186 THE ISLAND Otf ttANTUCKET. 



northward and take in all Squam, and run on to our 

 long sandy point, called Coatue or Nauma, which in 

 the English is Long Point, where our Massachusetts 

 lighthouse now stands ; and then to the westward to 

 New Town ; then to the southward to a place called 

 Weweder Ponds, which in English signifies a pair of 

 horns, by reason there are two ponds that run to a 

 point next to the sea, and spread apart so as to leave a 

 neck of land, called Long Joseph's Point, which two 

 ponds spread apart so as to resemble a pair of horns. 

 And the said Wauwinet had two sons : the oldest was 

 named Isaac, but was mostly called Nicornoose, which 

 signifies in English to suck the fore teat ; and his sec- 

 ond son was named Wawpordonggo, which in English 

 is white face, for his face was on one side white, and 

 the other brown or Indian color. And the said Nicor- 

 noose married, and had one son named Isaac, and one 

 daughter; and then he turned away his proper wife, 

 and took another woman, and had two sons Wat and 

 Paul Noose; and when his true son Isaac grew up to 

 be a man, he resented his father's behavior so much 

 that he went off and left them for the space of near 

 fifty years, — it was not known where. And in that 

 time his true sister married to one Daniel Spotsor, and 

 he reigned Sachem, by his wife, near about forty 

 years ; and we made large purchases of the said 

 Spotsors. And then about sixty years past or more, 

 there came an Indian man from Nauset, called Great 

 Jethro, and he brought Judah Paddock and one Hause 

 with him, and he challenged the Sachem right by be- 

 ing son to the said true son of Nicornoose ; and when 

 they first opened the matter to our old proprietors, 



