AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF ALL THE VOYAGES ROUND THE WORLD, PERFORMED BY ENGLISH NAVIGATORS; [...] UNDERTAKEN By ORDER of his PRESENT MAJESTY.

[...] WHOLE faithfully Extracted from the JOURNALS of the VOYAGERS

  • [...]KE, under [...] in [...]
  • C [...]VEND [...], 158 [...] ▪88
  • COWL [...]Y, 16 [...]3▪86
  • D [...]PIER, [...]
  • COO [...]E, 1708▪ [...]
  • ROGER [...], 170 [...]-1 [...]
  • C [...]IPP [...]TON and SHE [...]V [...], 1719▪22
  • [...]ON [...]taken in 17 [...] ▪44
  • BYRON, 1764▪ [...]
  • W [...], 17 [...]- [...]
  • [...] 1 [...] [...]
  • [...]d CO [...] [...]8▪ [...]

TOGETHER WITH That of SYDNEY PARKINSON, Dr [...]ftsman to JOSEPH BANKS, Esq who circumn [...]ted the Globe w [...]th Capt. COOK, in h [...]s Majest [...]s Ship the ENDEAVOUR.

[...] The Voyage of Mons. B [...]VILLE [...]nd the World, Performed by Order of the [...]nch King.

[...]us [...]ed with Map [...] Cha [...], and H [...]ical P [...]

To which [...] APPENDIX [...] the JOURNA [...] of a V [...]YAGE to the NORTH POLE by the Hon. Com­ [...]dore PHIPPS, and Captain LUTWIDGE

VOLUME THE FOURTH.

LONDON. [...] Corner of St. Paul's Church-Yard. MDCC [...]X [...]III.

THE BOOKSELLER'S ADVERTISEMENT. TO THE READER.

HAVING in the former part of this Collection given an authentic account of the pro­ceedings and discoveries of the English naviga­tors who have lately surrounded the globe; and also a copious detail of the voyage of a cotempo­rary navigator of another nation, who, jealous of the English designs, was commissioned to follow the same track. That the present undertaking may not want novelty to recommend it, I have procured, at a considerable expence, the jour­nal of a new voyage to the northern part of the globe; a voyage which his Majesty, in a particular manner, has thought fit to patronize, and which was equipped with such care and circumspection, that nothing was found want­ing during the course of it.

This voyage I have added by way of Sup­plement, without any additional expence to the subscribers; and have prefixed to it a brief recapitulation of the many attempts that have been made for the discovery of a north-east pas­sage to China and Japan, and also have sub­joined a like summary of the enterprizes set on foot by government, or undertaken by private adventurers, for discovering a communication with the great pacific ocean by a passage from the north-west.

[Page]These accounts are full of astonishing events, and wonderful descriptions of uncommon phe­nomena. In them we read of rivers and lakes of ice, bursting with imprisoned vapours; and of rocks, forests, beams of houses and build­ings, splitting with a noise not less terrible than the loudest thunder.—Of brandy, Brine, and even spirits of wine, exposed to the open air, only for a few hours, freezing into a solid mass.—Of mountains of ice frozen in the sea one hundred fathom deep.—Of snow hills that never thaw.—And of winds that blister the flesh, and shrivel the skin like red-hot iron.

In this Supplement the distresses, dangers, providential deliverances, and unspeakable suf­ferings of those who have wintered in the dark and dreary regions of the north, are recounted with clearness and brevity; and, in the small compass of a few sheets, the contents of many volumes are comprized.

FINIS.

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