We could not come near the shore by three quarters of an English mile, because of shallow water, which was a great prejudice to us, for our people going on shore were forced to wade a bow shot or two in going a-land, which caused many to get colds and coughs, for it was nigh times freezing cold weather. The bay is so round and circling, that before we could come to anchor we went round all the points of the compass. We found great mussels, and very fat and full of sea-pearl, but we could not eat them, for they made us all sick that did eat, as well sailors as passengers they caused to cast and scour, but they were soon well again. Neither got we any fish all the time we lay there, but some few little ones on the shore. For cod we assayed, but found none, there is good store, no doubt, in their season. Our master and his mate, and others experienced in fishing, professed we might have made three or four thousand pounds worth of oil they preferred it before Greenland whale-fishing, and purpose the next winter to fish for whale here. And thus we made our course south south west, purposing to go to a river ten leagues to the south of the Cape, but at night the wind being contrary, we put round again for the bay of Cape Cod and upon the 11th of November we came to an anchor in the bay, which is a good harbor and pleasant bay, circled round, except in the entrance which is about four miles over from land to land, compassed about to the very sea with oaks, pines, juniper, sassafras, and other sweet wood it is a harbor wherein a thousand sail of ships may safely ride: there we relieved ourselves with wood and water, and refreshed our people, which our shallop was fitted to coast the bay, to search for a habitation there was the greatest store of fowl that ever we saw.Īnd every day we saw whales playing hard by us, of which in that place, if we had instruments and means to take them, we might have made a very rich return, which to our great grief we wanted. It caused us to rejoice together, and praise God that had given us once again to see land. And the appearance of it much comforted us, especially seeing so goodly a land, and wooded to the brink of the sea. Wednesday, the sixth of September, the winds coming east north east, a fine small gale, we loosed from Plymouth, having been kindly entertained and courteously used by divers friends there dwelling, and after many difficulties in boisterous storms, at length, by God's providence, upon the ninth of November following, by break of the day we espied land which was deemed to be Cape Cod, and so afterward it proved. Johnson for presenting this hypertext version of Mourt's Relation. Then I adapted the general paragraphing scheme from the 1969 Dwight Heath version, which is clearly more appropriate for web page presentation. This version of Mourt's Relation is based on a University Microfilm (Ann Arbor, Michigan) facimilie edition of the original 1622 edition, to which I have updated the spelling to modern American-English standards. Mourt's Relation was first published in London in 1622, presumably by George Morton (hence the title, Mourt's Relation). Written between November 1620 and November 1621, it describes in detail what happened from the landing of the Pilgrims at Cape Cod, though their exploring and eventual settling at Plymouth, to their relations with the surrounding Indians, up to the First Thanksgiving and the arrival of the ship Fortune. Mourt's Relation was written primarily by Edward Winslow, although William Bradford appears to have written most of the first section. Mourt's Relation: A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, 1622, Part IĬaleb Johnson, a member of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants, provides the following comments on this hypertext version: Mourt's Relation: A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, 1622, Part I The Plymouth Colony Archive Project
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