English:
Identifier: historicalaccou_e03henr (find matches)
Title: An historical account of all the voyages round the world : performed by English navigators ; including those lately undertaken by order of His present Majesty ; the whole faithfully extracted from the journals of the voyagers ; Drake, undertaken in 1577-80 ; Cavendish, 1586-88 ; Cowley, 1683-86 ; Dampier, 1689-96 ; Cooke, 1708-11 ; Rogers, 1708-11 ; Clipperton and Shelvocke, 1719-22 ; Anson, undertaken in 1740-44 ; Byron, 1764-66 ; Wallis, 1766-68 ; Carteret, 1766-69 ; and Cook, 1768-71 ; together with that of Sydney Parkinson ... and the voyage of Mons. Bougainville ... to which is added, an appendix ; containing the journal of a voyage to the North pole, by the Hon. Commodore Phipps, and Captain Lutwidge
Year: 1773 (1770s)
Authors: Henry, David, 1710-1792
Subjects: Voyages around the world
Publisher: London : F. Newbery
Contributing Library: University of Pittsburgh Library System
Digitizing Sponsor: Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation
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ts,which are ufed chiefly in filhing, are adornedat head and ftern with the figure of a man,the eyes of which are compofed of the white(hells of fea-ears, a tongue of enormous fize isthruft out of the mouth, and the whole face is^ picture of the moft abfolute deformity. Thegrander canoes, which are intended for war,gre ornamented with open work, and coveredwith fringes of black feathers, v/hich givesthe whole an air of perfefb elegance: thefide boards, which are carved in a rude man-ner, are embelliflied with tufcs of white fearthers. Thefe vcflels are rowed with a kind of pad-dles, between five and fix feet in lengthy theblade of whicli is a long oval, gradually de-creafing till it reaches the handle ; and the ve-locity with which they row with thefe paddlesis really furprifing. Their fails are compofedof a kind of mat or netting, which is extendedbetween two upright pOks, one of which isfixed on each fide. Two ropes, faftened tothe top of e^ch pole, ferve inilead of f>»eets. The
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ROUND THE WORLD. 397 The veffds are fleered by two men, havingeach a paddle, and fitting in the flern ; butthey can only fail before the wind, in which di-redion they move with confiderable fwifcnefs. Thefe Indians ufe axes, adzes and chilfels,with which laft they likewife bore holes. Thechifiels are made of jafper, or of the bone ofa mans arfti; and their axes and adzes of ahard black ftone. They ufe their fmall jafpertools till they are blunted, and then throw themaway, having no inftrument to fharpen themwith. The Indians at Tolaga having been pre-fented with a piece of glafs, drilled a holethrough it, and hung it round the neck. Afmall bit of jafper is thought to have been thetool they uied in drilling it. Their tillage of the ground is excellent, ow-ing to the necefllty they are under of cultivat-ing or running the rilk of ftarving. At Te-gadoo thtir crops werejud put into the ground,and the furface of the field was as fmooth as agarden, the roots were ranged in regular lines,and
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