( 4^7 J 
about Winds, the Bay of Campechji the South-weft^ 
Coaft of America^ and his particular Voyage from 
Achin to Sumatra^ Tunquin^ Malacca^ But find« 
ing it would fwell his Book £oo much, he has 
promifed the Publick to give it in another Vo« 
lume. . 
In this Volume he has in Twenty Chapters, gi« 
ven an Account of the Voyages he made during 
near Twelve Years, L e. from the beginning of 
1679. When he left England^ to the middle of Sep» 
temher^ 1691. when he returned hither ; for the do« 
ing of which he was the better qualified, as ha- 
ving before that been in feveral long and diftant 
Voyages. And firft be relates his paflage to Jamaica^ 
thence to Porto Belo, thence crofi; the Ifthmus of 
Darien , paffing in fight of P^;?<j»?ii into the South- 
Sea , thence Coaftiog Southward , as far as the 
Ifland oi John Fernando^ and ftay there fbrnetime,- 
his return to crofs back again the faid IJlhmus into 
the iSIorth Sea. Of this Expedition he is the more 
brief, becauft Ri^grofe has already Publifh'd many 
Pallages of it. However , in his firft Chapter he 
relates what was remarkable at Sea, after his parting 
from Sharp.; giving by the by alfo a defciption of the 
Moskito Indians-, and in the Second Chapter he relates 
what occurred in his Journey by Land back again 
over the I/} hmus into the North-Sea, the way of 
which is traced by a prickt line in his Map of 
that Country ; but a more particular Account of it Qiq 
fays) we mayespeit from Mr. iF^i/^r's Relation of it^ 
now fitted for the Prefsa 
The. 
