ACCOUNT EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS AMERICA. An accurate Description of their Extent, Climate, Productions, Trade, Genius, and Dispositions of their Inhabitants: the Interests of tile several Powers of Europe with respect to those Settlements; and their Political and Commercial Views with Regard to each other. A NEW EDITION. ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS. LONDOX: PRINTED FOR JOHN JOSEPH STOCrvDALE, NO. 4 ], I’ALI,-MALL. 1808 , THE ADVERTISEMENT. Why the Editor of the Works of the Right Hon. Edmund Burke excluded from such a collection his admirable “ Account of the European Settlements in America,” we pretend not to know. Of this ex¬ cellent book, we are certain, however, that Edmund Burke was the real Author. Yet, we cannot, per¬ haps, assign our proofs of this fact, in stronger terms, than has been already done, by the able writer of “ The Documents, for the Opinion, that Hugh Macauley Boyd wrote Junius’s Letters:” u We had now commenced,” says he, “ our war with France about American boundaries. Every tongue talked, in 1750, about our American rights; and every pen scribbled about our checks by land, and our successes by sea. While curiosity was awake, and inquiry was active, Edmund Burke produced, in April 1757, An Account of the European Settle - meats in America. He was paid for the copyright of this historical account, which was received with an universal welcome, fifty guineas.* Of this work, * The writer of this saw the receipt, written with Edmund Stuke's own hand. The late Lord Maccartney used to sav, that this was a joint he u ould never admit, that he was the author. Yet, suc-h are its comprehensive brevity, and its elegant precision, that this book is not unworthy ol' the genius, and talents of Edmund Burke. I do not, however, say, but that a man of more elaboration than the author, with American records at his hand, could detect in it some inaccuracies of assertion, and expose more deficiencies of policy. It is curious to remark, that the taste of Burke corresponds with the judgement of Hume, in historic writing: They both concur, in simplicity of style, and strength of remark. Yet, is it east" to perceive, from an exami¬ nation of his European Settlements , that Burke, in history, would have shewn, like Hume, great pro¬ fundity of observation, and elegance of narrative, but, with all, great want of elaboration.” work of Mr. Burke, his brother, and his namesake William Burke. But, tlia principal merit of it belongs certainly to Mr. Edmund Burke. Yet, an opinion, however respectable, cannot be admitted against such a document, as a receipt, in the author’s hand writing, for the copy¬ right money. THE PREFACE TO THE ORIGINAL EDITION. The affairs of America have lately engaged a great deal of the publick attention. Before the present war, there were but a very few who made the history of that quarter of the world any part of their studj r ; though the matter is certainly very curious itself, and extremely interesting to us as a trading poeple. This history of a country which, though vast in extent, is the property only of four nations ; and which, though peopled probably for a series of ages, is only kllOWll to the rest of tile world for about two centuries, does not naturally afford matter for many volumes. Yet it is certain, that, to acquire a proper knowledge of the history of the events in America, an idea of its present state, and a competent judgment of its trade, a great deal of reading has been found requisite. And I may add, that the reading on many parts of this subject is dry and dis¬ gusting ; that authors have treated on it, some without a suffi¬ cient knowledge of the subject, aud others in such a manner as no knowledge of the subject in the author could induce any body to become readers. That some are loaded with a lumber of matter that can interest very few; and that others obscure the truth in many particulars, to gratify the low prejudices of b 2 parties, parties, and, I may say, of nations. Whatever is written by the English settled in our colonies, is to be read with great caution; because very few of them write without a bias to the in¬ terest of the particular province to which they belong, or per¬ haps to a particular faction in that province. It is only by comparing the printed accounts with one another, and those n-i,h the best private information, and correcting all by au- thentick matter of record, that one can discover the truth; and this hath been a matter of some difficulty. With regard to the foreign settlements, recourse was had to the best printed accounts of travellers and others; and, in some points, to private information from intelligent traders. The materials for the foreign settlements are far from being as perfect, or as much to be depended upon, as we could wish ; it was very seldom that I could venture to transcribe any thing directly from them without some addition or some corrective. In the historical part of this work, I fixed my eye prin¬ cipally on some capital matters, which might the most fully engage and best reward the attention of the reader; and in treating of those I dwelt only upon such events as seemed to me to afford some political instruction, or to open the characters of the principal actors in those great scenes. The affairs which seemed most worthy of an account of any length, are those splendid and remarkable events of the discovery of America, and the conquest of the only two civilized kingdoms it con¬ tained. In THE PREFACE. Iii treating of other parts, I have given so much of the his¬ tory of each country as may serve to shew, when and upon what principles it was planted, to enable the reader the better to judge of its present condition. These accounts are very short; and, considering of what sort of matter such histories are composed, I believe I shall deserve as much for what I . have omitted, as for what I have inserted. If I could not write well upon any subject, I have endeavoured always to write concisely. My principal view, in treating of the several settlements, was, to draw every thing towards their trade, which is the point that concerns us the most materially ; for which reason, I have but little considered their civil, and yet jess their natural history, further than as they tended to throw some light upon the com¬ merce of these countries; except where the matters were very curious, and served to diversify the work. It is not to be expected that a performance of this kind can be written equally throughout. In some places, the sub¬ ject refuses all ornament; and the matter, dry in itself, is by no art to be made otherwise: in some, a contagion commu¬ nicated from the duluess of materials, which yet were necessary to the work, may probably appear r in many, and perhaps the most blameable parts, the author alone must be answerable. Having spoken perhaps a little too hardly of my materials, I must except the assistance I have had from the judicious col¬ lection called Harris’s Voyages. There are not many finer pieces than the history of Brazil in that collection; the light 10 THE PHEFACE. in which the author sets the events in that history is fine and instructive; an uncommon spirit prevails through it; and his remarks are every where striking and deep. The little sketch I have given in the part of Portuguese America, if it has any merit, is entirely due to that original. However the accounts given of many things in that part of his work which relates to the English and French settlements may be defective, and suited rather to the ancient than to the present state of affairs in that part of the world : his remarks have rarely this fault; and where I differ from him in any respect, it is with deference to the judgment of a writer to whom this nation is much obliged, for endeavouring every where, with so much good sense and eloquence, to rouse that spirit of generous enterprise, that can alone make any nation powerful or glorious. A. D. 1/57- CONTENTS. CONTENTS. PAST I. Page The state of Europe before the discovery of America.—The project of Colum¬ bus—His application to sevcrul Courts—His successful application to that of Spain—His voyage.—The discovery of the Bahamas, and Greater Antilles 3 CHAP. II. The discovery of the Caribbct's.—Columbus returns to Europe—His behaviour at Lisbon—His reception at Barcelona by Ferdinand and Isabella.—Se¬ cond voyage of Columbus.—The condition of the Spaniards in Hispaniola. —The city of Isabella built, and a Spanish colony settled.— A Voyage for better discovering the coast of Cuba - - - n CHAP. III. The Difficulties attending the Voyage.—Jamaica discovered.—Columbus re¬ turns to Hispaniola.—The Spaniards rebel.—A War with the Indians of that Country—They are conquered—Their scheme for starving the Spa¬ niards ... . - . - 20 CIIAP. IV. Complaints against Columbus.—A Person is sent to enquire into his con¬ duct—He returns to Spain—He is acquitted—He sets out on his third voy¬ age—He discovers the Continent of South America—He sails to Hispaniola S6 CHAP. V. Columbus finds the Spaniards of Hispaniola in rebellion—His measures to suppress it—New complaints against him in Spain—He is superseded in the government, and sent to Spain in irons - - - 31 CHAP. VI. The Discoveries of Americus Vesputiusa and other Adventurers.—What caused the spirit of Discovery. 36 12 CONTEXTS. CHAP. VII. gain his Liberty; the consequence of it - - 59 CHAP. XI. The Attempts of Montezuma to make the Spaniards leave Mexico.—The arrival of Narvaez to take the command from Cortes.—Cortes leaves Mexico—Defeats and takes Narvaez prisoner.—The Spaniards in Mexico besieged.—Cortes raises the Siege.—Montezuma is killed - 66 CHAP. XII. Guatimozifi chosen Emperor by the Mexicans—He besieges the Spaniards in their quarters—Obliges Cortes to retire out of the city—Distresses him in his retreat.—The battle of Otumba.—Cortes retreats to TIascala - 75 CHAP. XIII. Spaniards sent against Cortes join him—He marches again to Mexico—A conspiracy against his life bathed - * - SS CHAP. XIV. The siege of Mexico.—Terms of accommodation refused by the Mexicans.— TheSpaniards repulsed by a stratagem of Guatimoziu.—A new stratagem of Guatimozin—He is taken.—The citv surrenders.—Guatimoziu toitured. —Cortes superseded in his government.—Reflexions on the Spanibh cruelties S9 CHAP.XV. jv s The scheme of Pizarro ami Ahnagro for the Conquest of Peru—Their elnrae- Im—The fetalc of the Empire of Peru at that lime.—The lahing of the jnca Atabalipa - - - . - - . J0& CHAP. XVI. The murder of the ynca.—A dispute bclwcrn Pizarro and Alnngro—They are reconciled.—Almagro'* expeditim to Chili.—The Peruvians rene w the war, ami ticsiegc Cusco.—Almagro returns and defeats them.—Almagro renews the quarrel with Pizarro, but is defeated, and put In death - 109 CHAP. XVII. The final dispersion of the Peruvian army.—The conspiracy against Pizarro. —lie is murdered - - - - » ipj CHAP. XVIII. Young Almagro made Governor.—The new Viceroy Vaca di Castro arrives —Pats to death young Almagro—Puls an end to the liiclions, and settles the province—He is recalled.—fJonrslo Pizarro raises a rebellion, and usurps the government.—Peter de la Oases made Viceroy—Defeats the troops of Ptzirro, and puts him to death - - - - 121 PART II. C1IAP.I. The persons of the Americans—Their drres and way of living—Their manner of conversing—Their hospitality—Their temper—Their' religion and su¬ perstitions—Their medicine - - • - 127 CHAP. II. The government of the Americans—Their councils—Their orators—Their feasts—Their manner of administering justice - - - l'S CHAP. III. Their mournings for their dead.—The feast of souls.—The American women; Ibeir occupations; their marriages and divorces - - - 138 CHAP. IV. The Indian manner of preparing for war—The songs and dances—Their taking the field—Their method of discovering and attacking the enemy— Their croel treatment of their prisoners of war - - 143 CONTEXTS. PART III. CHAP. I. 3BC A general description of America - - - - 153 CHAP. II. The climate and soil of New Spain.—Animals —Its vegetable produce - 157 CHAP. III. The gold and silver mines.—The manner of purifying those metals.-Some thoughts on the generation of metals.—Of the quantify of those metals pro¬ duced in the West Indies - - 161 CHAP. IV. Of cochineal and cacao ... . 1G9 CHAP. V. The trade of Mexico.—Some account of that city.—The fairs of Acapulco and La Vera Cruz.—The flora and register ships. - - 173 CHAP. VI. Three sorts of people in New Spain—The Whites, Indians, and Negroes; the characters of those.—The clergy, their characters.—The civil government, its character ... - - 180 CHAP. VII. New Mexico.—Its Discovery—Climate—Products.—The English claim to California ------ 184 CHAP. VIII. The climate and soil of Peru—Its produce.—The mines, the coca and herb of Paraguay - - - - - - - 186 CHAP. IX. The wines of Peru.—The wool.—The lamas and viennnas, sheep of Peru.— Jesuits bark.—Guinea pepper.—The dung of Iquiqua.—Quicksilver mines 190 CHAP. X. The character of the Peruvians—Their divisions.—The Indian festivals.— Honours paid to a descendant of the ynca - - - 191 CHAP. XI. The cities of Pern, Lima, Cosco, and Quito; a description of them.—Cal¬ lao, its trade and destruction.—The viceroy of Peru; his jurisdiction and revenues. - - . . 197 CONTENTS. CHAP. XII. Pa 3 e The temperature of the air in Chili—The soil; its fertility.—A description of the principal towns.—The trade of Chilly .... 203 CHAP. XIII. The Spaniards in this province but few.—The Americans; their character; CHAP. XIV. The climate of Paraguay ; its rivers.—The province of La Plata.—The town of Buenos-Ayres; its trade .... 203 CHAP. XV. The territory of the Jesuits in Paraguay—Their manner of settling and govern¬ ing it.—The obedience of the people.— S rnte reflexions on the late trans¬ actions there - - - - - - -21J' CHAP. XVI. Terra Firma; its extent and produce—The cities of Panaipa, Carthagenn, and Porto Bello.—'The galleons—The isle of Cuba—The Hat-anna ; His¬ paniola ; Porto Rico.—Reflexion on the policy of Spain with regard to the colonics ------ 21S PART W. CHAP. I. An account of the discovery of Brazil—The method of settling it; conquered by the Dutch; reconquered by the Portuguese - - - 227 CHAP. II. The Climate of Brazil.—Of the Brazil wood . . . 23» CHAP. III. Tlie trade of Brazil—Its intercourse with Africa—The settlement of the river Amazons and Rio Janeiro.—The gold mines.—The commonwealth of the Paulists.—The diamond mines. .... . 254 CHAP. IV. Regulation of the Portuguese trade—The description of St. Salvador, the capital of Brazil. 1 lie fleets for that city.—Rio Janeiro and Fernambucca 239 CHAP. V. The character of the American Portuguese—The state of the negroes_The g QvernmeDt .. CONTESTS. PART V. CHAP. I. Page The time in -which the French began their West India Settlements.—Favoured by Cardinal Richlien.—De Poincy Governor.—The West India Company 216 CHAP. II. Tie destruction of the colony of St. Christopher’s.—The rise of the Bucca¬ neers—The cause of their success.—The settlement of Hispaniola.—The policy of France.—A description of Hispaniola—Its trade.—The towns of Cape Francoise and Leogane - - - 251 CHAP. III. A description of Mariinico.—Of Guadaloupe and other French islands. —Their produce.—Observations on the mistakes that have been made about tbeir value - - - 258 CHAP. IV. French North America.—Description of Canada.—Its climate.—The fair of Mont-Real.—Quebec's.—'The inhabitants of Canada.—The river St. 'Lau ¬ rence and the great lakes.—Cape Breton - - 2G3 •CHAP. V. Louisiana.—The Missisippi.—The Ohio.—The fountain of youth.—The colony of Louisiana .... 270 CHAP. VI. The French Policy with regard to their Colonies - ■ 271 CHAP. VII. The Dutch settlements.—Cnrasson.—The city—Its trade.-—The Spanish contraband.—Eustatia.—The Danish company.—The Danish island of Santa Crna.—The characters of the several European nations as they re¬ gard America - - • - 281 PART VI. CHAP. I. The division of the English West Indies—Description of Jamaica—Conquest of that bland ..... CONTENTS. CHAP. II. Page The settlement of Jamaica.—TUcfai)ure of. cacao.—Tim Buccaneers.—Tlje flourishing stale of that island—Its decline in some respects - 204 CIIAP. III. The products of Jamaica.—Piemcnto.—Sugar.—Rum.—Molasses.—Cotton. —Ginger.—The logwood trade—Disputes about it.—The contraband.— Slave trade - 297 CHAP. IV. Port Royal.—The earthquake, 1692.—Kingston.—St. Jago de la Vega, or Spanish Town.—Disputes about the removal of the scat of government 30t CHAP. V. , Barbadoes. — Its savage condition at the first planting. —The hardships suffered by the planters.—The speedy increase of the island.—Its great wealth and number of inhabitants.—Its decline—Present state of the island 308 CHAP. VI. St. Christopher, Antigua, Nevis, Montserrat; their present condition and force 314 CHAP. VII. Climate of the West Indies.—The rains and winds.—Hurricanes.—Their prognosticks.—Produce of the West Indies.—Sugar.—The manner of manufacturing it.—Planters in the West Indies.—Their way of life and management of their affairs.—The Negroes - - 318 CHAP. VIII. Observations on the settlement of the-West Indies.—Advantages there for tempers prejudicial at home.—Bad tempers not always noxious in every sense 325 CHAP. IX. Observations on taxing the colonies.—On an expensive establishment there.— Objections answered .... 328 CHAP. X. State of the negroes in the West Indies.—Danger from them.—Methods pro¬ posed for remedying these abuses.—The necessity of increasing the whites. ■ —Use of this regulation in trade - - - CONTESTS. CHAP. XI. p^ t Misery of the negroes.—Greet waste of them.—Methods of preventing it.— Instruction of negroes in religion - - . S29 CHAP. XII. Proposal for a sort of enfranchisement of malattoes ami negroes.—Danger from the multitude of house negroes - - -314 PART VII. CHAP. I. A general view of the English dominions in North America - 316 CHAP. II. First attempts to settle North America.—The rise and progress of the Puri¬ tans.—They are persecuted by Laud.—Several fly into New England 319 CHAP. III. Difference in religion divides the colony.—Massacliuset.—Connecticut.— Providence.—Spirit of persecution.—Persecution of the Quakers_Dis¬ putes about grace. .... 315 CHAP. IV. The Witchcraft delusion.—Great cruelties—The madness ends in the accu¬ sation of the magistrates.—Reflexions ... 301 CHAP. V. The situation, climate, &c. of New England.—Indian corn described— Cattle of New England - 367 CHAP. VI. People of New England.—Their numbers.—History of the charters of the colonies here, and the forfeiture of some - - 371 CHAP. VII. Boston, its harbour.—Trade.—Ship-building.—Distillery.—Foreign trafiick. —Reflexions on the scheme of limiting it.—Declension of the trade of New England - - - - - 375 CHAP. viri. New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania—Description of their situation, &c.—Short account of their settlement - - 3S5 CONTENTS. CHAP. IX. Page City of New York—Its flourishing trade—Albany.—The Indian trade there. —T he Iroquois or Five Nations - - - 390 CHAP. X. New Jersey—Its trade; and inhabitants ... 333 CHAP. XI. Account of V. illiam Penn—The principles on which he settled the colony. —Ilis death - - - - - S93 CHAP. XII. Inhabitants of ?ew, ivania.—Variety of nations and religions there.—Paci¬ fic’; principles of the Quakers.—Reflections on the present state of affairs there ...... 398 CHAP. XIII. Description of Philadelphia.—Its trade.'—Number of people in Pennsyl¬ vania.—Its flourishing condition.—Few Negroes there - 401 CHAP. XIV. Situation, &c. of Virginia.—Conveniency of its rivers for navigation.— Beasts and birds of the country.—The opossum - - 404 CHAP. XV. Towns in Virginia few and small.—Tobacco, its cultivation—Trade in that and other commodities.—People in Virginia.—While and black 409 CHAP. XVI. Attempts tosettle Virginia, there unsuccessful—Settled at last by Lord Delaware 413 CHAP. xvn. Virginia bolds out against Cromwell, and is reduced.—Bacon’s rebellion.— Its causes.—Bacon dies.— Peace restored • - ■ - 4IT CHAP. XVIII. Maryland.—The time of settling it.—Grant to Lord Baltimore.—Attempts of King Janies to deprive him of his jurisdiction.—He is deprived of it on the Devolution.—He is restored.—Capital of Maryland.—Its unde and inhabitants - - - - 420 CHAP. XIX. Attempts of the French to settle Carolina—They are beat off by the Spaniards 423 CHAP. XX. Carolina is settled by the English—Its constitution.—The lords proprietors resign their charter—Made royal government, and divided into two provinces - - - - - 128 UUP. XXI. SU-.tioi?. cfei'c. of Carolina.—I(s animal anj vegetable productions Mb CHAP. XXII. Tbe commodities of Carolina for export—Rice, indigo, pitch, and tar.—Pro¬ cess in raising and manufacturing these commodities - - Mii CHAP. XXIII. NorT.ii Carolina. ;oir.e account of its settlement.—Bad state of that province. —Is considerably improved.—Chief town ... 440 CHAP. XXIV. An account of Charlestown.—Port Royal.—The trade of Carolina—Its vast increase.—Articles not sufficiently attended to there - 414 CHAP. XXV. Settlement of Georgia—Reasons for it.—The plan of the settlement defective— Attempts to remedy it - - - 449 CIIAP. XXVI. Colony new modelled.—Faults in the new constitution.—Trade of ibis province. - - - 454 CHAP. XX VII Nova Scotia, the time and reasons of its settlement.—French there.—Climate and soil.—Annapolis, Halifax, and Lunenburg - - 457 CHAP. XXVIII. The island of Newfoundland—The fishery there.—The Bermudas—Their set¬ tlement and trade.—The Bahamas - - - 462 ' CHAP. XXIX. Hudson's Bay.—Attempts for the discovery of a north-west passage.—The Hudson's Bay company—Thoughts upon its trade.—Climate and soil of the countries there.—Conclusion ... 4CG CHAP. XXX. The royal, proprietary, and charter governments.—Laws *v he colonies.— Paper currency.—Abuses in it.—Another sort of money i >ed 474 ACCOUNT EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS AMERICA. PART 1. DISCOVERY OF AMERICA, MEXICO AND PERU. CHAP. I. THE STATE OF EUROPE BEFORE THE DISCOVERT OF AMERICA.—THE PRO¬ JECT OF COLUMBUS. — HIS APPLICATION TO SEVERAL COURTS.—HIS SUCCESSFUL APPLICATION TO THAT OF SPAIN.-HIS VOYAGE.-THE DIS¬ COVERY OF TIIE BAHAMAS, AND GREATER ANTILLES. There was an extraordinary coincidence of events at the time that the discovery of America made one of the principal: the invention of printing, the making of gunpowder, the im¬ provement of navigation, the revival of ancient learning, and the Reformation ; all of these conspired to change the face of Europe entirely. At this time the principal monarchies began to knit, and to acquire the strength, and take the form, they have at this day. Before this period, the manners of Europe were wholly barbarous ; even in Italy, where the natural mildness of the climate and the dawning of literature had a little softened the minds of the people, and introduced something approach- b 2 ing AN' ACCOUNT OF ills; towards politeness, the history preceding this ana, and in¬ deed lor some time after it, is nothing but one series of trea¬ sons, usurpations, murders, and massacres : nothing of a manly courage, nothing of a solid and rational policy. Scarce any state had then very extensive views, or looked much further than to the present advantage. They did not well comprehend the complicated system of interests that Europe formed even long before thi . Lewis the Eleventh, who was looked upon as one of the wisest princes in his time, and one who sacrificed every thing to his ambition, sacrificed one of the fairest objects of that ambition to a pique, which since his time could have- little influence on the counsels of any prince. His son, Charles the Eighth as he won Italy without either courage or conduct, so he lost it by a chain of false measures, such, as we may venture to say has no parallel it later times. A wild romantic courage in the northern and western parts of Europe, and a wicked po¬ licy in the Italian states, was the character of that age. If we look into the manners of the courts, there appear but verv faint marks of cultivation and politeness. The interview between our Edward the Fourth and his brother of France, wherein they were both caged.up like wild beasts, shews dispositions very remote from a true sense of honour, from the dignity of their stations,- or any just ideas of politeness and humanitv- All the anecdotes which remain of these aud other, courts, are in the same spirit. . If the courts had made such poor advances in policy and politeness, which, might seem the natural'growth of courts at any time, both the courts and the people were yet less advanced in useful knowledge. The little learning which then subsisted, was only the dotage of the scholastic philosophy of words ; to¬ gether with the infancy of politer learning, which only concerned words too, though in another way. The elegance and purity EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMER1 of the Latin tongue was then the highest, and almost the only point of a scholar’s ambition. Mathematical learning was little valued or cultivated. The true system of the'heavens hvas not dreamed of. There was no knowledge at all of the'real form of the earth ; and in general the ideas of mankind were not ex¬ tended beyond their sensible horizon. In this state of affairs Christopher Columbus, a native of Genoa, undertook to extend the boundaries which ignorance had given to the world. This man’s design arose from the just idea he had formed of the figure of the earth •; though the maps,, more erroneous than his conjectures, made him mistake the object. His design was to find a passage to China and India by the Western Ocean. It is hot improbable, that besides tile glory attending such a discovery, and the private advantages of fortune lie might propose to-derive from-it, Columbus had a further incentive from national jealousy and resentment. Ve¬ nice and Genoa were then" almost ! the' only trading powers in Europe; and they'had no other‘support'of their power but their commerce. Thisbretl-aTivalship, a! jealousy, and fre¬ quent wars between’ them; but -hi- Traffick- Venice was much superior; she had drawn -to- lierseff almost the whole commerce of India, always one Of the most valuable in'the world, and then carried on only by the way of Egypt, and the Red Sea. • An- emulation of this kind might probably have put Columbus on finding another and more direct passage To the .East-Indies,- and by that means transferring this profitable trade to: Ins own country. But neither that which he sought, nor that, which he found, was destined for his country. However, lie performed the duty of a good citizen, and made his first proposal at home; at home it was rejected.. Discharged of this obligation, he applied to the court of France, and meeting no better success there, he offered next his services to our Henry the Seventh. This IX ACCOUNT OF Tins prince was rather a prudent steward and manager of a kingdom than a great king, and one of those defensive geniuses are the last in the world to relish a great but problematical de¬ sign. It is therefore no wonder that his brother, whom Colum¬ bus had employed to solicit in England, after several years spent here, had little success in his negotiation. But in Por¬ tugal, a here he applied himself after his failure here, his offers were not only rejected, but he was insulted and ridiculed ; he found, however, in these insults, and this ridicule, a net, - incite¬ ment to pursue his scheme, urged forward by the stings of anger and ’-esentment. L- _*t of all he exercised "his interest and his patience for eight years together at the court of Ferdinand and Isabella. There is a sort of enthusiasm in all projectors, absolutely necessary tor their affairs, which makes them proof against the most fatiguing delays, the most mortifying disappointments, 1 he most shocking insults; and, what is severer than all, the presump¬ tuous judgments of the ignorant upon their designs. Columbus had a sufficient share of this quality. He had every day, dur¬ ing this long space, to combat with every objection that want of knowledge, or that a false knowledge, could propose. Some held that the known‘world, which they thought was all that could be known, floated like a vast scum upon the ocean ; that the ocean itself was infinite. Others, who entertained more just notions, and believed that the whole of the earth and waters composed one vast globe, drew a consequence from it as absurd as the former opinion. For they argued, that if Columbus should sail beyond a certain point, the convexity of this globe would prevent his return. As is usual in such cases, every one abounded with abjections. His whole time was spent in fruit¬ less endeavours to enlighten ignorance, to remove prejudice, and to vanquish that obstinate incredulity, which is of all others the EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. the greatest enemy to improvement, rejecting every thing as false and absurd, which is ever so little out of the track of com¬ mon experience; and it is of the more dangerous consequence, as it carries a delusive air of coolness, of temper and wisdom. With all this, he had yet greater difficulties from the interests of mankind, than from their malignity and ignorance. The expence of the undertaking, inconsiderable as this expence was, was at the bottom the chief support of the other objections, and had more weight than all the rest together. However, with an assiduity and firmness of mind, never enough to be ad¬ mired and applauded, he at length overcame all difficulties; and, to his inexpressible joy, with a fleet of three ships, and the title and command of an admiral, set sail on the third of August, 1492, on a voyage the most daring and grand in the design, and in the event of which the world was the most con¬ cerned, of any that ever yet was undertaken. It most not be omitted here, in honour to the sex, and in justice to Isabella, that this scheme was first countenanced, and the equipment made by the queen only: the king had no share in it ; she even raised tile money necessary for the design upon her own jewels.. I do not propose to relate all the particulars of Columbus’s voyage in a track now so well known, and so much frequented ; but then there was no chart to direct him, no lights from former navigators, no experience of the winds and currents par¬ ticular to those seas. He had no guide but his own genius, nor any thing to comfort and appease his companions, discouraged and mutinous with the length and hopelessness of the voyage, but some indications which he drew from the casual appear¬ ances of land-birds and floating sea-weeds, most of them little to be depended upon, but which this wise commander, well ac¬ quainted with the human heart, always knew how to turn to the TUE best advantage. It was in this expedition that the variation of the compass was first observed ; an appearance which has ever since puzzled all philosophers, ami which at this time made a threat impression upon Columbus’s pilots; when in an unknown and boundless ocean, for from the road of former navigation, nature itself seemed altered, and the only guide they had left, appeared to be upon the point of forsaking them But Colum¬ bus, with a wonderful quickness and sagacity, pretended to discover a pkvsical cause for this appearance, which, though it did not satisfy himself, was plausible enough to remove some¬ thing of the terrors of his mariners. Expedients of this kind were daily wanting, and the fertile genius of this discoverer in¬ vented them daily- However, by frequent use, they began to lose their effect; the crew insisted on his returning, and grew loud and insolent in their demand. .Some even talked of throw¬ ing the admiral overboard. Ilis invention, and almost his hopes were near exhausted, when the only thing which could appease them happened ; the clear discovery of land, after a voyage of thirty-three days, the longest ever any man was known to be from sight of shore before that time. They landed on one of the islands now called Lucayos, or Bahamas, which is remarkable for nothing but this event; and here it was, that the two worlds, if I may use the expression, were first introduced to one another; a .meeting of an extraor¬ dinary nature, and which produced great changes in both. The first thing Columbus did, after thanking God for the success of his important voyage, was to take possession of the island in the name of their Catholic majesties, by setting up a cross upon the shore ; great multitudes of the inhabitants looking on, ignorant and unconcerned at a ceremony which was to deprive them of their natural liberty. . The stay of the Spaniards in this island was but short; they found, from the extreme poverty EUROPEANSETTLEMH] poverty of the people, that these were by no means the Indies, which they sought for. Columbus at his departure very prudently took with him some of the natives, that they might learn the Spanish tongue, and be his guides and interpreters in this new scene of affairs ; nor were they unwilling to accompany him. He touched on several of the islands in the same cluster, enquiring every where for gold, which was the only object of commerce he thought worth his care, because the only thing that could give the court of Spain an high opinion of his discoveries. All directed him to a great island called Bohio, of which they spoke extraordinary- tilings, and principally that it abounded in gold. They told him it lay to the southward. To the southward he steered his course, and found the island, which he called Hispaniola, no ways inferior to the reports; commodious harbours, an agree¬ able climate, a good soil, and, what was of most consequence, a country that promised from some samples a great abundance of gold ; inhabited by an humane and hospitable people, in a state of simplicity fit to be worked upon. These circumstances determined Columbus to make this island the center of bis de¬ signs, to plant a colony there, and to establish things in some permanent order, before he proceeded to further discoveries. But to carry his designs of a settlement here, and his schemes of future discoveries into execution, it was necessary that he should return to Spain and equip himself with a proper force. He had now collected a sufficient quantity of gold to give cre¬ dit to his voyage at court, and such a number of curiosities of all kinds as might strike the imaginations, and engage the at¬ tention of the people. Before he parted, he took care to secure the friendship of the principal king of the island by caresses and presents, and under pretence of leaving him a force sufficient to assist him against his enemies, he laid the ground-work of a ' c colon}-. 10 AN' ACCOUNT OF THE colonv. He built a fort, and put a small garrison of Spaniards into it, with such directions for their conduct as might have ensured their safety and the good offices of the inhabitants, if the men had not been of that kind, who are incapable of acting prudently, either from their own or other people’s wisdom. He did every thing to gain the esteem of the natives, by the justice, and even generosity of his dealings, and the politeness and hu¬ manity with which he behaved upon every occasion. He shew¬ ed them too, that though it was not in his will, it was not the less in his power to do them mischief, if they acted so as to force him upon harsher measures. The surprizing effects of his cannon, and the sharpness of the Spanish swords, of which he made an innocent ostentation, convinced them of this. When the Spaniards first arrived in that country, they were taken for men come from heaven ; and it was no wonder, con¬ sidering the extreme novelty of their appearance, and the pro¬ digious superiority they had in every respect over a people in all the nakedness of uncultivated nature. Whatever therefore the Indians got from them, they valued in an high degree, not only as curious and useful, but even as things sacred. The persons of tile Spaniards were respected in the same light. Columbus, who knew the value of opinion, did all he could to keep them in their error; and indeed no action of his, either of weakness or cruelty, could furnish matter to undeceive them. For which reason, on his departure, he left the people with the best inclinations imaginable to nurse his infant colon}'. And when he desired some of the inhabitants to carry into Spain, he was more at a loss whom he should accept, than how he should prevail upon them to go. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN' AMERICA. CHAP. II. THE DISCOVERY OF THE CARIBBEES.—COLUMBUS RETURNS TO ECROrE.— HIS BEHAVIOUR AT LISBON.-HIS RECEPTION AT BARCELONA BY FERDI¬ NAND AND ISABELLA.—SECOND VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS.-TIIE CONDITION OF THE SPANIARDS IN HISPANIOLA.-THE CITY OF ISABELLA BUILT, AN I) A SPANISH COLONY SETTLED.—A VOYAGE FOR BETTER DISCOVERING THU On his return homewards, still attentive to his design, he aim¬ ed at such discoveries as could be prosecuted without deviating considerably from his course. He touched upon several islands to the southward, and discovered theCaribbees, of the barbarity of whose inhabitants he had heard terrible accounts in Hispa¬ niola. He had before landed upon Cuba in his passage from the Bahamas. So that in his first voyage, he gained a general knowledge of all the islands, which lie in such an astonishing number in that great sea which divides North and South Ame¬ rica. But hitherto he neither knew nor suspected any conti¬ nent between him and China. lie returned to Europe after an absence of above six months, and was driven by a great storm into the harbour of Lisbon. This he did not look upon as a misfortune; since here, he had the satisfaction of convincing the Portuguese demonstratively of what an error they were guilty, in rejecting his proposals. It was now his turn to triumph. Those who want sagacity to discern the advantages of an offer, when it is made to them¬ selves, and treat it with the greatest scorn, are always most stung with envy when they actually see these advantages in the hands of another. The Portuguese had some time before this, 12 LN account of the begun to make a figure: their ships had coasted Africa for a greater length than any had done before them, which opened to them a profitable trade to Guinea. This gave them a repu¬ tation. They considered discovery as their proper province; and they were enraged to see that the Castilians were now let into the same path, in consequence of an offer which they had rejected. Some proposed to murder the admiral; but all were agreed to treat him in the most unworthy manner. However, their design of insulting him gave Columbus an opportunity at once of gratifying his resentment, maintaining his own dignity, and asserting the honour of the flag of Castile. lie sent to the king at his first entering the harbour, to desire a libel ty to come up to Lisbon and refresh, as he had Ins master's orders not to avoid his ports; adding, that he was not from Guinea, but the Indie.',. An officer of the king of Portugal came aboard him with an armed force, and ordered him to come ashore, and give an account of himself to the king’s officers. Columbus told him he had the honour of serving the king of Castile, and would own himself accountable to no other. The Portuguese tb.cn desired him to send the master of his ship; this he likewise refused, saving, that the admirals of Castile always chose rather to die than deliver up themselves, or even the meanest of their men ; and if violence was intended, lie was prepared to meet force with force. A spirited behaviour, in almost any circumstance of strength, is the most politic as well as the most honourable course; we preserve a respect at least by it, and with that we generally preserve every thing; but when we lose respect, every thing is lost. We invite rather than suffer insults, and the first is the oniv one we can resist with prudence. Columbus found this ; the officer did not pursue his demand ; the admiral had all the refreshments he wanted ; and was even received at court with particular marks of distinction. From EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA, From Lisbon he proceeded to Seville ; the court was then at Barcelona. But before he went to give an account of his voyage, he took_ all the care he could to provide for another, lie wrote an abstract of his proceedings, and sent with it a memorial of all such things as were necessary for the establish¬ ment of a colony, and fc. further discoveries. Soon after he began his journey to Barcelona,, every where followed by the admiration and applauses of the people, who crowded to see him from all parts. He entered the city in a sort of triumph. And certainly there never was a more innocent triumph, nor one that formed a more new and pleasing spectacle. He had not de¬ stroyed, but discovered nations. The Americans he brought with him appeared in all the uncouth finery of their own country, wondered at by every body, and themselves admiring every thing they saw. The several animals, many highly beau¬ tiful, and all strangers to this part of the world, were so dis¬ posed as to be seen without difficulty ; the other curiosities of the new world were displayed in the most advantageous manner; the utensils, the arms, and the ornaments of a people so remote from us in situation, and manners^ some valuable for the ma¬ terials ; even the rudeness of the workmanship in many made them but the more curious, when it was considered by whom, and with what instruments they were wrought. The gold was not forgot. The admiral himself closed the procession. He was received by the king and queen with all imaginable marks of esteem and regard, and they ordered a magnificent throne to be erected, in public to do him the greater honour. A chair was prepared for him, in which he sat, and gave, in presence of the whole court, a full and circumstantial account of all his dis¬ coveries, with that composedness and gravity, which is so ex¬ tremely agreeable to the Spanish humour, and with the modesty of a man who knows be has done things which do not need to be iX ACCOUNT OF THE lie proclaimed by himself. The successful merit of Columbus was understood by every body ; and when the king and queen led the way. all the grandees and nobility of the court vied with each other in their civilities and caresses. These honours did not satisfy Columbus. He prepared with a!! expedition for a second voyage. The difficulties attending the hrst were all vanished. The importance of the object ap¬ peared even,- day more clearly, and the court was willing to second the vivacity of his desires to the full. Eut before his departure, there was one thing which they judged wanting to give them a clear and unquestionable right to the countries, which should be discovered. This was a grant of them from the pope. The Portuguese some time before had a grant of such lands as they should discover within certain latitudes; and this grant made a similar one to the Spaniards appear the more necessary. The pope accordingly gave a Very ample bull in their favour, ven - liberallv conceding countries, of which he was so far from having any possession that he had no knowledge of them. The limits of this grant was a line drawn from pole to pole, an hun¬ dred leagues to the westward of the Azores. On the other side no bounds at all were set. This was afterwards a subject of much controversy between the crowns of Spain and Portugal, the latter having got a grant of all that should be discovered to the east, as the former had of all to the westward; those who drew the bulls not having known enough of the figure of the earth to see, that these grants must necessarily clash; and the powers which desired them, were perhaps not sorry to find their pretensions such as they might extend or contract at pleasure. Whatever the validity of this ample grant might be, Colum¬ bus was made governor with the highest authority over all that it contained. But he had somewhat with him more material -for his possession than any charters. This was a fleet of seven. teen EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 15 teen sail of ships, with all manner of necessaries for settlement or conquest, and fifteen hundred men on board, some of them of the best families in Spain. With this fleet he set sail on his second voyage the 25th of September, 1493. He gave each of the captains instructions for their course sealed, with orders not to open them, unless in distress, and separated from the fleet, that he might create such an absolute dependence of all upon himself, as should preserve an uniformity in their designs. On the second of November they made land, which is the island now called Dominica. But his design was first to settle his colony before he attempted any new discovery ; therefore he made no stay here, nor at several other islands at which he touched before lie could make Hispaniola. On his arrival he found the fort he had built utterly demo¬ lished, and all his men killed. The Spaniards had first fallen out amongst themselves, upon the usual subjects of strife, wo¬ men and gold ; and afterwards preserving as little harmony with the natives, and observing no decency in their behaviour, or justice in their dealings, they quickly lost their esteem, and were every man murdered, after having been dispersed into dif¬ ferent parts of the island. The prince, whom they were left to defend, was himself wounded in their defence, and bore this mark of his affection and good faith, when Columbus returned to the island. The admiral very wisely forbore to make any nice enquiry into the affair, or to commence hostilities in re¬ venge for the loss of his soldiers; but he took the most effectual measures to prevent such an evil for the future ; he chose a more commodious station for his colony, on the north-east part of the island, which had a good port, great conveniency of water, and a good soil, and lay near that where he was in¬ formed the richest mines of the country were found : in gra¬ titude to his royal patroness,, he called it Isabella. He en¬ gaged AX ACCOUKT 1(3 gaged in-the settlement with great warmth, and never allowed himself a moment’s repose from superintending the fortifica¬ tions, tlie private houses, and the works of agriculture ; in all which the fatigue was infinite; for he had not only the na¬ tural difficulties attending all such undertakings, but he had the insuperable laziness of the Spaniards to contend with. So that, spent with the fatigues of so long a voyage and the greater fatigues he had endured since he came on shore, he fell into a dangerous illness. Of this accident several of his men took the advantage to begin a rebellion, to undo all he had done, and to throw every thing into the most terrible con¬ fusion. These people, on their leaving Spain, had fancied to themselves that gold was to be found every where in this country, and that there required nothing further to make ample estates, than to be transported into it; but, finding their mistake, and that, instead of receiving these golden showers without any pains, they fared ill, laboured hard, and that their prospects of a fortune, if any at all, were remote and uncertain, their discontent became general; and the mutinous disposition in¬ creased so fast, and was carried to such extremities, that if the admiral had iiGt recovered at a very critical time, and on his recovery had not acted in the most resolute and effectual manner, all his hopes of a settlement in Hispaniola had been at an end. He was satisfied with imprisoning some of the chiefs. This was neitiier a time nor a place for very extensive or rigorous justice. He quelled this sedition, but he saw at the same time that his work was not yet done; he saw another danger, against which he was to provide with equal diligence. He had good reason to apprehend, that the Americans were not well affected to their new guests, and might probably me¬ ditate to cut them off, whilst they saw them divided amongst themselves. To prevent this, as well as to banish idleness from amongst EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. amongst liis men, and to revive military discipline, he marched into the heart of the country, through the most frequented parts of it, in order of battle, colours flying, and trumpets sounding, with the flower of his troops, to the mountains of Cibao; where lay the richest mines then discovered in the island. Here he built a fort to secure this advantageous post, and overawe the country; and then he returned in the same pomp and order, to the inexpressible terror of the inhabitants, who had now no prospect of withstanding a force, which to them seemed more than human. In this expedition Columbus made great ostentation of his cavalry. This was the first time the Indians of America had ever seen horses. Their dread of these animals and their riders were extreme; tliey thought both formed but one animal, and the impetuosity of their charge appeared irresistible to these naked and ill-armed people. Wherever they appeared, those Indians, who intended any hostility, immediately fled; nor did they think the intervention of the deepest and most rapid rivers any security; they believed that the horses could fly, and that nothing was impossible to creatures so extraor¬ dinary. But Columbus did not rely upon those prejudices, though he made all imaginable use of them ; knowing that those tilings which appear most terrible at first, become every day less affecting by use, and that they even grow contemptible, when their real power is once well known. For which reason, he neglected none of his former methods of cultivating the af¬ fections of the natives ; he still shewed them all manner of respect, and when he had taken two persons of their nation, who had committed some acts of hostility, and was at the point of putting them to death, he pardoned and set them free at the intercession of a prince of the country, with whom he was in alliance. On the other hand, he saw how necessary it was to d preserve IS IN ACCOUNT prc'crvo a strict discipline amongst the Spaniards, to keep them from that idleness to which they had such a propensity, and which naturally retarded the growth of the colony, at the same time that it nourished discontent and sedition. He employed them in cutting roads through the country, a work which the natives never attempted themselves, nor now endeavoured to oppose, though it be one of the best instru¬ ments of enslaving any barbarous people. This wise governor observed, besides, that the Spaniards conformed with great dif¬ ficulty to the Indian manner of living, to which, however, they were necessitated, but from which, for want of use, they suffered great hardships. To remedy this evil, he daily sent out small parties upon expeditions into the country; from which he de¬ rived two material advantages. First, he inured, by degrees, all his people to the manner of living in the couutry ; and se¬ condly, he taught them to know it perfectly; lest a war should find them unprovided in the only point iu which the Indians were their superiors, and a point which in a woody and moun¬ tainous country is certainly of the greatest importance. All this he did without any material hazard to the sum of his affairs. At home, he endeavoured to withdraw the Spaniards from their romantic hopes of miraculous treasures, and to fix them to a rational and industrious course of life. He represented to them, that there was no real wealth but what arose from la¬ bour; and that a garden, a corn ground, and a mill, were riches more to their present purpose, than all the gold they were in expectation of meeting in the Indies. In short, he la¬ boured for the establishment of this colony with as much assi¬ duity, as though his views had extended no further, at the same time that he meditated the greatest discoveries ; and con¬ sidered those things which had astonished the world, only as the earnest of his future performances. I have EUROPEAK SETTLEMENTS IK AMERICA. 19 I have before mentioned his having put in at Cuba. The country, from some specimens, seemed a rich discovery ; but whether it was an island, or a part of some great continent, he was altogether uncertain. Now that he had got his colony to take firm root in the Indies, he prepared with all expedition to ascertain this point, and to push his discoveries to the utmost, in which he had succeeded hitherto so happily. CHAP. 20 AN ACCOUNT 07 THE CHAP. III. THE DIFFICULTIES ATTENDING THE VOYAGE.—JAMAICA DISCO VERED.— COLUMBUS RETURNS TO HISPANIOLA.—THE SPANIARDS REBEL.-A WAR WITH THE INDIANS OF THAT COUNTRY.-THEY ARE CONQUERED.—THEIR SCHEME FOR STARTING THE SPANIARDS. This voyage was more remarkable for die hardships which the Admiral and his men suffered, than for any considerable dis¬ coveries it produced. As he endeavoured to coast along the southern shore of Cuba, lie was entangled in a labyrinth of an innumerable multitude of islands, amongst which he reckoned one hundred and sixty in one day. The}' were most of them pleasant and well inhabited, affording our navigator an agree¬ able meditation on this fertility of nature, where the ay or Id looked for nothing but a barren ocean. These islands. Colum¬ bus, who had a grateful mind, in w hich the memory of his be¬ nefactress was always uppermost, called Jardin de la Rayna, or the queen’s garden, in honour of queen Isabella. But their number and fertility made little amends for the obstruction they gave Columbus in the course of his navigation. The coast absolutely unknown, among so many rocks, sands, and shelves, the sudden and violent storms, the tornadoes, and the terrible thunder and lightning so constant between the tropics, obliged him to keep a continual watch, and held his mind upon a con¬ stant stretch; the voyage was extended to an unprofitable length by these difficulties; and being driven out to sea, the worst disaster of all befel them. Their provisions fell short. In this extremity they were obliged to come to a very narrow and bad allowance. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 21 •allowance, in the distribution of which the Admiral fared no¬ thing better than the rest. In this unremitted fatigue of body and of mind, in famine and in danger, his usual firmness began nearly to forsake him ; but it could go no further than to oblige him to remark in his journal, that no interest of his own should ever oblige him to engage again in such au enterprise. They were at last relieved by the appearance of Jamaica, where they were hospitably received, and supplied with Cassava bread and water. From thence they proceeded, mortified and disap¬ pointed, to Hispaniola, not being able to come to any certainty concerning Cuba, other than that they understood from some of the inhabitants that it was an island. This disappointment, and the infinite fatigue and difficulty of the voyage, threw Co¬ lumbus into a lethargy, which was near being fatal to him, and of which he was scarcely recovered when they arrived at the harbour of Isabella. Here they found all things in confusion, and the colony in the utmost danger of being a second time utterly destroyed ; as if its prosperity or destruction depended upon the presence or absence of Columbus. For no sooner was he sailed, than the Spaniards, who were very difficultly retained in their.duty by all his steadiness and wisdom, broke through all regulations, laughed at government and discipline, and spread themselves over the island, committing a thousand disorders, and living at free quarter upon the inhabitants, whose hatred to them was worked up to such a point, that they wanted only the word from their princes to fall on and massacre the whole colony ; a thing by no means impracticable, in its present disorder. Four of the principal sovereigns of the island took advantage of this disposition, and united to drive out those imperious intruders. Hone adhered to them but one called Gunacagany, the same prince nhom Columbus from the first had taken so much pains t'g AX ACCOUNT OF THE to oblige. In his dominions some of the Spaniards found pro¬ tection. The other princes had already commenced hostilities, and one of them killed sixteen of the Spaniards, who were taking no uniform measures to oppose them; neither in their present anarchy could it be well expected. In this condition was the island on the arrival of Columbus, whose first business was to collect the scattered fragments of the colony, and to form them into a body. This he was the better able to accomplish, because the present danger added a weight to his authority; hut it was necessary that he should lose no time. He was resolved to act with what force he had, rather than wait until the union of the islanders might be better ce¬ mented against him, and they might find some lesser matters in their favour to raise their courage, and abate their terror of the Spanish arms. He therefore first marched against the king, who had killed the sixteen Spaniards ; as it was an enterprise coloured with an appearance of justice, and because that prince happened to be the worst prepared to receive him. He was easily subdued, and several of his subjects sent prisoners into Spain. The second whom Columbus designed to attack being- better prepared against force, he was resolved to circumvent him bv fraud, and got him into his power by a stratagem, which did no honour to his sincerity, and rather shewed great weak¬ ness in this unfortunate barbarian, than any extraordinary con¬ trivance in those who deceived him. The other princes were not so terrified at these examples. Their hatred to the Spaniards increased ; and perceiving that all depended upon a sudden and vigorous exertion of their strength, they brought an immense army, it is said of one hun¬ dred thousand men, into the field, which was arrayed in the largest plain in that country. Columbus, though he had but a smail force, did not scruple to go out to meet them. His army EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 23 army consisted but of two hundred foot, twenty horse, and twenty wolf dogs. The latter part of this army has a ludicrous appearance ; but it was a very serious matter amongst a people no better provided with arms offensive or defensive than the Indians. Neither was it rash in Columbus to venture an engagement against forces so vastly superior in numbers ; for when such numbers are no better skilled or armed than these were, their multitude is in fact no just cause of dread but to themselves. The event was answerable; the victory was deci¬ sive for the Spaniards, in which their horses and dogs had a considerable share ; the loss on the side of the Indians was very great. From that day forward they despaired, and relinquished all thoughts of dislodging the Spaniards by force. Columbus had but little difficulty in reducing the whole island, which now became a province of Spain, had a tribute imposed, and forts built in several parts to enforce the levying of it, and to take away from this unhappy people all prospeet of liberty. In this affecting situation they often asked the Spaniards, when they intended to return to their own country. Small as the number of these strangers w r as, the inhabitants were ex¬ tremely burthened to subsist them. One Spaniard consumed more than ten Indians; a circumstance which shews how little this people had advanced in the art of cultivating the earth, or how lazy they were in doing it, since their indigence reduced them to such an extreme frugality, that they found the Spa¬ niards, who are some of the most abstemious people upon earth, excessively voracious in the comparison. Their experience of this, joined to their despair, put the Indians upon a project of starving out their invaders. In pursuance of this scheme, they entirely abandoned the little agriculture which they practised, and unanimously retired into the most barren and impracticable parts of the island. This ill-advised stratagem compleated their 24 i.V ACCOUNT THE ruin. A number of people crowded into the worst parts of the country, subsisting only upon its spontaneous productions, were soon reduced to the most terrible famine. Its sure attendant, epidemical sickness, pursued at its heels; and this miserable people, half famished and lessened a third of their numbers, were obliged to relinquish their scheme, to come down into the open country^, and to submit once more to bread and fetters. This conquest, and the subsequent ones made by the several European nations, with as little colour of right as consciousness of doing any thing wrong, gives one just reason to reflect on the notions entertained by mankind in all times concerning the right of dominion. At this period, a few doubted of the power of the pope to convey a full right to any country he was pleased to chalk out; amongst the faithful, because they were subject to the church; and amongst infidels, because it was meritorious to make them subject to it.. This notion began to lose ground at the Reformation, but another arose of as bad a tench ncy ; the idea of the dominion of grace, which prevailed with several, and the effects of which we have felt amongst ourselves. The Ma¬ hometan great merit is to spread the empire and the faith; and none amongst them doubt the legality of subduing any nation for these good purposes. The Greeks-held, that tile barbarians were naturallv designed-to be their slaves, and this .was so ge¬ neral a notion, that Aristotle himself, with all his penetration, gave into it verv seriously. In truth, it lias its principle in hu¬ man nature, for the generality of mankind very readily slide from what they conceive a fitness for government, to a right of governing; and they do not so readily agree, that those who are superior in endowments should only be equal in condition. These things partly palliate the guilt and horror of a conquest, undertaken with so little colour, over a people whose chief offence was their credulity, and theirconlider.ee in men who did EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 25 not deserve it. But the circumstances of Columbus, the mea¬ sures he was obliged to preserve with his court, aud his humane and gentle treatment of this people, by which he mitigated the rigour of this conquest, take off much of the blame from him, as the necessity of taking up arms at all never arose from his con¬ duct, or from his orders. On the contrary i his whole behaviour both to the Spaniards andlndians, the care he took to establish the one without injury to the other, and the constant bent of his policy to work every thing by gentle methods, may well be an example to all persons in the same situation. Since I have digressed so far, it will be the more excusable to mention a circumstance recorded in the history of this set¬ tlement. America was then, at least these parts of it were, without almost any of those animals by which we profit so greatly. It had neither horses, nor oxen, nor sheep, nor swine. Columbus brought eight sows into America, and a small num¬ ber of horned cattle. This was the stock which supplied, about two hundred years ago, a country now the most abound¬ ing in these animals of any part of the known world ; in which too, it has been a business, for this century past, to hunt oxen merely for their hides. An example which shews how small a number might originally have served to produce all the animals upon earth, who commonly procreate very fast to a certain point, and when they arrive at it, seem much at a stand. CHAP. 26 AN ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. IV. COMPLAINTS AGAINST COLUMBUS.—A PERSON IS SENT TO INQUIRE INTO HIS CONDUCT.-HE RETURNS TO SPAIN.-HE IS ACQUITTED.-HE SETS OUT ON HIS THIRD TOVAGE.—HE DISCOVERS THE CONTINENT OP SOUTH AMERICA.—HE SAILS TO HISPANIOLA. Whilst Columbus was reducing this wealthy island to the obedience of the crown of Castile, and laying the foundations of the Spanish grandeur in America, his enemies w r ere endea¬ vouring with pains as indefatigable to ruin him in Spain. Some of the persons principally concerned in the late disorders, fled to Spain before his return; and there, to justify their own conduct, and gratify their malice, they accused him of neglect¬ ing the colony, and of having deceived their majesties and the adventurers with false hopes of gold, from a country which produced very little either of that metal or any thing else that was valuable. These complaints were not without effect; and an officer, fitter by his character for a spy and informer than a redresser of grievances, was sent to inspect into his conduct; in which manner of proceeding there was certainly a policy as erroneous, as it was unjust and ungrateful. At that distance from the fountain of authority, with an enemy at the door, and a mutinous household, a commander ought always to be trusted or removed. This man behaved in a brutish and inso¬ lent manner, like all such persons, who, unconscious of any merit of their own, are puffed up with any little portion of de¬ legated power. Columbus found that he staid here to no pur¬ pose under such disgraceful terms ; and that his presence at court EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEI court was absolutely necessary to his support. He determined to return once more to Spain, convinced that a long absence is mortal to one’s interest at court, and drat importunity and at¬ tendance often plead better than the most solid services. How¬ ever, before he departed, he exerted the little remains of au¬ thority he had left, to .settle every thing in such a manner;' as to prevent those disorders which hitherto lie had always found the certain consequence of his absence. He built forts in all the material parts of the island, to retain the inhabitants in their subjection. He established the civil government upon a better footing, and redoubled his diligence for the discovery of mines, which were to be the great agents in his affairs ; nor did he altogether fail of success. It was the fate of this great man to have his virtue continually exercised with troubles and distresses. He continued his course to Spain in the latitude of 22, not having at that time disco¬ vered the advantageous method of running into the northern latitudes to meet the south-west winds : they therefore made very little way ; a scarcity ensued, in which they were reduced to six ounces of provision a day for each person. On these oc¬ casions the Admiral fared no better than the common sailor ; yet in this distress his hunger did not get the better of the ten¬ derness and humanity which distinguished his character. He refused to listen to the pressing instances of his crew, who were very earnest in this distress to have the Indian prisoners thrown overboard to lessen the consumption of provisions. In this voyage his skill was as remarkable as his magnanimity. He had nine experienced pilots in his fleet: yet none of them could tell where they were, after having been a full month from the sight of the first land. This length of time persuaded them they must be very near Europe, and they were there¬ fore for crowding sail to make land as soon as possible. But e 2 Columbus, 28 AN ACCOUNT Columbus, upon sure observations, maintained they were but a little to the westward of the Azores, and therefore ordered his sails to be slackened for fear of land. His prediction was fulfilled, and the Azores relieved them next morning. This, added to a series of predictions and noble discoveries, made his'skill seem something prophetic, and exalted his character in this respect above all the seamen before his time; and in¬ deed, considering his opportunities of improvement, and what he did himself to improve his art, he will perhaps appear in¬ ferior to none who have succeeded him. All the accusations and prejudices against the Admiral va¬ nished almost as soon as he appeared. He brought such testi¬ monies of his fidelity and good behaviour, as silenced all ca¬ lumnies which arose on that head; and the large specimens of gold and pearl he produced, refuted all that was said on the poverty of the Indies. The court was fully convinced of the importance of the new colony, the merit of its governor, and the necessity of a speedy supply. But the Admiral’s enemies were not idle, though they were silenced ; they continued to throw all manner of obstructions in his way ; which was a thing not difficult, in a country where every thing is executed with much phlegm and languor, and where those forms ana mechanical methods of business, necessary perhaps in the com¬ mon course of affairs, but ruinous in great designs, are more exactly observed, than any where else. It was therefore with great difficulty that he was able to procure any relief to be sent to Hispaniola, but with much greater, and after a thousand delays and disappointments, that he was himself enabled to set out on a discovery of more importance than any of the former. He designed to stand to the southward from tlie Canaries, until he should come under the equinoctial line, and then to proceed directly westward, until Hispaniola should bear to the north- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 29 north-west from him, to try what opening that might afford to India, or what new islands, or what continent might reward his trouble, lie therefore stood away to the Cape de Verd islands, and then south-west. In this navigation a thick fog, which intercepted the light of the sun and stars, enveloped them for several days ; and when this cleared off, the heats were grown so excessive, that the men could not venture between decks. The sun being at this time nearly vertical, the heavy rains which fall at this season between the tropicks, without abating the heat, added much to their distress. At last a smart gale sprang up, and they went before it seventeen days to the west¬ ward. The Admiral, who could have no second to supply his place, scarce allowed himself a moment’s sleep ; but in this, as in all his voyages, had the whole burthen of every thing upon himself; this fatigue threw him into a fit of the gout; but neither the fatigue nor the disorder could remove him from the deck, or make him abate of his usual vigilance. His provi¬ sions, however, being damaged by the heat, the wine casks many of them hurst, and the wine being soured in those that held, obliged him to alter the course he intended to keep south¬ ward, and to decline some points to the north-west, hoping to- fall in with some of the Caribbees, where he intended- to refit and take in provisions, to enable him to continue his discove¬ ries. But he had not sailed long, when from the round top a sea¬ man saw land, which was an island on the coast of Guiana, now called Trinidad. Havingpassed this island and two others, which lie in the mouth of the great river Oronoquo, he was surprized and endangered by a phenomenon lie had never seen before. The river Oronoquo, at all times very great, at this time aug¬ mented tenfold by the rains we have just mentioned, rushing into the ocean with an immense and rapid flood, meets the tide; which rises here to a great height, and comes in with much 30 strength ; and both being pent up between the islands, and re¬ verberated from one to another, caused a conflict extremely terrifying to those who had not been accustomed to it, and were ignorantof the cause, as Columbus was at this time. But sailing further he found plainly that he was in fresh water, and judging rightly that it was probable no island could supply so vast a. river, he began to suspect he had discovered the conti¬ nent. But when he left the river, and found that land continued on to the westward for a great way, he was convinced of it. Satisfied, in some measure, with this discovery, he yielded to the uneasiness and distresses of his crew, and bore away for Hispaniola, favoured by a fair wind and those currents which set strongly to the westward all along the northern coast of South America. In the course of this discovery the Admiral landed in several places, and traded with the inhabitants, amongst whom he found gold and pearl in tolerable plenty. Contraiy to the cus¬ tom of many navigators, who behave wherever they go as if they never intended to come there again, he every where used the natives with great civility, and gave them what they judged the full value of their commodities ; little bells, bits of glass and of tin, with some trifling apparel, being exchanged for gold dust and pearls, and much to the satisfaction of both pax- ties, who thought they bad each over-reached the other, and indeed with equal reason. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 31 CIIAP. V. COLUMBUS FINDS THE SPANIARDS OF HISPANIOLA IN REBELLION.—HIS MEA¬ SURES TO SUPPRESS IT.—NEW COMPLAINTS AGAINST HIM IN SPAIN.—HE IS SUPERSEDED IN THE GOVERNMENT, AND SENT TO STAIN IN IRONS. He arrived at Hispaniola the 19th of August, 1498, quite worn down witli sickness and continual watching, the necessity of which was rather increased than diminished as he came nearer home, amongst such a multitude of islands and shoals as filled those seas, at this time little known ; add to this, that a cur¬ rent, setting strongly westward towards the continent, threaten¬ ed every moment, without the greatest attention, to carry him out of his course. So wasted was he with the fatigue, that his brother, whom he had left in his place, scarce knew him at his return. And he found that he was likely to have as little repose upon land as at sea. The Admiral’s authority had suffered some diminution, from the ill-judged step of sending a check upon his motions before he left Hispaniola; and the encouragement this gave to all sorts of murmurings and complaints against government, sowed the seeds of a rebellion, which sprung up in the colony soon after he left it. But this rebellion was more dangerously formed than either of the former. For in the first place, the rebels had regularly appointed themselves a chief, called Francis Roldan ; a man whom the Admiral had left in a considerable post: this gave it an uniformity and credit. And .secondly, they gained the Indians to their party, by pretending to be their patrons, and the assertors of their liberty. Then to establish themselves the IX ACCOUNT OF THE more securelv, they made a secession from the uncorrupted part of the colony, and settled in another part of the island ; which formed an asylum for all idle and seditious persons, by whom they were continually reinforced. In this threatening state of things the Admiral, having found his forces in no condition to act offensively against the rebels, did what he could to break their force, and dissolve that union which made them formidable. He began by publishing a free pardon for ail that chose to cancel their crimes by a timely sub¬ mission. Observing, besides, that many were very desirous of returning to Spain, he gave them to understand the}- might go with the ships which brought the last succours. He did not intend to perform this latter part immediately, but he knew that his oilers would stagger some; and that, in affairs of this nature, it is every thing to gain time. He wrote to court a full account of his late discoveries, and sent samples of the wealth they yielded. He took the same opportunity of de¬ scribing the distracted state of the colony, desiring that fifty or sixty men might be sent by every ship, which he promised to replace by as many of the rebels. He proposed this plan, lest the Spanish power should be weakened in those parts, by diminishing their men, or kept in as dangerous a state, by har¬ bouring such as were ill disposed to the publick good. He added very- judiciously to his request, that some religious men and able lawyers might be sent him, as the most effectual means of in¬ troducing and preserving obedience and order. He then en¬ tered into negotiations with the chiefs of the rebels ; he granted them all they demanded, and even invidiously placed their prin¬ cipal commander, Roldan, in such an office as flattered his pride, though without augmenting his power. Thus things were brought into something of regularity, without any strug¬ gling or violence; and Roldan himself, though in his former EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 33 office of chief judge of the island, contributed most of all to¬ wards bringing those who stood out to obedience. There arose a difference between them ; and they flew again to arms ; but on their first motion, Roldan, by virtue of his authority, seized, condemned, and executed several. By this the rest were awed, all the connection broke off irretrievably between the head and body of the rebels, and all done without having any part of the offence, that might be given by this severity, charged to the Admiral. He now began just to breathe in a little tranquillity, ac¬ quired by the severest labours, whilst a new storm was gather¬ ing against him from the quarter of the court. His old impla¬ cable enemies, uniting with some of the rebels who had lately transported themselves into Spain, renewed the clamour against him. They heaped upon him all manner of calumnies; they accused him of a design of setting up for lvinself; and as they charged him in Hispaniola with cruelty and tyranny to the Indians, here they reversed the charge, and accused him of a popularity amongst that people, dangerous to his and their alliance. They added to these, what could not fail to work on national prejudices, that Columbus was a stranger, and had not a proper respect for the Spanish nobility. They complained that great debts were due to them ; that all ways of recovering them were shut up. In short, the king and queen never went abroad without being pursued and persecuted by the clamours of these pretended suitors of justice. Wearied out with silch complaints, they sent a judge, with power to enquire into the Admiral’s conduct, and authorized, if he should find the accu¬ sations proved, to send 1 him into Spain, and remain himself as governor in his room. They made it the judge’s interest' to condemn him. The judge, -who was extremely poor, and had no other call F but but his indigence to undertake the office, no sooner landed in Hispaniola, than lie took up his lodging in the Admiral’s house, for he was then absent. He next proceeded to seize upon all his effects ; and at last summoned him and his brothers to ap¬ pear. In tiie mean time, he encouraged all manner of accu¬ sations, without regarding the character of the accusers, or tha probability or consistency of their accusations. In consequence of these, he apprehended the Admiral and his brothers, and, with tiie last marks of insult and indignity, loaded them with irons, and embarked them to be transported prisoners into Spain. The captain of the vessel, touched with respect for the years and great merit of Columbus, offered to take off: the irons ; but he did not permit it. “ Since the king has commanded that • v I should obey his governor, lie shall find me as obedient to “ this, as I have been to all his other orders. Nothing but his “ commands shall release me. If twelve years hardship and fatigue; if continual dangers and frequent famine; if the “ ocean, first opened, and five times passed and rcpassed, to add a new world abounding with wealth to the Spanish 1110- “ narchy; and if an infirm premature old age, brought on by “ those sendees, deserve these chains as a reward, it is very fit I should wear them to Spain, and keep them by me as me- morials to the end of my life.” Great minds, though more apt to forgive injuries, perhaps, than common souls, do not easily lose the memory of the wrongs that are done them. Columbus afterwards carried these irons with him wherever he went; they hung constantly in his chamber, and he ordered them to be buried with him. The new governor made a more effectual provision for the reward of his sendees ; for, besides confiscating the greatest part of the Admiral’s effects, which he converted to his own use, to EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 3i to flatter the people lie permitted an unbounded liberty, by which he ruined the royal revenue, and was near ruining the colony too, past all reparation, if the court had not recalled him in time, and sent a person to succeed him of greater judg¬ ment and firmness, though of little more real virtue: CHAP. IN ACCOUNT OF THE 3G CHAP. VI. THE D1SC0TEP.IES OF AMERICUS VESPUTIL?, AND OTHER ADVENTURERS.- ' WHAT CAUSED THE SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY. About this time the spirit of discover}' began to spread itself widely; and private adventurers, both in Spain and Portugal, stimulated bv the gold which from time to time was remitted to Europe by Columbus, made equipments at their own expence. In one of these the famous Americus Vesputius commanded; he had got into his hands the charts of Columbus, in his last voyage, and he sailed the same course. But as he was a man of address and great confidence, and was besides an able seaman and good geographer, he found a way of arrogating to himself the first discovery of the continent of America, and called it by his own name; which it has ever since retained, though no body has any doubt concerning the real discoverer. For this, I believe, no other reason can be given, than that America is perhaps a better sounding word than Columbia, and is more easily pronounced with the others, in enumerating the several divisions of the earth ; a trifling matter, and influenced by' trifl¬ ing causes. But the gloiy of Columbus stands upon founda¬ tions of another sort. Piuzon, one who attended the Admiral in his first voyage, equipped a squadron at his own expence ; and was the first who crossed the line at the side of America, and entered the great river Maranon, or the river of Amazons. The. Portuguese, notwithstanding the pope’s exclusive grant, turned their thoughts to America, and discovered the Brazils, which EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 37 which make the most'valuable part of their present possessions; when thej' have lost what was considered as their original right, and which never was so advantageous to them. What animated these adventurers, at the same time that it fixes a stain upon all their characters and designs, is that in¬ satiable thirst of gold, which ever appeared uppermost in all their actions. This disposition had been a thousand times ex¬ tremely prejudicial to their affairs : it was particularly the cause of all the confusion and rebellions in Hispaniola: yet it is cer¬ tain, that if it were not for this incentive, which kindled the spirit of discovery and colonization first in Spain and Portugal, and afterwards in all parts of Europe, America had never been in the state it now is ; nor would those nations ever have had the beneficial colonies, which are now established in every part of that country. It was necessary there should be something of an immediate and uncommon gain, fitted to strike the ima¬ ginations of men forcibly, to tempt them to such hazardous de¬ signs. A remote prospect of commerce, and the improvement of manufactures, by extending of colonies, would never, have answered the purpose; those advantages come to be known only by reason and deduction ; and are not consequently of so strik¬ ing a nature. But to go out with a few baubles, and to return with a cargo of gold, is an object readily comprehended by any body, and was consequently pursued with vigour by all. The speculative knowledge of trade made no part of the study of the elevated or thinking part of mankind, at that time. Now, it may be justly reckoned amongst the liberal sciences ; and it makes one of the most considerable branches of political know¬ ledge. Commerce was then in the hands of a few, great in its profits, but confined in its nature. What we call the balance of trade, was far from being well understood ; all the laws rela¬ tive to commerce were every where but so many clogs upon it. 'The. 38 AX ACCOUNT OF THE The imposts and duties charged on goods, were laid on without distinction or judgment. Even amongst ourselves, the most trading and reasoning people hi Europe, right nol ions of these matters began late, and advanced slowiy. Our colonies were settled without any view to those great advantages which we draw from them. Virginia was constructed out of the wrecks of an armament destined on a golden adventure, which first tempted us to America. And those who settled New England and Maryland, meant them only as asylums from religious per¬ secution. So that if America had not promised sucli an inun¬ dation of treasure, it could only have supplied a languid com¬ merce, which would have habituated the natives by degrees to our European manners, and supplied them with equal arms. Then it would have been next to impossible to have made those extensive settlements in that new world. So certain it is, that we often reap differently from what we have sown; and that there must be some strong active principle to give life and energy to all designs, or they will languish, let them be ever so wisely concerted. CHAP. 39 CHAP. VII. COLl'MBUS AGAIN' ACQUITTED.—UNDERTAKES A FOURTH VOYAGE.—DISCO¬ VERS THE COAST OF TERRA FIRMA AND THE ISTHMUS OFDARIEN.—RETURNS TO HISPANIOLA.—HIS RECEPTION THERE.-PURSUES HIS DISCOVERIES TO THE COAST OF TERRA FIRMA.-HE IS DniVEN TO JAMAICA, AND SHIP¬ WRECKED ON THAT ISLAND.—HIS DISTRESSES THERE.—THE REBELLION OF HIS MEN, WHICH HE SUPPRESSES.—HE LEAVES THE ISLAND AND RETURNS TO SPAIN.—HIS RECEPTION THERE.—HE DIES. No sooner was Columbus arrived in Spain, in this disgraceful manner, than the court disavowed and highly blamed the con¬ duct of their governor. And now, according to the giddy cus¬ tom of men who act without plan or principle, they acquitted Columbus of all the charges against him, with as little enquiry into their validity, as they before used, when upon*the same charges, they unjustly condemned him. Restitution and reward were promised him, and he wanted very few incentives to en¬ gage once more in discoveries. His ambition was to arrive at the East-Indies, and so to surround the globe. This had really an influence upon his own mind, and he knew nothing could so much influence those of the king and queen. On this prospect he was again fitted out with a fleet, promising to reduce both East and West-Indies, under the dominion of their Catholic majesties. He embarked upon his fourth voyage in May 1502. His design was to stand directly for the coast of South-Ame- rica, and keep along the northern shore until he should come to the place where he heard an obscure account of some narrow streight 40 AX ACCOUNT TIIE straight {whether a streight or isthmus was not so clear from the accounts he had) ; and by this, if a streight, he hoped to pass into the great South-Sea. After so very long a voyage as his had been to America, and the discovery of a conti tent which was not that of India, nor that of China, he saw clearly that the maps were no longer in the least to be relied on : lie therefore depended solely upon his own ideas. lie reviewed the bearings ' of all the countries which his former experience or his late dis¬ coveries had opened to him; he considered the figure of the earth in general; he reasoned upon the balance and distribution of the land and water ; and comparing all these he concluded that, beyond the continent lie had discovered was another ocean, probably as great or greater than that lie had formerly passed; if this were so, then it was probable too that these oceans had some communication. He judged it to be near those places since called Veragua and Kombre de Dios ; but not thinking his ships tit for that voyage, he proposed to put into Hispaniola to refit, and to make some new dispositions. Columbus, whilst he navigated and resided in the West-In¬ dies, was extremely diligent in his observations upon the nature of the air, the seasons, the meteors, rains and winds; and how each of these seemed to affect the others ; nor was lie less saga¬ cious in drawing prognostics from the remarkable appearances in all; at this time he judged from observations that a great hurricane was approaching. Before he entered the harbour, he notified his arrival to Ohando the governor, with the nature of his design and the condition of his vessels; desiring at the same time that the fleet, which he understood to be on the point of setting sail for Europe, should in consideration of the approach¬ ing hurricane defer their departure for some davs. But it was his destiny that ingratitude should pursue him every where, and persecute him in every shape. For the governor, without any EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. cause, not only refused to hearken to his advice about the sail¬ ing of the ships, but absolutely denied him permission to enter into harbour, to save his life in that island which he himself had discovered and subdued. He had nothing to do but to draw upas close to the shore as he could. The storm came on the next night; but Providence, favouring his innocence and assist¬ ing his capacity, brought him safe through it; though as terrible a storm as had ever happened in those seas. The fleet of twenty sail, which against his advice had put to sea, suffered the punish¬ ment due to their temerity. Only four escaped the storm, six¬ teen perished. Amongst those which were lost, was the ship which carried back that governor to Spain, who had sent Co¬ lumbus thither in so oppressive and scandalous a manner; amongst the four that were saved, was one that had on board some treasure, all that could be rescued from the pillage of the Admiral’s fortune. So that whilst he was mortified at this shameful instance of human ingratitude. Heaven seemed to de¬ clare in his favour, and to condemn and punish it. His cha¬ racter was highly raised by the prediction of the storm, and by his behaviour in it; for to his, and his brother’s good conduct, the safety of his little fleet was justly attributed. His brother was a navigator and philosopher, second only to the Admiral, very useful to his affairs, and a comfort and assistance in all his misfortunes, by his capacity and the goodhess of his heart. After he had weathered the storm, he left this island, in which he had so surprizing an instance of ingratitude, in pursuit of more matter to employ it. In this voyage he discovered all the coast of Terra Firma to the isthmus of Darien, where he hoped to have found a passage to the South-Sea. In this he was dis¬ appointed, but he was not disappointed in the other part of his project; for every where as he advanced, he became more sen¬ sible of the value of his discoveries on the continent. He found 42 AN ACCOUNT a people more civilized and more abounding in gold than the islanders. He entered a harbour, which from its excellence he called Porto Bello, well known since as one of the greatest openings by which the Spanish commerce is carried on between the two worlds. Here the Admiral designed to establish a co¬ lony, under the command of his brother ; proposing to return to Europe himself to obtain the requisites for a compleat set¬ tlement. But the avarice and insolence of his men raised the country upon him, and obliged him to relinquish his design, without having an opportunity of doing any thing more than shewing his judgment in the choice of the situation, and his own and brother’s bravery in extricating their men from the cala¬ mities in which their folly had involved them. Driven from hence, and finding his vessels in so bad a con¬ dition that it was by no means adviseable to proceed upon fur¬ ther discoveries, he quitted the continent, after having disco¬ vered the eastern side of the isthmus of Darien, and the whole shore as far as Gracios o Dios in the gulph of Honduras. He then stood over to Hispaniola. His voyage was made under a thousand difficulties of the severest kind; the vessels so leaky,, that the crew had not a moment’s respite from the pump, and scarce any provision remaining to refresh them after their la¬ bours. To complete the sum of their calamities a violent storm arose, in which the ships fell foul of one another. But though he providentially weathered this storm, it was now scarcely pos¬ sible to- keep his ship above water, and he was glad to make Jamaica, where he was a second time relieved from the greatest dangers and distresses. But a distress of almost as bad a nature exercised his inven¬ tion here. His ships were absolutely unfit for service, beyond ail possibility of being repaired; no means of getting new; the inhabitants suspicious, -and the ill behaviour of his men gave daily. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IX AMERICA. 4.3 daily occasion to increase those suspicions. In this distress, he prevailed upon some of the hardiest and most faithful of them to pass over in a canoe to Hispaniola, to represent his cala¬ mitous situation to the governor, and to beg vessels to carry them off. Eight months did the Admiral remain in this island, without the least intelligence from his messengers, or assistance from the governor. The natives grew exasperated at the delay of the Spaniards and the weight of subsisting them, which was a heavy burthen on the poverty of the Indians. Provisions therefore came in very sparingly. Things even threatened to grow much worse ; for the seamen, who are at best unruly, but think that all discipline ceases the moment they set foot on land, mutinied in great numbers. By this mutiny the Admiral’s authority and strength were considerably weakened, whilst the natives were exasperated by the disorders of the mutineers-; but Columbus found means to recover his authority, at least among the In¬ dians. Knowing there would shortly be a visible eclipse of the moon, he summoned the principal persons in the island ; and by one who understood their language told them, that the God whom he served, and who created and preserves all things in heaven and earth, provoked at their refusing to support his ser¬ vants, intended a speedy and severe judgment upon them, of which they should shortly see manifest tokens in the heavens, for that the moon would, on the night he marked, appear of a bloody hue ; an emblem of the destruction that was preparing for them. His prediction, which was ridiculed for the time, when it came to be accomplished, struck the barbarians with great terror. They brought him plenty of provisions ; they fell at his feet, and besought him in the most supplicating style to deprecate the evils which threatened them. He took their pro- G 2 visions 44 visions, comforted them, and charged them to atone for their past sin by their future generosity. He had a temporary relief by this stratagem, but he saw no prospect of getting out of the island, and pursuing those sjreat purposes to which he had devoted his life. The mutiny of his men was in danger of growing general, when every thing seemed to be settled by the sight of a ship in the harbour, sent by Obando, the governor of Hispaniola. The governor resolved not only to abandon, but to insult this great man in bis mis¬ fortunes. The captain of the vessel was a mortal enemy to the Admiral, and one of the persons principally concerned in those rebellions, which had formerly given liun so much trouble. The design of tills captain was only to be a witness of the dis¬ tress of his affairs; for he came ashore, forbidding liis crew all manner of communication with the Admiral or Iris men; and after delivering to Columbus an empty letter of compliment, embarked, without even flattering him with the least hope of relief. Thus abandoned, his firmness and presence of mind alone did pot forsake him. The arrival of this ship for a moment recon¬ ciled his men to obedience; but when they saw it depart, they were almost unanimously on the point of shaking off all au¬ thority, and abandoning themselves to the most desperate courses. The Admiral, without betraying the least sign of dis¬ appointment or grief, told them in a cheerful manner, that he had a promise of an immediate supply : that he did not depart in this ship, because she was too small to carry off all the Spa¬ niards who were with him; and that he-was resolved, not to leave the island until every man of them might enjoy the same con- veuiency. The easy and composed air of the Admiral himself, and the care he manifested for his people, superior to his own. preser- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 4o preservation, reconciled their minds, and made them attend their fate with patience. But he knew his delay might be very tedious in this island, and that as long as there remained a re¬ ceptacle to which every ill humour among his men might ga¬ ther, his affairs would grow worse every day. He found those that still adhered to him firmly attached to his cause; he there¬ fore came to a resolution of taking vigorous measures with the rest. He sent his brother, a sensible and resolute man, with a proper force, and well aimed,, to- treat with them; and in case of obstinacy, to compel them to obedience. They met, and the captain of the mutineers, grown insolent with a long course of licentiousness and rapine, not only rejected the Admirals proposal, but offered violence to his brother; who using this as a signal to his men, prepared for such an accident, they fell upon the rebels with so much resolution, that ten lay dead in a moment with tlieir chief; disordered by the un¬ expected attack, tire rest fled, and soon after were obliged to submit. Thus the Admiral pacified every thing with equal spirit and address, sometimes giving w 7 ay to the storm, and temporizing when he doubted his strength ; but when he was assured of it, always employing it with resolution and effect; turning every incident, even the most unfavourable, to his advantage; and watching every change of nature, and every motion of the hu¬ man mind, to employ them in his purposes. It is the principal thing which forms the character of a great man, to be rich in expedients; the use Columbus made of the eclipse was truly ingenious. It may be said, that such a thing cannot be imi¬ tated amongst a civilized people. I grant it.. But tile way to imitate great men is not to tread in tlieir steps, but to walk in their manner. There is no people who have not some points of ignorance. 46 IN ACCOUNT THE ignorance, weakness, or prejudice, which a penetrating mind may discover, and use as the most powerful instruments in the exe¬ cution of his designs. Such a knowledge as this, is the only thing which gives one man a real superiority over another; and he who understands the passions of men, and can entirely com¬ mand his own, has the principal means of subduing them in his The Admiral might have spent his whole life in this mi¬ serable exile, if a private man, moved with esteem for his merit, and compassion to his misfortunes, had not fitted out a ship for his relief. This brought him to Hispaniola. The governor, who refused to contribute any thing to his coming, when he came received him with that overacted complaisance and shew of friendship, which so often succeeds the greatest in¬ solence in base minds, and which they practise with so little shame and remorse to the persons they have before loaded with the greatest injuries. The Admiral bore this like every thing else; and, convinced that a dispute with a governor in his own jurisdiction would bring him little advantage or honour, has¬ tened every thing for his departure to Spain, where he arrived after a voyage in which he was tossed by most terrible storms, and sailed seven hundred leagues after he had lost his main¬ mast. He was now grown old, and severely afflicted with the gout. The queen his patroness was dead; and the king, of a close and dissembling disposition, and a narrow mind, was the only person lie had to sooth his misfortunes, or pay the reward which was due to his labours. But he received neither comfort nor reward. The performance of his contract was deferred upon frivolous pretences ; and he employed the close of his life, as he had done the active part of it, in a court solicitation; the most EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 47 most grievous of all employments to any man, the most hope¬ less to an old man. Vanquished at last by years, fatigues, and disappointments, he died with these sentiments of piety, which supported him. through the misfortunes of his life, and added a finishing, which nothing else could give to his greatness of mind, and all his other virtues. CHAP, IS ACCOUNT THE CHAP. VIII. Henceforward, in treating of the progress of the Spanish discoveries and arms, instead of designs laid in science, and pursued with a benevolent heart and gentle measures; we are but too often to shew an enthusiastick avarice, urging men for¬ ward to even' act of cruelty and liorrour. The character of this first discoverer was extremely different from that of all with whom he dealt, and from that of most of those who pursued his discoveries and conquests; some with a vigour and conduct equal, butall with virtues very much inferiour. In his charac¬ ter hardly is any one of the components of a truly great mail wanting. For to the ideas of the most penetrating philoso¬ pher, and a scheme built upon them worthy of a great king, lie joined a constancy and patience, which alone could carry it into execution, with the fortune of a private man. Continual storms at sea, continual rebellions of a turbulent people on shore, vexations, disappointments, and cabals at court, were his lot all his life; and these were the only reward of services which no favours could have rewarded sufficiently. His magnanimity was proof against all these, and his genius surmounted all the difficulties they threw in his way, except that of his payment; the point in which such men ever meet with the worst success, and urge with the least ability. That surprizing art, possessed by so few, of making every accident an instrument in his de¬ signs ; his nice adjustment of h.s behaviour to his circum¬ stances., temporizing, or acting vigorously as the occasion re¬ quired, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. quired, and never letting the occasion itself pass by hiin.; the happy talent of concealing and governing his own passions, and managing those of others; all these conspire to give us the highest idea of his capacity. And as for his virtues, his disin¬ terested behaviour, his immoveable fidelity to the ungrateful crown he served, the just policy of his dealing with the Indians, his caution against giving them any offence, and his tender be¬ haviour to them when conquered, which merited him the glo¬ rious title of their father, together with his zeal to have them instructed in' the truths of religion, raise him to the elevated rank of those few men whom we ought to consider as examples to mankind, and ornaments to human nature. I hope it will be forgiven me if I add a remark upon the conduct of the court of Spain with regard to this great man. Though, as we saw all along, this conduct was equally unjust and impolitick, sorry I am, that no lesson of instruction can be drawn from the event, which was ill all respects as fortunate, as the measures pursued were ungrateful and imprudent. But there was a coincidence of events at that time, which does not always happen so opportunely to justify an ungrateful and nar¬ row policy. It is certain that some men are so possessed with their designs, that, when once engaged, nothing can discourage them in the pursuit. But great and frequent discouragements are examples to others, which will at least certainly have an effect, and will terrify men from forming such designs at all. Then the spirit of invention and enterprize dies away; then tilings begin to stagnate and to corrupt; for it is a rule as inva¬ riable in politicks as it is in nature, that a want of proper motion does not breed rest and stability, but a motion of another kind ; a motion unseen and intestine, which does not preserve but destroy. The best form and settlement of ‘a state, and every regulation within it, obeys the same universal law ; and 50 an account of the the only way to prevent all things from going to decay, is hr continually aiming to better them in some respect or other (since if they are not better, they will surely be worse), and to afford an attentive ear to every project for this purpose. I am sensible that it must frequently happen, that many of these projects will be chimerical in themselves, and offered by people of an appearance and manner not very p ; ejudicing in their fa¬ vour. But then I am satisfied too, that these men must in the nature of things have something odd and singular in their cha¬ racter, who expose themselves, and desert the common and cer¬ tain roads of gain, in pursuit of advantages not certain to the publick, and extremely doubtful to themselves. It is equally true, that, if such people are encouraged, a number of visionary' schemes will be offered. But it is the character of pride and laziness to reject all offers, bec ause some are idle, as it is a weakness and credulity to listen to all with¬ out distinction. But surely, if judgment is to have any share in our conduct, it is the province of judgment to sift, to exa¬ mine, to distinguish the useful from the foolish, the feasible from the impracticable, and even in the midst of the visions of a- fruitful and disordered brain, to pick out matter which a wise man will know how to qualify and turn to use, though the in¬ ventor did not. Cromwell, partly from his circumstances, but more from his genius and disposition, received daily a number of proposals of this kind, which always approacht d him in a fanatical dress, and were mixed frequently with matters the most remote from probability and good sense; and we know that he made a signal use of many tilings of this kind. Colbert spent much of his time in hearing every scheme for the extending of commerce, the improvement of manufactures, and the advancement of arts ; spared no pains or expence to put them in execution, and bountifully rewarded and encou¬ raged EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 51 raged the authors of them. By these means France advanced during the reign of Lewis the Fourteenth, ami under this mi¬ nister, more than it had done in many reigns before ; and by these means, in the midst of wars which brought that kingdom and all Europe to the brink of destruction, amidst many de¬ faults in the royal character and many errors in his government, a seed of industry and enterprise was sown, which, on.the first respite of the publick calamities, and even while they oppressed that nation, rose to produce that flourishing internal and ex¬ ternal commerce and power, that distinguishes France, and forms its strength at this day; though a less active reign and ministers of a different character have succeeded. On the con¬ trary, it was always the character of the court of Spain to pro¬ ceed very slowly, if at all, in any improvement; and to receive schemes for that purpose witli coldness and disdain. The ef¬ fects upon the power of that monarchy were at last answerable. With regard to America, the conquest as well as the discovery Was owing wholly to private -men: the court contributed no¬ thing but pretensions and patents. CHAP. 52 iN ACCOUNT THE C II A P. IX. THE DISCOVERIES AND CONQUESTS OF BALBOA.-VELASQUEZ SENDS CORTES OS THE MEXICAN EXPEDITION.-THE STATE OF THE MEXICAN EMPIRE. CORTES MAXES AS ALLIANCE WITH THE TLASC-ALANS. Ax ancient painter drew a satirical picture of Cimon the Athe¬ nian. He represented this commander asleep, and Fortune drawing a net over cities to put them into his possession. There never were princes to whom this representation could be applied with more justice, than to King Ferdinand and his suc¬ cessor the Emperor Charles. Without forming any plan in the cabinet,, without issuing a penny out of their treasury, without sending a regiment from their troops, private adventurers amongst their subjects put them into possession of a greater, and a more wealthy territory, than ever the most celebrated conquerors had acquired by their valour, or their wisdom. Nor was this conquest more extraordinary for the trivial means by which it was accomplished, than for the shortness of the time in which it was effected ; for from the departure of Columbus, which was in the year 1192, to the entire reduction of Chili, which was in 1541 , seven great kingdoms, inhabited by a vast number of warlike and wealthy nations, were made to bow under the Spanish yoke. After the discoveries of Columbus- had enlarged the sphere of industry to active minds, such a spirit of enterprise went abroad, that not only those persons- whose indigence might have driven them from- their native country, but persons of the first rank went over to settle in America. N SETTLEMENTS IN 53 America. Gold was the spur to all those adventurers, of what- ever rank ; and this, with a roniantick spirit of chivalry, made the greatest hazards appear but common matters in their eyes. And indeed in a country wholly uncivilised, under the burning zone, and in many places extremely, unhealthy, the temperance of the Spaniards, their hardiness under fatigue, and the pa¬ tience and perseverance which make the most shining part of their character, enabled them to engage in enterprises, and to surmount difficulties, to which an\ r other people had certainly been unequal. Vasco Nunez de Balboa made a considerable figure amongst these adventurers; he was a man of a graceful presence, a libe¬ ral education, a hardy constitution, and that kind of popular bravery, which recommends a man who engages in desperate expeditions, where he must have more authority from, his per¬ son than his place. This man. first surrounded Cuba-, con¬ quered, and left it. He did not there find the treasures which lie expected. He therefore relinquished the gleanings of this field to those who had a more moderate ambition, and a more saving industry. He- sought new ground, lie followed the tracks of Columbus to Darien, gained theiriendship of some of the Caziques, and conquered others.. He was the first, who discovered the South-Sea. He settled a. colony upon that coast, and built the city -of Panama. But according to the fate of all the first adventurers in this new world, indeed ac¬ cording to tile fate.of most who engage in new undertakings, be never lived to reap the fruit of his labours. He found himself superseded by one who had only, discernment enough of his merit to raise his jealousy and envy, and who could make no , other use of the discoveries of this great man, than to increase liis own private fortune. This mail was a politician and a courtier, and having.in several instances basely injured Balboa,. he lie was too wise to stop there, but, under a pretended form of justice, cut off his head, and confiscated Iris estate. Some time after the settlement of Cuba, Don James Velas¬ quez obtained the government; a man of good sense in com¬ mon affaire, but so much mistaken, as to imagine he could act a great part hj- deputy ; and that too in circumstances, wherein a man who had but little capacity could do him but little ser¬ vice, and he that could do much would certainly do it for him¬ self. The continent of America was now very well known, and the fame of the greatness and the wealth of the Mexican empire spread every where. This inspired Velasquez with a scheme of reducing some part of this opulent country under bis obedience. He pitched upon Hernando Cortes to command in tiffs expe¬ dition, in which he certainly made a very: right judgment. There was no man amongst the Spaniards, who to an adven¬ turous disposition, then common: to them, all, knew so ivell to join a cool and steady conduct, to igain love, whilst he preserved respect; not to shift his schemes according to occasions, but persisting uniformly in a well-judged design, to make every in¬ ferior action and event subservient.to it; to urge still forward ; to extricate himself out of difficulties into which he was brought by bold actions, not by meau subterfuges, but by actions ;yet bolder. This was the character of the man already in high re¬ putation, whom Velasquez chose to conquer for him. The embarkation was made at St. Jago de Cuba, and Cortes was to take in some reinforcements at the Havannah. But he was hardly departed, when Velasquez grew jealous of him ; and, without considering that Cortes was of that heroick dispo¬ sition in which a blind obedient* is rarely a principal ingre¬ dient, he took the ill-judged step of removing him from the command of the army, which in some sort might be considered as his own, since he had much influence on the soldiers, and-a considerable EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 55- considerable part of the 'expence of the armament had been supplied by himself. When this order, which was- to deprive him of his command, arrived to Cortes, he was not Jong before he came to a resolution. He explained the whole matter to his soldiers; he shewed them flow uncertain the intentions of Ve¬ lasquez were, and how much all their hopes were like to be frustrated by the inconstancy of his disposition. The event was prepared. The soldiers declared to a man; that they were subjects only to the King of Spain, and knew no commander but Cortes. The army and the general, thus bound to each other by their mutual disobedience, sailed for Mexico. The empire of Mexico was at that time governed by a prince called Montezuma, the eleventh who reigned from the first monarch who had conquered the country, i The empire was elective, and the merit of Montezuma had procured him the election. A prince of capacity and courage, but artful, hypo¬ critical, and cruel. This empire, founded on conquest, was in¬ creased by his victories. By himself, or by his generals, he had absolutely subdued several kingdoms and provinces; seve¬ ral were made tributary, and others, which were not absolutely subdued, were influenced by bis power to an entire obedience to his will- His armies were the best in that part of the world, and prodigiously numerous. In this situation, and so headed, .was the empire of the Mexicans, when Cortes came to prove its strength, with an army of no more than five hundred foot, and. not quite sixty horse. He did not come a stranger into the country, to encounter a force which lie dared to engage only because lie was ignorant of it. He had long made every pos¬ sible enquiry from the Spaniards and Indians in every circum¬ stance of its internal weakness or power; its allies, its enemies, and the interests which determined them to be allies or ene¬ mies. Weighing all these, and knowing that, along with great hopes, great dangers likewise lay before him, lie made bis re¬ treat yet more dangerous by disobedience to the governor of Culm ; and when be landed on the continent, he made it im¬ possible, for he burned his ships. But though he bad made a 'vtreat impossible, he had something more to encourage him to go forward, than the impossibility of retirin';, lie had great hopes that many of those states, who were kept in a forced sub¬ jection or a slavish dread of Montezuma, would gladly turn this new and alarming appearance from themselves against that mo- mrcli, :iml, under the banner of these formidable strangers, arm themselves to shake off the ancient tyranny, which always ap¬ pears the worst, without foreseeing consequences, to which more civilised nations have frequently been as blind as they. It happened according to his expectations. The Zempoallans, a nation tributary to Montezuma, as soon as they had sufficient proofs of the power of the Spaniards, at the expence of several of their neighbours, who attempted to •oppose their progress, threw oft’ the Mexican yoke, gladly put them'elves under the protection of Cortes, and famed it by the large reinforcements which they added to his army. Mon¬ tezuma was soon made acquainted with these measures. For, according to the custom of that well-regulated kingdom, he hail posts so stationed, that in a little time he had notice of what¬ ever happened in the remote parts of his empire. The dis¬ patches which were sent, him, were painted cloths, exactly re¬ presenting every circumstance of the business of which he was to he informed; the figures were interspersed with characters to explain what must necessarily he wanting in the picture. .So far. hut no further, had this people advanced in the art of writing. As well informed as the emperor was of every parti¬ cular of this invasion, and of the defection of his tributaries, Ire acted not at all conformably to the greatness of his former ex¬ ploits. rtmoPEA>' settlements in ameiiica. 5f ploits. lie look tile worst .method which a great prince ever did, upon such an occasion, which was, to temporize. lie let the. Spaniards see, by some. trifling artp l>e M used to op¬ pose them, that be did not ; !ook upon them ,as his. friends, and at the same time neglected to act against them as so formidahle an enemy required. , They made daily advances in the country. His enemies were encouraged, his tributaries made insolent, and his subjects audl fillies utterly dispirited; whilst tl)e Spa¬ niards, in ,a variety of engagements -which they had with ,the petty priiiceri of the CQimtry, raised their reputation by a. train of/victories, and began toibe considered as invincible, Gorl;es, like the igreat commander lie was, took advantage of this irre¬ solute disposition in Montezuma, and used every possible means to cherish it. lie always sent back what prisoners his new allies had taken, with presents, and every profession of es¬ teem and regard to their master, and with the strongest as¬ surance of a desire of preserving peace; requesting to see Montezuma, and to confer with him upon some matters which he said he had in charge to deliver to him from his master the Emperor of the Romans. There was at that time a celebrated republic on the coast of Mexico, towards the gulph, called Tlascala. This people were said to be so powerful, as to be able to arid four hundred thou¬ sand men. Powerful as they were, though not subdued, they were yet awed by the greatness of the Mexicans. This awe, or perhaps a better policy, induced them to give a check to the Spaniards. But, in the manner of Montezuma’s proceedings, they would not oppose them publickly, and therefore could not oppose them effectually. Some nations, on whom they had prevailed to fall upon the Spaniards, were over and over again defeated, together with those troops the Tlascalans had sent clandestinely to their assistance. At last, by degrees, de- i • elating 38: ' AS ACCOUNT OF the daring themselves more openly, as tiie danger pressed them, they drew a large army into the field, which was routed by the troops of Cortes ; few indeed in number, but infinitely su¬ perior in arms, and now grown familiar with victory. The consequence of this battle was the alliance of the Tlascalans with their conqueror, which they entered into with the less dif¬ ficulty, as they were to serve against the Mexicans, and might now hope to serve with, success. Cortes, however, did not chuse to trust to this untried and forced alliance too far,, nor at tire same time to deprive himself entirely of the succour it pro¬ duced. He therefore took a middle course, and, accepting three thousand of their men, he held on his route to Mexico,. CHAP, ■EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. CHAP, X. . (ORTES BUILDS LA VERA CRUZ—HE MARCHES TO MEXICO-HIS RECEPTION 11V MONTEZUMA.—CORTES IMPRISONS MONTEZUMA.—THAT PRINCE’S STRATEGEM TO GAIN HIS LIBERTY ; TUB CONSEQUENCE OF; IT. Before Cortes began bis expedition to Mexico, lie.bail built a strong fortress at the principal port on the, coast,, to open a passage for succours, whenever his success should make interest enough to procure them. This he called La Vera Cruz, and it has since become a city, remarkable, for the great traffick carried on between these opulent countries, and Old Spain. During the Tlascalan war, in which the Spaniards suffered something and had every thing to apprehend, Montezuma took no steps, but lay by, watching the event, in hopes that the Tlascalans might defeat the t roops of Cortes at their own ex¬ pence ; or, if the Spaniards proved victorious, he might then have the merit of not having used hostilities against them. He lost both parties by this double conduct; such an insidious neutrality betrays nothing but the weak policy of him who uses it. However, as a fair correspondence still subsisted, be¬ tween them, he used every means he could to dissuade Cortes from his proposed journey to Mexico. At last lie took a step., worse judged than all the bad ones he had hitherto taken. He sent to the Spaniards a very large and magnificent present, of every thing his dominions afforded valuable, but principally a vast quantity of gold and precious stones; offering at the spine time yet more, and persuading them to return to tlieir own i Q country. 6o ACC0TJXT country. If any person in the annv was imwillin g before this to proceed, he now changed his mind. All were convinced that they ought to advance with speed to possess the fountain of that wealth, of which this rich donation was but an incon¬ siderable rivulet. Montezuma, baffled in all his schemes to keep the Spaniards at a distance- havin'; used himself to shifting measures until they were in a degree grown habitual, found Cortes at the gates of Mexico before he was resolved hove he should receive him. It was how almost too late for force. He therefore dis¬ sembled his concern with the best grace he could, and received him with, all the honours a monarch can bestow, when he would display his own magnificence and shew his sense of ex¬ traordinary merit. Cortes was lodged in a palace spacious and grand, after the manner of the country. AH his Spaniards were lodged with him ; but he took care to place a train of frtilleiy at his gate. Thus posted without a blow'in the heart of this great city, the capital of the New World, he was for a while at a loss whdt measiires to pursue, for securing himself in a conquest of such importance. Having received more than he could rea¬ sonably have asked, there was no cause of complaint, and con¬ sequently no advantage to be colourabty taken. He had only to wait for some of those critical incidents, upon whose use all "great matters depend, and without which the greatest genius must be at a stand. It was not long before one of tliese oc¬ curred. Two Tlascalans arrived in disguise at Mexico, who brought him an account that a general of Montezuma had attacked soirfe of his confederate Indians; that the garrison of Vera Cr3z had gone out to their defence; and that, though the Mexicans were repulsed with loss, the Spaniards were greatly endangered. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS 6f endangered, many wounded, and one frilled, whose head, by order of Montezuma, was carried through all the cities and villages of their country, to destroy the reverence in which they held the Spaniards, and to undeceive them in a notion they had conceived, that these strangers were immortal. This intelligence alarmed Cortes. He knew that opinion was one. of the strongest supporters of his little force; that things of this kind never stop at their beginnings ; that Montezuma, while he caressed him in his city, was disjoining his allies, and distressing his garrison abroad ; and that no time was to be lost in dilatory counsels; that he must keep alive the memory of his former exploits. He therefore took a resolution worthy of a brave man, in a difficulty made for his capacity. lie armed himself in the best manner, and with five of the most .faithful arid best resolved of bis officers, went directly to the palace of Montezuma. Thirty of his men attended at some distance. Guards of Spaniards were placed at the principal avenues to the palace. It was usual for Montezuma’s guards to withdraw, out of respect, when lie had any conference with Cortes. On this occasion, as soon as he was admitted to audience, he charged the Emperor with the outrages committed by his orders, in terms of great resentment. The Emperor disavows them. But Cortes, after having paid him the compliment of not supposing him capable of so mean a-dissimulation, assured him, that he was himself entirely satisfied of his innocence ; but that others had fears which were not easily removed : that, to satify the Spaniards, lie must give some solid proof of his confidence in them; which he could effectually do no otherwise than by ' . removing without delay to their quarters.. A request of this nature startled Montezuma, who never was used lo any voice but that of the humblest submission. However, lie saw plainly that 62 itcOUNT THE that Cortes did not make so extraordinary a request but with a resolution of making it be complied with. He saw'the neces¬ sity, and he yielded to it. Thus was the metropolis of a vast and powerful empire, in¬ habited by an innumerable multitude of warlike people, entered without resistance by a handful of men, who came to overturn its liberty. And thus was one of the greatest princes on earth, renowned for his wisdom and valour, seized in his palace, in the midst of his capital, at noon-day, and carried prisoner, without noise or violence, by six persons, to be disposed of at their plea- Tlte people, confounded and enraged to find one’whom they always used to revere as a god, treated in this unworthy man¬ ner, surrounded the quarters of the Spaniards to punish this sacrilege, and rescue their captive prince. But Cortes, who well understood the consequence of the steps he had taken, was not alarmed. He knew that he had nowin his hands an engine, which was capable of doing any tiling. Montezuma went out to appease the people, assured them that he was there of choice, and pvhicli was true) that the Spaniards were •wanting in no instance of respect due to liis character and dig¬ nity. This appeased -aud dispersed the people. But Montezuma, whose unfortunate circumstances obliged him to act as an in¬ strument to his own captivity, could enjoy no rest, though al¬ lowed the attendance of the principal officers of liis court, aud indulged by the Spaniards in every thing but bis liberty. Long revolving, lie at last contrived a scheme, which lie judged, without his appearing to concur with them, might alarm his subjects with a sense of their danger, or oblige the Spaniards to depart by the reasonableness of liis proposals. He had al¬ ways liberty of going abroad with a guard of Spaniards under pretence EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 63 pretence of doing him honour. lie now desired to hold a council of the states of the empire, that in concurrence they might satisfy Cortes and his associates in the amplest manner. This council was convened, in which Montezuma, in a preme¬ ditated speech, set forth the origin of his nation; the prophecies extant among them, that a people of the same race should ar¬ rive, to whom this empire should be subject; that the people were now arrived who were the object of those prophecies, and sprung from this origin, to whom the gods had destined univer¬ sal empire, and who, by their great accomplishments and sur¬ prizing bravery, merited their high destination: then he so¬ lemnly declared himself tributary to the Emperor of the Ro¬ mans ; he exhorted his people on their part to a due obedience; and ended by telling them, that, as he had himself prepared a present from his treasures worthy of this Emperor, he expected that every one of them,, in proportion to. his ability; would tes¬ tify his loyalty to their new master, and his regard- to the merit of his general and those brave men that attended him ; that they might be enabled to depart speedily to tlieir own country, with . that- opinion of-their brethren the Mexicans', which their affection to them, and their obedience to their common master, deserved. At first a dead silence succeeded this harangue; the whole assembly were confounded and struck dumb with grief, indig¬ nation, and surprise; Then followed a mixed cry, as each per¬ son was affected by some particular part of the general calamity. The lustre of their empire was tarnished, their religion to be profaned, their-freedom surrendered, their Emperor degraded; what was worse, degraded by himself; could they-believe tlieir ears? -Was-it Montezuma who bad spoken-in such a manner? The design of Montezuma was until this momenta secret to Oortes; he was surprised and something-chagrined-at an arti¬ fice, the 1 invention of. which he now penetrated very , clearly.. But- 64 AX ACCOUNT of the But his suqirise did not confound or perplex him in any part he saw it was proper for him to act. Without any embarrass¬ ment, he seconded the harangue of Montezuma by a speech, which was well interpreted, wherein he strongly urged the pro¬ priety, and insinuated tire necessity, of an entire obedience to their prince and an imitation of his conduct. Disordered as the assembly was, yet still held by a sacred reverence to their Emperor, influenced by tire hope of tire sudden departure of the Spaniards, and reserving themselves for a better occasion, they followed Montezuma’s example, and paid homage. to Cortes, in that dumb and sullen submission with which fierce spirits yield to necessity. He received it, and thanked them, as a man thanks his debtor for a ready payment. Cortes saw that this empty homage secured him nothing ; but Ire knew that the gold, which was to accompany it, would ■Ire of real service in cancelling the ill impressions made by his disobedience, in Spain. In Mexico he might look upon him¬ self as secure; he had the person of the Emperor in Iris hands ; he had his forces in the capital; he had lately struck terrour in all, by seizing the general, who had committed hostilities against the Spaniards. He got the Emperor to disavow his conduct, and condemn him as a traitor. By their joint authority, this unhappy man, guilty of nothing but obedience to his lawful master and zeal for his country, was burned alive in the public • square of Mexico. But neither this horrid example, nor the imprisonment of their Emperor, nor the late acknowledgment of the Emperor Charles, was sufficient to make the Mexicans insensible to the disgrace they suffered, nor of the danger which hung over them. They began to consult how they might deliver themselves. Some proposed to cue off the com¬ munication with the continent, and hold the Spaniards be¬ sieged in their quarters: for the city of Mexico is an island in a great EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. great lake, and communicates with the continent by four great causeways, extremely curious for contrivance and solidity. Whilst they were ripening their schemes, a report came to Cortes, that some words had dropt from a Mexican concerning the practicability of destroying One of tliese causeways. From this word (for he heard no more) this watchful and sagacious commander judged of the whole contrivance. Withotftrhow- ever taking notice of it publickly, he immediately orders two brigantines to be built to secure hig retreat, if a retreat should prove the wisest measure, in'the mean time he kept a strict discipline in his army ; and to preserve reverence from the In¬ dians, he prohibited their approaching his quarters when his ' men were asleep, and severely punished those of his soldiers who slept out of the times and places appointed for that pur¬ pose. All this while no preparations for liis departure. CHAP. AN ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. XE. THE 1TIWHS CF MONTEZEMA TO MAKE THE SPANIARDS LEAVE MEXICO.— . THE ARRIVAL' OF NARVAEZ- TO TAKE TUB COMMAND FROM CORTES — CORTES LEAVES MEXICO.—DEFEATS AND TAKES NARVAEZ PRISONER.— THE SPANIARDS IN MEXICO BESIEGED,—CORTES RAISES THE SIEGE- MONTEZUMA IS KILLED. Montezuma, sick with impatience of his confinement, and. seeing that he daily lost his authority amongst the people by the pusillanimous appearance of his conduct, as soon as he per¬ ceived that any spirited action on his side would be seconded with equal spirit by his subjects, roused his dormant magna¬ nimity, and, in spite of the condition he was in, sent for Cortes, and addressed him in this manner : “ Cortes, the desires of my subjects, my own dignity, and the commands of my gods, re¬ quire that you should depart my empire. You are sensible how much I valued your friendship, and how effectually I have shewn that I valued it. But, after so many professions, of good¬ will upon your side, and so many proofs of it upon mine, after every pretence of business is over, wherefore do you delay your return ? I have yielded homage to your master, I am ready to obey him ; I have sent him presents (or shall I call it a tribute ?) worthy of myself and of him: your whole army is loaded, even to an inconvenience, with their darling gold. Would they have more ? they shall have more. But then, when they shall have spoken their largest wishes, and satisfied their most eager de¬ sires, I insist upon it that they depart immediately ; or they EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. may find, in spite of the condition I am in, of which condition, for your sake and for my own, I shall speak but little, that Montezuma has yet courage enough to vindicate his honour, and friends in Mexico who will not fail to revenge the wrongs he shall suffer." Cortes perceived something of an unusual resolution and sternness in the emperor's countenance whilst he spoke. He therefore sent orders, before the interpreter began to explain ins '.ycecb, that the Spaniards shouldstand to their arms, and wait his commands. His answer was resolute, but not such as to. drive the emperor to despair. He lamented the jealousy which their common enemies had occasioned ; that, for his part, lie was secured from all fear, by his own courage and the bra¬ very of his own troops ; but, since he was so unfortunate as to find lie could not longer enjoy the honour'of a conversation he had such reason to esteem, consistently with the emperor's re- p .ie, he would depart as soon as ships could be built, for on landing he had been obliged to bum his own. This answer soothed Montezuma; he resumed his good humour, he pro¬ mised to load his army with gold at his departure, and gave immediate orders that every thing should be prepared for fitting out the ships in the speediest and amplest manner. But Cortes gave oideris, which were full as well obeyed, to the person he : appointed for the equipment, to delay it upon every possible pretence. He expected daily the return of the messengers he had sent into Spain, to solicit his pardon and succours, with the continuance of the command. . Whilst he was entertained with these expectations, and with finding out pretences to defer his departure, an express arrived from Sandoval, his governor at La Vera Cruz, informing him of the arrival of eighteen ships, in which was an Urtnv of eight: hundred loot, and two hundred horse, under the Command of an account op the one Narvaez, who was sent by his old enemy Velasquez, the governor of Cuba, to supersede-him in the command, to treat him as a rebel, and send him in chains to Cuba. Tire governor seized the messengers, who were sent by Narvaez to require him to surrender, and sent them prisoners with this account to. Cortes. There never was,- a time' wherein the firmness and capacity of this commander, in chief were put so strongly to the proof. On one hand here was an- army, in weapons and courage equal to his own, in numbers vastly superior, and above all, strengthened with the- name of royal authority. The Mexi¬ cans, ill-affected before, would rejoice in this opportunity to fall upon him. On. the other hand* must he resign the conquests lie had made with such infinite toils and hazards into the hands of his mortal enemy,, and in return to bear the name and receive the punishment of a traitor ? There was little room to hope for an accommodation, and the thoughts of a surrender were intolerable. One way only remained, to con¬ quer Narvaez. His. own courage and conduct; his soldiers, habituated to victory; and endeared to him by common dan¬ gers and triumphs; his reputation, and the signal providence which always attended him, would combat upon his side. Above all, no time was to be lost in fruitless counsels. He sent an express to Sandoval, Iris governor in La Vera Cruz-, to evacuate that place, and join him in his route with what men. he had. He assembled his forces, and found them to a man attached to his interests, and ready to hazard every thing in support of them. He left eighty men in Mexico, picked from his troops, recommending them to Montezuma, and him to them. With this small garrison he dared to.eutrust Mexico and all his vast hopes there; but the imprisoned emperor was himself a garrison, from the reverence his subjects bore him. Before he set out, he released the prisoners which Sandoval had sent him, using the severity of his officer to display his own clemency. He EUUOPEAN SETTLEMENTS 69 He caressed them extremely, loaded them with presents for themselves and the principal officers of Narvaez’s army, and did every thing to create himself a party there by his generosity. He sent at the same time very advantageous terms of accom¬ modation to the general himself, but took care to follow and second his ambassadors with all the power he could raise. This, with Sandoval’s reinforcement, did not amount to three hun¬ dred men ; but with these, and some confederate Indians, he marched with all imaginable diligence to Narvaez’s quarters. Narvaez, elated with the superiority of his army; Would hearken to no terms, though he was much pressed 1 to it by his principal officers, who discovered plainly that' this quarrel could only end in the ruin, of their party, or that of the Spanish in¬ terest in Mexico. Mean time Cortes, little incumbered with baggage, and less with a dilatory genius, advanced by forced marches. He was but a small distance from the enemy’s quar¬ ters, when the rains came on, and as usual in that country, fell. very heavily. Cortes, knowing that the ill dispositions of the sky were circumstances favourable to a surprise, inviting to desu perate enterprises, and that they are always least prejudicial to those in motion, having perfect intelligence of the disposition ■ of Narvaez’s army, and having disposed his troops in such a manner as not to fall upon one another, and to act in concert, he ordered them, when they should enter the town where the enemy was posted, to keep in close to the houses, that they, might not suffer by the artillery, which was so placed as to play upon the middle of the street. Having made this disposition, he marched to attack the camp, on one of those gloomy and tempestuous nights. Though he directed every thing with the utmost secrecy, Narvaez had intelligence of his approach, but lie laughed at it; and, not understanding the.nature of a pru¬ dent. j.N ACCOUNT 70 . dent rashness, could not believe that Cortes Mould make such an attempt in sucli a season, but went to sleep, without taking sufficient care that it should not be disturbed. Security in the general is easily followed by that of every one else. Cortes assaulted the town in three bodies, and whilst every one in the adverse party ran in confusion to his arms, and opposed with¬ out command or uniformity as each man was attacked, the whole army was routed. The quarters of Narvaez were at¬ tacked by Cortes’s division, the men routed there as elsewhere. Narvaez himself, shamefully taken in bed, fell into his hands. “ Value yourself, said he, my lord Cortes, on your fortune in making me your prisoner!” But Cortes, with a smile of indig¬ nation, answered, “ That.he thought this by far the least action he had performed, since he came into the new world.” When the morning came on, the dispersed army of Narvaez began to form into bodies, and to discover tlie inconsiderable force which the night before had defeated them. Their first mo¬ tion, distracted whith shame and anger, was to fall upon the con¬ querors, and recover the honour they had lost. But, when they found that their general was a prisoner, their artillery seized, and the advantageous post they had' occupied in the enemy’s possession, and numbers amongst themselves well affected to Cortes, they listened at last to his proposals, recommended as they were by the polite and insinuating behaviour of which he was master, and that open and unbounded generosity he shew¬ ed to every one. They all enlisted under his banner, and agreed to share his fortune. Thus did this accident,' which seemed to threaten inevitable destruction to the affairs of Cortes, prove the most effectual method of restoring them to an excel¬ lent coii-lition, wholly by means of the wisdom of his measure’s, and of that vigour and activity with which he pursued them. His EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 71 His army now consisted of above a thousand men, after replac¬ ing his garrison at La Vera Cruz, in which fortress he left Nar¬ vaez a prisoner. This victory, and the reinforcement it procured, came at a most critical time ; for hardly had he begun to adjust matters for his return to Mexico, when an express arrived that his affairs there were in a most dangerous condition. Alvarado, whom he had left to command at his departure, though a brave and able man, had too great a contempt for the Indians, and too little discernment for the nice circumstances he was in, to manage with that just mixture of firmness and yielding, by which Cortes had hitherto so balanced the hopes and fears of the Mexicans, that he never gave them an entire opportunity of knowing their own strength. This man, either discovering, or pretending at least to discover, that some of the chief men in the city, who were met in the great temple, were assembled to consult, how to expel the Spaniards, suddenly surrounded the place, and murdered all the persons of rank who composed the assembly. This cruel and precipitate action fired the whole people. En¬ raged at what they had already suffered, and what they' saw plainly they were yet to expect, their late ignominious patience, the fear of the Spanish arms, their inbred respect for Monte¬ zuma, were all lost in their fury. Should they stay, until on. various pretences they were all butchered ? Montezuma, either forgetful of his office and dignity, or unable to exert it, could.: protect them no longer. Gods and men allowed them to defend themselves, and arms were in their hands. The flame, so fu¬ rious in the capital, spread itself with equal swiftness and rage over ail the country, and all were vowed and hearty for the des¬ truction of the Spaniards. In this extremity Alvarado shewed as much bravery as he had done imprudence in bunging it on: 72 AX ACCOUNT Of Tilt He redoubled Ills watch on the emperor; he obliged him to exert the remains of his authority in his favour, and, fortifying his quarters in the best manner the time would admit, he stood out the storm and repulsed the Mexicans in several attacks. But their fury, far from relenting at the frequent and bloody repulses they met, redoubled by their losses. They exercised the besieged, day and night, with the most vigorous assaults; and to cut oft' their retreat, found means to bum the brigantines which Cortes had built. Cortes, who was obliged to make so rapid a march'from Mexico, to defend himself against Narvaez, was compelled by an equal necessity to march from Zempoa'da to Mexico, to re¬ lieve his forces and preserve his most essential interests there. The Mexicans, like all people who have not reduced the art of war to some rule, suffered their eagerness in pursuing one ad¬ vantage to let another material one lie neglected. For, whilst they pushed on the siege of the Spanish quarters with great vigour and diligence, they took no effectual care of the avenues to the city, or to cut off all succours from the besieged. Cortes entered the city without resistance. He soon routed those who invested the post of the Spaniards, and brought them a relief of which they stood in the greatest need. The arrival of so formidable a body of troops held the Mexi¬ cans some time in suspence ; but, in spite of the fatal error of admitting them into their city, which had now inexcusably been a second time committed, and in spite of the success every where attending the Spanish arms, they came to a resolution of continuing hostilities. But things wore another face since the arrival of Cortes. No longer satisfied with defending his quarters, he sallied out and defeated them several times with great slaughter. However, as he found that he suffered more by the least losses than the Mejvjcans by the greatest, be kept close EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 75 close for some time, suffering the enemy to approach, in hopes of making one last effort, to appease them by the authority of Montezuma.. This unhappy prinoe, reduced to the sad ne¬ cessity of becoming the instrument of his awn disgrace, and of the slavery of his people, appeared on,the battlements, and ad¬ dressed his. subjects with every argument he could use to prevail with them to disperse. But this expedient was not attended with the usual .success.• The Mexicans, by an habit of living without rule, had many of them lost much of that respect, which, even to adoration, every one of them used to pay their prinoe; they answered him with reproaches; and a stone from an uncertain hand struck him wiilv gryat violence on the temple. The Spaniards carried him to his apartment. Here he refused to suffer any dressings to he applied to his. wound; but, wrap* ping his head in his garment, gaye himself up a prey to shame and grief; and in a.few days: died, less of his waynd, which was but inconsiderable, than of sorrow and indignation, on feeling that he had so far lost the esteem and lave of his subjects. There are other accounts of the death of Montezuma, but this appears the most probable. Tims died this noble prince, more remarkable for the great virtues by which he ascended the throne, and those qualities by which he held it in so much lustre for 111311}' years, than for his steadiness and wisdom in defending it when attacked by a formidable enemy. It lias happened thus to many great men. When Lucullus and Pompey attacked Tigranes king of Arme¬ nia, we do not see any thing in him of the conqueror of so many kings. Even his conqueror Pompey was not himself, after having enjoyed in glory for a long time a power acquired by the greatest exploits. Se esse magnum oblitus cst. It is natural whilst we are raising ourselves, and contending against difficult tiesi to have our minds, as it were, strung, and om- faculties in- 74 AN ACCOUNT OF THE teat and constantly awake. The necessity of our affairs obliges us to a continual exercise of whatever talents'we possess ; and we have hope to animate and urge us onward. But when we are come to the summit of our desires, the mind suffers itself to relax. It is grievous to contend anew for things, of which we have long looked upon ourselves as secure. When we have no longer any thing to hope, we have then every thing to fear. Thus enervated by this prosperity, and discomposed with this fear, we become stiff and irresolute to action; we are willing to use any temporizing measures, rather than hazard on an ad¬ venture so much power and reputation. If Montezuma had made an early use of his power, he had strength enough, after many losses, to have kept Cortes far enough from his capital; but, having once entered upon shifting and dilatory courses, this brave and active enemy gave his affairs a mortal' blow, by seizing his capital and his person. The rest'was all a conse¬ quence, which no prudence could prevent, ot a plan of conduct imprudent and ill laid originally. CHA?. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 75 CHAP. XII. GUATIMOZIX CHOSEN EMPEROR BY THE MEXICANS.—HE BESIEGES THE SPA¬ NIARDS IN THEIR QUARTERS.'—OBLIGES CORTES TO RETIRE OUT OF THE CITY.—DISTRESSES HIM IN HIS RETREAT.—THE BATTLE OF OTUMBA.— CORTES RETREATS TO TLASCALA. As soon as the Mexicans were apprized of the death of their emperor, they set about the election of a successor. They im¬ mediately cast their e.yes upon Guatimozin, nephew and son-in- law of Montezuma, a man fit to command at such a time ; of a person graceful, a body strong and robust, and of a soul of tlie most undaunted courage. Though no more than twenty- four years old, the reputation of his early exploits procured him the authority of age, and a penetrating genius served him for experience., He was no sooner called to this unsteady throne,- than he took measures to prevent the Mexicans from their dis¬ orderly and casual attacks, and to make them act with design, and uniformity. He examined thoroughly into the cause of their former miscarriages ; and considering every thing, lie found that the Indians in their present condition, could never hope, for any success in open action; he resolved therefore to spare his men as much as possible, until his own invention and time, might teach them better methods of fighting. On these ideas he caused all assaults to cease ; then lie cut off the causeways which joined the city to the continent, and at the same time, strongly barricaded the streets, resolving to starve an enemy; which seemed unconquerable by any other means; a measure, l 2 which AS' ACCOUKf Of fllR 70 which though it has with us no extraordinary appearance, shewed no small sagacity in Guatimozin, because it was what had never been before practised amongst the military stratagems of this people, and invention is the characteristick of genius. From henceforward the whole method of the war svas changed, the Spaniards grew every day more and more straightened for provisions; and whenever they sallied out, though they slew great numbers of their opponents, the many canals of the city, and barricado behind barricado; after sotnfe successful progress, obliged them, vanquished by mere Weariness, to return without effect to their quarters. The Spaniards, invincible hy the In¬ dian. arms. Were not proof agaihst famine. Cortes saw that no¬ thing was left for his security, but as speedy a retreat US pos¬ sible ; and though this must necessarily lose them the liloSt considerable part of the treasure they had amassed, it Was what least afflicted him. He encouraged his troops, by clreatfotly relinquishing his own part, not to attempt bnrthening them¬ selves with a treasure which they might consider US lying at ah advantageous interest, until they should, as they certainly would, be enabled to return with a sufficient force to reclaim it. ~ The resolution of retreating being now taken, Urtd all things disposed for it, aquestion afose, whether it were better made by day or ih the hight. On this the council of war was divided ; and their reasons seeming pretty equal, a person among them, a S6rl ofastrdtdger, who passed for a prophet, and hi sutli Was much respected by tlie greater part of the arrty, promised them eerlam success if they retreated bv night. Certain it is, that, when measures are dubious, "superstitious. deterilitnUtiorLs ItaVe great ttse; for as reason cannot easily determine the right Why, that method Which superstition fixes up6n is, by the Weight it' has from the nee, pursued with the greater chcarfulness and effect. EMOPrAtf settlements h! auvuica. The gehbral Vis guided by the prophet, and lie disponed every thing for his retreat with great judgment. He caused file Usual hit’s to 1* lighted in every part, of his quarters. Some of Hi*, boldest and Most active inen led the van. The prisoners, artillery-, and heavy baggage were in the center. He himself, with one hundred of liia choicest troops, formed the rear. With wonderful order ahd silence, and without any interruption, did thb Spaniard* match until they came to the first breach in the causeway, fibre a portable wood' n bridge, which Cortes bad prepared, was laid over; but when the artillery and horses had passed, it Was wedged ho closely into the stones tint bordered the causeway, that it could not be removed, and there was yet another breach. But they were soon called from attending to this by a more pressing danger ; for, as nothing could elude the vigilante of the new emperor, he found out their intention of retreating, and disposed all along the sides of the causeway an infinite multitude of canoes, with orders to preserve the greatest silence, and not to attempt any thing until a signal was given. The darkness of the bight favoured the scheme. And now, perceiving that the Spaniards were under some cure barrassment, the Mexicans took this advantage, and all at once, with great order, poured in their arrows; raising at the same time a most tremendous shout, swelled with the barbarous sound of all tbeir martial instruments of musick. The Spaniards were not wanting to themselves, but behaved with signal bravery. It were needless, and almost impossible, to relate all the de* struction of that horrid night. The Indians at first attacked in good order, but the first ranks bring repulsed, and the dis'- taut canoes pressing on to action, the whole attack was thrown into confusion. The Indians drowned or slaughtered one an¬ other; however, they still pressed on with untamcable fury. Thousands, impatient of the delay their remote situation caused LX AG con NT OF THE them, leapt from their canoes, and, climbing up the causeway in the front where it was interrupted, broke in upoir the Spa¬ niards, with a torrent hardly resistible. In vain this naked multitude was hacked to pieces by the Spanish swords, in vain were they tumbled upon one another by hundreds into the lake; new warriors succeeded those that were killed, and the Spa¬ niards, actually wearied out, were in danger of being wholly cut off; when, making one vigorous effort in the front, they happily cleared that post, and by a beam which they casually met, they passed over one by one ; or, as some say, silling the intervals with the dead bodies of their enemies, they gained the main land. Cortes came over with the first, for in the confu¬ sion of the night, their former order was in a good measure lost, and took care as fast as liis men got over, to form them, ill order to secure the passage for the rest. Then returning to those who were behind, by his presence and example, he ani¬ mated them to renew the fight, and drawing up a part of his men on both sides of the causeway, he ordered the rest to file off from the center. In this manner the first light saw the Spaniards clear out of the city. Cortes halted at a small distance, that those whom the confusion and the night had dispersed, might have an opportunity of rejoining the rest of the army. Happily they were not pursued ; for as soon as the dawning light unveiled the field of battle to the Mexicans, the possession of which they bought by such a profusion of their own blood, they perceived among the slain two sons of Montezuma. These were amongst the prisoners, and were pierced by the arrows of the Mexicans in the promiscuous and undistinguished carnage of the preceding night. For some time they were confounded and struck dumb with horror at this sight; their sentiments ot loyalty returned ; their monarch, almost their god, lately pro- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 79 failed by their own violence! now their hands imbrued in the blood of his children! A general deadness and consternation ensued. They must not add to their impiety by neglecting the obsequies due to the deceased. In the mean time the Spaniards, favoured by this circumstance, pursued their retreat without molestation. But this security lasted a short time: all the allies of the Mexicans, already in arms and divided into several flying parties, hung over the army of Cortes, and harassed it without intermission; they attacked him in front, in rear, in flank, by open force, by ambuscade, by surprise. Provision grew extremely scarce on his march; and now it was that Cortes shewed a firmness under his losses, a vigilance against incessant- attacks so various in time and manner, and a courage which- enabled him to repulse them, which have been exceeded by no¬ thing in history. The principal army of the Mexicans, whilst he contended with such difficulties from the flying parties, took another route,- and pouring in three columns into a plain, where their number might be of most avail, they covered the -whole of an extended valley, which lay directly in his road to Tlascala: this was called the valley of Otumba. . They concealed their purposes with all imaginable care. To blind the Spaniards, they ordered' several villages to give them a friendly reception. But Cortes- did not suffer this to relax his vigilance, not allowing him,self to be deceived by any appearances of friendship shewn by men,- whose interest it was not to be his friends ; convinced, as he was, that a surprise of all things was indeed very prejudicial to the affairs of a general, but that it was mortal to his reputation.. He drew indications of their sentiments towards him, from the manners, the gestures, and the countenances of those lie treated with in his march ; and, perceiving that many shewed unusual signs of content and exultation, he judged, not without reason, that .80 AS ACCOt'XT OF TUT. that it could not be favourable to him. lie therefore disposed cverv thing in such a manner as that his troops were neither disordered, nor his courage abated, when from an eminence thev discovered the extended plains of Otumba darkened as far as the eve could reach with the myriads of their enemies. The. Spaniards, animated by their superiority in arms and their former victories, and the Tlascalans, by the presence of such allies and their hatred of the Mexican name, behaved with great bravery and success ; neither were the Mexicans inferior in animosity and courage. But it was Cortes himself who de¬ termined the fortune of the day. Nothing he ever heard was either forgot, or suffered to be an useless burthen upon his me¬ mory. He remembered to have heard from the Mexicans, that the fortune of the field with them ever followed that of the royal standard. This was a net of gold, elevated on a gilded staff, and splendid with plumes of a thousand colours. Great exigencies alone brought it into the field, and it was entrusted to none but the care of the general, who sat on a chair sump¬ tuously adorned, and supported on men’s shoulders in the center of the armies, to view the whole battle, to lie a witness of the behaviour of all his troops, and to give orders as the oc¬ casion required. Cortes, pretending to make his principal effort in a quarter remote from the standard, employed all his foot in that service; hut headed the horse himself with some of his bravest officers, informing them of his design, and ani¬ mating them with the hopes of a speedy decision, he flung himself with fury against the part that seemed least distant from the center. After dispersing and overturning whole bat¬ talions, they penetrated to the chosen body of cobles, who guarded the general and standard. Here the resistance was greater, but it was soon overcome, and Cortes’s own lance met the general, who was overthrown, and the standard taken. All EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. All the other standards were struck directly, and the Mexi¬ cans fled every way which their fear and confusion hurried them. They lost twenty thousand men in this battle, and spoil infinite. This victory gave Cortes an undisturbed pas¬ sage to Tlascala, and a welcome reception amongst his allies there. CHAR AN ACCOUNT THE C H A P. XIII. SPANIARDS SENT AGAINST CORTES JOIN HIM—HE MARCHES AGAIN TO MEXICO.—A CGSSPIRACT AGAINST HIS LIFE BAFFLED. Let us now turn our eyes to Mexico. Xo sooner were the Spaniards departed, than Guatimozin ordered the city to be fortified in such a manner as to secure himself against their en¬ trance a third time. He found that a thousand Tlascalans were killed in this retreat, upwards of tiro hundred Spaniards (the greatest loss they had yet in America), and a great number of horses. He cut off the heads of the Spaniards, and of their horses, no less dreaded, and sent them to all the neighbouring nations, as an infallible token of his victory ; as a sure proof that he was resolved to keep no measures with the enemy, and to stir them up to their utter destruction. He succeeded so well, that numberless petty nations, well inclined to the Spa¬ niards, fell off, and many that were wavering were confirmed in the Mexican interest. By this means several adventurers, that from the feme of Cortes had landed to join him, were cut to pieces before they gained his army. But the negotiation to which Guatimozin bent all his force, was that with TIascaia, be¬ cause this was Cortes’s chief strength. He sent large presents, and ambassadors of ability, with excellent instructions, to de¬ tach them from the Spanish interest; who executed their com¬ mission so well, that they caused a great division in their fa¬ vour in the councils of that republick. But Cortes, making his military exploits subservient to his negotiations, and his skill in .negotiation EUROPEAN'SETTLEMENTS IN' AMERICA. 8.3 negotiation assistant to his exploits, baffled them at length with great address, but not without great difficulty ; and the Tlascalans were confirmed in his friendship. Whilst- a general has an obedient and well-united army, he has an engine in proper order to work his designs, and he can then execute them with ease; but the greatest trial of his ca¬ pacity is to defend himself against a foreign enemy and wrestle with a domestic sedition at the same time. The soldiers of Narvaez, since Cortes’s return from Mexico, where they were obliged to leave so considerable a part of their booty, now hopeless of the expedition, began to mutiny, and demanded to be sent home directly to Cuba; nor were his other troops free from some part of the infection. Whatever could be done by preserving them in action, without too great a fatigue ; what¬ ever a seasonable yielding, without 'forfeiting authority, iu short, whatever an able commander could do in such circum¬ stances, was done by Cortes, without any other effect than that of palliating the disease ; the indisposition still continued. Whilst he struggled with these difficulties, which nearly ; overpowered him, his old enemy, James Velasquez, looking on the success of Narvaez's expedition as a tiling certain, sent a ship to get intelligence of his proceedings, and about thirty men to reinforce him.. The person who commanded at tile port for Cortes, no sooner saw-the ship in the offing than lie went oil board her; and, upon the Captain’s enquiry after Narvaez, he assured him he was .well, and as successful as- he . could wish. Not doubting this, the Captain-and his- men landed, and -were immediately made prisoners. Finding how affaire were really circumstanced, they admired the conqueror, commended the stratagem, and cheerfully joined the army. . Much about the same time the governor-of Jamaica, and he too a determined enemy of Cortes, sent three ships- with asmall- M 2 . body 84 AN ACCOUNT THE body of troops, in hopes of tearing from him some part of his conquests. These ships were dispersed in a storm, and were involved in many difficulties; but, what is singular, they all, though separated, came to one and the same resolution, which was, to revolt from the commander and join Cortes the mo¬ ment they came on shore: so that the enemies of Cortes now no less than three times relieved him, by the very methods which they took to distress his affairs. These advantages, though improved to the utmost by Cortes, were certainly not at all the result of his contrivance. There is a species of a splendid good fortune necessary- to form an hero, to give a lustre to his wisdom and courage, and to create that confidence and superiority in him that nothing else can give, but which always makes a principal part in an lieroick character. Without this, it is impossible for any man, however qualified, to emerge. Cortes was not only fortunate, by being freed from the most terrible embarrassment by the arrival of these succours, which were never intended as such; but much about the same time ships arrived from Spain, bringing, on the account of some private persons, a reinforcement of men and military stores ; and from the court an authentick approbation of his conduct, and a confirmation of his command. Fortified with these, he yielded to the mutinous importu¬ nities of such of his soldiers as were earnest to depart; and, though he diminished his numbers considerably by this step, he judged it better to have a well-disciplined army than a great one, and knew that little could be expected from men who were dragged unwillingly to action; at the same time that, their cowardice or sedition might infect the rest, ilfter the, departure of the mutineers, he found he had still above nine, hundred Spanish foot, eighty-six horse, and eighteen pieces of cannon. With these, and with a vast body of Tlasealans, and allies EUHOFliAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEIIICA. 85 allies of various nations, whom admiration and fear of Cortes,- or hatred to the Mexicans had brought under his banner, he once more prepared to attack Mexico, which was the grand* object of *his undertakings. The city* was so advantageously* situated, and he knew at this'time so well fortified, that nothing* could be done without a force on the lake. To cut off their supplies, he.ordered the materials of twelve brigantines to be got ready, 1 in such 'a manner as only to need being put together when they * should arrive at Mexico. These were carried upon the shouldiers of his Indian allies. His route to Mexico cannot be so much considered in the light of a inarch, as a continued train of ambuscades and battles, some of which were fought with the most numerous armies, and-with circumstances not suited to the brevity of my purpose-to relate. In ail these he was successful, though his enemies - may be said, with lit¬ tle exaggeration, to have disputed with him every foot of ground between Tlascala and Mexico. At last that city shewed itself, rising-from the midst of a noble lake, surrounded with anumber of most populous cities, as her attendants upon every side, and all subject to her power. The Spaniards, looking on this as their goal, revived their cou¬ rage and forgot the difficulties of their march; and the Tlasi calans, in perfect fury of military delight, wanted the steady hand of Cortes to restrain a courage, which lie commended and kept alive by his example and words, whilst he moderated its ardour. Before he began the attack of Mexico, he spent some time in reducing all the neighbouring cities .from which it might derive any succour. He cut off the aqueducts which supplied Mexico with water, that of the lake -being brackish ; and he got ready his brigantines with all imaginable diligence, to cut off all relief from that quarter. Whilst his attention was wholly employed in the prosecution 85 AN ACCOUNT OF THE of the war. an old Spaniard, who had long served, discovered • to him a conspiracy of the most dangerous nature. Antonio de Vilesana, a private soldier, but a man bold and desperate in any bad purpose, and subtle in contriving it, had formed a conspiracy with several others to kill Cortes and the principal persons upon whom he relied, and then to return to Vera Cruz, from whence they might easily pass to Cuba, and secure their pardon by the merit they should make of this action with James Velasquez. They were urged to this resolution by. the fatigue of those innumerable dangers and difficulties they had passed, and by the despair of overcoming those.which yet lay before them; without considering that, by this wicked ac¬ tion, they must.rather produce new difficulties than overcome the old. Others of more consequence were drawn in ;< and the conspiracy had been so far formed, that the time and manner killing the general was settled, and the person fixed, upon whom they intended to devolve the command. When Cortes was apprized, of this conspiracy, without any hurry which might give notice that he had discovered it, yet, without losing a moment, to take advantage of the discovery, with four or five of his principal captains, .lie went directly to the quarters of Vilesana, who, astonished at seeing him, made half his confession by the fear he discovered. Cortes had him thrown immediately into irons; and then, ordering every body to retire, he examined himself into all the particulars of the af¬ fair, and the names of the persons concerned. Vilesana made a full confession, and it ended by producing a paper in vindica¬ tion of their proceeding, which had been signed with the names of all the conspirators. Cortes was not a little surprised to see amongst them the names of persons upon whom he had great reliance. However, he dissembled his concern, and ordered Vi¬ lesana to be immediately executed. He was shewn to all the .army EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 87 army hanging by his tent door. Cortes informed none of the friends he most trusted with the paper be had received; but, summoning the army, he gave them an account of the horrid conspiracy that had been formedi.against his life; that he had punished the- person principally concerned; but that it was with satisfaction he was left ignorant of his accomplices, by the care the criminal took in destroying a paper, which he be¬ lieved might have made great discoveries. For his part, as he had punished, and was resolved severely to punish, any flagi¬ tious attempt against his life 01- authority, so he was determined to order both in such a manner as to give just cause of com¬ plaint to no man ; and if by accident he had done so, he was ready to give him all reasonable satisfaction. Proceeding thus, Cortes had the advantage of knowing who they were that wished him ill; at the same time that they remained unap¬ prized of the discovery he had made, and endeavoured to pre¬ vent it by a more diligent performance of their duty: be now- appointed a guard upon his person. Hardly Itad Cortes suppressed this conspiracy, and made the proper use of a baffled attempt against his authority., which was to strengthen and increase it, than a difficulty of some¬ thing of a similar nature engaged him, and from which he ex¬ tricated himself with the same courage and prudence. The ge¬ neral of the Tlascalans, envying his glory, and perhaps fearful of the consequence of the entire destruction of the Mexicans, though enemies to his own country, persuaded a considerable body of the people to quit the Spanish camp. Cortes imme¬ diately ordered him to be pursued. This general had formerly been an enemy to Cortes, and opposed him in the council of his nation ; but, when he saw the general current in his favour, he made a timely change, and came entirely into his interests, lie had now relapsed, and was therefore to be trusted ne more. Cortes AS ACCOtTXT OF THE Cortes gave orders to those who pursued him to put him to. death. The Tiascalans who revolted were easily prevailed upon to return; and so dexterously did Cortes represent this affair, that neither the Tiascalans in his army, nor the re- publick., nor even the father himself ofthe general, condemned him for what he had clone. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. CHAP. XIV. THE SIEGE OF MEXICO. — TERMS OF ACCOMMODATjOlt REFUSED BY THE MEXICANS.—THE SPANIARDS REPULSED BY A STRATAGEM OF GUATIMOZ1N. -A NEW STRATAOF.M OF GUAT1MOZIN.—HE IS TAKEN.—THE CITY SUR¬ RENDERS.—GUATIMOZIN TORTURED.—CORTES SUPERSEDED IN HIS GO¬ VERNMENT.—REFLEXIONS ON THE SPANISH CRUELTIES. These internal disorders being composed, he turned his for¬ titude and wisdom against his open enemies. Three principal causeways led to the city, which three towns or suburbs de¬ fended upon the side of the continent. Within Were trenches and barricadoes one behind another the whole length of the way. Cortes ordered three attacks upon these towns, and the cause¬ ways which they defended. The brigantines acted upon the water. Through the whole length of the siege, the bravery of the Mexicans, in defence of every thing which was dear to them, was not more remarkable than the ingenuity by which they baffled the attacks of the Spaniards, and attacked them in their turn. On land, on water, by open force, by stratagem, by every method, they plied each other incessantly day and night. But the Spaniards, invincible under the command of Cortes, had the advantage so far, that with infinite slaughter they gained these posts which secured the causeways upon the side of the country, at the same time that they cleared the lake so, that a canoe of the enemy did not dare to appear upon it. Cortes gained these advantages, but be saw how dearly he had bought them; he reflected how it would tarnish his glory to destroy so beautiful a city, and drench it in the blond of its un- n fortunate 90 AN’ ACCOUNT OF THE fortunate inhabitants ; and, considering what supernatural ex¬ ertions of strength had been frequently shewn by a despairing people, in the last convulsive struggle for their religion, life, and property’, he made use of the advantages he had gained to recom¬ mend the terms of accommodation, which he resolved to send in to the besieged. lie required no more than the acknowledg¬ ment of the emperor of the Romans, and the confirmation of his right of succeeding ceded to him by Montezuma, and long acknowledged by the most authentick prophecies of the nation, and such a security as might settle the performance of this. Guatimozin, who had done all that bravery’ and military- skill could perform to save his country, finding the means most suited to bis years and inclinations unsuccessful, though full of that noble pride which becomes and supports the royal cha¬ racter, was now as willing to save it by the milder and surer way of accommodation. But the priests, who had much influence in the council, either fearful of losing their power, or through an honest, though blind zeal, denounced vengeance from their gods upon all who could think of submission, and promised a certain success to those who stood up in defence of their re¬ ligion. They had great weight; and the whole council, con¬ trary to the opinion of the emperor, became unanimous in re¬ fusing all terms. Guatimozin, who yielded to the general sen¬ timent with regret, and saw the unhappy consequence but too clearly, resolved to fall with the same spirit that be had lived, “ Then, said he, since you are determined to hazard everything, prepare to act in a manner wo.rthy of that resolution. Me, you shall never find wanting to you, or to myself. These are the last good terms you are to expect. Whatever henceforward you demand through necessity, will be answered with pride and cru¬ elty. Therefore, henceforward, let no man presume to speak qf peace, be our exigencies what they will; the first that dares to EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. J)1 to do it shall certainly die; even the priests themselves ; they are most concerned to support the oracles of their gods.” When he had said this, with a stern and determined counte¬ nance, he went out of the assembly, and ordered the whole city under anus. Cortes, on the other side, as soon as he found that his proposals were rejected, laid aside all thoughts but those of violence, and commanded a general assault to be made at the three causeways all at once, and to carry fire and sword into the heart of the city. He commanded himself in the principal at¬ tack. The causeway was broken down before him, and the breach formed a ditch of sixty feet wide. On the other side appeared a fortification of earth and planks. He ordered the brigantines to the side of the causeway, to favour the attack, and directing his cannon against the fortification, made so fu¬ rious a fire that is was soon demolished; and the defenders, galled by the incessant shot, which made a most terrible havock. could maintain the post no longer. Cortes, under the fire of his cannon and with the help of his brigantines, passed over the ditch, and lost no time to possess himself of the other side, leav¬ ing one of his captains with a detachment to fill it up, and se¬ cure a retreat, in case it should be found necessary. Then he advanced to attack the remaining barricadoes of the Mexicans, who made a brave defence. The battle raged furiously, and as the Spaniards gained ground, their dangers and losses grew every moment greater. They had now advanced amongst the build¬ ings, from whence they were oppressed with a mist storm of darts, arrows, stones and boiling water. Before them stood a chosen body of the Mexican soldiers, who made a resolute stand. During this conflict, the captain who had been posted to fill up the ditch, thinking it an inglorious employment to be employed as a pioneer whilst his companions were in such hot action, ad- 92 IS ACCOUNT OF THE vanced with all his men, and deserted the necessary work he was employed in. >'o sooner had Guatimozin, whose eyes were every where, perceived this motion, than he took advantage of it. He or* dered those who were, in the front of the Spaniards to slacken their efforts; for, as night came on fast, he thought it better to allow the enemy to gain some ground, that he might fall on them with more advantage in their retreat. Cortes as quickly perceived this slackness, and the cause which produced it. He found that the breach of the causeway was abandoned,. that night approached, and that there was little hope of a lodgment in the city at that time. He therefore began to retreat in the best order lie could, setting fire to the houses, that he might not be incommoded by them iu his next attack. But scarcely was the retreat begun, when their ears were alarmed by the dreary sound of the sacred trumpet, so called because it was permitted to the priests alone to sound it; and that only when they animated, the people on the part of their gods. The souud was doleful, continued and strong, inspiring a contempt of death, and a dark religious fury. Immediately ensued a horrid cry, which resounded from all parts; and this was followed by an attack of more than common rage upon the rear of the Spa¬ niards, which was broke entirely, after a gallant and bloody stand. All order was now lost. The general’s commands were drowned in the cry and tumult of the fight; the Tlascalans who were in the front threw themselves precipitately into the trench; some made a fruitless opposition, others attempted to gain the brigantines, whilst the Mexicans on shore, in canoes, wading or swimming, upon every side, assaulted and slaughtered them with the most horrid cries, and a rage almost inconceivable. With difficulty Cortes and some of his troops escaped on board mROPEAN'SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 93 board the brigantines, wounded and defeated. A thousand Tlascalans lay dead upon the causeway, many Spaniards, and scarce any escaped without a wound. What was the saddest circumstance of all, forty were taken prisoners, of whose des¬ tiny there was no doubt. The other attacks had no better success, though in them the loss was not so considerable. The officer, whose imprudence had occasioned this misfortune, came to Cortes, with tears acknowledging his crime, and desiring to wash it out with his blood ; but Cortes, though rigid in his dis¬ cipline, saw that this was no time to dispirit the army with examples of severity. Night came on; but it brought no rest to the afflicted Spa¬ niards, since darkness could not conceal from them the triumph of the Mexicans and the fate of their friends. They saw the whole city shining with lights, and heard it resounding with the dissonance of barbarous musick and all the marks of an hor¬ rid joy. So great were the fires and illuminations, that they could see distinctly the men in motion, and all things preparing for the death 1 of the prisoners, attended with the mortifying cir¬ cumstance, that they were to be sacrificed to their false gods; Cortes, in the midst of all these calamitous circumstances, which lay heavy about his heart, assumed an air of tranquillity, endeavouring to comfort his soldiers with the hope of a timely revenge, and taking all necessary care that they should not. be attacked unawares. This care was necessary ; for, before morn¬ ing appeared, the Mexicans, elated with their late victory, and under the auspices of those gods whom they believed they had rendered propitious by the human blood which washed their altars, and animated by the sound of the consecrated trumpet, sallied out to attack the Spaniards in their quarters. The at¬ tack was violent, but repelled at length with an incredible slaughter of the Mexicans, Guatimozin 91 AN ACCOUNT OF Guatimozin was not disheartened. He prepared for new as¬ saults, and had his ruined works repaired, to endure those assaults which should be made against himself. Not relying solely on force, he spread a report amongst all the neighbour¬ ing nations that Cortes was killed ; to them he sent the heads of the Spaniards, who had been sacrificed, informing them, that the god of war, appeased by a sacrifice so agreeable to him, had audibly declared in favour of the Mexicans, threatened vengeance on those who resisted them, and foretold that in eight days time the Spaniards should be all destroyed. The credit of this oracle amongst all the Indians, and the deter¬ minate time ascertained for its completion, gave it the air of truth; for falsehood delights in general terms and equivoca¬ tions, whereas the precise manner of speaking truth, is one of the marks by which we guess at it. In fact, the stratagem had its effect; many tribes of Indians, who were upon the point of joining Cortes; embraced the Mexican interest; the more pru¬ dent suspended their resolution; but Guatimozin did not want emissaries even in the Spanish camp, who terrified the Indian allies with this prophecy. Even the Tlascalans were upon the point of deserting him, when Cortes counteracted this strata¬ gem in the wisest manner possible. He resolved to suspend all manner of operations against the city for these eight days, to demonstrate the falsity of this oracle, and to hinder it from being ever again used as an instrument to work upon the cre¬ dulity of his confederates. He prevailed upon the Tlascalans to wait the determination. In the mean time he strongly for¬ tified his camp. Guatimozin was sensible that the effect of his policy must be weakened every day, and with that idea employed every hour of the day or night to assault Cortes’s camp, but always with ill success. This great commander was always on his guard; and EUROPEAN' SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 95 and his troops, advantageously posted, bid defiance to every tiling of an Indian attack. At last eight days expired, and with them the terrourof the confederate Indians. The stratagem now operated as powerfully against those who contrived it, inso¬ much that all the neighbouring nations, before suspended bv the uncertain event of these might}- struggles, declared infavour of Cortes, who by this fortunate turn, in a little time found him¬ self at the head of two hundred thousand men. This was the last hope of the Mexicans. All that followed was only the de¬ parting agony of that state. The city was assaulted with re¬ doubled vigour, and now, reduced by slaughters, fatigue, and famine, the Mexicans saw the superiour star of Cortes gain the ascendant. The town was penetrated upon all sides, yet the besieged defended every street; and their incessant showers of darts and stones from the tops of the houses, made the progress of tile besiegers slow and bloody. In this extremity, Guati- mozin did every thing that could justify the hopes of the Mexi¬ cans when they called him to the throne, every thing that was worthy of one resolved to die a king. But when he found that all hope of dislodging the enemy was utterly at an end, his troops half famished, exhausted in numbers and in strength, and no part tenable, he determined to leave the city to obtain the best terms it could from the conquerors, and to seek him¬ self a more prosperous opportunity at a distance. For this purpose he renewed the treaty with the Spaniards, and took the opportunity of this cessation of arms tb put himself and hhr family, with some of the bravest and most faithful of his no¬ bility, on board some periaguas, attempting to escape to the continent; but Cortes, apprehending this very thing, stationed his fleet in such a manner, that he was intercepted, and soon- out of a condition of making any defence. He went onboard the Spanish commander, with an air of dignity and composure, betraying AN ACCOUNT OF THE betraying neither fear nor surprise, and desired no favour, tout that the honour of his wife and her attendants might be spared. The Spanish captain attended but little to him, endeavouring to prevent the escape of the nobility; but Guatimozin desired him not be anxious about them. “ Not one of these men will fly, says he, do not fear it, they are come to die at the feet of their sovereign.” The captain, admiring the constancy of the man and the fidelity of his subjects, conducted him to Cortes. The ruins of the city of Mexico were now delivered up to the Spaniards. With it fell that empire,, and the liberty of all the Indian nations, which filled that vast country now called New Spain, who either slid gradually from alliance to subjection, or, defending themselves without success, were made, and treated as slaves. : The curiosity of the reader will doubtless be interested to know the fetes of the captains of the conquering and con¬ quered parties in this war. For some time the treatment of Guatimozin was such as fitted an unfortunate brave man, in the hands of those who could estimate virtue by other standards than its fortune; and such was his treatment, whilst the autho¬ rity of Cortes was sufficient to protect him. But the infernal avarice of his troops, which at once excited and disgraced their, courage, not satisfied with the plunder of this opulent city, be¬ lieved that there were some latent treasures, within the know¬ ledge of the emperor, which far exceeded all the rest that they had yet possessed. They often solicited the captive emperor with promises and threats to make a discovery, but to no pur¬ pose ; at last a number of villains, Juan de Alderete at their head, a name deserving to be remembered to its everlasting in¬ famy, seized upon him, and proceeding to the most abominable cruelty, laid him upon burning coals to extort a discovery of. his wealth. But their wickedness could neither extort a dis- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 97 eovery of his wealth, nor the satisfaction even of a declaration that he had none to discover. His countenance did not betray the least yielding or weakness under the torture; some of his principal counsellors suffered along with him, and with equal constancy. At last, one of those unhappy men, overcome by the force of torments, almost superiourto human strength, turn¬ ed his eyes, fainting with anguish, upon his master, and uttered a doleful cry; but Guatimozin answered him only by saying, “ Do you think I lie upon roses? The sufferer, struck dumb with these words, and stiffing every murmur that might dis¬ hearten the others or disturb Guatimozin, expired in an act of obedience to his priuce. This wickedness was committed without the knowledge of Cortes. He was no sooner apprised of what was doing, than he rushed in upon the villains, and rescued their prey, mangled as it was, from their further fury. However, this was hut a short respite. This prince, conscious of his own dignity, and sensible of the base usage he received, either en¬ deavoured to stir up commotions, or was suspected of such a design; and Cortes, being obliged to submit the humanity of his nature to the cruel necessity of politicks, ordered him to be executed. As for Cortes himself, neither his great success, nor the vast treasures which he sent into Spain, could secure him from his enemies; by whose unwearied zeal for his ruin, he saw himself superseded in the government of a country, conquered hy him¬ self with so much toil and danger, and which in any other hands had never been effected. He died in Spain, having received a title and some other rewards from Charles the Vth., for whom he had acquired an empire; but by his own desire he was car¬ ried to Mexico, and buried there. It was the policy of Spain at that time to give great encouragement, and extensive grants, to all adventurers; but when any great discovery was made,'or o conquest iiS AN ACCOUNT OF THE conquest atchieved, they always sent another to reap the be¬ nefit of the first adventurer’s labours. This -was a policy un¬ doubtedly good with regard to one object, the security of the conquered country: but, like all unjust policy, it iiad altoge¬ ther as ill an effect another way; the new governors, hungry ami rapacious, and scarce considering the Indians as human creatures, murdered vast numbers of them ; and exhausting them by an intolerable slavery, in hopes of a sudden gain, they depopulated the country in such a manner, as tc abate very much the advantages which Spain might have derived from so extensive a conquest. Cortes himself was not free from the im¬ putation of cruelty ; the bishop of Chiapa, a good man, who was sent purposely to make an enquiry into complaints of this kind, gives a very unfavourable representation of his conduct. He accuses him of having destroyed four millions of people in New Spain. It is certain, whether by his connivance or not, but partly by the necessity of war and partly by the avarice and insolence of the conquerors, vast numbers of the Indians perished: but, on the other hand, it appears that the bishop of Chiapa was an enemy to Cortes ; which, though a good man otherwise, must detract from his credit not a little, especially as other historians differ from him in this point. Besides, I am well satisfied, that great allowance must be made for exaggera¬ tions in the number of inhabitants these countries are said to have contained. More populous, I believe, they were than the entirely uncivilized parts of North or South America; but it can hardly be thought they were so full of people as they are represented to have been, if we can trust to any of the rules by which we usually judge in this matter, nor consequently could they have suffered such losses in so short a time, without being utterly depopulated, which certainly they were not. Since I am on the subject of these cruelties, and since they European Settlements are tiling'; so frequently mentioned, I cannot help observing, that the accounts are by no means founded upon any tolerable methods of calculation, but thrown down at random in a decla¬ matory way, with a design yet further to blacken the Spanish adventurers; men certainly wicked enough, though represented without any heightening colours. The truth is, that great numbers, perhaps almost as great as are charged, have really perished ; but then it was in a series of years, by being reduced to slavery in the mines, and other laborious occupations, to which the Americans are of all people by their constitutions the most unequal, and by being disheartened by a state of unpoli¬ tical and desperate slavery, the greatest enemy in the world to an increase. ' There is a notion likewise pretty common, that these cruelties were committed partly, if not wholly, upon a religious account, and at the instigation of the priests ; but in reality it was quite otherwise. This unfortunate people found their only refuge in the humanity which yet remained in the clergy, and the in¬ fluence they had on the .Spaniards; though the clergy, who went on these adventures, were generally not the most zealous for religion, and were, as the Spanish clergy commonly are, ig¬ norant enough, and so little principled in the spirit of the re¬ ligion they professed, or indeed in the nature of the human mind, that they could boast, as a very glorious thing, that one of them had baptized several thousands of Indians in one day, without the help of any miracle for their conversion, and With a degree of good life, which, to say the best, was nothing more than common. But of any murders committed by them, or at their instigation, I find little or no proof at all. 0 2 CHAP. 100 IN ACCOUNT OF THE C II A P. XV. Besides Mexico, there was but one country in America which in any sort deserved the name of a civilized kingdom, and that was Peru. During the latter part of the Mexican war, the Spa¬ niards became acquainted with the fame and wealth of this coun¬ try. After Pedraria was appointed governor over the conquests of Balboa, his lieutenants reduced all that large tract which is now called Terra-firma, committing barbarities worthy the man under whose authority they acted. Amongst all the adven¬ turers who acted uuder his commission, none have made them¬ selves so famous as those of whom we are going to speak. As if it were destined that ever}' thing in this New World should be carried on in a new' and extraordinary manner, three citizens of Panama, private men, and advanced in years, un¬ dertook the conquest of Peru, a Country known to them only by report, but by the same report said to be rich, extensive, populous, and powerful. The names of these adventurers were, Francis Pizarro, Almagro, and Ferdinand Lucques, a priest, and a man of considerable fortune. They entered into this engagement in the most solemn manner. Lucques said mass, an oath of mutual fidelity was plighted, the sacrament was divided into three parts, Lucques took one, and delivered the other two to his confederates. The first expedition. LEMENTS IN AMERICA. 101 in consequence of this confederacy, was made under extraor¬ dinary difficulties, and with very, little success. '.Pizarro, who commanded, spent two. years in the short navigation between Panama and the northern extremity of Peru, a voyage now- made frequently in two weeks, since the winds and currents are known. He landed, and found that the wealth of the country was as great as he imagined ; and that the resistance he was like to meet in endeavouring to possess himself of it, would be full as considerable. This he put to the proof very early, by taking the rash step of attacking the inhabitants at his first landing ; and thus letting them see all at once the worst of his intentions. The difficulties he met with, and the resistance his ill conduct occasioned in. the country, obliged him to return without effecting any thing considerable. But neither he nor his associates, after such a length of time or such greatness of expence, were deterred from the prosecution of their scheme. It was agreed that Pizarro should go into Spain, to obtain an exemption from the government of Pe- draria, and to get for themselves the grant of whatever they should conquer. Pizarro, (who, though, not the monied man, ■was the soul of the enterprise), was to be chief governor, with a property of two hundred leagues along the sea-coast. Alma- gro they agreed should be adelantado, or king’s lieutenant; and Lucques, who was a priest, was to be first bishop and pro¬ tector of the Indians. The other profits of the enterprise were to be equally divided. But as this was an enterprise of ambitious avarice, there was little faith observed. Pizarro so¬ licited only his own suit in Spain, and obtained for himself alone the property of the land, the government, the lieute¬ nancy, every thing which he was capable as a.layman of taking; Almagro was forgot, and to Lucques was left his, eventual bishoprick. On 102 AN aCcoust of the On his return, this ton early discovery of breach of faith was like to ruin all; but Pizarro, who knew how to retreat as well as to advance, yielded up to Almagro every thing he could reasonably desire ; and nothing now obstructed the embarka¬ tion, which, after all, did not exceed one hundred and eighty Before we proceed, it may not lie unnecessary to say something of the persons who had the conduct of this great undertaking. Francis Pizarro was the bastard son of a gentleman of good fa- milv. His education was as irregular as his birth, be could not even read; but then he had a great deal of that capacity and fitness for the world, which is obtained by much struggling in it, and by being early made dependent on a man’s own indus- trv. Hardened to life, dexterous in affairs, never setting his heart upon a part of his designs whilst the total was at stake, of a penetrating sagacity into the nature of man, artful, bold, dissembling, and cruel. Almagro had likewise enough of that desperate bravery and toughness of body and mind, so neces¬ sary in a design of this sort. In their birth there was no con¬ siderable difference. Pizarro was a bastard, Alinagro a found¬ ling. Pizarro owed nothing to education ; Almagro depended wholly upon his natural parts. But Almagro, bred from his infancy in the camp, had all the soldierly qualities., patient, la¬ borious, and temperate; far from the craft and dissimulation of Pizarro, he was all openness and generosity, knew not what avarice was, and his cruelty, tile common distemper of all the adventurers of this part of the world, was much mitigated by the intercourse he had with aft Indian woman, who, by de¬ grees, softened the rigour of a veteran seasoned to blood, into seme compassion to her unhappy countrymen. The empire of Peru was governed by a race of kings, which they called yncas. The twelfth in succession was-then upon the JiUItOI’EAN SETTLEMENTS IN- AMERICA. 105 the throne. The first of this race, named Mango Capac, was a prince of great genius, with that mixture of enthusiasm, which fits a man to make great changes, and to be the legislator of a forming nation. He observed that the people of Peru were naturally superstitious, and had principally a veneration for the sun. 1 He therefore pretended that lie was descended from that luminary, whose authority he was designed to bear, and whose worship he was by that authority to enforce. By this persuasion, easily received by a credulous people, lie brought a large territory under his jurisdiction; a larger was subdued by his arms; but lie made use both of die deceit and the force for the most laudable purposes. lie united and civilized the dis¬ persed and barbnrous people; be bent them to laws and arts; he softened them by the institutions of a benevolent religion ; in short, there was no part of America in which agriculture and the arts were so much and so well cultivated, nor where the people were of a milder nature, and more ingenious manners. The yncas, descended as they imagined from so sacred-an ori¬ ginal, were themselves respected as divinities. In none, even of the Asiatic countries, .was there so entire an obedience to the royal authority, But here it was rather filial than slavish. As to the character of the Peruvians themselves, they seem to have a strong resemblance to the ancient Egyptians: like them, under a sky constantly serene, they were a people industrious and ingenicus ; cultivating the arts, but without bringing them to perfection ; inclined to superstition, and of a soft unwarlike temper. : The ynca Guaiana Capac having conquered the province of Quito, which now makes a part of Spanish Peru, to secure himself in the possession, married the daughter of the natural prince of the country. By her he had a son called Atahualpa, or Atabalipai By a former marriage he had a son named Huescar, !(H Iluescar, heir of his other dominions. On his death Iluescar, his eldest son, claims his whole dominions, both hereditary and acquired. Atabalipa, the youngest,'without pretending to the rest, would keep Quito as his right by the double title of son to the conqueror, and to her whose inheritance that kingdom was ; fortified besides by the will which the dying ynca had made in his favour. This dispute kindled a civil war, which, after several turns of fortune, ended at last in favour of Atabalipa; he not only routed his brother’s armies and overrun his domi¬ nions, hut actually held him a prisoner in the tower of Cusco. Such was the face of affairs "when the Spaniards arrived in Peru, whose remarkable appearance and surprising feats of arms were every where spread'about the country, and caused a general alarm. As usual in frightful rumours, -new superstitions begin, or old ones are revived, to increase the confusion. There subsisted a tradition amongst the Peruvians, that one of their ancient princes had a dream which he ordered carefully to be -recorded. He imagined that he saw a man cloathed all over, even to his feet, with a long heard, and leading in his hand an animal, such as he had never seen before ; and that at the same time.he was clearly informed of the will of the gods, that such a man should rule that country'. A Spaniard, whom Pizarro had sent upon an embassy to Atabalipa, as soon as he was disco¬ vered leading his horse upon some occasion that made him dis¬ mount, agreed so well with this dream, that it is incredible how 7 soon it spread into the remotest parts of the country, and with how great a terrour it struck the whole nation. Atabalipa, newly seated upon a precarious throne, was not the least alarmed at this event; for a. new erected power has every thing to fear from whatever sets the people’s minds, still unsettled, upon a new motion. He resolved, if possible, that his enemies should take no advantage of the arrival of those strangers. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 105 strangers, by engaging them by all means to his own interest. He therefore received the ambassadors which Pissarro had sent with the greatest marks of honour, though their discourse, con¬ sisting itself of very impertinent matter, was very ill interpreted to him, as was his to them. He even went out to meet Pizarro with a vast number of attendants, to whom he gave the strictest charge upon no account to offer the least injury to the strangers, as they were those of whom his predecessor had foretold, and of tile same divine original, children of the sun. But Pizarro, who advanced with other notions to the interview, soon con¬ vinced him that a contrary caution was more necessary. They met near a celebrated temple, the Spaniards drawn up in order of battle, and a party in ambuscade. This circumstance leaves us in no doubt as to the design of Pizarro. The first person who addressed himself to the ynca, was father Vincent, a friar, who was not ashamed to make his character the instrument of so base a crime. He advanced with a cross in liis hand, and be¬ gan a most unseasonable discourse upon the birth and miracles of Christ, exhorting him to become a Christian, on the pain of eternal punishment. Then he spoke with equal eloquence of the emperor of the Romans, pressing him with the same strength of argument to become a subject to that emperor; threatening • him, in case of obstinacy, that God would harden his heart as he did Pharaoh’s, and then punish him with the plagues of Egypt; with other miserable stuff, worse interpreted. The yrica, though utterly astonished at a matter so unaccountable, behaved with decency and gravity, telling him, that he believed that he and his companions were children of the sun; recom¬ mended himself and his subjects to their protection ; and made no doubt but they would behave to them in a manner worthy the offspring of so beneficent a deity. Whilst these discourses continued, the Spanish soldiers, whose r least THE least business to Peru was to listen to sermons, observing a con¬ siderable quantity of gold in the neighbouring temple, had their zeal immediately stirred up, and a party of them began to pil¬ lage it. The priests made some opposition. A disturbance ensued, and a great noise, which so alarmed our adventuring apostle, that he let fell his cross and breviary in his fright, and turned his back upon his intended proselyte. Those Spaniards who were not concerned in the pillage seeing him fly, either that they judged the heathens had offered their priest some violence, or that Pizarro made use of this signal to them to fall on, im¬ mediately drew their swords, attacked the guards and attend¬ ants of the ynca, defenceless through a religious obedience to their sovereign’s command, and with every circumstance of the most deliberate and shocking barbarity, slaughtered five thou¬ sand, which was near the whole number of the Indians, who fell without any anxiety for their own lives, pressing forward with all the zeal and officiousness of a most heroick loyalty to the chair of their prince, to expire at liis feet; and as fast as one set of his supporters were slain, the others succeeded with eager¬ ness to supply their places, and share their fete. The ynca at last was dragged down, and made a prisoner, by an act of the most unparalleled treachery, executed with a cruelty that has hardly an example and can admit of no excuse. The plunder of his camp, rich beyond the idea of any European of that time, was their reward. The unfortunate prince was not wanting to . himself in bis captivity. Seeing that his liberty had fallen a sacrifice to their avarice, he hoped to relieve himself by working upon the same disposition. He began to treat of his ransom, and promised such sums as astonished the Spaniards into an agreement; nor was the performance unequal.. On this occasion, not only the an¬ cient ornaments and valuable furniture, amassed by a long line of EU110VEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 107 of magnificent kings, were brought out; but the hallowed trea¬ sures of the' most venerated temples were given without scruple, to save him who was the support of the kingdom and the reli¬ gion. Whilst these were preparing, three Spaniards, who were sent to Cusco to superintend in the work, had means of confer¬ ring with Huescar, who, quickly finding their foible and the use his brother bad made of it, complained bitterly of the injuries he had suffered ; begging the Spaniards, as the patrons of the oppressed, to embrace his cause, promising threefold the trea¬ sure for their assistance, which Atabalipa was to pay for his ransom. He received a very favourable answer. Mean time the Spaniards .treated the ynca with all maimer of civility, ad¬ mitted his attendants to him, but no talk of his liberty. As soon as he had been apprised of Hues car’s negotiation with the Spaniards and Almagro’s arrival with an additional force, he began to be under great apprehensions. To ease himself upon one side, he sent immediate orders to hare Huescar pot to death.- The arrival of Almagro, on the other hand, caused .some em¬ barrassment in Pizamfs affairs. This commander, .finding .that Pizarro had seized the ynca with immense treasures, and having already experienced his ill faith, consulted with liis principal officers about leaving Pizarro’s part to himself and seeking their fortune.elsewhere.. Whilst this was in agitation, his -secretary, moved by some resentment to lus master, gave Pizarro notice of the design. In an instant Pizarro saw how:disadvantageous such a step must proveto him, with so small a force, all re¬ sources at a distance, and the country exasperated by the de¬ testable action he : had lately committed. lie, saw tliat all de¬ pended upon removing every suspicion, from, tlhe breast of Al¬ magro. For this purpose, and as something of an ill mind appeared in his -most masterly actions, he began by sacrificing ■ p 2 the 108 A.V ACCOUNT OF THE the secretary. He informed Almagro of his treachery. Next;, though gold was the great object of his undertakings, yet he knew how to relinquish some part to secure the- rest. He agreed to divide the spoil equally between Almagro and him¬ self, and to make no distinction between the soldiers of either in the distribution. This made an entire and hearty reconci¬ liation; which was no sooner concluded than the ynca’s ransom came in. But this vast treasure, the capital object of all their labours and villainies, no sooner came into their possession, but in its consequences it was very near being the utter ruin of their affairs-. It is said, and not improbably, that the whole exceeded the sum of one million five hundred thousand pounds sterling, a sum vast at the present time ; then it was a prodigy. On the di¬ vidend, after deducting a fifth for the emperor, and the shares of the chief commanders and officers, each private soldier had above two thousand pounds English money. They had now made a fortune even beyond their imaginations ; but the sol¬ diery. was ruined, the greatest part of the army insisted upon being discharged, that they might enjoy their fortunes in quiet. This proposal ill suited with the ambitious views of the com- . manders. Almagro was for proceeding in- the usual way, to enforce obedience by the severity of military discipline; but Pizarro opposed him. <( Let them go, said he, they cannot do us better service; here we shall have mutinous- and cowardly soldiers, at home they will act for us as recruiting officers with great success; for when it shall be seen that common soldiers, of so little merit as-they, have made such large fortunes, we shall not. long want better -men to supply their places.”' The desire of the soldiers was complied with; and as many as chose to go, who- were no inconsiderable number, departed. In due time, the sagacious prophecy of Pizarro was accomplished, and their army never wanted reinforcements. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS-IN AMERICA. 109 C H A'P. xvr; The murder op the ynca.—a dispute between pizarro and almagro. -THEY ARE RECONCILED. — ALMAGRO’s EXPEDITION TO CHILI.-THE: PERUVIANS KENEWTHE WAR, AND BESIEGE CUSCO.-ALMAGRO RETURNS AND DEFEATS THEM.—ALMAGRO RENEWS: THE QUARREL WITH PIZARRO/ BUT .IS DEFEATED AND TUT TO DEATH. In the mean time the unfortunate Atabalipa,,the' greatness of;' whose ransom only, convinced the Spaniards of the necessity of never releasing, him, endeavoured to, take advantage of his cap- - tivity, to know the genius and manners of this people. Amongst all their accomplishments, there was nothing he so much ad¬ mired as the art of reading and writing. This appeared almost incomprehensible to him, though he saw clearly .the use of it. He was at a loss to know whether he should consider it as a na¬ tural endowment, or as an acquisition of art: To discover this,. he one day ,desired a soldier to write the name of God upon his nail: he carried this about the army, desiring several to explain it, which they all did, to his wonder and satisfaction.. At last lie shewed it to Pizarro, but Pizarro blushed, and could make nothing of it. The ynca then perceived it was no natural gift, . but owing to education; the want of which he thus discovered in Pizarro, and slighted him for it . This mortified, the general,. and his disgust, joined to his natural cruelty and a policy-he thought he saw-in the proceeding, made him hasten the fate he had some time before determined for his unhappy prisoner. . T}iat no.thing might be wanting to the boldness .and atrocious— JlN AtCOCVf Of THS no ness of their barbarity, they proceeded against him by tray of trial and by the forms of law. A charge \ras exhibited, digested underseveral heads. 1st. For being an idolater. 2dly, For having many concubines. 3d!y, For wasting the treasures t»f the. kingdom, and raising taxes since the coming in of the Spaniards. And lastly, For the murder of his brother Iluescar. Au attorney-general was ap¬ pointed to manage.the accusation, and an advocate appointed •from amongst themselves assigned for. ins defence. In vain did the more numerous and better part of tlie army protest against this proceeding, and lodged an appeal to Spain; in vain did they allege their want of power to judge a foreign prince for any crimes, arid tile absurdity Of Oit criritcS With Which this -'prince Wascbaiged. Beforesuch judges, and withsuehan adCo- tWe tb defend him-, the ynca was cowlesmed to l»e burned alive. "To complete this Violation afrid flibefceryttf all laws, human and diViite, the siitne father Vincent, who had st> signalized him¬ self upOn a former occasion, Was sent to comfort and instruct hit* in his last moments. ThcChief atgfrtnWit Which he used to ■Convert him fo Christianity Was, that, oil his embracing the faith, instead of being burned, his sentence should be mitigated to strangling. This prince submitted to baptism, and was imme¬ diately strangled iii prison. Pizarro gave the final stroke to his •hardened arid shameless villainy, by giving him a magnificent funeral, and going into mourning. The death of the ytica was no sooner spread abroad, than the principal nobility at Cusco set tip the brother Of Iluescar; 'Pizarro Set tip a son of Atabalipa ; and two generals of the Pe- uditiaris set up for thertistelces. Thus was this wretched country -tOrn to pieces at rirte'e by foreigners and by a dorrfestick War amongst themseiVes. Yet stidh is tlte preference of any sort of spirit roused within =a nation ,to a Idtlratgick inactivity, that the • • Peruvians EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. Ill Peruvians gained some considerable advantages over the Spa¬ niards, even in this distracted condition, and took several pri¬ soners, among which was the attorney-general, whom they put to the death lie deserved without any great formality. The rest of the prisoners, as soon as they were informed of their having- protested against the emperor’s death, they generously released. These advantages gained by the Peruvians made the Spaniards listen to a treaty; for Pizarro was equally ready at times to make a peace, or to break it, as his affairs required. He made use of this interval to settle the Spaniards in the country. It was now that he laid the foundations of the famous city of Lima. But as soon as he judged himself in a condition to prosecute it, he renewed the war with the Indians, and, after many difficulties, made himself master of Cusco, then the ca-r pital of the empire. But, whilst he was thus by force and fraud establishing him¬ self every where, the whole fabrick of liis designs was shaken by a fresh dispute between him and his colleague Almagro. These commanders had little mutual affection, and less confidence in each other’s honour and integrity ; for similarity of manners is no ground of friendship, but where the manners are good iq themselves. Their common necessities, it is true, obliged them. l'or a time to keep a fair appearance; but each, satisfied of the other’s ill intentions, watched an opportunity of being before¬ hand in sinister advantage. New grants and supplies had lately arrived from Spain. Pizarro obtained two hundred leagues along the sea-coast, to the southward of his former government. Almagro had a grant of two hundred more to the southward of Pizarro’s. Judging, or pretending he judged, that the.wealthy and important city of Cusco was not included within Pizarro’s grant, he immediately ceased to act in subordination.to him, and claimed this city as his property. Pizarro’s brother, who. commanded AX ACCOUNT OF THE 'commanded lor him, absolutely refused to deliver up the plate, Almagro insisted on it with equal obstinacy ; and they were on the point of deciding the dispute by the sword, when Pizarro, the moment he had notice of the quarrel, set out from Lima, where he was at that time indisposed, and, notwithstanding his infirmity, with incredible expedition arrived atGusco. He told his colleague, that he was not unable nor afraid to support the justice of his claim by arms ; but lie chose rather to convince him by reason; that the ties which subsisted between them, and their common necessities, would always 'touch him with concern when he should be compelled to violent courses; which, however they might end with regard to the competitors, would certainly be much more in favour of the common enemy. He demonstrated to him that Cusco was indubitably within his (Pizarro’s) government, and ended in assuring him, that, as he would defend his own-right with all his force, so he was equally willing to employ all that force, with all his treasure, and all his counsel, and whatever assistance he could give, to put Al- magro into possession of whatever was really his right; that this jay yet more southward than Cusco, and was a country no way inferiour in its riches, and the easiness of its conquest. This timely appearance of Pizarro, his dexterous manage¬ ment, and judicious mixture of firmness and flexibility, made such an impression upon Almagro, that he was once more re¬ conciled; and, adding as many of Pizarro’s troops to his own as he judged necessary, he penetrated with great danger and difficulty into Chili, losing many of his men whilst he passed over mountains of an immense height, and always covered with snow. He succeeded notwithstanding in a good measure in his designs, for he reduced a valuable and considerable part of that .country. There was undoubtedly in the four hundred leagues which Pizarro EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 113 Pizarro had solicited for himself, enough of land to supply any reasonable ambition, and something to spare, to secure the quiet possession of the rest; but his eagerness after a large ter¬ ritory made him blind to the folly of dividing his troops, and sending Alraagro upon a wild distant expedition; and yet he considered this as a master-piece of policy. A little time, how¬ ever, convinced him to the contrary. No sooner did the ynca perceive this division of the Spanish troops, than lie desired leave from Pizarro’s brother, who managed affairs for him at Cusco, to assist at a solemn festival of his nation, which was to be held at some distance. The feast was in reality a sort of an assembly of the states of the kingdom. The ynca, having ob¬ tained permission to assist at it, made use of this opportunity to represent to his subjects, in the most pathetick manner, the misery to which the nation was reduced; the settlement of the Spaniards, the cities they had built, the garrison they kept at Cusco, and the guard they had on his own person. That, for their salces, he was now resolved to hazard that person and every thing that was dear to him; that now was the time to make an effort with success, when their enemies, divided amongst them¬ selves, had separated in search of other kingdoms, to satisfy an ambition that nothing could satiate. The whole assembly unit¬ ed in these sentiments ; they roused the country every where, and the Spaniards who remained in Peru were not able to pre¬ vent the ynca from laying siege to Cusco, with an army Of two hundred thousand men. Though the garrison under Ferdinand Pizarro consisted of no more than seventy men, yet, with their artillery, the sallies made with their horse, and assisted by the ignorance of the Peruvians in carrying on a siege, their defence was as successful as it was brave. News was brought to Almagro of the dangers to which Ctiscd was exposed, and the universal insurrection of the Peruvians. q Kelin- H4 AN ACCOUNT OP THE Relinquishing his new conquests, he hastened back to preserve his old with great expedition, though on his return he suffered as much from drought and heat as in his progress he had endured from cold. At his approach the Indians raised the siege; and he was joyfully received into Cusco by Ferdinand Pizarro, and the garrison, almost exhausted by the length of tire defence. After all these long and laborious marches, Almagro- was ex¬ tremely fatigued, and thought it liard, that now in the wane of his life, he should be driven with infinite toil upon, new con¬ quests, while Pizarro sat down at ease to enjoy alone the fruits of their common labours. lie resolved to renew his claim to Cusco; he had now a sort of right to it by having raised the siege, and lie had a strength sufficient to support that right. Ferdinand and Gonzalo, the two brothers of Pizarro, making some opposition, were thrown into prison,, and their little army: either joined him, or shared the same fate.. . Pizarro, unacquainted with the arrival of Almagro or the step be had taken, had got together an army for the relief of Cusco, who were near the town before they found they had an enemy of any other sort than the Indians to contend with. Almagro, after having tried in vain to seduce their fidelity, engaged and routed them. On this advantage, his friends represented do him, that- 30v. r was the happy hour of his fortune, and that he ought to employ it to establish himself beyond all possibility of being- removed. That he ought to put the Pizarros, his prisoners, to death, and march directly to Lima, to seize upon his rival, who never could be heartily reconciled to him, and whilst lie re¬ mained iiipossession of the sea-coast, could never want means of making his enmity terrible. Almagro had humanity enough to reject the first part of this counsel, and weakness gnough not to hearken to the last. If he marched into another’s govern¬ ment, he trembled at the name of a rebel; ahd,.fcr fear of the name, EUROPEAN SETTI.EMENTS IN AMERICA. 115 name, exposed himself to suffer the punishment of the thing; not considering that, having once embrued his hands in civil blood, he ought never to stop still his end was gained ; that con¬ quest alone could decide the question of their right; and that he who had the greater force would have the best means of pro¬ tection, if he was in the wrong. Whilst he deliberated what course to take, Gonzalo Pizarro made his escape with an hun¬ dred of those who were affected to his cause. It was the interest of Pizarro, who found himself in no im¬ mediate condition to carry on the war, yet possessed all the means of being reinforced, to keep matters from coming to an extremity ; it was Almagro’s to bring them to a speedy issue; and, in this knowledge of the management of time, when to lie by to gain it and when to use the present moment, the great skill in business, so little understood, depends almost entirely. Pizarro had recourse to the old way of treaty; he promised largely, he offered a sea-port, and agreed to submit the decision of all their disputes to the royal audience; but, as a prelimi¬ nary, lie insisted on the release of his brother Ferdinand. Ex¬ perienced as Almagro was in Pizarro's faith, he gave up the only pledge that could secure it. The moment Ferdinand was re¬ leased, he was put at the head of the reinforcements Pizarro had long expected, and now received ; and, as he was a man of capacity, he prepared to act with vigour. The treaty was forgot. The country which held for Almagro was separated from that which Pizarro possessed, by vast mountains passable only in some steep and dangerous defiles. Almagro’s counsellors ad¬ vised him by all means to post his troops in such a manner as to oppose his enemies in those passes; but'so infatuated'was he with a false security, that he refused to send any troops tb occupy those important posts, which were seized by the enemy q 2 without AX ACCOUNT THE 116 without the least opposition. He had, however, one resource left, and that a good one. The town of Cusco was well for¬ tified, had a good garrison, and the enemy was ill provided for carrying on the siege. But, as he had prejudiced his affairs be¬ fore by dilatory measures, he now compleatly ruined them by precipitation and temerity. He turned his back upon the ad¬ vantages of his situation, and resolved, contrary to the opinion of all his officers, to hazard his fortune in the field; confident of his own superiority, and full of contempt of the enemy, whom be believed to be raw troops. But he found too late, that they were veterans of great braver)', and exact discipline. The en¬ gagement was warm ; in which Almagro and his troops behaved in such a manner as not to disgrace their former exploits ; but, after a gallant struggle, they were in the end entirely defeated. Almagro himself was taken prisoner, and fell, at the age of seventy-three years, a victim to a rashness scarce excusable in a young soldier -, but to the last degree blameable in an ex¬ perienced commander, who, being supposed to have long estab¬ lished his reputation for courage beyond all doubt, ought to model his conduct only by his own experience, and the circum¬ stances of the affair in which he is engaged. Pizarro, having got the rival who had caused him so many apprehensions into his hands, resolved to shew him no mercy. In spite of Almagro’s age, which, as it might remove his fears, ought to have given room for pity; in spite of their common warfare, their dangers^ and triumphs; in spite of every senti¬ ment of gtatitude for what this unfortunate man had contri¬ buted to bis greatness, and in spite of his late mercy to his brother; all which were pathetically and strongly urged by Almagro, to suffer an old mac, a prisoner too, after so many fruitless toils, to die quietly in his bed; Pizarro was deaf to every thing but a barbarous policy, which made him submit every EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 117 every virtue to securing the meanest part of his designs. Al- magro was formally tried, sentenced, and then strangled in pri¬ son, Ilis body was afterwards beheaded publickly, on a scaf¬ fold, ana for a long time denied burial. A negro slave interred it by stealth. Amidst the pity which this barbarous execution caused, people could not forbear recollecting the unhappy fate of Atahualpa, and the share which Abnagro had in it. ■CHAP. XVII. THE FINAL DISPERSION Or THE PERUVIAN ARMY.-THE-CONSFIRACY AGAINST rilARRO.—KL IS MURDERED. Whilst this civil war rased, the ynca took a very extraordi¬ nary resolution. He disbanded his troops and retired to the mountains ; “ Because, says he, whilst we are in arms, their fear of us will be a means of uniting the Spaniards ; but, if we. disperse, the;,- will certainly destroy each other.” A resolution this, which at first view has something masterly, but it is only when viewed in one light. When their natural prince is fled, the people who must be governed may give the reins of govern¬ ment into the hands of the enemy. An army once dispersed is got together again with great difficulty ; and, on the other hand, a civil war is by no means a certain destruction to those who .are engaged in it: and indeed, by the reason of the thing and by the event, it was an ill-judged step, the scheme of a bar¬ barous prince, who was far from being a consummate poli¬ tician. It was very ruinous to the Peruvians, that, happening to be divided amongst themselves when the Spaniards came in, they suffered them to interfere in their parties ; but it w as of yet worse consequence that, when the Spaniards were afterwards divided, they interfered themselves in the Spanish parties. Almagro and Pizarro had armies of Indians, by which those people were habituated to obey them, and to be interested iti their success; this, joined to the want of any regular plan of defence E NTS IN AMERICA. 119. defence on the part of their king and commanders, subdued that empire to Pizarro with small trouble, if we consider the- greatness of the object. Put having achieved so great- a i conquest, it only made Pizarro acquainted with other great tracts which were rich, and might be added to them. lie fol¬ lowed the tracks of Ahnagro into-Chilij and reduced a-consider¬ able part of- the country. Orellana, one of his commanders,- passed the Andes, and sailed down to the mouth of the river of Amazons-; an immense navigation, which discovered a rich and- delightful-country; but, as it is mostly flat, and therefore not- abounding in minerals, the Spaniards then, and ever since, ne¬ glected it-. The death of Atmagro, and the influence it had upon the con¬ duct of Pizarro, is a striking example how necessary it is for a- great man to have an awe upon him from some opposition, that- may keep his prudence alive, and teach him to have a watch' upon his passions. Not content with a territory upwards of. eight hundred leagues long, and of a prodigious breadth, richer such as none of the kings of his country have ever possessed, a jurisdiction little less than royal, and an absolute security for¬ t-lie extinction of the only person who ■had-..any. pretensions against him,- either through a jealousy which often haunts the- happiest fortune, or through a pride which, cannot bear even- the appearance of any who had once withstood his power, ha took a resolution entirely to cut off ail that ever adhered to his rival ; he did not know when the,issue of blood ought to be stopped ; nor that examples of severity on a fetv create terrour and submission, but that threats of general destruction produce nothing but despair and desperate resolutions. He was not satisfied with putting many to death, but issued a proclamation, inhibiting, under the same penalty, that any person should har¬ bour. or even relieve an Alinagrian with the necessaries of life. This This party was yet numerous, though dispersed and lurking about the country. The heads" of them, finding F i/.arro im¬ placable, entered into a conspiracy to murder him. They did not want adherents in the city, so that they found means of concealing themselves until their plot should be ripe for exe¬ cution; but by some means Pizarro discovered their designs, and suffered them to know he had discovered them. Alarmed at this information, they saw nothing could happen but death at any side. Twelve of the chiefs marched into the streets at uoon-dav, with their swords drawn, crying out, him, to give a breathing to their fury, to. think what new torments they shall inflict, and to refresh the strength of the sufferer, who, wearied out with sucli a variety of unheard-of torments, often falls immediately into so pro¬ found a sleep, that they are obliged to apply the fire to awaken, him, and renew his sufferings. lie is again fastened to the stake, and again they renew their cruelty; they stick him all over with small matches of wood, that easily takes fire, but burns slowly; they continually run, sharp 150 AN ACCOUNT THE sharp reeds into every part of his body ; they drag out his teeth •with pincers, and thrust out his eyes ; and lastly, after having burned his flesh from the bones with slow fires ; after having so mangled the body that it is all but one wound; after having mutilated his face in such a mariner as to carry nothing human in it; after having peeled the skin from the head, and poured a heap of red-hot coals or boiling water on the naked skull; they once more unbind the wretch, who, blind and staggering with pain and weakness, assaulted and pelted upon every side with clubs and stones, now up, now down, falling into tlieir fires at every step, runs hither and thither, until one of the chiefs, whether out of compassion or weary of cruelty, puts an end to his life with a club or a dagger. The body is then put into the kettle, and this barbarous employment is succeeded by a feast as barbarous. The women, forgetting the human as well as the female na¬ ture, and transformed into something worse than furies, act their parts, and even outdo the men, in this scene of honour. The principal persons of the country sit round the stake smoakitig mid looking on without the least emotion. What is most ex¬ traordinary, the sufferer himself, in the little intervals of his tor¬ ments, smokes too, appears unconcerned, and converses with his torturers about indifferent matters. Indeed, during the whole time of his execution, there seems a contest between him and them which shall exceed, they in inflicting the most horrid pains, or he in enduring them with a firmness and constancy almost above human. Not a groan, not a sigh, not a distor¬ tion of countenance, escapes him; he possesses his mind en¬ tirely in the midst of his torments; he recounts his own exploits, he informs them what cruelties he has inflicted upon tlieir coun¬ trymen, and threatens them with the revenge that will attend his death; and, though his reproaches exasperate them to a perfect tVnorSAS SETTUEMEXTS IS AMEHICA. 151 perfect madness of rage and fury, lie continues bis reproaches SSL?. f ^ «!^WA n ette, H anf more sensible'parts o( the body to be afflicted. The women have this part of courage as well as the men; and it is as rare for any Indian to behave otherwise, a* it would be for an European to suffer as an Indian. I do not dwell upon these circumstances of cruelty, which so degrade human nature, out of choice ; but, as all who mention the customs of this people have insisted upon their behaviour in this respect very particularly, and as it seems necessary to give a true idea of their character, I did uot chusc to omit it. It serves to shew too,.in tlic strongest light, to what an incon¬ ceivable degree of barbarity the passions of men let loose will carry them. It will point out to us the advantages of a reli¬ gion that teaches a compassion to our enemies, which is neither known nor practised in other religions; and it wiH make ns more sensible, than some appear to be, of the value of com¬ merce, the art of a civilized life, and the lights of literature; which, if they have abated the force of some of the natural vir¬ tues, by the luxury which attends them, have taken out likewise the sting of our natural vices, and softened the ferocity of the human race without enervating their courage. . On the other hand, the constancy of the sufferers in this ter¬ rible scene shews the wonderful power of an early institution, and a ferocious thirst of glory, which makes men imitate and exceed what philosophy, or even religion can effect. The prisoners who have the happiness to please those to whom theyare offered have a fortune altogether opposite to that of those who arc condemned. They are adopted into the family, they are accepted in the place of the father, son, or husband, that is lost; and they have no other mark of their captivity, but that 152 AS ACCOUNT OF THE lempc tlii j i.^o re ^ urn to their own nation. • To at- the war is to recruit in this manner ; for which reason a general who loses many of his men, though heshould conquer, is little better than disgraced at home; because the end of the war was not answered. They are therefore extremely* careful of their men, and never chuse to attack but with a very undoubted su¬ periority, either in number or situation. The scalps which they value so much are the trophies of their bravery; with these they adorn their houses, which are esteem¬ ed in proportion as this sort of spoils is more numerous. They have solemn days appointed, upon which the young men gain a new name or title of honour from their head men ; and these titles are given according to the qualities of the person, and Jus 'performances ; of which these scalps are the evidence. This is all the reward they receive for the dangers of the war, and the fatigues of many campaigns, severe almost beyond credit.* They think it abundantly sufficient to have a name given by tlieir ■governors; men of merit themselves, and judges of it; a name 'respected by their countrymen, and terrible to their enemies. There are many other things fit to engage the curiosity, ami 'even afford matter of instructive reflexion, in the manners-‘of barbarous people; but these seem to be the most striking,' and 'fittest to be insisted on in a work which is to give a general idea ■of America. The present settlements, their commerce and pro¬ ductions-, ought to be allowed their proper room. In which-I propose to treat, first of the Spanish colonies, as the first 'dis- . -covered and largest object, and that in which the rest of Eu¬ rope, though excluded; is the most concerned. The Portu¬ guese, as nearest in place and rank, shall be. second. The French shall next be considered.- The English shall be reserved to the last, as the most important to ourselves; ‘ . : ' 'Par? EUROPEAN SETTIvEME-NTS IN* AMERICA, PART TIL SPANISH A M E R I- C A. GHAP. I. . A GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF AMERICA. Having described, with as much conciseness as the subject would bear, the manners of the original inhabitants of America, as we had before that, related the most remarkable adventures of its discoverers and conquerors ; it will be necessary to view more minutely, what and how advantageous a country these conquests and discoveries have added to the world; and what are the views, interests, and characters of those, who at present possess the greatest part of that extensive region. America extends from the north pole to the fifty-seventh degree of south latitude ; it is upwards of eight thousand miles in length ; it sees both hemispheres ; it lias two summers and a double winter ; it enjoys all the variety of climates which the earth affords ; it is washed by the two great oceans. To the eastward it has the Alantick ocean, which divides it from Eu¬ rope and Africa. To the west it has another ocean, the great South-Sea, by which it is disjoined from Asia. By these seas it may, and does, carry on a direct commerce with the other three parts of the world. It is composed of two vast conti¬ nents, one on the north, the other upon the south, which are joined bv the great kingdom of Mexico, which forms a sort of isthmus fifteen hundred miles long, and in one part, at Darien, so extremely narrow, as to make the communication between the two oceans by no means difficult. In the great gulph, which is formed between this isthmus and the northern and southern continents, lie an infinite multitude of islands, many of them large, most of them fertile, and capable of being culti¬ vated to very great advantage. America in general is not a mountainous country, vet it has the greatest mountains in the world. The Andes, or Cordil¬ leras, run from north to south along the coast of the Pacific ocean. Though for the most part within the torrid zone, they are perpetually covered with snow, and in their bowels contain inexhaustible treasures. In the province of St. Martha in South America are likewise very great mountains, which com¬ municate with the former. In North America we know of none considerable, but that long ridge which lies to the back of our settlements, which we call the Apaiachian, or Alleghany moun¬ tains ; if that mar- be at all considered as a mountain, which upon one side indeed has a very great declivity, but upon the other is nearly on a level with the rest of the country. Without comparison, America is that part of the world which is the best watered ; and that not only for the support of life, but for the convenience of trade, and the intercourse of each part with the others. In North America the great river Mis- sisippi, rising from unknown sources, runs an immense course from north to south, and receives the vast tribute of the Ohio, the Ouabache, and other immense rivers, navigable almost to their very sources, and laying open the inmost recesses of this continent. Near the heads of these are five great lakes, or rather seas EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS JN AMERICA. seas of fresh water, communicating with each other, and all with the main ocean, by the river St. Lawrence, which passe > through them. These afford such an inlet for commerce u- must produce the greatest advantages, whenever the country adjacent shall come to be fully inhabited, and by an industriou; and civilized people. The eastern side of North America, which is our portion, besides the noble rivers Hudson, Dela¬ ware, Susquehanna, Potowmack, supplies several others of great depth, length, and commodious navigation. Many parts of our settlements are so intersected with navigable rivers ami creeks, that the planters may be said, without exaggeration, to have each a harbour at his own door. Soutli America is, if possible, in this respect, even more for¬ tunate. It supplies much the two largest rivers in the world, the river of Amazons, and the Rio de la Plata. The first, rising in Peru, not far from the South-Sea, passes from west to east, almost quite through the continent of South America, navigable for some sort or other of vessels all the way, and receiving into its bosom a prodigious number of rivers, all navigable in the same manner, and so great, that Monsieur Condamine found it often almost impossible to determine which was the main chan¬ nel. The Rio de la Plata, rising in the heart of the country, shapes its course to the south-east, and pours suell an im¬ mense flood into the sea, that it makes it taste fresh a great many leagues from the shore ; to sat' nothing of the Oronoquo, which mighL rank the foremost amongst any but the American rivers. The soil and products, in such a variety of climates, cannot, satisfactorily be treated of in a general description ; wr -hall, iii their places, consider them particularly. All America is in the hands of four nations. Tlr? Spaniard-, who, as they first discovered it, have the largest and riciiot -hum All that part of North America, -u Inch ennipo.-cs the Ftlimus of AF lies beyond tiiat towards the river Mi"i-i;>pi Pacific ocean to the west and north- v.-i >i: and they possess ail South America, except ing Brasil, v. !n\ ii lies between tire mouth of the river of Amazons and that i.t Piata along the Atlantic!* ocean ; this belongs to Portugal. That part of North America which the Spaniards have not, is divided between the English and French. The English have all the countries which incircle Hudson’s Bay, and thence in a lire all along the eastern shore to the thirtieth degree of north latitude- France claims the country which lies between this and the Spanish settlements to the west, and secures an inter¬ course with them by the months of the Missisippi, tile Mobile, ar.b of the river St. Lawrence, which are the only avenues of navigation to this very extensive country. The multitude of islands, which lie between the two continents, are divided amongst the Spaniards, French, and English. The Dutch pos¬ sess three or four small islands, which, in any other hands, would be of no consequence. The Danes have one or two; but they hardlv d -serve to be named amongst the proprietors of America. CHAP. EUROPEAN* SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 157 CHAP. II. Tub order which I intend to observe in treating of the Spa¬ nish colonies is, after having set forth their situation, their cli¬ mate, and the nature of the soil, to describe those commodities in which the}’ trade ; to give a clear and concise account of their method of manufacturing them ; and then to lay open the manner of tiieir dealing in them, as well as that by which they carry on their foreign commerce. Last of all, I shall say something of the genius and temper of the inhabitants; of such customs of theirs as are remarkable, and of their civil policy, and of their military, so far as they are come my knowledge, or r.s they are worthy the attention of the reader. The exact division of the provinces, the courses of the rivers, the distances of places, the dimensions of harbours and their soundings ; all these, as they are infinitely better known from maps and charts, so it would be impertinent and tedious to fill up this short work with them, which proposes to give, even short as it is, a de¬ scription of everything that may tend to a just notion of Ame¬ rica ; and therefore cannot sacrifice matters of more moment to the description of tilings, of which a far better idea may he ac¬ quired by other means to those whom they concern ; and to tho-e whom they do not interest, who are far the majority, must be tedious and ummtnictive. The first country which the Spaniards settled upon the con¬ tinent IX ACCOUNT OF THE ti’ient of America-was Mexico ; and itstiil continues their prin¬ cipal .settlement, whether we consider its number of inhabitants, its natural wealth, or its extended traffick. As it lies for the most part within the torrid zone, it is excessively hot; and on the eastern coast where the land is low, marshy, and constantly hooded in the rainy seasons, it is likewise extremely unwhole¬ some ; neither is that coast pleasant in any respect; incum¬ bered for th.e most part with almost impenetrable woods of mangrove trees, of a bare and disagreeable aspect, and which ex¬ tend into the water for a considerable way. The inland country assumes a more agreeable aspect, and the air is of a better temperament: here the tropical fruits grow in great abund¬ ance ; the land is of a good variety, and would not refuse any any common principle for their generation. Some they cannot analyse by any art, as gold ; they indeed define it a composition of a very subtile mercury, and a sulphur as subtile. But how this comes to be known, when no process hitherto discovered has been able to extract either of these from gold, they who have advanced such things ought to tell. It is rea¬ sonable to believe, that there is some plastick principle in nature, perhaps something analogous to the seminal principle in plants and animals, whatever that is, which does not, as we know, re¬ semble any known body, nor is composed of any combinatiou- of known bodies , but powerful of itself to combine and vary such a part of the common stock of matter as it is fitted to ope¬ rate upon, which it draws to itself, and causes to form an ani¬ mal, or a plant, or a mineral, or metal, of this or that nature, according to the original nature of the seed. Suppose a plant subjected to all the torture of the chemical question : you -find it contains various matters; an earth, water, oil, salt, spirit, and 1G6 AN' ACCOUNT OF THE amt in the three last perhaps something specifick, and differing from other plants. But neither the same quantities of similar matter, nor these very matters themselves, can ever come to form a plant like the original, or any thing like a plant at all, because the seminal virtue is wanting; nor is it perhaps disco¬ verable. And as for the other matters, they are the inert parts of the plant; without power themselves, they are the materials with which, and on which, the seminal virtue acts, to organize the mass, to spread the branches, to shoot out the gems, to mature the trait, and in short to perform all the functions of a complete plant. The same may be said of animals. And why not of minerals, though of a less nice organization? Why should they not have the seminal principle too, which, operating, by its own power and in a way of its own, upon the elements of air, earth, water, oil, and salt, is capable of producing iron, copper, gold, silver, and other metals. The want of this will always hinder us from being able to produce any metal from Other than metalline ingredients, though we should take such things as resemble the ingredients they yield upon an analysis, and in tire same quantities in which we find them. This I do not say as favouring the notion that stones and metals vegetate exactly like plants. That these are often found where they had formerly been exhausted, and that they are known to extend their dimensions,- is pretty certain ; but that they assimilate the heterogeneous matter which increases their bulk, in a manner analogous to plants, I cannot venture to propose. It must be allowed that silver has been found, and I have so seen it, ex¬ tending itself among the interstices of stones, not unlike ivy and other parasite plants-yet; as a metal no way differing from it, or at all inferiotrr, is extracted-from ores, which , have an appearance altogether different, and which too is the usual EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 167 way, it is probable the manner in which they grow is not the same. What I had to say of gold and silver, as both are found, and the latter in vast quantities, in Mexico, I thought proper,: for-the sake of avoiding repetitions, to bring under this head, though all the rest of the Spanish territories produce largely of both. Ot'the plenty of gold and silver, which the mines of Mexico afford, great things have been said, and with justice ; as this, with the other Spanish colonies in America, in a manner furnish the whole world with silver; and bear a great proportion in gold to the whole of what the world produces. A late very judicious collector of voyages says, that the revenues of iVfexico can hardly fall short of twenty-four millions of our money. He founds this upon a return made by the bishops of their tenths, which, without doubt, were not over-rated; and that these amounted to one million and a half sterling; that these are about a fourth of the revenues of the clergy; and that the estates of the clergy are about the fourth part of the whole re¬ venues of the kingdom, which at this rate amount to twenty- four millions English. He takes another method of computing tile wealth of this province, which is, by the fifth paid to the king of the gold and silver dug out of their mines. This, lie observes, in the year 1730, amounted to one million of marks in silver, each mark equivalent to eight ounces ; so that if we compute this silver at five shillings per ounce, then the inha¬ bitants receive from their mines ten millions in money. What a prodigious idea must this calculation give us of the united product of all the American mines! rlow much must be allowed in this account for the exaggeration of travellers, and the osten¬ tation of Spaniards, I will not pretend to determine. The plate circulated is- account circulated in trade, or lying dead as the ornaments of churches and houses, though a great deal is undoubtedly employed in all these nays, did not seem to me to justify so vast a compu¬ tation : but, as the gentleman who has considered this point with uncommon attention is of another opinion, I wave any fur¬ ther observation upon it. CHAP. TtJlOPEAN SETTLEMEXI N AMERICA, 169 C II A P. IV. OF COCHINEAI, AND CACAO. Cochin i',At,, the next commodity far value which they export, is used in dyeing all the several kinds of the finest scarlet, crim¬ son, and purple. After much dispute about the nature of Ibis curious drug, it seems at last agreed, that it is of the animal kind; an insect of the species of the gall-insects. This animal is found adhering to various plants, but there is only one which communicates to it the qualities which make it valuable in me¬ dicine and manufactures. This plant is called Opuntia by the botanists. It consists wholly of thick succulent oval leaves, joined end to end, and spreading out on the sides in various ramifications. The flower is large, and the fruit in shape re¬ sembling a fig; this fruit is full of a crimson juice, and to this juice it is that the cochineal insect owes its colour. When the rainy seasons come on, they wilO cultivate this plant, cut off those heads which abound most with such insects as are not yet at their full growth; and preserve them very care¬ fully from the weather and all other injuries. These brandies, though separated from their parent stocks, preserve their fresh¬ ness and juices a long time; and this enables the insect not only to live out the rains, but to grow to its full size, aud be in readiness to bring forth its young, as soon as the inclemency of the season is over. When this time comes on, they are brought out, and placed upon the proper plants, disposed in little nests of some mossy substance. As soon as they feel the enliven- ACCOUNT THE ing influence of the fresh air, they bring forth in three or four days from their exposure at furthest. The young, scarce bigger than a mite, runs about with wonderful celerity, and the whole plantation is immediately peopled ; yet, what is somewhat sin¬ gular, this animal, so lively in its infancy, quickly loses all its activity, and, attaching itself to some of the least exposed and most succulent part of the leaf, it clings there for life, without ever moving, not wounding the leaf for its sustenance, but sucking with a proboscis, with which it is furnished for this purpose. What is not less remarkable than the way of life of this ani¬ mal, is the nature of the male, which has no appearance of be¬ longing to the same species; far from being fixed to a spot, he has wings, and is, like the butterfly, continually in motion ; they are smaller than the cochineal, and constantly seen amongst them, and walking over them without being suspected by those who take care of the insect, of being a creature of the same kind, though they believe that the cochineals are impregnated by them. But it is the female cochineal only which is gathered They make four gatherings in a year, which are so many ge¬ nerations of this animal. When they are sufficiently careful, they brush off the insects one by one with a sort of hair pencils, and take them as they fall; but they often brush the whole plant in a careless manner, so that fragments of it are mixed with the cochineals, and themselves mixed, the old and young together, which carelessness abates much of tiie value ; but what chiefly makes the goodness of this commodity is, the manner of killing and drying the cochineals, which is performed three ways; the first is by dipping the basket in which it is gathered into boiling water, and afterwards drying them in the sun ; this the Spaniards call renegrida. The second method is by dry- EUHOl'LAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEItICA. 171 ing them in ovens made for the purpose; this, from its grey colour, veined with purple, is called jaspeade. The third man¬ ner is, when the Indians dry them on their cakes of maize which are baked on flat stones ; this last is the worst kind, as it is generally overbaked, and something burned. They call it negra. This drug has a very uncommon good quality, and the more extraordinary as it belongs to the animal kingdom, and to the most perishable of that kind, that it never decays. Without any other care than having been put by in a box, some have been known to keep sixty, some even upwards of a hundred years, and as fit for the purposes of medicine, or manufacture, as ever it was. It is used in medicine as a cordial sudorific, in which in¬ tentions few things answer better. And indeed as it answers such good purposes in medicine, is so essential in trade, and produced only in this country, it may be considered in all mar¬ kets as equivalent to gold or silver, by the certainty and queik- ness of the sale. It is computed they annually export no less than nine hundred thousand pound weight of this commodity. The cocao, or cacao, of which chocolate is made, is a con¬ siderable article in the natural history and commerce of New Spain. It grows upon a tree of a middling size; the wood, is spongy and porous, the bark smooth, and of a cinamon colour: the flower grows in bunches between the stalks and the wood, of the form of roses, but small, and without any scent The fruit is a sort of pod, which contains the cacao, much about the size and shape of a cucumber. Within there is a pulp of a most refreshing acid taste, which fills up the interstices between the nuts before they are ripe ; but, when they fully ripen, these nuts are packed up wonderfully close, and in a most regular and elegant order ; they have a pretty tough shell, and within this is the oily rich substance, of which chocolate is made. This ‘ % 2 fruit IS ACCOUNT OF THE fruit grows differently from our European fruits, which always hang upon the small branches; but this grows along the body of the great ones, principally at the joints. None are found upon the small, which, though it is a manner of vegetation un¬ known here, prevails in several other plants within the tropicks. This cacao is a very tender tree, equally impatient of the wind, heat or cold, and will flourish only in the shade : for which rea¬ son, in the cacao walks, they always plant a palm-tree for every one of cacao. I need say little of the use of this fruit; it is general amongst ourselves, and its virtues well known; but, however the great external call for it may be, the internal con¬ sumption is much greater: so that in Mexico and Terra Firma, in some provinces of which latter it is found in the greatest per¬ fection, their foreign and domestick commerce in this article is immense, and the profits so great, that a small garden of the cacaos is said to produce twenty thousand crowns a year; though I believe this to be exaggerated: it shews, however, in what a light of profit this commodity is considered. At home it makes the principal part of their diet, and is found whole¬ some, nutritious, and suitable to the climate. This fruit is often confounded with the cocoa nut, which is a species wholly different. CHAP. Ll'liOI’EAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 173 CHAP. V. THE TRADE OF MEXICO.—SOME ACCOUNT OF THAT CXTV.—THE FAIRS OF ACAPULCO AND LA VERA ’CRUZ.—THE FLOTA AND KEGISTER SHIPS. The trade of Mexico may be considered as consisting of three great branches, by which it communicates with the whole world the trade with Europe by La Vera Cruz ; the trade with the East-Indies by Acapulco ; and the commerce of the South-Sea by the same port. The places in New Spain, which can in¬ terest a stranger, are therefore three only,. La Vera Cruz, Aca¬ pulco, and Mexico. Mexico, the capital of the kingdom, the residence of the viceroy, the seat of the first audience or chamber of justice, and an avchbishoprick, is certainly one of the richest and most splen¬ did cities, not only in America, but in the whole world. Though no sea-port town, nor communicating with the sea by any na¬ vigable river, it lias a prodigious commerce, and is itself the center of all that is carried oil between America and Europe on one hand, and between America and the East-Indies on the other; for here the principal merchants reside, the greatest part of the business is negotiated; and the goods sent from Acapulco to La Vera Cruz, or from La Vera Cruz to Acapulco, for the use of the Philippines, and in a great measure for the use of Peru and Lima, all pass through this city, and employ an incredible number of horses and mules in the carriage. Hi¬ ther all the gold and silver come to be coined, here the king’s fifth is deposited, and here is wrought all that immense quantity 174 AS ACCOUNT OF THE of utensils and ornaments in plate, which is every year sent into Europe. Ever}' thing here has the greatest air of magnificence and wealth; the shops glitter upon all sides with the exposure of gold, silver, and jew els, and surprise yet more by the work of the imagination upon the treasures which fill great chests piled up to the ridings, whilst they wait the time of being sent to Old Spain. It is said that the negro wenches, who run by tlie coaches of the ladies there, wear bracelets of gold, pearl necklaces, and jewels in their ears, whilst the black foot-boys are all over covered with lace and embroidery. It cannot ex¬ actly be ascertained what number of people are in this city. It is certainly very considerable, by many not made less than seventy or eighty thousand. This city itself is well aud regu¬ larly built, though the houses are not lofty ; and monasteries are numerous, and richly endowed, and the churches extrava¬ gantly rich in their ornaments, though comparatively poor in the taste of their architecture. The port nearest to this city is Acapulco, upon the South- Sea, upwards of two hundred miles distant from the capital. Acapulco itself has one of the deepest, securest, and most com¬ modious harbours in the South-Sea, and indeed almost the only one which is good upon the western coast of New Spain. The entrance of the harbour is defended by a castle of tolerable strength; the town is but ill built, and makes every way a miserable figure, except at the time of the fairs, when it intirely changes its appearance, and becomes one of the most consider¬ able marts in the world. About the month of December, the great galleon, which makes the whole communication that is between America and the Philippines, after a voyage of five months, and sailing three thousand leagues without seeing any other land than the Little Ladrones, arrives here loaded with all the rich commodities of the East; cloves, pepper, cinatuon. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 175 nutmegs, mace, china, japan wares, calicoes plain and painted, cliints, muslins of every sort, silks, precious stones, rich drugs, and gold dust. At the same time the annual ship from Lima comes in, and is not computed to bring less than two millions ol' pieces of eight in silver, besides quicksilver, cacao, drugs, and other valuable commodities, to be laid out in the purchase of the commodities of the East-Indies. Several other ships from different parts of Chili and Peru meet upon the same occasion ; and, besides the traffick for the Philippine commodi¬ ties, this causes a very large dealing for every thing those coun¬ tries have to exchange with one another, as well as for the pur¬ chase of all sorts of European goods. The fair lasts sometimes for thirty days. As soon as the goods are disposed of, the gal¬ leon prepares to set out on her voyage to the Philippines with her returns, chiefly in silver, but with some European goods too, and some other commodities of America. I speak here, as though there were but one vessel in the trade with the Phi¬ lippines ; and in fact there is only nominally one trading vessel, the galleon itself, about twelve hundred tuns ; but another at¬ tends her commonly as’a sort of convoy, which generally carries such a quantity of goods as pretty much disables her from per¬ forming that office. The galleon has often above a thousand people on board, either interested in the cargo, or merely pas¬ sengers ; and there is no trade in which so large profits are made; the captain of the vessel, the pilots, their mates, and even the common sailors, making in one voyage, what in their several ranks may be considered as easy fortunes. It is said, by the writer of Lord Anson’s voyage, that the jesuits have the profits of this ship to support their missions ; and if. so, their gains must be extremely great, and must add much to the con¬ sequence of a society which has_ as great a. reputation for its riches as its wisdom. 176 AS ACCOtJST OF Tilfi This commerce to so vast a value, though carried bn directly between the king of Spam's own dominions, enriches them in proportion but very little; the for greater part of ever)' thing that comes from the Philippines being the produce, or the fa- brick, 0/other countries; the Spaniards add none of the artificial value of labour to any thing. The Chinese are largely inte¬ rested in this cargo, and it is to them they are indebted for the manufacturing of such of their plate, as is wrought into any better fashion than rude ingots or inelegant coins. When this foir is over, the town is comparatively deserted ; however, it remains for the whole year the most considerable port in Mexico, for the trade with Peru and Chili, which is not very great. The East-Iudia goods brought hither are carried on mules to Mexico, from whence what exceeds their own consumption is sent by land carriage to La Vera Cruz, to pass over the Terra Firma, to the islands, and some even to Old Spain, though iri no great quantity. From the port of La Vera Crilz it is that the great wealth of Mexico is poured out upon all the Old World ; and it is from this port alone, that they receive the numberless luxuries and necessaries that the Old World yields them in return. To this port the annual fleet from Cadiz, called the flota, arrives about the latter end of November, after a passage of nine weeks. This fleet, which sails only from Cadiz, consists of about three men of war as a convoy, and fourteen or fifteen large merchant ships, from four hundred to one thousand tuns hiirthen. They are loaded almost with every sort of goods which Europe produces for export; all sorts of woollens, linens, silks, velvets, laces, glass, paper, cutler)', all sorts of wrought iron, watches, clocks, quicksilver, horse furniture, shoes, stockings, books, pictures, military stores, wines, and fruits; so that all the trailing parts of Europe are highly interested in the cargo of this fleet. Spain itseif EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 177 , itself sends out little more than the wine and fruit. This, with the freight and commissions to the merchant and the duty to the king, is almost all the advantage which that kingdom de¬ rives from her commerce with the Indies. It is strictly prohi¬ bited to load any commodities on board this fleet without en¬ tering the goods, the value, and the owner’s name, in the India-house at Seville ; and when they return, they must bring a certificate, from the proper officer there, that the goods were duly landed, and in the proper port. They are not permitted to break bulk upon any account until they arrive at La Vera Cruz, nor suffered to take any other than Spanish passengers, nor them without a licence first obtained at the India-house. Jealousy is the glaring character of the court of Spain, in whatever regards their American empire; and they often sacri¬ fice the prosperity to an excessive regard to the security of their possessions. They attend in this trade principally to two ob¬ jects ; the exclusion of all strangers from any share in it, and the keeping up of the market for such goods as they send ; and they think both these ends best answered by sending out only one annual fleet, and that from only one port in Spain, and to one port only in Mexico. These, views, which would be impolitick in any power in Europe besides, are judicious enough in Spain; because, the goods they send belonging mostly to strangers, and the profits upon the sale in the Indies being the only thing that really accrues to themselves, it is certainly right to consult pri¬ marily how they shall get the greatest returns upon the smallest quantity of goods. It would be cpiite otlierwi.se, if all, or most of what they send abroad, were their own produce or manufac¬ ture. They are undoubtedly right too in keeping the trade very carefully to themselves, though perhaps the means taken to attain this end will not be thought so rational. By suffering all the trade to be carried on only between two ports, they dis¬ courage in the Old World all their towns from that emulation. which -mid not only enable them to traffick in foreign commodi¬ ties, but in time to set up fabricks of their own; whereas now, with n-g.ird to the export of their commodities, they stand upon the level of strangers ; they cannot carry their produce directly to ihe best market; and it is very certain, that even trilling dis¬ couragements operate very powerfully where the commercial spirit is weak, and the trade in its infancy. Again ; in the New World, this confinement of the trade encourages interlopers, and an illicit commerce, too gainful for any regulation to prevent, ar.d which may afford such bribes as will disarm the most rigid justice and lull the most attentive vigilance. So that in reality it may greatly be doubted, whether the precautions, so systema¬ tically pursued, and improved from time to time with so much tare ami foresight, are at bottom of most advantage or prejudice to that nation. It was probably some consideration of this kind, that first gave rise to the custom of register ships : it was found that this confined commerce supplied its extensive object very imperfectly ; and that those wiio were at watch to pour in contraband goods would take advantage of this want of a re¬ gular supply from Spain. When therefore a company of mer¬ chants of Cadiz or Seville judge that goods must be wanting at any certain port in the West-Indies, the course is, to petition the council of the Indies for licence to send a ship of three hun¬ dred tons, or under, to that port. They pay for this licence forty or fifty thousand dollars, besides presents to the officers, in proportion to the connivance necessary to their design; for, though the licence runs to three hundred tons at the utmost, the vessel fitted out is seldom really less than six hundred. This ship and cargo is registered at the pretended burthen. It is re¬ quired too, that a certificate be brought from the king’s officer at the port to which the register ship is bound, that she does not exceed the size at which she is registered; all this passes of course; these are what they call register ships, and by these the EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN 179 the trade of Spanish America lias been carried on principally for some years past; some think, as much to the prejudice of their trade, as contrary to all their former maxims in carrying it on. But to return to the flota. When all the goods are landed and disposed of at La Vera Cruz, the fleet takes in the plate, precious stones, cochineal, indigo, cacao, tobacco, sugar, and hides, which are their re- (urns for Old Spain. Sometimes in May, but more frequently in August, they are ready to depart. From I,a Vera Cruz they sail to the Havaima in the isle of Cuba, which is the place of rendezvous where they meet the galleons ; another fleet, which carries on all the trade of Terra Firma by Carthagena, and of Peru by Panama and Porto-bello, in the same manner that the flota serves for that of New Spain. When they arrive at this port, and join the galleons and the register ships that collect at the same port from all quarters, some of the cleanest and best sailing of their vessels are dispatched to Spain, with advice of the contents of these several fleets, as well as with treasure and goods of their own, that the court may judge what indulto or duty is proper to be laid on them, and a hat convoy is necessary for their safety. These fleets make generally some stay at the Havanna before all the ships that compose them are collected and ready to sail. As soon as this happens, they quit the Havanna, and beat through the gulph of Florida, and, passing between the Bahama islands, hold their course to the north-east, until they come to the height of St. Augustin, and then steer away to Old Spain. When the flota lias left La Vera Cruz, it lias no longer the appearance of a place of con¬ sequence ; it is a town in a very unhealthy situation, inhabited scarcely by any but Indians, Meztezes, or Negroes. All the merchants of any consequence reside at some distance, at a place called Los Angelos. This town may contain about three thou¬ sand inhabitants. CHAP. ISO AX ACCOUXT THE CHAP. VI. The inhabitants of New Spain are composed of people of three different races; Whites. Indians, and Negroes, or the several mixtures of those. The Whites are either born in Old Spain, or they are Creoles ; those who are native Spaniards are mostly in offices, or trade, and have the same character and manners with the Spaniards of Europe ; the same gravity of behaviour, tire same natural sagacity and good sense, the same indolence, and vet a greater share of pride and stateliness ; for here they look upon the being natives of Old Spain as a very honourable distinction, and are in return looked upon by the Creoles with no small share of hatred and envy. The latter have little of that firmness and patience which makes one of t he finest parts of the character of the native Spaniard. They have little cou¬ rage, and are universally weak and effeminate. Living as they do in a constant enervating heat, surfeited with wealth, and giving up their whole time to loitering and inactive pleasures, they have nothing bold or manly to fit them for making a figure in active life ; and few or none have any taste for the satisfac¬ tion of a learned retirement. Luxurious without variety or elegance, and expensive with great parade and little conve- niency. their general character is no more than a grave and spe¬ cious insignificance. They EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 181 They are temperate at their tables and in their cups, but, from idleness and constitution, their whole business is amour and intrigue; these they carry on in the old Spanish taste, by doing and saying extravagant things, by bad musick, worse poetry, and excessive expcnces. Their ladies are little celebrat¬ ed for their chastity or domestick virtues; but they are still a good deal restrained by the old-fashioned etiquette, and they exert a genius, which is not contemptible, in combating the restraints which that lays them under. The clergy are extremely numerous, and their wealth and in¬ fluence cannot be doubted amongst so rich and superstitious a people. It is said, that they actually possess a fourth of the revenues of that whole kingdom; which after all abatements, certainly amounts to several millions. And as to their numbers, it is not extravagant to say, that priests, monks, and nuns of all orders, are upwards of one fifth of all the white people, both here and in the other parts of Spanish America. But, tile clergy here being too ignorant in general to be able instructors by their preaching, and too loose and debauched in their own manners to instruct by their example, the people are little the better for their numbers, wealth, or influence. Many of them are no other than adventurers from Old Spain, who, without regard to their character or their vows, study nothing but how to raise a sudden fortune, by abusing the ignorance and extreme credulity of the people. A great deal of attention is paid to certain mechanical methods of devotion. Moral duties are little talked of. An extreme veneration for saints, lucrative to the orders they have founded or are supposed to patronize, is strongly inculcated, and makes the general subject of their ser¬ mons designed rather to raise a stupid admiration of their mi¬ racles, than an imitation of the sanctity of their lives. How¬ ever, having said this, it must be considered as all general obser- AN ACCOUNT observations, with the reasonable allowances ; for many of the dignified clergy, and others among them, understand, and prac¬ tise, the duties of their station; and some whole orders, as that of the jesuits, are here, as they are elsewhere, distinguishable for their learning and the decency of their behaviour. And certainly, with all their faults, in one respect their zeal is highly commendable; that they are the cause of several charitable foundations; and that they bring the Indians and blacks into some knowledge of religion, and in some measure mitigate their slavery. This too has a good political effect; for those slaves are more faithful than ours, and, though indulged with greater liberty, are far less dangerous. I do not remember that any insurrection has been ever attempted by them ; and the Indians are reduced to more of a civilized life, than they are in the co¬ lonies of any other European nation. This race of people are now, whatever they were formerly, humble, dejected, timorous, and docile; they are generally treated with great indignity. The state of all people subjected to another people is infinitely worse than what they suffer from the pressure of the worst form, or the worst administration, of any government of their own. The blacks here, as they are imported from Africa, have the same character as the blacks of our colonies ; stubborn, hardy, of an ordinary understanding, and fitted for the gross slavery they endure. Such are the characters of the people, not only of New Spain, but of all Spanish America. When any thing materially dif¬ ferent occurs, I shall not fail to mention it. The civil government is administered by tribunals, which here are calkd audiences, consisting of a certain number of judges, divided into different chambers, more resembling the par¬ liaments in France than our courts. At the head of the chief JSUnOFEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 183 of these chambers the viceroy himself presides when he sees fit. His employment is one of the greatest trust and power the king of Spain has in his gift; and is perhaps the richest government entrusted to any subject in the world. All employments here are held only by native Spaniards, and by them but for a cer¬ tain limited time ; most not above three years. Jealousy, in this respect, as in all others relative to the Indies, is the spirit that influences all their regulations; and it has this very bad effect; that every officer, from the highest to the lowest", has the avidity which a new and lucrative post inspires ; ravenous because his time is short, he oppresses the people and defrauds the crown ; another succeeds him with the same dispositions; and no man is careful to establish any thing useful in his office, knowing that his successor will be sure to trample upon every regulation which is not subservient to his own interests ; so that this enslaved people has not the power of putting in use the fox’s policy, of letting the first swarm of bloodsuckers stay on, but is obliged to submit to be drained by a constant succession of hungry and impatient harpies. There are some troops kept in New Spain, and a good re¬ venue appropriated for their maintenance, and for the support of the fortifications there ; but the soldiers are few ; ill cloatlied, ill paid, and worse disciplined; the military here keep pace with the civil and ecclesiastical administration, and every thing is a jot>. CIIAP. 184 C II A P. VII. Xkw Mexico lies to the north and north-east or’ New Spain. Its bounds to the north are not ascertained. Taking in Cali¬ fornia, it has the great South-Sea to the west, and to the east it is bounded bv the French pretensions on the Missisippi. This country' lies for the most part within the temperate zone, and has a most agreeable climate, and a soil in many places productive of exSry thing for profit or delight. It has rich mines of silver, and some of gold, which are worked more and more every day ; and it produces precious stones of several kinds: but it has no direct intercourse with any part of Eu¬ rope. The country is but little known at all to Europeans; and the-Spanish-settlements there are comparatively weak; however, they are every day increasing in proportion as they discover minds : which are here not inferiour to any that have been discovered in the other parts of America. The inhabi- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 183 .inconsiderable part, of this country. It is a place fiuely situated for trade," and lias a pearl fishery of great value. It was dis¬ covered by the great conqueror of Mexico, Hernando Cortes. Our famous admiral and navigator Sir Francis Drake landed there, and took possession of it in 1578 ; and he not only took possession, but obtained the best right in the world to the pos¬ session ; the principal king having formally invested him with his principality. However, I do not find that we have thought of asserting that right since his time : but it may probably em¬ ploy, in some future age, the pens of those lawyers who dispute with words what can only be decided by the sword, and will afford large matter upon the right of discovery, occupancy, and settlement. CHAP. C Ii A P. Till. The conquest of Pr-m, achieved in so extramdinnry.a manner, brought into the power of Spain a country not less wealthy and nearly as extensive as Mexico ; but far beyond it for the con- venienc}* of habitation and the agreeableness- of the climate. Like Mexico it is within the torrid zone ; yet, having on one side the South Sea. and oil the other the great ridge of the Andes through its whole length, the joint effects of the ocean and the mountains temper the equinoctial heat in a manner equally agreeable and surprising. TV itli a sky for the most part cloudy, which shields them from the rays of the vertical sun, it never rains in this country. But every night a soft be¬ nign deu r broods upon the earth, and refreshes the grass and plants so as to produce in some parts the greatest fertility ; wliat the dew wants in perfecting this, is wrought by the vast number of streams, to which the frequent rains and the daily melting of the snow on those astonishing mountains give rise ; for those mountains, though within the tropicks, have their tops continually covered with snow, which is an appearance unparal¬ leled in the same climate. Along the sea, coast, Peru is gene¬ rally a dry barren sand, except by the bank of the rivers and streams we have mentioned, where it is extremely fertile, as arc all the valleys in the hilly country. The cause of the want of rain in all the flat country of Peru is difficult to be assigned; though the agents in it are not im¬ probably the constant south-west wind, that prevails there for the "EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 18?. -die greatest part of the year, and the immense height of the mountains, cold with a constant snow. The plain country between, refreshed as it is on the one hand by the cool winds that blow without any variation from the frigid regions of the south, and heated as uniformly by the direct rays of the equi¬ noctial sun, preserves such an equal temper, that the vapour once elevated can hardly ever descend in rain': but in the mountainous part of the country, by the alternate contraction and dilatation of the air from the daily heats and the succeeding colds,' which the snows communicate in the absence of the sun, as well as from the unequal temper of the air which prevails in all hilly places, the rain.falls very plentifully ; the climate in the mountainous countries is extremely changeable, and the changes sudden. All along the coast of Peru, a current" sets strongly to the north ; further out to sea, it passes with equal rapidity to the south. This current probably moves eddywise; for, having run as far as its moving cause impels' it, it naturally passes back again where it has least resistance. The ignorance of this double current made the navigation in the South Seas originally very uncertain and fatiguing ; but now the course is, for those who pass from Chili to Peru, to keep in to the shore in their passage to Callao, and on their return to stand out a great many leagues to sea, and take the southern current homewards. The same method, but reversed, is observed in the voyages between Panama, and all the other northern countries, aud the ports, of Peru. The commodities of Peru, for export, may be reduced to these articles. First, silver and gold ; secondly, wine, oil, and brandy; thirdly, Vigonia wool; fourthly, jesuits’ bark ; fifthlv. Guinea or Jamaica pepper. Of the first of these articles' wc have already treated in our description of Mexico. The mines of gold in Peru arc almost all in the northern part, not ven 188 AN ACCOUNT OF THE remote from Lima; those of silver almost wholly in the south¬ ern. The voyagers who treat of this country are generally pretty diffuse in their accounts of the principal places, where mines are found ; but it does not therefore give us encourage¬ ment to insist much on these particulars, because they contain very iittle instruction in themselves ; and if thev were tilings in their own nature instructive, it would be little to the pur¬ pose to dwell upon what is continually changing. New mines are daily opened, and the old exhausted or deserted. The towns shift with the mines. A rich mine is always the founder of a town in proportion to its produce ; tiie town which it subsists, when the mine is exhausted, disappears. Indeed the great mines of Potosi in the province of Los Charcas, are the inheritance of ages ; and, after having en¬ riched the world for centuries, still continue the inexhaustible sources of new treasure. They are no., however, quite so valuable now as formerly; not so much from any failure of the vein, as from the immense depth to which they have pursued it, which, by the greater labour necessary, lessens, the profit on what it yields, in proportion as they descend; besides, new mines are daily opened, which are worked at a less expence: so that the accounts we had of the great number which inhabited the city of Potosi, when Mr. Frezier was in tuat country, must have since suffered some abatement. It had then upwards of seventy thousand souls, Spaniards and Indians; of which the latter were six to one. -The Spaniards oblige this unfortunate people to send an¬ nually a certain number from the villages of the adjacent country, who are compelled to work for a limited time ; after¬ wards they may return. But, having lost the sweetness of their former connections, they that survive this slavery com¬ monly settle in the city of Potosi. It is incredible how these mines, (the most terrible scourge with which God could afflict EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. '189 afflict tile inhabitants) have contributed to depopulate this country. Worse they are than sword or pestilence ; equally fatal to their lives ; and where those escape, they are em¬ bittered by the circumstance of an ignominious slaverv, with¬ out any prospect of end or mitigation. The effects of this servitude would be yet more fatal, if it were not for the me of an herb which the inhabitants call coca, to which they ascribe the most extraordinary virtues, and which they constantly use. Its qualities seem to he of the opiate kind, and to have some resemblance to those of tobacco; for it produces a kind of stupid composure. It is an antidote against poisons and poisonous effluvia, and makes those who Use it subsist a long time without, food. Though, necessary to those only who work in the mines, it is used for pleasure- by all the Indians, who chew it constantly, though it makes those who use it stink in a most offensive manner. This herb is gathered by the Indians with many superstitious cere¬ monies, to which they attribute its virtues; for which reason it is, ill many parts of Pern, with equal superstition, strictly forbidden; the Spaniards, as well as the Indians, giving the credit of itis effects to magick, and allowing to these more than they deserve; for they think the Indians’ superiority in strength owing principally to them. However, notwithstand¬ ing the severity of the inquisition, which is established in all the Spanish dominions with great terrour, necessity makes them wink at the practice, where the mines are worked. They make use of another preservative, an infusion of the herb of Paraguay; something of the nature of tea.; The consumption of this in Peru by all ranks of people is prodigi- wis. Above 18,000 hundred weight is annually brought into Chili and Peru, and is worth, when the duty is paid,.not less than 80,000/. sterling. The finest of this species ef tea conies ■from the country of the jesuits. CHAP. 190 LN ACCOUNT THE CHAP. IX. PERU.-JESUITS BARK.-GUINEA PEPPER.-THE DUNG OF IQUIQUA.— QUICKSILVER MINES. The southern part of Peru, which lies without the tropick of Capricorn, produces wine in great plenty, but not in a perfec¬ tion proportionable. The Spaniards dislike and leave it to the Indians and negroes, cliusing rather, what may seem odd, to regale in the brandy of the same wine ; which is likewise made and exported in large quantities, not only to all parts of Peru, but to Panama, and the ports of New Spain. The greatest quantity is made near a place otherwise of no consequence, called Moquaga; here, it is said, they make annually of wine and brandy one hundred thousand jars, which Me. Frezier reckons at three millions two hundred thousand Paris pints. Avast quantity in a small territory. The value of this produce as four hundred thousand pieces of eight. Other places trade in wine, such as Pisco, but of a goodness not superiour. ■Oil is likewise had in Peru; but both the wine and oil are mostly the produce of those places that lie beyond the southern tropick. Wool makes one of the most valuable commodities of the ^growth of this country. And it is not more remarkable for its .fine long staple, than for the singularity of the animal which carries it.. It is sheared from a sort of sheep, w hich they call lamas and vicunnas,; the lamas have small heads, resembling in -some measure both an. horse and sheep ; the upper lip is cleft like that of the hare, through which, when they are enraged, they EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN'AMEIUCA. 191 they spit, even to ten paces distance, a sort of envenomed juice, which, when it falls on the skin,, eauses a red spot and great itching. The neck is long like that of a camel ; the body re¬ sembles that of a sheep, but the legs are much longer in pro¬ portion. This animal lias a disagreeable smell, but its flesh is good ■; and it is extremely useful, not only for the wool, which is very long.and fine, but as it is a beast of burthen, strong, patient, and kept at a very easy expence. It seldom carries above one hundred and fifty pound weight, but then it carries that weight a vast way without tiring, eats very little, and never drinks. As soon as night comes, the lama lies down; and no blows can get him to move one foot after the time he destines for his rest and food. The vicunna is an animal resembling the kina, pretty much as the dromedary does the camel. He is smaller and swifter, • with a far finer wool, but otherwise exactly, like the lama in all respects. The wool of- these creatures is almost as fine as silk. Probably the famous sheep of Cachemir, of whose wool they make the little white cloths so much valued in India, is of this species. I,cannot ascertain what quantity of this wool is,ex¬ ported, manufactured or raw, out of Peru, either - to New or Old Spain; but I have reason to believe it is not at all incon¬ siderable. The fourth great article of their commerce is jesuits bark, so well known in medicine as a specifick in intermitting disorders, and the many , other great purposes, which experience daily finds it to answer. The tree which produces this valuable bark grpws principally; in the mountainous parts of Peru, and that most and best in the province of Quito.- Condamine informs • us, that it grows on the hither side of the Andes, no way in- feriour to the Peruvian in quantity and goodness; the best is produced on the high and rocky grounds ; and it is-not singular in this, for it seems in a ■ good measure to be the case of all plants. 192 plants, whose juices are much more strong and effective when elaborated in such situations. The tree which hears it is about the size of a cherrv-tree ; its leaves are round and indented ; it bears along reddish flower, from whence arises a sort of husk, which envelopes a flat and white kernel, not unlike an almond. This bark was first introduced in France by the cardinal Lago, a jesuit, about the year 1(550. Hence it had its name of Jesuit’s bark. It is said to have been discovered by the accident of an T'diau's drinking in a fever of the water of a lake into which some of these trees had fallen, and by which he was cured. This medicine, as usual, was held in defiance for a good while by the faculty ; but, after an obstinate defence, they have thought proper at last to surrender. Notwithstanding all the mischiefs at first foreseen in its use, every body knows that it is at this day innocently and efficaciously prescribed in a great variety of cases ; far which reason it makes a considerable and valuable part of the cargo of the galleons. Guinea pepper, Agi, or, as it is called by us, Cayenne pep¬ per, is a very great article in the trade of Peru, as it is used all over Spanish America in almost every thing they eat. This is produced in the greatest quantity in the vale of Arica, a district in the southern parts of Peru, from whence they export it to the annual value of six hundred thousand crowns. The district which produces this pepper in such abundance is but small, and naturally barren; its fertility in pepper, as well as in grain and fruits, is owing to the advantage of a species of a very extra¬ ordinary manure, brought from an island called Iquiqua. This is a sort of yellowish earth, of a fetid smell. It is generally thought to be dung of birds, because of the similitude of the scent; feathers having been found very deep in it, and vast numbers of sea fowls appearing upon that and all the adjacent coasts. But, on tire other band, whether v. e look upon this substance as the dung of these sea fowls or a particular species LAN SETTLEMENT rs IX AMERICA. iy$ of earth, it is almost equally difficult to-conceive how the small ishnd of Iqniqua, not above two miles in circumference, could supply such immense quantities ; and yet, after supplying up¬ wards of twelve ship loads annually for a century together for the distant parts, and a vastly larger quantity for the use of the neighbourhood, it cannot be observed that it is in the least diminished, or that the height of the island is at all lessened. But tliese are matters, which, to handle properly, require a more exact knowledge of all the circumstances relating to them, than can be gathered from travellers. Quicksilver is a remarkable article in their trade, because the purification of their gold and silver depends upon it. I do not find that any other part of the Spanish America produces it; so that Mexico and Terra Firma are supplied from Qld Spam with all they want of that mineral, which is' brought them an the Icing's account only ; except that some arrives from Peru iu a contraband manner. In Peru likewise it js monopolised by the crown. The principal mine of this extraordinary sub¬ stance is at a place called Guancaveiica, where it is found in a whitish mass, resembling bride ill-burned; this they pouud, and put into a furnace vaulted at the top ; it is laid upon an iron grate covered with earth. Through this the fire passes; and, volatilizing the mineral, it is raised in a smoke, which, finding no passage but through a little hole contrived for that purpose, rushes through into a succession of little round ves¬ sels, united to each other by the necks; here the smoak circu¬ lates, and it condenses by means of a little water at the bottom of each vessel, into which the quicksilver falls in a pure heavy liquid. The men who work in the mines of this mineral are yet more subject to diseases than those who toil in the others; and they make use of the same preservatives of Paraguay, tea, and CHAP. 194 IN ACCOUNT THE CHAP. X. THE CHARACTER OP THE PERUVIANS.—THEIR DIVISIONS.—THE INDIAN FESTIVAL—HONOURS PAID TO A DESCENDANT OF THE YNCA. The manners of tlie Spaniards and Creoiians of Peru resemble, ■with little difference, those of the Spaniards and Creoiians of Mexico, other than that the natives of Peru seem to be of a more liberal turn, and of greater ingenuity ; but they are for the greater part equally destitute of all cultivation. The slavery of the Indians is here yet more severe. The ftiagistrate and the priest devour their whole substance; and every Spaniard, as some authors report, insults them with impunity. The tra¬ veller takes as much of their provision as he pleases, and de¬ cides for himself what he shall pay, or whether he shall pay any thing at all. Complaints are answered with new indignities, and with blows, which it is a crime to return. This cruel ir¬ regular bondage contributes to dispeople this country even more than the methodical tyranny of the government. To avoid the plunder Ire is hourly subject to, the master of the family often raises no more grain than what just suffices for the sustenance of his family ; this he buries, and keeps the secret of his hoard to himself, only drawing out daily just so much as serves for the use of the day. If he chances to die suddenly, the family starves ; if a bad season comes, the calculated pro¬ duce fells short, and they are all reduced to beggary. Yet worse, they are even the slaves of slaves; for the Spaniards encourage their Negroes to treat them with the greatest inso¬ lence ; and they politically keep up a rancour, now grown in¬ veterate, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. IQi veto rate, between these two races of people. They are forbid¬ den, under the severest penalties, to marry, or to have an un¬ lawful intercourse together. Division is the great instrument in which the Spaniards trust for the preservation of their colo¬ nics. The native Spaniard has alone all the lucrative offices, civil, ecclesiastical, and military. He despises the Creolian. The Creolian hates and envies him. Both contemn and mal¬ treat the Indians, who, on their side, are not insensible of the indignities they suffer. The Blacks are encouraged to trample on the Indians, and to consider their interests as altogether opposite; whilst the Indians in their nominal freedom look with an envious disdain upon the slavery of the Negroes, which makes them their masters. What is extraordinary, the Spaniards, not content with re¬ ducing this unhappy nation under so cruel a yoke, as if they thought it nothing unless they were thoroughly sensible of its weight, suffer the Indians to celebrate an annual festival, in which plays are represented, commemorating the overthrow of their own stale. These are acted with all the horrid and aggra¬ vating circumstances which attended this event; and the people are at this time so enraged, that the Spaniards find it danger¬ ous to go abroad. In the city of Lima, there is annually cele¬ brated a festival of this kind, with a grand procession, wherein they carry in a sort of triumph the remaining descendant of the yncas of Peru, ami liis wife ; who at that time receive all ima¬ ginable honours in the most melancholy pomp, from a race bowed down with the sense of the common bondage of prince and people. This throws the most affecting gloom over the festival that renews the image of their former freedom. To this remaining ynca the viceroy of Peru does homage when he enters upon his government. The ynca sits upon a loft}- stage j and the viceroy makes his obeisance upon a horse, who is taught c c 2 to ACCOUNT OP THE 1 OC- to knee! upon the occasion. This manner cf proceeding may- ire thought of the most refined strain of insolent tyranny, and to he as unpolitick as it is insulting ; but it is not impossible that those vents, which they suffer the indignation of the people to take, may carry off a spirit, that might otherwise break out in a much more fatal manner, Whether by the division they keep up, or by these vents, or by the management of the clergy, or by whatever means, the Spaniards preserve their conquests with vers- little force; the Indians are even armed, and make a con¬ siderable part of their militia; it is true, they are interdicted the use of weapons without licence; but licence is procured without much difficulty. They have likewise a large number of free blacks, and they too are formed into companies in their militia. Certain it is, that* both in the Spanish and Portuguese colonies, they find slavery compatible enough with great li¬ cence in Some respects, and both with the security of the masters. Things deserving our consideration; as we do not seem to excel in the conciliating arts of government in our co¬ lonies, nor to think that atiy thing is to be effected by other instruments then those of terrour and rude force. CHAP. SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA, 197 CHAP. XI. THE CITIES OF PERU, LIMA, CUSCO, AND QUITO ; A DESCRIPTION OF THEM.— CALLAO, ITS TRADE AND DESTRUCTION.—THE VICEROY OF PERU,—HIS jurisdiction, and revenues. TrtEftE arc three cities in Pern famous for their opulence and trade; .Lima, Cusco, and Quito. Lima lies in the northern part of Peru, in the latitude of 12 degrees south, and 229 degrees longitude from Teneriffe. It stands about tiro leagues from the sea, upon a river called Rimac, 'small and im- havigable. This city is the capital of Peru, and of all South America ; it extends in length about two miles, and in breadth about one and a quarter; its distant appearance, from the mul¬ titude of spires and domes, is extremely majestkk; and when you enter it you see the streets laid out with the greatest regu¬ larity, cutting each other at equal distances and right angles i the houses, on account of the equality of the climate, are slightly roofed, as tiiey are built low and of light materials, to avoid the consequences of earthquakes, frequent and dreadful in this country. But they are elegantly plastered and painted on the outside, so as to have all the appearance-of free-stone. To add to the beauty and convenience of this city, most houses have a garden, watered by cuts drawn 'from the river; each man commands a little running stream for his own use; in a hot and dry country as this is, no small matter of convenience and delight. Here is a ,grand walk by the river-side two hun¬ dred fathom long, consisting of five rows of fine orange trees. To 193 AS ACCOUNT OF THE To this the company resorts at five in the evening drawn in their coaches and calashes.* Such is the opulence of this city, that, exclusive, of coaches, there are kept in it upwards of five thousand of these carriages. Lima has fifty-four churches, taking in the cathedral, the pa¬ rochial, and conventual; thirteen monasteries of men (besides six colleges of jesuits), one of which contains seven hundred, and another five hundred friars and servants; twelve nunne¬ ries, the principal of which lias not less than three hundred nuns ; and twelve hospitals, besides foundations for the portion¬ ing of poor girls. The number of whites is not less than ten thousand; and the whole of the inhabitants of all casts and colours are said not to fall short of sixty thousand souls. They tell a very remarkable fact, that may help us to some idea of the vast wealth of tiiis city. When their viceroy the duke de la Palata made his publick entry in 1682, they caused two of the principal streets to be paved with ingots of silver, that had paid the fifth to the king, of between twelve and fif¬ teen inches long, four or five in breadth, and two or three in thickness ; the whole of which, could not amount to less than . sixteen or seventeen millions sterling. But nothing can give a true idea of the vast wealth of Lima, except, the churches, which the most judicious travellers speak of with astonishment; and seem incapable of describing, on account oi that amazing, profusion of gold, silver, and precious stones with which every thing (even the walls) is in a manner totally covered. The tide of this vast wealth is fed from sources as copious; this city - being the great magazine for almost all the plate of Peru, which * The calash resembles that sort of coach which is called a vis-a-vis, but is drawn only by a single horse or mule, and goes on a single pair of wheels ; yet sometimes by the gilding and other decorations the price of a calash amounts to a thousand EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. is coined here; for the large manufactures and natural pro¬ ducts of that kingdom; for those of Chili; and for all the luxuries and conveniences brought from Europe and the East Indies. The trade of the French to Peru, during the general war in. Europe which was caused by the disputes about the Spanish succession, made this city decay not a little, by diffusing the commerce, of which before it was the centre, amongst the other towns which lie along the coast; but, as that privilege has been since taken away, Lima began to revive again mid continued in great splendour until the year 1747, when a mos tremendous earthquake, which entirely devoured Callao the port belonging to it, laid three-fourths of this city level with the ground. The destruction of Callao was the most perfect and terrible that can be conceived ; no more than one of all the inhabitants escaping, and he by a providence the most singular and extraor¬ dinary imaginable. This man was on the fort that overlooked the harbour, going to strike the flag, when he perceived the sea to retire to a considerable distance; and then swelling mountain high, it returned with great violence. The inhabitants ran from their houses in the utmost terrour and confusion ; he heard aery of Miserere rise from all parts of the city, and immediately all was silent; the sea had overwhelmed this city, and buried it for ever in its bosom ; but the same wave which destroyed thecity, drove a little boat by the place where the man stood, into which he threw himself and was saved. What is remarkable toO in this affair, Mr. Frezier, who was in Peru in the year 1714, and from whom I have part of my materials, on considering the si¬ tuation of this town and the nature of the country, ventured to prophesy for it the destruction, which we have seen accomplish¬ ed in our days. Whilst this town subsisted, it contained about three thousand inhabitants of all kinds, had five convents, and possessed X ACCOUNT 300 posseted the finest port in all Peru. II v e. ,\ v - houses furnished with all the goods of Lurope, whi-.h being landed by the galleons at Porto-bello were brought over land to Panama, and thence transported hither hv the annadilia, or fleet, with a convoy of three men of war reserved for this pur¬ pose. To this port arrived the annual ship from Acapulco, loaden with all the products of the least; Irom Cmii it received vast quantities of corn, dried beef and pork, leather, tallow, plank, and several sorts of woollen goods, particularly carpet; like those of Turkey. From the southern ports of Peru were brought sugars, wine, aud brandy, naval stores, cacao, Vigonia wool, and tobacco. From Mexico it had pitch and tar, woods for dyeing, and that balsam, which we improperly call of Peru, since it comes from Gualimala. 'As the port of Callao is so excellent, and as it is that by which the trade of Lima wholly, and that of all Peru in a great measure, must be carried on, we cannot doubt but that a new city is already built there ; and that Lima is restored to its former lustre: especially as this latter is the centre of so vast a trade, and the seat of so great a government. For to the viceroy of Peru, both Chili and Terra Finnaare subject. His settled salary is forty thou¬ sand pieces of eight yearly ; his perquisites are great; as often as he goes to Callao, he is entitled to three thousand pieces of eight for that little airing; he lias ten thousand for every pro¬ gress into more distant parts; he has the sole disposal of above a hundred great magistracies ; and, in short, the granting of all triennial employments both civil and military throughout the extent of his ample jurisdiction. It cannot therefore be doubted that his perquisites, even his lawful ones (for there are many others), at least double the value of his salary. And certainly, whatever the king of Spain may lose by the bad economy in his aSairs. no prince in the world has such means of rewarding the service? EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 201 services of his subjects, without any immediate burden upon his own revenues. Cusco, the capital of the ancient empire, is still a very con¬ siderable city ; it is a good distance from the sea, and situated in the mountainous part of the country ; it has not less than forty thousand inhabitants, three parts Indians, who are very industrious and ingenious. Though little instructed in the art, a taste for painting prevails, and some performances of the Indians of Cusco.and Quito have met with applause in Italy. An incredible quantity of pictures are painted here, and are dis¬ persed all over Peru and Chili. They have here likewise manu¬ factures of bays and cotton, and they work largely in leather in most of the waj's in which it is used. Quito is likewise an inland town situated in the most northern part of Peru ; it is a very considerable place, and equal to any in Peru for the number of inhabitants, which are between fifty and sixty thousand ; and it carries on a very extensive trade with Lima, in manufactures of wool, cotton, and flax, which are wrought in the city and its district, and supply the greater part of the consumption of the poorer sort all over this kingdom. Few mines are worked in this district, though thought to abound in minerals ; they receive plate in return for their own manu¬ factures, and send it to Carthagcna in return for those of Eu¬ rope. It is not easy to calculate the number of inhabitants in Peru, because wc have none of those data which are necessary to ground such a calculation. There are several very large and populous towns dispersed through that country; but in many places it is little better than a desart; partly for want of water, but much more generally through the pride of one part of the people, the miserable subjection of the other, and the sloth of all. The mines undoubtedly contribute laigely to depopulate D d the SOS AN ACCOUNT OF THE the country, by turning tlie inhabitants from agriculture and manufactures, employments that prolong life and provide for it, to tire working of metals extremely pernicious to health, and which makes them depend upon others for their necessary sustenance. The nations which are poor in respi ct of gold, and industrious from that poverty, have not the least reason to envy the wealth of the Peruvians; who, amidst all that ex¬ travagant glare that dazzles the eye, live penurioudy and sor¬ didly ; and are often in extreme want in a country, which in many places is one of the most fertile in the world. In fact, the countries which employ their men in arts and in agriculture, and receive their return in gold and silver, from the countries which abound in those metals, may be considered as the real proprietors of the mines; the immediate possessors, onlv as their stewards to manage, or as their slaves to work them; whilst they are employed themselves at an easy labour, friendly to life, and necessary to their well-being. CHAP. CAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 203 CHAP. XII. THE TEMPERATURE OF TIIE AIR IN CHILI.—TIIE SOIL.—ITS FERTILITr.-—A DESCRIPTION OF TIIE PRINCIPAL TOWNS.—THE TRADE OF CHILI. Immediately to the southward of Peru lies Chili, extending itself in a long narrow slip, along the coast of the South-Sea, in the south temperate zone. The air here is remarkably clear and serene. Scarce any changes happen for three parts of the year. Very little rain falls during that period. But the benign dews every night, and the many rivulets -which the neighbour¬ hood of the Andes supplies them, fertilize the plain country, and make it produce as much corn, wine, oil, and fruits, as the number of the inhabitants, which is very small, or their in¬ dustry, which is but moderate, will suffer them to cultivate. If it were under a more favourable government, and better peo¬ pled, there is hardly any part of the world which could enter into competition with this. Tor at the .same time that it en¬ joys a very healthful air, and is warmed by an heat no way oppressive, it bears many of the tropical fruits that would thrive no where else out of the torrid zone. It is luxuriant on the surface with every thing for profit and delight; and beneath it is rich to profusion with veins of gold, silver, copper, lead, quicksilver, and iron. Those of gold are the most wrought; and indeed there is scarce a rivulet in the country in which gold is not found in smaller or greater plenty ; but want of people, which is here more felt than in the other Spanish settlements, hinders them from working all their mines; ami, what is worse, from o d 2 improving THE 201 improving the surface of their country to any thing like the de¬ gree of perfection to which it might be brought. For in this whole extent of country, upwards of twelve hundred miles in h-ngth, and from three hundred to five hundred miles in breadth, it is not reckoned thev have much above twenty thousand whiter, fit to bear amis, and about three times that number of Indians, Blacks, and Muiattocs. Yet, with so few hands, and those not the most industrious, they export annually from the ports of Chili, to Callao, and other parts of Peru, corn enough to support sixty thousand men, for no country in the world is more prolifick in grain of every species ; they export besides great quantities of wine, hemp (which is raised in no other part on the South-Seas), hides, tallow, and salted provisions ; to say nothing of the gold, and other minerals, which form their prin¬ cipal wealth. The people are much employed in pasturage; and cattle are here in such plenty, that an ox fatted may be had for four dollars ; a great proof of the fertility of a country where there is no scarcity of money. But as they have a considerable trade in dried and salted beef, hides, and tallow, they constantly drive great numbers of horned cattle from the other side of the Andes, from the province of Tueuman in Paraguay. Chili has but a very few beasts of prey, and those timorous ; and although toads, snakes, and scorpions, are here as numerous as in other hot. countries, they are found entirely harmless. There are in Chili four towns of some note, either on the sea, or near it; St. Jago which is the capital, and contains about four thousand families, La Conception, Coquimbo or La Serena, and Baidivia. The three first of these towns arc laid out in a manner exactly resembling each other, the streets, like those of Lima, cutting one another so as to form squares like those of a draft board. They have all gardens between the houses, and running waters drawn from the neighbouring rivers to fertilize them : EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 205 them ; but the houses arc so low and meanly built (mud walls, and thatch in some) that they rather resemble agreeable country villages than cities of business and grandeur. However, some of the houses are well furnished, and it it is said, that in St. Jago there are many, which have the meanest utensils of the kitchen of gold and silver. As for Baldivia, it is not more remarkable for being the strongest fortress in the South-Seas, than for the manner in which it is peopled; for hither the criminals from Peru and the other parts of Chili are transported, either for a time or for life, and obliged to labour upon the fortifications ami other publick works. What is singular; these criminals are at once the prisoners and the jailors; for the garrison of the place, the whole corps, soldiers' and officers, is formed of no other. The town contains about two thousand souls, all of them banished people or the descendants of such. The maritime trade of Chili is entirely confined to what they carry on with Pern, one or two ports of New Spain, and Pa¬ nama. Their ships rarely penetrate the straits of Magellan, or pass Cape Horn. But they have a considerable inland com¬ merce with Tucuman, Buenos-Ayres, and other parts of Para¬ guay, from which they get the herb of Paraguay, bees-wax, and cattle. CHAP. 205 AS ACCOUNT THE .CHAP. XIII. THE SPANIARDS IS THIS PROVINCE BUT TEW.—THE AMERICANS, THEIR CHARACTER.-SOME FREE. As in Chili they are weak in men, have a large body of inde¬ pendent Indians, ill-affected to them on their borders ; as the Dutch once attempted an establishment here, and as other peo¬ ple have nourished projects of the same nature ; they arc ex¬ tremely cautious aud watchful on the coast, and the country is immediately in arms upon every alarm, which is given when any ship appears off the coast that is not Spanish built; yet, not¬ withstanding all their caution, their security is rather owing to the system of Europe, of which it is a part to kee p the Spanish possessions in the hand of the present proprietors, and to the difficult and dangerous passage of the straits of Magellan or Cape Horn, for any European armament of force, than either to their own strength or vigilance. The Indian inhabitants of Chili area brave and warlike peo¬ ple, who defended their liberties vigorously, made several suc¬ cessful insurrections, killed Peter Baldivia the conqueror of the country, and maintained a war against the whole Spanish power in that part of the world for several years; which was only ter¬ minated, oil the part of several of the nations near the moun¬ tains, by an honourable peace, which is preserved to this day. None can he more jealously watchful than this people of their freedom. They traffick indeed with the Spaniards, but with so much caution, and under limitations so strict, that they can • take %VKOP K AX SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA, 207 take very little ad van t age of this communication. As for those who are obliged to submit, it is to a yoke nothing near so heavy as that which oppresses the people who inhabit the other Spanish- provinces ; partly from the better terms which were procured ; and partly from the fear of a nation,, whom they have expe¬ rienced to be brave, and know to be surrounded with mail}', •who are of the same blood, and have defended their freedom with better success. A good example, even in the unfortunate, how much a brave defence of liberty may contribute to procure, if nothing else, yet a more tolerable servitude. The Indians of this country have more resemblance to those of North-America, though more humane and civilized in their manners, than to the Peruvians and Mexicans. Here they have less supersti¬ tion naturally ; and, far from having that excessive veneration which those nations had for their kings, they have no kings at all, and very little form of government; each family being so¬ vereign within itself, and independent. The business which concerns them all, is transacted In the assemblies of all; and the plurality of voices decides. They arc much given to liquour; and they practise polygamy, which in America is not common. However, the Spanish missionaries have now made a consider¬ able progress amongst these free nations; they have a college for the education of the Indian youth ; and their influence is a great means of preserving peace between the Spanish settle¬ ments and the free Indians on their borders, which, without their assistance, would be difficult. For, though they listen to the Spanish priests, they preserve very just terrour of falling under their-government, and no small hatred to the people. CHAP. 203 LX ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. XIV. THE CLIMATE OF PARAGUAY.—ITS RIVERS.—THE PROVINCE OF LA PLATA.— The country of Paraguay, or La Plata, shuts up the eastern side of a considerable part-of Chili and Peru ; whence extend¬ ing over a tract of country, above a thousand milts broad, it bounds Brazil upon the west, and upon the south butts upon the Atlantick ocean ; being fifteen hundred miles at least in length, from the mouth of the great river Plata to its northern boundary the country of the Amazons. This vast territory is far from being wholly subdued or planted by the Spaniards. There are many parts in a great degree unknown to them, or to any other people of Europe. In such a vast country, and lying in climates so different, for it lies on the northern frontier under the equinoctial line, and on the south advances to the thirty seventh degree of latitude, far into the south temperate zone, we must expect to meet great diversity of soil and pro¬ duct. However, in general, this great country is fertile; the pastures particularly are so rich that they are covered with in¬ numerable herds of black cattle, horses, and mules ; in which hardly any body thinks it worth his while to claim a property. Any person takes and breaks them according to his occasions. This country, besides an infinite number of smaller rivers, is watered by three principal ones, which unite near the sea, to form the famous Rio de la Plata. The first is Paraguay, from whence the country is denominated ; this forms the main chan- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 209 nel. It has its origin from a great lake in the center of South America, called the lake of Xarayes, and runs in a course nearly north and south. Parana, which rises amongst the moun¬ tains on the frontiers of Brazil, runs a sloping course to the south-west, until it joins the Paraguay, at a great distance from the ocean, about the twenty-seventh degree of south latitude. Uraguay rises likewise upon the same side, and runs almost an equal course before it meets those united rivers at no great dis¬ tance from the ocean, with which it mixes, along with them. The principal province which concerns us, in this vast tract, is that which is called Kio de la Plata, towards the mouth of the above-mentioned rivers. This province, with all the ad¬ jacent parts, is one continued level, interrupted by not the least' hill for several hundreds of miles every way; extremely fertile in most things ; but, contrary to the general nature of America, destitute of woods ; this want they endeavour to supply by plan¬ tations of every kind of fruit trees ; all which thrive here to admiration. The air is remarkably sweet and serene, and the waters of the great river are equally pure and wholesome ; they annually overflow their banks ; and, on their recess, leave them enriched with a slime, which produces the greatest plenty of whatever is committed to it. The principal town is Buenos-Ayres, on the south side of the river ; it was so called upon account of the excellence of the air. This town is the only place of traffick to the southward of Brazil; yet its trade, considering the rich and extensive country to which it is the avenue, is Very considerable. No re¬ gular fleet comes here, as to the other parts of Spanish Ame¬ rica; two, or at most three, register ships make the whole of their regular intercourse with Europe. Their returns are very valuable, consisting chiefly of gold, silver, sugar, and hides. I cannot learn that they have opened any considerable mines in e e this 210 AX ACCOUNT OP THE this province; but it is probable there are rich ones in the pro¬ vinces which lie to the eastward of the Andes ; besides, it is cer¬ tain that a good deal of gold is returned from Chili, for the mules, cattle, and tea, which are sent thither ; and that silver from the province of Los Charcas in Pern is sent upon the same account, for the most part by land carriage. There is besides a tolerable water carriage; for a large liver, called Pilcomayo, rises not for from the mines of Potosi; which, winding amongst the openings of the Cordillera, discharges itself at last into the Paraguay ; and this river is navigable to the very source, allow¬ ing for the interruption of some foils, which is the case of the river of Plata itself. By this way it is* I judge, that a great quantity of silver comes to Buenos-Ayres. Indeed it is in great plenty in that province; and those who have now and then carried on a contraband trade to this country, have found it far- more advantageous than 'any other whatsoever. The benefit of this contraband is nor? wholly in the hands of the Portuguese, who keep magazines for that purpose in the adjacent parts of Brazil. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 211 C II A P. XV. THE TERRITORY OF TI1E JESUITS IN PARAGUAY.—-THEIR MASKER OF SET¬ TLING AND GOVERNING IT.—THE OBEDIENCE OF THE PEOPLE.—SOME REFLECTIONS ON THE LATE TRANSACTIONS THERE. The trade of Paraguay, and the manners of the people, are so much the same with those of the rest of, the Spanish colonies in South America, that nothing further can be said on those articles; but it would be inexcusable to quit the country with¬ out saying something of tliat extraordinary species of common¬ wealth which the Jesuits have erected in tire interiour parts. About tlie middle of the last century those fathers repre¬ sented to the court of Madrid, that , their want of success in their missions was owing to the scandal which the immorality of the Spaniards never failed to give, and to the hatred which their insolent behaviour caused in the Indians.wherever they caine. They insinuated, that, if it were not for tliat impedi¬ ment, the empire of the gospel might, by their labours, have been extended into the most unknown parts of America; ami that all those countries might be subdued to (lis eathoiick ma¬ jesty’s obedience, without expence and without foroe. This remonstrance was listened to with attention ; the sphere of their labours was marked outan uncuntrouled liberty was given - to the Jesuits within these limits;, and the,, governors of tire: ad¬ jacent provinces had orders, not to interfere, not to suffer any Spaniard to enter into, this pale, witlrout licence from-' the fa¬ thers. They on their part agreed, to pay. a. certain capitation u e 2 tax 212 AX ACCOUNT OF THE tax in proportion to their flock; and to send a certain number to the king’s works whenever they should be demanded, and the missions should become populous enough to supply them. On these terms, the jesuits entered upon the scene of action, and opened their spiritual campaign. They began by gather¬ ing together about fifty wandering families, whom they per¬ suaded to settle; and they united them into a little township. This was the slight foundation upon which they have built a superstructure, which has amazed the world, and added so much power, at the same time that it has brought on so much envy and jealousv,.to their society. For when they had made his beginning, they labo'ured with such indefatigable pains, and with such masterly policy, that, by degrees, they mollified the : minds of the most savage nations; fixed the most rambling; and subdued the most averse to government. They prevailed upon thousands of various dispersed tribes of people to embrace their religion, and to submit to their government; and when they had submitted, the jesuits left nothing undone, that could conduce to their remaining in this subjection, or that could tend to- increase their number to the degree requisite for a well- ordered and potent society; and their labours were attended with success. It is said, that, from such inconsiderate beginnings, several years ago, their subjects amounted to three hundred thousand families. They lived in towns ; they were regularly clad; they laboured in agriculture; they exercised manufactures. Some even aspired to the elegant arts. They were instructed in the military, with the most exact discipline; and could raise sixty thousand men well armed. To effect these purposes, from time to time they brought oyer from Europe several handicraftmen, musicians, and painters. These, I am told were principally from Germany and Italy. We X SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 215 • We are far from being able to trace, with the exactness they deserve, all the steps which were taken in the accomplishment of so extraordinary a conquest over the bodies and minds of so many people, without arms or violence; and differently from the methods of all other conquests ; not by cutting oft'a large part of the inhabitants to secure the rest, but by multiplying their people, whilst they extended their territory. Their own accounts are not very ample, and they are partial to themselves without doubt. What some others have written is with a glar¬ ing prejudice against them. The particulars which seem best agreed upon by both sides are the only ones to be mentioned. • It is agreed then, that in each mission or district (the country is divided into forty-seven districts) a jesuit presides in chief. But magistrates are settled , in every town, answerable to those in the Spanish cities ; these are always Indians, elected by the people, and approved by the presiding jesuit: on solemn oc¬ casions, they appear in rich robes of ceremony, attended with a suitable retinue, and.every thing which may make for the dig¬ nity of their government. The people which compose this commonwealth are composed chiefly of two nations or tribes, one called 1 Garanies, theotber Chiquitos. The latter are active, lively and ingenious, therefore their economy is more left to themselves ; and they have something of property, but there is something too in common. Amongst tlie Garanies there is no property ; every thing is done under the publick eye, and for the publick ; for otherwise this people, naturally lazy and stupid to the last degree, would be in perpetual want. Each man’s la¬ bour is allotted him in proportion to his strength, or to his skill in the profession which he exercises. The product is brought faithfully into the publick magazines; from whence he is again supplied with all things which the managers judge to be expe¬ dient for the sustenance of himself or his family. All neces¬ saries- saries are distributed regularly twice a week; and the maga¬ zines always contain such a stock of provisions and goods of every kind, as to answer not only the ordinary exigencies, but to provide against a time of scarcity, or for those whom acci¬ dents, age, or infirmities, have disqualified for labour. Thus want is never known amongst them; their villages are cleanly and decent, greatly exceeding those of the Spaniards in their neighbourhood. Their churches are particularly grand and richly adorned; and sendee is in them performed with all the solemnity and magnificence of cathedrals; nor are good voices and instruments wanting. They provide early for the marriage of their young people, as well to prevent disorders, as to multiply their subjects. Here, as interest caii be no motive to the union, there are few diffi¬ culties attending it. The young man applies to the governing jesuit, informs him of his desire of marriage, and names the party : she is consulted, and, if there is no objection upon her part, they are immediately married. They are supplied with all necessaries for their establishment from the pubtick stores, and they have at the same time their task allotted them, by which tliey are to make amends for what they have received, and to provide for others in their turn. The Indian magistrate is obliged continually to watch over the minutest actions of his people, and to give the jesuit an exact account of the state of his district, and the merit and de¬ merit of the people which it contains. They are rewarded or punished according to this report. The punishment for smaller crimes is by imprisonment, for greater by whipping, from which it is said not even the principal magistrates are exempted. Capital punishments they do not inflict, as indeed crimes de¬ serving such punishment are rarely committed amongst them. The correction is received by all. not only with patience, but acknow- EUROPEAN' SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 215 acknowledgment.' The rewards are seldom more than bene¬ dictions,' and some slight marks of the jesuit’s favour, which make those men entirely happy. - Nothing can equal the obedience of the people of these mis¬ sions, except their contentment under it. Far from murmur¬ ing, that they have only the necessaries of life, by a labour which might in some degree procure them the conveniencies of it, they think themselves a distinguished and favoured people in wanting them ; aiid they believe their obedience a duty, that not only secures their order and repose in this world, but the very best means of insuring their happiness in the next. This is carefully inculcated ; and indeed, besides their attention to the government, thejesmts arc indefatigable in tlieir instruc¬ tions in the doctrines of religion, the regularity of life, and the contempt of this world. And, by what I can find, the Indians under their jurisdiction are an innocent people, civilized with¬ out being corrupted. The Jesuits, who govern them, are said to be extremely strict in preserving their privilege in keeping all strangers from amongst them. If any such should, by accident or in his journey, arrive in the country of the missions, he is immedia¬ tely carried to the presbytery, where he is treated for a day, or two at most, with great hospitality, but regarded with no less circumspection. The curiosities of the place are shewed him in company with the jesuit, and he can have no private con¬ versation with any of the natives. In a reasonable time, he is civilly dismissed, with a guard to conduct him to tlie next dis¬ trict, without expence, where he is treated in the same manner, until lie is out of the country of the missions. Cautions alto¬ gether as strict, and in the same spirit, are observed, when the natives are obliged to go out of their own territory to serve in the king’s works, or when any part of their troops are called 216 iN ACCOUNT OF out for his service. They shun all manner of conversation with strangers, upon whom they look with a sort of horreur ; and so return, uninformed and untainted, into their own country as they left it. I am seusible, that many have represented the conduct of the Jesuits in this mission in a very bad light; but their reflexions appear to me not at all supported by the facts upon which they build them. To judge perfectly of the service they have done their people, we must not consider them ill a parallel with the flourishing nations of Europe, but as compared with their neighbours, the savages of South America, or with the state of those Indians who groan under the Spanish yoke. Consider¬ ing it in this, which is the true light, it will appear, that hu¬ man society is infinitely obliged to them for adding to it three hundred thousand families in a well-regulated community, in the room of a few vagabond untaught savages. And indeed, it can scarce be conceived, that the government has not some ex-s traordinary perfection, which has a principle of increase within it, which draws others to unite themselves to the old stock, and shoots out itself a luxuriance of new branches. Neither can we, by any means, blame a system which produces such salu¬ tary effects; and which has found that difficult, but happy way, that grand desideratum in politicks, of uniting a perfect subjec¬ tion to an entire content and satisfaction of the people. - Mat¬ ters, which, it were to be wished, were studied with more at¬ tention by us, who content ourselves with railing at the dili¬ gence of an adversary-, which we should rather praise and imi¬ tate ; and who, in our affairs, seldom think of Using any other instruments than force or money-. . This commonwealth is now become a subject of much convert sat ion, upon account of the cession which has lately been made of part of that territoiy to the crown of Portugal. It.ris well EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 217 known, that the inhabitants of seven of the missions refused to comply with this division, or to suffer themselves to be transfer¬ red from one hand to another, like cattle, without their own con¬ sent.* We are informed, by the authority of the Gazette, that the Indians actually took up arms; but, notwithstanding the exactness of their discipline, they were easily, and with a con¬ siderable slaughter, defeated by the European troops, who were sent to quell them. It seems to have been ill-judged in this people, who had never seen any real service, nor were headed by officers who had seen 'any, without which the best discipline is but a sort of play, to have hazarded a battle with troops from Europe. They ought rather to have first habituated themselves to action by attacking small parties, by cutting off convoys, by little surprises, until, by use and success in smaller matters, they were intitled to hazard the sum of their affairs in the open field. However, it is not improbable, that this opposition will rouse the indolence of the Spaniards, and make them take the government of the country out of the hands it is in at present. If they do, it is not difficult to foresee, that the same depopu¬ lation, the same distress, and the same discontent, which dis¬ tinguish the Indians in the rest of the Spanish provinces, will be soon equally visible in this. It will not be difficult for them to effect the reduction of this country ; for the Jesuits have too large and valuable an interest in Old Spain, as well as in the New World, to dispute it with the court, whenever they shall demand in good earnest to have this country surrendered; if it be true, that the Jesuits have really such influence on the inhabitants as is attributed to them. It was not originally such bad policy, as it may seem, to have * The Jesuits have been entirely disgraced at the court of Portugal, for the share they arc said to have had in this resistance. f e intrusted ACCOUNT OF THE intrusted the Jesuits with so great a power ; since a little time will shew, that they have given them a territory unknown, un¬ peopled, and uncultivated, which they have the certain means of repossessing when they please, subdued, peopled, and cul¬ tivated. As to its wealth, it is hard to say any thing certain ; the Jesuits deny it. And truly, if they acted with a perfect policy, they would never have suffered any mines of gold or silver to be opened in that country. Of this matter I have ua information upon which I can depend. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS AMERICA. Sl^- CH. A P. XVI. TERRA FIRMA.—ITS EXTENT AND PRODUCE.—THE CITIES OF PANAMA/ CAR- THAGENA, AND PORTO-DELLO.-THE GALLEONS.—THE ISLE OF CUBA.— THE HAVANNA.—HISPANIOLA.—PORT i RICO.-REFLEXIONS ON THE PO¬ LICE OF SPAIN WITH REGARD TO THE COLONIES. The Spaniards have not made any settlements in the other di¬ visions of South-Ainerica, which they claim to the southward of Buenos-Ayres, nor to the northward, except in Terra Firrna, of which we shall say something. The country of the Amazons, though prodigiously large, wonderfully fertile, and watered by so noble a river, is almost entirely neglected. The river of Ama¬ zons, called also Maranon and Orellana, which waters and gives its name to this country, arising from the union of several streams that fall from the Cordillera, runs a course of no less than eleyen hundred leagues; it flows for the greater part through a level country covered with the fairest and loftiest forests in the world, in which it forms an innumerable multi¬ tude of delightful islands ; and receiving on both sides the co¬ pious tribute of several rivers almost equal to itself in greatness, increasing in breadth to a sort of sea, and to a depth which in some parts has been in vain searched with a line of upwards of an hundred fathoms, it rushes at length into the Atlantic)* ocean by two mouths of an astonishing wideness, the principal being forty-five leagues broad, the smaller not less than twelve, 'flic country on.this line river has no other inhabitants than Indians, AN ACCOUNT OF THE some savage, some united under Spanish and Portuguese mis¬ sionaries. The country of Patagonia is likewise of a vast stretch to the southward of Buenos-Ayres, all in the temperate zone, and ex¬ tended all along the Atlantick ocean. It is a plain country with¬ out trees; but this is the case of the delightful and fertile country of Buenos-Ayres. It is said likewise to be barren and desert; but, what is certain, it is unsettled by any European nation, and little known, though it lies open for any power that can avail itself of a favourable opportunity to establish a colony there. The last province, according to the order I have observed, though not of the least consequence in the Spanish American dominions, is Terra Firma; a vast country, above two thousand miles in length, and five hundred broad. Bordering on Mexico, Peru, and Amazonia, it stretches all along the north sea, from the Pacifick ocean to the mouth of the river of Amazons upon the Atlantick. It is divided into twelve large provinces. They all contain a vast deal of high and mountainous country, particularly the province of St. Martha, where there are said to be hills surpassing Teneriffe itself in height. These hills commu¬ nicate with the Andes. The valleys are deep and narrow, and for a great part of the year flooded ; but though Terra Firma is on the coast, the most unpleasant and most unhealthful country in the torrid zone, the plain grounds are extremely fertile ; pro¬ duce corn enough, when cultivated, all kinds of the tropical fruits; rich drugs ; cacao, vanilla, indigo, piemento, guaiacum, sarsaparilla, and balsam of Peru. No country abounds more in rich and luxuriant pasturage, or has a greater stock of black cattle. Their rivers have rich golden sands ; their coasts have good pearl fisheries ; and their mines formerly yielded great quantities of gold; but at present they are neglected or ex¬ hausted ; EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 221 hausted; so that the principal wealth of this kiugdom arises from the commerce of Carthagena; and what treasure is seen there is mostly the return for European commodities which are sent from that port to Santafe, Popayan, and Quito: and rubies and emeralds are here found in plenty ; but, the value of pre¬ cious stones depending more on fancy than that of gold or silver; this trade has considerably declined. This province has a very considerable share of the trade of Europe ; not only on account of its own produce and demand, but because all the intercourse of Peru and Chili with Old Spain is carried on through this country, for, as we have mentioned, Carthagena supplies. Its capital city Panama is the great bar- cadier of the South-Sea. Hither is brought all the treasure which the rich mines of Peru and Chili pay to the king, or pro¬ duce upon a private account. The city, of Panama is situated upon one of the best harbours, in all respects,, of the South-Seas. Ships of burden lie safe at some distance from the town ; but smaller vessels come up to the walls. In this bay is a pearl fishery of greatvalue. The town, one of the largest in America, is said to contain five thousand houses, elegantly built of brick and stone, disposed in a semicir¬ cular form, and enlivened with the spires and domes of several churches and monasteries. It is covered on the land side with an agreeable country, diversified with hills, valleys, and woods. The town stands upon a dry and tolerably healthful ground, and has a great and profitable trade with Peru, Chili, and the western coast of Mexico, chiefly for provisions of every.sort both ofdlie animal and vegetable kinds ; corn, wine, sugar, oil, with tallow, leather, and jesuit’s bark. In the neighbourhood of this city they raise nothing; and yet, by traffick and their convenient situation, there are few cities more abundantly supplied with all things for necessity, convenience, or luxury. Their AS ACCOUNT THE Their trade with the Terra Firma and with Europe is carried on over the isthmus of Darien, and bv the river Chagva. The second town of consideration in Terra Firrna, is Cartha- Hena, which stands upon a peninsula, that encloses one of the safest and best defended harbours in all the Spanish America. The town itself is well fortified, and built after the elegant fashion of most of the Spanish American towns, with a square in the middle, and streets running every way regularly from it, and others cutting these at right angles. This town has many rich churches and convents ; that of the Jesuits is particularly magnificent. Here it is that the galleons on their voyage from Spain put in first, and dispose of a considerable part of their cargo ; which from hence is distributed to St. Martha, the Ca- raccas, Venezuela, and most of the other provinces and towns in the Terra Firma. The fleet which is called the galleons consists of about eight men of war, of about fifty guns each, designed principally to supply Peru with military stores ; but in reality, laden not only with these, but with every other kind of merchandize on a pri¬ vate account ; so as to be in bad condition for defending them¬ selves, or protecting others. Under the convoy of these sail about twelve merchant ships, not inferiour in burden. This fleet of the galleons is regulated in much the same manner with the flotas, and it is destined for the exclusive commerce of Terra Firma and the South-Sea, as the fiota is for that of Mexico. No sooner is this fleet arrived in the haven of Carthagena, than expresses are immediately dispatched to Porto-bello, and to all the adjacent towns, but principally to Panama ; that they may get ready all the treasure which is deposited there, to meet the galleons at Porto-bello ; in which town, (remarkable for the goodness of its harbour, which brings such a surprising concourse here at the time of the fair, and the unwholesomeness of EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 223 of the ail', which makes it a desart at ail other time) ail the per¬ sons concerned in the various branches of this extensive traffick assemble; and there is certainly no other part of the world where business of such great importance is negotiated in so short a time. For in about a fortnight the fair is over; during which the display of the gold, silver, and precious stones, on the one hand, and of all the curiosity and variety of the ingenious fa- bricks of Europe on the other, is astonishing. Heaps of wedges and ingots of silver are tumbled about on the wharfs like com¬ mon things. At this time an hundred crowns are given for a poor lodging, a thousand for a shop, and provision of every kind is proportionally dear; which may help us to some idea of the profits made in this trade. The treasure is brought hither from Panama, by a very dangerous road, upon nudes. The other goods, sugar, tobacco, and drugs, are transported on the river Chagra. When the galleons have taken in their returns, they steer together to the Havanna, which is the place of rendezvous of all the ships concerned in the Spanish American trade. The Havanna is the capital city of the island of Cuba, it is situated upon an excellent harbour upon the western extremity of the island. This city is large, containing not less than two thousand houses, with a number of churches and convents; but then it is the only place of consequence upon the noble island of Cuba, which lies in the latitude twenty, and extends from east to west near seven hundred miles in length, though in breadth it is disproportioned, being but from one hundred ancl twenty to seventy miles. However, it yields to no part of the West-Indies in the fertility of its soil, or in excellence of evety thing which is produced in that climate. But the Spaniards, by a series of the most inhuman and impoliticly barbarities, having exterminated the original inhabitants, and not finding : the ACCOUNT S42 tilt quantities of gold in the islands which the continent -af¬ forded, they have left this, as well as Hispaniola, of which the French now possess the greater part, and Porto Rico, a large, excellent, and fertile island, comparatively so many desarts. The commerce between these islands and the Spanish, continent, is carried on by the Barlevento fleet, consisting of six ships of good burthen and force, who annually make the tour of all these iskmds, and the coast of Terra T'irma, not only to t arry on the commerce between those places, but to clear the sea of pirates and illicit traders. Now and then a register ship from Old Spain is bound to one or other of these islands. Hitherto the Spaniards seemed rather to keep them, to prevent any other nation from growing too powerful in those seas, than for any profit they ex¬ pected to derive from tliem. And it is certain, that if other nations should come entirely to possess the whole of the islands, the trade of the American continent, and perhaps the continent itself, would be entirely at their mercy. However, of late, the Spaniards have taken some steps towards the better settlement of Porto Rico. They are beginning to open the American trade to some other towns in Spain besides Cadiz. They have made a difference in point of duty between their own manufactures and those of foreigners. They are, in short, opening their eye to the true interest of their country, and moving their hands, though slowly, to promote it Upon this time, the tide of wealth, that constantly flowed from America into Spain, ran through that kingdom like a hasty torrent, which, far from enriching the country, hurried awav with it all the wealth which it found in its passage. No country in Europe receives such vast treasures as Spain. In no country in Europe is seen so little money. The truth is, from the time that the Indies fell into the hands of Spain, the affairs of that monarchy have been constantly going backward. In America EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 22b America their settlements were carried on conformably to that genius, and to those maxims, which prevailed in their govern¬ ment in Europe. No means of retaining their conquests but by extirpating the people; no schemes for the advancement of trade ; no attempts at the reformation of abuses, which became venerable in proportion to the mischiefs they had suffered by them. In government, tyranny ; in religion, bigotry; in trade, monopoly. When the Spaniards found, to their ambition which was boundless, that they had joined a treasure which was inex¬ haustible, they imagined there was nothing too vast for them to compass. They embraced a thousand projects at once ; many of them noble ones in theory, but to be executed with dif¬ ferent instruments in different parts of the world, and all at a vast expence of blood and treasure. The wars, which were the result of these schemes, and the Indies, which were to support them, were a continual drain, which carried off their people, and destroyed all industry in those who remained. The treasure which flowed in every year from the New World, found them in debt to every part of the Old ; for to the rest of their revenues they had forgot to add that, which is a great revenue itst'k and the great support of all the others, economy. On the con¬ trary, an ill order in their finances at home, and devouring usury abroad, swallowed up all their treasure, whilst they mul¬ tiplied the occasions for it. With the best scheming heads in Europe, they were every where outwitted; with the bravest and best disciplined troops, they were almost always defeated ; with the greatest treasures, they were in want; and their armies were ill provided, and ill paid. Their friends exhausted them by trade; their enemies by plunder. They saw new states arise out of the fragments of their dominions ; and new maritime powers start up from the wrecks of their navy. In short, they 226 AN ACCOUNT OF THE provoked, troubled, and enriched all Europe; and at last de¬ sisted through mere want of strength. They were inactive, but not quiet; and they were enervated as much by their laziness during this repose, as they had been weakened before by their ill-judged activity. All this happened in a country, which abounded with men of capacity as much as any state in Europe, and often with men of great capacity at its head. But their talents took a wrong turn : their politicks were always more abroad than at home ; more employed in weakening their neighbours, than in strength¬ ening themselves. They were wise in the concerns of foreign courts ; they were satisfied with being formal in their own do- mestick business. They relied too much upon their riches; and the whole state, being moulded into a system of corruption from the top to the bottom, things grew at last so bad, that the evils themselves became a sort of remedies; and they felt so se¬ verely the consequences of their former conduct, that they have for some years past turned their thoughts into a very good chan¬ nel ; and they may in time, and with perseverance, rise again ; whilst others shall fall, by adopting the abuses which brought them to ruin. At present the politicks of Spain, with regard to America, seem to be, to preserve South America, and particularly the navigation of the South-Seas, as much as possible to themselves ; to destroy effectually the contraband trade, and to encourage the export of their own manufactures. Of us they have long shewn a remarkable jealousy; a much greater than of the French, whom they see quietly settling in the neighbourhood of New Mexico ; and who are growing certainly in the West-In¬ dies in a far greater degree than we are. I shall not pretend to account for this distinction. PART EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. m PART IV. THE PORTUGUESE SETTLEMENTS CHAP. I. AN ACCOUNT OF THE DISCOVERY OF BRAZIL.—THE METHOD OF SETTLING IT. _CONQUERED BY THE DUTCH.-RECONQUERED BY THE PORTUGUESE. It is very rare that any material discovery, whether in the arts, in- philosophy, or in navigation, has been owing to efforts made directly for that particular purpose, and determined by the force of reasonings a priori. The first hints are owing to ac¬ cident; and discoveries in one kind present themselves volun¬ tarily to us, whilst we are in search of what flies from us in some other. The discovery of America by Columbus was ow¬ ing originally to a just reasoning on the figure of the earth, though the particular land he discovered was far enough from that which he sought. Here was a mixture of wise design and fortunate accident; but the Portuguese discovery of Brazil may¬ be considered as merely accidental. For sailing with a con¬ siderable armament to India, by the way of tile Cape of Good Hope, but standing out to sea to avoid the calms upon the coast g o 2 of 228 AN ACCOUNT of Africa, the Portuguese fleet fell in upon the continent of South America. Upon their return they made so favourable a report of the land they had discovered, that the court resolved to send a colony thither; ami accordingly made their first establishment; but in a very bad method, in which it were to be wished they had never been imitated. This was by banish¬ ing thither a number of criminals of all kinds. This blended an evil disposition with the first principles of the colony, and made the settlement infinitely difficult by the disorders inse¬ parable from such people, and the offence which they gave the original inhabitants. This settlement met with some interrup¬ tion too from the court of Spain, who considered the country as within their dominions. However, matters were accom¬ modated by a treaty, in which it was agreed, that the Portu¬ guese should possess all that tract of land that lies between the river Maranon, or of the Amazons, and the river Plate. When their right was thus confirmed, the Portuguese .pursued the settlement with great vigour. Large grants were made to those who were inclined to become adventurers; and almost all the nobility procured interests in a country which promised such great advantages. The natives were in most- parts sub¬ dued, and the improvement of the colony advanced apace. The crown in a little time became attentive to so valuable an ac¬ quisition ; the government was new modelled, many of the ex- orbitants recalled, and all things settled upon so advantageous a footing, that the whole sea coast, upwards of two thousand miles, was in some measure settled, to the honour of the in¬ dustry and courage of the first planters, and infinitely to the benefit of the mother-country. The Portuguese conquests on the coast of Africa forwarded this establishment, by the number of. Negroes it afforded them for their works ; and this was the first EUROPEAN.SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 229 first introduction of Negroes into America, of which at present they form a large part of the inhabitants. In the very meridian of their prosperity, when the Portu¬ guese were in possession of so extensive an empire, and so flourishing a trade in Africa, in Arabia, in India, in the isles of Asia, and in one of the most valuable parts of America, they were struck down by one of those incidents, that by one blow, in a critical time, decides the fate of kingdoms. Don Sebas¬ tian, one of their greatest princes, in an expedition he had un¬ dertaken against the Moors, lost his life ; and by that accident the Portuguese lost their liberty, being absorbed into the Spa¬ nish dominion. Soon after this misfortune, the same yoke that galled the Por¬ tuguese, grew so intolerable to the inhabitants of the Nether¬ lands, that they threw it off with great fury and indignation. Not satisfied with erecting themselves into an independent state, and supporting their independency by a successful defensive war, flushed with the juvenile ardour of a growing common¬ wealth, they pursued the Spaniards into the remotest recesses of their extensive territories, and grew rich, powerful, and ter¬ rible, by the spoils of their former masters. Principally, they fell upon the possessions of the Portuguese ; they took almost all their fortresses in the East-Indies, not sufficiently defended by the inert policy of the court of Spain; and then turned their arms upon Brazil, unprotected from Europe, and betrayed by the cowardice of the governor of the then principal city. And they would have overrun the whole, if Don Michael de Texeira, the archbishop, descended from one of the noblest families in Portugal, and of a spirit superiour to his birth, had not believ¬ ed, that in such an emergency, the danger of his country super¬ seded the common obligations of his profession. He took 230 AN ACCOUNT OF THE arms, and at the head of his monks, and a few scattered forces, put a stop' to the torrent of the Dutch conquest. He made a gallant stand until succours arrived; and then resigned the com¬ mission with which the publick necessity and his own virtue had armed him, into the hands of a person appointed by au¬ thority. By this stand he saved seven of the captainships, or provinces, out of fourteen, into which Brazil is divided ; the rest fell into the hands of the Dutch, who conquered and kept them with a bravery and conduct, which would deserve more applause, if it had been governed by humanity. The famous captain, Prince Maurice of Nassau, was the per¬ son to whom the Dutch owed this conquest, the establishment of their colony there, and that advantageous peace which se¬ cured them in it. But as it is the genius of all mercantile peo¬ ple to desire a sudden profit in all their designs ; and as this colony was not under the immediate inspection of the states, but subject to the company called the West-India company, from principles narrowed up by avarice and mean notions, they grudged that the present profits of the colony should be sacri¬ ficed to its future security. They found, that the prince kept up more troops, and erected more fortresses, than they thought necessary to their safety; and that he lived in a grander man¬ ner than they thought became one in their service. They ima¬ gined that a little official economy was the principal quality necessary to form a great conqueror and politician ; and there¬ fore they were highly displeased with their governor Prince Maurice, whom they treated in such a manner as obliged him to resign. Now their own schemes took place. A reduction of the troops; the expence of fortifications saved; the charge of a court retrenched ; the debts of the company strictly exacted; their gains increased cent per cent, and every thing flourishing according EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 231 according to their best ideas of a flourishing state. But then, all this fine system in a short time ended in the total loss of all their capital, and the entire ruin of the West-India company. The hearts of subjects were lost, by their penurious way of dealing and the severity of their proceedings. The enemy in their neighbourhood was encouraged, by the defenceless state of their frontiers; and both operated in such a manner, that Brazil was reconquered by the Portuguese; though after a struggle, in which the states exerted themselves vigorously; but with that aggravated expence, and that ill success, which always attends a late wisdom, and the patching up of a blun¬ dering system of conduct. A standing lesson to those people who have the folly to imagine they consult the happiness of a nation, when, by a pretended tenderness for some of its ad¬ vantages, they neglect the only things that can support it, the cultivating of the good opinion of the people, and the keeping up of a proper force. CHAP. 232 AS ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. II. THE CLIMATE OF BRAZIL.—OF THE BRAZIL WOOD. The name of Brazil was given to this country, because it was observed to abound with a wood of that name. It extends all along a tract of fine sea coast upon the Atlantick ocean upwards of two thousand miles, between the river of Amazons on the north, and that of Plate on the south. To the northward, the climate is uncertain, hot, boisterous, and unwholesome. The country, both there and even in more temperate parts, is annually overflowed. But to the southward, beyond the tropick of Capricorn, and indeed a good way beyond it, there is no part of the world that enjoys a more serene and wholesome air; re¬ freshed with the soft breezes of the ocean on one hand, and the cool breath of the mountains on the other. Hither several aged people from Portugal retire for their health, and protract their lives to a long and easy age. In general, the soil is extremely fruitful, and was found very sufficient for the comfortable subsistence of the inhabitants, until the mines of gold and diamonds were discovered. These, with the sugar plantations, occupy so many hands, that agri¬ culture lies neglected; and, in consequence, Brazil depends upon Europe for its daily bread. The chief commodities which this country yields for a foreign market are, sugar, tobacco, hides, indigo, ipecacuanha, balsam ofCopaibo, and brazil wood. As this last article in a more particular manner belongs to this country, to which it gives its EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 233 name, and which produces it in the greatest perfection, it is not amiss to allow a very little room to the description of it. This tree generally flourishes in rocky and barren grounds, in which it grows to a great height and considerable thickness. But a man who judges of the quantity of the timber, by the thickness of the tree, will be much deceived ; for, upon strip¬ ping off the bark, which makes a very large part of the plant, he will find, from a tree as thick as his body, a log no more in compass than his leg. This tree is generally crooked and knotty like the hawthorn, with long branches, and a smooth green leaf, hard, dry, and brittle. Thrice a year, bunches of small flowers shoot out at the extremities of the branches, and between the leaves. These flowers are of a bright red, and of a strong aro- matick and refreshing smell. The wood of this tree is of a red colour, hard and dry. It is used chiefly in dyeing red, but not a red of tiie best kind; and it has some place in medicine as a stomachick and restringent. C II A P. III. TUE TRADE i'E BRAZIL.—IT* INTERCOL’RSE WITH AFRICA.—THE SETTLE- TBE COMMONWEALTH or TUT. I’ALIASTb.—THE DIAMOND MINES. Tin: trade of Brazil is very great, and it increases every year. Nor i» this a wonder; since they have opportunities of supply¬ ing themselves with slaves for their several works, at a much easier and cheaper rate than any other European power, which has settlements in America. For they are the'only European nation which has taken the pains to establish colonies in Africa. Those of the Portuguese are very considerable, both for their extent and the numbers of their inhabitants; and of course they have advantages in that trade which no other nation can have. For, besides tlieir large establishment on the western shore of Africa, they claim the whole coast of Zanguebar on the eastern side, which in part they possess; besides several other large territories, both on the coast and in the country; where several numerous nations acknowledge themselves their dependents or subjects. This is not only of great advantage to them, as it increases their shipping and seamen and strengthens their com¬ mercial reputation, but as it leaves them a large field for their slave trade; without which, they could hardly ever supply, upon any tolerable terms, their settlements in Brazil, which carry off such numbers, by the severity of the works and the unwholesomeness of some part of the climate; nor could they otherwise extend their plantations, and open so many new mines as they do, to a degree which is astonishing. I own. N SETTX'EWEl I own, I have often been surprised, that our African trader? should clmse so contracted an object for their slave trade, which extends to little more than sqme part of the Gold Coast, to Siena Leone, and Gambia, and some other inconsiderable ports;, by which they liaye depreciated thejr own. commodities, and raised the price of sSryes within these few years above thirty per cent. Nor is it tp be pondered ; as in the tract, in which they trade, they have many rivals ; the people are grown top expert, by the constant habit of European commerce ; and the slaves in that part are in .a good measure exhausted ; whereas if some of our vessels passed the .Cape of Good Hope, and tried what might be done in Madagascar, or on those coasts which indeed the Portuguese claim, bat do not nor cauno.t hold, there is no doubt but .that they would find the greater espence and length of time in passing the Gape, or the charge of Ucenees.which might be procured from the Ivast-Inilia.Company, amply com- pensated. Our African trade might then be considerably en¬ larged, our own manufactures extended, arid our colonies sup¬ plied at an easier rate than they are at present, or are likely to be for the future, whilst we confine ourselves to two pr three places, which we exhaust; and where we shall find the market dearer every day. The Portuguese, from these settlements and this extensive range, draw every year into Brazil between forty and fifty thousand slaves. On this trade all their other .depends* and therefore they take great care to have it well supplied, for which purpose the situation of Brazil, nearer the coast of Africa than any other part of America, is very convenient; and it co¬ operates with the great advantages they derive from having co- lonies in both places. Hence it is principally, that Brazil is the richest, most flou¬ rishing, and most growing establishment in all America. Their export of sugar within forty years is grown much greater than it was, though anciently it made almost the whole of their ex¬ portable produce, and they were without rivals in the trade. It is finer in kind than what any of ours, the French, or Spanish sugar plantations send us. Their tobacco too is remarkably good ; and they trade very largely in this commodity to the coast of Africa, where they not only sell it directly to the na¬ tives, but supply the ships of other nations, who find it a neces¬ sary article to enable them to carry on the slave and gold dust trade to advantage. The northern and southern parts of Brazil abound in horned cattle; these are hunted for their hides, of which no less than twenty thousand are sent annually into Europe. The Portuguese were a considerable time possessed of their American empire, before they discovered the treasures of gold and diamonds, which have since made it so considerable. After the explosion of the Dutch, the colony remained without much attention from the court of Portugal; until in 1G85. a minister of great sagacity advised the then monarch to turn his thoughts to so valuable and considerable a part of his territories. He represented to him, that the climate in the hay of All-Saints, where the capital stood, was of such a nature as to deaden the activity and industry of the people ; but that the northern ex¬ tremities of Brazil, in a more temperate climate, invited them to the cultivation of the country. The advice was taken. But, because it was found that the insolence and tyranny of the na¬ tive Portuguese always excited the hatred of the native Bra¬ zilians, and consequently obstructed the settlements, they were resolved to people the countries, which were now the' object of their care, with those who are called Mestizes ; that is, a race sprung from a mixture of Europeans and Indians, who they judged would behave better; and who, on account of their con¬ nection, in blood, would be more acceptable to the Brazilians EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 237 on the.borders, who were not yet reduced. To complete this design, they vested the government in the hands of priestsi who acted each as governor in his own parish; or district. And they had the prudence to chuse with great care such men as were proper for the work. The consequence of these wise regu¬ lations was soon apparent; for, without noise or force, .in fifteen years, they not only settled the sea coast, but, drawing in vast numbers of the natives, they spread themselves above an hundred miles more to the westward than the Portuguese set¬ tlements had ever extended. They opened several mines, which improved the revenues; the planters were easy, and several of the priests made no inconsiderable fortunes. The fame of these new mines drew together a number of des¬ peradoes and adventurers of all nations and colours ; who, not agreeing with the moderate and simple manners of the inhabit¬ ants of the new settlements, nor readily submitting to any order or restraint elsewhere, retired, into a mountainous part of the country, but fertile enough, and rich in gold; where, by the accession of others in their own circumstances, they- soon be¬ came a-formidable and independent body, and for a- long time defended the privileges they had assumed with great courage and policy. They were called Paulists, from the town and dis¬ trict called St. Paul, which was their head quarters. But, as this odd commonwealth grew up in so unaccountable a manner, sd it perished in a manner altogether unknown in this part of the world. It is now heard of no longer. The king of Por¬ tugal is in full possession of the whole country ; and the mines are worked by his subjects and their slaves, paying him a fifth. These mines have poured almost as much gold into Europe as the Spanish America had of silver. Not many years after the discovery of the gold mines, Brazil, which for a.century had been given up as a place incapable of yielding. 238 AN ACCOUNT OF THE yielding the metals for which America was chiefly valued, was now found to produce diamonds too ; but at first of so unpro¬ mising a nature, that the working of the mines was forbidden by the court of Portugal, lest, without making any compensa¬ tion. by their number, they might depreciate the trade which was carried on in those stones from Goa. But, in spite of this prohibition, a number were from time to time smuggled from Brazil; and some too of such great weight, and high lustre and transparency, that they yielded very little to the finest brought from India. The court now perceived the importance of the trade, and accordingly resolved to permit it, but under such re¬ strictions as might be sufficiently beneficial to the crown and sub¬ ject ; and at the same time preserve the jewels in that scarcity which makes the principal part of their value. In 1740, the diamond mines were farmed at one hundred and thirty-eight thousand crusadoes, or about twenty-six thousand pounds sterling annually, with, a prohibition against employing more than six hundred slaves at a time in the works. It is probable that this regulation is not very strictly complied with ; the quantity of diamonds being much increased, and their value of conr.se sunk, since that time. It is true, that diamonds of the very first rank are nearly as dear as ever. None of the diamonds of Brazil have so high a lustre as the first rate of Golconda; and they have generally something of a dusky yellowish cast; but they have been found of a prodigious size. Some years ago we had an account in the newspapers of one sent to the king of Portugal, of a size and weight almost beyond the bounds of cre¬ dibility ; for it was said to weigh sixteen hundred carats, or six thousand seven hundred and twenty grains ; and consequently must be worth several millions. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT '■AMERI.CA, 239 C H A P. IV. TRADE.-THE DESCRIPTION OF ST. SAL- The trade of Portugal is carried on upon the same exclusive plan, on which the several nations of Europe trade with their colonies of America; and it more particularly resembles the Spanish method, by sending out not single ships, as the con- venieucy of the several places and the ideas of the European merchants may direct; but by annual fleets, which sail at Stat¬ ed times from Portugal and compose three flotas bound to as many ports in Brazil; to Fernambucca, in the northern part; Bio Janeiro, at the southern extremity; and the bay of All- Saints, in the middle. In this last is the capital, which is call¬ ed St. Salvador, where all the fleets rendezvous on their return to Portugal. This city commands a noble, spacious, and com¬ modious harbour. It is built upon an high and steep rock, having the sea upon one side, and a lake forming a crescent, investing it almost wholly, so as nearly to join the sea on the other. This situation makes it in a manner impregnable by nature; but they have besides added to it very strong fortifi¬ cations. All these make it the strongest place in America. It is divided into an upper and lower town. The lower consists only of a street or two, immediately upon the harbour, for the convenience of lading and unlading goods, which are drawn up to the higher town by machines. The streets in the upper town are laid out as regulary as the ground will admit, and are handsomely built. They had forty years ago in, this city above two 240 AN ACCOUNT OF THE two thousand houses, and inhabitants proportionable ; a sump¬ tuous cathedral; several magnificent churches, and many con¬ vents, well built and endowed. The Portuguese fleet sets out from Lisbon in its voyage hither in the month of February. I can get no accounts, precise enough to be depended upon, of the towns of Femarabucca or Parayba, and the capital of the Rio de Janeiro, to enable me to be particular about them. Let it suffice that the fleet for the former of these sets out in March; and for the latter in the month of January ; but they all ren¬ dezvous in the bay of All-Saints, to the number of an hundred sail of large ships, about the month of May or June, and carry to Europe a cargo little inferiour in value to the treasures of the flota and galleons. The gold alone amounts to near four millions sterling. This is not all extracted from the mines of Brazil; but, as they carry on a large direct trade with Africa, they bring, especially from their settlement at Mozambique, on the eastern side of that continent, besides their slaves, vast ■quantities of gold, ebony, and ivory, which goes into the amount of the cargo of the Brazil fleets for Europe. Those parts of Brazil which yield gold, are the middle and northern parts on the Rio Janeiro and Bay of All-Saints. . They coin a great deal of gold in America; that which is coined at Rio Janeiro hears an R, that which is struck at the Bay is marked with a B. To judge the better of the riches of this Brazil, fleet, the diamonds it contains must not be forgot. For if the mines rented to the crown in tiie year 1710, at twenty-six thousand pounds a year, it will be a very small allowance to say, that -at least five times more is made out of them ; and that there is returned to Europe in diamonds to at least the value of one hundred and thirty thousand pounds. This, with the sugar, which is principally the cargo of the Fernambucca fleet, the tobacco, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 241 tobacco, the hides, the valuable drugs for medicine and manu¬ factures, may give some idea of the importance of this trade, not only to Portugal, but to all .the trading powers of Europe, The returns are not the fiftieth part of the produce of Portugal. They.consist of the woollen goods, of all kinds, of England. Prance, and Holland ; the linens and laces of Holland, France and Germany; the silks of France and Italy ; lead, tin, iron, copper, and all sorts of utensils wrought in these metals, from England; as well as salt-fish, beef, flour, and cheese. Oil they have from Spain... Wine, with some fruits, is nearly all with which they are supplied from Portugal. Though the profits in this trade are great, very few Portu¬ guese merchants trade upon their own stocks; they are gene¬ rally credited by the foreign merchants, whose commodities they vend, especially the English. In slrort, though in Por¬ tugal, as in Spain, all trade .with their plantations is strictly interdicted to strangers; yet, like all regulations that contra¬ dict the very nature of the object they regard, they are here as little attended to as in Spain. The Portuguese is only the trustee and factor ; but his fidelity is equal to that of the Spa¬ nish merchant; and that has scarce ever been shaken hv'any publick or private cause whatsoever. A thing surprising in the Portuguese; and a striking instance amongst a people so far from remarkable for their integrity, of what a custom originally built upon a few examples, and a consequent reputation built upon that, will be able to effect in a succession of men of very different natural characters and morals. And so different is the spirit of commercial, honesty from that of justice, as it is an in¬ dependent virtue, and influences the heart. The English at present are the most interested, both in the trade of Portugal for home consumption and of what they want for the use of the Brazils, And they deserve to be most fa¬ voured, as well from the services they Irave always done .that 242 AN ACCOUNT THE crown and from the stipulations of treaties, as from the con¬ sideration that no other people consumes so much of the pro¬ ducts of Portugal. However, partly from our own supineness, partly from the policy and activity of France, and part ly from the fault of the Portuguese themselves, the French have be¬ come very dangerous rivals to us in this, as in most other branches of our trade. It is true, though the French have ad¬ vanced so prodigiously, and there is a spirit of industry and commerce raised in most countries in Europe, our exports of manufactures or natural products have by no means lessened within these last forty years; which can only be explained by the extending of our own, and the Spanish and Portuguese co¬ lonies, which increases the general demand. But, though it be true, that we have rather advanced than declined in our com¬ merce upon the whole, yet we ought to take great care not to be deceived by this appearance. For if we have not likewise advanced in as great a proportion to what we were before that period, and to our means since then, as our neighbours have done in proportion to theirs, as I apprehend we have not, then, I say, we have comparatively declined ; and shall never be able to preserve that distinguished rank of the first commercial and maritime power in Europe, time must be essential to preserve us in any degree, either of commerce or power. For if any other power, of a more extensive and populous territory than ours, should come to rival us in trade and wealth, he must come of necessity to give law to us in whatever relates either to trade or policy. Notwithstanding that the want of capacity in the ministers of such a power, or the indolence of the sovereign, may protract the evil for a time, it will certainly be felt in the end, and will shew us demonstratively, though too late, that we must have a great superiority in trade, not only to ourselves formerly, but to our neighbours at present, to have any at all which is likely to continue with us for a long time. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS'IN AMERICA. 245 CHAP. V. THE CHARACTER OF THE AMERICAN. PORTUGUESE.—THE STATE OF TUI'. . , NEGROES;—THE GOVERNMENT. The portrait, which the most judicious travellers give tis of the manners and customs of the Portuguese in America, is very far from being favourable to that people. They are represented as a people at once sunk in the most effeminate luxury, and practising the most desperate crimes. Of a dissembling hypo¬ critical temper; of little honesty in dealing, or sincerity in con¬ versation; lazy, proud, and cruel. They are poor and penu¬ rious in their diet, not more through necessity than'inclination. For, like the inhabitants of most southern climates, they are much more fond of show, state, and attendance, than of the joys of free society and the satisfaction of a good table. Yet their feasts,, seldom made, are sumptuous to extravagance. The luxury, indolence, pride, arid cruelty of the masters has, amongst other causes, been very justly attributed to their being- bred up amongst slaves, having every business entirely done by such; and to their being permitted to keep a prodigious number of Negroes, not for their field work, nor for domestick employ¬ ments, but merely to wait upon them, and to form their train. These become move corrupted than their masters, who make them the instruments of their crimes ; and, giving them an un¬ bounded and scandalous licence, employ them, whenever they want to, terrify or rewenge, as bullies and assassins. And indeed nothing can be conceived more lit to create the worst disorders, i i 2 thau 244 AS ACCOUNT 09 THE than the unnatural junction of slavery to idleness and a licen¬ tious way of living. They are all suffered to go armed, and there are vast numbers who have merited or bought their free¬ dom ; and this is suffered in a country where the Negroes are ten to one. ' : ' But this picture, perhaps too highly coloured for those whom it is intended to represent, is by no means applicable to all the Portuguese of Brazil. Those by the Rio: Janeiro, and in the northern captainships, are not near so effeminate and corrupted as those of the Bay of All-Saints, which, being in a- climate fa¬ vourable to indolence and debauchery, the capital city, oiie of the oldest settlements, is in all respects worse than any of the others. The government of Brazil is in the viceroy, who resides at St. Salvador. He has two councils, one for criminal, the other for civil affairs ; in both he presides. But, to the infinite pre¬ judice of the settlement, all the delay, chicanery, multiplied expe-ces incident to the worst part, of the law, and practised by the most corrupted lawyers, flourish here; at the same time that justice is so lax that the greatest crimes often pass with’im¬ punity. Formerly the judges could not legally punish any Por¬ tuguese with death. And it is not difficult to imagine, how much a licence in such a country must have contributed to a corruption, that it may be the business of successions of good magistrates, and ages of good discipline, to restore to soundness. Upon the river of Amazons, the people, who are mostly Indians and reduced by the priests sent thither, are still under the go¬ vernment of these pastors. The several divisions of this country are called missions. As the Portuguese have been once dispossessed of this country by the Dutch, and once endangered by the French, their mis¬ fortunes and dangers have made them wise enough to take very effectual EUROPEAN t ?ETTI.EM-EJfTS, IN AMERICA. $45 effectual measures for their future security. St. Salvador is a very strong fortification; they have others that are not con¬ temptible ; besides a good number of European regular troops, of which there are two regiments in St. Salvador. The militia too is regimented, amongst wlyom we'reckon some bodies of In¬ dians, and free Negroes; and indeed, at present, Brazil seems to- be in as little danger as the settlements of any power of Ame¬ rica, not only from their own internal strength, their remote¬ ness, and the intolerable heat and unhealtHiuess of a great part of the climate, but from the interest that most of the states in. Europe, who are concerned in that trade, have to keep it in the hands of the Portuguese. CHAP. AH ACCOWS* oy THE 245 PART V. THE FRENCH SETTLEMENTS. CHAP. I. THE TIME IS WHICH THE FRENCH REGAN THEIR WEST-INDIA SETTLEMENTS. —FAVOURED BY CARDINAL RICHLIEU.-DE POINCY GOVERNOR.—THE WEST-ISDIA COMPANY. The French were amongst the last nations who made settle¬ ments in the West-Indies ; but they made ample amends by the vigour with which they pursued them, and by that chain of judicious and admirable measures which they used in drawing from them even' advantage that the nature of the climate would yield; and in contending against the difficulties which it threw in their way. The civil wars which divided and harassed that kingdom, from the death of Henry the Second, with very little interrup¬ tion, until the majority of Lewis the Fourteenth, withdrew the attention of both prince and people from their commercial in¬ terests to those of parties in religion and government. The politicks of the house of Valois, though France perhaps was never governed by princes of so ingenious and refined a turn, were EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 247 were wholly of the Machiavelian kind. They tended to dis¬ tract, to unsettle, to try dangerous schemes, and to raise storms, only to display a skill of pilotage. The parties then in France solely contended what power could be given to or taken from the king, without considering what could make their country a great kingdom. Therefore, which way soever the balance inclined, whether to the king or to the nobles, to the catholieks or to the protestants, it rva§ pretty indifferent to the real happiness of that nation. The parties only gamed out of a common stock. Neither could be enriched. But their dis- sentions made all of them poor and weak. The time of Cardi¬ nal Ilichlieu must be considered as the true a:ra of French po¬ licy. This great man, pacifying all at home, exalting the royal authority upon the ruins of the power of the nobility, and mo¬ delling that great system of general policy in external affairs, which has raised France to such a pitch of greatness ; amongst so many, and such extensive cares, did not forget those of com¬ merce, and, what serves most effectually to support commerce, colonies and establishments abroad. But the circumstances of the time, and his genius that embraced so many objects, did not leave him leisure to perfect what he began. It was reserved for that great, wise, and honest minister Colbert, one of the ablest that ever served any prince or honoured any country, to bring that plan to perfection, to carry it in a great measure into execution, and to leave things in such order, that it was not difficult, when favourable circumstances offered, to make France one of the first trading powers in Europe, and .her color nies the most powerful, their nature considered, .of any in Amh- So early as the reign of Francis I. the French attempted an establishment in North America; but it was.not.vmtjl the yea/ 1625, that they made their first settlement in the .Wes.t-Indies. This THE This was upon St, Christopher, one of the Caribbee islands. A remarkable circumstance attended it; the English took pos¬ sesion of the island the same day. But this settlement had not long life on either side. The Spaniards had reason to dread the establishment, of such powers in their neighbourhood; and they envied the French and English those advantages it was foreseen the}- would draw from countries from which they had themselves no benefit, and which the}' claimed only to keep them desarts. They assaulted these new colonies, and drove them out of the island. The English colony soon returned, and possessed themselves of the largest and most fertile quarter, before the French could collect themselves ; who, finding the English al¬ ready occupied the best part, left a small colony on the other. But their chief, aud the most adventurous of their inhabitants, went in search of a new settlement; when, after various fortune, and after combating the difficulties which an uncultivated country and some indiscretions of their own had caused them, they made a considerable settlement in the islands of Martinico and Guadaloupe. Cardinal Richlieu saw very early into the advantages which might arise from these settlements, if prudently managed ; and he thought the most prudent management both for securing and extending them, consisted in but one article; which was, to put the government into proper hands. With this view he made choice of Monsieur de Poincy, a knight of Malta: who was sent thither with the title of governor and lieutenant-general of the isles of America, and a very ample commission. Xo person could be better fitted to rectify the disorders that naturally must arise in every new settlement, and to put things in a right channel for the time to come. Of a good family : of an un- •blemislied reputation for probity; of great reading ; of much and EUROPEAN SETTLEM 249 and various knowledge of life ; and of a genius as variously exercised. He was a master in mechanical learning ; in which he excelled not more to his honour, than to the benefit of the colonies which had the happiness to be committed to his care. He it was that first taught them the method of cultivating the sugar cane, and preparing the sugar. He improved the me¬ thod used in the Brazils for this purpose, both with regard to the mills and the furnaces ; and having given a direction to their industry, he gave it all the encouragement he could, by supporting those who raised their own substance, by the means which advanced the colony ; whilst he kept a watchful eye and a severe hand upon all, who were for making hasty fortunes, without adding to t.he publick stock. He made admirable re¬ gulations for the speedy and impartial administration of justice ; and knowing that all order must depend for its blessing above, and its effect here upon an attention to religion, be appointed a number of churches to be built in all the islands under his care, and settled priests in them, with a competent, but not a superfluous provision ; but he did not think monasteries and monks so^ompatible with a new colony. Under the inspection of this governor, Martinico, Guada- loupe, part of St. Christopher’s, St. Bartholomew, and St. Martin, were settled, and began to flourish, and that with very little help from home. A plain proof that almost every thing depends, in affairs of this nature, on chusing proper men to command, and giving them a proper authority. These islands, however, were unhappily under the super- intcndance of an exclusive company, which, in spite of all that could otherwise be done, especially after the death of Richlieu, so neglected, or mismanaged their affairs, that they were obliged to sell a part of the settlements; and they left the rest hardly worth purchasing. But the government at length bought up k k the 230 AS ACCOUNT OF THE the islands which they had alienated, and rescued the others oat of their hands. The trade under proper regulations was laid open, yc-t protected under the wings of their great India eompanv. These regulations took place about 1680, and the benefits of this arrangement were great, and soon apparent. Exclusive companies may probably be useful to nourish an in¬ fant trade. They may be useful too for a very distant one, where tile market is to be nicely managed, and where it is un¬ der the dominion of foreign and barbarous princes. But where the trade is between different parts of the dominions of the same prince, under the protection of his laws, carried on by his own subjects, and with goods wrought in his own country, such companies must be equally absurd in their nature, and ruinous in their consequences to the trade. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 251 CHAP. II. THE DESTRUCTION OF THE COLONY OF ST. CHRISTOPHER’S.-THE RISE OF THE BUCCANEERS.-THE CAUSE OF TIIEIR SUCCESS.—THE SETTLEMENT OF HISPANIOLA —THE POLICY OF FRANCE.—A DESCRIPTION OF HISPA¬ NIOLA-ITS TRADE.-THE TOWNS OF CAPE FnANCOISE AND LEOGANB. After the Spaniards had ruined the first colony at St. Chris¬ topher’s, they brought upon themselves by this act a very heavy revenge for the injustice of it. Their example at the same time made it apparent, how much better it is to let a bold and adventurous people settle in some place where they can do but little mischief, and to suffer their spirit to evaporate in peace¬ ful occupations, rather than to keep it up by difficulties, unable to quell it, but which may force it to take another and more dangerous turn. Several of the French inhabitants, who were expelled from St. Christopher’s, being reduced to great indigence, began to think of desperate courses. They betook themselves to piracy ; and uniting with some vagrant English, Dutch, and other out¬ casts of all nations, but resolute fellows, and not destitute of men of capacity amongst them, they began a piratical war upon the Spaniards. At first they satisfied themselves with taking their ships and destroying their trade ; which they did effectually ; but soon, encouraged and strengthened by this success, they landed upon the continent of New Spain and Terra Finna, burning and plundering the open country. Their bold¬ ness and number increasing with their success, they assaulted and took some of their strongest fortresses and most opulent AX ACCOUNT QP THE tovr.w They took Porto-bello, Campeachy, Maracaibo, Gib¬ raltar. and the fortress of Chagra ; they even took the city of Panama by storm, and burned it. after defeating an army which came to beat them off. In all which places, and in the others which they had taken, they gained an incredible hot ly, and committed the most unheard-of cruelties. Another party of these pirates passed the streights of Magellan, and entering into the South-Sea, turned the whole coast of Peru, Chili, and the East of Mexico, into one scene of desolation ; every where with a bravery and conduct, that in any other cause had merited the highest honours. It is not a little surprising, at first view, that all the great things which were done in this New World, were either done by actual pirates, as these men were, or by private adventurers, but one degree better authorised, and nothing better supported; whose own courage and skill were to be at once their commis¬ sion, their magazines, and their treasury ; being obliged to find the resources of the war, in the war itself. When the most numerous and the best provided armaments have shamefully failed, and failed in those very places, where the adventurers bad shewn them such a glorious example of success. But the cause is not so hard to be assigned. None but men of great en¬ terprise and bravery conceive those expeditions of themselves. Unsupported, but at the same time unchecked by the higher ■powers, they were under the necessity of turning to every side, and of exerting every faculty. But then they had nothing to hinder tins exertion. Their first attempts were generally low, and therefore they were prosperous. They did not lead great armies to be subsisted with great difficulty, and to be discou¬ raged and wasted by the hardships of the climate; but they ha¬ bituated themselves to hardships by degrees: they were encou¬ raged by smaller successes; and having nothing to expect from EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 253 from their power and numbers, they made amends by their vigi¬ lance, theiractivity,and their courage. These are causes adequate to the effect; indeed adequate to any effect. Whereas in the regular way, a general of the first note and reputation has rarely been sent into America ; the service seemed beneath him; and they that were tolerably expert at second and third parts (worse than the absolutely inexperienced for the very first, where the scene is new) were sent by court- favour and intrigue. What armaments from England, Holland, and France, have been sent in different times to America, whose remains returned without honour or advantage, is too clear, and perhaps too invidious a topic to be greatly insisted upon. The pirates, whom we called buccaneers improperly, the French denominated flibustiers, from the Dutch flyboats, in which they made their first expeditions. The buccaneers are no more than persons who hunt wild cattle in America for their hides and tallow. Some of these joined the flibustiers in their first expeditions; and from them we named the whole body, buccaneers. These people brought their prizes and plunder frequently into Jamaica, by which they enriched that island extremely. Others, finding that the Spaniards were very weak in Hispaniola, and that they had in a manner deserted a considerable part of the island, made it a place of rendezvous. They who hunted cattle saw the hideous desarts left by the Spanish tyranny, a proper place for exercising their profession. To these two sorts of people were soon added a third, who were some of the French in the Lesser Antilles; who, finding how much might be made by supplying a sort of people who ex¬ pended largely, and were not very exact in their bargains, and perceiving that no part of America afforded a better soil, passed over to this island, and exercised here their business of planters and merchants. These three sorts of people, mutually in want of each other, lived in very good harmony. The Spaniards dis¬ lodged 254 AN ACCOUNT OF lodged them several times; but they still returned, and with new strength; so that it was with difficulty, and after a long dispute, that the Spaniards were able to retain one part of the island. The court ofFrance saw the progress of these people silently. Whenever complaints were made, they disavowed their pro¬ ceedings ; resolved not to break measures with Spain for the sake of an object, which they were not sure they could hold, and the advantages of which were yet doubtful; but when they found the French in Hispaniola numerous, strong, and wealthy, they owned them as subjects, sent them a governor and regula r forces to keep them so, and to defend them in what they had done: the old method of piracy was still connived at, whilst the trade of skins increased, and the plantations extended. At last the French obtained a legal right by the cession, which the Spaniards made them of the north-west part of the island by the treaty of Ityswick, in 1697 ; the best and most fertile part of the best and most fertile island in the West-Indies, and per¬ haps in the world ; that which was the first settled, and the whole of which is upwards of four hundred miles long, and one hundred and forty broad. This is the principal settlement of the French in the West-Indies, and indeed in all America. The country is mixed; pretty mountainous in some parts, but many of these mountains are fertile, and covered with beautiful woods. Others, which are barren and rocky, anciently had mines of gold; they are not worked now, though it is judged thev not only contain those of gold, but mines of silver, copper, and iron: But the French think, and I believe with reason, that their labour is better bestowed on the culture of the plains for these rich commodities, which vend so well in Europe, than in the pursuit of mines, really more precarious in their profits, and which yield a wealth after all, of a less useful kind. This country has likewise prodigiously tine plains, of a vast extent, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 255 extent, and extreme fertility; either covered with noble and beautiful forests of timber and fir-trees, excellent in their kinds, or pastured by vast numbers of horned cattle, sheep, and hogs. The air in Hispaniola is the most healthy in the West-Indies. The country is admirably watered with rivulets as well as navi¬ gable rivers. It is no wonder therefore, that this active and industrious nation, in possession of so excellent and extensive a country, has reaped from it prodigious advantages. They were the better enabled to do this, from the great encouragement their settlements met with in France; and from the wise regu¬ lations which were made concerning them. These we shall consider in their place. But it is certain they reckoned in the year 1726, that on this island they had no less than one hundred thousand negroes, and thirty thousand whites; that they made, sixty thousand hogsheads of sugar of five hundred weight each ; that the indigo was half as much in value as the sugar ; that, they exported large quantities of cotton ; and that they had sent besides to France cacao and ginger in tolerable'plenty. Since that time they had raised coffee here to a very great amount. And not this article only, but every other branch of their commercial products has increased to a degree truly as¬ tonishing since that period. Towards the conclusion of the late war, a Spanish writer of great judgment, and well informed, reckons the produce of the plantations near Cape St..Fran$oise,. the capital of French Hispaniola, and which were exported from, that single town, at 30,000 tons in sugar, indigo, tobacco, and coffee. This export at the lowest possible calculation cannot be of less value than 600,000 pounds sterling. If to this we add the exports of the two considerable ports of Leogane and Petit Guaves, and the other inferiour ones, which certainly do not send out less than the capital; on this low estimation, we find the exported produce of this island to be worth 1,200,000/.. annually : 2 j6 ACcorST annually; which, great as it is, is certainly under-rated. But there is another branch of their trade, if possible, move advan¬ tageous to the mother country, the contraband which they carry on with the Spaniards, wholly in the manufactures of France, and for which they receive their returns in silver. The above-mentioned author, from the most authentic infor¬ mation tells us, that this trade returns annually to France no less tlrm two millions of dollars. This progress of the French colonies, and their flourishing state after a war in which they suffered greatly, I have displayed, in order to explode a notion which prevails with many ; that, by distressing the French in time of war, it is in our power to destroy their commerce ; but this notion, if it should prevail generally, may mislead us greatly to our disadvantage. Nations like France and England, full of people of spirit and of industry', easily recover all the losses of war. The trade of France was in a deplorable condition at. the treaty of Utrecht. She had not then live hundred vessels of ail sorts in the world. At the beginning of the last war, but thirty years after, they had eighteen hundred. Their losses in that war were very great; and yet their losses in this, shew, that in a very little time they had more than repaired them. Wherever the vital principle subsists in full vigour, wounds are soon healed. Dis¬ orders themselves are a species of remedies; and ever}' new loss not only shews how it may be repaired, but, by the vigour it inspires, makes new advantages known. Such losses renew the spirit of industry and enterprize; they reduce things to their first principles ; they keep alive motion, and make the appe¬ tites of traders sharp and keen. While the spirit of trade sub¬ sists, trade itself can never be destroyed. This is the reason that, amidst their continual wars and the losses all the nations of Europe suffer from each other, they are almost all thriving. And, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS.IN AMERICA. 2j? And, if I may indulge a conjecture, it may be one among seve¬ ral of the causes which have reduced the trade of Holland, that, since the treaty of Utrecht, now' above forty years, they have had no war. They may, during the quarrels of other powers, appear to have derived great advantages from their neutrality. But are they not with all this declining fast? And is not this country, which grew to be a nation, and to be a pow¬ erful, trading, and rich nation, in the midst of the most bloody' and expensive wars, now losing its trade, its riches, and its pow¬ er, and almost ceasing' to he a nation, in the midst of a pro¬ found peace of upwards of forty years? We must not forget, what the great Colbert said of his country, and which we have experienced to be true, that the industry of the French, if per¬ mitted, would turn the very rocks into gold. We must not therefore .place our dependance for keeping ourselves on a par of power w ith France, upon the prejudice which wc can do its trade in time of war, but upon the vigour, economy, and wis¬ dom of the measures which we take to secure and advance our own, both in war and in peace. The largest town in the French part of Hispaniola is Cape Framboise, which is situated on the northern part of the island upon a very fine harbour. It is well built, and contains about eight thousand inhabitants, blacks and whites. But though this be the largest town, Lcogane on the western Side, a good port too, and a place of considerable trade, is the seat of go¬ vernment, which here resides in the hands of a governor and the intendant, who are mutually a check upon each other. There are besides two other towns, considerable for their trade, Petit Guaves on the west end of the island, and Port Louis on the south-west part. CHAP. 258 AH ACCOUKT OF CHAP. III. A DESCRIPTION OF MAKTINICO.— OF 6CADADOUFE AND OTHER FRENCH ISLANDS.-THEIR PRODCCE.-OBSERVATIONS ON THE MISTAKES THAT Martinico is the next island in importance, which the French possess in America. It is one of the Caribbees or Windward islands, and the principal of them ; about sixty miles in length, and at a medium about half as much in breadth. It is forty leagues to the north-west of Barbadoes. It has pretty high hills, especially in the inland parts. From those hills are poured out upon every side a number of agreeable and useful rivulets, which adorn and fructify this island in a high degree. The bays and harbours are numerous, safe and commodious ; and so well fortified, that we have always failed in our attempts upon this place. The soil is fruitful enough, abounding in the same things which our islands in that part of the world produce, and upon which I shall the less insist on that account. Sugar is here, as it is in all the islands, the principal commodity, and great quantities are here made. Their export cannot be less than sixty or seventy thousand hogsheads, of five or six hun¬ dred weight, annually, and this certainly is no extravagant esti¬ mation. Indigo, cotton, piemento or allspice, ginger, and aloes, are raised here; and coffee in great abundance; but to what value I cannot exactly say. Martinico is the residence of the governor of the French islands in these seas. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 259 Guadaloupe is the largest of all the Caribbees, and in that division called the Leeward Islands. It is almost cut in two by a deep gulph that closes the side of a narrow isthmus, which connects the two peninsulas that compose this island. It is upwards of sixty miles long, and about the same breadth. Its soil is not inferiour to that of Martinico ; it is equally culti¬ vated ; and it is fortified with equal strength; its produce is the same with that of Martinico; its export of sugar is as great, besides indigo, cotton, and those other commodities, which are produced in all the islands of that part of America called the West-Indies. The rest of the French islands in those seas are Desiada, St. Bartholomew, and Marigalante ; all of them inconsiderable in comparison of those which we have mentioned. They do not all together produce above seven or eight thousand hogsheads of sugar. As for the island of St. Vincent, it is in the posses¬ sion of the native Americans, and of runaway negroes from the rest of the Caribbees. The French maintain them in this pos¬ session. Santa Lucia, or, as it is often called, Saint Alouzie, of which the French are themselves in possession, and have set¬ tled, contrary to the faith of treaties, it is impossible to say any thing of its produce; it has been so newly planted, that it cannot as yet yield a great deal, and it is, even in our present circumstances, much Otir fault if it ever yields a great deal to France. These islands, besides their staple commodities, send home rocou, and brazil wood, in considerable quantities, for the use of dyers, cassia for the druggists, and rosewood for joiners. The French have a settlement upon an island on the coast of Terra Firma in the province of Guiana, which they call Caen; and they claim besides a considerable part of the adjacent continent, but they have not much extended their settlements that way. The island is excessively unhealthy, 260 AS ACCOUNT OF THE ' though not so bad as formerly. The French here raise the same commodities which they have from the Caribbee islands, and in no inconsiderable quantity. In estimating the produce of these islands, it is not in my power to be very exact. I have made the best inquiries I could, and principally took care not to exaggerate. I have, indeed, made the produce of the Caribbee islands very much greater than the ingenious collector of Harris’s voyages; but then-1 am the less fearful of differing from him, as he seems a little to differ from himself, and not to have considered this point with his usual attention ; for of Martinico he says, “ That, as it is larger, so it has more inhabitants than Barbadoes, and produces more sugars,” &c. And speaking of Guadaloupe, a little lower, he observes, “ That it produces more sugars than any of the British islands, except Jamaica and yet afterwards, coming to sum up the products of all these islands, lie allows but fifteen thousand hogsheads of sugar, of about six hundred weight each, for the whole; when he makes the single island of Barbadoes to yield double the quantity of sugars which Mar¬ tinico, Guadaloupe, and all the French Caribbees put together produce. For he rates it in the year 1730, at twenty-two thou¬ sand hogsheads, and upwards, of thirteen hundred weight. lie must therefore certainly have made some mistake, excusable enough in so vast a work, which is executed in general in a very masterly manner. On the whole, from the best informations I can get, the French at present greatly exceed our islands in the quantity of sugars which they produce ; and it is as certain, that they are far less on the decline in that trade than we are, at least as things stood before the war ; that they cultivate great quan¬ tities of indigo ; a*trade which otir colonies in the West-Indies have entirely lost; that within these few years they have sent to ruiioi'EAX settixments in amebica. S*€>I to Europe abundance of coffee, Which our islands have iiot suiiicient encouragement to raise; and that, upfcn the whole, we have the greatest reason to be jealous of Franck in that part of the world. What advantages they derive from the noble is¬ land of Hispaniola ire have seen. What must they do, if they come to possess the whole of that island, which in the cutting and shuffling of a treaty of peace is no way impossible ? We shall then change the indolent Spaniard for the neighbourhood of the lively, vigilant, and enterprising French. And v hat a riviilry in peace, and what a danger in war, that neighbourhood is even now, and much more will probably be, is but too appa¬ rent. Jamaica is near it ; and, for so valuable a possession in so dangerous a situation, perhaps not so well defended. If, be¬ sides this, the French should retain the islands of St. Vincent, St. Lucia, and Tobago, though they should only turn them into plantations for fire-wood, lumber, ami provisions, as in such a case it would be adviseable to do with some of them at least, what an advantage to their colonies! what an annoyance to ours ! which they in a manner surround, and can in a sort hold besieged by the private armaments they may from thence tit out! These last mentioned islands were left neutral at the last peace ; or, in other words, they were left at the extinction of the old, in just the order proper for kindling a new flame (though such a design, I am convinced, was far front the inten¬ tions of the parties) and in all respects as if things were ex¬ pressly ordered for that very purpose. Indeed nothing can be attended with worse consequences than these political after- reckonings, which the party who has the advantage at making the peace never finds it his account to settle or adjust; but there they lie, full of matter of litigation ; full of idle occasions for formal business; full of strife and of ill blood ; and, when a proper 262 X ACCOUNT THE proper time occurs, of bloody and expensive wars. It were better, at any rate, all at once to know what we are to depend upon; the best or the worst we have to expect. If, on the conclusion of a peace, things should take for us such an unfor¬ tunate turn, we have still great resources in the territories we possess. Jamaica is nothing like folly cultivated. The Ba¬ hamas, our undisputed *ight, where it is highly probable sugars might be cultivated to advantage, remain at present utterly neglected, as if unworthy of all notice, though they are many in number, large in extent, fruitful in their soil, situated in a very happy climate, and are in a manner the keys of the West- India navigation. But we shall pass by all reflexions on this subject for the present, to look at the possessions and claims of France upon the continent; which, if they were as well culti¬ vated as they are fruitful and extensive, or as convenient objects of the French industry as their islands, they would, I make no doubt, be at least as advantageous to the trade, and add as much to the wealth and power, of that flourishing kingdom. CHAP- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 263 CHAP. IV. TRENCH NORTH AMERICA.—DESCRIPTION OF CANADA—ITS CLIMATE.—THE FAIR OF MONTREAL.—QUEEECK.—THE INHABITANTS OF CANADA.—THE RIVER OF ST. LAWRENCE AND THE GREAT LAKES.—CAPE BRETON. The French possessions and claims in North America consist of an immense inland country, communicating with the sea by the mouths of two great rivers ; both of difficult and dangerous navigation at the entrance; and one of which is quite frozen for almost half the year, and covered with thick exhalations and fogs for the greater part of the rest. They divide this vast country, which has our colonies on the east and north-east, the Spanish on the south-west, and south-east, and to the westward that unknown tract of land which stretches to the South-Sea, into two great provinces ; the northern of which they call Canada, and the southern Louisiana. But how far the bounds of these countries, extended to dimensions almost as great as all Europe by the ambition of France, ought to be contracted by the rights of other powers, I shall not undertake to deter¬ mine ; as, after all, such questions must be decided in a manner altogether different from any thing that can be said here. Canada, which borders upon our provinces of Nova-Scotia, New England, and New York, is of a climate not altogether different from theirs ; but, as it is much further from the sea, and more northerly than a great part of those provinces, it has a much severer winter; though the air is generally clear. The soil -‘Ft AN ACCOUNT OF THE soil is various ; mostly barren ; but the French have settlements ■'•here the land is equal in goodnc-s.s to that in any of our colo¬ nies, and wants nothing but a better convenience of market to make it equally advantageous to the proprietors. It. yields In¬ dian corn very well in most parts, and very fine wheat in some. All sorts of garden stuff which grcws in Europe flourishes here. But they raise no staple commodity to answer their demands upon Old France; their trade with the Indians produces all their returns fer that market They are the furs of the beaver principally, and those of foxes and racoons, with deer-skins, and ail the branches of the peltry. These, with what corn and lumber they send to the West-Indies, to a people not very luxurious nor extremely numerous, furnish, though very little money, yet wherewithal, in a plentiful country, to render life easy and agreeable. The nature of the climate, severely cold for the most part, and the people manufacturing nothing, shews what the country wants from Europe; wine, brandy, cloths, chiefly coarse, linen, and wrought iron. The Indian trade requires brandy, tobacco, a sort of duffil blankets, guns, powder and ball, ket¬ tles, hatchets, and tomahawks, with several toys and trinkets. The Indians supply the peltry, and the French have traders, whom they call courcurs de bois who, in the manner of the original inhabitants, traversing the vast lakes and rivers that divide this country, in canoes of bark, with incredible industry and patience, carry their goods into the remotest parts of Ame¬ rica, and amongst nations entirely unknown to us. This again brings the market home to them, as the Indians are hereby habituated to trade with them. For this purpose, people from aU parts, even from the distance of a thousand miles, come to the French fair of Montreal, which is held in June. On this occasion many solemnities are observed ; guards are placed, and EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS in AMERICA. 265 anti the governor assists, to preserve order in such a concourse of so great a variety of savage nations. The trade is now in that channel, for though many, if not most, of these nations ac¬ tuary pass by our settlement of Albany in New York,, where they may have the goods they want cheaper considerably than at Montreal, they travel on above two hundred miles further, to buy the same commodities at the second hand, and enhanced by the expence of so long a land carriage, at the French fair. Foi the French find it cheaper to buy our goods from the New York merchants, than to have them from their own, after so bad and so tedious a passage as it is from the mouth of the river St. Lawrence to Montreal. So much do the French exceed us in industry, economy, and the arts of conciliating the affections of mankind; things that even balance all the disadvantages they naturally labour under in this country ! Our fort of Oswego was well planned for securing the Indian trade, and actually brought us a great part of it. But it is no longer an interruption to the French commerce. Having mentioned Montreal, I have only to observe, that this town is situated in an island in the river of St. Lawrence. This island lies in a favourable climate, and is well inhabited and well planted. The city, which is sometimes called Mont- real, sometimes Ville Marie, is agreeably situated on a branch of the river St. Lawrence ; it forms an oblong square, divided by regular and well cut streets ; it contains three convents, with handsome churches, and an hospital for the sick. The fortifications are pretty good. The inhabitants are said to be about five thousand. The river is only navigable hither' by- canoes, or small craft,. having several falls between this town and Quebeck. Yet the Indian fair, and the trade of the •same kind which they drive more or less for the whole year, make it no inconsiderable place. Quebeck, AX ACCOUNT OF THE 26 b' Quebeck, the capital, lies much nearer to tire sea ; from •which, however, it is one hundred and fifty leagues distant. The river, which from the sea hither is ten or twelve miles broad, narrows all of a sudden to about a mile wide. The town is divided into an upper and lower; the houses in both are of stone, and in a tolerable manner. The fortifications are strong, though not regular ; but its situation on a rock, washed by the river St. Lawrence, is its chief defence. The city is a bishoprick; but the cathedral is mean, and unworthy the ca¬ pital of New France. The episcopal palace however is a building of a good appearance. Here is likewise a college of Jesuits, not inelegant; two convents and two hospitals. The town is covered with a regular and beautiful citadel, in which the governor resides. The city, though the capital of Canada, is however not very large. It contains about seven or eight thousand inhabitants at the utmost. Ships of the greatest bur¬ then load and unload there, and a good many are built. From Quebeck to Montreal, which is about one hundred and fifty miles distance, the country on both sides the river is very well settled, and has an agreeable effect upon the eye. The farms lie pretty close all the way ; several gentlemen's houses, neatly built, shew themselves at intervals; and there is all the appearance of a flourishing colony; but there are no towns or villages. It is pretty much like the well-settled parts of our colonies of Virginia and Maryland, where the planters are wholly within themselves. With all the attention of the court of France to tire trade and peopling of this, as well as their other colonies on the con¬ tinent, they have not yet been able thoroughly to overcome the consequences of those difficulties which the climate, whilst tite place was unsettled, threw in their way ; their losses in the ware with that brave and fierce nation the Iroquois, who more than EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IK AMEBICA. than once reduced tbeir colony to the last extremity, and the - bad navigation of the river St. Lawrence, which is an evil in* curable, have kept back the colony. Therefore, though it is the oldest of all the French establishments, and prior to our settlement of New England, tire inhabitants are not above one hundred. thousand souls. Some indeed of late reckon them but at forty thousand. An errour that is. very prejudicial to our affairs, whilst we overvalued our own strength and under-' rated.the force of the enemy, and acted in a good measure is conformity to such ideas; but even this number, as I estimate it, which 1 believe is not far from the reality, might be no just cause of dread to our colonies, if they managed the strength they have, which is ’ certainly much superkmr, with skill and effect. The French from theirs, though i'nfcriour, have seven or eight thousand militia, hardy and well disciplined, always in Readiness to co-opcrate with tbeir rcgdfar troops ; and there is nothing which may binder or retard tbeir operation*from with* in themselves. It is therefore not more the French intrigues and their intermarriages with the Indians, which fix that pe»> pic in the French interest, than: the succours which they am always sure to have from such a force, ever in readiness, to pro¬ tect them whilst they remain tbeir friends, or fa punhb theut whenever they dare to appear as enemies. With us ihecaseia quite otherwise. • This savage. people commence hostilities against us without any previous notice;, and often, without) any provocation,, they commit the most horrid ravages.for a long time with impunity-) But wheitat last tbeir barbarities have roused the deeping strength of our people,.at the sanm time too that they have considerably lessened it, they’are nob ashamed tu beg a serve that this island was taken by us in the late war, but restored by the treaty of Aix la Chapelle, in which we certainly were not in such a condition as to entitle us to prescribe the terms.. CHAP. 270 ACCOUNT Of THE CHAP. V. LOUISIANA.— THE MISSISIPPI.-THE OHIO.—THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH.-— THE COLONY OF LOUISIANA. The French have called the south part of the vast tract which they claim in America, Louisiana. It was heretofore a part of Florida. It is bounded by the gulph of Mexico upon the south ; but what bounds it is to have to the east and to the west, it is to be wished the next treaty of peace may settle definitely. This is in all respects a much finer country than Canada; in a delicious climate, capable of bearing almost any thing from the temper of the sky, and the goodness of the soil, and from the multitude of long, deep, and beautiful rivers, with which it is every where enriched and adorned ; these are most of them navigable for hundreds of miles into the country. They are principally the Missisippi, whose head is unknown, but it almost goes quite through North America, and at certain seasons overflows its banks for a vast way on both sides. The Ohio, a river almost equal to the Danube, which falls into the Missisippi; the Ouabache, scarce inferiour to the Ohio ; the great rivers, Alibama, Mobile, and several others. The face of the country is almost wholly plain, covered with stately woods, or spread into very fine meadows. In short, Louisiana, particularly the northern part (for the mouth of the Missisippi is barren}, without any. of those heightenings which it received, when it was made the instrument to captivate so many to their ruin, is in all respects a most desirable place; though there are EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 271 no sufficient reasons to believe that it contains any rich metals, which gave it the greatest influence in that remarkable delu¬ sion in 1717. I know not how it has happened, but it has been the fate of this country to create romantick ideas at alt times. Very sur¬ prising stories were told of it when first the Spaniards discovered the West-India islands. Amongst others, a notion was gene¬ rally current, that there was a fountain here which perpetually ' renewed the youth of those who drank it. This was so uni¬ formly and confidently affirmed, that Juan Pontio de Leon, a considerable man among fhe Spanish adventurers, gave credit to it, and made a particular expedition for the discovery of that fairy land, and that fountain of youth. He was the first of the Europeans who landed in Florida. But what success soever he met with in search for that celebrated spring, it is certain he died not long after, having searched every part of the country, and drank of almost every water it contained. Nor do I find- that so invaluable a spring is yet discovered there ; if it were, it would undoubtedly be the best commodity the country could yield, both for domestick consumption and for the foreign markets, and would be a far better basis for stocks and funds than the richest mines of gold or silver. Yet, without this, an idea, altogether as romantick, of a trade hither, operated so strongly upon a very wise nation, as to serve for the instrument of one of those dangerous master-strokes in politicks, by which nations are sometimes saved, individuals undone, and an entire change and reversemenfc brought about, not only in the com¬ mon ways of thinking of mankind, but of all that seemed most fixed and permanent in a state. The famous Missisippi scheme in France was of that nature, and built upon such a romantick foundation. It is well known to all the world, both on its-own* account, and upon account of a- similar madness that prevailed here, here, without perhaps being attended with such advantageous consequences. The French settled in Louisiana raise some indigo, a good deal of cotton, some cornand rice, with lumber for their islands ; but the colony is not very vigorous, on account of the shoals and sands with which the mouth of the river Missisippi is in a manner choaked up, and which deny access to vessels of any considerable burden. This keeps the inhabitants low ; but the cause which keeps them frcm growing rich contribu.es too to their security ; for it is not easy to act with any great force upon that side. But the French have not relied upon this ad¬ vantage ; but, according to tlieir usual cautions and wise cus¬ tom, have erected several forts in the most material places, and fortified, as it is said. New Orleans their capital, and indeed the only city in Louisiana, in a regular manner. This city is not remarkably fair, large, or rich ; but it is laid out regularly, ill a fine situation on the banks of the Missisippi, in prospect of an higher fortune. The whole colony is said not to contain above ten thousand souls, whites and negroes. Yet, with all its disadvantages, this colony is not declining ; and if ever they should make the mouth of the Missisippi more tractable (and what is impossible to ambition and industry?) if they should come fully to possess and settle the Ohio, which at one season overflows, and makes such flood as to level all the falls almost from its very source to the mouth of the Missisippi, and gives a passage all that way to very considerable vessels (though they have not (juite the same easy return); and if by this and other means they should contrive a communication between Canada and the settlement at Louisiana, whilst they entirely confine us between our mountains and the sea, Louisiana in a few years will wear quite another face. It will supply their West-Indies with boards, staves, horses, mules, and provisions. ; It will send tobacco ETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. tobacco into France ; and. increasing the conveniencies of its mother country and sister colonies; it will increase its own traffick, its inhabitants, and its power. But the French, not trusting to this remote prospect, have established themselves at the mouth of the Mobile ; a river which falls into the gulph of Mexico. And many are of opinion, that this is a more ad¬ vantageous situation, not only for the maritime but for the in¬ land commerce, and the communication of their colonies, than the Missisippi. It certainly approaches much nearer to our settlements, and, whilst it serves the French better, is much better calculated to annoy our southern colonies. We have seen how the French West-Indies, in less than forty years, from a condition which could excite no other sentiments than those of compassion, are risen to such a pitch as. to be au object of great and just terrour to her neighbourswe now feel too, that the French settlements in North America, even such as they are, are not an undermatch for the whole force of ours, in the manner at least in which that force is exerted. CIB\P. AX ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. VI. THE FRENCH POLICY WITH REGARD TO THEIR COLONIES. That we may not sit down in a senseless admiration of this pro¬ gress of the French colonies, as if it were the v.uk of fortune, it will not be amiss to open something of the wise plan of con¬ duct which France has pursued with regard to this interesting object. That nation is sensible, as the mother country is to re¬ ceive ultimately all the benefits of their labours and acquisi¬ tions, that all the prosperity of their plantations must be derived from the attention with which they are regarded at home. For which reason the plantations are particularly under the care and inspection of the council of commerce; a board very judiciously constituted to answer the purposes for which it is designed. To give it a proper respect and authority, it is romposed of twelve of the most considerable officers of the crown ; and then, to enable it to judge perfectly of the matters which come before it, these twelve are assisted by the deputies of all the considerable trading towns and cities in France, who are chosen out of the richest and most intelligent of their traders, and paid an handsome salary for their attendance at Paris, from the funds of their respective cities. This council sits once a week. The deputies propose plans for redress¬ ing every grievance in trade; for raising the branches that are fallen; tor extending new ones; for supporting the old; and, in fine, for every thing that may improve the working, or promote the vent of their manufactures, according to their own lights. ENTS IN AMERICA. lights, or to the instructions of their constituents- They have a watchful eye upon every article of commerce ; and they not only propose helps and improvements to it themselves, hut they hear the proposals of others, which are not disdainfully rejected, nor rashly received. They do not render the access to them difficult, by swelling themselves into a stiff and unwieldy state. They do not discourage those who apply, by admit¬ ting tlie vexatious practices of fees, perquisites, and exactions, in their inferiour officers. They do not suffer form and me’hods to load and encumber that business, they were solely intended to advance. They summon and examine those who are sup¬ posed the most competent judges of the matter before them, and every part of it, even the West artizans: but though they examine those men, they are instructed by their experience, not determined by their opinion. When they are satisfied of the usefulness'of any regulation, they propose it to the royal council, where their report is always received with particular attention. An edict to enforce it issues accordingly; and it is executed with a punctuality which distinguishes their government, and which alone can make the wisest regulations any thing better than serious mockeries. To the care of this excellent body the plantations are particularly entrusted. The government of the several divisions of their colonies is in a governor, an intendant, and a royal council. The governor is invested with a great deal of power; which however, on the side of the crown, is checked by the intendant, who has a care of the king’s rights, and whatever relates to the revenue; and on the side of the people, it is checked by the royal council, whose office it is, to see that the people are not oppressed by the one, nor defratfded by the other ; and they are all checked by the constant and jealous eye which the government at home keeps over them. For the officers at all the ports of France are charged, under the severest penalties, to interrogate all cap- n n 2 tains AN ACCOUNT OF THE tains of ships coming from the colonies concerning the recep¬ tion the} - met at the ports they were bound to ; how justice was administered to them ? what charges they were made liable to, and of what kinds ? The passengers, and .even the sailors, are examined upon these heads, and a verbal process of the whole is iormed and transmitted with all speed to the admiralty. Com¬ plaints are encouraged ; but a difference is made between hear¬ ing an accusation and condemning upon it. That the colonies may have as little load as possible, and that the governor may have as little temptation to stir up trouble¬ some intrigues, or favour factions in his government, his salary is paid by the crown. His perquisites are none; and he is strictly forbidden to carry on any trade, or to have any plan¬ tations in the islands, or on the continent, or any interest what¬ ever in goods or lands within his government, except the house be lives in, and a garden for his convenience and recreation. All the other officers are paid by the crown, and out of the reve¬ nues of Old Franee ; the fortifications are built and repaired^ and the soldiers are paid out of the same funds. In general the colonies pay no taxes ; but when, upon an extraordinary emergency, taxes have been raised, they were very moderate. And, that even the taxes might operate for the advancement of the colony, they who began new planta¬ tions were exempted from them. The duties upon the export of their produce at the islands, or at its import into France, is next to nothing; in both places hardly making two percent. What commodities go to. them, pay no duties-at' all. Besides these advantages, a considerable benefit accrues to such of the colonies as are poor, as Canada, by the money which comes from. France to support the establishment. This brings into Canada about 120,000 crowns a year, which finds them cir¬ culating cash; preserves them from the dangerous expedient of a.paper currency; enables them to keep up their intercourse EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 2T7‘ with some credit, with their mother country ; and at the same time is in fact no loss at all to it, since the money returns home almost as soon as it can possibly be transported back again: In all their islands, judges of the admiralty are appointed to decide in a summary manner all disputes between merchants, and whatsoever else has any relation to trade. These judges are strictly examined before they are appointed, particularly as td their skill in marine laws, which have been improved and di¬ gested in France with so much care and good sense, that all law-suits are quickly over ; though in other respects the prac¬ tice of law admits of as much chicanery, and has as many, if not more delays, than with us. After having taken such precautions to secure the good go¬ vernment of the colony within itself, and to make its communi¬ cation with the mother country easy and beneficial to both sides, all would be to very little purpose, if they had not provided with equal care to have the country replenished with people. To an¬ swer this end, they oblige every ship which departs from France to America, to carry a certain number of indentured servants. All vessels of sixty tons or under are to carry three ; from sixty to a hundred, four; and from a hundred upwards, six servants; sound strong bodies, between the ages of eighteen and forty. Before their departure, the servants are examined by the officers of the admiralty, to see whether they are the persons required bylaw; an examination to the same purpose is made by the commissary on their landing in America. They are to serve three years. The avarice of the planters makes them always prefer negro slaves, because they are more obedient than the Europeans; may be more worked, are subsisted with less dif¬ ficulty, and are besides the entire property of their master. This disposition, in time, would render the safety of the colony extremely precarious, whilst it made the colony itself of-Iess value 27S IN ACCOUNT OF to the mother country. Therefore the planters are by law- obliged to keep a certain number of white servants in propor¬ tion to their blacks ; and the execution of this law is deforced by the commissary, who adjusts the price, and forces the planters to take the number of servants required by the ordinance, who would otherwise be a burden upon the hands of the masters of ships who brought them over. They consider the planter, as a Frenchman venturing his life, enduring a species of banishment, and undergoing great hard¬ ships, for the benefit of his country'. For which reasons, he has great indulgence shewn him. Whenever, by hurricanes, earthquakes, or bad seasons, the planters sutler, a stop is put to the rigour of exacting creditors; the few taxes which are levied, are remitted; and even money is advanced to repair their losses and set them forward. To those who are poor, but shew a disposition to industry, necessaries and small sums are lent to make a beginning ; and this money is taken gradually, and by very-small payments. On the other hand, as it can be of no advantage to the planter to run fraudulently into debt,, but is of the greatest prejudice to the French merchant, all debts, though contracted by the planters in France, are levied with great ease. The process, properly authenticated, is trans¬ mitted to America, and admitted as proved there, and levied on the planter’s estate, of whatsoever kind it may be. How¬ ever, care is taken, that, whilst compulsory methods are used to make the planter do justice, the state shall not lose the industry of an useful member of the community ; the debt is always le¬ vied according to the substance of the debtor, and by instal¬ ment ; so that (what ought indeed to be the case in every well- regulated government) one of the parties is not sacrificed to the other. Both subsist; the creditor is satisfied; the debtor is not ruined; and the credit of the colonies is kept in health and EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 273 vigour at home, by the sure methods which are in use for reco-. vering all demands in the plantations. As to the negroes, they are not left as they are with us, wholly, body and soul, to the discretion of the planter. Their masters are obliged to have them instructed in the principles of religion. There are methods taken at once to protect the slaves from the cruelty of their owners, and to preserve the colony from the ill effects that might arise from, treating them with a lenity not consistent with their condition. In short, the Code Noir, and other ordinances relative to these poor creatures, shew a very just and sensible mixture of humanity and steadiness. There is however one errour, their planters commit in common with ours : which is, that they over-work these unhappy men in a manner not suitable to the nature of the climate, or to their constitutions. I have dwelt the longer upon the French policy as it regards their colonies, because it is just to give due honour to all those who advance the intercourse of mankind, the peopling of the earth, and the advantage of their country, by wise and effectual regulations. But I principally insist upon it, that it may, if possible, serve for an example to ourselves ; that it may excite an emulation in us ; that it may help to rouse us out of that languor into which we seem to he fallen. The war we now carry on principally regards our colonies, and is a sufficient proof that we come at last to know their value. But, if we are not to hope for better success than has hitherto attended a very just cause, the next peace will probably, contract the field we hoped to lay open to our industry in America. We ought therefore to cul-' tivate what still remains of it, with tenfold industry ; we ought to guard with the most unremitting vigilance that enclosed spring, that sealed fountain, (he waters of which we reserve to ourselves, and direct into such channels, and make to pursue such 280 AN- ACCOUNT OF THE such windings and turnings, as best serve our purposes. We have, I believe, pretty well discovered most of our errours, and the advantage our enemy and rival has taken, not only of our supine¬ ness, but of a contrary- genius in his own councils. We ought to rouse ourselves from the former, and prepare to imitate the latter. Our business is to fight against Alexander, not to rail at iiim. And truly, I do not know any thing, that for this long time past has contributed more to degrade our character for humanity in the eyes of foreigners, or to instil into ourselves a low and illiberal way of thinking, than the vein of licentious scurrility and abuse, by which, in alt sorts of writings, we are apt to vilify and traduce the French nation. There is nothing which hinders people from.acting properly, more than indulging themselves in a vain and effeminate licence of tongue. A man who loves his country, and can at once oppose and esteem an enemy, would view our present circumstances in a light, I con¬ ceive, somewhat like the following. We have been engaged for above a century with France in a noble contention for the su¬ periority in arms, 'in politicks, in learning, and in commerce ; and there never was a time, perhaps, when this struggle was more critical. If we succeed in the war, even our success, un¬ less managed with prudence, will be, like some former successes, of little benefit to us ; if we should fail, which God forbid', even' then, prudence may make our misfortunes of more use to us, than an ili-managed success: if they teach us to avoid' our former errours ; if they make us tess careless ; if they make us cultivate the advantages we have with care and judgment: this, and not our opinion.«£ the enemy, must decide the leng. contest between us. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 281 CHAP. VII. THE DUTCH SETTLEMENTS.—CUIUSSOU.—THE CITE, ITS TRADE.-THE SPA¬ NISH CONTRARAND.— EUSTATIA.-THE DANISH COMPANY.—THE DANISH ISLAND OF SANTA CRUZ.—THE CHARACTERS OF THE SEVERAL EUROPEAN NATIONS AS THEY REGARD AMERICA. After the Portuguese had dispossessed the Dutch of Brazil in the manner we have seen, and after the treaty of Nimeguen had entirely removed them out of North America, they were ob- ■ liged to console themselves with their rich possessions in the East-Indies, and to sit down content in the west with Suri¬ nam ; a country on the north-east part of South America, of no great value whilst we had it, and which we ceded to them in exchange for New-York; and with two or three small and barren islands in the North-Sea not far from the Spanish main. The former of these they are far from neglecting; they raise some su«ar in Surinam; a great deal of cotton; coffee of.an excellent kind, and some, valuable dyeing drugs. They trade with our North American colonies, who bring hither horses, live cattle, and provisions, and take home a large quantity of molasses ; but their negroes are only the refuse of those they have for the Spanish market; and the Indians in their neigh¬ bourhood are their mortal enemies. On the same continent they have three other settlements at no considerable distance from each other, Boron, Berbice, and Approwack; none very great, but producing the same commodities with Surinam. The islands which they possess are four, Curassou, St. Eu- o o statia, 282 AS ACCOUNT statia, Aiuba. ami Bonaire; none of them large or fertile, but turned to the best advantage possible by that spirit of industry ibr which the Batch are justly famous. Curacco, or Curassou, as it is generally called, is about thirty miles long, and ten in breadth. Though it is naturally barren, it produces a con¬ siderable quantity both of sugar and tobacco, and here are be¬ sides very great salt works, which furnish a good deal to the English islands, and for which there is a considerable demand from our colonies on. the continent; but the trade for which this island is chiefly valuable, is that which in time of war is carried on between them, the English, and the French; and the contraband which is carried on between them and the Spa¬ niards at all times. The Dutch vessels from Europe touch at this island for in¬ telligence or proper pilots, and then proceed to the Spanish coast upon a trade which they force with a strong hand. It is very 7 difficult for the Spanish guarda costas to take these ves¬ sels ; for they are not only stout ships with a number of guns ; hut, by a very wise policy, manned with a large crew of chosen seamen, who are all deeply interested in the safety of the vessel and the success of the voyage. They have each a share in the cargo, of a value proportioned to the owner’s station, supplied by the merchants upon credit, and at prime cost. This ani¬ mates them with an uncommon courage; they fight bravely be¬ cause every man fights in defence of his own property. But there is besides this, a constant intercourse between the Spa¬ nish continent and this island. This island of Curassou has its numerous warehouses always full of the commodities of Europe and the East-Indies. Here are all sorts of woollen and linen cloths, laces, silks, ribbands, utensils of iron, naval and military stores, brandy, the spices of the Moluccas, and the calicoes of India, white and painted. Hither EL'BOl'EAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 283 Hither the West-India, which is likewise their African com¬ pany, bring three or four cargoes of slaves annually. To this mart, the Spaniards come, themselves in small vessels, and carry oft' not only the best of their negroes, and at the best price, but very great quantities of all sorts of goods I have mentioned ; with this advantage to the seller, that the refuse of warehouses and mercers’ shops, things grown utterly unfashionable and un¬ saleable in Europe, go off extremely well, where every tiling is sufficiently recommended by being European. They leave here their gold and silver in bars or coined, cacao, vanilla, co¬ chineal, jesuit’s bark, hides, and other valuable commodities. The ships that trade directly from Holland to the Spanish con¬ tinent, as they touch here on their outward passage to gain in¬ telligence or assistance, on their return put in here likewise to complete what is wanting of their cargo, with the sugar, tiie tobacco, the ginger, and other produce of the island itself. The trade of this island, even in time of peace, is reputed to be worth to the Dutch no less than 500,000/. sterling annually, but in time of war the profit is far greater, for then it is in a m in¬ ner the common emporium of the West-Indies; it affords a great retreat to the ships of all nations, and at the same time refuses to none of them arms and ammunition to annoy one another. The intercourse with Spain being interrupted, the Spanish colonies have scarce any other market, from whence they can be well supplied either with slaves or goods; the French come hither to buy the beef, pork, corn, flour, and lumber, which the English bring from the continent of North America, or which is transported from Ireland; so that, whether in peace or in war, the trade of this island flourishes extremely. Nor is this owing to any natural advantage whatsoever. It seems as if it were fated, that the ingenuity and patience of the Hol¬ landers should every where, both in Europe and America, be o o 2 employed 234 employed in fighting against an unfriendly nature; for the island is not only barren, and dependent upon the rains for its water, but the harbour is naturally one of the worst in Ame¬ rica : yet the Dutch have entirely remedied that defect; they have upon this harbour one of the largest, and by far the most elegant and cleanly towns in the American islands. The pub- lick buildings are numerous and handsome ; the private houses commodious; and the magazines large, convenient, and well filled. All kind of labour is here performed by engines; some of them so dexterously contrived, that ships are at once lifted into the dock, where they are completely careened ; and then furnished with naval stores, provisions, cannon, and every thing requisite either for trade or war. Eustatia is but one mountain of about twenty miles in com¬ pass ; it is amongst the Leeward islands ; but, though so small and inconveniently laid out by nature, the industry of the Dutch has made it turn out to very good account, and it is fully peopled; the sides of the mountain are divided and laid out in very pretty settlements; and, though they have neither springs nor rivers, they are so careful, that they never want proper supplies of water from their ponds and cisterns. They raise here sugar and tobacco; and this island, as well as Cu- rassou, is engaged in the Spanish contraband trade, for which, however, it is not so well situated ; and it draws the same ad¬ vantages from its constant neutrality. As for Aruba and Bonaire ; they lie near Curassou, and have no trade of consequence ; they are chiefly employed in raising fresh provisions for the principal island, and for the refreshment of such ships as use these seas. The trade of all the Dutch American settlements was origi¬ nally' carried on by the West-India company only. At present such ships as go upon that trade pay two and a half per cent. for EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 285 far their licences; the company however reserves to itself, the whole of what is carried on between Africa and the American islands. The Danes had likewise a West-India company, though its object was for from extensive. It was little more than the island of St. Thomas, an inconsiderable member of the CaHb- bees; lately they have added to their possessions the island of Santa Cruz in the same cluster. These islands, so long as they remained in the hands of the.company, were ill managed, and nothing like the proper advantage was made of them ; but the present king of Denmark, inferiour to none who ever sat upon that or any other throne, in love to his subjects, and a judi¬ cious zeal for promoting their welfare, has bought up that com¬ pany’s stock, and laid the trade open. Since then, the old set¬ tlement at St. Thomas is very much improved; it produces upwards of three thousand hogsheads of sugar at a thousand weight each, and others of the West-Indian commodities iiv tolerable plenty ; and as for Santa Cruz, from a perfect desart a few years since, it is beginning to settle fast; several persons from the English islands, and amongst them some of great wealth, have gone to settle there, and have received very great encouragement to do so. The air of the place is extremely un¬ healthful, but this ill disposition will probably continue no longer than the woods, with which the island at present is almost wholly covered. These two nations, the Dutch and Danes, hardly deserve to be mentioned among the proprietors of America; their possessions there are comparatively nothing. But, as they appear extremely worthy of the attention of these powers, and as the share of the Dutch is worth to them at least six hundred thousand pounds sterling a year, what must we think of our possessions ? what attention do they not deserve from 236 AX ACCOUNT OP rut; from us? and what may not be made of them by that atten- Tiiere seems to be a remarkable providence in casting the parts, if I may use that expression, of the several European nations who act upon the stage of America. The Spaniard, proud, lazy, and magnificent, lias an ample walk in which to expatiate; a soft climate to indulge his love of ease; and ;l profusion of gold and silver to procure him all those luxuries his pride demands, but which his laziness would refuse him. The Portuguese, naturally indigent at home, and enterprising rather than industrious abroad, has gold and diamonds as the Spaniard lias, wants them as he does, but possesses them in a more useful, though a less ostentatious manner. The English, of a reasoning disposition, thoughtful and cool,, and men of business rather than of great industry, impatient of much fruitless labour, abhorrent of constraint, and lovers of a country life, have a lot which indeed produces neither gold nor silver; but they have a large tract of a fine continent; a noble field for the exercise of agriculture, and sufficient to fur¬ nish their trade without laying them under great difficulties. Intolerant as they are of the most useful restraints, their com¬ merce flourishes from the freedom every man lias of pursuing it according to his own ideas, and directing his life after his own- fashion. The French, active, lively, enterprising, pliable, and politick, and though changing their pursuits always pursuing the present object with eagerness, are notwithstanding tractai !e and obe¬ dient to rules and laws, which bridle these dispositions and wind and turn them to proper courses. This people have a country, where more is to be effected by managing the people than by cultivating the ground; where a pediing commerce, that re- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IK AMERICA. 287 quires constant motion, flourishes more than agriculture or a regular traffiek; where they have difficulties which keep them alert by struggling with them, and where their obedience to a wise government serves them for personal wisdom. In the islands, the whole is the work of their policy, and a right turn their government has taken. The Dutch have got a rock or two on which to display the miracles of frugality and diligence (which are their virtues), and on which they have exerted these virtues, and shewn those miracles. (CHAP. AN ACCOUNT OF THE PART VL THE ENGLISH SETTLEMENTS. CHAP. I. THE DIVISION OF THE ENGLISH WEST-INDIES.—DESCRIPTION OF JAMAICA.— CONQUEST OF THAT ISLAND, The English colonies are the fairest object of our attention in America; not only as they comprehend a vast and delightful variety of climates, situations, natural products, and improve¬ ments of art; but as they contain, though the dominions of one potentate, and their inhabitants formed out of the people of one nation, an almost equal variety of manners, religions, and ways of livings. They have a most flourishing trade with their mother country, and they communicate widely with many foreign nations ; for, besides the constant and useful in¬ tercourse they hold with Africa, their ships are seen in the ports of Spain, Portugal, Italy, and even in the Levant; nor are the}' excluded the American settlements of France, Spain, Por¬ tugal, and Holland. This, with their constant correspondence .with each other and with their mother country, hurries about a lively EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 283 a lively circulation of trade, of which Great Britain is the heart and spring, from whence it takes its rise, and to which it all returns in the end. In some of the European settlements, we have seen the effects of a vast ambition supported by surprising feats of a romantick courage mixed with an insatiable thirst of gold. In others, the regular product of a systeniatick policy tempering and guiding an active industry. But in our own colonies we are to display the effects of liberty ; the work of a people guided by their genius, and following the directions of their own natural temper in a proper path. I intend to consider the English colonies under two principal divisions ; the first I allot to those islands which lie under the torrid zone between the tropick of Cancer and the Equinoctial line, in that part generally called the West-Indies. The second is to comprehend our possessions in the temperate zone on the continent of North America. The West-Indics islands shall be considered, as they are amongst the Greater Antilles ; the Wind¬ ward ; or the Leeward islands. Amongst the first we possess the large and noble island of Jamaica; amongst the second we have Barbadoes ; and in the third St. Christoper’s, Antigua, Nevis, Montserrat, and Barbuda. As all these islands lie be¬ tween the tropicks; whatever is to be said of the air, winds, me¬ teors, and natural produce, shall fall under one head, as they are the same or nearly the same in all of them ; their produce for the market is nearly the same too; and therefore whatever is to be said of the manufacturing of those, shall come together, after we have given a concise description of the state of each island separately. Jamaica lies between the 7ufh and 7.9th degrees of west lon¬ gitude from London, and is between 17 and 19 degrees distant from the Equinoctial. It is in length, from east to west, a p e hundred 290 AN ACCOUXX OF THE hundred and forty English miles; in breadth about- sixty; and of an oval form. This country is in a manner inter¬ sected with a ridge of lofty mountains, rugged and rocky, that -..re called the Blue Mountains. On each side of the Blue Mountains are chains of lesser mountains gradually lower. The greater mountains are little better than so many rocks; where there is any earth, it is only a stubborn clay fit for no sort of husbandly. The mountains are very steep, and the rocks tumbled upon one another.in a manner altogether stu¬ pendous, the effect of the frequent earthquakes which have shaken this island in all times. Yet, barren as these mountains are, they are all covered to the very top with a great variety'of beautiful trees, flourishing in a perpetuaE spring; their roots penetrate the crannies of the rocks, and search out the moisture which is lodged there by the rains that fall so frequently on these mountains, and the mists that almost perpetually brood upon them. These rocks too are the parents of a vast number of fine rivulets, which tumble down their sides in cataracts, that form, amongst the rudeness of the rocks and precipices and the shining verdure of the trees, the most wildly-pleasing imagery imaginable. The face of this country is a good deal different from what is generally observed in other places. For as on one hand the mountains are very steep ; so the plains between them are perfectly smooth and level. In these plains, the soil, aug¬ mented by the wash of the mountains for so many ages, is pro¬ digiously fertile. None of our islands produce so fine sugars. They formerly had here cacao in great perfection, which de¬ lights in a rich ground. Their pastures after the rains are of a most beautiful verdure, and extraordinary fatness. They are called savannas. On the whole, if this island were not troubled with great thunders and lightnings, hurricanes and earthquakes ; and, if the air was not at once violently hot, damp, and ex¬ tremely EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. '291 treinely unwholesome in most parts, the fertility and beauty of this country would make it as desirable a situation for pleasure, as it is for the profits, which in spite of these disadvantages draw hither such a number of people. The river waters are many of them unwholesome and taste of copper; but some springs there are of a better kind. In the plains are found several salt fountains ; and in the mountains, not far from Spanish-Town, is a hot bath, of extraordinary medicinal virtues. It relieves in the dry belly-ach, one of the most terrible endemial distempers of Jamaica, and in various other complaints. This island came into our possession during the usurpation of Cromwell, and by means of an armament which had another des¬ tination. Cromwell, notwithstanding the great abilities which enabled him to overturn the constitution and to trample upon the liberties of his country, was not sufficiently acquainted with foreign politicks. This ignorance made him connect himself closely with France, then rising into a dangerous grandeur, and to fight with great animosity the shadow which remained of the Spanish power. On such ideas he fitted out a formidable fleet, .with a view to reduce the island of Hispaniola; and, though he failed in this design, Jamaica made amends not only for this failure, but almost for the ill policy which first drew him into hostilities with the Spaniards; by which, however, he added this excellent country to the British dominions. . There was nothing of the genius of Cromwell to be seen in the planning of this expedition. From the first to the last, all was wrong ; all was a chain of little interested mismanagement, and had no air of the result of absolute power lodged in great hands. The fleet was ill victualled ; the troops ill provided with necessaries to support and encourage men badly chosen ,and worse armed. They embarked in great discontent. The p p 2 generals 292 AX ACCOUNT OF THE generals were but little better satisfied, and had' little more hopes, than the soldiers. But the generals (for then; were two in the command, Penn and Venables, one for the marine, the other for the laud service) were men of no extraordinary talents. And, if they had been men of the best capacity, little was to be expected from two commanders not subordinate, and so dif¬ fering in their ideas, and so envious of each other as land and sea-officers generally are. But, to make this arrangement per¬ fect in all respects, aud to prove the advantages arising from a divided command, they added a number of commissioners as a check upon both. This tripartite generalship, in the truest Dutch taste, produced the effects that might be expected from it. The soldiers differed with the generals, the generals dis¬ agreed with one another, and all quarrelled with the commis¬ sioners. The place of their landing in Hispaniola was ill chosen, and the manner of it wretchedly contrived. The army had near forty miles to march before it could act; and the soldiers, with¬ out order, without heart, fainting and dying by the excessive heat of the climate and the want of necessary provisions, and disheartened yet more by the cowardice and discontent of their officers, yielded an easy victory to an handful of Spaniards. They retired ignominiously and with great loss. But the principal commanders, a little reconciled by their misfortunes, and fearing to return to England without effect, very wisely turned their thoughts another way. They resolved to attempt Jamaica, before the inhabitants of that island could receive encouragement by the news of their defeat in Hispa¬ niola. Thev* knew that this island was in no good posttire of defence ; and they set themselves vigorously to avoid the mis¬ takes, which proved so fatal in the former expedition. They severely punished the officers who had shewn an ill example by their cowardice ; and they ordered, with respect to the soldiers. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 293 that, if any attempted to run away, the man near him should shoot him. Fortified with these regulations, they landed in Jamaica, and laid siege to St. Jago de la Vega, now called Spanish-Town, the capital of the island. The people, who were in no condition to oppose an army of ten thousand men and a strong naval force, would have surrendered immediately, if they' had not been en¬ couraged by the strange delays of our generals and their com¬ missioners. However at last the town with the whole island surrendered, but not until the inhabitants had secreted their most valuable effects in the mountains. CHAP. IN ACCOUNT THE *94 CHAP. II. ' THE SETTLEMENT OF JAMAICA.—THE FAILURE OF CACAO.—THE BUCCA¬ NEERS.—THE FLOURISHING STATE OF THAT ISLAND.—ITS DECLINE IN SOME RESPECTS. After the Restoration, the Spaniards ceded the island to our court. Cromwell had settled there some of the troops em¬ ployed in its reduction ; some royalists, uneasy at home, sought an asylum in this island ; not a few planters from Barbadoes were invited to Jamaica by the extraordinary fertility of the soil, and the other advantages which it offered. These latter taught the former settlers the manner of raising the sugar cane, and making sugar; for at first they had wholly applied them¬ selves to the raising of cacao, as the Spaniards had done before them. It was happy for them that they fell into this new prac¬ tice; for the cacao-groves planted by the Spaniards began to fail, and the new plantations did not answer, as the negroes foretold they would not, because of the want of certain religious ceremonies always used by the Spaniards in planting them, at which none of the slaves were suffered to be present, and to the use of which they attributed the prosperity of these plantations. Probably there were methods taken at that time, that were covered by the veil of these religious ceremonies, which are necessary to the well-being of that plant. However that be, the cacao has never since equalled the reputation of the Spa¬ nish, but gave way to the more profitable cultivation of indigo and sugar. But what gave the greatest life to this new settlement, and raised EUROPEAN* SETTLEMENTS IN AMMMCA. 295, raised it at, once to a surprising pitch of opulence, which it hardly equals in our days, was the resort thither of those pi¬ rates called the buccaneers. These men, who fought with the most desperate bravery, and spent their plunder with the most stupid extravagance, were very welcome guests in Jamaica. They often brought two, three, and four hundred .thousand pieces of eight at a time, which were immediatly squandered in all the ways of excessive gaming, wine and women. • Vast for¬ tunes were made, and the returns of treasure to England were prodigiously great. In the island they had by this means raised such funds, that when the source of this wealth was stopped up by the suppression of the pirates, they were enabled, to turn their industry into better channels. They increased so fast, that it was computed that, in the beginning of this century, they had sixty thousand whites and a hundred and twenty thousand negroes in this island. This calculation is certainly too large. How¬ ever, the Jamaicans were undoubtedly very numerous, until re¬ duced by earthquakes (one of which entirely ruined Port-Royal, and killed a vast number of persons in all parts of the country) and by terrible epidemical diseases, which, treading on the heels of the former calamities, swept away vast multitudes: losses which have not been since sufficiently repaired. At present the white inhabitants scarcely exceed twenty five thousand souls ; the blacks are about ninety thousand ; both much less numerous than formerly, and with a disproportion much greater on the side of the whites. It appears at present, that Jamaica is rather upon the de¬ cline ; a point this that deserves the most attentive considera¬ tion. A country which contains at least four millions Of acres, has a fertile soil, an extensive sea coast, and many very fine harbours; for an island so circumstanced, and at a time when the value of ail its products at market is considerably risen ; for such 29G N ACCOUNT OK THE such a country to fall short of its former numbers, and not to have above three or four hundred thousand acres employed in any sort of culture, shews clearly that something must be very wrong in the management of its affairs; and, what shews it even yet more clearly, land is so extravagantly dear in many of the other islands, as to sell sometimes for one hundred pounds an acre and upwards; a price that undoubtedly never would be paid, if convenient land was to be had, and proper encouragement given, in Jamaica. Whether this be owing to publick or pri¬ vate faults, I know not; but certain it is, that, wherever they are, they deserve a speed}- and effectual remedy from those, in whose power it is to apply it. CHAP, EonOPEftH SETTLEMENTS IN AMEBICA. 29T CHAP. III. the products of Jamaica.—piemento.—sugar.—bom.—molasses.— COTTON.—G1NGEH.-THE LOGWOOD TRADE.-DISPUTES ABOUT IT.—THE CONTRABAND.—SLAVE TRADE. The natural products of Jamaica, besides sugar, cacao, and ginger, are principally piemento, or, as it is called, allspice, or Jamaica pepper. The tree which bears the piemento rises to the height of above thirty feet. It is straight, of a moderate thickness, and covered with a gray bark extremely smooth and shining. It shoots out a vast number of branches upon all sides that bear a plentiful foliage of very large and beautiful leaves of a shining green, in all things resembling the leaf of the bay tree. At the very ends of the twigs are formed bunches of flowers; each stalk hearing a flower which bends back, and within which bend are to be discerned some stamina of a pale green colour;" to these succeeds a bunch of small crowned ber¬ ries, larger when ripe than juniper berries; at that season they change from their former green, and become black, smooth, and shining; they are taken unripe from the tree, and dried in the sun; in this case they assume a brown colour, and have a mixed flavour of many kinds of spice, whence it is called allspice. But it is milder than the other spices, and is judged to be inferiour to none of them for the service which it docs to cold, watery, and languid stomachs. The tree grows mostly upon the moun¬ tains. ! Besides this, tliey have the wild cinnamon tree, whose bark is £98 AS A'CCOUXT OF THE so serviceable in medicine; the nrancluneel, a most beautiful' tree to the eve, with the fairest apple, in the world, and when cut down affording a very tine ornamental wood for the joiners, but the apple, and the juice in every part of the tree, contain one of the worst poisons in nature. Here is- the mahogany, in such general use with our cabinet makers; the cabbage tree, a tall plant, famous for a substance, looking and tasting like cabbage, growing on the very top, and no less remarkable for the ex¬ treme hardness of its wood which, when dry, is incorruptible, and hardh yields to any tool; the palma, from which is drawn a great deal of oil, much esteemed by the negroes both in food and medicine; the white wood, which never breeds the worm m ships; the soap tree, whose berries answer all purposes of washing ; the mangrove and olive bark, useful to tanners ; the fustick and redwood to the dyers, and lately the logwood and their forests supply the apothecary with guaiacum, salsaparilla, china, cassia, and tamarinds; they have aloes too ; and do not want the cochineal plant, though they know nothing of the art of managing it; nor perhaps is the climate suitable. The in¬ digo plant was formerly much cultivated ; the cotton tree is still so, and they send home more of its wool than, all the rest of our islands together. The whole product therefore of the island may be reduced to these lieaus. First, sugars, of which they imported in 1753 twenty thousand three hundred and fifteen hogsheads, some vastly great, even tc a ton weight, which cannot be w’orth less in England than 424,725 pounds sterling. Most of this goes to London and Bristol, and some part of it to North America, in return for the beef, pork, cheese, corn, peas, staves, plank, pitch, and tar, which they have from thence. 2. Rum, of which they export about 4000 puncheons. Tire rum of tills island is generally esteemed the best, and is the most used in England. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. England. 3. Molasses, in which they make a great part of their returns for New England, where there are vast'distilleries. All these are the produce of their grand staple the sugar cane. 4. Cotton, of which they send out 2000 bags. The indigo, formerly much cultivated, is now inconsiderable, but some cacao and coffee are exported, which latter is in no great esteem; though it is said to be little inferiour to that of Mocha, pro¬ vided it be kept for two or three years. With these they send home a considerable quantity of piemento, ginger, drugs for dyers and apothecaries, sweetmeats, and mahogany and man- chineel plank. But some of the most considerable articles of their trade are with the Spanish continent of New Spain and Terra Finna; for in the former they cut great quantities of logwood, and both in the former and latter they drive a vast and profitable trade in negroes, and all kinds of the same Eu¬ ropean goods, which are carried thither from Old Spain by the flota. Botli the logwood trade and this contraband have been the subjects of much contention, and the cause of a war between ours and the Spanish nation. The former we avow, and we claim it as our right; though, in the last treaty of peace, that point was far from being well settled. The latter we permit; because we think, and very justly, that if the Spaniards find themselves aggrieved by any contraband trade, it lies upon them, and not upon us, to put a stop to it. Formerly we cut logwood in the bay of Campeachy, on the northern side of the peninsula of Jucatan. But the Spaniards have driven our people entirely from thence, and built, forts and made settlements to prevent them from returning- Ex¬ pelled from thenee, the logwood cutters settled upon the.guiph of Honduras, on the southern side of the. same peninsula, .where they are in,some sort established, and have a fort to protect q Q 2 them. AS ACCOUNT OF THE SCO them. They are an odd kind of people, composed mostly of vagabonds and fugitives from all parts of North America, and their way of life is suitable. They live pretty much in a lawless maimer, though they elect one amongst them whom they call their king; and to him they pay as mueh obedience as they dunk iit. The country they are in is low, and extremely marshy ; the air is prodigiously molested with muskettoes; and the water dangerous with alligators; yet a life of licentiousness, a plenty of brandy, large gains, and a want of thought, have perfectly reconciled them to the hardships of their employment and the uuwholesomeuess of the climate. They go always welt armed, and are about one thousand five hundred men. In the dry season, when they cut the logwood, they advance a considerable way into the country, following the logwood, which runs amongst the other trees of the forest, like the vein of a mineral in the earth. When the rains have overflowed the whole country, they have marks by which they know where the logwood is deposited. This is an heavy wood, and sinks in the water. However, it is easily buoyed up, and one diver can lift very large beams. These they carry, by the favour of the land- floods into the river, to a place which is called the Barcaderas or Port, where they' meet the ships that come upon this trade; In the year 1716, when the debate concerning this matter was revived, the lords of trade reported, that before the year 1676 we had a number of people settled and carrying on thik trade on the peninsula of Jucatan ; that we always considered, this cntr rights and were supported in it by our kings ; and that this right was confirmed, if it had wanted any confirmation, by. a.dause of oft' possidetis in the treaty of peace 1 which was con- chided with Spain, and the court of London in 1^6; and that we certainly) were in fait possession- of those settlements and. fcattaute* long, before the time of that treaty ; and further, that EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 301 that tin? Spaniards themselves have incidentally drawn a great advantage from it, since the pirates, who were formerly the most resolved and effectual enemies they ever had, were the more easily restrained from their enterprises, by having their minds diverted to this employment. Upon the whole, they Concluded it an affair very well worth the attention of the go¬ vernment, as in some years it engaged near six thousand ton of shipping; found employment for a number of seamen propor¬ tionable ; consumed a good deal of our manufactures, and was of considerable use in fabricating many others; and that the whole Value of the returns were not less than sixty thousand pounds Sterling a year. Notwithstanding this, our claim seems drop¬ ped, nor is it very clear how far it can be maintained, to carry on a trade by violence in a country in which we can hardly claim, according to the common ideas of right in America, an/ property. However this may be, the trade, though with many difficulties and discouragements, still continues, and will pro¬ bably continue whilst the Spaniards are so weak upon that side- of Mexico, and while the coast continues so disagreeable, that none but desperate persons will venture to reside there. The logwood trade is generally carried on by vessels from New Eng¬ land, New-York, and Pennsylvania, who take up the-goods they want in Jamaica. But there is a trade yet more profitable carried on between tills island and the Spanish continent, especially in time of war. This too has been the cause of much bickering between us and. the court of Spain, and it will yet be more difficult for than to put a stop to this trade than to the former, whilst the Spaniards are so eager for it, whilst it is so profitable to the British mer¬ chant, and-whilst the Spanish officers from the highest to the lowest shew so great a respect to presents properly made. The trade is carried- on this maimer. The ship fro Hi Jamaica, bav- 302 AS ACCOUNT OP THE ing taken negroes and a proper sortment of goods there,' pro¬ ceeds in ti ne of peace ds C H A P. V. DARBADOE5.—ITS SAVAGE CONDITION AT THE FIRST PI,ANTING.—THE HARD¬ SHIPS SUFFERED EV THE PLANTERS.—THE SPEEDY INCREASE OF THE ISLAND.-ITS GREAT WEALTH AND NUMBER OF INHABITANTS. — ITS DECLINE.-PRESENT STATE QF THE ISLAND. The next island, in point of importance, which we possess in the West-Indies, but the oldest in point of settlement, is Bar- badoes. This is one, and by no means the most contemptible one, amongst the windward division of the Caribb, e islands. It is not distinctly known when this island was first discovered or settled; but it was probably some time about the year 1625. When the English first landed here, they found the place the most savage and destitute that can well be imagined, It had not the least appearance of ever having been peopled even by savages. There was no kind of beasts of pasture or of prey, no fruit, no herb, nor root fit for supporting the life of man. Yet as the climate was good, and the soil appeared fertile, some gentlemen of small fortunes in England resolved to be¬ come adventurers thither. But the first planters had not only the utter desolateness of the place, and the extreme want of provisions to struggle with, but the trees were so large, of a wood so hard and stubborn, and full of such great branches, that they proceeded in the clearing of the ground with a diffi¬ culty that must have worn down any ordinary patience. And even when they had tolerably cleared some little spot, the first produce it yielded for their subsistance was so small and ordi¬ nary. KL'BOJTiAN SETTtE.ME.VTS IV AMfclilCA, .'309 nary, at the same time that their supplies from England were so slow and precarious, tliat nothing but the noblest courage, and a firmness which cannot receive too many praises,' could have carried them through the discouragements which they met in the noblest work in the world, the cultivating and peo¬ pling a deserted part of the globe. But by degrees things were mollified ; some of the trees yielded fustick for the dyers; cot¬ ton and indigo agreed well with the soil; tobacco then becom¬ ing fashionable in England answered tolerably; and the country began gradually to lay aside its savage disposition and to submit to culture. These good appearances in America, and the storm which some time after began to gather in England, encouraged many to go over ; but still the colony received no sort of encourage¬ ment from the government, which at that time understood tlie advantages of colonies but little; and which was besides much worse occupied in sowing those seeds of bitterness, which came afterwards so terribly to their own lips. The court took no other notiee of this island than to grant it to a very unworthy and unfaithful favourite, the Earl of Carlisle ; which, as may¬ be judged, proved no advantage to the settlement, However, as this colony had the hardiest breeding, and the most laborious infancy of any of our settlements, so it was far stronger in its stamina, and grew with greater speed ; and that to an height, which, if it were not proved beyond any reason¬ able doubt, could scarcely be believed. For in .this small island, which is but twenty-five miles in length, and in breadth but fourteen, in little more than twenty years after its first set¬ tlement, that is, in 1650, it contained upwards of fifty thousand Whites of all sexes and ages, and a much greater number of Blacks and Indian slaves. The former of which they bought; the latter they acquired by means not at all to their honour ; for S10 ' AS- ACCOtST OF THE Tor they seized upon those unhappy men, without any pretence, in the neighbouring islands, and carried them into slavery. A practice, which has rendered the Caribbee Indians irreconcile- abte to us ever since. This small island, peopled by upwards of one hundred thou¬ sand souls, was not yet above half of it cultivated, nor was the industry of the inhabitants at a stand. A little before the period I have mentioned, they learned the method of making sugar -, and this enlarging the sphere of their trade, they grew prodigiously rich and numerous. About this time the government of England, which was then In the hands of Cromwell, confined the trade of Barbadoes to the mother country; before, it bad been managed altogether by the Dutch. The rigour exercised towards the royal party, obliged several gentlemen of very good families to settle in this island, which was far from being peopled like some other colonies, by fugitives and persons desperate at home. After the Restoration it continued still to advance by very hasty strides. Not long after the Restoration, KingCharies created thirteen baronets from the gentlemen of this island, some of whom were worth ten thousand pounds a year, and none so little as one thousand. In 1676, which was the meridian of this settlement, their Whites were computed to be still much about fifty thousand, but their Negro slaves were increased so as to be upwards of one hundred thousand of all kinds. They employed Four hun¬ dred sail of ships, one with another of an hundred and fifty tons,, in their trade-; their annual exported produce in sugar, indigo, ginger, cotton, &c,amounted to upwards of three hundred and. fifty thousand pounds, and their circulating cash at home was two hundred thousand. It is probable that Holland itself, or perhaps the best inhabited parts of China were never peopled, to the same proportion, nor. have they land, of tlie same dimen¬ sions. iu:uoi>ea.n settlements in Amehica. Sll sions, which produces any thine; like the same profits. But since that time the island has been much upon the decline. The growth of the French sugar islands and the settlement of Antigua, St. Christopher’s, Nevis, and Montserrat, is well as the greater establishment in Jamaica, have drawn away from time to time a vast number of their people. A terrible conta¬ gion, said to be brought over by the troops from England, but more probably derived from the coast of Africa, attacked the island in the year 16’92; it raged like a pestilence; twenty have died in a day in their principal town ; and all parts pf the island suffered in proportion. This sickness continued, with some abatements, for several years, and left an ill disposition, in the climate ever afterwards. War raged at the same time with this distemper; and the Barbadians, who raised a good number of men, lost many of them in fruitless expeditions against the French islands. The land too began not to yield quite so kindly as it formerly had done, and in some places they were obliged to manure it. All these causes contributed to reduce the numbers and opulence of this celebrated island. But it is only in comparison of itself, that it may be considered in any other than the most flourishing eondi&on even at this day; for even now it contains twenty-five thousand Whites, very near eighty thousand Negroes, and it ships above twenty- five thousand hogsheads of sugar, to the value of three hundred thousand pounds, besides rum, molasses, cotton, ginger, and aloes; an immense peopling and produce for a country not containing more than one hundred thousand acres of land. By the rise of sugars, the returns of this island are little less than they were.in its most flourishing times. This island can raise near five thousand men of its own militia, and it has generally a regiment of regular troops, though not very complete. It is fortified by nature all along 312 tbe windward shore by the rocks and shoals, so as to be near two-thirds utterly inaccessible. On the leeward side it has good harbours ; but the whole coast is protected by a line of several miles in length, and several forts to defend it at the most material places. They support their own establishment, which is very con¬ siderable, with great credit. The governor’s place is worth at least five thousand pounds a year, and the rest of their officers have valuable appointments. They provide very handsomely for their clergy, who are of the church of England, which is the religion established here, as it is in the other islands. Here are very few dissenters. There is in general an appearance of something more of order and decency, and of a settled people, .than in any other colony in the West-Indies. They have here a college,-founded and well endowed b.y the virtue and libe¬ rality of that great man colonel Christopher Codringtou, who was a native of this island, and who for a great number of amiable and useful qualities both in publick and private life, for his courage, and the zeal for the good of his country, his humanity, his knowledge and love of literature, was far the richest production and most shining ornament this island ever had. This college does not so fully answer the intentions of the excellent founder, as it might do. If the fund was applied, to the education of a number of catechists for the instruction of the negroes, some of them of their own colour, it would be a vast publick advantage, besides the charity, or perhaps the in¬ dispensable duty of some such work. This college is in Bridge-town, the capital of. this island, which, before the late fire, contained about twelve hundred houses, very handsomely built and inhabited by a numerous and wealthy people. The country of Barbadoes has a most heautifui. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 313 beautiful appearance, swelling here and there into gentle hills ; shining by the cultivation of every part, by the verdure of the sugar canes, the bloom and fragrance of the number of orange, lemon, lime, and citron trees, the guavas, the papas, aloes, and a vast multitude of other elegant and useful plants, that rise intermixed with the houses of the gentlemen which are sown thickly on every part of the island. Even the negro huts, though mean, contribute to the beauty of the country ; for they shade them with plantain trees, which give their villages the appearance of so many beautiful groves. In short, there is no place in the West-Indies comparable to Barbadoes, in point of numbers of people, cultivation of the soil, and those ele¬ gancies and conveniencies which result from both. CHAP, 514 •NT OF THE C II A P. VI. 57. CilP.IiTOFlIER, ANTIGUA. NEVIS, MONTSERRAT ; THEIR PRESENT CON¬ DITION AND rORCE. The island of St. Christopher's is the chief of those which we possess amongst the Leeward Islands. It was first settled by the French and English in the year 1626, but after various fortunes it was entirely ceded to us by the treaty of Utrecht. This island is about seventy-five miles in compass. The circuit of Antigua is but little inferiour. Nevis and Montserrat are the smallest of the four, not exceeding for either of them about eighteen or twenty miles in circumference. The soil in all these islands is pretty much alike; light and sandy, but notwithstanding fertile in an high degree. Antigua has no rivulets of fresh water, and but very few springs; this made it to be deemed uninhabitable for a long time ; but now they save the rains in ponds and cis¬ terns with great care, and they are rarely in great distress for water. In a word, this island, which we formerly thought use¬ less, has got the start of all the Leeward Islands, increasing every day in produce and inhabitants both freemen and slaves. It has one of the best harbours in the West-Indies ; on it stands the principal town called St. John’s, which is large and wealth}-. The island of St. Christopher’s is not so much on the increase. Neither that nor any of the Leeward Islands yields any com¬ modity of consequence but what is derived from the cane, ex¬ cept Montserrat, which exports some indigo, but of a very in¬ feriour kind. It UROPEAN' SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 315 It is judged that the island of St. Christopher’!, contains about seven thousand Whites and twenty thousand Negroes; that Antigua lias also about seven thousand of the former colour and thirty thousand Blacks; and that Nevis and Mont¬ serrat may have each about five thousand Europeans, who are the masters of ten or twelve thousand African slaves. So that the whole of the Leeward Islands may be reckoned without ex¬ aggeration to maintain about twenty-thousand English, of whom every single man gives bread to several in England, which is effected by the labour of near seventy thousand Ne¬ groes. Of the island of Barbuda I say little, because it has no direct trade with England. It is employed in husbandry, and raising fresh provisions for the use of the neighbouring colonies. It is the property of the Codrington family.. These islands are under the management of one governor, who lias the title of captain general and governor in chief of all the Caribbee islands from Guadaloupe to Porto Rico. His post is worth about three thousand five hundred pounds a year.. Under him each island has its particular deputy governor at a salary of two hundred pounds a year, and its separate, inde¬ pendent legislative of a council, and an assembly of the repre¬ sentatives. CHAP, 3lG ACCOUNT OF THR CHAP. VII. CLIMATE OF TIIE WEST-INDIES.—THE RAINS AND WINDS.—HURRICANES.— THEIR PROGNOSTICKS.-PRODUCE OF THE WEST-INDIES.-SUGAR.-THE MANNER OF MANUFACTURING IT.-PLANTERS IN THE WEST-INDIES.- The climate in all our West-India islands is nearly the same, allowing for those accidental differences which the several situa¬ tions and qualities of the lands themselves produce. As they lie within the tropick, and that the sun goes quite over their heads, passing beyond them to the north, and never retires fur¬ ther from any of them than about thirty degrees to the south, they are continually subjected to the extreme of an heat, which would be intolerable, if the trade wind rising gradually as the sun gathers strength did not blow in upon them from the sea, and refresh the air in such a manner as to enable them to attend their concerns even under the meridian sun. On the other hand, as the night advances, a breeze begins to he per¬ ceived, which blows smartly from the land, as it were from its center, towards the sea, to all points of the compass at once. By the same remarkable providence in the disposing of things it is, that when the sun has made a great progress towards the tropick of Cancer and becomes in a manner vertical, he draws after him such a vast body of clouds as shield them from his direct beams; and dissolving into rain, cool the air and re¬ fresh EUROPEAN SETTLEMEXTS IX AM Eli ] CA. 31? fresh the country, thirsty with the lone; drought, which com¬ monly reigns from the beginning of January, to the latter end of May. The rains in the West-Indies are by no means the things they are with us. Our heaviest rains are but dews compa¬ ratively. They are rather floods of water poured from the clouds with a prodigious impetuosity ; the rivers rise in a mo¬ ment; new rivers and lakes arc formed, and in a "short time ail the low country is under water. Hence it is, that the rivers which have their source within the tropicks swell and overfiow their banks at a certain season ; and so mistaken were the an¬ cients in their idea of the torrid zone, which they imagined to be dried and scorched up with a continual and fervent heal, and to be for that reason uninhabitable; when in reality some of the largest rivers in the world have their course within its limits, and the moisture is one of the greatest inconveniencin'- of the climate in several places. The rains make the only distinction of seasons in the West- Indies ; the trees are green the whole year round ; they have no cold, no frost, no snows, and but rarely some hail; the storms of hail are however very violent when they happen, and the hailstones very great and heavy. Whether it be owing to this.moisture alone, which alone does not seem to be a suffi¬ cient cause, or to a greater quantity of a sulphurous acid, which predominates in the air in this country, metals of all kinds that are subject to the action of such causes rust and canker in a very short time ; and this cause, perhaps as much as the .heat itself, contributes to make the climate of the West-Indies un¬ friendly and unpleasant to ail European constitution. It is in the rainy season (principally in the month of August, more rarely in July and September) that they are assaulted by hurricanes; the most terrible calamity to which they are sub¬ ject 513 ax account of the iect from the climate ; this destroys at a stroke the labours of many years and prostrates the most exalted hopes of the planter, and often just at the moment when he thinks himself out of the reach of fortune. It is a sudden and violent storm of wind, rain, thunder, and lightening, attended with a furious swelling of the seas and sometimes with an earthquake; in short, with every- circumstance which the elements can assemble that is terrible and destructive. First, they see as the prelude to the ensuing havock whole fields of sugar canes whirled into the air, and scattered over the face of the country. The strongest trees of the forest are tom up by the roots, and driven about like stubble; their windmills are swept away in a moment; their works, their fixtures, the ponderous copper boilers, and stills of several hundred weight, are wrenched from the ground, and battered to pieces: their houses are no protection, the roofs are tom off at one blast; whilst the rain, which in an hour, rises five feet, rushes in upon them with an irresistible violence. • There are signs, which the Indians of these islands taught our planters, by which they can prognosticate the approach of an hurricane. The hurricane comes on either in the quarters, or at the. full and change of the moon. If it comes at the full moon, when you are at the change observe these signs. That day you will see the sky very turbulent; you will observe the sun more red than at other times ; you will perceive a dead calm, and the hills clear of all those clouds and mists which usually hover about them. In the clefts of the earth, and in the wells, you hear a hollow rumbling sound like the rushing of a great wind. At night the stars seem much larger than usual, and surrounded with a sort of burs ; the north-west sky has a black and menacing look; the sea emits a strong smell, and rises into vast waves, often without any wind; the wind itself now for¬ sakes SETTLEMENTS IN AMERJ 319 salves its usual steady easterly stream, and shifts about to the west; from whence it sometimes blows with intermissions violently and irregularly for about two hours at a time. You Slave the same signs at the full of the moon ; the moon herself is surrounded with a great bur, and sometimes the sun has the same appearance. These prognosticks were taught by the Indians; and in general one may observe, that ignorant coun¬ try people and barbarous nations are better observers of times and seasons, and draw' better rules from them, than more civi¬ lized and reasoning people ; for they rely more upon experience than theories, they are more careful of traditionary observa¬ tions, and living more in the open air at all times, and not so occupied but they have leisure to observe every change, though minute, in that element, they come to have great treasures of useful matter, though, as it might be expected, mixed with many superstitious and idle notions as to the causes. These make their observations to be rejected as chimerical in the gross by many literati, who are not near so nice and circum¬ spect as they ought to be in distinguishing what this sort of people may be very competent judges of, and what not. The grand staple commodity of the West-Indies is sugar; this commodity was not at all known to the Greeks aud Ro¬ mans, though it was made in China in very early times, from whence we had the first knowledge of it; but the Portuguese were the first who cultivated it in America, and brought it into request as one of the materials of a very universal luxury in Europe. It is not settled whether the cane from which this substance is extracted be a native of America, or brought thi¬ ther by the Portuguese from India and the coast of Africa; but, however the matter may be, in the beginning they made the most as they still do the best sugars, which come to market in this part of the world. The sugar cane grows to the height S20 AS ACCOUNT or of between six and eight feet, full of joints, about four or five inches asunder ; the colour of the body of the cane is yellowish, and the top, where it shoots into leaves, of a vivid green ; the coat is pretty hard, and within contains a spongy substance full of a juice, the most lively, elegant, and least cloying sweet .in nature; and which, sucked raw, has proved extremely nu¬ tritive and wholesome. They are cultivated in this manner. In the month of Au¬ gust, that is, in the rainy part of the year, after the ground is cleared and well hoed, they lay a piece of six or seven joints of the cane, flat in a channel made for it, above half a foot deep ; this they cover with the earth, and so plant the whole field in lines regularly disposed and at proper distances In a short time a young cane shoots out from every joint of the stock which was interred ; and grows in twelve days to be a pretty tall and vigorous plant; but it is not until after sixteen months, or thereabouts, that the canes are fit to answer the purposes of the plantei, though they remain a few months after without any considerable prejudice to him. The longer they remain in the ground after they come tc maturity, the less juice they afford; but this is somewhat compensated by the supcriour richness of the juice. That no.time may be lost, they generally divide their cane-grounds into three parts. One is of standing canes, and to be cut that season ; the second is of new-planted canes : and the third is fallow, ready to receive a fresh supply. In some places they make second and third cuttings from the same root. The tops of the canes, and the leaves wliich grorv upon the joints, make very good provender for their cattle, and the refuse of the cane after grinding serves for fire; so that no part of this excellent plant is without its use. The canes are cut with a billet, and carried in bundles to the mill, which is now generally a windmill ,• it turns three great cylinders EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 32 i cylinders or rollers plated with iron set perpendicularly and cogged so as to be all moved by the middle roller. Between these the canes are bruised to pieces, and the juice runs through an hole into a vat which is placed under the rollers to receive it; from hence it is carried through a pipe into a great reservoir,in which however, for fear of turning sour, it is not suffered to rest long ; but is conveyed out of that by other pipes into the boiling house, where it is received by a large cauldron : here it remains, until the scum, which constantly arises during the boiling, is all taken off ; from this, it is passed successively into five or six more boilers, gradually diminishing in their size, and treated in the same manner. In the last of these it becomes of a very thick clammy consistence ; but mere boiling is incapable of carrying it further : to advance the operation, they pour in a small quantity of lime-water ; the immediate effect of this alien mixture is, to raise up the liquor in a very vehement fermen¬ tation ; but, to prevent it from running over, a bit of butter no larger than a nut is thrown in, upon which the fury of the fermentation immediately subsides; a vessel of two or three hundred gallons requires no greater force to quiet it. It is now taken out and placed in a cooler, where it dries, granulates, and becomes fit to be put into the pots, which is the last part of the operation. The pots are conical, or of a sugar-loaf fashion ; open at the point, which must be considered as their bottom; here a strainer is put across. In these pots the sugar purges itself of its remaining impurity; the molasses or treacly part disentan¬ gles itself from the rest; precipitates and runs out of the aper¬ ture at the bottom ; it is now in the condition called musca- vado sugar, of a yellowish brown colour, and thus it is gene¬ rally put into the hogshead and shipped off. But when they have a mind to refine it yet further, and leave AN ACCOfNI F T1IE no remain? at all of the molasses, they cover the pots I have just, mentioned with a sort of white clay, like that used for tobacco pipes, diluted with water; this penetrates the sugar, unites with the mola-ses, and with them runs off, leaving the sugar of a whitish colour, but whitest at^ top. This is called clayed sugar; the operation is sometimes repeated once or twice more, and the sugar every time diminishing in quantity gains considerably in value; but still is called clayed sugar. Fur¬ ther than this they do not go in the plantations, because an heavy duty of sixteen shillings per hundred weight is laid upon all sugars refined there: it is therefore not to my purpose to earn- the account any further. Of the molasses rum is made, in a manner that needs- no de¬ scription, since it differs in nothing from the manner of distil¬ ling any other spirit. From the scummings of the sugar, a meaner spirit is procured. Rum finds its market in North America (where it is consumed by the English inhabitants, or employed in the Indian trade, or distributed from thence to the fishery of Newfoundland, and the African commerce); be¬ sides what comes to England and Ireland. However, a very great quantity of molasses is taken off raw and carried to New. England to be distilled there. They compute that, when things are well managed, the rum and molasses pay the charges of the plantation, and the sugars are clear gain. However, by the particulars we have seen, and by others which we may easily' imagine, the expences of a plantation in the West-Indies are very great, and the profits at the first view precarious; for the chargeable articles of the windmill, the boiling, cooling, and distilling houses, and the buying and subsisting a suitable number of slaves and cattle, will not suffer any man to begin a sugar plantation of any con¬ sequence, not to mention the purchase of the land, which is very' EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 323 very high, under a capital of at least five thousand pounds. Neither is the life of a planter, a life of idleness and luxury ; at all times he must keep a watchful eye upon his overseers, and even oversee himself occasionally. But at the boiling season, if he is properly attentive to his affairs, no way of life can be more laborious, and more dangerous to the health; from a constant attendance day and night in the extreme united heats of the climate and so many tierce furnaces ; add to this the losses by hurricanes, earthquakes, and bad seasons; and then consider, when the sugars are in the cask, that he quits the hazard of a planter to engage in the hazards of a merchant, and ships his produce at his own risk. The sum of all might make one believe, that it could never answer to engage in this business; but, notwithstanding all this, there are no parts of the world, in which great estates are made in so short a time a: in the West-Indies. The produce of a few good seasons will provide against the ill effects of the worst; as the planter is sure of a speedy and profitable market for his produce, which has a readier sale than perhaps any other commodity in the world. Large plantations are generally under the care of a manager or chief overseer, who has commonly a salary of a hundred and fifty pounds a year, with overseers under him in proportion to the greatness of the plantation, one to about thirty negroes, and at the rate of about forty pounds. Such plantations have a surgeon at a fixed salary employed to take care of the negroes which belong to it. But the course which is least troublesome to the owner of the estate is, to let the land, with all the works and stock of the cattle and slaves, to a tenant, who gives secu¬ rity for the payment of the rent and the keeping up repairs and the stock. The estate is generally estimated to such a tenant at half the neat produce of, the best years. Such tenants, if indus¬ trious and frugal men, soon make good estates for themselves. t t 2 Tlie 324 AN ACCOUNT TUB The negroes in the plantations are subsisted at a very easy rate. This is generally by allotting to each family of them a' small portion of land, and allowing them two days in the week, Saturday and Sunday, to cultivate it ; some are subsisted in this manner ; but others find tlieir negroes themselves with a certain portion of Guinea or Indian corn, and to some a salt herring, or a small quantity of bacon or salt pork a day. All the rest of the charge consists in a cap, a shirt, a pair of breeches, stockings and shoes ; the whole not exceeding forty, shillings a year. To particularise the commodities proper for the West-India market, would be to enumerate all the necessaries, tonvenien- cies, and luxuries of life; for they have nothing of their own. but the commodities I have already mentioned. Traders there make a very large profit upon all they sell; and all kind of handicraftsmen, especially carpenters, bricklayers, and brasiers, get very great encouragement. CHAP. EUROPEAN" SETTLEMENTS IN AMER) 325 CHAP. VIII. OBSERVATION'S ON THE SETTLEMENT OP THE WEST-INDIES.-ADVANTAGES THERE FOR TEMPERS PREJUDICIAL AT HOME.-BAD TEMPERS NOT AL- WAVS NOXIOUS IN EYERV SENSE. The disposition to industry has a variety of characters, and is by no means constantly of the same colour. Some acquiesce in a moderate labour through the whole of their lives, attended with no risk either to their persons or their gains ; such sort of people, who form the best citizens in general, are fit to stay at home. Others, full as remote from an indolent disposition, are of quite a different character. These are fiery, restless tempers, willing to undertake the severest labour, provided it promises but a short continuance, who love risk and hazard, whose schemes are always vast, and who put no medium between being great and being undone. Characters of this sort, espe¬ cially when they happen in low and middling life, are often dangerous members in a regular and settled community. But the West-Indies open a fair and ample field to encourage per¬ sons of such a disposition ; and it inay be reckoned one very great benefit of our possessions in that part of the world, that, besides the vast quantities of our fabricks which they consume, our seamen that they employ, and our revenues that they sup¬ port, they are a vent to carry off such spirits, whom they keep occupied greatly to the publick benefit. Our dominions are so circumstanced, and afford such a variety, that all dispositions to 326 AX ACCOUNT OF THE to business, of what kind soever, may have exercise without pressing upon one another. It is besides a great happiness, that unfortunate men, whom unavoidable accidents, the frowns of the world, or the cruelty of creditors, would have rendered miserable to themselves, and useless to the publick, may find a sort of asylum, where at last they often succeed so well, as to have reason to bless those incidents, which .drove them from their country poor, deserted, and despised, to return them to it in opulence and credit. Of such a change every one can pro¬ duce many instances of his own knowledge ; as whoever looks about him cannot fail to see a great number of persons, who, having taken wrong steps at the beginning of their lives, have established such a character of weakness and imprudence, as prevents them ever after from being trusted or employed, wherever they are at all known, although their characters should be altogether changed and the passions quite subsided which gave occasion to their errours. Such persons become, first, indigent, then desperate, and at last, abandoned; but when they have an opportunity of going where this prejudice dees not operate against them, they set up as new men. With the advantage of an experience acquired by their mistakes, they are free from the ill reputation which attended them ; and they prove of vast service to their country, to which they could be of no advantage whilst they remained in it. There are persons too, far more blameabie than either of the former sorts, who, having erred without proper caution in points of morality, are deservedly regarded with distrust and abhorrence, though they may be at bottom far from being utterly abandoned ; and are still, excepting their character, the stuff proper for making very good men of the world. These are the several sorts of people, who, with very few ex¬ ceptions, have settled the West-Indies, and North America in a good EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 32" good measure. Atul thus hare we drawn from the rashness of hot and visionary men ; the imprudence of youth ; the corrup¬ tion of bad morals ; and even from the wretchedness and misery of persons destitute and undone; the great source of our wealth, our strength, and our power. And, though this was neither the effect of our wisdom, nor the consequence of our foresight; yet, having happened, it may tend to give us wisdom and a better foresight ; for it will undoubtedly be a standing monitor to us, how much we ought to cherish the colonics we have already established, by every encouragement in our power, and by every reasonable indulgence ; and it will be an additional spur to make us active in the acquisition of new ones : since experience has taught us, that, as there is no soil or climate which will not shew itself grateful to culture, so that there is no disposition, no character in mankind, which may not be turned with dexterous management to the publick advantage. Those- rulers, who make complaints of the temper of their people in almost any respect, ought rather to lament their own want of genius, which blinds them to the use of an instrument pur¬ posely put into their hands by Providence, for effecting perhaps the greatest things. There are humours in the body', which; contained, may be noxious to it, yet which, sent abroad, are the proper materials for generating new bodies. Providence, and a great minister who should imitate Providence, often gain their ends by means that seem most contrary to them; for earthquakes, and hurricanes, and floods, are as necessary to the well-being of things, as calm and sunshine ; life and beauty are drawn from death and corruption ; and the most efficacious me¬ dicines are often found united with the most deadly poisons. This, as it is well known, is the order of nature, and perhaps it might not unwisely be considered as an example for government. CIIAP. 323 AN ACCOUNT OF THE c H A p. ix. OBSERVATIONS ON TAXING THE COLONIES.—ON AN EXPENSIVE ESTABIlsII- Though we have drawn such great advantages from our pos¬ sessions in the IVest-Iudies, and are, even in our present way of acting, likely to continue to draw still more ; and though we have not wholly neglected the culture of that useful pro¬ vince ; yet some will think there are some things yet left un¬ done, some things in which our neighbours have set us a laud¬ able example, aud some others which the inconveniencies we have felt from the want of them demonstrate to be necessary to ourselves. But it is not my purpose to handle this subject in its full extent, since it is the wisdom and power of the legisla¬ ture, aud not the authorized speculations of a private man, which can effect any thing useful in this way. A West-Indian, who is naturally warm in his temper, and not too servilely obe¬ dient to the rules of the bienseance, might find some faults iii our proceedings here, and would perhaps reason in a manner not unlike the following. “ One would think, from some instances, that, at tire dis¬ tance we are placed from the seat of authority, we were too remote to enjoy its protection, but not to feel its weight. In¬ numerable are the grievances which have oppressed us from our infancy, and which contribute to bring on us a premature old age. Not one of the least evils under which pur plantations- in the West-Indies groan, is the support of an expensive civil establish- EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 329 establishment, suited rather to an established and independent country in the plenitude of wealth and power, than to newly settled colonies, to which nobody thinks himself to belong as to his country, and which struggle with a total want of almost all the necessaries and conveniencies of life. The building and maintaining ol' the publick works and fortifications, is a weight to which we are totally unequal, and the laying of which upon our shoulders is directly contrary to the very purpose for which vou cultivate the colonies; for, though the produce of these colonies is in general to be considered as a luxury, yet it is of the greatest value to you; first, as it supplies you with things, which, if not from us, you must certainly take from foreign na¬ tions. Even in this view the colonies are extremely useful. But there is another, and a much more advantageous light in which you may view them; you may consider them as they supply you with a commodity which you export to other countries, and which helps to bring the balance of trade in your favour. The whole secret of managing a foreign market is contained in two words, to have the commodity of a good kind, and to sell it cheap ; and the whole domestick policy of trade consists in contriving to answer these two ends, and principally the latter. Now, by what magick can we expect to sell as cheap as the French at any foreign market, when our planters pay four and. a half per cent, duty upon all the sugars, which they ship off in America, and this after having had the same commodity in effect heavily taxed before by the poll on the Negroes which work it, and by other impositions, which the planters endure according to the exigencies of the government; when the French planter pays a very insignificant poll-tax at worst, and not one per cent, duty upon all the sugars he exports; when he buys liis Negroes at an easier rate than we can do; when he is more u tr favoured 330 AX account favoured upon every occasion, and is besides ol’ a temper more industrious and frugal, than is found in our people ? Besides this, upon sudden emergencies, we run very much in debt; the island of Barbadoes at one stroke expended thirty thousand pounds upon a fortification, to say nothing of-what this and what other islands have done in the same wav and upon similar occasions. We are in reality only your factors ; you in Eng¬ land ought to consider yourselves as the merchants, who should be at the whole expence, and should willingly abide by whatso¬ ever loss accrues: since the profits are all your own, and since in the end, by the course of trade, the loss too, let you take what shifting measures you please to avoid it, and to cheat yourselves wdth appearances. It is reasonable that you should lay what duty you please upon what is consumed amongst your¬ selves, because you govern that market as you please ; but what you charge, or suffer to be charged, on the islands, is only the price of your own goods enhanced so much at the foreign market; there you have no exclusive privilege, and there you are sure to suffer. If that duty which is laid in England upon the produce of our islands, or even half of it, were expended, as in reason it ought, for the support of our establishment, we might well be freed from the heavy burdens which we hear, and conse¬ quently might be somewhat upon a par with our neighbours. In our present condition, we not only pay very ample salaries to our governors, but they are besides suffered to make the most they can, by management, of our weakness, to cheat us into voluntary gratuities, which we have given often with¬ out a due consideration of our circumstances. This custom prompts our governors to use a thousand arts, equally unbe¬ coming their character and prejudicial to the provinces they govern. It is this which induces them to foment those divi¬ sions which tear us to pieces ; and which prevent us from at¬ tending EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 331 tending seriously and entirely to what will best advance the prosperity of our settlement. It were a tedious and disagreeable task, to run through all the mischiefs, of which that one errour of sending a governor to make the most he can of us is the fruitful source. The governor, I allow, ought to have every where a certain, reasonable, and even a genteel salary; but then, when he has this, he ought not to be in a condition to hope for any thing further, and ought to consider nothing but how he may best perform the duty of his office. But I hear it objected, that we are already extremely charge¬ able to England, who sends her troops to protect us, and her fleets to cover our trade, at a very great expence, for which we ought to be contented, and even thankful; and that it is unrea¬ sonable to expect she should bear every part of our burden, loaded as she-is with the weight of a vast national debt, and a most expensive establishment of her own. But to this my an¬ swer is short, plain, and practical. The French do all this. They send armies and fleets to protect their colonies as well as you; but they support the establishment in their own planta¬ tions notwithstanding; and they are for from supposing this an insupportable burden. They know that a little judicious ex¬ pence is often the best economy in the world, and that in this case, it is only sparing their own subjects in the West-Indies, and levying the money laid out for their use upon the foreign consumer. What they do, I see no impossibility of our doing. They learned many of their maxims of trade, as well as many of the fabricks which supply it, from us ; I wish we would learn from them in our turn. We have, indeed, some years ago eased the trade, by permitting ships from the islands to’ carry our produce out directly to foreign markets ; but still it is so cu2 clogged. 3J2 AS ACCOUNT OF THE clogged, that we do not feel all the benefit which we might c-spc-ct from a more general and better regulated liberty. Not to carry our enquiries further, see what you have gained by prohibiting us to land our sugars directly in Ireland, before they are first entered in an English port. What was the conse¬ quence r why your sugars grew dear by this loading and un¬ loading, and passing backward and forward. The Portuguese offered sugars of at least equal goodness, and at a much more moderate price. The merchants in Ireland would not refuse so- good an offer out of a compliment to you, who in this instance paid them no compliment at all ; and you cannot, for very good reasons, dispute with the Portuguese about it. If this has hap¬ pened at home, the consequence must be infinitely worse abroad. But it is said that our failures abroad are only owing to this; that we have not ground enough conveniently situated to pro¬ duce more sugars than satisfies the home demand. But this is far enough from the case. There is in several of the islands, but there is in Jamaica in particular, a great quantity of good- land, and well enough situated too, if means were taken to bring it into culture, and a choice of markets to animate the planter in the cultivation ; who certainty deserves every sort of encou¬ ragement, as he asks for nothing but to be put into such a con¬ dition, as may enable him to be of more service to his mother country. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 333' CHAP. X. S-TATE OF THE NEGROES IN THE WEST-INDIES.—DANGER FROM THEM.—ME¬ THODS PROTOSED FOR REMEDYING THESE ABUSES.-—THE NECESSITY OF INCREASING THE WHITES.-USE OF THIS REGULATION IN TRADE. In the foregoing manner the West-Indian would state some part of what he conceives to be his grievances; and those I be¬ lieve he would be earnest enough to hare remedied. But there are other regulations, which a person not concerned in their affairs might think very proper too, but which the West-Indian would enter into with a much greater degree of phlegm. There are now allowed to he in our West-Indies, at least, two hundred and thirty thousand negro slaves ; and it is allowed too that, upon the highest calculation, the whites there, in all, do not amount to ninety thousand souls. This disproportion shews so clearly at the first glance how much the colonies are endangered, both from within and without; how much exposed to the assaults of a foreign enemy, and to the insurrection of their own slaves (which latter circumstance in all our islands keeps the people in. perpetual apprehensions), that it may be a just cause of surprise, that no-measures whatsoever are taken to correct this dangerous irregularity. This disproportion between the freemen and negroes grows more visible every day. That enterprising spirit, which the novelty of the object and various concurrent causes had pro¬ duced in the last century, has decayed very much. We have as many men indigent and unemployed at home as we had 'then; but 334 IS AtCOUNT but they have not the same spirit and activity they had at that time. The disposition of the people in the West-Indies con¬ curs with that of our people at home, to increase and perpetuate the evil of which I complain : for they choose to do every thing bv negroes, which can possibly be done by them ; and though they have laws and ordinances to oblige them to keep a certain number of white servants in some proportion to their blacks, in most places these laws are but a dead letter. They find it more easy to pay the penalty, when seldom it is exacted, than to comply with the law. Their avarice in these particulars makes them blind to the hazards to which they expose the sum total of their affairs. This disposition in the planters is now almost grown inveterate, and to such a degree, that the remedy will probably never be administered by themselves ; and if this disposition continues, in a little time (which is indeed nearly the case already), all the English in our colonies there will con¬ sist of little more than a few planters and merchants; and the rest will be a despicable, though a dangerous, because a nu¬ merous and disaffected, herd of African slaves. Indubitably the security, as well as the solid wealth of every nation, consists principally in the number of low and middling men of a free condition, and that beautiful gradation from the highest to the lowest, where the transitions all the way are almost imperceptible. To produce this ought to be the aim and mark of every well-regulated commonwealth, and none has ever flourished upn other principles. But when we consider the co¬ lony out of that independent light, and as it is related to Great Britain, it is clear that this neglect is of great detriment to the mother country; because it is certain, that the consumption of our commodities there would be in a great measure in pro¬ portion to the number of white men ; and there is nobody at all acquainted with the plantations, who will not readily allow, that. EUROPEAN SETTI.EMENTS IN AMERICA. 335 that, \vhen I say one white man takes off as much of our manu¬ factures as three negroes, I estimate his value to us at a very low rate. But tile necessity of having there a proper number of wliiteais not only strongly enforced by the consideration of the great gain which would from thence accrue to us, hut from the vast savings which such an arrangement would produce. The militia of the West-Indies is exceedingly well trained, so as to be in discipline not very much infej iour, but in courage and spirit beyond, most regular troops ; and they really want nothing but sufficient numbers to be able fully to defend themselves, and occasionally to annoy the enemy ; for both which purposes they are infini¬ tely more fit, by being habituated to the climate, than raw troops, which in this part of the world can never meet the enemy in the field with much more than half their complement. A less number of troops would do there in all times, if this point was well studied ; and I may venture to say, that the trans¬ porting and comfortably providing for a proper number of men effectually to secure our colonies, and even to make any at¬ tempt upon them desperate, would not have cost the govern¬ ment one third part of the' money, which for these twenty years past has been expended in the transporting and maintaining of troops there, who die and waste away without any benefit to themselves or their country ; whereas these settlers,'who would so effectually intimidate a foreign enemy, and take away all hope of liberty from the negroes, would all the while be enrich¬ ing their mother country, and paying a large interest for the sums she expended in their establishment. I am conscious that many objections will be made against the very proposal, and that many more would be started against any effectual scheme for increasing the number of white servants in the West-Indies. They are represented, as of very little use, disorderly. '3313 AS ACCOUNT -OP TKE disorderuly, idle, drunken, and 'fitter to -pervert the negroes, t!nu to be ar.y assistance do them in their business. This I believe to be in general true ; but this is no sort oJ objection to baring them; though it is an excellent argument for putting them, their masters, and the "whole colony, under a better re¬ gulation. If we labour under great inconvenieudes from tiic waut of a police at home, this want is in,finitely more visible in •the West-Indies, where, for the most part, they all live with¬ out the least sense of religion, in a state of vice and debauchery, which is really deplorable to consider them as men and Chris¬ tians, and of a very bad aspect in a political light. If there¬ fore it should be thought convenient by the wisdom of our go¬ vernment, at any time to enter into a scheme for peopling these countries fully and properly, it will be equally convenient at the same time to take such strict measures as may preserve them from vice and idleness; a thing far enough from being impracticable. Whenever such regulations shell take place, they will in a good measure answer another end too, the pre- ■ serving the health and lives of the people ; a point, which in all places every wise government will have very much at heart; but which is, above all, necessary in a colony, where the people are an inestimable treasure, and where the climate itself is suffi¬ ciently fatal. These observations principally regard Jamaica, the largest and best of our islands, where there are prodigious tracts of un¬ cultivated land. As the rivers there are not navigable, and as sugar is a bulky commodity which cannot afford to pay for a very long land carriage, only the coasts, or the land very near the coasts, can be turned to' that commodity. But if poor people were sufficiently encouraged to settle in the inland parts, necessity would oblige them to raise cotton, cacao, coffee, ginger, aloes, allspice, the dyeing woods, and other things, which require no LUaOPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 337 no vast labour, are not so burdensome in carriage, and which have all a sufficient demand at home to encourage people who do not look to great and sudden fortunes. And as we bring all these, especially the cotton, which is of great use in our manu¬ factures, from abroad, we might encourage the raising more of it by some moderate premium. The same necessit) r too would oblige them to try experiments on cochineal, and various other tilings which "we do not now think of, and which the climate frould not refuse. By degrees, and with good management, they would improve in the culture of many of these articles in which they are now defective ; the careful would grow tolerably rich ; and considerable works of many valuable commodities, as cacao, cochineal, and even indigo, may be attempted with small ca¬ pitals. Excepting the labour, I do not know that any of these require above two or three hundred pounds to begin with. So that, whilst the great stock and the lands convenient to navi¬ gation are employed in sugars, the small capitals and the inland might be employed in the less expensive, though not less use¬ ful, articles I have mentioned; every part would flourish, and agriculture would have its siiare with the other improvements; so that the great number might be subsisted at less expence than the few are now maintained. All this, I am confident, could be effected for twenty thousand pounds, or less, properly laid out; and the island by this means be rendered in a few years three times more beneficial to us, than it is at present. By the neglect of some encouragement of this kind, the great stocks, and the running into a staple which required them, have by degrees devoured the island. It is the nature of vast stocks to create a sort of monopoly ; and it is the nature of monopoly to aim at great profits from a comparatively little produce ; but diffuse business, and by bringing it within the compass of se¬ veral, you will make them sit down each with a small profit, AN ACCOUNT OF THE for all cannot hope a fortune, but the joint produce of all will be very considerable. Indigo was once very greatly produced in Jamaica, and it enriched the island to so great a degree, that in the parish of Yere, where this drug was cultivated, they are said to have had no less than three hundred gentlemen’s coaches; a number I do not imagine even the whole island exceeds at this day; and there is great reason to believe, that there were many more persons of property in Jamaica formerly than there are now, though perhaps they had not those vast fortunes, which dazzle us in such a manner at present. CM. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS AN AMERICA. 839 CHAP. XI. MISERY OF THE NEGROES—GRE-IT WASTE OF THEM.—METHOD!! OF PRE¬ VENTING IT.—INSTRUCTION-OF NEGROES IN RELIGION. Since I have indulged myself so long in a speculation, which appears to me very material to tW welfare of these colonies; I shall venture to say something further concerning another part of the inhabitants, though it may perhaps meet no warm re¬ ception from those who are.the most nearly concerned. The negroes in our colonies endure a slavery more complete, and attended with far w orse ■ ci rc u ms tan ces, than wliat any peo¬ ple in their condition suffer in any other part of the world, or have suffered in any other period of time. Proofs of this are not wanting. - The prodigious waste which we experience .in this unhappy part of our species, is a full and melancholy evidence of this truth. The island of Barbadoes (the negroes upon which do not amount to eighty thousand) notwithstanding alfthe.means which they use toriucrease them by propagation, notwithstand¬ ing that the climate is in every respect, except that of being more wholesome, exactly resembling the climate from whence they come; notwithstanding all this, Barbadoes lies under .a necessity of an annual recruit of five thousand slaves to keep up the stock at the' number I have mentioned. This prodigious failure, which is at least in the same proportion in all our islands, shews demonstratively that some uncommon and insupportable hardship lies upon the negroes which wear's them down in such a surprising manner; and this, I imagine, is principally the x x 2 excessive 3-10 IS ACCOCXT OF excessive labour which they undergo. For previously, I sup¬ pose, that none of the inhabitants of the countries between the tropicks are capable, even in their own climates, of mar so much labour, without great prejudice to them, as our people are in ours. But in our plantations.tire blacks work severely for five days, without any relaxation or intermission, for the benefit of tlie piaster, and the other two days they are obliged to labour for their own subsistence during the rest of the week ; and this I imagine, with the other circumstances of great severity which depress their spirits, naturally cuts oft' great numbers, as well as disqualifies those who remain from supplying this waste by na¬ tural propagation. - The planter will say, that, if he is to allow his negroes more recreation and to indulge them in more hours of absence from their work, he can never reimburse himself for the charge lie has been at in the purchase of the slave, nor make the profits which induced him to go to thatexpeuce. But this, though it appears plausible enough at first, because the slaves are very dear, and be¬ cause they do not yield aboveten or twelve pounds a head annually clear profit by their labour, is notwithstanding very fallacious. For let it be considered, that, out of their stock of eighty thou¬ sand in Barbadoes, there die every year five thousand negroes more than are born in that island : in effect, this people is under a necessity of being entirely renewed every sixteen years ; and what must we think of the management of a people, who, far from increasing greatly, as those who have no loss by wars ought to do, must, in so short a space of time as sixteen years, without foreign recruits, be entirely consumed to a man? Let us suppose that these slaves stand the Barbadians in no more than twenty pound a head out of the ship ; whereas, in reality, they cost a great deal more ; this makes one hundred thousand pounds every year, and in sixteen years one million six hundred thousand El/JiOPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEIilC.l. 341 . thousand pounds. A sum really astonishing, and amounting to a fourth of tiie value of every tiling they export. Now suppose, that, by allowing a more moderate labour and some other indulgences, a great number of these deaths might he prevented (and many I think it is probable would so be pre¬ vented), and that, they couid keep up within a thousand of their stock (and why they could not entirely keep it up by means, I cannot possibly guess) they would save in this way eighty thousand pounds every year. But from thence we must deduct the time in which these slaves have been unemployed. I suppose that all reasonable indulgences might be given of every sort for the difference of forty thousand pounds, which is the labour of four thousand slaves. This will be far from a small allowance, especially as in this way less time will be lost by sick¬ ness, and the surgeon will have less employment. Then, after all deductions, by behaving like good men, good masters, and good Christians, the inhabitants of this one island would save forty thousand pounds a year; which if, instead of being saved, ij were lost by such a proceeding, it ought to be considered as a necessary loss, and borne accordingly. This matter, though not, I think, before shewn in this same light, seems in itself extremely clear ; but if it were yet clearer, there are several gentlemen of the West-Indies who could not comprehend it: though a wfiggoner in England will comprehend very clearly, that, if he works his horse but moderately, and feeds him well, he will draw more profit from him in the end, than if he never gave him an hour’s respite in the day from his work, and at night turned him upon the common for his sub¬ sistence. I am far from contending in favour of an effeminate indulgence to these people. I know that they are stubborn and intractable for the most part, and that they must be ruled with the rod of iron. I would have them ruled, but not crushed 342 AN ACCOUNT OF THE witli it. I would have a humanity exercised which'is consistent with steadiness. And I think it clear from the whole course of history, that those nations which have behaved with the greatest - humanity to their slaves, were always best served, and ran the least hazard from their rebellions. And I am the more con¬ vinced of the necessity of these indulgences, as slaves certainly cannot go .through so much work as freemeu. The mind goes a great way in ever}' thing; and when a man knows that his labour is tor himself, and that the more lie labours, the more he is to acquire, this consciousness carries him through, and supports him beneath fatigues, under which he otherwise would have sunk. • The prejudice this saving would be to the African trade, s., I know, an objection which to some would appear very plausible. But surely, one cannot hear without horrour of a ■trade which must depend for its support upon the annual murder of several thousand of innocent men ; and indeed no¬ thing could excuse the slave trade at all, but the necessity we -are under of peopling our colonies, and the Consideration that the slaves we buy were in the same condition in Africa, either hereditary or taken in war. Eut, in fact, if the waste of these men should become less, the price would fall; then, if a due order were taken, the same demand might be kept by extend¬ ing our colonies, which is now produced by the havoek made of The people. This is the case on the continent, where, though the slaves increase, there is an annual call for seven thousand at least. The principal time I would have reserved for the indulgence 1 propose to be granted to the slaves, is Sunday, or the Lord’s -day ; a day which is profaned in a manner altogether scandalous in our colonies. On this day, I would have them regularly at¬ tend at church : I would have them, particftlarly the children, carefully EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 343 carefully (full as carefully as any others') instructed in the prin¬ ciples of religion and virtue, and especially in the humility, submission, and honesty, which become their condition. The rest of the day might be devoted to innocent recreation ; to these days of relaxation, and with the same exercises, should be added some days in the grand festivals of Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, and perhaps, four or five days in the year besides. Sucli methods would by degrees habituate their masters, not to think them a sort of beasts, and without souls, as some of them’ do at present, who treat them accordingly ; and the slaves would of course grow more honest, tractable, and less of eye-servants ; unless the sanctions of religion, the precepts of morality, and all the habits of an early institution, be of no advantage^ to man¬ kind. Indeed I have before me an * author, if he may be so called, who treats the notion of bringing the negroes to chris*- tianity with contempt, and talks of it at the best, as a thing of indifference. But, besides that he appears to me a writer of very little judgment, I cannot conceive with what face any body,. who pretends to inform the public, can set up as an advocate, for irreligion, barbarism, and gross ignorance. * Oldmixoa. CHAP. AS ACCOUNT of the ai4 CIIAP. VII. PROPOSAL run A sort of ENFRANCHISEMENT OF MULATTOES and negroes. —DANGER FROM THE MULTITUDE OF HOUSE NEGROES. It it said, that the law of England is favourable to liberty ; and so far this observation is just, that, when we had men in a ser¬ vile condition amongst us, the law took advantage even of ne¬ glects of the masters to enfranchise the villain ; and seemed for that purpose even to subtilize a little; because our ancestors judged that freemen were the real support of the kingdom. What if in our colonies we should go so far, as to find out some medium between liberty and absolute slavery, in which we might place all mulattces after a certain limited servitude to the owner of the mother; and such blacks, who !v::\ m the islands, their masters for their good services should mink proper in some degree to enfranchise r These might have land allotted them, or, where that could not be spared, some sort of I'.xcd employment, from either of which they should be obliged to pay a certain moderate rent to the public. Yv'hatever they should acquire above this, to be the reward of their industry. The necessity of paying the rent would keep them from idle¬ ness ; and when men arc once set to work through necessity, th-y will not stop there; but they will gradually.strive for con- vtniencies, and some even for superfluities. Ad this will add to the demand for our goods, and the colony will be strength¬ ened by the addition of so many men, who will have an interest of their own to fight for. There is, amongst others, a very bad custom in our colonics of multiplying their household slaves far beyond reason and ne- ccsily. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS '-IN AMERICA. 345 cosily. It is not uncommon for families of no very great for¬ tunes, to have twenty-five or thirty in the capacity of menial servants only. These arc so many hands taken from planting, to be of no maimer of use to the publick ; but they are infinitely the most dangerous of the slaves; for being at all times about our people, they come to abate of that great reverence, which the field negroes have for the whites, without losing any thing of the resentment of their condition, which is common to both. And besides, in ’ any insurrection, they have it more in their power to strike a sudden and fatal blow. Surely a sumptuary law might be contrived to restrain the number of the menial slaves, as there might and ought to be one strictly enjoying all who keep five servants, to have one white man and one white woman amongst them, without any power of being indulged in a contrary practice ; as it ought to be a rule never to be broken through, to haVe not only the overseers, but even all the drivers, white men. The alarms we are under at the news of any petty armament in the West-Indies is a demonstrative proof of the weakness of our condition there ; which is, however, so far from rousing us to seek any proper remedy, that there are not wanting of the people of that country, many who would use a thousand pre¬ tences to preveut our taking the only possible means of secur¬ ing their own possessions from danger; as the majority of men will always be found ready to prefer some present gain to their future and more permanent interests. But the apparent and dangerous progress of the French ought, methinks, to rouse us from our long inaction, and to animate us to enterprise some regulations, in a strain of policy far superior to any thing-1 have ventured to hint, and the honour of the councils, of the British nation. PART 546 AH ACCOtJHT THE PART VIL BRITISH NORTH AMERICA. CHAP. I. A CSKEBAt, TDEW Of THE ENGLISH DOMINIONS IN NORTH AMERICA. It is somewhat difficult to ascertain the bounds of the English property in North America, to the northern and western sides ; for to the northward, it should seem, that we might extend our claims quite to the pole itself, nor does any nation seem in¬ clined to dispute the property of this northernmost country with ns. France has, by the treaty of Utrecht, ceded to us Hudson’s bay, the streights of Hudson, and ail the country bordering upon that bay and those streights. If we should choose to take our stand upon the northern extremity of New Britain, or Terra de Labrador, and look towards the south, we have a territory extending in that aspect from the 60 to the 31 degree of north latitude, and consequently more than seventeen hundred miles long in a direct line. This country is, all the way, washed by the Altantick Ocean on the east; to the south it has the small remains of the Spanish Florida; bat to the west¬ ward. EUROPEAN SETTLRyEKTS IX AMERICA. 347 ward, our bounds are disputed by our enemies, and do not seem well agreed upon amongst ourselves. They who govern them¬ selves by the charters to our colonies, run their jurisdiction quite across the continent to the South-Sea; others contract our rights to the hither banks of the Missi.sippi, and take four of the great lakes into our dominions; but upon what grounds they have fixed upon that river as a barrier, other than that rivers or mountains seem to be a species of natural boundaries, I cannot determine. Others (upon the same grounds, I sup¬ pose) have contracted us within limits yet narrower; they make the Apalachiau mountains, the lake Ontario, and the river St. Laurence, the most westerly frontier of our rights in America. The French, agreeing in some lespects with these latter (or the latter rather agreeing with the French, whose maps they have for a long time servilely and shamefully copied), have made the mountains hem us in from their southern commencement to about the 44 degree of north latitude, or thereabouts, where this long chain terminates; then they draw a line slanting to the north-east, by which they cut off a great part of the pro¬ vinces of New York, New England; and Nova Scotia, and leave our bounds at such a distance from the river St. Laurence, as they judge convenient. This distribution, and the military dispositions which the French have made to support it,-form tlie principal cause' of the quarrel which now subsists : betveen the two kingdoms ; and it is the-issue of this quarrel which must instruct future.geo- . graphers in adjusting the boundaries of the two nations. For the present, I shall only mention what we have settled, without offering any opinion of my own concerning our bounds. Our rights in Nova Scotia have been already ascertained and estab¬ lished in a clear and cogent manner; but, with regard to our claims’in the Ohio and Missisippi, the rashness of some writers y y 2 in 348 AX ACCOTJXT OF THE in a manner which is a publick concern seems to me very blameable. Some of them timidly or ignorantly drawing our territories into a very inconvenient narrowness; whilst others have madly claimed all North America from sea to sea; some would give us very narrow bounds; whilst others will hear of no bounds at all. Posterity will perhaps think it unaccountable, that, in a mat¬ ter of such importance, we could have been so thoughtless as to leave on our back such a nation as France, without deter¬ mining, in any manner, even sufficiently clear to settle our own demands, what part of the country was our own right, or what we determined to leave to the discretion of our neighbours ; or that, wholly intent upon settling the sea coast, we have never- cast an eye into the country, to discover the necessity of mak¬ ing a barrier against them, with a proper force ; which formerly did not reed to have been a very great one, nor to be main¬ tained at any great expence. That cheap and timely caution would have saved us thousands of lives and millions of money; but the hour is now passed. In the ensuing discourse, I think it better neither to consider our settlements directly in the order of the time of their estab¬ lishment, nor of their advantage to the mother country, but as they lie near one another, north and south, from New Englaud to Carolina; reserving for the end the new settlements on the northern and southern extremities, those of Nova Scotia and Georgia, and the unsettled countries about Hudson’s bay. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 349 CHAP. II. FIRST ATTEMPTS TO SETTLE NORTH AMERICA.—THE RISE AND PROGRESS OP THE PURITANS.—THEY ARE PERSECUTED BY LAUD.—SEVERAL ELY INTO We derive our rights in America from the discovery of Sebas¬ tian Cabot, who first made the northern continent in M9J. The fact is sufficiently certain to establish a right to our settlements in North America: but the particulars are not known distinctly enough to encourage me to enter into a detail of his voyage. The country was in general called Newfoundland, a name which is now appropriated solely to an island upon its coast. It was a long time before we made any attempt to settle this country; though in this point we were no more backward than our neigh¬ bours, who probably did not abstain so long out of respect to our prior discovery. Sir Walter Raleigh shewed the way, by planting a colony in the southern part, which he called Vir¬ ginia. However, the spirit of colonization was not yet fully raised. Men lived at ease in their own country, and the new settlement of Virginia, though dressed up in all the showy co¬ lours which eloquence could bestow upon it, gave adventurers but little encouragement. The affairs of North America were in the hands of an exclusive company ; and they prospered ac¬ cordingly. Things remained in this condition until the latter end of the reign of James the First. From the commencement of the re¬ formation in England, two parties of- protestants subsisted amongst us; the first had chosen gradually and almost imper¬ ceptibly AN' ACCOUNT THE 550 ceptibly to recede from the church of Rome ; softening the lines rather than erasing the figure, they made but very little alteration in the appearances of things. And the people, see¬ ing the exterior' so little altered, hardly perceived the great changes they had made in the doctrines of their religion. The other part}', of a warmer temper, had more zeal and less policy. Several of them had fled from the persecution in Queen Mary’s days ; and they returned in those of queen Elizabeth with minds sufficiently heated by resentment of their sufferings, and by the perpetual disputations which had exercised them all the while they were abroad. Abroad they learned an aversion to the episcopal order, and to religious ceremonies of every sort; they were impregnated with an high spirit of liberty, and had a strong tendency to the republican form of government. Queen Elizabeth had enough of tile blood of Harry the Eighth, to make her impatient of an opposition to her will, especially in matters of religion, in which she had an high opinion of her own knowledge. She advised with the party but very little in the alterations which she thought proper to make; and, dis¬ liking the notions which they seemed to entertain in politicks, she kept them down during the whole course of her reign with an uniform and inflexible severity. However, the party was far enough from being destroyed. The merit of their sufferings, the affected plainness of their dress, the gravity of their deportment, the use of scripture phrases upon the most ordinary occasions, and even their names, which had something striking and venerable, as being borrowed from the Old Testament or having a sort of affected relation to reli¬ gious matters, gained them a general esteem amongst' sober people of ordinary understandings. This party was very nu¬ merous ; and their zeal made them yet more considerable than their numbers. They were commonly called'Puritans. When EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 351 When King James came to the throne, lie had a very fair op¬ portunity of pacifying matters ; or at worst he might have left them in the condition lie found them; but it happened quite otherwise. The unkiugly disputation at Harapton-court did more to encourage the Puritans to persevere in their opinions, by the notice which was taken of them, than all King James’s logick, as a scholar, backed with all his power as a king, could do to suppress that party. They were persecuted, but not .des¬ troyed; they were exasperated, and yet left powerful; and a severity was exercised towards them, which at once exposed the weakness anil the ill intentions of the government. In this state things continued until the accession of Charles, when they were far from mending. This prince, endowed with many great virtues, had very few amiable qualities. As grave as the Puritans themselves, he could never engage the licentious part of the world in his favour; and that gravity being turned against the Puritans, made him but the more odious to them. He gave himself up entirely to the church and churchmen; and he finished his ill conduct in this respect, by conferring the first ecclesiastical dignity of the kingdom, and a great sway in temporal affairs, upon doctor Laud. Hardly fit to direct a college, he was called to govern a kingdom. He was one of those indiscreet men of good intentions, who are the people in the world that make the worst figure in politicks. This man thought he did good service to religion by a scrupulous .enquiry into the manner in which the ministers every where conformed to the regulations of the former reigns. He deprived great numbers for nonconformity. Not satisfied with this, in which perhaps he was justifiable enough if he had managed prudently', he made new regulations, and introduced on a people already abhorrent of the most necessary ceremonies, ceremonies of a new kind, of a most useless nature, and such as were even ridiculous, 332 ridiculous, if the serious consequences which attended them may not intitle them to be considered as matters of im¬ portance. Several great men. disgusted at the proceedings of the court, and entertaining very reasonable apprehensions for the publick liberty,‘to make themselves popular, attached themselves to the popular notions of religion, and affected to maintain them with great zeal. Others became Puritans through principle. And now their affairs put on a respectable appearance ; in pro¬ portion as they became of consequence, their sufferings seemed to be more and more grievous : the severities of Laud raised not terrour as formerly, but a sort of indignant hatred; and they became every day further and further from listening to the least term; of agreement with surplices, organs, common-prayer, .or table at the east-end of the church. As they who are serious about trifles are serious indeed, their lives began to grow mise¬ rable to several on account of these ceremonies; and, rather than be obliged to submit to them, there was no part of the world to which they would not have fled with cheerfulness. Early in the reign of King James a number of persons of this persuasion had sought refuge in Holland ; in which, though a country of the greatest religious freedom in the world, they did not find themselves better satisfied than they had been in Eng¬ land. There they were tolerated indeed, but watched ; their zeal began to have dangerous languors for want of opposition; and, being without power or consequence, they grew tired of the indolent security of their sanctuary ; they chose to remove to a place where they should see no superiour ; and therefore they sent an agent to England, who agreed with the council of Ply¬ mouth, for a tract of land in America, within their jurisdiction, to settle in, after they had obtained from the king a privilege to do so. The Plymouth council was a company, who, by their charter, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 333 charter, had not only all the coast of North America from Nova Scotia to the southern parts of Carolina (the whole country being then distinguished by the names of South and North Virginia) as a scene for their exclusive trade ; but they had the entire property of the soil besides. This colony established itself at a place which they called New Plymouth. They were but few in number ; they landed in a bad season ; and they were not at all supported but from, their private funds. The winter was premature/and terribly cold. The country was all covered with wood, and afforded very little for the refreshment of persons sickly with such a voyage, or for the sustenance of an infant people. Near half of them perished by the scurvy, by want, and the severity of the climate; but they who survived, not dispirited with their losses nor with the hardships they were still to endure, supported by the vigour which was then the character of Englishmen, and by the satis¬ faction of finding themselves out of the reach of the spiritual arm, reduced this savage country to yield them a tolerable live¬ lihood, and by degrees a comfortable subsistence. This little establishment was made in the year 1621. Several of their brethren in England, labouring under the same diffi¬ culties, took the same methods of escaping from them. The. colony of puritans insensibly increased ; but as yet they had not. extended themselves much beyond New Plymouth. It was in the year 1629, that, the colony began to flourish in such a man¬ ner, that they soon became a considerable people. By the close, of the ensuing year they had built four towns, Salem, Dor-. Chester, Charles-Town, and Boston, which has since become the capital of New England. That enthusiasm which was re¬ versing every thing at home, and which is so dangerous in every settled community, proved of admirable service here, it be-; came a principle of life and vigour, that enabled them to con-. qner z. z S54 LN ACCOUNT or THE quer ail the difficulties of a savage country. Their exact and- sober manners proved a substitute for a proper subordination and regular form of government, which they had for some time wanted, and the want of which in such a country had otherwise been felt very severely. And now, not only they who found themselves uneasy at home upon a religious account, but several by reason of the then profitable trade of furs and skins, and for the sake of the fishery, were invited to settle in New England. But this colony received its principal assistance from the discontent of several great men of the puritan party, who were its protectors, and •who entertained a design of settling amongst them in New Eng¬ land, if they should fail in the measures they were pursuing for establishing the liberty, and reforming the religion of their mo¬ ther country. They solicited grants in New England, and were at a great expence in settling them. Amongst these patentees, we see the lords Brook, Say and Seal, the Pelhams, the Hamp- dens, and the Pyms; the names which afterwards appeared with so much eclat upon a greater stage. It was said that sir Mat¬ thew Boynton, sir William Constable, sir Arthur Haslerig, and Oliver Cromwell were actually upon the point of embarking for New England; when archbishopXaud, unwilling that so many objects of his hatred should be removed out of the reach of his - power, applied for, and obtained, an order from the court to put a stop to these transportations; and thus be kept forcibly from venting itself that virulent humour which he lived to see tire destruction of himself, his order, his religion, his master, and the constitution of his country. However, he was not able te prevail so far as to hinder New England from receiving vast reinforcements, as well of the clergy who were deprived of their. Brings or not admitted to them for non-conformity, as of. such, of the laity who adhered to their opinions. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 35a CHAP. III. DIFFERENCE IH' RELIGION, DIVIDES THE COLONY.-.UASSACUUSET.-CON¬ NECTICUT.—PROVIDENCE.-SPIRIT OP PERSECUTION.—PERSECUTION 0? THE QUAKERS,-DISPUTES ABOUT GRACE. The part of New England called Massachuset’s Bay had now- settlements, very thick all along the sea-shore. Some slips from these were planted in the province of Main and New Hamp¬ shire, being torn; from the original stock by the religious vio¬ lence,-, which was the chief characteristick of the first settlers in New England; The patentees we last mentioned principally settled, upon the river Connecticut, and established a separate and independent government there: some persons having be¬ fore that fixed themselves upon the borders of this river, who fled from the tyranny arising from the religious differences which were moulded into the first principles of the Plymouth and Mas¬ sachuset’s colonies. For a considerable time, the people of New England had* hardly any that deserved the name of a regular form of govern-' ment. The court took very little care of them. By their charter they were empowered to establish such an order, and to make such laws, as they pleased, provided they were not con¬ trary to the laws of England. A point not easily settled, nei¬ ther was there any means appointed for settling it. As they who composed the new colonies were generally persons- of a contract¬ ed way of thinking and most violent enthusiasts; they imitated' the Jewish polity in almost all respects ; and adopted the books• LCCCUXT OF THE of Moses as tlie law of the land. The first laws which they made were grounded upon them, and were -therefore very ill suited to the customs, genius, or circumstances of that country, and of those times ; for which reason they have since fallen into As to religion, it was, as I have said, the Puritan. In Eng¬ land, this could hardly be considered as a formed sect at the time of their emigration, since several who had received episco¬ pal ordination were reckoned to belong to it. But as soon as they found themselves at liberty in America, they fell into a way very little different from the independent mode. Every parish was sovereign within itself. Synods indeed were occa¬ sionally called ; but they served only to prepare and digest mat¬ ters, which were to receive their sanction from the approbation of the several churches. The synods could exercise no branch of ecclesiastial jurisdiction, either as to doctrine or to discipline. They had no power of excommunication.. They could only- refuse to hold communion with those whose.principles and prac¬ tices they disliked. The magistrates assisted in those synods, not only to hear, but to deliberate and determine. From suck a form as this, great religious freedom might, one would have imagined, be well expected. But the truth is, they had no idea at ail of such a freedom. The very doctrine of any sort of toleration was so odious to the greater part, that one of the first- persecutions set up here was against a small party which arose' amongst themselves, who were hardy enough to maintain, that ■ the civil magistrate had no lawful power to use compulsory measures in affairs of religion. After harassing these people by all the vteatious ways imaginable, they obliged them to fly out of their jurisdiction. These emigrants settled themsdves- ta the southward, near.Cape Cod, where they, formed a new- govemment upon their own principles, and built a town, whioh they EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 357 thej r called Providence. This has since made the fourth and smallest, but not the worst inhabited, of the New England go¬ vernments, called Rhode Island, from an island of that name which forms a part of-'it. As a persecution gave rise to the first settlement of New England, so a subsequent persecution in this colony gave rise to new colonies, and this facilitated the spread¬ ing of the people over the country. If men, merely for the moderation of‘their sentiments, were exposed to such severe treatment, it was not to be expected that others should escape unpunished. The very first colony liad hardly set its foot in America, when, discovering that some amongst them were false brethren and ventured to make use of the common prayer, they found means of making the country so uneasy to them, that they were glad to flyback to England. As soon as they began to think of making lairs, I find no less than five about matters of religion ; all contrived, and not only- contrived but executed in some respects, with so much rigour, that the persecution which drove the Puritans out of England might be considered as great lenity and indulgence in the com¬ parison. For, in the first of these laws, they deprive every one who does not communicate with their-established church, of the right to his freedom, or a vote in the election of any of their magistrates. In the second, they sentence to banishment any who should oppose the fourth commandment, or deny the vali¬ dity of infant baptism or the authority of magistrates. In the third, they condemn Quakers to banishment, and make it ca-- pital for them to .-return; and, not stopping at the offenders, they lay heavy fines upon all who should bring them into the province, or even harbour them for an hour. In the fourth, they provide banishment, and death in case of return, for Jesuits and Popish priests- of .every denomination. In the fifth, they 358 AN ACCOUNT OP THE decree death to any who shall worship images. After they had provided such a complete code of persecution, they were not long without opportunities of reading bloody lectures.upon it. The Quakers, warmed with that spirit, which animates the be¬ ginning of-most sects, had spread; their doctrines all over the British dominions in, Europe, and began at- last to spread them with equal zeal in America. Tire clergy curd the magistrates in New England took the alarm ; they seized- upon some of those people, they set them in the stocks and; in- the pillory without effect; they scourged, they imprisoned, they- banished them ; they treated all those, who seemed to commiserate their suffer¬ ings, with great rigour; but their persecution had no other effect thau to inflame their own cruelty and the zeal of the suf¬ ferers. The constancy of the Quakers under their sufferings begot a pity and esteem for their persons, and an approbation Qf their doctrines ; their proselytes increased; the Quakers re¬ turned; as.fast as thej' were banished ; and the fury of the ruling party was-raised to such a height, that they proceeded to the most sanguinary extremities. Upon the law they had made, they seized at different times upon five of those who had re¬ turned from banishment, condemned, and hanged them. It is unknown how far their madness had extended, if an order from the-king and council in England about the year 1661 had not interposed to restrain them. 'It is a task not very agreeable to insist upon such matters; but, in reality, tilings of this nature form the greatest part of the history of New England, for a long time. They perse¬ cuted the Anabaptists, who were no inconsiderable body amongst them, with almost an equal severity. In short, this people, who in England could not bear being chastised with rods, had no sooner got free from their fetters than they scourged'their. EinUWEAN iSE’l'TLBlttbNTS IN AMEIUCA. 3 59 fellow, refugees with scorpions; though the absurdity, as well as tile injustice,, of such a proceeding in them, might stare them in the face! One may observe, that men of all persuasions confine the word persecution, and all the ill ideas of justice and violence which belong to it, solely to those severities which are exer¬ cised upon themselves, or upon the party they are inclined to favour. Whatever is inflicted upon others, is a just punishment upon, obstinate impiety, and not a restraint upon conscientious differences. The persecution we have ourselves suffered, is a good ground for retaliation against an old enemy ; and if one of our friends and fellow sufferers should prove so wicked as to quit our cause, and weaken it by his dissension, he deserves to be punished yet more than the old enemy himself. Besides this, the zealous never fail to draw political inferences from religious tenets, by which they interest the magistrate in the dispute; and then to the heat of a religious fervour is added the fury of a party zeal. All intercourse is cut off between the parties. They lose all knowledge of each other, though countrymen and neighbours; and are therefore easily imposed upon with the most absurd stories concerning each other's opinions and prac¬ tices. They judge of the hatred of the adverse side by their own. Then fear is added to their hatred; and preventive in¬ juries arise from their fear. The remembrance of the past, the dread of the future, the present ill, will join together to urge them forward to the most violent courses. Such is the manner of proceeding of religious parties towards - each other; and in this respect the New England people are not worse than the rest of mankind; nor was their severity any just matter of reflexion upon that mode of religion which they pro¬ fess. No religion whatsoever, true or false, can excuse its own members, or accuse those of any other, upon the score of per¬ secution.- 560 lK ACCOUKT THE secution. The principles which give rise to it are common to all mankind, and the3' influence them as they are men, and not as they belong to this or that persuasion. In all persuasions the bigots are persecutors ; the men of a cool and reasonable piety are favourers of toleration; because the former sort of men, not taking the pains to be acquainted with the grounds of their adversaries tenets, conceive them to be so absurd and monstrous, that no man of sense can give into them in good earnest. For which reason they are convinced that some ob¬ lique bad motive induces them to pretend to the belief of such doctrines, and to the maintaining of them with obstinacy. This is a verv general principle in all religious differences, and it is the corner stone of all persecution. Besides the dispute with those of another denomination, the Independents were for a long time harassed with one in the bowels of their own churches. The stale dispute about grace and works produced dissensions, riots, and almost a civil war in the colony. The famous Sir Henry Vane the younger, an en- thusiastick, giddy, turbulent man, of a no very good disposi¬ tion, came hither with some of the adventurers ; and, rather than remain idle, played at small games in New England, where the people had chosen him governor. It is not hard to con¬ ceive, how such a man, at the head of such a people and en¬ gaged in such controversy, could throw every thing into con¬ fusion. In the very height of this hopeful dispute, they had a war upon their hands with some of the Indian nations. Their country was terribly harassed, and numbers were every day murdered, by the incursions of the enemy. All this time they had an army in readiness for action, which they would not suffer to march even to defend their own lives and possessions, be¬ cause “ many of the officers and soldiers were under a covenant “ of works.” CHAP. EUROPEAN SF.TTI.EM 361 C II A P. IV. THE WITCHCRAFT DELUSION.— GREAT CRUELTIES.—THE MADNESS ENDS IN THE ACCUSATION OF THE MAGISTRATES.—REFLEXIONS. When the New England Puritans began to breathe a little from these dissentions, and had their hands tied up from per¬ secuting the Quakers and Anabaptists, they fell not long after into another madness of a yet more extraordinary and danger¬ ous kind, which, like some epidemical disease, rau through the whole country, and which is perhaps one of the most extraor¬ dinary delusions recorded in history. This tragedy began in the year lb'92. There is a town in New England, which they fanatically called Salem. One Paris was the minister there. He had two daughters troubled with convulsions; which being attended with some of those extraordinary appearances not unfrequent in such disorders, he imagined they were bewitched. As soon as he concluded upon witchcraft .as the cause of the distemper, the next enquiry was, how to find out the person who had be¬ witched them. He cast bis eyes upon an Jndian servant wo¬ man of his own, whom he frequently beat, and used her with such severity, that she at last confessed herself the witch, and was committed to goal, where she lay for a .long time. The imaginations of the people were not yet sufficiently heated to make a very formal business .of this; therefore -tliey 362 AN ACCOUNT OF TIIE were content to discharge her from prison after a iong confine¬ ment. and to'sell her as a slave for her fees. However, as this example set the discourse about witchcraft afloat, some people, troubled with a similar complaint, began to fancy themselves bewitched too. Persons in an ill state cf health are naturally fond of finding out causes for their distem¬ pers ; especially such as are extraordinary, and call the eyes of the pub'iick upon them. There was perhaps something of malice in the affair besides. For one of the first objects whom they fixed upon was TIr. Burroughs, a gentleman who had for¬ merly been minister of Salem : but, upon some of the religious disputes which divided the country, he differed with his flock and left them. This man was tried with two others for witch¬ craft, bv a special commission of oyer and terminer, directed to some of the gentlemen of the best fortunes, and reputed to be of the best understandings in the country. Before these judges, a piece of evidence was delivered, the most weak and childish, the most repugnant to itself, and to common sense, that perhaps ever was known upon any serious occasion. Vet by those judges, upon that evidence, and the verdict founded upon it, this minister, a man of the most unexceptionable character, and two others, men irreproachable in their live?, were sen¬ tenced to die, and accordingly hanged. Then these victims of the popular madness were stript naked, and their bodies thrown into a pit, half covered with earth, and left to the discretion of birds and wild beasts. Upon the same evidence, in a little time after, sixteen more suffered death ; the greatest part of them dying in the most exemplary sentiments of piety, and with the strongest professions of their innocence. One man, refusing to plead, suffered in the cruel manner the law directs on that occasion, by a slow pressure to death. The imaginations of the people, powerfully affected by these shocking EUROPEAN' SETTLEMENTS IN' AMERICA. b6$ blocking examples, turned upon the most gloomy and horrid ideas. The most ordinary and innocent actions were meta¬ morphosed into magical ceremonies, and the fury of the people augmented in proportion as this gloom of imagination increased. Tiie flame spread with rage and rapidity into every part of the country. Neither the tenderness of youth, nor ..he infirmity of age, nor the honour of the sex, nor the sacredness of the ministry, nor the respectable condition of fortune or character, was the least protection. Children of eleven years old were taken up for sorceries. The women were stript in the most shameful manner to search them for magical teats. The scor- butiek stains common on the skins of old persons, were called tiie devil’s pinches. This was indisputable evidence against them. As such they admitted every idle flying report, and even stories of ghosts, which they honoured with a name, not found in our .law books. They called them Spectral Evidence. What these extraordinary testimonies wanted was completed by the torture, by which a number of these unhappy victims were driven to confess whatever their tormentors thought pro¬ per to dictate to them. Some women owned they had been lain with by the devil, and other things equally ridiculous and abominable. It is not dillicult to imagine the deplorable state of this pro¬ vince, when all mens lives depended upon the caprice and folly of diseased and distracted minds ; when revenge and malice had a full opportunity of wreaking themselves in a most dreadful and bloody manner, by an instrument that was always in rea¬ diness, and to which the publick phrenzy gave a certain and dangerous effect. What was a yet worse circumstance, the wretches who suffered the torture, being not more pressed to own themselves guilty than to discover their associates and ac T -complices, unable to give any real account, named people at 3 a 2 random, SG-i AH ACCOUNT OF THE fcmdom a who were immediately taken up, and treated in the same cruel manner fipon this extorted evidence. An universal terrour and consternation seized upon all. Some prevented accusation, and charged themselves with witchcraft, and so escaped death. Others fled the province; and many more were preparing to fly. The prisons were crowded ; people were executed daily ; yet the rage of the accusers was as fresh as ever, and the number of the witches and the bewitched in¬ creased every hour. A magistrate, who had committed forty persons for this crime, fatigued with so disagreeable an employ¬ ment and ashamed of the share he had in it, refused to grant any more warrants. He was himself immediately accused of sorcery ; and thought himself happy in leaving his family and fortune, and escaping with life out of the provir.es. A jury, struck with the affecting manner and the solemn assurances of innocence of a woman brought before them, ventured to acquit, her, but the judges sent them out again ; and in an imperious manner forced them to find the woman guilty ; and she was hanged immediately. The magistrates and ministers, whose prudence ought tc have been employed in healing this distemper and assuaging its fury, threw in new combustible matter. They encouraged the accusers; they assisted at the examinations, and they ex¬ torted the confessions, of witches. None signalized their zeal more upon this occasion than Sir William Phips, the governor, a New England man, of the lowest birth, and yet meaner -edu¬ cation ; who, having raised a sudden fortune by a lucky acci¬ dent, was knighted, and afterwards made gover nor of the pro¬ vince. Doctor Encrease Mather, and Dr. Cotton Mather, the pillars of the New England church, were equally sanguine. Several of the most popular ministers, after twenty executions had been made, addressed Sir William Phips with thanks for what EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. what he had done, and with exhortations to proceed in so lau¬ dable a work. The accusers encouraged in this manner did not know where to stop, nor how to proceed. They were at a loss for objects- They began at last to accuse the judges themselves. What was worse, the nearest relations to Mr. Encnease Mather were in¬ volved, and witchcraft began even to approach the governor's own family. It was now high time to give things another turn- The accusers were discouraged by authority. One hundred and fifty, who lay in prison, were discharged. Two hundred metre were under aceu-nation ; they were passed over; and those who had received sentence of death were reprieved, and in due time pardoned. A few' cool moments shewed them the gross and stupid errour that hat! carried them away, and which was utterly invisible to them all the while they were engaged in this prosecution. They grew heartily ashamed of what they had done. But what was infinitely mortifying, the Quakers took occasion to attribute all this misfortune to a judgment on them for their persecution. A general fast was appointed ; praying God to pardon all the errours of his servants and people in a late tragedy, raised amongst them by Satan and his instru¬ ments. This was the last paroxysm of the puritanick enthusiasm in New England. This violent fit carried off so much of that hu¬ mour, that the people there are now grown somewhat like the rest of mankind in their manners, and have much abated of their persecuting spirit. It is not an incurious speculation to consider these remark¬ able sallies of the human mind, out of its ordinary course. Whole nations are often carried away by what would never in¬ fluence one man of sense. The cause is originally weak, and to he suppressed without great difficulty ; but then its weakness prevents 366 OF THE prevents any suspicion of the mischief, until it is too late to think of suppressing it at all. In such cases the more weak, im¬ probable, and inconsistent any story is, the more powerful and general is its effect, being helped on by design in some, by folly in others, and kept up by contagion in all. The more extraor¬ dinary the design, the more dreadful the crime, the less we ex¬ amine into the proofs. The charge and evidence of some things is the same. However, in some time the minds of people cool, and they are astonished how they ever came to be so affected. CHAP. EUItOI'EAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 367 CHAP. V. THE SITUATION, CLIMATE, &C. OF NEW ENGLAND.—INDIAN CORN DESCRIBED. CATTLE OF NEW ENGLAND. The events in the history of New England, their disputes with their government, the variations in their charters, and their wars with the Indians, afford very little useful or agreeable matter. In their wars there was very little conduct shewn; and though they prevailed in the end, in a manner to the ex¬ tirpation of that race of people, yet the Indians had always great advantages in the beginning; and the measures of the English to oppose them, were generally injudiciously taken. Their manner too of treating them in the beginning, was so indiscreet (for it was in general no worse) as to provoke them as much to those wars, as the French influence has done since that time. The country which we call New England is in length some¬ thing less than three hundred miles ; at the broadest part it is about two hundred, if we carry it on to those tracts which are possessed by the French ; but if we regard the part we have settled, iu general, it does not extend any where much above sixty miles from the sea coast. This country lies between the 41st and 45th degrees of north latitude. Though it is situated almost ten degrees nearer the sun than we are in England, yet the winter begins earlier, lasts longer, and is incomparably more severe than it is with us. The summer again is extremely hot, and more fervently so than in places which lie under the same parallels in Europe. However, lx account or the However, both the heat and the cold are now far moie mode¬ rate, and the constitution of the air in ail respects far better, than our people found it at their first settlement. The clearing away of the woods, and the opening of the ground every where, has, by giving a free passage to the air, car ded off those noxious vapours which were so prejudicial to the health of the first inhabitants. The temper of the sky is generally both in summer and in winter very steady and serene. Two months frequently pass without the appearance of a cloud. Their rains are very heavy and soon over. The soil of New England is various, but best as you ap¬ proach the southward. It affords excellent meadows in the low grounds, and very good pasture almost every where. They commonly aliot at the rate of two acres to the maintenance of a cow. The meadows which they reckon the best, yield about a ton of hay by the acre. Some produce two tons, but the hay is rank and sour. This country is not very favourable to any of the European kinds of grain. The wheat is subject to be blasted; the barley is an hungry grain, and the oats are lean and chaffy. But the Indian com, which makes the general food of the lowest sort of people, flourishes here. This, as it is a species of grain not so universally known in England, and as it is that of all others which yields the greatest increase, 1 shall give a short description of. ■ This plant, which the native Americans call the weachin, is known in some of the southern parts of America by the name of maize. The ear is but a span in length, consisting of eight rows of the corn, or more, according to the goodness of the ground, with about thirty grains in each vow. On the top of the grain bangs a sort of flower, not unlike a tassel of silk, of various colours, white, blue, greenish, black, speckled, striped, ■which gives this corn, as it grows, a very beautiful appearance. The EUUOl’EAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEKICA. 369 The grain is of all the colours which prevail in the flower, but most frequently yellow and white. The stalks grow six or eight feet high, and are of a considerable thickness. They are less high in New England, and other northern countries, than in Virginia and those which lie more to the southward. They are jointed like a cane, and at each of these joints shoot out a number of leaves like flags, that make very good fodder for the cattle. The stalk is full of a juice, of which a syrup as sweet as sugar has been frequently made. This grain is generally sowed in little squares, and requires a very attentive cultivation. The ground in which it flourishes most is light and sandy, with a small intermixture of loam. About a peck of seed is sufficient for an acre, which at a medium produces about twenty-five bushels. The New Eng¬ land people not only make bread of this grain, but they malt and brew it into a beer, which is not contemptible. However, the greater part of their beer is made of molasses, hopped; with the addition sometimes of the tops of the spruce fir in- They raise in New England, besides this and other species of grain, a large quantity of flax, and have made essays upon hemp, that have been far from unsuccessful. An acre of their cow-pen land produces about a ton of this commodity ; but the land is pretty soon exhausted. This plant probably re¬ quires a climate more uniformly warm than New England ; for though the greater part of our hemp is brought to us from northern ports, yet it. is in the more southerly provinces of Russia, that the best which comes to our market is produced. Their horned cattle, are very numerous in New England, and very large. Oxen have been killed there of eighteen hundred weight. Hogs likewise arc numerous, and particularly excel¬ lent ; and some so large as to weigh twenty-five score. They AN ACCOUNT OP THE sro have besides, a breed of small horses, which are extremely; hardy. They' pace naturally,' though in no very graceful or easy manner ; but with such swiftness, and for so long a con¬ tinuance, as must appear almost incredible to those who have not experienced it. They have a great number of sheep too, and of a good kind. The wool is of a staple sufficiently long, but it is not near so fine as that of England. However, they manufacture a great deal of it very successfully. I have seen cloths made there, which were of as close and firm a contexture,, though not so fine, as our best drabs ; they were thick, and, as far as I could judge, superiour for the ordinary wear of country people, tnany thing we make in England. CHAP. EUJIOPlUJf SETTLEMENTS IN AMEDJC1. 371 CHAP. VI. PEOPLE OF NEW ENGLAND.-THEIR NUMBERS.-HISTORY OF THE CHARTER* OF THE COLONIES HERE, AND THE FORFEITURE OF SOME. There are in this country many gentlemen of considerable landed estates, which they let to farmers, or manage by their stewards or overseers ; but the greater part of the people is composed of a substantial yeomanry, who cultivate, their own freeholds, without a dependence upon any but Providence and their own industry. These freeholds generally pass to their children in the way of gavelkind; which keeps them from being almost ever able to emerge out of their original happy mediocrity. This manner of inheriting has here an additional good effect. It makes the people more ready to go backward into the uncultivated parts of the country, where land is to be had at an easy rate and in larger portions. The people, by their being generally freeholders, and by their form of govern¬ ment, have a very free, bold, and republican spirit. In no part of the world are the ordinary sort so independent, or pos¬ sess so many of the conveniencies of life ; they are used from their infancy to the exercise of arms ; and they have a militia, which for a militia is by no means contemptible ; and certainly if these men were somewhat more regularly trained^ and in better subordination, it would be impossible to find in any country, or in any time ancient or modern, an army better con- 3 n 2 stituted AX ACCOUNT OF stituted than that which New England can furnish. This too is much the best peopled of any of our colonies upon the continent. It is judged that the four provinces which it comprises, contain about three hundred and fifty thousand souls, including a very small number of Blacks and Indians; the rest are Whites. Douglas, who seems to be well informed in this point, propor¬ tions them as follow : Massacliuset’s bay, 200,000 Connecticut, 100,000 Rhode Island, 30,000 New Hampshire, 24,000 354,000 These four governments are confederated for their common defence. W r e have shewn how these several governments have arisen. The most considerable of them for riches and number of people, though not for extent of territory, is Massacliuset’s bay. This province, like the others, had originally a power of chusing every one of their own magistrates ; the governor, the council, the assembly,—all; and of making such laws as they thought proper, without sending them home for the approba¬ tion of the crown. But being accused of having abused this freedom, in the latter end of the reign of Charles the Second, they were deprived of it by a judgment in a quo zrairanto in the King’s Bench in England. They remained from that time to the Revolution without any charter. Some time after the Re- voiution^they received a new one, which, though very favour¬ able, was much inferiour to the extensive privileges of the for¬ mer charter, which were too extensive for a colony, and what left little more than a nominal dependence on the mother country, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 873 country, and the crown itself. But now, as the governor, lieu¬ tenant governor, and the chief places of the law and in the revenue, are in the disposal of the crown ; so is the militia; and though the council is chosen by the representatives of the people, yet the governor has a negative which gives him .an influence, sufficient to preserve the prerogative entire. Appeals for sums above three hundred pounds are admitted to the king and council, and all laws passed here must be remitted to Eng¬ land ; where, if they do not receive a negative from the crown in three years, they are to be considered as valid, and are to have the effect of laws ; which they are to have likewise until the time that the king's resolution is known. But one point has been long and resolutely disputed in this colony ; the grant of a certain salary to their governor. Many attempts have been made to induce them to this measure ; but to no effect. They think a dependence on the people for his salary is the most effectual method of restraining the governor from any unpopular acts. To the Massachuset’s government is united the ancient colony of Plymouth, and the territory which is called Main. The colony of Connecticut, which lies upon a river of the same name to tlie south of this province, has preserved its an¬ cient privileges, which are now as considerable as those of Mas¬ sachuset’s were formerly. At the time that the charter of the former was attacked, that of this government was threatened with the same fate. But they agreed to submit to the king’s pleasure ; therefore, no judgment was given against them ; and being found in this condition at the Revolution, it was judged that they were in full possession of their old charter, ami have so continued ever since. The third and smallest of the provinces which compose New England, is Rhode Island. This consists of a small island of that name, and the old plantation of Providence. These united plantations AS ACCOUST THE 374 plantations had a charter the same with that of Connecticut, and they hare preserved it by the same method. In this pro¬ vince is an unlimited freedom of religion, agreeable to the first principles of its foundation ; and though very small, it is from thence extremely well peopled. New Hampshire, the fourth province, is much the largest of them all; but not inhabited in proportion. This is more northerly for the greater part than any of the rest. It is a royal government; that is, the crown has the nomination of all the officers of justice and of the militia, and the appointment of the council. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS in amebica. 375 CHAP. VII. BOSTON, ITS HARBOUR.—TRADE.—SHIP-BUILDING.—DISTILLERY.—FOREIGN TRAFFICS.—REFLEXIONS ON THE SCHEME OF LIMITING IT.—DECLENSION OF THE TRADE OF NEW ENGLAND. Thebe is not one of our settlements which can be compared, in the abundance of people, the number of considerable and- trading towns, and the manufactures that are carried on in them, to New England. The most populous and flourishing parts of the mother country hardly make a better appearance. Our provinces to the southward on this continent are recom- mendable for the generous warmth of the climate, and a luxu¬ riance of soil which naturally throws up a vast variety of beau¬ tiful and rich vegetable productions; but New England is the first in America, for cultivation, for the number of people, and for the order which results from both.. Though there are in all the provinces of New England large' towns which drive a considerable trade, the only one which can deserve to be much insisted upon in a design like ours, is Bos¬ ton ; the capital of Massachuset’s bay, the first city of New England, and of all North America’. This city is situated on a peninsula, at the bottom of-a fine,capacious and safe harbour, which is defended from the outrages of the sea, by a number of islands, and rocks which appear above water. It is entered but by one safe passage ; and that is narrow, and covered by the cannon of a regular and very strong fortress. The harbour AN' ACCOUNT OF THU :j76 more than sufficient for the great number of vessels, which earn' on the extensive trade of Boston. At the bottom of the bay is a noble pier, near two thousand feet in length, along which on the north side extends a row of warehouses. The head of this pier joins the principal street of the town, which is, like most of the others, spacious and well built. The town lies at the bottom of the harbour, and forms a very agreeable view. It has a town house, where the courts meet, end the ex¬ change is kept, large, and of a very tolerable taste of architec¬ ture. Round the exchange, are a great number of well fur¬ nished booksellers’ shops, which find employment for live print¬ ing presses. There are ten churches within this town ; and it contains at least twenty thousand inhabitants. That we may be enabled to form some judgment of the wealth of this city, we must observe that from Christmas 17-17, to Christmas 1748, five hundred vessels cleared out from this port only, for a foreign trade; and four hundred and thirty were entered inwards ; to say nothing of coasting and fishing vessels, both of which are extremely numerous, and said to be equal in number to the others. Indeed the trade of New' Eng¬ land is great, as it supplies a large quantity of goods from within itself; but it is yet greater, as the people in this country are in a manner the carriers for all the colonies of North Ame¬ rica and the West-Indies, and even for some parts of Europe. They may be considered in this respect as the Dutch of America. The commodities which the country yields are principally masts and yards, for which they contract largely with the royal navy ; pitch, tar, and turpentine; staves, lumber, boards; all sorts of provisions, beef, pork, butter and cheese, in large quantities ; horses and live cattle; Indian corn and peas; cyder, apples, hemp and flax. Their peltry trade is not very consi¬ derable. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 3~7 derable. They have a very noble cod fishery upon their coast, which employs a vast number of their people ; they are enabled by this to export annually above thirty-two thousand quintals of choice cod fish, to Spain, Italy, and the Mediterranean, and about nineteen thousand quintals of the refuse sort to the West-Indies, as food for the negroes. The quantity of spirits, which they distil in Boston from the molasses they bring in from all parts of the West-Indies, is as surprising as tile cheap rate at which they vend it, which is under two shillings a gallon. With this they supply almost all the consumption of our colo¬ nies in North America, the Indian trade there, the vast de¬ mands of their own and the Newfoundland fishery, and in •great measure those of the African trade; but they are more famous for the quantity and cheapness, than for the excellency of their rum. They are almost the only one of our colonies which have much of the woollen and linen manufactures. Of the former they have nearly as much as suffices for their own cloatbiug. It is a close and strong, but a coarse stubborn sort of cloth. A number of Presbyterians, from the north of Ireland, driven thence, as it is said, by the severity of their landlords, from an affinity in religious sentiments, chose New England as their place of refuge. Those people brought with them their skill in the linen manufactures, and meeting with very large encou¬ ragement, they exercised it to the great advantage of this colony. At present they make large quantities, and of a very good kind ; their principal settlement is in a town, which in compliment to them is called Londonderry. Hats are made in New England, which, in a clandestine way, find a good vent in all the other colonies. The setting up of these manufactures has been in a great measure a matter necessary to them ; for as they have not been properly encouraged in some staple com- 3 c modity, 378 ACCOUNT OF THE moditv, by which they might communicate with their mother country, while they were cut oft from all other resources, they must either have abandoned the country, or have found means of employing their own skill and industry to draw out of it the necessaries of life. The same necessity, together with their convenience for building and manning ships, has made them the carriers for the other colonies. The business of ship-building is one of the most considerable which Boston or the other sea-port towns in New England carry on. Ships are sometimes built here upon commission ; hut frequently, the merchants of New England have them constructed upon their own account; and loading them with the produce of the colony, naval stores, fish, and fish-oil prin¬ cipally, they send them out upon a trading voyage to Spain, Portugal, or the Mediterranean ; where, having disposed of their cargo, they make what advantage they car', by freight, until such time as they can sell the vessel herself to advantage, which they seldom fail to do in a reasonable time. Thty re¬ ceive the value of the vessel, as well as of the freight of the goods, which from time to time they carried, and of the cargo with which they sailed originally, in bills of exchange upon Loudon ; for as the people of New England have no commo¬ dity to return for the value of above a hundred thousand pounds, which they take in various sorts of goods from Eng¬ land, but some naval stores, and those in no great quantities, they are obliged to keep the balance somewhat even by this circuitous commerce, which, though not carried on with Great Britain nor with British vessels, yet centers in its profits, where all the money which the colonies can make in any manner must center at last. I know that complaints have been made of this trade, prin¬ cipally because the people of New England, not satisfied with carrying EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 379 carrying out their own produce, become carriers for the other colonics, particularly for Virginia and Maryland, from whom they take tobacco, which, in contempt of the act of navigation, they cany directly to the foreign market. V here, not having the duty and accumulated charges which the British mer¬ chant is liable to pay, they in a manner wholly out him of'tlie trade. Again, our sugar colonies complain as loudly, that the vast trade which New England drives in lumber, live stock, and provisions, with' the French and Dutch sugar islands, par¬ ticularly with the former, enables these islands, together with tile internal advantages they possess, greatly to undersell the English plantations. That, the returns which the people of New England make from these islands being in sugar, or, the productions of sugar, syrups and molasses, the rum which is then distilled prevents the sale of our West-India rum. That this trade proves doubly disadvantageous to our sugar islands; first, as it enables the French to sell their sugars cheaper than they could otherwise afford to do; and then as it finds them a market for their molasses, and other refuse of sugars, for which otherwise they could find no market at all; because rum inter¬ feres with brandy, a considerable manufacture of Old France. These considerations were the ground of a complaint made by the islands to the legislature in England some years ago. They desired that the exportation of lumber, &c. to the French colonies, and the importation of sugars and molasses from thence, might, be entirely prohibited. This was undoubtedly a very nice point to settle. On one hand, the growth of the French West-Indies was manifest and alarming, and it was not to be thought that the French, would ever wink at this trade, if it had not been of the greatest advantage to them. On the other hand, the northern colonies declared, that, if they were 3 c 2 • deprived deprived of so great a branch of their trade, if must necessitate them to the establishment of manufactures. For if they were cut off from their foreign trade, they never could purchase in England the man}- things for the use or the ornament of life, "which - they have from thence. Besides this, the French, de¬ prived of the provision and lumber of New England, must of necessity take ever}- measure to be supplied from their Own colonies, which would answer their purposes better, if they could accomplish it, at the same time that it would deprive the New England people of a large and profitable branch of their trade. These points, and many more, were fully discussed upon both sides. The legislature took a middle course. They did not entirely prohibit the carrying of lumber to the French islands: but they laid a considerable duty upon whatever rum, sugars, or molasses, they should import from thence; to en¬ hance by this means the price of lumber and other necessaries to the French ; and, by laying them under difficulties, to set the English sugar plantations, in some measure, upon an equal footing with theirs. This was undoubtedly a very prudent regulation. For though it was urged, that the Missisippi navigation was so bad, that there was no prospect that the French could ever be sup¬ plied with lumber and provisions from thence ; and that there were no snows in Louisiana, the melting of which might faci¬ litate the transportation of lumber into that river, yet it was by no means safe to trust to that, so as utterly to destroy a trade of our own, which employed so much shipping and so many sailors: because we have a thousand instances, wherein the driving people to the last straits, and putting them under the tuition of such a master as absolute necessity, has taught them inventions. EUROPEAN SETTM5MEN'! IN AMERICA. 381 inventions, and excited them to an industry, which have com¬ passed things as much regretted at last, as they were unforeseen at first. Though no great snows fall in the southern parts of Louisiana, yet to the northward a great deal falls, and not only the hlissisippi, but the ntimber of Other great rivers, which it receives, overflow annually, and they can be ill no want of -timber convenient enough to navigation. And though the passage to the French islands be for such a great way to the windward, as to bring them these commodities in a more tedious manner, and at a dearer rate, is it not much better that they should have them cheap from us than dear from them¬ selves ? Nor perhaps would even this difficulty, which is indeed much less than it is represented, bring down the French to the par of our sugar colonies, loaded as they are with taxes, groan¬ ing under the pressure of many grievances, and deformed by an infinite multitude of abuses and enormities; nor can they with reason or justice hope for a cure of the evils which they suffer, partly from errours of their own, and partly from mistakes in England, at the expence of the trade of their sister colonies on the continent of America, who are entirely guiltless of their sufferings ; nor is it by restraints on the trade of their enemies, but by an effectual and judicious encouragement of their own, that they can hope to remedy these evils, and rival the French establishments. The French, in permitting us to supply them, it is true, give us a proof that they have advantages from this trade ; but this is no proof at all that we derive none from it; for, on that sup¬ position, no trade could be mutually beneficial. Nor is it at all certain, as it has been suggested, that, if we left their refuse of sugars upon their hands, they could turn them to no profit. If the council of commerce could be made to see distinctly that this 3 S3 this trade could not prejudice the sale of their brandy, and would only make the trade of rum change hands, as the case pro¬ bably would be ; and if they could shew, as they might, what a loss it might be to them entirely to throw away a considerable part of the produce of their lands, and which was formerly so valuable to them, there is no doubt but the court would give sufficient encouragement to their own plantations to distil rum, and to vend it in such a manner, as might the least prejudice the brandies of Trance; and then, instead of sending us mo¬ lasses, as they could distil the spirit far cheaper than our islands, they would send us the spirit itself; and we may know by experience, especially in that part of the world, how insuffi¬ cient all regulations are to prevent a contraband, which would be so gainful to particulars. After all, are we certain, that the French would trust for the supply of their islands to Louisiana, or to the precarious sup¬ plies from Canada r would they not redouble their application, now made necessary, to Cape Breton ? what experiments would they not make in Cayenne for the timber trade ? they would certainly try every method, and pi'obably would succeed in some of their trials. Restraints upon trade are nice things ; and ought to be well considered. Great care ought to be taken iu all such how we sacrifice the interest-, of one part of our ter¬ ritories to those of another ; and it would be a mistake of the most fetal consequence, if we came to think that the shipping, seamen, commodities, or wealth, of the British colonies, were not effectually the shipping, seamen, and wealth, of Great Bri¬ tain herself. Sentiments of another kind have frequently done us mischief. The general plan of our management with regard to the trade of our colonies, methinks, ought to be, to encourage in every one of them some separate and distinct articles, such as, not interfering, .EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. S83 interfering, might enable them to trade with each other, and all to trade to advantage with their mother country. And then, where we have rivals in any branch of the trade canned on by our colonies, to enable them to send their goods to the foreign market directly; using, at the same time, the Wise precaution which the French put in practice, to make the ships so employed take the English ports in their way home - r for our great danger is, that they should in that case make their re¬ turns in foreign manufactures, against which we cannot guard too carefully. This, and that they should hot go largely into manufactures interfering with ours, ought to be the only points at which our restrictions should aim. These purposes ought not to be compassed by absolute prohibitions and penalties, which would be unpolitical and unjust, but by the way of diver¬ sion, by encouraging them to fall into such things as find a demand with ourselves at home. By this means Great Britain and all its dependencies will have a common interest, they will mutually play into each other’s hands, and the trade, so dis¬ persed, will be of infinitely more advantage to us, than if all its several articles were produced and manufactured within our¬ selves. I venture on these hints concerning restraints on trade, because in fact New England rather wants to be supported than to be checked by such restraints. Its trade, in many of its branches, is clearly on the decline; and this circumstance ought to in¬ terest us deeply ; for very valuable is this colony, if it never sent us any thing, nor took any thing from us, as it is the grand barrier of all the rest; and as it is the principal magazine which supplies our West-Indies, from whence we draw such vast ad¬ vantages. That this valuable colony is far from advancing, will appear clearly from the state of one of the principal branches of its trade, that of ship-building, for four years. In the 384 AN- account on the the vear 1733, they built at Boston forty-one topsail vessels, burden in all 6324 tons; in 1743, only thirty; in 46, but twenty ; in 49, they were reduced to fifteen, making in the whole but 2450 tons of shipping; in such a time an astonishing declension ! How it lias been since I have not sufficient infor¬ mation ; but, allowing that the decline has ceased here, yet this is surely sufficient to set us upon the nicest enquiry into the cause of that decay, and the most effectual measures to re¬ trieve the affairs of so valuable a province ; particularly if by any ill-judged or ill-intended schemes, or by any misgovern- ment, this mischief has happened them. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS, IN AMERICA. 385 CHAP: VII]. SEW YORK, NEW JERSEY, AN ft PENNSYLVANIA.-DESCRIPTION OV TBEI* SITUATION, &C.—SHORT ACCOUNT OF THEIR SETTLEMENT. It is not certainly known at what time the Swedes and Dutch made their first establishment in North America; but it was certainly posterior to our settlement in Virginia, and prior to that of New England. The Swedes, who were no considerable naval power, had hardly fixt the rudiments of a colony there, ere they deserted it. The inhabitants, without protection or assistance, were glad to mter into a coalition with the Dutch, who had settled there upon a better plan, and to submit to the government of the states. The whole tract possessed or claimed by the two nations, whose two colonies were now grown into one, extended from the 38th to the 41st degree of latitude, all along the sea coast. They called it Nova Belgia, on New Nether¬ lands. It continued in their hands until the reign of Charles the Second. The Dutch war then breaking out, in the year 1664 Sir Robert Car with three thousand men was'sent to re¬ duce it, which be did with so little resistance, as not to gain him any great honour by the conquest. A little after, the Dutch, by way of reprisal, fell upon our colony of Surinam in South America, and conquered it after much the same opposi¬ tion that we met in the New Netherlands. By the treaty of peace which was signed at Breda, in 1.607, it was agreed thait things- should remain in the state they were at that time; Suri¬ nam-to the Dutch, the New Netherlands to the English. At 3 n that 386 AN* ACCOUNT OF HF. that time, this was looked upon by many as a bad exchange ; but it now appears, that we have made an excellent bargain ; for, to say nothing of the great disadvantage of having our co¬ lonies, as it were, cut in two by the intervention of a foreign territory, this is now one of the best peopled and richest parts of our plantations, extremely useful to the others, and making very valuable returns to the mother country ; whereas Surinam is comparatively a place of very small consequence, very un¬ healthy, and by no art to be made otherwise. The New Netherlands were not long in our possession before they were divided into distinct provinces, and laid aside their former appellation. The north-east part, which joined New England, was called New York, in compliment to the duke of York, who had at first the grant of the whole territory. This province runs up to the northward on both sides of the river Hudson, for about two hundred miles into the country of the Five Nations or Iroquois ; but it is not in any part above forty or fifty miles wide. It comprehends within its limits Long Island, which lies to the south of Connecticut, and is an island inferiour to no part of America in excellent ground for the pas¬ turage of horses, oxen, and sheep, or the plentiful produce of every sort of grain. The part of Nova Belgia, which lays along the ocean, between that and the river Delaware, from the southern part of New York quite down to Maryland, was granted to Sir George Car¬ teret and others, and called New Jersey from him, because he had, as the family still has, estates in the island of that name. This province is bounded upon the west by the river Delaware, which divides it from Pennsylvania. It is in length about one hundred and fifty miles, or thereabouts, and fifty in breadth. Pennsylvania, which lies between New York, New Jersey, and Maryland, and only communicates with the sea by. the mouth EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 387 mouth of the river Delaware, is in length about two hundred and fifty miles, and in breadth two hundred. This territory was granted to the famous Mr. William Pcmi, the son of Sir William Penn the admiral, in the year 1680. The climate and soil in tiie three provinces of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, admit of no very remarkable difference. In all these, and indeed in all our North American colonies, the land near the sea is in general low, flat, and marshy : at a considerable distance from the sea, it swells into little hills, and then into great even ridges of mountains, which hold their course, for the most part, north-east and south-west. The soil throughout these three provinces is in general ex¬ tremely fruitful; abounding not only in its native grain the Indian corn, but in all such as have been naturalized there from Europe. Wheat in such abundance, and of so excellent a qua¬ lity, that few parts of the world, for the tract which is culti¬ vated, exceed it in the one or the other of these particulars ; nor in barley, oats, rye, buck-wheat, and every sort of grain which we have here. They have a great number of horned cattle, horses, sheep, and hogs. All our European poultry abound there ; game of all kinds is wondeifully plenty ; deer of several species; hares of a kind peculiar to America, but inferiour in relish to ours; wild turkies, of a vast size and equal goodness ; a beautiful species of pheasants, only found in this country. Every species of herbs or roots, which we force in our gardens, grows here with great ease ; and every species ot fruit: but some, as those of peaches and melons, in far greater perfection. Their forests abound in excellent timber, the oak. the ash, the beech, the chesnut, the cedar, and walnut, the cypress, the hickory, the sassafras, and the pine. In all parts of our plan¬ tations, comprehending New York, to the northward, quite to 3 d 2 tin 388 AN ACCOUNT of the the southern extremity, the woods are full of wild vines of three or four species, all different from tilOSe MX have in Europe. But, whether from some fault in their nature, or in the climate, or the soil where they grow, or, what is much more probable, from a fault in the planters, they have yet produced no wine that deserves to be mentioned. It may be remarked in ge¬ neral of the timber of these provinces, that it is not so good for shipping as that of New England and Nova Scotia. The fur¬ ther southward ycu go, the timber becomes less compact, and rives easily; which property, as it makes it more useful for staves, renders it less serviceable for ships. They raise in all these provinces, but much the most largely in Pennsylvania, great quantities of flax; hemp is a promising article. Nor are they deficient in minerals. In New York, a good deal of iron is found. In NewJersey, a very' rich cop¬ per mine has been opened. There is no manner of doubt but in time, when the people come to multiply sufficiently, and ex¬ perience and want have made them ingenious in opening re¬ sources for trade, these colonies will become as remarkable for useful metals as they now are for grain. These three provinces, as are all those we have in North America, are extremely well watered. They have however observed :n New England, that, as they clear the country, a vast number of little brooks are quite lost, and the mills upon them by this loss rendered use¬ less. They even observe, that this cutting down of the woods has affected the river Connecticut itself, the largest in New England, and that it has grown distinguishably shallower. I do not know whether the same remark has been made in Penn¬ sylvania and New York. But whatever they haw lost in water, which, where there is such a plenty, is no great loss, has been amply compensated by the great salubrity of the air, which has arisen from the cultivation of the country. At present those I describe EUROPE AN, SETTLEMENTS JN AMERICA. I describe are, for tiie greater part, as healthy as Can be wished. As the climate and soil of the provinces of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, are, with very little variation, the same, so there is no difference in the commodities in which they trade, which are wheat, flour, barley, oats, Indian corn, peas,, beef, pork, cheese, butter, cyder, beer, flax, hemp and flax seed, linseed oil, fur and deer-skins, staves, lumber, and iron. Their markets are the same with those which the people of New Eng¬ land use; and these colonies have a share in the logwood trade, and that which is carried on with the Spanish and French plan¬ tations. CHAP. 390 AS ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. IX. eiTf OF SEW YORE.-ITS FLOURISHING TRADE.-ALBANY.-THE INDIAN TRADE THERE,-THE IROQUOIS OR'FIFE NATIONS. The province of New York has two cities; the first is called by the name of the province itself. It was denominated New Amsterdam when the Dutch possessed it, but it has changed its name along with its masters. This city is most conmiodiously situated for trade, upon an excellent harbour, in an island called Manahatton, about fourteen miles long, though not above one or two broad. This island lies just in the mouth of the river Hudson, which discharges itself here after a long course. This is one of the noblest rivers in America. It is navigable upwards of two hundred miles. The tide flows one hundred and fifty. The city of New York contains upwards of two thousand houses, and above twelve thousand inhabitants, the descendants of Dutch and English. It is well and cominodiously built, ex¬ tending a mile in length, and about that in breadth, and has a very good aspect from the sea ; but it is by no means properly fortified. The houses are built of brick in the Dutch taste ; the streets not regular, but clean and well paved. There is one large church built for the church of England worship ; and three bthers, a Dutch, a French, and a Lutheran. The town has a very' flourishing trade, and in which great profits are made. The merchants are wealthy, and the people in general most comfortably provided for, and with a moderate labour. From the year 1749 to 1750, two hundred and thirty-two vessels have EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN a 391 been entered in this port, and two hundred and eighty-six cleared outwards. In these vessels were shipped six thousand seven hundred and thirty ’ one tons of provisions, chiefly flour, and a vast quantity of grain ; of which I have no particular ac¬ count. In the year 1755, the export of flax seed to Ireland amounted to 12,328 hogsheads. The inhabitants are between eighty and an hundred thousand; the lower class easy; the better rich, and hospitable; great freedom of society ; and the entry to foreigners made easy by a general toleration of all re¬ ligious persuasions. In a word, this province yields to no part of America in the healtlifulness of its air, and the fertility of its soil. It is much superiour in the great convenience of water carriage, which speedily and at the slightest expence carries the product of the remotest farms to a certain and profitable market. Upon the river Hudson, about one hundred and fifty miles from New York, is Albany ; a town of not so much note for its number of houses or inhabitants, as for the great trade which is carried on with the Indians, and indeed, by connivance, with the French for the use of the same people. This trade take.? off a great quantity of coarse woollen goods, such as Strouds and duffils; and with these, guns, hatchets, knives, hoes, kettles, powder and shot; besides shirts and clothes ready made, and several other articles. Here it is that the treaties and other transactions between us and the Iroquois In¬ dians are negotiated. This nation, or combination of five nations, united by an ancient and inviolable league amongst themselves, were the oldest, the most steady, and most effectual ally we have found amongst the Indians. This people, by their unanimity, firm¬ ness, military skill, and policy, have raised themselves to be the greatest and most formidable power in all America; they have 392 AX ACCOUNT OF THE have reduced a vast number of nations, and brought under then- power a territory twice as large as the kingdom of Franee ; but they have not increased their subjects in proportion. As- their manner of warring is implacable and barbarous, they l'C-iga the lords of a prodigious desert, inhabited only by a few scattered insignificant tribes, whom they have permitted to live out of a contempt of th-sir power, and who are all in the lowest state of subjection. And yet this once mighty and victorious nation, though it has always used the policy of incorporating with itself a great man}- of the prisoners they make in war, is in a very de¬ clining condition. About sixty years ago, it was computed, that they had ten thousand fighting men; at this day, they can¬ not raise upwards of fifteen hundred. So much have wars, epide¬ mical diseases, and the unnatural union of the vices of civilized nations with the manners of savages, reduced this once numer¬ ous people. But they are not only much lessened at this day- in their numbers, but in their disposition to employ what num¬ bers they have left in our service. Amongst other neglects, which I have no pleasure in mentioning and no hopes of seeing amended, this of inattention, or worse treatment, of the In¬ dians, is one, and a capital one. The Iroquois have lately had three other nations added to their confederacy, so that they ought now to be considered as eight; and the whole confederacy seems much more inclined to the French interest than ours. CHAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. CHAP, X. NEW JERSEY.—ITS TRADE ; AND INHABITANTS. New Jersey, by tlie perpetual disputes which subsisted between the people and the proprietaries whilst it continued a proprie¬ tary government, was kept for a long time in a very feeble state; but, within a few years, it has begun to reap some of the ad¬ vantages which it might have had earlier from the proper ma¬ nagement of so fine a province and so advantageous a situation. They raise very great quantities of grain at present, and are in¬ creased to near sixty thousand souls; but they have yet no town of any consequence. Perth Amboy, which is their capital, has not upwards of tiro hundred houses ; and, though this town has a very fine harbour, capable of receiving and securing ships of great burden, yet, as the people of New Jersey have been used to send their produce to the markets of New York and Philadelphia, to which they are contiguous, they find it hard, as it always is in such cases, to draw the trade out of the old channel; for there the correspondencies are fixed, the method of dealing established, credits given, and a ready market for needy dealers, who in all countries are sufficiently numerous; so that the trade of this town, which is the only town of any trade worth notice in New Jersey, is still inconsiderable; in the year 1~51, only forty-one vessels have entered inwards, anti only thirty-eight cleared out, in which were exported six thou¬ sand four hundred and twenty-four barrels of flour; one hun- 3 e dred 394 AN ACCOPNT OJ THE dred and sixty-eight thousand weight of bread; three hundred and fourteen barrels of beef and pork; seventeen thousand nine hundred and forty-one bushels of grain; fourteen thousand weight of hemp; with some butter, hams, beer, flax-seed, bar- iron, and lumber. CHAP. EUROPEAN SfcmglUENtS IN AMERICA. CHAP. xl. AccftWi 01? WlttiAM pfeNii.—?it£ Principles on which Re settled the EOtoKV.—his DEA'rii. I find it of late k hotiort pretty etlrrertt, that proprietary go¬ vernments are a sort of cheek to the growth of the colonies which they superintend. It is certain, that abuses have been, and still do subsist, in that species Of government; find abuses of as bad a kind may, I believe, be found, by persons of Ho great penetration, in all ouf governments; but, if there were any truth in this observation, the province of Pennsylvania would prove an illustrious exception to it. William Penn, in his capacity of a divine and of a moral writer, is certainly not of the first rank ; and his Works are of no great estimation, except amongst his o\vn people; but, in his capacity of a legislator and the founder of So flourishing a com¬ monwealth, he deserves great honour amongst all mankind; a commonwealth, V’hich, in the Space of about seventy years, from a beginning of a few hundreds of refugees and indigent men, has grown to be a numerous arid flourishing people; a people, Who, from a perfect Wilderness, have brought their ter¬ ritory to a state of great cultivation, and filled it with wealthy and populous towns; and who, in the midst of a fierce and law¬ less race of nigh, have preserved themselves, with unarmed hands and passive principles, by the rules of moderation and justice, better than any other people has done by policy and arms, for Mr. Penn, when, for his father’s services and by his own interest at court, he obtained the inhex-itance of this country 3 F. 2 and 396 AS ACCOUNT OF THE and its government, saw that he could make the grant of value to him only by rendering the country as agreeable to all people, as ease and good government could make it. To this purpose, he began by purchasing the soil, at a very low rate indeed, from the original possessors, to whom it was of little use. By this cheap act of justice at the beginning, he made all his dealings for the future the more easy, by prepossessing the Indians with a favourable opinion of him and his designs. The other part of his plan, which was, .to people this country after he had secured the possession of it, he saw much facilitated by the un¬ easiness of his brethren the Quakers in England, who, refusing to pay tytlies and other church dues, suffered a great deal from the spiritual courts. Their high opinion of and regard for the man, who was an honour to their new church, made them the more ready to follow him over the vast ocean into an untried climate and country. Neither was he himself wanting in any thing which could encourage them. For he expended large sums in transporting and Hading them in all necessaries; and, not aiming at a sudden profit, he disposed of his land at a very light purchase. But what crowned all was, that noble charter of privileges, by which he made them as free as any people in the world ; and which has since drawn such, vast numbers, of so many different persuasions and such various countries, to put themselves under the protection of lhs laws. He made the most perfect freedom, both religious and civil, the basis of this establishment; and this has done more towards the settling of the province, and towards the settling of it in a strong and per¬ manent manner, than the wisest regulations could have done upon any other plan. All persons who profess to believe one. God, are freely tolerated; those who believe in Jesus Christ, of whatever denomination, are not excluded from employments and posts. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. This great man lived to see an extensive country called after his own name ; lie lived to see it peopled by his own wisdom, the people free and flourishing, and the most flourishing people in it of his own persuasion; lived to lay the foundations of a splendid and wealthy city; he lived to see it promise every thing from the situation which he himself had chosen, and the encouragement he himself had given it: he lived to see all this; but he died in the Fleet prison. It is but just, that in such a subject, we should allot a little room, to do honour to those great men, whose virtue and ge¬ nerosity have contributed to the peopling of the earth, and to the freedom and happiness of mankind; who have preferred the interest of a remote posterity, and times unknown, to their own fortunes, and to the quiet and security of their own lives. Now, Great Britain, and all America, reap great benefits from his labours and his losses; and his posterity have a vast estate out of the quit-rents of that province, whose establishment was. the ruin of their predecesor’s moderate fortune. CHAP, AN ICCMJNt Of TH8 S» CHAP. XH. in-habitants of tbwavi.vanu.—’ mtm ot nations Aim fctttctbNi THEBE.—PACIFICA PRINCIPLES OF THE (JUA1EBS.—REFUtKlOKI OH TtlP PUESENT STATE OF AFFAIRE TUERI. Pennsylvania is inhabited by upwards of two hundred and fifty thousand people, half of whom ate Germans, Swedes, or Dutch. Here you see the Quakeis, Churchmen, Calvinists, Lutherans, Cath-ilicks, Methodists, Menists, Moravians, Independents, the Anabaptists, and the Dumplers, a sort of German sect, that live in something likp a religious society, wear long beards, and a habit resembliug that of friars. In short, the diversity of peo¬ ple, religion, nations and languages here, is prodigious, and the harmony in which they live together no less edifying. For, though every man, who wishes well to religion, is sorry to see the di¬ versity which prevails, and would by all humane and honest methods endeavour to prevent it; yet, when once the evil has happened, when there is no longer an union of sentiments, it is glorious to preserve at least an union of affections; it is a beau¬ tiful prospect, to see men take and give an equal liberty; to see them live, if as not belonging to the same church, yet to the same Christian religion; and if not to the same religion, yet to the same great fraternity of mankind. I do not observe, that the Quakers, who had, and who still have in a great mea¬ sure, the power in their hands, have made use of it in any sort to persecute; except in the single case of George Keith, whom they first imprisoned, and then banished out of the province. This EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. This Keith was originally a minister of the Church of England, then a Quaker, and afterwards returned to his former ministry. But whilst he remained with the friends, he was a most trou¬ blesome and litigious manr was for pushing the particularities of quakerism to yet more extravagant lengths, and tor making new refinements, even where the most enthusiastick thought they had gone far enough ; which rash and turbulent conduct raised such a storm, as shook the church, he then adhered to, to the very foundations. This little sally into intolerance, as it is a single instance, and with great provocation, ought by no means to be impute-d to the principles of the Quakers, considering the ample and hu¬ mane latitude they have allowed in all other respects. It was certainly a very right policy to encourage the importation of fo¬ reigners into Pennsylvania, as well as into our other colonics. By this we are great gainers, without any diminution of the in¬ habitants of Great Britain. But it has been frequently observed, and, as it should seem, very justly complained of, that they are left still foreigners, and-likely to continue so for many genera¬ tions ; as they have schools taught, books printed 1 , and even the common newspaper in their own language; by which means, and as they possess large tracts of the country without any in¬ termixture of English, there is no appearance of their blending and becoming one people with us. This certainty is a great irregularity, and the greater, as these foreigners, by their in¬ dustry, frugality, and a hard wayof living, in which they greatly exceed our people, have in a manner thrust them out in several places ; so as to threaten the colony, with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners and perhaps even inclina¬ tions. In the year 1750, were imported into Pennsylvania and its depenceucies four thousand three hundred and seventeen Germans, whereas of British and Irish but one thousand ar¬ rived ; 400 AN ACCOUNT OF THE rived ; a considerable number, if it was not so vastly overba¬ lanced by that of the foreigners. I do by no means think that this sort of transplantations ought to be discouraged ; I only observe, along with others, that the manner of their settlement ought to be regulated, and means sought to have them naturalized in reality. The present troubles have very unhappily reversed the svstem so long pursued, and with such great success, in this part of the world. The Pennsylvanians have suffered severely by the in¬ cursions of the savage Americans as well as their neighbours ; but the Quakers could not be prevailed upon, by what did not directly affect those of their own communion (for they were out of the way of mischief in the more settled parts), to relinquish their pacifick principles ; for which reason, a considerable oppo¬ sition, in which, however, we must do the Quakers the justice to observe they were not unanimous, was made, both within their assembly as well as without doors, against granting any money to carry on the war ; and the same, or a more vigorous opposition, was made against passing a militia bill. A bill of this kind has at length passed, but scarcely such as the circum¬ stances of the country and the exigencies of the times required. It may perhaps appear an errour, to have placed so great a part of the government in the hands of men. v, ho hold principles di¬ rectly opposite to its end and design. As a peaceable, indus¬ trious, honest people, the Quakers cannot be too much cherish¬ ed ; but surely they cannot themselves complain, that when, by their opinions, they make themselves sheep, they should not be entrusted with the office, since they have not the nature of dogs. ClIAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 401 CHAP. XIII. DESCRIPTION OP PHILADELPHIA.-ITS TRADE.—NUMBER OY TEOPU'. IK PENNSYLVANIA.— ITS FLOURISHING CONDITION.-FEW NEGROES THERE. There are so many good towns in the province of Pennsyl¬ vania, even exceeding the capitals of some other provinces, that nothing could excuse our passing them by, had not Philadelphia drawn our attention wholly to itself. This city stands upon a tongue of land, immediately at the confluence of two fine rivers, the Delaware and the Schuylkil. It is disposed in the form of an oblong, designed to extend two miles front river to river; but the buildings do not extend above a mile and a half on the west side of Delaware in length, and not more than half a mile where the town is broadest. The longest stretch, when the original plan can be fully executed, is to compose eight parallel streets, all of two miles in length ; these are to be intersected by sixteen others, each in length a mile, broad, spacious, and even; with proper spaces left for the publick buildings, churches, and market-places. In the center is a square of ten acres, round which most of the publick buildings are disposed. The two principal streets of the city are each one hundred feet wide, and most of the houses have a small garden and orchard; from the rivers are cut several canals, equally agreeable and beneficial. The quays are spacious and fine; the principal quay is two hundred feet wide, and to this a vessel of five hundred tons may lay her broadside. The ware¬ houses are large, numerous and commodious, and the docks for ship-building every way well adapted to their purposes. A great 3 f number 4G-I AN ACCOUNT Or- THE number of vessels have been buiit here ; twenty haw been upon the stocks at a time. The city contains, exclusive of warehouses and outhouses, about two thousand houses ; most of them of brick, and well built; it is said, there are several of them worth four or five thousand pounds. The inhabitants are now about thirteen thousand. There are in this city a great number of wealthy merchants ; which is no way surprising, when one considers the great trade which it carries on with the English, French, Spanish, and Dutch colonies in America ; with the Azores, the. Canaries, and the Madeira islands ; with Great Britain and Ireland; with Spain, Portugal and Holland, and the great profits which are made in many branches of this commerce. - Besides the quan¬ tity of all kinds of the produce of this province which is brought down the rivers Delaware and Schuylkil (the former of which is navigable, for vessels of one sort or other, more than two hun¬ dred miles above Philadelphia) the Dutch employ between eight and nine thousand waggons, drawn each by four horses, in bring¬ ing the product of their farms to this market. In the year 1749, three hundred and three vessels entered inwards at this port, and two hundred and ninety cleared outwards. There are, at the other ports of this province, custom-house officers ; but the foreign trade in these places is not worth notice. The city of Philadelphia, though, as it may be judged, far from compleating the original plan, yet, so far as it is built, is earned on conformable to it, and increases in the number and beauty of its buildings every day. And as for the province, of which this city is the capital, there is no part of British America in a more growing condition. In some years, more people have transported themselves into Pennsylvania, than into all the other settlements together. In 17-9, six thou¬ sand two hundred and eight persons came to settle here as pas¬ sengers EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 40.> senders or servants, four fifths of whom at least were from Ire¬ land. In short, this province has increased so greatly from the time of its first establishment, that, whereas lands were given by Mr. Penn the founder of the colony at the rate of twenty pounds for a thousand acres, reserving only a shilling every hundred acres for quit-rent; and this in some of the best situated parts of the province : yet now, at a great distance from the naviga¬ tion, land is granted at twelve pounds the hundred acres, and a quit-rent of four shillings reserved ; and the land which is near Philadelphia rents for twenty shillings the acre. In many places, and at the distance of several miles from that city, land sells for twenty years purchase. The Pennsylvanians are an industrious and hardy people; they are most of them substantial, though but a few of the landed people can be considered as rich ; but they are all well lodged, well fed, and, for their condition, well clad too; and this at the more easy rate, as their inferiour people manufacture most of their own wear, both linens and woollens. There are hut few Blacks, not in all the fortieth part of the people of the province. 3 v 2 @HAP ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. XIV. -1IUATION. &C. OF VIRGINIA.-CONVENIENCE' OF ITS RIVERS FOR NAVI¬ GATION-BEASTS AND BIRDS OF TllE COUNTRY.—THE OPOSSUM. The whole country which the English now possess in Xorth America, was at first called Virginia; but by the parcelling of several portions of it into distinct grants and governments, the country which still bears the name is now reduced to that tract which has the river Potowmack upon the north; the bay of Chesapeak upon the east; and Carolina upon the south. To the westward, the grants extend it to the South-Sea; but their plant¬ ing goes no further than the great Alleghany mountains, which boundaries leave this province in length two hundred and forty- miles, and in breadth about two hundred, lying between the fifty-fifth and fortieth degrees of north latitude. The whole face of this country is so extremely low towards the sea, that, when you are come even within fifteen fathom soundings, you can hardly distinguish land from the mast head. However, all this coast of America has one useful particularity, that you know your distance exactly by the soundings, which uniformly and gradually' diminish as you approach the land. The trees appear as if they rose out of the water, and afford the stranger a very’ uncommon, and not a disagreeable, view. In sailing to Virginia or Maryland, you pass a streight, between two points of land, called the Capes of Virginia, which opens a passage into the bay of Chesapeak, one of the largest and safest bays perhaps in the world; for it enters the country near • *49 three EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IX AMERICA. 40-5 three hundred miles from the south to the north, having the eastern side of Maryland, and a small portion of Virginia oil the same peninsula, to cover it from the Atlautiek Ocean. This bay is about eighteen miles broad for a considerable way, and seven where it is narrowest, the waters in most places being nine fathom deep. Through its whole extent, it receives, both on the eastern and western side, a vast number of fine navigable rivers. Not to mention those of Maryland ; from the side of Virginia, it receives James River, York River, the Rappahan¬ nock, and the Potowmack. All these great rivers in the order they are here set down from soutli to north, discharge themselves, with several smaller ones, into the bay of Ckesapeak ; and they are all not only na¬ vigable themselves for very large vessels a prodigious way into the country, but have so many creeks, and receive such a num¬ ber-of smaller navigable rivers, as renders the communication of all parts of this country infinitely more easy than that of any country, without exception, in the world. The Potowmack is navigable for near two hundred miles, being nine miles broad at its mouth, and for a vast way not less than seven. The other three are navigable upwards of eighty, and in the windings of their several courses approacli one another so nearly, that the distance between one and the other is in some parts not. more than ten, sometimes not above five miles; whereas in others there is fifty miles space between each of tiiese rivers. The planters load and unload vessels of great burden each at his own door; which, as their commodities are bulky, and of small value in proportion to their bulk, is a very fortunate circum¬ stance ; else they could never afford to send their tobacco to market low as they sell it, and charged, as it is in England, with a duty of six times its original value. The 40G AS ACCOUNT OF THE The climate and soil of Virginia was undoubtedly much heightened in the first descriptions, for political reasons; but, after making ail tire necessary abatements which experience rince tanght us, wc still find it a most excellent country. The heats in summer are excessively great, but not without the allay of refreshing sea breezes. The weather is changeable, and the changes sudden and violent. Their winter frosts come on with¬ out the least warning. After a warm day, towards the setting in of winter, so intense a cold often succeeds as to freeze over the broadest and deepest of their great rivers in one night; but these frosts, as well as their rains, are rather violent tlian of long continuance. They have frequent and terrible thunder and lightning, but it does rarely any mischief. In general the sky is clear, and the air thin, pure, and penetrating. The soil in the low grounds of Virginia is a dark fat mould; which, for many years, without any manure,, yields plentifully whatever is committed to it. The soil, as you leave the rivers, becomes light and sandy, is sooner exhausted than the low country, but is yet of a warm and generous nature, which, helped by a kindly sun, yields tobacco and com extremely well. There is no better wheat than what is produced in this province and Maryland; but the culture of tobacco employs all their attention, and almost all their hands; so that they scarcely cultivate wheat enough for their own use. It may be judged, from the climate and the soil I have de¬ scribed, in wbat excellence and plenty every sort of fruit is found in Virginia. Their forests are full of timber trees of all kinds; and their plains are covered for almost the whole year witli a prodigious number of flowers, and flowering shrubs, of colours so rich, and of a scent so fragrant,, that they occasioned the name of Florida to be originally given to this country. This country country produces several medicinal herbs and roots, particu¬ larly the snake root; and of late the celebrated ginseng of tile Chinese has been discovered there. Horned cattle and hogs have multiplied almost beyond be¬ lief; though at the first settlement the country was utterly des¬ titute of these animals. The meat of the former is as much be¬ low the flesh of our oxen, as that of the latter exceeds that of our hogs. The animals natural to the country are deer, of which there are great numbers; a sort of panther or tiger; bears, v.-olves, foxes, racoons, squirrels, wiki cats, and one very un¬ common animal called the opossum. This creature is about the size of a cat, and, besides the belly which it has in common with others, has a false one beneath it, with a pretty large aper¬ ture at the end towards the hinder legs. Within this bag or belly, on the usual parts of the common belly, are a number of teats; upon these, when the female of this creature conceives, the young are formed, and there they hang like fruit upon the stalk, until they' grow in bulk and weight to their appointed size; then they drop off, and are received in the false belly, from which they go out at pleasure, and in which they take refuge when any danger threatens them. They have all our sorts of tame and wild fowl in equal per¬ fection, and some which we have not; and a vast number of birds of various kinds, valuable for their beauty or their note. The white owl of Virginia is far larger than the species which we have, and is all over of a bright silver-coloured plumage, except one black spot upon his breast; they have the night¬ ingale called from the country, a most beautiful one, whose fea¬ thers are crimson and blue ; the mocking bird, thought to excel all others in his own note, and imitating the notes of every one ; the rock bird, very sociable, and his society very agreeable by the sweetness of his musick; the humming bird, the smallest of 408 AN ACCOUNT OF THE of all the winged creation and the most beautiful, all arrayed in scarlet, green, and gold. This bird is said to live by licking off the dew that adheres to the flowers; he is too delicate to be brought alive into England. The sea-coasts and rivers of Virginia abound not only in several of the species of fish known in Europe, but in most of those kinds which are peculiar to America. The reptiles are many ; it were tedious to enume¬ rate all the kinds of serpents bred here; the rattle snake is the principal, and too well known in general 'to need any de¬ scription. CHAP. VUHOPEAN SETTLEMENTS IMIiltlCA. 409 C II A P. XV. TOWNS IN VIRGINIA FEW AND SMALL.—TOBACCO, ITS CULTIVATION..—TRADE IN THAT AND OTHER COMMODITIES.-PEOPLE IN VIRGINIA.—WHITE AND The great commodiousness of navigation and the scarcity of handicraftsmen have rendered all the attempts of the govern¬ ment to establish towns in Virginia ineffectual. James’s town, which was anciently the capital, is dwindled into an insignifi¬ cant village; and Williamsburgh, though the capital at present, the seat of the governor, the place of holding the assembly and courts of justice, and a college for the study of arts and sciences, is yet but a small town. However, in this town are the best pub- lick buildings in British America. The college, one hundred and thirty-five feet long in front, resembling Chelsea hospital ; the capital directly facing it, at the other end of the design of a noble street, not unlike the college in the fashion and the size of the building, where the assembly and courts of justice are held and the publick offices kept; and the church, in the form of a cross, large and well ornamented. The great staple commodity of this country, as well as Mary¬ land, is tobacco. This plant is aboriginal in America, and of very ancient use, though neither so'generally cultivated nor SO well manufactured as it has been since the coming of the Euro¬ peans. When at its just height, it is as tall as an ordinary-sized man; the stalk is straight, hairy, and clammy; the leaves alter¬ nate, of a faded yellowish green, and towards the lower part of 3 o the 410 AN ACCOUNT OF THE the plant of a great size. The seeds of tobacco are first sown in beds, from whence they are transplanted, the first rainy wea¬ ther, into a ground disposed into little hillocks like an hop garden. In a month’s time from their transplantation they be¬ come a foot high; they then top them, and prune off the lower leaves, and with great attention clean them from weeds and worms twice a week ; in about six weeks after, they attain to their full growth, and they begin then to turn brownish. By these marks they judge the tobacco to be ripe. They cut down the plants as fast as they ripen, heap them up and let them lie a night to sweat; the next day they carry them to the tobacco house, which is built to admit as much air as is consistent with keeping out rain, where they are hung separately to dry, for four or five weeks ; then they take them down iu moist weather, or else they crumble to dust. After this they are laid upon sticks, and covered up close to sweat for a week or two longer; the servants strip and sort them, the top being the best, the bottom the worst tobacco ; then they make them up in hogsheads, or form them into rolls. Wet seasons must be carefully laid hold on for all this work, else the tobacco will not be sufficiently pliable. In trade they distinguish two sorts of tobacco, tire first is called Aranokoe, from Maryland and the northern parts of Vir¬ ginia ; this is strong and hot in the mouth, but it sells very well in the markets of Holland, Germany, and the North. The other sort is called sweet-scented, the best of which is from James’s and York rivers in the southern parts of Virginia. There is no commodity to which the revenue is so much obliged as to this. It produces avast sum, and yet appears to lay but a very inconsiderable burden, upon the people in England ; all the weight in reality falls upon the planter, who is kept down by the lowness of the original price; and as we have two provinces which deal EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 411 deal in the same commodity, if the people of Virginia were to tike measures to straiten the market and raise the price, those of Maryland would certainly take the advantage of it; the peo¬ ple of Virginia would take the same advantage of those ofMary- land in a like case. They have no prospect of ever bettering their condition ; and they are the less able to endure it as they live in general luxuriously, and to the full extent of their for¬ tunes. Therefore any failure in the sale of their goods brings them heavily in debt to the merchants in London, who get mortgages on their estates, which are consumed to the bone, with the canker of an eight per cent usury. But, however the planters may complain of the tobacco trade, the revenue flou¬ rishes by it, for it draws near three hundred thousand a year from this one article only;' and the exported tobacco, the far greater part of the profits of which come to the English merchant, brings almost as great a sum annually into the kingdom. To say nothing of the great advantage we derive from being supplied from our own colonies with that for which the rest of Europe pays ready money, besides the employment of two hundred large vessels, and a proportionable number of seamen, which are occupied in this trade. From us the Vir¬ ginians take every article for convenience or ornament which they use ; their own manufacture does not deserve to be men¬ tioned. The two colonies export about eighty thousand hogs¬ heads of tobacco of eight hundred weight. They likewise trade largely with the West-Indies in lumber, pitch, tar, corn, and provisions. They send home flax, hemp, iron, staves, and wal¬ nut and cedar plank. The number of White people in Virginia, is between sixty and seventy thousand ; and they are growing every day more nu¬ merous, by the migration of the Irish, who, not succeeding so well in Pennsylvania as the more frugal and industrious Get- 412- AX ACCOUNT OF THE mans, sell their lands in that province to the latter, and take tip new ground in the remote counties in Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina. These are chiefly Presbyterians from the northern part of Ireland, who in America are generally called Scotch Irish. In Virginia there are likewise settled a consider¬ able number of French refugees; but much the larger part of the inhabitants are negroe slaves, who cannot be much fewer than a hundred thousand souls ; they annually import into the two tobacco colonies between three and four thousand of these slaves. The negroes here do not stand in need of such vast re¬ cruits as the West-India stock; they rather increase than diminish; a blessing derived from a more moderate labour, better food, and a more healthy climate. The inhabitants of Virginia are a chearful, hospitable, and many of them a genteel,, though something vain and ostentatious, people; they are for: the greater part of the established church of England ; nor until lately did they tolerate any other. Now they have some few. meeting-houses of Presbyterians and Quakers. CHAP, GROPE A-N SETTLEMENTS IN AMEHI 413 CHAP. XVI. ATTEMPTS TO SETTLE VIRGINIA, THREE UNSUCCESSFUL.—SETTLED AT LAST ' BY LORD DELAWARE. This of Virginia is the most ancient of our colonies. Though; strictly speaking, the first attempts to settle a colony were not made in Virginia, but in that part of North Carolina which im¬ mediately borders upon it. Sir Walter Raleigh, the most ex¬ traordinary genius of his own or perhaps any other time, a penetrating statesman, an accomplished courtier, a deep scholar; a fine writer, a great soldier, and one of the ablest seamen in the world ; this vast genius, that pierced so far and ran through so many things, was of a fierce eccentrick kind, which led him into daring expeditions • and uncommon projects, whieh, not being understood by a timid prince and envied and hated by the rivals he had in so many ways of life, ruined him at last. In person, he ran infinite risks in Guiana in search of gold mines: arid when this country was first discovered, he looked through the work of an age at one glance, and saw how advantageous it might be made to the trade of England. He was the first man in England who had a right conception of the advantages of settle¬ ments abroad ; he was then the only person who had a thorough insight into trade, and who saw clearly the proper methods of promoting it. He applied to court, and got together a com¬ pany, which was composed of several persons of distinction and several eminent merchants, who agreed to open a trade and settle a colony in that part of the world, which, in honour of Queen Elizabeth, he called Virginia. Raleigh. 414 AN ACCOUNT OF THE Raleigh had too much business upon iiis hands at court, and found too few to second him in his designs, to enable him to support the establishment with the spirit in which lie began it. If ever any design had an ominous beginning, and seemed to forbid any attempts for carrying it on, it was that of the first settlement of Virginia. Near half of the first colony was de¬ stroyed by the savages ; and the rest, consumed and worn down by fatigue and famine, deserted the country, and returned home in despair. The second colony was cut off, to a man, in a manner unknown ; but they were supposed to be destroyed by the Indians. The third had the same dismal fate; and the fourth, quarrelling amongst themselves, neglecting their agri¬ culture to hunt for gold, and provoking the Indians by their insolent and unguarded behaviour, lost several of their people, and were returning, the poor remains of them, in a famishing and desperate condition, to England, when just in the mouth of Chesapeak bay they met the Lord Delaware, with a squadron loaded with provision, and every thing for their relief and de¬ fence, who persuaded them to return. This nobleman travelled with as much zeal and assiduity to cherish and support the froward infancy of this unpromising colony, as some have used in its better times for purposes of another kind. Regardless of his life, and inattentive to his for¬ tune, he entered upon this long and dangerous voyage, and accepted this barren province, which had nothing of a govern¬ ment but its anxieties and its cares, merely for the service of his country ; and he had no other reward than that retired and in¬ ward satisfaction, which a good mind feels in indulging its own propensity to virtue, and the prospect of those just honours which the latest posterity will take a pleasure in bestowing upon those, who prefer the interest of posterity to their own. After he had prevailed upon the people to return, he comforted them under EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 415 under their misfortunes, he pointed out their causes, and unit- . ing the tenderness of a father with the steady sevm'ity of a magistrate, he healed their divisions, and reconciled them to authority and government, by making them feel by his conduct what a blessing it could be made. When he had settled the colony within itself, his next care was to put them upon a proper footing with regard to the Indians, whom he found very haughty and assuming, on account of the late miserable state of the English ; but, by some well- timed and vigorous steps, he humbled them, shewed he had power to chastise them, and courage to exert that power ; and, after having awed them into very peaceable dispositions and settled his colony in a very growing condition, lie retired home for the benefit of his health, which, by his constant attention to business and the air of an uncultivated country, had been im¬ paired ; but he left his son, with the spirit of his father, his deputy; and Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Summers, the honourable George Piercy, Sir Ferdinand Wenman, and Mr. Newport,, for his council. These, with other persons of rank ' and fortune, attended him on this expedition, which gave a credit to the colony. Though there are in England many young gentlemen of fortunes disproportioned to their rank, I fear we , should not see the names of so many of them engaged in an expedition, which had 110 better appearance than this had at that time. Lord Delaware did not forget the colony on ids return to Eng¬ land; but, considering himself as nearer the fountain head, thought it his duty to turn the spring of the royal favour more copiously upon the province which he superintended. For eight years together he was indefatigable in doing every thing that could tend to the peopling, the support, and the good government of this settlement; and he died in the pursuit of the same object It is one of the most necessary, and I am sure it is one of the most pleasing, parts of this design to do justice to the names of those men, who, by their greatness of mind, their wisdom and their goodness, have brought into the pale of civility and religion these rude and uncultivated parts of the globe ; who could discern the rudiments of a future people, wanting only time to be unfolded in the seed; who could perceive, amidst the losses and disappointments and expences of a beginning co¬ lony, the great advantages to be derived to their country from such undertakings; and who could pursue them in spite of the malignity and narrow wisdom of the world. The ancient world had its Osiris and Erichthonius, wiio taught them the use of grain; their Bacchus, who instructed them in the culture of the vine; and their Orpheus and Linus, who first built towns and formed civil societies. The people of America will not fail, when time has made things venerable, and when an intermix¬ ture of fable has moulded useful truths into popular opinions, to mention with equal gratitude, and perhaps similar heightening circumstances, her Columbus, her Castro, her Casca, her De Poincy. her Delaware, her Baltimore, and her Penn. CHAP. 417 C II A P. XVII. VIRGINIA HOLDS OUT AGAINST CROMWELL, AND IS REDUCED.-BACONS RE¬ BELLION.-ITS CAUSES.-BACON DIES.-PEACE RESTORED. The colony of Virginia was so fast rooted by the care of Lord Delaware, that it was enabled to stand two terrible storms; two massacres made by the Indians, in which the whole colony was nearly cut oft'; and to subdue that people, so as to put it utterly out of their power for many years past to give them the least disturbance. In the fatal troubles which brought Charles the First to the block, and overturned the constitution of England, many of the cavaliers fled for refuge, to this colony, which, by the ge¬ neral disposition of the inhabitants and the virtue of Sir Wil¬ liam Berkley, held out for the crown, until the parliament, father by stratagem than force, reduced them. And what is remarkable, if it may be depended upon with any certainty, they deposed Cromwell’s governor, set up Sir William Berkley again, and declared for King Charles the second, a good while even before the news of Oliver’s death could arrive in America. After the Restoration, there is nothing very interesting in their history; except that soon after, a sort of rebellion arose in the province, from mismanagements in the government, from the decay of their trade, and from exorbitant grants inconsiderately made, which included the settled property of many people; these grievances raised a general discontent amongst the plan¬ ters, which was fomented and brought to blaze out into an ac- 3 h tual 418 AX ACCOUNT OF THTT tual war, by a young gentleman whose name was Bacon. lie was an agreeable man, of a graceful presence and winning car¬ riage. He had been bred to the law, had a lively and fluent expression, fit to set off a popular cause, and to influence men who were ready lo hear whatever could be said to colour in a proper manner, what was already strongly drawn by their own feelings. This man, by a specious, or perhaps a real, though ill-judged, regard for the publick good, finding the governor slow in his preparations against the Indians, who were at that time ravaging the frontiers of the province, took up arms, with¬ out any commission, to act against the enemy. When he had sufficient force for this purpose, he found himself in a condition not only to act against the enemy, but to give law to the go¬ vernor, and to force him to give a sanction by his authority to those proceedings which were meant to destroy it. Bacon, armed with the commission of a general and followed by the whole force of the colony, prepared to- march against the Indians ; when Sir William Berkely, the governor, freed from the immediate terrour of his forces, recalled him, proclaimed him a traitor, and issued a reward for apprehending him as such. This brought matters to extremities; the people were universally inflamed; Bacon adhered to what he had done, the people adhered to Bacon; and the governor, who seemed no ways inclined to temporize or yield to the storm, fled over the river Potowmack, and proclaimed all Bacon’s adherents traitors. He put himself at the head of a small body of troops which lie had raised in Maryland, and of such of the Virginians as were faithful to him, and wrote to England for supplies. On the other hand. Bacon marched to the capital, called an assembly, and for six months together disposed all things according to his own plea¬ sure. Every- thing was now hastening to a civil war, when all was quieted, in as sudden a manner as it had begun, by the EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 419 natural death of Bacon, in the very height of the confusion. The people, unable to act without a head, proposed terms of accommodation : the terms were listened to, and peace was re¬ stored and kept without any disturbance, not so much by the removal of the grievances complained of, as by the arrival of a .regiment from England, which remained a long time in the country. It must be remarked, in honour of the moderation of the government, that no person suffered, in his life or his estate, for this rebellion, which was the more extraordinary as many people, at tliat time, were very earnest in soliciting grants of land in Virginia. The events in ail countries which are not the residence of the su¬ preme power, and have no concern in the great business of trans¬ acting war and peace, have generally but little to engage the attention of the reader. I have therefore entirely omitted the tedious detail of the governors and their several transactions, with which my materials so plentifully supply me; and, for the same reason, I shall be very concise in my account of Mary¬ land, which, agreeing altogether with Virginia in its climate, soil, products, trade, and genius of the inhabitants, and having •few or no remarkable events to recommend it, mil. save much trouble in that article. CHAP. 420 ciiap. xviii. It was in the reign of Charles the First, that the Lord Balti¬ more applied for a patent for a part of Virginia, and obtained, in 1632, a grant of a tract ctf land, upon Chesapeak Buy, of about an hundred and forty miles long, and an hundred and thirty broad, haring Pennsylvania, then in the hands of the Dutch, upon the north, the Atlantick Ocean upon the east, and the river Potowmack upon the south ; in honour of the queen, he called this province Maryland. Lord Baltimore was a Roman Catholick, and was induced to attempt this settlement in America, in hopes of enjoying liberty of conscience for himself, and for such of his friends to whom the severity of the laws might loosen their ties to their country, and make them prefer an easy banishment with freedom, to the eonveniencies of England, embittered as they were by the sharpness of the laws, and the popular odium which hung over them. The court at that time was certainly very little inclined to treat the Roman Catholicks in a harsh manner, neither had they in reality the least appearance of reason to do so ; but the laws themselves were of a rigorous constitution; and, however the court might be inclined to relax them, they could not in policy do it, but with great reserve. The Puritan party per¬ petually accused the court, and indeed the episcopal church, of a desire of returning to popery; and this accusation was so po¬ pular, that it was not in the power of the court to shew the Papists r.unorr.AN' settlements in America. J2I Papists that indulgence which they desired. The laws were still executed with very little mitigation; and they were in themselves of a much keener temper, than those which had driven the Puritans about the same time to seek a refuge in the same part of the world. These reasons made Lord Balti¬ more desirous to have, and the court willing to give him, a place of retreat in America. The settlement of the colony cost the Lord Baltimore a large sum. It was made, under his auspices, by his brother, and about two hundred persons, Roman Catholicks, and most of them of good families. This settlement, at the beginning, did not meet with the same difficulties, which embarrassed and re¬ tarded most of the others we had made. The people were ge¬ nerally of the better sort; a proper subordination was observed amongst them ; and the Indians gave and took so little offence, that they ceded one half of their principal town, and some time after the whole of it, to these strangers. The Indian women taught ours how to make bread of their corn ; their- men went out to hunt and fish with the English ; they assisted them in the chace, and sold them the game they took themselves for a trifling consideration ; so that the new settlers had a sort of town ready built, ground ready cleared for their subsistence, and no enemy to harass them. They lived thus, without much trouble or fear, until some ill-disposed persons in Virginia insinuated to the Indians, that the Baltimore colony had designs upon them; that they were Spaniards and not Englishmen ; and such other stories as they judged proper to sow the seeds of suspicion and enmity in the minds of these people. Upon the first appearance, that the malice of the Virginians had taken effect, the new planters were not wanting to themselves. They built a good fort with all expedition, and took every other measure necessary for their defence; but they continued still to treat the Indians with so much 432 AS ACCOUNT OF THE much kindness, that, partly by that and partly by .lie awe of their arms, the ill designs of their enemies were defeated. As the colony met with so few obstructions, and as the Ro¬ man Cat'nolicks in England were yet more severely treated in proportion as the court parly declined, numbers constantly ar¬ rived to replenish the settlement; which the lord proprietor omitted no care, and withheld no expence, to support and en¬ courage ; until the usurpation overturned the government at home, and deprived him of his rights abroad. Maryland re- mained under the governors appointed by the Parliament and by Cromwell until the Restoration, when Lord Baltimore was reinstated in his former possessions, which he cultivated with his former wisdom, care, and moderation. Xo people could live in greater ease and security ; and his lordship, willing that as many as possible should enjoy the benefits of his mild and equitable administration, gave his consent to an act of assembly, which he had before promoted in his province, for allowing a free and unlimited toleration for all who professed the Christian religion, of whatever denomination. This liberty, which was never in the least instance violated, encouraged a great number, not only of the church of England, but of Presbyterians, Quakers, and all kinds of dissenters, to settle in Maryland, which before that was almost wholly in the hands of Roman Catholicks. This lord/though guilty of no mal-administration in his go¬ vernment, though a zealous Roman Catholick, and firmly at¬ tached to the cause of King James the Second, could not pre¬ sent his charter from being questioned in that arbitrary reign, and a suit from being commenced, to deprive him of the pro¬ perty and jurisdiction of a province granted by the royal favour, and peopled at such a vast expence of his own. But it was the errour of that weak, and unfortunate reign, neither to know its friends nor its enemies; but, by a blind precipitate conduct. 423 EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA, conduct,, to hurry on every thing of whatever consequence with almost equal heat, and to imagine that the sound of the royal authority was sufficient, to justify every sort of conduct to every sort of people. But these injuries could not shake the honour aild constancy of Lord Baltimore, nor tempt him to desert the cause of his master. Upon the Revolution, he had no reason to expect any favour ; yet he met with more than King James had intended him ; he was deprived indeed of all his jurisdic¬ tion, but he was left the profits of his province, which were by no means inconsiderable; and when his descendants had con¬ formed to the church of England, they were restored to all their rights as fully as the legislature has thought tit that any proprietor should enjoy them. When, upon the Revolution, power changed hands in tliat province, the new men made but an indifferent requital for the liberties and indulgences they had enjoyed under the old admi¬ nistration. They not only deprived the Roman Catholicks of ail share in the government, but of all the rights of freemen; they have even adopted the whole body of the penal laws of England against them; they are at this day meditating new la\rs in the same spirit, and they would undoubtedly go to the greatest lengths in this respect, if the moderation and good sense of the government in England did not set some bounds to their bigotry ; thinking very prudently that it were highly unjust, and equally impolitick, to allow an asylum abroad to any religious persuasions which they judged it improper to to¬ lerate at home, and then to deprive them of its protection; recollecting at the same time, in the various changes which our religion and government have undergone, which have in their turns rendered every sort of party and religion obnoxious to the reigning powers, that this American asylum, which has been admitted in the hottest times of persecution at home, has proved of infinite service, not only to the present peace of England, England. but to the prosperity- of its commerce and the estab¬ lishment of its power. There are a sort of men, who will not =ee so plain a truth ; and they are the persons who would appear to contend most warmly for liberty; but it is only a party li¬ berty for which they contend; a liberty, which they would stretch out one way only to narrow it in another; they are not ashamed of using the very same pretences for persecuting others, that their enemies use for persecuting them. This colony, as for a long time it had with Pennsylvania the honour of being unstained with any religious persecution, SO neither they nor the Pennsylvanians have ever until very lately been harassed by the calamity of any war, offensive or defensive, with their Indian neighbours, with whom they always lived in the most exemplary harmony. Indeed, in a war which the Indians made upon the colony of Virginia, by mistake they made an incursion into the bounds of Maryland; but they were soon sensible of their mistake, and atoned for it. This present war indeed has changed every thing, and the In¬ dians have been taught to laugh at all their ancient alliances. Maryland, like Virginia, has no considerable town, and for the same reason; the number of navigable creeks and rivers. Annapolis is the seat of government. It is a small but beauti¬ fully situated town, upon the river Severn. Here is the seat of the governor, and the principal custom¬ house collection. The people of Maryland have the same estab¬ lished religion with those of Virginia, that of the church of England; but here the clergy are provided for in a much more liberal manner, and they are the mest decent, and the best of the clergy in North America. They export from Maryland the same things in all respects that they do from Virginia. Their tobacco is about forty thousand hogsheads. The white inhabitants are about forty thousand; the negroes upwards of sixty thousand. CHAP. EUROPEAN' SETTLEMENTS IX AMERICA. 425 C II A P. XIX. ATTEMPTS OF THE FRENCH TO SETTLE CAROLINA.—THEY ARE HEAT OFF BY It must not be forgot, that we formerly called all the coast of North America by the name of Virginia. The province pro¬ perly so called, with Maryland and tile Carolinas, was known by the name of South Virginia. By the Spaniards it was con¬ sidered as part of Florida, which country they made to extend from New Mexico to the Atlantick Ocean. By them it was first discovered ; but they treated the natives with an inhumanity which filled them with so violent an hatred to the Spanish name, as rendered their settlement there very difficult; nor did they push it vigorously, as the country shewed no marks of pro¬ ducing gold or silver, the only things for which the Spaniards then valued any country. Florida therefore remained under an entire neglect in Europe, until the reign of Charles the Ninth, king of France. The celebrated leader of the Protestants in that kingdom, the Admiral Chastillon, who was not only a great commander, but an able statesman, was a man of too comprehensive views not to see the advantages of a settlement in America - r he pro¬ cured two vessels to be fitted out for discoveries'upon that coast. He had it probably in his thoughts to retire thither with those of his persuasion, if the success, which hitherto suited so ill with his great courage and conduct, should at last entirely de¬ stroy his cause in France. These ships in two mouths arrived upon the coast of America, near the river now called. A be- IN ACCOUNT OF THE made., in the province of North Carolina. The French gave the Indians to understand, in the best manner they were able, that they were enemies to the Spaniards, which secured them a friendly reception and the good offices of the inhabitants. They were, however, in no condition to make any settlement. On tiieir return to France, the Admiral, at this time, by the abominable policy of the court, apparently in great favour, was so well satisfied with the account tliev had given of the country, that, in 1564, he fitted out five or six ships, with as many hundred men aboard, to begin a colony there. This was accordingly done at the place of their landing in the first ex¬ pedition. They built a fort here, which they called Fort Charles, as they called the whole country Carolina, m honour of their king then reigning. The Spaniards, who had intelli¬ gence of their proceedings, dispatched a considerable force to attack this colony, who, not satisfied with reducing it, put all the people to the sword, after quarter given ; and, committing great outrages on the natives, they paved the way for the ven¬ geance which soon after fell upon them for such an unnecessary and unprovoked act of cruelty. For, though the Admiral and his party were by this time destroyed in the infamous mas¬ sacre of St. Bartholomew, and though the design of a colony died with him, one M. de Gorgues, a private gentleman, fitted out some ships, which sailed to that coast purely to revenge the murder of his countrymen and his friends. The Indians greedily embraced the opportunity of becoming associates in the punish¬ ment of the common enemy. They joined in the siege of two fir three forts the Spaniards had built there ; they took them, and, in all of them, put the garrison to the sword without mercy. Satisfied with this action, the adventurers returned, and, hap¬ pily for us, the French court did not understand, blinded as they EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS JN AMERICA. 42? they were by their bigotry, the advantages which might have been derived from giving America to the Protestants, as we afterwards did to the Dissenters, as a place of refuge; if they bad taken this step, most certainly we should have either had no settlements in America at all, or they must have been small in extent, and precarious in their tenure, to what they are at this day. CIIAP. , 423 AS ACCOUNT OF C II A P. XX. After the French expedition, the country of Carolina remained without any attention from Spaniards, French, or English, untli, as we observed in the article of Virginia, .Sir Walter Ila- Ieigh projected an establishment there. It was not in the part now called Virginia, but in Xortli Carolina, that our first un¬ happy settlements were made and destroyed. Afterwards the adventurers entered the bay of Chesapc-ak, and fixed a perma¬ nent colony to the northward ; so that, although Carolina was the first part of the Atlantick coast of America, which had an European colony, yet, by an odd caprice, it was for a long time deserted by both England and France, who settled with infi¬ nitely more difiiculty in climates much less advantageous or agreeable. It was not until the year 1G63, in the reign of Charles the Second, that we had any notion of formally settling that coun- trv. In that year, the Earl of Clarendon lord chancellor, the Duke of Albemarle, the Lord Craven, Lord Berk let'. Lord Ashley, afterwards Earl of Shaftesbury, Sir George Carteret, Sir William Berkley, and Sir George Colleton, obtained a char¬ ter for the property and jurisdiction of that country, from the 31st degree of north latitude to the 36th ; and, being inyested with full power to settle and govern the country, they had the model EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 42Q model of a constitution framed, and a body of fundamental laws compiled, by the famous philosopher Mr. Locke. On this plan, the lords proprietors themselves stood in place of the king, gave their assent or dissent, as (hey thought proper, to all laws, appointed all officers, and bestowed all titles of dig¬ nity. Ill his turn, one of these lords acted for the resf. In the province they appointed two other branches, in a good measure analagous to the legislature in England. They made three ranks, or rather classes of nobility. The lowest was composed of those to whom they had made grants of twelve thousand acres of land, whom they called barons; the next order had twenty- four thousand acres, or two baronies, with the title of eassinue-.; these were to answer our earls ; the third had two cassiquediip-., or forty-eight thousand acres, and were called landgraves, a title in that province analogous to duke. This body formed the upper house ; their lands were not alienable by parcels. The lower house was formed, as it is in the other colonies of representatives from the several towns or counties. But the whole was not called, as in the rest of the plantations, an as¬ sembly, but a parliament. They began their first settlement at a point of land towards the southward of their district, between two navigable rivers, though of no long course, called Ashley and Cowper rivers ; and there laid the foundation of a city, called Charles-town, which was designed to be, what it now is, the capital of the province. They expended about twelve thousand pounds in the first settlement. But it was not chiefly to the funds of the lords proprietors that this province owed its establishment. They observed what advantages the other colonies derived from opening an harbour for refugees ; and, not only from this con¬ sideration, but from the humane disposition of that excellent man who formed the model of their government, they gave an unlimited AN ACCOUNT OF THE unlimited toleration to people of all religious persuasions. This induced a great number of dissenters, over whom the then go¬ vernment held a more severe hand than was consistent with ■u~;iee or policy, to transport themselves with their fortunes and families into Carolina. They became soon at least as nu¬ merous as the churchmen; and, though they displayed none of that frantick bigotry which disgraced the New England refugees, they could not preserve themselves from the jealousy and hatred of those of the church of England, who, having a majority in one of the assemblies, attempted to exclude ah dissenters from a right of sitting there. This produced dissensions, tumults, and riots every day, which tore the colony to‘pieces, and hin¬ dered it for many years from making that progress which might be expected from its great natural advantages. The people fell into disputes of no less violent a nature with the lords pro¬ prietors; and, provoking the Indians by a series of unjust and violent actions, they gave occasion to two wars, in which how¬ ever thev were victorious, and subdued almost all the Indian nations within their own bounds on this side of the Apalachian Their intestine distractions and their foreign wars kept the coinin' so low, that ail act of parliament, if possible to prevent the last ruinous consequences of these divisions, put the pro¬ vince under the immediate care and inspection of the crown, 'fiie lords proprietors, making a virtue of necessity, accepted a recompence of about twenty-four thousand pounds, both for the propertv and jurisdiction ; except the Earl Granville, who kept his eighth part of the property, which comprehends very near half of North Carolina, on that part which immediately borders upon tin province of Virginia. Their constitution, in ;hose points wherein it differed from that of the other colo¬ nies, was altered; and the country, for the more commo¬ dious EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEIUC.i. 431 (lions administration of affairs, was divided into two distinct independent governments, called North Carolina and South Carolina. This was in the year 1728. In a little time, a firm peace was established with all the neighbouring Indian nations, the Chevokees, the Creeks, and the Cataubas ; the province began to breathe from its internal quarrels, and its trade lias advanced every year since that time with an astonishing ra¬ pidity. CHAP. ACCOUNT OF THE C H A P. XXI. SITUATION, CLIMATE, &C. OF CAROLINA.—ITS ANIMAL AND 'VEGETABLE PRODUCTIONS. These tivo provinces, lying between the "1st and 3(ith degrees of latitude, are upwards of four hundred miles in length, and in breadth to the Indian nations near three hundred. The climate and soil in these countries do not considerably differ from those of Virginia; but, where they differ, it is much to the advantage of Carolina, which, on the whole, may be con¬ sidered one of the finest climates in the world. The heat in summer is very little greater than in Virginia; but the winters arc- milder and shorter, and the year, in all respects, does not come to the same violent extremities. However, the weather, though in general serene as the air is healthy, yet, like all American weather, makes such quick changes, and those so sharp, as to oblige the inhabitants to rather more caution in their dress and diet, than we are obliged to use in Europe. Thunder and lightning is frequent; and it is the only one of our colonies upon the continent which is subject to hurricanes ; but they are very rare, and not near so violent as those Of the West-Indie’s. Part of the month of March, and all April, Mav, and the greatest part of June, are here inexpressibly temperate and agreeable, but in July, August, and for almost the whole of September, the heat is very intense ; and, though the winters are sharp, especiallv when the north-west wind prevails, yet they are seldom severe enough to freesie any consi- siderable water, affecting only the mornings and evenings; the frosts EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS 433 frosts have never sufficient strength to resist the noon-day sun, so that many tender plants, which do not stand the winter of Virginia, flourish in Carolina; for they have oranges in great plenty near Charles-Town, and excellent in their kinds, both sweet and sour. Olives are rather neglected by the planter, than denied by the climate. The vegetation of every kind of plant is here almost incredibly quick ; for there is something so kindly in the air and soil, that, where the latter has the most barren and unpromising appearance, if neglected for a while, of itself it shoots out an immense quantity of those various plants and beautiful flowering shrubs and flowers, for which this country is so famous, and of which Mr. Catesby, in his Natural History of Carolina, has made such fine drawings. The whole country is in a manner one forestr, where our planters have not cleared it. The trees are almost the same in every respect with those produced in Virginia; and, by the different species of these, the quality of the soil is easily known; for those grounds which bear the oak, the walnut, and tlie hickory, are extremely fertile; they are of a dark sand, intermixed with loam, and, as all their land abounds with nitre, it is a long time before it is exhausted ; for here they never use any manure. The pine barren is the worst of all; this is an almost perfectly white sand yet it bears the pine tree and some other useful plants naturally, yielding good profit in pitch, tar, and turpentine. When this species of land is cleaved, for two or three years together it produces very tolerable crops of Indian corn and peas ; and, when it lies low and is flooded, it even answers well for rice. But, what is the best of all for this province, this worst species of its.land is favourable to a species of the most valuable of all its products, to one of the kinds of indigo. There is another sort of ground, which lies low and wet upon the banks of some of their rivers ; this is called swamp, which in some places is in a manner useless, in 3 k others 434 AN ACCOUNT OF THE others it is far the richest of all their grounds ; it is a black fat earth, and bears their great staple rice, which must have in general a rich moist soil, in the greatest plenty and perfec¬ tion. The country near the sea and at the mouths of the navigable rivers is much the worst; for the most of the land there is of the species of the pale, light, sandy-coloured ground; and what is otherwise in those parts is little better than an unhealthy and unprofitable salt marsh; but the country, as you advance in it, improves continually; and at an hundred miles distance from Charles-town, where it begins to grow hilly, the soil is of a prodigious fertility, fitted for every pur¬ pose of human life. The air is pure and wholesome, and the summer heats much more temperate than in the flat country; for Carolina is all an even plain for eight}' miles from the sea; no hill, no rock, scarce even a pebble to be met with : so that the best part of the maritime country, from this sameness, must want something of the fine effect which its beautiful products would have by a more variegated and advantageous dispo¬ sition ; but nothing can be imagined more pleasant to the eye than the back country, and its fruitfulness is almost incredible. Wheat grows extremely well there, and yields a prodigious in¬ crease. In the other parts of Carolina they raise but little, where it is apt to mildew and spend itself in straw ; and these evils the planters take very little care to redress, as they turn their whole attention to the culture of rice, which is more pro¬ fitable, and in which they are unrivalled; being supplied with what wheat they want in exchange for this grain from New York and Pennsylvania. The land in Carolina is very easily cleared every where, as there is little or no underwood. Their forests consist mostly of great trees at a considerable distance asunder ; so that they can clear in Carolina more land in a week, than in the forests of Europe they can do in a month. Their method is to cut them EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 435 them at about a foot from the ground, and then saw the trees into boards, or convert them into staves, heading, or other species of lumber, according to the nature of the wood or the demands at the market. If they are too far from navigation, they heap them together, and leave them to rot. The roots soon decay ; and, before that, they find no inconvenience from them, where land is so plenty. The aboriginal animals of this country are in general the same with those of Virginia, but there is yet a greater number and variety of beautiful fowls. All the animals of Europe are here in plenty ; black cattle are multiplied prodigiously. About fifty years ago, it was a thing extraordinary to have above three or four coivs ; now some have a thousand ; some in North Carolina a great many more; but to have two or three hundred is very common. These ramble all day at pleasure in the forests; but, their calves being separated and kept in fenced pastures, the cows return every evening to them ; they are then milked, detained all night, milked in the morning,, and then let loose again. The hogs range in the same manner, and return like the cows, by having shelter and some victuals provided for them at the plantation; these are vastly numerous, and many quite wild ; many horned cattle and horses too run wild in their woods; though at their first settlement fhere was not one of these animals in the country. They drive a great many cattle from North Carolina every year into Virginia, to be slaughtered there ; and they kill and salt some beef, and a good deal of pork, for the West-Indies, within themselves; but the beef is neither so good, nor does it -keep near so long, as what is sent to the same market from Ireland. They export a considerable number of live cattle to Pennsylvania and the West-Indies. Sheep are not so plenty as the black cattle or hogs, neither is their flesh so good ; their wool is very ordinary. 3k 2 CHAP. 43& IN ACCOUNT or Til) C HAP. XXII. THE COMMODITIES OF CAROLINA FOR EXPORT.—RICE.. INDIGO, PITCH, AND TAR.—PROCESS IS RAISING AND MANUFACTURING THESE COMMODITIES. Tiie trade of Carolina, besides the lumber, provision, and the like, which it yields in common with the rest of America, lias three great staple commodities, indigo, rice, and the produce of the pine, turpentine, tar, and pitch. The two former com¬ modities South Carolina has intirely to itself; and, taking in Xorth Carolina, this part of America yields more pitch ( aud tar than all the rest of our colonies. Rice anciently formed by itself the staple of this province; this wholsome grain makes a great part of the food of all ranks of people in the southern parts of the world; in the northern, it is not so much in request. Whilst the rigour of the act of navigation obliged them to send all their rice directly to England, to be re¬ shipped for the markets of Spain and Portugal, the charges inci¬ dent to this regulation lay so heavy upon the trade, that the cul¬ tivation of rice, especially in time of war, when these charges were greatly aggravated by the rise of the freight and insurance, hardly answered the charges of the planter; but notv the legis¬ lature has relaxed the law in this respect, and permits the Caro¬ linians to send their rice directly to any place to the southward of Cape Finisterre. This prudent indulgence has again revived the rice trade ; and, though they have gone largelv, and witli great spirit, into the profitable article of indigo, it has not di¬ verted their attention from the cultivation of rice : they raise now above double the quantity of what they raised some years EUTiOPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMKIUCA. 43f ago ; and this branch alone of their commerce is, at the lowest estimation, worth one hundred and fifty thousand pounds ster- Indigo is a dye made from a plant of the same name, which probably was so called front India, where it was first cultivated, and from whence we had, for a considerable time, the whole of what we consumed in Europe. This plant is very like the fern when grown, and, when young, hardly distinguishable from luccrn-grass ; its leaves in general are pennated and terminated by a single lobe ; the flowers consist of five leaves, and arc of the papilionaceous kind ; the uppermost petal being larger and rounder than the rest, and lightly furrowed on the side; the lower ones are short, and end in a point; in the middle of the flower is situated the stile, which afterwards becomes a pod, containing the seeds. They cultivate three sorts of indigo- in Carolina, which de¬ mand the same variety of soils. First, the French or Hispa¬ niola indigo, which striking a long tap-root, will only flourish in a deep rich soil; and therefore, though an excellent sort, is not so much cultivated in the maritime parts of Carolina, which are generally sandy ; but no part of the world is more fit to produce it in perfection than the same country, an hundred miles backwards; it is neglected too on another accout, for it hardly bears a winter so sharp as that of Carolina. The second sort, which is the false Guatemala or true Ba¬ hama, bears the winter better, is a more tall and vigorous plant, is raised in greater quantities from the same compass of ground; is content with the worst soils in the country, and is therefore more cultivated than the first sort, though inferiour in the qua¬ lity of its dye. The third sort is the wild indigo, which is indigenous here; this,, as it is a native of the country, answers the'purposes of the planter the best of all, with regard to the hardiness of the plant, the 438 AN ACCOUNT the easiness of the culture, and the quantity of the produce; of the quality there is some dispute, not yet settled amongst the planters themselves; nor can they as yet distinctly tell when they are to attribute the faults of their indigo to the nature of the plants, to the seasons, which have much influence upon it, or to some defect in the manufacture. The time of planting the indigo is generally after the first rains succeeding the venial equinox; the seed is sowed in small straight trenches, about eighteen or twenty inches asunder; when it is at its height, it is generally eighteen inches tall. It is fit for cutting, if all things answer well in the beginning of July. Towards the end of August, a second cutting is obtained; and, if they have a mild autumn, tiler; is a third cutting at Michaelmas; the indigo land must be weeded every day, and the plants cleansed from worms, and the plantation attended with the greatest care and diligence; about twenty-five negroes may manage a plantation of fifty acres, and compleat the manufacture of the drug, besides providing their own necessary subsistence, and that of the planter’s family. Each acre yields, if the land be very good, sixty or sventy pounds weight of indigo; at a medium the pro¬ duce is fifty pounds. When the plant is beginning to blossom it is fit for cutting; and, when cut, great care ought to be taken to bring it to the steeper, without pressing or shaking it, as a great part of the beauty of the indigo depends upon the fine farina which adheres to the leaves of this plant. The apparatus for making indigo is pretty considerable, though not very expensive; for, besides a pump, the whole consists only of vats and tubs of cypress wood, common and cheap in this country. The indigo, when cut, is first laid in a vat about twelve or fourteen foot long, and four deep, to the height of about fourteen inches, to macerate and digest. Then this vessel, which is called the steeper, is filled with water; the whole having lain from about twelve or sixteen hours, accord¬ ing EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. ing to the weather, beigns to ferment, swell, rise, and grow sen¬ sibly warm ; at this time spars of wood are run across to pre¬ vent its rising too much, and a pin is then set to mark the highest point of its ascent; when it falls below this mark, they judge that the fermentation has attained its due pitch, and begins to abate; this directs the manager to open a cock, and let off the water into another vat, which is called the beater -, the gross matter that remains in the first vat is carried off to manure the ground, for which purpose it is excellent, and new cuttings are put in. as long as the harvest of this weed con¬ tinues. When the water, strongly impregnated with the particles of the indigo, has run into the second vat or beater, they attend with a sort of bottomless buckets, with long handles, to w 7 ork and agitate it; which they do incessantly until it heats, froths, ferments, and rises above the rim of the vessel w’hich contains it; to allay this violent fermentation, oil is thrown in as the froth rises, which instantly sinks it. When this beating has continued for twenty, thirty, or thirty-five minutes, according. to the state of the weather (for in cool weather it requires the longest continued beating) a small muddy grain begins to be formed; the salts and other particles of the plant united and dis¬ solved before with the water, are now re-united, and begin to. granulate. To discover these particles the better, and to find when the liquor is sufficiently beaten, they take up some of it from time to time on a plate or in a glass; when it appears in an hopeful condition, they let loose some lime water from an adjacent vessel, gently stirring the whole, which wonderfully facilitates the operation; the indigo granulates more fully, the liquor as-- sumes a. purplish colour, and the whole is troubled and muddy; it is now suffered to settle; then the clearer part is let to run Off: 440 AN account of the off into another succession of vessels, from whence the water is conveyed away as fast as it clears at the top, until nothing remains but a thick mud, which is put into bags of coarse linen. These are hung up and left for some time, until the moisture is entirely drained off. To finish the drying, this mud is turned out of the bags, and worked upon boards of some porous timber with a wcoden spatula; it is frequently exposed to the morning and evening sun, but for a short time only: and then it is put into boxes or frames, which i6 called the curing, exposed again to the sun in the same cautious manner, until with great labour and attention the operation is finished, and that valuable drug, called indigo, fitted for the market. The greatest skill and care is required in every part of the process, or there may be great danger of ruining the whole; the water must not be suffered to remain too short or too long a time, either in the steeper or -beater; the beating itself must be nicely managed so as not to exceed or fall short; and, in the curing, the exact medium be¬ tween too much or tod little drying is not easily attained. No¬ thing but experience cau make the overseer skilful in these matters. There are two methods of trying the goodness of indigo ; by fire and by water; if it swims it is good, if it sinks it is naught, the heavier the worse; so if it wholly dissolves in water it is good. Another way of proving is, by the lire ordeal ; if it en¬ tirely bums away, it is good; the adulterations remain un¬ touched. . j There is perhaps no branch of manufacture, in which so large profits may be made upon so moderate a fund, as that of indigo; and there is no country in which this manufacture can be car¬ ried on to such advantage as in Carolina, where the climate is healthy, provisions plentiful and cheap, and every tiling ne¬ cessary, for .that business had with the greatest ease.. To do _., justice EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 441 justice to the Carolinians, they have not neglected these ad¬ vantages ; and, if they continue to improve them with the same spirit in which they have begun and attend diligently to the quality of their goods, they must naturally and necessarily come to supply the whole consumption of the world with this com¬ modity ; and consequently make their country the richest, as it is the pleasantest and most fertile, part of the British domi- Iu all pares of Carolina, but especially in North Carolina, they make great quantities' of turpentine, tar and pitch. They are all the produce of the pine. The turpentine is drawn simply from incisions made in the tree; they are made from as great an height as a man can reach with an hatchet; these incisions meet at the bottom of the tree in a point, where they pour their* contents into a vessel' placed to receive them. There is nothing farther in this process. But tar requires a more considerable apparatus and great trouble. They prepare a circular floor of clay, declining a little towards the center ; from this is laid a pipe of wood; the upper, part of which is even with the floor, and reaches ten feet without the circumference ; under the end the earth is dug away, and barrels placed to receive the tar as it runs. Upon the floor is built up a large pile of pine wood split in pieces, and surrounded with, a wall of earth, leaving only a- small aperture at the top where the'fire is first kindled: When- the fire begins to burn, they cover this opening likewise to con¬ fine the fire from flaming out, and to leave only sufficient heat to force the tar downwards to the floor. They temper the heat as they please, by running a stick into the wall of clay, and giving it air. Pitch is made by boiling tar in large iron kettles set in furnaces, or burning it in round clay holes made iii the earth. The greatest quantity of pitch and tar is made in North Carolina. 3 i. CHAP, 4i£ AN ACCOUNT THE CHAP. XXIII. NORTH CAROLINA, SOME ACCOUNT OF IT3 SETTLEMENT.—BAD STATE OF THAT PROVINCE.-IS CONSIDERABLY IMPROVED.-CHIEF TOWN. Thf.rf. are, in the two provinces which compose Carolina, ten navigable rivers of a very long course, ami innumerable smaller ones, which fall into them, all abounding in fish. About fifty or sixty miles from the sea, there are falls in most of the great rivers, which, as you approach their sources, become more fre¬ quent. This is the case of almost all the American rivers ; at these falls, those who navigate these rivers land their goods, carry them beyond the cataract on horses or waggons, and then re-ship them below or above it. The mouths of the rivers in North Carolina form but ordi¬ nary harbours, and do not admit, except at Cape Fear, vessels of above seventy or eighty tons; so that large ships are obliged to lye off in a sound called Ocacock, which is formed between some islands and the continent. This lays a weight upon their trade by the expence of lighterage. North Carolina, partly upon that occasion, but principally that the first settlements were made as near as possible to the capital, which lies consi¬ derably to the southward, was greatly neglected. For a long time it was but ill inhabited, and by an indigent and disorderly people, who had little property, and hardly any law or govern¬ ment to protect them in what they had. As commodious land grew scarce in the other colonies, people in low circumstances, observing that a great deal of excellent and convenient land was yet EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 445 yet to be patented in North Carolina, were induced by that cir¬ cumstance to plant themselves there. Others, who saw how they prospered, followed their example. The government became more attentive to the place as it became more valuable ; by de¬ grees something of a better order was introduced. The effect of which is, that, though by no means as wealthy as South Caro¬ lina, North Carolina has many more white people; things begin to wear a face of settlement; and the difficulties they have lain under are not so many nor so great, as to make us neglect all future efforts, or hinder us from forming very reasonable expec¬ tations of seeing the trade of this country, with'proper manage¬ ment, become a flourishing and fruitful branch of the British American commerce. That even now it is far from con¬ temptible, may appear by a list of their exported commodities, which I shall subjoin. Edenton was formerly the capital of North Carolina, if a. trifling village can deserve that denomination; but the present governor Mr. Dobbs has projected one further south upon the river Neus; which, though it has the advantage of being some¬ thing more central, is by no means equally well situated for trade, which ought always to be of the first consideration in whatever regards any of the colonies. However, none of their towns are worth mentioning ; the Conveniency of inland navi- ' gation-in all our southern colonies, and the want of handicrafts¬ men, is a great and almost insuperable obstacle to their ever, having any considerable. 3l2 CHAP. 444 AX AC COUNT THE CHAP. XXIV. AN ACCOUNT OF CHARLES-TOWX.—PORT-ROVAL.—THE TRADE OF C AROLIN A. —ITS VAST INCREASE.—ARTICLES NOT SUFFICIENTLY ATTENDED TO The only town in eitlier of tlie Carolinas ■which can draw our attention is Charles-town ; and this is one of the first in North America for size, beauty, and traffick. Its situation I have already mentioned, so admirable' chosen at the confluence of two navigable rivers. Its harbour is good in every respect, but that of a bar, which hinders vessels of more than two hun¬ dred tons burden from entering. The town is regularly and pretty strongly fortified both by nature and art; the streets are well cut; the houses are large and well built, and rent ex¬ tremely high. The church is very spacious, and executed in a very handsome taste, exceeding every thing of that kind which we have in America. Here, besides, the several denominations of dissenters have their meeting houses. It contains about eight hundred houses, and is the seat of the governor and the place of meeting of the assembly. Several handsome equipages are kept here. The planters and merchants are rich and well bred ; the people are shewv and expensive in their dress and way of living ; so that every thing conspires to make this by much the liveliest and politest place, as it is one of the richest too, in all America. The best harbour in this province is far to the southward, on the borders of Georgia, called Port-Royal. This might give a capacious and safe reception to the largest fleets of the greatest bulk and burden ; yet the town, which is called Beaufort, built upon 443 upon an island of the same name with the harbour, is not as yet considerable, but it bids fair in time for becoming the first trading town in this part of America. The import trade of South Carolina from Great Britain and the West-Indies is the same in all respects with that of the rest of the colonies, and is very large. Their trade with the Indians is likewise in a very flourishing condition. As for its export, both the nature of that and its prodigious increase may be dis¬ cerned from the following comparative tables, which let us see how much this colony lias really advanced in a few years ; as an attentive consideration of its natural advantages must shew us how much it must advance, if properly managed, as there is scarce any improvement of which this excellent country is not capable. Exported from Cliarles-Town. In the year 1731. In the year 1754. Rice 41,957 barrels Rice, 104,682 barrels Indigo, 00,000 pounds Indigo, 216,924 pounds Deerskins, 300 hogsheads Deerskins, 460 hogsheads Pitch, 10,750 barrels 114 bundles Tar, 2,063 ditto 508 loose Turpentine, 7-59 ditto Pitch, 5,869 barrels Beef, pork, &c. not parti- Tar, 2,945 ditto cularized. Turpentine,' 759 ditto Beef, 416 ditto Pork, 1,560 ditto Ind. corn, 16,428 bushels Peas, 9,162 ditto Tanned leat. 4,196 barrels Hides in the liair 1,200 Shing. 1,114,000 Staves, 206,000 Lumber, 395,000 feet 446 THE AS ACCOUNT OF Besides a great deal of live cattle, horses, cedar, cypress, aud walnut plank; bees-wax, myrtle, and some raw silk and cotton. North Carolina, which is reputed one of the least flourishing of our settlements, and which certainly lay under great diffi¬ culties, j et is within a few j'ears greatly improved. The con¬ sequence of this inferiour province may appear by the following view of its trade, which I can take upon me to say is not very far from being exact; it is at least sufficiently so to enable us to form a proper idea of this province, and its commerce. Exported from all the ports of North Carolina in 1753. Tar . . . 61,528 barrels. Pitch . . . 12,055 ditto. Turpentine . . 10,429 ditto. Staves . . 762,330 number. Shingles . . 2,500,000 number. Lumber . . 2,000,647 feet. Cora . . . 61,580 bushels. Peas, about . . 10,000 ditto. Pork and beef . 3,300 barrels. Tobacco, about . 100 hogsheads. Tanned leather, about 1,000 hundred weight Deerskins, in all ways, about 30,000. Besides a very considerable quantity of wheat, rice, bread, potatoes, bees-wax, tallow, candles, bacon, hog’s lard, some cotton, and a vast deal of squared timber of walnut and cedar, and hoops and headings of all sorts. Of late they raise indigo, but in what quantity I cannot determine, for it is all exported from South Carolina. They raise likewise much more tobacco than I have mentioned, but this, as it is produced on the fron¬ tiers of Virginia, so it is exported from thence. They export too EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 447 too no inconsiderable quantity of beaver, racoon, otter, fox, minx, and wild cats', skins, and in every skip a good deal of live cattle, besides what they vend in Virginia. Both in North and South Carolina they have made frequent, but I think not vigorous nor sufficiently continued, efforts in the cultivation of cotton and silk. What they have sent home of these commodities is of so excellent a kind, as to give us great encouragement to pro¬ ceed in a business which we have not taken to heart with all that warmth which its importance in trade and the fitness of the climate for these most valuable articles certainly deserve. It was a long time before this province went into the profitable trade of indigo, notwithstanding a premium subsisted a good many years for all that should be raised in our plantations ; the thing was at first despaired of, and it was never judged that Carolina could produce this drug; but no sooner had a few shewn a spirited and successful example, than all went into it so heartily, that though it is but about six years since they be¬ gan, I am informed that five hundred thousand weight was made last year; and as they go on, in a very little time they will supply the market with a commodity, which before we purchased every ounce from the French and Spaniards. Silk requires still more trouble, and a closer attention ; as yet it proceeds with lan¬ guor, nor will a premium alone ever suffice to set on foot in a vigorous manner a manufacture which will find great difficulties in any country, which does not abound in hands that can work for very trifling wages. The want of this advantage in Caro¬ lina, though no part of the world is fitter for this business and no business could be so advantageous to England, will, for a very long time, be an impediment to the manufacture of raw silk, unless some proper, well-studied, and vigorously executed scheme be set on foot for that purpose ; and surely it is a matter worthy of a very serious consideration. America is our great re¬ source ; 448 AN ACCOUNT OF THE source; this will remain to us when our other branches of our trade are decayed, or exist no more ; and therefore we ought to grudge no expence that may enable them to answer this end so effec¬ tually, as one day to supply the many losses we have already had, and the many more we have but too much reason to ap¬ prehend, in our commerce. These expences are not like the expences of war, heavy in their nature, and precarious in their effects; but, when judiciously ordered, the certain and infallible means of rich and successive harvests of gain to the latest pos¬ terity, at the momentary charge of a comparatively small quantity of seed, and of a moderate husbandry to the present generation. CHAP. C 31 A P. XXV. JIENT DEFECTIVE.—ATTEMPTS TO KE.V.EOV U\ In the year 1732, the government, observing that a great tract of land in Carolina, upon the borders of the Spanish Florida, lay waste and unsettled, resolved to erect it into a separate province, and to send a colony thither. This they were ra- Iher induced to do, because it lav oil the frontier of our pro¬ vinces, naked and defenceless ; whereas, if it could be properly settled, it would be a strong barrier to them upon that side, or at least would be sufficient to protect Carolina from the incur¬ sions which the Indians, instigated by the French or Spaniards, might make upon that province. They had it likewise ill thei r view to raise wine, oil, and silk, and to turn the industry of this new people from the timber and provision trade, which the other colonies had gone into too largely, into channels more advantageous to the publick. Laudable designs in every respect; though perhaps the means which were taken to put them in execution were not altogether answerable. That whole country which lies between the rivers Savannah and Alatamaha north and south, and from the Atlantick Ocean on the east to the great South-Sea upon the west, was vested in trustees ; at the end of that period, the property in chief was to revert to the crown. This country extends about sixty miles from north and south near the sea, but widens in the more remote parts to above one hundred and fifty. From the 450 AN ACCOUNT OF THE sea to the Apalachian mountains, it is not much short of three hundred. In pursuance of the original design, the trustees resolved to encourage poor people to settle in the province, which had been committed to their care; and to this purpose found them in necessaries to transport them into a countiy, of which they had previously published a most exaggerated and flattering de¬ scription. In reality, the country differs little from South Carolina, but that the summers are yet hotter, and the soil in the general of a poorer kind. The colony was sent over under the care of Mr. Oglethorpe, who very generously bestowed his own time and pains, without any reward, for the advancement ■ of the settlement. The trustees had very well observed, that many of our colo¬ nies, especially that of South Carolina, had been very much endangered, both internally and externally, by suffering the Negroes to grow so much more numerous than the Whites. An errour of this kind, they judged, in a colony which was not only to defend itself but to be in some sort a protection to the Others, would have been inexcusable ; they, for that reason, forbid the importation of Negroes in Georgia. In the next place, they observed that great mischiefs happened in the other settlements from making vast grants of land, which the ■ grantees jobbed out again to the discouragement of the settlers; or, what was worse, suffered to lie idle and uncultivated. To avoid this mischief, and to prevent the people from becoming wealthy and luxurious, which they thought inconsistent with the military plan upon which this colony was founded, they allowed in the common course of each family but twenty-five acres; and none could, according to the original scheme, by any means come to possess more than five hundred. Neither did they give an inheritance in fee simple, or to the heirs general of iXHOPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AJIEltICA. 451 of the settlers, but granted them their lands inheritable only by their male issue. They likewise forbid the importation of nun into the province, to prevent the great disorders which they observed to arise ill the Other parts of North America, from the abuse of spirituous liquors. These regulations, though well intended and meant to bring about very excellent purposes, yet it might at first, as it did afterwards, appear, that they were made without sufficiently consulting the nature of the country or the disposition of the people which they regarded, l'or, in the first place, as the cli¬ mate is excessively hot, and field work very laborious in a new' colony, as the ground must be cleared, tilled, and sowed, all with great and incessant toil for their bare subsistence, the load was too heavy for the White men, especially men who had not been seasoned to the country. The consequence of which was, that the greatest part of their time, all the heat of the day, was .spent in idleness, which brought certain want along with it. It is true, that all our colonies on the continent, even Virginia and Carolina, were originally settled without the help of Negroes. The Wiiite men were obliged to labour, and they underwent it, because they then saw no other way ; but it is the nature of man not to submit to extraordinary hardships in one spot, when they see their neighbours in another, without any difference in the circumstances of things, in a much more easy condition. Besides, there were no methods taken to ani¬ mate them under the hardships they endured. All things con¬ tributed to dispirit them. A levelling scheme in a new colony is a thing extremely un- adviseable. Men arc seldom induced to leave their country, but upon some extraordinary prospects ; there ought always to be something of a vastness in the view that is presented to them, to strike powerfully upon their imagination; and this will ope- 3 m 2 rate 452 AN ACCOUNT THE rate, because men will never reason veil enough to see, that the maioruv ot mankind are not endued with dispositions proper to make a fortune anv where, let the proposed advantages be what, they will. The majority of mankind must always be in¬ digent : but in a new settlement they must be all so, unless some persons there are on such a comfortable and substantial footing a-^ to give direction and vigour to the industry of the rest ; for, in every well contrived building, there must be strong beams and joists, as well as smaller bricks, tiles, and laths. •Persons of substance found themselves discouraged from at¬ tempting a settlement, by the narrow bounds which no industry could enable them to pass ; and the design of confirming the inheritance to the male line was an additional discouragement. The settlers found themselves not upon a par with the other colonies. There was an obvious inconvenience in leaving no provision at all for females, as in a new colony the land must be, for some time at least, the only wealth of the family. The quantity of twenty-five acres was undoubtedly too small a por¬ tion, as it was given without any consideration of the quality of the land, and was therefore in many places of very little value. Add to this that it was clogged, after a short free tenure, with a much greater quit-rent than is paid in our best and longest settled colonies. Indeed, through the whole manner of grant¬ ing land, there appeared, I know not what low attention to the trifling profits that might be derived to the trustees or the crown by rents and escheats, which clogged the liberal scheme that was first laid down, and was in itself extremely injudicious. When you have a flourishing colony, with extensive settle¬ ments, from the smallest quit-rents the crown receives a large revenue; but, in an ill-settled province, the greatest rents make but a poor return, and yet are sufficient to burden and impoverish the people. The nun OPT. AN SETTLEMENTS IN AMEIilCA. 45 3 Tin*, tail male grants were so grievous, that the trustees them¬ selves corrected that errour in a short time. The prohibition of rum, though specious in appearance, had a very bad effect. The waters in this unsettled country, running through such an extent of forest, were not wholesome drinking, and wanted the corrective of a little spirit, as the settlers themselves wanted something to support their strength in the extraordinary and unusual heat of the climate, and the dampness of it in several places disposing them to agues and fevers. But, what was worse, this prohibition in a manner deprived them of the only vent they had for the only commodities they could send to market, lumber and corn, which could sell no where but in the sugar islands ; and, with this restriction of negroes and rum, they could take very little from them in return. GHAP. 4o4 AN ACCOUNT OF THE C IIAP. XXVI. COLONY NEW MODELLED.-FAULTS IN' THE NEW CONSTITUTION.-TRADE OF THIS PROVINCE. All these and several other inconveniencies, in the plan of the settlement, raised a general discontent in the inhabitants ; they quarrelled with or.e another and with their magistrat; they complained : they remonstrated ; and, finding no satisfaction, many of them fled out of Georgia, and dispersed themselves where thev deemed the encouragement better, to all the other colonies So that of above two thousand people, who had trans¬ ported themselves from Europe, in a little time not above six or seven hundred were to be found in Georgia; so far were they from increasing. The mischief grew worse and worse even' dav, until the government revoked the grant to the trustees, took the province into their own hands, and annulled all the particular regulations that were made. It was then left exactly on the same footing with Carolina. Though this step lias probably saved the country from entire ruin, yet it was not perhaps so well done to neglect entirely the first views upon which it was settled. These were undoubtedly judicious ; and, if the methods taken to compass them were not so well directed, it was no argument against the designs them¬ selves, but a reason for some change in the instruments designed to put them in execution. Certainly nothing wants a regula¬ tion more, than the dangerous inequality in the number of Ne¬ groes and Whites in such of our provinces where the former are used. South Carolina, in spite of its great wealth, is really in a more defenceless condition, than a knot of poor townships on the frontiers of New England. In Georgia, the first errour of absolutely prohibiting the use of negroes, might, be turned EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IX AMERICA. duO to very good account; for they would have received the per¬ mission to employ them under what qualifications soever, not as a restriction, but as a favour and indulgence; and by exe¬ cuting whatever regulations we should make in this point with strictness, by degrees we might see a province fit to answer all the ends of defence and tralfick too ; whereas we have let them use such a latitude in that affair, which we were so earnest to prevent, that Georgia, instead of being any defence to Carolina, does actually stand in need of a considerable force to defend itself. As for the scheme of vines and silk, we were extremely eager in this respect in the beginning; and very supine ever since. At that time such a design was clearly impracticable,; because a few people seated in a wild country must first provide every thing for the support of life, by raising corn and breeding cattle, before they can think of manufactures of any kind ; and they must grow numerous enough to spare a number of hands from that most necessary employment, before they can send such tilings in any degree of cheapness or plenty to a good market. But now there is little said of either of these articles, though the province is longer settled and grown more populous. But the misfortune is, that, though no people upon earth originally conceive things better than the English do, thej- want the un¬ remitting perseverance which is necessary to bring designs of consequence to perfection. We are apt suddenly to change our measures upon any failure; without sufficiently considering whether the failure has been owing to a fault in the scheme it¬ self ; this does not arise from any defect peculiar to our people, for it is the fault of mankind in general if left to themselves. What is done by us is generally done by the spirit of the people; as far as that can go we advance, but no further. We want po¬ litical regulations, and a steady plan in government, to remedy the IN ACCOUNT OF THE the defects that must be in all things, which depend merely on the character and disposition of the people. At present, Georgia is beginning to emerge, though slowly, out of the difficulties that attended its first establishment. It is still but indifferently peopled, though it is now twenty-six years since its first settlement. Not one of our colonies was of so slow a growth, though none had so much of the attention of the government or of the people in general, or raised so great expectations in the beginning. They export some corn and lumber to the 'Vest Indies ; they raise some rice, and of late are going with success into indigo. It is not to be doubted but i:i time, when their internal divisions are a little better composed, the remaining errours in the government corrected, and the people begin to multiply, they will become a useful province. Georgia lias two towns already known in trade ; Savannah the capital, which stands very well for business about ten miles from the sea, upon a noble river of the same name, which is na¬ vigable two hundred miles further for large boats, to the second town, called Augusta; this stands upon a spot of ground of the greatest fertility, and is so coinmodiouslv situated for the Indian trade, that, from the first establishment of the colony, it lias been in a very flourishing condition, and maintained very early six hundred Whites in that trade alone. The Indian nations on their borders are the Upper and Lower Creeks, the Chieke- ?aws, and the Citerokees; who are some of the moT numerous and powerful tribes in America. The trade of skins with this people is the largest we have ; it takes in that of Georgia, the two Carolinas, and Virginia. We deal with them somewhat rn furs likewise, but they are of an inferiour sort. All species of animals that hear the fur, by a wise Providence, have it more thick, ami of a softer and finer kind, as you go to the north¬ ward ; the greater the cold, the better they are clad. CIIAP. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 45 ? C II A P. XXVII. NOVA SCOTIA, THE TIME AND REASONS OF ITS SETTLEMENT.—FRENCH THERE. —CLIMATE AND SOIL.—ANNAPOLIS, HALIFAX, AND LUNENBURG. The last province we have settled, or rather began to settle, upon the continent of North America, is Nova Scotia. This vast province, called by the French Acadie, has New England and the Atlantick Ocean to the south and SOlith-WCSt, and the river and gulph of St. Laurence to the north and north-east. It lies between the 44th and 50th degrees of north latitude, and, though in a very favourable part of the temperate zone, has a winter of an almost insupportable length and coldness, continu¬ ing at least seven months in the year; to this immediately suc¬ ceeds, without the intervention of any thing that may be called spring, a summer of an heat as violent as the cold, though of no long continuance; and they are wrapt in the gloom of a per¬ petual fog, even long after the summer season has commenced. In most parts, the soil is thin and barren, the corn it produces of a, shrivelled kind like rye, and the grass intermixed with a cold spongy moss. However, it is not uniformly bad; there are tracts in Nova Scotia, which do not yield to the best land iu New England. Unpromising as this country is, yet, neglecting all those de¬ lightful tracts to the southward, it was here that some of the first European settlements were made. The French seated themselves here before they made any establishment in Canada; but whatever unaccountable ignorance influenced their choice, LN ACCOUNT OF THE 4*8 the industry and vigour of that time deserve our applause ; for, though they had infinitely more difficulties to struggle with than we have at this day, and not the hundredth part of the succours from Europe, yet they subsisted in a tolerable manner, and increased largely; when the colony which in our days we have fixed there, if the support of the royal hand was withdrawn but for a moment, after all the immense sums which have been expended in its establishment, would undoubtedly sink into nothing. It is with difficulty it subsists, even encouraged and supported as it is. Yet the design of establishing a colony here, with whatever dfficulties it might have been attended, was a very prudent measure; for the French would undoubtedly have profited of our neglects, and have by some means got this country into their hands, to the great annoyance of all our co¬ lonies, and to the great benefit both of their fishery and their sugar islands. This country has frequently changed hands from one private proprietor to the other, and from the French to the English nation, backward and forward; until the treaty of Utrecht established our right in it finally ; as the treaty of Aix-la-Cha- pelle confirmed it. But both were deficient in not ascertain¬ ing distinctly what bounds this province ought to have. This was left to be adjusted by commissaries. Whilst they were de¬ bating, the French built forts, and secured such a part of the province as they were resolved to hold. I have not, throughout this work, chosen to enter into territorial disputes, because they convey very little private instruction, and do nothing at all to¬ wards tbe establishment of the publick rights ; yet it i s difficult to avoid remarking, that the line which the French have drawn in Nova Scotia is not only not drawn by any treaty, but that it is very apparently calculated to secure them those parts of the province which they value most, and at the same time, to pay EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 459 an apparent respect to the treaty of Utretcht by leaving us some part of Acadia. The chief town we had formerly in this province, was called Annapolis Royal; but, though the capital, it was a small place, wretchedly fortified, and yet worse built and inhabited. Here were stationed the remains of a regiment, which continued there, very little recruited, since the reign of queen Anne; but though this place never flourished, it stood upon the very best harbour, as it is said, in North America; but it was not here, but on the south-east side of the peninsula, that the settlement, re¬ solved and executed with so much spirit at the end. of the last war, was established. This too stands upon a fine harbour, very commodiously situated, and rather better than Annapolis for the fishery. The town is called Halifax from the present earl, to whose wisdom and care we owe this settlement. In 1743, three thousand families, at an immense charge to the go¬ vernment, were transported into this country at once, and (I think) three regiments stationed there to protect them from the Indians, who have always shewed themselves our most im¬ placable enemies. The town is large, and, for so new a set¬ tlement, well built. It has a good intrenchraent of timber, strengthened with forts of the same materials, so as to be in little danger at least from an Indian enemy. Though this town of Halifax has, all things considered, a tolerable appearance, the adjacent country is not improved in proportion; the ground is veiy hard to be cleared ; when clear¬ ed does not produce a great deal, and labour is extravagantly dear. But this colony has suffered more from the incursions of the Indians than from any thing else. Their incursions have been so frequent, and attended with such cruelties, that the people can hardly extend themselves beyond the cannon of the fort, nor attend their works of agriculture even there without 3 n 2 the 460 AN ACCOUNT OB THE the greatest danger. The consequence of this is, that they do ; not raise the fifth part of what is sufficient to maintain them. Most of their provision of every sort comes from New England, and they must have starved if it were not for the fishery, which it must lie owned is not contemptible, and for some little naval stores, and the pay of the garrison, the spending of which here is the principal use of the troops; against the Indian enemy t hey are of very little effect; though there are three regiments, and all the fighting men the Indians can raise in that province are not five hundred. The soldiers, inactive by- their confine¬ ment in their barracks, diseased for the mast part with the scurvy, and debilitated by the use of spirituous liquors, are quite an undennatch for the activity, vigilance, patience, and address of the American. A company of wood rangers kept con¬ stantly to scour the country near our settlements, and a small body of Indians who might be brought at an easy rate from the friendly tribes who inhabit our other settlements, and encou¬ raged by a reward for what scalps they should bring home, sent to infest the enemy amongst their own inhabitants, would have protected our colony, and long ago exterminated the Indians, or reduced them to an useful subjection, since unfortunately we have not the secret of gaining their affections. The easy plan I hav^. mentioned would not have had half the expence attend¬ ing it, that the maintenance of a numerous and almost useless garrison has had. A little experience will shew to the most or¬ dinary understandings, what hardly any sagacity could have with¬ out it, unveiled to the most penetrating statesman. It was a want of this experience that caused another mistake of almost as bad a nature. Until the beginning of this war, a number of the an¬ cient French colony, some say ten or twelve thousand souls, remained in the country, and were called and treated in a man¬ ner as a neutral people, though, they ought to have been the king’s EUROPEAN'SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA, 461 king’s subjects ; but they yielded very little obedience to the crown of England, as in truth they had from us veiy little pro¬ tection ; and they were even accused of encouraging the Indian incursions, and supplying them with arms and ammunition to annoy our people. Had we erected in their country a little fort, and in it kept a small garrison, to he maintained by that people themselves, appointed magistrates, and made them know the benefit and excellency of the British laws, and, at the same time, impressed them with a dread of the British power, we might have saved many useful people to this colony, and prevented the necessity (if it was a necessity) of using measures, which, if they are not impolitic, are certainly such as an humane and ge¬ nerous mind is never constrained to but with regret. Besides Annapolis and Halifax, we have another settlement a little to the south-west of the latter, called Lunenburg. This, is a branch of Germans from Halifax, who, being discontented at the infertility of the soil there, desired to go where there was. better land to be had, undertaking their own defence; accords ingly they settled where they desired, to the number of seven or eight hundred, and succeed tolerably well. Upon a tumult which arose amongst them, the governor sent a party of soldiers to protect them from their own discords, and from the enemy. This province is yet but in its beginning; and therefore, ex¬ cept in prospect, can afford us no great subject matter of spe¬ culation. CHAP. 462 AS ACCOUNT OF C II A P. XXVIII. THEIR SETTLEMENT AND TRADE.-THE BAHAMAS. To the east of this province lies the great isle of Newfoundland, above three hundred miles long, and two hundred broad, ex¬ tending quite up to New Britain, and forming the eastern boundary of the Gulf of St. Laurence. This island, after va¬ rious disputes about the property, was entirely ceded to Eng¬ land by the treaty of Utrecht. From the soil of this island we were far from reaping any- sudden or great advantage ; for the cold is long continued and intense; and the summer heat, though violent, warms it not enough to produce any thing valuable ; for the soil, at least in those parts of the island with which we are acquainted (for we are far from knowing the whole), is rocky and barren. However, it hath many large and safe har¬ bours ; and several good rivers water it. This island, whenever the continent shall come to fail of timber convenient to naviga¬ tion (which perhaps is no very remote prospect), will afford a copious supply for masts, yards, and all sorts of lumber, for the West India trade. But what at present it is chiefly vain- able for, is the great fishery of cod, which is carried on upon those shoals which are called the Banks of Newfoundland. In that the French and Spaniards, especially the former, have a ianre share. Our share of this fishery is computed to increase the national stock by three hundred thousand a year, in gold and silver, remitted to us for the cod we sell in the North, in Spain, Portugal, Italy, and the Levant. The plenty of cod, both EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 463 both on the great bank and the lesser ones which lie to the east and south-east of this island, is inconceivable; and not only cod, but several other species of fish are there in abundance ; all these species are nearly in an equal plenty all along the shores of New England, Nova Scotia, and the isle of Cape Bre¬ ton ; and consequently excellent fisheries are carried on upon all their coasts. Where our American colonies are so ill peopled or so barren as not to produce any thing from their soil, their coasts make us ample amends ; and pour in upon us a wealth of another kind, and no way inferior to the former, from their fisheries. We have in North America, besides this, two clusters of islands ; the Bermudas or Summer Islands, at a vast distance from the continent, inlat. 31, and the Bahama Islands. The former were very early settled, and were much celebrated in the time of the civil wars ; when, several of the cavalier party being obliged to retire into America, some of them, in particular Mr. Waller, the poet, spent some time in this island. Waller was extremely enamoured with the serenity of the air, and the beauty and richness of the vegetable productions of these islands ; he celebrated them in a poem, which is fine but unequal, written by him upon this subject. The Bermudas are but small, not containing in all upward* of twenty thousand acres. They are very difficult of access, being, as Waller expresses it, walled with rocks. What has been said of the clearness and serenity of the air, and of the healthi¬ ness of the climate, was not exaggerated; but the soil could never boast of an extraordinary fertility. Their best production was cedar, which was superior to any thing of the kind in Ame¬ rica. It is still so, though diminished considerably in quantity, which has, as it is imagined, changed the air much for the worse ; for now it is much more inconstant than formerly; and several 464 AN ACCOUNT OP THE several tender vegetables, which flourished here at the first set¬ tlement, being deprived of their shelter, and exposed to the bleak northerly winds, are seen no more. The chief and indeed only business of these islanders is the building and navigating of light sloops and brigantines, built w ith their cedar, which they employ chiefly in the trade be¬ tween North America and the West Indies.' These vessels arc as remarkable for their swiftness, as the wood of which they are built is for its hard and durable quality. They export no- Ihing from themselves but some white stone to the West Indies and some of their garden productions. To England they send nothing. Formerly they made a good deal of money of a sort of hats for women’s wear of the leaves of their palmettos, which, whilst the fashion lasted, were elegant, but the trade and the fashion are gone together. Their Whites are computed to be about five thousand, the Blacks which they breed are the best in America, and as useful as the Whites in their navigation. The people of the Bermudas are poor but healthy, contented and remarkably cheerful. It is extremely surprising that they do not set themselves heartily to the cultivation of vines in this island, to which their rocky soil seems admirably adapted ; and their situation and the man¬ ner of trade they are already engaged in, would facilitate the distribution of their wine to every part of North America and the West Indies. The Bahamas are situated to the south of Carolina, from lat. 22 to 27 , and they extend along the coast of Florida quite down to the Isle of Cuba; and are said to be five hundred in number; some of them only mere rocks ; but a great many others large, fertile, and in nothing differing from the soil of Carolina. All are however absolutely uninhabited, except Providence, which is wither the largest nor the most fertile. This EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. -465 This island was formerly a receptacle for the pirates, who, for a long time, infested the American navigation. This obliged the government to erect a fort there, to station an independent company in the island, and to send thither a governor. This island has at present not much trade, some oranges it sends to North America excepted. IlQWCVCr, ill time of war, it makes Considerably by the prizes condemned here; and in time ot' peace, by the wrecks, which are frequent in this labyrinth of innumerable rocks and shelves. This is all the benefit we derive from so many large and fer¬ tile islands, situated in such a climate as will produce any thing, and which, as it is never readied- by any frosts, would yield, in all probability, even sugars of as good a sort, and in as great abundance, as any islands in the West Indies. Nothing more fully shews the present want of that spirit of adventure and en¬ terprise, which was so common in the two last centuries, and which is of such infinite honour and advantage to any time or nation, than that these islands so situated can lie unoccupied, whilst we complain of the want of land proper for sugar, and whilst an hundred pounds hn acre is sometimes paid for such in the Caribbees. This point, to any who will be at the pains of studying tire situation of these islands, and the consequences which may result from the improvement or nedect of them, will appear of no small importance: and perhaps an enquiry into the causes of the strange degree of backwardness in which they are at .present, may be a very prudent and perhaps a ne¬ cessary measure. CHAP. 466 IS ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. XXIX. HCBSON's BAY.—ATTEMPTS FOR THE discovery of a south-west pas¬ sage. the Hudson’s bat comtasy.—thoughts upon its trade.— CLIMATE AND SOIL OF THE COUNTRIES THERE.—CONCLUSION. The countries about Hudson’s and Baffin’s Bay make the last object of our speculation in America. The knowledge of these seas was owing to a project for the discovery of a north-west passage to China. So early as the year 1576 this noble design was conceived; since then, it has been frequently dropped ; it has often been revived; it is not yet compleated ; but was never despaired of by those whose knowledge and spirit make them competent judges and lovers of such undertakings. Frobisher only discovered the main of New Britain, or Terra de Labrador, and those straits to which he has given his name. In 1585, John David sailed from Dartmouth, and viewed that and the more northerly coasts ; but he seems never to have entered the bay. Hudson made three voyages on the same adventure, the first in 1607, the second in 1608, and his third and last in 1610. This bold and judicious navigator entered the straits that lead into this new Mediterranean, coasted a great part of it, and penetrated to eighty degrees twenty-three minutes, into the heart of the frozen zone. His ardour for the discovery not bein'* abated by the difficulties he struggled with in this empire of winter and world of frost and snow, he staid here until the en¬ suing spring, and prepared in the beginning of 1611 to pursue his discoveries; but his crew, who suffered equal hardships without 467 ■without the same spirit to support them, mutinied, seized upon him and seven of those who were most faithful to him, and committed them to the fury of the seas in an open boat. Hudson and his companions were either swallowed up by the waves, or, gaining the inhospitable coast which they water, were destroyed by the savages; but his fate so calamitous cannot so much discourage a generous mind from such undertakings, as the immortality of his name, which he has secured by having given it to so great a sea, will be a spur to others to expect an equal honour, and perhaps with better success. From the first voyage of Frobisher an hundred and ten years ago, to that of Captain Ellis, notwithstanding so many disap¬ pointments, the rational hopes of this grand discovery have grown greater by every attempt, and seetn to spring even out of our very failures. The greater swell of the tides in the inner part of the bay than near the straits, an appearance so unknown in any other inland seas, and the increase of this swell with west¬ erly winds, seem, without any other arguments, to evince the certain existence of such a passage as we have so long sought without success. But though we have hitherto failed in the original purpose for which we navigated this bay, yet such great designs even in their failures bestow a sufficient reward for whatever has been expended upon them. In 1670, the charter was granted to a company for the exclusive trade to this bay, and they have acted under it ever since with great benefit to the private men •who compose the company, though comparatively with little advantage to Great Britain. It is true, that their trade in bea¬ vers and other species of furs is not inconsiderable, and it is a trade in itself of the best kind; its object enters largely into our manufactures, and carries nothing but our manufactures from us to procure it; and thus it has the qualities of the most • • - 3 o 2 advantageous ACCOUNT OF THE advantageous kinds of traffick. The company has besides pretty large returns in beaver and deer skins. It is said that the di¬ vidends of this company are prodigious ; far exceeding wliat is gained in any other of the great trading bodies; yet their ca¬ pital is small, they seem little inclined to enlarge their bottom, and appear strongly possessed with that spirit of jealousy that prevails in some degree in all knots and societies of men endued with peculiar privileges. The officers of the company have be¬ haved to those who wintered within their jurisdiction in search of the north-west passage (one of the purposes for which the company itself was originally instituted) in such a manner as to give us the truest idea of this spirit. If I had been singular in this opinion, I should have expressed my sentiments with much greater diffidence; but this abuse has been often and loudly complained of. It would appear astonishing that this trade has not hitherto been laid open, if, in the perplexing multiplicity of affairs that engages our ministry, something must not necessa¬ rily pass unredressed. The vast countries which surround this bay all abound with animals, whose fur is excellent, and some of kinds which are not yet brought into commerce; and the company is very far from any attempt to stretch this trade to its full extent. If the trade were laid open, it seems of necessity that three capital advan¬ tages would ensue; first, that the trade going into a number of rival hands, with a more moderate profit to individuals, would consume a much greater quantity of our manufactures, employ more of our shipping and seamen, and of course bring home more furs and, by lowering the price of that commodity at home, increase the demand of those manufactures into which they enter at the foreign markets: it might bring home other species of furs'than those we deal in at present, and thus open new channels of trade, which in commerce is a matter of great consideration. EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 469 consideration. Secondly, this more general intercourse would make the country better known; it would habituate great numbers of our people to it; it would discover the most toler¬ able parts for a settlement; and thus instead of a miserable fort or two, time might shelf an English Colony at Hudson’s Bay, which would open the fur trade yet more fully, and increase the vent of our manufactures yet further. Thirdly, this more ge¬ neral trade on the Bay would naturally, without any new ex- peuce or trouble whatsoever, in a very short space of time, dis¬ cover to us the so much desired north-west passage, or shew us clearly and definitely that we ought to expect no such thing. These advantages, and even yet more considerable ones, would be derived from laying open this trade, under such proper re¬ gulations as the nature of the object would point out of itself. No colony lias been hitherto attempted at Hudson’s Bay. The company has two inconsiderable forts there. The country is every where barren; to the northward of the bay even the hardy pine is seen no longer, and the cold womb of the earth is iucapable of any better production than some miserable shrubs. The winter reigns with an inconceivable rigour for near nine months of the year; the other three are violently hot, except when the north-west wind renews the memory of the winter. Every k,ind of European seed, which we have committed to the earth in this inhospitable climate, has hitherto perished; but, in all probability, we have not tried the seed of corn from the northern parts of Sweden and Norway ; in such cases, the place from whence the seed comes is of great moment. All this seve¬ rity and long continuance of winter, and the barrenness of the earth which arises from thence, is experienced, in the latitude of 51, in the temperate latitude of Cambridge. However, it is far from increasing uniformly as you go northwards. Captain James wintered in Charlton island, in latitude 51; be judged that 170 ACCOUNT OF THE tiiat the climate here was to be deemed utterly uninhabitable on account of the surprising hardships which he suffered ; yet the company lias a fort several degrees more to the northward, where their servants make a siiift to subsist tolerably. It is called Fort Nelson, and is in the latitude 54. All the animals of these countries are cloathed with a close; soft, warm fur. In summer there « here, as in other places, a variety in the colours of the several animals ; when that is over, they ail assume the livery of winter, and every sort of beasts, and most of their fowls, are of the colour of the snow; every thing animate and inanimate is white. This is a surprising pha;- nomenon. But what is yet more surprising, and what is indeed one of those striking things tiiat draw the most inattentive to an admiration of the wisdom and goodness of Providence, is, that the dogs and cats from England, that have been carried into Hudson’s Bay, on the approach of winter have entirely changed their appearance, and acquired a much longer, softer, and thicker coat of hair than they. had originally. As for the men of the country, Providence there, as every where else, has given them no provision bfit their own art and ingenuity, and they shew a great deal in their manner of kindling a fire, in cloafhing themselves, and in preserving their eyes from the ill effects of that glaring white which every where surrounds them for the greatest part of the year; in other respects they are very savage. In their shapes and faces, they do not resemble the Americans whodive to the southward; they are much more like the Laplanders and Samoeids of Europe, from whom they are probably descended. The other Americans seem to be of a Tartar original. I have now finished upon my plan the survey of the English colonies in America. I flatter myself that so full an idea has not been given of them before in so narrow a compass. By this EUnOPEAK SETTLEMENTS IN AMEHICA. 471 this the reader will himself be enabled to judge, for it is not my design to pre-occupy his judgment in these particular*, how our colonies have grown, what their vegetative principle has been, in what vigour it sulwists, or what sign* of corruption ap¬ pear in any of them; how far we hare pursued the advantage* wliich our situation and the nature of the country hare given us; or, where we have pursued them, whether we hare gone to the ultimate point. He will see how far the colonieB have served the trade of. the mother country, and how much the mother country lias done or neglected to do towards their happiness and prosperity. Certainly our colonies deserve, and would fully reward an attention of a veiy different kind from any that has ever yet been given to them. Even as they are circum¬ stanced, I do not in the least hesitate to say that we derive more advantage, and of a better kind, from our colonies, that! the Spaniards and Portuguese have from theirs, abounding a* they are with gold and silver and precious stones; although itr eurs there is no appearance at all of Mich dazzling and delusive wealth. But then I conceive it might be made Very dear, that; had they yielded ns these splendid metal* in lieu of what they now produce, the effect would be far less to our advantage. Our present intercourse with them is an emulation in industry; they have nothing that does not arise from theirs, and what we re¬ ceive enters into our manufactures, excites'our industry, atid increases our commerce; whereas gold is the measure Or accOunt,' but not the means, of trade. And' it is found in-nations M‘ii is in the fortunes of private men, that what does notarise from labour, but is acquired by other means, is never lastingi Sticlv acquisitions extinguish industiy, which alone hr tire parent of any solid riches. The barbarism of our ancestors could not Comprehend how a nation could grow more populous by sending OUt ft p&rt of- itk people. 472 AM ACCOUNT OF TIIE people. We have lived to see this paradox made out by expe¬ rience, but we have not sufficiently profited of this experience; since we begin, some of us at least, to think that there is a dan¬ ger of dispeople^ ourselves by encouraging new colonies, or in¬ creasing the old. If our colonies find, as hitherto they have, constantly done, employment for a great number of hands, there is no danger but that hands will be found for the employment. That a rich, trading, and manufacturing nation should be long in want of people, is a most absurd supposition; for besides that the people within themselves multiply the most where the means of subsistence are most certain, it is as natural for people to flock into a busy and wealthy country, that by ah}' accident may be thiu of people, as it is for the dense air to rush into those parts where it is rarefied. He must be a great stranger to this country, who does not observe in it a vast number of people, whose removal from hence, if they could be of any use elsewhere, would prove of very little detriment to the publick. I have already observed, that the trade of our colonies de¬ serves a more particular attention than any other, not only on account of the advantages I have just mentioned, but because our attention is sure of being sufficiently rewarded. The object is in our own power; it is of a good kind ; and of such extent and variety, as to employ nobly the most inventive genius in those matters. Foreign politicks have something mote splendid and entertaining than domestick prudence ; but this latter is ever attended, though with less glaring, yet with infinitely more so¬ lid, secure, and lasting advantages. The great point of our regard in America ought therefore to be, the effectual peopling, employment, and strength of our possessions there ; in a sub¬ ordinate degree, the management of our interests with regard to the French and Spaniards. The latter we have reason to re¬ spect, to. indulge, and even perhaps to endure ; and more, it is probable, EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 473 probable, may be had from them in that way than bv the vio¬ lent methods which some have so warmly recommended, and still urge, though we have hud some experience to convince us of their insufficiency. But the nature of the French, their situ¬ ation, their designs, every thing lias shewn that we ought to use every method to repress them, to prevent them from extending their territories, their trade, or their influence, and above all to connive at not the least encroachment; but this in such a rnanr- ner as not to strain our own strength, or turn our eyes from serving ourselves by attempts to distress them. But as we are now in the midst of a war, until that is decided, it will be im¬ possible to say any thing satisfactory on our connexions with French America, until we see what the next treaty of peace will do in the distribution of the territory of the two nations there. AX ACCOUNT 01' T«£ C H A P. XXX. THE ROYAL, PROPRIETARY, AND CHARTER GOVERNMENTS.—LAWS OF THE COLONIES.-PAPER CURRENCY.-AEUSES IN IT.-ANOTHER SORT OF MONEY PROPOSED. The settlement of our colonies was never pursued upon any regular plan ; but they were formed, grew, and flourished, as accidents, the nature of the climate, or the dispositions of pri¬ vate men, happened to operate. We ought not therefore to be surprised to find, in the several constitutions and govern¬ ments of our colonies, so little of any thing like uniformity. It has been said that there is scarce any form of government known, that does not prevail in some of our plantations ; the variety is certainly great and vicious; but the latitude of the observation must be somewhat restrained ; for some forms they are certainly strangers to. To pass over several, nothing like a pure hereditary aristocracy lias ever appeared in any of them. The first colony which we settled, was that of Virginia. It was governed for some time by a president and a council, ap¬ pointed by the crown ; but when the people were increased to a considerable body, it was not thought reasonable to leave them longer under a mode of government so averse from that which they had enjoyed at home. They were therefore em¬ powered to elect representatives for the several counties into which this province is divided, with privileges resembling those of the representatives of the commons in England. The per¬ sons EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. 475 sous so elected form what is called the lower house of assembly. This was add'd to the council which still subsisted, and the members of which were, and to this day are, nominated by the. crown, as at the first; and they are not only nominated by the crown but hold their seats during the .king’s pleasure, as signi¬ fied by his governor. They .are . styled honourable, and are chosen from the persons of tile best; fortunes and most consi¬ derable influence in the country. • They form another branch of tile legislature, and are sometimes called the upper house of assembly. They answer in some measure to the house of peers in our constitution. As the lower house of assembly is the guardian of the people’s privileges, the council is appointed chiefly to preserve the prerogative of the crown, and to-secure the dependence of the colony ; it is the more effectually to an¬ swer these ends; that the members of the council only arc ap¬ pointed during pleasure. When any bill lias passed the two houses, it comes before the governor, wiio represents the Icing, and gives his assent or negative, as he thinks proper. It now acquires the. force of a law, but it must be afterwards transmitted to the king and council in England, where it may still receive a negative tiiat takes away all its effect. The upper house of assembly not only forms a part of the legislature of the colony, but it acts as a privy council to the governor, without whose concurrence lie can do nothing of moment; it sometimes acts as a court of chancery. This is the common form of government, and the best too that is in use in the plantations. This is the manner of government in all the islands of the West-Indies ; in Nova Scotia; in one province of New England, and, with some re¬ striction, in another; in New York, New Jersey, Virginia, the two Carolinas, and Georgia. This form is commonly called a royal government. ■176 The second form in use in our settlements in America is called a proprietary government. At our first planting that part of the world, it was not difficult for a person who had interest at court, to obtain large tracts of land, not inferiour in extent to many kingdoms; and to be invested with a power very little less than regal over them ; to govern by what laws, and to form what sort of constitution, he pleased. A dependence upon the crown of England was shewn only by the payment of an Indian arrow, a few skins, or some other trifling acknowledgment of the same nature. We had formerly many more governments of that sort, than we have at present; in the W'est-Indies, the island of Barbadoes was granted to the Earl of Carlisle; and we have seen a like grant made of the island of St. Lucia to the Duke of Montague in this age, which, after an infinite charge to that benevolent nobleman, came to nothing, by a sort of tacit allowance of the French claim to it. This was in 1722, when our connexion with France hindered us from exerting our rights with the necessary vigour. Carolina was formerly a government of this kind, but it was lodged in eight pro¬ prietaries. How they parted with their rights we have seen already. New Jersey was likewise a proprietary government; but this too failed like the others. The only governments in this form which remain at present, but considerably abridged of their privileges, are Pennsylvania and Maryland. In.the latter, theconstitution exactly resembles that of the royal go¬ vernments ; a governor, council, and assembly of the represen¬ tatives of the people ; but the governor is appointed by the proprietary, and approved by the crown. The customs are reserved to the crown likewise; -and the officers belonging to them are independent of the government of ,the province. .In Pennsylvania, the proprietary is underihe same restrictions that limit the proprietary of Maryland, on .the side .of the crown; 477 EUROPEAN" SETTLEMENTS IN AMERICA. crown ; on the side of the people, he is yet more restrained ; for their legislature has but two parts, the assembly of the people and the governor; so that the governor, wanting the great in¬ fluence which the council gives in other places, whenever his sentiments differ from those of the assembly, is engaged in a very unequal contest. The third form is called a charter government; this originally prevailed in all the provinces of New England and still remains in two of them, Connecticut and Rhode Island. By the char¬ ters to these colonies, the exorbitant power, which was' given in the proprietary governments to single men, was here vested, and I apprehend much more dangerously, in the whole body of the people. It is to all purposes a mere democracy. They elect every one of their own officers, from the highest to the lowest; they displace them at pleasure; and the laws which they enact, are valid without the royal approbation. This state of unbounded freedom, I believe, contributed in gome degree to make those settlements flourish ; but it certainly contributed as much to render their value to,their-mother country far more precarious, than a better digested plan would have done that might .have taken in the interests both of Great Britain.aud,of the new settlement. The truth is, nothing of an enlarged and legislative spirit appears.in the planning of our colonies; .the charter governments were evidently copied from spine Qf.our corporations at home, which, if they are .good institutions tliemseives, yet are by no means .fit to be imitated by a new .people .going into a remote country, ;far from the eye and hand of the supreme power. What may he an useful institution for an inferiour member of some great body, and closely united to it, may be not all proper for a-new settlement, which is to form a sort.of,dependent commonwealth in a remote part of the world. Here the ends to be answered are, to make the new establish¬ ment 478 AX ACCOUNT OF THE ment as useful as possible to the trade of the mother country ; to secure its dependence; to provide for the case, safety, and happiness of the settlers; to protect them from their enemies, and to make a:i easy and effectual provision to preserve them from the tvranny and avarice of their governors, or the ill con¬ sequences of their own licentiousness: that they should not, by growing into an unbounded liberty, forget that they were sub¬ jects, or, lying under a base servitude, have no reason to think themselves British subjects. This is all that colonies, accord¬ ing to the present and best ideas of them, can or ought to he. The charter governments had nothing of this in view, and con¬ sequently provided for it but very indifferently. The province of Massacliusets Bav, which is partly a govern¬ ment of this popular kind, but tempered with something more of the royal authority, seems to be on still a worse footing, through the one errour of having no established provision for the governor ; this one mischief is productive of a thousand others, because the governor in a manner is obliged to keep intrigues and devices on foot, to reconcile the various parts which he must act, and is necessitated to govern by faction and cabal. Hence it is that the charges of this one government are greater than those not only of the other provinces of New England taken together, but of those of Pennsylvania and New York added to them ; they are deeply in debt., they are every day plunging deeper, their taxes increase, and their trade declines. It has been an old complaint, that it is not easy to bring Arne- } rican governors to justice for mismanagements in their province, or to make them refund to the injured people the wealth raised by their extortions. Against such governors at present there are three kinds of remedy; the privy council, the king's bench, and the parliament. The council, on just cause of complaint, may remove the governor; the power of the council seems to extend extend no further. The king’s bench may punish the governors for their offences committed in America, as if done in England. The power of parliament is unlimited in the ways of enquirjr into the crime, or of punishing it. The first of these remedies can never be sufficient to terrify a governor grown rich by ini¬ quity, and willing to retire uietiy, though dishonourably, to enjoy the fruits of it. The king’s bench, or any other merely lair COUrt, seem? equally insufficient for this purpose; because offences in government, though very grievous, can hardly ever be so accurately defined as to be a proper object of any court of justice, bound up by forms and the rigid letter of the law. The parliament is equal to every thing; but whether party, and other bars to a quick and effectual proceeding, may not here leave the provinces as much unredressed as in the other courts, I shall not take upon me to determine. The law in all our provinces, besides those acts which from time to time they have made for themselves, is the common law of England, the old statute law, and a great part of the new, which in looking over their laws I find many of our settlements have adopted, with very little choice or discretion. Ami indeed tlie laws of England, if in the long period of their duration they have had many improvements, so they have grown more tedious, perplexed, and intricate, by the heaping up many abuses in one age, and the attempts to remove them in another. These infant settlements surely demanded a more simple, clear, and deter¬ minate legislation, though it were of -somewhat an homelier kind ; laws suited to the time, to their country, and the nature of their new way of life. Many tilings still subsist in the law of England, which are built upon causes and reasons that have long ago. ceased; many things are in those laws suitable to England only. But the whole weight of this ill-agreeing mass, which neither we nor our fathers were well able to bear, is laid ts ACCOUNT OF THE 480 upon the shoulders of these colonies, by which a spirit of con¬ tention is raised, and arms offensive and defensive are supplied, to keep up and exercise this spirit, by the intricacy and un¬ suitableness of the laws to their object. And thus, in many of our settlements, the lawyers have gathered to themselves the greatest part of the wealth of the country ; men of less use in such establishments than in more settled countries, where the number of people naturally sets many apart from the occupa¬ tions of husbandry, arts, or commerce. Certainly Our Ame¬ rican brethren might well have carried with them the privileges which make the glory and happiness of Englishmen, without taking them encumbered with all that load of matter, perhaps so useless at home, without doubt so extremely prejudicial in the colonies. Laws themselves are hardly more the cement of societies than money; and societies flourish or decay according to the condi¬ tion of either of these. It may be easily judged, as the balance of trade with Great Britain is very much against the colonies, that therefore whatever gold or silver they" may receive from the other branches of their commerce makes but a short stay in America. This consideration at first view would lead one to conclude, that in a little time money for their Ordinary circula¬ tion would be wanting; and this is apparently confirmed by experience. Very little money is seen amongst them, notwith¬ standing the vast increase of their trade. This deficiency is supplied, or, more properly speaking, it is caused, by the use of money of credit, which they commonly call paper currency. This money is notcreated for the convenicncy of traffick, but by the exigencies of the government, and often by the frauds and artifices of private men for their particular profit. Before this invention, money was indeed scarce enough in America ; but they raised its value, and it served their purpose tolerably. I shall' EIWOPEAX LEMENTS 481 I shall forbear entering into the causes that increased the charges of government so greatly in all our American provinces. But the execution of projects too vast for their strength made large sums necessary. The feeble state of a colony which had hardly taken root in the country could not bear them; and to raise sudden and heavy taxes, would destroy tile province without answering their purpose. Credit then came in aid of money, and the government issued bills to the amount of what they wanted, to pass current in all payments; and they commonly laid a tax, or found some persons willing to engage their lands as security, for gradually sinking this debt, and calling in these bills. But before the time arrived at which these taxes were to answer their end, new exigencies made new emissions of paper currency necessary ; and thus things went from debt to debt, until it became very visible that no taxes which could be im¬ posed could discharge them; and that the land securities given were often fraudulent, and almost always insufficient. Then the paper currency became no longer to be weighed against the credit of the government, which depended upon its visible re¬ venue. It was compared to the trade, to which it was found SO disproportionate, that the bills fell ten, twenty, fifty, and eighty percent in some places. It was to no purpose that the govern¬ ment used every method to keep up their credit, and even to compel the receiving of these bills at the value for which they were emitted, and to give no preference over them to gold and silver ; they were more depreciated every day; whilst the go¬ vernment every day emitted more paper, and grew less soli¬ citous about their old bills, being entirely exhausted to find means of giving credit to the new. It is easy to perceive how much the intercourse of business must suffer by this uncertainty in the value of money, when a man receives that in payment this day for ten .shillings, which to¬ morrow 482 AX ACCOUNT OF morrow he will not find received from him for five, or pe rhaps - for three. Real money can hardly ever multiply too much in any country, because it will always as it increases be the certain sign of the increase of trade, of which it is the measure, and consequently of the soundness and vigour of the whole body. Bat this paper money may, and does increase, without any in¬ crease of trade, nay often when it greatly declines, for it is not the measure of the trade of the nation, but of the necessity of its government; and it is absurd, and must be' ruinous, that the