Mira. How came we ashore?
Pro. By Providence divine.
Sit still, and hear the last of our
sea-sorrow.
Here in this island we arrived.
“Tempest.”
A frigate called at the island for
turtle; and, having represented my case to the captain,
he offered to take me on board, telling me at the
same time that he was going much farther to the southward,
to relieve another cruiser, who would then return
to England, and the captain of her would, no doubt,
give me a passage home. I accordingly made hasty
preparations for my departure; took leave of all my
kind friends at the barracks, for kind indeed they
were to me, although thoughtless and foolish
towards themselves. I bade adieu to the families
on the island, in whose houses and at whose tables
I had experienced the most liberal hospitality; and
last, though not least, I took leave of poor Carlotta.
This was a difficult task to perform,
but it was imperative. I told her that I was
ordered on board by my captain, who, being a very
different person from the last, I dare not disobey.
I promised to return to her soon. I offered her
money and presents, but she would accept of nothing
but a small locket, to wear for my sake. I purchased
the freedom of poor Sophy, the black girl, who had
saved my life. The little creature wept bitterly
at my coming away; but I could do no more for her.
As for Carlotta, I learned afterwards that she went
on board every ship that arrived, to gain intelligence
of me, who seldom or ever gave her a thought.
We sailed; and, steering away to the
south-east with moderate winds and fine weather, captured,
at the end of that time, a large American ship, which
had made a devious course from the French coast, in
hopes of avoiding our cruisers; she was about four
hundred tons, deeply laden, and bound to Laguira,
with a valuable cargo. The captain sent for me,
and told me that if I chose to take charge of her,
as prize master, I might proceed to England direct.
This plan exactly suited me, and I consented, only
begging to have a boatswain’s mate, named Thompson,
to go along with me; he was an old shipmate, and had
been one of my gig’s crew when we had the affair
in Basque Roads; he was a steady, resolute, quiet,
sober, raw-boned Caledonian, from Aberdeen, and a
man that I knew would stand by me in the hour of need.
He was ordered to go with me, and the necessary supply
of provisions and spirits were put on board.
I received my orders, and took my leave of my new
captain, who was both a good seaman and an excellent
officer.
When I got on board the prize, I found
all the prisoners busy packing up their things, and
they became exceedingly alert in placing them in the
boat which was to convey them on board the frigate.
Indeed they all crowded into her with an unusual degree
of activity; but this did not particularly strike
my attention at the time. My directions were
to retain the captain and one man with me, in order
to condemn the vessel in the Court of Admiralty.
Occupied with many objects at once,
all important to me, as I was so soon to part company
with the frigate, I did not recollect this part of
my orders, and that I was detaining the boat, until
the young midshipman who had charge of her asked me
if he might return on board and take the prisoners.
I then went on deck, and seeing the whole of them,
with their chests and bags, seated very quietly in
the boat, and ready to shove off, I desired the captain
and one of the American seamen to come on board again,
and to bring their clothes with them. I did not
remark the unwillingness of the captain to obey this
order, until told of it by the midshipman; his chest
and goods were immediately handed in upon deck, and
the signal from the frigate being repeated, with a
light for the boat to return (for it was now dark),
she shoved off hastily, and was soon out of sight.
“Stop the boat! for God’s
sake stop the boat!” cried the captain.
“Why should I stop the boat?”
said I; “my orders are positive, and you must
remain with me.”
I then went below for a minute or
two, and the captain followed me.
“As you value your life, sir,”
said he, “stop the boat.”
“Why?” asked I, eagerly.
“Because, sir,” said he,
“the ship has been scuttled by the men, and
will sink in a few hours: you cannot save her,
for you cannot get at her leaks.”
I now did indeed see the necessity
of stopping the boat; but it was too late: she
was out of sight. The lanthorn, the signal for
her return, had been hauled down, a proof that she
had got on board. I hoisted two lights at the
mizen peak, and ordered a musket to be fired; but,
unfortunately, the cartridges had either not been put
in the boat which brought me, or they had been taken
back in her. One of my lights went out; the other
was not seen by the frigate. We hoisted another
light, but it gained no notice: the ship had evidently
made sail. I stood after her as fast as I could,
in hopes of her seeing us that night, or taking us
out the next morning, should we be afloat.
But my vessel, deeply laden, was already
getting waterlogged, and would not sail on a wind
more than four miles an hour. All hope in that
quarter vanished. I then endeavoured to discover
from the captain where the leaks were, that we might
stop them; but he had been drinking so freely, that
I could get nothing from him but Dutch courage and
braggadocia. The poor black man, who had been
left with the captain, was next consulted. All
he knew was, that, when at Bordeaux, the captain had
caused holes to be bored in the ship’s bottom,
that he might pull the plugs out whenever he liked,
swearing, at the same time, that she never should
enter a British port. He did not know where the
leaks were situated, though it was evident to me that
they were in the after and also in the fore parts of
the ship, low down, and now deep under water, both
inside as well as out. The black man added, that
the captain had let the water in, and that was all
he knew.
I again spoke to the captain, but
he was too far gone to reason with: he had got
drunk to die, because he was afraid to die sober no
unusual case with sailors.
“Don’t tell me; d n
me, who is a-feard to die? I arn’t.
I swore she should never enter a British port, and
I have kept my word.”
He then began to use curses and exécrations;
and, at last, fell on the deck in a fit of drunken
frenzy.
I now called my people all together,
and having stated to them the peril of our situation,
we agreed that a large boat, which lay on the booms,
should be instantly hoisted out, and stowed with every
thing necessary for a voyage. Our clothes, bread,
salt meat, and water, were put into her, with my sextant
and spy-glass. The liquor, which was in the cabin,
I gave in charge to the midshipman who was sent with
me; and, having completely stowed our boat, and prepared
her with a good lug-sail, we made her fast with a
couple of stout tow-ropes, and veered her astern,
with four men in her, keeping on our course in the
supposed track of the frigate till daylight.
That wished-for hour arrived, but
no frigate was to be seen, even from the mast-head.
The ship was getting deeper and deeper, and we prepared
to take to the boat. I calculated the nearest
part of South America to be seven hundred miles from
us, and that we were more than twice that distance
from Rio Janeiro. I did not, however, despond,
for, under all circumstances, we were extremely well
off: and I inspired the men with so much confidence,
that they obeyed in everything, with the utmost alacrity
and cheerfulness, except in one single point.
Finding the ship could not in all
probability float more than an hour or two, I determined
to quit her, and ordered the boat alongside. The
men got into her, stepped the mast, hooked on the lug-sail,
ready to hoist at my orders; and, without my bidding,
had spread my boat cloak in the stern-sheets, and
made a comfortable place for me to repose in.
The master proceeded to get into the boat, but the
men repulsed him with kicks, blows, and hisses, swearing
most dreadfully that if he attempted to come in, they
would throw him overboard. Although in some measure
I participated in their angry feeling, yet I could
not reconcile myself to leave a fellow-creature thus
to perish, even in the pit which he had dug for others,
and this too at a time when we needed every indulgence
from the Almighty for ourselves, and every assistance
from his hand to conduct us into a port.
“He deserves to die; it is all
his own doings,” said they; “come into
the boat yourself, Sir, or we must shove off without
you.”
The poor captain who, after
sleeping four hours, had recovered his senses, and
felt all the horror of his situation wept,
screamed, tore his hair, laid hold of my coat, from
which only the strength of my men could disengage
him. He clung to life with a passion of feeling
which I never saw in a criminal condemned by the law;
he fell on his knees before me, as he appealed to
us all, collectively and separately; he reminded us
of his wife and starving children at Baltimore, and
he implored us to think of them and of our own.
I was melted to tears, I confess;
but my men heard him with the most stoical unconcern.
Two of them threw him over to the opposite side of
the deck; and before he could recover from the violence
of the fall, pushed me into the boat, and shoved off.
The wretched man had by this time crawled over to
the side we had just left; and throwing himself on
his knees, again screamed out, “Oh, mercy, mercy,
mercy! For God’s sake, have mercy,
if you expect any! Oh, God! my wife and
babes!”
His prayers, I lament to say, had
no effect on the exasperated seamen. He then
fell into a fit of cursing and blasphemy, evidently
bereft of his senses; and in this state he continued
for some minutes, while we lay alongside, the bowman
holding on with the boat-hook only. I was secretly
determined not to leave him, although I foresaw a mutiny
in the boat in consequence. At length, I gave
the order to shove off. The unhappy captain,
who, till that moment, might have entertained some
faint hope from the lurking compassion which he perceived
I felt for him, now resigned himself to despair of
a more sullen and horrible aspect. He sat himself
down on one of the hen-coops, and gazed on us with
a ghastly eye. I cannot remember ever seeing a
more shocking picture of human misery.
While I looked at him, the black man,
Mungo, who belonged to the ship, sprang overboard
from the boat, and swam back to the wreck. Seizing
a rope which hung from the gangway, he ascended the
side, and joined his master. We called to him
to come back, or we should leave him behind.
“No, massa,” replied the
faithful creature; “me no want to lib: no
takee Massa Green, no takee me! Mungo lib good
many years wi massa cappen. Mungo die wi massa,
and go back to Guinea!”
I now thought we had given the captain
a sufficient lesson for his treachery and murderous
intentions. Had I, indeed, ever seriously intended
to leave him, the conduct of poor Mungo would have
awakened me to a sense of my duty. I ordered
Thompson, who was steering the boat, to put the helm
a-starboard, and lay her alongside again. No
sooner was this command given, than three or four of
the men jumped up in a menacing attitude, and swore
that they would not go back for him; that he was the
cause of all their sufferings; and that if I chose
to share his fate, I might, but into the boat he should
not come. One of them, more daring than the rest,
attempted to take the tiller out of Thompson’s
hand; but the trusty seaman seized him by the collar,
and in an instant threw him overboard. The other
men were coming aft to avenge this treatment of their
leader; but I drew my sword, and pointing it at the
breast of the nearest mutineer, desired him, on pain
of instant death, to return to his seat. He had
heard my character, and knew that I was not to be
trifled with.
A mutineer is easily subdued with
common firmness. He obeyed, but was very sullen,
and I heard many mutinous expressions among the men.
One of them said that I was not their officer that
I did not belong to the frigate.
“That,” I replied, “is
a case of which I shall not allow you to be the judges.
I hold in my pocket a commission from the King’s
Lord High Admiral, or the commissioners for executing
that duty. Your captain, and mine also, holds
a similar commission. Under this authority I
act. Let me see the man that dares dispute it I
will hang him at the yard-arm of the wreck before
she goes down;” and, looking at the man whom
Thompson had thrown overboard, and who still held by
the gunwale of the boat, without daring to get in,
I asked him if he would obey me or not? He replied
that he would, and hoped I would forgive him.
I said that my forgiveness would depend entirely on
the conduct of himself and the others; that he must
recollect that if our own ship, or any other man-of-war,
picked us up, he was liable, with three or four more,
to be hanged for mutiny; and that nothing but his and
their future obedience could save them from that punishment,
whenever we reached a port.
This harangue had a very tranquillising
effect. The offenders all begged pardon, and
assured me they would deserve my forgiveness by their
future submission.
All this passed at some little distance
from the wreck, but within hearing; and while it was
going on, the wind, which had been fair when we put
off, gradually died away, and blew faintly from the
south-west, directly towards the sinking wreck.
I took advantage of this circumstance to read them
a lecture. When I had subdued them, and worked
a little on their feelings, I said I never knew any
good come of cruelty: whenever a ship or a boat
had left a man behind who might have been saved, that
disaster or destruction had invariably attended those
who had so cruelly acted; that I was quite sure we
never should escape from this danger, if we did not
show mercy to our fellow-creatures. “God,”
said I, “has shown mercy to us, in giving us
this excellent boat, to save us in our imminent danger;
and He seems to say to us now, ’Go back to the
wreck, and rescue your fellow-sufferer.’
The wind blows directly towards her, and is foul for
the point in which we intend to steer; hasten, then,”
pursued I, “obey the Divine will; do your duty,
and trust in God. I shall then be proud to command
you, and have no doubt of bringing you safe into port.”
This was the “pliant hour;”
they sprang upon their oars, and pulled back to the
wreck with alacrity. The poor captain, who had
witnessed all that passed, watched the progress of
his cause with deep anxiety. No sooner did the
boat touch the ship, than he leaped into her, fell
down on his knees, and thanked God aloud for his deliverance.
He then fell on my neck, embraced me, kissed my cheek,
and wept like a girl. The sailors, meanwhile,
who never bear malice long, good-naturedly jumped
up, and assisted him in getting his little articles
into the boat; and as Mungo followed his master, shook
hands with him all round, and swore he should be a
black prince when he went back to Guinea. We
also took in one or two more little articles of general
use, which had been forgotten in our former hurry.
We now shoved off for the last time;
and had not proceeded more than two hundred yards
from the ship, when she gave a heavy lurch on one
side, recovered it, and rolled as deep on the other;
then, as if endued with life and instinct, gave, a
pitch, and went down, head foremost, into the fathomless
deep. We had scarcely time to behold this awful
scene, when the wind again sprang up fair, from its
old quarter, the east.
“There,” said I, “Heaven
has declared itself in your favour already. You
have got your fair wind again.”
We thanked God for this; and having
set our sail, I shaped my course for Cape St Thomas,
and we went to our frugal dinner with cheerful and
grateful hearts.
The weather was fine the
sea tolerably smooth and as we had plenty
of provisions and water, we did not suffer much, except
from an apprehension of a change of wind, and the
knowledge of our precarious situation. On the
fifth day after leaving the wreck we discovered land
at a great distance. I knew it to be the island
of Trinidad and the rocks of Martin Vas. This
island, which lies in latitude twenty degrees south,
and longitude thirty degrees west, is not to be confounded
with the island of the same name on the coast of Terra
Firma, in the West Indies, and now a British colony.
On consulting Horseberg, which I had
in the boat, I found that the island which we were
now approaching was formerly inhabited by the Portuguese,
but long since abandoned. I continued steering
towards it during the night, until we heard the breakers
roaring against the rocks, when I hove-to, to windward
of the land, till daylight.
The morning presented to our view
a precipitous and rugged iron-bound coast, with high
and pointed rocks, frowning defiance over the unappeaseable
and furious waves which broke incessantly at their
feet, and recoiled to repeat the blow. Thus for
ages had they been employed, and thus for ages will
they continue, without making any impression visible
to the eye of man. To land was impossible on the
part of the coast now under our inspection, and we
coasted along, in hopes of finding some haven into
which we might haul our boat, and secure her.
The island appeared to be about nine miles long, evidently
of volcanic formation, an assemblage of rocky mountains
towering several hundred feet above the level of the
sea. It was barren, except at the summit of the
hills, where some trees formed a coronet, at once beautiful
and refreshing, but tantalising to look at, as they
appeared utterly inaccessible; and even supposing
I could have discovered a landing-place, I was in
great doubt whether I should have availed myself of
it, as the island appeared to produce nothing which
could have added to our comfort, while delay would
only have uselessly consumed our provisions.
There did not appear to be a living creature on the
island, and the danger of approaching to find a landing-place
was most imminent.
This unpromising appearance induced
me to propose that we should continue our course to
Rio Janeiro. The men were of another opinion.
They said they had been too long afloat, cooped up,
and that they should prefer remaining on the island
to risking their lives any longer, in so frail a boat,
on the wide ocean. We were still debating, when
we came to a small spot of sand, on which we discovered
two wild hogs, which we conjectured had come down
to feed on the shell fish; this decided them, and
I consented to run to leeward of the island, and seek
for a landing-place. We sounded the west end,
following the remarks of Horseberg, and ran for the
cove of the Nine-Pin Rock. As we opened it, a
scene of grandeur presented itself, which we had never
met with before, and which in its kind is probably
unrivalled in nature. An enormous rock rose,
nearly perpendicularly, out of the sea, to the height
of nine hundred or one thousand feet. It was as
narrow at the base as it was at the top, and was formed
exactly in the shape of the nine-pin, from which,
it derives its name. The sides appeared smooth
and even to the top, which was covered with verdure,
and was so far above us that the sea birds, which
in myriads screamed around it, were scarcely visible
two-thirds of the way up. The sea beat violently
against its base the feathered tribe, in
endless variety, had been for ages the undisturbed
tenants of this natural monument; all its jutting
points and little projections were covered with their
white dung, and it seemed to me a wonderful effort
of Nature, which had placed this mass in the position
which it held, in spite of the utmost efforts of the
winds and waves of the wide ocean.
Another curious phenomenon appeared
at the other end of the cove. The lava had poured
down into the sea, and formed a stratum; a second
river of fused rock had poured again over the first,
and had cooled so rapidly as to hang suspended, not
having joined the former strata, but leaving a vacuum
between for the water to fill up. The sea dashed
violently between the two beds, and spouted magnificently
through holes in the upper bed of lava to the height
of sixty feet, resembling much the spouting of a whale,
but with a noise and force infinitely greater.
The sound indeed was tremendous, hollow, and awful.
I could not help mentally adoring the works of the
Creator, and my heart sunk within me at my own insignificance,
folly, and wickedness.
As we were now running along the shore,
looking for our landing-place, and just going to take
in the sail, the American captain, who sat close to
the man at the helm, seemed attentively watching something
on the larboard bow of the boat. In an instant
he exclaimed, “Put your helm, my good fellow,
port-hard.” These words he accompanied with
a push of the helm so violent, as almost to throw
the man overboard who sat on the larboard quarter.
At the same moment, a heavy sea lifted the boat, and
sent her many yards beyond, and to the right of a
pointed rock, just flush or even with the water, which
had escaped our notice, and which none suspected but
the American captain (for these rocks do not show
breakers every minute, if they did they would be easily
avoided). On this we should most certainly have
been dashed to pieces, had not the danger been seen
and avoided by the sudden and skilful motion of the
helm; one moment more, and one foot nearer, and we
were gone.
“Merciful God!” said I,
“to what fate am I reserved at last? How
can I be sufficiently thankful for so much goodness?”
I thanked the American for his attention told
my men how much we were indebted to him, and how amply
he had repaid our kindness in taking him off the wreck.
“Ah, lieutenant,” said
the poor man, “it is a small turn I’ve
done you for the kindness you have shown to me.”
The water was very deep, the rocks
being steep; so, we lowered our sail, and getting
our oars out, pulled in to look for a landing.
At the farther end of the cove, we discovered the
wreck of a vessel lying on the beach. She was
broken in two, and appeared to be copper-bottomed.
This increased the eagerness of the men to land; we
rowed close to the shore, but found that the boat would
be dashed to pieces if we attempted it. The midshipman
proposed that one of us should swim on shore, and,
by ascending a hill, discover a place to lay the boat
in. This I agreed to; and the quarter-master immediately
threw off his clothes. I made a lead-line fast
to him under his arms, that we might pull him in if
we found him exhausted. He went over the surf
with great ease, until he came to the breakers on the
beach, through which he could not force his way; for
the moment he touched the ground with his foot, the
recoil of the sea, and what is called by sailors the
undertow, carried him back again, and left him in the
rear of the last wave.
Three times the brave fellow made
the attempt, and with the same result. At last
he sunk, and we pulled him in very nearly dead.
We, however, restored him by care and attention, and
he went again to his usual duty. The midshipman
now proposed that he should try to swim through the
surf without the line, for that alone had impeded the
progress of the quarter-master; this was true, but
I would not allow him to run the risk, and we pulled
along shore, until we came to a rock on which the
surf beat very high, and which we avoided in consequence.
This rock we discovered to be detached from the main;
and within it, to our great joy, we saw smooth water;
we pulled in, and succeeded in landing without much
difficulty, and having secured our boat to a grapnel,
and left two trusty men in charge of her, I proceeded
with the rest to explore the cove; our attention was
naturally first directed to the wreck which we had
passed in the boat, and, after a quarter of an hour’s
scrambling over huge fragments of broken rocks, which
had been detached from the sides of the hill, and
encumbered the beach, we arrived at the spot.
The wreck proved to be a beautiful
copper-bottomed schooner, of about a hundred and eighty
tons burthen. She had been dashed on shore with
great violence, and thrown many yards above the high-water
mark. Her masts and spars were lying in all directions
on the beach, which was strewed with her cargo.
This consisted of a variety of toys and hardware,
musical instruments, violins, flutes, fifes, and bird-organs.
Some few remains of books, which I picked up, were
French romances, with indelicate plates, and still
worse text. These proved the vessel to be French.
At a short distance from the wreck, on a rising knoll,
we found three or four huts, rudely constructed out
of the fragments; and, a little farther off, a succession
of graves, each surmounted with a cross. I examined
the huts, which contained some rude and simple relics
of human tenancy: a few benches and tables, composed
of boards roughly hewn out and nailed together; bones
of goats, and of the wild hog, with the remains of
burnt wood. But we could not discover any traces
of the name of the vessel or owner; nor were there
any names marked or cut on the boards, as might have
been expected, to show to whom the vessel belonged,
and what had become of the survivors.
This studied concealment of all information
led us to the most accurate knowledge of her port
of departure, her destination, and her object of trade.
Being on the south-west side of the island, with her
head lying to the north-east, she had, beyond all doubt,
been running from Rio Janeiro towards the coast of
Africa, and got on shore in the night. That she
was going to fetch a cargo of slaves was equally clear,
not only from the baubles with which she was freighted
but also from the interior fitting of the vessel,
and from a number of hand and leg shackles which we
found among the wreck, and which we knew were only
used for the purposes of confining and securing the
unhappy victims of this traffic.
We took up our quarters in the huts
for the night, and the next morning divided ourselves
into three parties, to explore the island. I
have before observed that we had muskets, but no powder,
and therefore stood little chance of killing any of
the goats or wild hogs, with which we found the island
abounded. One party sought the means of attaining
the highest summit of the island; another went along
the shore to the westward; while myself and two others
went to the eastward. We crossed several ravines,
with much difficulty, until we reached a long valley,
which seemed to intersect the island.
Here a wonderful and most melancholy
phenomenon arrested our attention. Thousands
and thousands of trees covered the valley, each of
them about thirty feet high; but every tree was dead,
and extended its leafless boughs to another a
forest of desolation, as if nature had at some particular
moment ceased to vegetate! There was no underwood
or grass. On the lowest of the dead boughs, the
gannets, and other sea birds, had built their nests
in numbers unaccountable. Their tameness, as
Cooper says, “was shocking to me.”
So unaccustomed did they seem to man, that the mothers,
brooding over their young, only opened their beaks,
in a menacing attitude at us, as we passed by them.
How to account satisfactorily for
the simultaneous destruction of this vast forest of
trees, was very difficult; there was no want of rich
earth for nourishment of the roots. The most probable
cause appeared to me, a sudden and continued eruption
of sulphuric effluvia from the volcano; or else, by
some unusually heavy gale of wind or hurricane, the
trees had been drenched with salt water to their roots.
One or the other of these causes must have produced
the effect. The philosopher, or the geologist,
must decide.
We had the consolation to know that
we should at least experience no want of food the
nests of the birds affording us a plentiful supply
of eggs, and young ones of every age; with these we
returned loaded to the cove. The party that had
gone to the westward, reported having seen some wild
hogs, but were unable to secure any of them; and those
who had attempted to ascend the mountain, returned
much fatigued, and one of their number missing.
They reported that they had gained the summit of the
mountain, where they had discovered a large plain,
skirted by a species of fern tree, from twelve to eighteen
feet high that on this plain they had seen
a herd of goats; and among them, could distinguish
one of enormous size, which appeared to be their leader.
He was as large as a pony; but all attempts to take
one of them were utterly fruitless. The man who
was missing had followed them farther than they had.
They waited some time for his return; but as he did
not come to them, they concluded he had taken some
other route to the cove. I did not quite like
this story, fearing some dreadful accident had befallen
the poor fellow, for whom we kept a watch, and had
a fire burning the whole night, which, like the former
one, we passed in the huts. We had an abundant
supply of fire-wood from the wreck, and a stream of
clear water ran close by our little village.
The next morning, a party was sent
in search of the man, and some were sent to fetch
a supply of young gannets for our dinner. The
latter brought back with them as many young birds
as would suffice for two or three days; but of the
three who went in quest of the missing man, only two
returned. They reported that they could gain no
tidings of him: that they had missed one of their
own number, who had, no doubt, gone in pursuit of
his shipmate.
This intelligence occasioned a great
deal of anxiety, and many surmises. The most
prevalent opinion seemed to be that there were wild
beasts on the island, and that our poor friends had
become a prey to them. I determined, the next
morning, to go in search of them myself, taking one
or two chosen men with me. I should have mentioned,
that when we left the sinking vessel, we had taken
out a poodle dog, that was on board first,
because I would not allow the poor animal to perish;
and, secondly, because we might, if we had no better
food, make a dinner of him. This was quite fair,
as charity begins at home.
This faithful animal became much attached
to me, from whom he invariably received his portion
of food. He never quitted me, nor followed any
one else; and he was my companion when I went on this
excursion.
We reached the summit of the first
mountain, whence we saw the goats browsing on the
second, and meant to go there in pursuit of the objects
of our anxious search. I was some yards in advance
of my companions, and the dog a little distance before
me, near the shelving part of a rock, terminating
in a precipice. The shelf I had to cross was
about six or seven feet wide, and ten or twelve long,
with a very little inclined plane towards the precipice,
so that I thought it perfectly safe. A small
rill of water trickled down from the rock above it,
and, losing itself among the moss and grass, fell over
the precipice below, which indeed was of a frightful
depth.
This causeway was to all appearance
safe, compared with many which we had passed, and
I was just going to step upon it, when my dog ran
before me, jumped on the fatal pass his
feet slipped from under him he fell, and
disappeared over the precipice! I started back I
heard a heavy squelch and a howl; another fainter succeeded,
and all was still. I advanced with the utmost
caution to the edge of the precipice, where I discovered
that the rill of water had nourished a short moss,
close and smooth as velvet, and so slippery as not
to admit of the lightest footstep; this accounted for
the sudden disappearance, and, as I concluded, the
inevitable death of my dog.
My first thoughts were those of gratitude
for my miraculous escape; my second unwillingly glanced
at the fate of my poor men, too probably lying lifeless
at the foot of this mountain. I stated my fears
to the two seamen who were with me, and who had just
come up. The whole bore too much the appearance
of truth to admit of a doubt. We descended the
ruins by a circuitous and winding way; and, after an
hour’s difficult and dangerous walk, we reached
the spot, where all our fears were too fully confirmed.
There lay the two dead bodies of our companions, and
that of my dog, all mangled in a shocking manner; both,
it would appear, had attempted to cross the shelf
in the same careless way which I was about to do,
when Providence interposed the dog in my behalf.
This singular dispensation was not
lost upon me; indeed, latterly, I had been in such
perils, and seen such hair-breadth escapes, that I
became quite an altered and reflecting character.
I returned to my men at the cove, thoughtful and melancholy;
I told them of what had happened; and, having a Prayer-book
with me in my trunk, I proposed to them that I should
read the evening prayers, and a thanksgiving for our
deliverance.
In this, the American captain, whose
name was Green, most heartily concurred. Indeed,
ever since this poor man had been received into the
boat, he had been a very different character to what
I had at first supposed him; he constantly refused
his allowance of spirits, giving it among the sailors;
he was silent and meditative; I often found him in
prayer, and on these occasions I never interrupted
him. At other times, he studied how he might
make himself most useful. He would patch and
mend the people’s clothes and shoes, or show
them how to do it for themselves. Whenever any
hard work was to be done, he was always the first
to begin, and the last to leave off; and to such a
degree did he carry his attention and kindness, that
we all began to love him, and to treat him with great
respect. He took charge of a watch when we were
at sea, and never closed his eyes during his hour
of duty.
Nor was this the effect of fear, or
the dread of ill-usage among so many Englishmen, whom
his errors had led into so much misfortune. He
very soon had an opportunity of proving that his altered
conduct was the effect of sorrow and repentance.
The next morning I sent a party round by the sea-shore,
with directions to walk up the valley and bury the
bodies of our unfortunate companions. The two
men who had accompanied me were of the number sent
on this service; when they returned, I pointed out
to them how disastrous our residence had been on this
fatal island, and how much better it had been for us
if we had continued our course to Rio Janeiro, which,
being only two hundred and fifty or two hundred and
sixty leagues distant, we should by that time nearly
have reached: that we were now expending the most
valuable part of our provisions, namely our
spirits and tobacco; while our boat, our only hope
and resource, was not even in safety, since a gale
of wind might destroy her. I therefore proposed
to make immediate preparations for our departure,
to which all unanimously agreed.
We divided the various occupations;
some went to fetch a sea stock of young birds, which
were killed and dressed to save our salt provisions;
others filled all our water-casks. Captain Green
superintended the rigging, sails, and oars of the boat,
and saw that every thing was complete in that department.
The spirits remaining were getting low, and Captain
Green, the midshipman, and myself, agreed to drink
none, but reserve it for pressing emergencies.
In three days after beginning our preparations, and
the seventh after our landing, we embarked, and after
being nearly swamped by the surf, once more hoisted
our sail on the wide waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
We were not destined, however, to
encounter many dangers this time, or to reach the
coast of South America: for we had not been many
hours at sea, when a vessel hove in sight; she proved
to be an American privateer brig, of fourteen guns
and one hundred and thirty men, bound on a cruise
off the Cape of Good Hope. As soon as she perceived
us, she bore down, and in half-an-hour we were safe
on board; when having bundled all our little stock
of goods on her decks, the boat was cut adrift.
My men were not well treated until they consented to
enter for the privateer, which, after much persuasion
and threats, they all did, except Thompson, contrary
to my strongest remonstrances, and urging every argument
in my power to dissuade them from such a fatal step.
I remonstrated with the captain of
the privateer, on what I deemed a violation of hospitality.
“You found me,” I said, “on the wide
ocean, in a frail boat, which some huge wave might
have overwhelmed in a moment, or some fish, in sport,
might have tossed in the air. You received me
and my people with all the kindness and friendship
which we could desire; but you mar it, by seducing
the men from their allegiance to their lawful sovereign,
inducing them to become rebels, and subjecting them
to a capital punishment whenever they may (as they
most probably will) fall into the hands of their own
government.”
The captain, who was an unpolished,
but sensible, clearheaded Yankee, replied that he
was sorry I should take any thing ill of him; that
no affront was meant to me; that he had nothing whatever
to do with my men, until they came voluntarily to
him, and entered for his vessel; that he could not
but admit, however, that they might have been persuaded
to take this step by some of his own people. “And,
now, Leftenant,” said he, “let me ask
you a question. Suppose you commanded a British
vessel, and ten or twelve of my men, if I was unlucky
enough to be taken by you, should volunteer for your
ship, and say they were natives of Newcastle, would
you refuse them? Besides, before we went to war
with you, you made no ceremony of taking men out of
our merchant-ships, and even out of our ships of war,
whenever you had an opportunity. Now, pray, where
is the difference between your conduct and ours?”
I replied, that it would not be very
easy, nor, if it were, would it answer any good purpose,
for us to discuss a question that had puzzled the
wisest heads, both in his country and mine for the
last twenty years; that my present business was a
case of its own, and must be considered abstractedly;
that the fortune of war had thrown me in his power,
and that he made a bad use of the temporary advantage
of his situation, by allowing my men, who, after all,
were poor, ignorant creatures, to be seduced from
their duty, to desert their flag, and commit high
treason, by which their lives were forfeited, and their
families rendered miserable; that whatever might have
been the conduct of his government or mine, whatever
line pursued by this or that captain, no precedent
could make wrong right; and I left it to himself (seeing
I had no other resource) to say, whether he was doing
as he would be done by?”
“As for that matter,”
said the captain, “we privateer’s-men don’t
trouble our heads much about it; we always take care
of Number One; and if your men choose to say they
are natives of Boston, and will enter for my ship,
I must take them. Why,” continued he, “there
is your best man, Thompson; I’d lay a demijohn
of old Jamaica rum that he is a true-blooded Yankee,
and if he was to speak his mind, would sooner fight
under the stripes than the Union.”
“D n the
dog that says yon of Jock Thompson,” replied
the Caledonian, who stood by. “I never
deserted my colours yet, and I don’t think I
ever shall. There is only one piece of advice
I would wish to give to you and your officers, captain.
I am a civil spoken man, and never injured any soul
breathing, except in the way of fair fighting; but
if either you, or any of your crew, offer to bribe
me, or in any way to make me turn my back on my king
and country, I’ll lay him on his back as flat
as a flounder, if I am able, and if I am not able,
I’ll try for it.”
“That’s well spoken,”
said the captain, “and I honour you for it.
You may rely on it that I shall never tempt you, and
if any of mine do it, they must take their chance.”
Captain Green heard all this conversation;
he took no part in it, but walked the deck in his
usual pensive manner. When the captain of the
privateer went below to work his reckoning, this unhappy
man entered into conversation with me he began by remarking
“What a noble specimen of a
British sailor you have with you.”
“Yes,” I replied, “he
is one of the right sort he comes from the
land where the education of the poor contributes to
the security of the rich; where a man is never thought
the worse of for reading his Bible, and where the
generality of the lower orders are brought up in the
honest simplicity of primitive Christians.”
“I guess,” said Green,
“that you have not many such in your navy.”
“More than you would suppose,”
I replied; “and what will astonish you is, that
though they are impressed, they seldom, if ever, desert;
and yet they are retained on much lower wages than
those they were taken from, or could obtain; but they
have a high sense of moral and religious feeling,
which keeps them to their duty.
“They must needs be discontented
for all that,” said Green.
“Not necessarily so,”
said I: “they derive many advantages from
being in the navy, which they could not have in other
employments. They have pensions for long services
or wounds, are always taken care of in their old age,
and their widows and children have much favour shown
them, by the government, as well as by other public
bodies and wealthy individuals. But we must finish
this discussion another time,” continued I,
“for I perceive the dinner is going into the
cabin.”
I received from the captain of the
privateer every mark of respect and kindness that
his means would allow. Much of this I owed to
Green, and the black man Mungo, both of whom had represented
my conduct in saving the life of him who had endangered
mine and that of all my party. Green’s
gratitude knew no bounds he watched me night
and day, as a mother would watch a darling child;
he anticipated any want or wish I could have, and
was never happy until it was gratified. The seamen
on board the vessel were all equally kind and attentive
to me, so highly did they appreciate the act of saving
the life of their countryman, and exposing my own
in quelling a mutiny.
We cruised to the southward of the
Cape, and made one or two captures; but they were
of little consequence. One of them, being a trader
from Mozambique, was destroyed; the other, a slaver
from Madagascar, the captain knew not what to do with.
He therefore took out eight or ten of the stoutest
male negroes, to assist in working his vessel, and
then let the prize go.