LANDING AT MAER. 197 



Masseed, they burst out into shouts of delight, 

 crying out the name of the persons, and thus attest- 

 ing in the most striking way the accuracy of the 

 likenesses. 



Old Duppa shortly came on board, the man who 

 had behaved so kindly to Ireland and young 

 D'Oyley, the survivors of the wrecked and murdered 

 crew of the Charles Eaton.* He was the father of 

 young Duppa of Erroob, and he brought off another 

 younger son, whose name was Dzon, or Dzonna,| but 

 who was also called " Kabbi Duppa," or " Little 

 Duppa." 



Old Duppa related to us a long history about 

 Wak and Uass (the native designations of Ireland 

 and D'Oyley) ; but all we could make out was, that 

 when Dzon was so Wgh (about four feet), Uass was 

 a piccaninny, so high (about two feet). 



I accompanied Captain Blackwood ashore in the 

 afternoon, attended by an intelligent native called 

 Koiyop, who had attached himself to me. The 

 people ashore received us with a clamour of delight, 

 men, women, and children; the two latter, however, 

 keeping a little in the background at first. 



The whole shore here was lined with a continuous 

 row of houses, each in <a small court-yard of from 

 ten to twenty yards square. The houses were the 



* See the "account of Mr. Lewis's cruise in the Isabella, in 

 search of the survivors of the Charles Eaton," in the Nautical 

 Magazine for 1835. 



t This was the same sound as that which they used for our 

 English name John, and may be intended for that. 



