. An English garner; ingatherings from our history and literature . ut myself to be a soldierin the King of Spains Galleys, which were bound forMajorca. Coming thither, in the end of the Christmas holidays [^about the 6th January, 1583!, I found there, two English ships,the one of London, and the other of the West Country :which were ready freighted, and stayed but for a fair the Master of the one which was of the West Country,went I, and told him that I had been two years in Spain,to learn the language; and that I was now desirous to go £kq Gar. V. 20 3o6 At length he reaches home
. An English garner; ingatherings from our history and literature . ut myself to be a soldierin the King of Spains Galleys, which were bound forMajorca. Coming thither, in the end of the Christmas holidays [^about the 6th January, 1583!, I found there, two English ships,the one of London, and the other of the West Country :which were ready freighted, and stayed but for a fair the Master of the one which was of the West Country,went I, and told him that I had been two years in Spain,to learn the language; and that I was now desirous to go £kq Gar. V. 20 3o6 At length he reaches home, at Poole. [^* ?|^^. home, and see my friends, for that I lacked having agreed with him, for my passage, I took thus, through the providence of Almighty GOD, aftersixteen years absence ; having sustained many and sundrygreat troubles and miseries, as by this Discourse appeareth:I came home to this, my native country of England, in theship called the Landret, and arrived at Poole, in the monthof February, in the year 1582 [,f 1583].. [Third Ka^^Rative, by a n o t h e f(Survivor.] THE RARE Travels of Job Hortop, an Englishman, who was not heard of,in three and twenty years space. Wherein is declared the dangers he escaped in his Voyage to Guinea; where, after he was set on shore, in a wilderness near to Panico [Tampico], he endured much slavery and bondage in the Spanish Galleys* Wherein also he discourseth many strange and wonder-ful things seen in the time of his travels ; as wellconcerning wild and savage people, as alsoof sundry monstrous beasts, fishes,and fowls : and also trees ofwonderful form andquality. LONDON: Printed for W i l l i a m [v Title and Dedication of the original tract only are here reprinted. Thenarrative itself is taken as rewritten in Hakluyt.] 3o8 ^ V ^ V V V V X V V V V ^ ^ ^ w ^ ^ ^ ^«i^^/^^ tfl^n/9^A #1^^ #9^LA «>^^ A^^ r^^ #MA «3^A #1^A fl^^ *dS ^^ •T •T ^^ ^^ ^S •!? ^K ^^ •^ ^ ^* *X* •!•
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Keywords: ., bookauthorarberedw, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookyear1884