Sir Edward Seward's Narrative of His Shipwreck: And Consequent Discovery of Certain Islands in the Caribbean Sea: with a Detail of Many Extraordinary and Highly Interesting Events in His Life, from the Year 1733 to 1749, as Written in His Own Diary, Bind 1Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1832 |
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Side viii
... year . The original Diary , and consequently this published Narrative , copied almost word for word from it , is very precise in its dates ; noting even the days of the week by name in their regular passing , not viii PREFACE .
... year . The original Diary , and consequently this published Narrative , copied almost word for word from it , is very precise in its dates ; noting even the days of the week by name in their regular passing , not viii PREFACE .
Side ix
... passing , not only as to private but public occurrences . It is also equally correct in the topography of places on land , and in their maritime positions on the ocean . The islands which form so large an object of interest in the work ...
... passing , not only as to private but public occurrences . It is also equally correct in the topography of places on land , and in their maritime positions on the ocean . The islands which form so large an object of interest in the work ...
Side 2
... passed most of them with our benevolent pastor , my former kind schoolmaster , the Reverend Mr. William Goldsmith ; between whose amiable family and my father's there had existed the kindest feeling from our infancy ; and these ...
... passed most of them with our benevolent pastor , my former kind schoolmaster , the Reverend Mr. William Goldsmith ; between whose amiable family and my father's there had existed the kindest feeling from our infancy ; and these ...
Side 15
... passed the rest of the even- ing in conversing with Eliza . I told her , that she only had possession of my heart from my earliest years ; but that I did confess , I had not been con- scious of the extent and power of my affection until ...
... passed the rest of the even- ing in conversing with Eliza . I told her , that she only had possession of my heart from my earliest years ; but that I did confess , I had not been con- scious of the extent and power of my affection until ...
Side 16
... passed at Awbury ; but those days seemed to constitute my present existence . I arrived late in the evening at my uncle's , and was glad that he had gone to the club ; so , after taking tea quietly with my aunt , I retired to rest . In ...
... passed at Awbury ; but those days seemed to constitute my present existence . I arrived late in the evening at my uncle's , and was glad that he had gone to the club ; so , after taking tea quietly with my aunt , I retired to rest . In ...
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appeared armadillo basket beach biscuit blessed boat breakfast brig brought cabin cacao canoe capsicums captain cask cave coccos coffee companion cool cotton-tree couple crayfish dear Edward dear Eliza dear wife deck delighted Diego dinner door doubloons ducks feeling feet felt Fidele finished fire fish fish-pot fowls friends gave goats hand happy hastened helpmate hour iguana Indian corn instantly island isthmus Jamaica labour land little dog looked melon Mira morning mullet musket nearly negroes night o'clock oakum ourselves peccary pieces pike pine-apple plank plank-house plant plantains plantation poor poultry promontory pumpkin punt refreshment repast replied rest retired returned rock rocky Rota round Sabbath sail sand schooner seeds seemed shade shore side silk-cotton-tree smiled soon spade stood Sunday sunset thicket thing thought took tree vessel walked wind women woodland region Xavier yams
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Side 57 - Blessed be the Lord God ; even the Lord God, who only doeth wondrous things ; And blessed be the name of his Majesty for ever ; and let every one of us say, Amen, Amen.
Side iii - SIR EDWARD SEAWARD'S NARRATIVE OF HIS SHIPWRECK, and consequent Discovery of certain Islands in the Caribbean Sea: with a detail of many extraordinary and highly interesting Events in his Life, from 1733 to 1749. as written in his own Diary. Edited by Miss JANE PORTER.
Side 57 - The waters of the sea had well-nigh covered us : the proud waters had well-nigh gone over our soul. The sea roared : and the stormy wind lifted up the waves thereof. We were carried up as it were to heaven, and then down again into the deep : our soul melted within us, because of trouble ; Then cried we unto thee, O Lord : and thou didst deliver us out of our distress. Blessed be thy Name, who didst not despise the prayer of thy sen-ants : but didst hear our cry, and hast saved us. Thou didst send...
Side 48 - ... rivers of water in a dry place, and the shadow of a great rock in a weary land...
Side 29 - I feel that we are safe, notwithstanding this dreadful hurricane : but," added she, pressing my hand and moving it to her lips, " if we should be drowned, we shall die together and we shall not be separated : we shall meet, where where we can part no more." Her feelings now overpowered her, and she fell on my neck and wept. I kissed away the tears from her eyes, saying, " We will trust in the Almighty.
Side 156 - The vision that night appeared to the hermit, as promised, and thus addressed him : " You are now no longer weary of life, but happy. Know then, that man was made for labor ; and prayer also is his duty : the one as well as the other is essential to his well-being. Arise in the morning, take the cord, and with it gird up thy loins, and go forth into the world; and let it be a. memorial to thee, of what God expects from man, if he would be blessed with happiness on earth.
Side 33 - ... over, nearly on her beam ends. I now again thought it right to reach the deck, and as the ladder had been lashed to its situation, it was not displaced, notwithstanding all the shocks the vessel had sustained. On ascending the ladder, I pushed open the lee half of the companion door, when a gleam of joy rushed upon me, on perceiving that the day had dawned, and that the water to leeward was quite smooth. The brig now...
Side 32 - and if we die, we die together!" " It is done,"' I replied, " we will not stir." " Then tell them so," cried she, hastily ; " and if you can lay your hand on the bread-bag in your way, it may be useful to them, if they survive this hour.
Side v - ... travel in distant lands. Thus impressed, I ventured to recommend the publication of Sir Edward Seaward's Diary to its owner. He smiled, and objected, saying, "He should expect the spirit of the worthy knight would haunt him to his dying day, did he make such an exposition of family history, and of the unpretending abilities, as an author, of the journalist himself, who had evidently penned it for no other eyes than those of his kindred.
Side 31 - We are indeed lost !" said my wife, as she recovered a little from the fall she had just received. I did not now wait to console her by my words : I renewed my efforts to force the companion door, and get upon deck; but it was perfect darkness where we were, and I could not find anything to add to my own ineffectual strength, nor could I make any one on deck attend to me ; they could not hear me for the noise made by the howling of the wind and the breaking of the sea: yet I sometimes heard them,...