CHANGES 



G F 



OUR G L O B E 



Z1 



OF THE 

 GLOBE, 



Ae garment of its cultivator, and fcreen him againfl the heat of the changes 

 fun, and the cold of the nodurnal air. How beautiful, how im- 

 proved, how ufeful does nature become by the induflry of man ! 

 and what happy changes are produced, by the moderate care of ra- 

 tional beings ! 



M 



Every one mufl perceive, though ^ve forbore to name the countries 



hich we have thus 



pared, th 



for 



the pi(flu 



of 



the wilds of New-Zeeland, in the Southern ifles ; and who can fail 



difcover Taheitee, the ^happieft ifle of the South-Seas 



the 



? 



latter reprefentation : 



Amono; the accidental 

 on our globe, the moft remai 



waters of 



the -trd'es of the 



fubterraneous fires, and earthquakes 



gh in the feveral ifles of the South-S 



N A T u R A L CAUSES of the changes 

 able ones are, the winds, the rains, 



san, the currents therein, 

 t, as we did not ilay long 

 ia, to make accurate ob- 



b 



fervations on thefe chan 



6 



we can fay nothing on that fubjed: 



« . 



But, as we had an opportunity of feeing three different volcanos 

 the year 1774, and were for feveral weeks. 



very 



to one of 



them, I will here infert my remarks on that fubjed. 



Two days after our arrival at Namocka, at day-break 



we were 



agreeably furprized by the fight of more than i -, 



low illands, none 



of which we had feen before 5 befid 



es them, we difcovered two 



hi p-h 



%^ ones, the 



Weflernmofl of which. 



T 



emitted 



great 



quau- 



