Piace. 
Time of be- 
ginning. 
Duration. 
Weather 
and wind. 
Degrees of violence, and 
variety of circumftances. 
(5) Kinfale, 
Ireland. 
About fix 
P. M. ten 
minutes be- 
fore five, as 
per fhip 
Amey. 
T he fea role fuddenly two 
feet in hight ; ebbed and 
flowed again feveral times j 
four minutes retiring, 
four advancing, with great 
force ; but the firfi: ftretch 
the greateft. 
(6) Carrick, 
ibid. 
About four 
P. M. two 
hours after 
flood. 
The waters of the river 
Sure rofe four feet in the 
(pace of five minutes at 
Carrick, about thirty miles, 
from the fea, to which the 
tide, however, reaches. 
Attefted by numbers of 
eye-witnefles, who refide 
on the banks of the Sure. 
(7) Dungar- 
von, ibid. 
Between 
four and nine 
P. M. 
The fea flowed and ebbed 
five times alternately, be- 
tween four and nine 
o’clock in the afternoon. 
(8) Rofs, in 
the county of 
Wexford, 
ibid. 
About feven 
P. M. 
The wind 
calm. 
There was a violent com- 
motion in the river, which 
forced a fioop from its 
hawfers, and the ferry- 
boat, on her paflage, turned 
round, with great velo- 
city ; the water returned 
then into its ufual courfe, 
like a fluice. 
(9) Water- 
ford, ibid. 
There was an agitation in 
the river, fo that “ the fea 
“ rofe [i. e. advanced on 
“ the IhoreJ thirty feet 
“ extraordinary, though 
4 ‘ it was near the lafl: ebb- 
“ quarter.” 
PL.ce. 
PL.ce, 
