StoryTitle("caps", "The Vessels of the Fleet") ?> InitialWords(0, "These", "smallcaps", "nodropcap", "indent") ?> were three in number, as I have already said: the Susan Constant, a ship of near to one hundred tons in size; the Goodspeed, of forty tons, and the Discovery, which was a pinnace of only twenty tons.
DisplayImagewithCaption("text", "zpage019", "And now, lest some Page(20) ?> who read what I have set down may not be acquainted with the words used by seamen, let me explain that the measurement of a vessel by tons, means that she will fill so much space in the water. Now, in measuring a vessel, a ton is reckoned as forty cubic feet of space, therefore when I say the Susan Constant was one hundred tons in size, it is the same as if I had set down that she would carry four thousand cubic feet of cargo.
DisplayImagewithCaption("text", "zpage020a", "That he who reads may know what I mean by a pinnace, as differing from a ship, I can best make it plain by saying that such a craft is an open boat, wherein may be used sails or oars, and, as in the case of the Discovery, may have a deck over a certain portion of her length. That our pinnace was a vessel able to Page(21) ?> withstand such waves as would be met with in the ocean, can be believed when you remember that she was one half the size of the Goodspeed, which we counted a ship.
DisplayImagewithCaption("text", "zpage020b", "