ate brought from the Weft Indias. rolß 
entrie thereof. The are at a maruellous greatnes. There . 
: be ſoms of them which are in length two andthirty fot: they 
kill them with lich hooks, fo; with a handgun it is verp dik⸗ 
ſtculte, becauſe of the hard ſkin which they haue:they lie al⸗ 
wayes with their mouthes open. There is founde in their 
mawes, woht᷑ that they kil them, the quantity of a great bas 
(eet full of ſmoath ſtones, and it is not knowne to what ens 
they eate them, bohether it be to haue their maw oꝛ ſtemack 
occupied, oʒ for balleſt as a ſhip hath. The Indians keepe 
theſe ſtones, t the Spaniardes alſo, foꝛ ſuch as haue Quar- 
kee enn domatbe Fine 
tt᷑plas ot ths head, the quartern ken away, ts 
beate is notable liabtened,and of this tyep haue ertence 
inthofe partes: and in the thip where ane came, wha gane 
met {woof them, 3 learned that he put them ta a bop, being 
a little Page of a ſhip, who had the Quarterne Age w, and 
it was taken away therby z pꝛoceding fozward he lightned 
himſelle thꝛee oꝛ foure fits aſter that the ſtones were laid to 
him. 3 alfo haue experimented it, ⁊ haue applied it twice to 
à litle girle that bath a quarterne ague, and it ſeemeth that 
the feeleth not fo much heate, when the hath them laid vnte 
ber, but they haue not taken away the quarter though 1 
n due ple derm onto ber toie 3 Knot nat hom ital 
= ae Seas ofthe Indias, oꝛ in the mot of them, ü 5 
atte, bes Terenten 2 Ste 2 rete arn sales base fons | 
ee land, 
— tl see » and cute Chemise 
