1()4 GREENLAND VOYAGE. 
Bay is another inlet> to which I gave the name 
of Rater’s Bay ; anti to a bold tract of land ly¬ 
ing a few leagues to the southward of this bay, I 
applied the name of Wollaston Foreland, 
as a testimony of respect to two of the Commis¬ 
sioners of longitude. An opening a little farther 
south was named, in compliment to the Secretary 
to the Board of Longitude, Young’s Bay. 
Wollaston Foreland will, I expect, prove to be 
an island of about four leagues in extent. It is 
remarkably black and mountainous; and at this 
time was less clothed with snow than any of the 
adjoining coast. After another tract of high land, 
of a somewhat different character, a considerable 
inlet was discovered, in latitude 74° 5', in which 
no land towards the north-west was ever seen du¬ 
ring our stay on the coast. It was named Scott’s 
Inlet, in honour of Sir Walter Scott. A fine 
bold and picturesque foreland lies immediately to 
the southward of Scots’s inlet, to which the name 
of Sir Everard Home was applied. 
In addition to the places now mentioned, other 
Capes and Bays were named in compliment to the 
following much respected individuals:—viz. Sir 
Thomas Brisbane, Dr Brinkley, Colonel 
Beaueoy, Dr Holland, Mr J. F. W. Her- 
schel, and my brothers-in-law the Rev. John 
Arundel, Captain Jackson, and Mr John 
Clark, whose names appear in the northern part 
