2 October 1794
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Travel and Touring, International
12

Thursday October 2. 1794. Our breeze continues through this day, and we still slip through 6 and 7. knots an hour. The weather however grows cold and chilly, and we have frequent squalls with rain. The sea this day ran very high. The Captain told me he never saw an heavier surf; but I suspect there was a little exaggeration in this assertion. He says he always finds an extraordinary sea rolling in this Latitude and Longitude; which seems to agree with the system advanced as I understand by 13Governor Pownal about the gulf-stream, for I take our present longitude to be not far distant from the western islands. The sea of this day however was not short and irregular, as in the two former instances above-noticed, but it was a remarkably long and regular swell, presenting alternately an extensive ridge of lofty mountains and an immeasurable length of intermediate valley; these varieties of appearance, may be attributed to the different effect of the stream at different distances from its source, spreading and weakening as it proceeds.— Saw nothing.

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Citation

John Quincy Adams, , , The John Quincy Adams Digital Diary, published in the Primary Source Cooperative at the Massachusetts Historical Society: