[262]. Hakluyt, vi. 136.

[263]. vi. 138.

[264]. Reprinted in Hakluyt, vi. 141–52.

[265]. Strype, Memorials, ii. 504. Strype says the two ships were lent to Wyndham and his associates in 1552, and were intended for the voyage in search of the North-East Passage.

[266]. Stanford’s Compendium (1907) says that the ‘grains’ of this coast were pepper. Eden, although he describes them as ‘a very hot fruit’, speaks of pepper as a distinct article further on.

[267]. Probably the Niger.

[268]. Eden speaks of having seen the Primrose after her return, hence it must have been the Lion which was abandoned.

[269]. Reprinted by Hakluyt, vi. 154–77.

[270]. See Towerson’s first voyage, and marginal note to Eden’s account of the present voyage.

[271]. Acts of the Privy Council, v. 162.