Class _. Book_ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/voyagescommerciaOOclev CLEYELAND'S YOYAGES. VOYA.GE3 HAli/i 1T>0 m\B of D^chi (J^iiDlani 5^ l.M^ NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY LEAVITT & ALLEN No.2 7DetStreet. 1855. Entered according to Act of Congress, by Richard I Cleveland, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of tlie District of Massachusetta PREFACE 1^22 character of the citizens of New England for enterprise and industry, is very generally acknowledged. Being for the most part obliged to seek their own fortunes, they are thus early accustomed to the endurance of privations, and to those industrious and frugal habits, which lead to competence and wealth. In the pursuit of that independence of which all are more or less desirous, there have been instances of daring enterprise, of persevering determination, of disregard of fatigue and suffering, which are very remarkable ; but which pass unobserved from their^ frequency, no less than from the unobtrusive habits of the actors. A simple account of such enterprises, drawn from journals and letters written at the time the events therein related occurred, is here given to the public. More than forty-five years have elapsed since the first of the voyages here narrated was undertaken ; and more than twenty since the completion of the last. It is apparent that they possess but in a small degree, the power to interest, that PREFACE. ■^'ould have been excited, had they been published at the period of their performance ; yet this delay in their publica- tion may, on some considerations, enhance their value. It may be interesting to the young merchant to trace some of the great revolutions in the commerce of the world, which have occurred within the above-named periods ; and those of advanced age may be induced to recur to by-gone days, with pleasing, even if accompanied with melancholy associa- {.ums. For several years preceding the date of the first of my voyages, the merchants of the United States, and particu- larly those of Salem, carried on an active and lucrative commerce with the Isles of France and Bourbon, which was continued up to the period of the conquest of those islands by the British, since which it has nearly ceased. That im- portant product of our country, cotton, which is now its greatest and most valuable article of export, employing a greater amount of tonnage than any other, was then un- known as an article of export from the Umted States ; and the little required for the consumption of our domestic fa- brics was imported from Demerara, Surinam, and the West India Islands. The trade to the Northwest Coast of Amer- ica, which for about twenty-five years was actively and al- most exclusively pursued from Boston, on an extensive scale, and to great advantage, has for some years been abandoned, from the scarcity and high price of furs, caused by the competition of the Russians, who have gradually advanced their posts far to the south of those places where my cargo was collected; and where they were not then seen. The sealing voyages, which were prosecuted most actively from PEEFACE. New Haven, Norwich, and Stonington, principally to the Island of Masafuera, and by which sudden and large for- tunes were made, have, for many years past, been produc- tive of little comparative advantage to the few yet engaged in them ; and this in consequence of the animal's being almost annihilated. Our cargoes from China, which were formerly paid for in these furs, and in Spanish dollars, are now procured for bills on England, for opium, and for European and Ameri- can fabrics. The cotton and silk manufactures of Indostan constituted formerly, almost exclusively, the cargoes of our ships from Calcutta, which were paid for in Spanish dol- lars, and which generally yielded large profits. At this time our cotton fabrics are so much better and cheaper, as en- tirely .to have superseded the importation of those ; and most of the articles which now compose a cargo from Calcutta, excepting saltpetre and bandanas, were then scarcely known there, as articles of export to this country. Bills on Eng- land in payment for these cargoes, as well as for those laden at other ports of India, have been substituted for Spanish dollars, which formerly were indispensable to the prosecution of this trade. When I first visited the ports of Brazil, of Chili, of Peru, of Mexico, and of California, they had been for ages, and were then, so exclusively used for their own respective flags, that the admittance of one of a foreign nation was granted only on the most palpable evidence of a necessity, which it would be inhuman not to relieve. When admitted, no indi- vidual belonging to the vessel was permitted to land, or to walk the streets of the city, without the disagreeable incum- 10 PREFACE. brance of a soldier following him ; hence the difficulty of obtaining information, and consequently the meagre accounts given of the manners and customs of those nations. The revolutions in those countries which have been effect- ed with so much individual distress, and so great loss of life, though far from having produced the prosperity and hap- piness anticipated by their most enlightened patriots, have nevertheless caused their ports to be thrown open for the admission of the flags of all nations. This has afforded op- portunities to strangers for visitmg them, which have been abundantly improved ; and the numerous and elaborate ac- counts of them which have been given to the world, within a few years, by Hterary men, who possessed the requisite leisure and opportunity for the purpose, seemed to obviate the necessity of my attempting to enlarge on those subjects. The same reason forbade the attempt at more than cursory and passing descriptions of countries, cities, customs, and manners in other parts of the globe, visited by me for ob- jects exclusively of a commercial character. Equally, if not even more remarkable than the changes above mentioned, are those observable at the Sandwich Islands, since my first visit there in the year 1799. Then the inhabitants were but little elevated from the barbarous state in which they were found by Captain Cook ; now they are comparatively a civilized people, sensible of the value of instruction, and eager to obtain it ; cultivating their fields, and, by an extended and increasing foreign trade, afford- ing a most remarkable instance of the ameliorating and hu- manizing effects of commerce. In these days of philanthropy, when there are so many PREFACE. 11 zealous advocates and active promoters of the great and truly benevolent cause of temperance, it is proper and be- coming in every well wisher to the advancement of this cause, to aid it in every way in his power. With such impressions, and with the favorable opportunity now present- ed, I should consider it reprehensible to withhold from the public a statement of facts relating to myself personally, and which no other consideration than the hope of doing good, would induce me to make, although they may be viewed by many as not the least extraordinary of the facts which have been narrated. I am not, nor have I ever been a member of a tem- perance society ; but I was a practical temperance man long before such societies were dreamed of. At the period when I began my nautical career, it was a universally received maxim, that drinking grog and chewing tobacco were two essential and indispensable requisites for making a good sea- man. So omnipotent is custom, and so powerful is satire, that although the absurdity of such a maxim must be appa- rent to every one, I have, nevertheless, seen many young men repeatedly made sick before overcoming the disgust, and some of them afterwards became miserable drunkards. As alcohol and tobacco were in no degree less offensive to me than I had evidence of their being to my associates, it appeared to me that to submit to the ridicule rather than to the sickness, was selecting the least of the evils, and I acted accordingly. Those who may honor me with a perusal of my narrative will perceive, that I have navigated to all parts of the world, from the sixtieth degree of south latitude, to the six- 12 PREFACI'. tieth degree north ; and sometimes in vessels whose diminu- tive size and small number of men caused exposure to wet and cold, greatly surpassing what is usually experienced in ships of ordinary capacity; that I have been exposed to the influence of the most unhealthy places ; at Batavia, where I have seen whole crews prostrate with the fever, and death making havoc among them ; at San Bias, where the na- tives can stay only a portion of the year ; at the Havana, within whose walls I have resided five years consecutively ; that I have suffered captivity, robbery, imprisonment, ruin, and the racking anxiety consequent thereon. And yet, through the whole, anK to the present sixty-eighth year of my age, I liave never taken a drop of spirituous liquor of any kind ; never a glass of wine, of porter, ale, or beer, or any bev- erage stronger than tea and coffee ; and, moreover, I have never used tobacco in any way whatever ; and this, not only without injury, but, on the contrary, to the preserva- tion of my health. Headache is known to me by name only ; and excepting those fevers which were produced by great anxiety and excitement, my life has been free from sickness. The following narrative will enable the reader to form a comparison between a seaman's profession and his own ; and, possibly, after perusing it, he will be less disturbed by the annoyances Avhich peculiarly beset him. He will perceive that the master of a merchant ship, in whom are united the duties of na\'igator and factor, is subjected to great care and responsibility, even on ordinary and well-defined voyages. These are greatly augmented when the enterprise is envel- oped in darkness from the unknown political state of the , PREFACE. 13 countries -whither he is destined; from the contingencies which may be presented to him ; and from the necessity of great circumspection, decision, and promptitude, in the choice of them. If he is timid and afraid to enter a port where there is uncertainty of a friendly reception, it may cause the ruin of his voyage. If, on the contrary, he is bold, and enters such port, confiding in the protection of existing treaties, and the laws of nations, he may also become the victim of arbitrary power, confided to unworthy and ignor- ant individuals. If success attend his enterprise, when re- turning home with ample compensation for his labor, he runs the risk of having it all snatched from him by some hun- gry sateUite of that great high-sea robber, termed " His," or *' Her Majesty." Thus, in addition to the ordinary perils of hurricanes and storms, of rocks and shoals, he has to incur the greater ones of the cupidity and villany of man. Of the ordinary labor and fatigue attendant on the pro- fession, the same individual would form opposite conclusions in different circumstances. The man who makes a winter's passage from Europe to America, and encounters the usual storms and severity of weather peculiar to that passage, will probably prono-unce the seaman's life to be the hardest, the most dangerous, the most irksome, the most wearing to body and mind, of any one of the pursuits of man. On the con- trary, he who sails from the United States to Calcutta, to China, or to South America, avoiding our winter's coast, may perform the voyage without experiencing a gale of greater severity than would require the sails to be reefed, a pleasing excitement when the necessity is of rare occur- rence ; and he would probably decide that no profession is 2 14 PREFACE. SO easy, so pleasant, and so free from care, as the sea- man's. These are the two extremes, l^etween which, as may be supposed, there are gradations, which will tend to incline the scale one way or the other, according to circumstances. The experience of more than twenty years, passed in nav- igating to all parts of the world, has led me to the con- clusion, that though the hardships and privations of a sea- man's life be greater than those of any other, there is a compensation in the very excitement of its dangers, in the opportunity it affords of visiting diflferent countries, and view- ing mankind in the various gradations between the most barbarous and the most refined ; and in the ever-changing scenes which this occupation presents. And I can say, with truth, that I not only feel no regret for having chosen this profession rather than any other, but that if my life were to be passed over again, I should pursue the same course. CONTENTS. Fbefacb. .' 7 CHAPTEE I. The Counting House. A Salem merchant. His ships and masters. Distant voyages. Their excitement My first voyage. Disgust with it. Become master of the Enterprise. Voyage to Bom-bon 25 CHAPTEE n. Voyage to Havre. Disappoiiatment. Send home the Enterprise. Buy a cut- ter. Amount of vessel and cargo. Explanation of my plan. Apprehension of my friends. Name of the vessel. Sail from Havre. Disaster. Attempt to return. Fall to leeward. Come to anchor. Cables part. Eun ashore. Hu- mane conduct of the people. They unlade and get off the vessel. Enter river Orme. Stop the leaks. Eeturn to Havre. Eepau" the vessel. The crew desert 40 CHAPTEE m. Difficulty in procuring men. Partially accomplished. Sail from Havre. A Brit- ish Frigate. Ushant. Sketch of the crew. Anecdotes of George. His ^ bravery and fidelity. Swimming after the pig. British Frigate Stag. Danger of contact. - Chased off Cadiz. Boarded from a French privateer. Eeleased unharmed. Cape de Verde Islands. A gale. Lose a cask of water. Causes a necessity of stopping at Cape of Good Hope. Arrival. Interview with the Admiral. Many visitors. Suspicion of our object. Interview with Loi-d Macartney. Searched for papers. ■ Sell the vessel. Trouble with the Collec- tor. Appeal to Lord Macartney. Adjusted. The vessel despatched. Never heard of after 49 15 16 CONTENTS. CHAPTER IV. Description of the Cape. Of the toMii. Eflects of southeast wind. Devil's Ta- ble Cloth. Season of westerly gales. Dangerous to the shipping. Loss of the Sceptre. Loss of ship Jefferson. Xotice of the inhabitants. Their feelings under the actual govemment. Simon's Bay. Constantia. Signal Hill. Eesi- dence and resource of the man stationed there. Table ]\Iomitain. The ascent and view therefrom. Perilous situation. Mode of rescue. Descent and return to town 62 CHAPTER V. Impatience to be off. Embark for BataT^i. Chased hj a Brig. Outsail her. AiTival at Batavia. Governor's surprise at our quick passage. Hotel. Amer- ican commerce. Effect of the climate on Europeans. Market. The Bay. Sharks and aligators. No opportunity to fi-eight to the United States. Embark for China. Anival at IMacao. A tj-phon. Lose an anchor. Arrive at 'WTiam- poa. At Canton. Embarrassment as to next destination. Arrival and pur- chase of an English cutter. Associates in the adventure. Factories. Recourse of beggars to compel alms. Enter the city. Result 67 CHAPTER VL Information from Boston. Difficulty of obtaining men. Northeast Monsoon. A choice of difficulties. Sail from Anson's Bay. Anchoring when the tides were against us. NaiTOw escape. Rocks and shoals. Strike and stopped on a sunken ledge. Come off as the tide rises. Anchor and procure water and wood. Curiosity of the people. Stormy weather. Pass through a breaker unhurt. Keep company with a Chinese fleet. They enter Amoy. Anchor outside. Dangerous navigation. Island of Kemoy. Mutiny. Means of sub- dumg it. Leave six men behind. Visit from a Chinese. Weather the north end of Formosa. Heavy gales across the Pacific. Discontent of tlie crew. . . . V5 CHAPTER YU. See the coast of America. Prepare bulwarks. Anchor at Norfolk Sound. Dis- charge a cannon. Natives come to us. Caution to them. Their appeai'ance. Purchase sldns. Tribe. An accident. Result. Chatham Straits. Ship Eliza. Suspicious conduct of the natives. An alarm. Steeken. War canoe. A present. Request to stop the rain. A deserter. Recovered. Game. An- chor in a cove. Hostile attitude of the natives. Leave them. Ship Cheerful. Dangerous position of the vessel. Escape. Repair the damage. Ships Han cock and Despatch, of Boston. Skittigates. A stratagem. Howlings in the night. Sensibility of a native. Chiefs Kow, Coneyaw, and Eltargee. ... 90 CONTENTS. 17 CHAPTER Vni. Sail for Sandwich Islands. My satisfaction. Owhyhee. Provisions and Fruit. Natives. Mowee. Proceed westward. Tinian. Anchor in the Typa. The ship Ontario. Reflections caused by her loss. Proceed to Whampoa and Can- ton. Take a factory. Contract for the cargo. Causes operating to discourage a return to the coast. SeU. the cuttei*. Embark for Calcutta. Malacca. Pulo Pinang. Procure a Pilot. Arrive at Calcutta .' • . 109 CHAPTER IX. Captain Lay. Take a house. Servants. George pressed. Application for his release to the town Major and to the Chief of Police. Unsuccessful. To Lord Momington. George restored. His gratitude. American commerce. Buy a boat. Danish Flag. Deer hunt by tigers. Obsei-vations on Calcutta. Isle of France. Culpu. Danger in passing the Barabulla. Anrival at Isle of France 118 CHAPTER X. Good fortune. Visit the Governor. His civility. William Shaler. Dinner at the Governor's. SeU the vessel and cargo. Isle of Bourbon. St. Dennis. St. Paul's. Riviere d' Aborde. Mr. Nairac. Dinner Party. Pass near the volcano. St. Benoit. Return to St. Dennis. Retm-n to Isle of France- Death of the Governor. Honors to his memory. Entry of a Hamburgh ship. Cut out by EngUsh boats. Purchase coffee. Confiance and Kent. Mode of capture. Bravery aud generosity of Sm-couffe. Brig Traveller. A duel. Kent sold. Freight her. Natm-aliste and Geographe 127 CHAPTER XI. Satisfaction at the prospect of departure. Observations on the Isle of France. Influence of the Jacobins. A hm-ricane. Sail for Europe. Hail an American schooner. Coast of Norway. War between the English and Danes. Arrive at Christiansand. Leave the ship, and proceed to Copenhagen. Arrival there. A profitable voyage. Sketch of Copenhagen. Obehsk. Fredericksburg pal- ace. . Rosenberg Palace. Arrival of the ship from Norway 140 CHAPTER XH. Remarks. Associated with Mr. Shaler. Leave Copenhagen. Arrive at Ham burgh. Purchase a vessel. Decision as to the command. Count de Rouissil- lon. Peasoe of Amiens. Discouraging prospects. Vessel near being lost in the river. Proceed to sea. Arrive at Grand Canaria. Appearance of the town. 2* 18 CONTENTS. Departure. Arrival at Rio Janeiro. ^\ji assassiuation. Convent of Bene- dictines. Bay of Rio. Departure. Cape Horn. Lose a man. Arrive at Val- paraiso 152 CHAPTER XUI. American vessels at Valparaiso. Permission to obtain supplies. Threat of the Captain-General. Controver'sy between the Governor and Captain Rowan. Ai-rest and imprisonment of Americans. Preparation for hostilities. Anger of the Governor. Determined on Vengeance. His treachery. Capture of the ship Hazard. Imprisomiient of Rowan. Con-espondence with the Captain- General. Defer our departure. Seizure of our vessel. Interrogatories. Our vessel restored to us. Order of the Captain-General to leave the port. Propo- sition from the Collector. Refused. Return of the actual Governor. Inter- view and civil reception. Departure 163 CHAPTER XIV. AiTive at the Calhpagos Islands. Transactions there. Departure. Singular flaw of "wind. An-ival at San Bias. Visited by the Commissary. Agreement with him. Opposed by the Governor. Character of the Governor. Contro- . versy between the Governor and Commissaiy. Order to leave San Bias. Ar- rangement with Rouissillon. He leaves us for llexico. Go to the three Maria Islands. Embarrassment. Letter from Roiiissillon. Death of the Governor. Catch a Sun Fish. Description of Three Marias. Return again to San Bias. Proposal for the cargo. Return of Rouissillon. Sale of part of the cargo. Pur- chase sea-otter skins. Suspicion of treachery. Take final leave of Rouissillon. His character. Death. Again anchor at the Three Marias. Discover a traitor in the mate. Seize his papers. Remarks thereon 177 CHAPTER XV. Notice of San Bias. Domestic Indians. Circulation of revolutionary papers. Sail from the Three Slaria Islands. St. Clement's. Indians. Arrive at San Diego. Commandant Rodrig-uez visits the ship. Leaves a guard on board. A visit to the fort. Ship Alexander. Fail in purchasing the skins. Detention of our men. Resciie. Disann the guard on board. Prepare for war. Get under sail to go out. Fire of the fort. Returned. Pass by the fort. Put the giiards on shore. Arrive at St. Quintin's. Visit of Missionaries. Corporal's letter. Padre's opinion of Rodriguez. Leave St. Quintin's. Notice of it. Guadaloupe. San Borja. Padre Mariano Apolonario. His character. Procure horses. Our Farewell. Arrive at St. Joseph's. Obtain supplies. Sail for the Sandwich Islands 192 CONTENTS J9" CHAPTER XVI. Observations oq leaving the coast. California. Saud'wicli Islands. Visit of the king. Land the horses. Present them to the king. His estimation of them. Visit Derby's grave. Leave the Islands. Sketch of Tamaahmaah. Attempt at his conversion. A practice of the natives. An evidence of their gallantry. Instances of atrocious conduct of Americans. Island of Guam. A visit from the Governor's lady. Sketch of the Island. A storm. Arrival at Canton. Dis- pose of one half the ship. Mr. Shaler returns to California, and I embark in the Alert for Boston 206 CHAPTER XVn. Parting with Mr. Shaler. Origin of our acquaintance. Observations. Embark for Boston. Touch at North Island. Pass the Isle of Bourbon. Arrive at the Cape of Good Hope. Reflections. Departure from the Cape of Good Hope. Ar- rival at Boston. Lelia Byrd sails for California. Disaster. Difficulty of mak- ing repairs. Arrive at the Sandwich Islands. Barter with the king. Place the cargo in his power. His honorable conduct. Expedite the Tamana. Mr. Hudson. His voyage. Return and death. Leha Byrd. Apology for the voyage. 217 CHAPTER XVIH. Cause of again Voyaging. Destination. Suspicion of the Quakers. Sail from New York. A Gale. Dismasted. Aii-ive at Rio Janeiro. The Visit. Allow- ed Forty-five days to repair. Rig the vessel as a Brig. Obstacles to Changuig the voyage. Obviated. Dispose of the Cargo. Buy a Ship and Cargo of Beef. Despatch the Aspasia by the Mate. Go to St. Catharine's in the Ship. De- scription. Sail for Havana. Boarded twice. Cochrane's Fleet. Boarding Offi- cer. A contrast to his Commander. Ordered for Tortola. Taken Possession of by the Cerberus Frigate 224 CHAPTER XIX. Admiral Cochrane. His Notariety. Officers of the Cerberus. Theme of Con- versation. Arrival at Tortola. Dougan, the Prize agent. His Threat to the Judge. Vice Admiralty Court. Condemnation. Cause therefor. Proposal from the Agent. Proceed to St. Thomas. Wrecked. Arrive in the Boat. Ef- fect on the Owners. Fail in my Object. Retm-n.- Embark again for St. Thomas. Hence to New York. Arrival. Interview with a Friend. Extent of my Misfortune. Arrive at Home > , 2S7 80 - CONTENTS. CHAPTER XX. English Aggression. Embargo. Voyage to Africa. To Halifax and to Europe. Arrive in the Clj-de. Proceed to London. Project a Voyage to the Isle of France. Defeated. lUness at Exeter. Recover. Go to Holland. Lade a Ship for New York. Take Charge of Despatches for the United States. Arrival at Baltimore 249 CHAPTER XXL Necessity for seeking a milder Climate. Sail for Naples. Arrival there. Con- fiscation. Rome visited. Ship Mai-garet. Refused a Passage in her. Disap- pointment. Her Loss. Buy the Nancy Ann. Sail with a License. Boai-ded by an English Brig of War. Wrath of the Captain. An-ive at Lisbon. Sell my Wine there. Embargo. Raised on the Retreat of llassena. Sail for Eng- land. Arrive at Plymouth. NaiTOw Escape from Shipwreck. Standgate Creek. Arrive at London. , Termination of my Charge 260 CHAPTER XXn. Buy a Vessel and Cargo. Sail for Copenhagen. Wrecked on Jutland. Save the Cargo. Honest Character of the People. Arrive at Copenhagen. Sent an Agent to take Charge of the Cargo. French Privateer at Elsineur. Go to Ri- ga and back. Lnport a Cargo from London. Seized at Copenhagen. Releas- ed too late. Frozen up. Proceed to Hamburgh. Bombardment. Capitulation. General Hogendorf. His CiviUty. Proceed to Paris. To Nantz. To Bordeaux. Embark in a Clipper. Pass through an English Fleet of Merchantmen. Their Dismaj'. Often chased, particularly on our own Coast. Great Superiority of Saihng. Anive at New York 267 CHAPTER XXm. Invited to take Charge of a Voyage to Tenerifle and Batavia. Sail from Salem in Ship Exeter. Dismasted. Repair the Damages. Arrive at Tenerifle. Bad Roadstead of Orotava. Quarantine. 'Mr. Little. His Hospitality and Benevo- lence. Sail from Orotava. Cape Verde Islands. Land at Tristan d'Acunha. Procure Fish and Potatoes. Jonathan Lambert. Arrive at, and sail from, the Cape of Good Hope. Island of Amsterdam. Arrive at Batavia. Governors. Mr. Watt. Lade the Ship and put to Sea. Lose two Men. ' Airive at the Isle of France. Exchange Produce. . Sail for Home. St. Helena. Warned off. Finish the Voyage by arriving at Boston 277' CHAPTER XXIV. Preliminary Remarks. Departure from New York. Passing Reflections. Pas- sage to Cape de Verde Islands. Tornado. St. Paul's on the Equator. Per- nambuco. Rio de la Plata. Cape Horn. Embayed. Passage of the Cape. CONTENTS. H Land on the Island of Mocha. AiTival at Talcahuana. Visit of the Authori- ties. Sketch of them. A Guard sent on Board. Our Men taken away. Pro- hibition of Communication with our Countrymen of the Canton 284 CHAPTER XXV. Sails unbent. Interchange of Letters with the Governor. Unfortunate Selection of a Port. Situation of the Eoyal and Patriot Forces. Visit from the Authori- ties. Sketch of them. Their Object and Determination. Hopeless Case. Some Eesources . 291 CHAPTER XXVI. Examination by the Assessor. Liberty to go on Shore. Escape to the Enemy of the Beaver's Men. Indignation of the Populace. Annoyance of Sentries. An-ival of the Venganza. Put the Guard to Sleep. Answer the Watchword. Plan of taking the Frigate. Consequences. Sounding the Men. Day appoint ed. Disappointed 296 CHAPTER XXVII. Attack of Fever. Assault on the Town. Repulse. Condemnation of the Ship and Cargo. Appeal. Patriots set Fire to and abandon Conception. Arrival of Osorio, with Four Thousand Men. Pursue the Patriots. Battle of Talca. Desperate State of the Patriot Cause. Battle of Maipo. Ruin of the Royal Ai-my. ■ Retnm to Osorio. Distress of the People. Ships ordered to be ready. Removed from the Beaver 308 CHAPTER XXVIII. AiTival of the Esmeralda. Her Escape from capture. A Ship from Lima. An Order from the Viceroy for us to be sent there. Brig Canton prepared. Sailed on the 12th of May. Arrival at Callao. Interview with the Viceroy of Peru. Result. Take a House at Lima. Visit the Officers of Government. Encour- agement of Eventual Success 316 CHAPTER XXIX. Arrival of the Ontario. Thi-eat of the Viceroy to send me away. His Change of Opinion. Promise of Protection. Plan a Voyage to Valparaiso. Engage a Ship. Engagement broken. Disappointment. Embark for Valparaiso in the Andromache. Captain SherilTe, Officers, and Crew. Observance of the Sab- bath. Recreation. Masafuera. ,Tuan Fernandez. AittvhI . 821 S2 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXX. Visit to the Governor. Difference in effect of old and new Government. Tariff. Mistaken policy. Meet some of the Beaver's men. Expectation of arrival of Supreme Director. Rejoicing on his arrival. Meet with Eibas. Introduced to the Supreme Director. Proposal to enter the service. Charter a Brig. ' Em- bargo. Journey to Santiago. Cuesta de Prado. Maipo. Sketch of tlie City. Return to Valparaiso . 328 CHAPTER XXXI. Sail for Callao. AiTival. Revocation of the Decree of Condemnation. Over t\u-es to buy the Ship. Take possession of the Beaver. Obligation to Captain Biddle. Livonia. Obligation to Captain Sheriffe. Embargo. Blossom, Eng- lish vessel of War. Judge Provost. His bad odor ^vith the Viceroy. Diffi- culty of procuring men. Obviated by prisoners. Capture of Isabella. Ex- pectation of the Chilian Fleet. Remove the Beaver below the Fleet. Ready for sea 336 CHAPTER XXXn. Embargo raised. Arrival of the Chilian Fleet. Cannonading with the Batteries. Useless resiUt. Removal of the Beaver. Disposition of the crew to desert. Visit the Viceroy. Obtain a License. Chilian proclamation of Blockade. Visit Lord Cochrane's Ship. Insolence of her Captain. Sail for Pisco. Arrival there. JIutiny of the Crew. Suppressed. Sail for Guanchaca 343 CHAPTER XXXni. Pisco. An-ival at Guanchaca. Alarm at Tmxillo. Unlading and relading. Gal- varino. Men detained on shore. Suspicion of our good faith. Proceed to Mal- abrigo. Lose two anchors. Proceed to Pacasmayo. Finish loadmg. Sail for Callao. Touch at Guacho. Hear of the Blockade being raised. Ai-rival at Callao. Sketches of Truxillo, Guanchaca., Malabrigo, Pacasmayo. Satisfac- tion given the Viceroy. Discharge the Cargo. Proceed to Pisco. Lade with Brandy. Return to Callao. Disappearance of the Volador 353 CHAPTER XXXIV. Suspected of sinking the Volador. Crew of the Beaver examined. Sell the Cargo. Charter the Ship. Sail for Guacho. AiTival of the Chilian Fleet. Guacho and its manufactures. Sail for La Barranca. Stupid Pilot. Return to Guacha. Sail for Samanco Bay. Observations thereon. Bad calculation of the Charterer. Commandante and his daughters. AiTival at Pacasmayo. Sail for Chili. Boarded by the San JIartin. An-ival at Valparaiso 863 CONTENTS. , 23 CHAPTER XXXV. Competition at Valparaiso. Purchase the Ship Ocean. Sail for Lima. Arrival. Completion of the Charter. Drottinger and Ocean sail for Guayaquil. Zephyr for Pacasmayo. Beaver for Guayaquil. Sketch of Lima. Arrival at Payta. Observations. Arrival at Guayaquil. Controversy with the Governor. Lade the Ships. Sail for Callao. An-ival thei-e. Governor of Guayaquil superse- ded. Sketch of Guayaquil , 371 CHAPTER XXXVL Arrive at Callao. Repair lh« Ship. Sail for Rio Janeiro. Retrospective Reflec- tions. Receive a letter from the Owners. Remarks thereon. Reply. Arrival at Rio Janeiro. Customhouse Officer. Sail from Rio Janeiro. Happy Ship's Company. Arrive at New York. Letter to the President of the National In- surance Company. Reception by that Officer. Remark of a ^Merchant on the Voyage 380 CHAPTER XXXVn. Visit my family in Massachusetts. Return to New York. Owners object to my Commission. Left to Arbitrators. Deduct therefrom two and a half per cent. Disappointed in promised remuneration. Letter to the President. No reply. Comparison of this Company with others. Not attributable to the President. Observations on Corporations. Close of my Voyaging. Remarkable fact as respects loss of men and Sickness. Loss of Property. Don Pedro Abadia. Don Jose Arismendi. Proceed to Hamburgh. Return. Letter to Abadia. Proceed to Bordeaux and Madrid. Interview with Arismendi. Viceroy. Re- turn via Paris and Havre. Ai'ismendi in Boston. Imprisoned. Escape by the aid of a Merchant. His cunning. Proceed to Havana. Death of Mr. Shaler. Effi)rt to obtain the Consulate. Disappointed. Return to Boston 388 CONCLUSION ". ... 401 APPENDIX . . . ; 404 NAllRATIVE OE VOYAGES. CHAPTER I. The Counting-House — A Salem Merchant — His Ships and Masters — Distant Voy ages — Their Excitement — My First Voyage — Disgust with it — Become Master of the Enterprise — Voyage to Bourbon. tl^ the ordinaiy course of a commercial education, in New England, boys are transferred from school to the merchant's desk at the age of fourteen or fifteen. When I had reached my fourteenth year, it was my good fortune to be received into the counting-house of Elias Hasket Derby, Esq. of Salem ; a merchant, who may justly be termed the father of the American commerce to India ; one whose enterprise and commercial sagacity were une- qualled in his day, and, perhaps, have not been surpassed by any of his successors. To him our country is indebted for opening the valuable trade to Calcutta ; before whose fortress his was the first vessel to display the American flag ; and, following up the business, he had reaped golden harvests before other merchants came in for a share. The first American ships, seen at the Cape of Good Hope and at the Isle of France, belonged to him. His were the first American ships which carried cargoes of cotton from Bombay to China ; and among the first ships which made a direct voyage to China and back, was one owned by him. He continued to prosecute a successful business, on an extensive scale, in those countries, until the day of his death. In the transaction of his affairs abroad, he was liberal, greatly beyond the practice in modern times, always desirous that every one, even the foremost hand, should share the 3 26 FIRST VOYAGE. good fortune to which he pointed the way ; and the long list of masters of ships, who have acquired ample fortunes in his employment, is a proof both of his discernment in selecting and of his generosity in paying them. Without possessing a scientific knowledge of the construction and the sparring of ships, Mr. Derby seemed to have an intuitive faculty in judging of models and proportions ; and his experiments, in several instances, for the attainment of swiftness of sailing, were crowned with a success unsurpassed in our own or any other country. He built several ships for the India trade, immediately in the vicinity of the counting-house ; which afforded me an opportunity of becom- ing acquainted with the building, sparring, and rigging of ships. The conversations, to which I listened, relating to the countries then newly visited by Americans, the excitement on the return of an adventure from them, and the great profits which were made, always manifest from the result of my own little adventures, tended to stimu- late the desire in me of visiting those countries, and of sharing more largely in the advantages they presented. Consequently, after having passed four years in this course of instruction, I became impatient to begin that nautical career on which I had determined, as presenting the most sure and direct means of arriving at independence. The force of prejudice, in defiance of common sense and the plain- est dictates of reason, is perhaps in no case more frequently exhibited than in the pertinacity with which old seamen, whose nautical course began in the forecastle, adhere to the maxim, that, to make a good seaman, " it is requisite one should enter on board by the hawse-holes (or forecastle), and not by the cabin windows." When 1 began, I was aware of the existence of this maxim, but doubted its truth ; as I could not comprehend how the qualifications for command were to be acquired by living in the forecastle ; or how nautical skill was to be advanced by practising the duties of tarring down the rigging, and slushing the masts. I therefore had no ambition of attaining to a practical knowledge of these accomplishments. I came in at the cabin windows ; but with an understanding that I was to stand watch regularly, to take my regular turn at the helm, to reef and hand the sails, &c. ; and I am sure it will be admitted that there was no time when I flinched from the performance of those duties. CAPE HAYTIEN. 27 Having, early in life, imbibed a predilection for nautical affairs, I had ample opportunity of indulging it, while in the counting-house of a merchant who had several ships built and equipped in the im- mediate vicinity of my place of employment. I had watched the progress and manner of fitting the rigging of many vessels, and thereby obtained a better knowledge of it than is often gained by many years' service in the forecastle. On the sailing or the arrival of our vessels, I was almost always on board, and thence acquired a knowl- edge of the art of manoeuvring a ship, such as is not always attained by long practice at sea. With such practical experience, I embarked at Salem, on my first voyage, in June, 1792, on board of the brig Rose, owned by Mr. Derby, and commanded by my early friend and school-mate, Nathaniel Silsbee,* on a voyage to Cape Frangois, now Cape Haytien. I entered in the capacity of captain's clerk ; to live with him in the cabin ; to assist him in his business in port ; and to do duty as a foremast hand at sea. Nor have I, after my long course of experience, been able to discover any way so desirable, so eligible as this, for giving a young man a practical knowledge of seamanship, free from the vulgarity of the forecastle ; and of so familiarizing him with the manner of doing business in various countries, as to make him an accomplished super-cargo. Our passage being made in the" height of summer, — we experien- ced a long course of southerly winds, which so retarded our progress, that nearly forty days were consumed before reaching our destined port ; and there was scarcely a day of this long passage that I was not more or less sea-sick. I remember only one incident to vary the monotonous scene on this tedious passage ; and this was of a descrip- tion that will never be obliterated from my memory. We were one day lying perfectly becalme^near the tropic, — the water so smooth as to reflect every object, like a mirror, — the heat intense ; the vessel lying like a log, with scarcely any perceptible motion. At this time, though not unconscious of danger, I could not resist the inclination of taking a plunge into the ocean. I had not, however, been swim- ming more than five minutes, before the men on board perceived a shark coming quickly towards the vessel. The necessity for caution, * Since President of the Senate of Massachusetts, and for several years a Senator of the United States. 28 FIRST VOYAGE. SO as not to alarm me, was obvious ; and Captain Silsbee, being for- tunately on deck, with great presence of mind dropped his hat over- board, and called to me to come quickly and pick it up before it filled with water. I did so, and had scarcely got out of the water with the hat in my hand, when I saw, within a few feet of me, a shark of enormous size ; indeed in all my extensive navigation since, I have seen none that would bear any comparison with it. As he came fearlessly close alongside the vessel, one of the seamen got ready a liarpoon to throw into him, but was forbidden so to do, from the cer- tainty of losing it. Arriving safely at Cape Francois, the bay presented a scene of commercial activity, such as I had never seen equalled. The throng of boats by which we v/ere instantly surrounded, to sell us the variety of strange fruits with which they were laden; — the number of large ships in port, some loading, others unloading ; — the daily arrival and departure of vessels of all nations ; — the French slavers continually coming in from Africa, with a crowd of blacks on their decks ; — the fine ships of war in beautiful order ; and the multitude of boats passing to and fro, across the bay; — formed, altogether, a scene surpassingly animated and brilliant, to one whose eye had never before met any thing of the kind, exceeding the ordinary exhibition of ves- sels in Salem harbor. The activity and bustle of business on shore seemed to be even greater than that in the bay ; and the magnificent stores, filled with every description of merchandise, gave indications of the riches and business of the place ; while the long range of stalls on the border of the bay, for the retail of all kinds of French knick- knacks, gave employment and a living to a great number of the col- ored population. The insurrection of the negroes, however, had, at this time, made some progress ; and only a short period elapsed before these riches " took to themselves wings," and the whole white population of the colony was involved in one promiscuous state of ruin. Having disposed of our outward cargo, and reladen with another, the produce of the island, we were wafted to sea by the land breeze, very early on a morning in the latter part of August, and, after a -fair passage, arrived in safety at Salem, in September, 1792 ; — thus, to my great joy, accomplishing my first voyage ; and experiencing a PORT PEAYA. 29 ■ relief from the nausea, occasioned by the wearisome rolling and bad odor of the vessel, which is probably not unusual, and will be duly appreciated by those who make their first passages at sea. The distress from sea-sickness, and its consequent prostration of, spirits, were such as to make it desirable to seek some other road to fortune. But I possessed no capital with which to bring my com- mercial acquirements into action ; and a merchant without capita) was as incapable of making head-way, as a mechanic without tools. There remained to me, therefore, only the choice of persevering in the profession I had chosen, with a prospect of independence ; or of earning a maintenance as a clerk or book-keeper, with no chance of ever being any thing else. Had the disagreeable circumstances attending a sea-life been even greater than they were, I should have had no hesitancy in the choice, and I therefore engaged to go out again with Captain Silsbee, in the same capacity as before, in a new ship of Mr. Derby's, then ready to be launched. This ship, of about one hundred and ninety tons' burden, was called the Benjamin, and was destined for the Isle of France and the East Indies. In the prosecution of this voyage, we left Salem harbor on the 11th of December, 1792. During the first week after our departure, we had a gale of wind from north-northwest, and northwest, which compelled us to take in the topsails, and to keep the ship scudding before the wind and sea, under the foresail. As we passed over George's Bank the sea was tremendous ; sweeping from our decks several hogsheads of water and two casks of merchandise, and threatening us with the loss of boats and caboose. The men suffered exceedingly, during the first three days, from incessant exposure to cold and wet. Such entire absence, for the time, of any approximation to comfort, I have never witnessed since. The cook, a black man, either from heedlessness, or from ignorance how to take care of himself, had his feet so badly frozen that it was found necessary to amputate his toes, — which was done with a penknife by the second mate ; who then dressed the wounds to the best of his ability. About six weeks after this occurrence (26th January) we arrived at Port Praya, St. Jago, to which place we had proceeded for the pur- pose either of leaving the cook there, or of procuring such surgical 3* 30 FIRST VOYAGE. and medical aid as was needed for his recovery. Fortunately, we found lying there H. B. iMajesty's ship Scorpion. The surgeon of this ship, being immediately sent for, came with alacrity, and exam- ined and dressed the poor fellow's feet. He left salves and medicines, with directions how to use them ; and, with characteristic generosity, refused any compensation. To the fortunate circumstance of re- ceiving this very opportune aid, the poor cook Avas indebted for a speedy cure, if not for his life. Having filled our water-casks, and procured the requisite supply of vegetables, we sailed the next day for the Cape of Good Hope. The long calms we experienced on the equator, and the foulness incident to a wooden-bottomed ship, retarded our progress, so that we did not arrive at Table Bay till the 10th of April. The exhaustion of our stores, consequent on a four months' pas- sage, would have rendered an arrival at any civilized place a pleasing event. But, at the Cape of Good Hope, where fresh provisions and vegetables of good quality, and delicious grapes and other fruits, were to be obtained in abundance, the pleasure of our arrival was increased to a degree to leave a lasting impression on my mind, A pai't of our cargo was disposed of at the Cape ; and its place filled up with such produce of the country as it was supposed would yield the most profit at the Isle of France. Our business being accom- plished, we sailed from the Cape on the 23d of April. On the suc- ceeding night we experienced a gale, which obliged us to heave to, under foresail and mizzen staysail. At this time the ship was labor- ing and straining so much, that it was deemed expedient to throw over the deck load, which afforded perceptible relief. Proceeding on our course, no event w^orthy of notice occurred till the 26th of May, when we fell in with the French frigate. La Prudente, bound to the Isle of France, and conveying the news of a declaration of war by England against France. On the 6th of June we arrived, and came to anchor at Port Louis, Isle of Franbe. The news of the war with England greatly enhanced the value of our cargo ; and the prospect was flattering for making a great voy- age, if left unmolested to pursue our business. But the disorders incident to the Revolution had reached this island ; and the discord existing between the admiral in command of the naval force, and the ISLE OF BOURBON. 31 government on shore, was an epitome of that then existing in France, between the parties who were struggling for the ascendency. Vice- admiral St. Felix refused obedience to the dictation of the Jacobin government ; and for such refusal, — -Jike the unfortunate Macnamara, — he would have been cut- to pieces, had he ventured to come on shore. Aware of this, he took care never to put himself into their power ; but his long residence on ship-board, and consequent depri- vation of the salutary effects of occasionally visiting the shore, had the usual result in such cases, producing scurvy. But however much the authorities were at variance with each other, they agreed in one thing, the detention of all the American vessels in port, till the arri- val of news from France, such as should dispel the existing doubt, t"hen very prevalent, of America's taking sides with England against France. In the mean time, all the ships being sheathed with wood, the worms were making such havoc, that a long detention would be scarcely less disastrous than confiscation. There is probably no place in the world surpassing Port North- West, now so called, for the destructive power of the worm. On going into the hold of the ship, when empty, I was astonished at the noise they made ; not unlike a multitude of borers with augers ; . but fortunately, when they have pierced the sheathing, their further progress is arrested by the hair which is plac- ed between the sheathing and the bottom of the ship. On the 6th of July, several American ships being ready for sea, their masters went together on board of the Admiral's ship, and had an interview with him on the subject of obtaining leave to sail ; but this he refused them, on the plea of its endangering the safety of some merchant ships then on the point of sailing for France. A second application was made on the 31st of July, with a like result; nor was it till the arrival of the American ship Pigou, with French passengers, direct from Bordeaux, on the 20th of November, that the authorities were satisfied that America would maintain a neutral posi- tion, and, as a consequence, were willing to raise the embargo. Being thus relieved from a painful state of anxiety, and from an embargo of nearly six months' duration, we sailed from the Isle of France on the 25th of November, being only partly laden ; and pro- ceeded to the Isle of Bourbon to take on board a quantity of coffee already prepared for us. Having anchored at St. Dennis, and 32 FIRST VOYAGE. takea on board a part, we proceeded to St. Benoit, and took in the remainder. The anchorage at this latter place is so bad that it is rare that any other than small coasting vessels attempt to load there. We came to in fifty fathoms, the cable being nearly up and down. The Benjamin was the first foreign vessel that had ever an- chored in that poi't ; and having fine weather and a very smooth sea, and receiving every facility from the agent on shore, we succeeded in the accomplishment of our object, after remaining four days at this dangerous anchorage. We then sailed, on the 7th of December, for the Cape of Good Hope, touching again at St. Dennis for the settle- ment of accounts, which caused a detention of a few hours only. Our passage from St. Dennis to the Cape of Good Hope was at- tended with no circumstance worthy of note. It was performed in about thirty days, and we arrived there on the 4th of January, 1794. A few days afterwards, the ship Henry arrived from the Isle of . Bourbon, only partially laden ; and on the same day the brig Hope arrived from Salem. Such a coincidence was not lost on the enter- prising mind of Captain Silsbee, who, seizing the advantage present- ed by it, determined on returning to the Isle of France with a cargo of Cape produce, which was greatly wanted there ; and on freighting home, in the above vessels, the cargo then on board. Having made arrangements for carrying this plan into execution, he caused to be shipped in these vessels, to the owner in Salem, such portion of the cargo from the Isle of France as would considerably more than pay for the cost of our ship and of her whole outward freight ; and the proceeds of the remainder, beyond what was put on board the Henry and the Hope, were invested in wines and other articles suited to the market of the Isle of France. A few days before the completion of our business at the Cape, the British frigate Diomede anchored in the bay ; which was rather an alarming incident, as at that period the thirst for plunder among the officers of the British navy, and their consequent annoyance of neu- trals, were very great. It was soon afterwards rumored that they had information of our intention of going to the Isle of France, and meant to prevent it ; although we had not violated any known law or regulation of the place, or compromised any of the rights of neu- trals, nor was the island blockaded. Our exertions, therefore, were ISLE OF FRANCE. 33 unremitting to be off with the least possible delay. Accordingly, be- ing ready for sea, we went on board in the afternoon of the 4th of February, in a strong southeaster, and with a prospect of its increase. We had been on board" butja short time before we saw a boat put off from the Dlomede, and row towards us. If it had been their inten» tion to board us, as we supposed to be the case, they were unable to do so, from the violence of the wind, and they landed about a mile to leeward. As, in going out of the bay, we should be obliged to pass by the Diomede, we waited till after dark for this purpose. In the mean time the gale had increased to such a degree, that, when we attempted to heave ahead, we found it to be entirely impossible, and, as the only alternative, we slipped our cables, hoisted the fore-topmast staysail, and were soon at sea, out of the reach of molestation. Arriving safely at the Isle of France on the 13th of March, our cargo was disposed of immediately, to great advantage. The ship was again loaded with a cargo of the produce of the island, and we sailed for home on the 8th of April ; having been only twenty-six days in selling and delivering one cargo, purchasing and lading another, and getting off. Here, again, we had to leave rather abrupt- ly, and a day or two sooner than had been contemplated, in conse- quence of information, which was received on a Sunday morning, that at a meeting, the preceding evening, of the Jacobin club (which then governed the place), it had been decreed that an embargo should be laid, on Monday morning, on all the foreign vessels then in port. Having previously, as has been seen, suffered here from a six months' embargo, it was determined, if possible, to escape another such detention, even at some hazard. In pursuance of this determination, a number of sailors were hired, and brought on board ; one of the pilots of the port, who was an in- fluential member of the Jacobin club, was, by means of an exorbi- tant price for his services, and by a little stratagem which was ac- quiesced in by him, prevailed upon to be on board the ship, and to conduct her out of port ; the ship's papers were procured from the Bureau of the government by an officer of the port, for which he was rewarded by a free passage to Salem ; and all other preparations being made, — as soon as the port bells rang to call the populace to dinner, the three topsails, with the jib and spanker, were hastily bent, 34 FIRST VOYAGE. the cables slipped, and the ship put to sea before their return, — the long boat being given to the hired sailors, to convey themselves and the pilot on shore. Not having a sufficiency of provisions on board for a passage to America, no other alternative was left us but to stop at the Isle of Bourbon ; accordingly, with only one anchor and one cable left, we anchored the next day in the roads of St. Dennis. The account of the transactions here I copy from Captain Silsbee's notes. — " On landing at St. Dennis, I called on the Governor of the island (whose residence was immediately contiguous to the wharf, and who was one of the old Royalists), as was usual, though not obligatory; and, immediately after leaving him, devoted myself exclusively to the procurement of such provisions as I could find, and the addition of a few bags of coffee to the cargo ; which business was not ac- complished until towards night, — when, just as I was stepping from the wharf into my boat, with a determination to be at sea before morning, the Governor ordered me to his presence ; which order I obeyed from necessity, and with strong apprehension that some re- straint was to be imposed on me. On meeting the Governor, he ask- ed, — ', How long do you contemplate staying at Bourbon } ' My an- swer was, ' No longer than is necessary to complete my business.' He added, — ' Can't you leave here to-night .'' ' I replied, ' I can do so, if you wish it.' He then said to me, ' As you had the politeness to call on me this morning, and as 1 should be sorry to see you injur- ed, hearken to my advice, and leave here to-night, if practicable.' I thanked the Governor for his advice, and was on my way towards my boat, when he called me back and said, ' Let no one know what I have said to you.' I was in my boat and on board the ship as soon as possible after leaving the Governor. There was a brig of war at anchor in the roads, a little to windward of our ship. Towards mid- night I caused the anchor to be hove up without noise, and let the ship drift to leeward (the wind and current being favorable), without mak- ing sail, until from the darkness of the night we had lost sight of the brig ; when we made all sail directly from the land. At daylight in the morning, the brig was out, and in pursuit of us ; but, in the course of the day, gave up the chase. _" I never knew the cause of the Governor's advice, but attributed RETURN HOME. 35 it to an apprehension, on his part, that my stopping at Bourl;)on might be supposed by the populace to be for the purpose of taking off tlie French admiral St. Felix (another of the old Royalists), who had rendered himself obnoxious to them, and who was known to be then secreted somewhere on the island ; and that this suspicion might compel him (the Governor) to cause the detention and perhaps the seizure of my ship, if I remained there until the next day." Whatever might have been the Governor's motive, we could per- ceive in his advice only a disinterested and friendly act towards us ; by means of which mischief was probably averted. Pursuing our course to the westward, we struck soundings in sixty-five fathoms on L'Agulhas Bank, the 4th of May ; passed the Cape of Good Hope the next day, and on the 30th came to anchor at the Island of As- cension. The time we passed here in fishing, catching turtle, shoot- ing wild goats, and rambling about the island, formed a pleasing and healthy interlude to the monotony of our voyage. Having obtained a good supply of all such refreshments as the island afforded, we left it on the first of June, and, after a very pleasant passage, anchored in Salem harbor on the tenth of July ; having been absent nineteen months ; and having the satisfaction of returning all our men, in health, to their families and friends. This voyage, thus happily accomplished, will be viewed, when taken in all its bearings, as a very remarkable one ; — first, from the extreme youth of him on whom the whole duty and responsibility of conducting the enterprise rested ; aided by a chief mate younger than himself, and by a second mate but a few years older. Captain Silsbee was not twenty years old when entrusted with this enterprise ; the chief mate, Charles Derby, had not entered on. his twentieth year; and the second mate, who was discharged at the Isle of France, and v/hose place I filled afterward, was about twenty-four years old. Secondly, — from the foresight, ingenuity, and adroitness manifest- ed in averting dangers ; in. perceiving advantages, and in seizing them opportunely, and turning them to the best account ; — and third- ly, from the great success attending this judicious management, as demonstrated by the fact of his returning to the owner four or five times the amount of the original capital. Mr, Derby used to call us his boys, and boast of our achievements ; and well might he do so ; 36 FinST VOYAGE. for it is not probable that the annals of the world can furnish another example of an enterprise of such magnitude, requiring the exercise of so much judgment and skill, being conducted by so young a man, aided only by those who were yet younger, and accomplished with the most entire success. It was a gratifying evidence of confidence and approbation, that, after such extended observations of my capacity and character, Cap- tain Silsbee should invite me to accompany him again to India in the Benjamin, us chief mate ; which I was preparing to do, when, unex- pectedly, Mr. Derby made known his intention of giving that office to his nephew, and proposed my going as second mate. This I de- clined to do ; and thus raised a barrier to any advancement where I had most reason to hope for it. I remained without employment till the autumn, not without expe- riencing much anxiety and impatience, — when I was invited by Captain Chipman to go with him, as chief mate, in the bark Enter- prise, belonging to the son of my former employer, and bound to Bordeaux. Captain Chipman, a native of Salem, was an experienc- ed navigator ; one who had seen severe and even cruel service at sea ; having, during our revolutionary war, been pressed on board a British frigate, and taken to the East Indies; where, in some engage- ment, he received a wound, the effect of which remained to the end of his days, and probably lessened their number. He was a rigid disciplinarian ; a good-hearted man ; but often irritable, from the effect of indisposition caused by his wound. Our bark was so deep- ly laden that there were but few days of the passage when the sea was not rolling from side to side over our deck, and twenty-five days were consumed before reaching our destination. Arriving safely at Bordeaux, late in November, we there passed the winter of 1794-95, a winter of remarkable severity, and such as is rarely experienced in that part of France. The running ice made sad havoc with all those ships which were not seasonably re- moved from the effect of its greatest force. The cables of some were cut off, and they drifted on shore ; the bottoms of others were cut through, and they sunk at their anchors. The cold, being pro- porfonally severe at the North, greatly facilitated the operations of Pichegru in the conquest of Holland. TRENCH EEYOLXJTJON. 37 This was a period of unusual effervescence in the minds of the French people ; when, professing to worship Reason, they seemed, to have abandoned any they might ever have had. On one of the De- cades, I went, amongst those going to worship, into what they term- ed the Temple of Reason. It was one of the old Catholic churches, fitted up in accordance with the new order of things. At one end of the interior was painted, in imitation of wild natural scenery, trees and shrubs, rocks and precipices, on a screen which concealed seats at various elevations, and flights of steps leading to them, and extend- ing nearly up to the ceiling. Here, and on the floor of the Temple, were assembled, probably, one hundred and fifty persons ; who were addressed by a citizen, from the pulpit, on the subject of^^ the advan- tages resulting, and to result, to France and to the world, from the Revolution ; — a Revolution which was the pride and glory of the ■ patriots, and the dread and horror of the aristocrats ; — a Revolution which would place France at the head of the civilized world, and immortalize all those who were most instrumental in producing it, &c. &c. It was, in those days, hazardous even for a foreigner to be seen in the streets without the tricolored cockade ; equally so was. it to use the words Monsieur and Madame^ instead of citoyen and cito- yenne. Even the slightest reference to the old regime was inadmissi- ble ; and such was the tumult, one evening when I was present at the Great Theatre, because an actress appeared with a white feather in her head-dress, that it was suppressed with much difficulty, and only by calling in the aid of the military. At every corner and public place in the city, was to be seen a tablet inscribed with large letters as follows, — '■'■ Liherie, Egalite, Fraternite^ ou la mort.'''' Such were some of the freaks incident to the early part of the French Revolution ; and such was the infatuation of the sovereign people, as to render them blind to the fact of their having substituted a hundred tyrants for the one they had destroyed. There was, at this time, a great scarcity of provisions in France, and the poor experienced unusual suffering from that cause. Flour produced thirty dollars a barrel, and other provisions in proportion ; so that our cargo of fish sold for a great profit. Having invested the proceeds of it in a cargo of wine and brandy, we sailed for home in March, and arrived there in safety after a fair passage. Remaining 4 38 FIRST VOYAGE. but a few days at home, I sailed again with Captain Chipman, in tlie same capacity and in the same vessel, to New York, — there to lade a cargo for France. After being partially loaded, accounts were re- ceived from thence which discouraged the prosecution of the plan. The cargo was relanded, the crew discharged, the vessel laid by, and myself alone left to take care of her. In the autumn of 1795, a voyage was determined on for the bark, to the Isle of Bourbon ; to lade a part of the cargo at New York, and to proceed to Boston for the remainder. The charge of this en- terprise was confided to me, and, as will readily be supposed, was very gratifying to me. But, in carrying into execution the first part of this plan, that of conducting the vessel to Boston, I came near terminating my nantical and earthly course, from a cause beyond the reach of human control. When we came in sight of Cape Cod, the weather was clear and pleasant with a light breeze from the east- ward, before which we spread all sail for Boston light ; but very sud- denly the wind increased, accompanied with thick weather, and every appearance of a storm. It was no less extraordinary than unfortunate, that neither myself, nor any one on board, had entered Boston harbor from sea, consequently no one was acquainted with the localities of the light-house. Under such circumstances, in thick weather, a gale of wind blowing on shore, and night approach- ing, — to have run for the light, in the hope of obtaining a pilot, would have been the height of imprudence. The only alternative, then, which presented for the salvation of the ship and our lives, was that of hauling on a wind, and endeavoring to keep off shore ; but this was a forlorn hope, for we had advanced far into the bay, and could make only short boards each way. As every man was sensi- ble of the impending danger, they worked with unusual alacrity in close-reefing the topsails, which, with the courses, when hauled on a wind, brought the lee gunwale under water. It was about four o'clock, P. M., and the sea had increased so much that the ship, be- ing a dull sailer, made nearly as much lee way as head way. The night was long, dark, terrific, and it was doubtful if any one of us would see the light of another day ; yet all were alert, at their posts, in wearing ship, though thoroughly drenched with the spray which constantly broke over us. The only glimmering hope that remained NARROW ESCAPE. 39 to US was, that the gale might not be of the ordinary duration ; and this was realized, as, at dawn, the gale abated as suddenly as it had risen, leaving us nearly becalmed. This in no degree lessened the danger of our situation. By the soundings, we knew that we were but little distant from Cohasset rocks, on which the sea was breaking with great fury, and constantly heaving the ship toward them. We had got ready our anchors ; aware, however, that if they brought the ship up, which was doubtful, the cables would soon be cut off by the rocks, for a chain cable was not then known. In this dilemma, with a dense fog and a light easterly breeze, a little fishing vessel appear- ed close alongside of us, bound in. The skipper knew his position exactly, and said if we would follow him, we should be inside the light in two hours. We did follow him, and, in less than two hours, were boarded by a pilot when inside the light. This sudden transition from the most imminent danger to the most perfect safety ; from the most boister- ous, sleepless, and terrific night, to the smooth water, quiet, and safety of a secure haven, was productive of emotions more easily imagined than described ; nor could I fail to contrast the bearing which a dif- ferent result (supposing I had survived it) would have had on my future destiny. CHAPTER II. Voyage to Havre de Grace — Disappoinhnent — Send home tlie Enterprise — Buy a Cutter — Amount of Vessel and Cai-go — Explanation of my Plan — Apprehension of my Friends — Name of the Vessel— Sail from Ha^^.•e — Disaster — Attempt to return — Fall to Leeward — Come to Anchor — Cables part — Eun ashore — Humane Conduct of the People — They unlade and get off the Vessel — Enter River Orme — Stop the Leaks — Ectum to Havre — Eepah- the Vessel — The Crew desert. ^"U^ISIQ^ completed the lading of the ship, I sailed from Boston in October, 1795, bound to the Isle of Bourbon. The confidence, thus evinced, in entrusting the management of a valuable vessel and cargo to so young and inexperienced a man, for I had then only attained my majority, was very gratifying to my ambition, and was duly appreciated. In those almost primitive days of our commerce, a coppered vessel was scarcely known in the United States ; and on the long East India voyages, the barna- cles and grass, which accumulated on the wooden sheathing, retarded the ship's sailing so much, that a third vhmore time, at least, was required for the passages, than is needed since the practice of sheathiifg with copper has been adopted. The success attending this voyage was very satisfactory to my employer, of which he gave evidence in despatching me again, in the same vessel, on a voyage to Europe, and thence to Mocha, for a cargo of coffee. While at Havre de Grace, in the summer of 1797, engaged in making preparations for pursuing the voyage, I had the mortification to learn, by letters from my employer, that some derangement had occurred in his affairs, which made it necessary to abandon the ]\Iocha enterprise, and to place in his hands, with the least possible delay, the funds destined for that object. Among the numerous commercial PURCHASE A VESSEL. -ii adventures, in which our merchants at that time had been engagea to the eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, no voyage had been undertaken to Mocha. To be the first, therefore, in an untried adven- ture, was highly gratifying to my ambition ; and my disappointment was proportionally great when compelled to relinquish it. To have detained the vessel in France, while waiting the slow progress of the sale of the cargo, would have been injudicious ; and she was there- fore despatched for home under charge of the mate, William "Webb, of Salem. Being thus relieved from the necessity of an immediate return to the United States, I flattered myself that, even with the very con- tracted means which I possessed, I might still engage, with a little assistance, and on a very humble scale, in some enterprise to the Isle of France and India. When, therefore, I had accomplished the business with which I had been chai-ged, by remitting to the owner in Salem his property with me, I began earnestly to put to the test the practicability of the object of which I was so desirous, A coincidence of favorable and very encouragirfg circumstances aided my views. A friend of mine had become proprietor of a little cutter of thirty- eight tons burden, which had been a packet between Dover and Calais. This vessel had been taken for a debt ; and the owner, not knowing what to do with her, offered her to me for a reasonable price, and to pay when I had the ability. This credit would enable me to put all my capital in the cargo, excepting what, was required for coppering and fitting the cutter for the contemplated voyage, about five hundred dollars ; leaving me fifteen hundred to be invested in the cargo. On making known to others of my friends the plan of my voyage, two of them engaged to embark to the amount of a thousand dollars each, on condition of sharing equally the profits at the end of the voyage. Having become proprietor of the cutter, which, with all additional expenses, cost, ready for sea, about one thousand dollars, an investment of articles best suited to the market of the Isle of France was purchased to the amount of three thou- sand five hundred dollars ; making vessel and cargo amount to four thousand five hundred. . It is not probable that the annals of com- merce can furnish another example of an Indiaman and cargo being fitted and expedited on so humble a scale. 4* 42 FIRST VOYAGE. I had now the high gratification of uncontrolled action. An innate love of independence, an impatience of restraint, an aversion to responsibility, and a desire to have no other limits to my wanderings than the globe itself, reconciled me to the endurance of fatigues and privations, which I knew to be the unavoidable consequence of navi- gating in so frail a bark, rather than to possess the comparative ease and comfort, coupled with the restraint and responsibility which the. command of a fine ship belongmg to another would present. As there are, doubtless, many persons, not excepting those, even, who are familiar with commercial and maritime aflairs, who will view this enterprise as very hazardous from sea risk, and as oflfering but a very small prospect of emolument, it is proper, so far as I am able, to do away such impressions by briefly stating the object I had in view. On my late voyage to the Isle of Bourbon, I had perceived a great deficiency in the number of vessels, requisite for the advan- tageous conveyance of passengers and freight to and from the Isles of France and Bourbon. If my cutter had been built expressly for the purpose, she could not have been more suitable. With a large and beautifully finished cabin, where passengers would be more com- fortably accommodated than in many vessels of greater dimensions ; with but small freighting room, and requiring, therefore, but little time to load, and of greater speed in sailing than the generality of mer- chant vessels, I had no doubt of being able to sell her there for more than double the cost; or I might find it to be more advantageous to employ her in freighting between the islands. In either event, I felt entire confidence in being amply remunerated for the time and risk. On the cargo, composed of such articles as my late experience had proved to be most in demand, I had no doubt of making a profit of from fifty to one hundred per cent, on its cost. The proceeds of vessel and cargo, invested in the produce of the island, and shipped to Europe or the United States, would, at that time, have yielded a clear gain of thirty-three and one third per cent. Thus, in the course of one year, I should make two hundred per cent, on the original cap- ital ; a result which might be considered abundant compensation for the time it would consume, and should take from the enterprise the character of quixotism, with which it had been stigmatized. As soon as it became known at Havre that my destination was the DANGEROOS VOYAGE. 4S Isle of FrancGj some of my friends, anxious for my safety, and per- ceiving in the enterprise only the ardor and temerity of inexperienced youth, endeavored to dissuade me from it, by painting to me, in glow- ing colors, the distress and probable destruction I was preparing for myself and men. But, however friendly and considerate the advice, I felt myself more competent to judge of the risk than they were, and, consequently, disregarded them.* The vessel, being all ready for sea on the 20th of September, 1797, was detained several days by the difficulty of procuring men. Those who were engaged one day would desert the next ; and the dangerous character of the enterprise having been discussed and admitted among the seamen in port, I began to be seriously apprehen- sive that I might not succeed in procuring a crew. At length, how- ever, with much difficulty, and some additional pay, I succeeded in procuring four men ; and, having previously engaged a mate, our number was complete.. To delay proceeding to sea a moment longer than was necessary, would have been incurring a risk of the loss of my men, and the pay I had advanced them. Hence I was induced to sail when appear- ances were very inauspicious. A strong north wind was blowing into the bay with such violence as already to have raised a consider- able sea ; but I flattered myself that, as the sun declined, it would abate ; that, if we could weather Cape Barfleur, we should make a free wind down channel ; and that, if this should be found imprac- ticable, we could, at all events, return to Havre Roads, and wait there a more favorable opportunity. With such impressions, we sailed from Havre on the 25th of Sep- tember. A great crowd had assembled on the pier head to witness our departure, and cheered us as we passed. It was about noon, and we were under full sail ; but we had scarcely been out two hours, when we were obliged to reduce it to a double-reefed mainsail, fore- sail, and second-sized jib. With the sail even ♦•bus diminished, the vessel, at times, almost buried herself; still, as every part of the *In conformity with a condition in the contract for the vessel, she was called the Caroline. We navigated with such papers only as our foreign consuls were^ at that period, in the habit of giving on similar emergencies ; the bill of sale and consular certificate attached, which were respected by the belligerents. 44 FIKST VOYAGE. equipment was new and strong, I flattered myself with being able to weather the Cape, and pressed forward through a sea in which wo were continually enveloped, cheered with the hope that we had nothing worse to experience, and that we should soon be relieved by the ability to bear away and make a free wind. I was destined, how- ever, to a sad disappointment; for the wind and sea having increased towards midnight, an extraordinary plunge into a very short and sharp sea "completely buried the vessel, and, with a heavy crash, snapped off the bowsprit by the board. The vessel then luffed into the wind, in defiance of the helm, and the first shake of the foresail stripped it from the bolt rope. No other alternative now presented than to endeavor to regain the port of Havre ; a task, under existing circumstances, of very difficult and doubtful accomplishment. The sea had increased in so great a degree, and ran so sharp, that we were in continual apprehension of having our decks swept. This circumstance, combined with the sea- sickness, which none escaped, retarded and embarrassed the opera- tion of wearing round on the other tack. The violent motion of the vessel had also prevented the possibility of obtaining sleep ; indeed, no person had been permitted to go below before the disaster ; and none had the disposition to do so afterwards ; but all were alert in the performance of their duty, which had for its immediate object the getting of the vessel's head pointed towards Havre. This was at length effected ; but, as we had no ^ar suitable for a jury bowsprit, we could carry only such part of our mainsail as was balanced by a jib, set in the place of a foresail. With this sail we made so much lee way, that it was evident, as soon as daylight enabled me to form a judgment, that we could not reach Havre ; nor was it less evident, that nothing but an abatement of the gale could save us from being stranded before night. With the hope of this abatement, the heavens were watched with an intensity of interest more easily imagined than described ; but no favorable sign appeared ; and before noon we had evidence of being to leeward of the port of Havre. We now cleared away the cables and anchors, and secured with s battens the communications with the cabin and forecastle While thus engaged, the man at the mast head announced the appall ing, but expected intelligence, of " breakers under the lee." SAFELY LANDED. 45 This information had the effect of an electric shock to rouse the crew from that apathy which was a natural consequence of twenty- four hours' exposure to great fatigue, incessant wet and cold, and want of sleep and food ; for we had not been able to cook any thing. The rapidity with which we were driven to leeward, soon made the breakers discernable from deck ; and they were of such extent as to leave us no choice whether we headed east or west ; for the forlorn hope of being held by our anchors was all that remained to us. No one on board possessed any knowledge of the shore we were approach- ing ;1>ut our chart denoted it as rocky. It was easy to perceive, that to be thrown among rocks, by such a sea, must be the destruction of us all. Hence it was of the utmost importance to discover, and to • anchor off the part of the shbre which appeared to be most free from rocks ; and with this view the mate was looking out from the mast head. As he perceived an apparently clear beach east of us, and within our ability of reaching, we steered for it ; and when the water Avas only six fathoms deep, we lowered our sails and came to anchor. But as our anchor dragged, a second was let go, which, for a moment only, brought the vessel's head to the sea, when one cable parted ; and as we were drifting raj)idly with the other, we cut it, then hoisted the jib, and steered directly for the clear space in the beach. Going in with great velocity, on the top of a high breaker, we were soon enveloped in its foam, and in that of several others which succeeded. The vessel, however, notwithstanding she struck the ground with a violence which appeared sufficient to dash her in pieces, still held together, in defiance of this and several minor shocks ; and, as the tide was falling, she soon became so still, and the water so shoal, as to enable us to go on shore. As the alarm gun had been fired, the peasantry had come down in great numbers ; and when they perceived us leaving the vessel, they ran into the surf, and, with such demonstrations of humanity and kindness as our forlorn situation was calculated to excite, supported us to the shore, which we had no sooner reached, than they compli- mented us on the judicious selection we had made of a place to come on shore. And it was now obvious to us, that if we had struck half a mile, either on one side or the other from this spot, there would have been scarce a possibility of saving, our lives. 46 FIRST VOYAGE.. We were fortunate, not only in the selection of the spot, but also in the circumstance of its being nearly high water wiien the vessel struck. The concurrence of two such circumstances turned the scale in my favor ; and immediately after landing I was con- vinced that the vessel and cargo, though much damaged, would both be saved. When the tide had so fallen as to •leave the vessel dry, the inhabitants showed no disposition to take advantage of our dis- tress, by stipulating for a certain proportion of what they might save, before going to work ; but, prompted by their humane feelings, set about discharging the vessel, in such numbers and with such ear- nestness, that before sunset she was completely unloaded, and the cargo carried above high water mark. The gale, towards evening, had very much abated, and, before the next high water, was fortunately succeeded by a calm and a great decrease of sea. In the mean time, the leaks made in the bottom were stopped, as well as time and circumstances would permit ; an anchor was carried as far as the retreat of the tide would admit, and the cable hove taut. Having made these dispositions, I engaged a pilot and a sufficient number of men to attend, at full tide, to heave the vessel off, and to endeavor to remove her into the river Orme, \vhich was near by. These arrangements being made, I went with my men to an inn, in the neighboring town of Oistrehara, to get some refreshment, and to pass the night ; compelled by exhaustion to place entire dependence on those who were strangers to us, for getting the vessel afloat, as well as to secure the cargo from being plundered. Though worn out by fatigue and anxiety, my distress of mind was so great that I could not sleep. The thoughts that I had contracted a debt which I might never be able to pay, that no insurance had been effected, that, without credit, I might be compelled to sacrifice what had been saved to defray the expenses incurred, and that my fortune and prospects were ruined, were so incessantly haunting my imagination, that the night rather added to, than diminished my feel- ings of exhaustion. The following morning I found the vessel lying safely in the river Orme ; and men were also there, ready to make those temporary repairs which were indispensable to enable us to return to Havre. PROCEED TO HAVRE. 47 In the forenoon it was required of me to go to Caen (two or three miles distant) for the purpose of making the customary report to the municipal authorities, which was a business of very little intricacy and very speedy accomplishment. An examination of the vessel and cargo satisfied me that the former could be repaii'ed at very trifling expense, and the latter was not damaged to much amount. The alacrity to render us assistance, in the people of this place, from the beginning of our disaster, was extended to the period when, the cargo having been transported to the vessel and re-shipped, we were prepared to return to Havre. As in cases of vessels stranding, it seems to be a practice, sanc- tioned by long established usage, (particularly on the other side of the channel,) to consider the unfortunate as those abandoned by Heaven, from whom may lawfully be taken all that the elements have spared, I was prepared for a demand of salvage to a considerable amount. But in this expectation I found I had done great injustice to these good people ; for, on presenting their account, it appeared they had charged no more than for ordinary labor, and that at a very moderate rate. It is a circumstance, also, very creditable to them, that notwithstanding some, packages of the cargo, of much value, and of such hulk as to be easily concealed, were in their possession, exclusively, for several days and nights, yet nothing was lost. Al- though these transactions are of a date so remote, that probably many of the actors therein have " ceased from their earthly labors," yet I never recall them to mind without a feeling of compunction that I had not ascertained the names of the principals in the business, and made that public acknowledgement for the disinterested and impor- tant services rendered me, which gratitude, no less than justice demanded. For this omission my perturbed state of mind is my only apology. With a favorable wind for Havre, we proceeded for that port, where we arrived in about ten days after having sailed from there. The reception I met with at Havre, from my friend James Price, Esq. of Boston, .who was more largely interested in the adventure than any other individual excepting myself, was kind and friendly in the extreme, and tended to counteract the effects of my deep mortification, and to raise my spirits for the prosecution of the original plan. He 48 FIRST VOYAGE. relieved my anxiety relative to the means of defraying the expenses of repairs, by engaging to provide them. He gave me a room at his house ; and while I was ill there, (for this I did not escape,) he facili- tated my recovery by his care and kindness. With such attentions, my health was soon re-established, my spirits renewed, and I pursued the repairing and refitting the vessel with my accustomed ardor. On examination of the cargo, it was found to be very little dam- aged. The vessel was considerably injured so near the keel, that it was necessary to lay her on blocks, where it was discovered that the lower plank was so much broken that several feet of it would inquire to be replaced with new. This being accomplished, the other repairs made, and the cargo again put on board, there was nothing to pre- vent proceeding immediately to sea, excepting a difficulty in procuring men, which seemed to be insurmountable. No one of my former crew, excepting a black man, (George,) would try it again. We had arrived at the close of the month of November ; and each day's delay, by the advance of winter, increased the difficulty and danger of our enterprise. Indeed, the westerly gales were already of fre- quent occurrence ; the nights had become long, and when I heard the howling winds and beating raift, and recollected in what a frail boat I had to contend with them, I wished that my destiny had marked out for me a task of less difficult accomplishment. CHAPTER III. Difficulty in procuring Men — Partially accomplislied — Sail from Havre — A British Frigate — Usliant — Sketch of the Crew — Anecdotes of George — His Bravery and Fidehty — Swimming after the Pig — British Frigate Stag — Danger of Contact — Chased off Cadiz — Boarded from a French Privateer — Eeleased unharmed — Cape de Verde Islands — A Gale — Lose a Cask of Water — Causes a Necessity of Stop- ping at Cape of Good Hope — Arrival — Interview with the Admiral — Many Vis- itors — Suspicion of our Object — Interview with Lord Macartney — Searched for Papers — Sell the Vessel — Trouble with the Collector — Appeal to Lord Macart- ney — Adjusted — The Vessel despatched — Never heard of after. fj^iS difficulty of procuring men seemed to in- crease with each additional day's detention. Those I whom I engaged one day, would desert the next, j alarmed by some exaggerated story of our first ( attempt. In the course of three weeks I shipped no less than four different men as mates, and as many different crews, and each, in turn, abandoned me. At length I procured an active and capable 'young seaman from a Nantucket ship, one whom the captain recommended, as mate, and another man and a boy in addition to George, who had held true to his en- gagement. I was desirous of procuring one more, but my attempt to do so was unsuccessful ; and fearing that, by any delay for this purpose, I might lose those already on board, I sailed immediately. Our expedition had become a subject of general conversa- tion in the town ; and the difficulty of getting away the Indiaman (as she was called) was known to every one. The day, therefore, that we sailed, the pier-head was again thronged with people, who cheered us as we passed by, wishing us un Ion voyage ; but no small portion of them considered us as bound to certain destruction. It was now the twenty-first day of December ; a season of the year when the loss of a few hours only of the easterly wind, then blowing, might be at- 5 50 FIRST VOYAGE. tended witli disagreeable, if not disastrous consequences. We there- fore set all our sail to improve it, and, while making rapid progress towards the channel, were brought to by a British frigate, command- ed by Sir E.. Strachan. The boarding officer was very civil. He declared our enterprise to Le a'ver)-' daring' one ; caused us as little detention as possible, and, returning to his ship, immediately made the signal that we might proceed. It was soon very evident that no person on board, excepting the mate and myself, was capable of performing the very common and indispensable business of steering ; and though there was no doubt our men would soon learn, yet, in tlie mean time, we had the pros- pect before us of a tedious, though not very laborious course of duty. As the wind continued to be favorable, our passage down the channel was easy and expeditious ; and the day after leaving Havre we passed by and in sight of the island of Ushant. We were now in a position to feel the full effect of the westerly gales, which are so prevalent at this season of the year ; and, in order to have plenty of sea-room, m case of encountering one, I directed a course to be steered which should carry us wide of Cape Ortegal. A sufficient time had now elapsed since leaving Havre, (it being the third day,) to give me a very tolerable knowledge of my crew ; whose characters, peculiarities, and accomplishments were such, that a sketch of them may not be without interest to the reader. My mate, Reuben Barnes, was a young man of nineteen or twenty, a native of Nantucket, who, having been engaged in the whale fishery, had profited by that excellent school to acquire, not only the know- ledge of the seaman's profession, but also enough of the mechanic arts to fish a spar with dexterity, to caulk a seam, or to make a buck- et or a barrel. The intelligence, activity, watchfulness, and adroit- ness of this young man relieved me from much anxiety and care ; and in his conduct while with me, he evinced all the steadiness and fidelity which the recommendation he brought, as well as the place of his birth, had led me to expect. Decidedly the most important personage of any foremast hands was the black man George, who had dared to embark on our second voy- age, after having shared in the disaster's of the first. In his appear- ance, capacity, and dialect, George was the veriest negro that can be ANECDOTES OF GEORGE. 51 imagined. For honesty, fidelity, and courage, he may have been equalled, but can never have been surpassed. He stood about six feet and three inches, vs^as rather slender, very awkward, and of a much- more sable hue than common, but with an expression of countenance mild and pleasing. With simplicity of character approximating to folly, he united a degree of self-conceit, which led him to believe that he could do whatever could be done by another, and, in some cases, to suppose he could make great improvements ; an instance of which occurred before we had been out a week. In his previous voyages George had been cook, and had therefore nothing to do with the compass ; but now, having to take his regular turn at steering, he was greatly puzzled with its unsteadiness.- He could steer in the night with tolerable accuracy, by giving him a star by which to steer; but the compass appeared to him to be calculated only to embarrass. With a view of remedying this difficulty,- George had taken off the cover to the till of his chest, on which having marked the points of the compass, and pierced a hole in the centre for the pivot, he brought it aft, and with great appearance of complacency, and expectation of applause, placed it on deck before the helmsman, with the proper point directed forward to correspond with the course, and then exclaimed, " Dair, massa, dat compass be teady ; George teer by him well as anybody." But this simplicity and conceit was more^ than redeemed by his tried fidelity and heroic courage, of which the following is a remark- able instance. George had been a slave to some planter in Savan- nah ; and one day, being in the woods with his master, they encoun- tered an Indian, who was hunting. Some dispute arising, the Indian, having the advantage of being armed, threatened to shoot them. In consequence of this threat they seized him and took away his gun ; but after a little while, and with urgent entreaties and fair promises from him, they were induced to return it ; first taking .the precaution to dip it into water, to prevent an immediate use of it. This served again to rouse the anger of the Indian, who immediately took the readiest means for drying it. In the mean time George and his mas- ter had entered a canoe, and, pursuing their way in a narrow river or creek, had got a long distance from the spot where they had left the Indian ; when, on looking back, they perceived him running after 52 FIRST VOYAGE. them on the bank. On arriving abreast of them he immediately took aim, which George perceiving, threw himself, as a shield, between his master and the ball, and was so severely wounded that liis life was, for many weeks, despaired of. After a confinement of six months, he entirely recovered ; and, as a reward, his master gave him his liberty. At the time he engaged with me he had been a sailor about two years, and had been so invariably cheated out of his wages, that he had no other means of clothing himself than the advance I paid him. Such treatment had been productive of a tinge of misanthropy ; and it was not until after long acquaintance that he gave me his entire confidence. As this acquaintance continued for many years, (even as long as he lived,) and as he was a sharer of my various adven- tures, I shall have frequent occasion to mention his name in connex- ion with my own, while narrating them. My other man had been a Prussian grenadier. He had served in the army of the Duke of Brunswick, at the time of his invading Hol- land to restore the authority of the Stadtholder, and in other cam- paigns ; but, having a dislike to the profession, he had deserted, and had been, about eighteen months, a sailor in English vessels. Dur- ing this time he had not acquired such a knowledge of steering 4;hat we could leave him at the helm without watching him ; and however brave he may have been in the ranks, he was the veriest coward im- aginable, when called to the performance of duties aloft. In addi- tion to this incapacity, he possessed a most ungovernable temper ; and, being a powerful man, we had considerable difficulty in keeping him, at all times, in a state of subordination ; a difficulty which was, in some degree, augmented by his very imperfect knowledge of our language, and the consequent embarrassment he found in making himself understood. The last, as well as least of our numbers, was a little French boy of fourteen years, who possessed all the vivacity peculiar to his coun- trymen, and who, having been some time on board the Carmagnole and other privateers, had acquired many of the tricks of a finished man-of-war's man. Some months' residence in an English pi-ison had given him the command of a few English words ; but they were not of a selection that indicated much care in the teacher. ANECDOTES OF GEOEGE. _ 53 It was not uncommon for George, the Prussian grenadier, and the French boy, to get into a warm debate on the relative merits of their respective countries ; for they were all men of great vivacity and patriotism ; and sometimes (probably from not understanding each other) they would become so angry as to render it necessary for the mate to interfere to restore tranquillity. At such moments I used to think, that if Hogarth could have been an observer, his genius would have done justice to the group. It may fairly be presumed, however, that-such a ship's company, for an India voyage, was never before seen, and, moreover, that " we ne'er shall look upon its like again." For several days after passing the Isle of Ushant, the wind was light from north-west and west-north-west, accompanied with a heavy swell from that quarter; and though our progress was, in consequence, slow, it was proportionally comfortable. Before we had reached the latitude of Cape Finisterre, the light wind, before which we had been sailing with all our canvass spread, died away, and left us, some hours, becalmed. During this time one of our pigs had got over- board, and was swimming away from the vessel. George, being an excellent swimmer, did not hesitate to go after him ; but when he had caught him, at the distance from us of about twenty fathoms, a light puff of wind, termed by seamen a cat's-paw, took the sails aback, and suddenly increased our distance from George, who, per- ceiving it, and becoming alarmed, let go the pig, and swam for the vessel, crying out lustily, as he approached, " I dead, I dead." As he had not been long in the water, nor used such exertion as to cause extraordinary exhaustion, I "was apprehensive that he might beat- tacked by a shark. We threw towards him a spar, and set imme- diately about clearing away the boat ; but before we could be ready to launch it, George had seized the spar, and, by its aid, had succeed- ed in getting along-side. When taken on board he did not hesitate to express his belief that our going from him was intentional, and that, had the breeze continued, we should have left him for the pur- pose of saving his' wages. Nor was it until after long experience, and repeatedly receiving his wages, when due, that he would acknowl- edge that he had judged me -erroneously. The day succeeding this adventure we had another, which had nearly brought our voyage to a close. Early in the morning we fell 54 FIRST VOYAGE. in with the British frigate, Stag. The wind was so light, and its influence on the manoeuvres of the ship so counteracted by a deep and hollow swell, that, getting sternway, her counter came in con- tact with our broadside with a tremendous force, which threatened immediate destruction, and which must have been the result, but for the order instantly given and obeyed, to " fill away." This saved us from a second shock ; and we were happy to perceive we had re- ceived no other damage than that of breaking the rail. The officer of the frigate very politely offered to send their carpenter on board to re- pair this ; but I declined, from my desire of not losing a moment's time in advancing towards those latitudes where gales of wind were of less frequent occurrence. When we were released from this visit, the mate immediately set about exercising his ingenuity as carpenter ; and, with great application, he completed the repairs, in a workman- like manner, on the third day after meeting the accident. We had now advanced far into the second week of our departure. The wind, though light, was fair, and the prospect was favorable for the continuance of good weather. These encouraging circumstances led me to hope that we should reach the tropical latitudes without encountering a gale, and also without meeting, what was more to be dreaded, any one of those Spanish or French privateers, which had frequented the track we were passing, and whose conduct, in many instances, to defenceless merchant vessels, had nearly equalled thaf of the ancient buccaneers. We had passed by many vessels, but had carefully avoided speak- ing with any one. At length, on a very fine morning, as the sun rose, and when we were about fifty leagues west of Cadiz, we per- ceived a small sail in the northwest. At ten o'clock she was equally plain to be seen ; and by noon we were satisfied she was in chase of, and was gaining on us. We kept steadily on our course, hoping that an increase of wind would give us an advantage, or that some other object might divert their attention. But our hopes were fallacious. The wind rather decreased ; and when this was the case, we observ- ed she appeared to approach us faster. By two'o'clock we perceived she had latteen sails, and hence had no doubt of her being a privateer. Soon after she began to fire at us, but the balls fell much short. As the v/ind continued very light, it was soon apparent that we could BOARDED FROM A FRENCH PRIVATEER. 55 not escape, as we perceived that her progress was accelerated by means of a multitude of sweeps. To run any longer would only have been incurring the risk of irritating the captain of the buccaneer ; vve therefore rounded to, and prepared to be plundeied. As they came up with us, about five o'clock, they gave such a shout of " Bonne prise ! honne prise ! " as would be expected from banditti subject to no control ; but I felt considerable relief in the persuasion that, as their flag indicated, they were French, and not Spanish. After the shouting had ceased, I was ordered, in very coarse terms, to hoist out my boat and come on board with my papers. I replied that I had not men sufficient to put out the boat. The order was reiterated, accompanied with a threat of firing into us. I then sent my men below, and waited the result, which was, that they got out their own boat. The officer, who came on board, I suppose to have been the captain himself, from the circumstance of his being a very intelligent man, and from my presence not being required on board the privateer. A cursory examination of our papers convinced him of our neutraJ character ; and the exhibition of a passport with a se.al and signature of one high in authority in the French govern- ment, while it astonished, seemed also to satisfy him, that the less trouble and detention he gave us, the better ; as he immediately ordered his ruffians lb desist from clearing away for opening the hatches, which they had already begun, and to go on board their boat, where, after wishing me a good voyage, and regretting the de- tention he had caused, he joined them ; and they returned to their privateer and sailed in pursuit of other adventures. The result of this rencontre was better than I had anticipated ; aware, as I was, of the general insubordination on board of vessels of this description. I had feared, that even if the chief had been disposed to prevent his men from plundering, it would not have been in his power ; and I was much relieved by finding myself mistaken. Pursuing a course for the Cape de Verde Islands, we came iri sight of them the thirtieth day from leaving Havre. It was my intention to stop at Port Praya, to obtain a supply of fruit and vegetables ; but I was prevented by a gale of wind, in which we lay to twelve hours, and had a fair opportunity of testing the good properties of the vessel for this miportant purpose. This was the only gale of any severity 56 FIRST VOYAGE. that \vc experienced during tne passage ; and, as evidence that it was of no inconsiderable violence, a ship came into the Cape of Good Hope three days after our arrival there, wliich had lost her mizzen- mast in the same gale. It is well known to all who have crossed the ocean, and may easily be imagined by those who have not, that a passage at sea presents to the observer little else, from day to day, than the same unbounded, and (in tropical climes) unvaried horizon; the same abyss of waters, agitated, more or less, as it is acted upon by the wind ; the same routine of duties to be performed on board, which, in the trade winds, have seldom even the ordinary excitement caused by I'educing and making sail ; and when this monotonous round is interrupted by speaking a vessel, by catching a porpoise, or by seeing a whale, the incident is seized with avidity as an important item to be inserted in the ship's log-book, or journal of the day's transaction. As our experience was of this kind, I have only to notice that we crossed the equator in the longitude of 25° ; and that we met with no occurrence, worthy of note, from the time of our leaving the Cape de Verde Islands to our arrival at the Cape of Good Hope, ex- cepting that one night, when going before the v/ind with a strong breeze, the Prussian soldier brought over the main boom with such violence as to part the sheet, and rouse all hands from their slumbers. As there was a considerable sea, it was not without great difficulty and risk that the boom was again secured. After passing the equator, we discovered that one of our casks of water had nearly leaked out ; and, having failed to fill up the empty ones, it was doubtful if we had sufficient to carr}^ us to the Isle of France. This consideration, and the desire of obtaining refreshments and a short respite from the fatigue and cinxiety of such a passage, determined me to stop at the Cape ; as I believed, also, that our car- go might be sold advantageously there. Shaping our course accordingly, we came in sight of the Table Mount on the 21st March, 1798, just three months from the time of our leaving Havre. Wo were so near in before dark as to perceive that we were signalled at the lion's head, but were not able to reach the anchorage until between nine and ten o'clock in the evening. We had scarcely dropped our anchor, when we were boarded b3';_a man-of- ARRIVE AX THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. 57 war's boat ; the officer of which, finding we were from France, im- mediately hurried me ashore, in my sea garb, to see the Admiral, (Sir Hugh C. Christian,) who, surrounded by a group of naval offi- cers, appeared very earnest for such European news as I could give them. After passing nearly an hour with the Admiral, who treated me with great civility, and answering the many questions which were asked by the company, the officer who took me from my vessel was desired to convey me on board again ; an hour having been previously named by the Admiral at which I was to meet him, the next morn- ing, at the government-house. The arrival of such a vessel from Europe naturally excited the curiosity of the inhabitants of the Cape ; and the next morning, being calm, we had numerous visitors on board, who could not dis- guise their astonishment at the size of the vessel, the boyish appear- ance of the master and mate, the queer and unique characters of the two men and boy who constituted the crew, and the length of the passage we had accomplished. Various were the conjectures of the good people of the Cape, as to the real object of our enterprise. While some among them viewed it in its true light, that of a commercial speculation, others believed that, under this mask, we were employed by the French govern- ment for the conveyance of their despatches; and some even went so far as to declare a belief that we wei'e French spies, and, as such, deserving of immediate arrest and confinement. Indeed, our enter- prise formed the principal theme of conversation at the Cape during the week subsequent to our arrival. At the hour appointed I presented myself at the government-house, and was introduced to the Governor, Lord Macartney, in whose com- pany I found, also, the Admiral. There was so much urbanity and affability in the reception I met with from the Governor as well as the Admiral, that it inspired me with confidence, and prevented my feeling any embarrassment. The Governor very politely handed me a chair ; and, seated between these two distinguished men, I was pre- pared to answer, to the best of my knowledge, such questions as they should ask me, and to give them all the late information respecting European affairs that my residence in that country, and my recent departure, enabled me to do. It was just at this period that the flo- 58 FIKST VOYAGE. tllla were assembling in the ports of the channel for the invasion of England ; and on this subject, in particular, they were very earnest to obtain information, seeming to be not without apprehension that an invasion was really intended. While I related to them what had come under my own observation with regard to the preparation, and what I had heard from others, I expressed to them my belief, founded on the desperate nature of the undertaking, that nothing more was intended by it than to keep England in a state of alarm, and to cause a corresponding increase of expenses. Having interrogated me to their satisfaction on the political affairs of France, they adverted to the more humble business of the object of my enterprise, which the Admiral did not hesitate to declare he believed to be for the conveyance of despatches for the French govern- ment ; and, in this belief, informed me that he should take measures to prevent my going to the Isle of France. At the same time, and as an additional evidence of this persuasion, he had ordered that a search should be made on board my vessel for the supposed despatch- es, and that all the papers and letters found on board should be brought to him. . Consequently my journal, book of accounts, and private letters and papers were submitted to his inspection ; and the letters I had for French gentlemen in the Mauritius were all broken open. On the conclusion of my visit to the Governor, who gave me per- mission to dispose of my cargo here if I desired, I went to the house of an old acquaintance, where I had lodged in a former voyage, and in what he considered more propitious times. Both he and his family seemed glad to see me, and invited me to take up lodgings there again ; but the safety of my vessel required my presence on board not less in port than at sea, and I therefore declined. The day following, my papers and letters were returned to me by the secretary of the Admiral ; and I was surprised by a proposition from him for the purchase of my vessel. I delayed giving an answer until the next day ; and in the mean time my inquiries led me to believe that my cargo would sell advantageously ; but there was nothing but specie which would answer my purpose to take away for it, and this was prohibited. With a provision for the removal of this difficulty, and a good price for my vessel, I was prepared to negotiate SALE OF CARGO. 59 With the secretary. Meeting him, therefore, at the time appointed, and both being what in trade is called ofF-hand men, we soon uiosed the bargain, by his engaging to pay me, on delivery of the Caroline and stores, five thousand Spanish dollars, and to obtain for me per- mission to export ten thousand. This so far exceeded the cost of the vessel, and was even so much more than I had expected to receive at the Isle of France, that I considered myself already well indemni- fied for all my trouble and anxiety. As the Admiral was pressing to have the vessel discharged, it was my intention to land the cargo, next day, on my own account ; but, in the mean time, I contracted with the merchant, at whose house I now resided, for the whole of it, at a moderate advance on the invoice ; it being agreed that he was to pay the duties, the expense of landing, &c. My spirits were now much elevated with my success, and with the prospect of soon being rid of the Caroline and of the care insep- arable from having such a vessel, so circumstanced. But I was allowed but a short period to my exultation ; new and alarming difficulties awaited me, of which I had no suspicion, and which were more harassing than the dangers of the winds and the waves. It appeared that the duties on entries at the custom-house were a percentage on the invoice, and that it was a very common practice with the merchants to make short entries. The purchaser was aware that, to stand on equal footing with other merchants, he must do as they did ; but he seems not to have reflected that, being known to be' more hostile to the English government than any other individual at the Cape, he would be rigidly watched, and, if detected, would have less indulgence than any other. The consequence was a detection of the short entry and seizure of vessel and cargo. The merchant went immediately, in a supplicating mood, to the collector, in the hope of arranging the affair before it should become generally known ; but it was all in vain. The only alternative which seemed now to be left me, was to appeal to the highest authority ; and I determined to write to Lord Macartney, and prove to him that, by my contract for the sale of the cargo, the duties were not to be paid by me, and that, consequently, I should have derived no benefit had the attempt for evading them suc- ceeded ; but that, on the other hand, if the vessel and cargo were to 60 FJRST VOYAGE. be confiscated, I should be the sufferer, as it was doubtful if the merchant could make good the loss. I hoped that he might thus be induced to advise a less severe course than the collector intended to pursue. But how to write a suitable letter embarrassed me. I had no friend with whomto advise. I was entirely ignorant of the manner of addi'essing a nobleman, and at the same time was aware of the necessity of doing it with propriety. In this dilemma, I remembered to have seen, in an old magazine on board, some letters addressed to noblemen. These I sought as models ; and they were a useful guide to me. After I had completed my letter in my best hand, and enclosed it in a neat envelope, I showed it to the Admiral's secretary, who appeared to be friendly to me. He approved of it, and advised my taking it myself to his Lordship immediately. As the schoolboy approaches his master after having played truant, so did I approach Lord Macartney on this occasion. I delivered my letter to him ; and, after hastily reading it, he sternly said, " he could not interfere in the business ; there were the laws, and if they had been infringed, the parties concerned must abide the consequence ; " but added, " he would speak to the collector on the subject." This addition, delivered in rather a milder tone, led me to encourage the hope that the affair would not end so disastrously as if left entirely to the discretion of the collector. Nor were my hopes unfounded ; as, the next day, the vessel, and that part of the cargo yet remaining on board, were restored to me ; while the portion in possession of the collector was to be adjudged in the fiscal court, where it was event- ually condemned, to the amount of about two thousand dollars.* The success of my letter was a theme of public conversation in the town, and was the means of procuring me the acquaintance of several individuals of the first respectability. The delay, caused by this controversy with the collector, was un- favorable to the views of the Admiral, who began to evince symptoms of impatience, and would, probably, have taken out the cargo with his own men, if we had not set about it with earnestness as soon as the vessel was released from seizure. Having, the day following, com- pleted the unlading, I delivered the vessel to the officer who was au- * As a favor to the merchant, I consented to share the loss with him. SALE OF VESSEL. 61 thorized to take possession. In two days after, she was expedited, with a lieutenant and competent number of men (I believe for India) ; and, in a subsequent voyage, I learned that she had never been heard of afterwards. It is probable that the officer in charge, having been accustomed only to large and square-rigged vessels, was not aware of the delicacy of management which one so small and differently rigged, required ; and to this her loss may be attributed. The various drawbacks on my cargo, arising from seizure, some damage, and some abatement, reduced the net proceeds to about the original cost. This, with the amount of the vessel, I collected in Spanish dollars, making together, after my various disbursements, the sum of eleven thousand dollars, which I kept in readiness to embark in the first vessel that should enter the bay on her way to India or China. I was obliged, however, to wait several months before any such chance offered. In the mean time my long residence and leisure at the Cape afforded me the opportunity of becoming acquaint- ed with many families, and of visiting many places in the vicinity of Cape Town. CHAPTER IV. Description of the Cape — Of the Town — Effects of Southeast Wind — Devil's Table Cloth — Season of Westerly Gales — Dangerous to the Shipping — Loss of the Sceptre — Loss of Ship Jefferson — Notice of the Inhabitants — Their Feelings under the actual Government — Simon's Bay — Constantia — Signal HLU — Eesidence and Eesom-ce of the Man stationed there — Table Mountain — The Ascent and View tiicrefrom — Perilous Situation — Mode of Rescue — Descent and Eeturn to Town. ^3325 of Good Hope is very remarkable in its form- ation ; so much so, as to make a lasting impression on the memory of those who have once seen it. The group of lofty and steep hills, called the Devil's Mount, the Table-Land, the Sugar-loaf, and the Lion's Eump, form a barrier on the south and the east sides of the town, which appears almost impassable. On a plain, at the foot of these hills, and on the border of Table Bay, is situated the beautiful town of the Cape. It presents a fine appearance when seen from the bay, and seems to possess all that neatness which is an acknowledged characteristic of the Dutch. The streets are parallel to each other, and are kept very clean. There is a large square for a parade ground, at the north part of the town, which is bounded by a canal bordered with a double row of trees. The Company's garden, as it is called, is a space of fifteen or twenty acres on the east side of the town. It is enclosed by a wall, and laid out in handsome walks, and forms one of the most delightful lounges in the world. In a retired part of this garden, and almost hidden with trees, is the residence of the Governor. Most of the houses consist of two stories, and are covered with plas- ter ; which being whitewashed every year, they have an uncommonly neat appearance. DESCRIPTION OF THE CAPE. ■ 63 During the summer months the inhabitants are greatly annoyed by the clouds of sand which' are raised by the southeast wind, which is often so violent as to compel them to keep within doors, and pene- trates into all the crevices of doors arnd windows which have not been carefully closed. These gales, which last two or three days, are fol- lowed by calms and light variable winds for the same length of time. Daring these gales, and for some time before, the top of the table- land is enveloped in thick clouds, which the people of the Cape call the Devil's Table-cloth. Although these winds are often so violent as to prevent communication with the shipping in the bay, yet they are rarely the cause of any disaster. Not so with the westerly gales, which prevail in the months of June, July, and August, and bring in a sea which it is impossible to resist. A melancholy instance of the power of these gales was seen in the loss of the English sixty-four-gun ship Sceptre, with nearly all her crew. The Dutch East Indiamen were exclusively confined to the use of Simon's Bay at this season of the year. In times of peace it was common for the vessels of all nations, on their way to and from India, to touch at this place for refreshments ; and then, almost every house was open for the reception of the captains and officers for a moderate compensation. But the vexations, experienced by neutral 'commerce at this period, were enough to discourage most navigators from stopping there. While I was there, the ship Jeffer- son of Boston was compelled to come in from having been six months on her way from Boston to India. The suspicions of the government were roused ; and, not satisfied with the examination of the log-book and papers, they caused her to be entirely unladed. And although she was at length released, yet before she could get away, a gale came on from the west, in which she went ashore and was totally lost. The climate of the Cape is very healthy ; which blessing many of the inhabitants attribute to the prevalence of the high winds f yet it is observed that instances of longevity are very rare, and that few old persons are met with. _ The native citizens are, for the most part, hospitable, friendly, and affable. A love of ease and relaxation, and an aversion to much activity of body or mind, are striking character- istics in the men. The ladies are, generally, very pretty, have fine complexions, graceful and pleasing manners, and cultivated minds. 64 FIRST VOYAGK. The invariable rvnd universal siesta causes a midnight silence and seclu- sion for the two or three hours immediately succeeding dinner. All the domestics, and most of the mechanics, are slaves ; and, as far as 1 had an opportunity of observing, they are treated with more human- ity than is generally supposed. Notwithstanding the increase of buildings, and the rise in value of real estate, as well as various other advantages, felt by the inhabitants since they submitted to the English government, there was, nevertheless, observable in many an impatience of a foreign yoke, a feeling of being a conquered people, and a. sense of degradation, which was very naturfil, and which would not be easily effaced even under the mild and equitable government of the English. In company with a native merchant I made an excursion to Simon's Bay, and to the pretty estate of Constantia. Not being able to procure lodgings on shore, we passed a night on board an American ship, which, together with several English men-of-war and Indiamen, was lying for security in Simon's Bay. At Constantia we were entertained with great hospitality and politeness by the proprietor, who showed us every part of his beautiful estate, which, for extreme neatness, as well as for profit, is unrivalled. The wine made at this place is well known in Europe and in the United States ; though it is said that more than treble the quantity produced on this estate is annually sold under the name of Constantia. Its peculiar flavor is attributed to the properties of the soil ; all attempts to produce the same else- where having failed. An excursion to the flag-staff on Sugar-Loaf Hill was an after- noon's labor of no easy accomplishment. Before reaching the top, there are several perpendicular precipices of ten to fifteen feet to climb ; and ropes are fastened to bolts, inserted in the rocks, to aid the ascent. The man, who is stationed here to signal the approach of vessels, is provided with a small brass cannon and several flags ; the former to announce a sail in the horizon, and, at the same time, to attract the attention of the citizens ; the latter to denote the kind of vessel and the nation to which she belongs. By these means informa- tion of the approach of a vessel is given many hours before her ar- rival in the bay. • The habitation of this man is so confined that his residence there would be considered a cruel punishment, were it not vol- TABLE MOUNTAIN?.. .65 untary. It is a mere dog-kennel, partly formed by the rock, and partly artificial, but barely sufficient to shelter one person, in a sitting posture, from the rays of the sun and from the inclemency of the weather. The greatest interior space does not exceed five feet, from the den to the perpendicular precipice. A slave brings him his daily provisions and water ; and this is the only opportunity the recluse has ■ for conversation during the day. My visit was, therefore, considered by him as a kind of God-send, for which he appeared to be very grateful, and which he begged me to repeat. The excursion over the Table Mountain, which is three thousand five hundred and eighty-two feet above the level of the ocean, was an undertaking of such labor as to require the greater part of a day to perform it. It was advisable, also, on many considerations, to make up a party for the purpose. Accordingly, having engaged the mate of the Jefferson, and my own mate, to accompany me, we set out together on a fine, clear morning, provided with refreshments, but without a guide, not doubting, with the information given us, of being able to find our way. We met with no embarrassment in reach- ing the chasm,^on one side of which were the craggy and irregular steps, by which only we could work our way to the top. The task was arduous, and required two hours of great exertion for its accom- plishment. The day continued to be very clear ; and the view amply repaid the toil of the ascent. It was limited on the north by high, irregular, and distant mountains ; oil the south and east by the ocean, and an horizon greatly extended ; on the west by the bay with its shipping diminished to the size of such toys as children play with ; and immediately beneath us was the town, its gardens and streets, distinctly seen, though its inhabitants could not be distinguished with the unaided eye. A large part of the day was passed in rambling about the top of the mountain, and enjoying the extensive and beautiful viev/s from it; and the time had arrived to think of descending. Desirous of return- ing by a different route, 1 attempted to find a new one in a chasm, which, from the imperfect view I could take of it, resembled the path we had ascended. But the better to satisfy myself, with great diffi- culty and imminent danger of falling, I climbed down a precipice of about twelve feet, and found myself upon a bridge formed by the 6* 66 FIRST VOYAGE. falling away of the rock within the chasm, and extending across about twenty feet. Its width varied from two to four feet ; and it seemed, where narrowest, as if any additional weight would cause it to give way. On either side, and beneath this bridge, was an abyss, of which I could scarcely see the bottom ; it being fifteen hundred, or, perhaps, two thousand feet deep. I now saw plainly that I must return by the way I came ; as, at the other end of the bridge, the height was the same, and the rocks jutted over. I made known to my companions my perilous situation, and that a slip in climbing must be attended with certain destruction. In order, therefore, to help me up again, Mr. Barnes lay on the ground, and held his jacket over the precipice, while the mate of the Jefferson held Barnes to prevent his being pulled over. With this management, and the scanty support I could find for my feet, I succeeded in gaining the summit, and in escaping from a situation so perilous, that, even at this day, I do not recur to it without shuddering. After this I attempted no more to find a new way, but descended as we had come up ; and, before sunset, arrived at my lodgings very much fatigued. CHAPTER V Impatience to be off — Embark for Batavia — Chased by a Brig — Outsail her — Ar- rival at Batavia — Governor's Surprise at our quick Passage — Hotel — American Commerce — Effect of the Climate on Em'opeans — Market — The Bay — Sharks andAUigators — No Opportunity to freight to the United States — Embark for China — Arrival at Macao — A Tyi^hon — Lose an Anchor — Arrive at Whampoa — At Canton — Embarrassment as to next Destination — Arrival and Purchase of .an English Cutter — Associates m the Adventure — Factories — Eecourse of Beggars to compel Alms — Enter the City — Kesult. ,15 than four months had elapsed since my arrival at the Cape ; and, during that period, no opportunity had offered for India. My impatience to be away was now so great, that I determined to embrace any chance that presented itself for going ''® to the east, without regard to the particular place ; ^ and, on the first of August, the brig Betsey having touched in the bay, in a short passage from Balti- more, bound to Batavia, I embarked in this vessel, taking with me the proceeds of my vessel and cargo in Span- ish dollars. I was accompanied by my black man George, for whom I had contracted an attachment, which was evidently reciprocal. The day after leaving the Cape, we had a strong westerly wind and a considerable sea, and, at noon, while making rapid progress on our way, we discovered a brig standing on a wind across us, which we had reason to suppose was a cruiser. As our vessel was a remarkably swift sailer, we decided not to sub- mit to the trouble and detention which a visit would cause, and there- fore kept steadily on our course, which, being towards him, induced the belief that we intended to speak him, and prevented the prepara- tion he would have made had he known our intention. When just 68 FIRST VOYAGE. clear of gun shot, we altered our course two points ; on seeing which he immediately fired, and instantly set about getting up top- gallant masts and yards, and crowding all sail after us ; but it was like the tortoise in pursuit of the hare. Before dark his hull was not to be seen. We had a continuance of the strong westerly winds until we enter- ed the trades, south of the island of Java ; and our arrival at Bata- via, on the first of September, in only thirty days from the Cape, was a circumstance so extraordinary, that it required the confirmation of letters which we carried to convince the Governor of the fact. I took rooms at the great public hotel ; and here, as well as in other buildings in the city, there were traces of the splendor which had attended the better days of t?ie Dutch East India Company. The spacious rooms were painted in a tawdry, but expensive manner, in red and gold, or blue and gold. The furniture was as massive and costly as it could be made ; a band of a dozen slaves always played during dinner ; and a multitude of servants, shabbily dressed, were in attendance. Every thing about the establishment indicated an at- tempt at magnificence, which was but ill-supported by the present state of Dutch commerce. Most of the strangers, who then visited Batavia, were Americans ; and there were few, or none of them, whose appetites required the stimulus of a band, or who had sufiicient taste for oriental luxuries to be willing to contribute to them further than custom rendered necessary. Batavia is built on a flat, which extends ten or twelve leagues. Most or its streets have canals of stagnant water, which are, doubt- less, among the causes of the fevers so prevalent there ; as these are avoided by taking a residence five or six miles in the country. The houses generally are built of brick, plastered and whitewashed ; and the apartments are spacious and well-adapted to the climate. But, notwithstanding all their luxuries, most of the residents show, by their pallid countenances and emaciated figures, that they are sacri- ficing health to gain. Yet the certainty of this does not prevent ad- venturers from seeking their fortunes there, apparently blinded to consequences by the eagerness of pursuit. The Chinese constitute much the largest and most industrious part BATAVIA. 69 of the population. They inhabit the suburbs, and are said to amount to seventy or eighty thousand. The domestics are principally Malay slaves, and are considered much less docile than the Africans. The market of Batavia is well supplied with all the delicious fruits, which are peculiar to the tropical climates. Pine-apples, in particular, are very abundant, and so cheap that a hundred may be obtained for a dollar. Animal food, beef and mutton particularly, is, as in most tropical countries, generally poor and without flavor. Fowls are very abundant and cheap. The natives here, as in India, live principally on rice, which is very cheap and much cultivated. The bay is spa- cious ; and the ships ride with safety therein, screened from the only wind which could injure them by seventeen or eighteen very pretty islands, which are not less ornamental than serviceable. The alliga- tors and sharks are very numerous ; and instances are related of boats being upset on the bar, and their whole crews devoured by them.* Those whom business shall lead to Batavia, for there can be no other inducement, will remain there no longer than is absolutely necessary. It was very evident, soon after my arrival, that I need only be detained until I could take passage for China ; for, though the com- parative value of the produce of the island here and in the United States offered a profit of one and a half to two capitals, yet there was no one of the several vessels lying here which could take freight ; all having sufficient capital to lade on their own account. If I could have invested the amount of my property in a freight of coffee, for the United States, I should have made a very short and lucrative voyage. ' But my efforts proving unsuccessful to effect this, I took advantage of an opportunity v/hich v/as offered in the ship Swift, of New York, for Canton, after having spent ten days at Batavia. For I was well aware, that though I might not be able to ship such bulky articles as coffee or sugar, there was no doubt of my finding room enough for the fabrics of China, in which a much greater capital than I possessed could be invested so as to occupy but a small space. Having removed my baggage and specie from the Betsey to the * It would therefore be the extreme of rashness to bathe in the bay, though tho neat renders the desire of doing so very strong. 70 FIRST VOYAGE. Swift, we sailed next morning, the 12th of Sicptember, for Canton, in company with two of the Danish East India Company's ships, the commanders of which agreed to keep company with us through the straits of Banca, for mutual security against any attack of the Malay pirates. Our ships sailed so nearly alike, that no day passed when we were not within speaking distance ; and when the weather was fine, and the sea smooth, which was often the case, we exchanged visits. The commodore had a band on board ; and in the bright moon- light evenings, when the breeze was only sufficient to keep the sails from flapping against the masts, and the ripple of the ship's passage through the waters scarcely heard, the music of this band was so delightful, that it even now brings back.the most pleasing associations, whenever memory retraces the incidents of this passage. We were compelled, by calms and the darkness of the night, to anchor two or three times in the straits of Banca, but met with no embarrassment from pirates, or from rocks and shoals. It was, how- ever, apparent that, although we had taken care to keep well to the eastward, we only secured our passage ; having taken the northeast wind so many days before our arrival, that we with difficulty gained the anchorage in Macao roads. The three ships arrived at this place within a few hours of each other, after a passage of thirty-one days from Batavia. The Danish ships, having agents at Macao, procured pilots, and proceeded to Whampoa without delay ; but we were not so for- tunate as to obtain a pilot, and were obliged, in consequence, to wait a week in the roads. During this period we encountered a typhon, which blew with such violence, and caused such a sea, that, although our yards and topmast were struck, we parted a cable, lost an anchor, and were in danger of being driven out to sea ; but, after drifting several miles, finally brought up with the other anchor. After the weather became again settled, it was judiciously determined by the captain to remain no longer in so exposed a situation ; and, having procured a fisherman to pilot us as far as Anson's Bay, which is a safe anchorage at the entrance of the river Tigris, we arrived and anchored there, without further embarrassment. Here, Captain White received a letter from the captain of the Ontario, a ship belonging to the same owners, informing him of his WHAMFOA. 71 safe arrival at Whampoa, and the exertions he was making to send him a pilot. He mentioned that he was in want of a first and second officer. This circnmstance appeared to offer a favorable opening for me ; inasmuch as, if I could obtain the chief mate's office, the privi- lege attached to it would insure the transport of all ray property. I therefore settled it in my mind that this was my destination. Hav- ing waited three days more, and no pilot appearing, CaptainJW^hite determined to go up to Whampoa in his own boat ; and I accom- panied him. Soon after leaving the ship we were overtaken by a heavy shower, which wet us completely through. When above second bar, towards evening, the tide set so strong against us, that, perceiving we made no headway, we determined to go on board a Swedish ship, then lying at the bar, and there wait the return of the flood. We were received with great hospitality, and, during our visit, were treated with as much kindness as if we had been conferring, rather than receiving a benefit. We remained with these friendly people until ten o'clock in the evening, when, the tide having turned, we took leave, and pursued our course towards Whampoa, but, unfor- tunately, by mistaking our course, and getting into a wrong branch of the river, were out all night, and did not arrive on board the Onta- rio before eight o'clock in the morning. A good breakfast renewed our energies for pursuing our course to Canton, where I was the more anxious to arrive, from the fear that the office I sought might be filled by another before my arrival. We started, therefore, as soon as the flood tide came in. Arriving at the Ontario's factory, I had the mortification to learn from the commander that he had en- gaged an officer only the day previous. Thus, this resource failed me. As I had confidently counted upon it, and as fancy had been busy in anticipating a meeting with my friends at home under such favorable circumstances, my disappointment was very great. The next plan was to freight my property in some one of the American ships ; a thing, usually, of very easy accomplishment; but, et this time, it was not practicable at such a rate as I felt myself war- ranted in paying. It then occurred to me that I might obtain a small premium on my money to Calcutta, and that there I should be able to lay in an investment for the United States, and freight it from thence on better terms than I could make here. With this impression 72 FIRST VOYAGE. I was about contracting with the captain of the country ship Zoroas- ter to let him have my money on respondentia, and to embark with him for Calcutta. But before definitely closing this negotiation, a lit- tle English cutter arrived at Whampoa from the Northwest Coast of America, and was offered for sale. This suggested to me an enter- prise which would be attended with great difficulties and dangers, but which offered a prospect of fortune in proportion. As my means alone were not sufficient to buy this vessel and to put in a cargo suitable for a voyage to. the Northwest Coast, I engaged the assistance of Messrs. D. Green and E. Towsend, of New Haven, and purchased this cutter, of about fifty tons burden ; two thirds for my account and one third for theirs ; having abandoned my Calcutta plan. She was called the Dragon ; but as my papers were for the Caroline, I changed her name accordingly. From the remnants of the cargo of a Boston vessel, returned from the Northwest Coast, and such articles as I could pro- cure from the shops at Canton, I made up a very suitable investment to the amount of nine thousand dollars. By the timd I was ready to sail on this enterprise, nearly three months had elapsed since my arrival at Canton ; during which period my expenses had been moderate, from having the good fortune of associating myself with the inmates of the Elizabeth's factory. The factories are handsome houses, built in the European style, on the margin of the river, for the accommodation of those who have busi- ness to transact at Canton. They are generally of two stories ; the lower being used as warehouses. They are whitewashed, and, with their respective national flags displayed on a high staff before them, malce a very pretty appearance. In former times the ships came and returned with a regularity of the monsoons ; and the resident super- cargoes, during their absence, were not permitted to remain at Can- ton, but removed to the Portuguese town of Macao, This routine has, of late years, been broken up by the disregard of etiquette and the established seasons, on the part of the Americans, who, comins; and going all the year round, have inverted all the ancient rules of doing business at Canton. In the rear of the factories, and spreading out on either side, are the houses and shops of those merchants and mechanics who derive theii" support from trading with foreigners ; a dense and active popu- CANTON. 73 lation, who evince a shrewdness in their dealings not surpassed by those strangers who traffic with them, and who are too apt to treat them with contempt. The police of this portion of the community- is so lax, that petty thefts are very common, and rarely punished. An additional evidence of this laxity is also manifested in the occa- sional practice of beggars, who extort alms from the shopkeepers by covering themselves with a coat of the most filthy odor, and thus rendering themselves so disgusting that the shopkeepers, to prevent their coming in, stand read}' at the door with the contribution. Great numbers of the poor population are born, reared, and die in small boats of twelve to fifteen feet long, which have a bamboo covering to screen them from the sun and from the inclemency of the weather ; and in no other part of the world, perhaps, is it so clearly demon- strated in how little space, and on what slender means, man may subsist. The Chinese are decided idolaters, and have an annual show and procession for propitiating an evil demon. They have numerous houses of worship, in which are kept images of gods, which resemble, in some respects, those of the most barbarous nations of Indians. At one of these houses, on the opposite side of the river, were several of the priesthood, whose dress bore some re^mblance to that of Franciscan friars, and whose business was principally to take care of the sacred hogs. These were about twenty in number, and were in an inclosure. They are never killed, but are left to die in the regu- lar course of time ; and several of them were so unwieldy that it was not without great difficulty they could move themselves a few feet one way or the other. The pertinacity with which the Chinese adhere to the ancient prac- tice of interdicting to strangers the entrance of their city, is still un- diminished. Having in one of my excursions come near to the gate, and observing no one on duty to prevent the entrance of stran- gers, I walked in, and had proceeded a distance of about thirty feet, when a hue and cry was made ; and a dozen people came running up to me, and, with earnest looks and violent gesture, pointed to the gate, and indicated, by signs that could not be mistaken, that I must return. 1 did not hesitate to comply with wishes so clearly man- yifested, and where the power of enforcing them was so apparent. 74 FIRST VOTAGE. Within the wall I saw nothing in the appearance of the streets and houses difTering from those without ; and I am induced to believe that the rigor, in forbidding access to foreigners, arises from the ob- servance of the customary Asiatic jealousy with regard to the women. Of the character, manners, customs, and habits of the Chinese, so much better accounts are given by those who have had greater oppor- tunities of observing, that I shall not attempt to describe them. CHAPTER VI. Information from Boston — Difficulty of obtaining Men — Northeast Monsoon — A Choice of Difficulties — Sail from Anson's Bay — Anchoring when the Tides ■were against us — Narrow Escape — Eocks and Shoals — Struck and stopped on a simk- en Ledge — Came off as the Tide rose — Anchor, and procure Water and Wood — Curiosity of the People — Stormy Weather — Pass through a Brealier unliurt — Keep Company with a Chinese Fleet — They enter Amoy — Anchor outside — Dangerous Navigation — Island of Kemoy— Mutiny — Means of subduing it — Leave six Men behind — Visit from a Cliinese — Weather the North End of Formo- sa — Heavy Gales across the Pacific — Discontent of the Crew. "^ a recent arrival from Boston I learned that sev- eral vessels were fitting from thence for the North- west Coast ; and as my success depended mainly on arriving there before them, I spared no exertion for the accomplishment of this purpose. But for this information it had been my intention to wait until the strength of the monsoon had diminished. To procure a competent number of men was a task of such difficulty, that, when any one offered his ser- vices, I was not very particular in inquiring whence he came, or how well he was qualified ; it was sufficient for my purpose if he was a white man, and presented an ap- pearance of health and strength ; for it was indispensable to our safety with the Indians that our crew should be com- posed of Europeans or Americans. Most of my men were deserters from Indiamen ; and these were generally the '' worst of a bad crew. With such as I could procure, however, I at length completed my complement, sixteen men before the mast, four- teen of whom were English and Irish, and two Americans. In the cabin we were five in number, including George, who acted as stew- ard, and the linguist ; making together twenty-one. The vessel was remarkably strong and well built ; well coppered ; mounted ten brass 76 FIRST VOYAGE. four-pound cannon ; with a proper number of muskets, pistols, pikes, &c. At this season of the year the northeast monsoon was blowing with its greatest force, and the current was strong in proportion. No track could be pointed out, therefore, by which we could arrive at such a northern latitude as to be free from the influence of the trade wind, which was not fx'aught with difficulties and dangers. The most direct course was to pass between the southern end of Formosa and the northern point of Luzon, by the Bashee Islands. But here, the effect of such a sea as would be met, upon so short a vessel, combin- ed with a strong lee current, presented obstacles sufficient to discour- age the attempt. To follow the track of Captain JVTeares, at the same season of the year, in 1788, by going south, and endeavoring to get our easting on the equator, would doubtless be the easiest meth- 'od ; but would unavoidably take up so much time as to defeat my object. The course wdiich appeared to me to offer the best prospect of success, though attended with more danger than either of the others, was to beat up along the shore of the coast of China. For I was persuaded that the small size of my vessel would enable me to keep so near the shore as sometimes to have a favorable current ; to be protected, occasiSnally, by a projecting point, from the roughness of the sea ; and to come to anchor w^hen it appeared that we were losing ground. The attempt, I was aware, was an arduous and haz- ardous one ; and of its impracticability I was assured by some of the most experienced navigators in those seas. But I considered that a failure, by arriving too late on the coast, would be equally disastrous with any misfortune that could arise from making the attempt. I' was also the more encouraged to make the trial, as I could not learn that it had ever been attempted at the same season of the year ; con- sequently, that my advisers were not warranted in declaring so con- fidently that it was impracticable. With such impressions, with my vessel well equipped, and with a crew whose appearance made it difficult to believe that most of them had not been familiar with crime, I sailed from Anson's Bay on the 10th of January, 1799, in the morning. Having a strong breeze, we passed Macao Roads at four P. M., at a long distance from the ship- ping, fearing we might be brought to, and our men taken out. Dur- NAEKOW ESCAPE. 77 ing the night, we passed between the Lema Islands and very near to one of them ; which I ventured to do, from the local knowledge pos- sessed by the chief mate. The inconvenience, arising from the want of a chart of the coast and Islands, was immediately experienc- ed. The small and imperfect one I possessed was not of the least use, and hence our utmost vigilance was constantly required. In the morning and forenoon of the 11th, we made several tacks off and on ; but the current was so strong against us, that notwithstanding we had a fresh breeze and smooth sea, we gained nothing to windward ; and as we had not been able to complete our watering and wooding at Anson's Bay, we went in and anchored near a small fishing town for this purpose. Here, we were soon visited by as great a number of the inhabit- ants as boats could be found to convey. Both old and young, of either sex, came off to see the Fanquis, as they called us. Among them was one who spoke the Portuguese language ; and who, for a moderate compensation, procured for us the supply we required. In the mean time the numbers had greatly increased, and evinced a strong desire to come on board. As it would have been very impru- dent to permit this, I found .myself obliged to station men in different parts of the vessel, with boarding pikes, to keep them off. In the afternoon, the current appearing to have diminished, we weighed anchor, and perceived, towards evening, that we had gained considerably ; but, as there were appearances of bad weather, and we were abreast a deep bay which promised a shelter, we ran in and came to anchor ; and thus escaped the fatigue and danger of a stormy night at sea. From eight o'clock in the morning until late in. the afternoon of the 12th, our efforts to gain to windward jvere inef- fectual ; indeed, such was the force of the current, that we could not reach the place we had left in the morning ; and the succeeding night, it being calm, we were obliged to lie at anchor outside. The next day, (13th,) having but a light breeze, we used our sweeps ; by the aid of which, and keeping close in shore, we advanced a little. In beating through a narrow strait, formed by a point of the coast and a rocky island, against which the sea broke with great fury, and at the critical moment when passing not more than fifteen yards to wind- ward, the peak halyards slipped from the pin to which they were 7* • 78 FIRST VOYAGE. belayed, and the peak of the mauisail ran down. As all hands were on deck, it was instantly hoisted again ; but such was the force of the swell, the wind being light, that before we had got by we were thrown so near the rock as to reach it with an oar. After this escape we stood out to sea, with the wind from east-northeast, blowing in the night very strong, which caused a considerable increase of sea. This obliged us to carry a press of sail, and presently our jib split ; we then reefed the mainsail, set a second-sized jib, and a little after midnight tacked in shore. At daylight of the 14th we were not a little elated to find our- selves considerably to windward of the place we left the last evening, notwithstanding a rough sea. We continued all day successfully plying to windward, and in the evening, it being calm, we anchored fifteen fathoms. All day of the 15th we had light airs and calms by turns ; so that when we could gain nothing by the help of our sweeps, we anchored ; and when the breeze came, weighed again ; by these means we advanced, though very slowly and with much labor. In the forenoon of the 16th, the weather being calm, we rowed in shore and anchored under the lee of an island, and near a very exten- sive sandy beach, not far from a fishing town. The inhabitants soon came off to us, and I engaged one of them to take our empty water-casks ashore and fill them ; and to bring us a supply of oranges. Of others, 1 purchased, at a moderate price, some very good fish. These people were better dressed and were more civil than those who visited us on the 11th ; and, when we were leaving them, request- ed a paper, describing the vessel and our destination. On the 17th it was apparent that we had arrived at a shoaler, and consequently more dangerous part of the coast than we had, hitherto, been navigating ; and could not, therefore, without great risk, work along shore at night, as we had done. The wind was very light dur- ing the day ; but towards evening freshened so much as to make it necessary to reef the sails. We stood off shore until two o'clock on the morning of the 18th, and then tacked towards the land ; in ex- pectation that, as we had carried as much sail all night as the vessel would bear, we shoyld gain very considerably to windward ; but, at daylight, had the disappointment to find ourselves at least thi'ee STRUCK ON A LEDGE. 79 leagues to leeward of the land we left the preceding evening. To lose so much, in so short a time, was very discouraging ; for, with our greatest exertions, we could hardly hope to regain it in twenty- four hours. This also convinced me that we could do nothing by keeping far from the shore. In the evening, as well as throughout the succeeding night, a breeze from the land favored us very much ; and, by keeping close in, we gained even more than our preceding day's loss. On the morning of the 19th, we had a pleasant breeze from east- northeast, making short tacks near the shore ; and soon after eight, A. M., we doubled a point, which opened to our view a large sandy bay, and in which there appeared to be many dangerous rocks and breakers. Keeping our lead constantly going, we had v^ry irregular soundings, from five to two and a half fathoms ; when, suddenly, as we were sailing at the rate of about three knots, we ran upon a sunk- en ledge. As the vessel hung only forward, we lowered the sails and hoisted out the boat, with a view to carry out an anchor astern ; but unfortunately, in putting the anchor into the boat, the bill of it struck with such force against one of the planks in the bottom as to render her useless until she was repaired. This was a discouraging circumstance, as the vessel lay very uneasy ; but there was no other resource than to hoist the boat again on deck, and stop the leak in the most expeditious way possible. While we were thus engaged, the tide rose so much that the vessel slid off the rock, unaided by any efforts of ours ; and apparently without having received any injury. Our latitude was 22°, 35^ north. Having secured our boat and anchor, and again made sail, we stood off to sea, so far as to enable us to weather this shoal on the opposite tack. Towards evening, perceiving the current to be strong against us, we came to anchor and lay all night. We now were encouraged by the discovery that we had regular tides setting north and south ; and as soon as it began to set in .our favor, on the' 20th, we weighed anchor and began beating. But, having a short irregu- lar sea to contend with, we made but little progress during the day ; and so entirely did the coast appear to be strewed with rocks and shoals, that it could not be approached in the night without the most imminent danger of losing our vessel ; hence the necessity of finding 80 FIRST VOYAGE. an anchorage for the night before the day closed. We succeeded in doing this by running in where there was a number of junks at anchor ; and near a considerable settlement, before which appeared to be a fort. As soon as we had anchored a number of visitors ' came off to us ; but, as no one of them knew any of the European languages, our communications were confined to signs ; by means of which I suc- ceeded in replenishing our stock of wood and water. While the Chinaman was engaged in filling our water-casks, Mr. Smith, the chief mate, made an excursion on shore. As soon as he landed, a person, who seemed to possess some authority, came up to him and made signs that he should follow him to the fort. He was there in- troduced to a Mandarin, who was, doubtless, the commandant, and who, being made to comprehend the object of our visit, manifested a desire to gratify it ; and behaved with great civility. It appeared as if these people had never before seen an European, or American. They followed him in crowds to the fort, and back again to the land- ing-place. All labor, for the time, was abandoned ; and even the actors, who were then engaged on a public stage, suspended their sing song, while the " fanqui " was passing. The following morning (21st) we sailed again, accompanied by a number of the junks, also bound to windward ; and from this time until the 24th, we had no other wind than the regular monsoon ; sometimes blowing very strong, so that we could gain nothing by beating ; we then generally sought a smooth place in which to anchor ; and even when the wind was moderate, we were always obliged to anchor while the tide was setting against us. We passed every day vast fleets of fishing boats ; and were in sight of several towns, some of which appeared to be of considerable size. On the morning of the 24th, I was equally surprised and delighted with a breeze springing up from the southwest, which, increasing at noon, continued throughout the day, and afforded such an enlivening prospect, that I began to flatter myself with the belief that we had seen the worst of our passage. But I was not long permitted to in- dulge so pleasing a hope ; as before eight o'clock in the evening, the wind shifted suddenly, in a squall, to its old quarter, the northeast, and blew with great violence. PASS THROUGH A BREAKER _UNH'URT. 81 On the 25th, we gained considerably in the forenoon ; but towards evening the wind increased so as to bring us under double-reefed sails. The night was rainy and dark, with a rough sea, into which we were plunging, without reaping any advantage ; as, in the morn- ing our position differed little or none from what it was the preced- ing evening. On the evening of the 26th, preferring the chance of anchoring where we were not well sheltered, to passing such a night as the last, we came to anchor under the lee of a rock, soon after sunset ; where we rode very securely until between ten and eleven o'clock, when, the wind having increased very much, we struck adrift. All hands were called immediately ; we hove up the anchor, and, under double-reefed sails, stood out to sea, until four A. M., when we tacked in shore ; the wind and sea having so increased as to keep us buried most of the time, even under our storm-sails. Approaching the coast, and when within about three leagues of it, we suddenly perceived a breaker ; but, as the vessel was going at a rapid. rate, we were in the midst of the foam almost at the moment of this discovery. The vessel struck once, in the hollow of the sea, and was enveloped in the succeeding billow, but passed over without receiving any in- jury ; her deck, at the same time, was covered with sand. It had now become essential that we should find a harbor; as we could do no more than drift to leeward by remaining out. But to seek one, in a gale of wind, without a chart, and on a coast to which we were all strangers, was attended with great hazard. When we had run about four leagues to leeward, the man at mast-head perceiv- ed a deep and sandy bay ; the access to which appeared to be free from danger ; and the sea was now so high that any shoal which could take us up, would show itself. We therefore ran boldly in, and doubling round a projecting point of. sand, came to anchor near a fleet of junks ; which we found were bound north, and haj:!, like our- selves, put in to evade the storm. The gale continued throughout thig and the following day, accompanied with frequent and heavy squalls of rain ; and the weather as cold as it is commonly in Boston in the month of December. After our recent fatigue and anxiety, the re- laxation and comfort, afforded by lying two days, and a night in so smooth a harbor, while the storm was howling, and the sea roaring without, was almost beyond the power of description. 82 FIRST VOYAGE.. In the evening of the 28th there was evidently a considerable abatement of tlie gale ; and by midnight the weather was serene and pleasant. Before dawn on the 29th, we perceived a muster on board the junks, for getting under way ; and, following their example, wc also weighed anchor, and went out in company with thirty-two sail ; with which we plied to windward till one P. M. when, the tide making against us, we all came to anchor in three and a half fathoms, opposite a small fishing town. We perceived, during this day, that when working up in smooth water, sometimes caused by a projecting point, our vessel was decidedly superior to the junks in sailing ; but that when we got out where the sea was rough, they had as much the advantage of us ; indeed, I was astonished to perceive how fast such square, uncouth, ill-shaped craft, with bamboo sails, would work to windward in a sea which almost buried my cutter. At eleven o'clock in the evening we perceived the junks to be getting under way ; and concluded we could not do better than to keep company with them, which we did throughout the night ; and, in the morning of the 30th, found We had gained very considerably. Between four and five A. M., the tide set against us so strongly that we barely maintained our position ; and while a part of the fleet went in shore and anchored, a part remained under sail. At ten o'clock, we had again a favorable current, of which the whole fleet took advantage, and kept plying to windward till four P. M., when we all stood into a deep bay, or estuary, at the inner extremity of which is the town of Amoy ; a place of great trade, if a judgment can be formed by the vast number of vessels which we perceived to be lying there. The masters of the two junks that were nearest to us made mo- tions that were not difficult to understand, that we should go and anchor under the lee of an island a little to windward of us ; which we did at six o'clock, near two Chinese Junks. The captain of one of these came on board, and informed us that the name of the town was Amoy ; that the land about three and'a half leagues to wind- ward was the Island Kemoy ; and that we must keep the lead going all the time, as there were numerous rocks and shoals in the interme- diate space. THE ISLAND OF KEBIOY. 83 Some very neat houses, surrounded with trees and shrubbery, and having the appearance of country-seats of opulent men, were beau- tifully situated on the side of a hill opposite to the spot where we had anchored ; and the whole island, of apparently not more than two miles in circumference, presented a highly cultivated and pleas- ing appearance. During the day, we had passed several considera- ble settlements, one of which had a wall round it ; anti the country generally exhibited an appearance of great cultivation. We dared not take advantage of the night tide, after the account of the dangers which the Chinaman had given us, and therefore remained at anchor all .night. I would gladly have procured ar^ilot, but could not ; and had no other resource than following the imperfectly conveyed direc- tions of the Chinaman, and trusting to the lead and a good lookout for safety. Desirous of reconnoitring the ground before us at low water, when some of the reefs would discover themselves, we remained at anchor on the 31st fortius purpose ; and saw many rocks in our track, which were not visible at high water. Of these we took the bearings, and sav/ how to avoid many of the dangers which were pointed out to us by the Chinaman. Early on the morning of the 1st of February, we resumed the task of beating to windward ; and although we had frequently only two fathoms of water, and did not always deepen it by standing off shore, we yet, fortunately, reached in safety the anchorage under the lee of the Island Kemoy, towards evening, after having passed a day of great anxiety and" fatigue. The duty had now been so arduous, the prospect of its duration so uncertain, and the dangers so appalling, that the men, unceasingly exposed to wet and cold^ became quite disheartened ; and, during the ensuing night, entered into a combination to compel me to return to Macao. This was manifested in the morning, by a general refusal to weigh anchor, when the order was given. In this determination they were so well agreed,. that I did not attempt to force them, otherwise than by declaring to them, that if they would not work they should not eat, and took the necessary precaution to prevent their getting provisions. On this they became very boisterous ; using insolent and abusive language to myself and officers ; swearing they would have 84 FIRST VOYAGE. provisions ; and providing themselves with axes, ci'owbars, and what- ever weapons they could find, to enforce their threat ; or possibly to take possession of the vessel. It was now very evident that no time was to be lost in putting our- selves in a state of defence ; which, if it did not discourage the attempt, should defeat the success of any desperate measure they might plan. With this view, I caused a four-pound cannon, loaded with langrage, to be pointed forward from each side of the quarter- deck ; and each officer, at the same time, providing himself with a pair of loaded pistols, we had nothing to apprehend from an attack while we observed the degree of vigilance the case demanded. When this preparation was made, I forbade any man to come abaft the mast, on penalty of being fired at ; and declared to them, that ijf I perceived any number coming aft together, I would discharge one of the cannon among them. With this view, I had constantly a man on the alert, at each gun, with a lighted match ; and we relieved each other every two hours. Aware that this state of things could not be of long duration, neither myself nor officers attempted to procure any sleep during the suc- ceeding night. Having remained in this hostile attitude for about twenty-four hours, without perceiving any diminution of the resolution of the mutineers, it occurred to me, that if they would consent to be set on shore, they would soon be glad to be taken on board again on such terms as I should prescribe. When, therefore, I made the proposi- tion to them, they readily acceded to it ; and were immediately landed on the beach. The curiosity of the inhabitants to see them was such, that they were incessantly surrounded by a great crowd, and their situation became extremely irksome and uncomfortable ;, besides which, they could obtain no other food than a scanty supply of rice. The next morning, (3d,) we perceived the eldest of the party, (a good-natured old man-of-war's-rnan, of about fifty, whose pride of adhering to his comrades, rather than hostility to us, had led him into his present trouble,) coming down to the beach and waving his jacket, as if he wanted to speak with us. Supposing he might be deputed by the others to make some proposal, I sent the boat, with the chief mate, and with George and the linguist to row him. Old MUTINY ; MEANS OF SUBDUING IT. ' 85 Will, (for that was the name by which he was called,) had no other favor to ask, than permission to come on board again on any terms. He was accordingly brought off; and appeared to be so much ashamed of his conduct, and promised so fairly to behave well in future, that I forgave him. He gave a lamentable account of the great inconvenience they experienced from the excessive curiosity of the inhabitants to see them :, and from which they had been partially relieved by the kindness of a humane Mandarin, who gave them shelter in his house. He also mentioned the regret, expressed by several of them, at having acceded to my proposal of leaving the vessel. A few hours after old Will had been taken on board, I saw all the others getting into a Chinese boat ; and therefore made preparation to keep them off, if they should attempt to come on board without permission. When they had arrived within hail, I cautioned them, on their peril, to approach no nearer. They said the Mandarin had sent them off, and they dared not return. With a cannon pointed towards the boat, I threatened them with destruction if they attempt- ed to advance. The Chinamen, who were at the oars, seeing this, became so alarmed that -they hastened to the shore again. This I con- ceived to be the proper moment for getting my men on board on my own terms. Accordingly, the mate and myself, well armed, and rowed by two men, went to the beach ; and calling one at a time into the boat, took their solemn promise of future good behavior. There were two desperate fellows, the ringleaders, whom I deter- mined not to take on board again on any conditions. I- had recently learned that they were convicts,'who had escaped from Botany Bay; and that the one, whom, from 'his intelligence and activity, I had made boatswain, had once been master of a Liverpool guineaman. This man, probably suspecting my intentions, attempted to come without being called ; and when refused, he immediately opened his clasp knife, and presenting it to the breast of his comrade, who was advancing towards the boat, threatened him with instant death if he attempted to pass him. I then levelled my musket at him ; but instantly recollecting that we had already secured men enough to navigate the vessel with safety, desisted from firing it ; and returned on board with all but six ; hoping, that, with a little further delay, we 8 86 FIRST VOYAGE. should obtain the other four, of which I was desirous. Accordingly, next morning, seeing them again on the beach, I went to them, armed as before ; and found they had determined not to separate ; though they all made fair promises of good conduct, if I would take them on board again. Being convinced that I could not get those I wanted without those I did not want, I determined to prosecute my voyage, even with such reduced numbers ; and, weighing anchor, we recom- menced our arduous and hazardous duty of beating to windward. We stood out to sea, with a good whole-sail breeze from northeast, till four o'clock in the morning of the 5th, when we tacked. The wind and sea having increased very considerably, reduced us to our double reefs ; and, on coming in with the land, we found we had gained several miles. But with so much wind and sea as there then was, we could not advance any on our course, and we determined to find an anchorage. This we succeeded in doing by running a little to leeward ; and at noon, anchored in a deep bay not more than five or six miles from the place where we had landed our men. On com- ing to anchor we discharged a cannon, to notify our men that there was yet time to dissolve their partnership. Here, for a moderate compensation, I again engaged a Chinaman to fill up our water-casks, and replenish our stock of wood. In the afternoon I visited one of the large China junks, near to which we had anchored; where I was treated with great politeness by a person, whom, from his dress and appearance, I took to be the owner. He offered us tea and sweetmeats in the great cabin, which was extremely neat and clean, and in which a Joss occupied a conspicuous place. ] invited him to go on board rny vessel, to which he very readily assented ; and, as he seemed to possess an inquiring mind, I pointed out to him our superiority of manner over his, of taking up the anchor, hoisting the sails, &c., of which he seemed to be convinced ; and, after taking some refreshments, he left us, apparently much pleased with his visit. The gale continuing the next day, it would have been useless to put out; we therefore lay at anchor all day. About noon, observing a great concourse of people on the beach, from which we lay half a mile distant, with the help of my glass I perceived that our men were among them ; and that they were getting into a boat. I then pre- VISIT FKOBI A CHINESE. 87 pared to keep them off, in case they should attempt to come on board by force. When they were within haii, I desired them to keep ofh They replied, that the Mandarin would not let them remain on shore, and were advancing ; when, on firing a musket over them, they imme- diately retreated to the shore. The Mandarin, with his numerous attendants, then came off, leaving our mutineers on shore. 1 invited these on board, and treated them with wine and sweetmeats ; but would not comply with the pressing desire of the Mandarin, to take all our men on board again. I believe I succeeded in making him understand that four of the six I should be willing to take again, but that the other two I would not. After remaining an hour on board and examining every thing with much earnestness and attention, they returned to the shore. At the same time, and with the usual precaution, I went near the beach, in my boat, and, calling each of the persons separately by name, inquired if he was ready to go on board on my conditions. They declared they would not separate ; but complained of the cruelty and hardship of being left in such a place. This was the last interview I had with them ; for, soon after returning on board, I saw them marched away, escorted by the guard which attended the Mandarin. On our return to Canton, we learned that these six men had been sent there by the Chinese authorities, and delivered to the English company's residents. The next morning, having a favorable current and a good breeze, we put out, and beat till the tide began to make against us ; when we gained an anchorage near a small fishing town, where we lay the remainder of the day, and all the following night. Early on the morning of the 7th, we had a moderate breeze from north-northwest, by means of which we made a course nearly parallel with the China coast till noon. The breeze then left us, and having a contrary cur- rent, we let run the graplin, in twenty fathoms ; and lay till five P. M., when there came a light breeze from the southeast, to which we set all sail. In the course of the afternoon, during, the calm, a large boat came towards us, full of men shouting and hallooing, and occasionally firing a gun they had in the bow. Their conduct was so very differ- ent from that of any of the Chinese we had met with, that, suspecting 88 FIRST VOYAGE. they might be Ladrones, I ordered a four-pound shot fired over them , "which produced an instantaneous- retreat to the shore. Between ten and eleven o'clock, the wind continuing to be very light, we discov- ered a large boat rowing towards us, which I supposed to be the same. When at a short distance to windward they left off rowing and lay on their oars. Their manoeuvres and number of men led me to be* suspicious ; and I therefore loaded two cannon and several muskets. They, however, probably from seeing we were not off our guard, returned towards the shore without molesting us. With various winds and weather, we diligently' pursued our course to the northward, till we got out of the influence of the monsoon ; and on the 11th of February had the satisfaction of seeing the north end of Formosa, bearing south, distant ten leagues. Thus, after thirty-one days of great toil, exposure, and anxiety, we had accom- plished that part of our passage which had been represented as an impossibility ; and which, with a fair wind, might have been performed in three days. On the 17th, we passed between the north end of the Island Le- keyo (which is nearly four hundred miles east of Formosa) ana several small islands which lie to the north of it, with a gale of wind from the westward, and under the head of our squaresail, having pre viously split the topsail, and got the yards on deck. I had only a manuscript chart of the North Pacific, which, 1 was convinced, was- not to be depended on, having already discovered two islands thai were not laid down in it. And as the gale continued to blow with violence, till we had quite passed the coast of Japan, the nights, which were long, and exceedingly dark, were passed in sleepless anxiety, lest we should meet destruction from some island or rock, not laid down in my chart. Our passage across the North Pacific proved clearly enough the misapplication of the term to that sea, as it was hardly possible for il to be less peaceful. The violence of the wind generally obliged us to show but very little sail ; and the sea was so boisterous that there were but few days when we were not enveloped by it, so that the fire was repeatedly extinguished in the caboose. The men who composed the watch on deck, never escaped a complete drenching ; and had constant employment in carrying their clothes up the rigging DISCOURAGEMENT OF THE CKEW. 89 to dry. The exposure and privations, though not sufficient to injure the health of the crew, were much greater than they had ever before experienced ; and, as they imagined that the other passages were to be equally fatigumg, they formed the design, (of which I had notice,) of deserting, as soon as ihpv rou'd. after out arrival on the coast. til API Ell V 11. See the Coast of America. — Prepare Bulwarks — Anchor at Norfolk Sound — Dis- charge a Cannon — Natives come to us— Caution to them — Tlieu- Appearance — Pm-chase Skins— Tribe — An Accident — Result — Chatham Straits — Ship Eliza— Suspicious Conduct of the Natives- An Alai-m- Steeken War Canoe — A Present — Eequest to stop the Eain — A Deserter — Eecovered — Game — Anchor m a Cove — Hostile Attitude of the Natives — Leave them— Ship Cheerful — Dan- gerous Position of the Vessel — Escape — Repair the Damage— Ships Hancock and Despatch, of Boston — Skittigates — Stratagem — HowUngs in the Night— Sensi- bihty of a Native — Chiefs Kow, Coneyaw, and Eltai-gee. ^MiLY ill the morning of the 30th of March we saw the usual indications of land, drift-wood, kelp, and gulls ; and at ten o'clock perceived the snow-capped hills of the American coast, twelve leagues distant. We immediately set all hands to work in bending our cables and getting up a bul- wark, which we had been preparing of hides sewed together. These were attached to stanch- ions of about six feet, and completely screened us from being seen by the natives, whom it was important to our safety to keep in ignorance of our numbers. Towards evening we anchored in a snug harbor at Norfolk Sound, in latitude 57° 10^ north. Here the smoothness of the water, the feeling of safety, and the silent tranquillity which reigned all round us, formed a striking contrast to the scenes with which we had been familiar since leaving Can- ton ; and would have- afforded positive enjoyment, had I possessed a crew on whose fidelity I could depend. The following day was very clear and pleasant. At the first dawn of the morning we discharged a cannon to apprize any natives who might be near, of our arrival. We then loaded the cannon and a number of muskets and pistols, which were placed where they could APPEAEANCE OF THE NATIVES. 91 be most readily laid hold of. The only accessible part of the vessel was the stern, and this was exclusively used, (while it was necessary to keep up the bulwark,) as the gangway. As it was over the stern that we meant to trade, I had mounted there two four-pound cannon ; and on the tafferel a pair of blunderbusses on swivels, which were also loaded. Soon after the discharge of our cannon, several Indians came to us ; and before dark some hundreds arrived, who encamp- ed on the beach near which the vessel was anchored. As we observ- ed them to be loaded with skins, we supposed that we were the first who had arrived this season. With a view to our own security, as well as convenience, I direct- ed my interpreter to explain to the chiefs, and through them to the tribe, that after dark no canoe would be allowed to come near the vessel ; and that if I perceived any one approaching, I should fire at it ; that only three or four canoes must come at a time to trade, and that they must always appear under the stern, avoiding the sides of the vessel. With my own men I neglected no precaution to make escape impossible, but at the imminent risk of life. While at anchor they were divided into three watches. One of these I took charge of; and stationing them in such parts of the vessel that no move- ment could be made undiscovered, obliged them to strike the gong every half hour throughout the night, and to call out, from each end of the vessel and amidships, " All's well." This practice so amused the Indians, that they imitated it by striking a tin kettle, and re- peating the words as near as they were able. But a more hideous set of beings, in the form of men and women, I had never before seen. The fantastic manner in which many of the faces of the men were painted', was probably intended to give them a ferocious appearance ; and some groups looked really as if they had escaped from the dominions of Satan himself. One had a perpendicular line dividing the two sides of the face ; one side of which was painted red, the other black ; with the hair daubed with grease and red ochre, and filled with the white down of birds. Another had the face divided with a horizontal line in the middle, and painted black and white. The visage of a third was painted in checkers, &c. Most of them had little mirrors ; before the acquisition of which, they must have been dependent on each other for those correct touches y^ FIRST VOYAGE. of the pencil which are so much in vogue ; and which daily require more time than the toilet of a Parisian belle. The women made, if possible, a still more frightful appearance. The ornament of wood which they wear to extend an incision made beneath the under lip, so distorts the face as to take from it almost the resemblance to the human ; yet the privilege of wearing this ornament is not extended to the female slaves, who are prisoners taken in war. Hence, it would seem, that distinctive badges have their origin in the most rude state of society. It is difficult, however, for the imagination to conceive of more disgusting and filthy beings than these patrician dames. It was quite noon before we could agree upon the rate of barter ; but when once arranged with one of the chiefs, and the exchange made, they all hurried to dispose of their skins at the same rate ; and before night we had purchased upwards of a hundred, at the rate of two yards of blue broadcloth each. The Indians assured us, that a vessel with three masts had been there, a month before, from which they had received four yards of cloth for a skin ; but this story was rendered improbable by the number they had on hand ; and I consid- ered it as a manoeuvre to raise the price. As soon as it became dark they retired in an orderly manner to their encampment, abreast the vessel ; and some of them appeared to be on the watch all night, as we never proclaimed the hour on board without hearing a repetition of it on shore. The following morning, (April 2d,) the natives came off soon after daylight, and began without hesitation to dispose of their furs to us, at the price fixed upon the day before ; and such was their activity in trading that, by night, we had purchased of them more than two hundred sea otter skins ; besides one hundred and twenty tails. Our barter consisted of blue cloth, great coats, blankets, Chinese trunks ; with beads, China cash, and knives, as presents. Canoes were arriving occasionally throughout the day ; so that at night there Vi'as a very perceptible augmentation of their numbers. Our linguist recognized them to be the Hoodsnahoo tribe, who had come thus early to the coast to get a supply of the spawn of certain fish, which constitutes their principal food in the spring of the year. As this tribe had attacked the cutter last year, alone, we thought it TRAFFIC WITH THE INDIANS. ' 93 not improbable that, now they were united with the Norfolk Sound tribe, they might determine to make another attempt. We therefore took every precaution against them. On the 3d, we were proceeding harmoniously and prosperously in our traffic, when a little incident occurred, which produced a short interruption. A canoe, containing eleven persons, men, women, and children, had, contrary to our regulations, come alongside, and were raising the screens at the ports to look in on the deck. Before I had time to speak to them, the cook (either by accident or design) threw a ladle full of hot water over them, which, causing an involuntary and sudden motion of their bodies to the other side of the boat, im- mediately upset it, and all were immersed in the water. The confu- sion was now very .great ; as those, who, at the time, were under the stern engaged in traffic, fearing some treachery, made haste to paddle away, without regard to the distress of their comrades. All of these appeared, however, to be capable of taking care of themselves, ex- cepting an infant of about a year old, whose struggles being observed by Mr. Smith, he jumped overboard and saved it. As the weather was very raw and chilly, we hastened to dry and warm the infant by the fire, then wrapped it in a blanket, gave it a piece of sugar, and returned it to its parents, who appeared to be exceedingly pleased and grateful. They all soon recovered from the inconvenience of the accident, as I was glad to find they considered it. The appre- hensions of the others being but momentary, we proceeded again to business, which was conducted throughout the day to mutual satisfac- tion. Having observed, on the 4th and 5th, that their store of furs was nearly exhausted, we weighed anchor the next morning, and, parting on good terms with the natives, steered up a narrow passage, in an easterly direction, till we arrived in that extensive sound, which Van- couver has called Chatham's Straits. Nearly opposite to the openino- into this sound is the village of Hoodsnahoo, the tribe we had just parted with ; and here we came to anchor. Several women came off, and told us there were no skins in the village ; that the men were gone in pursuit of them ; and that, if we came there again in twice ten days, they should have plenty. Here we passed a day in filling up our empty water casks and getting a supply of wood. 94 ' FIRST VOYAGK. In the afternoon of the 9th, we put out of the snug cove in which we were lying, having been informed by the Indians that there was a ship in sight. This we found to be true, as, on opening the sound, we saw her not more than a mile distant from us. Soon after, we were boarded by Captain Rowan, of ship Eliza, of Boston, who had arrived on the coast at least a .month before us, and who, having been very successful, was now on his way to the southward to complete his cargo, and then to leave the coast. He mentioned that ten ves- sels would probably be despatched from Boston for the coast this season. From this information it was_ evident that it would require all our efforts to dispose of our articles of traffic advantageously before the competition should reduce their value. For the Indians are suffi- ciently cunning to derive all possible advantage from competition, and will go from one vessel to another, and back again, with assertions of offers made to them, which have no foundation in truth, and showing themselves to be as well versed in the tricks of trade as the greatest adepts. After taking leave of Captain Rowan, we were proceeding along the western shore of the sound, with a light breeze, when we fell in with a canoe, from which we obtained four skins, but were obliged to pay more for them than for any others we had bought. This was in consequence of their knowing what Captain Rowan had been paying, which, he informed me, was twice as much as I had given. We now were influenced very much by the course of the wind, in our deter- mination of going up and down the sound, and into its various ramifi- cations, always directing our course to any point where we discover- ed a smoke, and remaining no longer than to purchase what skins the natives possessed. On the morning of the 13th, having passed up the eastern branch of the sound, we- came to anchor near to a high iso- lated rock. A space on the top of this was enclosed with a chevaux- de-frise ; and on the side towards us it was inaccessible. We per- ceived many people moving about within the enclosure ; and soon after coming to anchor, several canoes came off to us, and, among them, one large war canoe with twenty-five warriors, with their war garments on, and well armed. This had been but a short time near us, before the Indians in her gave a loud shout, and paddled towards TROUBLE •WITH THE NATIVES. 95 the shore, at the same time discharging their muskets in the air, and saying their enemy was in sight. But, as the other canoes with which we were trading did not leave us, nor evince any fear, I could not help suspecting some stratagem, and therefore made preparation, and kept every man on the alert. Scarcely half an hour had elapsed after the war canoe left us, when we again saw her coming, accompanied by two others of equal size, and equally well manned and armed. Three canoes were under our stern trading ; and their hurried and earnest manner was evident- ly designed to divert our attention from those which were approach- ing. But as soon as they were within hail, we desired them to come no nearer, on penalty of being fired at. They then pulled leisurely towards the shore. Whilst this was transacting, our linguist, in sell- ing a musket, had carelessly laid a cartridge of powder by him, which took fire and scorched him considerably. The blaze alarmed the Indians, who, as if conscious of intended mischief on their part, suspected it on ours, as they immediately seized and levelled their muskets at us. Without reflecting how useless was the exposure, I involuntarily seized and pointed a blunderbuss at them, while, in a moment, George, ever on the alert, was at my side with his musket cocked and ready to fire ; but, fortunately, those who managed the paddles exerted themselves to get out of our reach, and so soon in- creased the distance between us, that no gun was discharged on either side. ' After their fears were a little abated, we called to some natives in a small canoe, and explained to them the cause of the alarm," and de- sired them to tell their friends that if they would come off* in the small canoes, and without arms, we would trade with them. In con- sequence of this invitation, several came off unarmed ; and while they were engaged in disposing of their furs, we kept a lookout after their comrades. By the aid of our glass we perceived that they were putting their arms into the small canoes, and embarking as many men as each would carry. When within hail, they were cau- tioned to come no nearer ; but they persisted in advancing till they saw that we were pointing a cannon at them. They then returned to the shore, and appeared to have abandoned their design, though a con- siderable armed body of them kept on the shore abreast of the vessel, 96 FIRST VOYAGE. occasionally firing their muskets, all day. The circumstance of iha'r women not being with them, and also that of their having very few skins, tended to confirm me in the belief that their intentions were mischievous. But, whatever may have been their design, we parted with them, as we had done with other tribes, on friendly terms. On the 15th, while steering, as we supposed, for the village of Steeken, we came across a canoe belonging to that tribe, from which we obtained directions for finding it ; but, as the wind was light, and a current against us, we were unable to reach it before dark, and anchored about two miles off. During the night there was a consid- erable fall of snow. In the morning we weighed anchor, and, about an hour after, dropped it again abreast the village. Several canoes came off, and sold us, in the course of the day, sixty skins, several cotsacks (or cloaks of fur), and fifty-six tails. On leaving us, at dark, they promised to return the next day with more skins, and moreover told us that if we would remain five or six days, several great chiefs would arrive with their families, and bring plenty of skins. Unexpectedly, one of these very great chiefs arrived the next day in a canoe quite as long as my vessel, and ornamented with a rudely cawed figure of a warrior on the prow, the head of which was deco- rated with real hair, filled with a mixture of grease and red ochre, and the white down of birds. The chief was a dignified, good-looking man of about forty-five. He was accompanied by twenty-two athletic young men, who appeared to handle their paddles with a graceful- ness and dexterity as much excelling the management of the ordinary canoes, as the oarsmen of a man-of-war's barge surpass those of a merchantman. This chief was very desirous to come on board ; but to have indulged him would have been an imprudent exposure of the smallness of our numbers. He then expressed a wish to have a cannon discharged ; and we readily fired two in immediate succes- sion, which appeared to astonish and gratify him, and on the subject of which much conversation was held with his men ; but it was only partially understood by my linguist as expressing admiration of the report. After this the chief stood up and made a speech, evincing his pleasure, and at the same time handing up three fine skins as presents. An Indian's gift is understood here, as elsewhere, to be made with the expectation of a generous return ; and I gave to the A SAILOR DESERTS. 97 chief great coats, cloth, knives, beads, and China cash, to more than their value. He drank half a tumbler of wine w^ith great relish, and then blew into the air a quantity of the down of birds in token of friendship. As they left us to go ashore, they all began a song, whose wildness was in perfect keeping with their appearance, and to which they kept the most exact time with their paddles. The days of the 18th and 19th were rainy and unpleasant. We continued at anchor, and were visited by a number of Indians with skins'; but they did not trade with much spirit. The rainy, chilly weather seemed to have checked their animation ; and they would sit, crouched up in their canoes, looking at us for hours together, without altering their position, while it rained without cessation. At length we observed a very old chief earnestly engaged to get his canoe nearer to us ; as I supposed to sell his furs and be off. But not so ; his object was to persuade me to cause the rain to cease ; and, as an inducement, he assured me they would bring a great many skins. As there was no appearance of fair weather, I told him I could not do so that day, but might possibly the next. It happened that the next day was fair ; but I saw noliiing more of the chief. We sailed from this place on perceiving that we had exhausted their store of skins ; and, in passing to and fro in the multitude of the ramifications of this extensive inland navigation, we met many strag- gling canoes, and seldom any one that had not some skins to dispose of. In this way we had a great advantage over a large vessel ; and, by running into various creeks, where, probably, no vessel had ever been before, our collection of a few at a time amounted to a very con- siderable number. On the 1st of May we anchored near a place favorable for replen- ishing our wood and water ; and, while busily engaged in this busi- - ness, one of my Irish sailors, eluding the vigilance of the officer who was with the party, made his escape. As he was on an island of no great extent, and could procure nothing to subsist upon, there was no doubt he would endeavor to get on board the first canoe he might see. Therefore, as soon as our business was accomplished, we proceeded to the village, about four miles to leeward, and immediately despatched two canoes .after him, promising a reward of a musket to the one that should bring him. The canoes no sooner came in sight, than, having 9 98 FIRST VOYAGE. no suspicion that they were in pursuit of him, he called to them, and one of them readily took him on board ; but, instead of bringing him to us, put him ashore at their village. The next day it was evident that they had no intention of returning him, as they made various ex- cuses ; such as " he was too strong for them;" "the women would not allow him to be sent on board ; " and " he had gone away to a distant place." It then became necessary to convince them that I was in earnest ; and, hauling my cutter near to the village, I threat- ened them destruction with my great guns if they delayed to bring off the man ; and, firing a four-pound shot over them, it made such a cracking among the trees, that they were too much frightened to hesitate any longer. The man was brought on board ; and I paid the promised reward, charging the value to the account of the delinquent. On investigation it appeared that he and another lad had, some time past, determined on escaping in our boat, but had never found an opportunity. Had they succeeded, as we had only one boat, the loss of it would have been very distressing to us. For the several succeeding days we did not anchor, but kept under way, and approached the shore wherev^ there was smoke, or where we had before met the natives. During this time- we came across many canoes, some of which were looking for a vessel to trade with ; and of such stragglers we bought many skins. Others reported that they had fallen in with two ships, to which they had disposed of all, and were then on their way to look for more. Among them was an old chief, and a number of men and women of his tribe, whom we remembered to have seen at Norfolk Sound. They had now their faces blacked, and their hair cut short, which they told us was in mourning for a friend that had lately been killed. As we approached the northern part of the sound, the wild fowl became more abundant ; and scarce a day passed that we did not kill a number of geese, turkeys, and ducks. The latter were .so numerous as often to darken the horizon in the direction in which they rose ; and at one time I fired a canister of musket balls from a four-pounder at them, and killed six. Of fish, also, particularly sa' mon and halibut, we had always an abundant supply, both catchii them ourselves, and procuring them from the natives. But our pota toes were consumed, and no vegetable could be had as a substitute. CHILCAT TRIBE. 99 It was yet too early in the season for wild berries ; and the natives had not reached that first point of civilization, which is indicated by an attention to the cultivation of the earth. The Indians, who had last left us, perceiving we were going further north, advised us to be on our guard against the Chilcat tribe, whose village we were approaching, and whom they represented as being very numerous, very warlike, and very mischievous. On the 6th of May we had arrived at the northern extremity of Chatham's Straits, near the Chilcat tribe ; and, having a strong wind from the .south, we found a harbor in a neighboring cove, and came to anchor within a cable's length of the shore, being in latitude 59° 30^ north. Here, sheltered from the violence of the south v/ind, we lay in smooth wa- ter ; but, owing to the boisterous state of the weather outside, only two canoes came to us this day. The wind having subsided during the night, was succeeded by a calm. This being favorable for the canoes, they arrived in surprising numbers. We had witnessed nothing to be compared with it since our arrival on the coast. Coming in divisions of four or five each, by ten o'clock twenty-six were assembled in the cove, some of which were as long as my vessel, and carrying from twelve to twenty-eight persons each, making an aggregate of about five hundred men, all well armed v/ith muskets, spears, and daggers. They were unac- companied by their women and children, and had but few skins, which was a certain indication that their intentions were of a hostile char- acter. It will be perceived that our situation was now one of great dan- ger. The calm continuing, rendered it impossible for us to retreat; and it was obvious, that if they attacked us with resolution, their great superiority of numbers would enable them to overwhelm us, before the guns could be reloaded, after the first discharge. Our only alter- native, then, was to make the best preparation in our power for re- -pelling an attack, and to sell our lives as dearly as possible ; for our men were all convinced that death was greatly to be preferred to •Silling alive into the hands of these barbarians. Accordingly, our Sftnnon were all loaded with bags of musket balls. Our small arms, two muskets and two pistols for each man, were also loaded ; and our pikes placed at hand. 100 FIRST VOYAGE, The Indians passed most of the day in their canoes, keeping at about a cable's length distant from our vessel, continually endeavor- ing to persuade us to let them approach, by the assurance of having a great many skins. Our own men, at the same time, with lighted matches, were all day at the guns, pointing at them as they altered their positions ; while our linguist was calling to them not to advance, on pain of destruction from the great guns. In this hostile attitude each party remained all day. In the forenoon we observed two large canoes to go away, which, returning before night, we supposed might have been sent for reinforcements. The day had been a long and anxious one ; and when night came, we were rejoiced to see them go on shore, haul up their canoes, and build their fires. They remained quiet during the night, excepting mocking our watch, as each half hour was called out. Early next morning there sprang up a breeze from the northward, when we got under way and proceeded out of the cove, the Indians begging us to remain another day, and promising us a great many skins. We had scarcely got into the broad part of the sound before we met two war canoes, each containing twenty-six men, well armed, who were on their way to join the others ; and for ■whose arrival the attack had probably been delayed. Of these I pur- chased four skins in passing ; and they were exceedingly anxious we should return and anchor again, assuring us of a great many skins. On perceiving their persuasions to be of no avail, they showed evi- dent demonstrations of great disappointment. But I discovered afterwards, on falling in with the English ship Cheerful, Captain Beck, that they were instigated to attack us by a greater stimulus than their cupidity, namely, a desire for revenge. It appeared, from Captain Beck's account, that his ship had run aground on a sand bank, near where we had anchored, about a month before ; that, while carrying out an anchor, the natives were seen approach- ing in great numbers, and, he had no doubt, with hostile intentions. He therefore called his men on board, and prepared for resistance. As they advanced towards him, he cautioned them to come no nearer ; but, disregarding the warning, and still approaching, he fired over them. This not producing the desired cflect of intimidating them, he reluctantly fired among them, and supposes he killed and wounded several, as there were great cries heard, great confusion in the fleet, STRIKE A LEDGE. 101 and an instantaneous retreat. Captain Beck had left Macao in Sep- tember, but had been little more than a month on the coast, and had not met with good success. After leaving the Chilcat tribe, as above mentioned, we steered southv/ard, till we reached that branch of the sound which runs in an easterly direction. It was deemed advisable to sail up this branch, and round those islands, which are called, by Vancouver, Admiralty, Macartney's and Duke of York's Islands, visiting the several tribes who inhabit their shores, and purchasing all the furs they had collected. For, having at this time, 19th of May, nearly expended our articles of barter to great advantage, it was requisite that we should make preparation for leaving the coast, by getting a supply of wood and filling up our water-casks. The next day, while steering to the westward with this intention, and going at the rate of about two knots, unsuspicious of danger, the vessel suddenly struck a sunken ledge, and stopped. Perceiving that she hung abaft the midships, and that there were three and a half fathoms under the bows, we immediately run all the guns forward, and carried out an anchor ahead ; but the tide ebbed so rapidly, that our efforts to heave her off were ineffectual. We therefore heeled her on the side, v/hence she would be less likely to roll over. At low water the position of the vessel was such as to afford but feeble expectation that she could escape bilging. She hung by about four feet amidships, having slid about as much on the rock as the tide fell, and brought up with the end of the bowsprit against the bottom. Her keel formed an angle of forty-five degrees with the water line, the after part of it being from fourteen to fifteen feet above the rock. This position, combined with a rank heel to starboard, rendered it impossible to stand on deck. We therefore put a number of loaded muskets into the boat, and prepared for such resistance, in case of being attacked, as could be made by fifteen men, crowded into a' sixteen feet boat. Our situation was now one of the most painful anxiety, no less from the immediate prospect of losing our vessel, and the rich cargo we had collected with so much toil, than from the apprehension of being discovered in this defenceless state by some one of the hostile tribes by which we were surrounded. .A canoe of the largest class, with 9* 102 FIRST VOYAGE. thirty wari-iors, well armed, had left us not more than half an hour before we struck, who were now prevented from seeing us by having passed round an island. Should the vessel bilge, there existed scarcely any other chance for the preservation of our lives, than the precarious one of falling in with some ship. That she would bilge there was no reason to doubt, if the weather varied in any degree from that perfect calm which then prevailed. More than ten hours were passed in this agonizing state of suspense, watching the horizon to discover if any savages were approaching, — the heavens, if there were a cloud that might chance to ruffle the smooth surface of the water, — the vessel, whose occasional cracking seemed to warn us of destruction ; and, when the tide began to flow, impatiently observing its apparently sluggish advance, while I involuntarily consulted my watch, the hands of which seemed to have forgotten to move. In this painful interval, 1 beguiled some little time, while seated in the boat, by taking a sketch of the hazardous situation of my cutter, at low water, fearing that it might soon be beyond my power to give such evidence of her sad fate. At length, the water having flowed over the coamings of the hatches, which had been caulked down in anticipation of this event, without any indication of the vessel's lifting, I was deliberating on the propriety of cutting away the mast, when we perceived her to be rising. She soon after righted so much, that we could go on board ; and at half past twelve in the night we had the indescribable pleasure of seeing her afloat again, without having received any other apparent injury than the loss of a few sheets of copper. To the perfect calm, smooth water, and uncommon strength of the vessel, may be attributed our escape from this truly perilous situation. On the 23d, being in a favorable place, and where there were no indications of natives in the immediate vicinity, we took the oppor- tunity to lay the vessel ashore. The tide having left her, it was evident that there was no material injury. The keel was considerably brushed, from the effects of having slid while on the rock. From the same cause, several sheets of copper were rolled up, and a few feet of the sheathing, under the copper, very much broken. All these were repaired as well as our time and means would permit ; and at high water we hauled off again. NORFOLK SOUND. 103 We passed another week in cruising about the sound ; but per- ceiving that the stock of the natives in this quarter was so exhausted that when vv^e came across a canoe they had seldom any skins with them, it was deemed expedient to leave Chatham's Straits. We determined, therefore, to proceed to Norfolk Sound again, there pick up what we could by lying a day or two, and then go to Charlotte's Islands, previous to taking a final farewell of the coast. With this intention v/e steered westward. Arriving in the broad part of the sound, the course of which is north and south, and having the wind from the south w^-d, we could make but little progress on our way. In the afternoon the south wind increased greatly, and caused such a sea as latterly we had been entirely unaccustomed to. As much fatigue and some risk would be incurred by attempting to pass the night in tacking to and fro in the sound, without a possibility, while the wind was so high and the sea so rough, of advancing at all on our way, it became very desirable to find a harbor ; and a little before sunset, being near the eastern side of the sound, we perceived an opening of about a fourth of a mile, between two precipitous hills, clothed from the bottom to their summits with pine. The hills on each side forming the entrance were so decisively indicative of sufficient depth of water, that we ran boldly in, without taking the precaution of first sending the boat to reconnoitre. We were imme- diately becalmed on passing the entrance, and, using our sweeps, rowed but a third of a mile before we were in perfectly smooth water. The passage, having become narrower as we had advanced in it, rendered anchoring unnecessary ; and we kept the vessel suspended, between the two shores, by ropes made fast to the trees. Our position was quite romantic. The thick-wooded hills on either side seemed almost to unite at the top ; the dark gloom overhanging all around ; the silence and tranquillity which had so instantaneously succeeded the roar and turbulence of the sea without ; and the comfort and security for the night of which we had a prospect, all combined to produce sensations of a most pleasing character. While musing on the scenery about us, and while it was yet twilight, I perceived a movement in the bushes, and in a moment a large bear made his appearance, probably attracted by the scent of the vessel. As the object of killing him did not appear to me to compensate the risk of 104 FIRST VOYAGE. the attempt, I refused permission to my men to go ashore for that purpose ; but, as he seemed disposed to remain and make our acquaintance, 1 caused a four-pounder to be discharged at him. The piece was elevated too high ; the ball went over him, making a great cracking among the bushes, and the reverberation of the report was long and loud. He did not wait for a second, but scampered off among the bushes, and we saw him no more. The wind having come round to the northwestward during the night, we put out early in the morning of the 30th, and, steering southward, before night we had an unbounded ocean open to our view. This little variation to the scene was quite agreeable, as we had now been two months navigating inland, without having even a sight of the ocean, and having been at all times surrounded with lofty mountains, whose sides present an impenetrable forest of pine wood, and whose sum- mits (at the north) are, most of the year, covered with ice and snow. On the 1st of June, approaching Norfolk Sound, a ship was per- ceived going in before us, which proved to be the Hancock, of Boston, Captain Crocker, who had arrived on the coast in April. As we drew near to her after she had anchored, a considerable bustle was per- ceived on board, as if they were preparing for defence ; which, I was afterwards amused to find, arose from our suspicious and uncouth appearance. This, to be sure, was rather unusual, from the circum- stance of our beards, at this time, being four or five inches long ; as, having found the operation of shaving to be difficult, where the motion of the vessel was so great, I had neglected it since leaving .China, and my officers and men had followed my example ; so that it must be admitted, we did present an appearance so little prepossessing, that it was very excusable for people whom we approached to be on their guard. The following day, arrived and anchored near us the ship De- spatch, of Boston, Captain Breck, which, as well as the other ship, had arrived on the coast rather too late to insure successful voyages the present season. While three vessels were lying together here, it was amusing to observe the adroitness and cunning with which the Indians derived all possible advantage from the competition. They had succeeded in raising the price of their skins so high that there was a necessity, at last, of our entering into an agreement respecting the SKITTIGATES. 105 price to be given, which ought to have been made at first; as not less requisite to profit, than to despatch. Although nearly a week was passed here, yet the natives showed so little earnestness to dispose of their furs, that very few were pur- chased till the day before our departure, and when they had taken ample time to satisfy themselves they were obtaining the highest price. The whole number of skins purchased during this time, by the three vessels, did not exceed together morethantwo hundred and fifty, and for these we paid more than twice as much as for those which were obtained here on my arrival. Leaving this place on the 7th, and pursuing a course to the south- ward, we fell in, a week after, with the ship Ulysses, of Boston, Cap- tain Lamb. This ship had arrived on the coast a month before us ; but the success which ought to have resulted from so early an arrival was defeated by a mutiny of long and ruinous duration. Thus it appears that no less than three ships had arrived on the coast before us,, and that to accident, not less than to industry and perseverance, were we indebted for our great success. A long continued southerly wind so retarded our passage to Char- lotte's Islands, that we did not' reach the Skittigates, (the largest tribe of these islands,) till the 20th, having found it advisable to make a harbor on the way, where we lay three days, and were screened from the effects of a southeast gale. In the mean time oui' men were employed in replenishing our stock of wood and water. When near to the Skittigates, it being calm and the current running out, we anchored about two miles north of their village. As this was a numerous and warlike tribe, whose intercourse with foreigners had been great, and to whose hostility and treachery some of them had fallen victims, there was a necessity for the observance of all that vigilance on our part, to guard against surprise, that we had been in the practice of observing. One of this tribe, in order to decoy men ashore, covered himself in a bear's skin, and came out of the border of the wood, on all fours, abreast the ship, while a party lay in ambush ready to fire on those who should come in pursuit. The stratagem would have succeeded, had not one of the natives been too earnest to come forward, so as to be discovered in time for the boat to retreat, before any mischief had occurred. 106 FIRST VOYAGE. Soon after anchoring a canoe came to us, from which we procured three skins. The Indians in this canoe assured us that there were plenty of skins at the village, and manifested a desire that we should go there. In the morning of the 21st, several canoes came to us with some of the inferior chiefs. They were very urgent in their entreaties for us to go up to the village, alleging that it was so far for them to come, that many would be deterred by it from bringing their skTns. Their solicitations, however, were of no avail, as I had no doubt that those who had skins to dispose of would not be prevented from coming to us by the distance, and that we should avoid the visits of the mischievous and idle, by remaining at our present anchorage. By nine o'clock, we had many canoes assembled about us ; but they appeared to be so indifferent about trading, that it was past noon before they began ; yet, such was their alacrity when they did begm, that by dark they had sold us iipwards of one hundred skins, and one hundred and thirty tails. The succeeding day was squally and unpleasant, and we had a smaller number of the natives about us. We purchased, however, eighty-five skins, and as many tails. Towards evening a canoe came to us with the son of the chief of the Skittigates on board, who told us that if we would remain another "day, his father would come to us, and bring a great many skins. In the night, which was perfectly calm, we heard frequent and wild howlings at the village, and occasionally the report of a musket. The morning of the 23d was calm, and a favorable current for the Indians to come to us ; but, having waited till near noon without seeing a single canoe . moving, we were at a loss to conjecture the reason, more especially after the promise of the king's son. fast evening. In case, however, of their bringing many skins, as they promised, we had not the means of purchasing them, our articles of barter being nearly expended. It was therefore judged best not to ■wait to ascertain the cause of such extraordinary conduct; and, having a light breeze from the south, we put out with the intention of going over to the Coneyaws. The next day, when about two leagues south of Point Rose, the breeze not being sufficient to enable us to stem the current, we came to anchor. Soon afterwards, two large canoes came to us, in one of which was a young, good-looking warrior, the son-in-law of , SENSIBILITY OF A NATIVE. 107 Coneyaw, who is head chief of the Tytantes tribe, and who, with other warriors, had come over on a hostile expedition against Cummashaw's tribe. Being so nearly on the point of leaving the coast, and therefore fearing no bad consequences from an exposure of our weakness, I acceded to the earnest solicitations of this young warrior to come on board. This was the only one of the natives whom we had admitted on board since being on the coast. We invited him into the cabin, and gave him a glass of wine, which pleased him so much that he soon asked for another. Having made me a present of a very fine skin, I made a return of a shirt, jacket, and pantaloons, which he immediately put on, and appeared to be well satisfied with the figure he made, and much pleased with the dress. But the friendly feelings I had inspired suffered a momentary interruption, by my careless and apparently rude manner of giving him a handkerchief. Being on the opposite side of the cabin from that on which I was sitting, I thi'ew it into his lap, which, instead of taking, he allowed to roll down on the floor, his feelings so much wounded that he actually shed tears ; nor was it without considerable effort, that we persuaded him that no insult was intended, by assuring him that it arose from my ignorance of the etiquette which custom had established among them. This little interruption to our harmony was of short duration, the party aggrieved being satisfied with my apology ; and having purchased of him and his comrades about sixty skins, we parted with mutual good-will and friendship. It was now time to make the necessary preparation for leaving the coast, by filling up our water-casks, and procuring sufficient wood for the passage to China. With this intention we directed our course for Tatiskee cove, where, having anchored, we set about cutting wood with all diligence, and also procuring our supply of water. This work being accomplished, we were ready for our departure on the 26th ; but the wind was from the south, and the weather rainy and boisterous. It was therefore decidedly most advantageous for us to lie quietly in the snug port where we were anchored, and wait for a fair wind and the return of good weather before putting to sea. The wind having changed to the westward during the night, on the morning of the 27th of June we weighed anchor for the last time on the coast, and put to sea, intending to reconnoitre North Island before 108 FIRST VOYAGE. bidding farewell to the coast. But, owing to a contrary current, it was late in the afternoon before we passed the southern point of Kiganny ; previous to which we were boarded by the celebrated chief Kow, a man whose intelligence and honest demeanor recommended him to all who had any dealings with him. He had always been in the habit of coming on board the Cutter on her former voyages, and had never failed to receive the most generous and friendly treatment from Captain Lay, her former master, whom he was much disappointed in not finding on board. For the few skins he had we paid him liberally ; and he left us much satisfied. The following day, at noon, we had arrived opposite and near to the village on North Island. A number of canoes soon came off, in one of which was the chief Coneyaw, and in another Eltargee. The latter had, a year or two ago, accidentally, it was said, caused the death of a Captain Newberry, by the discharge of a pistol, which he did not know was loaded. His looks, however, were so much against him, and, in the short intercourse we had with him, his actions and manner so corresponded with his looks, that I should require the clearest evidence to be satisfied that the disaster was purely the efFeqt of accident. I CHAPTER VIII. Sail for Sandwicli Islands — Satisfaction — whyhee — Provisions and Fruit — Natives — Mowee — Proceed, westward — Tinian — Anchor in the Typa — Ship Ontario — Eeflections caused hj her Loss — Proceed to Whampoa and Canton — Take a Fac- tory — Contract for the Cargo — Causes operating to discourage a Eeturn to the Coast — Sell the Cutter — Sail for Calcutta — Malacca — Pulo Pinang — Procure a Pilot — Arrive at Calcutta. ^WiM