A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07.

A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07.
teeth, and having made me swear by the water of the sea that I would do them no harm, three or four of them came on board, and we entertained them with such things as we had, of which they eat and drank as freely as ourselves.  We then bought all their teeth, of which they had 14, 10 being small.  On going away, they desired us to come to their towns next day.  Not wishing to trifle our time at this place, I desired the master to go on the 26th with two of our merchants to one of the towns, while I went with one merchant to the other town, the two towns being three miles asunder.  Taking with us to both places some of every kind of merchandise that we had, the master got nine rather small teeth at one town, while at the other I got eleven not large.  Leaving on board with the [other] master an assortment of manillios, he bought 12 teeth in our absence from people who came to the ships.  I bought likewise a small goat, and the master bought five small hens at the other town.  Finding that nothing more was to be done here, as they had no more teeth, we went on board by one o’clock, P.M. and immediately weighed anchor, continuing our progress eastward, always within sight of land.

[Footnote 240:  Between these two points is what is called the ivory coast of Guinea:  After which is the gold coast to Cape St Pauls; and then the slave coast.—­E.]

[Footnote 241:  Forty leagues E.N.E. along the gold coast bring us to Saccoom or Accra, in the country called Aquamboo.—­E.]

The 28th, the wind turning contrary, we stood out to sea, and when the wind changed from the seaward we again stood for the land, which we fell in with at a great round red cliff, not very high, having to the eastwards a smaller red cliff, and right above that towards the inland a round green hummock, which we took to be covered with trees.  In the last 24 hours we only made good about 4 leagues.  The 29th coming near the shore, we noticed the before mentioned red cliff to have a large tuft of trees on its summit.  All to the westwards as far as we could see was full of red cliffs, and all along the shore, both on the tops of these cliffs, and in the low intervals between them, was everywhere full of wood.  Within a mile of the great cliff to the eastwards there was a river, and no cliffs that we could see beyond it, except one small cliff very near its eastern side.  At this place we had the wind in the night at north off the land, and in the day south from the sea, which was not usual, as we were assured by such of our people as had been there before, being commonly N.W. and S.W.  We ran this day and night 12 leagues.  The 31st we went our course by the shore, which was everywhere low and covered with wood, with no rocks.  This morning many boats of the negroes came out to fish, being larger than those we had seen hitherto but of similar make, some of them having five men.  In the afternoon, about 3 o’clock we had sight of a town by the sea-side, which our pilots judged to be 25 leagues west from Cape Three-points.

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A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.