A fair copy, in the same hand as MS. 7589.
There is a sketch map of Ceylon at f.28v.
Barton's route from to Ceylon takes him along the coast of Cochin China, down the China Sea to Malaya then to Singapore, passing Java and Sumatra. Barton is hosted along the way by various P.& O. steamer captains and company agents. He describes his fellow passengers in detail including an American doctor anxious to get home to wife and family because of the Civil War and conditions in the South.
From Columbo Barton and his party head towards Kandy the hill capital of the island, engage servants and porters and arrange transport.
Barton's account of his six-week stay in Ceylon includes descriptions of the local population, British settlers, the valleys and lush scenery, their diet, wet weather, wildlife and hunting prey (deer, elk, jungle fowl, buffalo, boars, pigs and hares). Exciting accounts of their first successful elephant hunts can be found between ff.48-56. Measurements of the elephants the party shoot are entered in the journal. Barton experiences problems with his hired help, develops a swollen shoulder and the whole party suffer from the intense heat, fevers, the red and black ants and the mosquitoes. The party return to the coast by mid-October, much to their general relief.