A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, Volume 1.

A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, Volume 1.

About ten o’clock, the family of the natives paid us a visit.  Seeing that they approached the ship with great caution, I met them in a boat, which I quitted when I got to them, and went into their canoe.  Yet, after all, I could not prevail on them to put along-side the ship, and at last was obliged to leave them to follow their own inclination.  At length they put ashore in a little creek hard by us; and afterwards came and sat down on the shore a-breast of the ship, near enough to speak with us.  I now caused the bagpipes and fife to play, and the drum to beat.  The two first they did not regard; but the latter caused some little attention in them; nothing however could induce them to come on board.  But they entered, with great familiarity, into conversation (little understood) with such of the officers and seamen as went to them, paying much greater regard to some than to others; and these, we had reason to believe, they took for women.  To one man in particular, the young woman shewed an extraordinary fondness until she discovered his sex, after which she would not suffer him to come near her.  Whether it was that she before took him for one of her own sex, or that the man, in order to discover himself, had taken some liberties with her which she thus resented, I know not.

In the afternoon, I took Mr Hodges to a large cascade, which falls from a high mountain on the south side of the bay, about a league above the place where we lay.  He made a drawing of it on paper, and afterwards painted it in oil colours; which exhibits, at once, a better description of it than any I can give.  Huge heaps of stones lay at the foot of this cascade, which had been broken off and brought by the stream from the adjacent mountains.  These stones were of different sorts; none however, according to Mr Forster’s opinion, (whom I believe to be a judge,) containing either minerals or metals.  Nevertheless, I brought away specimens of every sort, as the whole country, that is, the rocky part of it, seemed to consist of those stones and no other.  This cascade is at the east point of a cove, lying in S.W. two miles, which I named Cascade Cove.  In it is good anchorage and other necessaries.  At the entrance, lies an island, on each side of which is a passage; that on the east side is much the widest.  A little above the isle, and near the S.E. shore, are two rocks which are covered at high water.  It was in this cove we first saw the natives.

When I returned aboard in the evening, I found our friends, the natives, had taken up their quarters at about a hundred yards from our watering-place; a very great mark of the confidence they placed in us.  This evening a shooting party of the officers went over to the north side of the bay, having with them the small cutter to convey them from place to place.

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A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.