it had hitherto failed. At present we saw the
                  other island to the south,64 which had been discovered on the 28th, more
                  distinctly than before. The nearer island seemed to be less fertile and agreeable
                  than those which we had hitherto discovered; it seemed, however, to be inhabited,
                  which we concluded on seeing a great smoke rise from it. Our situation was the
                  more disagreeable, as it was tantalizing to be in sight of land, and not to be
                  able to approach it. Notwithstanding its supposed barrenness, which precluded the
                  hope of refreshments, we were all very desirous of being better acquainted with
                  it. We never felt the tediousness of being confined to the ship more severely, nor
                  ever wished more eagerly to have intercourse with human creatures. The company of
                  savages, and an opportunity of contemplating their manners, dwellings and
                  plantations, were at present, in our estimation, desirable objects. In the
                  afternoon two sharks were caught, which swam about the ship, attended by pilot and
                  sucking-fishes. One of these huge voracious animals seemed to be a species of
                  epicure, having in his maw no less than four young turtles, of eighteen inches in
                  diameter, two large cuttle-fishes, and the feathers and skeleton of a booby; but
                  though he was well fed, he did not disdain a piece of salt pork, with which we
                  baited our hook. The sailors had no sooner hauled them on deck, than every one
                  drew his knife, and in a few moments divided them into small pieces, which they
                  hastened to dress, and to devour. One of the sharks making some resistance in
                  hauling up, was shot dead by our officers, who were equally concerned with the
                  rest of their shipmates to prevent his escape. In this manner we revenged the
                  cause of the whole submarine creation. Salt provisions are more loathsome in hot
                  climates than every where else, which is partly owing to the raging thirst they
                  occasion. As we had lived upon salt meat since we left Namoka, it may be easily
                  imagined that no shark was ever more delicious to our taste. A faint breeze sprung
                  up at night, with which we proceeded towards the land once more. We discerned a
                  single rock <date>[1774. August.][Monday 1.]</date>the next morning lying off its
                  north end, at the distance of a few leagues; and as we approached, found the
                  island less barren than we had at first supposed. Towards ten o'clock, we were
                  most dreadfully alarmed by a fire in the ship. Confusion and horror appeared in
                  all our faces, at the bare mention of it; and it was some time before proper
                  measures were taken to stop its progress: for in these moments of danger, few are
                  able to collect their faculties, and to act with cool deliberation. The mind which
                  unexpected and imminent danger cannot ruffle for a time, is one of the scarcest
                  phӕnomena in human nature; no wonder then, that it was not to be met with among
                  the small number of persons to whom the ship was entrusted. To be on board of a
                  ship on fire, is perhaps one of the most trying situations that can be imagined; a
                  storm itself, on a dangerous coast, is less dreadful, as it does not so entirely
                  preclude all hopes of escaping with life. Providentially, the fire of this day was
                  very trifling, and extinguished in a few moments. Our fears suggested that it was
                  in the sail-room; but we soon found, that a piece of Taheitee cloth, carelessly
                  laid near the lamp in the steward's room had taken fire, and raised a quantity of
                  smoke, which gave the alarm. In proportion as we advanced towards the land, we
                  discerned fine woods upon it, interspersed with glades and plantations on the very
                  summits of the hills. A number of coco-palms were likewise observed upon it, which
                  had not however that noble appearance, by which we distinguished them in other
                  countries.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we came up with the west side of the island, and running close to
                  the shore, we observed several small beaches, at the foot of steep hills, covered
                  with plantations. These chiefly consisted of bananas, and were confined in neat
                  enclosures, near which we also noticed several houses like sheds.65 Thirty or
                  forty natives were seen running along the shore, armed with bows and arrows, as
                  well as spears. They looked very swarthy at a distance, and resembled the people
                  of Mallicollo. Some women were observed among them, who wore a kind of petticoat,
                  apparently made of leaves and straw, which descended to the mid-leg, or sometimes
                  nearly to the ancles;66 the men on the contrary were naked, like the Mallicollese.
                  We entered a kind of open bay, where the natives of both sexes waded a good way
                  into the water, and called to us, to all appearance, with very friendly gestures.
                  We stood across the bay, where it was not thought proper to anchor. It was growing
                  dark when we opened the southernmost point, and saw the coast stretching to the
                  east. As the wind was falling again, we did not attempt to stand in shore any
                  longer, but rather endeavoured to keep off during night, for fear of being set
                  towards it by the current. Every morning and evening, at sun-rise and sun-set, our
                  sailors washed the decks from one end to the other, to prevent the heat from
                  drying them up too much, and making them leaky. This evening one of the marines,
                  who was drawing water on the ship's side, for this purpose, had the misfortune to
                  fall over-board. He was not able to swim; however, by bringing the ship to
                  instantly, and throwing a number of ropes over-board, one of which he seized, we
                  succeeded in our endeavours to save him. The poor fellow was immediately conducted
                  between decks, by his comrades the marines, being much weakened by the efforts he
                  had made to save himself by keeping fast hold of the rope, as well as the sudden
                  fear of death. They shifted his clothes, and gave him a dram or two of brandy to
                  revive the animal spirits, treating him with peculiar tenderness, the result of an
                  esprit du corps, to which sailors are at present utter strangers.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 2.]</date>The calms which had so long persecuted us, were not yet
                  at an end. Our ship lay like a log on the water all night, and the next day being
                  gradually drifted into the bay which we had passed the day before, the boats were
                  hoisted out, and sent in quest of anchorage. They had no soundings till they came
                  near the shore, but there had found twenty fathom, at the distance of three cables
                  lengths (six hundred yards). The natives were seen running to the beach again, but
                  our people held no converse with them; for captain Cook seeing a breeze spring up,
                  made the signal for them to return, and hoisted them in again. The cannon which
                  was fired on the occasion, seemed to have no particular effect on the natives, who
                  were doubtless utterly unacquainted with our arms, and with Europeans.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 3.]</date>We sailed round the N. W. point of the island, and in
                  the morning advanced towards the single rock, which we had noticed before. A very
                  remarkable mountain with a double summit, which had some resemblance to a saddle,
                  lay on the island just abreast of this rock, and seemed to be of great height,
                  even though the rest of the island had a considerable elevation. The detached rock
                  appeared to be covered with wood, and our ship being greatly in want of fuel, two
                  boats were hoisted out and sent towards it. The hopes of making some botanical
                  acquisitions, engaged us to embark in one of these boats. The distance which had
                  been supposed trifling, was found to be near five miles; but after rowing all this
                  space, we were wholly disappointed. An enormous surf broke upon the rock on all
                  sides, which rendered the landing absolutely impracticable. In vain we rowed all
                  round it, casting many a longing look at the verdure and trees with which we saw
                  it covered. A large bat, and some small birds were observed flying through its
                  bushes; and a number of fish swam among the broken rocks; but the former did not
                  come within musket-shot, and the others refused to take our hooks. Returning back
                  to the ship we caught a water-snake (coluber laticaudatus, Linn.) of the same sort
                  which had been observed so plentiful on one of the low isles off Maria Bay, in
                  Tonga-Tabboo. (See vol. I. p. 478.)</p>

               <p>After returning on board, a gentle breeze sprung up, and we stood into a kind of
                  bay, close under the Saddle-peak, to the westward of it. We came in towards
                  evening, and found the bay very extensive, above eight miles wide, but not above
                  two deep. The Saddle which forms a kind of peninsula, lies on its east side, and
                  shelters it from the trade-wind, being very steep towards the point, but gradually
                  sloping into lesser hills towards the bottom of the bay. Every part of the shore
                  was well cultivated between the wild groves; and every plantation seemed to be
                  enclosed in very neat fences of reed, exactly resembling those which we had
                  observed at the Friendly Isles. We dropped an anchor about a quarter of a mile
                  from shore, having a low point a-head of us, behind which there appeared to be a
                  harbour. The natives lined the shore in great crouds; some of them swam off, and
                  came within hail, but no nearer; crying out and screaming aloud to us. They
                  appeared at a distance to resemble the Mallicollese, and were swarthy; one of them
                  however, had reddish hair, and was fairer than the rest. It was remarkable that
                  not a single canoe appeared, either on the water, or hauled ashore; though we can
                  hardly suppose so fine an island to be destitute of boats. As it was growing dark,
                  all the swimmers returned to the shore, and made several fires in their
                  plantations. Our provision of fresh water being very low, and that which we filled
                  at Namoka being very bad, we rejoiced to have found a place, where the appearance
                  of the country, gave us the greatest hopes of meeting with a fresh supply, not
                  only of this necessary article, but of all sorts of refreshments. All those who
                  had been poisoned by the red fish at Mallicollo, were not yet wholly recovered,
                  but felt their pains returning every night, their teeth lose, and their gums and
                  palate excoriated. They likewise hoped to get rid of the remains of their tedious
                  sickness, by making some stay on this island, and recruiting their strength with
                  wholesome fresh food, to which they had long been strangers. But all our
                  expectations proved abortive and premature.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 4.]</date>Early in the morning, captain Cook ordered two boats to
                  be properly armed and manned, and commanding himself in one, and entrusting the
                  other to the care of the master, went in search of a convenient watering-place. He
                  first rowed towards the shore directly abreast of the ship, where a number of
                  natives not less than sixty, were assembled on the beach. As soon as he was near
                  the shore, some of the natives came into the water, round the boats, where the
                  captain distributed to them nails, medals, Taheitee cloth, &amp;c. with which they
                  seemed vastly delighted. He soon put off, and rowed along the shore, more ahead of
                  the ship, round the low point which I have already mentioned, the natives running
                  along in the same direction. The boats having got round the point, which might be
                  about three quarters of a mile off, continued out of sight near an hour. In the
                  mean time, the natives were observed running towards the point from all parts,
                  whilst a great number sat down opposite the ship, gazing at it with the greatest
                  attention. At once we heard the discharge of some muskets, and an irregular fire
                  kept up for some time. Upon this alarm, another boat was instantly equipped, and
                  sent to the assistance of the former, and a swivel shot directed over the point. A
                  great gun was likewise brought upon the fore-castle, and fired off towards the
                  hills. This struck a panic into the inhabitants in our sight, who all hastened to
                  screen themselves in the bushes; many were seen running out of the plantations on
                  the hills, roused by the sound, and hurrying away again, as soon as they beheld
                  their countrymen put to flight. We also saw several dragging a dead or wounded man
                  up one of the hills, from the place where we heard the fire of our boats. In a
                  little time the captain returned in one boat, while the two others continued to
                  sound in the bay. One of our seamen was brought into the ship with a wound in the
                  cheek and another in the wrist; and we had the following account from captain Cook
                  and those who accompanied him, concerning this unfortunate attack. The boats had
                  no sooner rowed round the point than they found a good landing-place, where the
                  captain and another person stepped ashore. He found several hundred natives armed
                  with bows and arrows, clubs, and long spears. Their stature was of the middle
                  size, and much superior to that of the Mallicollese; they were indeed nearly of
                  the same swarthy hue, but better limbed and better featured. They went stark
                  naked, with a rope only about the middle, and were for the rest to the full as
                  indecent in the eyes of Europeans as the Mallicollese. Black paint and ruddle68
                  were likewise not spared on some of their faces; their hair was black, very curly
                  or frizzled, but not woolly in all persons alike, and in a great quantity. Some,
                  however, had reddish hair, and all had strong black beards.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook began with distributing presents to several of the natives, and
                  particularly to a man who appeared to have some authority over the rest.69 Having
                  expressed by signs that he wanted fresh water and other provisions, the chief sent
                  away some men, and continued to converse by signs. In a short time the men
                  returned, bringing a hollow bamboo filled with fresh water, a few coco-nuts, and
                  the root of a yam. Our people understood from their gestures, that they had
                  fetched the water at a little distance, but it seemed the natives were not
                  inclined to let them walk thither to examine it. Their numbers encreasing every
                  moment, the captain re-embarked, and ordered his boat to be pushed off. One of the
                  natives immediately seized an oar, but another took it out of his hand and threw
                  it back towards the boat. Some then took hold of the gang-board, which the sailors
                  had neglected to secure, and hauled the boat back to the shore, whilst others came
                  into the water and seized the boat itself, taking out two other oars. The chief
                  stood near the boat, and seemed to direct this whole manӕuvre. Captain Cook
                  levelled his musket at the natives, but here, as at Savage Island, (see pag. 166.)
                  the piece missed fire several times. The natives seeing him take aim, and readily
                  conceiving that what he held in his hand was a weapon, drew their bows and poised
                  their spears. A volley of arrows was directed at our people, and several spears
                  were thrown into the boat. One of them, without any carving and perfectly blunt,
                  wounded a seaman in the cheek. Captain Cook, seeing the lives of his people in
                  danger, ordered them to fire, but it was some time before any of them could
                  discharge their muskets. The first discharge killed two natives, who fell close to
                  the boat. The rest, still undismayed, ran back a little at first, but returned
                  briskly to the charge, throwing stones and shooting arrows at our people. The
                  other boat likewise fired upon them, but only two or three of their muskets went
                  off; however, they also killed and wounded some other natives. It is remarkable,
                  that though the best flints are to be had in England, and though government allows
                  the highest price for them to the contractors, yet are our troops supplied with
                  the very worst flints by these people, who use every means to amass a fortune at
                  the expence of the public. Some attention ought to be paid to an article, upon
                  which the lives of many thousand subjects, nay often the success of engagements,
                  in great measure depends . An arrow hit the master on the naked breast, but being
                  entirely spent, it did not even fetch blood. It consisted of a reed, armed with a
                  long point of black wood, which was jagged or bearded with many indentures on one
                  side. Some of the natives who were wounded crawled upon all fours into the bushes.
                  When our swivels and cannon were fired from the ship, the whole croud dispersed;
                  some, however, hid themselves behind a sandy elevation, which served as a
                  breast-work, from whence they continued to annoy our people, who for some time
                  amused themselves to fire at them as often as their heads appeared. At last,
                  captain Cook seeing a third boat come to his assistance returned on board, and
                  ordered the other two to sound the bay. From his account of this unhappy dispute,
                  Mr. Hodges has invented a drawing, which is meant as a representation of his
                  interview with the natives.70 For my own part, I cannot entirely persuade myself
                  that these people had any hostile intentions in detaining our boat. The levelling
                  of a musket at them, or rather at their chief, provoked them to attack our crew.
                  On our part this manӕuvre was equally necessary; but it is much to be lamented
                  that the voyages of Europeans cannot be performed without being fatal to the
                  nations whom they visit.</p>

               <p>After breakfast we weighed the anchor, and prepared to stand farther into the bay,
                  our boats having found convenient anchorage nearer to the watering-place. All the
                  western coast of the bay was covered with thousands of palms, which had a
                  beautiful effect, and appeared to be different from the coco-palm. We soon came in
                  sight of the place where the engagement had happened. A few natives who stood here
                  and there on the shore, ran into the woods on seeing the ship. We saw the two oars
                  which they had taken out of the boat stuck in the ground and leaning on the
                  bushes; but it was not thought proper to send a boat in quest of them, though the
                  coast was clear. After we had entertained hopes of coming to an anchor again for
                  some time, the captain gave orders to put about, and stood to the eastward round
                  the saddle-peak, which was now called Traitor's Head.71 We tacked all the morning,
                  in order to weather that point, but could not accomplish it till three o'clock in
                  the afternoon, when we opened a bay immediately to the eastward of it. This bay
                  extended very far inland, and seemed to contain several snug creeks or harbours.
                  The lands on both sides were covered with the thickest woods, which had a most
                  fertile and enchanting appearance. To the south, the land sloped very gently,
                  offering a fine exposure of vast extent almost wholly cultivated, and in all
                  likelihood rich in vegetable productions. We were just abreast of this bay, and
                  perhaps in doubt whether we should not go in, when the island appeared in sight
                  again to the south, which we had already discovered on the 28th of July. Captain
                  Cook now resolved to relinquish the nearer island, and to proceed to the more
                  distant one, in order to leave as little unexplored as possible. The breeze was
                  very fresh, and we left the island with great rapidity. It is situated in 18° 48'
                  south latitude, and 169° 20' east longitude , and is nearly of a square figure,
                  which measures at least 30 leagues in circuit. We stood southerly towards the new
                  island, with studding sails set, which had been in disuse with us ever since we
                  arrived among this group of isles. Several fires appeared upon the island at
                  night, one of which blazed up from time to time like the flame of a volcano.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 5.]</date>At day-break we saw a low island at the north-eastward of
                  us, having passed close to it during the night, and a high one nearly east of us,
                  at the distance of eight or nine leagues. The low island was covered with
                  coco-palms, but we could not determine whether it consisted of a circular reef or
                  not. The large island, towards which we still directed our course, extended from
                  N. W. to S. E. and consisted of a high range of mountains. Towards the
                  southeastern extremity, at the end of a secondary range of hills, we discovered a
                  volcano, of which we had really seen the fire at night.73 It was a low hill, much
                  lower than any in the same range, and of a conical shape, with a crater in the
                  middle. Its colour was reddish brown, consisting of a heap of burnt stones,
                  perfectly barren, but it offered a very striking sight to our eyes. A column of
                  heavy smoke rose up from time to time, like a great tree, whose crown gradually
                  spread as it ascended. Every time that a new column of smoke was thus thrown up,
                  we heard a very deep rumbling sound like thunder, and the columns followed each
                  other at very short intervals. The colour of the smoke was not always the same; it
                  was white and yellowish in general, but sometimes of a dirty reddish grey, which
                  we suspected to be partly owing to the fire in the crater which illuminated the
                  smoke and ashes. The whole island, except the volcano, is well wooded, and
                  contains abundance of fine coco-palms; its verdure, even at this season, which was
                  the winter of these regions, was very rich and beautiful.</p>

               <p>After eight o'clock we hoisted out our boats, and the master went to sound a
                  harbour, which appeared in view to the east of the volcano. They ran in very fast,
                  and were followed by two canoes of the natives, which put off from different parts
                  of the coast; another canoe was seen at a distance sailing along shore. In a
                  little time they made signals for the ship to follow. We stood on into the
                  harbour, which has a narrow entrance, and as we kept a man constantly sounding in
                  the chains, we were greatly alarmed when our soundings suddenly decreased from six
                  fathom to three and a half; however, an instant afterwards we had four, five, and
                  more fathoms. It appeared that we had providentially passed over a rock before the
                  entrance, on which we had run the greatest risk of striking. The harbour was a
                  small snug bason, where we let go our anchor in four fathom, surrounded by a
                  number of natives in their canoes.</p>

               <p>This was the only anchorage where we made any stay in all the extensive cluster of
                  islands which we had now discovered. We provided our ship with wood and water, but
                  did not obtain any refreshments worth mentioning. The principal advantage which we
                  derived from putting in here, consisted in a few remarks on a race of people, in a
                  great measure distinct from all the tribes which were known to us before. But
                  while we were entertained with various new and striking objects, it was very
                  disagreeable to be tantalized with the sight of wholesome vegetable and animal
                  food, with which the natives did not choose to supply us.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. II.</l>

                  <l>Account of our stay at Tanna, and departure from the New Hebrides.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. August.][Friday 5.]</date>HAVING brought the ship to an anchor, we
                  were well pleased to see the natives coming off in their canoes from different
                  parts of the bay, and paddling round about us at a little distance. Their
                  behaviour at first was very irresolute; though all were armed with spears, clubs,
                  bows and arrows. One or two came close to us, and sent a yam, or a coco-nut, upon
                  the deck, for which we made them presents of our goods.1 In a few moments the
                  number of canoes encreased to seventeen; some of them contained twenty-two men;
                  others ten, seven, five, and the smallest only two; so that the number of people
                  about us exceeded two hundred. They pronounced several words to us from time to
                  time, and seemed to propose questions; but if we uttered a word of the Taheitee or
                  Mallicollo dialect, they repeated it, without seeming to have the least idea of
                  it. By degrees they were familiarized with our appearance, and ventured close
                  along side. We had hung a net overboard astern, containing salt meat for dinner;
                  which the sea water was to freshen, as we did every day; one of the natives, an
                  old man, seized this net, and was about to detach it; but being called to, he
                  instantly desisted. However, another shook his dart at us upon this occasion, and
                  still another adjusted an arrow to his bow, taking aim by turns at different
                  persons on the quarter-deck. Captain Cook imagined that the discharge of a cannon
                  might be of great service, to prevent any unhappy differences with the natives, by
                  apprizing them of our power. He made sign accordingly to the canoes to paddle
                  aside, in order to keep clear of the shot. It was remarkable that they were not
                  offended by this sign, which had the air of authority, but readily dropped astern.
                  The gun was fired towards the shore, and the two hundred people leaped out of
                  their canoes into the sea in the same instant. Only a single young man, very well
                  made, and of a very open friendly countenance, remained standing in his canoe,
                  without the least marks of surprize or fear, but looking with a mixture of mirth
                  and contempt at his affrighted countrymen. They presently recovered their station
                  in their canoes, and seeing no ill consequences had ensued after our bravado,
                  conversed very loud with each other, and seemed to laugh at their own fears. They
                  kept off however at a little distance, and did not shew any hostile
                  inclinations.</p>

               <p>Captain Cook did not like the ship's birth, but resolved to carry her deeper into
                  the bay. To that purpose, a boat was sent off with an anchor, and our people
                  proceeded in their operation without being molested. The buoy, however, which
                  belonged to our first anchor, appeared so tempting, that an old Indian, who was
                  quite bald, put off in his canoe, and endeavoured to carry it away, at first by
                  towing it, but afterwards by detaching it from its rope. As soon as we perceived
                  that he was seriously at work about it, captain Cook called to him to desist, but
                  he was not able so much as to divert his attention. The captain fired a musket
                  loaded with small shot at him; and some of the shot having struck him, he
                  immediately threw the buoy out of his canoe. A few moments after, however, feeling
                  himself very little hurt, he returned once more to complete his former
                  undertaking. A musket, with a ball, was now fired rather short of him into the
                  sea; upon this he left the buoy, and came long side to present us with a coco-nut.
                  There was something bold and generous in his behaviour, which I think plainly
                  indicated, that he offered us his friendship, after making trial of our spirit.
                  Our boat having laid the anchor in the ground with another buoy, came on board,
                  and we began to warp in by it. The buoy tempted another native, notwithstanding
                  the correction which his countryman had received. He was afraid of taking it up;
                  but paddled several times towards it, and as often turned back again. At last the
                  temptation prevailed, and he began to haul it into his canoe. A large musketoon
                  was fired at him, and the ball fell close to him, striking the water several
                  times, and at last dropping on the beach. A number of people stood near the place,
                  and immediately ran off; but the man in the canoe returned again to the buoy.
                  Another musketoon, a swivel, and last of all a cannon were fired, which terrified
                  him and all the natives both on the water and on shore, without doing them any
                  hurt.</p>

               <p>We brought the ship deeper into the bay, after this little disturbance; but in
                  warping her in, she struck aground several times, being drawn out of the deep
                  channel. The water was very smooth, and the bottom covered with mud, so that she
                  could receive no material damage, and the fault was easily redressed. We then went
                  to dinner very quietly, and afterwards proceeded to the beach in three boats, well
                  manned, especially by all our marines. The opportunity seemed very favourable, as
                  the numbers of natives in sight was very small, and not likely to give us any
                  trouble. A few of them, who were seated in the grass along the beach, ran off upon
                  our landing, but returned as soon as we beckoned to them. On our left, or to the
                  westward, we saw a body of about a hundred and fifty, well armed, who advanced
                  towards us with the green branches of coco-palm, which they presented us in sign
                  of peace. We distributed medals, Taheitee cloth,2 and iron ware, to conciliate
                  their good will; and afterwards exchanged these articles for a few coco-nuts which
                  they brought us, after we had pointed to the trees, and made our wants
                  intelligible by different gestures.3 One of our first requests was, that they
                  should sit down; which was imperfectly complied with: another, that they should
                  not transgress a line which we drew on the sand; and to this they readily
                  assented. We presently found a pond of very palatable fresh water, and made signs
                  to the natives, that we came to provide ourselves from thence, and that we also
                  desired leave to cut some trees. They immediately pointed out several wild trees
                  which we might cut, only excepting the coco-palms, of which innumerable quantities
                  covered the shore. We filled two small barrels with water, and cut down a few
                  trees, to shew in what manner we intended to proceed; and the natives appeared to
                  be satisfied. Our marines were however drawn up, and the least motion they made so
                  terrified the inhabitants, that they ran off to a considerable distance, only a
                  few old men remaining near us. We desired them to lay down their arms; and even in
                  this demand, which was in itself unreasonable, the greatest part acquiesced. Their
                  stature was of the middle size, and their persons infinitely stronger, and better
                  proportioned, than those of the Mallicollese. Their colour was a dark or chestnut
                  brown, with a very swarthy mixture. Like the natives of Mallicollo, they went
                  stark naked, having only a string round the belly, which did not cut their body in
                  such a shocking manner, as we had observed at that island. We saw some women at a
                  distance, who did not seem to be so ugly as those of Mallicollo, and wore a kind
                  of petticoat, which descended below the knee. Two girls had each a long spear in
                  their hand, but did not venture nearer than the rest. We collected a number of
                  words from these people, among which, far the greatest part were entirely new to
                  us; but sometimes they expressed the same idea by two words, one of which was new,
                  and the other corresponded with the language of the Friendly Islands; from whence
                  we had reason to conclude, that they have some neighbours of the other race, who
                  speak that language.4 They also told us, that they call their own island Tanna, a
                  word which signifies " earth" in the Malay language. This last we looked upon as a
                  great acquisition; for the indigenous name of a country is always permanent.5 We
                  made but a short stay among these people, and returned on board as soon as we had
                  filled our casks. We now thought the peace concluded, and every difficulty
                  conquered; but we found matters in a very different situation the next morning.
                  Our intercourse with them had hitherto been peaceable, because they did not feel
                  themselves a match for us; but it seems they were very far from purposing to give
                  us free admittance into their country. They looked upon us as invaders, and
                  appeared jealous of their property, and resolved to defend it.</p>

               <p>We saw the flame of the volcano in the evening, blazing up, with an explosion once
                  in five minutes or thereabouts. The transactions of the day prevented my speaking
                  of this wonderful phӕnomenon, though it was in continual agitation. Some of the
                  explosions resembled very violent claps of thunder, and a rumbling noise continued
                  for half a minute together. The whole air was filled with smoky particles and with
                  ashes, which occasioned much pain when they fell into the eye. The decks, rigging,
                  and all parts of the ship were covered with black sherl ashes in the space of a
                  few hours, and the same sand, mixed with small cinders and pumice stones, covered
                  the sea-shore. The distance of this volcano from our harbour was five or six
                  miles; but several hills lay between, so that we only saw its summit, which threw
                  up the smoke from a crater, consisting of several ragged points.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 6.]</date>Early in the morning, the ship was moored still more
                  conveniently and nearer to the shore. The natives appeared at sun-rise coming out
                  of their groves and consulting together on the beach. In order to make the sequel
                  more intelligible, it will be necessary to give a slight sketch of the appearance
                  of the country which enclosed the harbour.6 The point which forms its eastern
                  shore is very low and flat, but presently rises into a level hill, about fifteen
                  or twenty yards high, which is wholly laid out in plantations. This encompasses
                  the eastern and southern shore of the bay, being near three miles long, and
                  extending several miles inland to the sea on the other side. Where this flat hill
                  ends, a fine plain covered with plantations runs to the southward, bounded by
                  several ranges of pleasant hills, of which the nearest are of easy ascent. To the
                  west this plain, as well as the whole bay itself, is enclosed by a steep hill,
                  three or four hundred yards high, which is nearly perpendicular in most places. A
                  narrow beach of large broken shingles and stones runs along the western shore, but
                  a perpendicular rock separates it from the southern beach. This last is very
                  broad, and consists of a firm black sand; it bounds the plain, and is the same
                  where we cut wood and filled our casks with water. A beach of coral rock and shell
                  sand continues from thence along the foot of the flat hill quite to the eastern
                  point of the harbour. The flat hill does not lie close to this beach, but a space
                  of level land, thirty or forty yards wide, covered with groves of palms, extends
                  to its foot. The whole south-east corner of the bay is filled with a flat reef of
                  coral, which is overflowed at low water.</p>

               <p>A few canoes put off one by one from the shore, and each brought a coco-nut or two
                  and a cluster of bananas for sale, which they readily exchanged for Taheitee
                  cloth. As soon as the natives in them had disposed of their cargo, they returned
                  to the shore and brought off another. One of them offered captain Cook his club,
                  and, having agreed to take a piece of cloth for it, it was let down into his
                  canoe. However, he had no sooner received this cloth, than he took no farther
                  trouble to fulfil his agreement. The captain spoke to him several times, by such
                  signs as the man seemed to understand, but all in vain; a musket, charged with
                  small shot was fired into his face, upon which he, and two men who were with him,
                  betook themselves to paddling with the greatest agility. Their canoe was pursued
                  from deck by several shots from the ship's musketoons; one of them fell so near
                  them, and rebounded so often from the water, that they all jumped into the sea and
                  swam ashore. A great concourse of natives was presently observed near the spot
                  where they landed, to whom they probably related their story. A few minutes after,
                  a single man came off to us in a canoe, with some sugar-canes, coco-nuts, and
                  yams. He was an old man, of a low stature, but had a very friendly countenance,
                  which announced his good disposition. He had been active the preceding afternoon
                  to preserve the peace with our people, and his arrival was therefore the more
                  acceptable to us. Captain Cook made him a present of a complete dress of the best
                  red Taheitee cloth, with which the old man was highly pleased. He had in his canoe
                  two large clubs, none of these people ever going without arms; but captain Cook,
                  being in one of our boats along side, took them out and threw them into the sea,
                  making signs to the man, that all his countrymen on shore should lay down their
                  arms. The old fellow liked this proposal exceedingly, and seeming entirely
                  contented with the loss of his clubs, returned to the shore, where we observed him
                  parading for some time in his new dress. Vast numbers of people were now seen
                  assembling on the beach from all quarters of the island, but far the greatest part
                  came down from the steep hill on the west side of the bay. The bushes and groves
                  on the plain were filled with men, of whom none went without arms. Towards nine
                  o'clock, having fixed a spring on the cable, we prepared to land in the launch and
                  two other boats, with all our marines and a party of seamen well armed.7 As soon
                  as the natives saw our boats coming, they hastened out of the bushes on the beach,
                  and formed chiefly in two large bodies, one on each side of the watering-place.
                  That on the west side was by far the most considerable, consisting of no less than
                  seven hundred men, in a compact body, who seemed prepared for action. On the east
                  side we guessed there might be about two hundred men, who, though equally well
                  armed, had however a more peaceable look. In the middle, between them, stood the
                  little old man who had been with us just before, and two other natives. These
                  three were unarmed, and had laid a heap of bananas on the beach. Having approached
                  within twenty yards of the beach, captain Cook called to the natives, and made
                  signs for them to lay down their arms, and to recede from the beach. But of this
                  demand they took no manner of notice, perhaps thinking it absurd and unjust that a
                  few strangers should prescribe laws to them on their own ground. As it was not
                  thought prudent to land between the two bodies of natives, and to expose ourselves
                  to an attack in which many of these innocent people, and perhaps some of us, might
                  have been killed, captain Cook ordered a musket-ball to be fired over their heads,
                  in order, if possible to frighten them away. Indeed, the whole body was
                  immediately in motion at the sound; but, soon recovering from their surprize, the
                  greatest number stood their ground. One of them, standing close to the water's
                  edge, was so bold as to turn his posteriors towards us, and slap them with his
                  hand, which is the usual challenge with all the nations of the South Sea. Captain
                  Cook ordered another musket to be shot into the air, and, at this signal, the ship
                  played her whole artillery, consisting of five four-pounders, two swivels, and
                  four musketoons. The balls whistled over our heads, and making some havock among
                  the coco-palms, had the desired effect, and entirely cleared the beach in a few
                  moments. Only our old peace maker, with his two friends, remained unconcerned near
                  his pile of fruit, which he presented to the captain as soon as he had landed, at
                  the same time desiring him not to shoot any longer. An interesting picture,
                  representing this landing at Tanna,composed by Mr. Hodges, with great ingenuity,
                  has been engraved for captain Cook's account of this voyage. It is one of those
                  pieces in which the skill of that able artist is displayed in its full force.</p>

               <p>Our first care was to draw up the marines in two lines, to guard the waterers.
                  Stakes were driven into the ground on both sides, and ropes fastened to them,
                  leaving a space of fifty or sixty yards clear, for our people to pass and repass
                  unmolested. By degrees they ventured out of the bushes, and came upon the beach,
                  where we made signs to them not to transgress our lines, which none of them
                  attempted. The captain once more repeated his signs, that they should lay down
                  their arms; those on the west did not attend to them, but the other party, who
                  were in some measure connected with our old friend, complied for the greatest
                  part. The old man told us his name, which was Paw-yangom,9 and was permitted to
                  stay within the lines if he chose.</p>

               <p>We now endeavoured to advance into the woods in quest of plants, but we had not
                  got twenty yards, before we saw numbers of natives behind every bush, who kept up
                  a communication between the two parties on the beach. It was therefore impossible
                  to make any great acquisitions at first, and we contented ourselves with two or
                  three new species. With these we returned on the beach, and by endeavouring to
                  converse with the party on our left (to the east of us) filled our vocabularies
                  with many words of their language. We often offered to purchase their arms, but
                  they constantly refused to part with them. However, one of them disposed of a
                  cylindrical piece of alabaster, two inches long, which he wore as a nose-jewel.
                  Before he delivered it, he washed it in the sea, whether from a principle of
                  cleanliness, or not, we cannot determine. During the whole time of our stay on
                  shore this morning, the natives did not attempt to molest or attack us; and those
                  on our left seemed very well disposed, and gave us hopes, that we might establish
                  a friendly intercourse with them in a short time. As we now saw a great part of
                  the inhabitants of this island assembled, we had the best opportunity of forming
                  an adequate idea of their general habit of body, their dress and arms. They are of
                  the middle-sized stature, but many among them may be reckoned tall. Their limbs
                  are well made, and rather slender; some are likewise very stout and strong; but
                  those beautiful outlines, which are so frequent among the people of the Society
                  and Friendly Islands, and of the Marquesas, are rarely to be met with at Tanna. I
                  did not observe one single corpulent man among them; all are active, and full of
                  spirit. Their features are large, the nose broad, but the eyes full, and in
                  general agreeable. Most of them have an open, manly, and good-natured air, though
                  some may likewise be found, as in other nations, whose countenance betrays
                  malevolence. The colour of their hair is black; however, we observed some which
                  had brown or yellowish tips. It grew very thick and bushy, and in generally
                  frizzled; but in a few individuals, it still preserved a degree of woolliness. The
                  beard is likewise thick, black, and frizzled. The colour of their whole body is a
                  dark chestnut brown, which is frequently mixed with a blackish hue, so that it
                  appears at first sight, as if it were sullied with soot; and their skin is
                  extremely soft to the touch, as is observed to be the case with Negroes. They
                  almost go perfectly naked; but, true to the general characteristic of mankind,
                  wear several sorts of ornaments. They dress their hair after the following method:
                  they take a quantity, not exceeding a pigeon's quill in thickness, and wrap it in
                  a thin thread or ribbon, made of the stalk of a bindweed, so that only a small
                  tuft remains at the end. All the hair on the head is disposed exactly in the same
                  manner, so that they have several hundred queues, three or four inches long,
                  standing on end, and diverging every way.</p>

               <p>If these parcels are a little longer, from five to eight or nine inches, they hang
                  down on both sides of the head, and in that case, the wearer strongly resembles a
                  river-god, with his lank hair all soaked and dripping.11 Some however, and
                  particularly those who have woolly hair, let it grow without torturing it into any
                  particular form, or, at farthest, tie it in a bunch on the crown of the head with
                  a leaf. Most of them wear a thin stick or reed, about nine inches long, in their
                  hair, with which they occasionally disturb the vermin that abound in their heads.
                  A reed set with cock's or owls feathers, is likewise sometimes stuck in the hair
                  as an ornament.12 A few of them also wear a cap made of a green plantane leaf, or
                  of matted work, on their heads. Some twist their beard into a kind of rope, but
                  the greater number leave it in its natural form. The cartilage between the
                  nostrils is commonly perforated, and in the aperture, they wear a cylindrical
                  stone, or a bit of reed, half an inch thick. The ears are pierced with a very
                  large hole, in which they wear a number of rings of tortoise-shell, or of a piece
                  of white shell an inch in diameter, and three quarter's of an inch broad.
                  Sometimes one ring is fastened within the other, so as to form a kind of chain.
                  Round their neck they sometimes pass a string, to which they fasten a shell, or a
                  small cylindrical piece of green nephritic stone, resembling that which is common
                  at New Zeeland.13 On the left upper arm, they commonly have a bracelet made of a
                  piece of coco-nut-shell, either curiously carved, or plain and polished, between
                  which they frequently stick some plant, as the euodia hortensis , the croton
                  variegatum, lycopodium phlegmaria, vitex trifolia, or a species of epidendrum.
                  Some of them wear a belt, or sash, of a kind of coarse cloth, made of the inner
                  bark of a tree, which is commonly of a dark cinnamon colour. Round their middle
                  they tie a string, and below that, they employ the leaves of a plant like ginger ,
                  for the same purpose, and in the same manner as the natives of Mallicollo. Boys,
                  as soon as they attain the age of six years, are already provided with these
                  leaves, which seems to confirm, what I have observed in regard to the
                  Mallicollese, viz. that they do not employ this covering from motives of
                  decency.14 Indeed it had so much the contrary appearance, that in the person of
                  every native of Tanna or Mallicollo, we thought we beheld a living representation
                  of that terrible divinity, who protected the orchards and gardens of the
                  ancients.15 To complete the list of their ornaments, I must add their paints and
                  incisions. The paints are reserved for the face; they are red ochre, white lime,
                  and a colour shining like black lead; all these they mix with coco-nut oil, and
                  lay on the face in oblique bars, two or three inches broad. The white colour is
                  seldom employed, but the red and black is more frequent, and sometimes each covers
                  one half of the face. The incisions are chiefly made on the upper arm, and the
                  belly, and supply the place of punctures, which are common in the lighter-coloured
                  race of men, who inhabit the Friendly and Society Islands,New Zeeland, Easter
                  Island, and the Marquesas. They cut the flesh with a bamboo, or sharp shell, and
                  apply a particular plant, which forms an elevated scar on the surface of the skin,
                  after it is healed. These scars are formed to represent flowers, and other fancied
                  figures, which are deemed a great beauty by the natives. A single man only was
                  observed, who had a figure punctured on his breast, which appeared to have been
                  performed in the same manner as among the nations above enumerated.</p>

               <p>The weapons which the men of Tanna constantly carry are bows and arrows, clubs,
                  darts and slings. Their young men are commonly slingers and archers, but those of
                  a more advanced age make use of clubs or darts. The bows are made of the best
                  club-wood (casuarina) very strong and elastic. They polish them very highly, and
                  perhaps rub them with oil from time to time, in order to keep them in repair.
                  Their arrows are of reed, near four feet long. The same black wood, which the
                  Mallicollese employ for the point, is likewise made use of at Tanna;16 but the
                  whole point, which is frequently above a foot long, is jagged or bearded on two or
                  three sides. They have likewise arrows with three points, but these are chiefly
                  intended to kill birds and fish. Their slings are made of coco-nut fibres, and
                  worn round the arm or waist; they have a broad part for the reception of the
                  stone, of which the people carry with them several in a leaf. The darts or spears
                  are the third sort of missile weapons at Tanna. They are commonly made of a thin,
                  knotty, and ill-shaped stick, not exceeding half an inch in diameter, but nine or
                  ten feet long. At the thickest end they are shaped into a triangular point, six or
                  eight inches long, and on each corner there is a row of eight or ten beards or
                  hooks. These darts they throw with great accuracy, at a short distance, by the
                  help of a piece of plaited cord, four or five inches long, which has a knob at one
                  end, and an eye at the other. They hold the dart between the thumb and
                  fore-finger, having previously placed the latter in the eye of the rope, the
                  remaining part of which is slung round the dart, above the hand, and forms a kind
                  of noose round it, serving to guide and confine the dart in its proper direction,
                  when it is once projected. I have seen one of these darts thrown, at the distance
                  of ten or twelve yards, into a stake four inches in diameter, with such violence,
                  that the jagged point was forced quite through it.17 The same thing may be said of
                  their arrows; at eight or ten yards distance they shoot them very accurately, and
                  with great force; but as they are cautious of breaking their bows, they seldom
                  draw them to the full stretch, and therefore at twenty-five or thirty yards their
                  arrows have little effect, and are not to be dreaded. The clubs are reserved for
                  close engagement, and every grown man carries one of them, besides some of the
                  missile weapons. They are of four or five different shapes. The most valuable are
                  made of the casuarina, about four feet long, strait, cylindrical, highly polished,
                  and knobbed at each end. One knob, which they grasp in the hand, is round, but the
                  other, with which they strike, is cut out into the figure of a star, with many
                  prominent points. Another sort of clubs are about six feet long, and have a great
                  knob or lateral excrescence at one end, which appears to belong to the root. These
                  are made of hard wood, but of a greyish colour. A third kind is about five feet
                  long, and has a flat piece, eight or ten inches long, projecting at right angles,
                  which greatly resembles a farrier's fleam18 in shape, and is formed with a very
                  sharp edge. A fourth is exactly like this, but has one of these flat blades on
                  each side of the handle. Lastly, a fifth is simply a piece of coral rock, about
                  eighteen inches long, and two in diameter, rudely shaped into a cylinder.
                  Sometimes this is likewise made use of as a missile weapon.</p>

               <p>We saw but few women on this day, and those who appeared kept at a great distance
                  from us; however they all seemed ill-favoured, and of smaller stature than the
                  men.19 The young girls had only a string tied about the middle, with a little wisp
                  of dry grasses fastened to it, before and behind; but those of a maturer age wore
                  a short petticoat made of leaves. Their ears were hung full of tortoiseshell
                  rings, and necklaces of shells fell on their bosom. Some of the oldest had caps
                  made of a plantane-leaf, or of matted work, but this head-dress was rather
                  uncommon.</p>

               <p>Towards noon the greater part of the natives left the beach, as the weather grew
                  very hot, and the hour of taking food was approaching. We likewise embarked,
                  having filled a quantity of fresh water, and returned to dine on board.</p>

               <p>About three in the afternoon we went ashore again, and did not find a single man
                  on the beach. At a considerable distance to the eastward we saw about thirty
                  sitting under the shade of their palms, but they did not care to come towards us.
                  We took this opportunity of rambling about two or three hundred yards into the
                  country, where we collected several new plants. We found that part of the plain,
                  at the foot of the level hill, was uncultivated, and filled with a variety of
                  spontaneous shrubs and trees, but did not venture far out of the reach of
                  protection, as we were not yet upon a sure footing with the natives. Having passed
                  some time in the bushes, we walked towards the people whom we had observed seated
                  on the grass. Our friend Paw-yangom met us about halfway, and presented my father
                  with a little pig, for which he received a large nail, and a piece of Taheitee
                  cloth in return. This good old man now accompanied us to our boats, where captain
                  Cook had given orders to haul the seine. By degrees the natives whom we had seen,
                  all came towards us unarmed, and conversed with us, as well as they could, with
                  the greatest cordiality. Our fishermen were extremely successful, and took upwards
                  of three hundred weight of mullets and other fish . Paw-yangom seemed greatly
                  desirous of obtaining some of them; and we made him exceedingly happy, by
                  gratifying his desire. About sunset we returned in high spirits with our capture,
                  it being a long time since we had been able to provide a fresh meal for the whole
                  ship's company. </p>

               <p>The volcano which had played at long intervals in the morning, entirely ceased its
                  explosions in the afternoon. <date>[Sunday 7.]</date>The next morning, however, at
                  four-o'clock, it began to blaze up again; some showers of rain having fallen over
                  night. Its fires afforded us a most pleasing and magnificent sight. The smoke,
                  which slowly rolled up from time to time, in thick and heavy volumes, was coloured
                  with all the various hues of yellow, orange, crimson, and purple, which died away
                  into a reddish grey and brown. As often as a new explosion happened, the whole
                  country, with its shaggy forests, was tinged with the same orange and purple,
                  according to its distance, or particular exposure to the volcanic light.</p>

               <p>We landed after breakfast. The natives, who were assembled in great crouds, though
                  not near so numerous as the day before, did not attempt to hinder our landing, but
                  immediately made way for us. Captain Cook however found it necessary to stretch
                  ropes again on both sides, in order to keep our back free from them. The greater
                  part still refused to sell their arms; but some were not so strict, and parted
                  with both darts and spears. My father gave Paw-yangom a hatchet for the pig which
                  he had received the day before, and explained to him the use of it. He was
                  extremely well pleased with it, and shewed it to his countrymen. Many of them made
                  signs to us that they wanted the same present, which we promised them, if they
                  would bring us hogs; but this offer was entirely unsuccessful. A tent was erected
                  this day, where Mr. Wales, the astronomer, made his observations. A few of the
                  natives were in high spirits, and danced about, shaking their darts at some of our
                  people, but the rest remained very quiet. At noon captain Cook returned on board
                  with us, leaving the lieutenant of marines with his men on shore. We had not been
                  long on board, before we heard a musket fired, and saw the natives disturbed.
                  However, they were soon pacified, and returned to their former station. All our
                  people came off about three of the clock, in order to dine on board. We then heard
                  that one of the inhabitants had offended the officer, by making the same
                  unmannerly gesture with which we had been challenged the day before. Upon this he
                  was shot in the thigh, and made off into the woods. His countrymen likewise
                  prepared to run away, but their old people pacified them.</p>

               <p>The success of the preceding afternoon tempted us to haul the seine a second time
                  this evening, by which means we got about forty-eight pounds of fish. When we
                  landed we saw very few natives, but in a short time they collected near us in
                  great crouds, most of them without any arms, having left them in the bushes,
                  probably to please us. Towards sunset they all dispersed, and only a few remained;
                  who came up and told us that they wanted to go to sleep.21 We made signs to them
                  to depart, and they all left us immediately. We thought we might explain this
                  behaviour as a kind of ceremony, and that they did not think it civil to leave
                  their guests alone in their own country. This circumstance would imply, that they
                  have ideas of propriety and decency, which we should hardly have expected among an
                  uncivilized people.</p>

               <p>The next morning Dr. Sparrman, with my father and myself, landed under the steep
                  mountain on the west side of the bay, where a party of sailors were sent to load
                  shingle for ballast. A little swell came in upon the shore in this place, which
                  obliged us to wade through the surf. On the steep sides of the hill we gathered
                  several new plants, and slid down the precipice several times. Different sorts of
                  minerals appeared in this place. The principal strata of the steep hill consist of
                  a species of clay, very soft, and crumbling in pieces when exposed to the air and
                  moisture. We also found a species of black sand-stone, a substance resembling
                  rotten-stone (lapis suillus), and some pieces of chalk, which were either pure, or
                  tinged with a reddish colour, perhaps arising from particles of iron. We walked
                  several hundred yards along the beach, towards the west point of the harbour, and
                  at last seeing a path which led up the hill, prepared to advance into the country,
                  when we were met by a number of natives, who were all armed. We then rejoined our
                  party, who loaded ballast, and traded with the natives for a few sugar-canes and
                  coco-nuts. They all sat down on the rocks near us; and one of them, to whom the
                  rest paid some deference, exchanged names with my father. He was called
                  Oomb-yégan. This custom of making friendship, by a reciprocal exchange of names,
                  is common in all the southern islands which we had hitherto visited, and in
                  reality has something in it very engaging and affectionate. After having been in
                  this manner adopted among the natives, we continued upon the best terms
                  imaginable, and collected great supplements to the vocabulary.22 They made us a
                  present of some leaves of a fig, which had been wrapped in banana-leaves, and
                  stewed. They were extremely well tasted, and might be eaten as a substitute for
                  our spinach. We likewise obtained two large plantanes of the coarser sort; which
                  proved, that even here the spirit of hospitality is natural to the inhabitants.
                  The women and children brought down these dainties from the hills, and presented
                  them to us; but they were so extremely timorous, that if we only fixed our eyes
                  upon them, they instantly ran away, to the great entertainment of the men.
                  However, their coming so near us, was sufficient proof that we had made great
                  progress towards gaining their confidence. We observed some of them which had a
                  smile on their countenance, but in general they looked gloomy and melancholy. They
                  had earrings and necklaces like the men, and the married women wore caps of matted
                  work. The greater part of them had nose-jewels of white stone. Whenever we
                  presented a bead, a nail, or ribbon to any of the people, they refused to touch
                  it, but desired us to lay it down, and then took it up in a leaf.23 Whether this
                  was owing to some superstitious notions, or to a fancied idea of cleanliness, or
                  of civility, must remain a matter of doubt. Towards noon our party re-embarked,
                  and we went on board with them, the greatest part of the natives having already
                  retired to their dwellings on the hill. The afternoon was spent in fishing again,
                  but without our former success, for we only caught about two dozen of fish, after
                  many repeated hauls of the net. The natives on the beach were very numerous; and
                  their presence made it improper for us to ramble far into the woods. We therefore
                  confined ourselves to the skirts, and collected a few words of their language.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 9.]</date>We returned to the same place the next morning, where our
                  people had loaded ballast the day before. We climbed about the rocks for several
                  hours in the heat of the day, without much success; and were only tantalized by
                  the appearance of a rich forest, into which we could not venture to advance with
                  any degree of prudence. Before we returned on board again, we discovered a hot
                  spring coming out of the rock close to the water's edge. We had no thermometer at
                  hand; but the degree of heat was such, that we could not bear to hold a finger in
                  the water above a single second. As soon as we had returned to the ship at noon,
                  captain Cook likewise came from the watering party, and brought one of the natives
                  with him in his boat. We soon discovered him to be the same young man, who had
                  shewed so much coolness and bravery on the first day of our arrival, by remaining
                  in his canoe, when near two hundred of his country-men leaped into the sea at the
                  discharge of a cannon, (see p. 263). He told us his name was Fannòkko, and
                  enquired for our names, which he endeavoured to remember. He, as well as all his
                  countrymen, had not the same facility of pronunciation as the Mallicollese; we
                  were therefore obliged to tell him our names, modified according to the softer
                  organs of the Taheitians. His features were rather handsome; his eyes large, and
                  very lively; and the whole countenance expressed good-humour, sprightliness, and
                  acuteness. To mention only a single instance of his ingenuity; it happened that my
                  father and captain Cook, on comparing their vocabularies, discovered that each had
                  collected a different word to signify the sky; they appealed to him, to know which
                  of the two expressions was right; he presently held out one hand, and applied it
                  to one of the words, then moving the other hand under it, he pronounced the second
                  word; intimating that the upper was properly the sky, and the lower the clouds
                  which moved under it. He likewise gave us the names of several islands in the
                  neighbourhood. That from which we came to Tanna, and on which captain Cook had an
                  unhappy difference with the natives, he called Irromanga. The low island which we
                  had passed in standing in to this harbour he named Immèr; a high island, which we
                  had discovered to the east of Tanna, on the same day, Irronàn; and another to the
                  south, which we had not yet seen, Anàttom. He sat down to dinner with us, and
                  tasted of our salt pork, but did not eat more than a single morsel of it. Some
                  yams, fried in lard, or simply boiled, he relished better; but he ate very
                  sparingly upon the whole, and finished his repast with a small portion of pye,
                  made of dried and worm-eaten apples, which seemed to be very agreeable to his
                  palate. He also tasted a little wine after dinner; but though he drank it without
                  shewing any dislike, he did not choose to take a second glass. His manners at
                  table were extremely becoming and decent; and the only practice which did not
                  appear quite cleanly in our eyes, was his making use of a stick, which he wore in
                  his hair, instead of a fork, with which he occasionally scratched his head. As his
                  hair was dressed in the highest fashion of the country, à la porc-épic,24 greased
                  with oil and paint, our stomachs were so much the more easily offended; though
                  Fannòkko had not the least notion that such an action was reprehensible.</p>

               <p>After dinner we walked about the decks with him, and shewed him different parts of
                  the ship. He soon fixed his eyes on one of our Taheitian dogs, which he called
                  boòga, hog; a sure sign that dogs are unknown in his country. He seemed so
                  desirous of possessing this creature, that captain Cook made him a present of one
                  of each sex. Besides this, he received a hatchet, a large piece of Taheitee cloth,
                  some spike-nails, medals, and other trinkets of less value, with which we carried
                  him back to the shore, happy beyond expression. As soon as he landed he left the
                  beach with his riches, and walked into the country to his home.</p>

               <p>We took a walk to the eastward along the shore of the bay, and looked into the
                  groves which skirted the flat hill, of which I have spoken above. We found these
                  groves to consist of coco-palms, and several species of shady fig-trees, with
                  eatable fruits, nearly of the size of common figs. We also observed several sheds,
                  under which some of their canoes were secured from the sun and weather; but there
                  were no habitations, except towards the eastern point. We were still above three
                  hundred yards from thence, when a great number of natives came and begged us not
                  to go farther; some likewise ran to captain Cook, and pointing to us, desired him
                  to recall us. We returned to our party, and endeavoured to penetrate into the
                  country, immediately at the back of our waterers. We found a path, which led
                  through a variety of bushes, upon the flat hills. In our way to it, we crossed
                  some glades, or meadows, enclosed in woods on all sides, and covered with a very
                  rich herbage of the most vivid green. On our ascending the hill, we were met by
                  three natives, who endeavoured to persuade us to return; but seeing us resolved to
                  proceed, they accompanied us. We passed through a little airy grove, into several
                  extensive plantations of bananas, yams, eddoes, and fig-trees, which were in some
                  places enclosed in fences of stone two feet high. We heard the surf beating on the
                  shore to the south, and seeing the three natives very uneasy at our progress, we
                  told them we only wished to behold the sea. They led us to a little eminence, from
                  whence we got sight of it, and of an island eight or ten leagues distant, which
                  was the same that Fannòkko had named Anattom. It appeared to be of considerable
                  height; and though not of the same extent as Tanna, was probably about ten or
                  twelve leagues in circuit. Having seen this island, the natives invited us to go
                  on farther inland with them, with the same eagerness which they had before
                  expressed to keep us back; but as we took notice, that one of them was sent before
                  the rest, we did not care to trust their invitations at that time, which might
                  however, for aught I know, have been very friendly and honest. We retreated
                  therefore gradually to the beach, having picked up a new plant, and seen so much
                  of the country, as only made us more desirous of examining it. Our people had once
                  more tried their luck in fishing, but were not by far so fortunate as the first
                  time. The natives attended to their method of hauling the net, and from their
                  gestures, we learnt that they are unacquainted with this contrivance, and only
                  dart or shoot with arrows at the fish, when they rise near the surface of the
                  water. They never failed to beg for some fish as often as our people hauled the
                  seine, which is some confirmation that they rarely catch or strike them.25 As
                  often as they took notice of any thing new to them, they broke out into the
                  interjection, heebou! They likewise made use of the same word, when they were
                  suddenly surprised, when they admired, or disliked, or coveted any thing. The
                  different tone and gesture with which it was either drawled out, or quickly
                  repeated several times in a breath, strongly marked the various affections of the
                  mind. They snapped their fingers at the same time, especially when they expressed
                  their admiration.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 10.]</date>We went on shore at the watering-place the next
                  morning, immediately after breakfast. A party of our people had been there ever
                  since day-break, and told us they had seen many of the natives passing by them,
                  from the eastern part of the bay, loaded with bundles, which they carried into the
                  country. Our men were of opinion that they had actually removed, in order to
                  remain undisturbed, and out of the reach of our fire-arms; but as we never found
                  many habitations on this part of the shore, our arrival might at first have drawn
                  together a number of people from other parts of the island, who occasionally
                  lodged in the woods thereabouts, but now returned to their own dwellings, seeing
                  that no farther mischief was to be apprehended from the strangers, who had arrived
                  among them. We endeavoured to conquer their diffidence more and more, by counting
                  on our fingers, that we only intended to remain a certain number of days on the
                  island; and we found that they were always much pleased and pacified by this
                  intelligence. It must be observed, however, that all those who carried loads this
                  morning were women, whilst the men walked on unconcernedly without any
                  incumbrance, except their arms. It should appear from this circumstance, that the
                  people of Tanna are not yet arrived at that advanced state, which distinguishes
                  the natives of the Society and Friendly Islands. All savage nations have the
                  general character of using the other sex with great unkindness and indignity,
                  obliging them to perform all sorts of laborious, and humiliating operations.</p>

               <p>The removal of the natives was soon discernible, as those who came on the beach to
                  us, were in very small numbers. We therefore took the opportunity of walking out
                  upon the plain, behind the watering-place. We met with several ponds of stagnant
                  water, in which the natives had planted great quantities of eddoes (arum). The
                  coco-palms formed spacious groves, full of different shrubberies, where a great
                  number of birds of different sorts, chiefly fly-catchers, creepers, and parroquets
                  resided. We saw likewise many lofty trees, covered with nuts, which are common at
                  Taheitee, (inocarpus Nov. Gen.). These trees were commonly the resort of pigeons
                  of different kinds, and chiefly of the sort which are to be met with at the
                  Friendly Islands, where the natives catch and tame them. It should seem that the
                  inhabitants of Tanna likewise practise fowling; for one of our lieutenants shot a
                  pigeon this day, which had two very long white feathers fastened to its tail by
                  strings; he had believed it to be a new and singular species of bird, till he
                  discovered the artifice. We met with some natives on this excursion, who told us,
                  that one of our people had killed two pigeons; but this intelligence was only
                  valuable to us, on account of the language in which it was conveyed, which was
                  exactly the same with that spoken at the Friendly Islands. It appeared to us that
                  he made use of this language, in order to be more intelligible to us, having
                  frequently observed that we pronounced several words of it. We expressed some
                  surprize however, at his knowledge, and he then repeated the same meaning in the
                  language of Tanna, which was totally distinct from the other. He added at the same
                  time, that the former language was spoken at the island of Irronan, which lies
                  seven or eight leagues to the east of Tanna . Perhaps a colony of the same race,
                  who inhabit the Friendly Islands, and all the easterly islands of the South
                  Pacific Ocean, may have settled on that island; or perhaps the natives of Irronan
                  keep up a communication with the Friendly Islands, by means of some Isles unknown
                  to us, lying between them.27 </p>

               <p>We made another excursion in the afternoon, and saw but few inhabitants in our
                  way, though we advanced near three miles on the plain. We always told them, that
                  we wanted to kill birds, and they immediately went on without giving us any
                  uneasiness. We shot indeed a number of small birds, but the grass was so thick
                  that we lost almost all of them. We passed by some plantations of bananas and
                  sugar-canes, but saw no houses, the greatest part of the ground being
                  uncultivated, and covered with shady forests, or low shrubberies. At the end of
                  the plain we observed a long, and spacious valley, from whence we saw a great
                  number of smokes rising, and heard the promiscuous voices of many men, women, and
                  children. We stood in a path, on both sides of which were thick shrubberies; and
                  the vale itself was so full of groves, that we neither saw the people, whose
                  voices we heard, nor any of their dwellings. It being late in the evening, we
                  proceeded no farther, and without discovering ourselves, retreated to the
                  beach.</p>

               <p>The volcano had been quiet ever since the 7th, and though it continued to emit
                  smoke from time to time, yet the rumbling had entirely ceased. The fire within the
                  crater, still however illuminated the clouds of smoke. We had heavy, and almost
                  continual rains all night. In the morning we landed on the beach, and saw but few
                  inhabitants; we therefore repaired to its westernmost corner, where we had
                  observed a path which led to the steep hill on the west side of the bay. We
                  ascended by very easy steps, through the most delightful groves of spontaneous
                  trees and shrubs, which every where spread a fragrant and refreshing smell.
                  Several kinds of flowers embellished the tufted foliage, and the most beautiful
                  bindweeds climbed like ivy to the summits of the tallest trees, and adorned them
                  with garlands of blue and purple blossoms. A number of birds twittered round us,
                  and gave life to a scene, which would without them have been inanimate. Indeed, we
                  did not see a single native on the first slope of this hill, nor did we meet with
                  any plantations. Having walked up about half a mile by different windings, we came
                  to a little glade, covered with delicate herbage, and surrounded with the most
                  beautiful wild trees of the wood. Here the sun shone excessively hot upon us, the
                  place being entirely sheltered from winds. A sulphureous smell however, soon
                  betrayed a kind of steam rising out of the ground, which added to the heat of the
                  place. There was a little mound of whitish earth, which looked as if it were
                  calcareous, on the left side of the path, almost hid by the branches of several
                  sorts of wild fig-trees, that throve luxuriantly in this neighbourhood. From this
                  mound we saw a vapour, or steam rising continually; the earth was so hot, that we
                  could hardly bear to stand upon it, and we found it impregnated with native
                  sulphur. When we stirred in the white earth, we found the steam coming up faster;
                  and on tasting it, we observed a styptic28 or astringent quality, like that of
                  alum in it. From this place we walked on a great way higher, and came to another
                  open place, which lay on the slope, and was rather barren. Here likewise we found
                  two other spots, which emitted steam, but not in such quantities as the first, nor
                  so strongly scented. The earth which covered these solfatarras, was of the same
                  nature as that on the first, and had a greenish tinge from the sulphur with which
                  it was penetrated. But in the neighbourhood of it, we found red ochre of the same
                  sort with that which the natives employ to paint their faces. The volcano was more
                  loud than ever we had known it this day, and at every explosion we observed the
                  steam rising much more copiously than before, in thick white clouds, from the
                  solfatarras.29 This circumstance seems to indicate, that they have a subterraneous
                  connection with, or are, by some means unknown to us, affected by the convulsions
                  of this burning mountain. We remarked that this was the second time the explosions
                  of the volcano had recommenced after showers of rain; and were therefore led to
                  suspect, that the rain in some measure excites these explosions, by promoting or
                  encreasing the fermentation of various mineral substances in the mountain. Having
                  contemplated these singular spiracula,30 we mounted still higher, and discovered a
                  great number of plantations, in different parts of the forest. The path continued
                  to be very good and easy of ascent, surrounded on all sides by very shady trees;
                  but as soon as it approached the plantations, we lost it by some means or other,
                  and it seemed as if the natives had purposely contrived it so, in order to prevent
                  being surprised by their enemies. At last we reached the summit of this hill, and
                  went down the other side of it, in a narrow lane between hedges of reeds, in sight
                  of the sea, which washes the north-east coast of the island. In a little time we
                  got sight of the volcano between the trees, and perceived that the walk which led
                  to it, across several hills and vallies, could not be less than two leagues long
                  from our station. We saw its eruption however, and took notice of immense masses
                  of rock which it hurled upwards in the smoke, and some of which were at least as
                  large as the hull of our long-boat. We were thinking to go on towards it, as we
                  had hitherto met with no bad accident, nor seen so much as a single native on our
                  walk: however, our voices must have alarmed some of them in the plantations along
                  which we passed, for we presently heard one or two blowing on great conchs, which,
                  among many savage nations, and particularly in the South Seas, are used to alarm
                  the country. At this sound we instantly resolved to retreat, and got safely down
                  to the solfatarra which we had last discovered, unseen by any of the natives. Here
                  we met a few of them coming up the hill from the sea side, who seemed greatly
                  surprised to see us so far advanced into their recesses. We told them that we went
                  about to shoot birds, and desired them to bring us something to drink. They went
                  on without seeming to take much notice of our request; but after we had botanized
                  on the spot above a quarter of an hour, and were just preparing to descend, we saw
                  a whole family of men, women, and children, coming down with abundance of
                  sugar-canes and two or three coco-nuts. We sat down, and after refreshing
                  ourselves with the juices which these vegetables contained, made our hospitable
                  friends several presents, with which they parted from us well contented. We went
                  down with our acquisitions, and came on the beach when the boats were going on
                  board. The natives had now begun to trade with yams, sugar-canes, coco-nuts, and
                  bananas; and though they only supplied us sparingly, yet we were highly pleased
                  even with this small beginning, hoping that in time we might obtain more
                  considerable supplies. They set no value on our iron-ware, but preferred Taheitee
                  cloth, small pieces of green nephritic stone from New Zeeland, mother of pearl
                  shells, and, above all, pieces of tortoise-shell. For these last they sold their
                  arms; at first, parting only with darts and arrows, but afterwards disposing also
                  of their bows and clubs.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we landed, and walked along the seashore towards the east point,
                  where the natives had prevented our going on two days before. We met some of them,
                  who talked with us a few moments; but whilst they stood near us, we took notice of
                  a single man sitting behind a tree, with his bow bent and the arrow pointed
                  towards us. As soon as he perceived himself discovered, and a musket pointed at
                  him, he threw his arms into the bush and crept out to us, and I believe he really
                  had no bad intent, though such kinds of jests are not much to be trusted. We
                  reached the eastern point of the harbour, and there gathered some beautiful red
                  flowers, which had tempted us ever since we came to an anchor; they belonged to a
                  species of yamboos or eugenia.31 As we were going to cross the point and to
                  proceed along the shore beyond it, fifteen or twenty natives crouded about us, and
                  begged us with the greatest earnestness to return. We were not much inclined to
                  comply with their demand, but they repeated their intreaties, and at last made
                  signs that we should be killed and eaten. The same gestures, though much less
                  intelligible, had been made to us two days before, but we had paid very little
                  attention to them, unwilling, upon such slight testimony, to suppose that they had
                  any idea of anthropophagy. However, at present we could no longer be mistaken;
                  for, having pretended to misunderstand them, and making them believe that we
                  thought they offered us some provisions, we began to move forward, and expressed
                  that we should be glad to eat something. They were very eager to undeceive us, and
                  showed, by signs, how they killed a man, cut his limbs asunder, and separated the
                  flesh from the bones. Lastly, they bit their own arms, to express more clearly
                  that they eat human flesh.32 We turned from the point, but walked towards a hut
                  which we observed about fifty yards from it, where the ground began to rise. Here
                  several of them, seeing us advance, took up arms out of the hut, perhaps to force
                  us to return. It was not our wish to offend these people in their own country, and
                  therefore we checked a spirit of curiosity, which might have proved fatal to some
                  of them, if they had obliged us to defend our lives. The motives for pursuing our
                  discoveries on this point were not, however, of a trifling nature. Every morning,
                  at day-break, we heard a slow solemn song or dirge sung on this point, which
                  lasted more than a quarter of an hour. It seemed to be a religious act, and gave
                  us great reason to suspect that some place of worship was concealed in these
                  groves, and the constant endeavours of the natives to keep us from this place,
                  greatly confirmed us in this supposition.33 Having walked back a little way, we
                  resolved to get upon the flat hill in a place where the ascent was easy, and
                  where, being very near the point, we hoped to be able to make some observations.
                  When we had reached the top, which was about thirty-five or forty feet
                  perpendicular in height, we found ourselves in a spacious plantation, chiefly
                  consisting of innumerable banana-trees. We found it interspersed with coco-palms
                  and other tall and tufted trees, which entirely impeded the prospect on all sides,
                  and separated from other plantations by various fences of reeds, very neatly made,
                  much resembling those of Tonga-Tabboo and Namoka. Here the natives began to repeat
                  their threats, and, if possible, made it more plain to us than before, that we
                  should be killed and eaten if we went on. We told them we only wished to shoot
                  some birds, but they did not seem to pay much attention to this excuse, and I know
                  not whether we should have made any discoveries this afternoon, if the little
                  friendly old man, Paw-yangom, had not luckily met us. We expressed reciprocal joy
                  on finding each other, and the old man immediately conducted us along the edge of
                  the hill towards its western extremity. Here we saw great numbers of fig-trees,
                  which the natives cultivate for the sake of the fruit and the leaves. They are of
                  two or three different kinds, and one sort, in particular, bears figs of the
                  common size, which are woolly, like peaches, on the outside, and have a beautiful
                  crimson pulp like pomegranates. They are sweetish and juicy, but, upon the whole,
                  rather insipid. The yamboos, (eugenia), a cooling watery fruit, of the size of
                  pears, but with an agreeable tartness, likewise grew here in great abundance on
                  large trees; and we also observed some fine cabbage-palms, (areca oleracea). We
                  advanced into a little thicket of various flowering shrubs, and in a few minutes
                  found ourselves on a fine open area not less than an hundred yards square, on the
                  skirts of which we saw three habitations of the natives.34 Many lofty trees,
                  richly furnished with foliage, made this recess impenetrable to the eye from the
                  outside. Among the rest we noticed an immense wild fig-tree in one corner of the
                  green, of which the stem was three yards in diameter, and the branches spread at
                  least forty yards on all sides in the most picturesque manner. At the foot of this
                  beautiful tree, which was still in full vigour, we saw a small family seated round
                  a fire, on which they roasted some yams and bananas. They ran away into their huts
                  at sight of us, but Paw-yangom telling them they had nothing to fear, they came
                  out again; the women and girls, however, remained at a great distance, and only
                  peeped at us behind the bushes. We sat down with them, and they offered us some of
                  their provisions, with the same hospitality which we had experienced in other
                  islands. Their huts were, properly speaking, large sheds, of which the roof
                  reaches down to the very ground, and forms a ridge at top. They are open at both
                  ends, having only a small enclosure or railing of reeds and sticks about eighteen
                  inches high. The height of the ridge in the largest was nine or ten feet, and the
                  width on the floor between the roofs nearly the same. The length, however, was
                  considerable, and exceeded five and thirty feet. The construction of these huts is
                  very simple; two row of stakes are placed in the ground, bending towards each
                  other, and those which are opposite are tied together. Over these they lay several
                  mats, made of coco-nut leaves, which form a thatch sufficient to defend them from
                  the inclemencies of the air. We saw no manner of utensils or furniture in these
                  houses. The floor was covered with dry grass, and a few mats of palm-leaves lay
                  spread in different parts. We likewise observed that all the inside was blackened
                  by smoke, and found in every hut the vestiges of several fire-places. In the
                  middle of the area, we saw three tall poles standing close together, which were
                  made of the stems of coco-palms, and connected together by means of transverse
                  laths at the top. A vast number of small sticks were fastened across them from the
                  top to within nine or ten feet of the bottom, and these were hung with old
                  coco-nuts. As they make use of the oil in the kernel, and employ the shell for
                  bracelets, they probably keep them in this place to season them. All the skirts of
                  the flat hill, where we saw no habitation, are, as I have already observed, well
                  stocked with immense numbers of wild coco-palms, and the ground underneath them is
                  covered with nuts, of which as it should seem they take the trouble to collect
                  only an inconsiderable quantity. Little bits of their cloth, which they wear as
                  sashes or belts, were suspended on the bushes which surrounded the green; and the
                  presents which Paw-yangom had received, among which was a laced hat, were placed
                  in the same manner like so many trophies. This was a convincing proof to me of the
                  general honesty of the people towards each other. At Taheitee they are already
                  obliged to suspend their goods to the roofs of their houses, in order to keep them
                  out of the reach of thieves; but here they are safe on every bush. It must be
                  observed likewise, in confirmation of this remark, that during our stay among the
                  people of Tanna, we had not a single instance of their stealing the least trifle
                  from any one of our people.35 The natives having observed, that though we looked
                  into their huts, we did not attempt to do any hurt, to displace or take any thing,
                  soon became more reconciled to our appearance, and the boys, from six to fourteen
                  years, who had hitherto kept aloof, ventured to come near, and suffered us to
                  seize their hands. We distributed medals with silk ribbons to them, and gave them
                  handkerchiefs of Taheitee cloth, which entirely conciliated their affection, and
                  banished reserve and the remains of apprehension. Distrust and suspicion, are not
                  yet known to the boy; he is frank and honest, and thinks every body is like
                  himself. We learnt all their names, and preserved them in memory, and it can
                  hardly be thought how much this little artifice assisted us in gaining their good
                  graces; they were overjoyed that we remembered them, and came running as often as
                  we called. Having spent some time with them, we got up to return to the beach, and
                  old Paw-yangom, who did not care to go down, it being very near sun-set, gave
                  directions to two or three young men to shew us the nearest path. We took leave of
                  him very heartily, and made some addition to the presents he had already received.
                  In our way we told our conductors, pointing to the coco-palms near the beach, that
                  we were dry, and should be glad to taste some of them. Upon this they immediately
                  led us into another path, where a number of palms stood in the midst of the
                  plantation. From thence they took some nuts, and presented them to us, which we
                  interpreted as a mark of great good-nature; but when we tasted the liquor, we
                  found that they had done us a particular kindness or civility, it being infinitely
                  more delicious than that of the nuts near the beach. We now looked at the trees,
                  and finding them in very fine order, concluded that those below were wild; but
                  these, planted and brought to perfection by the care of the inhabitants. It is
                  well known that by means of cultivation the coco-palm, as well as all other trees,
                  is made fitter for domestic purposes; and the Javanese have many varieties, of
                  which the nuts are much improved . The sort which is usual in the Society Islands
                  is one of the best, and likewise owes its excellence to culture; nor do I remember
                  to have seen any variety there resembling the wild palms of Tanna, which thrive
                  even on the mountains. Having been well refreshed through the benevolence of our
                  friendly Indians, we proceeded towards the beach, and in a few minutes rejoined
                  our watering-party there, by a path which led us directly down. Here we rewarded
                  our conductors to the best of our power, and embarking in a boat returned to the
                  ship for the ensuing night.</p>

               <p>The singular nature of the solfatarra on the western hill so much attracted our
                  attention, that we hastened thither again the next morning, and Mr. Hodges was of
                  the party. The volcano continued to thunder all the day, and threw up vast
                  quantities of minute black ashes, which, when more accurately examined, proved to
                  be long needle-like and semitransparent sherls. The whole country was strewed with
                  these particles, and they proved remarkably dangerous to our eyes in botanizing,
                  as every leaf on the island was entirely covered with them. It may however be
                  remarked, that the volcano and its productions seem to contribute greatly to that
                  prodigious luxuriance of vegetation which is so remarkable on this island. Many
                  plants here attain twice the height which they have in other countries; their
                  leaves are broader, their flowers larger, and more richly scented. The same
                  observation has been made in various volcanic countries. The soil of Vesuvius and
                  Etna is reckoned the most fertile in Italy and Sicily; and some of the best
                  flavoured wines which Italy produces are raised upon it. The volcanic ground on
                  the Habichtswald, in Hesse, though situated in a high, cold, and barren country,
                  is surprisingly fertile, and covered with verdure. All kinds of plants, indigenous
                  and foreign, thrive with luxuriance, and make this beautiful spot, on which the
                  gardens of the landgrave are situated, the admiration of all beholders. Nay, to
                  confine ourselves to our own voyage, the Society Islands, the Marquesas, and some
                  of the Friendly Islands, where we found volcanic remains, as well as Ambrrym and
                  Tanna, where we actually saw burning mountains, have a rich and fertile soil, in
                  which nature displays the magnificence of the vegetable kingdom. Easter Island
                  itself, wholly overturned by some volcanic eruption, produces different vegetables
                  and useful roots, without any other soil than slags, cinders, and pumice-stones;
                  though the burning heat of the sun, from which there is no shelter, should seem
                  sufficient to shrivel and destroy every plant.</p>

               <p>We soon reached the first smoking place, but seeing the natives somewhat higher,
                  we did not stop, and walked up to them. They were the same who had behaved so well
                  to us the day before, and they now sent some of their people up into the country,
                  as soon as they saw us. Mr. Hodges sketched some views,36 whilst we passed our
                  time in examining several plants, and suspended a thermometer, with Fahrenheit's
                  scale, on a tree in the shade. This thermometer stood at 78° on board the ship, at
                  half an hour past eight, which was the time of our departure. Having been carried
                  up close to the body, it has risen to 87°; but after hanging five minutes, at a
                  distance of twenty yards from the solfatarra, it remained at 80°. We made a hole
                  in the earth, deep enough to contain the thermometer in its whole length, and
                  suspending it from a stick into this hole, it rose in half a minute to 170°. We
                  left it there for the space of four minutes, and at the end of that time it still
                  marked the same degree. The instant it was taken out, it fell to 160°, and in a
                  few minutes gradually to 80° again. The steam which issues from this place is
                  consequently of the hottest. The natives, who observed that we stirred in the
                  solfatarra, desired us to leave it, telling us it would take fire, and resemble
                  the volcano, which they called assoòr.37 They seemed to be extremely apprehensive
                  of some mischance, and were very uneasy as often as we made the least attempt to
                  disturb the sulphureous earth. We walked higher, and found several other spots
                  smoking, and of the same nature with that before described. By this time the
                  messengers, whom the people had sent off, came back with sugar-canes and
                  coco-nuts, and treated us as they had done the preceding morning. After this
                  refreshment we advanced higher up the hill, towards another in sight, from whence
                  we hoped to have a nearer view of the volcano; but upon our approaching some
                  plantations, the natives came out, and pointed out a path, which they pretended
                  led directly to the volcano or assoòr. We followed them for several miles, through
                  various windings, being continually surrounded by woods, which hid the country
                  from us on all sides. At last we found ourselves near the sea-shore, from whence
                  we had set out, and saw, or thought we saw, that the inhabitants had been artful
                  enough to lead us far from their dwellings, where they dislike the presence of
                  strangers. One of them was a very intelligent man, and gave us the names of
                  several islands in the neighbourhood, some in directions where we had not been. As
                  we knew that captain Cook had collected a list of names of countries the day
                  before, all which he afterwards found to be districts on the isle of Tanna, we
                  particularly enquired of our Indian, whether the places which he enumerated were
                  likewise situated on this island; but he expressly said there was the sea (tàssee)
                  between them; and seeing us make circles on a paper, made signs that we were
                  right.</p>

               <p>We spent the afternoon in an excursion round the flat hill to the south-eastward.
                  Here we found some new plants, and met with a few natives, who offered to conduct
                  us to the sea on the other side. However, observing that they only endeavoured to
                  lead us back to the watering place by another path, we left them, and walked on
                  alone through the plantations, many of which were enclosed with fences of reed
                  five feet high. However another native soon came after us, and brought us to the
                  beach on the other side of the island. We saw the isle of Anattom again, and the
                  native pointed a little to the north of it, where he said another island was
                  situated, which he called Eetònga.38 This circumstance strengthens the conjecture
                  which I venture before, that there is some connection or intercourse between Tanna
                  and the Friendly Islands. The name of Eetònga has a great similarity with that of
                  Tonga-Tabboo, and some of the natives of Middleburgh Island or Eaoowhe, really
                  call it Eetonga-Tabboo. The latter part of the word, (Tabboo) is affixed to other
                  islands in the Pacific Ocean; viz. Tabboò-amannoo (Saunders Island) and Tabboo-aï
                  .39 I will not pretend to say that the people of Tanna design40 the island of
                  Tonga-Tabboo by their Eetònga; but there is room to suppose that some other island
                  of that name may be situated towards the Friendly Islands which facilitates the
                  connection.41 When we had satisfied our curiosity we returned to the beach at the
                  bay, where our people had once more caught about two hundred and fifty pounds
                  weight of fish. This good fortune enabled the captain to give the whole ship's
                  company another fresh meal, which was consumed with the greatest avidity. The bay
                  contained great plenty of fish, and some of the petty officers, who took the
                  trouble of fishing, caught several albecores and cavalhas42 of prodigious
                  dimensions during night. Two fish of the same species which had poisoned so many
                  persons at Mallicollo were likewise taken one morning; but though I wished
                  particularly to draw and describe this species, in order to enable future
                  navigators to be on their guard, yet such was the greediness with which all our
                  shipmates now seized on a fresh meal, that in spite of the example, which was
                  recent in all our memories, the fish were cut up, salted, and peppered the moment
                  they came out of the water. Fortunately those who dined upon them did not feel any
                  bad effects; a farther proof that those which poisoned the officers had fed upon
                  some noxious vegetables, and by that means acquired a bad quality, which is not
                  natural to them. Our sailors relied on the experiment of the silver-spoon, which
                  remained perfectly untainted after being boiled with the fish; but it is at
                  present well known that this mark is extremely fallacious, and that only certain
                  sorts of poisons tinge that metal with an unusual colour. The natives still
                  continued to sell us some yams, but the trade was very far from being brisk.43
                  Tortoise-shell was the only commodity which they were desirous to obtain; but as
                  we had never expected a demand for it, it happened that there were only a few
                  small pieces in the ship, which had been accidentally purchased at Tonga-Tabboo.44
                  Those who were in possession of this valuable article were far from making proper
                  use of it. Notwithstanding the loathsomeness of salt meat, the sailor could not be
                  brought to have a single provident thought for the future, and exchanged his
                  tortoise-shell for bows and arrows, instead of laying up a stock of yams.</p>

               <p>Our short excursions into the country did not produce such great discoveries in
                  botany, as to confine us to the ship a whole day. We therefore hastened ashore
                  every morning, and endeavoured to collect materials for new observation.
                     <date>[Saturday 13.]</date>On the 13th, we walked up the flat hill to the
                  eastward, in order to visit our friends who lived with old Paw-yangom. We arrived
                  at the plantations unseen by any of the natives, who now came down in very small
                  numbers to the beach, their curiosity being satisfied, and their distrust
                  considerably lessened. We heard one of the men at work cutting down a tree with
                  his hatchet of stone, and observed him through the bushes a long while. The tree
                  was not so thick as a man's thigh, and yet it was a very laborious undertaking,
                  with such a tool as this hatchet, to cut it in two. We went up to him, and he
                  immediately left off working, in order to talk to us. Several boys, who remembered
                  us, came, calling us by name, and brought us handfulls of figs and yamboos; and
                  the women likewise ventured to come and look at us. We examined the hatchet which
                  the man employed, and found it formed exactly like those which are made use of at
                  the Friendly and Society Islands. The blade was of a black stone, which resembled
                  the basaltes employed at those places, and he told us it came from the isle of
                  Anattom.45 He shewed us at the same time another kind of hatchet, to which a
                  broken shell was fastened instead of a blade. This shell, which seemed to be a
                  part of a mitre-shell (voluta mitra), he said was brought from the low island
                  Immèr, a few leagues to the northward of the bay. It appeared that he was clearing
                  a piece of ground, in order to plant it with yams. He had already cut down a
                  quantity of bushes, which lay in heaps, and which he told us he would set on fire.
                  We proceeded from hence towards the sea shore on the other side, attended by a
                  number of boys, and several young men. We shot some birds in our way thither, and
                  collected several new plants in the plantations, which were more delightfully
                  situated than any we had hitherto seen. We found in them a variety of odoriferous
                  plants, and some others, which it seems were cultivated only for their elegant
                  appearance, as is frequently practised in gardens. We also took notice of the
                  catappa-tree, of which the nuts have a large delicious kernel, twice as big as an
                  almond. It had shed its leaves at present; but the nuts of the last season were
                  still sticking on the branches: the boys broke the hard shell between stones,
                  presenting the kernel to us on a clean fresh leaf. They were as assiduous at
                  present in offering their services as the Taheitians, and from less interested
                  motives. If we had collected a plant, of which we could find no other specimens,
                  we only shewed it them, and away they flew to gather it for us, in places where
                  they knew it was to be found. They were extremely fond of seeing us shoot, eagerly
                  pointed out birds on the summits of the coco-palms, and were overjoyed as often as
                  we killed them. Near every hut we saw some poultry, and several well fed hogs; and
                  here and there we observed rats running over the path, of the same sort which is
                  common in the other islands of the Pacific Ocean. They particularly frequented the
                  fields of sugar-cane, in which they make great depredation. The natives had
                  therefore dug several holes all round these plantations, in which they catch these
                  animals. When we came to the sea shore, we walked to the northward along the beach
                  a good way, in order to come to the point, which the natives from the other side
                  had repeatedly guarded from our sight. On the shore we observed some small huts,
                  which we took to be the abode of fishermen, and from whence we concluded that we
                  had been formerly mistaken, in supposing them unacquainted with fishing; however,
                  we saw no inhabitants, no nets, nor fish in these huts, but only some darts, which
                  might be used as harpoons, or fish-gigs.46 Our attending Indians were greatly
                  alarmed on seeing us go on towards the point, and with much anxious intreaty
                  prevailed on us to give up all thoughts of going to examine that part of the
                  island. They repeated to us the signs of eating human flesh; and it is not to be
                  doubted, but that this practice still prevails among them.47 Those who contend,
                  that anthropophagy has the plea of the most cruel necessity, will hardly be able
                  to account for its existence in a nation living in a rich and fertile country,
                  having plenty of vegetable food, and likewise well provided with domestic animals.
                  The principle of revenge seems much more likely to have produced this
                  extraordinary custom, wherever it has been observed. Self-preservation is
                  doubtless the first law of nature, and the passions are subservient to its
                  purposes.48 In civilized communities we have tacitly consented to laws and
                  regulations, and delegated to certain individuals the power to redress our wrongs;
                  but among savages every man rights himself, and anger and revenge are implanted in
                  his breast, to repress the injuries and oppressions of others. They are equally
                  natural to him as the sentiments of general philanthropy; and however different
                  and opposite these two impulses of nature may seem, yet they are springs, which by
                  acting against each other, keep the whole system of human society in constant
                  motion, and prevent its total subversion or corruption. A man wholly destitute of
                  philanthropy is a monster, justly detested by all mankind; but another, entirely
                  incapable of anger, is a sheepish wretch, liable to be insulted by every
                  mean-spirited villain. A nation, or I may say a family, (as savages seldom live in
                  greater communities), which has been frequently exposed to the attacks and insults
                  of others, naturally contracts a degree of hatred and inveteracy against its
                  oppressors, which renders its revenge more furious, unbounded, and, in our eyes,
                  more cruel. If the enemy have used treacherous arts, they create distrust, and in
                  the end form a malevolent disposition, which soon has recourse to the same
                  baseness. At the least shadow of an injury they are up in arms, and threaten to
                  bear down all before them: when they are actually provoked, they are ruled by no
                  other law but that of the strongest, and exterminate their foes with a degree of
                  fury, which is capable of the most horrid excesses . On the contrary, a nation,
                  which has not experienced, or has long lost the remembrance of mischievous
                  enemies, and inveterate broils, which, by applying to agriculture, has arrived to
                  a degree of opulence, luxury, and civilization, and acquired new and refined ideas
                  of philanthropy, is unaccustomed to the sudden overflowings of the bile, and slow
                  to resent an affront . The natives of Tanna doubtless are engaged, either in civil
                  feuds with each other, or in frequent wars with the adjacent islanders; their
                  reserved and distrustful behaviour towards us at first, and their custom of going
                  constantly armed, seems clearly to prove the truth of this assertion. We have
                  therefore, I think, great room to believe, that the violence of resentment has
                  insensibly led them to the custom of eating human flesh, which they practise
                  according to their own confession. But we must still remain utterly ignorant of
                  the reasons which induced them to prohibit our access towards the eastern point of
                  the harbour.</p>

               <p>We turned back with our Indians to their great joy and satisfaction. They led us
                  on by a path which we had never trodden before, through a variety of the richest
                  plantations, kept in excellent order. The boys ran before us, and gave us repeated
                  marks of their skill in warlike exercises. They slung a stone with great accuracy,
                  and made use of a green reed, or stiff grass, in lieu of a dart. They had attained
                  to such perfection in throwing the latter, that they never failed to hit their
                  object, and knew to give the reed, which every breath of air might turn out of its
                  way, so much force and moment, that it entered above an inch into the hardest
                  wood. They poised it between the lowest joint of the thumb, and the hand, without
                  touching it with a single finger. The youngest among them, five or six years old,
                  already habituated themselves to this exercise, and thus prepared one day, to
                  wield their arms with activity and effect.49 By various windings we came back to
                  their habitations, where the women were employed in dressing their dinner. They
                  had made a fire of a few sticks above ground, under the fig-tree, and broiled the
                  roots of yams and eddoes over it. As soon as we arrived they were startled, and
                  began to run away, but our conductors quieted them, and they continued their
                  operations. We sat down on the trunk of a tree which lay before one of the houses,
                  and endeavoured to talk with our new friends as well as we could, whilst some of
                  them were gone to fetch us some refreshments. We collected a number of words of
                  their language on this occasion, and had the pleasure to satisfy their curiosity
                  respecting our dress, arms, and various implements, concerning which they had
                  hitherto not ventured to ask a single question. The inhabitants of adjacent
                  plantations hearing of our arrival, crouded about us, and seemed much pleased that
                  they could converse amicably and familiarly with us. As I happened to hum a song,
                  many of them very eagerly intreated me to sing to them, and though not one of us
                  was properly acquainted with music, yet we ventured to gratify their curiosity,
                  and in fact, offered them a great variety of different airs. Some German and
                  English songs, especially of the more lively kind, pleased them very much; but Dr.
                  Sparrman's Swedish tunes gained universal applause; from whence it appeared that
                  their judgment of music was not influenced by the same rules which regulate the
                  taste of other countries. When we had performed, we desired them in return to give
                  us an opportunity of admiring their talents, and one of them immediately began a
                  very simple tune; it was however harmonious, and, as far as we could judge,
                  superior to the music of all the nations in the tropical part of the South Sea,
                  which we had hitherto heard. It ran through a much more considerable compass of
                  notes, than is employed at Taheitee, or even at Tonga-Tabboo; and had a serious
                  turn which distinguished it very remarkably from the softer effeminate music of
                  those islands.50 The words seemed to be metrically arranged, and slowed very
                  currently from the tongue. When the first had finished his song, another began;
                  his tune was different as to the composition, but had the same serious style which
                  strongly marked the general turn of the people. They were indeed seldom seen to
                  laugh so heartily, and jest so facetiously, as the more polished nations of the
                  Friendly and Society Islands, who have already learnt to set a great value on
                  these enjoyments. Our friendly natives likewise produced a musical instrument,
                  which consisted of eight reeds, like the syrinx of Tonga-Tabboo, with this
                  difference, that the reeds regularly decreased in size, and comprehended an
                  octave, though the single reeds were not perfectly in tune.51 We might perhaps
                  have had an opportunity of hearing them play on this instrument, had not the
                  arrival of some of their brethren with a present of coco-nuts, yams, sugar-canes,
                  and figs, obliged us in civility to transfer our attention from the musicians, to
                  those who brought us such a valuable gift. And here I cannot but lament, that the
                  ingenious and obliging friend,52 who communicated to me his remarks on the music
                  of the Friendly Islands, of Taheitee and New Zeeland, did not likewise visit the
                  island of Tanna, which in that respect would doubtless have furnished him with
                  some curious and useful observations.</p>

               <p>If we have before observed the principle of revenge to have been active among the
                  natives of Tanna, we must allow at the same time, that benevolence, and a love of
                  the fellow-creature, are not entirely banished from their hearts. As there is the
                  greatest reason to suppose, that their life is frequently disturbed by the
                  troubles of war, we cannot be surprised at the distrust which they all expressed
                  towards us, on the first days of our acquaintance; but as soon as they were
                  thoroughly convinced of our harmless intentions, they naturally gave way to a
                  contrary impulse, which nothing but the necessity of self-preservation could have
                  silenced so long. They did not indeed trade with us, because their affluence is
                  not yet equal to that of the Taheitians; but hospitality does not consist in
                  exchanging an article of which you have more than a sufficiency, for another of
                  which you stand greatly in need.</p>

               <p>Having made various presents to our friends, to the best of our abilities, we
                  returned down to the beach, and passed some time among the natives who were there
                  assembled. We observed more women among them this day, than we had found before;
                  most of them were married, and carried their children in a mat-satchel on their
                  backs. Some had baskets of a close texture, made of pliant sticks, in which they
                  brought a brood of young chickens, whilst others had yamboos, and figs, which they
                  presented to us. Among the rest, we saw one who had a whole basket full of green
                  oranges, though on all our excursions we had never found a single orange-tree in
                  the plantations. However, we were much pleased to have seen this fruit at Tanna,
                  as well as at Mallicollo, there being great room to suppose, that it is likewise a
                  production of the intermediate islands. We were fortunate in little acquisitions
                  to-day; another woman gave us a pye or pudding, of which the crust or dough was
                  made of bananas, and eddoes; and the contents were the leaves of the okra
                  (hibiscus esculentus) mixed up with the kernel of a coco-nut. This pudding was
                  exceedingly well-tasted, and shewed that the women are well skilled in cookery. We
                  also purchased several pipes of eight reeds, which the natives brought for sale,
                  and some bows, arrows, and clubs; with all which we returned on board, rather
                  later in the day than usual.</p>

               <p>After dinner we came on shore again, to be present at hauling the seine; however,
                  when we arrived on the beach, we separated, and Dr. Sparrman went up the flat hill
                  with me, to pay another visit to the natives. Some of them met us about half way,
                  and conducted us to the huts. We were no sooner seated with the father of one of
                  the families, a middle-aged man, of a promising countenance, than our friends
                  importuned us to sing to them again. We readily complied with their request, and
                  when they seemed to wonder at the difference in our songs, we endeavoured to make
                  them comprehend that we were natives of different countries. Hearing this, they
                  pointed at an elderly thin man in the circle of our hearers, and telling us that
                  he was a native of Irromanga , desired him to sing to us. The man immediately
                  stepped forward, and began a song, in the course of which he made a variety of
                  gesticulations, not only to our entertainment, but to the great satisfaction of
                  all the people about him. His song was to the full as musical as that of the
                  people of Tanna, but it seemed to be of a droll or humorous nature, from his
                  various ludicrous postures., and from the particular tone of the whole. The
                  language was utterly distinct from that of Tanna, but not harsh or ill-suited to
                  music. It seemed likewise to have a certain metre, but very different from that
                  slow and serious one which we heard this morning. It appeared to us, when he had
                  done singing, that the people of Tanna spoke to him in his own language, but that
                  he was not acquainted with theirs. Whether he came as a visitor, or had been taken
                  prisoner, we could not determine; the natives however told us upon this occasion,
                  that their best clubs, made of casuarina wood, came from Irromanga, so that it is
                  probable they have an amicable intercourse, or carry on a kind of trade with the
                  inhabitants of that island. We observed no remarkable characteristic difference in
                  his features from those of the people of Tanna, and his custom of dressing, or
                  rather ornamenting himself was the same. His hair was woolly, short, and therefore
                  not divided into little queues. His temper was very chearful, and he appeared to
                  be more inclined to mirth than any of the people of Tanna.</p>

               <p>Whilst the native of Irromanga was singing, the women came out of their huts, and
                  seated themselves in the little group which surrounded us. They were in general of
                  a low stature, compared with the men, and wore shaggy petticoats, made of grasses
                  and leaves, which lengthened according to their age.55 Such as had borne children,
                  and seemed to be about thirty years old, had entirely lost all the feminine
                  graces, and their petticoats descended to the ancles. Some young girls, about
                  fourteen years of age, had very agreeable small features, and a smile which became
                  more engaging, in proportion as their fears wore off. Their whole form was
                  slender, their arms particularly delicate, but the bosom round and full, and the
                  petticoats barely reaching to the knee. Their hair curling upon their heads,
                  without being cut, or restrained into any particular form, had not a bad effect;
                  and the green plantane leaf which they generally wore, instead of covering it from
                  the sight, served rather to set off its black colour to advantage. They wore in
                  their ears tortoise-shell rings; but we observed that the number of ornaments
                  considerably encreased with age, the oldest and ugliest being loaded with
                  necklaces, ear-rings, nose-jewels, and bracelets. It appeared to me that the women
                  were not held in any esteem by the men, but obeyed upon the smallest sign; and
                  according to the accounts of our waterers (See above, p. 292.) many were seen in
                  the humiliating guise of drudges and beasts of burden. Perhaps the laborious tasks
                  which they are forced to perform, contribute to lessen their stature, especially
                  if they are disproportioned to their strength. It is the practice of all
                  uncivilized nations to deny their women the common privileges of human beings, and
                  to treat them as creatures inferior to themselves. The ideas of finding happiness
                  and comfort in the bosom of a companion, only arise with a higher degree of
                  culture.56 Where the mind is continually occupied with the means of
                  self-preservation, there can be but little refined sentiment in the commerce of
                  the sexes, and nothing but brutal enjoyment is known. Infirmity and meekness,
                  instead of finding a protector in the savage, are commonly insulted and oppressed:
                  the love of power is so natural to mankind, that they eagerly seize every
                  opportunity to exercise their superiority over those who are unable to resist. The
                  encrease of population necessarily brings on a greater degree of polish; the cares
                  of self-preservation are in great measure removed from the individual to the
                  community; affluence takes the place of want and indigence, and the mind more
                  unemployed, takes pleasure in the more refined enjoyment of life; it gives a loose
                  to a disposition for mirth and play, and learns to set a value on the amiable
                  qualities of the sex. The savage is not wholly incapable of tenderness and
                  affection; we trace them in the boy whilst he remains thoughtless and free from
                  care ; but as soon as he feels the urgent wants of his existence, every other
                  sentiment or instinct is forced to lie dormant. We observed an instance of
                  affection among the natives of Tanna this evening, which strongly proves that the
                  passions and innate qualities of human nature are much the same in every climate.
                  A little girl, about eight years old, of very agreeable features, peeped at us
                  between the heads of the people who were seated on the ground. As soon as she
                  found herself observed, she ran away to hide herself in the hut. I beckoned the
                  child to come back, and shewed her a piece of Taheitee cloth, but I could not
                  prevail on her to come and fetch it. Her father got up, and with some entreaty
                  persuaded her to come to me. I took hold of her hand, and gave her the cloth, and
                  a number of little ornaments. But I was overpaid by the pleasure of the father,
                  the joy, the fondness which sparkled in his eyes, and lighted up his whole
                  countenance.</p>

               <p>We staid among these people till sunset, and were entertained with songs, and with
                  a display of their skill. At our request they shot their arrows into the air, and
                  at a mark. They did not force the arrow to any extraordinary height, but were very
                  accurate marksmen at a short distance, as has been already observed. With their
                  clubs they parried the darts of their antagonist, nearly in the same manner as I
                  have described at Taheitee (See p. 104). They told us that all the clubs which
                  have a lateral blade, like a fleam (See p. 280) are brought from the low island,
                  which they call Immèr; but we could not learn whether they are manufactured there
                  by the inhabitants, or whether the island is uninhabited, and they only visit it
                  occasionally, to gather shells and to cut wood.57 Before we left the huts, the
                  women had lighted several fires in and about them, and began to dress their
                  suppers. The natives all huddled about these fires, and seemed to feel the evening
                  air rather too cool for their naked bodies. Several of them had a swelling in the
                  upper eye-lid, which we attributed in some measure to this practice of sitting in
                  the smoak. It impeded their sight so much, that they were obliged to lean their
                  heads backwards, till the eye was in a horizontal line with the object which they
                  wished to behold. This complaint was the more remarkable, as it extended to
                  several little boys five and six years old; from whence we suspected that it was
                  perhaps propagated from one generation to another.</p>

               <p>When we arrived on the beach, almost all the natives had left it, and in a short
                  time we were left entirely to ourselves. To us, who were provided with cloaths,
                  the cool of the evening was delightful, and we rambled about the deserted woods
                  till the twilight had entirely disappeared. A prodigious number of bats of a small
                  size fluttered about us, coming out of every bush; but our endeavours to shoot at
                  them were entirely unsuccessful, for we could not see them till they were close to
                  us, and they were instantly out of sight again. Our people having replaced their
                  nets in the boats, after toiling a long time with no other success than a dozen or
                  two of fish, which all together might weigh thirty pounds, we embarked likewise,
                  and returned on board to rest from our excursion.</p>

               <p>The next morning captain Cook, Mr. Wales, Mr. Patton, and several other gentlemen,
                  who were desirous to examine the volcano, set out with Dr. Sparrman, my father,
                  myself, and two men, and walked up the hill on the west side of the bay. The
                  weather was foggy, heavy, and sultry, but the volcano was quiet. We soon reached
                  the solfatara, where the hot steam rose plentifully. The experiment to measure the
                  degree of heat was repeated as on the 12th, with this difference, that the
                  thermometer was entirely buried in the white earth where the vapour came up. After
                  it had remained one minute in this state, it rose to 210°, which is nearly the
                  heat of boiling water, and remained stationary there as long as we kept it in the
                  hole, which was for the space of five minutes. As soon as it was taken out, it
                  fell instantly to 95°, and gradually descended to 80°, where it had stood previous
                  to the immersion. The perpendicular height of the first solfatara, above the level
                  of the sea, is about 80 yards. We proceeded up the hill, and saw several extensive
                  spots of ground which had been cleared of wood in order to be cultivated. The
                  wretched tools of the natives, and the necessity of working very slowly with them,
                  to which we had been witnesses on the other hill, convinced us that this piece of
                  ground, which comprehended near two acres, must have required a great deal of
                  labour and a long space of time to clear. We passed by some dwellings, but did not
                  see a native stirring, till we came to another plantation in very good order,
                  where a single man was planting some yams. He was at first a little startled at
                  our appearance, but on asking him the way to the volcano, he pointed out a path
                  and returned to his former employment. We saw some hogs and poultry in the
                  neighbourhood of these houses, which were permitted to roam about unconfined; but
                  perhaps the fences which the natives form round some of their plantations, may be
                  intended to exclude the hogs. A little farther on we were met by two natives, who
                  came out of an adjacent garden of bananas, and continued to walk with us. Coming
                  to a place where the path divided, another man appeared in that part which led
                  into the country, and with his uplifted dart prohibited our advancing that way. We
                  told him we were desirous of going to the volcano, and he presently pointed out
                  the other path to us, and went before to lead the way. As we advanced, we took
                  notice that he continually counted over our number; and having brought us to a
                  clear part of the hill, from whence a considerable space of country could be
                  overlooked, we discovered that he had misled us, and attempted to bring us off our
                  road. We therefore returned the same way we came, in spite of his signs, which he
                  did not think proper to enforce at present with any hostile gestures. However,
                  seeing us determined to proceed against his will, he blew with great force into
                  his hand several times, and was soon answered by the sounding of several conchs on
                  different parts of the hill. He now called out as loud as he could, and we plainly
                  heard him mention how many there were of us, probably desiring his countrymen to
                  assemble and oppose us. In the meanwhile we lost our road and came into a fine
                  secluded dell, surrounded by trees of prodigious height and extent, where numbers
                  of pigeons and parroquets fluttered about. We passed some time in shooting here,
                  whilst several of the natives still continued with us, especially a couple of
                  little boys, to whom we made some presents to gain their goodwill. From hence we
                  proceeded into a dark path, which had many various windings, and at once opened
                  upon a clear spot, surrounded by three or four houses of the same dimensions as
                  those where old Paw-yangom dwelt. Here about a dozen men, well armed with bows and
                  arrows, clubs and darts, were sitting on their hams in a row, who instantly
                  started up at sight of us. We beckoned to them, and made signs that we meant no
                  harm, but they seemed not to trust us entirely. Some elderly men among them seemed
                  to have pacific intentions, but two or three young fellows frowned, and made
                  several motions with their arms, which, though not exactly directed towards us,
                  yet might have been construed into a provocation if we had been very irascible. We
                  concluded it was best to return, and desired them to shew us the road to the sea.
                  We could not have hit upon a better method of quieting their distrust and
                  apprehensions at once. Some of them went before us down a narrow path, which was
                  rather steep at first but became more easy afterwards. Having descended about a
                  quarter of a mile, they desired us to stop and take some repose, and several of
                  their brethren came to us loaded with coco-nuts, benanas, and abundance of
                  sugar-canes. The sultriness of the weather made these refreshments very
                  acceptable. We gave the Indians several presents in return, and were well pleased
                  that it was only from distrust, and not real malevolence, that they had collected
                  together to oppose our progress into the country. After a walk of half an hour we
                  returned to the beach from whence we had set out, and happily ended an excursion
                  which might, with a little more rashness on our part, have proved fatal not only
                  to the natives, but, in the end, to ourselves. We were forced to give up all hopes
                  of approaching the volcano; but it is surely adviseable to abandon a pursuit where
                  knowledge cannot be obtained without bloodshed and injustice.</p>

               <p>During our walk, our people had hauled the seine with the flood-tide, and obtained
                  a small quantity of fish, among which we found a new species. The pond of fresh
                  water likewise furnished us with a new sort of fish, and the seamen caught a
                  number of mud eels in it. With these fish, and several new plants collected on the
                  hill, we returned on board, and passed the afternoon in describing and drawing
                  them.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 15.]</date>We resumed our excursions into the country the next
                  morning. The trade for yams and for the weapons of the natives was still carried
                  on, but tortoise-shell was so scarce in the ship that we could make but a small
                  purchase of provisions. The mother of pearl fish-hooks of the Friendly Islands,
                  which had the barb of tortoise-shell, were in great request, and our seamen could
                  sometimes obtain a handful of arrows for one of them; whereas another fish-hook,
                  equally good, but with a mother of pearl barb, was not esteemed by the natives. We
                  rambled about among the woods on the plain, and shot several birds, of which this
                  island has a great variety. We also met with a number of East-Indian plants which
                  we had never observed in the more easterly islands. But the most valuable
                  acquisition, in our opinion, was a pigeon, of the sort which is common at the
                  Friendly Islands. This bird had the sides of its bill covered with a red
                  substance, and, upon farther examination, had in its mouth and craw two nutmegs,
                  recently swallowed. They were still surrounded by a scarlet coating, which was
                  their mace, and had a bitter aromatic taste, but no smell. The nutmeg itself was
                  considerably more oblong than the true spice of that name, but had likewise a very
                  bitter and aromatic taste. We soon met with a native, to whom we shewed the fruit,
                  and desired him to point out the tree on which it grew, offering him a mother of
                  pearl shell for his trouble. He conducted us about half a mile up into the country
                  to a young tree, which, as he affirmed, bore the nutmeg. We gathered its leaves,
                  but saw no fruit, which the native said had all been eaten by the pigeons. The
                  name of the fruit, in the language of the country, was guannatèn.60 We heard some
                  muskets fired, which had an unusual report, and made us apprehensive that some
                  disturbance had happened, especially as we thought we understood something to that
                  purpose from the mouth of a native who passed by us coming from the beach. We
                  therefore hastened to the sea-side, but soon found that every thing had been quiet
                  there. However, shewing the leaves of the tree, which we had received as belonging
                  to the nutmeg-tree, all the natives on the beach agreed in giving it a different
                  name from that which our guide had told us, though he endeavoured to cover his
                  deceit by telling his countrymen to name the leaf as he had done. We expressed
                  strong marks of indignation at his behaviour, and the other natives likewise
                  rebuked him.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon captain Cook, with lieutenants Cooper and Pickersgill, Mr.
                  Patton, Mr. Hodges, Dr. Sparrman, my father, and myself, went upon the flat hill
                  to the eastward, and passed through the plantation to the sea-shore on the other
                  side. The Isle of Anattom, which the captain was particularly desirous to see, was
                  for the greatest part involved in haze. We returned therefore leisurely through
                  other gardens, shooting several birds, till we came to the huts of our friendly
                  Indians. The father of the child which I mentioned on page 325, brought me a
                  present of bananas, sugar-canes, and coco-nuts, and thus confirmed us in the good
                  opinion we had formed of his sensibility. Mr. Hodges made several sketches of
                  views, and particularly drew this little farm, with a group of natives of both
                  sexes, seated under the shady branches of the fig-tree. From thence he afterwards
                  composed an elegant picture, which is engraved for captain Cook's account of this
                  voyage, and gives a perfect idea of the island of Tanna, and its inhabitants.
                  Towards sun-set we returned on board.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 16.]</date>The next morning we came ashore again, and immediately
                  walked into the woods on the plain. We saw a great number of large and beautiful
                  parroquets, of black, red, and yellow plumage; but they kept on the tops of the
                  highest fig-trees, where they were wholly out of the reach of small shot, guarded
                  by the thick foliage. The size of these trees can scarcely be imagined. Their
                  roots grow above ground a considerable part of their length, and converge together
                  into one enormous stem about ten or twelve feet above the surface. This stem which
                  is frequently no less than three yards in diameter, seems to consist of several
                  trees grown together, which form every where sharp longitudinal angles, projecting
                  above three feet from the main body. Thus it rises thirty or forty feet, before it
                  divides into branches, which are above a yard in diameter. These run up nearly to
                  the same height without dividing, and the summit of the tree is at least one
                  hundred and fifty feet high. The place where they were most frequent, was a marsh
                  or swamp, occasioned by several branches of the same pond, which we supplied our
                  ship with fresh water. We were not able to determine whether this pond is the
                  remains of a river, coming from the inland mountains, and losing itself in the
                  volcanic sand and ashes which cover the plain; or whether it is only the produce
                  of the rains in the summer months. It had innumerable quantities of musketoes
                  which were very troublesome to us, and was likewise the abode of rails and ducks,
                  of which we could never obtain any, though they appeared to be of a new species.
                  We walked on through the plain, keeping on its western part, and crossed several
                  spots, which being covered with grasses, resembled our meadows, but were much
                  overun with bind-weeds, and separated from each other by wild shrubberies which
                  had the effect of hedges. Now and then we met with great spots entirely covered
                  with tall reeds (saccharum spontaneum, Linn.) which we could hardly imagine to
                  have grown in such great quantities without cultivation. They supply the natives
                  with shafts for their arrows, and are made use of in basket-work, fences, &amp;c.
                  Beyond these fields we came into a forest, consisting of trees of the same sort
                  with those which cover the western shores of the bay. Here we shot a species of
                  wild dove hitherto unknown to naturalists, and saw some parroquets, which were
                  excessively shy, and may perhaps be scared by the natives, whose orchards they
                  infest. Advancing still farther we came into a hollow road, which appeared to have
                  been formed by a current of water, but was perfectly dry at present, and served as
                  a path to the natives. Its sides were fringed in the most beautiful manner with
                  shrubberies and palms; and in one part a huge venerable fig-tree (ficus religiosa,
                  Linn.) of the same sort to which the Cinghalese and natives of Malabar pay a
                  particular regard , struck its roots into both sides, and formed an astonishing
                  vaulted arch over the lane, which was at least five yards wide. A prodigious
                  number of birds, of a very diminutive size, fluttered about on its uppermost
                  branches, and picked off the fruit. We rested some time under its shade, whilst
                  several natives passed by, who did not express the least uneasiness at sight of
                  us, and with perfect unconcern heard our fowling-pieces fired at birds. Towards
                  noon we returned to the sea side, and though the weather was very hot, yet as we
                  walked almost continually in the shade, we felt no inconvenience. Before we came
                  to the watering-place, we passed through a shrubbery, where we found a native at
                  work cutting sticks, on which the climbing stalks of the yams (dioscorea
                  oppositifolia) are supported. Seeing that he cut them very slowly with his
                  hatchet, which had only a bit of shell in lieu of a blade, we began to help him
                  with an English hatchet, and in a few minutes cut a much greater heap than he had
                  done the whole day. The natives who were now frequently passing, as the hour of
                  their meals was at hand, stood still, and expressed the greatest astonishment at
                  the extreme utility of this tool, and some were very desirous to possess it, by
                  offering their bows and arrows for it. We thought this was a favourable
                  opportunity to encourage them to part with their hogs, and told them we would
                  exchange our hatchet for one of these animals; but they were deaf to this
                  proposal, and never sold us a single hog during our stay. Having shewn them the
                  wild nutmeg which we had found in the pigeon's craw the day before, one of them
                  produced three others, which were wrapped in their mace, but could not point out
                  the tree on which they grew. They gave these nuts several different names, and
                  told us they grew on a tree called neerash.61 On having recourse to our books, we
                  found that this species has some resemblance to the wild nutmeg of Rumphius, and
                  seems to be exactly the same with a sort which is found in the Philipinas. The
                  pigeon which feeds upon it at Tanna is the same which Rumphius describes as the
                  disseminator of the true nutmeg at the Spice Islands, and we had the honour of
                  presenting one alive to her majesty.</p>

               <p>We found a very old decrepit man sitting on the beach whom we had never seen
                  before. Many among the croud told us his name was Yogàï, and that he was their
                  areekee.62 He was of a tall stature, but very lean and worn out; his face was
                  wrinkled, his head almost entirely bald, and what little hair remained was
                  perfectly grey. There was however an expression of kindness in his features, which
                  preserved the vestiges of a former manly beauty. Near him sat another person, who
                  might have passed for an old man, if he had not been in company with the former.
                  The rest of the people told us he was the son of Yogàï, and named Yatta. He was
                  likewise a tall man, but well-proportioned, and remarkably well-featured for a
                  native of Tanna. His hair was black, frizzled, and almost woolly, but not dressed;
                  and he had a very engaging, sensible look, which expressed great good-nature
                  towards the strangers. The natives acquainted us that he was the koù-vosh,63 which
                  we suppose to be a title perhaps equivalent to such expressions as " successor,
                  heir, prince of the blood," and the like, which are used in civilized countries.
                  As their colour was exactly the same with that of the common people, for they were
                  both of a very blackish or sooty complexion, we took particular care to examine
                  whether there was any difference between their ornaments and those of the rest of
                  the natives; but all the distinction which we could observe, consisted in the kind
                  of sash, or cloth, which they wore round their body as a belt. The sashes of the
                  common people were of an uniform cinnamon, or brownish-yellow colour; but these
                  two chiefs wore them painted with black lines, and chequered with compartments of
                  black and red: however, it is not improbable that even this variation is merely
                  accidental, and by no means considered as a mark of royalty by the natives. Upon
                  the whole, no deference was paid to these two persons, if we except the title of
                  chiefs, with which they were distinguished. We never observed either of them to
                  issue any command, and it is very probable that their orders are only obeyed in
                  time of war. At such a period, the people readily give up their judgment to the
                  experience of hoary age, and follow its counsels instead of laws. They implicitly
                  trust their lives and fortunes to the conduct of a man, whose superior valour, and
                  consummate art, they acknowledge with one common voice. We made them some trifling
                  presents, and gave them an invitation to come on board, which they declined. We
                  then embarked in one of the boats, in order to go to dinner. Our people brought
                  off a great quantity of clubwood (casuarina) from the shore, having cut down a
                  stately tree of this sort, which grew upon the edge of the flat hill.64 They began
                  to saw it the preceding afternoon; but Paw-yangom came to captain Cook to
                  complain, because this tree is highly valued at Tanna, and so very scarce, that
                  they are obliged to go to Irromanga, where it grows more plentifully, in order to
                  supply themselves with clubs. Captain Cook immediately ordered the workmen to
                  leave it; but afterwards finding that it was cut so far that it could not grow any
                  more, he gave the old man a dog, a quantity of Taheitee cloth, and several other
                  articles, for which he agreed that we should take the tree, and the inhabitants in
                  his neighbourhood seemed perfectly satisfied. Paw-yangom, no doubt, was a man of
                  some weight among the people who dwelt on the flat hill, and it is not unlikely
                  that his age alone had entitled him to some deference. The government of the
                  people of Tanna seems to be in its infant state, and every family is guided by the
                  advice of the oldest men, their patriarchs, who never exercise their authority in
                  a severe or tyrannical manner.</p>

               <p>We returned into the woods again after dinner, but made an unsuccessful excursion,
                  having now searched the same spots almost every day since our arrival on the
                  island. The <date>[Wednesd. 17.]</date>next morning we renewed our rambles, in
                  hopes of meeting by accident with the nutmeg-tree. We passed some time in a fine
                  plantation of bananas close to the western corner of the beach, where a number of
                  parrots destroyed the fruit; but they were so extremely shy, that we attempted in
                  vain to come at them. Having taken a long walk into the country, during which we
                  frequently separated from each other to a considerable distance, as we had now
                  nothing to apprehend from the inhabitants, we came back to the beach. We found the
                  last boat ready to put off, and returned to the ship, where we found the old chief
                  Yogaï, his son Yatta, and a well-made boy, about fourteen years old, named Narrep,
                  who appeared to be nearly related to them. They were all seated on the floor of
                  the cabin when we came in, and captain Cook had given them a variety of presents
                  of all kinds. The old man had received them with the indifference natural at his
                  age; but his son, and above all the boy Narrep, were extremely well pleased with
                  the civilities which had been shewn them. We invited them to dinner, and they ate
                  of some yams, but would not touch any other food, behaving nearly as Fanòkko, our
                  former visitor, had done (See p. 288). As soon as we had dined, we embarked with
                  them, and brought them to the beach, where the other natives conversed with them,
                  and seemed to be highly pleased with the deference which we had paid to their
                  chiefs. The number of natives on the beach now rarely ever amounted to one
                  hundred, including women and children, who commonly sat down in several groups
                  under the shade of the bushes. From time to time they brought us a yam or a bunch
                  of bananas, for which they took Taheitee cloth in exchange. The women sometimes
                  had baskets full of yamboo apples, (eugenia,) which they sold for trifles, such as
                  small bits of green nephritic stone, black beads, and the like, and, as it seemed,
                  more to shew their good will, than from any value which they set upon those
                  articles. The civility of the natives was, upon the whole, very conspicuous
                  towards us. If they met us in a narrow path, they always stepped aside into the
                  bushes and grasses in order to make way for us. If they happened to know our
                  names, they pronounced them with a smile, which could be extremely well understood
                  as a salutation; or, if they had not seen us before, they commonly enquired our
                  names in order to know us again. On the beach we had for some days left off
                  stretching ropes to reserve a clear spot for our waterers and woodcutters; only a
                  centry was placed on each side, beyond whom they never ventured to advance, unless
                  they came fresh from the country, and were unacquainted with our regulations. In
                  short, the change which our little stay among them had wrought in their opinion of
                  us was already very remarkable, and continued every day to turn more in our
                  favour. Yogaï and Yatta, with Narrep and several other natives, left the beach
                  very soon, and returned through the woods to their own homes, which they pointed
                  at as far distant from the bay. As soon as they were gone, captain Cook went in
                  his boat with us to the people who loaded ballast under the western hill. Here we
                  examined the hot-springs which we had discovered on the 9th, having taken a
                  thermometer for that purpose, which had stood at 78° on board the ship, but being
                  carried close to the body had risen to 83°. When the bulb was plunged into the
                  hot-spring the mercury rose to 191° in the space of five minutes. We then took it
                  out, and enlarged the hole by clearing away the sand and stones, through which the
                  water oozed and ran into the sea. Having replaced the thermometer so that it was
                  immerged considerably above the the bulb, it rose again to 191°, and continued
                  there upwards of ten minutes longer. We threw some small shell-fish into the
                  spring, and they were boiled in two or three minutes. A piece of silver, after
                  lying in the water above half an hour, came out perfectly bright and untarnished.
                  Salt of tartar had no visible effect upon it; but still, as we observed a kind of
                  astringency in its taste, we filled a bottle with it, and shut it up close, in
                  order to make more accurate and complicated experiments with it after our return .
                  We observed a great number of little fishes, not above two inches long, skipping
                  about the wet rocks like lizards, to which they bore a great resemblance. Their
                  pectoral fins performed the functions of feet, and their eyes were placed near the
                  summit of the head, in order to guard them against all their enemies when they are
                  out of the water. These little amphibious animals were indeed so cautious and so
                  nimble at the same time, that it was with great difficulty we caught them. They
                  could leap the length of a yard with great ease, and belonged to the genus of
                  blennies. The same or a similar species of fish had been observed on the coast of
                  New Holland by captain Cook in the Endeavour . In one place we found them very
                  active in destroying a brood of minute young crickets, which appeared to have been
                  washed out of a crevice in the rock.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 18.]</date> Captain Cook set out again with us the next morning,
                  to examine the hot springs at low water, the experiments of the preceding day
                  being made during flood-tide, about half past four o'clock. We immersed the
                  thermometer, which in the open air had stood at 78°, and the quick-silver rose to
                  187°, after lying one minute and a half in the hot water. This difference, from
                  the former heat of 191°, was rather surprising, especially as the springs issued
                  so near the level of the sea, that some of them were covered at high water, might
                  therefore be expected to be cooled by the mixture. We concluded that some other
                  cause besides the tides influenced the relative heat of these springs, and we were
                  confirmed in this supposition by examining another spring which came out upon the
                  great beach to the south, at its westermost corner. Here, at the foot of a
                  perpendicular rock, forming part of the mountain to the west, on which the
                  solfataras were situated, the hot water bubbles up out of the black sand, and runs
                  into the sea, which likewise covers it at the flood-tide. In the space of a minute
                  the thermometer, after being placed in this new spring, rose to 202 1/2°, and
                  remained at this degree several minutes. It should seem that these springs are
                  heated by the volcano, and run under ground till they find an issue. The fire of
                  that mountain in all probability is not always equally violent, and gradually
                  cools in the intervals between its eruptions. Different parts of it may likewise
                  have various degrees of heat, and the different springs, by passing over a longer
                  or shorter space, must lose more or less of their original heat. The solfataras on
                  the hill directly above these springs, are in my opinion connected with them; and
                  the steam which rises from thence, through subterraneous crevices, may be part of
                  the same water, ascending before it can be condensed into a continued fluid, by
                  the coolness of the ground over which it is carried. The volcano had been quiet
                  for two days past, and offered no new phӕnomena, from whence any of these
                  circumstances might have been better explained.</p>

               <p>We passed the day before and after noon, in the plain behind the watering-place,
                  and collected the flowers of an unknown sort of tree, which we could obtain no
                  other way, than by shooting at them. In the evening the seine was hauled, and we
                  caught about two hundred weight of fish, which afforded another, though rather
                  scanty fresh meal to the whole ship's company. Dr. Sparrman went up the flat hill
                  with me, where we passed about half an hour very agreeably with our friends the
                  natives, who made us a present of fruit at parting. We amused them as usual by
                  singing to them, and they became so familiar at last as to point out some girls to
                  us, whom from an excess of hospitality not uncommon with uncivilized nations, they
                  offered to their friends with gestures not in the least equivocal. The women, at
                  the first hint of the civility which the men intended to confer upon us, ran off
                  to a great distance seemingly much frightened, and shocked at their indelicacy.
                  Our Indians, and particularly the young people, were very desirous that we should
                  pursue the girls, whether only to frighten them or not, we could not ascertain.
                  However, they seemed to be very well pleased, that we did not take the hint; and
                  we parted from them, after distributing several presents, and especially some
                  mother of pearl hooks with tortoise-shell barbs.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 19.]</date>The next morning we were ready for sailing, having taken
                  in a sufficient quantity of ballast, wood, and fresh-water; only the wind, which
                  blew right into the harbour, prevented our putting to sea. We went on shore after
                  breakfast, with the captain, and a party of people; and he continued to trade with
                  the natives, whilst we went into the country. We soon separated, and each of us
                  went by himself to a different part. I passed by a number of natives in their way
                  to the beach; but they all stepped out of the path to make room for me, though I
                  was without any companion, and not one of them attempted with a look or gesture to
                  offend me. I strolled alone several miles in the back of the flat hill, or in the
                  valley along its south-side, to a part where I had never been before. The path
                  which I followed was hid in the thickest groves, from whence I could only now and
                  then discern the extensive plantations which covered the whole slope of the hill.
                  Here I frequently saw the natives employed in cutting down trees, or pruning them,
                  or digging up the ground with a branch of a tree, instead of a spade, or planting
                  yams, and other roots; and in one place, I heard a man singing at his work, nearly
                  the same tune which they used to sing to us on the hill. The prospect which I
                  beheld was so pleasing, that it did not fall much short of the beautiful scenes of
                  Taheitee. It had this advantage besides, that all the country about me to a great
                  distance, consisted of gentle elevations, and spacious vallies, all which were
                  capable of culture; whereas at Taheitee the mountains rose immediately craggy,
                  wild, and majestic from the plain, which has no where the breadth of two miles.
                  The plantations at Tanna consist, for the greatest part of yams, bananas, eddoes,
                  and sugar-canes, all which being very low , permit the eye to take in a great
                  extent of country. Single tufted trees rise in different places, and amuse the
                  beholder with a variety of romantic forms. The whole summit of the level hill
                  which bounds a part of the horizon, apppears shaggy with little groves, where a
                  number of lofty palms rise over the rest of the trees.</p>

               <p>Those who are capable of being delighted with the beauties of nature, which deck
                  the globe for the gratification of man, may conceive the pleasure which is derived
                  from every little object, trifling in itself, but important in the moment when the
                  heart is expanded, and when a kind of blissful trance opens a higher and purer
                  sphere of enjoyment.65 Then we behold with rapture the dark colour of lands fresh
                  prepared for culture, the uniform verdure of meadows, the various tints upon the
                  foliage of different trees, and the infinite varieties in the abundance, form, and
                  size of the leaves. Here these varieties appeared in all their perfection, and the
                  different exposure of the trees to the sun added to the magnificence of the view.
                  Some reflected a thousand dancing beams, whilst others formed a broad mass of
                  shadow, in contrast with the surrounding world of light. The numerous smokes which
                  ascended from every grove on the hill, revived the pleasing impressions of
                  domestic life; nay my thoughts naturally turned upon friendship and national
                  felicity, when I beheld large fields of plantanes all round me, which, loaded with
                  golden clusters of fruit, seemed to be justly chosen the emblems of peace and
                  affluence. The cheerful voice of the labouring husbandman resounded very
                  opportunely to complete this idea. The landscape to the westward was not less
                  admirable than that of which I have just now spoken. The rich plain was bounded on
                  that side by a vast number of fertile hills, covered with forests, interspersed
                  with plantations, and beyond them rose a ridge of high mountains, not inferior to
                  those of the Society Islands, though apparently of a much easier slope. The
                  solitary spot from whence I beheld this rural scene was likewise favoured by
                  nature. It was a delightful cluster of trees, which climbers and bindweeds decked
                  with odoriferous blossoms. The richness of the soil was here extremely remarkable;
                  for though I beheld many palms which the winds had thrown down , yet most of them
                  bent their summits upwards from the ground, and sent forth new shoots with
                  surprising luxuriance. Their branches were the resort of various birds, adorned
                  with the brightest colours, which now and then struck the ear with an unexpected
                  song not destitute of harmony. The serenity of the air, and the coolness of the
                  breeze, contributed to make my situation still more agreeable. The mind at rest,
                  and lulled by this train of pleasing ideas, indulged a few fallacious reflections,
                  which encreased its happiness at that instant by representing mankind in a
                  favourable light. We had now passed a fortnight amidst a people who received us
                  with the strongest symptoms of distrust, and who prepared to repel every hostile
                  act with vigour. Our cool deliberate conduct, our moderation, and the constant
                  uniformity in all our proceedings, had conquered their jealous fears. They, who in
                  all probability had never dealt with such a set of inoffensive, peaceable, and yet
                  not despicable men; they who had been used to see in every stranger a base and
                  treacherous enemy, now learnt from us to think more nobly of their
                  fellow-creatures. Prudence, which accompanied the civilized voyagers, had no
                  sooner fascinated the instinct of the savages, watchful for their safety, than
                  another, no less powerful, awoke in their breast, and taught them to relish the
                  sweets of society. They shared the abundant produce of their soil with their new
                  acquaintance, being no longer apprehensive that they would take it by force. They
                  permitted us to visit them in their shady recesses, and we sat down in their
                  domestic circles with that harmony which befits the members of one great family.
                  In a few days they began to feel a pleasure in our conversation, and a new
                  disinterested sentiment, of more than earthly mould, even friendship, filled their
                  heart. This retrospect was honourable to human nature, as it made us the
                  benefactors of a numerous race. I fell from hence into a reverie on the
                  pre-eminence of our civilized society, from which I was roused by the sound of
                  approaching steps. I turned about and saw Dr. Sparrman, to whom I pointed out the
                  prospect and communicated my ideas. We agreed in our sentiments, and set out on
                  our return, as the hour of noon was approaching. The first native whom we met ran
                  out of the way and hid himself in a bush. The next was a woman at the entrance of
                  a plantation, to whom we appeared so unexpectedly, that she had no time to escape.
                  She offered us a basket full of yamboos, with a trembling hand, and with all the
                  expressions of fear strongly marked in her countenance. We were surprised at this
                  behaviour, and giving her some small trifles proceeded in our way. A number of men
                  stood behind the bushes in and about the plantation, and made signs to us to walk
                  on by waving their hands towards the beach. At last, when we stepped out of the
                  wood, we beheld two natives seated on the grass, holding one of their brethren
                  dead in their arms. They pointed to a wound in his side, which had been made by a
                  musket-ball, and with a most affecting look they told us " he is killed ." We
                  looked hastily towards the station of our people, and seeing them deserted by the
                  natives, hurried to join them, and learn the particulars of this shocking event. A
                  sentinel had been posted as usual to keep the natives at a distance from our
                  party, but the sailors took the liberty of walking and trading freely among them.
                  A native, who in all likelihood had never been on the beach before, came through
                  the croud and began to walk across the space which our people occupied. The sentry
                  pushed him back among the rest of his brethren, who were already accustomed to
                  this injurious treatment, and acquiesced in it. The new-comer, however, refused to
                  be controuled on his own island by a stranger; he prepared once more to cross the
                  area, perhaps with no other motive at present than that of asserting his liberty
                  of walking where he pleased. The sentry drove him back once more, with a rude
                  thrust sufficient to rouse a man much less irascible than a savage. He, to
                  vindicate his right, laid an arrow on his bow, which he aimed at the aggressor;
                  but the soldier instantly levelled his musket and shot him dead. Captain Cook
                  landed in the same moment; he saw the native fall, and many of his countrymen
                  running off to hide themselves from the cruel and treacherous people who had
                  polluted their island. He commanded the soldier to be loaded with irons, and sent
                  him on board the ship. He next endeavoured to appease the natives, and the natural
                  excellence of the human heart is such, that several, especially those who came
                  from the flat eastern hill, were persuaded to stay, and once more to trust those
                  who had so grievously violated the laws of hospitality. Dr. Sparrman and myself
                  were struck with the moderation of the people, who had suffered us to pass by them
                  unmolested, when they might easily have taken a severe revenge for the murder of
                  their countryman. We went on board with captain Cook, greatly apprehensive for the
                  safety of my father, who still remained in the woods, accompanied by a single
                  sailor. We had, however, the satisfaction to see him safe about a quarter of an
                  hour after, among the party of marines who were left on the beach to protect some
                  of our water-casks. A boat was immediately sent off, which brought him on board.
                  He had met with the same good treatment from the natives as ourselves; they had
                  learnt to know our disposition, and seemed to be too good tempered to confound the
                  innocent with the guilty. Thus one dark and detestable action effaced all the
                  hopes with which I had flattered myself. The natives, instead of looking upon us
                  in a more favourable light than upon other strangers, had reason to detest us much
                  more, as we came to destroy under the specious mask of friendship; and some
                  amongst us lamented that instead of making amends at this place for the many rash
                  acts which we had perpetrated at almost every island in our course, we had
                  wantonly made it the scene of the greatest cruelty. Captain Cook resolved to
                  punish the marine with the utmost rigour for having transgressed his positive
                  orders, according to which the choleric emotions of the savage were to be
                  repressed with gentleness, and prudently suffered to cool. But the officer who
                  commanded on shore, declared that he had not delivered these orders to the sentry,
                  but given him others which imported, that the least threat was to be punished with
                  immediate death. The soldier was therefore immediately cleared, and the officer's
                  right to dispose of the lives of the natives remained uncontroverted.</p>

               <p>We came on shore again after dinner, where our people hauled the seine, and caught
                  a few fish. The natives on the beach were very few in number, and chiefly without
                  arms; the murder of their countryman seemed to be forgotten, or at least they
                  seemed to have forgiven it in their hearts. My father, with Dr. Sparrman and
                  myself, walked about on the plain, and shot some birds. We only met a single
                  native, who at sight of us immediately struck into a different path, and walked
                  very swiftly to escape us. We called to him, and making all the friendly signs
                  which we could invent, at last prevailed on him to turn back. He approached us
                  with distrust and apprehension marked in every gesture; however, by making him
                  some presents, his fears were removed, mutual confidence took place, and we parted
                  very good friends. It was late in the evening when we left the shore with all our
                  people.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 20.]</date>Early in the morning several canoes of the natives got
                  under sail, and went out of the harbour. Their form resembled that of the canoes
                  at the Friendly Islands, but with this difference, that the workmanship was very
                  inferior at Tanna. They have out-riggers to all their canoes, and some may contain
                  twenty people. Their sails were low triangular mats, of which the broadest part is
                  uppermost, and the sharp angle below. A long piece of timber, hollowed out in the
                  middle, forms the bottom of the canoe, and upon this one or two planks are fixed,
                  forming the two sides, by means of ropes of the coco-nut fibres. These ropes are
                  drawn through the round holes in several knobs on the inside of the planks, by
                  which means the latter are not pierced with a single hole. Their oars are
                  ill-shaped, and very clumsily made. It seems the fabrick of a boat is so tedious
                  an enterprize to people who are in a continual state of warfare, that they cannot
                  spend much time in polishing the timbers, and giving them that perfection and
                  elegance, which is conspicuous in the manufactures of the Friendly Islands.</p>

               <p>The wind being favourable to our departure at present, we weighed the anchor, and
                  set sail, after a stay of sixteen days. The island of Tanna is situated in 19° 30'
                  S. lat. and 169° 38' E. long. and I believe does not exceed twenty-four leagues in
                  circuit. A clayey sort of stone, mixed with pieces of chalk-stones, forms most of
                  the rocks which we examined. It is commonly of a brownish or yellowish colour, and
                  lies in strata nearly horizontal, about six inches thick. In a few places we
                  observed a soft black stone, composed of the ashes and sherls thrown up by the
                  volcano, mixed with clay, or with a sort of tripoly, which is called rotten-stone
                  by some miners. This substance sometimes forms alternate strata with the black
                  stone. The same volcanic sand, mixed with vegetable mold, forms the rich soil of
                  this island, on which, as I have already mentioned, all vegetables thrive with
                  uncommon luxuriance. The volcano which burns on the island, doubtless works a
                  great change in its mineral productions, and might perhaps have afforded some new
                  observations, if the jealousy of the natives had not continually prevented our
                  examining it. We found native sulphur in the white earth which covers the
                  solfataras, from whence the aqueous streams arise. The taste of this earth was
                  strongly aluminous, and it may perhaps be impregnated with particles of that salt.
                  We likewise met with a red bolus near these places, and observed a white selenitic
                  stone among the natives, which they wear as an ornament in the cartilage between
                  the nostrils. We found some specimens of strong lavas; but as we could not come
                  near the volcano, we never met with them in any quantity. The hot springs have a
                  kind of astringency in the taste, which gives us some reason to suspect that they
                  contain mineral particles; but we had no opportunity to make experiments on board
                  with the water which we brought from thence. The only remark of any consequence,
                  is a confirmation of a former well-known fact with regard to volcanos, viz. that
                  these burning mountains are not always the highest in the whole ridge, as in Peru
                  and Sicily, but that they sometimes break out in a secondary ridge, and are even
                  of an inconsiderable height. As there are instances in the Açores, and in the
                  Archipelago, that volcanic eruptions have forced their way through the sea from
                  the unfathomable bottom, this circumstance would be of less consequence, if it had
                  not disagreed with the opinion of the great naturalist, M. de Buffon.68 He
                  asserts, that the highest mountains alone are the seat of volcanic fires, being
                  desirous to remove these fires as far from the centre of the earth as possible.
                  Another observation which we made seems to prove, that the eruptions commonly
                  succeeded after showers of rain; but so short a stay as ours is insufficient to
                  give this remark its necessary weight, though it coincides with the conjectures
                  which have hitherto been made concerning the causes of subterraneous fires. The
                  vegetable productions of Tanna are very rich and various. The forests are filled
                  with plants, of which a great number were new to us, and some were species
                  hitherto known only in the East Indian islands. The cultivated grounds likewise
                  contain a great variety of plants which are unknown in the Society and Friendly
                  Islands, and no less than forty different species are cultivated. Among the
                  spontaneous plants, we ought particularly to repeat the mention of the nutmeg, in
                  defence of Quiros's veracity, who asserts that he found it in Tierra del Espiritù
                  Santo, which doubtless belongs to this group of islands. Whether oranges are
                  cultivated, or grow wild, is uncertain, as we never met with a single tree that
                  bore them, but were obliged to content ourselves with the fruit, which the women
                  sometimes sold to us.</p>

               <p>The animal creation in Tanna is likewise numerous and beautiful. Shells indeed are
                  scarce upon the coast, and the natives go in quest of them to other islands,
                  setting some value also upon large mother of pearl shells. Fish, on the contrary,
                  are numerous, and in great variety: with the seine and hook we caught mullet
                  (mullus), Brasilian pike, garfish, dolphins, cavalhas, parrot-fish, sting-rays,
                  toothless-rays, angel-fish, sharks, and sucking-fish, as well as several species
                  of mackrel and mullet (mugil). The woods contained a variety of birds, especially
                  several sorts of pigeons, parroquets, and fly-catchers. Among the latter we found
                  a species which is likewise to be met with in New Zeeland. The Ceylanese owl, a
                  species of creeper, a sort of duck, and a purple water-hen, were likewise seen;
                  but all in general were remarkably shy, which seems to indicate their being
                  pursued by the natives. The only tame fowls are the common cock and hen; and the
                  only domestic quadrupeds are hogs. Rats and bats, both which I have already
                  mentioned, form the only two wild species of quadrupeds.</p>

               <p>Tanna, thus well supplied by nature, and blessed with the mild influence of a
                  tropical climate, contains a race of men in a much inferior state of civilization,
                  than the natives of the Friendly and Society Islands, who live nearly in the same
                  parallel, but to the eastward. I am of opinion, we rate the population of Tanna
                  very high, when we suppose it to amount to twenty thousand persons.69 The
                  plantations seems to bear a small proportion to the wild forests, wherever we
                  walked about in the island, only excepting the flat hill along the eastern shore
                  of the bay, which is indeed the richest spot I ever beheld in the South Seas. The
                  excellence of the soil, instead of being an advantage to cultivation in its infant
                  state, is rather of disservice; as all kinds of wild trees, bushes and weeds, are
                  with the greatest difficulty rooted out, and propagate with luxuriance, either
                  from seeds, or from the roots. Cultivated vegetables, being of a more weakly and
                  delicate nature, are easily oppressed and suffocated by the indigenous wild
                  tribes, till repeated labours succeed at last to bring them to a flourishing
                  state. These two circumstances together strongly indicate, that the nation which
                  inhabits Tanna is not very numerous, in proportion to the extent of that island.
                  The people seem to live dispersed in small villages, consisting of a few families;
                  and their constant custom of going armed is a certain sign that they formerly had,
                  and probably still have, wars with neighbouring islanders, or quarrels amongst
                  themselves. If I might venture a conjecture, founded upon the languages which we
                  heard spoken in the island, I should suppose that several tribes of different
                  nations have peopled the island of Tanna, and may have disputed the possession of
                  the ground with each other. Besides the common language of the island,70 and
                  besides a dialect of that of the Friendly Islands, we collected some words of a
                  third language, chiefly current among the inhabitants of its western hills; and we
                  particularly obtained the numerals of all the three tongues, which are indeed
                  totally distinct. In the common language of Tanna, we met with two or three words,
                  which have a clear affinity with the language of Mallicollo, and about the same
                  number correspond with some words of the Malay; but in general they are wholly
                  unlike each other, and related to no other tongue that I know of. There is a
                  strong kind of aspiration, and a guttural sound, in many words at Tanna, which
                  are, however, very sonorous and full of vowels, and therefore easily
                  pronounced.</p>

               <p>The small size of the islands in the South Sea, and the want of wild quadrupeds on
                  them, have totally prevented their first settlers from living by the chace, the
                  usual occupation of savages.71 This confined space likewise did not allow them to
                  breed numerous herds of domestic animals, and obliged them to have recourse to the
                  cultivation of the soil for their immediate subsistence, especially when they
                  could not support themselves by fishing. It has been the salutary consequence of
                  this early application to rural œconomy, to facilitate civilization. All the
                  nations of tropical islands in the South Sea have fixed habitations, and it is
                  only the degree of elegance and convenience which distinguishes their different
                  progress in culture. The people of Tanna do not appear, according to this
                  standard, to be far advanced; their houses are mere sheds, which barely cover them
                  from the inclemency of the weather. Dress, another distinguishing character of
                  civilization, is as yet entirely unknown to them; and in the place of cleanliness,
                  which every where renders mankind agreeable to each other, we observed divers
                  sorts of paint and grease. They seem however to be in great forwardness towards
                  receiving a greater polish. Their food is much varied by the arts of cookery which
                  the women put in practice; they roast or broil the yams and bananas; they stew the
                  green leaves of a kind of fig, and of the okra (hibiscus esculentus), they bake
                  puddings made of a paste of bananas and eddoes, containing a mixture of coco-nut
                  kernel and leaves, and they likewise eat several sorts of ripe fruits, without any
                  preparation. Their poultry and hogs doubtless supply them at times with animal
                  food; and from time to time they catch fish and birds, which very probably are
                  reckoned dainties. If the taste for a variety of food becomes more general and
                  violent, agriculture, arts, and manufactures will be carried on with greater
                  spirit, as far as they are subservient to the pleasure of the palate, and one
                  refinement still must give birth to another. The heaviest task becomes light and
                  amusing, as soon as it is undertaken from our own inclination, and for the
                  gratification of our senses. The domestic life of the people of Tanna is not
                  wholly destitute of amusements; they are at present indeed of a more serious turn
                  than the civilized nations of the Friendly and Society Islands, and the more
                  savage inhabitants of Mallicollo: but, on the other hand, their music is in
                  greater perfection than any in the South Sea; and it cannot be disputed that a
                  predilection for harmonious sounds implies great sensibility, and must prepare the
                  way for civilization. Agreeably to their present situation, their government is in
                  a very imperfect state. Every village or family appears to be independent, and
                  only to join with the rest when their common interest is absolutely the same: for
                  example, when their country is threatened by the invasion of strangers. The aged
                  or the strong appear to have the greatest influence among the multitude, and a
                  diversity of ranks seems to be unknown. The separate interest of many small
                  societies must frequently clash, and of course involve them in feuds, which
                  nourish, in some measure, the principles of distrust and revenge. This difficulty
                  can only be remedied in process of time by the encrease of population, which will
                  oblige them to unite and to establish a government on a more permanent basis. The
                  manufacture of arms, upon which they now spend more time than on any other, will
                  then employ their more numerous leisure hours, and the same elegance which is at
                  present lavished on the arms at the Friendly Islands, may likewise at Tanna become
                  the work of peace and mutual safety. How far their navigations to neighbouring
                  islands may hasten that period is uncertain; but commerce is doubtless of infinite
                  service to the encrease of civilization.</p>

               <p>We know nothing of their religion, except the solemn song which we heard on the
                  eastern point of the bay almost every morning, from whence we suspect that they
                  have a place of worship in the woods thereabouts. Their solicitude to prevent our
                  access to that part seems to strengthen this conjecture; but in their general
                  behaviour we did not take notice of the least religious act, nor of any thing that
                  could be construed into superstition. The only circumstance which has some
                  appearance of owing its origin to a religious notion, is their taking up the
                  presents which we gave them, in a leaf; but as this was not a general custom, and
                  almost entirely neglected as soon as we became better acquainted, I cannot lay any
                  stress upon it. Civilization enlarges and unravels the idea of a Deity, which is
                  not unknown to the savage, though his more immediate wants prevent his giving
                  attention to it. When the exigencies of nature are supplied with less trouble, and
                  in a shorter time, the intellectual part expands and mounts to heaven to find some
                  occupation. It cannot be expected that during the little stay which we made at
                  Tanna, and in the confined situation to which the distrust of the natives reduced
                  us at first, we should have been able to collect more certain and instructive
                  observations, or an exact detail of the whole extent of knowledge among the
                  natives. Many articles, and especially all the customs of domestic life, remain
                  entirely unknown to us. All nations practise certain ceremonies on solemn
                  occasions, such as marriages, births, or deaths; and however simple they may be at
                  Tanna, they contribute to delineate the character of the people, of which our
                  knowledge is but too imperfect. The visits which we made to them on the hill, gave
                  us great room to believe them hospitable, and open to sentiments of universal
                  benevolence, as soon as the apprehensions for their safety were pacified. We found
                  them unjust to their women, but not so cruel and unnatural as the New Zeelanders;
                  on the contrary, it is rather to be supposed that they made gradual advances
                  towards that kind disposition which manifests itself in the good treatment of the
                  sex at the Friendly and Society Islands. Upon other occasions we had reason to
                  believe them brave and intrepid, and their conduct to us in the woods, after the
                  fatal murder of their countryman, was certainly generous. Their conversation
                  sometimes afforded us an opportunity of admiring their sagacity. Their behaviour
                  to us at our first arrival, and the custom of going constantly armed, are evident
                  marks of distrust; and the custom of eating human flesh, which their signs plainly
                  indicated, is a proof that their passions are violent. The intercourse with
                  Europeans might perhaps have proved a benefit to them, and laid the ground-work
                  for a future progress in civilization, if their last rash action had not effaced
                  those favourable impressions which the natives had already conceived of them.
                  European goods were in no repute; but as we left a considerable number of nails
                  and some hatchets among them, the durability of the metal will soon teach them to
                  hold it in high esteem, and it is not improbable that the next ship which may
                  happen to visit them, will find them fond of iron-ware, and eager to barter
                  provisions for it.</p>

               <p>Having once more put to sea, we ran to the eastward, in order to examine the
                  island of Irronan. Our stay at Tanna had supplied us only with three or four meals
                  of fresh fish, and a small quantity of yams, which we treasured up to serve upon
                  emergencies. Some of our crew were at this time afflicted with fevers, and
                  received small portions of those roots, as substitutes to the unwholesome biscuit
                  and pickled beef.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 21.]</date>In the evening we came near the island of Irronan, which
                  was found to lie about twelve leagues to the east of Tanna, and consisted of a
                  high table-hill. We passed the night in tacking, and the next morning ascertained
                  the situation of Anattom in 20° 3' south, and 170° 5' east. Its size was inferior
                  to that of Tanna, though we kept at such a distance that we could not determine it
                  with precision; but the height of its mountains was to all appearance nearly the
                  same. Observing no other islands to the southward at present, we shaped our course
                  along the south-west shore of Tanna, which we saw to great advantage on that side,
                  all the hills sloping very gently from their summits and inland ridges.
                     <date>[Monday 22.]</date>As the wind was very fresh and wholly in our favour,
                  we were on the lee-side of Irromanga the next morning. Captain Cook was resolved
                  to spend some time in examining the western coasts of all this group of islands,
                  and particulary not to leave unexplored that to the north of Mallicollo, which had
                  been seen by M. de Bougainville. This group being the westernmost hitherto known
                  in the South Pacific Ocean, captain Cook named the New Hebrides , having acquired
                  the right of giving this new collective name by discovering ten large islands,
                  besides a number of smaller ones, all which had never been seen before. The day
                  was not yet spent when we had already passed the southern shores of Sandwich
                  Island. Its aspect on that side was very beautiful, and its forests seemed more
                  rich and copious than we had formerly observed them to the northward. Four small
                  islands, of inconsiderable height but finely wooded with the most tufted trees,
                  formed a harbour, which had the appearance of being very convenient and safe.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 23.]</date>Running on all night with great speed, we came in sight
                  of the Isles of Apee, Pa-oom, and Ambrrym the next morning, and stood along the
                  south-west side of Mallicollo. The peak of Pa-oom seemed at this distance in one
                  direction, to be entirely separate from the land before it, but it may
                  nevertheless be connected with it by low land. Mallicollo surprised us again with
                  the beauty and shagginess of its forests, from whence vast numbers of smokes
                  ascended, sufficient to prove, that a great part of these forests was inhabited. A
                  spacious bay soon opened to our view, with a fine beach; and the land about it,
                  was to all appearance, extremely populous and fertile. Two small islands were
                  situated in this bay, and we feasted our eyes on the richness of luxuriance of the
                  prospect, where the brightest tints of verdure were profusely spread.</p>

               <p>A great number of natives were observed on the shore, and two canoes put off about
                  noon, paddling towards us, but soon giving over the chace, as we sailed on too
                  fast for them. Beyond the point which included the bay to the north-west, the
                  country lost something of its exuberant fertility, and was interspersed with
                  barren spots, though we saw smokes and habitations on the highest ridges: and at
                  night the mountains were illuminated in different places, by several lines of
                  fires, some of which appeared to extend at least half a mile in length. We passed
                  the north point of Mallicollo during night, and were a good way advanced in
                  Bougainville's passage at day-break on the 24th. <date>[Wednesd. 24.]</date>
                  Mallicollo lies nearly N. N. W. and S. S. E. and the north point is in 15° 50' S.
                  and 167° 23' E. The land which forms the north side of the passage, appeared very
                  extensive, high and mountainous, and a number of small islands lay along its
                  southern coast, which were of a very moderate height, and covered with the finest
                  forests. The continual fair weather which attended this part of our nagivation,
                  made all these beautiful landscapes appear to the greatest advantage; and the
                  pleasure of contemplating a great variety of rich sceneries, made us some amends
                  for the wretchedness of our diet, which at present consisted of no other than the
                  ship's provisions. </p>

               <p>The land which we now saw to the northward, seems to be the same, which that great
                  navigator, captain Quiros, called Tierra Austral del Espiritu Santo, and which at
                  that time, he supposed to make part of a continent. It is not improbable, that the
                  bay of St. Philip and St. Jago, where he anchored, is situated within the small
                  islands, which lie before that great land. We really saw the appearance of a bay
                  within them, but did not stop to examine it, only giving the small islands the
                  name of Bartholemew Isles, from the day on which we saw them.</p>

               <p>We were now entertained once more with the sight of the island of Lepers, and
                  Aurora which remained at a great distance to the east of us. Our course continued
                  to the north along the eastern shore of Tierra del Espiritu Santo, where we still
                  discovered new islands, which were not seen by M. de Bougainville. These small
                  islands, as well as the main land, had all a very fertile aspect, being covered
                  with fine forests, from whence numerous smokes ascended, which were so many signs
                  of a great population. Having passed the night, standing off and on, we came
                  abreast of the northernmost islands the next morning, <date>[Thursday
                  25.]</date>and took notice that even the large land extended no further northward.
                  Most of the small islands were very long, narrow, and bluff at one end, but formed
                  a low flat point, running out to the northward. Their bluff part was commonly
                  white like a chalk-cliff, and it was remarkable that we did not observe any
                  coco-nut trees among their forests, which in some places consisted chiefly of
                  club-wood. As we passed by their northern extremity, they formed a very beautiful
                  prospect, gradually opening from each other, and clear of the main land. Steering
                  to the westward, we passed a projecting point on Tierra del Espiritù Santo, and
                  opened a most spacious bay of which the entrance could be no less than five
                  leagues wide. The depth of the bay was proportioned to the width. The shores on
                  each side seemed to run parallel for the space of seven leagues, at the end of
                  which the bay terminates. A fine beach was seen all along the bottom of it, and
                  the land from thence, for many leagues within the country, consisted of hills of a
                  very moderate height, and extensive populous vallies, which had the appearance of
                  fertility and plenty. We stood over to its western shore where we saw many
                  natives, especially towards the evening; and likewise took notice of a canoe
                  similar to those which we had observed at Mallicollo; it came off, but the people
                  in it kept it at a distance from the ship, and would not come near, though we gave
                  them ever so many invitations. The hill which formed the western shore was rather
                  steep, but however well inhabited, and covered with woods. A low flat point ran
                  out from it a mile or two into the bay, and formed a kind of cove where we wished
                  to come to an anchor, as we were becalmed, and the night was coming on. We sounded
                  several times, but found no bottom with one hundred and thirty, and one hundred
                  and forty fathom, about a mile from the shore. It was soon perfectly dark, and as
                  we only discerned the land by the lights which glimmered through the woods in
                  different places, our situation was beginning to be alarming, and we thought of
                  hoisting out our boats to tow us off, when a faint breeze assisted us to get into
                  the middle of the bay. Here we <date>[Friday 26.]</date>waited for day-light, and
                  then continued to stand in to the southward with light airs, which vanished
                  towards noon. Two boats were sent after dinner to the beach which runs along the
                  bottom of the bay, in order to reconnoitre whether there was any port, or a river,
                  which we could not discern from on board, being still above a league and a half
                  distant. In the mean while three canoes put off from the shore, with triangular
                  sails, and approached the ship very fast. In each of them we observed four or five
                  men, to whom we called, as soon as we thought them within hearing. They were
                  naked, and of the same colour as the Mallicollese; but taller, and more stoutly
                  formed; their hair seemed to be woolly, and their beards frizzled. Some of them
                  had a bunch of feathers on the top of the head, and others wore a white shell tied
                  on the fore-head. On their arms they had bracelets of shell-work, exactly
                  resembling those which we had observed at Mallicollo, and round their middle they
                  wore a narrow belt, from whence a long slip of matted-work, five inches broad,
                  descended to the knees before and behind. One of them had a sago-leaf rolled round
                  his head, forming a kind of airy cap. Their canoes were of indifferent workmanship
                  like those of Mallicollo, and had out-riggers. We saw some spears in them, which
                  had two or three prongs, and were doubtless intended as fish-gigs; but, besides
                  these, the people had no arms whatsoever. They came so near as to accept a present
                  of medals, nails, Taheitee cloth, and red baize; and we could observe them seizing
                  upon the nails with peculiar eagerness, which seems to indicate that they were not
                  wholly unacquainted with them: Quiros perhaps might leave some iron-ware on this
                  island, which has thus acquired a high value among the natives. They fastened a
                  branch of the pepper-plant to the same rope by which we had lowered down the nails
                  to them; but it appeared, that besides this emblem of friendship, they had nothing
                  else to give. We spoke a good deal to them, and they answered from time to time,
                  but neither party understood the other. However, I thought of repeating the
                  numerals in the dialect of the Friendly Islands, and had scarcely begun to count,
                  when they immediately interrupted me, and counted very exactly till ten. We now
                  pointed to the shore, and enquired for the name of the island. They repeated the
                  word Fannoòa, which in the dialect just mentioned signifies land; and called the
                  level district, at the bottom of the bay, Tallaònee, at the same time giving
                  several names for different parts of the country on the sides; but we could not
                  obtain a general name of the island, which we therefore distinguished by that of
                  Tierra del Espiritù Santo, as Quiros had done before. The languages of Mallicollo
                  and Tanna, of which we repeated some words to these people, were either unknown to
                  them, or we pronounced them too improperly to be understood. When they saw our
                  boats coming back from the shore, they left us, it being then near sunset.
                  Lieutenant Pickersgill, who had the command of our boats, reported that he found
                  no soundings before he came within two or three cable's lengths of the shore, but
                  that the bottom was good at this distance. He had found a fine river, which was
                  deep enough for his boat at the entrance, and had landed on one of the banks,
                  whilst a great number of natives appeared in the bushes on the opposite side. He
                  made many signs of friendship, and called and beckoned to them to come over the
                  water; but none of them venturing to accept the invitation, he re-embarked, and
                  returned to the ship. The boats were hoisted in, and a breeze springing up,
                  assisted us to go gradually out of the bay. Captain Cook gave this bay the name of
                  St. Philip and St. Iago; but it is still somewhat doubtful, whether it is the same
                  which Quiros has distinguished by that name; at least the port of Vera Cruz, which
                  according to that Spanish navigator, has room for a thousand ships, is not to be
                  found in it . The eastern point of the entrance was named cape Quiros, and lies in
                  14° 55' S. and 167° 14' E. The western point extends somewhat more to the
                  northward, being in 14° 38' S. and 166° 52' E. and was named cape Cumberland. We
                  were off this point early the next morning, and advanced slowly out of the bay,
                  along the northern coast of the island, being much detained by calms and light
                  airs. Quiros had great reason to extol the beauty and fertility of this country;
                  it is indeed to appearance, one of the finest in the world. Its riches in
                  vegetable productions would doubtless have afforded the botanist an ample harvest
                  of new plants, as next to New Zeeland it was the largest land we had hitherto
                  seen, and had the advantage of having never been examined by other naturalists.
                  But the study of nature was only made the secondary object in this voyage, which,
                  contrary to its original intent, was so contrived in the execution, as to produce
                  little more than a new track on the chart of the southern hemisphere. We were
                  therefore obliged to look upon those moments, as peculiarly fortunate, when the
                  urgent wants of the crew, and the interest of the sciences, happened to
                  coincide.</p>

               <p>A shark was caught in the afternoon, and afforded us a fresh meal. We found a
                  small insect, of the monoculus tribe, upon its back, which much resembled the
                  species in the gills of salmons. A scorpion was likewise dislodged from a shelf,
                  by the accidental removal of a book; some of these creatures having been brought
                  on board at the Society or Friendly Islands with clusters of bananas, on which
                  they sometimes sit. Towards night we made another acquisition; it was a booby, of
                  the sort which Linnӕus calls pelecanus fiber, which had roosted on the
                  main-yard.</p>

               <p>The day following a light air likewise retarded our progress, so that we slowly
                  examined the western coast of Tierra del Espiritù Santo. A variety of fish were
                  observed swimming along side; two albecores were caught, and a single dolphin was
                  struck with the harpoon, after many unsuccessful attempts. The land on this side
                  was high, and the mountains very steep. Many fires were observed at night,
                  probably in order to clear the ground for plantations. Quiros having likewise seen
                  fires on this island, conjectured as we had done at first, that they were feux de
                  joye, and illuminations, on account of the arrival of ships. A southerly breeze
                  springing up, obliged us to tack off and on, during the 30th and 31st, when we
                  reached the S. W. point of the island, which we named Cape Lisburne, and which is
                  situated in 15° 35' S. and 167° E. We stood once more into the passage between
                  Tierra del Espiritù Santo and Mallicollo, in order to complete the circuit of the
                  former. Here we saw the bay which M. de Bougainville has expressed in his map,
                  sheltered by some of the Bartholomew Islands: it did not however appear to be of
                  such great extent as it is there represented. About six in the evening we put
                  about, and stood to the S. S. W. from the New Hebrides, with a S. E. trade-wind.
                  This group of islands, which we had now cursorily examined in the space of
                  forty-six days, seems to be well worth the attention of future navigators,
                  especially if they should ever be sent out upon the liberal plan of making
                  discoveries in all the various branches of science. I will not pretend to say that
                  they would find great riches of silver and pearls, which Quiros was forced to
                  speak of, in order to engage an interested, avaricious court, to support his great
                  and spirited undertakings. These incitements are not necessary now a-days, when
                  several monarchs in Europe have convinced the world that they can institute
                  voyages of discovery, with no other view than the increase of human knowledge, and
                  the improvement of mankind. The sums which some of their predecessors have
                  lavished on parasites, have been found sufficient to make an immense progress,
                  nay, to produce a new and important revolution in the state of the sciences, which
                  have ever required a trifling expence to triumph over the numberless obstacles
                  that ignorance, envy, or superstitution opposed against them. The natural
                  productions of the New Hebrides, exclusive of all kinds of artificial riches, are
                  therefore in my opinion considerable enough to engage the attention of future
                  voyagers. Their volcanoes, their vegetables, and their inhabitants, would provide
                  sufficient employment for a Ferber , a Solander, and many of the historians of
                  mankind.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. September.][Thursday 1.]</date>We proceeded at present to the
                  southward, and prepared to cross the South Sea in its greatest breadth towards the
                  extremity of America; and though our crew were much weakened by living entirely
                  upon salt meat in a hot climate, yet it was intended not to touch at any place by
                  the way; a project, which if it had been put in execution, would doubtless have
                  proved fatal to some of them, whose bad constitution would not prompt them to
                  support such an abstinence. Fortunately, after standing on the same course for
                  three days, we fell in with a large land, which had never been visited by any
                  European navigator before, and which entirely altered the plan of our proceedings
                  for the remaining part of our stay in the South Seas.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. III.</l>

                  <l>Discovery of New Caledonia.-Account of our stay there.-Range along the coast to
                     our departure.-Discovery of Norfolk Island.-Return to New Zeeland.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. September.][Sunday 4.]</date>ON the 4th of September, about seven in
                  the morning, a midshipman at the mast-head discovered land to the south, extending
                  a great way to the westward, and likewise to the south-eastward. It appeared to be
                  very high, and its distance from us was about eight leagues, being seen through a
                  haze, which made it appear farther off than it really was. We had at this time
                  little wind, though fair weather, and therefore advanced slowly towards this new
                  and unexpected coast. M. de Bougainville takes notice of meeting with a part of
                  the sea which was entirely smooth , and where several pieces of wood and fruits
                  floated past his ship. This was nearly to the N. W. of the land which we now
                  discovered, and which, as an able and intelligent navigator, he had conjectured to
                  lie in that direction.</p>

               <p>A calm, which happened after noon, entirely stopped our progress towards the land,
                  to which we were now near enough to discern several smokes, sufficient to prove
                  that it was inhabited. An officer at the mast-head likewise entertained us with
                  the hope of seeing another volcano, of which he said he had seen the smoke
                  bursting out. He must, however, have been deceived by appearances, as we never
                  afterwards saw any volcanic production upon this island. The point which had first
                  been seen, was named after the midshipman, Cape Colnett , and is situated in 20°
                  30' south, and 165° 2' east. The whole land, appearing to be very extensive, was
                  honoured with the appellation of Nova Caledonia . We could not wait the moment
                  which should make us acquainted with the inhabitants of this land, but formed
                  several conjectures relative to them. As we had found the inhabitants of the New
                  Hebrides not only entirely distinct from the New Zeelanders, but also different
                  amongst themselves, this new country offered itself to our eyes very opportunely
                  in order to account for the population of New Zeeland; but the sequel convinced us
                  that our ideas were very premature on this subject, and that the history of the
                  human species in the South Seas cannot yet be unravelled with any degree of
                  precision.</p>

               <p>Before it was dark, three sailing canoes were seen coming off from the shore.
                  Perhaps the natives had taken our ship to be a canoe, and upon this supposition
                  had mistaken the distance, for soon after they put about and returned. The land to
                  the westward seemed to be divided into several islands, and a-head of the ship we
                  observed some breakers, which gave us reason to conclude that a reef of coral
                  surrounded the land at a considerable distance from it.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 5.]</date>Early the next morning, having a fine breeze, we stood
                  towards the shore, and soon discovered the reef, which ran parallel to the coast,
                  at the distance of three leagues. Within it we saw several canoes, each provided
                  with two large sails, one behind the other, and some natives on board of them
                  employed in fishing. A few other canoes put off from the shore some time after,
                  and, passing the reef, came towards the ship. We called to them as soon as we
                  could be heard, but they only looked at us, and soon returned the way they came,
                  making however no unfriendly gestures. Having observed an entrance into the reef
                  we hoisted two boats out, which we sent to sound. In a little time they made the
                  signal of having found a convenient and safe passage into the smooth water within
                  the reef, and we could observe them conversing upon very amicable terms with a
                  canoe full of the natives.1 Our ship stood into this smooth bason through a gap in
                  the reef, which was about a mile in breadth. The natives laid some of their canoes
                  on both sides of the passage, in a place where it was narrow, and beckoned to us
                  to keep in the middle between, which gave us a very high opinion of their friendly
                  and open disposition.2 Our boats still continued to proceed a-head of us, sounding
                  from time to time, and making signals of the depth of water. The face of the
                  country looked rather barren as we approached, and was covered with a dry whitish
                  grass. Trees were very sparingly scattered on the mountains, and seemed all to
                  have white stems, and to resemble willows; nor was any kind of shrubberies or
                  underwood to be seen. Coming nearer, we discovered a small border of flat land at
                  the foot of the hills, covered with green and tufted trees and bushes, amongst
                  which we saw now and then a coco-nut palm and a banana-tree. Some houses likewise
                  appeared, which had the shape of conical or round bee-hives, with a hole for the
                  entrance, and exactly resembled the houses which are represented in Le Maire's and
                  Schouten's voyage, and which they saw on Cocos and Hoorne Island .</p>

               <p>Lieutenant Pickersgill, who had been out in the boat, now returned on board, and
                  told us that the people in the canoes had been extremely friendly towards him, and
                  shewed him one of their number whom they named Teà-booma , and stiled their
                  arèekee , or king.3 He gave him some medals and other trifles, and likewise
                  presented the other people in the canoe with the same; but they all delivered what
                  they received immediately into the hands of Teà-booma. Mr. Pickersgill brought on
                  board four or five fish, of which these good people had made him a present; but
                  unfortunately they were already putrid and unfit to be eaten.</p>

               <p>We saw a small islet in the harbour, surrounded by reefs and shoals, near which we
                  let go our anchor in a good bottom. This was no sooner done than we were
                  surrounded by about twenty canoes, each of which was provided with sails, and
                  consisted of two hulls, connected by a platform of boards, on which lay a heap of
                  soil and ashes, where the natives kept a constant fire. Many of these people
                  immediately came on board, placing perfect confidence in us, and one of them
                  exchanged a yam for a small bit of red cloth. We sat down to dinner, and a number
                  of the natives were our spectators. They ate very heartily of the yams which we
                  had obtained at Tanna, but refused to touch our salt pork, or to drink a drop of
                  wine. Unfortunately, yams were such a rarity upon our table, that we could not
                  conveniently part with them. They admired every thing that had a red colour,
                  particularly red cloth or baize, but did not choose to give us any thing in
                  exchange. Their language, if we except the word areekee and one or two more, had
                  no affinity with any one of the various languages which we had heard in the South
                  Sea before. This was the more surprising to us, as we had found one language, or
                  at least dialects of it, in all the easterly islands of the South Sea, as well as
                  at New Zeeland.5 The people were likewise different from any we had seen. They
                  were very stout, tall, and in general well proportioned; their features mild,
                  their beards and hair black and strongly frizzled, so as to be almost woolly in
                  some individuals, and their general colour swarthy or a dark chestnut brown,
                  nearly the same with that of the people of Tanna.</p>

               <p>After dinner we proceeded to a flat point on the shore, where we saw a great croud
                  of the natives assembled. Two boats filled with people went on this expedition,
                  and among them were twelve marines, well armed. We landed without the least
                  opposition among the natives, some of whom were armed, but others entirely
                  defenceless. Our marines drew up in a line, whilst we went up and down before
                  them, and desired the natives to give us some room, to which they readily
                  consented. A handsome young man, who, according to Mr. Pickersgill, was the chief
                  Teà-booma, held a speech almost as soon as we had stepped ashore. Previous to
                  this, another of the natives pronounced some words very loud, upon which a general
                  silence immediately ensued. The speech was very moderate, though serious, and from
                  time to time delivered in a loud tone. Sometimes the orator seemed to propose
                  several questions, which were always answered by some old men in the croud, and
                  the whole lasted two or three minutes. A little while after another chief arrived,
                  who likewise held a speech of the same nature to us; after which we mixed freely
                  in the croud, and had an opportunity of examining their arms and ornaments. Our
                  principal enquiry, which we expressed by signs, was whether they had any fresh
                  water, upon which some pointed to the west, but the greatest number to the
                  eastward. Their persons were tall and wholly of that character which I observed in
                  those who came on board at first. Many of them, however, had prodigious thick legs
                  and arms, which seemed to be affected by a kind of leprosy.6 They all went naked,
                  only tying a string round the middle, and another round the neck. A little piece
                  of brown cloth, made of the bark of a fig-tree, which is sometimes tucked up to
                  the belt, and sometimes pendulous, scarcely deserves the name of a covering; it
                  seems indeed not to be intended for a veil, any more than the contrivance of the
                  Mallicollese, and in the eyes of Europeans would rather be reckoned obscene than
                  decent. Every inhabitant of this island, therefore, like the natives of Tanna and
                  Mallicollo, was an ambulant figure of the Roman Garden-God.7 The ideas of modesty
                  are different in every country, and change in different periods of time. Where all
                  men go naked, for instance on New Holland , custom familiarizes them to each
                  other's eyes, as much as if they went wholly muffled up in garments. The
                  fashionable dresses and suits of armour which were worn in the fifteenth and
                  sixteenth century at every European court, would at present be looked upon as the
                  most indecent that can possibly be contrived; and yet who will dare to assert
                  this, or defame the virtuous characters of the invincible knights of that time, so
                  famous for chastity, honour, and gallantry,-because they wore breeches made after
                  the fashions of the times ?</p>

               <p>The same piece of cloth, which the natives of New Caledonia have made so
                  conspicuous, is sometimes of such a length, that the extremity is fastened to the
                  string round the neck. To this string they also hang small round beads, of a pale
                  green nephritic stone, which is of the same species with that of Tanna, and nearly
                  related to that of New Zeeland. On their heads many among them wear black
                  cylindrical caps, made of a very coarse matted work, and entirely open at both
                  ends, being only a kind of stiff cloth, formed by a longitudinal seam into a
                  cylinder, which has some resemblance to the cap of an hussar.8 The chiefs had
                  ornamented theirs with many small red plumes, and at the top with long black
                  cock's feathers. In their ears, of which the extremity is stretched to a great
                  length, and the whole cartilage cut out, as at Easter Island, they hang great
                  numbers of tortoise-shell rings, as is customary at Tanna, and sometimes place a
                  scroll, made of a sugar-cane leaf, in the hole. Their arms were clubs, spears and
                  slings. The former were of different shapes and woods, but in general rather
                  short, seldom exceeding three feet in length, and resembling that sort of the
                  clubs of Tanna, which is made of the casuarina. Their ends are cut out in stars
                  and various knobs, and some are formed almost like a scythe or pick-axe, with a
                  very short handle. Their spears are fifteen or twenty feet long, and black, or
                  blackened over; and the best of them, somewhat before the middle, have a
                  prominence, which is carved so as to bear a rude resemblance to a human face. They
                  throw them by the assistance of such short cords, knobbed at one end and looped at
                  the other, as are usual at Tanna, and which seamen call beckets. Those of New
                  Caledonia were of superior workmanship, and contained a quantity of red wool,
                  which we should have taken for the covering of a new sort of animal, if we had not
                  formerly seen the vampyre, or great Indian bat, from whence it was taken. Their
                  last weapons were slings, for bows and arrows were wholly unknown to them.9 These
                  slings consisted of a slender round cord, no thicker than a packthread, which had
                  a tassel at one end, and a loop at the other end and in the middle. The stones
                  which they used were oblong, and pointed at each end, being made of a soft and
                  unctuous soap-rock (smectites), which could easily be rubbed into that shape.
                  These exactly fitted the loop in the middle of the sling, and were kept in a
                  wallet or pocket of coarse cloth, strongly woven, of a kind of grass, which was
                  tied on about the middle. Their shape gives them a striking resemblance to the
                  glandes plumbeœ of the Romans .</p>

               <p>Captain Cook being desirous to find a watering-place, soon returned to the boats,
                  and proceeded along shore to the eastward, where he saw the whole coast lined with
                  mangroves, growing in shallow water, and in swampy or marshy ground. The natives
                  on the beach, seeing us put off, dispersed immediately, and went to their several
                  homes. Two of them were seen walking with great difficulty along the mangroves;
                  for which reason we rowed towards them, and took them into the boat. After we had
                  proceeded near two miles, these two men pointed out an entrance between the
                  mangroves, which looked like a river. As it was deep enough for our boats, we went
                  in, and soon perceived, that, after several turns and windings, it led to a few
                  habitations. In our way we saw some of the natives standing on the shore, and a
                  flock of wild ducks passing over our heads at the same time. I killed one of them,
                  which one of our friends in the boat was so desirous of possessing, that we
                  readily made him a present of it. He, as well as those on shore, expressed some
                  admiration on observing the effect of our fire-arms, but did not betray the
                  smallest symptom of fear. Before we reached their houses, we repeated the
                  experiment, much to their satisfaction, and were very well pleased to give them an
                  idea of our power, by such innocent means.10 At last, the river being not above
                  twelve yards11 wide, we landed on its banks, which were raised about two feet
                  above the water, it being near the flood tide. Here we found a few small families,
                  with their wives and children, who all came familiarly about us, without the least
                  marks of distrust or ill-will. The women were in general of a dark chesnut, or
                  sometimes mahogany brown colour; their stature was middle-sized, some being rather
                  tall, and their whole form very stout, and somewhat clumsy. Their dress was the
                  most disfiguring that can be imagined, and gave them a thick squat shape. It was a
                  short petticoat or fringe, consisting of filaments or little cords about eight
                  inches long, which were fastened to a very long string, which they had tied
                  several times round the waist. The filaments or little ropes therefore lay above
                  each other in several layers, forming a kind of thick thatch all round the body,
                  which did not cover above a third part of the thigh. These filaments were
                  sometimes dyed black; but frequently those on the outside only were of that
                  colour, whilst the rest had a dirty straw-colour. They wore shells, ear-rings, and
                  bits of nephritic stones, like the men; and some had three black lines
                  longitudinally from the under-lip to the chin, which had been punctured by the
                  same methods practised at the Friendly and Society Islands. Their features were
                  coarse, but expressed great good-nature. The forehead in general was high, the
                  nose broad and flat at the root, and the eyes rather small. Their cheek-bones were
                  very prominent, and the cheeks commonly plump. Their hair was frizzled, and often
                  cut short, as among the natives of the Society and Friendly Islands. The huts,
                  which stood about ten yards from the banks of the river, on a little rising, were
                  of a conical shape, about ten feet high, but not pointed at the top. Their
                  innermost skeleton consisted of several poles placed nearly upright, and connected
                  together by twisted sticks like hurdles. Over these we found a covering of matts
                  from top to bottom, and upon that a thick and well-contrived thatch of straw. What
                  little light there is in these houses, comes in through the entrance, which is a
                  hole about four feet high; so that the inhabitants must stoop to go in or out. We
                  found them full of smoke, and saw a heap of ashes in the entrance; and concluded
                  that they were obliged to light fires, in order to drive away the mosquitoes,
                  which must infest the swamps in the neighbourhood; though this day being rather
                  cool, we saw but few. The huts were surrounded by a small number of coco-palms,
                  destitute of fruit, some sugar-canes, bananas, and eddoes, which the natives had
                  supplied with water by several little trenches. Some of the eddoes were actually
                  set under water, in the same manner as is customary throughout the South Sea
                  Islands.12 The whole plantation, however, had a very scanty appearance, and seemed
                  to be insufficient to afford nourishment to the inhabitants throughout the year.
                  We entirely missed that variety of fruits, which we had hitherto met with in the
                  tropical islands, and naturally recollected the poverty of the inhabitants of
                  Easter Island, above whom it appeared, that the people before us enjoyed but few
                  advantages. A native named Heebai, seemed to be the principal man among the few
                  families which were here assembled; we made him some presents, and walked about on
                  the banks of the river towards the mangroves, meeting with a new plant by the way.
                  Towards the hills, of which the first risings were at the distance of about two
                  miles, the country looked extremely dreary; here and there indeed, we saw a few
                  trees, and small cultivated spots, but they appeared to be lost on the great
                  extent of barren and unprofitable country, which resembled our moors more than
                  anything else.13 Upon a large heap of embers and ashes before the huts, lay a
                  round earthen pot, which could hold four or five gallons. It was very clumsily
                  shaped, had a large belly, and consisted of a reddish substance, which was totally
                  covered with soot both without and within. After a short stay with the good people
                  of this spot, whose provisions were doubtless so scanty, that they could not spare
                  any for us, we reimbarked in our boats. The natives came along side early the next
                  morning in their canoes. They had fires upon every canoe, having laid some stones
                  and ashes on the platform, to prevent any accident. There were some women in the
                  boats, who did not come into the ship, but many of the men came in without
                  invitation, and began to sell their arms for pieces of Taheitee cloth.</p>

               <p>The boats were sent ashore again in search of a nearer watering-place. We landed
                  at the same point, where we had made our first landing the day before. Here we met
                  with a few inhabitants, who on our making enquiry for fresh-water, pointed to the
                  westward where we had not yet been. We walked along the beach, which was here
                  sandy, and bounded by a fine wild shrubbery: we soon came to a hut, from whence a
                  number of plantations extended to the back of the beach and wild wood. We rambled
                  into the country, and came to a canal that watered this plantation, but of which
                  the water was very brackish. From hence however, we ran immediately to an eminence
                  near us, where the nature of the country appeared evidently changed. The plain was
                  covered with a thin stratum of vegetable soil, which being very poor was manured
                  in the plantations with broken shells and corals. The eminence on the contrary was
                  a rocky ground, consisting of large pieces of quartz and glimmer (mica ). Here
                  grew a quantity of dry grasses, about two or three feet high, very thin in most
                  places; and at the distance of fifteen or twenty yards asunder, we saw large trees
                  black at the root, but with a bark perfectly white and loose, and having narrow
                  long leaves like our willows. They were of the sort which Linné calls melaleuca
                  leucadendra, and Rumphius arbor alba, who says that the natives of the Moluccas
                  make the oil of cayputi,14 from the leaves, which are indeed extremely fragrant
                  and aromatic . Not the least shrub was to be seen on this eminence, and the trees
                  did not intercept the distant prospect. We discerned from hence a line of tufted
                  trees and shrubberies, which extended from the sea-side towards the mountains, and
                  immediately concluded that they stood on the banks of a rivulet. We walked past a
                  few other plantations, and soon found the rivulet we sought, which about two
                  hundred yards from the sea, was unmixed with salt-water, so that we could fill our
                  casks without much trouble. Here we saw the chief Teabooma, and gave him several
                  medals and other trifles, for which he made us a present of a sling, and some
                  clubs. The banks of the river were lined with mangroves, beyond which a few other
                  sorts of plants and trees occupied a space of fifteen or twenty feet, which had a
                  layer of vegetable mould, charged with nutritive moisture, and covered with a
                  green bed of grasses, where the eye gladly reposed itself after viewing a parched
                  prospect. The border of shrubberies and wild trees which lined the sea shore, was
                  the most advantageous to us as naturalists; here we met with some unknown plants,
                  and saw a great variety of birds of different classes, which were for the greatest
                  part entirely new. But the character of the inhabitants, and their friendly,
                  inoffensive behaviour towards us, gave us greater pleasure than all the rest. We
                  found their numbers very inconsiderable, and their habitations very thinly
                  scattered.15 They commonly had built two or three houses near each other, under a
                  group of very lofty fig-trees, of which the branches were so closely entwined,
                  that the sky was scarcely visible through the foliage, and the huts were involved
                  in a perpetual cool shade. They had another advantage besides, from this pleasant
                  situation; for numbers of birds continually twittered in the tufted tops of the
                  tree, and hid themselves from the scorching beams of the sun. The wild note of
                  some species of creepers was very agreeable, and conveyed a sensible pleasure to
                  every one who delighted in this kind of artless harmony. The inhabitants
                  themselves were commonly seated at the foot of these trees, which had this
                  remarkable quality, that they shot long roots from the upper part of the stem,
                  perfectly round, as if they had been made by a turner, into the ground, ten,
                  fifteen, and twenty feet from the tree, and formed a most exact strait line, being
                  extremely elastic, and as tense as a bow-string prepared for action. The bark of
                  these trees seems to be the substance of which they make those little bits of
                  cloth, so remarkable in their dress. They communicated a number of words of their
                  language to us, which had no affinity with those we had learnt before in other
                  islands; a circumstance sufficient to discourage the greatest and most
                  indefatigable genealogist. Their temper seemed to be as indolent, as it was
                  good-natured and harmless. It was very rare indeed, that any one of them chose to
                  follow us on our rambles; if we passed by their huts, and talked to them, they
                  answered us, but if we went on without addressing them, they took no farther
                  notice of us. The women were rather more curious, and sometimes strayed in the
                  bushes to observe us, but would not venture to come near, except in the presence
                  of the men.</p>

               <p>We shot a number of birds, without giving the least offence by this amusement to
                  any of the natives; on the contrary, when we came near their houses, the young men
                  readily pointed them out to us. It appeared that they had very little occupation
                  at this time of the year, having now prepared the ground, and planted roots and
                  bananas, of which they expected a new crop the ensuing summer. Perhaps from the
                  same reason, they were at present more unable than at any other time, to part with
                  their provisions to us, though their insuspicious, open disposition, gave us the
                  greatest room to believe that they were not strangers to the principles of
                  hospitality, which render all the natives of the South Sea so amiable in the eyes
                  of their visitors.</p>

               <p>We walked about till noon, when the boats returned on board with a load of water,
                  having only left a small party with the casks; a precaution, which the honesty of
                  the natives perhaps did not render necessary. Mr. Wales, our astronomer, had in
                  the meanwhile fixed some instruments on the little sandy islet, in order to
                  observe an eclipse of the sun, which happened this day. The captain joined him
                  there, and from this, as well as subsequent observations, they deduced the
                  situation of this little island to be in 20° 15' S. and 164° 40' E.</p>

               <p>In the evening we went on shore with captain Cook to the watering-place. The
                  cayputi-trees (melaleuca), of which we found several in flower, had a loose bark,
                  which in many places burst off from the wood, and concealed within it beetles,
                  ants, spiders, lizards, and scorpions. We thought we observed quails among the
                  tall dry grasses this day, but could not be certain; we walked about till sunset,
                  on the hillocks nearest to our watering-place, where we saw but very few natives,
                  who sold some of their arms to us. We endeavoured to represent to them that we
                  stood in need of provisions, but they lent a deaf ear to every hint of that kind,
                  since it was plain they had barely enough for their own subsistence. The soil of
                  New Caledonia is indeed very unfit for agriculture, and poorly rewards the labours
                  which the natives bestow upon it.</p>

               <p>Early in the morning, before any natives come on board, we sent a boat to the
                  offing with the body of one of our seamen, who had acted as butcher on board the
                  ship, but died the day before, of a hurt which he had received on the 5th of
                  September by a fall. He was a laborious man, indefatigable in his employment,
                  though he seemed to be near sixty years old. This was the third man whom we lost
                  on this voyage, one having been drowned, and another dying of a dropsy.</p>

               <p>We set out with the captain, the master, two midshipmen, and three sailors, after
                  breakfast, and ascended the hills from whence the rivulet sprung, at which we
                  watered. We found a convenient path all the way, though the mountain was very
                  steep in some place. The rock was every where of the same nature; it was always a
                  mixture of a kind of glimmer and quartz, more or less tinged with an ochreous or
                  reddish colour, which owed its origin to particles of iron. We found the cayputi
                  trees all the way up; but as we came higher, we met with various sorts of shrubs,
                  though thinly scattered, which offered new species of flowers to our eyes. The
                  higher we came, the more the trees dwindled into shrubs, except in a few deep
                  glens, where we observed some small rills gushing down, which fertilized the
                  ground so much, that a variety of plants shot up in them with luxuriance. We had
                  not ascended an hour, when we met a body of near two hundred men of the natives
                  descending, most of them well armed, who seemed to have come on purpose to see the
                  strangers. The greater part turned back with us, seeing us advance towards the
                  summit of the hill. Being near the summit, we stopped to look at some stakes
                  placed here and there in the ground, with dry branches of trees and dry grasses
                  laid across them. The natives told us they buried their dead on this hill, and
                  that the stakes indicated the places where every one was interred.17 In the
                  meanwhile, captain Cook, with the master, had reached the summit of the hill, from
                  whence he beheld the sea on the south side, at no greater distance from the
                  mountains than that to the north. A plain appeared on that side watered by various
                  rivulets, and some plantations could be discerned; but upon the whole, no material
                  difference was observed between the two sides of the ridge. The natives seeing us
                  very dry, and tired by the immense heat of the day, brought us some sugar-canes,
                  though I cannot conceive where they found them so soon, as we could not see, or
                  indeed suppose, any growing in the neighbourhood. The tops of the hills were
                  almost entirely barren, but still consisted of the same kind of stone, which
                  seemed to indicate, that New Caledonia contains some valuable minerals.18 Their
                  height, from the time which the ascent took up, and all other circumstances
                  considered, appears not to be very considerable, and must be inferior to the
                  height of the Table-mountain at the Cape of Good Hope, which, according to abbè la
                  Caille , is said to be 3350 Rhinland feet high. We descended by a different path,
                  which was more steep and rugged than the first, but likewise brought us down on
                  the plain in a much shorter time. We found a number of plantations on that part of
                  the plain where we came down, which was a considerable way to the westward of our
                  watering-place. A few habitations of the natives were situated in the midst of
                  these cultivated spots, without being sheltered against the sun. Their inhabitants
                  came out, and offered us some cups full of fresh water, which the heat rendered
                  very acceptable. This friendly action is fully sufficient to prove that the people
                  have a kind and hospitable disposition, which nothing but their indigence, and
                  their ungrateful soil, prevented them from manifesting in a more striking manner.
                  In our polished regions we sometimes see real generosity shine through the cracks
                  of a ruinous cottage, while it faintly glimmers in sumptuous palaces.</p>

               <p>Having rejoined our watering party, we returned on board, where we found a number
                  of natives, who visited every part of the ship, and disposed of their clubs,
                  spears, and ornaments. One among them was prodigiously tall, and seemed at least
                  six feet five inches high, and the black cylindrical cap which he wore, made him
                  appear at least eight inches higher. Many of these caps were ornamented with the
                  feathers of the Ceylonese owl, which is also to be met with here and in the woods
                  of Tanna; and it was almost a general custom to tie the sling round them, letting
                  the tassel hang down on the shoulder. Fern leaves were likewise no uncommon
                  ornament about these caps, which the natives sold us for Taheitee cloth, though
                  they set a great value upon them. The number of ear-rings, which many of them
                  wore, was remarkable; we observed one who had no less than eighteen, made of
                  tortoise-shell, an inch in diameter, and a quarter of an inch in breadth. They
                  brought a musical instrument, a kind of whistle, for sale this day. It was a
                  little polished piece of brown wood, about two inches long, shaped like a bell,
                  though apparently solid, with a rope fixed at the small end. Two holes were made
                  in it near the base, and another near the insertion of the rope, all which had
                  some communication with each other, and by blowing in the uppermost, a shrill
                  sound, like whistling, was formed at the other. Besides this, we never observed
                  any instrument among them which had the least relation to music. They had now
                  begun to take our large spike-nails; but seeing some round iron bolts in the ship,
                  to which some of the cordage is fastened (commonly called belaying-pins), they
                  constantly shewed a great desire of possessing them. They did not attempt to take
                  the least trifle by stealth, behaving with the strictest honesty and propriety on
                  board. Many came swimming from the shore, which was better than a mile off,
                  holding their piece of brown cloth out of the water with one hand, whilst with the
                  other they moved forwards, and brought with them a spear, or a club, though not of
                  the sort which is made of casuarina wood, that being too heavy to be conveyed in
                  such a manner.</p>

               <p>We embarked in a boat after dinner, and landed near two miles to the west of our
                  watering-place, on a point which formed the bay where our ship lay at anchor. Here
                  captain Cook took some bearings, whilst we pursued our researches. Immediately on
                  the beach we found a large irregular mass of rock, not less than a cube of ten
                  feet, which consisted of a close-grained horn-stone, speckled full of garnets,
                  somewhat bigger than pins heads. This discovery confirmed what we had before
                  conjectured, viz. that there was some probability of meeting with rich and useful
                  minerals upon this island, which, as far as we saw, distinguished itself from all
                  those we had hitherto examined in the South Seas, in being entirely destitute of
                  volcanic productions.19 From this rock we struck into the woods which lined the
                  shore, and which happened to be very thick in this part to a short distance on all
                  sides. Here we found a few young bread-fruit-trees, not yet sufficiently grown to
                  bear fruit; but they seemed to have come up without culture, and were perhaps
                  indigenous wild trees of the country. We likewise met with a new species of
                  passion-flower, which was chiefly extraordinary on this account, that all its
                  species formerly known to the learned world were confined to America. I separated
                  from my company during this search, and came into a hollow sandy way, which was
                  hung with bindweeds and sweet-scented shrubs on both sides, and seemed to have
                  been the bed of a torrent or rivulet. It brought me to a group of two or three
                  huts, surrounded by coco-nut trees. Before one of them I observed a man seated
                  with a little girl of eight or ten years old on his lap, and examining her head.
                  He was somewhat surprised at sight of me, but presently recovering his
                  tranquillity, proceeded in his occupation. He had a piece of fine transparent
                  quartz in his hand, which having a very sharp edge, he made use of instead of
                  scissars to cut the girl's hair. I made her a present of some black beads, and
                  also gave him a few, with which he seemed much pleased. I now went on to the other
                  huts, and found two placed so near together, as to inclose an area of about ten
                  feet square, which was partly shut in with a fence. Here I found three women, one
                  middle-aged, and the others somewhat younger, who made a fire under one of those
                  large earthen pots which I have already mentioned. As soon as they saw me, they
                  made signs that I should leave them; however, being desirous to see their method
                  of cooking, I came in, and saw that they had stuffed the pot full of dry grasses
                  and green leaves, in which they had wrapped up a few small yams. These roots are
                  therefore in a manner baked in this pot, or undergo the same operation which the
                  natives of Taheitee perform by burying them under a heap of earth, among heated
                  stones. It was with difficulty they would give me time to intrude so far; they
                  repeated their signs that I should go away, and pointing to the huts, moved their
                  fingers several times under their throat; which I interpreted, that if they were
                  observed to be thus alone with a stranger, they would be choaked or killed.20 I
                  left them after they had made this gesture, and peeped into the huts, which I
                  found quite empty. Returning into the wood, I met Dr. Sparrman; and we went to the
                  women again, in order to look at their work once more, and to be convinced whether
                  I had properly interpreted their signs, or whether they had only some particular
                  objection to my appearance. We found them in the same place, and walking up to
                  them, immediately made them a present of some beads, which they accepted with
                  great expressions of joy; but at the same time they repeated the gestures which
                  they had made when I came alone, and looked at us as if they would add entreaties
                  to the signs, with which we immediately complied, and returned. We met the rest of
                  our company some time after, and being athirst, asked the man who cut his
                  daughter's hair for a little water. He shewed us a tree, on which he had hung
                  about a dozen coco-nut shells, filled with fresh water, that element being to all
                  appearance rather scarce in the country. We emptied some of these cups, and made
                  him a present of a bit of Taheitee cloth, with which he seemed to be well pleased.
                  From hence we proceeded to the watering-place, some by land, and some in the boat.
                  We shot some curious birds by the way, with which the country abounds; and among
                  the rest a species of crow, which is common in Europe. At the watering-place we
                  found a considerable number of natives, some of whom, for a little rag of Taheitee
                  cloth, carried our people into and out of their boats about forty yards, the water
                  being too shallow for boats at that distance from the shore. Here we also saw some
                  women, who, far from expressing any dread of the jealousy of their men, came among
                  the croud, and sometimes amused themselves in encouraging the proposals of our
                  seamen. They commonly beckoned them to come into the bushes, but as soon as the
                  sailors followed, they gave them the slip, and ran with such agility, that they
                  could not be overtaken. Thus they took pleasure in disappointing their new
                  adorers, and laughed very heartily as often as they had put their little arts in
                  practice. There was not a single instance, during our stay upon the island, of
                  their ever having condescended to permit any indecent familiarity from an
                  European; an innocent recreation, which shewed them good humoured, and not
                  destitute of ingenuity, was what they strictly adhered to.</p>

               <p>The captain's clerk purchased a fish on shore, for a piece of Taheitee cloth, from
                  one of the natives, who had killed it with a spear. As soon as he came on board,
                  he sent it to the captain; and as I found it to be a new species, I made a drawing
                  and description of it. It was of the genus, by Linnӕus named tetraodon, of which
                  several species are reckoned poisonous.21 We hinted this circumstance to captain
                  Cook, especially as the ugly shape, and large head of the fish, were greatly in
                  its disfavour; but he told us he had eaten this identical sort of fish on the
                  coast of New Holland, during his former voyage, without the least bad
                  consequences. It was accordingly preserved for the next day, and we sat down very
                  chearful, in expectation of a fresh meal. At supper the liver of this fish was
                  served up, which was very large and oily. For this reason the captain, my father,
                  and myself eat only a morsel or two of it, and thought it had no other bad taste,
                  than what arose from the oil. Our messmate, Dr. Sparrman, fortunately did not
                  touch it. We went to bed upon this somewhat early, intending to revisit the shore
                  at day-break; but at three o'clock in the morning, my father awaking, found
                  himself extremely giddy, and his hands and feet entirely, as it were, benumbed. He
                  got up, and was scarcely able to stand. He came into the steerage, where Dr.
                  Sparrman slept, and acquainted him with his illness. Captain Cook's apartment was
                  only separated by a thin partition: he was awake, and feeling the same symptoms of
                  which he heard my father complain, got out of bed, and found himself unable to
                  walk without holding onto something. I was in the same situation, upon being
                  awakened by my father, and crawled into the cabin, where the surgeon, Mr. Patton,
                  immediately appeared, to assist us. Our disorder had indeed a most serious aspect;
                  the blood had left our cheeks, all our limbs were benumbed, and without sensation,
                  and a great degree of languor and oppression had taken place. Emetics were
                  administered, which gave my father and myself some relief, but had not much effect
                  upon captain Cook. We took a sudorific after this, and went to bed again.</p>

               <p>In the morning, about eight, we got up, very giddy and heavy; however I found
                  myself well enough to pass the whole morning in sketching the outlines of six or
                  eight plants, and some birds, which we had collected on our former excursions. Dr.
                  Sparrman, in the mean while, went on shore to collect farther supplies. Towards
                  noon my father endeavoured to converse with some of the natives who came into the
                  ship. At sight of the fish, which was hung under the half-deck, they made signs
                  that it occasioned pain in the stomach, and by leaning their heads upon one hand,
                  and shutting their eyes, expressed that it caused sleep and drowsiness, and death.
                  Still thinking they might only make these gestures in order to obtain the fish, we
                  offered it to them, but they refused it with the strongest marks of aversion,
                  holding both their hands out before them, and turning away the head. They
                  afterwards desired us to throw it into the sea, but we determined to preserve it
                  in spirits of wine.</p>

               <p>I was severely punished about noon for making light of my complaint, and passing
                  the morning at work; for I was suddenly seized with sickness, and forced to go to
                  bed, by a returning fit of dizziness. The only remedies which gave any relief,
                  were sudorifics; but the poison was of too virulent a nature, to be subdued in a
                  short time. It prevented our making those researches, which from the nature of the
                  country before us, would doubtless have teemed with a variety of interesting
                  discoveries in every branch of natural history. <date>[Friday 9.]</date>The next
                  morning lieutenant Pickersgill, was sent with the launch and another boat, to an
                  island to the west, about eight leagues distant, which the natives named Balabeea;
                  in order to examine the situation and direction of the coasts in that part. We saw
                  these boats put off with the greatest regret, being obliged by the continuance of
                  our dizziness, to forego this opportunity of examining an extensive tract of
                  unknown country. Absolute inability to stand or walk longer than five minutes at a
                  time, was the only circumstance which with-held us from embarking on this
                  excursion. The poison which had been thus fatal to us, had likewise affected
                  several dogs, taken on board at the Society Islands; these creatures having seized
                  upon the remains of the liver, were extremely ill, and had the same symptoms as
                  those which were poisoned at Mallicollo. A little pig, the only one which we
                  obtained at Tanna, having eaten the entrails of the fish, died soon after, being
                  swelled to an unusual size.</p>

               <p>The natives who came on board, began now to admire our iron ware, and readily took
                  nails, knives, and hatchets. Tea-booma the chief, sent captain Cook a present of
                  some sugar-canes and yams, which, considering the poverty of the country, was
                  indeed a kingly present. He was complimented in return with a hatchet, a gimlet,
                  and a Taheitian dog of each sex, these animals being entirely unknown in the
                  country. We endeavoured to obtain the name of this great island from the natives,
                  but we could not succeed, being always put off with the appellations of particular
                  districts. Thus for instance, they called the part opposite to the ship, Baladd
                  the observatory island, Poozooe; and the district beyond the hills on the S. W.
                  coast, Teabooma; which being also the name of the chief, occasioned several
                  conjectures. The general name of New Caledonia was therefore preserved,
                  particularly as it suited not only with the good disposition of the people, but
                  also with the nature of the country.</p>

               <p>We ventured, though excessively weakened, to go on shore <date>[Saturday
                     10.]</date>the next morning. Having landed to the eastward of the
                  watering-place, we walked across a part of the plain, which was wholly
                  uncultivated, and covered with thin dry grasses. A path brought us into a fine
                  wood at the foot of the hills, which abounded with new plants, birds, and insects.
                  Every thing conspired here, to make us look upon the country as a solitude. We saw
                  the hills before us, and on both sides, without a single habitation upon them, and
                  the plain which we had crossed, was in this neighbourhood equally destitute of
                  inhabitants. The population of New Caledonia must indeed be extremely thin; for
                  the soil is unfit for cultivation on the mountains, and the narrow plain itself,
                  is for the greatest part very barren and desert. We proceeded to the eastward,
                  till we came near a few houses, placed among swamps. Some of the inhabitants came
                  to us with great good-nature in their countenances, and pointed out the places
                  where we might walk with safety without sinking into the mud. We observed that
                  their houses had not only a covering of mats made of coco-nut leaves, but that the
                  innermost coating sometimes consisted of the bark of the cayputi-tree. Before one
                  of the huts, some of the natives were eating a few leaves which had been stewed;
                  and others sucking the bark of the hibiscus tiliaceus, after they had broiled it
                  over the fire. We tasted of this bark, but found it extremely insipid, nauseous,
                  and affording little nutriment. Necessity seems to have forced the people to
                  content themselves with the most scanty means of subsistence, at certain seasons;
                  and no time of the year is more likely to be severely felt, than that of spring,
                  when their winter shores is exhausted, and the new crop is not yet come up. They
                  doubtless supply the deficiency by fishing, for which the extensive reefs round
                  their island furnish the best opportunity; but since our arrival in the harbour it
                  had blown rather fresh, and the wind daily encreased to such a pitch, that it
                  would have been to no purpose to venture from the shore. Mahine, whilst he
                  accompanied us, frequently used to mention, that even the opulent natives of
                  Taheitee and the Society Islands, sometimes, though rarely, feel the
                  inconveniences of a dry or barren year, and are obliged during some months, to
                  have recourse to fern-roots, the bark of various trees, and the fruit of wild
                  bushes, to satisfy the cravings of hunger.</p>

               <p>We found near these huts a number of tame fowls of a large breed, and bright
                  plumage, which were the only domestic animals of any kind, belonging to the
                  natives; and also saw heaps of shells, which they had collected on the reefs, and
                  of which they had eaten the fish. The temper of these people in general was
                  indolent, and almost destitute of curiosity; the greater part of them did not stir
                  from their seats, when we passed by their huts, spoke very seldom, and almost
                  always in a serious tone. The women were somewhat more cheerful, and those who
                  were married, carried their infants on their backs in a kind of satchel.</p>

               <p>We returned on board about one o'clock, but landed again after dinner. Having
                  observed that the bushes and trees near the sea-side, were better stocked with
                  birds than those in the interior country, because they afforded more shade and
                  more food, we confined our excursion to the plain, being desirous of encreasing
                  our zoological collection. We fell in with another group of huts, close to the
                  water; here the natives had put one of their large earthen pots over the fire, and
                  filled it with shells, of which by this means they roasted the fish. We saw one of
                  them who had a hatchet in his hand, of a very remarkable shape. It was made of a
                  crooked piece of wood, which forms a great knob, but has a short handle, not
                  exceeding six inches. The other end is hollowed out, and a black stone just
                  fitting the cavity is placed in it, without being tied on, as is the case with the
                  hatchets of the Society and Friendly Islands.22 We purchased this hatchet, it
                  being the first instrument relating to agriculture which we had seen in this
                  country. We likewise made an acquisition of some clubs, slings, and spears, and
                  had an opportunity of admiring the skill of several youths, who made use of their
                  slings with the greatest precision. In the course of our rambles, we came to an
                  enclosure of sticks, round a little hillock or mound, four feet high; within the
                  enclosure the natives had stuck in the ground some other sticks beset with large
                  trumpet-shells. We enquired for what purpose this spot was so enclosed, and were
                  told that the chiefs of the district were buried in that ground. As we found
                  numerous burying-places on the hills, it appears to be a general custom with the
                  natives, to commit their dead bodies to the earth. This manner of disposing of the
                  dead, seems indeed much more judicious than that of Taheitee, where they expose
                  them above ground, till all the flesh is perfectly putrified. If the mortality
                  were more considerable, than we have reason to believe it in that happy island,
                  this custom might have the most pernicious consequences, and produce a dreadful
                  epidemical distemper. Europeans, above all, should be extremely cautious of
                  communicating any contagious disorder to the people whom they visit in the South
                  Seas. Such a disease as the small pox, for example, would undoubtedly make
                  dreadful havock, and go near to destroy the whole race of Taheitians.</p>

               <p>The acrimony of the poison which we had received into the body, by tasting the
                  liver of the fish, had so much weakened us, that we were entirely exhausted
                  towards evening, and obliged to sit down repeatedly, in order to recruit our
                  wasted spirits. We still felt returns of dizziness which made us unfit for any
                  kind of researches, in spite of ourselves, and even deprived us of the power of
                  thinking, judging, and remembering, as well as of the perfect use of our external
                  senses. I cannot mention this misfortune, without lamenting once more, that it
                  befell us in a country newly discovered, where we had more need than ever of
                  perfect health, and of all our attention and discernment, in order to make the
                  most of the few moments which we were allowed to spend among a people wholly
                  different from all we had hitherto seen. The reader, who perhaps may find less
                  food for his curiosity in this part of our narrative, than he expected, is
                  requested to consider our unhappy situation at that time, when all our corporeal
                  and intellectual faculties were impaired by this virulent poison. We came back
                  before it was dark to the ship, which the natives left soon after our return. A
                  few of them only went off in canoes; for, as the wind blew very hard, the greatest
                  number had come on board swimming, and returned the same way. We saw forty of
                  fifty put off together, and in spite of the great agitation of the water, swim to
                  the shore; it blew so hard the next morning, however, that none of them came back
                  to the ship.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 11.]</date>We went ashore again, though we were much wetted in our
                  passage thither, and took a walk to the westward. On this excursion we saw a great
                  number of birds, and enriched our collection with many new species. It is not to
                  be doubted, that the vicinity of such an extensive continent as that of New
                  Holland, contributes to encrease the variety of animal and vegetable species in
                  this island. To confirm this assertion, we may quote the testimony of captain
                  Cook, and of all those persons who had seen New Holland with him in the Endeavour,
                  and who, upon examining New Caledonia, unanimously pronounced that in its general
                  appearance it perfectly resembled that continent. New Holland is said to differ
                  from New Caledonia only in having a more fertile soil in some places, consisting
                  of a stratum of vegetable earth; but there is no difference in the growth of the
                  trees, the want of shrubbery in the forests, and the general dryness or parched
                  appearance of the country.24 We stopped at several houses of the natives, situated
                  in a group of shady trees; the inhabitants of these huts were seated on the
                  ground, without any occupation, and none but young people rose from their seats at
                  our approach. We found here a man who had perfectly flaxen hair, a complexion much
                  fairer than common, and his face covered with freckles.25 Anomalous individuals
                  have been found among the Negroes of Africa, and the inhabitants of America, the
                  Moluccas, and the tropical islands of the South Sea; but their weak habit of body,
                  and particularly a weakness in their eyes, have given the greatest room to
                  believe, that a disease of the parents occasioned these varieties . In the man
                  whom we saw, no symptom of weakness, and no defect in the organs of sight could be
                  observed; and therefore some slighter cause must have influenced the colour of his
                  hair and skin. A gentleman cut off a lock of his hair, as well as another from a
                  man of the common colour, and gave them both to us. The natives expressed some
                  dislike on losing their lock of hair, but as he had performed the operation before
                  they were aware, he soon pacified them with a few trifles.26 Their good temper,
                  and their indolence, seem to make their resentment very short-lived, especially
                  upon trifling occasions.</p>

               <p>After leaving these huts, we rambled separately all the morning, and did not
                  rejoin each other till it was time to return. Dr. Sparrman, with my father, had
                  gone upon the hills, whilst I remained in the woody skirts of the plain, and
                  conversed as well as I could with the natives. They gave me the names of many
                  districts upon their island, of which we had not heard before, and of which we
                  could not make use, for want of knowing their proper situations. Here I saw again
                  many individuals with one leg, or arm, of an enormous size, in the same manner as
                  I had observed some at our first landing, (see p. 383.) and one had both his legs
                  afflicted in the same manner. I touched this swelling, and found it extremely
                  hard; but the skin was not harsh and scaly alike in all the sick persons. The
                  preternatural expansion of the leg or arm did not appear to be a great
                  inconvenience to them, and, as far as I understood, they rarely feel any pain in
                  it; but in some the disorder caused a kind of excoriation, and began to form
                  blotches, which were marks of a greater degree of virulence. The leprosy, of which
                  this elephantiasis, or prodigious swelling, according to the opinion of the
                  medical faculty, is a species, seems to be a disease particularly incident to dry,
                  parched climates. The countries where it commits the greatest ravages, as the
                  coast of Malabar, Egypt, Palestine, and all Africa, are remarkable for droughts,
                  and contain in many places vast tracts of sandy desarts. I do not mean to suppose
                  that leprosy is the natural effect of a dry climate, but only to hint, that heat
                  and drought may contribute to make the human body more liable to its attacks. I
                  observed this day that the women of New Caledonia are hardly so much esteemed by
                  the men as those of Tanna. They commonly kept at a distance from the men, and
                  seemed fearful of offending them by a look or gesture; they were the only persons
                  in the family who had any employment, and several of them brought bundles of
                  sticks and fuel on their backs. Their insensible husbands seldom deigned to look
                  upon them, and continued in a kind of phlegmatic indolence, whilst the women
                  sometimes indulged that social cheerfulness, which is the distinguishing ornament
                  of the sex. Thus, in every country, mankind are fond of being tyrants, and the
                  poorest Indian, who knows no wants but those which his existence requires, has
                  already learnt to enslave his weaker helpmate, in order to save himself the
                  trouble of supplying those wants, and cruelly exacts an obedience from her, which
                  has been continued among savages as a curse upon the sex . Considering these
                  humiliations and cruel oppressions of the sex, we have sometimes the greatest
                  reason to admire, that the human race has perpetuated itself, and that the Creator
                  has wisely planted a motive in the female breast, which stands the test of every
                  outrage, which makes them patient to suffer, and prevents their withdrawing from
                  the power of their tyrants.</p>

               <p>After dining on board, we passed the afternoon ashore again, and were so far
                  successful in our researches, as to obtain a beautiful species of parrot, which
                  was entirely new to zoologists. It was shot in a plantation far exceeding every
                  thing I had seen upon New Caledonia for extent, as well as for the variety and
                  flourishing state of the vegetables in it. There were several walks of bananas,
                  several fields of yams and eddoes, together with sugar-canes, and likewise some
                  species of yamboo-trees (eugenia), which we had never seen before. Different parts
                  of it were separated by paths, and the whole was kept in good order. Industrious
                  individuals are therefore to be met with even among these indolent people; and
                  when navigators have an opportunity of becoming the benefactors of savages, for
                  example, by giving them domestic animals, they should select such people as are
                  most likely to make a good use of their presents.</p>

               <p>We returned on board in the evening, after shooting at a mark to amuse some of the
                  natives, who set up their clubs for that purpose, and were much pleased with our
                  supposed skill. Soon after arrived the two boats with lieutenant Pickersgill had
                  conducted to the westward, and which had been detained by contrary winds. We were
                  fortunate enough to collect the following particulars of that intelligent
                  officer's excursion. Having set out from the ship, he did not approach the shore
                  till he had advanced several leagues, and saw many turtles on the water, of which
                  he could not strike one, on account of the violence of the wind. The boats putting
                  ashore, found the face of the country, towards the N. W. end of the island, very
                  like the part opposite our anchoring place, though considerably more fertile and
                  cultivated, and covered with many coco-trees. The natives were as civil and
                  inoffensive in this place as we had found them from the beginning. Two of them,
                  who had already been on board the ship, hearing that our people intended to cross
                  over to the isle of Balabeea, more to the northward, took a passage in the cutter.
                  One of them, whose name was Boobik, was a merry fellow, different in this respect
                  from most of his countrymen; he talked a great deal to our people at first, and
                  taught them his name, which they pronounced booby, with the same pleasure with
                  which he heard it. After some time, however, the waves rising, and frequently
                  washing into the boat, he became very silent, and crept into a boat-cloak, to
                  screen himself from the wet, and recover from the chilliness which the wind
                  occasioned on his naked body. He likewise grew very hungry, having taken no
                  provisions with him, and very thankfully received what our people offered him. His
                  situation, and that of all his companions, however, became very soon alarming to
                  the highest degree. The cutter sprung a leak, which admitted such quantities of
                  water, that it was impossible to free the boat, though every body baled with his
                  hat, or such utensil as he could find most fit for the purpose. They were
                  presently reduced to heave over-board a cask of fresh water, and many other
                  articles, in order to lighten the boat; but all was to no purpose, till having
                  cleared away some bundles, they found the leak, which they stopped as well as they
                  could for the present with their caps, and with rags, and proceeded for the isle
                  of Balabeea with all possible dispatch. Mr. Pickersgill, in the launch, met a
                  canoe of that island with a few natives, who had caught a large quantity of fish,
                  of which they readily shared out a part to him for a trifling consideration of
                  iron-ware. It was late in the afternoon when he arrived upon the island. The
                  natives, being exactly of the same race as those of New Caledonia, were not less
                  good-tempered, and freely parted with their arms to our people for trifles of
                  iron-ware, or Taheitee cloth. They also, at the desire of Mr. Pickersgill, brought
                  him some fresh water.</p>

               <p>In the evening our party retired to a few bushes, and made a great fire, by which
                  they broiled the fish which had been presented to them, and ate their suppers. A
                  number of the natives still remained with them, and spoke of a great land to the
                  northward, which they called Mingha, of which the inhabitants were their enemies,
                  and very warlike. They likewise pointed out a sepulchral mound or tumulus, where
                  one of their chiefs lay buried, who had been killed in defence of his own country,
                  by the hand of a native of Mingha.27 The appearance of a large beef-bone, which
                  some of our people began to pick towards the conclusion of their supper,
                  interrupted this conversation. The natives talked very loud and earnestly to each
                  other, looked with great surprize, and some marks of disgust, at our people, and
                  at last went away all together, expressing by signs that they suspected the
                  strangers of eating human flesh. Our officer endeavoured to free himself and his
                  shipmates from this suspicion; but the want of language was an unsurmountable
                  obstacle to this undertaking, even supposing it possible to persuade a set of
                  people, who had never seen a quadruped in their lives. The next morning they went
                  about to mend their boat, and spread their wet cloaths upon the ground to dry in
                  the sun. The natives gathered about them in great crouds from all parts of the
                  island, and Mr. Pickersgill found it adviseable to draw lines on the sand, in
                  order to secure the cloaths of his people. The natives very readily came into his
                  proposal, and never crossed the lines. One of them, however, seemed to be more
                  surprised than all the rest at this contrivance, and with a great deal of humour
                  drew a circle round about himself, on the ground, with a stick; and intimated, by
                  many ludicrous gestures, that every body present should keep at a distance from
                  him. This little sally was the more striking, as it was extremely uncommon among
                  the grave inhabitants of these countries. They spent the day in repairing their
                  boats, and examining the island on which they had landed; and the next morning
                  before day-break put off, in order to return. They were, however, unfortunate
                  enough to find their repairs to little purpose, and therefore, in order to lighten
                  the boat, landed on New Caledonia at six in the morning. They left only the rowers
                  in the boat, and proceeded on foot, along a coast of near twenty-four miles, to
                  the land abreast of the ship. One of the surgeon's mates, who went on this
                  excursion, collected a prodigious variety of new and curious shells upon the
                  island of Ballabeea, and likewise met with many new species of plants, of which we
                  did not see a single specimen in the districts we had visited; but the meanest and
                  most unreasonable envy taught him to conceal these discoveries from us, though he
                  was utterly incapable of making use of them for the benefit of science .28 We had
                  therefore more reason than ever to regret that our illness disabled us from
                  sharing the perils of this little excursion. </p>

               <p>We accompanied captain Cook the next morning into the river to the eastward, where
                  he went to give his friend Heebaï a little pig of each sex, in order to provide,
                  if possible, a stock of domestic animals for a nation, whose good, inoffensive
                  temper seemed highly to deserve such a present. We found this man and his family
                  at the huts where we had first seen him; and captain Cook having delivered the
                  pigs to him, each of us contributed his mite of knowledge of the language, in
                  order to make it intelligible to him, that the propagation of these animals would
                  supply him, in course of time, with constant food, and that they deserved to be
                  carefully nursed. He, as well as the whole family, were surprised at the sight of
                  these creatures, and at first expressed so much dislike and dread of them, that
                  they made signs to us to take them back. We now redoubled our efforts to convince
                  them of their error, and at last prevailed upon them to keep the pigs. It must be
                  allowed, that swine are far from being well-looking quadrupeds, and that those who
                  have never seen an animal of that class, cannot be supposed to like them at first
                  sight. Men seem to have had recourse to animal food through necessity at first, as
                  the depriving any creature of life is an act of violence, which demands a powerful
                  cause, before it is made familiar by habit. When they had the choice, it should
                  seem that such ill-looking animals as hogs were commonly rejected, till a more
                  urgent opportunity proved, that, in spite of their appearance, their flesh was as
                  delicious as that of sheep and oxen. The poor natives of New Caledonia had
                  hitherto tasted no other animal food than fish and birds, and therefore the
                  introduction of a quadruped into their œconomy, could not fail to surprise them.
                  We walked about for some time among the marshes and plantations, and came to a
                  house detached from the rest, which was enclosed by stakes, and behind which we
                  saw a row of wooden pillars.29 Each of them was about a foot square, and nine feet
                  high; and on the top of each a human head was rudely carved. Here we found a
                  solitary old man, who, on our pointing to these pillars, made signs that they
                  indicated his burying-place. Nothing is more remarkable in the history of mankind,
                  than the general concurrence of different nations, to erect a monument on the spot
                  where they lie buried. To dive into the original motives for this custom, with
                  various people, would be a curious and interesting pursuit, and might perhaps lead
                  us to discover, among all nations an universal idea of a future state.</p>

               <p>After leaving this spot, we passed a plantation, where the natives, and
                  particularly the women, were at work to clear, and dig up a piece of swampy
                  ground, probably in order to plant it with yams or eddoes. They had an instrument
                  with a long crooked, and sharp-pointed bill, like the bill of a bird, with which
                  they stirred up the soil. The same tool they frequently make use of as an
                  offensive weapon, and as such I mentioned it on page 385. It seems the soil of
                  this country is so poor, as to require more than ordinary pains to make it fit for
                  planting, especially as I never observed the people digging in this manner, in any
                  of the islands of the South Sea.30 We shot some curious and beautiful birds at
                  this place, and then returned to the ship, where we found all the other boats
                  hoisted in. We landed at the watering-place after dinner, where captain Cook
                  ordered the following inscription to be cut into a remarkable large and shady tree
                  on the beach, close to the rivulet; " His Britannic Majesty's Ship Resolution,
                  Sept. 1774." This being done, we rambled for the last time along the brook, which
                  had supplied us with as much water as we had expended since our departure from
                  Tanna; and having snatched a few plants, which our disorder had caused us to
                  overlook before, we took our last leave of this large island, and were hurried on
                  board from our scene of action.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 13.]</date>At day-light the next morning, the seamen weighed the
                  anchors, the ship soon cleared the reefs, and we stood along shore to the N. W. We
                  had lain in this harbour exactly seven days and a half; but on the third night
                  after our arrival, we were poisoned by eating of the fish, by which means we lost
                  the opportunity of making the most of this short stay. On leaving this place, we
                  were far from being recovered, but had daily acute head-aches, and spasmodic pains
                  over the body, together with an eruption on our lips. We also felt ourselves much
                  weakened, and unfit to go through our usual occupations; whilst the want of fresh
                  food greatly contributed to keep us in a lingering state, and retarded our
                  recovery. Thus we left an island situated in the westernmost part of the South
                  Pacific Ocean, not above 12 degrees distant from the coast of New Holland, and
                  inhabited by a race of men very distinct from all we had hitherto seen in the same
                  ocean. From their vicinity to New Holland, one might have been apt to suppose,
                  that they had the same origin with the people of that continent; but upon
                  comparing all the accounts of former voyagers, who have visited New Holland, its
                  inhabitants bear no resemblance to one another, and as a farther proof, the
                  vocabulary of both nations is totally different . Their numbers appear to be very
                  inconsiderable, and the most probable guess we would form of them, after ranging
                  the whole northern coast of the island, does not make them amount to fifty
                  thousand, upon a sea-coast of near two hundred leagues. The country which they
                  inhabit, seems indeed to be very unfit for cultivation in most parts. The narrow
                  plain which surrounds it, is full of swamps on the sea-side, covered with
                  mangroves; and this part is with much trouble drained by ditches, and dug till it
                  is made fit for the purposes of agriculture. The rest of the plain is somewhat
                  higher, but in return excessively dry, so that they are obliged to moisten it by
                  means of canals which conduct the water from the rivulets or pools. Beyond this
                  several hillocks rise, covered with a dry parched earth, where some species of
                  shrivelled grass, the cayputi-tree, and a few shrubs thrive, at a great distance
                  asunder; and from thence upwards, the interior mountains are almost entirely
                  destitute of vegetable earth in many places, and consist of a shining red glimmer,
                  and large pieces of quartz. The nature of this soil cannot give luxuriance to the
                  growth of vegetables; on the contrary, it is rather surprising, that such a
                  variety of species spring up in it, as we met with, though they are for the
                  greatest part dry, and of a very homely appearance. Only the woods on some parts
                  of the plain, are filled with shrubberies, bind-weeds, gay flowers, and tufted
                  shady trees. It is easy to be conceived, that the contrast between Nova Caledonia,
                  and the New Hebrides, was very striking to us, who had so lately visited those
                  rich and fertile islands, where the vegetable kingdom glories in its greatest
                  perfection. The difference in the character of the people was no less surprising.
                  All the natives of the South Sea islands, excepting those only which Tasman found
                  on Tonga-Tabboo and Namoka , made some attempt to drive away the strangers who
                  came to visit them. But the people of New Caledonia at the first sight of us,
                  received us as friends; they ventured to come on board our ship, without the least
                  marks of fear or distrust, and suffered us to ramble freely throughout their
                  country as far as we pleased. They resembled most the people of Tanna in colour,
                  and the woolliness of their hair; but their stature was superior, their limbs in
                  general more stout, their features more mild, open, and inoffensive; and their
                  customs in many respects very different. The peculiar character of their faces may
                  be seen in the accurate portraits which Mr. Hodges has drawn of each sex, and
                  which are engraved for captain Cook's account of this voyage. A just idea of the
                  country may likewise be formed, by consulting the views which that ingenious
                  artist has copied from nature. There is, however, some similarity between their
                  manufactures, and those of Tanna; especially in the shape of their arms, in the
                  use of the rope or becket, (see p. 279.) to throw the spear, in the nature of the
                  ornaments which they wear, and particularly in what I have mentioned p. 277, and
                  p. 383 . The language, which on these occasions is the surest guide, is totally
                  dissonant;31 their dwellings are of a different construction, and their mode of
                  living seems to correspond only in a few instances. The people of Tanna are rich,
                  in comparison with those of New Caledonia; their plantations furnish them with
                  abundance of vegetables, and if these should fail, the woods on their sea-shore
                  are full of coco-palms, which offer an ample store of fruits. At New Caledonia,
                  the plantations yield in most places a scanty produce; and the wild country, as
                  far as we had an opportunity of examining it, does not contain a single article
                  which could be deemed of great service. On the other hand, the people of New
                  Caledonia seem to be great fishermen, and the reefs round their island, give them
                  excellent opportunities for this purpose, and are doubtless at certain seasons,
                  the resort of turtles. As nature has been so sparing here of her gifts, it is the
                  most surprising, that instead of seeing the inhabitants savage, distrustful, and
                  warlike as at Tanna, we should find them peaceable, well-disposed, and
                  unsuspicious. It is not less remarkable, that in spite of the drought which
                  prevails in their country, and the scanty supply of vegetable food, they should
                  have attained to a greater size, and a more muscular body. Perhaps instead of
                  placing the causes which effect disparity of stature among various nations in the
                  difference of food, this instance ought to teach us, to have some retrospect
                  likewise to the original races from which those tribes are descended, that fell
                  under our examination. Let us for instance suppose, that the people of New
                  Caledonia are the offspring of a nation, who by living in affluence, and in a
                  genial climate, have not been stinted in their growth; the colony which removed
                  into the barren soil of New Caledonia, will probably preserve the habit of body of
                  their ancestors for many generations. The people of Tanna may have undergone a
                  contrary revolution, and being descended of a slender and short race, like the
                  Mallicollese, the richness of their present country may not yet entirely have
                  taken effect. These hints are submitted to the learned, whose province it is to
                  confirm or refute them; but on which side soever the truth may fall, I shall rest
                  equally contented, as I have adopted no particular system.</p>

               <p>The inoffensive character of the people of New Caledonia appears to great
                  advantage in their conduct towards us. They are the only people in the South Seas
                  who have not had reason to complain of our arrival among them. When we consider
                  how easy it is to provoke the mariner to sport with the lives of Indians, from the
                  numerous examples throughout this narrative, we must acknowledge that it required
                  an uncommon degree of good temper, not to draw upon themselves a single act of
                  brutality. Those philosophers who are of opinion that the temper, the manners, and
                  genius of a people, depend entirely upon the climate, will be at a loss to account
                  for the peaceful character of the inhabitants of New Caledonia. If we admit that
                  they are only strangers to distrust, because they have little to lose, we shall
                  not solve the difficulty; since the people of New Holland, under the influence of
                  a similar climate and soil, and in a more wretched situation than the inhabitants
                  of New Caledonia, are savage and unsociable. The different characters of nations
                  seem therefore to depend upon a multitude of different causes, which have acted
                  together during a series of many ages. The inhabitants of New Caledonia do not owe
                  their kind disposition to a total ignorance of wars and disputes; the variety of
                  their offensive weapons being alone sufficient to put this matter out of doubt. By
                  conversing with them we learnt that they have enemies, and that the people of an
                  island called Mingha had a very different character from their own. I was once in
                  a boat with captain Cook and Mr. Wales, when one of the natives acquainted us by
                  very significant and intelligible gestures, that they had enemies who feasted on
                  human flesh; and the behaviour of the inhabitants of Balabeea, on seeing our
                  people eat salt beef, which they mistook for human flesh, contributes to prove
                  that such a custom is not unknown to them, and that they look upon it with horror
                  and detestation. Civilization is therefore much farther advanced in this respect
                  among them, than with their more opulent neighbours. That higher degree of
                  culture, where the understanding is sufficiently enlightened to remove the unjust
                  contempt shewn to the fair sex, is however unknown to them; their temper is too
                  grave to be captivated by female blandishments, or to set a proper value upon the
                  refined enjoyments of life. They are obliged to work hard, at times, for the means
                  of subsistence; but their leisure hours are spent in indolence, without those
                  little recreations which contribute so much to the happiness of mankind, and
                  diffuse a spirit of cheerfulness and vivacity throughout the Society and Friendly
                  Islands. Besides the little whistle which I have mentioned above, we never saw a
                  musical instrument among the people of New Caledonia. Their dances and songs are
                  equally unknown to us; and what we observed during our short stay, gave us reason
                  to suppose, that even laughter is an uncommon guest among them. They are likewise
                  niggards of speech, and we rarely met with individuals among them, who took a
                  pleasure in holding converse with us. Their language therefore seems to be
                  uncultivated, and their pronunciation so indistinct, that the vocabularies which
                  several of our shipmates collected, disagreed remarkably. Though they have few
                  harsh consonants, they have a frequent return of gutturals and sometimes a nasal
                  sound, or rhinismus, which commonly puzzled those who were not acquainted with any
                  other language than the English. Perhaps, their plantations lying remote from each
                  other, are the means of preventing that familiar intercourse which would gradually
                  give life to the pleasures of society. As their country seems not to be very fit
                  for agriculture, the best means to forward civilization among them might be the
                  introduction of quadrupeds, such as they should not find it difficult to maintain;
                  for instance, a few hogs, to keep near their huts, and goats to run wild. The
                  latter in all probability would thrive extremely well in that dry climate, and
                  afford an excellent article of food.</p>

               <p>That simplicity which is remarkable in their domestic life, cannot fail to be
                  conspicuous in their government. Teàbooma was acknowledged as a chief in the
                  district opposite the ship's anchoring-place, but the poverty of the country did
                  not afford him great and exclusive advantages, and luxury being hitherto unknown,
                  he lived like the rest of his countrymen. Among a people so simple we cannot
                  expect exterior marks of deference; and the only act which seemed to indicate a
                  certain degree of homage on their part, consisted in delivering to the chief, the
                  presents which they had received from Mr. Pickersgill at their first interview.
                  The neighbouring districts are not under the government of Teàbooma, and probably
                  have their own chiefs; or perhaps each family forms a little kingdom of its own,
                  which is directed by its patriarch, as must be the case in all infant states. We
                  cannot attempt to extend our observations to the religion of the natives, of
                  which, in the space of eight days, we had no opportunity of acquiring any
                  information. We did not observe any thing which might distantly be construed into
                  a religious act, nor remark a single custom which had the least colour of
                  superstition. Probably the simplicity of their ideas on this subject, corresponds
                  with the whole tenour of their character. There is nothing to disprove this
                  supposition, unless the slight marks which point out their burying-places, should
                  be deemed indications that some ceremonies attend their funerals. Death, the most
                  remarkable scene in the oeconomy of human affairs, is commonly honoured with some
                  unusual act by the survivors; and grief is particularly apt to be extravagant. It
                  remains unknown whether the mortality is great or moderate at New Caledonia, and
                  what diseases are most fatal in that island. We saw no other than the
                  elephantiasis, a sort of leprosy, which I have already mentioned, and which was
                  very common. However, I never observed this evil in so violent a degree, that the
                  patient seemed to be in danger of losing his life by it. Upon the whole, a great
                  multitude of diseases are the consequences of unbounded luxury, and cannot take
                  place among persons so little refined as those of New Caledonia. I saw some among
                  them whose grey hair and wrinkles indicated a great age; but it was impossible to
                  converse with them upon such an abstract idea as age, supposing they took the
                  pains to number their years. We were not able to make ourselves understood when we
                  attempted to make enquiries at Taheitee concerning the age of the inhabitants,
                  though our knowledge of their language was very extensive, when compared with the
                  few words which we had snatched up in haste on New Caledonia. After these few
                  remarks, I resume the narrative of the voyage.</p>

               <p>We steered between the north and west, along the reefs which enclose New
                  Caledonia, in order to ascertain the position of lands which we had indistinctly
                  seen in that quarter. Having advanced towards Balabeea, we found the reefs running
                  northerly, and in some places near six leagues from the shore. Man of war birds,
                  boobies, and tropic birds frequented this part of the sea in great numbers,
                  hovering about our ship. <date>[Thursday 15.]</date>We discovered on the 15th,
                  that there were three islands to the north of the west end of New Caledonia; but,
                  as the reef extended very far to the east of them, and we could find no passage,
                  it was impossible to form an exact idea of their figure and extent. The largest of
                  them might be about seven leagues long. We were becalmed on the 15th, within four
                  miles of the reef, towards which a heavy swell drifted us very visibly. In order
                  to prevent striking on these dangerous rocks, we hoisted out two boats, and the
                  crew were obliged to labour very hard to tow the ship off. A faint breeze in the
                  evening gave them some respite, but at midnight they were obliged to return to
                  their work, releasing each other from time to time. <date>[Friday 16.]</date>The
                  morning was so calm that we went out to shoot birds, but had little success. We
                  did not obtain a breeze till the evening came on, and then, instead of losing our
                  time in farther researches to the northward, where we tried in vain to find a
                  passage, we left that part, and prepared to range the south-east end of New
                  Caledonia. The northernmost lands, which we had seen, lie in 19° 37' S. and 163°
                  40' E. </p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 17.]</date>The next morning we passed the district of Ballàdd,
                  where we had lain at anchor. Repeated calms rendered our course very tedious; we
                  did not advance above twenty leagues in two days, and still seeing the land to the
                  south of us, were apprehensive of coming late to New Zeeland, where it was now
                  said we should prepare for the last southern cruize. We continued however standing
                  to the eastward, and somewhat southerly, having gentle breezes which lasted
                  several hours, between the calm intervals. <date>[Thursday 22.]</date>On the 22d,
                  in the evening, we saw a remarkable bluff point on the land, which was named Cape
                  Coronation, in commemoration of that day. The reefs which had enclosed the
                  northern coasts of New Caledonia, did not extend to this part; but as we had
                  hitherto kept at the distance of four or five leagues, we could not discern any
                  thing of the nature of the country, except that the ridge of mountains continued
                  to run along of the same height as near our anchoring-place, and without any
                  remarkable prominences or peaks. In the morning we saw a spot of ground, which
                  could not be less than half a mile in length, from whence a quantity of smoke
                  ascended. The sea coast near it was covered with innumerable columnar forms, of a
                  considerable height, which we distinguished by the help of our glasses. Some of
                  them stood remote from each other, but far the greater part were place in close,
                  and seemingly compact, groups. The nature of the pillars of Basaltes, which are
                  found in many parts of the world , gave us some reason to look upon these
                  extraordinary appearances as so many colonnades of Basaltes; and having so lately
                  seen several volcanoes in the neighbourhood, and one so near as Tanna, we were
                  greatly strengthened in this opinion, it being asserted by the most judicious and
                  experienced mineralogists, that basaltes is a volcanic production. In the evening,
                  having left Cape Coronation astern, we discerned a vast quantity of these columnar
                  forms projecting into the sea, on a flat point.</p>

               <p>Early on the 24th, we came in sight of a cape which terminated New Caledonia to
                  the east; it was rather steep, but of no great height, and perfectly level at the
                  top to a considerable distance. A number of pillars stood upon it, which something
                  invalidated the opinion of their being basalt-columns. This cape, which captain
                  Cook named Queen Charlotte's Foreland, lies in 22° 15' S. and 167° 15' E. In the
                  evening, towards six o'clock, another island was discovered far to the south-east
                  from the mast-head, and the next morning several small islands appeared between
                  New Caledonia and this new discovery, which the instability of the wind would not
                  permit us to examine. We observed, however, that a great reef enclosed these
                  islands, which seemed entirely to preclude a passage, and obliged us to stand on
                  to the eastward, in order to weather all the distant land in sight. This part of
                  our cruize was extremely disagreeable and tantalizing; we longed to have an
                  opportunity of examining the country, and were at present in great distress for
                  fresh food. A scanty portion of yams remained, which were eaten as dainties at the
                  officers tables; but the crew had not tasted any refreshments since our departure
                  from Namoka. The appearance of new lands made but little amends for the
                  involuntary fast which we kept, and only supported our hopes of making some
                  fortunate discovery, which might perhaps offer us fresh supplies.</p>

               <p>We did not obtain a settled breeze till the 26th in the evening, when we
                  immediately began to ply to windward, in order to double the large island before
                  us. It consisted of a mountain of less elevation than New Caledonia, and easy of
                  ascent, every where surrounded by flat land, on which the columnar bodies were
                  innumerable. As we made several trips within two miles in-shore, we were at last
                  convinced that they were nothing else than trees, which on a prodigious tall stem
                  had short and slender branches, not discernible at a distance.</p>

               <p>We doubled the eastermost extremity of this island, and of its reefs, on the 28th,
                  at day-break, and then bore away along its south-east shore. Captain Cook gave it
                  the name of Isle of Pines, suspecting the columnar trees upon it to be of that
                  kind. It seems to be about eighteen leagues in circumference, and the middle is
                  situated in 22° 40' S. and 167° 40' E. The south-east wind, which had now set in
                  very fresh, cooled the air so much in this latitude, that the thermometer sunk to
                  68°, which caused a disagreeable sensation to our bodies, long used to a warmer
                  climate. <date>[Thursday 29.]</date>The next day we found a passage between
                  several reefs, and came to an anchor off a little island, not above two miles in
                  circuit, which was covered with tall columnar trees, though it was intirely flat
                  and sandy. The south end of New Caledonia was not above six leagues distant from
                  hence, and the southern coast of that island seemed to run nearly parallel to the
                  northern, giving the whole a long, narrow shape. This south point, which was
                  called the Prince of Wales's Foreland, lies in 22° 30' S. and 166° 58' E. </p>

               <p>We hoisted a boat out immediately, and rowed to the little islet, which was about
                  a mile and a half from us. It was surrounded with a small reef of its own, in
                  which we found a narrow passage, containing many rocks, notwithstanding which we
                  landed with safety. The tall trees immediately demanded our first attention, and
                  we found that they belonged to the genus of cypresses. They were remarkably
                  strait, and at least ninety or a hundred feet high. Their branches grew round the
                  stem, forming little tufts, but seldom exceeded the length of ten feet, and were
                  very slender in proportion. A variety of other trees and shrubs grew up between
                  them, and rendered this little spot the resort of a great number of birds. We saw
                  here also some scurvy-grass, and another plant (tetragonia), which we commonly
                  made use of at New Zeeland in our soups. Captain Cook returned to the ship with
                  us, after this discovery, intending to land again after dinner, in order to cut
                  down some of the trees, and to collect some greens. We met with a variety of
                  plants in the afternoon, which quite surprised us, on such a confined spot. We
                  also saw some fire-places on its sandy shores, on which lay the remains of several
                  turtles, which had probably afforded a delicious repast to some of the natives. A
                  species of hawk was shot, which proved to be the common falco haliaëtos, or osprey
                  ; a kind of fly-catcher likewise fell into our hands, which was not known before;
                  but besides this we saw several large beautiful pigeons, which we could not shoot.
                  Flat-tailed water-snakes (anguis platura) were likewise numerous upon the island.
                  The cypress-trees were found to be exceeding good timber, and the younger ones
                  were very elastic, and fit for studding sail-booms. After rambling about this
                  little spot till near sun-set, we all returned on board, and at day-light the next
                  morning, <date>[Friday 30.]</date>weighed the anchor, and sailed slowly on to
                  clear the reefs. Captain Cook gave this little islet the name of Botany Island,
                  because it contained in so small a space a flora of near thirty species, among
                  which we saw several new ones. Its situation is nearly 22° 28' S. and 167° 16' E.
                  Its soil is very sandy on the shores, but in the interior part mixed with
                  vegetable earth, from the trees and plants which continually decay on it, without
                  being cleared away by human industry. Whilst we lay at anchor, the first
                  lieutenant caught a fish, exactly of the same species with that which poisoned
                  captain Cook, my father, and myself. He ordered it to be cleaned and boiled, in
                  spite of the earnest representations of all his messmates, who warned him against
                  its pernicious effects. It was at last set before him, by his positive orders, and
                  his friends found no other means to save him, than to ridicule his mad design.
                  Their humorous and satirical remarks had a better effect than friendly
                  admonitions, and he desisted from the attempt. A little dog was, however,
                  unfortunate enough to eat of the entrails of the fish, and lay several days in
                  such exquisite torments, that it was at last thrown overboard, to put an end to
                  its pain and misery. This circumstance proves to what great distresses we were now
                  driven for want of fresh food, since even the risk of being poisoned was made
                  light of, for the sake of a single meal. All our officers, who had made several
                  voyages round the world, and experienced a multiplicity of hardships, acknowledged
                  at present, that all their former sufferings were not to be compared to those of
                  the present voyage, and that they had never before so thoroughly loathed a salt
                  diet. Captain Cook had made a provision of dried hams for the voyage, which by
                  length of time were much corrupted; all the fat being converted into a rancid oil,
                  and the salt having filled the flesh with a quantity of alkaline concretions like
                  tartar. However, as often as this putrid and loathsome meat was carried to table,
                  which happened once a week, the petty officers devoured it with wistful looks, and
                  spoke of our good fortune so feelingly, that it would have given pain to a savage.
                  It was owing to our having such an excellent preservative as sour-krout on board,
                  that the scurvy did not at this time make any considerable progress amongst us;
                  but our situation was indeed wretched enough, without the additional horrors of
                  disease.</p>

               <p>We were becalmed in the evening among the reefs, which surrounded us on all sides,
                  and made our situation dangerous, on account of the tides and currents, as well as
                  for want of anchoring-ground, having sounded in vain with a line of 150 fathoms.
                  At half past seven o'clock we saw a ball of fire to the northward, in size and
                  splendor resembling the sun, though somewhat paler. It burst a few moments after,
                  and left behind it several bright sparks, of which the largest, of an oblong
                  shape, moved quickly out of our horizon, whilst a kind of bluish flame followed,
                  and marked its course. Some heard a hissing noise, which accompanied the swift
                  descent of this meteor. Our shipmates expected a fresh gale after its appearance,
                  having frequently observed the same to ensue upon similar occasions. And in fact,
                  whatever may be the relation between this phӕnomenon, and the motion of the
                  atmosphere, or whether it was accident, their predictions were verified the same
                  night. A brisk gale sprung up, which settled at south, <date>[1774.
                     October.][Saturday 1.]</date>the next morning, and permitted us to direct our
                  course E. by S. and S. S. E. from New Caledonia. This island, the largest hitherto
                  discovered in the South Seas between the tropics, remains entirely unexplored on
                  its south side. The direction and outline of its northern coast, was sketched out
                  during the short time which we could afford to spend on this valuable discovery;
                  but its animals, vegetables, and minerals still remain untouched, and offer an
                  ample field to the naturalist. The appearance of cypress-trees on the eastern
                  part, seems to prove that the nature of the soil, and the mineral productions are
                  totally different in that part, from those of Balladd, of which we had a cursory
                  view; and from what we saw on the little sandy Botany Island, a distinct set of
                  plants must there cover the ground, and various unknown birds inhabit the woods.
                  Thus it still remains for future navigators, to continue our discoveries in the
                  South Seas, and to take more time in investigating their productions. Several
                  parts of the Pacific Ocean are still untouched by former tracks; for instance, the
                  space between 10° S. and the line, across the whole ocean, from America to New
                  Britain; the space between 10° S. and 14° S.35 included between the meridian of
                  140° and 160° W. the space included between the parallels of 30° and 20° S. and
                  the meridian of 140° and 175° west; the space between the southernmost of the
                  Friendly Islands, and New Caledonia, and that between New Caledonia and New
                  Holland. M. de Surville's track, which I have mentioned vol. I. p. 238, is the
                  only one which lies between these two countries. But New Guinea, New Britain and
                  all the lands in that neighbourhood, obviously require to be more minutely
                  examined, and would doubtless reward the navigator by a world of new and important
                  discoveries. All these districts of the South Sea being searched, the northern
                  part of the same sea will require several voyages before it can be thoroughly
                  explored.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 2.]</date>It fell calm again on the 2d in the forenoon, and several
                  sharks appearing about the ship, one of them was caught, and divided instantly
                  among the whole ship's company. We had our share of it, which the keen sauce of
                  hunger made very delicious to our palate, though it was in fact very oily. We soon
                  recovered a westerly breeze, which permitted us to go to the S. S. E. after
                  crossing the tropic of capricorn.</p>
               <!-- AN April 7: Another instance of '26' written as '26th' in the below paragraph. -->
               <p><date>[Wednesday 5.]</date>On the fifth in the afternoon, we had sight of two
                  albatrosses again, being between the 26th and 27th degree of south latitude. The
                  calm which happened the day after, permitted our officers to go out in a boat, in
                  order to shoot some birds; but after toiling the whole day, they brought on board
                  only four, of which two were petrels, and two albatrosses. We were now once more
                  on the confines of the easterly trade-wind, which so near the solstice became
                  variable as soon as we had passed the tropic. On the 7th in the afternoon, we had
                  a gentle breeze with which we sailed between the south and west; captain Cook
                  being desirous to fall in with the west coast of New Zeeland in order to escape
                  the same difficulties which we had experienced the year before in going into
                  Cook's Strait. In the evening of the 8th, a numerous shoal of large porpesses
                  passed the ship, and played about it, leaping frequently out of the water. One of
                  them was struck with an harpoon, and by giving it a great deal of line, we had
                  time to hoist a boat out, and to kill it with five musket shot. It was of that
                  species which the ancients called the dolphin, and which, with the common porpess,
                  is found in every sea. It was six feet long, and its dugs were full of milk, it
                  being a viviparous animal of the class which suckle their own young. It was cut up
                  the next morning, and the meat distributed to the ship's company; its colour was
                  not very inviting, being almost black; but its taste after cutting away all the
                  fat, was very like beef, only somewhat dry. We dined on it very heartily, and were
                  very well contented with our good fortune. We saw land the same morning, which
                  proved to be a small island, of moderate elevation, wholly covered with
                  cypress-trees, resembling those we had found on Botany Island. We had soundings at
                  a good distance, in twenty fathom more or less, and about nine o'clock were
                  abreast of it. It seemed to be about two or three miles long, was very steep,
                  almost entirely covered with woods, and to appearance uninhabited. Many aquatic
                  fowls of different species were observed about it, which gave us hopes of making
                  at least a provision of another fresh meal. We hastened to finish our dinner, and
                  went on shore with captain Cook in two boats. Several large broken rocks project
                  into the sea from the island, on all sides. We were fortunate enough to find a
                  little cove so well sheltered by some of these rocks, that our boats lay very safe
                  in it, and were able to land without wetting a foot. A heap of large stones formed
                  a kind of beach, beyond which the shore rose very steep, and in some parts
                  perpendicular. We found a little rill which descended in a cleft between two
                  hills; and following the course of it, we penetrated into the woods with great
                  difficulty, through a thick tissue of bindweeds and climbers. However, as soon as
                  we had passed through this outward fence, we found the forest tolerably clear of
                  underwood, and had not the least difficulty to walk forwards. The rocks of this
                  island consisted of the common yellowish clayey stone, which we had found at New
                  Zeeland; and in some places we met with small bits of porous reddish lava, which
                  seemed to be decaying, but made us suspect this island to have had a volcano. The
                  vegetables which we found upon it, throve with great luxuriance in a rich stratum
                  of black mould, accumulated during ages past, from decaying trees and plants. The
                  greatest number of species which we met with were well known to us, as belonging
                  to the flora of New Zeeland, but they appeared here with all the advantages which
                  a milder climate, and an exuberant soil could give them. The New Zeeland flag
                  (phormium tenax), shot stalks eight or nine feet high, having flowers much larger
                  and brighter than we had seen at Queen Charlotte's Sound. The productions of New
                  Zeeland were here united to those of New Caledonia, and the New Hebrides; for the
                  cypress of the one, and the cabbage palm which we had seen in the latter,
                  flourished here in the greatest perfection. It was chiefly on these two species,
                  that we bestowed our attention; the former supplied the carpenter with several
                  spare booms, and pieces of timber; and the latter offered us a most welcome and
                  palatable refreshment. We cut down several of them, and took on board the central
                  shoot, or heart, which in taste more resembles an almond than a cabbage. The
                  animal creation, like the vegetable, consisted chiefly of the same species which
                  we found at New Zeeland. The parrots and parroquets were infinitely brighter
                  coloured, though evidently of the same species; but the pigeon was exactly the
                  same. We found besides these, a number of small birds, peculiar to this spot, some
                  of which were very beautiful. On the beach we found several succulent plants, such
                  as a species of tetragonia, and a mesembryanthemum, of which we gathered a
                  quantity to boil in our soups. The melody of the birds was very pleasing in this
                  little deserted spot, which if it had been of a greater size, would have been
                  unexceptionable for an European settlement. We put off from it late in the
                  evening, and when we arrived on board, we greatly regretted that we had not
                  thought of leaving a hog of each sex, which would doubtless have propagated
                  undisturbed, and in the space of a few years stocked the island, so as to become
                  useful to future navigators. Captain Cook gave this pretty little spot, the name
                  of Norfolk Island; it is situated in 29° 2' 30" S. and 168° 16' E. Whilst we had
                  examined the woods, some of the boats' crew had been no less busy in catching
                  fish, having been fortunate enough to meet with a pool, where they had come in at
                  high water. The tops of the cabbage-palm, these fish, and the birds which we had
                  shot, afforded us an excellent refreshment for a day or two. We passed the S. E.
                  end of the island the next morning, and saw a large single rock off that end. We
                  sounded repeatedly all the forenoon, and found bottom at thirty and forty fathom,
                  to the distance of eight leagues and upwards from the island. The vast number of
                  boobies, and shear-waters, which were continually catching fish about us, by
                  darting down into the sea, indicated that this was a kind of fishing-bank. At one
                  o'clock in the afternoon, we were out of soundings, and advanced with a fresh
                  breeze towards New Zeeland, where we could expect to meet with regular
                  refreshments after our tropical cruize, which towards the latter end had greatly
                  weakened the crew, by confining them to a putrid salt-diet, and which had proved
                  particularly fatal to the officers and ourselves, by means of the poisonous fishes
                  that unfortunately fell in our way.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 17.]</date>We made such speed, attended by flocks of pintadas,
                  petrels, and albatrosses, that we made the coast of New Zeeland on the 17th, early
                  in the morning, after having heavy dews for two nights before, which are commonly
                  reckoned signs of land. The part of New Zeeland which we now fell in with, was
                  Mount Egmont, that prodigious peak which forms the north point of Cook's Strait
                  coming from the west. It appeared to be covered with snow and ice nearly from the
                  middle to the summit, of which we had only a glimpse now and then, when the clouds
                  broke which involved it. Its appearance is remarkably majestic, and the
                  neighbouring hills look like dwarfs in comparison. It stands upon, or rather its
                  base gradually flattens into an extensive plain on all sides; and its summit,
                  tapering gradually, terminates in a small point. Its height is supposed to be not
                  much inferior to the peak of Teneriff, from the space which the snow occupies on
                  it.</p>

               <p>The breeze, which had hitherto been moderate, now changed into a hard gale, which
                  carried us forward at the rate of eight knots an hour; and we felt the air very
                  sharp and uncomfortable, the thermometer standing at 58°. We now esteemed
                  ourselves happy to be on the west coast of New Zeeland, where this gale was
                  favourable, which on the east side would have been furiously against us.
                     <date>[Tuesday 18.]</date>The next morning it hurried us past Cape Stephens,
                  Admiralty Bay, and Point Jackson. As soon as we entered Queen Charlotte's Sound,
                  it only blew in intermittent gusts, with the help of which we came safely to an
                  anchor, the third time during this voyage, in Ship Cove, which we had left near
                  eleven months before. The sight of each well-known object, however bleak and
                  savage its appearance, conveyed a pleasing sensation, and the hope of recruiting
                  our wasted spirits and strength, inspired unusual chearfulness.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. IV.</l>

                  <l>Third and last stay at Queen Charlotte's Sound, in New Zeeland.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. October.][Tuesday 18.]</date>REPEATED showers, and chilling squalls
                  of wind, gave us a rough reception on the wild shores of New Zeeland. The season
                  was not yet far advanced in this raw climate, and the withered foliage of the last
                  year, had not made room on many trees for the verdure of spring. After dinner, we
                  went on shore to examine the beach where we had twice before fixed our tents
                  during this voyage, being desirous of seeing what was become of the bottle which
                  contained a letter to captain Furneaux. Before we landed we took notice of a small
                  flock of shags, which had built their nests on some trees hanging over the water;
                  a sign that the cove had not lately been visited by men. Indeed we have reason to
                  suppose that the natives dwell in the interior recesses of the bay during winter,
                  those parts being probably resorted to by the fish at that inhospitable season.
                  After dislodging the shags, and killing some of their young, which, though
                  fledged, were yet too stupid to fly away, we landed, and were presently convinced
                  that an European ship had visited this place after our departure in November last.
                  Many trees which we had left standing were cut down with saws and other tools
                  unknown to the natives; the bottle was removed, and other indubitable vestiges of
                  the new visitation remained. The plantations which we had formerly made were
                  almost entirely destroyed, being partly rooted out, and partly stifled by the
                  indigenous weeds, which grew luxuriantly in the soil after it had been turned up.
                  Our sailors dragged a net several times, but to no purpose; however, we were
                  somewhat more successful after our return to the ship, where several fish were
                  caught with the hook and line. Amongst others, a fine sea-bream (sparus pagrus),
                  weighing eleven pounds, was taken, it being one of those species which are to be
                  met with in almost every ocean . About sunset a cannon was fired, with a view to
                  apprize the natives of our arrival, if any of them happened to be within hearing.
                  It was our interest to have them near us, in order to supply us with fish, which
                  our sailors were not expert enough to catch in any quantity, supposing we could
                  have dispensed with their labours in repairing the rigging, &amp;c.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 19.]</date>At day-break all our people began to warp the ship
                  deeper into the cove, and about nine o'clock they had brought her into a
                  convenient situation very near the shore. We profited by an interval of fair
                  weather, in order to visit the beach, where we once more pitched our tents. The
                  last year's generation of birds, unacquainted with the treacherous arms of
                  Europeans, sat patiently till we came near enough not to run the risk of missing
                  them; and thus we not only recruited our collection, but likewise provided a
                  delicious refreshment. The creepers in particular, and several smaller species,
                  were to the full as grateful to the palate as ortolans; and every land-bird of
                  this part of New Zeeland, hawks excepted, would have been relished at the most
                  luxurious tables.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we accompanied captain Cook to Canibal Cove, the next to the
                  northward of our anchoring-place. The shores of this cove we knew to be rich in
                  celery and scurvy-grass, which it was the captain's constant care to provide for
                  his crew, wherever they were to be had. In our rambles through the woods at this
                  place we found a true cabbage-palm (areca oleracea), of the same sort which we had
                  seen at Norfolk Island. Its situation in this high latitude was somewhat
                  surprising, and seems to prove that this species is of a more hardy nature than
                  the rest in the same class. We returned on board with a rich load of greens, very
                  acceptable to all our shipmates, but eyed with peculiar pleasure by all those who
                  had been poisoned, and who hoped, by the use of this wholesome diet, to be
                  restored to health and strength, which they had never enjoyed since that
                  unfortunate event. Another cannon was fired in the evening, as no natives had
                  hitherto made their appearance.</p>

               <p>The next day we experienced dreadful gales, which coming over the bleak and
                  snow-capt alps to the south of us, chilled the air most uncomfortably, and at last
                  brought on heavy rains. The wind abated the day following, but showers and thick
                  fogs continued till the evening. A N. W. wind then springing up, chased the clouds
                  from the mountains, &amp;c. <date>[Saturday 22.]</date>The sun arose in all his
                  splendor the next morning; the choir of feathered songsters was heard on all sides
                  for the first time since our arrival, announcing a mild vernal day, and summoned
                  us into the woods. Many of our officers immediately embraced this opportunity of
                  recreation, and we accompanied captain Cook in a boat, coasting the shores towards
                  Point Jackson, and landing from time to time in the different coves on our way.
                  The afternoon was spent in an excursion to the Hippah-rock, on which we made a
                  fire to allure the natives, being very desirous of their company. We likewise
                  visited the cabbage-garden on Motu-Aro, and found the plants shot into seed, which
                  had been for the greatest part consumed by the birds. In the evening all the
                  sportsmen returned loaded with birds; the different boats' crews had collected
                  fresh supplies of greens, and the rest had caught fish during the fair weather.
                  All these successes contributed to make a kind of general festival in the ship,
                  which the levity of the mariners rendered the more chearful, as every past
                  discomfort was already forgotten.</p>

               <p>Having waited in vain another day for the appearance of the natives, we resolved
                  to go in quest of them into the southern creeks on the 24th. <date>[Monday
                     24.]</date>That morning, however, at day-break, two canoes appeared off the
                  point of Shag Cove with their sails set; but they were no sooner in sight of the
                  ship, than the sail was instantly let down, and the people betook themselves to
                  paddling very fast back again. Their reserve only made us more desirous to have
                  some intercourse with them, as it appeared to be a mark of fear or distrust.
                  Captain Cook set out in his boat with us, and we came into Shag Cove, where we
                  passed some time shooting shags and sea-pies, of which we found great numbers. At
                  last, however, we heard some shouts on the south shore of the cove, and coming
                  towards that part, discerned several natives who had retired to the upper part of
                  the hills, whilst only three or four remained below on a rising, where several
                  huts were concealed in the woods. Here we found their canoes hauled on the beach,
                  and immediately landing, made signs for these people to come to us. They hesitated
                  a little; then one descended, and having joined noses with us, the usual sign of
                  friendship, the rest came down, and those who had ascended the higher parts
                  likewise joined us. They were all dressed in shaggy cloaks, which were old and
                  ragged; their hair hung about their heads in disorder, and filth and stench
                  announced them even at a distance. We did not remember to have seen above three or
                  four of them at our former stay in this sound; but having learnt their names,
                  enquired concerning many of their countrymen who were better known to us. They
                  gave us an answer which was infinitely too complex to be intelligible to us; but
                  we could collect that they spoke of a battle, and mentioned the death of several
                  of the natives. They continued from time to time to ask if we were displeased with
                  them, and seemed to be very apprehensive that our present protestations of
                  friendship were not quite sincere. We suspected from this circumstance, that a
                  fatal misunderstanding had happened between the natives and the crew of some
                  European ship, and we naturally thought of our consort the Adventure. However, far
                  from confirming the natives in their fears, we endeavoured by every method to gain
                  their confidence, in which we succeeded very well, by waving the subject of our
                  discourse, and asking if they had any fish to sell. They ran to their canoes
                  immediately, and clearing away the mats with which they were covered, produced a
                  vast quantity of fish, probably caught the same morning. For a few pieces of
                  Taheitian cloth,2 a nail, some medals, and a bit of red baize, we bought a
                  sufficient quantity to supply our whole ship's company, and so far gained the
                  confidence of the natives, that they promised to come to the ship the next day.
                  One of them, of a middle age, who seemed to be the principal man in this small
                  village, told us his name was Peeterrè, and shewed himself the friendliest of them
                  all. We parted from them, after admiring their bold spirit, which disdained
                  concealment, at the moment when they were filled with apprehensions that we should
                  take advantage of our superiority of numbers. We were indeed ignorant at that time
                  how much reason they had to dread our resentment, a circumstance which gives still
                  greater lustre to their bravery.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 25.]</date>They were indeed as good as their word, and came to us
                  at sun-rise the next morning, in five canoes, selling a great quantity of fine
                  fish, and thus restoring affluence on our tables. Having parted with their fish,
                  they produced a number of pieces of green nephritic stone, wrought into chissels
                  and various ornaments, which they eagerly exchanged for Taheitian and English
                  cloth, as well as iron ware. Not content with what they could collect on board,
                  some of them went to the beach, where a number of our people were employed in
                  watering, wooding, &amp;c. and where Mr. Wales had once more fixed his
                  observatory. Here they made many acquisitions, and then all went to pass the night
                  on a neighbouring beach. They rose at day-break, and caught abundance of fish,
                  with which they returned to us, continuing to supply us every day in the same
                  manner. Their favourite place of resort was, however, our watering-place; for
                  there they met with several marines, who took a pleasure in conversing with them,
                  as well as they could, for hours together. It appears this kind of familiar
                  intercourse suited their disposition, for they soon became so intimate as to
                  impart to their new friends a tale, of which the particulars were of the utmost
                  importance to us. They related, that an European vessel had put into the harbour
                  some time ago; but that in a quarrel with the inhabitants, all her people had been
                  killed and eaten. This intelligence alarmed us greatly, as we apprehended that
                  this vessel was most probably the Adventure. The natives were repeatedly
                  questioned, and in every conversation we discovered some additional circumstances,
                  by which the fact was more clearly established. At last, however, observing that
                  our enquiries on this subject were frequently repeated, they resolved to give us
                  no farther information, and by threats stopped short one of their own brethren,
                  who had been prevailed upon to speak once more on the subject. Captain Cook being
                  very desirous of obtaining some certainty concerning the fate of the Adventure,
                  called Peeterrè and another native into the cabin, both of whom denied that any
                  harm had been done to the Europeans. We made two pieces of paper, to represent the
                  two ships, and drew the figure of the Sound on a larger piece; then drawing the
                  two ships into the Sound, and out of it again, as often as they had touched at and
                  left it, including our last departure, we stopped a while, and at last proceeded
                  to bring our ship in again: but the natives interrupted us, and taking up the
                  paper which represented the Adventure, they brought it into the harbour, and drew
                  it out again, counting on their fingers how many moons she had been gone. This
                  circumstance gave us two-fold pleasure, since at the same time that we were
                  persuaded our consort had safely sailed from hence, we had room to admire the
                  sagacity of the natives. Still, however, there was something mysterious in the
                  former accounts, which intimated that some Europeans were killed; and we continued
                  to doubt whether we had rightly understood this part of their conversation, till
                  we received more certain intelligence at our return to the Cape of Good Hope. Here
                  we learnt that our consort had lost a boat with ten men at New Zeeland. Some
                  account of this melancholy event will, I hope, not be unwelcome to my readers, as
                  I shall occasionally compare the story of the natives with the reports of our
                  fellow-voyagers.3 It appears that captain Furneaux, after separating from us, was
                  obliged, on the 9th of November 1773, to put into Tolaga Bay , on the northern
                  isle of New Zeeland, where he lay till the 16th. He then sailed towards Queen
                  Charlotte's Sound, where he arrived on the 30th, a few days after our departure.
                  O-Maï, the native of Raietea, whom he had on board, told me he was the first who
                  found the inscription on the tree, under which our bottle was buried. He pointed
                  it out to the captain, and the bottle with the letter was immediately found. In
                  consequence of this, captain Furneaux made all the necessary preparations for the
                  remaining part of his voyage, in as little time as possible. His ship the
                  Adventure was ready to sail, when he sent a boat to Grass Cove, on the eastern
                  shore of the Sound, in order to gather a load of celery and scurvy-grass for the
                  crew. Mr. Rowe, the unfortunate youth who had the command of this boat, combined
                  with many liberal sentiments the prejudices of a naval education, which induced
                  him to look upon all the natives of the South Sea with contempt, and to assume
                  that kind of right over them, with which the Spaniards, in more barbarous ages,
                  disposed of the lives of the American Indians. After landing in Grass Cove, his
                  people began to cut greens, and some in all probability stripped off their
                  cloaths, to perform their task with greater ease; for the accounts which we
                  obtained from the natives at Queen Charlotte's Sound import, that one of their
                  countrymen stole a sailor's jacket; that our people had hereupon immediately begun
                  to fire, and continued to do so till all their ammunition was spent; that the
                  natives had taken this opportunity to rush upon the Europeans, and had killed
                  every one of them. This relation is very reconcileable with the opinion which the
                  late Mr. Rowe always entertained of the New Zeelanders, viz. that they would never
                  stand the fire of European musketry. He had before, when at Tolaga Bay, been
                  exceeding desirous of firing upon them, for having stolen a small keg of brandy
                  from the boat's crew; but the judicious and humane advice of lieutenant Burney
                  checked his impetuosity. Captain Furneaux finding that his boat did not return the
                  next day, sent Mr. Burney in another boat, well armed, to look after the former.
                  They soon reached the entrance of East Bay, where they observed a canoe containing
                  many natives, who at sight of them paddled away as fast as possible. Our people
                  made after them, but the fear of being taken made the natives jump overboard, and
                  swim to the shore. This behaviour alarmed Mr. Burney, and his apprehensions were
                  but too fully verified when he came up with the canoe. Here they found several
                  mangled limbs of their comrades, and some of their cloaths. After rowing about
                  some time, they came to Grass Cove, towards seven in the evening, where they saw a
                  considerable number of the natives assembled, who seemed prepared to oppose them.
                  The whole hill to the top was covered with crouds of people, as in a fair, and
                  smokes ascended in several places, where they were probably dressing human flesh.
                  Horror chilled the sailors blood in their veins, but the next moment they glowed
                  with the fierce ardour of revenge, and cooler reason was obliged to give way to
                  the powerful impulse. They fired and killed several of the natives, driving them
                  at last, but with great difficulty, from the beach, and destroying a great number
                  of canoes, which they found hauled on shore. They then landed, and searched the
                  huts, where they found many other limbs of their friends packed into baskets, and
                  particularly a hand, which they knew to be that of the unfortunate Mr. Rowe. Mr.
                  Burney is of opinion, that the boat had been beaten to pieces by the natives, for
                  the sake of the iron, as he only met with some detached parts of it. It is not
                  unlikely that the unhappy people who were thus cut off, did not take sufficient
                  care to keep their boat afloat, but suffered the tide to leave it dry upon the
                  rocks, by which means they made their retreat impracticable afterwards. Captain
                  Furneaux having suffered this heavy loss, more heavy to him, as Mr. Rowe was his
                  relation, set sail from Queen Charlotte Sound on the 22d of December, and passed
                  round Cape Horn, touching at no port, nor seeing any land, till he arrived at the
                  Cape of Good Hope, on the 19th of March 1774; from whence he returned to England,
                  anchoring at Spithead on the 15th of July following, at the time when we were near
                  the New Hebrides in the South Sea.</p>

               <p>The New Zeelanders have been dangerous enemies to all the nations who have visited
                  them. The first discoverer, Abel Jansan Tasman, a Dutch navigator, lost four of
                  his people, in an anchoring place, which he named Murderers Bay, and which seems
                  to be the same with captain Cook's Blind Bay. The natives took one of the dead
                  bodies into the canoe with them, and had therefore doubtless tasted the flesh of
                  an European, so early as the year 1642 . By killing ten persons of the Adventure's
                  crew, they have been still more pernicious to the English, and by murdering M.
                  Dufresne Marion, with twenty-eight men, they have treated the French more roughly
                  than all the rest.4 M. Crozet, captain of a fire-ship, in the French navy,
                  happening to be at the Cape of Good Hope, on his way to India, at the time of our
                  return to that settlement, gave us an account of the melancholy fate of his
                  countrymen. He commanded the king's sloop of Mascarin, under M. Marion, and put
                  into the Bay of Islands, on the northern island of New Zeeland in great distress.
                  He was obliged, having lost his masts, to look out for new ones in the woods of
                  this country; but when he had found trees fit for his purpose, it appeared almost
                  impossible to bring them from the hills to the water side. However, necessity at
                  last obliged them to make a road two or three miles long, through the thickest
                  forests, to the place where he met with the best trees. A party of his people were
                  in the mean while placed on an island in the bay, to fill the casks with water,
                  and another party occasionally went on shore to cut wood for the ship's use. They
                  had lain here thirty-three5 days, upon the best terms with the natives, who freely
                  offered their women to the sailors, when M. Marion went on shore with several
                  people, to visit the different parties who were at work, without leaving word that
                  he intended to come back to the ship the same day. His first visit to the waterers
                  being performed, he went to the Hippah, or fortification of the natives, where he
                  commonly used to call in his way to the carpenters, who were encamped in the woods
                  with M. Crozet. Here however, it seems he was cut off, with his company, and
                  boat's crew. The next morning, the lieutenant, who commanded on board, not knowing
                  what had happened, sent a party to cut wood within the neck of land, which may be
                  seen in captain Cook's draught of this bay . A party of the natives waited the
                  opportunity when every one was at work to fall upon the French, and killed them
                  all, except a single sailor who ran over the isthmus, and threw himself into the
                  sea, in order to swim towards the ships, though he was wounded by several spears.
                  He called out at last, and being taken on board, gave the general alarm. M.
                  Crozet's situation in the woods with a small party, was the most critical. A
                  corporal and four marines were immediately dispatched, to acquaint him of his
                  danger, while several boats attended to receive his party, at a place where the
                  sick had been lodged in tents for the recovery of their health. He disposed every
                  thing as well as the time would permit, and effected his retreat to the sea-side.
                  Here however, he found a prodigious croud of the natives assembled, drest out in
                  their best habits, with several chiefs at their head. M. Crozet, told the four
                  marines, to be ready in case he found it necessary, to fire at such persons as he
                  should point out. He gave orders to his party to strike the tents of the sick, to
                  embark all their tools and apparatus, and to retire into the boat, whilst he with
                  the soldiers walked up to the chief. This man immediately told him, that M. Marion
                  was killed by another chief whom he named. M. Crozet took up a stake, and forcing
                  it into the ground, just before the feet of the chief, bid him advance no further.
                  The violence of the action startled the savage, whose irresolution M. Crozet
                  observing, insisted on his commanding the croud to sit down, which was accordingly
                  complied with. He now walked up and down before the New Zeelanders, till all his
                  men were in the boat; his soldiers were ordered to follow, and himself was the
                  last who embarked. He had scarce put off, when the whole body of New Zeelanders
                  rose, began their song of defiance, and threw stones after him; however, by the
                  timely exertion of his people, they all came safe on board. The New Zeelanders
                  from this time forward, made several attempts to cut him off. They made an
                  expedition against the watering-party at night, which, but for the vigilance of
                  the French, would have been fatal to them; and they likewise attacked the ships in
                  more than a hundred large canoes full of men, who felt the effects of European
                  artillery. At last M. Crozet, seeing it impossible to supply the ships with masts,
                  unless he could drive the natives from this neighbourhood, went to attack their
                  hippah, which was one of the greatest and strongest. He put the carpenters in the
                  front, to cut down the pallisadoes, behind which the natives stood in great
                  numbers on the fighting stages, described in captain Cook's former voyage . His
                  people drove the natives from these stages by keeping up a regular fire, which did
                  some execution. The carpenters could now approach without danger, and in a few
                  moments cut a breach in the fortification. A chief instantly stepped into it with
                  a long spear in his hand. He was shot dead by M. Crozet's marksmen, and presently
                  another occupied his place, stepping on the dead body. He likewise fell a victim
                  to his intrepid courage, and in the same manner eight chiefs successively
                  defended, and bravely fell on this post of honour. The rest seeing their leaders
                  dead, took flight, and the French pursued and killed numbers of them. M. Crozet
                  offered fifty dollars to any person who should take a New Zeelander alive, but
                  this was absolutely impracticable. A soldier seized an old man, and began to drag
                  him towards his captain, but the savage being unarmed, bit into the fleshy part of
                  the Frenchman's hand, of which the exquisite pain so enraged him, that he ran the
                  New Zeelander through with the bayonet. M. Crozet found great quantities of
                  dresses, arms, tools, and raw flax in this hippah, together with a prodigious
                  store of dried fish, and roots, which seemed to be intended for winter provision.
                  He completed the repairs in his ship without interruption, after accomplishing
                  this enterprize, and prosecuted his voyage after a stay of sixty-four days in the
                  Bay of Islands.</p>

               <p>The character of the New Zeelanders would appear to no great advantage in this
                  transaction with the French, if we supposed that nothing passed previous to the
                  massacre to rouze their indignation. But the whole tenour of their behaviour to
                  Europeans, seems to acquit them of treachery and cruel malevolence. It is
                  therefore greatly to be suspected that they took umbrage at some affront, perhaps
                  unwittingly committed by the strangers, and revenged it with that passionate fury
                  which hurries on the savage into excesses.7 We had no reason to doubt the veracity
                  of the people at Queen Charlotte's Sound, since they accused their own countrymen
                  of theft; but it plainly appears from these instances, that the rash action of
                  revenging this theft with death, and most probably revenging it indiscriminately
                  on a whole body of natives, must have provoked them to retaliate. Born to live our
                  stated time on this globe, every one who puts a premature period to our existence
                  here, offends the laws of the Creator. The passions are wisely implanted in our
                  breast for our preservation; and revenge, in particular, guards us against the
                  encroachments of others. Savages do not give up the right of retaliating injuries;
                  but civilized societies confer on certain individuals the power and the duty to
                  revenge their wrongs. Still, even in the most polished countries of Europe, this
                  method of administring justice is not sufficient in all cases. Such is the
                  imperfection of human institutions, that the public avenger of wrongs oft lifts
                  his hand against the sacred rights of the whole community. On that occasion all
                  civil agreements are dissolved, every man assumes his rights, and give free course
                  to the passions. Even in private life there are occasions where this sacred
                  principle of revenge is of infinite service in the best regulated community.
                  Nothing is more common than oppressions, affronts, and injuries against which the
                  law provides no remedy; nothing more frequent, than that a set men are powerful
                  enough to wrest the laws to the disadvantage of the wretched and friendless. These
                  instances would be still more numerous, and be carried to the most detestable
                  pitch of tyranny, if this dread did not with-hold them, that the injured party may
                  resume that power of redressing his wrongs, which he sees so inadequately
                  exercised by his representative. He that attempts another's property, runs the
                  risk of being killed without a trial by the person whom he robs; and the fear of
                  the sword or the cane, hath often kept villains within bounds, who are
                  invulnerable to the attacks of the law.</p>

               <p>Being satisfied that the Adventure had safely sailed from Queen Charlotte's Sound,
                  by the signs of Peeterrè,9 we took the opportunity of a fair day <date>[Friday
                     28.]</date>to visit the innermost recesses of West Bay, in order to be
                  convinced, if possible, whether there was any probability that the hogs and fowls,
                  brought thither almost a year before, would ever stock these wild woods with
                  numerous breeds. We came to the spot where we had left them, but saw not the least
                  vestiges of their having been on the beach, nor did it appear that any of the
                  natives had visited this remote place; from whence we have some room to hope, that
                  the animals had retreated into the thickest part of the woods. We afterwards found
                  a few families of the natives in an opposite part of the bay, who furnished us
                  with abundance of fish.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. November.][Wednesday 2.]</date>We went to Grass Cove on the 2d of
                  November, having had rainy and stormy weather after our excursion to West Bay.
                  Ignorant of the dreadful tragedy which had there been acted, we landed in all the
                  creeks thereabouts, and advanced far into the country, seeing several paths which
                  led up the hills, but meeting no inhabitants. We shot here about thirty birds,
                  amongst which were a dozen pigeons, that frequented this spot on account of a
                  species of sophora-tree, of which they consumed the leaves and seeds. We returned
                  in the evening at eight o'clock, finding a number of natives on board, who had
                  arrived from another part of the bay. These natives sold us no provisions like
                  those who came with Peeterrè, but brought dresses, arms, and other curiosities;
                  captain Cook therefore absolutely prohibited all commerce with them. They returned
                  to us again the next morning, but the captain persisted in his resolution of not
                  admitting them, unless they brought us refreshments. Indeed, this manner of
                  proceeding was equally laudable and necessary; it required the utmost exertion of
                  authority, as well as the enforcement of example, to make the stubborn sailor take
                  the least step for the benefit of his own health, as soon as his attention was
                  engaged by the manufactures of the natives. It is surprising to what a pitch the
                  rage of collecting arms and utensils had risen among the crew. During our stay at
                  Queen Charlotte's Sound, several of our people who were sent to make brooms, with
                  the boatswain at their head, robbed the hut of a poor native of several tools, and
                  forced upon him some nails, which they thought an equivalent. Fortunately, the
                  natives found means to complain to captain Cook, and the offenders were justly
                  punished. The crew of the Endeavour were not a whit more equitable or honest; they
                  robbed the wife of Tuboraï Tamaide at Taheitee and seemed at New Zeeland to think
                  they had a right to the property of the natives.10 Indeed their character is very
                  uniform, and cannot well be otherwise from their manner of life; and it may be
                  observed, that their own commanders complain of the same inhuman propensity to
                  destroy the poor harmless people of the South Seas, which I have so frequently
                  observed in the course of this voyage .</p>

               <p>The embargo which was laid on the trade was the reason that all the natives left
                  us on the 4th, except a single wretched family, who had not been able to catch
                  fish during the two last days, on account of the stormy weather. We found them at
                  the Indian Cove feeding on insipid fern-roots, for want of more nutritive food.
                  Each of their huts contained a fire, of which the smoke entirely involved them;
                  however, by lying down close to the ground, they were less incommoded by the smoke
                  than if they had sat upright. Notwithstanding the inconvenience of this situation,
                  there were not wanting several of our shipmates who readily took up with the same
                  lodging, in order to receive the caresses of the filthy female inhabitants.
                  Perhaps it may be imagined that only brutish sailors could have such groveling
                  appetites; but the imperious element, on which they are continually tossed about,
                  seems to level all distinctions. Indeed, when people habitually give full course
                  to their unbounded desires, it is not surprising that they gratify one sense at
                  the expence of all the rest. The nations whom we had lately visited in the New
                  Hebrides, and at New Caledonia, having very wisely declined every indecent
                  familiarity with their guests, the most loathsome objects in a New Zeelander's
                  smoky and nasty hovel, were eagerly addressed.</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 5.]</date>The next day was very fair, after an interval of bad
                  weather; captain Cook therefore chose to make an excursion, to trace the end of
                  the sound, which still remained unknown We set out in a boat, and advanced a
                  considerable way towards some canoes which were fishing. At sight of us the people
                  in them left their employment, and paddled away; but as our crew rowed very
                  briskly, we soon overtook them, and enquired if they knew a passage out to sea
                  through the extremity of the Sound. They seemed not to understand our question,
                  but offered us some fish, which they had just caught. We purchased a great
                  quantity, and found the natives very friendly in their behaviour, they having been
                  on board the ship a few days before. Receiving no intelligence from them, we rowed
                  a great way higher, and passed an arm of the Sound to the left, and several bays
                  and coves on the right hand. Here meeting with another canoe, which came up
                  towards us, we asked the natives concerning the outlet into the sea. They pointed
                  out the left or eastern arm, and told us that the other to the south at last ended
                  in a bay, which was every where surrounded by mountains. Upon their report we
                  steered into the eastern arm, and soon discovered a most spacious bay in it, to
                  the right of which the shores were every where lined with natives. We landed at
                  one of the most populous places, and saluted by the nose the chief and principal
                  people, who stepped forward from the rest. The chief immediately acquainted us
                  that his name was Tringo-Boohee .12 He was a little elderly man, but very active,
                  lively and friendly; his face was punctured all over in scrolls, by which he
                  distinguished himself from every one of his countrymen present, who were all much
                  less disfigured by this operation. The women sat in several rows before their
                  huts, and a few of them were known to us, having been on board the ship some days
                  before. They all seemed to be much better situated than the scattered families in
                  the neighbourhood of our cove; their garb was new and neat, and the features of
                  some much less disgusting than we had generally seen. Perhaps this was owing to
                  their faces being clean, without being covered with paint, soot, or other dirt.
                  The number of men encreased about us every minute, as we traded eagerly for fish,
                  which they were equally eager to sell. Our friend Tringho-Bohee, however, seemed
                  to dislike the arrival of so many people, especially as the price of his fish
                  fell, in proportion as the market was better supplied. A great number of them
                  likewise brought their arms and clothes to sell, and most of them went naked,
                  except a small piece of mat girt about the loins, this day being remarkably mild,
                  and the place sheltered from all winds. After staying here about a quarter of an
                  hour, captain Cook reimbarked with us, which was the more adviseable, as many of
                  the natives who arrived last, brought their arms, and the whole croud now amounted
                  to two hundred and upwards, a much greater number than we had suspected the sound
                  to contain, or had ever seen assembled together. We had already put off, when a
                  sailor acquainted the captain, that he had bought a bundle of fish from one of the
                  natives, for which he had not paid him. Captain Cook took the last nail which was
                  left, and calling to the native, threw it on the beach at his feet. The savage
                  being offended, or thinking himself attacked, picked up a stone, and threw it into
                  the boat with great force, but luckily without hitting any one of us. We now
                  called to him again, and pointed to the nail which we had thrown towards him. As
                  soon as he had seen, and picked it up, he laughed at his own petulance, and seemed
                  highly pleased with our conduct towards him. This circumstance, with a little
                  rashness on our part, might have become very fatal to us, or might at least have
                  involved us in a dangerous quarrel. If we had resented the affront of being pelted
                  with a stone, the whole body would have joined in the cause of their countryman,
                  and we must have fallen an easy prey to their numbers, being at the distance of
                  five or six leagues from the ship, without any hopes of assistance. It was
                  fortunate that we were not acquainted at that time with the wretched fate of Mr.
                  Rowe and his companions; else the unexpected meeting with such a body of natives,
                  would greatly have alarmed us, especially as it appears probable from their
                  situation, that they acted a principal part in his massacre. When we consider the
                  numerous opportunities which we gave the natives to cut us off, by leaving our
                  boats, walking up hills, landing in their populous settlements, going among them
                  unarmed, and the like; it becomes every moment clearer to me, that their
                  friendship is always to be trusted, unless it is infringed on our part, and that
                  accordingly they did not cut off the Adventure's people without provocation. It
                  must nevertheless be acknowledged, that we were peculiarly fortunate in our
                  excursions, which Providence always guided in such a manner, that we did not fall
                  unawares into the hands of any families of the natives, with whom we had not
                  concluded a previous treaty of peace.</p>

               <p>The people at this place agreed with those to whom we had spoken in the canoe,
                  that the arm which we had entered communicated with the sea. We continued our
                  route accordingly, and observed after some turnings, that the inlet ran to the
                  northward, at the back of Grass Cove, and East Bay. We found in it many coves and
                  beaches, with greens, and plenty of wild fowl; the water was perfectly smooth, and
                  the mountains formed many romantic prospects, being clothed with fine forests.
                  Having advanced about three leagues from Tringo-Boohee's settlement, which the
                  natives call Ko-Haghee-nooee,13 we began to see many shags, with a double crest, a
                  species which always builds in the vicinity of the sea. A few moments afterwards
                  we also saw breakers at the farther end of the inlet, which fully confirmed the
                  accounts of the natives. On the left, or at the back of Grass Cove, we saw a
                  hippah, built on a high rock which stood in a manner insulated, on a fine spot of
                  level land. The whole sort was surrounded with many tall poles, and appeared to be
                  in very good order. Having left it at some distance, (for it lay in a kind of bay)
                  we saw the outlet into Cook's Strait, and found it a very narrow passage; before
                  it lay many dangerous and lofty rocks, upon which a dreadful surf broke
                  continually. In the passage, or gap itself, we had thirteen fathom of water,14 and
                  observed a strong tide running past. We had a fair view from hence of the northern
                  island, and of the strait through which we were to pass into the South Sea for the
                  last time. It was about four o'clock when we made this discovery, but having the
                  wind against us, or at least very uncertain, we were obliged to return the same
                  way we came, instead of going round cape Koamaroo, which would have saved us much
                  time. As we knew of such a numerous tribe of natives living in this neighbourhood,
                  we did not venture to stay a night on shore; but passing the Hippah, and
                  Ko-Haghee-nooee, arrived safe on board about ten o'clock at night, having fasted
                  the whole time, and being thoroughly fatigued with our long excursion. The new
                  channel which we had now discovered, is indicated as a bay in captain Cook's map
                  of the Straits, inserted in his former voyage, he being at that time unacquainted
                  with its outlet into the sea.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 6.]</date>The weather was rather dull the next day; however, our
                  friend Peeterrè returned with his family to visit us. Captain Cook took him into
                  the cabin, and dressed him in a shirt, stockings, breeches, and coat, as a mark of
                  friendship for his assiduity in supplying us with fish. Peeterrè seemed highly
                  delighted with his new dress, and valued himself upon being in favour with us. As
                  he was contented with these presents, he did not venture to beg for any others,
                  but behaved with great moderation. He accompanied us to Long Island, where we
                  passed some time in shooting, and then returned on board to dinner, of which
                  Peeterrè partook with peculiar good manners, considering his education. It is
                  scarce to be doubted, that he felt the superiority of our knowledge, of our arts,
                  manufactures, and mode of living, in some degree, especially as he was always
                  remarkably in good spirits when amongst us; but notwithstanding all this, he never
                  once expressed a desire of going with us; and when we proposed it to him, he
                  declined it, preferring the wretched precarious life of his countrymen, to all the
                  advantages of which he saw us possessed. I have already mentioned in another place
                  , that this way of thinking is common to all savages; and I might have added, that
                  it is not entirely obliterated among polished nations. The force of habit no where
                  appears more strikingly than in such instances, where it seems alone to
                  counterbalance the comforts of a civilized life.</p>

               <p>Peeterrè returned on shore with his comrades in the evening, but came to sell us
                  fish again the next day. We frequently heard him and the rest of the natives
                  singing on shore, and were sometimes favoured with a song when they visited us on
                  board. Their music is far superior in variety to that of the Society and Friendly
                  Islands; and if any nation of the South Sea comes in competition with them in this
                  respect, I should apprehend it to be that of Tanna. The same intelligent friend15
                  who favoured me with a specimen of the songs at Tonga-Tabboo, (see vol. I. p.
                  429), has likewise obligingly communicated to me another of the New Zeeland music,
                  which will be sufficient to give an idea of the taste of the people. He did not
                  visit the island of Tanna, but assured me that there appeared to be some display
                  of genius in the New Zeeland tunes, which soared very far above the wretched
                  humming of the Taheitian, or even the four notes of the people at the Friendly
                  Islands.</p>

               <p>[Some music notes here]</p>

               <p>Of this tune they continue to sing the two first bars till the words of their song
                  are at an end, and then they close with the last. Sometimes they also sing an
                  under-part, which is a third lower, except the two last notes, which are
                  unisons.</p>

               <p>[Some music notes here]</p>

               <p>The same gentleman likewise took notice of a kind of dirge-like melancholy song,
                  relating to the death of Tupaya. This song was chiefly practised by the
                  inhabitants round Tolaga Bay, on the northern island, where the people seem to
                  have had a high regard for that Taheitian. There is an extreme simplicity in the
                  words, though they seem to be metrically arranged, in such a manner, as to express
                  the feelings of the mourners, by their flow movement.</p>

               <p>The first effusions of grief are not loquacious; the only idea to which we can
                  give utterance is that of our loss, which takes the form of a complaint. Whether
                  the simplicity of the tune is equally agreeable, or well judged, is a question
                  which I cannot pretend to determine. The connoisseurs in music must acquit or
                  condemn the New Zeelanders.</p>

               <p>They descend at the close from c to the octave below in a fall, resembling the
                  sliding of a finger along the finger-board on the violin. I shall now dismiss this
                  subject with the following observation, that the taste for music of the New
                  Zeelanders, and their superiority in this respect to other nations in the South
                  Seas, are to me stronger proofs, in favour of their heart, than all the idle
                  eloquence of philosophers in their cabinets can invalidate. They have violent
                  passions; but it would be absurd to assert that these only lead them to inhuman
                  excesses.</p>

               <p>We continued to make several excursions along shore, and to the islands in the
                  Sound, till the 9th of November. In this interval we made such additions to our
                  botanical and zoological collections, as could hardly have been expected at so
                  early a season, and after searching the same woods so many times. We collected ten
                  or twelve species of plants, and four or five sorts of birds, which we had not
                  seen before. Our crew assiduously filled all our water-casks, cut a great quantity
                  of wood, repaired the rigging, and fitted the ship once more to encounter the fury
                  of southern gales. The quantity of fish which the natives daily brought for sale,
                  allowed us to salt so many as to fill several casks with them, which served as a
                  sea-stock during our passage to Tierra del Fuego, kept extremely well, and were
                  very palatable to most people. The latter part of our stay was likewise employed
                  in laying in an ample provision of shags, cormorants, and such other birds as we
                  could find, in order that we might prolong as much as possible the term of living
                  on fresh food.</p>

               <p>On the 9th, in the afternoon, we unmoored, and rode all night at a single anchor,
                  which we weighed the next morning at four, thus leaving New Zeeland a third time
                  in the course of one voyage. As often as we had visited this country, it had
                  abundantly supplied us with refreshments, which were particularly efficacious in
                  restoring our health, and banishing the symptoms of the scurvy. Not only
                  well-tasted antiscorbutic plants, but likewise the fish, which are easily
                  digested, seem to me to have been equally salutary restoratives. The keen air
                  which is felt in New Zeeland, on the finest days, contributed not a little to
                  brace our fibres, relaxed by a long cruize in warmer climates, and the strong
                  exercise we took was doubtless beneficial in many respects. From hence it happened
                  that we always left that country with new vigour. If we came in ever so pale and
                  emaciated, the good cheer which we enjoyed during our stay, soon rekindled a glow
                  of health on our cheeks, and we returned to the south, like our ship, to all
                  outward appearance, as clean and sound as ever, though in reality somewhat
                  impaired by the many hard rubs of the voyage. Perhaps it may be attributed in part
                  to the healthiness of the air, the simplicity of food, and particularly its easy
                  digestion and great abundance, that the natives have attained a tall stature, are
                  muscular, well proportioned , and well formed. It appears indeed from many
                  circumstances, that fish are so innumerable on their coasts, as to supply them
                  with constant food, in sufficient quantity throughout the year, especially as M.
                  Crozet and ourselves observed that they had laid up a plentiful share of dried
                  fish for the winter.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. V.</l>

                  <l>The course from New Zeeland to Tierra del Fuego.-Stay at Christmas Harbour.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. November.][Thursday 10.]</date>WE cleared Cook's Strait on the 10th
                  in the afternoon, after passing within a few leagues of the new inlet, which we
                  had discovered previous to our departure. We were becalmed all the next day in
                  sight of the land, and did not obtain a breeze till towards evening. On the 12th
                  in the morning we were out of sight of land, and steered away between the south
                  and east, towards Tierra del Fuego. We entered upon this navigation with more
                  chearfulness, than upon the last southern cruize. We were persuaded that no land
                  lay in our way to retard our progress; the westerly winds, which prevail in these
                  latitudes, were in our favour; and we knew that the hardships of the voyage were
                  drawing to an end. Indeed we looked upon ourselves as already safe from perils,
                  and the hope of revisiting Europe, after many hazardous tracks and narrow escapes,
                  seemed to animate us with new Promethean fire. The run from New Zeeland to Tierra
                  del Fuego surpassed our warmest expectations, and, considering the construction of
                  our ship, which was always reckoned a dull sailor, was indeed one of the quickest
                  passages which can be imagined, as we made one day with another upwards of forty
                  leagues. We saw a whale on the 12th, about twelve yards long, with an oblong blunt
                  head, on which were two longitudinal furrows, and as many upright ridges.1 It had
                  small eyes, two semilunar apertures, from whence it occasionally spouted the
                  water, and was mottled all over with white spots. It had two large fins behind the
                  head, but none on the back. This extraordinary creature seems to have been
                  intirely unknown before.</p>

               <p>We had sprung a leak on going out of Queen Charlotte's Sound, which we discovered
                  on the 14th; but it gave us very little uneasiness, as the water in the pump-well
                  encreased only five inches in eight hours. The westerly winds blew with
                  astonishing violence, and the breadth of the ocean being very considerable, the
                  billows encreased to an immense size, and seemed to be sometimes several hundred
                  yards long. The ship rolled very disagreeably when the wind was quite aft; and
                  though it has been supposed that a ship's inclination in the greatest roll never
                  exceeds twenty degrees, we have observed it inclined above thirty, and several
                  times even to forty degrees.</p>

               <p>During this run we saw birds of the albatross, petrel, and pinguin kinds, almost
                  every day, and especially at equal distances from New Zeeland and America, which
                  are about fifteen hundred leagues asunder. On the 27th of November we made a
                  greater run than ever was made in our ship before, which consisted of 184 miles by
                  the log.</p>

               <p><date>[1774. December.]</date>On the 2d of December, after a short calm, we had a
                  fresh breeze, which continued to blow without intermission, but with different
                  degrees of velocity, <date>[Sunday 18.]</date>till the 18th, when we made the
                  land, a little after midnight, near Cape Deseado, on one of the westermost islands
                  of Tierra del Fuego. The fish which we had salted at New Zeeland had lasted during
                  the whole run, and we had found great benefit from living upon them preferably to
                  salt beef and pork, which was now so universally loathed, that captain Cook
                  himself declared he should probably never eat it again with any degree of
                  satisfaction. The sour-krout had been constantly used in the mean while, and the
                  wort had been taken as a preservative by many persons in the ship. The former was
                  still as good as ever, but the malt was much damaged, and had lost part of its
                  efficacy, by having been put up in green unseasoned casks. I drank plentifully of
                  it, but was notwithstanding afflicted with considerable swellings in the legs,
                  attended with pains, which returned from time to time.</p>

               <p>The part of the world which was now in sight had a very unfavourable aspect. About
                  three o'clock in the morning we ran along it, and found it for the greatest part
                  hid in a thick haze. The parts near us seemed to be small islands, which though
                  not very high, were however very black, and almost entirely barren. Beyond them we
                  saw some broken high lands, which were covered with snow, almost to the water's
                  edge. Great flocks of shags, shear-waters, skuas, and other water-fowl, in some
                  measure made amends for the desolate appearance of the coast, as they gave us
                  great hopes that we should meet with refreshments, if we could find a harbour. Few
                  countries that we touched at are so wretchedly destitute, as not to have afforded
                  us some supply of food, either animal or vegetable, by the assistance of which we
                  made shift to keep ourselves free from a high degree of the scurvy and other
                  distempers.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we passed the island, upon which Cape Noir is situated, mentioned
                  by M. Frezier.2 The view which he gives of the land corresponded very well with
                  what we saw; and to the N. E. there appeared to be a long inlet, which is
                  doubtless the channel of St. Barbara. In the Spanish charts this extremity of
                  Tierra del Fuego has long since been very accurately laid down as divided into
                  many islands and channels, which have been explored, and each in particular named,
                  by their early navigators. One of the best charts of this kind accompanies the
                  Spanish translation of the anonymous account of Mr. Byron's Voyage round the
                  World, by Dr. Casimir Gomez Ortega. Agreeably to their discoveries, we found many
                  separate islands, from the place where we made the coast to Cape Noir, and should
                  perhaps have seen many more, if the weather had not been very hazy.</p>

               <p>We found the land to all appearance much more compact after passing Cape Noir; and
                     <date>[Monday 19.]</date>the next morning in particular, the coast seemed to be
                  entirely connected; the mountains rose to a much greater height, immediately from
                  the sea-side, and were covered with snow in every part. The wind gradually
                  lessened, and towards noon we were entirely becalmed, having the finest sun-shine,
                  and mild weather. Many sorts of water-birds appeared about us from time to time,
                  and several seals also sported in the water. In the afternoon about thirty
                  grampusses were seen playing about us, chiefly swimming in couples. Another calm
                  succeeded again <date>[Tuesday 20.]</date>the next day, though we had had an
                  easterly wind during a part of the preceding afternoon. It was very amusing to us,
                  to meet with mild weather in the neighbourhood of that tempestuous cape, of which
                  the name alone has affrighted the mariners, ever since lord Anson's voyage.3 The
                  destruction of vulgar prejudices is of so much service to science, and to mankind
                  in general, that it cannot fail of giving pleasure, to every one sensible of its
                  benefits. We had this day the thermometer at 48° which, considering the
                  neighbourhood of the huge heaps of snow on shore, was very moderate. This part of
                  the world has been called the Coast of Desolation by the navigators who first
                  visited it, and seems fully to deserve the appellation. Here we discerned nothing
                  but vast mountains, of which the spiry summits were every where covered with
                  eternal snow. Along the sea, the nearest rocks were clear of snow, but black, and
                  destitute of grasses or shrubbery. Some inlets appeared in different parts, where
                  a few islands seemed to have a covering of green. We stood in to one of these in
                  the evening, having then obtained an easterly breeze. A huge perpendicular wall of
                  rock formed its western entrance, and captain Cook called it the York Minster,
                  having discovered a strong resemblance between that Gothic building, and this
                  dreary chaotic rock. It lies in 55° 30' S. and 70° 28' W. Along the coast we found
                  regular soundings, but in the mouth of the inlet, we could not reach the bottom
                  with one hundred and fifty fathom of line. This circumstance had already happened
                  to us before at Dusky Bay (vol. I. p. 123); but as we saw a very spacious sound
                  before us, we ventured to stand on, amidst different rude islands, on which the
                  summits of hills were sometimes capt with snow. A boat was hoisted out, in which
                  my father accompanied some of the lieutenants, who endeavoured to shoot birds, but
                  brought only one on board. After being much retarded by calms, we arrived about
                  nine o'clock in a small cove, indifferently sheltered either from wind or sea, but
                  a welcome place of refuge on account of the approach of night. Here, then we
                  dropped the anchor, which had been aweigh only forty-one days, during which we had
                  crossed the South Sea in its full extent, from New Zeeland to Cape Deseado.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 21.]</date>The next morning captain Cook, accompanied by several
                  officers, as well as my father, Dr. Sparrman, and myself, went in a boat in quest
                  of a more safe and convenient anchorage. We only rowed round a single point of the
                  island under which our ship lay, and immediately found a fine cove sheltered from
                  all winds, and perfectly land-locked, with a little rill of water, and a
                  shrubbery. The weather was mild considering the climate, and several birds were
                  heard on the shore. We found many little clefts, which cannot properly be called
                  vallies, where a few shrubs of different species, sprung up in a thin layer of
                  swampy soil, being defended against the violence of storms, and exposed to the
                  genial influence of reverberated sun-beams. The rock of which the whole island
                  consisted, is a coarse granite, composed of feld-spath, quartz, and black mica or
                  glimmer. This rock is in most places entirely naked, without the smallest
                  vegetable particle; but wherever the rains, or melted snows have washed together
                  some little rubbish, and other particles in decay, it is covered with a coating of
                  minute plants, in growth like mosses, which forming a kind of turf, about an inch
                  or more in thickness, very easily slip away under the foot, having no firm hold on
                  the rock. In sheltered places a few other plants thrive among these mossy species,
                  and these at last form a sufficient quantity of soil, for the nutriment of shrubs,
                  especially in such spots as I have mentioned before. Among them we immediately
                  found the species, the bark of which captain Winter discovered to be an excellent
                  aromatic, known in the shops by the name of Winter's bark, but frequently, till of
                  late, confounded with a very different plant, the canella alba, of Jamaica. This
                  Winter's bark-tree grows on the shores of the straits of Magalhaens, and on the
                  eastern parts of Tierra del Fuego, to a stately size; but in this barren part we
                  never saw it under any other form than that of a shrub, about ten feet high,
                  crooked and shapeless. Barren as these rocks appeared, yet almost every plant
                  which we gathered on them was new to us, and some species were remarkable for the
                  beauty of their flowers, or their smell. A new species of geese, a sort of shags,
                  the black oyster-catchers, or sea-pies, and several other birds dwelt along the
                  shores, which were lined with immense floating beds of rockweeds. At our return,
                  all our people began to remove the ship into her new situation, where she was
                  moored in the afternoon. A few small fish, of a new species of cod, were caught
                  among the weeds; but in general every attempt to supply the table by fishing
                  proved unsuccessful.</p>

               <p>Early the next morning, captain Cook set out to take bearings in the sound, and we
                  took that opportunity of examining its natural productions. The sound is very
                  spacious, and surrounded to the north and east by several ranges of high
                  mountains, which seem covered with permanent snow and ice. In the bay itself are
                  several islands of considerable elevation, though not equal to the height of the
                  main land, of which only the highest have some snow on their very summits. That
                  under which our ship lay at anchor, was free from snow, though it seemed to be at
                  least two hundred yards perpendicular in height. Besides these high islands, we
                  observed several, from ten to twenty yards high, which lay in the northern part of
                  the sound, and appeared to be almost covered with verdure at a distance. We
                  directed our course to one of these, about three miles off, of which the mosses
                  and shrubs, upon nearer examination, seemed to have been burnt in several places.
                  The rock was here a kind of yellowish slate, which lay in horizontal strata,
                  covered with a much thicker stratum of soil, than we had seen on the other island.
                  Among the plants which grew on it, we picked up some new ones, and on its shores
                  met with a new sort of fly-catcher, which lived upon shell-fish and worms, and
                  seemed for that purpose to be furnished with a much stronger bill, than the birds
                  of that genus commonly have. Rowing round one end of this island, we observed a
                  shrubbery, or little grove on a point of land, in the shade of which stood several
                  empty huts. They resembled in shape that which is described and drawn in the
                  Endeavour's voyage , with this difference, that they were not covered with
                  seals-skins, which are perhaps put on occasionally, and deemed too valuable to be
                  left behind. They were only skeletons of huts, consisting of boughs of trees,
                  which for the greatest part had fresh green foliage on them; a sign that the
                  natives had but lately made them. On entering this sound, and taking notice of its
                  dreary, desolate appearance, we had supposed that the natives of Tierra del Fuego,
                  never touch upon this inhospitable part, but confine themselves to the
                  neighbourhood of the Straits of Magalhaens, and to the eastern side of Tierra del
                  Fuego; but it seems that human nature is capable of withstanding the greatest
                  inclemencies of weather, and of supporting its existence alike in the burning
                  sands of Africa, and in the frozen extremities of the globe. We landed on several
                  other islands, from whence we had a most extensive view across the sound, which
                  looked wild and horrid in its wintery dress. This was however, the first summer
                  month of these regions; most of the plants we saw were in flower, and the birds
                  were every where bringing up their young. From thence we may easily form an
                  adequate idea of the torpid state of these regions, where the sun-beams cannot
                  melt the snow, at a season when their influence is the strongest. The farther we
                  advanced from the sea, the more snow appeared on the mountains. In some places we
                  saw cascades, and streams gushing down over the snow, especially where the rays of
                  the sun took effect by being frequently reflected. We found a most beautiful cove
                  on this coast, which formed a circular bason, where the water was smooth and
                  transparent as a mirror. All the lower parts were fringed with trees, which we had
                  no where seen so tall in the neighbourhood, and many streams rushed down with
                  great impetuosity between their roots, making a most convenient watering-place. A
                  prodigious number of small birds sat on every branch, and twittered around us in
                  the sun-shine. They were of many different species, but unacquainted with men,
                  hopped so near us, that it was impossible to shoot them, especially as we had now
                  no other than coarse shot left, and that in very small quantity. Abundance of
                  mosses, ferns, and climbers grew up between the trees, and were no small
                  impediment to us in walking. Various flowers enlivened these woods, and encreased
                  our collection with new species. Here then there was the appearance of summer; but
                  if we looked up to the monstrous cloud-capt mountains which formed almost
                  perpendicular walls on all sides of the harbour, and beheld them covered with snow
                  and ice, which had sometimes a blue, and sometimes a yellowish tinge, we thought
                  ourselves transported to the Glaciers of Switzerland, where the seasons seem
                  likewise to be lost, and confounded in each other. The height of these mountains
                  was very considerable, though not equal to the Alps, and their summits were
                  divided into many sharp and craggy points, between which the interval was filled
                  with snow. We landed here, and walked along the shore to another port, formed by a
                  number of low islands, which entirely sheltered it from all winds. Here we met
                  with several species of wild ducks, and particularly one of the size of a goose,
                  which ran along the surface of the sea with amazing velocity, beating the water
                  with its wings and feet.</p>

               <p>Indeed its motion was so quick, that we saw it was in vain to attempt to shoot at
                  it; a more favourable opportunity was therefore eagerly wished for. In the sequel
                  we really obtained several specimens of this curious bird, which resembled a duck,
                  except in the size, and in the extreme shortness of its wings. It had a grey
                  plumage, with a few white quill-feathers; a yellow bill and feet, and two large,
                  naked, callous knobs of the same colour, upon the joint of each wing, at the
                  alula. Our sailors called it a race-horse, from its vast swiftness; but in the
                  Falkland Islands, the English have given it the name of loggerhead-duck . Besides
                  this species, we found numbers of the great gull or skua, which had their nests
                  among some dry grass on one of the islands. We were fortunate enough to meet with
                  an island entirely covered with the shrubs of a species of arbutus, loaded with
                  red fruit, of the size of small cherries, which were very well tasted, and
                  combined an agreeable tartness with a sweet and a bitter flavour. The rocks of the
                  same island, at the water's edge, were covered with large muscle-shells, of which
                  we found the fish more delicious than oysters. On these two articles, with the
                  help of a few biscuits, and a little piece of salt-beef, we dined luxuriously,
                  amidst the dreary rocks of a country, which at first sight did not seem likely to
                  furnish such an entertainment. To add to our good fortune, we met with several
                  islands in our return, covered with excellent celery, which, though much smaller
                  than that of New Zeeland, was much higher flavoured, its juices being probably
                  more concentrated. We loaded our boat with it, and returned late on board, after
                  being overtaken by several smart showers. On our return, we found that the
                  neighbourhood of the ship was very sensibly warmer than the northern parts of the
                  sound, where the air was refrigrated by the abundance of snow on the mountains.
                  One of the lieutenants returned the same evening from an excursion to the
                  north-westward, whither he had been sent by captain Cook to take the bearings of
                  the land.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 23.]</date>The next day was so fine and mild, that several gentlemen
                  walked across the island under which the ship lay at anchor, and shot many little
                  birds in their excursion. Mr. Hodges took a draught of the whole sound from the
                  height, which has a most picturesque appearance in that point of view. It has been
                  engraved for captain Cook's account of this voyage; and the print is remarkable
                  for the figure of a falcon in the fore-ground, which, from its supernatural size,
                  seems to resemble the rukh, celebrated in the Arabian Tales, more than any bird of
                  less fanciful dimensions.4 We met with a most beautiful species of hawk on Tierra
                  del Fuego, about the size of the falcon-gentil, brown, with a black crest, and the
                  neck and shoulders barred with a grey and chocolate colour; the figure above
                  mentioned may perhaps be meant for this species.</p>

               <p>We accompanied the captain this morning on an excursion round the island under
                  which the ship lay at anchor, whilst he sent lieutenant Pickersgill to explore
                  another part of the bay. The trouble of this day we thought well rewarded by a
                  great number of shags which we shot among the rocks, where they had built their
                  nests by thousands. The power of instinct had commonly impelled them to choose for
                  this purpose such places where the rocks project over the sea, or where at least
                  they rise perpendicular; that in case their young should happen to fall out, they
                  might take no hurt by dropping only in the water. The slate of which the rock
                  consisted in this part was not very hard; but it is nevertheless very surprising
                  that these birds have found means to make holes in it, or even to enlarge its
                  natural cavities so much, as to make room for their offspring in them. These shags
                  always returned to their nests immediately after we had fired, and flew so
                  heavily, that we found not much difficulty to shoot them on the wing. The French
                  at the Falkland Isles have called these birds nigauds, or ninnies, on account of
                  their seeming stupidity, which could hardly be taught to shun destruction .
                  Besides these, we also brought on board three geese which we had shot on this
                  excursion, and which were very remarkable, on account of the difference of colour
                  between the male and female. The gander was somewhat less than a common tame
                  goose, and perfectly white, except the feet, which were yellow, and the bill,
                  which was black. The goose, on the contrary, was black, with white transverse
                  bars, a grey head, some green, and some white quill-feathers. It should seem that
                  nature hath very wisely ordered this disparity; for the female being obliged to
                  lead the young brood, its graver colour does not so easily discover them to
                  falcons and other birds of prey. I would only hint this as a supposition which
                  requires farther confirmation; perhaps our understanding is much too short-sighted
                  to assign, on such slight grounds, the true ways of Divine Providence in the
                  wonderful works of the creation.</p>

               <p>After we had returned on board, lieutenant Pickersgill arrived, who had met with a
                  cove on the eastern shore of the sound, where a prodigious number of geese had
                  taken up their residence. Captain Cook being desirous to procure some kind of
                  refreshment for his people, and to enable them to spend their Christmas-day with
                  chearfulness, proceeded towards that place the next morning, and sent Mr.
                  Pickersgill thither in another boat by a different route. My father, Dr. Sparrman,
                  myself, and one midshipman, accompanied the captain in the pinnace. We stood out
                  to sea, along an island to the east of the ship, which lay between us and the
                  Goose Cove. It happened very fortunately that we took this course, without which
                  we should probably have made a very unsuccessful excursion. But along the whole
                  southern extremity of the island, extending at least four or five miles, we saw
                  prodigious numbers of geese, which suffered us to come close to them. We perceived
                  that they were, for the greatest part, young birds of the last year's brood, which
                  moulted their feathers in this place, and having lost their quill-feathers, could
                  not fly to any great distance. If we had been apprised of this circumstance at
                  first, we might have taken greater spoils than we did; however, after toiling till
                  sunset, we had collected no less than sixty-three geese, which enabled us to give
                  a fresh meal to every man on board. The sport of the day was extremely
                  entertaining; for though the object of our mission was variety, yet our principles
                  were not yet sufficiently sanctified, to refuse a good meal when it was offered .
                  We found many deep caverns in the rock, which vaulted sometimes thirty yards over
                  our heads; and the swell being rather moderate, we could often enter into these
                  dark places with the boat, and were always amply rewarded for our trouble by
                  meeting with a number of birds. Several of these caverns were forty or fifty yards
                  in length, and the rocky walls, about their entrance, were commonly the abode of
                  shags, to which we paid no attention at present. The slate of which many of these
                  rocks consist had likewise huge chasms and crevices, which commonly proved fatal
                  to the geese, as they could seldom fly over, but fell between them, and were taken
                  up alive by our sailors, to whom this employment was an inexhaustible fund of
                  diversion. It was late in the evening when we arrived on board, where we found
                  lieutenant Pickersgill, who had discovered a small island in his way, almost
                  entirely covered with the eggs of sea-swallows or terns. He brought away about
                  three hundred of them, which were in general very fit to be eaten.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 25.]</date>During our absence some of the natives, in four small
                  canoes, had visited the ship; they were described to us as wretched and poor, but
                  inoffensive, and ready to part with their spears, seal-skins, and the like. We now
                  regretted that we had lost the opportunity of seeing them, but fortunately they
                  returned the next morning, though the weather was rainy. The four canoes in which
                  they came were made of the bark of trees, which could hardly have grown in this
                  sound, on account of their size. Several small sticks are the ribs which distend
                  this bark, and another stick forms the gunwale, over which they have wrapped the
                  extremity of the bark, and sewed it on. A few stones, with a small quantity of
                  earth, are laid in the bottom of each canoe, and on this the natives keep a
                  constant fire. Their paddles are small, and rudely formed, and they work very
                  slowly with them. Each canoe contained from five to eight persons, including
                  children, who, contrary to the custom of all the nations in the South Sea, were
                  very silent in their approach to the ship, and when along side, hardly pronounced
                  any other word than pesseray. Those whom M. de Bougainville saw in the Strait of
                  Magelhaens, not far from hence, used the same word, from whence he gave them the
                  general name of Pecherais. We beckoned to them to come into the ship, and some
                  accepted the invitation, though without the least sign of being pleased, and
                  seemingly without the smallest degree of curiosity. Their persons were short, not
                  exceeding five feet six inches at most, their heads large, the face broad, the
                  cheek-bones very prominent, and the nose very flat. They had little brown eyes,
                  without life; their hair was black and lank, hanging about their heads in
                  disorder, and besmeared with train-oil. On the chin they had a few straggling
                  short hairs instead of a beard, and from their nose there was a constant discharge
                  of mucus into their ugly open mouth. The whole assemblage of their features formed
                  the most loathsome picture of misery and wretchedness to which human nature can
                  possibly be reduced.6 Mr. Hodges made a most excellent drawing of one of the men,
                  which is extremely characteristic, and the print which Mr. Basire has executed
                  after it, for captain Cook's account of this voyage, is a proof of his consummate
                  skill. The shoulders and chest were broad and bony, but the rest of the figure was
                  so thin and shrivelled, that to have seen it separate, we could not have supposed
                  it belonged to the same person. Their legs were lean and bowed, and their knees
                  disproportionately large. They had no other clothing than a small piece of old
                  seal-skin, which hung from their shoulders to the middle of the back, being
                  fastened round the neck with a string. The rest of their body was perfectly naked,
                  not the least regard being paid to what Europeans would term decency. Their
                  natural colour appeared to be an olive-brown, with a kind of gloss, which has
                  really some resemblance to that of copper; but many of them had disguised
                  themselves with streaks of red paint, and sometimes, though seldom, with white;
                  from whence it should seem evident, that the ideas of ornament are of a more
                  ancient date with mankind, than those of shame and modesty. The women were nearly
                  formed as the men, though somewhat less in stature; their features were not less
                  uncouth and ugly, and their dress exactly the same. They had only added a small
                  piece of seal-skin, not so large as the palm of the hand, which hung down before,
                  fixed to a string, which was tied about the waist. Round their necks they wore
                  leather strings, on which they had hung a number of shells; and on their heads
                  they had a kind of bonnet, consisting of a few white quill feathers of geese,
                  which they occasionally placed upright on the head, by that means giving them a
                  resemblance to the French head-dresses of the last century . There was but a
                  single person among them, who had a small piece of a guanaco's skin sewed on his
                  seal-skin, to lengthen it. The children were perfectly naked, and, like their
                  mothers, huddled about the fire in each canoe, shivering continually with cold,
                  and rarely uttering any other word than pesseray, which sometimes sounded like a
                  word of endearment, and sometimes seemed to be the expression of complaint. Those
                  of the men who had come on deck, spoke a few other words, which contained many
                  consonants and gutturals, particularly the ll of the Welch; and all seemed to lisp
                  very strongly, which contributed to make them wholly unintelligible. They accepted
                  trifles, such as beads, without seeming to value them, but at the same time they
                  also gave away their own arms, or even their ragged seal-skins, without the least
                  concern; their whole character being the strangest compound of stupidity,
                  indifference, and inactivity. They had no other arms than bows and arrows; the
                  former were made of a kind of berberry wood, very small and ill-shaped; and the
                  latter of a different wood, between two and three feet long, feathered at one end,
                  and not pointed. The points are put on occasionally, and they carried them in
                  little seal-skin satchels, and parted only with a single one, which was a wretched
                  irregular triangle of black slate. Besides these they have fish-gigs, of which the
                  staffs are about ten feet long, of equal thickness, but angular instead of being
                  round, and provided at one end with a sharp bone about a foot long, which has a
                  single barb on one side, and is occasionally tied on. These instruments they
                  employ to take shells from the rocks, according to the accounts of former voyagers
                  . All those gestures, which the most wretched nation in the South Sea had easily
                  understood, were made to them in vain; they seemed not to have the most distant
                  idea of teaching us their language, and having probably no eager desire of
                  possessing any thing which they saw amongst us, they were not sollicitous to make
                  themselves intelligible. All those who had made the voyage in the Endeavour
                  agreed, that the people whom they had seen at Success Bay, lived much more
                  comfortably and happily than these wretched outcasts ; and upon comparing my
                  account with the published narrative of that voyage, it will easily appear, that
                  the Pecherais of Success Bay were considerably more civilized (if I may make use
                  of this term) than those who fell under our observation. Their stature was taller;
                  they had contrived buskins, which secured their feet; they appeared to be sensible
                  of the excellence of several European goods, and to set a value upon them; lastly,
                  they were more communicative, and had ideas of ceremony or civility; whereas those
                  we saw, at the same time that they felt the inclemency of the weather, were yet
                  too stupid, too indolent, or too wretchedly destitute of means to guard against
                  it. They seemed totally insensible of the superiority of our situation, and did
                  not once, with a single gesture, express their admiration of the ship, and its
                  many great and remarkable objects. I cannot figure to myself a more unhappy human
                  being, than one who seems to be so far deprived of reason, as not to defend
                  himself against the injuries of weather, whilst he severely feels its effects; and
                  who is incapable of combining ideas, and comparing his own necessitous situation
                  with that of others more happy than himself. If ever the pre-eminence of a
                  civilized life over that of the savage could have been reasonably disputed, we
                  might, from the bare contemplation of these miserable people, draw the most
                  striking conclusions in favour of our superior happiness. Till it can be proved,
                  that a man in continual pain, from the rigour of climate, is happy, I shall not
                  give credit to the eloquence of philosophers, who have either had no opportunity
                  of contemplating human nature under all its modifications, or who have not felt
                  what they have seen . It were to be wished, that the consciousness of those great
                  advantages which heaven hath bestowed on us, in preference to so many of our
                  rational fellow-creatures, might tend to the general reformation of morals amongst
                  us; instead of which, our civilized communities are stained with vices and
                  enormities, unknown to the wretch, who, compared with ourselves, is next to a
                  brute, being destitute of that superior knowledge, of which, to our shame be it
                  spoken, we do not always make the best uses.</p>

               <p>These wretched natives of a most dreary country, fed on pieces of seal's-flesh,
                  which being very putrid, were become highly offensive. They relished the fat oily
                  part, which we would reject at all times, and offered some of it to our sailors.
                  It should seem that they prefer this vile blubber by instinct, as all nations in
                  high latitudes are fond of it, and are said, in some measure to season their
                  bodies against the cold by this diet. The natural consequence of it was an
                  insupportable rank stench, which exhaled from their whole body, and which their
                  flesh, their dressed, arms, ornaments, and utensils seemed to have thoroughly
                  imbibed. This odour was so completely nauseous, that we could not continue long in
                  their company, and with our eyes shut, could smell them at a considerable
                  distance. It almost surpasses belief, but is nevertheless an undeniable fact, that
                  our boldest and roughest sailors were so totally overcome by this horrid
                  exhalation, that they did not offer to contract any intimate acquaintance with the
                  women. Our people offered them salt provisions, and rotten biscuit, but they set
                  no manner of value on this food, and could hardly be persuaded to taste of it. Did
                  their instinct perhaps teach them that it was more unwholesome than their own
                  rotten seal's-flesh? - We did not observe any kind of subordination among these
                  people, whose mode of life approaches nearer to that of brutes, than that of any
                  other nation. It is indeed very probable, that they are the miserable out-casts of
                  some neighbouring tribe, which enjoys a more comfortable life; and that being
                  reduced to live in this dreary inhospitable part of Tierra del Fuego, they have
                  gradually lost every idea, but those which their most urgent wants give rise to.
                  They ramble perhaps in quest of food, from one inlet or bay into another, as we
                  have reason to suppose this sound communicates with others, and take up their
                  winter residence in the least uncomfortable spot of this horrid country. I am
                  indeed of opinion that the rigour of the winter, is not proportionate to the cold
                  during summer, particularly as the thermometrical observations made in the
                  Falkland Islands, (see vol. I. p. 499.) which are not far from Tierra del Fuego,
                  and nearly in the same latitude, strongly confirm this supposition. But allowing
                  the winters to be as mild as possible, still however they must prove dreadfully
                  distressing to these poor destitute wretches, who have not sagacity enough to
                  guard against them. We are told by the Dutch navigators, especially admiral
                  Jacques l'Hermite, who conducted the Nassau fleet into the South Sea in 1624, that
                  the natives on the southern extremity of Tierra del Fuego are cannibals, and kill
                  each other in order to regale themselves . If there be any likelihood that want of
                  food has ever suggested this horrid practice, I should admit that it was possible,
                  among a small number of unhappy individuals, driven from more convenient seats to
                  these barren extremities of the world; and in that case it must likewise be
                  allowed, that such a tribe cannot long continue in being.</p>

               <p>The poor Pecherais embarked in their canoes again about noon, and slowly and
                  silently paddled away, in the same manner as they came. <date>[Monday
                  26.]</date>Our sailors well pleased to see their ship safe at anchor, had already
                  begun their holiday the evening before, and continued to carouse during two days
                  without intermission, till captain Cook ordered the greatest part of them to be
                  packed into a boat, and put ashore, to recover from their drunkenness in the fresh
                  air.</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 27.]</date>On the 27th in the morning, some of the people being
                  tolerably sober, captain Cook manned a boat, and went with my father, and Dr.
                  Sparrman, to the same island where we had been so successful on the 24th. He
                  brought on board in the evening some geese and other fowls, which were roasted,
                  and preserved as a kind of sea-stock. In his absence the natives came on board
                  again, but made a very short stay, as nobody took any notice of them on account of
                  their insufferable stench. The word pesseray which they repeated from time to
                  time, was pronounced in such a piteous tone, that we sometimes believed the
                  natives were begging; but upon looking at them, we discovered no change of
                  countenance; nothing but that vacant stare which is the characteristic of the most
                  consummate stupidity.</p>

               <p>Having completed our provision of wood and water, and brought the tents on board,
                  which had been erected on shore, we sailed <date>[Wednesd. 28.]</date>the 28th in
                  the morning, at eight o'clock, on our way towards Cape Horn. The refreshments
                  which we had obtained in this sound, which was named Christmas Sound, and its
                  convenient situation for ships coming into, or going out of the South Sea, make it
                  a very fit place of resort. It contains many excellent harbours, and has wood
                  enough for fuel, though little or none for the carpenter's use; its water is very
                  pure, and well-tasted, and the air though keen, is yet very salubrious. Whilst we
                  lay in this sound, one of the marines was unfortunately drowned. He was not missed
                  till two days after, when an enquiry being made, it was discovered, that being
                  much intoxicated he had gone down into the head, where he had probably flipped
                  overboard. It was the same person who had before escaped drowning off the Isle of
                  Irromanga, and who afterwards shot a native of Tanna.7 This was the fourth and
                  last man we lost in the course of our whole voyage.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 29.]</date>In the afternoon we passed the island of St. Ildefonso,
                  probably so called by Spanish navigators; after which we steered to the eastward
                  whilst it was light, and tacked till the day broke. At six in the morning we
                  passed Cape Horn, which is a large black rock, at the extremity of an island,
                  lying before the Nassau inlet, discovered by Jacques l'Hermite . This famous cape
                  has hitherto been ill placed in the charts, but the two voyages of captain Cook
                  round it, have fixed its situation exactly at 55° 58' S. and 67° 46' W. After
                  taking our leave of the South Sea, we steered for Le Maire's Strait, between
                  Tierra del Fuego, and Staten Island. Towards evening, we came near enough to
                  observe, that this side of Tierra del Fuego had a much milder aspect, than that
                  about Christmas Sound. Here the land sloped down from the hills into long level
                  points, covered with tall forests; and no snow was to be seen, except on the
                  distant western mountains. We entered the strait the next morning, but were
                  becalmed in it almost the whole day. Success Bay lay open to our eyes, and the
                  country about it looked so rich and fertile, that we heartily wished to make some
                  stay there.</p>

               <p>About two o'clock in the afternoon, whilst we were at dinner, captain Cook
                  dispatched a boat to the shore, in order to examine whether the Adventure had
                  touched there, and to leave some account of our passing the strait. The ship in
                  the mean while stood on with faint breezes towards the side of Tierra del Fuego,
                  in order to take up the boat on its return. A number of large whales, not less
                  than thirty, and some hundred of seals, played in the water about us.8 The whales
                  went chiefly in couples, from whence we supposed this to be the season when the
                  sexes meet. Whenever they spouted up the water, or, as the sailors term it, were
                  seen blowing to windward, the whole ship was infected with a most detestable,
                  rank, and poisonous stench, which went off in the space of two or three minutes.
                  Sometimes these huge animals lay on their backs, and with their long pectoral fins
                  beat the surface of the sea, which always caused a great noise, equal to the
                  explosion of a swivel. This kind of play has doubtless given rise to the mariner's
                  story of a fight between the thrasher and whale, of which the former is said to
                  leap out of the water, in order to fall heavily on the latter.9 Here we had an
                  opportunity of observing the same exercise many times repeated, and discerned that
                  all the belly and under side of the fins and tail are of a white colour, whereas
                  the rest is black. As we happened to be only sixty yards from one of these
                  animals, we perceived a number of longitudinal furrows, or wrinkles, on its belly,
                  from whence we concluded it was the species by Linnӕus named balœna boops. Besides
                  flapping their fins in the water, these unwieldy animals, of forty feet in length,
                  and not less than ten feet in diameter, sometimes fairly leaped into the air, and
                  dropped down again with a heavy fall, which made the water foam all round them.
                  The prodigious quantity of power required to raise such a vast creature out of the
                  water is astonishing; and their peculiar oeconomy cannot but give room to many
                  reflections.</p>

               <p>The boat which the captain had sent to Success Bay returned about six o'clock in
                  the evening. The lieutenant acquainted us that his boat had been followed into the
                  bay by many seals, and some whales, upon one of which the boat narrowly escaped
                  striking. He had not found the least sign at the watering-place of any European
                  ship having lately passed this way; but on landing, several natives met him well
                  dressed in guanacoe-skins, and large cloaks of seal-skins, with a much more
                  chearful and happy countenance, than the poor tribe whom we had left at Christmas
                  Sound. They had bracelets of reed, with silver-wire wrapped about it, to which
                  they often pointed, pronouncing the word passeray, and seeming to set no value on
                  any thing our people had to offer. It was concluded that they had received these
                  ornaments from the Spaniards, either by means of ships which had touched at this
                  bay, or indirectly through the hands of other tribes to the north of the strait of
                  Magelhaens. After staying on shore two or three minutes, our people re-embarked,
                  and came on board. We continued our course through the Strait of Le Maire, and the
                  next morning ran along the shore of Staten Land, which was wrapped in thick fogs.
                  Later in the day the fog cleared a little away, and gave us a view of the land,
                  which consisted of mountains, to the full as craggy and barren as those of the
                  west coast of Tierra del Fuego, though not so high, and therefore less covered
                  with snow. Several islands, about thirty yards perpendicular in height, lay off
                  this coast, and seemed entirely covered with grass at the top. Great numbers of
                  seals were seen about them; and as captain Cook was in want of oil, he thought he
                  should have the best opportunity of providing himself with this article, by coming
                  to an anchor somewhere in the neighbourhood. These islands were seen by father
                  Feuilleè, who has given a map of them in his Voyage to Peru, which we found to be
                  very erroneous. After turning round them, we perceived a snug harbour on Staten
                  Land, but captain Cook did not choose to put in there, because he was of opinion
                  he might be detained in it by contrary winds. He therefore preferred anchoring
                  under the lee of one of the low islands; and as the 31st of December ended at
                  noon, according to the nautical reckoning, he gave these islands the name of New
                  Year's Islands, and the harbour on Staten Land, that of New Year's Harbour.</p>

               <p> ;</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VI.</l>

                  <l>Stay at the New Year's Islands. Discovery of lands to the southward. Return to
                     the Cape of Good Hope.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1774. December.][Saturday 31.]</date>OUR boats were hoisted out immediately
                  after dinner, and we went in them to the island, which was above a mile off. The
                  rocks along shore were covered with a multitude of seals, amongst which the
                  largest had a long shaggy mane, and therefore deserved to be called sea-lions with
                  much greater propriety, than those smooth animals to which Lord Anson gave that
                  name at Juan Fernandez. Indeed many former navigators have also given them that
                  name, though their writings are little read at present . We put into a little cove
                  under shelter of a few rocks, and fired at some of these fierce animals, most of
                  which immediately threw themselves into the water. Some of the most unwieldy,
                  however, kept their ground, and were killed by our bullets. Several showers
                  interrupted our sport for some time, but the weather clearing up afterwards, we
                  killed with clubs a great number of the fattest sea-lions, which our crew carried
                  on board, in order to boil their blubber into train-oil. The old males were in
                  general very fat, and measured from ten to twelve feet in length; the females were
                  more slender, and from six to eight feet long. The weight of the largest male
                  amounts to 1200 or 1500 lb. for one of a middle size weighed 550 lb. after the
                  skin, entrails, and blubber were taken off. The head of the male has really some
                  resemblance to a lion's head, and the colour is likewise very nearly the same,
                  being only a darker hue of tawny. The long shaggy hair on the neck and throat of
                  the male, beginning at the back of the head, bears a strong resemblance to a mane,
                  and is hard and coarse to the touch; all the rest of the body is covered with
                  short hairs, which lie very close to the skin, and form a smooth glossy coat. The
                  lioness is perfectly smooth all over the body; but both sexes are formed alike
                  with regard to the feet, or rather fins. Those fins which originate near the
                  breast are large flat pieces of a black coriaceous membrane, which have only some
                  small indistinct vestiges of nails on their middle. The hinder fins are rather
                  more like feet, being black membranes divided into five long toes, with a thin
                  thong, or membrane, projecting far beyond the nails, which are very small. With
                  these nails however we have seen them scratch all parts of their body. The tail is
                  excessively short, and hid between the hind feet or fins, which grow close
                  together. The whole hind quarters are very round, being covered with an amazing
                  quantity of fat. The noise which all the animals of this kind make together was
                  various, and sometimes stunned our ears. The old males snort and roar like mad
                  bulls or lions; the females bleat exactly like calves, and the young cubs like
                  lambs. Of the young we saw great numbers on the beaches; and one of the females
                  being knocked down with a club, littered in the same instant. The sea-lions live
                  together in numerous herds. The oldest and fattest males lie apart, each having
                  chosen a large stone, which none of the rest dares approach without engaging in a
                  furious battle. We have often seen them seize each other with a degree of rage
                  which is not to be described; and many of them had deep gashes on their backs,
                  which they had received in the wars. The younger active sea-lions, with all the
                  females and the cubs, lie together. They commonly waited the approach of our
                  people; but as soon as some of the herd were killed, the rest took flight with
                  great precipitation, some females carrying off a cub in their mouths, whilst many
                  were so terrified as to leave them behind. When left to themselves, they were
                  often seen caressing each other in the most tender manner, and their snouts oft
                  met together, as if they were kissing. The late professor Steller found these
                  animals at Bering's Island, near Kamtchatka, where he was shipwrecked; and his
                  descriptions, the first and best ever drawn up, correspond exactly with our
                  observations. M. Pernetty, in his Voyage to the Falkland Islands, has likewise
                  mentioned him; but his figure, which is very inaccurate, is perfectly in the style
                  of all his other drawings, and corresponds with the truth and accuracy of his
                  writings . M. de Bougainville, in his Voyage round the World, also speaks of them.
                  They come ashore on these uninhabited spots to breed; they do not, however, feed
                  during their stay on shore, which sometimes lasts several weeks, but grow lean,
                  and swallow a considerable quantity of stones to keep their stomach distended. We
                  were surprised to find the stomachs of many of these animals entirely empty, and
                  of others filled with ten or a dozen round heavy stones, each of the size of two
                  fists .</p>

               <p>Having made some havock among these creatures, we walked upon the summit of the
                  island, which was nearly level, but covered with innumerable little mounds of
                  earth, on each of which grew a large tuft of grass (dactylis glomerata). The
                  intervals between these tufts were very muddy and dirty, which obliged us to leap
                  from one tuft to the other. We soon discovered that another kind of seals occupied
                  this part of the island, and caused the mud by coming wet out of the sea. These
                  were no other than the sea-bears which we had already seen at Dusky Bay, but which
                  were here infinitely more numerous, and grown to a much larger size, equalling
                  that assigned to them by Steller. They are however far inferior to the sea-lions,
                  the males being never above eight or nine feet long, and thick in proportion.
                  Their hair is dark brown, minutely sprinkled with grey, and much longer on the
                  whole body than that of the sea-lion, but does not form a mane. The general
                  outline of the body, and the shape of the fins are exactly the same. They were
                  more fierce towards us, and their females commonly died in defence of their young.
                  Great numbers of a species of vultures, commonly called carrion crows by the
                  sailors (vultur aura), were seen upon this island, and probably feed on young
                  seal-cubs, which either die in the birth, or which they take an opportunity to
                  seize upon. Besides them we also found a new species of hawks, and several geese
                  of the sort which had so well furnished out our Christmas entertainment. Here we
                  likewise saw a few pinguins, of a species which we had not met with before, some
                  large grey petrels of the size of albatrosses, being the same species which the
                  Spaniards name que branta-huessos, or the bone-breakers, and some shags.</p>

               <p><date>[1775. January.][Sunday 1.]</date>The new year began with a very fair day,
                  though it blew fresh, and the air was sharp. A boat was dispatched to New Year's
                  harbour, to sound and survey it, but as lieutenant Pickersgill had orders not to
                  make any stay on shore, we did not accompany him, choosing rather to take another
                  turn on the new island with captain Cook. The strata of this island, consisted of
                  a yellowish clay-stone, and sometimes of a grey slate, both which were of
                  different degrees of hardness, in different places. We fell in with many herds of
                  sea-bears, and sea-lions, which we did not attack, as another party was sent out
                  upon that errand. We observed however, that these two species, though sometimes
                  encamped on the same beach, always kept at a great distance asunder, and had no
                  communication with each other. A strong rank stench is common to them, as well as
                  to all other seals; a circumstance as well known to the ancients, as their
                  inactivity and drowsiness whilst they lie on shore.</p>

               <p>Rowing along shore, we fell in with a spot where several thousand shags had built
                  their nests, on those elevated tufts which I have mentioned before. Here was an
                  opportunity to provide the whole ship's company with a fresh meal, which was not
                  neglected. The birds were for the greatest part so tame, as to let our boat's crew
                  come among them with clubs and staves; by which means several hundreds of them
                  were killed. On this day's excursion we found a bird of a new genus, which was of
                  the size of a pigeon, and perfectly white. It belonged to the class of wading
                  water-fowl, its toes were half webbed, and its eyes, as well as the base of the
                  bill, surrounded by many little white glands or warts. It had such an horrid
                  offensive smell, that we could not taste the flesh, though at this time we were
                  not easily disgusted. Captain Cook observed the latitude on the east end of the
                  island, which was a barren rock wholly covered with herds of seals, flocks of
                  gulls, shags, and other animals. We returned to dine on board, and then spent the
                  afternoon upon the island again. We shot there several geese, amongst which was a
                  new species; and were not less successful among a flock of pinguins, than we had
                  been among the shags in the morning. They were of the size of small geese, and of
                  that species which is the most common in the neighbourhood of the Straits of
                  Magelhaens. The English at the Falkland Islands have named them jumping-jacks .3
                  They sleep very sound, for Dr. Sparrman met one of them, which he kicked several
                  yards by accidentally stumbling over it, without breaking its sleep, till by
                  repeatedly shaking the bird, it awoke. When the whole flock was beset, they all
                  became very bold at once, and ran violently at us, biting our legs, or any part of
                  our clothes. They are excessively hard-lived, for having left a great number of
                  them, seemingly dead on the field of battle, and going in the pursuit of the rest,
                  they all at once got up, and walked off with great gravity. The seals and
                  sea-lions were likewise killed with great difficulty, but their snout was by far
                  the most sensible part. Dr. Sparrman, and myself, were near being attacked by one
                  of the oldest sea-bears, on a cliff where several hundreds lay assembled, which
                  all seemed to wait the issue of the fight. The Doctor had discharged his musket at
                  a bird, and was going to pick it up, when this old bear growled and snarled, and
                  seemed ready to oppose him. As soon as I was near enough, I shot the surly
                  creature dead, and at that instant the whole herd, seeing their champion fallen,
                  hurried to the sea; and many of them hobbled along with such precipitation, as to
                  leap down ten or fifteen yards perpendicular, upon the pointed rocks on the shore,
                  though without receiving any hurt, which may be attributed to their fat easily
                  giving way, and their hide being remarkably tough.</p>

               <p>The chace of these animals afforded great sport to our people; and the many
                  singular circumstances which must strike the observer, in contemplating a species
                  of animals associated into numerous herds, gave us much satisfaction. All these
                  creatures were here in their proper climate; for the seals and sea-lions being
                  loaded with an immense quantity of fat, and the shags and pinguins with a thick
                  plumage, felt no inconvenience from the coolness of the weather. The captain
                  obtained a considerable quantity of blubber, which was put into casks, and
                  afterwards converted into oil; but a disagreeable putrid stench infected the whole
                  ship for several days after leaving these New Year's Isles. In the evening our
                  party returned from New Year's Harbour, on Staten Land, which they had found
                  extremely safe and commodious. They brought with them some gulls, and five large
                  ducks of the short-winged sort, which our sailors called race-horses. Each of
                  these weighed sixteen pounds, but their meat was remarkably fetid, and not fit to
                  be eaten. We spent the second of January in the same manner as the first, still
                  making an acquisition of some new species of birds, with which this island,
                  notwithstanding its small size, abounded. Among the rest we found a fine sort of
                  grey curlew, with a yellow neck, which was one of the stateliest birds we had ever
                  seen. The vegetable productions of this spot were confined to six or eight
                  species, among which we saw some small shrubs not above three feet high, and a new
                  plant; but the grass above mentioned (dactylis glomerata) occupied almost the
                  whole surface of the island. In the evening we hoisted in all our boats, and
                     <date>[Tuesday 3.]</date>the next morning at three o'clock we set sail, and
                  doubled the N. E. end of Staten Land, which is named Cape St. John by father
                  Feuillèe. A prodigious strong tide was observed to run past our ship every day
                  whilst we lay at anchor, at the rate of four or five miles an hour. This is,
                  however, so much the less remarkable, as the Straits of Magelhaens and the eastern
                  coast of America, in high southern latitudes, are likewise known to have strong
                  tides. The New Year's Islands, which we now left, are situated in 54° 46' S. and
                  64° 30' W. The largest of them is about six leagues, and that under which we lay
                  at anchor appeared to be between three and four leagues in circuit. They are
                  excellent places of refreshment for a ship's crew bound on expeditions like ours;
                  for though the flesh of sea-lions and pinguins is not the most palatable food, yet
                  it is infinitely more salubrious than salt meat; and by searching the different
                  islands, it is not improbable that a sufficient quantity of celery and
                  scurvy-grass might be found to supply the whole crew, especially as we saw both
                  the species on our excursions. Our seamen lived several days on young shags and
                  pinguins, of which they found the former extremely palatable, comparing them to
                  young pullets. They likewise roasted several little cubs of seals, but there was a
                  degree of softness in the meat which made it disgustful. The flesh of young but
                  full-grown sea-bears was greatly preferable, and tasted like coarse and bad beef;
                  but that of the old sea-lions and bears was so rank and offensive, that we could
                  not touch it.</p>

               <p>After ranging the eastern and southern coast of Staten Land, till the afternoon,
                  we took our departure, and steered to the E. S. E. in order to pass our third
                  summer season to the southward. We had strong gales, which carried away a
                  main-top-gallant-mast, and some studding sail-booms; but as the wind was in our
                  favour, these losses were esteemed of little consequence. A halo of very great
                  circumference was observed round <date>[Thursday 5.]</date>the sun on the 5th. It
                  inclosed a dark area, but the circle itself was white, with several faint
                  prismatic hues on the edges. This was reckoned a prognostic of storms, but we
                  experienced mild weather for several days afterwards, from whence we may conclude
                  how far such signs are to be relied upon. The latest charts published in England
                  and France, have laid down a great sea-coast between 40° and 53° west, in the
                  latitude of 54° and 58° south, which they found marked in a chart projected by
                  Ortelius, in 1586 , and in that of Mercator, published so early as the year 1569.
                  It appears to have been discovered by Spanish navigators, as the name of Golfo de
                  San Sebastiano seems to indicate. We passed over that part of the ocean, where the
                  western coast of this gulph is said to be situated, but did not meet with any
                  land. Captain Furneaux likewise the year before, passed across both the eastern
                  and western shores of this gulph, in 60°, and afterwards 58° S. from 60° to 40° W.
                  without seeing land. It appears therefore that either this gulph does not exist,
                  or that it is not rightly laid down in former charts; and the latter is much more
                  probable, since it can hardly be conceived by what means such a discovery could
                  obtain a place in the old charts, without some authority to support it.</p>

               <p>On the 6th, at eight in the evening, we changed our course, and stood to the
                  northward, having reached upwards of 58° S. without seeing any ice; though Dr.
                  Halley, in the year 1700, at the same season, found abundance of ice in the
                  latitude of 52° S. A heavy dew fell on the 8th in the evening, which is reckoned
                  an indubitable sign of land; and petrels, albatrosses, and seals had been seen
                  from time to time, ever since we left Staten Land. Having run into 54° S. we began
                  to steer to the eastward again, in search of the land which was discovered by M.
                  Duclos Guyot, in the Spanish ship Lion, which sailed from Callao in Peru, in
                  February 1756, and passed Cape Horn in the depth of Winter .</p>

               <p><date>[Saturday 14.]</date>We continued to stand to the eastward, seeing many
                  birds, and now and then pinguins, and sea-weeds, till the 14th, in the morning,
                  when the officer of the watch acquainted the captain that an island of ice was in
                  sight. We continued sailing towards it all day; but in the evening we discovered
                  that what had been taken for ice, was really land, which seemed to be of great
                  height, and covered with snow for the greatest part. By consulting the accounts of
                  M. Guyot, it appears to be certain, that this land is the same of which he saw the
                  south end in June 1756, and which he named Isle de St. Pierre. He lays it down in
                  38° 10' W. from Greenwich, which agrees entirely with our observations of the
                  north-west extremity, and is only between thirty and forty leagues to the west of
                  the longitude which we assign for the S.E. end . Notwithstanding this coincidence,
                  many were still of opinion that we only saw an island of ice; and as the wind was
                  very boisterous the next day, and the weather extremely foggy, the point remained
                  undertermined till the 16th. We had very cold weather all this time, the
                  thermometer being at 34 1/2°, and great falls of snow covering our decks. On the
                  16th, in the morning, we had sight of the land again, and found its mountains of a
                  vast height, covered with loads of snow and ice, in most places down to the
                  water's edge. The only parts which were clear of snow were a few black and barren
                  cliffs, and particularly some huge hollow rocks, that</p>

               <p>Towards the south end of this land we saw several low islands, like the New Year's
                  islands, which appeared to have some verdure upon them, and were therefore called
                  the Green Islands. As it had been the main object of our voyage to explore the
                  high southern latitude, my father suggested to captain Cook, that it would be
                  proper to name this land after the monarch who had set on foot our expedition,
                  solely for the improvement of science, and whose name ought therefore to be
                  celebrated in both hemispheres.</p>

               <p>It was accordingly honoured with the name of Southern Georgia, which will give it
                  importance, and continue to spread a degree of lustre over it, which it cannot
                  derive from its barrenness and dreary appearance.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon we saw two rocky islands at the north end of Georgia, which lay
                  about a league asunder, and were of a dull black colour. We steered towards them,
                  and about five o'clock passed in the middle between them. The northernmost was a
                  craggy cliff, nearly perpendicular, which contained the nests of many thousand
                  shags, and was named Willis's Island; it is situated in 54° S. and 38° 25' W. The
                  southernmost sloped gradually to the westward, being covered on that side with
                  some grass, and with innumerable flocks of birds of all sorts, from the largest
                  albatrosses down to the least petrels, for which reason it was named Bird Island.
                  Great numbers of shags, pinguins, divers, and other birds played about, and
                  settled in the water around us, this cold climate seeming to be perfectly
                  agreeable to them. Several porpesses were likewise noticed, and many seals were
                  seen, which probably came to breed on these inhospitable shores.</p>

               <p>We ran along the north-east coast of the land till it was dark, when we brought
                  to, and did not resume our course till <date>[Tuesday 17.]</date>the next morning
                  at three o'clock. The aspect of the land was extremely unpromising; the mountains
                  were the most craggy we had ever seen, and formed many sharp points, between which
                  the intervals were filled up with snow. We passed a bay, which, from the number of
                  low green islands in it, was named the Bay of Islands, and opened another, towards
                  which we stood with the ship, having soundings at the distance of two or three
                  miles. About nine o'clock a boat was hoisted out, and captain Cook, accompanied by
                  one midshipman, my father, Dr. Sparrman, and myself, went into the bay. We sounded
                  in the entrance, but found no bottom with thirty-four fathom. Upon advancing into
                  the furthest recess of the bay, we soon observed a solid mass of ice, such as is
                  found in the harbours of Spitsbergen , in the northern hemisphere. This mass of
                  ice bore a great resemblance to those detached islands, of which we saw such
                  numbers floating upon the ocean in the high southern latitudes. The shores of the
                  bay, nearer the sea, were clear of snow, but excessively dreary, and almost
                  perpendicular. We landed in a spot which was perfectly sheltered from the swell,
                  and where the land formed a long projecting point. Here we saw a number of seals
                  assembled on a stony beach, and among them a huge animal, which we had taken to be
                  a rock at a distance, but which proved to be exactly the same animal with lord
                  Anson's sea-lion. The midshipman shot it through the head whilst it lay fast
                  asleep, and we afterwards found a younger one of the same sort. It was all over of
                  a dark grey colour, with a slight olive cast, something like the seals in the
                  northern hemisphere. It likewise resembled these animals in the more perfect shape
                  of its fore feet, and the want of external ears. Its nose projected far beyond the
                  mouth, and had a loose wrinkled skin, which may perhaps be occasionally puffed up
                  when the animal is angry, and will in that case form something like the crest
                  which has been figured in the print accompanying lord Anson's voyage. The animal
                  which we examined was about thirteen feet long, but in proportion, of a more
                  slender make than the sea-lion with a mane, which we saw at Staten Land . Here we
                  likewise found a flock of about twenty pinguins, of a much greater size than any
                  we had hitherto seen; they were thirty-nine inches long, and weighed forty pounds.
                  Their belly was of a most enormous size, and covered with a vast quantity of fat.
                  An oval spot of bright yellow, or lemon colour, appears on each side of the head,
                  and is edged with black, the rest of the body being of a blackish-grey colour on
                  the whole back, and upper-side, and white on the belly, under the fins, and all
                  the fore-part. These birds were so dull, as hardly to waddle from us; we easily
                  overtook them by running, and knocked them down with sticks. When we returned on
                  board, we found that they were mentioned by that great zoologist Mr. Pennant, in
                  the Phil. Trans. by the name of Patagonian pinguins, and we likewise suppose them
                  to be the same species which the English at the Falkland Islands, have named
                  yellow, or king pinguins . The seals which we found here, were more fierce, than
                  any we had seen on the New Year's Isles, and did not run out of our way. The
                  youngest cubs barked at us, and ran after our heels when we passed by them, trying
                  to bite our legs. They were all of the species which I have before named
                  sea-bears, (ursine seals, Penn.) and not a single sea-lion with a mane, was to be
                  seen among them. We climbed upon a little hummock, about eight yards high, where
                  we found two species of plants; one was the grass which grows plentifully on the
                  New Year's Isles (dactylis glomerata) , and the other a kind of burnet
                  (sanguisorba). Here captain Cook displayed the British flag, and performed the
                  ceremony of taking possession of these barren rocks, " in the name of his
                  Britannic Majesty, and his heirs for ever." A volley of two or three muskets was
                  fired into the air, to give greater weight to this assertion; and the barren rocks
                  re-echoed with the sound, to the utter amazement of the seals and pinguins, the
                  inhabitants of these newly discovered dominions. The rocks consisted of a bluish
                  grey slate, in horizontal strata, of which many fragments every where covered the
                  beaches. As far as we were able to examine them, they contained no other minerals
                  of any kind; the whole country being useless, and frightfully barren in every
                  respect. We embarked soon after with a load of seals, pinguins, and shags, and
                  leaving this bay, which was named Possession Bay, and is situated in 54° 15' S.
                  and 37° 15' W. arrived safe on board before noon. During our stay on shore, we saw
                  some small fragments of ice floating out to sea, and heard the huge masses in the
                  farthest part of the bay, crack very loud from time to time. We continued to coast
                  the land during the two following days, and discovered several bays and head-lands
                  upon it, which were successively named Cumberland Bay, Cape George, Royal Bay,
                  Cape Charlotte, and Sandwich Bay. The appearance of the land was always nearly the
                  same; its mountains towards the south were excessively high, and divided into
                  innumerable ragged points, like the flames in a raging fire. Mr. Hodges had drawn
                  a very masterly view of part of this coast, where the horrors and caricatures of
                  nature are faithfully copied, in that great style which is peculiar to him, and
                  which animates all his views of savage countries. The drawings I here mention are
                  engraved, and intended for captain Cook's account of this voyage.</p>

               <p>On the 19th we reached the S. E. extremity of southern Georgia, which we now
                  discovered to be an island, between fifty and sixty leagues in length. A rock
                  which was named Cooper's Island, lies off the south end, in 54° 52' S. and 35° 50'
                  W. We discovered at the same time, an island to the south-eastward, about fourteen
                  leagues distant, of which we could not yet determine the size.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 20.]</date>We sailed towards it on the 20th in the morning, after
                  having coasted the south end of the Isle of Georgia, till we came in sight of the
                  Green Islands, discovered on the 16th. The weather had for these four days past,
                  been extremely fair, and favourable for the purpose of exploring this land; the
                  winds had likewise been gentle, and the air very mild. We had however, no sooner
                  left the coast, than a strong gale, attended with fogs and rains sprung up, which
                  obliged us to take in all our topsails; but it fortunately was of a short
                  duration, for at midnight we were becalmed. The land towards which we sailed, was
                  so much involved in fogs, that our seamen were uncertain of the situation, and
                  continued to tack from time to time, in order to avoid it. The fog continued
                  during the 21st, and 22d, and obliged us to change our course very frequently.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 23.]</date>On the 23d, the same thick weather, being attended with a
                  fresh breeze, we stood boldly on a tack, which all on board were firmly persuaded,
                  would carry us directly from the land. Instead of that, about eleven o'clock,
                  lieutenant Clerke saw the breakers scarce half a mile ahead, and several shags
                  came to meet us, which seldom go to a greater distance from land. We now
                  discovered that we had very providentially escaped being wrecked on the land, by
                  making the circuit of it without knowing it. We put about instantly after this
                  discovery, and stood off and on all day, as well as the next, because the same
                  kind of thick fog, with frequent intervals of calm weather continued. In the
                  evening however, the fog cleared for a little while, and gave us a fair view, both
                  of the Isle of Georgia, and of the smaller one round which we had sailed. We found
                  the latter of an inconsiderable size, and surrounded with other broken rocks; the
                  whole dangerous group was therefore named Clerke's rocks, and lies in 55° S. and
                  34° 50' W. <date>[Wednesd. 25.]</date>Early on the 25th, we directed our course to
                  the eastward, and afterwards somewhat southerly, in order to make another run
                  towards the south before we returned into milder climates.</p>

               <p>It has been supposed, that all parts of this globe, including those which are
                  barren and dreary in the highest degree, are fit to become the abode of men.
                  Before we arrived at this Island of Georgia, we had nothing to oppose to this
                  opinion, since even the wintery shores of Tierra del Fuego were inhabited by human
                  beings, who were still one step removed from brutes. But the climate of Tierra del
                  Fuego is mild with respect to that of Georgia, the difference in the thermometer
                  which we observed, being at least ten degrees. It has besides the advantage of
                  producing a quantity of shrubbery and wood, sufficient to supply the wants of the
                  natives, who are by that means enabled to rest sheltered from the inclemencies of
                  the air, and to light fires, which give them warmth, and may serve to make their
                  food eatable and wholesome. As New Georgia is wholly destitute of wood, and of any
                  other combustible to serve as a succedaneum, I apprehend it would be impossible
                  for any race of men to live upon it, though they should, instead of the stupidity
                  of the Pesserais, be possessed of the ingenuity of Europeans. The summers of this
                  new island are rigorously cold, the thermometer having never risen ten degrees
                  above the freezing point, during our stay on the coast; and though we have reason
                  to suppose, that the winters are not colder in the same proportion as in our
                  hemisphere, yet it is probable there will be at least a difference of twenty or
                  thirty degrees. This I think is sufficient to kill any men who may survive the
                  summer there, supposing them provided with no other defence, than that which the
                  country affords. But South Georgia, besides being uninhabitable, does not appear
                  to contain any single article, for which it might be visited occasionally by
                  European ships. Seals, and sea-lions, of which the blubber is accounted an article
                  of commerce, are much more numerous on the desart coasts of south America, the
                  Falkland, and the New Year's Islands, where they may likewise be obtained at a
                  much smaller risk. If the northern ocean should ever be cleared of whales, by our
                  annual fisheries, we might then visit the other hemisphere, where these animals
                  are known to be numerous. However, there seems to be little necessity to advance
                  so far south as New Georgia in quest of them, since the Portuguese, and the North
                  Americans, have of late years killed numbers of them on the coast of America,
                  going no farther than the Falkland Islands. It should therefore seem probable,
                  that though Southern Georgia may hereafter become important to mankind, that
                  period is at present so far remote, and perhaps will not happen, till Patagonia
                  and Tierra del Fuego are inhabited, and civilised like Scotland and Sweden.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 26.]</date>We stood to the southward on the 26th, with a fresh
                  breeze, and the horizon tolerably clear, considering the usual weather of these
                  climates, and returned to our wonted but loathed diet of salted meat, having eaten
                  the last pinguin which we had killed in Possession Bay; however, the expectation
                  of a speedy arrival at the Cape of Good Hope, in some measure alleviated our
                  sufferings. On the 27th at noon we had passed the latitude of 59 1/2° S. and saw
                  several fulmars (procellaria glacialis) which are commonly the forerunners of ice
                  in high latitudes. Accordingly in the evening, between six and seven, we saw
                  several islands of ice, and a quantity of loose ice. Fogs and wet weather set in
                  this day, which prevented our steering so much to the southward as we had hitherto
                  done. Many great masses of ice surrounded us on all sides the next day, and
                     <date>[Saturday 28.]</date>in the afternoon a large bed of small ice, adjoining
                  to several fields of ice, stopped our farther progress, greatly to the
                  satisfaction of all the crew, who were at present thoroughly tired of this
                  dreadful climate, and exhausted by perpetual watching and attendance, which the
                  frequency and sudden appearance of dangers required. We had this time penetrated
                  only a few minutes beyond 60° S. and gradually steered to the northward, as well
                  as the winds, the thickness of the weather, and the ice would permit. Many of our
                  people were at this time afflicted with severe rheumatic pains and colds, and some
                  were suddenly taken with fainting fits, since their unwholesome, juiceless food
                  could not supply the waste of animal spirits. The thermometer stood at 35° in
                  these high latitudes; and this degree of cold, as well as the continuance of
                  snow-showers and wet fogs, greatly retarded the recovery of our patients. However,
                  as we now steered to the northward, we were in hopes of soon reaching a milder
                  climate, fully persuaded that no farther obstacles lay in wait to try our
                  patience. But we were again doomed to experience disappointment, and discovered
                  another frozen country, which</p>

               <p>The discovery of this land happened on <date>[Tuesday 31.]</date>the 31st of
                  January, at seven in the morning, when the weather was so hazy, that we could not
                  see four or five miles around us. We ran towards it near an hour, when we were
                  within half a mile of the rocks, which were black, cavernous, and perpendicular to
                  a vast height, inhabited by flocks of shags, and beaten by dreadful breakers.
                  Thick clouds veiled the upper parts of the mountains, but one immense peak
                  appeared towering beyond them, covered with snow. It was agreed by all present,
                  that the perpendicular height of this mountain could not be far short of two
                  miles. We sounded with 170 fathom close in shore, and then put about, standing to
                  the south, in order to weather the western point, which we had now discovered. We
                  had not run above an hour on this tack, when we saw high mountains to the S. S. E.
                  about five or six leagues distant, which, from the course we had kept, we must
                  have narrowly escaped about midnight. This being the southernmost extremity of the
                  land, my father named it Southern Thule, a name which captain Cook has preserved.
                  It is situated in 59° 30' S. and 27° 30' W. At one o'clock in the afternoon we put
                  about, and stood to the northward, beyond the point which we had first seen. This
                  now appeared to be a black rock, separated from a great projecting head-land. The
                  rock was named Freezeland's Head, from a German sailor who first discovered it,
                  and lies in 58° 55' S. and 27° W. The head-land, which has since been named Cape
                  Bristol, appeared to be connected with the Southern Thule, by some lands which we
                  saw very far to the eastward, forming a spacious bay. Captain Cook, however, did
                  not venture to lose any time in the investigation of this coast, where he was
                  exposed to imminent danger from the violence of westerly winds. He chose rather to
                  explore its northern extremities, which besides, were doubtless the most likely to
                  be of importance to navigators. We kept at the distance of two or three leagues
                  from the land, having little winds, and seeing the coast every where steep and
                  inaccessible. The mountains appeared to be of vast height, their summits being
                  constantly wrapped in clouds, and the lower part covered with snow down to the
                  water's edge in such a manner, that we should have found it difficult to pronounce
                  whether we saw land or ice, if some hollow rocks had not shewn their black and
                  naked caverns in several places.</p>

               <p><date>[1775. February.][Wednesd. 1.]</date>We found ourselves abreast of another
                  projecting point in the morning, which captain Cook has since named Cape Montague,
                  and which seems to be connected with Cape Bristol, a kind of bay lying between
                  them. Beyond it we discovered another point to the north, which upon our nearer
                  approach was found to be a separate island, and named Saunders's Island. It was
                  not inferior in height to the moutainous coast to the south of it, and was covered
                  with snow and ice in the same manner. It is situated in 57° 48' S. and 26° 35' W. </p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 2.]</date>We had little wind during night, but with the return of
                  day-light, stood to the eastward, in order to weather Saunders's Island. On this
                  course we saw two small islands far to the northward of us, which, from the day,
                  were named Candlemas Islands. We could not accomplish our point with a single
                  board, but the wind being contrary, tacked all the afternoon, in order to double
                  the norther extremity of Saunders's Island. We came very near it several times,
                  and observed a flat point or beach running out to the northward, covered with
                  heaps of shingle, which were piled up in the wildest manner, and offered nothing
                  but sharp points and ridges to the eye. The whole country had the most desolate
                  and horrid appearance which can possibly be conceived; not a single grass could be
                  discerned upon it, and it seemed to be forsaken even by the amphibious and lumpish
                  animals which dwelt on Southern Georgia. In short, we could not help applying to
                  it, that remarkable expression of Pliny.</p>

               <p>The wind permitted us the next day to approach the Candlemas Isles, in order to
                  ascertain their situation, which we found to be in 57° 10' S. and 27° 6' W. We now
                  steered to the eastward, and lost sight of the southern land, having doubled its
                  northern extremity. Captain Cook at first gave it the general name of Snowland,
                  but afterwards honoured it with that of Sandwich Land. I am inclined to believe
                  that this land has been discovered by those early navigators, who have furnished
                  the geographers with the Gulph of St. Sebastian, and the isle of Cressalina. It
                  remains very doubtful, whether the different projecting points of Thule, Cape
                  Bristol, and Cape Montague, form one connected land, or several distinct islands;
                  and this may probably continue undetermined for ages to come, since an expedition
                  to those inhospitable parts of the world, besides being extremely perilous, does
                  not seem likely to be productive of great advantages to mankind. It was the object
                  of our hazardous voyage to explore the southern hemisphere to the sixtieth degree
                  of latitude, and to ascertain the existence of a southern continent in the
                  temperate zone. Our different tracks have not only rendered it evident, that a
                  continent does not exist in the temperate southern zone, but have likewise made it
                  probable, by advancing into the frigid zone to seventy one degrees south, that the
                  space within the antarctic circle is far from being every where filled up with
                  land. The existence of such a continent has been believed by the most philosophic
                  enquirers of the present age; and this opinion, though now so much invalidated, is
                  nevertheless a proof of their great intelligence, considering the few data upon
                  which they could proceed. Without ascertaining whether Sandwich Land is part of a
                  greater tract, it may not be improper to mention, that one of the reasons alledged
                  in favour of a continent, has lately been overthrown by experiments. It has always
                  been supposed that the ice, which is seen floating in immense quantities on the
                  sea, must be formed on shore from snow or fresh water; but it has now been proved
                  that sea-water will freeze, and that the ice which is thus formed does not contain
                  any particles of salt, except where it comes in contact with the water, which
                  introduces itself into its pores and interstices .10 </p>

               <p>The barrenness of Sandwich Land, the gradual encrease of the nights, and the
                  approach of a more rigorous season in these high latitudes, added to the
                  consideration that we had a long run to make before we arrived at another place of
                  refreshment, and that our provisions were almost expended, induced captain Cook to
                  abandon the further investigation of the coast, and to steer to the eastward,
                  nearly in the parallel of 58° S. where we had frequent snow showers, saw many
                  ice-islands every day, and, contrary to our former observations, found the
                  northerly winds colder than those from the south; on which a strong presumption
                  may be founded, that there is no land in the last mentioned direction.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 10.]</date>The sour krout, that excellent antiscorbutic food, of
                  which sixty large casks were put on board our ship, was now entirely consumed, and
                  the want of it was severely felt from the captain down to the sailor. It enabled
                  us to eat our portion of salt meat, of which it corrected the septic quality. The
                  wish for a speedy release from this nauseous diet now became universal, and our
                  continuance in the high latitudes of 58° and 57° was disagreeable to all on board.
                  On the 15th we bore away to the northward, having crossed the meridian of
                  Greenwich, and on the 17th, at noon, reached the parallel of M. Bouvet's discovery
                  of Cape Circumcision, when we again ran to the eastward that we might not miss it.
                  The weather was favourable for the purpose; we had a fair wind, and could see to
                  the distance of eight or ten leagues. On the 19th, in the morning, we crossed the
                  place where this cape is laid down by M. des Loziers Bouvet, according to his own
                  journal, without having at that time the least signs of land, or passing more than
                  four or five islands of ice in the course of the whole day. We continued to run on
                  in the same parallel till <date>[Wednesd. 22.]</date>the 22d, having then explored
                  six degrees of longitude to the west of M. Bouvet's supposed land, and about seven
                  degrees to the east of it. Captain Furneaux likewise, after sailing over the space
                  where the Gulph of St. Sebastian is delineated in the charts, and passing between
                  our two discoveries of Georgia and Sandwich Land, crossed the meridian of Cape
                  Circumcision, in the latitude of 54° S. without meeting with land. From the joint
                  authority of these two tracks, we have great room to suppose, that Mr. des Loziers
                  Bouvet saw only a field of ice, with such huge mountainous islands of ice upon it,
                  as we fell in with on the 14th of December, 1772 . Some of our officers were at
                  that time strongly of opinion that they saw land, as the ice bore a striking
                  resemblance to it, and the French captain might be deceived in the same manner.
                  Captain Cook was unwilling to leave it in doubt whether there was land or not in
                  the situation of that field of ice seen in the beginning of our voyage; and
                  therefore directed his course across it on the 23d, without meeting with any
                  obstacles in his way, nor seeing a single island of ice in the same spot which had
                  been covered with immense floating masses about two years and two months before.
                  Being now well assured that there was no considerable land in this part of the
                  ocean, we steered to the northward, in order to make the best of our way towards
                  the Cape of Good Hope. The winds being north-westerly, and blowing very fresh,
                  obliged us to make a great deviation to the east of our proper course,
                     <date>[1775. March.][Wednesd. 1.]</date>till the first of March, when we could
                  steer directly towards the Cape. The wind, however, soon shifted, and blew from
                  its former quarter at several intervals. Its frequent changes occasioned great
                  discontent among our ship's company, whose expectations of putting an end to their
                  distresses, were wound up to the highest pitch. The clouds had perhaps never
                  before been so attentively examined, in order to find some prognostics of a fair
                  wind in their appearance, and the general uneasiness and impatience at an
                  unfavourable change can scarcely be described. Our voyage had now lasted
                  twenty-seven months after leaving the Cape of Good Hope, since which time we had
                  not touched at any European port, and lived chiefly upon salt provisions. The sum
                  total of all the days which we had spent on shore at different islands, and at
                  very great intervals of time, did not amount to more than one hundred and eighty,
                  or about six months. This was the only time of refreshment in the course of our
                  long voyage, and yet during part of this, especially the last year's cruize, we
                  obtained no fresh provisions at several islands. The run from New Zeeland towards
                  the Cape of Good Hope was by far the longest and most difficult which we had ever
                  made; for the trifling refreshments which we obtained in Christmas Sound, and at
                  the New Year's Islands, did not afford the crew more than four or five fresh
                  meals. If we add to this, the deficiency of such a salutary article of provision
                  as sour krout, and the continual progressive decay of our salt meat, it cannot be
                  very surprising, that towards the latter end of this run, the hardships of our
                  unnatural situation should become more intolerable than ever. Several obvious
                  reflections likewise encreased our uneasiness, in proportion as we advanced
                  towards a place which had some intercourse with Europe. All those who had left
                  behind them relations and parents, were apprehensive that they had lost some of
                  the number during their absence; and it was more than probable, that this interval
                  of time would have dissolved many valuable connections, diminished the number of
                  our friends, and robbed us of the comforts which we used to find in their
                  society.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 15.]</date>Notwithstanding the frequent changes of wind, we
                  advanced to the northward so far, that we began to change our cloaths on the 15th,
                  being then between 35° and 36° S. The next morning, at seven, we saw a ship to the
                  windward of us, and about three hours afterwards we came in sight of another; and
                  the eagerness with which every person on board bent his eyes towards these welcome
                  objects, was the strongest proof of that universal longing for an intercourse with
                  Europeans, which, though hitherto silent, now broke out into loud and fervent
                  wishes. It was thought proper to hoist Dutch colours, upon which the ship in sight
                  hoisted the same; we then hoisted the British flag, and fired a gun to leeward,11
                  but the stranger still continued to shew the first. As we were now arrived in a
                  part of the sea frequented by European ships, captain Cook called together all his
                  officers and sailors, and in the name of the Admiralty board, demanded their
                  journals and log-books, which were all packed up and sealed. Those who did not
                  belong to the military establishment , were not subject to this restriction, but
                  preserved their papers, being only requested not to divulge the particular
                  situations of our late discoveries, previous to their arrival in England. The
                  zealous and candid concern for the advancement of the sciences, which animates the
                  British government, has not suffered them to conceal the improvement which
                  different branches of knowledge have received under their auspices; and it were to
                  be wished, that so laudable and generous an example, might be followed by other
                  maritime powers, who at present seem to steal into the South Seas, and to be
                  ashamed of owning that they have been there.</p>

               <p>The ship in sight seemed to be a homeward bound Dutch Indiaman, and held the same
                  course with us, but we gradually came up with her. <date>[Friday 17.]</date>On the
                  17th in the morning we sounded, and found bottom with fifty-five fathom, being
                  arrived on the bank which runs off the south end of Africa. Some fishing lines
                  were thrown overboard, and a fish called a pollack was caught. In the evening we
                  made the coast of Africa, which here consisted of low sandy hummocks, and on which
                  we perceived several fires. <date>[Saturday 18.]</date>The next morning a boat was
                  hoisted out, and sent on board the Indiaman, which was now about five miles off.
                  Our people returned in a few hours with the welcome news, that there was universal
                  peace in Europe. The pleasure of this intelligence, was however, in a great
                  measure soured by an account of the massacre of the Adventure's boat's crew. The
                  Dutch captain having been long at sea from Bengal, lamented that he had no
                  refreshments to offer us. In the afternoon, the weather being very fair, and the
                  breeze freshening, we got sight of two Swedish, one Danish, and an English ship,
                  which glided along with all their sails set, and colours flying, and offered to
                  our eyes one of the most pleasing sights which we had beheld for some time past.
                     <date>[Sunday 19.]</date>The next morning, the English ship bore down to us,
                  and lieutenant Clerke, with my father, and a midshipman, went on board of her. In
                  the afternoon, a strong breeze set in, our boat returned, and the Indiaman
                  carefully stood off to sea, whilst we proceeded till we were close in shore. This
                  ship was the True Briton, captain Broadley, on her return from China. Our
                  gentlemen spoke in the strongest terms of the hearty hospitality with which they
                  had been received, and invited to a plain dinner. Our readers may imagine with
                  what avidity three famished circumnavigators, who had not seen fresh meat for six
                  weeks past, fell upon a dish of fattened Chinese quails, and a delicious goose,
                  which their host reckoned a very homely fare. On relating how long they had been
                  absent from any European settlement, how long they had lived upon salt-beef, and
                  how oft they had regaled themselves with seals, albatrosses, and pinguins, the
                  captain and his mates dropt their knives and forks, and in pure pity to the
                  strangers, resigned all pretensions to their dinner. At parting, captain Broadley
                  presented them with a large fat pig, and several geese, on which we dined the two
                  following days. We passed Cape Agulhas on the 20th, and were near being blown far
                  to leeward of the Cape, by a very hard gale, if we had not discovered the land
                  through the haze early on the 21st. We hauled up for it, and carrying more sail
                  than we had ever ventured to do, in the course of the whole voyage, we came safe
                  to an anchor in Table Bay, on the <date>[Wednesd. 22; or Tuesday 21.]</date>22d in
                  the morning, which we found was only the 21st, according to the reckoning of the
                  people on shore, we having gained a whole day by sailing round the world to the
                  eastward.</p>

            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VII.</l>

                  <l>Second stay at the Cape of Good Hope.--Run from thence to the Islands of St.
                     Helena and Ascension.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1775. March.][Tuesday 21.]</date>WE found the Table Bay full of ships at
                  our arrival, amongst which was one English Indiaman, the Ceres, captain Newt. As
                  soon as we were seen in the entrance of the bay, and known by our bleached rigging
                  and anti-quated appearance, captain Newt very politely sent one of his mates with
                  a boat load of the best refreshments, and with an offer of his assistance in case
                  our crew had been in distress. Having been so long at sea, we were touched with
                  this generous conduct, and with no small degree of pleasure and satisfaction, felt
                  ourselves once more in the company of men.1 We landed soon after, and having paid
                  our devoirs to the governor, and the principal officers of the company, retired to
                  the house of Mr. Brand, where we were received with that hearty welcome, which
                  always makes men forget national characters, and convinces them, that real worth
                  is not confined to certain climates or nations. The weather was so intensely hot
                  this day, that we did not remember to have ever felt such a degree of heat in the
                  course of our whole voyage. Notwithstanding this, we dined, according to the Dutch
                  custom, at one o'clock, or during the time of the greatest heat, and devoured our
                  meal with a ravenous appetite, which painted our past distresses in more lively
                  colours, and, as it were, with greater efficacy, than all the powers of language.
                  However, as it would have been dangerous to our emaciated bodies to indulge our
                  voracity too far, we were content to rise from table with a good appetite. We soon
                  found the benefit of this proceeding, and visibly regained strength and healthy
                  looks during our stay at the Cape. The officers of the ship took lodgings on shore
                  the next day; but having neglected to take the same precaution, and eating
                  immoderately at first, were presently surfeited, and continued to labour under a
                  want of appetite and sickness, which made their situation truly tantalizing.
                  Captain Cook sent two or three scorbutic patients to the hospital, these being the
                  only persons who were not able to do their duty. The rest were soon restored to
                  perfect health by a constant supply of refreshments, among which, a kind of brown
                  rye-loaves, and all sorts of greens, were doubtless the most efficacious.</p>

               <p>The pleasure of receiving some intelligence from all those who were united to us
                  by the ties of blood and affection, was inexpressible; and the satisfaction of
                  conversing with Europeans, after our long voyage, revived our spirits, which a
                  thousand incidents had conspired to depress. We passed our time very agreeably,
                  and assiduously collected, from heaps of old gazettes, the history of those years,
                  during which we had been banished, as it were, from all the world. This settlement
                  being resorted to, in summer and autumn, by ships of all nations, appeared at
                  present in a more flourishing light, than during our former stay in 1772. Besides
                  the great annual fleet of Dutch Indiamen, we found here several French vessels
                  from the Isle of France,2 and likewise one from Europe, commanded by M. Crozet,
                  who had formerly been at New Zeeland. Several Danish and two Swedish Indiamen also
                  came in; a Portuguese ship of war lay here several days, and three Spanish
                  frigates, one homeward bound from Manilla, and two going out to that settlement,
                  passed several weeks in this bay. The great events which had happened in Europe
                  during our absence, crouded upon us unexpectedly. Sweden delivered from the yoke
                  of aristocratical tyranny, by a young hero, emulous of Gustave-Vasa; the barbaric
                  darkness, which in the East of Europe and Asia had baffled the Herculean efforts
                  of Peter, dispelled by a princess, who, like the wonder of the polar sky, spreads
                  luminous beams, which turn night into day; lastly, Poland restored to peace, from
                  anarchy and the horrors of civil war, by the united efforts of the leaving powers
                  in Europe; and Frederick the Great resting from his triumphs, and sacrificing to
                  the Muses in the shade of his laurels, revered and beloved even by his former
                  foes! Such were the great and unexpected prospects, which all at once opened to
                  our eyes, which promised general happiness to the human race, and seemed to
                  announce a period of time, when mankind will appear in a more exalted light than
                  ever!</p>

               <p><date>[1775. April.][Friday 7.]</date>During our stay at the Cape, we made an
                  excursion to False Bay, where Mr. Brand commanded for the Dutch East India
                  Company. The heat of the summer had, in many places, darkened all the tints of
                  green, on that immense variety of low shrubs and plants, which grow in Africa.
                  However we found a great number of species in flower, with which we filled our
                  herbals. The roads are very bad, consisting of deep sand in many places, and of
                  rugged heaps of the hardest stones, in the neighbourhood of False Bay. In our way
                  we saw great coveys of a species of partridge, which the Dutch improperly call
                  pheasants. They are not very shy, and may easily be taken alive, and tamed. As
                  there are many parts about the Cape where these partridges do not breed, the Dutch
                  have found the method of stocking such spots with them. They take several pair of
                  tame partridges, dip them in water, and strew them with ashes, and thus put them
                  among the bushes, with their heads under the wing. I do not doubt but that many
                  readers will call in question the success of this simple manӕuvre; but I have only
                  to add, that I heard it from persons whose sincerity I had no reason to
                  suspect.</p>

               <p>The environs of False Bay are more dreary than those of Table Bay, the country
                  being almost entirely desart, if we except the commander's house, two or three
                  other houses belonging to private persons, and some magazines and work-shops, the
                  property of the Company. The colour of the mountains, however, is less gloomy, and
                  the variety of plants and birds which we found there is surprising. Antelopes
                  likewise reside in great numbers, some among the most inaccessible cliffs, and
                  others amidst the small dry grasses and shrubberies in more level spots. We spent
                  a whole morning in climbing these hills, and returned excessively fatigued from
                  the immoderate heat of the day. On the mountains we saw several over-hanging
                  rocks, forming small caverns, where the Dutch frequently pass the night, when they
                  leave the town to shoot antelopes.</p>

               <p>Simmon's Bay is that part of False Bay, where the ships are best sheltered from
                  the violence of the N. W. winds, which prevail here during the winter months. A
                  pier close to the commander's house is built out into the sea, where the boats can
                  take in water and all kinds of stores, with the same facility as in Table Bay.
                  Fish of the best and most palatable sorts are caught here in great plenty, and all
                  kinds of refreshments are easily procured from the plantations on the isthmus, or
                  from the Cape-Town itself, which is only twelve miles distant. The arrival of the
                  ships draws several inhabitants from thence to False Bay, who confine themselves
                  in narrow lodgings, for the sake of enjoying the company of strangers. This
                  peculiar situation affords many favourable opportunities towards forming more
                  intimate connections, which, we were told, the strangers seldom neglect,
                  especially as beauty and vivacity are not uncommon at the Cape.</p>

               <p>After a stay of three days, we returned to the Cape-Town, where we passed our time
                  in examining the animals at the Company's garden, and searching all the furriers
                  shops, in order to collect an assortment of antelopes skin. We were likewise
                  favoured with the sight of a live ourang-outang, or ape, from the island of Java,
                  of that species which has the honour to be adopted as a near relation by several
                  philosophers.3 This animal was about two feet six inches high, and preferred
                  crawling on all fours, though it could likewise sit and walk upon the hind-legs.
                  Its fingers and toes were remarkably long, and its thumbs very short, its belly
                  prominent, and its face, which was as ugly as it can well be imagined, had a nose
                  more resembling the human than that of other monkies. This animal has, I am told,
                  been since brought over to the menagerie of the Prince of Orange, at the Hague
                  .</p>

               <p>We became acquainted, in the course of our stay, with M. Crozet, who, attended by
                  all his officers, dined with us, upon captain Cook's invitation, and entertained
                  us with many curious particulars relating to his voyage. We were afterwards
                  introduced to the Spanish officers, amongst whom there were several whose
                  accomplishments and extensive knowledge do great honour to their corps. They
                  visited our astronomer, Mr. Wales, and were much pleased with the time-keepers, or
                  new-invented watches, which they saw in his possession, complaining, at the same
                  time, of the inaccuracy of all the astronomical instruments which they obtained
                  from their correspondents at London. Mr. Wales readily parted with one of his
                  sextants to them, having now, in a manner, completed the voyage; but captain Cook
                  refused to have any communication with them, and shunned them on all occasions,
                  from what motives we were at a loss to determine. Their frigates were reckoned
                  very fine ships by our officers; that homeward bound was the Juno, commanded by
                  Don Juan Arraos; the others, going to Manila, were the Astrea, captain Don Antonio
                  Albornos, and the Venus, captain Don Gabriel Guerna. The Dutch formerly did not
                  suffer the Spaniards to land at the Cape of Good Hope, and discouraged them, as
                  much as lay in their power, from touching there, keeping strictly to the Pope's
                  bull, which points out the limits of navigation, and shared the world between the
                  crowns of Portugal and Spain. They have, however, of late adopted more Protestant
                  principles, and will soon drop entirely the aversion which they have long
                  expressed towards the Spaniards, as they already feel no reluctance in taking
                  their superfluous dollars.</p>

               <p>Our ship's company being well refreshed, and in perfect health, and the ship being
                  likewise refitted and painted, we took on board a quantity of provisions, to serve
                  on our return, and prepared to sail with the first fair wind. After taking leave
                  of all our friends, and particularly of Dr. Sparrman, who had shared the perils
                  and distresses of our voyage, and whose heart had endeared him to all who knew
                  him, we came on board <date>[Thursday 27.]</date>on the 27th in the morning .
                  About noon, the Dutton Indiaman, captain Rice, got under sail, and we followed her
                  example, after saluting the fort. The Spanish frigate, the Juno, saluted us with
                  nine guns; which unexpected mark of politeness our gunners returned a full quarter
                  of an hour afterwards. A Danish Indiaman, captain Hanssen, likewise saluted us
                  with eleven guns. Both these ships got under sail immediately after, and soon left
                  us far behind.</p>

               <p>We passed through the northern part of the bay, between Robben Island and the
                  main. This island is a barren sandy spot, where many murderers and other
                  miscreants are confined by order of the Dutch India Company. Among them however
                  there are some unhappy victims to the merciless ambition of these merchants. We
                  need only mention the king of Madurè, who, deprived of his possessions, and driven
                  to the greatest horrors of despair, here lingers out a burthensome life, in the
                  despicable condition of a common slave .</p>

               <p>On the 28th, in the morning, a man was found concealed in the hold, and proper
                  enquiry being made, it was discovered that one of the quarter-masters had
                  conducted him thither some days before, and shared his daily allowance with him.
                  His good-nature was punished with a dozen lashes, and another dozen applied on the
                  stranger's back as a welcome. He was a native of his majesty's German dominions,
                  who having been kidnapped into the Dutch East Indian service, had applied to
                  captain Cook to take him under his protection. But it being deemed improper to
                  protect all his majesty's subjects alike, he had been reduced to the necessity of
                  coming on board by stealth, in order to escape from a service to which he had been
                  unjustly forced. He soon proved to be one of the most industrious men in the whole
                  ship, and gave our crew a good idea of their Hanoverian fellow-subjects.</p>

               <p>We shaped our course directly for the island of St. Helena,7 as soon as we had
                  cleared the land about Table Bay. The Dutton Indiaman kept company with us, her
                  captain relying on the superior accuracy of our computations; it being customary
                  with all India ships, first to run down the latitude, and then to bear away for
                  the island upon a parallel. <date>[1775. May.][Monday 15.]</date>We made the
                  island right a-head on the 15th of May, early in the morning, and came to an
                  anchor at midnight in the usual anchoring-place of James's Bay. As we ran along
                  the south-eastern shore, we found it of a considerable height, and consisting of
                  perpendicular porous rocks, of a brown and blackish colour, which in some places
                  appeared to be hollowed out by the continual dashing of the waves against them
                  .</p>

               <p><date>[Tuesday 16.]</date>Early the next morning our ship was saluted from James's
                  Fort, which is the principal fort in the bay, and as soon as we answered it, the
                  Dutton also saluted. The town, which lay before us, had a steep dreary mountain on
                  each side, which looked more burnt and desolate than Easter Island itself.
                  However, at the head of the valley between them we perceived some green mountains,
                  and in the town itself two coco-palms rose behind the fort. After breakfast we
                  landed at a flight of steps newly constructed, but which had at all times been
                  much wanted, as the surf breaks in with great violence on every part of the shore.
                  We walked between a huge impending rock and a parapet wall which faces the sea, to
                  a gate with a draw-bridge, defended by small batteries. It led to a very
                  considerable battery fronting an esplanade, with a shady walk of banian-trees
                  (ficus religiosa). Here we passed another gate, and entered the governor's house,
                  which is likewise fortified, and forms a kind of castle. The governor, Mr.
                  Skottowe, received captain Cook with the greatest marks of distinction, a salute
                  of thirteen guns being fired on his arrival at the house. Soon after, the
                  passengers from on board the Dutton likewise came to visit the governor. This
                  worthy and generous veteran, who has been crippled in his country's service, took
                  every opportunity to make our stay on the island agreeable, and, in particular, to
                  facilitate our researches as naturalists. We were in the course of the day
                  introduced to the principal officers of the Company in the town, who received us
                  with a degree of easy politeness, peculiar to men of liberal principles. The
                  governor's house contains several spacious and convenient apartments, which are
                  particularly agreeable in this hot climate, on account of their loftiness. Its
                  outside is, however, very plain, as are all the buildings in the town, not
                  excepting the church, which is newly built of lime-stone found on the island. A
                  small garden, at the back of the governor's house, contains a few shady walks, and
                  some curious East Indian trees, among which is the Barringtonia. The barracks of
                  the garrison, which is here supported by the East India Company, are situated
                  farther in the valley; as is likewise an hospital, with a small orchard, from
                  whence the sick are supplied with greens, and where they are allowed to walk.
                  Several other buildings belonging to the Company are situated in the same valley,
                  where, notwithstanding the sea-breeze, we felt the heat excessive, being confined
                  and reverberated by a high barren mountain on each side, which must make the
                  residence in town highly disagreeable and gloomy. Many of the principal
                  inhabitants open their houses for the reception of strangers who come on shore at
                  this place from the India ships. The terms are here nearly the same as at the
                  Cape; but the produce of so small an island as St. Helena, will not allow of that
                  provision of good cheer, for which the Dutch colony is famous over all the world.
                  We were entertained by Mr. Mason, a very worthy old man, to whom this settlement
                  owes some of its best and most amiable inhabitants. Having taken our lodgings, we
                  went to dine with the governor; and the spirit with which the conversation was
                  carried on, gave a convincing proof, that the means of acquiring useful knowledge,
                  from a store of good books, were by no means neglected among the inhabitants. Dr.
                  Hawkesworth's account of captain Cook's first voyage round the world, in the
                  Endeavour, had reached this island some time before; it had been eagerly perused,
                  and several articles, relative to this settlement, were now taken notice of with
                  great good humour and pleasant raillery. The total want of wheelbarrows, and the
                  ill-treatment of the slaves, which are spoken of in that account , were reckoned
                  particularly injurious, and captain Cook was called upon to defend himself. Mrs.
                  Skottowe, the sprightliest lady on the island, displayed to advantage her witty
                  and satirical talents, from which there was no other escape left, than to lay the
                  blame on the absent philosophers whose papers had been consulted.</p>

               <p>Early the next morning, the Hon. Mr. Stuart, captain Cook, and myself, took an
                  airing on the hills. We rode up that which lies to the westward, and is named the
                  Ladder-hill. The road, which has been lately made, ascends in zigzag along its
                  steep sides, and is very easy of ascent. Its breadth is nine feet, being enclosed
                  on the declivity by a wall about three feet high, made of the same stone of which
                  the whole mountain consists. This is nothing but a heap of lava, crumbling and
                  decaying into a brown earth in some parts, whilst in others it forms huge masses
                  of black cavernous slags, which, in a few instances, seemed to be somewhat
                  vitreous. Many rocks of this kind hang over the road, and sometimes roll down to
                  the terror and great risk of the inhabitants, being frequently detached by goats,
                  which came to brouze there; but the soldiers of the garrison have received orders
                  to shoot those animals as often as they appear on these eminences; and no other
                  command is obeyed with greater alacrity, because they are generally permitted to
                  feast upon the goat which they have killed. We proceeded into the country along
                  the summit of this hill, about half a mile, when all at once appeared one of the
                  finest prospects we had ever seen. It consisted of several sloping hillocks,
                  covered with rich verdure, and interspersed with fertile vallies, which contained
                  gardens, orchards, and various plantations. Many pastures surrounded by enclosures
                  of stone, were filled with a small, but fine breed of cattle, and with English
                  sheep; and every valley was provided with a little rivulet, many of which probably
                  take their rise near two high mountains in the midst of the island, which are
                  frequently involved in clouds. We crossed several hills, and looked down into
                  Sandy Bay, which is a small cove situated on the opposite part of the island, and
                  defended by a battery. The view was here romantic, the mountains being covered
                  with thick wild woods to their summits, and several of them, especially that named
                  Diana's Peak, rising in the most elegant forms. The rocks and stones in this
                  higher part of the island, were quite different from those in the valley which we
                  had left. Below they bore evident marks of the existence of a former volcano; but
                  here above, they consisted of a dark grey clayey stone in strata, or in some
                  places of lime-stone, and in others of an unctuous soft stone, like soap-rock. The
                  soil which covers these strata, is in many places a rich mould, from six to ten
                  inches deep, and a variety of plants thrive in it with luxuriance. I found several
                  shrubs on this excursion, which I had seen in no other part of the world, and
                  among them were those which the inhabitants named cabbage-trees, gum-trees, and
                  red-wood; the former thrive in places where the ground is very moist; but the
                  latter are always found on the ridge of hills where the soil is dry . The
                  cabbage-tree is one of the indigenous species, and has rather large leaves; but
                  after many repeated enquiries, I found that it was never made use of any other
                  way, than as fuel, and that no reason could be assigned why it has obtained that
                  name. It must not be confounded with the cabbage-tree of America, India, and the
                  South Seas, which is a species of palm.</p>

               <p>We were thoroughly wetted several times by smart showers, after each of which the
                  heat of the sun dried us in a few minutes. We stopped every slave whom we met on
                  the road, in order to enquire of him what treatment he received from his master;
                  being desirous to know whether the published accounts were more to be relied upon,
                  than those of the inhabitants. In general, we obtained such answers as were
                  favourable to these happy islanders, and removed the blame which had formerly been
                  thrown on them. A few indeed complained that they were sparingly supplied with
                  food, but this is a disadvantage under which I am told, even their masters
                  sometimes labour, being obliged to eat salt provisions at certain seasons. The
                  situation of the soldiers appeared to be by far more irksome, they being confined
                  to constant salt-diet, of which the East-India Company, it is said, allows very
                  scanty portions. Their pay is also very small, and made much less before it comes
                  from England. Those who are most industrious, obtain leave at times to work for
                  the inhabitants, and earn their subsistence by carrying wood for fuel, from the
                  mountains to the town. We saw some old grey-headed men employed in this manner,
                  who seemed very chearful, till we prevailed upon them to speak of their hardships,
                  which they could not do without emotion. All however mentioned their governor with
                  great affection, who is indeed generally esteemed on the island, and has the good
                  of the settlement much at heart.</p>

               <p>We returned into the town, descending along the slope of the hill, opposite to
                  that by which we went up, and found ourselves much refreshed by our excursion. The
                  horses at St. Helena, are imported chiefly from the Cape of Good Hope, and a few
                  are now bred on the island; they are small, but travel well in this hilly
                  country.</p>

               <p><date>[Thursday 18.]</date>The next day after breakfast, the governor invited to
                  his country-house a numerous company, consisting of the captains and passengers in
                  our ship, and the Dutton. We rode up the same hill which I had ascended in the
                  first ramble, and at the distance of about three miles from the town, arrived at
                  the place appointed. We were elegantly entertained at a small house, agreeably
                  situated in the midst of a very spacious garden, where we saw several plants of
                  Europe, Africa, and America, and particularly a profusion of roses and lilies,
                  interspersed with myrtle and laurel. Several walks of peach-trees were loaded with
                  fruit, which had a peculiar rich flavour different from that of our peaches; but
                  all other European fruit-trees throve indifferently, and if I was rightly
                  informed, never bear any fruit. Vines have likewise been planted several times,
                  but have not succeeded, on account of the climate; and cabbages and other greens,
                  which thrive extremely well, are devoured by caterpillars. We walked on all the
                  neighbouring hills, and saw some small spots which had been sowed with barley; but
                  this, and all other kinds of corn, are generally destroyed by the rats, which are
                  immensely numerous on the island. The ground is therefore laid out in pastures, of
                  which the vivid verdure, in a tropical climate, was really surprising. We were
                  told that the whole island can support 3000 head of cattle, but that there were
                  only 2600 upon it at that time. From the number of fields which we saw unoccupied,
                  we judged that a much greater number might find sufficient food; but we were
                  assured that the grass does not grow up again during winter, and that a certain
                  number of fields must be reserved for that season. The beef is juicy, delicious,
                  and very fat, and the constant consumption of it prevents the cattle growing old
                  on the island. The common furze or gorse (ulex europœus) which our farmers take
                  great pains to eradicate, has been planted here, and now over-runs all the
                  pastures. The inhabitants have found means to draw advantage from a shrub, which
                  has universally been esteemed useless and pernicious. The aspect of the country
                  was not always so delightful as it is at present; the ground was parched by the
                  intense heat, and all kinds of herbage and grass were shrivelled up. The
                  introduction of furze bushes, which throve as it were in despite of the sun,
                  preserved a degree of moisture in the ground; under their shade the grass began to
                  grow, and gradually covered the whole country with a rich and beautiful sod. At
                  present the furze is no longer wanted, and the people assiduously root it out, and
                  make use of it for fuel, which is indeed very scarce upon the island, though I
                  never saw a more œconomical use made of it than there, and at the Cape. It is
                  really surprising to see a variety of dishes dressed, especially at the last
                  mentioned settlement, with no greater fire than an English cook would make under a
                  small tea-kettle.</p>

               <p>In our return we saw several coveys of partridges, which are of the small
                  red-legged sort, common on the coast of Africa. We likewise saw several beautiful
                  ring-pheasants, which have been introduced into the island by the governor,
                  together with guinea-hens and rabbits. There is at present a penalty of five
                  pounds for killing a pheasant, by which means they multiply so fast, that the
                  restriction will soon be needless. Several other useful importations might still
                  be made, which would contribute to the greater oppulence of the people.
                  Snail-trefoil and clover might be sowed, which would doubtless give more
                  substantial food for the cattle than grass alone; and the cultivation of pulse,
                  such as carvanses and Chinese beans (dolichos sinensis &amp; phaseolus mungo), of
                  which sago is made in the province of Georgia, in North America , cannot be too
                  frequently recommended. A little perseverance, and a few trials, would easily
                  succeed in destroying the rats and caterpillars, which now devour many useful
                  plants; and these appear to be the principal obstacles to agriculture on the
                  island. Asses ought to be carried thither from Senegal; where, as M. Adanson says,
                  they have an excellent breed of them. The removal of all kinds of goods would be
                  infinitely facilitated by this importation; and there are several spots of ground,
                  where cattle cannot feed, that would be extremely suitable to animals which are so
                  indifferent in regard to food.</p>

               <p>We passed the next day at Mr. Mason's country-house, at the distance of four or
                  five miles from the town. We made a circuit, in order to go up a high mountain
                  adjacent to Diana's Peak, where we collected some curious plants, though the
                  weather was very rainy. Having seen on this excursion a small kind of blue dove,
                  which is said to have been originally found in the country, as well as the
                  red-legged partridge; and likewise some rice-birds, commonly called paddies (loxia
                  oryzivora), which have been introduced from the East Indies; we passed a small
                  farm, about a quarter of a mile from the road, where two Bramins resided, who were
                  accused of having opposed the Company's interest in India. Whether the crime was
                  real or imaginary, remains undetermined; but I could not avoid taking notice of
                  the different manner in which the Dutch and English treat their captives. The king
                  of Madurè is locked in a dungeon on Robben Island, whereas these Bramins are
                  suffered to be at large, and have a house and gardens, with all kinds of
                  provisions, besides several slaves to wait upon them.</p>

               <p>In the evening we returned to town, where Mr. Graham gave a ball to the
                  inhabitants. On entering the room, I was very agreeably surprised with the great
                  beauty and elegance displayed in a numerous circle of ladies; I thought myself
                  suddenly transported to the most brilliant capital of Europe: their features were
                  regular, their forms graceful, and their complexion perfectly fair. To these
                  charms we may add an easy deportment, a genteel education, a pleasing flow of
                  spirits, and acuteness of understanding, which gave constant life to their
                  conversation, and totally banished all formal constraint. The same company graced
                  another ball the next night, which was given by Mr. Laurel; and, notwithstanding
                  the short interval which was left for repose, we had the same reason as before to
                  admire their vivacity and activity. The number of ladies was so great, that some
                  of them were at a loss for partners, notwithstanding the presence of many persons
                  from on board the two ships in the harbour. On this occasion we were told, that
                  the number of female children born in this island evidently exceeds that of males,
                  in the same manner as it remarkably does at the Cape of Good Hope. It would be an
                  important circumstance to ascertain, whether this is always the case in warm
                  countries, especially as philosophers could not fail to draw many inferences from
                  thence relative to the domestic life of different nations. These proportions are
                  not yet well ascertained, even in some parts of Europe; and where they are
                  determined with some precision, they offer several curious facts. In England and
                  France the number of male children exceeds that of females; but in Sweden it is
                  the reverse. The number of inhabitants on St. Helena does not exceed two thousand
                  persons, including near five hundred soldiers, and six hundred slaves. The
                  greatest extent of their island is nearly eight miles, and the circuit about
                  twenty. By the arrival of the India ships, which they supply with refreshments,
                  they are in return provided with all sorts of manufactures and other necessaries;
                  and the Company annually orders one or two of their ships to touch there in their
                  way to India, in order to send them a sufficient quantity of European goods and
                  provisions, which they stand in need of. Many of their slaves are employed in
                  catching fish, which are very plentiful; and by the help of these, together with
                  their cattle, poultry, roots, and salt provisions, they subsist throughout the
                  year. Their life seems to pass along very happily; free from the multitude of
                  cares which distresses their countrymen in England, and blessed with quiet and
                  content.</p>

               <p>The same company which had passed the evening at the ball appeared at church
                     <date>[Sunday 21.]</date>the next morning. The Rev. Mr. Carr, a young clergyman
                  of great merit, and of very liberal sentiments, pronounced a sensible discourse,
                  well suited to his audience, and convinced us that he has all the qualities of an
                  excellent spiritual pastor. After the sermon we dined with the governor; and
                  taking leave of all our friends, whose amiable character had endeared them to us
                  in so short a time as that of our stay, returned on board, captain Cook's
                  departure being honoured once more by a salute from the castle. Towards night we
                  got under way, in company with the Dutton Indiaman, and proceeded to the
                  northward. The Company had sent an order to St. Helena a few months before our
                  arrival, importing that none of their ships should touch at the Isle of Ascension,
                  which they formerly used to frequent for the sake of taking some turtles. Captain
                  Cook, however, being desirous of visiting this island, parted company with the
                  Dutton on the 24th in the evening, after we had all dined on board that ship, and
                  experienced many civilities from captain Rice and all his passengers. We came in
                  sight of the land early on the 28th in the morning, and having run all day towards
                  it, came to an anchor in Cross Bay about five o'clock in the evening <date>[Sunday
                     28.]</date>.9 This island was first discovered in 1501, by Joao da Nova Galego,
                  a Portuguese navigator, who named it Ilha de Nossa Senhora de Conceiçao. The same
                  admiral, on his return to Portugal in 1502, discovered the Island of St. Helena,
                  which obtained that name from the day of the discovery . Ascension was seen a
                  second time by Alfonso d'Albuquerque on his voyage to India in 1503, and then
                  received the name it now bears; but was already at that time in the same desolate
                  condition as at present . We sent several parties on shore, who passed the night
                  on the watch for turtles, which came to lay their eggs on the sandy shores. The
                  dreariness of this island surpassed all the horrors of Easter Island and Tierra
                  del Fuego, even without the assistance of snow. It was a ruinous heap of rocks,
                  many of which, as far as we could discern from the ship, seemed to be totally
                  changed by the fire of a volcano. Nearly in the centre of the island rises a broad
                  white mountain of great height, on which we discerned some verdure by the help of
                  our glasses, from whence it has obtained the name of Green Mountain.</p>

               <p><date>[Monday 29.]</date>We landed early in the morning among some rocks, the surf
                  being always immensely high on the great beach; which consists of minute
                  shell-sand, chiefly of a snowy white, very deep, dry, and intolerable to the eyes,
                  when the sun shines. We ascended among heaps of black cavernous stone, which
                  perfectly resembles the most common lavas of Vesuvius and Iceland, and of which
                  the broken pieces looked as if they had been accumulated by art. The lava currents
                  cooling very suddenly, may easily be imagined to produce such an effect. Having
                  ascended about twelve or fifteen yards perpendicular, we found ourselves on a
                  great level plain, of six or eight miles in circuit, in the different corners of
                  which, we observed a large hill of an exact conical shape, and of a reddish
                  colour, standing perfectly insulated. Part of the plain between these conic hills,
                  was covered with great numbers of smaller hillocks, consisting of the same wild
                  and ragged lava, as that near the sea, and ringing like glass when two pieces are
                  knocked together. The ground between the heaps of lava, was covered with a black
                  earth on which we walked very firmly; but where these heaps did not appear, the
                  whole was a red earth, which was so loose, and in such dry minute particles, that
                  the wind raised clouds of dust upon it. The conic hills consisted of a very
                  different sort of lava, which was red, soft, and crumbling into earth. One of
                  these hills stands directly in front of the bay, and has a wooden cross on its
                  summit, from whence the bay is said to take its name. Its sides are very steep,
                  but a path near three quarters of a mile long, winds round it to the summit. After
                  examining this remarkable country a little longer, we concluded with a great
                  degree of probability on our side, that the plain on which we stood, was once the
                  crater or seat of a volcano, by the accumulation of whose cinders and
                  pumice-stones, the conic hills had been gradually formed; that the currents of
                  lava which we now saw divided into many heaps, had perhaps been gradually buried
                  in fresh cinders and ashes, and the waters coming down from the interior mountain
                  in the rainy season, had smoothened every thing in their way, and filled up by
                  degrees the cavity of the crater. The rocky black lava was the residence of
                  numberless men of war birds and boobies, which sat on their eggs, and suffered us
                  to come close to them. The men of war birds in general, have a prodigious
                  pendulous skin, of a bright red, which they can distend to the size of a man's
                  hand, and which resembles the pelican's pouch, being perhaps intended for the same
                  purpose by nature. On all this rocky ground, we did not meet with more than ten
                  shrivelled plants, which were only of two sorts; one a species of spurge, the
                  other a bind-weed (euphorbia origanoides, &amp; convolvulus pes caprœ). We
                  returned on board at noon, where we saw only six turtles which had been caught
                  over night, their laying season being almost at an end. The officer who had been
                  sent to the eastward, found the wreck of a ship there, which appeared to have been
                  partly consumed by fire, and was probably run on shore by the people, in order to
                  save their lives. The distressful situation to which such a set of men must have
                  been reduced, in this barren island, before a ship could take them up, drew an
                  expression of pity even from the sailors. But their misfortune was now become our
                  advantage; for our provision of fuel being very low, captain Cook sent his boats
                  to take in a sufficient quantity of the timbers of this wreck.</p>

               <p>About eight in the evening, it being then quite dark, a small vessel came into the
                  bay, and anchored directly within us. Captain Cook having hailed her repeatedly,
                  received in answer, that she was the Lucretia, a New York sloop, which had been at
                  Sierra Leon, and was now come to catch turtles, in order to sell them at the
                  windward islands of the West Indies. A lieutenant was sent on board, who learnt
                  from the master, that he had taken our ship to be a French Indiaman, and was very
                  desirous of trading with English India-ships, in which he was disappointed by the
                  Company's regulations. He dined with our officers the next day, but on the 31st at
                  day-break, left the island. <date>[Tuesday 30.]</date>On the 30th in the morning,
                  we landed a second time, and crossing the plain, arrived at a prodigious lava
                  current, intersected by many channels, from six to eight yards deep, which bore
                  strong marks of being worn by vast torrents of water; but were at present
                  perfectly dry, the sun being in the northern hemisphere. In these gullies we found
                  a small quantity of soil, consisting of a black volcanic earth, mixed with some
                  whitish particles gritty to the touch. Here we saw some small bunches of purslane,
                  and a species of grass (panicum sanguineum) which found sufficient nutriment in
                  the dry soil. Having at last with great fatigue, climbed over this extensive and
                  tremendous current of lava, which was much more solid than the heaps nearer to the
                  sea, we came to the foot of the green mountain, which even from the ship's place
                  in the bay, we had plainly distinguished to be of a different nature from all the
                  rest of the country. Those parts of the lava which surrounded it, were covered
                  with a prodigious quantity of purslane, and a kind of new fern (lonchitis
                  adscensionis) where several flocks of wild goats were feeding. The great mountain
                  is divided in its extremities, by various clefts into several bodies, but in the
                  centre they all run together, and form one broad mass of great height. The whole
                  appears to consist of a gritty tophaceous10 lime-stone, which has never been
                  attacked by the volcano, but probably existed prior to its eruption; its sides are
                  covered with a kind of grass, peculiar to the island, which Linnӕus has named
                  aristida ascensionis. We likewise observed several flocks of goats feeding on it;
                  but they were all excessively shy, and ran with surprising velocity along
                  tremendous precipices, where it was impossible to follow them. The master of the
                  New York sloop acquainted us, that there is a spring of water on one part of this
                  mountain, which falls down a great precipice, and is afterwards absorbed in the
                  sand. I am almost persuaded that with a little trouble, Ascension might shortly be
                  made fit for the residence of men. The introduction of furze (ulex europœus), and
                  of a few other plants which thrive best in a parched soil, and are not likely to
                  be attacked by rats or goats, would soon have the same effect as at St. Helena.
                  The moisture attracted from the atmosphere by the high mountains in the centre of
                  the island, would then no longer be evaporated by the violent action of the sun,
                  but collect into rivulets, and gradually supply the whole island. A sod of grasses
                  would every where cover the surface of the ground, and annually encrease the
                  stratum of mould, till it could be planted with more useful vegetables.</p>

               <p>We returned gradually to Cross Bay, in the heat of noon, over the plain, having a
                  space of more than five miles to traverse, where the sun burnt, and blistered our
                  faces and necks, and heated the soil to such a degree, that our feet were likewise
                  extremely sore. About three o'clock we arrived at the water's-side, and after
                  bathing in a small cove among a few rocks, we made the signal for a boat, and were
                  taken on board. <date>[Wednesd. 31.]</date>The next forenoon we made another small
                  excursion, in company with captain Cook, towards the Green Mountain, but we were
                  all of us so much fatigued that we could not reach it. We made no new observations
                  in the course of this day, the nature of the island being dreary beyond
                  description, in its outskirts. In the afternoon we hoisted in all our boats, and
                  set sail, having taken twenty-four turtles, weighing from three to four hundred
                  pounds each. They lasted us three weeks, one and sometimes two being killed every
                  day, and the ship's company receiving as much as they could eat of this wholesome
                  and palatable food.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
               <head>
                  <l>CHAP. VIII.</l>

                  <l>Run from Ascension, past the Island of Fernando da Noronha, to the
                     Açores.--Stay at Fayal.--Return to England.</l>
               </head>

               <p><date>[1775. June.][Friday 9.]</date>AFTER leaving Ascension we made a good deal
                  of westing, insomuch that we came in sight of the Island of Fernando da Noronha,
                  near the coast of Brasil, on the 9th of June, about one o'clock in the afternoon.
                  The longitude of this island being hitherto unsettled, captain Cook only ran in
                  sight of it, in order to determine its true situation. Americo Vespucci, whose
                  name has since been given to the continent, of which he was one of the first
                  discoverers, fell in with this island in his fourth voyage, so early as the year
                  1502 ; but in what manner it received its present name remains unknown. In 1733,
                  the French India Company made a small settlement on it; but the Portuguese laid
                  claim to it, and took possession of it, in 1739. According to the charts of the
                  French, all the interior part of the island consists of extensive plains, which
                  are surrounded by several hills along the sea-shores . We approached it on the
                  east side, and then hauled close round the Isle of Rats, which lies off its N. E.
                  point, and looked into the Bay of Remedios, which is surrounded by five forts,
                  some on Fernando Noronha itself, and one on a rock which lies off the N. E. end.
                  The island appeared very well wooded in all parts, and some of its mountains had
                  much the appearance of being volcanic, though they were covered with rich verdure,
                  which did not shew the least marks of cultivation. The five forts in sight hoisted
                  their colours at once, and one of them fired a gun. We likewise hoisted our
                  colours, fired a gun to leeward, and instantly putting about, stood away to the
                  northward.</p>

               <p><date>[Sunday 11.]</date>On the 11th we crossed the line, after spending two years
                  and nine months to the south of it. The calms which are usual in its neighbourhood
                  did not retard our course, till we had gained near four degrees of north latitude,
                  and lasted from the 14th to the 18th, when the N. E. tradewind set in, after we
                  had amused ourselves with catching some sharks and a porpesse, which the crew
                  feasted upon. Of a very numerous collection of live animals, which my father had
                  collected at a great expence at the Cape of Good Hope, nearly one half perished
                  before we reached these latitudes. Being desirous of preserving the rest, he was
                  obliged to put himself to another expence, in order to rescue them from the malice
                  of the sailors, who had slily and enviously killed most of those which he had lost
                  before.</p>

               <p><date>[Friday 30.]</date>The trade-wind carried us out of the torrid zone in
                  twelve days, and lasted us five days more; the sun, which commonly regulates the
                  extent of this wind, being in the northern signs. <date>[1775. July.][Tuesday
                     4.]</date>On the 4th of July we met with squalls and calms alternately; and the
                  next day had a dead calm, which lasted undisturbed during two days, and was
                  intermixed with light airs for the two following days. The latitudes where these
                  calms chiefly reign, are named the horse-latitudes by mariners, who frequently
                  cross the ocean from Europe to America, because they are fatal to horses and other
                  cattle, which are transported to the last mentioned continent; instances
                  frequently happening, when the calms have lasted a whole month without being
                  interrupted, except by light airs of a few hours duration.</p>

               <p>Having obtained a fair wind on the 9th, we directed our course towards the Açores,
                  commonly called the Western Islands in English charts; and on the 13th, at four in
                  the afternoon, saw the Island of Fayal.1 <date>[Friday 14.]</date>Early the next
                  morning we stood in for the land, and gradually came in sight of the lofty Island
                  of Pico, of which the skirts appeared to be covered with verdure and habitations.
                  Towards seven we drew near the road or bay on the Island of Fayal, where ships
                  commonly anchor. The Portuguese master of the port came off to us in a small boat,
                  in order to point out a secure place of anchorage, where three vessels were
                  already moored. He acquainted us in French, that one of these, a snow under
                  Portuguese colours, had lately arrived from Para in the Brasils, having, through
                  the ignorance of her conductor, missed the Cape Verd Islands, to which she was
                  bound. Another small vessel, which did not shew any colours, was a North-American
                  sloop. The third was the Pourvoyeuse, a French frigate, whose captain, M.
                  d'Estelle, with great politeness sent a lieutenant on board, to offer his services
                  to captain Cook. After coming to an anchor, an officer was sent on shore to the
                  commandant of the fort, in order to make the usual enquiry with regard to the
                  salute; but after being detained several hours, he was told that the fort always
                  returned two guns less than it received, for which reason we did not think proper
                  to pay the compliment. The American sloop set sail in the afternoon, being greatly
                  apprehensive of some mischance from us, though we were inclined to be at peace
                  with all the world.</p>

               <p>The appearance of the town, from the sea side, made nearly the same impression on
                  us, as that of Funchal in Madeira. It lies along the shore of the bay, and rises
                  in the form of an amphitheatre upon the hill, with an easy slope. Its churches,
                  monasteries, forts, and flat-roofed houses, which are for the greatest part white,
                  produce a very pleasing effect. The hills beyond the town are some of the richest
                  that nature and industry ever adorned. They were at this time loaded with ripe
                  corn-fields, interspersed with gardens, groves, and various buildings, which bore
                  evident marks of a great population, and raised every idea of plenty. There are
                  two forts which command the bay, one at each extremity of the town, but the
                  southernmost is the most considerable.</p>

               <p>Immediately after dinner captain Cook, accompanied by my father and myself, went
                  on shore at the foot of the southern fort. We were no sooner landed than we
                  plainly discovered from what motives the Portuguese had refused to return an equal
                  salute. The cannon rested on rotten carriages, which it was not prudent to expose
                  to the shock of a discharge; and the greater part of them were placed on a
                  rampart, which was infinitely too narrow to be fit for use. Besides this, we were
                  afterwards informed, that the expence of powder, upon such occasions, was deemed
                  superfluous by the present oeconomical ministry in Portugal. We walked through
                  great part of the town, which is named Villa da Horta, and extends a mile and a
                  quarter in length, consisting chiefly of one irregular street, intersected by a
                  few small lanes. The pavement is made of large stones, and tolerably clean, being
                  little frequented. The houses are contrived exactly in the same manner as those of
                  Madeira, with projecting balconies which are roofed at the top, and have lattices
                  that may be lifted up occasionally, supplying the place of windows. After we had
                  visited the churches, of which there are three, dark and Gothic like those of
                  Madeira, we were conducted to Mr. Dent, the English deputy-consul, who received us
                  very kindly, and offered Mr. Wales, my father, Mr. Hodges, and myself a lodging in
                  his house during our stay. He accompanied us next to the different convents within
                  the town. One of these belongs to the Franciscan Cordeliers, who are twenty in
                  number, besides several lay-brothers; and, according to their own account, teach
                  rhetoric, philosophy, and divinity to the children of the inhabitants. Another,
                  situated on an eminence, contains twelve Carmelites, with their lay-brothers. The
                  third lies on a hill above the town, and belongs to twelve Capuchins, with some
                  lay-brothers. The fourth is placed in the best and most conspicuous part of the
                  town, and was formerly the college of the Jesuits, but is now converted into a
                  court of justice, a part of it being reserved for a public school. It cannot be
                  expected that learning should flourish in all these dreary cells. The monks being
                  here entirely cut off from the means of acquiring knowledge, are content to live
                  comfortably and agreeably, without undergoing the fatigues of study. The two
                  nunneries next attracted our attention; the one is dedicated to St. John, and
                  contains one hundred and fifty nuns of the order of St. Clara, with as many
                  servants. They wear a long cloak, of dark brown serge, over another of white
                  callicoe. Eighty or ninety nuns, of the order of Nossa Senhora de Conceiçao,
                  occupy another convent, with an equal number of servants. They wear white dresses,
                  and have a piece of blue silk fixed on the breast, together with an image of the
                  Virgin on a silver plate. The reception which we met with at their grates was very
                  polite; but we could not converse with them for want of knowing their language.
                  Their pronunciation was very soft, and in a singing tone, which we should have
                  taken to be affected, if we had not afterwards found it general among all ranks of
                  people. The features of some were very agreeable, and their complexions fairer
                  than we expected, though in general rather languid. Religion had not yet so
                  entirely occupied their breast, as to extinguish every spark of corporeal fire;
                  their eyes, which were indeed their finest features, still betrayed an attachment
                  to nature; and if there is truth in the hundredth part of the accounts which we
                  heard at Fayal, love reigns with absolute sway in the midst of their
                  cloisters.</p>

               <p>After walking about till sunset, we returned to Mr. Dent's house, and were
                  introduced to a Portuguese priest, who spoke Latin better than all the friars in
                  the different convents, and appeared to be a very intelligent man, whose
                  inquisitive turn of mind had got the better of many prejudices which were common
                  among his countrymen. He communicated to us a Spanish literary and political
                  journal, which is read at present throughout the Portuguese dominions; the prime
                  minister having prohibited the printing of any kind of gazette or news-paper in
                  Portugal. This regulation greatly contributes to keep that kingdom in profound
                  ignorance, which is the only security of an oppressive government.</p>

               <p>The next morning we paid a visit to the officers of the French frigate, who lodged
                  at the house of Mrs. Milton, an English woman, and a widow. This good lady,
                  hearing we had been round the world, shed a flood of tears, and told us that our
                  arrival put her in mind of the cruel death of one of her sons, who had embarked in
                  captain Furneaux's ship, and was one of those unfortunate men that were killed and
                  devoured in New Zeeland. The circumstances with which his untimely fate was
                  attended, are much more horrible, according to the ideas we imbibe by education,
                  than those of any other manner of death, and could not fail of making a deeper
                  impression on the unhappy parent. Her grief was likewise of that genuine kind, to
                  which no feeling heart can refuse a sympathetic tribute; and it taught us to
                  reflect, how many mothers in Europe, and in the South Seas, have had reason to
                  wail the loss of their sons, and to execrate the enterprizing spirit of mankind.
                  Mrs. Milton, reflecting on the many calamities which had embittered her life, was
                  resolved to secure repose and happiness for her daughter, by placing her in one of
                  the nunneries of Fayal; without considering at the same time, that the world has
                  charms at the age of fourteen, which lose their attractive power at fifty. Her
                  daughter was handsome enough to dispute the palm of beauty with all the Portuguese
                  ladies at Fayal. One of our officers, therefore, undertook to dissuade Mrs. Milton
                  from her project, and assured her, in very blunt terms indeed, that so far from
                  doing a meritorious action, she would incur the eternal displeasure of heaven.
                  Whether a seaman's admonition could have much effect I leave the reader to
                  determine; Mrs. Milton, however, received it with good humour; and the
                  conversation which followed, gave a convincing proof, that religious motives were
                  not so urgent, in behalf of her daughter's confinement, as those of private
                  interest.</p>

               <p>From hence we took a walk upon the hills beyond the town, and found the ground
                  extremely well cultivated, all the field being enclosed by walls of stone, in some
                  places cemented together, in others only wrapped in moss. The people chiefly sow
                  wheat of the bearded sort, of which the ears were very large, and the straw of no
                  great length. Besides this, they have likewise barley, which was already housed;
                  and maize, or Indian corn, which grows in some places under fine groves of
                  chestnut-trees, that greatly adorn the country; but where it stands in open
                  fields, they mix it with French beans. Near the cottages we found some fields of
                  cucumbers, gourds, melons, and water-melons, together with safflor, which the
                  Portuguese employ to colour their eatables yellow. Their orchards supply them with
                  lemons, oranges, plums, apricots, figs, pears, and apples. They have few cabbages,
                  and their carrots degenerate, and turn white, which obliges them to send for fresh
                  seeds to Europe every year. They plant abundance of potatoes by the express
                  command of the government, and sell them very cheap, because they do not like to
                  eat them. Large sweet onions, and garlick, the favourite greens of the Portuguese,
                  are plentiful on the island; together with the solanum lycopersicon, the fruit of
                  which they call tomatos, and likewise abundance of strawberries. There are a few
                  vine-yards on the island; but the quantity of wine which is made is
                  inconsiderable, and its quality very indifferent. Their oxen are small, but the
                  meat very good, though they are employed to draw the plough and the cart. Their
                  sheep are likewise of a very small breed, but the mutton well tasted. Their goats
                  and hogs are long-legged; and besides these, they keep abundance of poultry of all
                  sorts. Their horses are small and ill-looking; but asses and mules are more
                  numerous, and perhaps more serviceable in this hilly island. The roads are much
                  better than at Madeira, and every thing, upon the whole, bears evident marks of
                  greater industry. The deafening noise made by their carts is, however, very
                  disagreeable, and owing to their aukward construction. The wheels are formed of
                  three large clumsy pieces of wood, bound by iron, and fastened to a strong
                  axletree, which moves therefore together with the wheels, and turns in a round
                  hole made through a square piece of wood, which is transversely fixed to the
                  bottom of the cart. The cottages of the common people are built of clay, and
                  thatched with straw; and are small, but cleanly and cool. The inhabitants were in
                  general fairer than those of Madeira; their features, though similar, were however
                  somewhat softer; and their dress was in general much more decent and comfortable,
                  consisting of coarse linen shirts and drawers, with blue or brown jackets, and
                  boots on the legs. A short jacket and petticoat is the dress of the women, whose
                  hair is tied in a bunch behind, and whose features are not always disagreeable.
                  When they go to town, they put on a cloak which covers their heads, leaving only a
                  small opening for the eyes, and is tied round the waist. The men likewise add a
                  broad-brimmed hat and a cloak upon these occasions. Wherever we came we found them
                  employed; in the fields reaping their corn, or at home in various other branches
                  of husbandry; and not one idle beggar made his appearance, by which means the
                  difference between this island and Madeira became still more striking. We rambled
                  to some groves and wild shrubberies on the summits of the hills, where we found
                  abundance of myrtles growing wild among tall aspen-trees, and great quantities of
                  beeches, which being called faya (fagus), in the Portuguese language, have, it is
                  said, given occasion to name the island Fayal. The prospect from these eminences
                  was very delightful, the town and road lying as it were under our feet, and the
                  island of Pico opposite, at the distance of two or three leagues. A number of
                  canary-birds, blackbirds, and other song-birds were heard on all sides; and their
                  harmony was the more enchanting, as it put us in mind of those European scenes
                  from which we had so long been absent. The whole country was filled with a variety
                  of birds, among which we particularly noticed prodigious numbers of common quails,
                  some American woodcocks, and a small species of hawks, from whence this group of
                  islands was named Açores, that being the Portuguese name of a hawk. The prodigious
                  heat of the day obliged us to return to the town about noon, and to take shelter
                  in the lofty cool rooms of the consul's house. I was however too much pleased with
                  the appearance of the country to pass the whole afternoon in town, and therefore
                  accompanied Mr. Wales, Mr. Patton, Mr. Hodges, and Mr. Gilbert on another
                  excursion. We passed by the Capuchin monastery of St. Antonio, which is situated
                  on the hill; and being particularly desirous of seeing a rivulet, which would
                  naturally embellish the landscape where it flowed, we engaged two lively boys to
                  become our conductors. We now crossed some romantic hills and groves, where Mr.
                  Hodges took several sketches, and soon opened a fine rich plain, laid out in
                  corn-fields and pastures, in the midst of which lay the village of Nossa Senhora
                  de la Luz, surrounded by groves of aspen and beech. When we had reached this place
                  we separated, and Mr. Patton and Mr. Hodges only continued to walk to the rivulet
                  with me. We were somewhat disappointed, when we saw a very deep and broad bed of a
                  torrent almost entirely dry, except in one part, where an inconsiderable brook
                  appeared to wind its way among the rocks and stones. However, we were prevailed
                  upon by our conductors to go down into this hollow, where we soon found a great
                  number of young girls assembled about the head of the spring, employed in drawing
                  water. Among them was one who, by her fair complexion and dress, appeared to be of
                  higher rank than the rest; notwithstanding this, she had no manner of advantage
                  over her companions, but like them filled her pails with water from the fountain.
                  We could not help being pleased to find the remains of patriarchal simplicity
                  among a civilized people, where the superiority of rank is commonly marked by
                  pride and indolence. From hence we walked along the bed of the river, which we
                  were told is filled to the top in winter, when heavy rains usually happen in this
                  island. The people told us they expected a shower, and had, for that reason, laid
                  great quantities of flax in bundles into the dry bed of the torrent, in order to
                  be soaked. This flax appeared to be long, and of a good quality, and is
                  manufactured into coarse linens on the island. We came back to town much fatigued,
                  when it began to grow dark, after having called at a peasant's house on the road,
                  where we drank some of the common wine of the country, which has a bitter taste,
                  but seems to be very wholesome. The rain, which the people expected, really set in
                  as soon as we were returned; and I was told it would be of infinite value to the
                  islands at this season, by swelling the grapes with juice, which otherwise remain
                  no bigger than currants. During my absence, my father had conversed with several
                  Portuguese, especially with the clergyman I mentioned before, from whom he
                  obtained some particulars relative to the Açores, which have enabled me to give
                  the following account of them.</p>

               <p>The Açores were first discovered by some Flemish ships, in 1439, when several
                  families of that nation settled at Fayal, where one of the parishes still bears
                  the name of Flamingos. For this reason some of the old geographers have called
                  them the Flemish Islands. In 1447, the Portuguese discovered the island of St.
                  Maria, which is the easternmost of this group, then St. Miguiel (Michael) and next
                  Terceira. Don Gonzalo Velho Cabral, commander of Almuros, settled on Terceira in
                  1449, and founded the city of Angra. The islands of St. George, Graciosa, Pico,
                  and Fayal, were likewise successively seen, and settled; and last of all, the two
                  westernmost of the group, were discovered, and named Flores and Corvo, from the
                  abundance of flowers on the one, and of crows on the other. .</p>

               <p>These islands, which are all fertile, and at present inhabited by an industrious
                  race of people, are commanded by a governor-general, who resides at Angra in
                  Terceira. The present governor was Don Anton da Almada, who is universally
                  esteemed on account of his good-nature, and abhorrence of all kinds of extortion
                  and oppression. Instead of accumulating a fortune in his post, he has spent much
                  more than his income, living in great splendor on purpose to benefit the islands,
                  for which reason he was continued six years in his government, though it is
                  customary to keep it only three years in the same hands. His successor, Don Luis
                  de Tal Pilatus, was however daily expected from Lisbon, together with a new bishop
                  of Angra. The bishop's diocese extends over all the Açores, and he has twelve
                  canons in his cathedral. His income is paid in wheat, and consists of 300 muys, or
                  measures of twenty-four bushels. Each muy at the lowest is worth, four pounds
                  sterling, consequently he has at least twelve hundred pounds sterling a year.
                  Every island is commanded by a Capitan Major, who is a kind of deputy governor, or
                  commandant, and directs the police, militia, and revenue. A Juiz or judge, is at
                  the head of the law department in every island, from whom they appeal to a higher
                  court at Terceira, and from thence to the supreme court at Lisbon. The natives of
                  these islands are said to be very quarrelsome, and have law-suits constantly
                  depending.</p>

               <p>The isle of Corvo, is the least of the Açores, and contains scarcely six hundred
                  inhabitants, who chiefly cultivate wheat, and feed hogs, exporting annually a
                  small quantity of bacon.</p>

               <p>The isle of Flores is something larger, more fertile and more populous. Its
                  exports amount to six hundred muys of wheat, besides a quantity of bacon. But as
                  no wine is made in both these islands, the inhabitants are obliged to import a
                  quantity for their consumption from Fayal. A large Spanish ship of war, richly
                  laden, was lost upon the coast of Flores many years ago; her crew and all her
                  treasures however were saved. These Spaniards introduced the venereal disease upon
                  the island, where it was never known before, and their riches being an
                  irresistible temptation with many women, every individual inhabitant was soon
                  infected. To expiate this crime in some measure, they have built a church at a
                  great expence, which is now reckoned the handsomest building in all the Açores.
                  The evil has however maintained its ground, and as in Peru, or in some parts of
                  Siberia, no inhabitant of Flores is free from it.</p>

               <p>Fayal is one of the larger islands in the group, being nine leagues long from east
                  to west, and about four leagues broad. Its present commandant, or Capitan Mo#r, is
                  called Senhor Thomas Francisco Brum de Silveyra; he has the character of a greedy
                  covetous man, and always lives in the country, in order to avoid shewing
                  civilities to strangers, or keeping company with the inhabitants of the town. The
                  judge of Fayal was then expected from Portugal, with the new governor-general. The
                  head of the clergy on the island, is only styled oviedor or auditor, and was the
                  vicar of the principal church in the town.</p>

               <p>Learning is much discountenanced at Fayal, as in all the Açores, and in Portugal
                  itself. M. de Fleurieu with M. Pingrè;, the French astronomer, who went out to try
                  some time-keepers, were not permitted to land their instruments at Terceira, it
                  being apprehended that they meant to do some mischief to the island . Upwards of
                  two years ago, an impost of two reys was laid on each canari of wine, made in
                  Fayal and Pico, which amounts to something more than a shipping per pipe, and
                  produces about one thousand pounds a year. This revenue was to be raised under
                  pretence of providing the salary of three professors, to be established at Fayal,
                  after undergoing an examination at Lisbon. But unfortunately for science, and for
                  the inhabitants of the island, the money was no sooner collected, than it was
                  applied to a very different use, and now serves to pay and support the garrison,
                  which nominally consists of one hundred, but in effect of only forty men, without
                  either discipline or arms. In consequence of this abuse, there are at present no
                  public institutions for the improvement of children, and those only who can afford
                  to pay for instruction, can give their children a lettered education. There is a
                  professor appointed indeed, who has passed the examination; but as he receives no
                  salary, he poorly earns his bread by teaching the rudiments of Latin. It must be
                  confessed, that the impost upon the wine, is not the only one which is misapplied
                  in this island. There is another much more considerable, of two per cent. laid on
                  all the exports, the produce of which is intended to maintain the fortifications
                  in good repair. However, it is at present thought fit to suffer the batteries to
                  decay, and to transmit the money to Terceira, where it is not better employed. One
                  tenth on all the productions of the Aèores belong to the king, and the single
                  article of tobacco, which is monopolized by the crown, brings in a considerable
                  sum. The possession of these islands, small as they are, can therefore never be
                  indifferent to Portugal.</p>

               <p> Wheat and maize are the chief products of Fayal; and of the former, it sends
                  several ship loads to Lisbon in plentiful years. Some flax is likewise raised
                  there; but the wine known by the name of Fayal wine, is all raised on the island
                  of Pico, which lies directly opposite, and has no harbour. The number of
                  inhabitants in Fayal is computed at 15000, distributed in twelve parishes; and one
                  third of the number live in the town, or Villa da Horta, which contains three of
                  the above parishes. Its road or bay is reckoned tolerably safe in summer, but in
                  winter it is open to south and south-east winds, which, I was told, blow hard at
                  that season. However, as the bottom is a good sand, the American vessels sometimes
                  ride there in the worst weather, by three or four anchors. The wine of Pico is
                  chiefly carried from Fayal to North America, and to Brasil.</p>

               <p>The isle of Pico has its name from the peak or high mountain upon it, which is
                  frequently capt with clouds, and serves the inhabitants of Fayal nearly the same
                  purpose as a barometer. The island is not only the greatest, but also the most
                  populous of the Aèores, containing 30000 inhabitants. It has no corn-fields, being
                  every where covered with vineyards, which have a most enchanting appearance on the
                  easy slope at the foot of the mountain. The corn, and other necessaries for the
                  consumption of the natives, are therefore supplied from Fayal, most of the
                  principal families of that island having large possessions on the opposite, or
                  western part of Pico. The season of vintage, is the season of mirth and festivity,
                  when a fourth, or even a third part of the inhabitants of Fayal, remove to Pico
                  with their families, down to the smallest domestic animals. It is affirmed that a
                  quantity of grapes, which would yield three thousand pipes of wine, are eaten at
                  that time, every person indulging his taste with this delicious fruit, though no
                  people are more sober and frugal at their meals than the Portuguese. Formerly the
                  vintage produced annually 30000, and sometimes in fortunate years 37000 pipes of
                  wine; but a kind of disease attacked the vines some years ago, which causes the
                  leaves to drop off, at the time when the grapes require to be sheltered from the
                  sun . Of late however they have recovered, and at present yield from 18000 to
                  20000 pipes a year. The best wine is made on the west side of the island, in the
                  vineyards which belong to the natives of Fayal. That which is raised on the
                  opposite side, is converted into brandy, of which one pipe is made from three or
                  four pipes of wine. The best sort of wine is tart, but pleasant, and has a good
                  body, which improves greatly by being kept; a pipe of it is sold on the spot for
                  between four and five pounds sterling. A small quantity of sweet wine is likewise
                  made, which they call passada, and of which the pipe is sold at the rate of seven
                  or eight pounds sterling.</p>

               <p>St. George is a small narrow island, very steep, and of considerable height. It is
                  inhabited by 5000 persons, who cultivate much wheat, but scarcely any wine. </p>

               <p>Graciosa has a more gentle slope than the former, but is likewise very small, and
                  chiefly produces wheat, having 3000 inhabitants. A small quantity of indifferent
                  wine is likewise made on it, which is converted into brandy; from five to six
                  pipes of wine being required to make one pipe of brandy. Graciosa and St. George
                  likewise have some pastures, and export cheese and butter.</p>

               <p>Terceira is the largest island, next to Pico, of all the Açores. It is highly
                  cultivated with wheat, and likewise produced some bad wine. As it is the residence
                  of the governor-general, and of the superior court of justice, as well as a
                  bishop's see, it has some kind of importance above the rest. Its inhabitants are
                  computed at 20,000, and its exports consist in wheat, which is sent to Lisbon.</p>

               <p>St. Miguiel is likewise of considerable extent, very fertile and populous,
                  containing about 25,000 inhabitants. They cultivate no vines, but abundance of
                  wheat and flax. Of the latter they manufacture such a quantity of coarse linens,
                  that three ship-loads of them are annually sent to Brasil. The linen is about two
                  feet wide, and the vara of the common sort is sold for about one shilling and six
                  pence, which is to all appearance a very high price. The principal place on this
                  island is a city named Ponte de Gada.</p>

               <p>Santa Maria is the south-eastermost of all the Açores, and produces plenty of
                  wheat. The inhabitants amount to 5000, some of whom manufacture a kind of coarse
                  earthen-ware, with which they supply all the islands. They have likewise built two
                  small ships lately, of wood which grew in their own island.</p>

               <p>I flatter myself that the above particulars, though insufficient to give a perfect
                  idea of the Açores, will not be unacceptable to my readers, especially as these
                  islands, being seldom visited by Europeans, are little known, notwithstanding
                  their short distance from us.</p>

               <p>We passed the Sunday in visiting several churches, and accompanied captain Cook,
                  in the afternoon, to the different convents. Each of them has a church annexed to
                  it, where we commonly saw two pulpits, opposite to each other. It is usual here,
                  at certain stated times, to allow the devil to defend himself in one of these
                  pulpits, whilst he is arraigned in the other; but at the same time it may be
                  superfluous to mention, that Satan is always sure to be defeated, though his
                  opponent were the most ignorant monk that ever was fattened in a convent. Most of
                  the altars are made of cedar wood, and perfume the whole church very agreeably. In
                  the evening we saw a great procession, at which all the clergy in town assisted,
                  and where most of the principal inhabitants likewise took part, by walking in
                  black gowns before the Host. The commercial intercourse with the North-Americans
                  seems to have abated the spirit of persecution, of which the church of Rome is
                  sometimes accused in other countries. When the host passes, no person is insulted,
                  who does not choose to perform an act of adoration; and strangers in particular
                  are treated with a degree of civility on this subject, which they do not meet with
                  in the polite but slavish metropolis of France.</p>

               <p>We took a walk the next morning upon the hills to the northward of the town, which
                  furnished some of the most beautiful prospects. All the roads were lined with tall
                  shady trees, and on both sides were corn-fields, gardens, and orchards. We were
                  able to overlook the whole plain, in which the village of Nossa Senhora de la Luz
                  is situated, and beyond it viewed a ridge of hills, which lead to the highest part
                  of the island. There is a deep circular valley, as I was informed by the
                  inhabitants, on the summit of one of the hills, about nine miles from the town.
                  This cavity is about two leagues in circumference, and its sides slope uniformly
                  down, covered with a rich herbage, where many sheep are grazing in flocks, which,
                  though belonging to private persons, are almost entirely wild. Rabbits and quails
                  likewise are plentiful on its sides, and at the bottom there is a lake of fresh
                  water, well stocked with wild-ducks. The water is said to be about four or five
                  feet deep all over it. This excavation, called La Caldeira, or the Kettle, from
                  its figure, seems to be the crater of a former volcano; which becomes so much the
                  more probable, as we know that some other volcanos have existed in the Açores.
                  That remarkable mountain, which rose to the surface of the sea, forming a new
                  island, in the year 1638, close to the islands of St. Michael, was doubtless
                  produced by the action of a very powerful volcano; and though it sunk again within
                  a short space of time after its formation, yet its momentary appearance
                  sufficiently overthrows the assertion, that only the highest peaks of the world
                  can have internal fires . The island which appeared between Terceira and St.
                  Michael, in November 1720, was exactly of the same nature, and confirms the above
                  circumstances. The lofty summit of Pico likewise constantly emits a smoke, which
                  we were assured of by a Portuguese captain, named Xaviers, who had taken the pains
                  to climb to the top; and this smoke may be seen on fair days at Fayal, very early
                  in the morning. Earthquakes are likewise very common at all the Açores, and
                  several shocks were felt at Fayal three weeks before our arrival. It appears
                  therefore that almost all the islands of the Atlantic Ocean, like those of the
                  South Sea, have vestiges of former volcanos, or still contain burning mountains,
                  at this moment.</p>

               <p>We returned to town, after visiting the country-house and gardens belonging to one
                  of the principal inhabitants, which were contrived with more taste than could be
                  expected in this island. We were extremely sensible of the heat, which was very
                  great at this season, though we came from the torrid zone. In general, however,
                  the climate of the Açores is said to be very happy, salubrious, and temperate. The
                  severities of winter are never felt; the winds indeed are sometimes boisterous at
                  that season, and the rains more frequent, but frost and snow appear only on the
                  higher parts of the peak. The spring and autumn, as also the greatest part of
                  summer, are reckoned delightful; since a fine breeze of wind commonly cools the
                  air sufficiently to mitigate the heat of the sun.</p>

               <p>In the afternoon, M. Estries, the French consul, went with me to the convent of
                  St. Clare, where his whole family paid a visit to his sisters, who had taken the
                  veil. I was much surprised, that not even the female relations were admitted
                  within the parlour grates, as this degree of rigid sequestration is uncommon. It
                  is customary for the nuns to offer their visitors some dainties to eat, but here
                  they served up a whole repast, which consisted of several rich and luscious
                  dishes. That the mind can be at ease, and disposed to spiritual meditation, when
                  the body is exhausted with abstinence and watching, seems to be improbable; but
                  whether the opposite extreme, the luxury of a well furnished table, is better
                  suited to that principal intent of monastic life, may be doubted with equal
                  justice.</p>

               <p>The next day, about noon, having taken leave of all our acquaintance, we returned
                  on board with the consul, and several Portuguese, who honoured us with their
                  company at dinner; we passed the afternoon very agreeably, their conversation
                  being easy and chearful, the reverse of that haughty taciturnity which is the
                  general character of the Portuguese nobility at Madeira. They were put on shore in
                  the evening, and at four the next morning we weighed, and set sail with a fair
                  wind.</p>

               <p><date>[Wednesd. 19.]</date> We passed by the islands of St. George and Graciosa,
                  and came in sight of Terceira at noon. About three o'clock in the afternoon we
                  sailed along its north side, which exhibited the richest corn-fields, and various
                  villages surrounded by trees. We took leave of it in the evening, and then
                  directed our course to the channel. On the 29th, at four o'clock, we saw the Start
                  Point and Eddistone light-house near it, the same parts of the English shores
                  which we had last seen at the beginning of the voyage. <date>[Sunday
                  30.]</date>The next morning we passed through the Needles, and swiftly sailing
                  between the Isle of Wight and the fertile shores of Hampshire, came to an anchor a
                  little before noon at Spithead.</p>

               <p>Thus, after escaping innumerable dangers, and suffering a long series of
                  hardships, we happily completed a voyage, which had lasted three years and sixteen
                  days; in the course of which, it is computed we run over a greater space of sea
                  than any ship ever did before us; since, taking all our tracks together, they form
                  more than thrice the circumference of the globe. We were likewise fortunate enough
                  to lose only four men; three of whom died by accident, and one by a disease, which
                  would perhaps have brought him to the grave much sooner had he continued in
                  England. The principal view of our expedition, the search after a southern
                  continent within the bounds of the temperate zone, was fulfilled; we had even
                  searched the frozen seas of the opposite hemisphere, within the antarctic circle,
                  without meeting with that vast tract of land which had formerly been supposed to
                  exist. At the same time, we had made another discovery important to science, that
                  nature forms great masses of ice in the midst of the wide ocean, which are
                  destitute of any saline particles, but have all the useful and salubrious
                  qualities of the pure element. At other seasons we explored the Pacific Ocean
                  between the tropics, and in the temperate zone; and there furnished geographers
                  with new islands, naturalists with new plants and birds, and, above all, the
                  friends of mankind with various modifications of human nature. In one extreme we
                  saw, and not without compassion, the dull, hungry, deformed savages of Tierra del
                  Fuego, incapable of guarding against the severities of their wretched climate, and
                  having their mental faculties reduced to that miserable situation which places
                  them next to brutes. In the other, the happier tribes of the Society Islands,
                  beautifully formed, placed in a delightful climate, which supplies all their
                  wants; sensible of the advantages of a well-ordered society, affectionate towards
                  each other, and accustomed to gratify their senses, even till they lead to
                  excesses. From the contemplation of these different characters, the advantages,
                  the blessings which civilization and revealed religion have diffused over our part
                  of the globe, will become more and more obvious to the impartial enquirer. He will
                  acknowledge, with a thankful heart, that incomprehensible goodness which has given
                  him a distinguished superiority over so many of his fellow-creatures, who follow
                  the impulse of their senses, without knowing the nature or name of virtue; without
                  being able to form that great idea of general order, which could alone convey to
                  them a just conception of the Creator. Upon the whole, nothing appears more
                  evident, than that the additions to the stock of human knowledge which have been
                  made during this voyage, however considerable they may be when put in competition
                  with what was known before, are of small moment when compared with the immense
                  variety of unknown objects which, even in our present confined situation, are
                  still within our reach, and which, for ages to come, will probably open new and
                  extensive fields, where the human soul will have room to expatiate, and display
                  its faculties with superior lustre.</p>

               <p>FINIS.</p>

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