LITERATURE. 155 



gives an account of the voyage evidently drawn from contemporary 

 information. Various documents relating to the voyage are repro- 

 duced in English in Blair and Robertson, vol. 1. 



LoAiSA. — Andres de Urdaneta's account of the expedition of Loaisa, 

 which visited Guam in September, 1526, is given in Navarrete's 

 Coleccion de viages, vol. 5. An abridgment of it appears in Medina's 

 Coleccion de documentos ineditos, vol. 3, and an English translation 

 in Burney's Chronological History, vol. 1, p. 217. 



Legazpi. — Accounts of the expedition of Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, 

 which visited Guam in January and February, 1565, are given in 

 Gaspar de San Agustin's Conquista de las Philipinas, lib. 1, cap. 17, 

 Madrid, 1698, and in Juan de Grijalva's Cronica de la Orden de n. p. s. 

 Augustin en las provincias de Nueva Espana. Burney's Chronological 

 History, vol. 1, contains a narrative in English, translated from Gas- 

 par and Grijalva's accounts. 



Cavendish. — The narrative of the voyage of Thomas Cavendish, 

 the English freebooter, who touched at Guam in January, 1588, is 

 given in Hakluyt's Voyages, vol. 3, 1837, and Burney's Chronological 

 History, vol. 1, pp. 64-94. 



Van Nooet. — An account of the visit of the Dutch navigator, 

 Oliver van Noort, in September, 1600, is given in the Abb6 Provost's 

 Histoire gen^rale des voyages, vol. 10, taken from the narrative of 

 the voyage published in French at Amsterdam in 1602. An account 

 of the voyage in English is given in Purchas, His Pilgrimes, vol. 1, 

 book 2, pp. 71-78. 



Spilbeeghen. — The narrative of the voyage of Joris van Spil- 

 berghen, who touched at Guam January 23, 1616, is given in Miroir 

 Oost et West- Judical, published in French at Amsterdam in 1621. 



Nassau Fleet. — The account of the visit of this fleet in 1626 is 

 given in the Journael van de Nassausche Vloot, Amsterdam, 1626. 



Cowley. — The account of the pirates Cowley and Eaton's visit to 

 Guam in March, 1685, is published in Dampier's Voyages, vol. 4. 



Dampiek. — The account of Dampier's visit to Guam in 1686 is given 

 in A New Voyage Round the World, by Capt. William Dampier, 

 vol. 1. 



WooDES Rogers. — The account of the visit of this celebrated free- 

 booter to Guam in 1710 is given in Woodes Rogers' Narrative. 



Anson. — No book ever met with more favorable reception than 

 Lord Anson's Voyage Round the World, which, though printed under 

 the name of his chaplain, Richard Walter, was composed by Benjamin 

 Robbins, under the inspection of Anson himself. During his visit to 

 the group, in 1742, Anson gleaned much interesting information 

 regarding the island of Guam, its inhabitants, and its products. His 

 geographical, hydrographic, and botanical descriptions are remarkably 

 accurate and exceedingly interesting, though his picture of the island 

 of Tinian is perhaps a little too highly colored. 



