( 47° ) 
B. The Foot of the Cliff, 50 Yards from the Rock. 
C. The Top of the Cliff, about 6 Yards high. 
CD. A Plain of Yards. 
D E. A cragged Cliff, of 60 Yards high. 
E F. A Plain above a Mile long. 
F G. An Hill of deep Afcent, near half a Mile. 
G H. The Land from the Top of the Hill to the 
Houfe, near a Mile- 
/. Tdrlingham Houfe , lying near 2 Miles and a half 
N, A f , W. from the Rock 
EGH.fi Line of Sight. 
K B L. The Shore at High Water Mark. 
I hope Sir, you will underdand the Situation of the 
Place pretty well, tho’ 1 have notobferved exa<5t Proportion 
in the Sketch ; which the Paper would not allow after 
I had taken the Rife of the Cliffs fo high, which I 
thought proper for the more particular Defcribing of 
them. 
The Mooring-Rosk (tho 5 it lies furrounded with great 
numbers of other Rocks,) is it felf a mod noted one, 
known by this Name, time out of mind. At this VeR 
felsufe_to be moored, while they are loading other 
Rocks ; which they take from hence, not only for our 
own Tier Heads but for thofe of Dover Pier ; and a .very 
great Quantity of them were Shipt, in the time of Olivers 
Ufurpation, and carried to Dunkirk t for .the Service 
of that Harbour. — 
This Rock has remained- fixt thus, for the. memory of 
Man,* and old Men have obferved, that, -for forty Years 
and upwards, the didance between it and the Foot of the 
lefier Cliff A B. has been much the fame ; neither can 
they be muck out in their Guefs, the Didance being fo 
vno^hins-exctaordwiar y in eh is, 
yet its what they take fpecial Notice of, to their great fur- 
prize; for they fay, and prove by good Marks and To- 
kens,. 
