night's stay and in fourteen days after arrived at Cb 

 Town, the metropolis of South Carolina." 



In his **A Journal of a Thousand Miles Travel s 

 the Indians from South to North Carolina,'' he r 

 further: "On December 28, 1700, I began my voyag 

 North Carolina) from Charles-Town, being six Englis 

 in company, with three Indian men and one woman 

 to our Indian guide." 



With the above information on the character of th( 

 the date and nature of his trip, we may turn more i 

 gently to that part of his work with which we are 

 directly concerned. In his description of the count 

 treats North and South Carolina separately, t 

 the portion called "The Natural History of Carolina 

 considers Carolina as a whole. The following is c 

 from the introduction to his history in support o 

 statement: "And since the produce of South and 

 Carolina is the same, unless silk, which this plac 

 duces great qualities of and very good. North Cb 

 having never made any tryal thereof, I shall ref 

 natural produce of this country to that part which 

 of North Carolina, whose productions are much the 

 ****** * 



I shall now proceed to relate my journey thru the C( 

 from this settlement to the other, and then treat 

 Natural History of Carolina, with other remarkab 

 cumstances which I have met with during my eight 

 abode in that country. " 



Under a subdivision of the natural history entitled 

 Vegetables of Carolina," we find eighteen pages d( 

 to "an account of all the spontaneous fruits of Ca 



