2 TRAVELS TO THE EAST. 
xnaritima, or Sea Milk Wort, and Arenaria Pc- 
ploides, or Sea Chick Weed, which 'Was already in 
feed. , 
The rocks here feemed to be lplit by the waves 
in large perpendicular clefts, which were filled up 
with clear quartz, Or cryftallind matter, by which 
one might plainly difcover traces of the generation 
of this Itone. The 1 3th, at two o’clock in the morn* 
jug, we came to Huleroen, where we anchored, in 
order to Ihew our pafs at the fort, and get cuftom- 
houfe officers on board to vifit us. Both fides of the 
harbour were built with fmall wooden-houfes, which 
gave the place the appearance of a little town. 
Thofe on one fide are called Iutholmen and the 
other Dalereon. The inhabitants of both places 
are chiefly pilots and fifhermen. They catch here, 
fometimes in large quantities, a kind of fifli, called 
by Linnaeus, Conus quadricornis (Four-horned Bull’s 
head). The fituation of the place was very dila- 
greeable, being furrounded with barren mountains 
and fandy hills. I could not learn that they had 
any other fign here of the change of the wind ; but 
when the fea fwells towards the fliore they are fure 
of a northerly wind, which our pilots fald they knew 
from long experience. 
The 14th, we failed by a gentleman s feat called 
Sandmar: here there is an elegant garden and a fine 
view of the fea. On the 1 6th, we left the harbour 
of Daleroe, and weighed anchor at five o’clock in 
the morning, in hopes not to anchor again in the 
Baltic, which happened luckily according to our 
Wlfhes. , , 
Land sort was the lafl: land we faw on the 
Stockholm coaft ; thdre is a light-houfe here for the 
fervice of feamen. Our pilots left us here, and opr 
fenmen took charge of the fhip. The Captain, 
among other accounts he gave us of his travels, as we 
were 
