A little while after this there came
in a Dutch ship from Batavia; she was a coaster, not
an European trader, of about two hundred tons burden;
the men, as they pretended, having been so sickly that
the captain had not hands enough to go to sea with,
so he lay by at Bengal; and having, it seems, got
money enough, or being willing, for other reasons,
to go for Europe, he gave public notice he would sell
his ship. This came to my ears before my new
partner heard of it, and I had a great mind to buy
it; so I went to him and told him of it. He
considered a while, for he was no rash man neither;
and at last replied, “She is a little too big—however,
we will have her.” Accordingly, we bought
the ship, and agreeing with the master, we paid for
her, and took possession. When we had done so
we resolved to engage the men, if we could, to join
with those we had, for the pursuing our business;
but, on a sudden, they having received not their wages,
but their share of the money, as we afterwards learned,
not one of them was to be found; we inquired much
about them, and at length were told that they were
all gone together by land to Agra, the great city
of the Mogul’s residence, to proceed from thence
to Surat, and then go by sea to the Gulf of Persia.
Nothing had so much troubled me a
good while as that I should miss the opportunity of
going with them; for such a ramble, I thought, and
in such company as would both have guarded and diverted
me, would have suited mightily with my great design;
and I should have both seen the world and gone homeward
too. But I was much better satisfied a few days
after, when I came to know what sort of fellows they
were; for, in short, their history was, that this man
they called captain was the gunner only, not the commander;
that they had been a trading voyage, in which they
had been attacked on shore by some of the Malays,
who had killed the captain and three of his men; and
that after the captain was killed, these men, eleven
in number, having resolved to run away with the ship,
brought her to Bengal, leaving the mate and five men
more on shore.
Well, let them get the ship how they
would, we came honestly by her, as we thought, though
we did not, I confess, examine into things so exactly
as we ought; for we never inquired anything of the
seamen, who would certainly have faltered in their
account, and contradicted one another. Somehow
or other we should have had reason to have suspected,
them; but the man showed us a bill of sale for the
ship, to one Emanuel Clostershoven, or some such name,
for I suppose it was all a forgery, and called himself
by that name, and we could not contradict him:
and withal, having no suspicion of the thing, we
went through with our bargain. We picked up
some more English sailors here after this, and some
Dutch, and now we resolved on a second voyage to the
south-east for cloves, &c.—that is to say,
among the Philippine and Malacca isles. In short,
not to fill up this part of my story with trifles
when what is to come is so remarkable, I spent, from
first to last, six years in this country, trading
from port to port, backward and forward, and with
very good success, and was now the last year with
my new partner, going in the ship above mentioned,
on a voyage to China, but designing first to go to
Siam to buy rice.
In this voyage, being by contrary
winds obliged to beat up and down a great while in
the Straits of Malacca and among the islands, we were
no sooner got clear of those difficult seas than we
found our ship had sprung a leak, but could not discover
where it was. This forced us to make some port;
and my partner, who knew the country better than I
did, directed the captain to put into the river of
Cambodia; for I had made the English mate, one Mr.
Thompson, captain, not being willing to take the charge
of the ship upon myself. This river lies on
the north side of the great bay or gulf which goes
up to Siam. While we were here, and going often
on shore for refreshment, there comes to me one day
an Englishman, a gunner’s mate on board an English
East India ship, then riding in the same river.
“Sir,” says he, addressing me, “you
are a stranger to me, and I to you; but I have something
to tell you that very nearly concerns you. I
am moved by the imminent danger you are in, and, for
aught I see, you have no knowledge of it.”—“I
know no danger I am in,” said I, “but
that my ship is leaky, and I cannot find it out; but
I intend to lay her aground to-morrow, to see if I
can find it.”—“But, sir,”
says he, “leaky or not leaky, you will be wiser
than to lay your ship on shore to-morrow when you hear
what I have to say to you. Do you know, sir,”
said he, “the town of Cambodia lies about fifteen
leagues up the river; and there are two large English
ships about five leagues on this side, and three Dutch?”—“Well,”
said I, “and what is that to me?”—“Why,
sir,” said be, “is it for a man that is
upon such adventures as you are to come into a port,
and not examine first what ships there are there,
and whether he is able to deal with them? I suppose
you do not think you are a match for them?”
I could not conceive what he meant; and I turned
short upon him, and said: “I wish you would
explain yourself; I cannot imagine what reason I have
to be afraid of any of the company’s ships,
or Dutch ships. I am no interloper. What
can they have to say to me?”—“Well,
sir,” says he, with a smile, “if you think
yourself secure you must take your chance; but take
my advice, if you do not put to sea immediately, you
will the very next tide be attacked by five longboats
full of men, and perhaps if you are taken you will
be hanged for a pirate, and the particulars be examined
afterwards. I thought, sir,” added he,
“I should have met with a better reception than
this for doing you a piece of service of such importance.”—“I
can never be ungrateful,” said I, “for
any service, or to any man that offers me any kindness;
but it is past my comprehension what they should have
such a design upon me for: however, since you
say there is no time to be lost, and that there is
some villainous design on hand against me, I will
go on board this minute, and put to sea immediately,
if my men can stop the leak; but, sir,” said
I, “shall I go away ignorant of the cause of
all this? Can you give me no further light into
it?”
“I can tell you but part of
the story, sir,” says he; “but I have a
Dutch seaman here with me, and I believe I could persuade
him to tell you the rest; but there is scarce time
for it. But the short of the story is this—the
first part of which I suppose you know well enough—that
you were with this ship at Sumatra; that there your
captain was murdered by the Malays, with three of his
men; and that you, or some of those that were on board
with you, ran away with the ship, and are since turned
pirates. This is the sum of the story, and you
will all be seized as pirates, I can assure you, and
executed with very little ceremony; for you know merchant
ships show but little law to pirates if they get them
into their power.”- -“Now you speak plain English,”
said I, “and I thank you; and though I know
nothing that we have done like what you talk of, for
I am sure we came honestly and fairly by the ship;
yet seeing such a work is doing, as you say, and that
you seem to mean honestly, I will be upon my guard.”—“Nay,
sir,” says he, “do not talk of being upon
your guard; the best defence is to be out of danger.
If you have any regard for your life and the lives
of all your men, put to sea without fail at high-water;
and as you have a whole tide before you, you will
be gone too far out before they can come down; for
they will come away at high-water, and as they have
twenty miles to come, you will get near two hours
of them by the difference of the tide, not reckoning
the length of the way: besides, as they are
only boats, and not ships, they will not venture to
follow you far out to sea, especially if it blows.”—“Well,”
said I, “you have been very kind in this:
what shall I do to make you amends?”—
“Sir,” says he, “you may not be willing
to make me any amends, because you may not be convinced
of the truth of it. I will make an offer to
you: I have nineteen months’ pay due to
me on board the ship -, which I came out of England
in; and the Dutchman that is with me has seven months’
pay due to him. If you will make good our pay
to us we will go along with you; if you find nothing
more in it we will desire no more; but if we do convince
you that we have saved your lives, and the ship, and
the lives of all the men in her, we will leave the
rest to you.”
I consented to this readily, and went
immediately on board, and the two men with me.
As soon as I came to the ship’s side, my partner,
who was on board, came out on the quarter-deck, and
called to me, with a great deal of joy, “We
have stopped the leak—we have stopped the
leak!”—“Say you so?” said
I; “thank God; but weigh anchor, then, immediately.”—“Weigh!”
says he; “what do you mean by that? What
is the matter?”—“Ask no questions,”
said I; “but set all hands to work, and weigh
without losing a minute.” He was surprised;
however, he called the captain, and he immediately
ordered the anchor to be got up; and though the tide
was not quite down, yet a little land-breeze blowing,
we stood out to sea. Then I called him into
the cabin, and told him the story; and we called in
the men, and they told us the rest of it; but as it
took up a great deal of time, before we had done a
seaman comes to the cabin door, and called out to
us that the captain bade him tell us we were chased
by five sloops, or boats, full of men. “Very
well,” said I, “then it is apparent there
is something in it.” I then ordered all
our men to be called up, and told them there was a
design to seize the ship, and take us for pirates,
and asked them if they would stand by us, and by one
another; the men answered cheerfully, one and all,
that they would live and die with us. Then I
asked the captain what way he thought best for us to
manage a fight with them; for resist them I was resolved
we would, and that to the last drop. He said
readily, that the way was to keep them off with our
great shot as long as we could, and then to use our
small arms, to keep them from boarding us; but when
neither of these would do any longer, we would retire
to our close quarters, for perhaps they had not materials
to break open our bulkheads, or get in upon us.
The gunner had in the meantime orders
to bring two guns, to bear fore and aft, out of the
steerage, to clear the deck, and load them with musket-bullets,
and small pieces of old iron, and what came next to
hand. Thus we made ready for fight; but all this
while we kept out to sea, with wind enough, and could
see the boats at a distance, being five large longboats,
following us with all the sail they could make.
Two of those boats (which by our glasses
we could see were English) outsailed the rest, were
near two leagues ahead of them, and gained upon us
considerably, so that we found they would come up with
us; upon which we fired a gun without ball, to intimate
that they should bring to: and we put out a
flag of truce, as a signal for parley: but they
came crowding after us till within shot, when we took
in our white flag, they having made no answer to it,
and hung out a red flag, and fired at them with a
shot. Notwithstanding this, they came on till
they were near enough to call to them with a speaking-trumpet,
bidding them keep off at their peril.
It was all one; they crowded after
us, and endeavoured to come under our stern, so as
to board us on our quarter; upon which, seeing they
were resolute for mischief, and depended upon the
strength that followed them, I ordered to bring the
ship to, so that they lay upon our broadside; when
immediately we fired five guns at them, one of which
had been levelled so true as to carry away the stern
of the hindermost boat, and we then forced them to
take down their sail, and to run all to the head of
the boat, to keep her from sinking; so she lay by,
and had enough of it; but seeing the foremost boat
crowd on after us, we made ready to fire at her in
particular. While this was doing one of the three
boats that followed made up to the boat which we had
disabled, to relieve her, and we could see her take
out the men. We then called again to the foremost
boat, and offered a truce, to parley again, and to
know what her business was with us; but had no answer,
only she crowded close under our stern. Upon
this, our gunner who was a very dexterous fellow ran
out his two case-guns, and fired again at her, but
the shot missing, the men in the boat shouted, waved
their caps, and came on. The gunner, getting
quickly ready again, fired among them a second time,
one shot of which, though it missed the boat itself,
yet fell in among the men, and we could easily see
did a great deal of mischief among them. We
now wore the ship again, and brought our quarter to
bear upon them, and firing three guns more, we found
the boat was almost split to pieces; in particular,
her rudder and a piece of her stern were shot quite
away; so they handed her sail immediately, and were
in great disorder. To complete their misfortune,
our gunner let fly two guns at them again; where he
hit them we could not tell, but we found the boat
was sinking, and some of the men already in the water:
upon this, I immediately manned out our pinnace,
with orders to pick up some of the men if they could,
and save them from drowning, and immediately come
on board ship with them, because we saw the rest of
the boats began to come up. Our men in the pinnace
followed their orders, and took up three men, one
of whom was just drowning, and it was a good while
before we could recover him. As soon as they
were on board we crowded all the sail we could make,
and stood farther out to the sea; and we found that
when the other boats came up to the first, they gave
over their chase.
Being thus delivered from a danger
which, though I knew not the reason of it, yet seemed
to be much greater than I apprehended, I resolved
that we should change our course, and not let any one
know whither we were going; so we stood out to sea
eastward, quite out of the course of all European
ships, whether they were bound to China or anywhere
else, within the commerce of the European nations.
When we were at sea we began to consult with the two
seamen, and inquire what the meaning of all this should
be; and the Dutchman confirmed the gunner’s
story about the false sale of the ship and of the
murder of the captain, and also how that he, this
Dutchman, and four more got into the woods, where they
wandered about a great while, till at length he made
his escape, and swam off to a Dutch ship, which was
sailing near the shore in its way from China.
He then told us that he went to Batavia,
where two of the seamen belonging to the ship arrived,
having deserted the rest in their travels, and gave
an account that the fellow who had run away with the
ship, sold her at Bengal to a set of pirates, who were
gone a-cruising in her, and that they had already
taken an English ship and two Dutch ships very richly
laden. This latter part we found to concern
us directly, though we knew it to be false; yet, as
my partner said, very justly, if we had fallen into
their hands, and they had had such a prepossession
against us beforehand, it had been in vain for us
to have defended ourselves, or to hope for any good
quarter at their hands; especially considering that
our accusers had been our judges, and that we could
have expected nothing from them but what rage would
have dictated, and an ungoverned passion have executed.
Therefore it was his opinion we should go directly
back to Bengal, from whence we came, without putting
in at any port whatever—because where we
could give a good account of ourselves, could prove
where we were when the ship put in, of whom we bought
her, and the like; and what was more than all the
rest, if we were put upon the necessity of bringing
it before the proper judges, we should be sure to
have some justice, and not to be hanged first and
judged afterwards.
I was some time of my partner’s
opinion; but after a little more serious thinking,
I told him I thought it was a very great hazard for
us to attempt returning to Bengal, for that we were
on the wrong side of the Straits of Malacca, and that
if the alarm was given, we should be sure to be waylaid
on every side—that if we should be taken,
as it were, running away, we should even condemn ourselves,
and there would want no more evidence to destroy us.
I also asked the English sailor’s opinion,
who said he was of my mind, and that we certainly
should be taken. This danger a little startled
my partner and all the ship’s company, and we
immediately resolved to go away to the coast of Tonquin,
and so on to the coast of China—and pursuing
the first design as to trade, find some way or other
to dispose of the ship, and come back in some of the
vessels of the country such as we could get.
This was approved of as the best method for our security,
and accordingly we steered away NNE., keeping above
fifty leagues off from the usual course to the eastward.
This, however, put us to some inconvenience:
for, first, the winds, when we came that distance
from the shore, seemed to be more steadily against
us, blowing almost trade, as we call it, from the
E. and ENE., so that we were a long while upon our
voyage, and we were but ill provided with victuals
for so long a run; and what was still worse, there
was some danger that those English and Dutch ships
whose boats pursued us, whereof some were bound that
way, might have got in before us, and if not, some
other ship bound to China might have information of
us from them, and pursue us with the same vigour.
I must confess I was now very uneasy,
and thought myself, including the late escape from
the longboats, to have been in the most dangerous
condition that ever I was in through my past life;
for whatever ill circumstances I had been in, I was
never pursued for a thief before; nor had I ever done
anything that merited the name of dishonest or fraudulent,
much less thievish. I had chiefly been my own
enemy, or, as I may rightly say, I had been nobody’s
enemy but my own; but now I was woefully embarrassed:
for though I was perfectly innocent, I was in no
condition to make that innocence appear; and if I
had been taken, it had been under a supposed guilt
of the worst kind. This made me very anxious
to make an escape, though which way to do it I knew
not, or what port or place we could go to. My
partner endeavoured to encourage me by describing
the several ports of that coast, and told me he would
put in on the coast of Cochin China, or the bay of
Tonquin, intending afterwards to go to Macao, where
a great many European families resided, and particularly
the missionary priests, who usually went thither in
order to their going forward to China.
Hither then we resolved to go; and,
accordingly, though after a tedious course, and very
much straitened for provisions, we came within sight
of the coast very early in the morning; and upon reflection
on the past circumstances of danger we were in, we
resolved to put into a small river, which, however,
had depth enough of water for us, and to see if we
could, either overland or by the ship’s pinnace,
come to know what ships were in any port thereabouts.
This happy step was, indeed, our deliverance:
for though we did not immediately see any European
ships in the bay of Tonquin, yet the next morning
there came into the bay two Dutch ships; and a third
without any colours spread out, but which we believed
to be a Dutchman, passed by at about two leagues’
distance, steering for the coast of China; and in the
afternoon went by two English ships steering the same
course; and thus we thought we saw ourselves beset
with enemies both one way and the other. The
place we were in was wild and barbarous, the people
thieves by occupation; and though it is true we had
not much to seek of them, and, except getting a few
provisions, cared not how little we had to do with
them, yet it was with much difficulty that we kept
ourselves from being insulted by them several ways.
We were in a small river of this country, within
a few leagues of its utmost limits northward; and
by our boat we coasted north-east to the point of
land which opens the great bay of Tonquin; and it was
in this beating up along the shore that we discovered
we were surrounded with enemies. The people
we were among were the most barbarous of all the inhabitants
of the coast; and among other customs they have this
one: that if any vessel has the misfortune to
be shipwrecked upon their coast, they make the men
all prisoners or slaves; and it was not long before
we found a spice of their kindness this way, on the
occasion following.
I have observed above that our ship
sprung a leak at sea, and that we could not find it
out; and it happened that, as I have said, it was
stopped unexpectedly, on the eve of our being pursued
by the Dutch and English ships in the bay of Siam;
yet, as we did not find the ship so perfectly tight
and sound as we desired, we resolved while we were
at this place to lay her on shore, and clean her bottom,
and, if possible, to find out where the leaks were.
Accordingly, having lightened the ship, and brought
all our guns and other movables to one side, we tried
to bring her down, that we might come at her bottom;
but, on second thoughts, we did not care to lay her
on dry ground, neither could we find out a proper place
for it.