Couple was remara••bly tender, and Mr. Jones, the first Mare immediately stepped aside to Mr Collet, and found means to take him to the other side of the Rock, while the other two Mates, the Carpenter, and some others, dug a Grave in the Bird's Dung, in which they deposited the Body, reading over it the Burial Service, from a French Prayer Book, which had driven ashore with her from the Wreck. Having thus paid the Deb•• of Humanity to the Dead, and concealed from Mr. Collet a Sight which would most sensibly, if not fatally, have affected him, they found means, after some Days, to disclose to him by degrees what they had done, and to give him the Wedding|ring, which they had taken from her Finger. He received it with great Emotion, and afterwards spent many Days, in raising a Monument over the Grave, by piling up the squarest S••ones he could find, on the ••op of which he fixed an E••m ••lank, and inscribed it with her Name, her Age, the Time of her Death, and some Account as the fatal Accident by which it was oc|casioned.
On Monday, July 21, they secured some more Water and Pork, and found some Timber, Plank, Cordage, and Canvas. These they secured with great joy for the Boat, though as yet they were in want of many Implements, without which it was impossible for the Carpenter to work. He had just finished a Saw, but he had neither Hammer nor Nails. It happened, however, that one of the Seamen, Hendrick Scantz, a Sweed, having picked up an old Pair of Bellows, brought them to his Compani|ons, and told them, that he had been by Profession a Smith, and that with these Bellows and a Forge, which he hoped they would be able, by his Direction, to build, he could furnish the Carpenter with all the ••ools he would want, Nails included, as plenty of Iron might be obtained by burning the Timber which had come on Shore from the Wreck. This Acc••unt was received with a Transport of Joy; the Smith immediately ap|plied himself to mend the Bellows, and the three following Days