It was five or six months after this
before they heard any more of the savages, in which
time our men were in hopes they had either forgot
their former bad luck, or given over hopes of better;
when, on a sudden, they were invaded with a most formidable
fleet of no less than eight-and-twenty canoes, full
of savages, armed with bows and arrows, great clubs,
wooden swords, and such like engines of war; and they
brought such numbers with them, that, in short, it
put all our people into the utmost consternation.
As they came on shore in the evening,
and at the easternmost side of the island, our men
had that night to consult and consider what to do.
In the first place, knowing that their being entirely
concealed was their only safety before and would be
much more so now, while the number of their enemies
would be so great, they resolved, first of all, to
take down the huts which were built for the two Englishmen,
and drive away their goats to the old cave; because
they supposed the savages would go directly thither,
as soon as it was day, to play the old game over again,
though they did not now land within two leagues of
it. In the next place, they drove away all the
flocks of goats they had at the old bower, as I called
it, which belonged to the Spaniards; and, in short,
left as little appearance of inhabitants anywhere
as was possible; and the next morning early they posted
themselves, with all their force, at the plantation
of the two men, to wait for their coming. As
they guessed, so it happened: these new invaders,
leaving their canoes at the east end of the island,
came ranging along the shore, directly towards the
place, to the number of two hundred and fifty, as
near as our men could judge. Our army was but
small indeed; but, that which was worse, they had
not arms for all their number. The whole account,
it seems, stood thus: first, as to men, seventeen
Spaniards, five Englishmen, old Friday, the three slaves
taken with the women, who proved very faithful, and
three other slaves, who lived with the Spaniards.
To arm these, they had eleven muskets, five pistols,
three fowling-pieces, five muskets or fowling-pieces
which were taken by me from the mutinous seamen whom
I reduced, two swords, and three old halberds.
To their slaves they did not give
either musket or fusee; but they had each a halberd,
or a long staff, like a quarter-staff, with a great
spike of iron fastened into each end of it, and by
his side a hatchet; also every one of our men had
a hatchet. Two of the women could not be prevailed
upon but they would come into the fight, and they
had bows and arrows, which the Spaniards had taken
from the savages when the first action happened, which
I have spoken of, where the Indians fought with one
another; and the women had hatchets too.
The chief Spaniard, whom I described
so often, commanded the whole; and Will Atkins, who,
though a dreadful fellow for wickedness, was a most
daring, bold fellow, commanded under him. The
savages came forward like lions; and our men, which
was the worst of their fate, had no advantage in their
situation; only that Will Atkins, who now proved a
most useful fellow, with six men, was planted just
behind a small thicket of bushes as an advanced guard,
with orders to let the first of them pass by and then
fire into the middle of them, and as soon as he had
fired, to make his retreat as nimbly as he could round
a part of the wood, and so come in behind the Spaniards,
where they stood, having a thicket of trees before
them.
When the savages came on, they ran
straggling about every way in heaps, out of all manner
of order, and Will Atkins let about fifty of them
pass by him; then seeing the rest come in a very thick
throng, he orders three of his men to fire, having
loaded their muskets with six or seven bullets apiece,
about as big as large pistol-bullets. How many
they killed or wounded they knew not, but the consternation
and surprise was inexpressible among the savages;
they were frightened to the last degree to hear such
a dreadful noise, and see their men killed, and others
hurt, but see nobody that did it; when, in the middle
of their fright, Will Atkins and his other three let
fly again among the thickest of them; and in less
than a minute the first three, being loaded again,
gave them a third volley.
Had Will Atkins and his men retired
immediately, as soon as they had fired, as they were
ordered to do, or had the rest of the body been at
hand to have poured in their shot continually, the
savages had been effectually routed; for the terror
that was among them came principally from this, that
they were killed by the gods with thunder and lightning,
and could see nobody that hurt them. But Will
Atkins, staying to load again, discovered the cheat:
some of the savages who were at a distance spying
them, came upon them behind; and though Atkins and
his men fired at them also, two or three times, and
killed above twenty, retiring as fast as they could,
yet they wounded Atkins himself, and killed one of
his fellow-Englishmen with their arrows, as they did
afterwards one Spaniard, and one of the Indian slaves
who came with the women. This slave was a most
gallant fellow, and fought most desperately, killing
five of them with his own hand, having no weapon but
one of the armed staves and a hatchet.
Our men being thus hard laid at, Atkins
wounded, and two other men killed, retreated to a
rising ground in the wood; and the Spaniards, after
firing three volleys upon them, retreated also; for
their number was so great, and they were so desperate,
that though above fifty of them were killed, and more
than as many wounded, yet they came on in the teeth
of our men, fearless of danger, and shot their arrows
like a cloud; and it was observed that their wounded
men, who were not quite disabled, were made outrageous
by their wounds, and fought like madmen.
When our men retreated, they left
the Spaniard and the Englishman that were killed behind
them: and the savages, when they came up to
them, killed them over again in a wretched manner,
breaking their arms, legs, and heads, with their clubs
and wooden swords, like true savages; but finding
our men were gone, they did not seem inclined to pursue
them, but drew themselves up in a ring, which is,
it seems, their custom, and shouted twice, in token
of their victory; after which, they had the mortification
to see several of their wounded men fall, dying with
the mere loss of blood.
The Spaniard governor having drawn
his little body up together upon a rising ground,
Atkins, though he was wounded, would have had them
march and charge again all together at once:
but the Spaniard replied, “Seignior Atkins,
you see how their wounded men fight; let them alone
till morning; all the wounded men will be stiff and
sore with their wounds, and faint with the loss of
blood; and so we shall have the fewer to engage.”
This advice was good: but Will Atkins replied
merrily, “That is true, seignior, and so shall
I too; and that is the reason I would go on while
I am warm.” “Well, Seignior Atkins,”
says the Spaniard, “you have behaved gallantly,
and done your part; we will fight for you if you cannot
come on; but I think it best to stay till morning:”
so they waited.
But as it was a clear moonlight night,
and they found the savages in great disorder about
their dead and wounded men, and a great noise and
hurry among them where they lay, they afterwards resolved
to fall upon them in the night, especially if they
could come to give them but one volley before they
were discovered, which they had a fair opportunity
to do; for one of the Englishmen in whose quarter
it was where the fight began, led them round between
the woods and the seaside westward, and then turning
short south, they came so near where the thickest
of them lay, that before they were seen or heard eight
of them fired in among them, and did dreadful execution
upon them; in half a minute more eight others fired
after them, pouring in their small shot in such a
quantity that abundance were killed and wounded; and
all this while they were not able to see who hurt
them, or which way to fly.
The Spaniards charged again with the
utmost expedition, and then divided themselves into
three bodies, and resolved to fall in among them all
together. They had in each body eight persons,
that is to say, twenty-two men and the two women,
who, by the way, fought desperately. They divided
the firearms equally in each party, as well as the
halberds and staves. They would have had the
women kept back, but they said they were resolved
to die with their husbands. Having thus formed
their little army, they marched out from among the
trees, and came up to the teeth of the enemy, shouting
and hallooing as loud as they could; the savages stood
all together, but were in the utmost confusion, hearing
the noise of our men shouting from three quarters
together. They would have fought if they had
seen us; for as soon as we came near enough to be
seen, some arrows were shot, and poor old Friday was
wounded, though not dangerously. But our men
gave them no time, but running up to them, fired among
them three ways, and then fell in with the butt-ends
of their muskets, their swords, armed staves, and
hatchets, and laid about them so well that, in a word,
they set up a dismal screaming and howling, flying
to save their lives which way soever they could.
Our men were tired with the execution,
and killed or mortally wounded in the two fights about
one hundred and eighty of them; the rest, being frightened
out of their wits, scoured through the woods and over
the hills, with all the speed that fear and nimble
feet could help them to; and as we did not trouble
ourselves much to pursue them, they got all together
to the seaside, where they landed, and where their
canoes lay. But their disaster was not at an
end yet; for it blew a terrible storm of wind that
evening from the sea, so that it was impossible for
them to go off; nay, the storm continuing all night,
when the tide came up their canoes were most of them
driven by the surge of the sea so high upon the shore
that it required infinite toil to get them off; and
some of them were even dashed to pieces against the
beach. Our men, though glad of their victory,
yet got little rest that night; but having refreshed
themselves as well as they could, they resolved to
march to that part of the island where the savages
were fled, and see what posture they were in.
This necessarily led them over the place where the
fight had been, and where they found several of the
poor creatures not quite dead, and yet past recovering
life; a sight disagreeable enough to generous minds,
for a truly great man though obliged by the law of
battle to destroy his enemy, takes no delight in his
misery. However, there was no need to give any
orders in this case; for their own savages, who were
their servants, despatched these poor creatures with
their hatchets.
At length they came in view of the
place where the more miserable remains of the savages’
army lay, where there appeared about a hundred still;
their posture was generally sitting upon the ground,
with their knees up towards their mouth, and the head
put between the two hands, leaning down upon the knees.
When our men came within two musket-shots of them,
the Spaniard governor ordered two muskets to be fired
without ball, to alarm them; this he did, that by
their countenance he might know what to expect, whether
they were still in heart to fight, or were so heartily
beaten as to be discouraged, and so he might manage
accordingly. This stratagem took: for
as soon as the savages heard the first gun, and saw
the flash of the second, they started up upon their
feet in the greatest consternation imaginable; and
as our men advanced swiftly towards them, they all
ran screaming and yelling away, with a kind of howling
noise, which our men did not understand, and had never
heard before; and thus they ran up the hills into the
country.
At first our men had much rather the
weather had been calm, and they had all gone away
to sea: but they did not then consider that
this might probably have been the occasion of their
coming again in such multitudes as not to be resisted,
or, at least, to come so many and so often as would
quite desolate the island, and starve them.
Will Atkins, therefore, who notwithstanding his wound
kept always with them, proved the best counsellor
in this case: his advice was, to take the advantage
that offered, and step in between them and their boats,
and so deprive them of the capacity of ever returning
any more to plague the island. They consulted
long about this; and some were against it for fear
of making the wretches fly to the woods and live there
desperate, and so they should have them to hunt like
wild beasts, be afraid to stir out about their business,
and have their plantations continually rifled, all
their tame goats destroyed, and, in short, be reduced
to a life of continual distress.
Will Atkins told them they had better
have to do with a hundred men than with a hundred
nations; that, as they must destroy their boats, so
they must destroy the men, or be all of them destroyed
themselves. In a word, he showed them the necessity
of it so plainly that they all came into it; so they
went to work immediately with the boats, and getting
some dry wood together from a dead tree, they tried
to set some of them on fire, but they were so wet
that they would not burn; however, the fire so burned
the upper part that it soon made them unfit for use
at sea.
When the Indians saw what they were
about, some of them came running out of the woods,
and coming as near as they could to our men, kneeled
down and cried, “Oa, Oa, Waramokoa,” and
some other words of their language, which none of
the others understood anything of; but as they made
pitiful gestures and strange noises, it was easy to
understand they begged to have their boats spared,
and that they would be gone, and never come there again.
But our men were now satisfied that they had no way
to preserve themselves, or to save their colony, but
effectually to prevent any of these people from ever
going home again; depending upon this, that if even
so much as one of them got back into their country
to tell the story, the colony was undone; so that,
letting them know that they should not have any mercy,
they fell to work with their canoes, and destroyed
every one that the storm had not destroyed before;
at the sight of which, the savages raised a hideous
cry in the woods, which our people heard plain enough,
after which they ran about the island like distracted
men, so that, in a word, our men did not really know
what at first to do with them. Nor did the Spaniards,
with all their prudence, consider that while they made
those people thus desperate, they ought to have kept
a good guard at the same time upon their plantations;
for though it is true they had driven away their cattle,
and the Indians did not find out their main retreat,
I mean my old castle at the hill, nor the cave in the
valley, yet they found out my plantation at the bower,
and pulled it all to pieces, and all the fences and
planting about it; trod all the corn under foot, tore
up the vines and grapes, being just then almost ripe,
and did our men inestimable damage, though to themselves
not one farthing’s worth of service.
Though our men were able to fight
them upon all occasions, yet they were in no condition
to pursue them, or hunt them up and down; for as they
were too nimble of foot for our people when they found
them single, so our men durst not go abroad single,
for fear of being surrounded with their numbers.
The best was they had no weapons; for though they
had bows, they had no arrows left, nor any materials
to make any; nor had they any edge-tool among them.
The extremity and distress they were reduced to was
great, and indeed deplorable; but, at the same time,
our men were also brought to very bad circumstances
by them, for though their retreats were preserved,
yet their provision was destroyed, and their harvest
spoiled, and what to do, or which way to turn themselves,
they knew not. The only refuge they had now
was the stock of cattle they had in the valley by
the cave, and some little corn which grew there, and
the plantation of the three Englishmen. Will
Atkins and his comrades were now reduced to two; one
of them being killed by an arrow, which struck him
on the side of his head, just under the temple, so
that he never spoke more; and it was very remarkable
that this was the same barbarous fellow that cut the
poor savage slave with his hatchet, and who afterwards
intended to have murdered the Spaniards.
I looked upon their case to have been
worse at this time than mine was at any time, after
I first discovered the grains of barley and rice,
and got into the manner of planting and raising my
corn, and my tame cattle; for now they had, as I may
say, a hundred wolves upon the island, which would
devour everything they could come at, yet could be
hardly come at themselves.
When they saw what their circumstances
were, the first thing they concluded was, that they
would, if possible, drive the savages up to the farther
part of the island, south-west, that if any more came
on shore they might not find one another; then, that
they would daily hunt and harass them, and kill as
many of them as they could come at, till they had
reduced their number; and if they could at last tame
them, and bring them to anything, they would give
them corn, and teach them how to plant, and live upon
their daily labour. In order to do this, they
so followed them, and so terrified them with their
guns, that in a few days, if any of them fired a gun
at an Indian, if he did not hit him, yet he would fall
down for fear. So dreadfully frightened were
they that they kept out of sight farther and farther;
till at last our men followed them, and almost every
day killing or wounding some of them, they kept up
in the woods or hollow places so much, that it reduced
them to the utmost misery for want of food; and many
were afterwards found dead in the woods, without any
hurt, absolutely starved to death.
When our men found this, it made their
hearts relent, and pity moved them, especially the
generous-minded Spaniard governor; and he proposed,
if possible, to take one of them alive and bring him
to understand what they meant, so far as to be able
to act as interpreter, and go among them and see if
they might be brought to some conditions that might
be depended upon, to save their lives and do us no
harm.
It was some while before any of them
could be taken; but being weak and half-starved, one
of them was at last surprised and made a prisoner.
He was sullen at first, and would neither eat nor
drink; but finding himself kindly used, and victuals
given to him, and no violence offered him, he at last
grew tractable, and came to himself. They often
brought old Friday to talk to him, who always told
him how kind the others would be to them all; that
they would not only save their lives, but give them
part of the island to live in, provided they would
give satisfaction that they would keep in their own
bounds, and not come beyond it to injure or prejudice
others; and that they should have corn given them to
plant and make it grow for their bread, and some bread
given them for their present subsistence; and old
Friday bade the fellow go and talk with the rest of
his countrymen, and see what they said to it; assuring
them that, if they did not agree immediately, they
should be all destroyed.
The poor wretches, thoroughly humbled,
and reduced in number to about thirty-seven, closed
with the proposal at the first offer, and begged to
have some food given them; upon which twelve Spaniards
and two Englishmen, well armed, with three Indian slaves
and old Friday, marched to the place where they were.
The three Indian slaves carried them a large quantity
of bread, some rice boiled up to cakes and dried in
the sun, and three live goats; and they were ordered
to go to the side of a hill, where they sat down,
ate their provisions very thankfully, and were the
most faithful fellows to their words that could be
thought of; for, except when they came to beg victuals
and directions, they never came out of their bounds;
and there they lived when I came to the island and
I went to see them. They had taught them both
to plant corn, make bread, breed tame goats, and milk
them: they wanted nothing but wives in order
for them soon to become a nation. They were
confined to a neck of land, surrounded with high rocks
behind them, and lying plain towards the sea before
them, on the south-east corner of the island.
They had land enough, and it was very good and fruitful;
about a mile and a half broad, and three or four miles
in length. Our men taught them to make wooden
spades, such as I made for myself, and gave among
them twelve hatchets and three or four knives; and
there they lived, the most subjected, innocent creatures
that ever were heard of.
After this the colony enjoyed a perfect
tranquillity with respect to the savages, till I came
to revisit them, which was about two years after;
not but that, now and then, some canoes of savages
came on shore for their triumphal, unnatural feasts;
but as they were of several nations, and perhaps had
never heard of those that came before, or the reason
of it, they did not make any search or inquiry after
their countrymen; and if they had, it would have been
very hard to have found them out.
Thus, I think, I have given a full
account of all that happened to them till my return,
at least that was worth notice. The Indians
were wonderfully civilised by them, and they frequently
went among them; but they forbid, on pain of death,
any one of the Indians coming to them, because they
would not have their settlement betrayed again.
One thing was very remarkable, viz. that they
taught the savages to make wicker-work, or baskets,
but they soon outdid their masters: for they
made abundance of ingenious things in wicker-work,
particularly baskets, sieves, bird-cages, cupboards,
&c.; as also chairs, stools, beds, couches, being very
ingenious at such work when they were once put in the
way of it.
My coming was a particular relief
to these people, because we furnished them with knives,
scissors, spades, shovels, pick-axes, and all things
of that kind which they could want. With the
help of those tools they were so very handy that they
came at last to build up their huts or houses very
handsomely, raddling or working it up like basket-work
all the way round. This piece of ingenuity,
although it looked very odd, was an exceeding good
fence, as well against heat as against all sorts of
vermin; and our men were so taken with it that they
got the Indians to come and do the like for them;
so that when I came to see the two Englishmen’s
colonies, they looked at a distance as if they all
lived like bees in a hive.
As for Will Atkins, who was now become
a very industrious, useful, and sober fellow, he had
made himself such a tent of basket-work as I believe
was never seen; it was one hundred and twenty paces
round on the outside, as I measured by my steps; the
walls were as close worked as a basket, in panels
or squares of thirty-two in number, and very strong,
standing about seven feet high; in the middle was
another not above twenty-two paces round, but built
stronger, being octagon in its form, and in the eight
corners stood eight very strong posts; round the top
of which he laid strong pieces, knit together with
wooden pins, from which he raised a pyramid for a
handsome roof of eight rafters, joined together very
well, though he had no nails, and only a few iron
spikes, which he made himself, too, out of the old
iron that I had left there. Indeed, this fellow
showed abundance of ingenuity in several things which
he had no knowledge of: he made him a forge,
with a pair of wooden bellows to blow the fire; he
made himself charcoal for his work; and he formed
out of the iron crows a middling good anvil to hammer
upon: in this manner he made many things, but
especially hooks, staples, and spikes, bolts and hinges.
But to return to the house: after he had pitched
the roof of his innermost tent, he worked it up between
the rafters with basket-work, so firm, and thatched
that over again so ingeniously with rice-straw, and
over that a large leaf of a tree, which covered the
top, that his house was as dry as if it had been tiled
or slated. He owned, indeed, that the savages
had made the basket-work for him. The outer circuit
was covered as a lean-to all round this inner apartment,
and long rafters lay from the thirty-two angles to
the top posts of the inner house, being about twenty
feet distant, so that there was a space like a walk
within the outer wicker-wall, and without the inner,
near twenty feet wide.
The inner place he partitioned off
with the same wickerwork, but much fairer, and divided
into six apartments, so that he had six rooms on a
floor, and out of every one of these there was a door:
first into the entry, or coming into the main tent,
another door into the main tent, and another door
into the space or walk that was round it; so that
walk was also divided into six equal parts, which
served not only for a retreat, but to store up any
necessaries which the family had occasion for.
These six spaces not taking up the whole circumference,
what other apartments the outer circle had were thus
ordered: As soon as you were in at the door
of the outer circle you had a short passage straight
before you to the door of the inner house; but on
either side was a wicker partition and a door in it,
by which you went first into a large room or storehouse,
twenty feet wide and about thirty feet long, and through
that into another not quite so long; so that in the
outer circle were ten handsome rooms, six of which
were only to be come at through the apartments of
the inner tent, and served as closets or retiring
rooms to the respective chambers of the inner circle;
and four large warehouses, or barns, or what you please
to call them, which went through one another, two
on either hand of the passage, that led through the
outer door to the inner tent. Such a piece of
basket-work, I believe, was never seen in the world,
nor a house or tent so neatly contrived, much less
so built. In this great bee-hive lived the three
families, that is to say, Will Atkins and his companion;
the third was killed, but his wife remained with three
children, and the other two were not at all backward
to give the widow her full share of everything, I mean
as to their corn, milk, grapes, &c., and when they
killed a kid, or found a turtle on the shore; so that
they all lived well enough; though it was true they
were not so industrious as the other two, as has been
observed already.
One thing, however, cannot be omitted,
viz. that as for religion, I do not know that
there was anything of that kind among them; they often,
indeed, put one another in mind that there was a God,
by the very common method of seamen, swearing by His
name: nor were their poor ignorant savage wives
much better for having been married to Christians,
as we must call them; for as they knew very little
of God themselves, so they were utterly incapable
of entering into any discourse with their wives about
a God, or to talk anything to them concerning religion.
The utmost of all the improvement
which I can say the wives had made from them was,
that they had taught them to speak English pretty
well; and most of their children, who were near twenty
in all, were taught to speak English too, from their
first learning to speak, though they at first spoke
it in a very broken manner, like their mothers.
None of these children were above six years old when
I came thither, for it was not much above seven years
since they had fetched these five savage ladies over;
they had all children, more or less: the mothers
were all a good sort of well-governed, quiet, laborious
women, modest and decent, helpful to one another,
mighty observant, and subject to their masters (I cannot
call them husbands), and lacked nothing but to be well
instructed in the Christian religion, and to be legally
married; both of which were happily brought about
afterwards by my means, or at least in consequence
of my coming among them.