It now came into my thoughts that
I had hinted to my friend the clergyman that the work
of converting the savages might perhaps be set on
foot in his absence to his satisfaction, and I told
him that now I thought that it was put in a fair way;
for the savages, being thus divided among the Christians,
if they would but every one of them do their part
with those which came under their hands, I hoped it
might have a very good effect.
He agreed presently in that, if they
did their part. “But how,” says
he, “shall we obtain that of them?” I
told him we would call them all together, and leave
it in charge with them, or go to them, one by one,
which he thought best; so we divided it—he
to speak to the Spaniards, who were all Papists, and
I to speak to the English, who were all Protestants;
and we recommended it earnestly to them, and made
them promise that they would never make any distinction
of Papist or Protestant in their exhorting the savages
to turn Christians, but teach them the general knowledge
of the true God, and of their Saviour Jesus Christ;
and they likewise promised us that they would never
have any differences or disputes one with another
about religion.
When I came to Will Atkins’s
house, I found that the young woman I have mentioned
above, and Will Atkins’s wife, were become intimates;
and this prudent, religious young woman had perfected
the work Will Atkins had begun; and though it was not
above four days after what I have related, yet the
new-baptized savage woman was made such a Christian
as I have seldom heard of in all my observation or
conversation in the world. It came next into
my mind, in the morning before I went to them, that
amongst all the needful things I had to leave with
them I had not left them a Bible, in which I showed
myself less considering for them than my good friend
the widow was for me when she sent me the cargo of
a hundred pounds from Lisbon, where she packed up
three Bibles and a Prayer-book. However, the
good woman’s charity had a greater extent than
ever she imagined, for they were reserved for the
comfort and instruction of those that made much better
use of them than I had done.
I took one of the Bibles in my pocket,
and when I came to Will Atkins’s tent, or house,
and found the young woman and Atkins’s baptized
wife had been discoursing of religion together—for
Will Atkins told it me with a great deal of joy—I
asked if they were together now, and he said, “Yes”;
so I went into the house, and he with me, and we found
them together very earnest in discourse. “Oh,
sir,” says Will Atkins, “when God has sinners
to reconcile to Himself, and aliens to bring home,
He never wants a messenger; my wife has got a new
instructor: I knew I was unworthy, as I was
incapable of that work; that young woman has been sent
hither from heaven—she is enough to convert
a whole island of savages.” The young
woman blushed, and rose up to go away, but I desired
her to sit-still; I told her she had a good work upon
her hands, and I hoped God would bless her in it.
We talked a little, and I did not
perceive that they had any book among them, though
I did not ask; but I put my hand into my pocket, and
pulled out my Bible. “Here,” said
I to Atkins, “I have brought you an assistant
that perhaps you had not before.” The man
was so confounded that he was not able to speak for
some time; but, recovering himself, he takes it with
both his hands, and turning to his wife, “Here,
my dear,” says he, “did not I tell you
our God, though He lives above, could hear what we
have said? Here’s the book I prayed for
when you and I kneeled down under the bush; now God
has heard us and sent it.” When he had
said so, the man fell into such passionate transports,
that between the joy of having it, and giving God
thanks for it, the tears ran down his face like a
child that was crying.
The woman was surprised, and was like
to have run into a mistake that none of us were aware
of; for she firmly believed God had sent the book
upon her husband’s petition. It is true
that providentially it was so, and might be taken
so in a consequent sense; but I believe it would have
been no difficult matter at that time to have persuaded
the poor woman to have believed that an express messenger
came from heaven on purpose to bring that individual
book. But it was too serious a matter to suffer
any delusion to take place, so I turned to the young
woman, and told her we did not desire to impose upon
the new convert in her first and more ignorant understanding
of things, and begged her to explain to her that God
may be very properly said to answer our petitions,
when, in the course of His providence, such things
are in a particular manner brought to pass as we petitioned
for; but we did not expect returns from heaven in
a miraculous and particular manner, and it is a mercy
that it is not so.
This the young woman did afterwards
effectually, so that there was no priestcraft used
here; and I should have thought it one of the most
unjustifiable frauds in the world to have had it so.
But the effect upon Will Atkins is really not to
be expressed; and there, we may be sure, was no delusion.
Sure no man was ever more thankful in the world for
anything of its kind than he was for the Bible, nor,
I believe, never any man was glad of a Bible from a
better principle; and though he had been a most profligate
creature, headstrong, furious, and desperately wicked,
yet this man is a standing rule to us all for the
well instructing children, viz. that parents
should never give over to teach and instruct, nor
ever despair of the success of their endeavours, let
the children be ever so refractory, or to appearance
insensible to instruction; for if ever God in His
providence touches the conscience of such, the force
of their education turns upon them, and the early
instruction of parents is not lost, though it may have
been many years laid asleep, but some time or other
they may find the benefit of it. Thus it was
with this poor man: however ignorant he was of
religion and Christian knowledge, he found he had some
to do with now more ignorant than himself, and that
the least part of the instruction of his good father
that now came to his mind was of use to him.
Among the rest, it occurred to him,
he said, how his father used to insist so much on
the inexpressible value of the Bible, and the privilege
and blessing of it to nations, families, and persons;
but he never entertained the least notion of the worth
of it till now, when, being to talk to heathens, savages,
and barbarians, he wanted the help of the written
oracle for his assistance. The young woman was
glad of it also for the present occasion, though she
had one, and so had the youth, on board our ship among
their goods, which were not yet brought on shore.
And now, having said so many things of this young
woman, I cannot omit telling one story more of her
and myself, which has something in it very instructive
and remarkable.
I have related to what extremity the
poor young woman was reduced; how her mistress was
starved to death, and died on board that unhappy ship
we met at sea, and how the whole ship’s company
was reduced to the last extremity. The gentlewoman,
and her son, and this maid, were first hardly used
as to provisions, and at last totally neglected and
starved—that is to say, brought to the last
extremity of hunger. One day, being discoursing
with her on the extremities they suffered, I asked
her if she could describe, by what she had felt, what
it was to starve, and how it appeared? She said
she believed she could, and told her tale very distinctly
thus:-
“First, we had for some days
fared exceedingly hard, and suffered very great hunger;
but at last we were wholly without food of any kind
except sugar, and a little wine and water. The
first day after I had received no food at all, I found
myself towards evening, empty and sick at the stomach,
and nearer night much inclined to yawning and sleep.
I lay down on the couch in the great cabin to sleep,
and slept about three hours, and awaked a little refreshed,
having taken a glass of wine when I lay down; after
being about three hours awake, it being about five
o’clock in the morning, I found myself empty,
and my stomach sickish, and lay down again, but could
not sleep at all, being very faint and ill; and thus
I continued all the second day with a strange variety—
first hungry, then sick again, with retchings to vomit.
The second night, being obliged to go to bed again
without any food more than a draught of fresh water,
and being asleep, I dreamed I was at Barbadoes, and
that the market was mightily stocked with provisions;
that I bought some for my mistress, and went and dined
very heartily. I thought my stomach was full
after this, as it would have been after a good dinner;
but when I awaked I was exceedingly sunk in my spirits
to find myself in the extremity of family. The
last glass of wine we had I drank, and put sugar in
it, because of its having some spirit to supply nourishment;
but there being no substance in the stomach for the
digesting office to work upon, I found the only effect
of the wine was to raise disagreeable fumes from the
stomach into the head; and I lay, as they told me,
stupid and senseless, as one drunk, for some time.
The third day, in the morning, after a night of strange,
confused, and inconsistent dreams, and rather dozing
than sleeping, I awaked ravenous and furious with
hunger; and I question, had not my understanding returned
and conquered it, whether if I had been a mother,
and had had a little child with me, its life would
have been safe or not. This lasted about three
hours, during which time I was twice raging mad as
any creature in Bedlam, as my young master told me,
and as he can now inform you.
“In one of these fits of lunacy
or distraction I fell down and struck my face against
the corner of a pallet-bed, in which my mistress lay,
and with the blow the blood gushed out of my nose;
and the cabin-boy bringing me a little basin, I sat
down and bled into it a great deal; and as the blood
came from me I came to myself, and the violence of
the flame or fever I was in abated, and so did the
ravenous part of the hunger. Then I grew sick,
and retched to vomit, but could not, for I had nothing
in my stomach to bring up. After I had bled
some time I swooned, and they all believed I was dead;
but I came to myself soon after, and then had a most
dreadful pain in my stomach not to be described—not
like the colic, but a gnawing, eager pain for food;
and towards night it went off with a kind of earnest
wishing or longing for food. I took another
draught of water with sugar in it; but my stomach
loathed the sugar and brought it all up again; then
I took a draught of water without sugar, and that
stayed with me; and I laid me down upon the bed, praying
most heartily that it would please God to take me
away; and composing my mind in hopes of it, I slumbered
a while, and then waking, thought myself dying, being
light with vapours from an empty stomach. I recommended
my soul then to God, and then earnestly wished that
somebody would throw me into the into the sea.
“All this while my mistress
lay by me, just, as I thought, expiring, but she bore
it with much more patience than I, and gave the last
bit of bread she had left to her child, my young master,
who would not have taken it, but she obliged him to
eat it; and I believe it saved his life. Towards
the morning I slept again, and when I awoke I fell
into a violent passion of crying, and after that had
a second fit of violent hunger. I got up ravenous,
and in a most dreadful condition; and once or twice
I was going to bite my own arm. At last I saw
the basin in which was the blood I had bled at my
nose the day before: I ran to it, and swallowed
it with such haste, and such a greedy appetite, as
if I wondered nobody had taken it before, and afraid
it should be taken from me now. After it was
down, though the thoughts of it filled me with horror,
yet it checked the fit of hunger, and I took another
draught of water, and was composed and refreshed for
some hours after. This was the fourth day; and
this I kept up till towards night, when, within the
compass of three hours, I had all the several circumstances
over again, one after another, viz. sick, sleepy,
eagerly hungry, pain in the stomach, then ravenous
again, then sick, then lunatic, then crying, then
ravenous again, and so every quarter of an hour, and
my strength wasted exceedingly; at night I lay me down,
having no comfort but in the hope that I should die
before morning.
“All this night I had no sleep;
but the hunger was now turned into a disease; and
I had a terrible colic and griping, by wind instead
of food having found its way into the bowels; and in
this condition I lay till morning, when I was surprised
by the cries and lamentations of my young master,
who called out to me that his mother was dead.
I lifted myself up a little, for I had not strength
to rise, but found she was not dead, though she was
able to give very little signs of life. I had
then such convulsions in my stomach, for want of some
sustenance, as I cannot describe; with such frequent
throes and pangs of appetite as nothing but the tortures
of death can imitate; and in this condition I was when
I heard the seamen above cry out, ‘A sail! a
sail!’ and halloo and jump about as if they
were distracted. I was not able to get off from
the bed, and my mistress much less; and my young master
was so sick that I thought he had been expiring; so
we could not open the cabin door, or get any account
what it was that occasioned such confusion; nor had
we had any conversation with the ship’s company
for twelve days, they having told us that they had
not a mouthful of anything to eat in the ship; and
this they told us afterwards— they thought
we had been dead. It was this dreadful condition
we were in when you were sent to save our lives; and
how you found us, sir, you know as well as I, and
better too.”
This was her own relation, and is
such a distinct account of starving to death, as,
I confess, I never met with, and was exceeding instructive
to me. I am the rather apt to believe it to
be a true account, because the youth gave me an account
of a good part of it; though I must own, not so distinct
and so feeling as the maid; and the rather, because
it seems his mother fed him at the price of her own
life: but the poor maid, whose constitution
was stronger than that of her mistress, who was in
years, and a weakly woman too, might struggle harder
with it; nevertheless she might be supposed to feel
the extremity something sooner than her mistress,
who might be allowed to keep the last bit something
longer than she parted with any to relieve her maid.
No question, as the case is here related, if our
ship or some other had not so providentially met them,
but a few days more would have ended all their lives.
I now return to my disposition of things among the
people. And, first, it is to be observed here,
that for many reasons I did not think fit to let them
know anything of the sloop I had framed, and which
I thought of setting up among them; for I found, at
least at my first coming, such seeds of division among
them, that I saw plainly, had I set up the sloop, and
left it among them, they would, upon every light disgust,
have separated, and gone away from one another; or
perhaps have turned pirates, and so made the island
a den of thieves, instead of a plantation of sober
and religious people, as I intended it; nor did I leave
the two pieces of brass cannon that I had on board,
or the extra two quarter-deck guns that my nephew
had provided, for the same reason. I thought
it was enough to qualify them for a defensive war against
any that should invade them, but not to set them up
for an offensive war, or to go abroad to attack others;
which, in the end, would only bring ruin and destruction
upon them. I reserved the sloop, therefore,
and the guns, for their service another way, as I
shall observe in its place.
Having now done with the island, I
left them all in good circumstances and in a flourishing
condition, and went on board my ship again on the
6th of May, having been about twenty-five days among
them: and as they were all resolved to stay upon
the island till I came to remove them, I promised
to send them further relief from the Brazils, if I
could possibly find an opportunity. I particularly
promised to send them some cattle, such as sheep,
hogs, and cows: as to the two cows and calves
which I brought from England, we had been obliged,
by the length of our voyage, to kill them at sea,
for want of hay to feed them.
The next day, giving them a salute
of five guns at parting, we set sail, and arrived
at the bay of All Saints in the Brazils in about twenty-two
days, meeting nothing remarkable in our passage but
this: that about three days after we had sailed,
being becalmed, and the current setting strong to
the ENE., running, as it were, into a bay or gulf
on the land side, we were driven something out of
our course, and once or twice our men cried out, “Land
to the eastward!” but whether it was the continent
or islands we could not tell by any means. But
the third day, towards evening, the sea smooth, and
the weather calm, we saw the sea as it were covered
towards the land with something very black; not being
able to discover what it was till after some time,
our chief mate, going up the main shrouds a little
way, and looking at them with a perspective, cried
out it was an army. I could not imagine what
he meant by an army, and thwarted him a little hastily.
“Nay, sir,” says he, “don’t
be angry, for ’tis an army, and a fleet too:
for I believe there are a thousand canoes, and you
may see them paddle along, for they are coming towards
us apace.”
I was a little surprised then, indeed,
and so was my nephew the captain; for he had heard
such terrible stories of them in the island, and having
never been in those seas before, that he could not
tell what to think of it, but said, two or three times,
we should all be devoured. I must confess, considering
we were becalmed, and the current set strong towards
the shore, I liked it the worse; however, I bade them
not be afraid, but bring the ship to an anchor as
soon as we came so near as to know that we must engage
them. The weather continued calm, and they came
on apace towards us, so I gave orders to come to an
anchor, and furl all our sails; as for the savages,
I told them they had nothing to fear but fire, and
therefore they should get their boats out, and fasten
them, one close by the head and the other by the stern,
and man them both well, and wait the issue in that
posture: this I did, that the men in the boats
might he ready with sheets and buckets to put out
any fire these savages might endeavour to fix to the
outside of the ship.
In this posture we lay by for them,
and in a little while they came up with us; but never
was such a horrid sight seen by Christians; though
my mate was much mistaken in his calculation of their
number, yet when they came up we reckoned about a hundred
and twenty-six canoes; some of them had sixteen or
seventeen men in them, and some more, and the least
six or seven. When they came nearer to us, they
seemed to be struck with wonder and astonishment,
as at a sight which doubtless they had never seen
before; nor could they at first, as we afterwards understood,
know what to make of us; they came boldly up, however,
very near to us, and seemed to go about to row round
us; but we called to our men in the boats not to let
them come too near them. This very order brought
us to an engagement with them, without our designing
it; for five or six of the large canoes came so near
our long-boat, that our men beckoned with their hands
to keep them back, which they understood very well,
and went back: but at their retreat about fifty
arrows came on board us from those boats, and one of
our men in the long-boat was very much wounded.
However, I called to them not to fire by any means;
but we handed down some deal boards into the boat,
and the carpenter presently set up a kind of fence,
like waste boards, to cover them from the arrows of
the savages, if they should shoot again.
About half-an-hour afterwards they
all came up in a body astern of us, and so near that
we could easily discern what they were, though we
could not tell their design; and I easily found they
were some of my old friends, the same sort of savages
that I had been used to engage with. In a short
time more they rowed a little farther out to sea,
till they came directly broadside with us, and then
rowed down straight upon us, till they came so near
that they could hear us speak; upon this, I ordered
all my men to keep close, lest they should shoot any
more arrows, and made all our guns ready; but being
so near as to be within hearing, I made Friday go out
upon the deck, and call out aloud to them in his language,
to know what they meant. Whether they understood
him or not, that I knew not; but as soon as he had
called to them, six of them, who were in the foremost
or nighest boat to us, turned their canoes from us,
and stooping down, showed us their naked backs; whether
this was a defiance or challenge we knew not, or whether
it was done in mere contempt, or as a signal to the
rest; but immediately Friday cried out they were going
to shoot, and, unhappily for him, poor fellow, they
let fly about three hundred of their arrows, and to
my inexpressible grief, killed poor Friday, no other
man being in their sight. The poor fellow was
shot with no less than three arrows, and about three
more fell very near him; such unlucky marksmen they
were!
I was so annoyed at the loss of my
old trusty servant and companion, that I immediately
ordered five guns to be loaded with small shot, and
four with great, and gave them such a broadside as
they had never heard in their lives before. They
were not above half a cable’s length off when
we fired; and our gunners took their aim so well,
that three or four of their canoes were overset, as
we had reason to believe, by one shot only.
The ill manners of turning up their bare backs to
us gave us no great offence; neither did I know for
certain whether that which would pass for the greatest
contempt among us might be understood so by them or
not; therefore, in return, I had only resolved to
have fired four or five guns at them with powder only,
which I knew would frighten them sufficiently:
but when they shot at us directly with all the fury
they were capable of, and especially as they had killed
my poor Friday, whom I so entirely loved and valued,
and who, indeed, so well deserved it, I thought myself
not only justifiable before God and man, but would
have been very glad if I could have overset every
canoe there, and drowned every one of them.
I can neither tell how many we killed
nor how many we wounded at this broadside, but sure
such a fright and hurry never were seen among such
a multitude; there were thirteen or fourteen of their
canoes split and overset in all, and the men all set
a-swimming: the rest, frightened out of their
wits, scoured away as fast as they could, taking but
little care to save those whose boats were split or
spoiled with our shot; so I suppose that many of them
were lost; and our men took up one poor fellow swimming
for his life, above an hour after they were all gone.
The small shot from our cannon must needs kill and
wound a great many; but, in short, we never knew how
it went with them, for they fled so fast, that in
three hours or thereabouts we could not see above three
or four straggling canoes, nor did we ever see the
rest any more; for a breeze of wind springing up the
same evening, we weighed and set sail for the Brazils.
We had a prisoner, indeed, but the
creature was so sullen that he would neither eat nor
speak, and we all fancied he would starve himself
to death. But I took a way to cure him:
for I had made them take him and turn him into the
long-boat, and make him believe they would toss him
into the sea again, and so leave him where they found
him, if he would not speak; nor would that do, but
they really did throw him into the sea, and came away
from him. Then he followed them, for he swam
like a cork, and called to them in his tongue, though
they knew not one word of what he said; however at
last they took him in again., and then he began to
he more tractable: nor did I ever design they
should drown him.
We were now under sail again, but
I was the most disconsolate creature alive for want
of my man Friday, and would have been very glad to
have gone back to the island, to have taken one of
the rest from thence for my occasion, but it could
not be: so we went on. We had one prisoner,
as I have said, and it was a long time before we could
make him understand anything; but in time our men taught
him some English, and he began to be a little tractable.
Afterwards, we inquired what country he came from;
but could make nothing of what he said; for his speech
was so odd, all gutturals, and he spoke in the throat
in such a hollow, odd manner, that we could never
form a word after him; and we were all of opinion that
they might speak that language as well if they were
gagged as otherwise; nor could we perceive that they
had any occasion either for teeth, tongue, lips, or
palate, but formed their words just as a hunting-horn
forms a tune with an open throat. He told us,
however, some time after, when we had taught him to
speak a little English, that they were going with
their kings to fight a great battle. When he
said kings, we asked him how many kings? He said
they were five nation (we could not make him understand
the plural ’s), and that they all joined to
go against two nation. We asked him what made
them come up to us? He said, “To makee
te great wonder look.” Here it is to be
observed that all those natives, as also those of
Africa when they learn English, always add two e’s
at the end of the words where we use one; and they
place the accent upon them, as makee, takee, and the
like; nay, I could hardly make Friday leave it off,
though at last he did.
And now I name the poor fellow once
more, I must take my last leave of him. Poor
honest Friday! We buried him with all the decency
and solemnity possible, by putting him into a coffin,
and throwing him into the sea; and I caused them to
fire eleven guns for him. So ended the life of
the most grateful, faithful, honest, and most affectionate
servant that ever man had.
We went now away with a fair wind
for Brazil; and in about twelve days’ time we
made land, in the latitude of five degrees south of
the line, being the north-easternmost land of all that
part of America. We kept on S. by E., in sight
of the shore four days, when we made Cape St. Augustine,
and in three days came to an anchor off the bay of
All Saints, the old place of my deliverance, from
whence came both my good and evil fate. Never
ship came to this port that had less business than
I had, and yet it was with great difficulty that we
were admitted to hold the least correspondence on
shore: not my partner himself, who was alive,
and made a great figure among them, not my two merchant-trustees,
not the fame of my wonderful preservation in the island,
could obtain me that favour. My partner, however,
remembering that I had given five hundred moidores
to the prior of the monastery of the Augustines, and
two hundred and seventy-two to the poor, went to the
monastery, and obliged the prior that then was to go
to the governor, and get leave for me personally,
with the captain and one more, besides eight seamen,
to come on shore, and no more; and this upon condition,
absolutely capitulated for, that we should not offer
to land any goods out of the ship, or to carry any
person away without licence. They were so strict
with us as to landing any goods, that it was with
extreme difficulty that I got on shore three bales
of English goods, such as fine broadcloths, stuffs,
and some linen, which I had brought for a present
to my partner.
He was a very generous, open-hearted
man, although he began, like me, with little at first.
Though he knew not that I had the least design of
giving him anything, he sent me on board a present
of fresh provisions, wine, and sweetmeats, worth about
thirty moidores, including some tobacco, and three
or four fine medals of gold: but I was even
with him in my present, which, as I have said, consisted
of fine broadcloth, English stuffs, lace, and fine
holland; also, I delivered him about the value of one
hundred pounds sterling in the same goods, for other
uses; and I obliged him to set up the sloop, which
I had brought with me from England, as I have said,
for the use of my colony, in order to send the refreshments
I intended to my plantation.
Accordingly, he got hands, and finished
the sloop in a very few days, for she was already
framed; and I gave the master of her such instructions
that he could not miss the place; nor did he, as I
had an account from my partner afterwards. I
got him soon loaded with the small cargo I sent them;
and one of our seamen, that had been on shore with
me there, offered to go with the sloop and settle
there, upon my letter to the governor Spaniard to allot
him a sufficient quantity of land for a plantation,
and on my giving him some clothes and tools for his
planting work, which he said he understood, having
been an old planter at Maryland, and a buccaneer into
the bargain. I encouraged the fellow by granting
all he desired; and, as an addition, I gave him the
savage whom we had taken prisoner of war to be his
slave, and ordered the governor Spaniard to give him
his share of everything he wanted with the rest.
When we came to fit this man out,
my old partner told me there was a certain very honest
fellow, a Brazil planter of his acquaintance, who
had fallen into the displeasure of the Church.
“I know not what the matter is with him,”
says he, “but, on my conscience, I think he
is a heretic in his heart, and he has been obliged
to conceal himself for fear of the Inquisition.”
He then told me that he would be very glad of such
an opportunity to make his escape, with his wife and
two daughters; and if I would let them go to my island,
and allot them a plantation, he would give them a small
stock to begin with—for the officers of
the Inquisition had seized all his effects and estate,
and he had nothing left but a little household stuff
and two slaves; “and,” adds he, “though
I hate his principles, yet I would not have him fall
into their hands, for he will be assuredly burned
alive if he does.” I granted this presently,
and joined my Englishman with them: and we concealed
the man, and his wife and daughters, on board our ship,
till the sloop put out to go to sea; and then having
put all their goods on board some time before, we
put them on board the sloop after she was got out
of the bay. Our seaman was mightily pleased with
this new partner; and their stocks, indeed, were much
alike, rich in tools, in preparations, and a farm—but
nothing to begin with, except as above: however,
they carried over with them what was worth all the
rest, some materials for planting sugar-canes, with
some plants of canes, which he, I mean the Brazil planter,
understood very well.
Among the rest of the supplies sent
to my tenants in the island, I sent them by the sloop
three milch cows and five calves; about twenty-two
hogs, among them three sows; two mares, and a stone-horse.
For my Spaniards, according to my promise, I engaged
three Brazil women to go, and recommended it to them
to marry them, and use them kindly. I could
have procured more women, but I remembered that the
poor persecuted man had two daughters, and that there
were but five of the Spaniards that wanted partners;
the rest had wives of their own, though in another
country. All this cargo arrived safe, and, as
you may easily suppose, was very welcome to my old
inhabitants, who were now, with this addition, between
sixty and seventy people, besides little children,
of which there were a great many. I found letters
at London from them all, by way of Lisbon, when I
came back to England.
I have now done with the island, and
all manner of discourse about it: and whoever
reads the rest of my memorandums would do well to
turn his thoughts entirely from it, and expect to read
of the follies of an old man, not warned by his own
harms, much less by those of other men, to beware;
not cooled by almost forty years’ miseries and
disappointments—not satisfied with prosperity
beyond expectation, nor made cautious by afflictions
and distress beyond example.