Raleigh had been released from the
Tower expressly on the understanding that he should
make direct preparations for a voyage to Guiana.
The object of this voyage was to enrich King James
with the produce of a mine close to the banks of the
Orinoco. In the reign of Elizabeth, Raleigh had
stoutly contended that the natives of Guiana had ceded
all sovereignty in that country to England in 1595,
and that English colonists therefore had no one’s
leave to ask there. But times had changed, and
he now no longer pretended that he had a right to the
Orinoco; he was careful to insist that his expedition
would infringe no privileges of Spain. He was
anxious by every diplomatic subtlety to avoid failure,
and for the first few months he kept extremely quiet.
He had called in the 8,000_l._ which had been lying
at interest ever since he had received it as part
of the compensation for the Sherborne estates.
Lady Raleigh had raised 2,500_l._ by the sale of some
lands at Mitcham. 5000_l._ more were brought together
by various expedients, some being borrowed in Amsterdam
through the famous merchant, Piéter Vanlore,’
and 15,000_l._ were contributed by Raleigh’s
friends, who looked upon his enterprise much as men
at the present day would regard a promising but rather
hazardous investment.
His first business was to build one
large ship of 440 tons in the Thames. This he
named the ‘Destiny,’ and he received no
check in fitting her up to his desire; the King paid
700 crowns, as the usual statutable bounty on shipbuilding,
without objection. At the same time Raleigh built
or collected six other smaller vessels, and furnished
them all with ordnance. The preparation of such
a fleet in the Thames could not pass unobserved by
the representatives of the foreign courts, and during
the last six months of 1616 Raleigh’s name became
the centre of a tangle of diplomatic intrigue, and
one which frequently occurs in the correspondence
of Sarmiento, better known afterwards as Gondomar,
the Spanish ambassador, and in that of Des Marets,
the French ambassador. Mr. Edwards has remarked,
with complete justice, that the last two years of
Raleigh’s life were simply ’a protracted
death-struggle between him and Gondomar.’
The latter had been in England since 1613, and had
acquired a singular art in dealing with the purposes
of James I. At the English Court during 1616 we find
Spain watching France, and Venice watching Savoy,
all of them intent on Raleigh’s movements in
the river. For the unravelment of these intrigues
in detail, the reader must be referred to Mr. Gardiner’s
masterly pages.
On August 26, a royal commission was
issued, by which Raleigh was made the commander of
an expedition to Guiana, under express orders, more
stringently expressed than usual, not to visit the
dominions of any Christian prince. This was to
allay the alarm of the Spanish ambassador, who from
the first rumour of Raleigh’s voyage had not
ceased to declare that its real object was piracy,
and probably the capture of the Mexican plate fleet.
At the same time James I. allowed Gondomar to obtain
possession of copies of certain documents which Raleigh
had drawn out at the royal command describing his
intended route, and these were at once forwarded to
Madrid, together with such information as Gondomar
had been able to glean in conversation with Raleigh.
Spain instantly replied by offering him an escort
to his gold mine and back, but of course Raleigh declined
the proposition. He continued to assert that he
had no piratical intention, and that any man might
peacefully enter Guiana without asking leave of Spain.
It is doubtful whether the anecdote
is true which records that Raleigh at this time applied
to Bacon to know whether the terms of his commission
were tantamount to a free pardon, and was told that
they were. But it rests on much better testimony
that Bacon asked him what he would do if the Guiana
mine proved a deception. Raleigh admitted that
he would then look out for the Mexican plate fleet.
’But then you will be pirates,’ said Bacon;
and Raleigh answered, ’Ah, who ever heard of
men being pirates for millions?’ There was no
exaggeration in this; the Mexican fleet of that year
was valued at two millions and a half. The astute
Gondomar was at least half certain that this was Raleigh’s
real intention, and by October 12 he had persuaded
James to give him still more full security that no
injury should be done, at the peril of Raleigh’s
life, to any subject or property of the King of Spain.
The building of the ‘Destiny’
meanwhile proceeded, and Raleigh received many important
visitors on board her. He was protected by the
cordial favour of the Secretary, Sir Ralph Winwood;
and if the King disliked him as much as ever, no animosity
was shown. In the first days of 1617, Raleigh
ventured upon a daring act of intrigue. He determined
to work upon the growing sympathy of the English Court
with Savoy and its tension with Spain, to strike a
blow against the rich enemy of the one and ally of
the other, Genoa. He proposed to Scarnafissi,
the Savoyard envoy in London, that James I. should
be induced to allow the Guiana expedition to steal
into the Mediterranean, and seize Genoa for Savoy.
Scarnafissi laid the proposal before James, and on
January 12 it was discussed in the presence of Winwood.
There was talk of increasing Raleigh’s fleet
for this purpose by the addition of a squadron of
sixteen ships from the royal navy. For a fortnight
the idea was discussed in secret; but on the 26th,
Scarnafissi was told that the King had determined
not to adopt it. Four days later Raleigh was released
from the personal attendance of a keeper, and though
still not pardoned, was pronounced free. On February
10, the Venetian envoy, who had been taken into Scarnafissi’s
counsel, announced to his Government that the King
had finally determined to keep Raleigh to his original
intention.
Raleigh was next assailed by secret
propositions from France. Through the month of
February various Frenchmen visited him on the ‘Destiny,’
besides the ambassador, Des Marets. He was
nearly persuaded, in defiance of James, to support
the projected Huguenot rebellion by capturing St.
Valery. To find out the truth regarding his intention,
Des Marets paid at least one visit to the ‘Destiny,’
and on March 7 gave his Government an account of a
conversation with Raleigh, in which the latter had
spoken bitterly of James, and had asserted his affection
for France, and desire to serve her. It is in
the correspondence of Des Marets that the names
of Raleigh and Richelieu become for a moment connected;
it was in February 1617 that the future Cardinal described
his English contemporary as ’Ouastre Raly, grand
marinier et mauvais capitaine.’ In
March the English Government, to allay fresh apprehensions
on the part of Spain, forwarded by Gondomar most implicit
assertions that Raleigh’s expedition should be
in no way injurious to Spain. And so it finally
started after all, not bound for Mexico, or Genoa,
or St. Valery, but for the Orinoco. Up to the
last, Gondomar protested, and his protestations were
only put aside after a special council of March 28.
Next day Raleigh rode down to Dover to go on board
the ‘Destiny,’ which had left the Thames
on the 26th.
His fleet of seven vessels was not
well manned. His own account of the crews is
thus worded in the Apology: ’A company
of volunteers who for the most part had neither seen
the sea nor the wars; who, some forty gentlemen excepted,
were the very scum of the world, drunkards, blasphemers,
and such others as their fathers, brothers, and friends
thought it an exceeding good gain to be discharged
of, with the hazard of some thirty, forty, or fifty
pound.’ He was himself Admiral, with his
son Walter as captain of the ‘Destiny;’
Sir William Sentleger was on the ‘Thunder;’
a certain John Bailey commanded the ‘Husband.’
The remaining vessels were the ‘Jason,’
the ‘Encounter,’ the ‘Flying Joan,’
and the ‘Page.’ The master of the
‘Destiny’ was John Burwick, ’a hypocritical
thief.’ Various tiresome delays occurred.
They waited for the ‘Thunder’ at the Isle
of Wight; and when the rest went on to Plymouth, the
‘Jason’ stayed behind ignominiously in
Portsmouth because her captain had no ready money
to pay a distraining baker. The ‘Husband’
was in the same plight for twelve days more. The
squadron was, however, increased by seven additional
vessels, one of them commanded by Keymis, through
the enforced waiting at Plymouth, where, on May 3,
Raleigh issued his famous Orders to the Fleet.
On June 12 the fleet sailed at last out of Plymouth
Sound.
West of Scilly they fell in with a
terrific storm, which scattered the ships in various
directions. Some put back into Falmouth, but the
‘Flying Joan’ sank altogether, and the
fly-boat was driven up the Bristol Channel. After
nearly a fortnight of anxiety and distress, the fleet
collected again in Cork Harbour, where they lay repairing
and waiting for a favourable wind for more than six
weeks. From the Lismore Papers, just published
(Ja, we learn that Raleigh occupied this enforced
leisure in getting rid of his remaining Irish leases,
and in collecting as much money as he could.
Sir Richard Boyle records that on July 1 Raleigh came
to his house, and borrowed 100_l._ On August 19 the
last Journal begins, and on the 20th the fleet
left Cork, Raleigh having taken a share in a mine
at Balligara on the morning of the same day.
Nothing happened until the 31st, when, being off Cape
St. Vincent, the English fleet fell in with four French
vessels laden with fish and train oil for Seville.
In order that they might not give notice that Raleigh
was in those waters, where he certainly had no business
to be, he took these vessels with him a thousand leagues
to the southward, and then dismissed them with payment.
His conduct towards these French boats was suspicious,
and he afterwards tried to prove that they were pirates
who had harried the Grand Canary. It was also
Raleigh’s contention, that the enmity presently
shown him by Captain Bailey, of the ‘Husband,’
arose from Raleigh’s refusal to let him make
one of these French ships his prize.
On Sunday morning, September 7, the
English fleet anchored off the shore of Lanzarote,
the most easterly of the Canaries, having hitherto
crept down the coast of Africa. These Atlantic
islands were particularly open to the attacks of Algerine
corsairs, and a fleet of ‘Turks’ had just
ravaged the towns of the Madeiras. The people
of Lanzarote, waking up one morning to find their
roadstead full of strange vessels, took for granted
that these were pirates from Algiers. One English
merchant vessel was lying there at anchor, and by
means of this interpreter Raleigh endeavoured to explain
his peaceful intention, but without success.
He had a meeting on shore with the governor of the
island, ’our troops staying at equal distance
with us,’ and was asked the pertinent question,
’what I sought for from that miserable and barren
island, peopled in effect all with Moriscos.’
Raleigh asserted that all he wanted was fresh meat
and wine for his crews, and these he offered to pay
for.
On the 11th, finding that no provisions
came, and that the inhabitants were carrying their
goods up into the hills, the captains begged Raleigh
to march inland and take the town; ‘but,’
he says, ’besides that I knew it would offend
his Majesty, I am sure the poor English merchant should
have been ruined, whose goods he had in his hands,
and the way being mountainous and most extreme stony,
I knew that I must have lost twenty good men in taking
a town not worth two groats.’ The Governor
of Lanzarote continued to be in a craven state
of anxiety, and would not hear of trading. We
cannot blame him, especially when we find that less
than eight months later his island was invaded by genuine
Algerine bandits, his town utterly sacked, and 900
Christians taken off into Moslem slavery. After
three Englishmen had been killed by the islanders,
yet without taking any reprisals, Raleigh sailed away
from these sandy and inhospitable shores. But
in the night before he left, one of his ships, the
‘Husband,’ had disappeared. Captain
Bailey, who is believed to have been in the pay of
Gondomar, had hurried back to England to give report
of Raleigh’s piratical attack on an island belonging
to the dominion of Spain. As the great Englishman
went sailing westward through the lustrous waters
of the Canary archipelago, his doom was sealed, and
he would have felt his execution to be a certainty,
had he but known what was happening in England.
He called at Grand Canary, to complain
of the Lanzarote people to the governor-general
of the islands, but, for some reason which he does
not state, did not land at the town of Palmas,
but at a desert part, far from any village, probably
west of the northern extremity of the island.
The governor-general gave him no answer; but the men
found a little water, and they sailed away, leaving
Teneriffe to the north. On September 18 they
put into the excellent port of the island of Gomera,
‘the best,’ he says, ’in all the
Canaries, the town and castle standing on the very
breach of the sea, but the billows do so tumble and
overfall that it is impossible to land upon any part
of the strand but by swimming, saving in a cove under
steep rocks, where they can pass towards the town
but one after the other.’ Here, as at Lanzarote,
they were taken for Algerines, and the guns on the
rocks began to fire at them. Raleigh, however,
immediately sent a messenger on shore to explain that
they were not come to sack their town and burn their
churches, as the Dutch had done in 1599, but that
they were in great need of water. They presently
came to an agreement that the islanders should quit
their trenches round the landing-place, and that Raleigh
should promise on the faith of a Christian not to
land more than thirty unarmed sailors, to fill their
casks at springs within pistol-shot of the wash of
the sea, none of these sailors being permitted to
enter any house or garden. Raleigh, therefore,
sent six of his seamen, and turned his ships broadside
to the town, ready to batter it with culverin if he
saw one sign of treachery.
It turned out that when the Governor
of Gomera knew who his visitors were, he was as pleased
as possible to see them. His wife’s mother
had been a Stafford, and when Raleigh knew that, he
sent his countrywoman a present of six embroidered
handkerchiefs and six pairs of gloves, with a very
handsome message. To this the lady rejoined that
she regretted that her barren island contained nothing
worth Raleigh’s acceptance, yet sent him ‘four
very great loaves of sugar,’ with baskets of
lemons, oranges, pomegranates, figs, and most delicate
grapes. During the three days that they rode
off Gomera, the Governor and his English lady wrote
daily to Sir Walter. In return for the fruit,
deeming himself much in her debt, he sent on shore
a very courteous letter, and with it two ounces of
ambergriece, an ounce of the essence of amber, a great
glass of fine rose-water, an excellent picture of
Mary Magdalen, and a cut-work ruff. Here he expected
courtesies to stay, but the lady must positively have
the last word, and as the English ships were starting
her servants came on board with yet a letter, accompanying
a basket of delicate white manchett bread, more clusters
of fruits, and twenty-four fat hens. Meanwhile,
in the friendliest way, the sailors had been going
to and fro, and had drawn 240 pipes of water.
So cordial, indeed, was their reception, that, as
a last favour, Raleigh asked the Governor for a letter
to Sarmiento [Gondomar], which he got, setting forth
’how nobly we had behaved ourselves, and how
justly we had dealt with the inhabitants of the islands.’
Before leaving Gomera, Raleigh discharged a native
barque which one of his pinnaces had captured, and
paid at the valuation of the master for any prejudice
that had been done him. On September 21 they
sailed away from the Canaries, having much sickness
on board; and that very day their first important
loss occurred, in the death of the Provost Marshal
of the fleet, a man called Stead.
On the 26th they reached St. Antonio,
the outermost of the Cape Verde Islands, but did not
land there. For eight wretched days they wandered
aimlessly about in this unfriendly archipelago, trying
to make up their minds to land now on Brava, now on
St. Jago. Some of the ships grated on the rocks,
all lost anchors and cables; one pinnace, her crew
being asleep and no one on the watch, drove under
the bowsprit of the ‘Destiny,’ struck
her and sank. When they did effect a landing on
Brava, they were soaked by the tropical autumnal rains
of early October. Men were dying fast in all
the ships. In deep dejection Raleigh gave the
order to steer away for Guiana. Meanwhile Bailey
had arrived in England, had seen Gondomar, and had
openly given out that he left Raleigh because the
admiral had been guilty of piratical acts against Spain.
It does not seem that Winwood or the King took any
notice of these declarations until the end of the
year.
The ocean voyage was marked by an
extraordinary number of deaths, among others that
of Mr. Fowler, the principal refiner, whose presence
at the gold mine would have been of the greatest importance.
On October 13, John Talbot, who had been for eleven
years Raleigh’s secretary in the Tower, passed
away. The log preserved in the Second Voyage
is of great interest, but we dare not allow its observations
to detain us. On the last of October, Raleigh
was struck down by fever himself, and for twenty days
lay unable to eat anything more solid than a stewed
prune. He was in bed, on November 11, when they
sighted Cape Orange, now the most northerly point
belonging to the Empire of Brazil. On the 14th
they anchored at the mouth of the Cayenne river, and
Raleigh was carried from his noisome cabin into his
barge; the ‘Destiny’ got across the bar,
which was lower then than it now is, on the 17th.
At Cayenne, after a day or two, Raleigh’s old
servant Harry turned up; he had almost forgotten his
English in twenty-two years. Raleigh began to
pick up strength a little on pine-apples and plantains,
and presently he began to venture even upon roast
peccary. He proceeded to spend the next fortnight
on the Cayenne river, refreshing his weary crews, and
repairing his vessels. An interesting letter to
his wife that he sent home from this place, which
he called ‘Caliana,’ confirms the Second
Voyage, and adds some details. He says to
Lady Raleigh: ’To tell you I might be here
King of the Indians were a vanity; but my name hath
still lived among them. Here they feed me with
fresh meat and all that the country yields; all offer
to obey me. Commend me to poor Carew my son.’
His eldest son, Walter, it will be remembered, was
with him.
In December the fleet coasted along
South America westward, till on the 15th they stood
under Trinidad. Meanwhile Raleigh had sent forward,
by way of Surinam and Essequibo, the expedition which
was to search for the gold mine on the Orinoco.
His own health prevented his attempting this journey,
but he sent Captain Keymis as commander in his stead,
and with him was George Raleigh, the Admiral’s
nephew; young Walter also accompanied the party.
On New Year’s Eve Raleigh landed at a village
in Trinidad, close to Port of Spain, and there he
waited, on the borders of the land of pitch, all through
January 1618. On the last of that month he returned
to Punto Gallo on the mainland, being very
anxious for news from the Orinoco. The log of
the Second Voyage closes on February 13, and
it is supposed that it was on the evening of that day
that Captain Keymis’ disastrous letter, written
on January 8, reached Raleigh and informed him of
the death of his son Walter. ’To a broken
mind, a sick body, and weak eyes, it is a torment
to write letters,’ and we know he felt, as he
also said, that now ’all the respects of this
world had taken end in him.’ Keymis had
acted in keeping with what he must have supposed to
be Raleigh’s private wish; he had attacked the
new Spanish settlement of San Thome. In the fight
young Walter Raleigh had been struck down as he was
shouting ’Come on, my men! This is the only
mine you will ever find.’ Keymis had to
announce this fact to the father, and a few days afterwards,
with only a remnant of his troop, he himself fled
in panic to the sea, believing that a Spanish army
was upon him. The whole adventure was a miserable
and ignominious failure.
The meeting between Raleigh and Keymis
could not fail to be an embarrassing one. Raleigh
could not but feel that all his own mistakes and faults
might have been condoned if Keymis had brought one
basket of ore from the fabulous mine, and he could
not refrain from reproaching him. He told him
he ’should be forced to leave him to his arguments,
with the which if he could satisfy his Majesty and
the State, I should be glad of it, though for my part
he must excuse me to justify it.’ After
this first interview Keymis left him in great dejection,
and a day or two later appeared in the Admiral’s
cabin with a letter which he had written to the Earl
of Arundel, excusing himself. He begged Raleigh
to forgive him and to read this letter. What
followed, Sir Walter must tell in his own grave words:
I told him he had undone me by his obstinacy,
and that I would not favour or colour in any sort
his former folly. He then asked me, whether
that were my resolution? I answered, that it was.
He then replied in these words, ’I know
then, sir, what course to take,’ and went
out of my cabin into his own, in which he was no sooner
entered than I heard a pistol go off. I sent up,
not suspecting any such thing as the killing of
himself, to know who shot a pistol. Keymis
himself made answer, lying on his bed, that he
had shot it off, because it had long been charged;
with which I was satisfied. Some half-hour
after this, his boy, going into the cabin, found
him dead, having a long knife thrust under his
left pap into his heart, and his pistol lying by him,
with which it appeared he had shot himself; but
the bullet lighting upon a rib, had but broken
the rib, and went no further.
Such was the wretched manner in which
Raleigh and his old faithful servant parted.
In his despair, the Admiral’s first notion was
to plunge himself into the mazes of the Orinoco, and
to find the gold mine, or die in the search for it.
But his men were mutinous; they openly declared that
in their belief no such mine existed, and that the
Spaniards were bearing down on them by land and sea.
They would not go; and Raleigh, strangely weakened
and humbled, asked them if they wished him to lead
them against the Mexican plate fleet. He told
them that he had a commission from France, and that
they would be pardoned in England if they came home
laden with treasure.
What exactly happened no one knows.
The mutiny grew worse and worse, and on March 21,
when Raleigh wrote a long letter to prepare the mind
of Winwood, he was lying off St. Christopher’s
on his homeward voyage; not knowing of course that
his best English friend had already been dead five
months. Next day, he made up his mind that he
dared not return to England to face his enemies, and
he wrote to tell his wife that he was off to Newfoundland,
’where I mean to make clean my ships, and revictual;
for I have tobacco enough to pay for it.’
But he was powerless, as he confesses, to govern his
crew, and no one knows how the heartbroken old man
spent the next two dreadful months. His ships
slunk back piecemeal to English havens, and on May
23, Captain North, who had commanded the ‘Chudleigh,’
had audience of the King, and told him the whole miserable
story. On May 26, Raleigh made his appearance,
with the ‘Destiny,’ in the harbour of
Kinsale, and on June 21 he arrived in Plymouth, penniless
and dejected, for the first time in his life utterly
unnerved and irresolute. On June 16 he had written
an apologetic letter to the King. By some curious
slip Mr. Edwards dated this letter three months too
late, and its significance has therefore been overlooked.
It is important as showing that Raleigh was eager
to conciliate James.