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    Captain Singleton

    Page 4
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    encouraged when we launched it, and found it swam upright and steady, as we

      would have been at another time, if we had a good Man of War at our Command.

      She was so very large, that she carried us all very easily, and would have

      carried two or three Ton of Baggage with us; so that we began to consult about

      going to Sea directly to Goa; but many other Considerations check'd that

      Thought, especially when we came to look nearer into it; such as Want of

      Provisions, and no Casks for fresh Water; no Compass to steer by; no Shelter

      from the Breach of the high Sea, which would certainly founder us; no Defence

      from the Heat of the Weather, and the like; so that they all came readily into

      my Project, to cruise about where we were, and see what might offer.

      Accordingly, to gratify our Fancy, we went one Day all out to Sea in her

      together, and we were in a very fair Way to have had enough of it; for when she

      had us all on Board, and that we were gotten about Half a League to Sea, there

      happening to be a pretty high Swell of the Sea, tho' little or no Wind, yet she

      wallow'd so in the Sea, that we all of us thought she would at last wallow her

      self Bottom up; so we set all to Work to get her in nearer the Shore, and giving

      her fresh Way in the Sea, she swam more steady, and with some hard Work we got

      her under the Land again.

      We were now at a great Loss; the Natives were civil enough to us, and came often

      to discourse with us; one time they brought one whom they shew'd Respect to as a

      King, with them, and they set up a long Pole between them and us, with a great

      Tossel of Hair hanging, not on the Top, but something above the Middle of it,

      adorn'd with little Chains, Shells, Bits of Brass, and the like; and this we

      understood afterwards was a Token of Amity and Friendship, and they brought down

      to us Victuals in Abundance, Cattel, Fowls, Herbs, Roots, but we were in the

      utmost Confusion on our Side; for we had nothing to buy with, or exchange for;

      and as to giving us things for nothing, they had no Notion of that again. As to

      our Money, it was meer Trash to them, they had no Value for it; so that we were

      in a fair Way to be starved. Had we had but some Toys and Trinckets, Brass

      Chains, Baubles, Glass Beads, or in a Word, the veriest Trifles that a Ship

      Loading would not have been worth the Freight, we might have bought Cattel and

      Provisions enough for an Army, or to Victual a Fleet of Men of War, but for Gold

      or Silver we could get nothing.

      Upon this we were in a strange Consternation. I was but a young Fellow, but I

      was for falling upon them with our Fire Arms; and taking all the Cattel from

      them, and send them to the Devil to stop their Hunger, rather than be starved

      our selves; but I did not consider that this might have brought Ten Thousand of

      them down upon us the next Day; and tho' we might have killed a vast Number of

      them, and perhaps have frighted the rest, yet their own Desperation, and our

      small Number, would have animated them so, that one time or other they would

      have destroy'd us all.

      In the Middle of our Consultation, one of our Men who had been a kind of a

      Cutler, or Worker in Iron, started up, and ask'd the Carpenter, if among all his

      Tools he could not help him to a File. Yes, says the Carpenter, I can, but it is

      a small one. The smaller the better, says the other. Upon this he goes to Work,

      and first by heating a Piece of an old broken Chissel in the Fire, and then with

      the Help of his File, he made himself several Kinds of Tools for his Work; and

      then he takes three or four Pieces of Eight, and beats them out with a Hammer

      upon a Stone, till they were very broad and thin, then he cut them out into the

      Shape of Birds and Beasts; he made little Chains of them for Bracelets and

      Necklaces, and turn'd them into so many Devices, of his own Head, that it is

      hardly to be exprest.

      When he had for about a Fortnight exercised his Head and Hands at this Work, we

      try'd the Effect of his Ingenuity; and having another Meeting with the Natives,

      were surprized to see the Folly of the poor People. For a little Bit of Silver

      cut out in the Shape of a Bird, we had two Cows; and, which was our Loss, if it

      had been in Brass, it had been still of more Value. For one of the Bracelets

      made of Chain-work, we had as much Provision of several Sorts, as would fairly

      have been worth in England, Fifteen or Sixteen Pounds; and so of all the rest.

      Thus, that which when it was in Coin was not worth Six-pence to us, when thus

      converted into Toys and Trifles, was worth an Hundred Times its real Value, and

      purchased for us any thing we had Occasion for.

      In this Condition, we lived upwards of a Year, but all of us began to be very

      much tir'd of it, and whatever came of it, resolv'd to attempt an Escape. We had

      furnished our selves with no less than three very good Canoes; and as the

      Monsoones, or Trade-Winds, generally affect that Country, blowing in most Parts

      of this Island one six Months of a Year one Way, and the other six Months

      another Way, we concluded we might be able to bear the Sea well enough. But

      always when we came to look nearer into it, the Want of fresh Water was the

      thing that put us off from such an Adventure, for it is a prodigious Length, and

      what no Man on Earth could be able to perform without Water to drink.

      Being thus prevailed upon by our own Reason to set the Thoughts of that Voyage

      aside, we had then but two things before us; one was, to put to Sea the other

      Way, viz. West, and go away for the Cape of Good Hope, where first or last we

      should meet with some of our own Country Ships, or else to put for the main Land

      of Africa, and either travel by Land, or sail along the Coast towards the Red

      Sea, where we should first or last find a Ship of some Nation or other, that

      would take us up, or perhaps we might take them up; which, by the bye, was the

      thing that always run in my Head.

      It was our ingenious Cutler, whom ever after we called Silver Smith, that

      proposed this; but the Gunner told him, that he had been in the Red Sea, in a

      Malabar Sloop, and he knew this, that if we went into the Red Sea, we should

      either be killed by the wild Arabs, or taken and made Slaves of by the Turks;

      and therefore he was not for going that Way.

      Upon this I took Occasion to put in my Vote again. Why, said I, do we talk of

      being killed by the Arabs, or made Slaves of by the Turks? Are we not able to

      board almost any Vessel we shall meet with in those Seas; and instead of their

      taking us, we to take them? Well done, Pyrate, said the Gunner, he that had

      look'd in my Hand, and told me I should come to the Gallows; I'll say that for

      him, says he, he always looks the same Way. But I think o' my Conscience, 'tis

      our only Way now. Don't tell me, says I, of being a Pyrate, we must be Pyrates,

      or any thing, to get fairly out of this cursed Place.

      In a Word, they concluded all by my Advice, that our Business was to cruize for

      any thing we could see. Why then, said I to them, our first Business is to see,

      if the People upon this Island have no Navigation, and what Boats they use; and

      if they have any better
    or bigger than ours, let us take one of them. First

      indeed all our Aim was to get, if possible, a Boat with a Deck and a Sail; for

      then we might have saved our Provisions, which otherwise we could not.

      We had, to our great good Fortune, one Sailor among us, who had been Assistant

      to the Cook, he told us, that he would find a Way how to preserve our Beef,

      without Cask or Pickle; and this he did effectually by curing it in the Sun,

      with the Help of Salt-Petre, of which there was great Plenty in the Island; so

      that before we found any Method for our Escape, we had dry'd the Flesh of six or

      seven Cows and Bullocks, and ten or twelve Goats, and it relished so well, that

      we never gave our selves the Trouble to boil it when we eat it, but either

      broiled it, or eat it dry: But our main Difficulty about fresh Water still

      remained; for we had no Vessel to put any into, much less to keep any for our

      going to Sea.

      But our first Voyage being only to coast the Island, we resolved to venture,

      whatever the Hazard or Consequence of it might be; and in order to preserve as

      much fresh Water as we could, our Carpenter made a Well thwart the Middle of one

      of our Canoes, which he separated from the other Parts of the Canoe, so as to

      make it tight to hold the Water, and cover'd so as we might step upon it; and

      this was so large, that it held near a Hogshead of Water very well. I cannot

      better describe this Well, than by the same Kind which the small Fisher-Boats in

      England have to preserve their Fish alive in; only, that this, instead of having

      Holes to let the Salt Water in, was made sound every Way to keep it out; and it

      was the first Invention, I believe, of its Kind, for such an Use: But Necessity

      is a Spur to Ingenuity, and the Mother of Invention.

      It wanted but a little Consultation to resolve now upon our Voyage. The first

      Design was only to coast it round the Island, as well to see if we could seize

      upon any Vessel fit to embark our selves in, as also to take hold of any

      Opportunity which might present for our passing over to the Main; and therefore

      our Resolution was to go on the Inside, or West Shore of the Island, where at

      least at one Point, the Land stretching a great Way to the North-West, the

      Distance is not extraordinary great from the Island to the Coast of Africk.

      Such a Voyage, and with such a desperate Crew, I believe was never made; for it

      is certain we took the worst Side of the Island to look for any Shipping,

      especially for Shipping of other Nations, this being quite out of the Way:

      However, we put to Sea, after taking all our Provisions and Ammunition, Bag and

      Baggage on Board; we had made both Mast and Sail for our two large Periagua's,

      and the other we paddl'd along as well as we could; but when a Gale sprung up,

      we took her in Tow.

      We sail'd merrily forward for several Days, meeting with nothing to interrupt

      us, We saw several of the Natives in small Canoes, catching Fish, and sometimes

      we endeavoured to come near enough to speak with them, but they were always

      shye, and afraid of us, making in for the Shore, as soon as we attempted it;

      till one of our Company remember'd the Signal of Friendship which the Natives

      made us from the South Part of the Island, viz. of setting up a long Pole, and

      put us in Mind, that perhaps it was the same thing to them as a Flag of Truce

      was to us: So we resolved to try it; and accordingly the next time we saw any of

      their Fishing Boats at Sea, we put up a Pole in our Canoe that had no Sail, and

      rowed towards them. As soon as they saw the Pole, they staid for us, and as we

      came nearer, paddl'd towards us. When they came to us, they shewed themselves

      very much pleased, and gave us some large Fish, of which we did not know the

      Names, bnt they were very good. It was our Misfortune still, that we had nothing

      to give them in Return; but our Artist, of whom I spoke before, gave them two

      little thin Plates of Silver, beaten, as I said before, out of a Piece of Eight;

      they were cut in a Diamond Square, longer one way than t'other, and a Hole

      punch'd at one of the longest Corners. This they were so fond of, that they made

      us stay till they had cast their Lines and Nets again, and gave us as many Fish

      as we cared to have.

      All this while we had our Eyes upon their Boats, view'd them very narrowly, and

      examined whether any of them were fit for our Turn; but they were poor sorry

      things; their Sail was made of a large Matt, only one that was of a Piece of

      Cotton Stuff, fit for little, and their Ropes were twisted Flags, of no

      Strength; so we concluded we were better as we were, and let them alone. We went

      forward to the North, keeping the Coast close on Board for twelve Days together;

      and having the Wind at East, and E. S. E. we made very fresh Way. We saw no

      Towns on the Shore, but often saw some Hutts by the Water Side, upon the Rocks,

      and always Abundance of People about them, who we could perceive run together to

      stare at us.

      It was as odd a Voyage as ever Men went: We were a little Fleet of three Ships,

      and an Army of between Twenty and Thirty as dangerous Fellows as ever they had

      among them; and had they known what we were they would have compounded to give

      us every thing we desired, to be rid of us.

      On the other Hand, we were as miserable as Nature could well make us to be; for

      we were upon a Voyage and no Voyage, we were bound some where and no where; for

      tho' we knew what we intended to do, we did really not know what we were doing:

      We went forward and forward by a Northerly Course; and as we advanced, the Heat

      increased, which began to be intolerable to us who were upon the Water, without

      any Covering from Heat or Wet; besides we were now in the Month of October, or

      thereabouts, in a Southern Latitude, and as we went every Day nearer the Sun,

      the Sun came also every Day nearer to us, till at last we found our selves in

      the Latitude of 20 Degrees, and having past the Tropick about five or six Days

      before that, in a few Days more the Sun would be in the Zenith, just over our

      Heads.

      Upon these Considerations we resolved to seek for a good Place to go on Shore

      again, and pitch our Tents till the Heat of the Weather abated. We had by this

      time measured Half the Length of the Island, and were come to that Part where

      the Shore tending away to the North-West, promised fair to make our Passage over

      to the main Land of Africk, much shorter than we expected. But notwithstanding

      that, we had good Reason to believe it was about 120 Leagues.

      So, the Heats consider'd, we resolved to take Harbour; besides, our Provisions

      were exhausted, and we had not many Days Store left. Accordingly, putting in for

      the Shore early in the Morning, as we usually did once in three or four Days,

      for fresh Water, we sat down and considered, whether we should go on, or take up

      our Standing there; but upon several Considerations too long to repeat here, we

      did not like the Place, so we resolved to go on for a few Days longer.

      After Sailing on N. W. by N. with a fresh Gale at S. E. about six Days, we found

      at a great Distance, a large Promontory, or Cape of Land, pushing ou
    t a long Way

      into the Sea; and as we were exceeding fond of seeing what was beyond the Cape,

      we resolved to double it before we took into Harbour; so we kept on our Way, the

      Gale continuing, and yet it was four Days more before we reach'd the Cape. But

      it is not possible to express the Discouragement and Melancholy that seized us

      all when we came thither; for when we made the Head Land of the Cape, we were

      surprized to see the Shore fall away on the other Side, as much as it had

      advanced on this Side, and a great deal more; and that, in short, if we would

      adventure over to the Shore of Africk, it must be from hence; for that if we

      went further, the Breadth of the Sea still increased, and to what Breadth it

      might increase, we knew not.

      While we mused upon this Discovery, we were surprized with very bad Weather, and

      especially violent Rains, with Thunder and Lightning most unusually terrible to

      us. In this Pickle we run for the Shore, and getting under the Lee of the Cape,

      run our Frigates into a little Creek, where we saw the Land overgrown with

      Trees, and made all the Haste possible to get on Shore, being exceeding wet, and

      fatigued with the Heat, the Thunder, Lightning and Rain.

      Here we though our Case was very deplorable indeed, and therefore our Artist, of

      whom I have spoken so often, set up a great Cross of Wood on the Hill, which was

      within a Mile of the Head Land, with these Words, but in the Portuguese

      Language,

      Point Desperation. Jesus have Mercy!

      We set to work immediately to build us some Hutts, and so get our Clothes dry'd,

      and tho' I was young, and had no Skill in such Things, yet I shall never forget

      the little City we built, for it was no less; and we fortify'd it accordingly;

      and the Idea is so fresh in my Thought, that I cannot but give a short

      Description of it.

      Our Camp was on the South Side of a little Creek on the Sea, and under the

      Shelter of a steep Hill, which lay, tho' on the other Side of the Creek, yet

      within a Quarter of a Mile of us N. W. by N. and very happily intercepted the

      Heat of the Sun all the after Part of the Day. The Spot we pitched on had a

      little fresh Water, Brook, or a Stream running into the Creek by us, and we saw

      Cattle feeding in the Plains and and low Ground, East and to the South of us a

      great Way.

      Here we set up twelve little Hutts, like Soldiers Tents, but made of the Boughs

      of Trees stuck into the Ground, and bound together on the Top with Withes, and

      such other things as we could get; the Creek was our Defence on the North, a

      little Brook on the West, and the South and East Sides we fortify'd with a Bank,

      which entirely covered our Hutts; and being drawn oblique from the North West to

      the South East, made our City a Triangle. Behind the Bank, or Line, our Hutts

      stood, having three other Hutts behind them at a good Distance. In one of these,

      which was a little one, and stood further off, we put our Gun-powder, and

      nothing else, for fear of Danger; in the other, which was bigger, we drest our

      Victuals, and put all our Necessaries; and in the third, which was biggest of

      all, we eat our Dinners, called our Councils, and fat and diverted our selves

      with such Conversation as we had one with another, which was but indifferent

      truly at that time.

      Our Correspondence with the Natives was absolutely necessary, and our Artist,

      the Cutler, having made Abundance of those little Diamond cut Squares of Silver,

      with these we made Shift to Traffick with the black People for what we wanted;

      for indeed they were pleased wonderfully with them: And thus we got Plenty of

      Provisions. At first, and in particular, we got about fifty Head of Black Cattel

      and Goats, and our Cook's Mate took care to cure them, and dry them, salt and

      preserve them for our grand Supply; nor was this hard to do, the Salt and

     


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