P companions,1 and driven far to the south, "at length," to quote the words of an old narrator, " fell in with the uttermost part of land towards the South Pole, which uttermost cape or headland of all these islands stands near the 56th degree, without... English Seamen: Howard, Clifford, Hawkins, Drake, Cavendish - עמוד 250מאת Robert Southey - 1895 - 403 דפיםתצוגה מלאה - מידע על ספר זה
| William Desborough Cooley - 1830 - 386 דפים
...pole ; which uttermost cape or headland of all these islands stands nearly in the fiftysixth degree, without which there is no main nor island to be seen to the southwards, but the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope." Winter entered... | |
| Historical account - 1836 - 510 דפים
...South Pole ; which uttermost cape or headland of all these islands, stands near in the 56th degree, without which there is no main nor island to be seen to the southwards, but the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope." When the weather... | |
| Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1837 - 446 דפים
...the South Pole, which uttermost cape or headland of all these islands stands near in the 56th degree, without which there is no main nor island to be seen to the southwards, but the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope."* On the 28th... | |
| Chambers W. and R., ltd - 1850 - 784 דפים
...southwards upon it than any of them, yea or any man as yet knowne.' Here the gallant captain saw ' the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope :' he was detained by the storm fifty-one days, and occupio'. himself in observing the manners of the... | |
| 1856 - 580 דפים
...southwards upon it than any of them, yea or any man as yet knowne.' Here the gallant captain saw ' the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope :' he was detained by the storm fifty-one days, and occupied himself in observing the manners of the... | |
| Frank Boott Goodrich - 1858 - 656 דפים
...quaint language of the times, "fell in with the uttermost part of the land towards the South Pole, where the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope." He saw the cape since called Cape Horn, and anchored there : he gave the name of Elizabethides to all... | |
| Frank Boott Goodrich - 1858 - 614 דפים
...the loss of the pinnace, was driven again to the southward, and, in the quaint language of the times, "fell in with the uttermost part of the land towards the South Pole, where the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large o and free sjcope." He saw the cape since... | |
| Henry Richard Fox Bourne - 1868 - 666 דפים
..."fell in with the uttermost part of the land towards the South Pole, without which there is no main or island to be seen to the southward, but the Atlantic...and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope." He landed at the edge of Cape Horn, called by him — in opposition to the old term Terra Incognita... | |
| Henry Richard Fox Bourne - 1868 - 336 דפים
...fifty-one days, had, however, one good result. On, the 28th of October, the last day of storm, Drake "fell in with the uttermost part of the land towards the South Pole, without which there is no main or island to be seen to the southward, but the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and... | |
| Frank Boott Goodrich - 1873 - 724 דפים
...quaint language of the times, "fell in with the uttermost part of the land towards the South Pole, where the Atlantic Ocean and the South Sea meet in a large and free scope." He saw the cape since called Cape Horn, and anchored there: he gave the name of Elizabethides to all... | |
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