Page:Wanderings of a Pilgrim Vol 2.djvu/424

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il crusero di che Dante parlò nel principio del Purgatorio con spirito profetico, dicendo,

"Io mi volsi a man destra, e posi mente
  All' altro polo, e vidi quattro stelle
  Non viste mai, fuor ch'alla prima gente.
Goder pareva'l ciel di lor fiammelle.
  O settentrïonal vedovo sito,
  Poichè privato se'di mirar quelle!"

It is still sacred in the eyes of the Spaniards: "Un sentiment religieux les attache à une constellation dont la forme leur rapelle ce signe de la foi planté par leurs ancêstres dans les déserts du nouveau monde."

A lantern was held for me by the chief officer while I took the sketch, to enable me, as he said, to see the stars.

20th.—The thermometer 81° in my cabin, and 84° in the stern cabin above. The new moon was most beautiful. Venus looked of surprising size, and threw her light across the sea like a moon light.

21st.—The trade wind blows calmly and sweetly; we only make about 100 knots a day, and the heat is oppressive; but the starry nights are brilliant, and the air at that time is most luxuriously cool, fresh, and soft.

23rd.—Thermometer 82°—A calm—the boats were lowered, and a purse made for a boat race for the native crew, which afforded amusement—the heat at night was intense.

25th.—Calm again—how much patience is requisite during a voyage at sea!

29th.—A dead calm—the heat excessive, quite overpowering, far beyond the heat of India. Heavy rain, a water-spout seen—a little breeze in the evening—recrossed the line during the night.

March 1st.—-The heat renders all exertion, mental or bodily, almost impossible. A heavy squall at noon, with powerful thunder and lightning followed by a calm. No sooner are we refreshed by a breeze, than torrents of rain fall and the calm returns. When shall we pick up the monsoon?—we creep along at a weary pace.