864 PRINCE LEE BOO. Tas amiable prince who is the chief subject of the follow- ing pages was a native of one of the Pelew Islands, which islands are situated in the western part of the Pacific Ocean, and were, it is supposed, first seen by the Spaniards of the Philippines, who named them the Palos Islands, from the great number of tall palm-trees which grew there, and which at a distance appear not unlike the masts of ships, the word palos signifying in the Spanish language something like a mast. It is supposed that no Europeans had visited and landed on any of these islands before the Antelope, a ship belonging to the East India Company, commanded by Captain Henry Wilson, had the misfortune to be wrecked on one of them, in the night between the 9th and 10th August, 1783; and this misfortune was so much the more distressing to the crew of the Antelope, as they knew not what the islands afforded ; whether the natives, if any natives there were, were civil or barbarous, or whether any refreshments for the crew, after this their severe calamity, could be procured or not; their situation, therefore, may be easier conceived than described. However, at length, by means of the boats, and their own exertions, they were enabled to reach Jand three or four leagues distant from the rock on which the ship had struck, and then soon discovered, by evident signs of places where there had been fires, &c., that it was an island not constantly inhabited, but only occasionally resorted to by the inhabitants of some other island not far distant ; and this was fully confirmed in the course of a few days, when some of the natives paid them a visit, and they proved to be a people simple, humane, and kind, and naturally of a good-natured and