I did not myself touch on this island,
but I met in Chili an American Captain just returned
from it, and in Tahaiti one of the earliest mothers
of its population, who spoke English well enough to
carry on a conversation. The information jointly
obtained from both these persons, will not, I think,
be unwelcome to my readers; and those who are unacquainted
with the rise of this interesting colony, will perhaps
find pleasure in a brief account of it.
The English government appreciating
the usefulness of the bread-fruit tree, and desirous
of introducing it into the West-Indian colonies, in
the year 1787, commissioned the ship Bounty, under
the command of Lieutenant Bligh, who had already served
as master under Captain Cook, to convey a cargo of
these young trees from the South Sea Islands, to the
West Indies. Forty-six men formed the ship’s
complement.
After an excessively difficult voyage,
during which he had vainly endeavoured, for thirty
days, to double Cape Horn, and at length, yielding
to necessity, had effected his passage by the Cape
of Good Hope, he reached Tahaiti in safety in October
1788.
Although the good-natured Tahaitians
seem to have given great assistance, five months were
occupied in lading the vessel; perhaps because Lieutenant
Bligh and his crew found their station very agreeable.
During this period the crew lived in the greatest harmony
with the natives, especially the women; and this may
probably afford a key to the subsequent fate of Bligh.
On the fourth of April 1789, he sailed
from Tahaiti, touched at one of the Friendly Islands
to replace such of the young plants as had been destroyed,
and on the 27th of the same month continued his course,
cheered by the conviction of his ability to execute
his commission, and to become the benefactor of the
West Indies, by extending to them one of the greatest
blessings bestowed by nature on her favourite children.
But it was otherwise written in the
book of Fate. The remorseless severity with which
he treated those under his command, the
insults he offered them, having subjected even his
mate, Christian Fletcher, to corporal chastisement,
combined with the recollection of the pleasant time
spent in Tahaiti, produced a conspiracy of some of
the crew, headed by Fletcher, to seize on the ship,
remove from it the commander and his adherents, and,
renouncing England for ever, to return to Tahaiti,
and spend there the remainder of their lives in ease
and enjoyment.
The conspirators kept their plan so
profoundly secret, that neither Bligh nor any of those
who remained faithful to him, imbibed the least suspicion
of the criminal project, which was put in execution
at sunrise on the 28th of April. The mate Christian,
who then commanded the watch, entered, with two petty
officers and a sailor, the cabin of Lieutenant Bligh,
whom they found tranquilly sleeping. They fell
on him, bound his hands behind his back, and threatened
him with instant death if he uttered a sound, or offered
the smallest resistance. Bligh, perfectly undaunted,
endeavoured to grasp his weapons, and, on finding himself
overpowered, called aloud for help; but the mutineers
having, at the same moment, seized on all who were
strangers to the plot, the unfortunate Commander had
no resource but submission to his fate. He was
carried on deck with no other covering than his shirt,
and there found his faithful followers, nineteen in
number, bound in a similar manner.
The long-boat was now lowered; Bligh,
in the mean time, attempting to recall the mutineers
to their duty by unavailing remonstrances, to which
renewed menaces of immediate death were the only answers.
When the boat was ready, and the officers
and sailors had been separately unbound and lowered
into it, Christian addressed himself to Bligh:
“Now, Captain, your officers and crew are ready;
it is time for you to follow; any opposition will
cost your life.” He was then liberated,
and put into the boat with his companions in misfortune,
amidst the bitterest exécrations for his past
tyranny, from the mutineers. After some provisions
had been furnished to the boat, and a compass, quadrant,
and a couple of old sabres added, at the entreaty of
its occupants, the mutineers set their sails and abandoned
their former comrades to their fate, with shouts of
“Down with Captain Bligh! Hurrah for O
Tahaiti!”
A regular narrative of what afterwards
befell these unfortunate outcasts would not be strictly
in place here; but such of my readers as are yet unacquainted
with the facts, may learn with interest, that though
abandoned on the vast ocean, in an open boat only twenty-three
feet long, six feet nine inches broad, and two feet
nine inches deep, very scantily provisioned, and destitute
of a chart, they ultimately succeeded, by unparalleled
efforts, in reaching a place of safety. The boat
being, at the period of its desertion, within about
thirty miles of the island of Tofoa, it was determined
to land there, and take in a store of provisions,
then proceed to Tongatabu, and solicit permission
from the King of the Friendly Islands to put their
boat into a practicable condition for hazarding a
voyage to India.
They effected their landing at Tofoa,
and secured the boat to the strand, but were presently
attacked by a multitude of savages, who saluted the
defenceless strangers with showers of stones, and would
soon have overpowered them, had not an heroic petty-officer,
named Norton, resolved to sacrifice himself for the
safety of his companions. He sprang on shore,
loosened the iron chain which fastened the boat, and
had only time to exclaim, Fly, fly! ere he was seized
and murdered by the savages.
This melancholy occurrence discouraged
the fugitives from touching at Tongatabu, or any other
island inhabited by savages. All now applied to
Bligh, with the unanimous entreaty that he would conduct
them to some port in the possession of Europeans;
and took a solemn oath of the most unconditional obedience
to him in the execution of this design. In compliance
with their wishes, Bligh adopted the daring resolution
of passing through the Torres Straits to the island
of Timor, belonging to the Dutch. The distance
was about four thousand miles; it was therefore indispensable
to observe the most rigid economy in distributing the
provisions. The whole crew submitted, without
murmuring, to the daily allowance of an ounce of biscuit,
and the eighth part of a bottle of water. On
the following day a storm arose, which so filled the
boat with water, that the most unremitting exertions
were necessary to prevent her foundering. By
a second storm, accompanied with violent rain, the
small remaining provision of biscuit was transformed
into a sort of paste, which now constituted their
only food, and even of this they were henceforward
obliged to partake yet more sparingly, as the voyage
proved of longer duration than was at first calculated.
Thus utterly exhausted by hunger,
thirst, fatigue, wet, the burning rays of the sun,
and sickness arising from such complicated sufferings,
the unfortunate wanderers, after a voyage of thirty-two
days, had the indescribable joy of beholding the coast
of New Zealand, and entering the Torres Straits.
They landed on a little uninhabited island near the
coast, where they found fine flavoured fruits, oysters,
and the most delicious water, all in abundance.
Refreshed by wholesome nourishment,
they reposed with rapture for one night on terra
firma; but the rising sun discovered new perils.
The savages, armed with spears, had assembled on the
opposite coast, and threatened them with a powerful
irruption, which they thought it prudent to avoid,
by a precipitate retreat from the island.
They sailed through the channel with
fine weather, and a tranquil sea. The natives
beckoned from the shore with green boughs, inviting
them to land; but Bligh would not trust the intentions
of this little hideous negro race.
Some other uninhabited islands served
them as resting-places, and for recruiting their stores
with fresh water and fruits. Reanimated by the
hope of soon reaching the island of Timor and the term
of their sufferings, the best spirits now prevailed
among them.
But the object of their wishes was
still far distant. When the boat had passed the
Torres Straits, and regained the open sea, all the
inconveniences and misfortunes to which they had before
been subjected, returned with redoubled severity.
The whole crew was sick; some were ready to expire;
almost all had resigned the hope of ever again finding
safety in port, and besought Heaven only for deliverance
from their accumulated sufferings by a speedy death.
Bligh, though himself ill, did his utmost to inspire
his men with courage, assuring them that they were
approaching land.
The promise did not fail. On
the morning of the 12th of June, at three o’clock,
the high mountains of the island of Timor rose in smiling
majesty before them. This sight operated like
an electric shock on the exhausted sufferers; they
raised their hands to Heaven, and never certainly
were thanksgivings more sincere. Two more days
brought them to the Dutch settlement of Cupang, where
the Governor received them with the utmost benevolence.
The whole party, except one only, whose strength was
entirely worn out, soon recovered their health, and
found means of reaching England in March 1790.
It might have been supposed, that
the terrible lesson Bligh had received would have
taught him caution for the future; but it made little
impression on his character. As commander of a
ship of the line, his severity again provoked a mutiny;
and when afterwards Governor of New South Wales, an
insurrection was excited from the same excess of discipline.
To return from this digression to
the history of the colonization of Pitcairn Island.
The mutineers of the Bounty, after the success of their
plot, unanimously elected Christian for their Captain,
and sailed for Tahaiti. On their way thither,
they passed the small hilly, well peopled island of
Tabuai, seen in 1777 by Cook, and formed the resolution
of settling there. With much difficulty they
brought the ship into harbour, through numerous coral
reefs. They were received in the most friendly
manner by the natives, who only showed symptoms of
uneasiness when they saw the new comers preparing
to erect a fortress on a point of land near the harbour;
even in this obnoxious undertaking, however, they assisted;
but harmony was not of much longer continuance.
The Europeans, confident in the superiority they derived
from their weapons, soon became insolent, and especially
irritated the islanders by the abduction of their
women.
A sudden attack was made on Christian
and his crew, who gained a height, where they defended
themselves, and so effectually, that none of the party
was killed, and but one man wounded; while the fire
of their muskets produced great havoc among the savages.
Though conquerors in this instance, they however found
it advisable to quit Tabuai, and to sail once more
for Tahaiti. During the voyage thither, a deep
melancholy seized the mind of Christian; remorse,
and dark forebodings of the future, haunted him incessantly;
he shut himself up in his cabin, seldom appeared,
and spoke but little.
When the Bounty again cast anchor
before Tahaiti, the natives crowded to the shore,
rejoicing in the speedy return of their friends, but
were much surprised at missing the captain and a great
part of the crew. Christian persuaded them that
Captain Bligh and the other men had made a settlement
on Tabuai, of which island the captain had become king,
but that he himself, and those who accompanied him,
preferred returning to Tahaiti, where among their
kind friends, they wished to pass the remainder of
their days. These innocent people gave implicit
credence to his story, and heartily rejoiced in the
prospect of their friends’ continued residence
among them. Christian’s private intention,
however, was to establish a colony on some unknown
and uninhabited island, since it was easy to forsee,
that the criminals would be first sought in Tahaiti,
whenever the tidings of their proceedings should reach
the English government. Being dissatisfied with
some of his companions, or unable to obtain their
concurrence in his views, he concerted his project
with eight only of the crew, and under the strictest
injunctions of secrecy. Thus arose a second conspiracy
among the accomplices in guilt.
Christian and the parties to his new
plot, found an opportunity of engaging the rest of
the crew at a distance, while they weighed anchor
and stood out to sea, with eight Tahaitians and ten
women, whom they had enticed to accompany them.
After a search of some weeks in those seas, they accidentally
lighted upon Pitcairn Island, discovered by Carteret
in the year 1767. Its extent is inconsiderable,
but they found it uninhabited, and the soil fruitful,
although high and rocky. Christian and his companions
examined it closely, and, charmed with its luxuriant
vegetation, resolved here to conceal themselves for
ever from the world, hoping by this means to escape
the punishment they so well merited.
All their endeavours to discover a
harbour capable of admitting the Bounty, proving fruitless,
they determined to place themselves under the lee
of the island, save the cargo, and then destroy the
ship, lest its appearance might betray them to vessels
passing by.
This resolution was carried into effect,
the cargo was brought quickly ashore, and the ship
burnt.
At first the colony suffered from
a scarcity of provisions, as the island produced neither
bread-fruit nor cocoa-trees; they, however, contented
themselves with a temporary subsistence on roots and
fish, relying for the future improvement of their
supplies on the trees destined for the West Indies,
and other plants brought from Tahaiti; which had all
been landed uninjured, and immediately planted.
Time indeed was required before the bread-fruit and
cocoa-trees would bear, but some sweet potatoes, yams,
taro-roots, and others, yielded in the following year
an ample harvest.
Unanimity and concord appeared firmly
established among the colonists, who, by common consent,
elected Christian as their head. Pretty little
huts, and diligently cultivated fields of taro, yam,
and potatoes, soon adorned the wilderness. After
the lapse of three years, Christian became the father
of a son, whom he named Friday Fletcher October Christian;
but the infant’s birth made its father a widower.
Strongly inclined to a second marriage, and all the
women being already provided with husbands, he seduced
a wife from one of the Tahaitians, who, incensed at
this outrage, watched an opportunity when Christian
was at work on his plantation, attacked, and murdered
him. Intelligence of this deed spreading quickly
through the colony, produced instant retribution from
the musket of an Englishman.
Long inflamed by jealousy, at the
decided preference shown by their females for the
strangers, the passions of the Tahaitians were exasperated
beyond endurance, by this act of retaliation; they
made a sudden attack by night on the English, and
murdered all, except one man named Adams, who, though
severely wounded, contrived to escape into the forest,
and elude the pursuit of the murderers. The women
rendered desperate by the massacre of their lovers,
and eager for revenge, found means to obtain it the
very next night. They overpowered the Tahaitians
in their sleep, and murdered them to a man!
As soon as it was light in the morning,
these blood-stained Megaeras sought for the corpses
of their beloved Englishmen, and perceiving that Adams
was missing, conjectured that he might be concealed
and safe; although traces of blood were visible on
the ground of his hut. They accordingly searched
the forest in every direction, and at last found him
in a most miserable condition. They bound his
wounds, carried him into a hut, and by their united
care and the application of healing herbs, Adams,
being young and vigorous, soon recovered his health.
The affections of all the women now concentrated themselves
in this one object. He became their common chief
and husband, to whom they willingly promised obedience;
and, according to his testimony, jealousy never embittered
their lives.
Till the year 1803, consequently during
fourteen years, Adams remained with his progeny concealed
from the world. In this year the English Captain
Falgier, sailing from Canton to Chili, landed at Pitcairn’s
Island, where they with astonishment encountered a
people speaking English, having the most intimate
knowledge of European customs, and betraying their
origin in their features and complexion. Adams
himself explained to him the enigma. Falgier
communicated the information he had received to the
English Government, but represented the situation of
the island so erroneously, that it passed for a new
discovery, till the English frigate Breton, in the
year 1814, on her voyage from the Marquesas to the
coast of Chili, also touched at the Pitcairn Island,
which from the account of its discoverer Carteret,
they considered uninhabited. The crew were therefore
much surprised at the sight of cultivated fields,
and ornamental cottages; and also of men assembled
on the shore making friendly signals and inviting
them to land. Some were even seen skilfully guiding
their little canoes through the surf, and approaching
the frigate.
The sailors were about to address
them in the language of the South Sea Islands, when
their surprise was not a little increased by hearing
the name of the ship and her captain enquired for,
in pure English. The Captain himself replied
to these questions, and the conversation becoming
interesting, invited his new acquaintances on board;
they immediately complied, and even when the whole
crew surrounded them and overwhelmed them with questions,
betrayed no symptom of the timidity universal among
the South Sea islanders.
The young man who had first mounted
the vessel, saluted the Captain with the greatest
propriety, and enquired whether he had known in England
a man of the name of William Bligh. This suddenly
threw a light on the mystery of the Pitcairn islanders;
and they were in return asked if there was a man on
the island named Christian. The answer was “No,
he has been long dead, but his son is in the boat
which is coming alongside.” This placed
the origin of the colony beyond all doubt.
The crew of the Breton were further
informed, that the whole population of the island
consisted of forty-eight persons that the
men were not allowed to marry before their twentieth
year, and must only have one wife that
Adams had instructed them in the Christian religion that
their general language was English, but that they also
understood the Tahaitian, and that they acknowledged
the King of England as their sovereign. On being
asked if they did not wish to go to England with the
frigate, they answered “No: we are married
and have children.”
The sight of a ship of war and its
crew, they said, was no novelty to them; and they
mentioned Captain Falgier’s visit to their island.
A little black poodle dog which they suddenly caught
sight of, put them all to flight. “That
is certainly a dog,” they exclaimed, as they
retreated; “we have never seen one, but we know
that it will bite.” A little observation,
however, convinced them of the animal’s good-nature,
and they were soon induced to play fearlessly with
him. Being conducted into the cabin, they were
there entertained with a breakfast, at which they
behaved very modestly, and showed in their conversation
much natural understanding. They said a grace
before eating, and then partook with a good appetite
of the provision set before them.
With much difficulty the Captain effected
a landing. A pleasant path winding among groves
of cocoa and bread-fruit trees, led him to a very
pretty, well situated little village, whose houses,
though small, were convenient and beautifully clean.
One of Adams’s daughters, a
young and very attractive looking girl, received the
guests, and conducted them to her father, a man of
sixty, but still of very vigorous appearance.
The conversation naturally fell on
Christian’s mutiny, in which Adams maintained
he had taken no part, having been wholly unacquainted
with the design till the moment of its execution.
He spoke with abhorrence of the manner in which Captain
Bligh and his officers and men had been treated.
The Captain proposed to Adams to accompany
him back to England; but the whole colony assembling
round him, with tears in their eyes, besought him
not to take their good father from them. The scene
affected even the Englishmen.
The Pitcairn islanders are of very
pleasing exterior; they have black hair and beautiful
teeth. The men are slender, and their height five
feet ten inches and upwards. The dress of both
sexes consists of a mantle like the Chilian pancho,
and they wear hats made of reeds adorned with feathers.
They still possess a great quantity of old clothes
from the ship Bounty, but, with better taste than
their maternal ancestors the Tahaitians, they never
wear them. The island has a beautiful appearance,
and is said to be extremely fruitful. Wild boars
are found in the interior.
Seven years after this visit of the
Breton, the American merchant-ship Eagle, whose Captain
I met in Chili, touched on Pitcairn Island. He
found the population already increased to a hundred
persons, and was delighted with the order and good
government of the little colony. Adams reigned
as a patriarch king amongst them, and, as sovereign
arbitrator, settled all disputes, no one presuming
to object to his decision. Every family possessed
a portion of land; the fields were measured off from
each other, industriously cultivated, and yielding
abundant crops of yams and sweet potatoes. On
Sundays, the whole population assembled at Adams’s
house, when he read the Bible to them, exhorted them
to concord and good conduct, and took pains to confirm
their virtuous dispositions.
Every evening at sunset, when after
the heat of the day the inhabitants of this delightful
climate are revived by the refreshing coolness of the
air, the young people formed a semicircle round their
beloved father, while he communicated to them some
knowledge of the manners and history of his native
country, its connections with other nations, and the
arts, inventions, and customs of the European world.
Adams’s knowledge is probably not very extensive,
but it has sufficed to enable him to train up his
numerous family in habits and information which fit
them for the easy acquisition of all the arts of civilization.
His attentive auditory have accurately
retained his instructions, and converse with wonderful
facility on the characteristics and customs of different
nations.
Abusive words are strictly prohibited;
and some of the islanders, perfectly astonished at
hearing a sailor on board the American vessel which
visited them swear at another, enquired of the Captain
whether such expressions were permitted in his country.
The Captain was enchanted with the
conduct and character of this amiable people; and
ascribed their virtues to the instructions and example
of their patriarch. This good old man, however,
expressed much anxiety concerning the future.
“I cannot,” said he, “live much longer, and
who shall prosecute the work I have begun? My
children are not yet so firmly established, but that
they are liable to fall into error. They require
the guidance of an intelligent virtuous man from some
civilized nation.”
At Tahaiti, as already stated, I met
with one of Adams’s wives, who had arrived there
a short time before in an European ship, and from her
I learnt many of the particulars here related.
She spoke tolerably good English, but with a foreign
accent. This old woman had been induced, by that
longing for our native home which acts so powerfully
upon the human mind, to return to the land of her
birth, where she intended to have closed her life,
but she soon changed her mind. The Tahaitians,
she assured me, were by no means so virtuous as the
natives of the little Paradise to which she was now
all impatience to return. She had a very high
opinion of her Adams, and maintained that no man in
the world was worthy of comparison with him.
She still spoke with vehement indignation of the murder
of the English by her countrymen, and boasted of the
vengeance she had taken.
Adams, who was now very aged and feeble,
had proposed to the Missionaries to send a Tahaitian
as his successor; and fearing that the population
of his island might exceed the means of subsistence
which their quantity of arable land afforded, he was
desirous of settling some of his families in Tahaiti.
With his first wish the Missionaries
will certainly comply as a means of extending their
dominion over Pitcairn Island also. May Adams’s
paternal government never be exchanged for despotism,
nor his practical lessons of piety be forgotten in
empty forms of prayer.
In the year 1791, the English frigate
Pandora was sent, under the command of Captain Edwards,
to the South Sea in pursuit of the mutineers against
Bligh. Those who had remained in Tahaiti were
found and carried back to England, where they were
condemned to death according to the laws; the royal
mercy was extended to a few only, the rest suffered
the full penalty of their crime.