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A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany-Bay by Watkin Tench
page 20 of 82 (24%)
sixteen of these last a 'petack'. Every piece is marked with the number
of rees it is worth, so that a mistake can hardly happen. English silver
coin has lost its reputation here, and dollars will be found preferable
to any other money.




CHAPTER VI.



The Passage from the Brazils to the Cape of Good Hope; with an Account
of the Transactions of the Fleet there.


Our passage from Rio de Janeiro to the Cape of Good Hope was equally
prosperous with that which had preceded it. We steered away to the
south-east, and lost sight of the American coast the day after our
departure. From this time until the 13th of October, when we made the
Cape, nothing remarkable occurred, except the loss of a convict in the
ship I was on board, who unfortunately fell into the sea, and perished
in spite of our efforts to save him, by cutting adrift a life buoy and
hoisting out a boat. During the passage, a slight dysentery prevailed
in some of the ships, but was in no instance mortal. We were at first
inclined to impute it to the water we took on board at the Brazils, but
as the effect was very partial, some other cause was more probably the
occasion of it.

At seven o'clock in the evening of the 13th of October, we cast anchor
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