THE
INTERESTING NARRATIVE
OF
THE LIFE
OF
OLAUDAH
EQUIANO,
OR
GUSTAVUS VASSA,
THE AFRICAN
WRITTEN BY HIMSELF.

“Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust and not
be
afraid, for the Lord Jehovah is my
strength and my
song; he also is become my
salvation.
And in that
shall ye say, Praise the Lord, call upon his
name, declare his doings among
the people.” Isaiah xii. 2, 4.
LONDON:
Printed for and sold by the
Author, No. 10, Union-Street, Middlesex
Hospital
Sold also by Mr. Johnson, St.
Paul's Church-Yard; Mr.Murray,
Fleet-Street; Messrs. Robson and Clark, Bond-Street; Mr. Davis, opposite Gray's
Inn, Holborn;
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Oxford Street; Mr. Lackington, Chiswell-Street;
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be had of all the Booksellers in Town and Country.
To the
Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain.
My Lords and Gentlemen,
Permit me, with the greatest deference and respect,
to lay at your feet the following genuine Narrative;
the chief design of which is to excite in your august assemblies a sense of
compassion for the miseries which the Slave-Trade has entailed on my
unfortunate countrymen. By the horrors of that trade was I first torn away from
all the tender connexions that were naturally dear to
my heart; but these, through the mysterious ways of Providence, I ought to
regard as infinitely more than compensated by the introduction I have thence
obtained to the knowledge of the Christian religion, and of a nation which, by
its liberal sentiments, its humanity, the glorious freedom of its government,
and its proficiency in arts and sciences, has exalted the dignity of human
nature.
I am sensible I ought to entreat your pardon for
addressing to you a work so wholly devoid of literary merit; but, as the
production of an unlettered African, who is actuated by the hope of becoming an
instrument towards the relief of his suffering countrymen, I trust that such a
man, pleading in such a cause, will be acquitted of boldness and presumption.
May the God of heaven inspire your hearts with
peculiar benevolence on that important day when the question of Abolition is to
be discussed, when thousands, in consequence of your Determination,
are to look for Happiness or Misery!
I am,
My Lords and Gentlemen,
Your most obedient,
And devoted humble Servant,
Olaudah Equiano,
or
Gustavus Vassa.
Union-Street, Mary-le-bone,
March 24, 1789.
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CONTENTS
Chapter I
The
author's account of his country, their manners and customs, &c.
Chapter II
The author's birth and
parentage—His being kidnapped with his sister—Horrors of a slave ship
Chapter III
The author is carried to Virginia—Arrives in England—His wonder at a fall of
snow
Chapter IV
A particular account of the
celebrated engagement between Admiral Boscawen and Monsieur Le Clue
Chapter V
Various interesting
instances of oppression, cruelty, and extortion
Chapter VI
Favourable change in the author's
situation—He commences merchant with threepence
Chapter VII
The author's disgust at the West Indies—Forms schemes to obtain his freedom
Chapter VIII
Three remarkable dreams—The author is shipwrecked on the Bahama-bank
Chapter IX
The author arrives at
Martinique—Meets with new difficulties, and sails for England
Chapter X
Some account of the manner
of the author's conversion to the faith of Jesus Christ
Chapter XI
Picking up eleven miserable
men at sea in returning to England
Chapter XII
Different transactions of
the author's life—Petition to the Queen—Conclusion
CHAPTER
I
The author's account of his country, and their manners and
customs—Administration of justice—Embrenche—Marriage
ceremony, and public entertainments—Mode of living—Dress—Manufactures
Buildings—Commerce—Agriculture—War and religion—Superstition of the natives—Funeral
ceremonies of the priests or magicians—Curious mode of discovering poison—Some
hints concerning the origin of the author's countrymen, with the opinions of
different writers on that subject
I believe it is difficult for those who publish
their own memoirs to escape the imputation of vanity; nor is this the only
disadvantage under which they labour: it is also
their misfortune, that what is uncommon is rarely, if ever, believed, and what
is obvious we are apt to turn from with disgust, and to charge the writer with
impertinence. People generally think those memoirs only worthy to be read or
remembered which abound in great or striking events, those, in short, which in
a high degree excite either admiration or pity: all others they consign to contempt
and oblivion. It is therefore, I confess, not a little hazardous in a private
and obscure individual, and a stranger too, thus to solicit the indulgent
attention of the public; especially when I own I offer here the history of neither a saint, a hero, nor a tyrant. I believe there
are few events in my life, which have not happened to many: it is true the
incidents of it are numerous; and, did I consider myself an European, I might
say my sufferings were great: but when I compare my lot with that of most of my
countrymen, I regard myself as a particular favourite
of Heaven, and acknowledge the mercies of Providence
in every occurrence of my life. If then the following narrative does not appear
sufficiently interesting to engage general attention, let my motive be some
excuse for its publication. I am not so foolishly vain as to expect from it
either immortality or literary reputation. If it affords any satisfaction to my
numerous friends, at whose request it has been written, or in the smallest
degree promotes the interests of humanity, the ends for which it was undertaken
will be fully attained, and every wish of my heart gratified. Let it therefore
be remembered, that, in wishing to avoid censure, I do not aspire to praise.
That part of Africa, known by the name of Guinea, to which the trade for slaves is carried
on, extends along the coast above 3400 miles, from the Senegal to Angola, and includes a variety of
kingdoms. Of these the most considerable is the kingdom of Benin,
both as to extent and wealth, the richness and cultivation of the soil, the
power of its king, and the number and warlike disposition of the inhabitants.
It is situated nearly under the line, and extends along the coast about 170
miles, but runs back into the interior part of Africa
to a distance hitherto I believe unexplored by any traveller;
and seems only terminated at length by the empire of Abyssinia,
near 1500 miles from its beginning. This kingdom is divided into many provinces
or districts: in one of the most remote and fertile of which, called Eboe, I was born, in the year 1745, in a charming fruitful
vale, named Essaka. The distance of this province
from the capital of Benin
and the sea coast must be very considerable; for I had never heard of white men
or Europeans, nor of the sea: and our subjection to the king of Benin
was little more than nominal; for every transaction of the government, as far
as my slender observation extended, was conducted by the chiefs or elders of
the place. The manners and government of a people who have little commerce with
other countries are generally very simple; and the history of what passes in
one family or village may serve as a specimen of a nation. My father was one of
those elders or chiefs I have spoken of, and was styled Embrenche;
a term, as I remember, importing the highest distinction, and signifying in our
language a mark of grandeur. This mark is conferred on the person entitled to
it, by cutting the skin across at the top of the forehead, and drawing it down
to the eye-brows; and while it is in this situation applying a warm hand, and
rubbing it until it shrinks up into a thick weal across the lower part of the
forehead. Most of the judges and senators were thus marked; my father had long
born it: I had seen it conferred on one of my brothers, and I was also destined
to receive it by my parents. Those Embrence, or chief
men, decided disputes and punished crimes; for which purpose they always
assembled together. The proceedings were generally short; and in most cases the
law of retaliation prevailed. I remember a man was brought before my father,
and the other judges, for kidnapping a boy; and, although he was the son of a
chief or senator, he was condemned to make recompense by a man or woman slave.
Adultery, however, was sometimes punished with slavery or death; a punishment
which I believe is inflicted on it throughout most of the nations of AfricaA: so sacred among them is the honour of the marriage bed, and so jealous are they of the
fidelity of their wives. Of this I recollect an instance:—a woman was convicted
before the judges of adultery, and delivered over, as the custom was, to her
husband to be punished. Accordingly he determined to put her to death: but it
being found, just before her execution, that she had an infant at her breast;
and no woman being prevailed on to perform the part of a nurse, she was spared
on account of the child. The men, however, do not preserve the same constancy
to their wives, which they expect from them; for they indulge in a plurality,
though seldom in more than two. Their mode of marriage is thus:—both parties
are usually betrothed when young by their parents, (though I have known the
males to betroth themselves). On this occasion a feast is prepared, and the
bride and bridegroom stand up in the midst of all their friends, who are
assembled for the purpose, while he declares she is thenceforth to be looked
upon as his wife, and that no other person is to pay any addresses to her. This
is also immediately proclaimed in the vicinity, on which the bride retires from
the assembly. Some time after she is brought home to her husband, and then
another feast is made, to which the relations of both parties are invited: her
parents then deliver her to the bridegroom, accompanied with a number of
blessings, and at the same time they tie round her waist a cotton string of the
thickness of a goose-quill, which none but married women are permitted to wear:
she is now considered as completely his wife; and at this time the dowry is
given to the new married pair, which generally consists of portions of land,
slaves, and cattle, household goods, and implements of husbandry. These are
offered by the friends of both parties; besides which the parents of the
bridegroom present gifts to those of the bride, whose property she is looked
upon before marriage; but after it she is esteemed the sole property of her
husband. The ceremony being now ended the festival begins, which is celebrated
with bonefires, and loud acclamations of joy,
accompanied with music and dancing.
We are almost a nation of dancers, musicians, and
poets. Thus every great event, such as a triumphant return from battle, or
other cause of public rejoicing is celebrated in public dances, which are
accompanied with songs and music suited to the occasion. The assembly is
separated into four divisions, which dance either apart or in succession, and
each with a character peculiar to itself. The first division contains the
married men, who in their dances frequently exhibit feats of arms, and the
representation of a battle. To these succeed the married women, who dance in
the second division. The young men occupy the third; and the maidens the
fourth. Each represents some interesting scene of real life, such as a great
achievement, domestic employment, a pathetic story, or some rural sport; and as
the subject is generally founded on some recent event, it is therefore ever
new. This gives our dances a spirit and variety which I have scarcely seen elsewhereB. We have many musical instruments,
particularly drums of different kinds, a piece of music which resembles a
guitar, and another much like a stickado.
These last are chiefly used by betrothed virgins, who play on them on all grand
festivals.
As our manners are simple, our luxuries are few. The
dress of both sexes is nearly the same. It generally consists of a long piece
of callico, or muslin, wrapped loosely round the
body, somewhat in the form of a highland plaid. This is usually dyed blue,
which is our favourite colour.
It is extracted from a berry, and is brighter and richer than any I have seen
in Europe. Besides this, our women of
distinction wear golden ornaments; which they dispose with some profusion on
their arms and legs. When our women are not employed with the men in tillage,
their usual occupation is spinning and weaving cotton, which they afterwards
dye, and make it into garments. They also manufacture earthen vessels, of which
we have many kinds. Among the rest tobacco pipes, made after
the same fashion, and used in the same manner, as those in TurkeyC.
Our manner of living is entirely plain; for as yet
the natives are unacquainted with those refinements in cookery which debauch
the taste: bullocks, goats, and poultry, supply the greatest part of their
food. These constitute likewise the principal wealth of the country, and the
chief articles of its commerce. The flesh is usually stewed in a pan; to make
it savoury we sometimes use also pepper, and other
spices, and we have salt made of wood ashes. Our vegetables are mostly
plantains, eadas, yams, beans, and Indian corn. The
head of the family usually eats alone; his wives and slaves have also their
separate tables. Before we taste food we always wash our hands: indeed our
cleanliness on all occasions is extreme; but on this it is an indispensable
ceremony. After washing, libation is made, by pouring out a small portion of
the food, in a certain place, for the spirits of departed relations, which the
natives suppose to preside over their conduct, and guard them from evil. They
are totally unacquainted with strong or spirituous liquours;
and their principal beverage is palm wine. This is gotten from a tree of that
name by tapping it at the top, and fastening a large gourd to it; and sometimes
one tree will yield three or four gallons in a night. When just drawn it is of
a most delicious sweetness; but in a few days it acquires a tartish
and more spirituous flavour: though I never saw any
one intoxicated by it. The same tree also produces nuts and oil. Our principal
luxury is in perfumes; one sort of these is an odoriferous wood of delicious
fragrance: the other a kind of earth; a small portion of which thrown into the
fire diffuses a most powerful odourD. We beat this
wood into powder, and mix it with palm oil; with which both men and women
perfume themselves.
In our buildings we study convenience rather than
ornament. Each master of a family has a large square piece of ground,
surrounded with a moat or fence, or enclosed with a wall made of red earth
tempered; which, when dry, is as hard as brick. Within this are his houses to
accommodate his family and slaves; which, if numerous, frequently present the
appearance of a village. In the middle stands the principal building,
appropriated to the sole use of the master, and consisting of two apartments;
in one of which he sits in the day with his family, the other is left apart for
the reception of his friends. He has besides these a distinct apartment in
which he sleeps, together with his male children. On each side are the
apartments of his wives, who have also their separate day and night houses. The habitations of the slaves and their
families are distributed throughout the rest of the enclosure. These houses
never exceed one story in height: they are always built of wood, or stakes
driven into the ground, crossed with wattles, and neatly plastered within, and
without. The roof is thatched with reeds. Our day-houses are left open at the
sides; but those in which we sleep are always covered, and plastered in the
inside, with a composition mixed with cow-dung, to keep off the different
insects, which annoy us during the night. The walls and floors also of these
are generally covered with mats. Our beds consist of a platform, raised three
or four feet from the ground, on which are laid skins, and different parts of a
spungy tree called plaintain.
Our covering is calico or muslin, the same as our dress. The usual seats are a
few logs of wood; but we have benches, which are generally perfumed, to
accommodate strangers: these compose the greater part of our household furniture.
Houses so constructed and furnished require but little skill to erect them.
Every man is a sufficient architect for the purpose. The whole neighbourhood
afford their unanimous assistance in building them and in return
receive, and expect no other recompense than a feast.
As we live in a country where nature is prodigal of
her favours, our wants are few and easily supplied;
of course we have few manufactures. They consist for the most part of calicoes,
earthern ware, ornaments, and instruments of war and
husbandry. But these make no part of our commerce, the principal articles of
which, as I have observed, are provisions. In such a state
money is of little use; however we have some small pieces of coin, if I may
call them such. They are made something like an anchor; but I do not remember
either their value or denomination. We have also markets, at which I have been
frequently with my mother. These are sometimes visited by stout mahogany-coloured men from the south west of us: we call them Oye-Eboe, which term signifies red men living at a
distance. They generally bring us fire-arms, gunpowder, hats, beads, and dried
fish. The last we esteemed a great rarity, as our waters were only brooks and
springs. These articles they barter with us for odoriferous woods and earth,
and our salt of wood ashes. They always carry slaves through our land; but the
strictest account is exacted of their manner of procuring them before they are
suffered to pass. Sometimes indeed we sold slaves to them, but they were only
prisoners of war, or such among us as had been convicted of kidnapping, or
adultery, and some other crimes, which we esteemed heinous. This practice of
kidnapping induces me to think, that, notwithstanding all our strictness, their
principal business among us was to trepan our people. I remember too they
carried great sacks along with them, which not long after I had an opportunity
of fatally seeing applied to that infamous purpose.
Our land is uncommonly rich and fruitful, and
produces all kinds of vegetables in great abundance. We have plenty of Indian
corn, and vast quantities of cotton and tobacco. Our pine apples grow without
culture; they are about the size of the largest sugar-loaf, and finely flavoured. We have also spices of different kinds,
particularly pepper; and a variety of delicious fruits which I have never seen
in Europe; together with gums of various
kinds, and honey in abundance. All our industry is exerted to improve those
blessings of nature. Agriculture is our chief employment; and every one, even
the children and women, are engaged in it. Thus we are all habituated to labour from our earliest years. Every one contributes
something to the common stock; and as we are unacquainted with idleness, we
have no beggars. The benefits of such a mode of living are obvious. The West
India planters prefer the slaves of Benin
or Eboe to those of any other part of Guinea,
for their hardiness, intelligence, integrity, and zeal. Those benefits are felt
by us in the general healthiness of the people, and in their vigour and activity; I might have added too in their
comeliness. Deformity is indeed unknown amongst us, I mean that of shape.
Numbers of the natives of Eboe now in London might be brought in
support of this assertion: for, in regard to complexion, ideas of beauty are
wholly relative. I remember while in Africa to
have seen three negro children, who were tawny, and
another quite white, who were universally regarded by myself, and the natives
in general, as far as related to their complexions, as deformed. Our women too were in my eyes at least uncommonly graceful, alert, and
modest to a degree of bashfulness; nor do I remember to have ever heard of an
instance of incontinence amongst them before marriage. They are also remarkably
cheerful. Indeed cheerfulness and affability are two of the leading
characteristics of our nation.
Our tillage is exercised in a large plain or common,
some hours walk from our dwellings, and all the neighbours
resort thither in a body. They use no beasts of husbandry; and their only
instruments are hoes, axes, shovels, and beaks, or pointed iron to dig with.
Sometimes we are visited by locusts, which come in large clouds, so as to
darken the air, and destroy our harvest. This however happens rarely, but when
it does, a famine is produced by it. I remember an instance or two wherein this
happened. This common is often the theatre of war; and therefore when our
people go out to till their land, they not only go in a body, but generally
take their arms with them for fear of a surprise; and when they apprehend an
invasion they guard the avenues to their dwellings, by driving sticks into the
ground, which are so sharp at one end as to pierce the foot, and are generally dipt in poison. From what I can recollect of these battles,
they appear to have been irruptions of one little state or district on the
other, to obtain prisoners or booty. Perhaps they were incited to this by those
traders who brought the European goods I mentioned amongst us. Such a mode of
obtaining slaves in Africa is common; and I
believe more are procured this way, and by kidnapping, than any otherE. When a trader wants slaves, he
applies to a chief for them, and tempts him with his wares. It is not
extraordinary, if on this occasion he yields to the temptation with as little
firmness, and accepts the price of his fellow creatures
liberty with as little reluctance as the enlightened merchant. Accordingly he
falls on his neighbours, and a desperate battle
ensues. If he prevails and takes prisoners, he gratifies his avarice by selling
them; but, if his party be vanquished, and he falls into the hands of the
enemy, he is put to death: for, as he has been known to foment their quarrels,
it is thought dangerous to let him survive, and no ransom can save him, though
all other prisoners may be redeemed. We have fire-arms, bows and arrows, broad
two-edged swords and javelins: we have shields also which cover a man from head
to foot. All are taught the use of these weapons; even our women are warriors,
and march boldly out to fight along with the men. Our whole district is a kind
of militia: on a certain signal given, such as the firing of a gun at night,
they all rise in arms and rush upon their enemy. It is perhaps something
remarkable, that when our people march to the field a red flag or banner is
borne before them. I was once a witness to a battle in our common. We had been
all at work in it one day as usual, when our people were suddenly attacked. I
climbed a tree at some distance, from which I beheld the fight. There were many
women as well as men on both sides; among others my mother was there, and armed
with a broad sword. After fighting for a considerable time with great fury, and
after many had been killed our people obtained the victory, and took their
enemy's Chief prisoner. He was carried off in great triumph, and, though he
offered a large ransom for his life, he was put to death. A virgin of note
among our enemies had been slain in the battle, and her arm was exposed in our
market-place, where our trophies were always exhibited. The spoils were divided
according to the merit of the warriors. Those prisoners which were not sold or
redeemed we kept as slaves: but how different was
their condition from that of the slaves in the West Indies!
With us they do no more work than other members of the community, even their
masters; their food, clothing and lodging were nearly the same as theirs,
(except that they were not permitted to eat with those who were free-born); and
there was scarce any other difference between them, than a superior degree of
importance which the head of a family possesses in our state, and that
authority which, as such, he exercises over every part of his household. Some
of these slaves have even slaves under them as their own property, and for
their own use.
As to religion, the natives
believe that there is one Creator of all things, and that he lives in the sun,
and is girted round with a belt that he may
never eat or drink; but, according to some, he smokes a pipe, which is our own favourite luxury. They believe he governs events,
especially our deaths or captivity; but, as for the doctrine of eternity, I do
not remember to have ever heard of it: some however believe in the
transmigration of souls in a certain degree. Those spirits, which are not
transmigrated, such as our dear friends or relations, they believe always
attend them, and guard them from the bad spirits or their foes. For this reason
they always before eating, as I have observed, put some small portion of the
meat, and pour some of their drink, on the ground for them; and they often make
oblations of the blood of beasts or fowls at their graves. I was very fond of
my mother, and almost constantly with her. When she went to make these
oblations at her mother's tomb, which was a kind of small solitary thatched
house, I sometimes attended her. There she made her libations, and spent most
of the night in cries and lamentations. I have been often extremely terrified
on these occasions. The loneliness of the place, the darkness of the night, and
the ceremony of libation, naturally awful and gloomy, were heightened by my
mother's lamentations; and these, concuring with the
cries of doleful birds, by which these places were frequented, gave an
inexpressible terror to the scene.
We compute the year from the day on which the sun
crosses the line, and on its setting that evening there is a general shout
throughout the land; at least I can speak from my own knowledge throughout our
vicinity. The people at the same time make a great noise with rattles, not
unlike the basket rattles used by children here, though much larger, and hold
up their hands to heaven for a blessing. It is then the greatest offerings are
made; and those children whom our wise men foretel
will be fortunate are then presented to different people. I remember many used
to come to see me, and I was carried about to others for that purpose. They
have many offerings, particularly at full moons; generally two at harvest
before the fruits are taken out of the ground: and when any young animals are
killed, sometimes they offer up part of them as a sacrifice. These offerings,
when made by one of the heads of a family, serve for the whole. I remember we
often had them at my father's and my uncle's, and
their families have been present. Some of our offerings are eaten with bitter
herbs. We had a saying among us to any one of a cross temper, 'That if they
were to be eaten, they should be eaten with bitter herbs.'
We practised circumcision
like the Jews, and made offerings and feasts on that occasion in the same
manner as they did. Like them also, our children were named from some event,
some circumstance, or fancied foreboding at the time of their birth. I was
named Olaudah, which, in our language, signifies
vicissitude or fortune also, one favoured, and having
a loud voice and well spoken. I remember we never polluted the name of the
object of our adoration; on the contrary, it was always mentioned with the
greatest reverence; and we were totally unacquainted with swearing, and all
those terms of abuse and reproach which find their way so readily and copiously
into the languages of more civilized people. The only expressions of that kind
I remember were 'May you rot, or may you swell, or may a beast take you.'
I have before remarked that the natives of this part
of Africa are extremely cleanly. This
necessary habit of decency was with us a part of religion, and therefore we had
many purifications and washings; indeed almost as many, and used on the same
occasions, if my recollection does not fail me, as the Jews. Those that touched
the dead at any time were obliged to wash and purify themselves before they
could enter a dwelling-house. Every woman too, at certain times, was forbidden
to come into a dwelling-house, or touch any person, or any thing we ate. I was
so fond of my mother I could not keep from her, or avoid touching her at some
of those periods, in consequence of which I was obliged to be kept out with
her, in a little house made for that purpose, till offering was made, and then
we were purified.
Though we had no places of public worship, we had
priests and magicians, or wise men. I do not remember whether they had
different offices, or whether they were united in the same persons, but they
were held in great reverence by the people. They calculated our time, and
foretold events, as their name imported, for we called them Ah-affoe-way-cah, which signifies calculators or yearly men,
our year being called Ah-affoe. They wore their
beards, and when they died they were succeeded by their sons. Most of their
implements and things of value were interred along with them. Pipes and tobacco
were also put into the grave with the corpse, which was always perfumed and
ornamented, and animals were offered in sacrifice to them. None accompanied their
funerals but those of the same profession or tribe. These buried them after
sunset, and always returned from the grave by a different way from that which
they went.
These magicians were also our doctors or physicians.
They practised bleeding by cupping; and were very
successful in healing wounds and expelling poisons. They had likewise some
extraordinary method of discovering jealousy, theft, and poisoning; the success
of which no doubt they derived from their unbounded influence over the
credulity and superstition of the people. I do not remember what those methods
were, except that as to poisoning: I recollect an instance or two, which I hope
it will not be deemed impertinent here to insert, as it may serve as a kind of
specimen of the rest, and is still used by the negroes in the West
Indies. A virgin had been poisoned, but it was not known by whom:
the doctors ordered the corpse to be taken up by some persons, and carried to
the grave. As soon as the bearers had raised it on their shoulders, they seemed
seized with someF sudden impulse, and ran to and fro
unable to stop themselves. At last, after having passed through a number of
thorns and prickly bushes unhurt, the corpse fell from them close to a house,
and defaced it in the fall; and, the owner being taken up, he immediately
confessed the poisoningG.
The natives are extremely cautious about poison.
When they buy any eatable the seller kisses it all round before the buyer, to shew him it is not poisoned; and the same is done when any
meat or drink is presented, particularly to a stranger. We have serpents of
different kinds, some of which are esteemed ominous when they appear in our
houses, and these we never molest. I remember two of those ominous snakes, each
of which was as thick as the calf of a man's leg, and in colour
resembling a dolphin in the water, crept at different times into my mother's
night-house, where I always lay with her, and coiled themselves into folds, and
each time they crowed like a cock. I was desired by some of our wise men to
touch these, that I might be interested in the good omens, which I did, for
they were quite harmless, and would tamely suffer themselves
to be handled; and then they were put into a large open earthen pan, and set on
one side of the highway. Some of our snakes, however, were poisonous: one of
them crossed the road one day when I was standing on it, and passed between my
feet without offering to touch me, to the great surprise of many who saw it;
and these incidents were accounted by the wise men, and therefore by my mother
and the rest of the people, as remarkable omens in my favour.
Such is the imperfect sketch my memory has furnished
me with of the manners and customs of a people among whom I first drew my
breath. And here I cannot forbear suggesting what has long struck me very
forcibly, namely, the strong analogy which even by this sketch, imperfect as it
is, appears to prevail in the manners and customs of my countrymen and those of
the Jews, before they reached the Land of Promise, and particularly the
patriarchs while they were yet in that pastoral state which is described in
Genesis—an analogy, which alone would induce me to think that the one people
had sprung from the other. Indeed this is the opinion of Dr. Gill, who, in his
commentary on Genesis, very ably deduces the pedigree of the Africans from Afer and Afra, the descendants of
Abraham by Keturah his wife and concubine (for both
these titles are applied to her). It is also conformable to the sentiments of
Dr. John Clarke, formerly Dean of Sarum, in his Truth
of the Christian Religion: both these authors concur in ascribing to us this
original. The reasonings of these gentlemen are still
further confirmed by the scripture chronology; and if any further corroboration
were required, this resemblance in so many respects is a
strong evidence in support of the opinion. Like the Israelites in their
primitive state, our government was conducted by our chiefs or judges, our wise
men and elders; and the head of a family with us enjoyed a similar authority
over his household with that which is ascribed to Abraham and the other
patriarchs. The law of retaliation obtained almost universally with us as with
them: and even their religion appeared to have shed upon us a ray of its glory,
though broken and spent in its passage, or eclipsed by the cloud with which
time, tradition, and ignorance might have enveloped it; for we had our
circumcision (a rule I believe peculiar to that people:) we had also our
sacrifices and burnt-offerings, our washings and purifications, on the same
occasions as they had.
As to the difference of colour
between the Eboan Africans and the modern Jews, I
shall not presume to account for it. It is a subject which has engaged the pens
of men of both genius and learning, and is far above my strength. The most able
and Reverend Mr. T. Clarkson, however, in his much admired Essay on the Slavery
and Commerce of the Human Species, has ascertained the cause, in a manner that
at once solves every objection on that account, and, on my mind at least, has
produced the fullest conviction. I shall therefore refer to that performance
for the theoryH, contenting myself with extracting
a fact as related by Dr. MitchelI. "The
Spaniards, who have inhabited America,
under the torrid zone, for any time, are become as
dark coloured as our native Indians of Virginia; of
which I myself have been a witness." There is also another instanceJ of a Portuguese settlement at Mitomba, a river in Sierra Leona; where the inhabitants are
bred from a mixture of the first Portuguese discoverers with the natives, and
are now become in their complexion, and in the woolly quality of their hair,
perfect negroes, retaining however a smattering of the Portuguese language.
These instances, and a great many more which might
be adduced, while they shew how the complexions of
the same persons vary in different climates, it is hoped may tend also to
remove the prejudice that some conceive against the natives of Africa on account of their colour.
Surely the minds of the Spaniards did not change with their complexions! Are
there not causes enough to which the apparent inferiority of an African may be
ascribed, without limiting the goodness of God, and supposing he forbore to
stamp understanding on certainly his own image, because "carved in
ebony." Might it not naturally be ascribed to their situation? When they
come among Europeans, they are ignorant of their language, religion, manners,
and customs. Are any pains taken to teach them these? Are they treated as men?
Does not slavery itself depress the mind, and extinguish all its fire and every
noble sentiment? But, above all, what advantages do not a refined people
possess over those who are rude and uncultivated. Let the polished and haughty
European recollect that his ancestors were once, like the Africans,
uncivilized, and even barbarous. Did Nature make them inferior to their sons? and should they too have been made slaves? Every rational
mind answers, No. Let such reflections as these melt
the pride of their superiority into sympathy for the wants and miseries of
their sable brethren, and compel them to acknowledge, that understanding is not
confined to feature or colour. If, when they look
round the world, they feel exultation, let it be tempered with benevolence to
others, and gratitude to God, "who hath made of one blood all nations of
men for to dwell on all the face of the earthK;
and whose wisdom is not our wisdom, neither are our ways his ways."
FOOTNOTES
A See Benezet's "Account of Guinea"
throughout.
B When I was in Smyrna
I have frequently seen the Greeks dance after this manner.
C The bowl is earthen, curiously figured, to which a long reed
is fixed as a tube. This tube is sometimes so long as to be born by one, and
frequently out of grandeur by two boys.
D When I was in Smyrna I saw
the same kind of earth, and brought some of it with me to England; it
resembles musk in strength, but is more delicious in scent, and is not unlike
the smell of a rose.
E See
Benezet's Account of Africa
throughout.
F See
also Leut. Matthew's Voyage, p. 123.
G An instance of this kind happened at
Montserrat in the West Indies in the year
1763. I then belonged to the Charming Sally, Capt. Doran.—The
chief mate, Mr. Mansfield, and some of the crew being one day on shore, were
present at the burying of a poisoned negro girl. Though they had often heard of
the circumstance of the running in such cases, and had even seen it, they
imagined it to be a trick of the corpse-bearers. The mate therefore desired two
of the sailors to take up the coffin, and carry it to the grave. The sailors,
who were all of the same opinion, readily obeyed; but they had scarcely raised
it to their shoulders, before they began to run furiously about, quite unable
to direct themselves, till, at last, without intention, they came to the hut of
him who had poisoned the girl. The coffin then immediately fell from their
shoulders against the hut, and damaged part of the wall. The owner of the hut
was taken into custody on this, and confessed the poisoning.—I give this story
as it was related by the mate and crew on their return to the ship. The credit
which is due to it I leave with the reader.
H Page
178 to 216.
I Philos. Trans. Nº 476, Sect. 4, cited by Mr.
Clarkson, p.205.
J Same page.
K Acts, c. xvii. v. 26.
CHAPTER II
The author's birth and parentage—His being kidnapped with his
sister—Their separation—Surprise at meeting again—Are finally separated—Account
of the different places and incidents the author met with till his arrival on
the coast—The effect the sight of a slave ship had on him—He sails for the West
Indies—Horrors of a slave ship—Arrives at Barbadoes,
where the cargo is sold and dispersed
I hope the reader will not think I have trespassed
on his patience in introducing myself to him with some account of the manners
and customs of my country. They had been implanted in me with great care, and
made an impression on my mind, which time could not erase, and which all the
adversity and variety of fortune I have since experienced served only to rivet and
record; for, whether the love of one's country be real or imaginary, or a
lesson of reason, or an instinct of nature, I still look back with pleasure on
the first scenes of my life, though that pleasure has been for the most part
mingled with sorrow.
I have already acquainted the reader with the time
and place of my birth. My father, besides many slaves, had a numerous family,
of which seven lived to grow up, including myself and a sister, who was the
only daughter. As I was the youngest of the sons, I became, of course, the
greatest favourite with my mother, and was always
with her; and she used to take particular pains to form my mind. I was trained
up from my earliest years in the art of war; my daily exercise was shooting and
throwing javelins; and my mother adorned me with emblems, after the manner of
our greatest warriors. In this way I grew up till I was turned the age of
eleven, when an end was put to my happiness in the following manner:—Generally
when the grown people in the neighbourhood were gone
far in the fields to labour, the children assembled
together in some of the neighbours' premises to play;
and commonly some of us used to get up a tree to look out for any assailant, or
kidnapper, that might come upon us; for they sometimes took those opportunities
of our parents' absence to attack and carry off as many as they could seize.
One day, as I was watching at the top of a tree in our yard, I saw one of those
people come into the yard of our next neighbour but
one, to kidnap, there being many stout young people in it. Immediately on this
I gave the alarm of the rogue, and he was surrounded by the stoutest of them,
who entangled him with cords, so that he could not escape till some of the
grown people came and secured him. But alas! ere long
it was my fate to be thus attacked, and to be carried off, when none of the
grown people were nigh. One day, when all our people were gone out to their
works as usual, and only I and my dear sister were left to mind the house, two
men and a woman got over our walls, and in a moment seized us both, and,
without giving us time to cry out, or make resistance, they stopped our mouths,
and ran off with us into the nearest wood. Here they tied our hands, and
continued to carry us as far as they could, till night came on, when we reached
a small house, where the robbers halted for refreshment, and spent the night.
We were then unbound, but were unable to take any food; and, being quite
overpowered by fatigue and grief, our only relief was some sleep, which allayed
our misfortune for a short time. The next morning we left the house, and
continued travelling all the day. For a long time we
had kept the woods, but at last we came into a road which I believed I knew. I
had now some hopes of being delivered; for we had advanced but a little way
before I discovered some people at a distance, on which I began to cry out for
their assistance: but my cries had no other effect than to make them tie me
faster and stop my mouth, and then they put me into a large sack. They also stopped
my sister's mouth, and tied her hands; and in this manner we proceeded till we
were out of the sight of these people. When we went to rest the following night
they offered us some victuals; but we refused it; and the only comfort we had
was in being in one another's arms all that night, and bathing each other with
our tears. But alas! we were soon deprived of even the
small comfort of weeping together. The next day proved a day of greater sorrow
than I had yet experienced; for my sister and I were then separated, while we
lay clasped in each other's arms. It was in vain that we besought them not to
part us; she was torn from me, and immediately carried away, while I was left
in a state of distraction not to be described. I cried and grieved continually;
and for several days I did not eat any thing but what they forced into my
mouth. At length, after many days travelling, during
which I had often changed masters, I got into the hands of a chieftain, in a
very pleasant country. This man had two wives and some children, and they all
used me extremely well, and did all they could to comfort me; particularly the
first wife, who was something like my mother. Although I was a great many days
journey from my father's house, yet these people spoke exactly the same language
with us. This first master of mine, as I may call him, was a smith, and my
principal employment was working his bellows, which were the same kind as I had
seen in my vicinity. They were in some respects not unlike the stoves here in
gentlemen's kitchens; and were covered over with leather; and in the middle of
that leather a stick was fixed, and a person stood up, and worked it, in the
same manner as is done to pump water out of a cask with a hand pump. I believe
it was gold he worked, for it was of a lovely bright yellow colour,
and was worn by the women on their wrists and ancles.
I was there I suppose about a month, and they at last
used to trust me some little distance from the house. This liberty I used in
embracing every opportunity to inquire the way to my own home: and I also
sometimes, for the same purpose, went with the maidens, in the cool of the
evenings, to bring pitchers of water from the springs for the use of the house.
I had also remarked where the sun rose in the morning, and set in the evening,
as I had travelled along; and I had observed that my
father's house was towards the rising of the sun. I therefore determined to
seize the first opportunity of making my escape, and to shape my course for
that quarter; for I was quite oppressed and weighed down by grief after my
mother and friends; and my love of liberty, ever great, was strengthened by the
mortifying circumstance of not daring to eat with the free-born children,
although I was mostly their companion. While I was projecting my escape, one
day an unlucky event happened, which quite disconcerted my plan, and put an end
to my hopes. I used to be sometimes employed in assisting an elderly woman
slave to cook and take care of the poultry; and one morning, while I was
feeding some chickens, I happened to toss a small pebble at one of them, which
hit it on the middle and directly killed it. The old slave, having soon after
missed the chicken, inquired after it; and on my relating the accident (for I
told her the truth, because my mother would never suffer me to tell a lie) she
flew into a violent passion, threatened that I should suffer for it; and, my
master being out, she immediately went and told her mistress what I had done.
This alarmed me very much, and I expected an instant flogging, which to me was
uncommonly dreadful; for I had seldom been beaten at home. I therefore resolved
to fly; and accordingly I ran into a thicket that was hard by, and hid myself
in the bushes. Soon afterwards my mistress and the slave returned, and, not seeing
me, they searched all the house, but not finding me,
and I not making answer when they called to me, they thought I had run away,
and the whole neighbourhood was raised in the pursuit
of me. In that part of the country (as in ours) the houses and villages were
skirted with woods, or shrubberies, and the bushes
were so thick that a man could readily conceal himself in them, so as to elude
the strictest search. The neighbours continued the
whole day looking for me, and several times many of them came within a few
yards of the place where I lay hid. I then gave myself up for lost entirely,
and expected every moment, when I heard a rustling among the trees, to be found
out, and punished by my master: but they never discovered me, though they were
often so near that I even heard their conjectures as they were looking about
for me; and I now learned from them, that any attempt to return home would be
hopeless. Most of them supposed I had fled towards home; but the distance was
so great, and the way so intricate, that they thought I could never reach it,
and that I should be lost in the woods. When I heard this I was seized with a
violent panic, and abandoned myself to despair. Night too began to approach,
and aggravated all my fears. I had before entertained hopes of getting home,
and I had determined when it should be dark to make the attempt; but I was now
convinced it was fruitless, and I began to consider that, if possibly I could
escape all other animals, I could not those of the human kind; and that, not knowing
the way, I must perish in the woods. Thus was I like the hunted deer:
"Ev'ry leaf and ev'ry whisp'ring breath
Convey'd a foe, and ev'ry foe a death."
I heard frequent rustlings among the leaves; and
being pretty sure they were snakes I expected every instant to be stung by
them. This increased my anguish, and the horror of my situation became now
quite insupportable. I at length quitted the thicket, very faint and hungry,
for I had not eaten or drank any thing all the day; and crept to my master's
kitchen, from whence I set out at first, and which was an open shed, and laid
myself down in the ashes with an anxious wish for death to relieve me from all
my pains. I was scarcely awake in the morning when the old woman slave, who was
the first up, came to light the fire, and saw me in the fire place. She was
very much surprised to see me, and could scarcely believe her own eyes. She now
promised to intercede for me, and went for her master, who soon after came,
and, having slightly reprimanded me, ordered me to be taken care of, and not to
be ill-treated.
Soon after this my master's only daughter, and child
by his first wife, sickened and died, which affected him so much that for some
time he was almost frantic, and really would have killed himself, had he not
been watched and prevented. However, in a small time afterwards he recovered,
and I was again sold. I was now carried to the left of the sun's rising,
through many different countries, and a number of large woods. The people I was
sold to used to carry me very often, when I was tired, either on their
shoulders or on their backs. I saw many convenient well-built sheds along the
roads, at proper distances, to accommodate the merchants and travellers, who lay in those buildings along with their
wives, who often accompany them; and they always go well armed.
From the time I left my own nation I always found
somebody that understood me till I came to the sea coast. The languages of
different nations did not totally differ, nor were they so
copious as those of the Europeans, particularly the English. They were
therefore easily learned; and, while I was journeying thus through Africa, I acquired two or three different tongues. In
this manner I had been travelling for a considerable
time, when one evening, to my great surprise, whom
should I see brought to the house where I was but my dear sister! As soon as
she saw me she gave a loud shriek, and ran into my arms—I was quite
overpowered: neither of us could speak; but, for a considerable time, clung to
each other in mutual embraces, unable to do any thing but weep. Our meeting
affected all who saw us; and indeed I must acknowledge, in honour
of those sable destroyers of human rights, that I never met with any ill
treatment, or saw any offered to their slaves, except tying them, when
necessary, to keep them from running away. When these people knew we were
brother and sister they indulged us together; and the man, to whom I supposed
we belonged, lay with us, he in the middle, while she and I held one another by
the hands across his breast all night; and thus for a while we forgot our
misfortunes in the joy of being together: but even this small comfort was soon
to have an end; for scarcely had the fatal morning appeared, when she was again
torn from me for ever! I was now more miserable, if possible, than before. The
small relief which her presence gave me from pain was gone, and the
wretchedness of my situation was redoubled by my anxiety after her fate, and my apprehensions lest her sufferings should be
greater than mine, when I could not be with her to alleviate them. Yes, thou
dear partner of all my childish sports! thou sharer of
my joys and sorrows! happy should I have ever esteemed
myself to encounter every misery for you, and to procure your freedom by the sacrifice
of my own. Though you were early forced from my arms, your image has been
always rivetted in my heart, from which neither time
nor fortune have been able to remove it; so that, while the thoughts of your
sufferings have damped my prosperity, they have mingled with adversity and
increased its bitterness. To that Heaven which protects the weak from the
strong, I commit the care of your innocence and virtues, if they have not
already received their full reward, and if your youth and delicacy have not
long since fallen victims to the violence of the African trader, the
pestilential stench of a Guinea ship, the seasoning in the European colonies,
or the lash and lust of a brutal and unrelenting overseer.
I did not long remain after my sister. I was again
sold, and carried through a number of places, till, after travelling
a considerable time, I came to a town called Tinmah,
in the most beautiful country I have yet seen in Africa.
It was extremely rich, and there were many rivulets which flowed through it,
and supplied a large pond in the centre of the town, where the people washed.
Here I first saw and tasted cocoa-nuts, which I thought superior to any nuts I
had ever tasted before; and the trees, which were loaded, were also
interspersed amongst the houses, which had commodious shades adjoining, and
were in the same manner as ours, the insides being neatly plastered and
whitewashed. Here I also saw and tasted for the first time sugar-cane. Their
money consisted of little white shells, the size of the finger nail. I was sold
here for one hundred and seventy-two of them by a merchant who lived and
brought me there. I had been about two or three days at his house, when a
wealthy widow, a neighbour of his, came there one
evening, and brought with her an only son, a young gentleman about my own age
and size. Here they saw me; and, having taken a fancy to me, I was bought of
the merchant, and went home with them. Her house and premises were situated
close to one of those rivulets I have mentioned, and were the finest I ever saw
in Africa: they were very extensive, and she
had a number of slaves to attend her. The next day I was washed and perfumed,
and when meal-time came I was led into the presence of my mistress, and ate and
drank before her with her son. This filled me with astonishment; and I could
scarce help expressing my surprise that the young gentleman should suffer me,
who was bound, to eat with him who was free; and not only so, but that he would
not at any time either eat or drink till I had taken first, because I was the
eldest, which was agreeable to our custom. Indeed every thing here, and all
their treatment of me, made me forget that I was a slave. The language of these
people resembled ours so nearly, that we understood each other perfectly. They had
also the very same customs as we. There were likewise slaves daily to attend
us, while my young master and I with other boys sported with our darts and bows
and arrows, as I had been used to do at home. In this resemblance to my former
happy state I passed about two months; and I now began to think I was to be
adopted into the family, and was beginning to be reconciled to my situation,
and to forget by degrees my misfortunes, when all at once the delusion
vanished; for, without the least previous knowledge, one morning early, while
my dear master and companion was still asleep, I was wakened out of my reverie
to fresh sorrow, and hurried away even amongst the uncircumcised.
Thus, at the very moment I
dreamed of the greatest happiness, I found myself most miserable; and it seemed
as if fortune wished to give me this taste of joy, only to render the reverse
more poignant. The change I now experienced was as painful as it was sudden and
unexpected. It was a change indeed from a state of bliss to a scene which is
inexpressible by me, as it discovered to me an element I had never before
beheld, and till then had no idea of, and wherein such instances of hardship
and cruelty continually occurred as I can never reflect on but with horror. All the nations and people I had hitherto passed
through resembled our own in their manners, customs, and language: but I came
at length to a country, the inhabitants of which differed from us in all those
particulars. I was very much struck with this difference, especially when I
came among a people who did not circumcise, and ate without washing their
hands. They cooked also in iron pots, and had European cutlasses and cross
bows, which were unknown to us, and fought with their fists amongst themselves.
Their women were not so modest as ours, for they ate,
and drank, and slept, with their men. But, above all, I was amazed to see no
sacrifices or offerings among them. In some of those places the people
ornamented themselves with scars, and likewise filed their teeth very sharp. They
wanted sometimes to ornament me in the same manner, but I would not suffer
them; hoping that I might some time be among a people
who did not thus disfigure themselves, as I thought they did. At last I came to
the banks of a large river, which was covered with canoes, in which the people
appeared to live with their household utensils and provisions of all kinds. I
was beyond measure astonished at this, as I had never before seen any water
larger than a pond or a rivulet: and my surprise was mingled with no small fear
when I was put into one of these canoes, and we began to paddle and move along
the river. We continued going on thus till night; and when we came to land, and
made fires on the banks, each family by themselves, some dragged their canoes
on shore, others stayed and cooked in theirs, and laid in them all night. Those
on the land had mats, of which they made tents, some in the shape of little
houses: in these we slept; and after the morning meal we embarked again and
proceeded as before. I was often very much astonished to see some of the women,
as well as the men, jump into the water, dive to the bottom, come up again, and
swim about. Thus I continued to travel, sometimes by land, sometimes by water,
through different countries and various nations, till, at the end of six or
seven months after I had been kidnapped, I arrived at the sea coast. It would
be tedious and uninteresting to relate all the incidents which befell me during
this journey, and which I have not yet forgotten; of the various hands I passed
through, and the manners and customs of all the different people among whom I
lived: I shall therefore only observe, that in all the places where I was the
soil was exceedingly rich; the pomkins, eadas, plantains, yams, &c. &c. were in great abundance,
and of incredible size. There were also vast quantities of different gums,
though not used for any purpose; and every where a great deal of tobacco. The
cotton even grew quite wild; and there was plenty of redwood. I saw no
mechanics whatever in all the way, except such as I have mentioned. The chief
employment in all these countries was agriculture, and both the males and
females, as with us, were brought up to it, and trained in the arts of war.
The first object which saluted my eyes when I arrived
on the coast was the sea, and a slave ship, which was then riding at anchor,
and waiting for its cargo. These filled me with astonishment, which was soon
converted into terror when I was carried on board. I was immediately handled
and tossed up to see if I were sound by some of the crew; and I was now
persuaded that I had gotten into a world of bad spirits, and that they were
going to kill me. Their complexions too differing so much from ours, their long
hair, and the language they spoke, (which was very different from any I had
ever heard) united to confirm me in this belief. Indeed such were the horrors
of my views and fears at the moment, that, if ten thousand worlds had been my
own, I would have freely parted with them all to have exchanged my condition
with that of the meanest slave in my own country. When I looked round the ship
too and saw a large furnace or copper boiling, and a multitude of black people
of every description chained together, every one of their countenances
expressing dejection and sorrow, I no longer doubted of my fate; and, quite
overpowered with horror and anguish, I fell motionless on the deck and fainted.
When I recovered a little I found some black people about me, who I believed
were some of those who brought me on board, and had been receiving their pay;
they talked to me in order to cheer me, but all in vain. I asked them if we
were not to be eaten by those white men with horrible looks, red faces, and
loose hair. They told me I was not; and one of the crew brought me a small
portion of spirituous liquor in a wine glass; but, being afraid of him, I would
not take it out of his hand. One of the blacks therefore took it from him and
gave it to me, and I took a little down my palate, which, instead of reviving
me, as they thought it would, threw me into the greatest consternation at the
strange feeling it produced, having never tasted any such liquor before. Soon
after this the blacks who brought me on board went off, and left me abandoned to despair. I now saw myself deprived of all
chance of returning to my native country, or even the least glimpse of hope of
gaining the shore, which I now considered as friendly; and I even wished for my
former slavery in preference to my present situation, which was filled with
horrors of every kind, still heightened by my ignorance of what I was to
undergo. I was not long suffered to indulge my grief; I was soon put down under
the decks, and there I received such a salutation in my nostrils as I had never
experienced in my life: so that, with the loathsomeness of the stench, and
crying together, I became so sick and low that I was not able to eat, nor had I
the least desire to taste any thing. I now wished for the last friend, death,
to relieve me; but soon, to my grief, two of the white men offered me eatables;
and, on my refusing to eat, one of them held me fast by the hands, and laid me
across I think the windlass, and tied my feet, while the other flogged me
severely. I had never experienced any thing of this kind before; and although,
not being used to the water, I naturally feared that element the first time I
saw it, yet nevertheless, could I have got over the nettings, I would have
jumped over the side, but I could not; and, besides, the crew used to watch us
very closely who were not chained down to the decks, lest we should leap into
the water: and I have seen some of these poor African prisoners most severely
cut for attempting to do so, and hourly whipped for not eating. This indeed was
often the case with myself. In a little time after,
amongst the poor chained men, I found some of my own nation, which in a small
degree gave ease to my mind. I inquired of these what was to be done with us;
they gave me to understand we were to be carried to these white people's
country to work for them. I then was a little revived, and thought, if it were
no worse than working, my situation was not so desperate: but still I feared I
should be put to death, the white people looked and acted, as I thought, in so
savage a manner; for I had never seen among any people such instances of brutal
cruelty; and this not only shewn towards us blacks,
but also to some of the whites themselves. One white man in particular I saw,
when we were permitted to be on deck, flogged so unmercifully with a large rope
near the foremast, that he died in consequence of it; and they tossed him over
the side as they would have done a brute. This made me fear these people the
more; and I expected nothing less than to be treated in the same manner. I
could not help expressing my fears and apprehensions to some of my countrymen:
I asked them if these people had no country, but lived in this hollow place
(the ship): they told me they did not, but came from a distant one. 'Then,'
said I, 'how comes it in all our country we never heard of them?' They told me
because they lived so very far off. I then asked where were their women? had they any like
themselves? I was told they had: 'and why,' said I,'do
we not see them?' they answered, because they were left behind. I asked how the
vessel could go? they told me
they could not tell; but that there were cloths put upon the masts by the help
of the ropes I saw, and then the vessel went on; and the white men had some
spell or magic they put in the water when they liked in order to stop the
vessel. I was exceedingly amazed at this account, and really thought they were
spirits. I therefore wished much to be from amongst them, for I expected they
would sacrifice me: but my wishes were vain; for we were so quartered that it
was impossible for any of us to make our escape. While we stayed on the coast I
was mostly on deck; and one day, to my great astonishment, I saw one of these
vessels coming in with the sails up. As soon as the whites saw it, they gave a
great shout, at which we were amazed; and the more so as the vessel appeared
larger by approaching nearer. At last she came to an anchor in my sight, and
when the anchor was let go I and my countrymen who saw it were lost in
astonishment to observe the vessel stop; and were not convinced it was done by
magic. Soon after this the other ship got her boats out, and they came on board
of us, and the people of both ships seemed very glad to see each other. Several
of the strangers also shook hands with us black people, and made motions with
their hands, signifying I suppose we were to go to their country; but we did
not understand them. At last, when the ship we were in had got in all her
cargo, they made ready with many fearful noises, and we were all put under
deck, so that we could not see how they managed the vessel. But this
disappointment was the least of my sorrow. The stench of the hold while we were
on the coast was so intolerably loathsome, that it was dangerous to remain
there for any time, and some of us had been permitted to stay on the deck for the
fresh air; but now that the whole ship's cargo were confined together, it
became absolutely pestilential. The closeness of the place, and the heat of the
climate, added to the number in the ship, which was so crowded that each had
scarcely room to turn himself, almost suffocated us. This produced copious
perspirations, so that the air soon became unfit for respiration, from a
variety of loathsome smells, and brought on a sickness among the slaves, of
which many died, thus falling victims to the improvident avarice, as I may call
it, of their purchasers. This wretched situation was again aggravated by the
galling of the chains, now become insupportable; and the filth of the necessary
tubs, into which the children often fell, and were almost suffocated. The
shrieks of the women, and the groans of the dying, rendered the whole a scene
of horror almost inconceivable. Happily perhaps for myself I was soon reduced
so low here that it was thought necessary to keep me almost always on deck; and
from my extreme youth I was not put in fetters. In this situation I expected
every hour to share the fate of my companions, some of whom were almost daily
brought upon deck at the point of death, which I began to hope would soon put
an end to my miseries. Often did I think many of the inhabitants of the deep
much more happy than myself. I envied them the freedom
they enjoyed, and as often wished I could change my condition for theirs. Every
circumstance I met with served only to render my state more painful, and
heighten my apprehensions, and my opinion of the cruelty of the whites. One day
they had taken a number of fishes; and when they had killed and satisfied
themselves with as many as they thought fit, to our astonishment who were on
the deck, rather than give any of them to us to eat as we expected, they tossed
the remaining fish into the sea again, although we begged and prayed for some
as well as we could, but in vain; and some of my countrymen, being pressed by
hunger, took an opportunity, when they thought no one saw them, of trying to
get a little privately; but they were discovered, and the attempt procured them
some very severe floggings. One day, when we had a smooth sea and moderate
wind, two of my wearied countrymen who were chained together (I was near them
at the time), preferring death to such a life of misery, somehow made through
the nettings and jumped into the sea: immediately another quite dejected
fellow, who, on account of his illness, was suffered to be out of irons, also
followed their example; and I believe many more would very soon have done the
same if they had not been prevented by the ship's crew, who were instantly
alarmed. Those of us that were the most active were in a moment put down under
the deck, and there was such a noise and confusion amongst the people of the
ship as I never heard before, to stop her, and get the boat out to go after the
slaves. However two of the wretches were drowned, but they got the other, and
afterwards flogged him unmercifully for thus attempting to prefer death to slavery.
In this manner we continued to undergo more hardships than I can now relate,
hardships which are inseparable from this accursed trade. Many a time we were
near suffocation from the want of fresh air, which we were often without for
whole days together. This, and the stench of the necessary tubs, carried off
many. During our passage I first saw flying fishes, which surprised me very
much: they used frequently to fly across the ship, and many of them fell on the
deck. I also now first saw the use of the quadrant; I had often with
astonishment seen the mariners make observations with it, and I could not think
what it meant. They at last took notice of my surprise; and one of them,
willing to increase it, as well as to gratify my curiosity, made me one day
look through it. The clouds appeared to me to be land, which disappeared as
they passed along. This heightened my wonder; and I was now more persuaded than
ever that I was in another world, and that every thing about me was magic. At
last we came in sight of the island
of Barbadoes,
at which the whites on board gave a great shout, and made many signs of joy to
us. We did not know what to think of this; but as the vessel drew nearer we
plainly saw the harbour, and other ships of different
kinds and sizes; and we soon anchored amongst them off Bridge Town.
Many merchants and planters now came on board, though it was in the evening.
They put us in separate parcels, and examined us attentively. They also made us
jump, and pointed to the land, signifying we were to go there. We thought by
this we should be eaten by these ugly men, as they appeared to us; and, when
soon after we were all put down under the deck again, there was much dread and
trembling among us, and nothing but bitter cries to be heard all the night from
these apprehensions, insomuch that at last the white people got some old slaves
from the land to pacify us. They told us we were not to be eaten, but to work,
and were soon to go on land, where we should see many of our country people.
This report eased us much; and sure enough, soon after we were landed, there
came to us Africans of all languages. We were conducted immediately to the
merchant's yard, where we were all pent up together like so many sheep in a
fold, without regard to sex or age. As every object was new to me every thing I
saw filled me with surprise. What struck me first was that the houses were
built with stories, and in every other respect different from those in Africa: but I was still more astonished on seeing people
on horseback. I did not know what this could mean; and indeed I thought these
people were full of nothing but magical arts. While I was in this astonishment
one of my fellow prisoners spoke to a countryman of his about the horses, who
said they were the same kind they had in their country. I understood them,
though they were from a distant part of Africa,
and I thought it odd I had not seen any horses there; but afterwards, when I
came to converse with different Africans, I found they had many horses amongst
them, and much larger than those I then saw. We were not many days in the
merchant's custody before we were sold after their usual manner, which is
this:—On a signal given,(as the beat of a drum) the
buyers rush at once into the yard where the slaves are confined, and make
choice of that parcel they like best. The noise and clamour
with which this is attended, and the eagerness visible in the countenances of
the buyers, serve not a little to increase the apprehensions of the terrified
Africans, who may well be supposed to consider them as the ministers of that
destruction to which they think themselves devoted. In this manner, without
scruple, are relations and friends separated, most of them never to see each
other again. I remember in the vessel in which I was brought over, in the men's
apartment, there were several brothers, who, in the sale, were sold in
different lots; and it was very moving on this occasion to see and hear their
cries at parting. O, ye nominal Christians! might not
an African ask you, learned you this from your God, who says unto you, Do unto
all men as you would men should do unto you? Is it not enough that we are torn
from our country and friends to toil for your luxury and lust of gain? Must
every tender feeling be likewise sacrificed to your avarice? Are the dearest
friends and relations, now rendered more dear by their
separation from their kindred, still to be parted from each other, and thus
prevented from cheering the gloom of slavery with the small comfort of being
together and mingling their sufferings and sorrows? Why are parents to lose
their children, brothers their sisters, or husbands their wives? Surely this is
a new refinement in cruelty, which, while it has no advantage to atone for it,
thus aggravates distress, and adds fresh horrors even to the wretchedness of
slavery.
CHAPTER III
The author is carried to Virginia—His
distress—Surprise at seeing a picture and a watch—Is bought by Captain Pascal,
and sets out for England—His
terror during the voyage—Arrives in England—His wonder at a fall of
snow—Is sent to Guernsey, and in some time
goes on board a ship of war with his master—Some account of the expedition
against Louisbourg under the command of Admiral
Boscawen, in 1758
I now totally lost the small remains of comfort I
had enjoyed in conversing with my countrymen; the women too, who used to wash
and take care of me, were all gone different ways, and I never saw one of them
afterwards.
I stayed in this island for a few days; I believe it
could not be above a fortnight; when I and some few more slaves, that were not
saleable amongst the rest, from very much fretting, were shipped off in a sloop
for North America. On the passage we were
better treated than when we were coming from Africa,
and we had plenty of rice and fat pork. We were landed up a river a good way
from the sea, about Virginia
county, where we saw few or none of our native
Africans, and not one soul who could talk to me. I was a few weeks weeding
grass, and gathering stones in a plantation; and at last all my companions were
distributed different ways, and only myself was left. I was now exceedingly
miserable, and thought myself worse off than any of the rest of my companions;
for they could talk to each other, but I had no person to speak to that I could
understand. In this state I was constantly grieving and
pining, and wishing for death rather than any thing else. While I was in
this plantation the gentleman, to whom I suppose the estate belonged, being
unwell, I was one day sent for to his dwelling house to fan him; when I came
into the room where he was I was very much affrighted at some things I saw, and
the more so as I had seen a black woman slave as I came through the house, who
was cooking the dinner, and the poor creature was cruelly loaded with various
kinds of iron machines; she had one particularly on her head, which locked her
mouth so fast that she could scarcely speak; and could not eat nor drink. I was
much astonished and shocked at this contrivance, which I afterwards learned was
called the iron muzzle. Soon after I had a fan put into my hand, to fan the
gentleman while he slept; and so I did indeed with great fear. While he was
fast asleep I indulged myself a great deal in looking about the room, which to
me appeared very fine and curious. The first object that engaged my attention
was a watch which hung on the chimney, and was going. I was quite surprised at
the noise it made, and was afraid it would tell the gentleman any thing I might
do amiss: and when I immediately after observed a picture hanging in the room,
which appeared constantly to look at me, I was still more affrighted, having
never seen such things as these before. At one time I thought it was something
relative to magic; and not seeing it move I thought it might be some way the
whites had to keep their great men when they died, and offer them libation as
we used to do to our friendly spirits. In this state of anxiety I remained till
my master awoke, when I was dismissed out of the room, to my no small
satisfaction and relief; for I thought that these people were all made up of
wonders. In this place I was called Jacob; but on board the African snow I was
called Michael. I had been some time in this miserable, forlorn, and much
dejected state, without having any one to talk to, which made my life a burden,
when the kind and unknown hand of the Creator (who in very deed leads the blind
in a way they know not) now began to appear, to my comfort; for one day the
captain of a merchant ship, called the Industrious Bee, came on some business
to my master's house. This gentleman, whose name was Michael Henry Pascal, was
a lieutenant in the royal navy, but now commanded this trading ship, which was
somewhere in the confines of the county many miles off. While he was at my
master's house it happened that he saw me, and liked me so well that he made a
purchase of me. I think I have often heard him say he gave thirty or forty
pounds sterling for me; but I do not now remember which. However, he meant me
for a present to some of his friends in England: and I was sent accordingly
from the house of my then master, one Mr. Campbell, to the place where the ship
lay; I was conducted on horseback by an elderly black man, (a mode of travelling which appeared very odd to me). When I arrived I
was carried on board a fine large ship, loaded with tobacco, &c. and just
ready to sail for England.
I now thought my condition much mended; I had sails to lie on, and plenty of
good victuals to eat; and every body on board used me very kindly, quite contrary
to what I had seen of any white people before; I therefore began to think that
they were not all of the same disposition. A few days after I was on board we
sailed for England.
I was still at a loss to conjecture my destiny. By this time, however, I could
smatter a little imperfect English; and I wanted to know as well as I could
where we were going. Some of the people of the ship used to tell me they were
going to carry me back to my own country, and this made me very happy. I was
quite rejoiced at the sound of going back; and thought if I should get home
what wonders I should have to tell. But I was reserved for another fate, and
was soon undeceived when we came within sight of the English coast. While I was
on board this ship, my captain and master named me Gustavus
Vassa. I at that time began to understand him a
little, and refused to be called so, and told him as well as I could that I
would be called Jacob; but he said I should not, and still called me Gustavus; and when I refused to answer to my new name,
which at first I did, it gained me many a cuff; so at length I submitted, and
was obliged to bear the present name, by which I have been known ever since.
The ship had a very long passage; and on that account we had very short
allowance of provisions. Towards the last we had only one pound and a half of
bread per week, and about the same quantity of meat, and one quart of water
a-day. We spoke with only one vessel the whole time we were at sea, and but
once we caught a few fishes. In our extremities the captain and people told me
in jest they would kill and eat me; but I thought them in earnest, and was
depressed beyond measure, expecting every moment to be my last. While I was in
this situation one evening they caught, with a good deal of trouble, a large
shark, and got it on board. This gladdened my poor heart exceedingly, as I
thought it would serve the people to eat instead of their eating me; but very
soon, to my astonishment, they cut off a small part of the tail, and tossed the
rest over the side. This renewed my consternation; and I did not know what to
think of these white people, though I very much feared they would kill and eat
me. There was on board the ship a young lad who had never been at sea before,
about four or five years older than myself: his name
was Richard Baker. He was a native of America, had received an excellent
education, and was of a most amiable temper. Soon after I went on board he shewed me a great deal of partiality and attention, and in
return I grew extremely fond of him. We at length became inseparable; and, for
the space of two years, he was of very great use to me, and was my constant
companion and instructor. Although this dear youth had many slaves of his own,
yet he and I have gone through many sufferings together on shipboard; and we
have many nights lain in each other's bosoms when we were in great distress.
Thus such a friendship was cemented between us as we cherished till his death,
which, to my very great sorrow, happened in the year 1759, when he was up the Archipelago,
on board his majesty's ship the Preston: an
event which I have never ceased to regret, as I lost at once a kind
interpreter, an agreeable companion, and a faithful friend; who, at the age of
fifteen, discovered a mind superior to prejudice; and who was not ashamed to
notice, to associate with, and to be the friend and instructor of one who was
ignorant, a stranger, of a different complexion, and a slave! My master had
lodged in his mother's house in America:
he respected him very much, and made him always eat with him in the cabin. He
used often to tell him jocularly that he would kill me to eat. Sometimes he
would say to me—the black people were not good to eat, and would ask me if we
did not eat people in my country. I said, No: then he said he would kill Dick
(as he always called him) first, and afterwards me. Though this hearing
relieved my mind a little as to myself, I was alarmed
for Dick and whenever he was called I used to be very much afraid he was to be
killed; and I would peep and watch to see if they were going to kill him: nor
was I free from this consternation till we made the land. One night we lost a
man overboard; and the cries and noise were so great and confused, in stopping
the ship, that I, who did not know what was the matter, began, as usual, to be
very much afraid, and to think they were going to make an offering with me, and
perform some magic; which I still believed they dealt in. As the waves were
very high I thought the Ruler of the seas was angry, and I expected to be offered
up to appease him. This filled my mind with agony, and I could not any more
that night close my eyes again to rest. However, when daylight appeared I was a
little eased in my mind; but still every time I was called I used to think it
was to be killed. Some time after this we saw some very large fish, which I
afterwards found were called grampusses. They looked
to me extremely terrible, and made their appearance just at dusk; and were so
near as to blow the water on the ship's deck. I believed them to be the rulers
of the sea; and, as the white people did not make any offerings at any time, I
thought they were angry with them: and, at last, what confirmed my belief was,
the wind just then died away, and a calm ensued, and in consequence of it the
ship stopped going. I supposed that the fish had performed this, and I hid
myself in the fore part of the ship, through fear of being offered up to
appease them, every minute peeping and quaking: but my good friend Dick came
shortly towards me, and I took an opportunity to ask him, as well as I could,
what these fish were. Not being able to talk much English, I could but just
make him understand my question; and not at all, when I asked him if any
offerings were to be made to them: however, he told me these fish would swallow
any body; which sufficiently alarmed me. Here he was called away by the
captain, who was leaning over the quarter-deck railing and looking at the fish;
and most of the people were busied in getting a barrel of pitch to light, for
them to play with. The captain now called me to him, having learned some of my
apprehensions from Dick; and having diverted himself and others for some time
with my fears, which appeared ludicrous enough in my crying and trembling, he
dismissed me. The barrel of pitch was now lighted and put over the side into
the water: by this time it was just dark, and the fish went after it; and, to
my great joy, I saw them no more.
However, all my alarms began to subside when we got
sight of land; and at last the ship arrived at Falmouth, after a passage of thirteen weeks.
Every heart on board seemed gladdened on our reaching the shore,
and none more than mine. The captain immediately went on shore, and sent on
board some fresh provisions, which we wanted very much: we made good use of
them, and our famine was soon turned into feasting, almost without ending. It
was about the beginning of the spring 1757 when I arrived in England, and I was near twelve
years of age at that time. I was very much struck with the buildings and the pavement
of the streets in Falmouth;
and, indeed, any object I saw filled me with new surprise. One morning, when I
got upon deck, I saw it covered all over with the snow that fell over-night: as
I had never seen any thing of the kind before, I thought it was salt; so I
immediately ran down to the mate and desired him, as well as I could, to come
and see how somebody in the night had thrown salt all over the deck. He,
knowing what it was, desired me to bring some of it down to him: accordingly I
took up a handful of it, which I found very cold indeed; and when I brought it
to him he desired me to taste it. I did so, and I was surprised beyond measure.
I then asked him what it was; he told me it was snow: but I could not in
anywise understand him. He asked me if we had no such thing in my country; and
I told him, No. I then asked him the use of it, and who made it; he told me a
great man in the heavens, called God: but here again I was to all intents and
purposes at a loss to understand him; and the more so, when a little after I
saw the air filled with it, in a heavy shower, which fell down on the same day.
After this I went to church; and having never been at such a place before, I
was again amazed at seeing and hearing the service. I asked all I could about it;
and they gave me to understand it was worshipping God, who made us and all
things. I was still at a great loss, and soon got into an endless field of
inquiries, as well as I was able to speak and ask about things. However, my
little friend Dick used to be my best interpreter; for I could make free with
him, and he always instructed me with pleasure: and from what I could
understand by him of this God, and in seeing these white people did not sell
one another, as we did, I was much pleased; and in this I thought they were
much happier than we Africans. I was astonished at the wisdom of the white
people in all things I saw; but was amazed at their not sacrificing, or making
any offerings, and eating with unwashed hands, and touching the dead. I
likewise could not help remarking the particular slenderness of their women,
which I did not at first like; and I thought they were not so
modest and shamefaced as the African women.
I had often seen my master and Dick employed in
reading; and I had a great curiosity to talk to the books, as I thought they
did; and so to learn how all things had a beginning: for that purpose I have
often taken up a book, and have talked to it, and then put my ears to it, when
alone, in hopes it would answer me; and I have been very much concerned when I
found it remained silent.
My master lodged at the house of a gentleman in Falmouth, who had a fine
little daughter about six or seven years of age, and she grew prodigiously fond
of me; insomuch that we used to eat together, and had servants to wait on us. I
was so much caressed by this family that it often reminded me of the treatment
I had received from my little noble African master. After I had been here a few
days, I was sent on board of the ship; but the child cried so much after me
that nothing could pacify her till I was sent for again. It is ludicrous
enough, that I began to fear I should be betrothed to this young lady; and when
my master asked me if I would stay there with her behind him, as he was going
away with the ship, which had taken in the tobacco again, I cried immediately,
and said I would not leave her. At last, by stealth, one night I was sent on
board the ship again; and in a little time we sailed for Guernsey,
where she was in part owned by a merchant, one Nicholas Doberry.
As I was now amongst a people who had not their faces scarred, like some of the
African nations where I had been, I was very glad I did not let them ornament
me in that manner when I was with them. When we arrived at Guernsey,
my master placed me to board and lodge with one of his mates, who had a wife
and family there; and some months afterwards he went to England, and left me in care of
this mate, together with my friend Dick: This mate had a little daughter, aged
about five or six years, with whom I used to be much delighted. I had often
observed that when her mother washed her face it looked very rosy; but when she
washed mine it did not look so: I therefore tried oftentimes myself if I could
not by washing make my face of the same colour as my
little play-mate (Mary), but it was all in vain; and I now began to be
mortified at the difference in our complexions. This woman behaved to me with
great kindness and attention; and taught me every thing in the same manner as
she did her own child, and indeed in every respect treated me as such. I
remained here till the summer of the year 1757; when my master, being appointed
first lieutenant of his majesty's ship the Roebuck, sent for Dick and me, and
his old mate: on this we all left Guernsey,
and set out for England in a
sloop bound for London.
As we were coming up towards the Nore, where the
Roebuck lay, a man of war's boat came alongside to press our people; on which
each man ran to hide himself. I was very much frightened at this, though I did
not know what it meant, or what to think or do. However I went and hid myself
also under a hencoop. Immediately afterwards the press-gang
came on board with their swords drawn, and searched all about, pulled the
people out by force, and put them into the boat. At last I was found out also:
the man that found me held me up by the heels while they all made their sport
of me, I roaring and crying out all the time most lustily: but at last the
mate, who was my conductor, seeing this, came to my assistance, and did all he
could to pacify me; but all to very little purpose, till I had seen the boat go
off. Soon afterwards we came to the Nore, where the
Roebuck lay; and, to our great joy, my master came on board to us, and brought
us to the ship. When I went on board this large ship, I was amazed indeed to
see the quantity of men and the guns. However my surprise began to diminish as
my knowledge increased; and I ceased to feel those apprehensions and alarms
which had taken such strong possession of me when I first came among the
Europeans, and for some time after. I began now to pass to an opposite extreme;
I was so far from being afraid of any thing new which I saw, that, after I had
been some time in this ship, I even began to long for a battle. My griefs too, which in young minds are not perpetual, were
now wearing away; and I soon enjoyed myself pretty well, and felt tolerably
easy in my present situation. There was a number of
boys on board, which still made it more agreeable; for we were always together,
and a great part of our time was spent in play. I remained in this ship a
considerable time, during which we made several cruises, and visited a variety
of places: among others we were twice in Holland,
and brought over several persons of distinction from it, whose names I do not
now remember. On the passage, one day, for the diversion of those gentlemen,
all the boys were called on the quarter-deck, and were paired proportionably, and then made to fight; after which the
gentleman gave the combatants from five to nine shillings each. This was the
first time I ever fought with a white boy; and I never knew what it was to have
a bloody nose before. This made me fight most desperately; I suppose
considerably more than an hour: and at last, both of us being weary, we were parted.
I had a great deal of this kind of sport afterwards, in which the captain and
the ship's company used very much to encourage me. Sometime afterwards the ship
went to Leith in Scotland,
and from thence to the Orkneys, where I was surprised in seeing scarcely any
night: and from thence we sailed with a great fleet, full of soldiers, for England.
All this time we had never come to an engagement, though we were frequently
cruising off the coast of France:
during which we chased many vessels, and took in all seventeen prizes. I had
been learning many of the manoeuvres of the ship
during our cruise; and I was several times made to fire the guns. One evening,
off Havre de Grace, just as it was growing dark, we were standing off shore,
and met with a fine large French-built frigate. We got all things immediately
ready for fighting; and I now expected I should be gratified in seeing an
engagement, which I had so long wished for in vain. But the very moment the
word of command was given to fire we heard those on board the other ship cry
'Haul down the jib;' and in that instant she hoisted English colours. There was instantly with us an amazing cry of—Avast! or stop firing; and I think
one or two guns had been let off, but happily they did no mischief. We had hailed
them several times; but they not hearing, we received no answer, which was the
cause of our firing. The boat was then sent on board of her, and she proved to
be the Ambuscade man of war, to my no small disappointment. We returned to Portsmouth, without having
been in any action, just at the trial of Admiral Byng (whom I saw several times
during it): and my master having left the ship, and gone to London for promotion, Dick and I were put on
board the Savage sloop of war, and we went in her to assist in bringing off the
St. George man of war, that had ran ashore somewhere on the coast. After
staying a few weeks on board the Savage, Dick and I were sent on shore at Deal,
where we remained some short time, till my master sent for us to London, the place I had
long desired exceedingly to see. We therefore both with great pleasure got into
a waggon, and came to London, where we were received by a Mr.
Guerin, a relation of my master. This gentleman had two sisters, very amiable
ladies, who took much notice and great care of me. Though I had desired so much
to see London,
when I arrived in it I was unfortunately unable to gratify my curiosity; for I
had at this time the chilblains to such a degree that I could not stand for
several months, and I was obliged to be sent to St. George's Hospital.
There I grew so ill, that the doctors wanted to cut my left leg off at
different times, apprehending a mortification; but I always said I would rather
die than suffer it; and happily (I thank God) I recovered without the operation.
After being there several weeks, and just as I had recovered, the small-pox
broke out on me, so that I was again confined; and I thought myself now
particularly unfortunate. However I soon recovered again; and by this time my
master having been promoted to be first lieutenant of the Preston
man of war of fifty guns, then new at Deptford, Dick and I were sent on board
her, and soon after we went to Holland
to bring over the late Duke of —— to England.—While I was in this ship an
incident happened, which, though trifling, I beg leave to relate, as I could
not help taking particular notice of it, and considering it then as a judgment
of God. One morning a young man was looking up to the fore-top, and in a wicked
tone, common on shipboard, d——d his eyes about something. Just at the moment
some small particles of dirt fell into his left eye, and by the evening it was
very much inflamed. The next day it grew worse; and within six or seven days he
lost it. From this ship my master was appointed a lieutenant on board the Royal
George. When he was going he wished me to stay on board the Preston, to learn
the French horn; but the ship being ordered for Turkey I could not think of leaving
my master, to whom I was very warmly attached; and I told him if he left me
behind it would break my heart. This prevailed on him to take me with him; but
he left Dick on board the Preston, whom I
embraced at parting for the last time. The Royal George was the largest ship I
had ever seen; so that when I came on board of her I was surprised at the
number of people, men, women, and children, of every denomination; and the
largeness of the guns, many of them also of brass, which I had never seen
before. Here were also shops or stalls of every kind of goods, and people
crying their different commodities about the ship as in a town. To me it
appeared a little world, into which I was again cast without a friend, for I
had no longer my dear companion Dick. We did not stay long here. My master was
not many weeks on board before he got an appointment to be sixth lieutenant of
the Namur, which was then at Spithead,
fitting up for Vice-admiral Boscawen, who was going with a large fleet on an
expedition against Louisburgh. The crew
of the Royal George were turned over to her, and the flag of that
gallant admiral was hoisted on board, the blue at the maintop-gallant mast
head. There was a very great fleet of men of war of every description assembled
together for this expedition, and I was in hopes soon to have an opportunity of
being gratified with a sea-fight. All things being now in readiness, this
mighty fleet (for there was also Admiral Cornish's fleet in company, destined
for the East Indies) at last weighed anchor,
and sailed. The two fleets continued in company for several days, and then parted;
Admiral Cornish, in the Lenox, having first saluted our admiral in the Namur, which he returned.
We then steered for America;
but, by contrary winds, we were driven to Teneriffe,
where I was struck with its noted peak. Its prodigious height, and its form,
resembling a sugar-loaf, filled me with wonder. We remained in sight of this
island some days, and then proceeded for America,
which we soon made, and got into a very commodious harbour
called St. George, in Halifax,
where we had fish in great plenty, and all other fresh provisions. We were here
joined by different men of war and transport ships with soldiers; after which,
our fleet being increased to a prodigious number of ships of all kinds, we
sailed for Cape Breton
in Nova Scotia.
We had the good and gallant General Wolfe on board our ship, whose affability
made him highly esteemed and beloved by all the men. He often honoured me, as well as other boys, with marks of his
notice; and saved me once a flogging for fighting with a young gentleman. We arrived
at Cape Breton in the summer of 1758: and here
the soldiers were to be landed, in order to make an attack upon Louisbourgh. My master had some part in superintending the
landing; and here I was in a small measure gratified in seeing an encounter between
our men and the enemy. The French were posted on the shore to receive us, and
disputed our landing for a long time; but at last they were driven from their
trenches, and a complete landing was effected. Our
troops pursued them as far as the town of Louisbourgh. In this action many
were killed on both sides. One thing remarkable I saw this day:—A lieutenant of the Princess Amelia, who, as well as my
master, superintended the landing, was giving the word of command, and while
his mouth was open a musquet ball went through it,
and passed out at his cheek. I had that day in my hand the scalp of an indian king, who was killed in the
engagement: the scalp had been taken off by an Highlander. I saw this king's
ornaments too, which were very curious, and made of feathers.
Our land forces laid siege to the town of Louisbourgh,
while the French men of war were blocked up in the harbour
by the fleet, the batteries at the same time playing upon them from the land.
This they did with such effect, that one day I saw some of the ships set on
fire by the shells from the batteries, and I believe two or three of them were
quite burnt. At another time, about fifty boats belonging to the English men of
war, commanded by Captain George Balfour of the Ætna
fire-ship, and another junior captain, Laforey,
attacked and boarded the only two remaining French men of war in the harbour. They also set fire to a seventy-gun ship, but a
sixty-four, called the Bienfaisant, they brought off.
During my stay here I had often an opportunity of being near Captain Balfour,
who was pleased to notice me, and liked me so much that he often asked my
master to let him have me, but he would not part with me; and no consideration
could have induced me to leave him. At last Louisbourgh
was taken, and the English men of war came into the harbour
before it, to my very great joy; for I had now more liberty of indulging
myself, and I went often on shore. When the ships were in the harbour we had the most beautiful procession on the water I
ever saw. All the admirals and captains of the men of war, full dressed, and in
their barges, well ornamented with pendants, came alongside of the Namur. The vice-admiral
then went on shore in his barge, followed by the other officers in order of
seniority, to take possession, as I suppose, of the town and fort. Some time
after this the French governor and his lady, and other persons of note, came on
board our ship to dine. On this occasion our ships were dressed with colours of all kinds, from the topgallant-mast head to the
deck; and this, with the firing of guns, formed a most grand and magnificent
spectacle.
As soon as every thing here was settled Admiral
Boscawen sailed with part of the fleet for England, leaving some ships behind
with Rear-admirals Sir Charles Hardy and Durell. It
was now winter; and one evening, during our passage home, about dusk, when we
were in the channel, or near soundings, and were beginning to look for land, we descried seven sail of large men of war, which
stood off shore. Several people on board of our ship said, as the two fleets
were (in forty minutes from the first sight) within hail of each other, that
they were English men of war; and some of our people even began to name some of
the ships. By this time both fleets began to mingle, and our admiral ordered
his flag to be hoisted. At that instant the other fleet, which were French,
hoisted their ensigns, and gave us a broadside as they passed by. Nothing could
create greater surprise and confusion among us than this: the wind was high, the
sea rough, and we had our lower and middle deck guns housed in, so that not a
single gun on board was ready to be fired at any of the French ships. However,
the Royal William and the Somerset
being our sternmost ships,
became a little prepared, and each gave the French ships a broadside as they
passed by. I afterwards heard this was a French squadron, commanded by Mons. Conflans;
and certainly had the Frenchmen known our condition, and had a mind to fight
us, they might have done us great mischief. But we were not long before we were
prepared for an engagement. Immediately many things were tossed overboard; the
ships were made ready for fighting as soon as possible; and about ten at night
we had bent a new main sail, the old one being split. Being now in readiness
for fighting, we wore ship, and stood after the French fleet, who were one or two ships in number more than we. However we
gave them chase, and continued pursuing them all
night; and at daylight we saw six of them, all large ships of the line, and an
English East Indiaman, a prize they had taken. We chased them all day till
between three and four o'clock in the evening, when we came up with, and passed
within a musquet shot of, one seventy-four gun ship,
and the Indiaman also, who now hoisted her colours,
but immediately hauled them down again. On this we made a signal for the other
ships to take possession of her; and, supposing the man of war would likewise
strike, we cheered, but she did not; though if we had fired into her, from
being so near, we must have taken her. To my utter surprise the Somerset, who was the next ship astern of the Namur, made way likewise;
and, thinking they were sure of this French ship, they cheered in the same
manner, but still continued to follow us. The French Commodore was about a
gun-shot ahead of all, running from us with all speed; and about four o'clock
he carried his foretopmast overboard. This caused another loud cheer with us;
and a little after the topmast came close by us; but, to our great surprise,
instead of coming up with her, we found she went as fast as ever, if not
faster. The sea grew now much smoother; and the wind lulling, the seventy-four
gun ship we had passed came again by us in the very same direction, and so
near, that we heard her people talk as she went by; yet not a shot was fired on
either side; and about five or six o'clock, just as it grew dark, she joined
her commodore. We chased all night; but the next day they were out of sight, so
that we saw no more of them; and we only had the old Indiaman (called Carnarvon I think) for our trouble. After this we stood in
for the channel, and soon made the land; and, about the close of the year
1758-9, we got safe to St. Helen's. Here the Namur ran aground; and also another large
ship astern of us; but, by starting our water, and tossing many things
overboard to lighten her, we got the ships off without any damage. We stayed
for a short time at Spithead, and then went into Portsmouth
harbour to refit; from whence the admiral went to London; and my master and
I soon followed, with a press-gang, as we wanted some
hands to complete our complement.
CHAPTER IV
The author is baptized—Narrowly escapes
drowning—Goes on an expedition to the Mediterranean—Incidents he met with
there—Is witness to an engagement between some English and French ships—A
particular account of the celebrated engagement between Admiral Boscawen and Mons. Le Clue, off Cape Logas, in August 1759—Dreadful explosion of a French
ship—The author sails for England—His master appointed to the command of a
fire-ship—Meets a negro boy, from whom he experiences much benevolence—Prepares
for an expedition against Belle-Isle—A remarkable story of a disaster which befel his ship—Arrives at Belle-Isle—Operations of the
landing and siege—The author's danger and distress, with his manner of
extricating himself—- Surrender of Belle-Isle—Transactions afterwards on the
coast of France—Remarkable instance of kidnapping—The author returns to
England—Hears a talk of peace, and expects his freedom—His ship sails for
Deptford to be paid off, and when he arrives there he is suddenly seized by his
master and carried forcibly on board a West India ship and sold
It was now between two and three years since I first
came to England,
a great part of which I had spent at sea; so that I became inured to that
service, and began to consider myself as happily situated; for my master
treated me always extremely well; and my attachment and gratitude to him were
very great. From the various scenes I had beheld on shipboard, I soon grew a
stranger to terror of every kind, and was, in that respect at least, almost an
Englishman. I have often reflected with surprise that I never felt half the
alarm at any of the numerous dangers I have been in, that I was filled with at
the first sight of the Europeans, and at every act of theirs, even the most
trifling, when I first came among them, and for some time afterwards. That
fear, however, which was the effect of my ignorance, wore away as I began to
know them. I could now speak English tolerably well, and I perfectly understood
every thing that was said. I now not only felt myself quite easy with these new
countrymen, but relished their society and manners. I no longer looked upon
them as spirits, but as men superior to us; and therefore I had the stronger
desire to resemble them; to imbibe their spirit, and imitate their manners; I
therefore embraced every occasion of improvement; and every new thing that I
observed I treasured up in my memory. I had long wished to be able to read and
write; and for this purpose I took every opportunity to gain instruction, but
had made as yet very little progress. However, when I went to London with my master, I had soon an
opportunity of improving myself, which I gladly embraced. Shortly after my
arrival, he sent me to wait upon the Miss Guerins,
who had treated me with much kindness when I was there before; and they sent me
to school.
While I was attending these ladies their servants
told me I could not go to Heaven unless I was baptized. This made me very
uneasy; for I had now some faint idea of a future state: accordingly I
communicated my anxiety to the eldest Miss Guerin, with whom I was become a favourite, and pressed her to have me baptized; when to my
great joy she told me I should. She had formerly asked my master to let me be
baptized, but he had refused; however she now insisted on it; and he being
under some obligation to her brother complied with her request; so I was
baptized in St. Margaret's church, Westminster,
in February 1759, by my present name. The clergyman, at the same time, gave me
a book, called a Guide to the Indians, written by the Bishop of Sodor and Man.
On this occasion Miss Guerin did me the honour to
stand as godmother, and afterwards gave me a treat. I used to attend these
ladies about the town, in which service I was extremely happy; as I had thus
many opportunities of seeing London,
which I desired of all things. I was sometimes, however, with my master at his
rendezvous-house, which was at the foot of Westminster-bridge. Here I used to
enjoy myself in playing about the bridge stairs, and often in the watermen's wherries, with other boys. On one of these occasions there
was another boy with me in a wherry, and we went out
into the current of the river: while we were there two more stout boys came to
us in another wherry, and, abusing us for taking the
boat, desired me to get into the other wherry-boat.
Accordingly I went to get out of the wherry I was in;
but just as I had got one of my feet into the other boat the boys shoved it
off, so that I fell into the Thames; and, not
being able to swim, I should unavoidably have been drowned, but for the
assistance of some watermen who providentially came to my relief.
The Namur being again
got ready for sea, my master, with his gang, was ordered on board; and, to my
no small grief, I was obliged to leave my school-master, whom I liked very
much, and always attended while I stayed in London, to repair on board with my master.
Nor did I leave my kind patronesses, the Miss Guerins,
without uneasiness and regret. They often used to teach me to read, and took
great pains to instruct me in the principles of religion and the knowledge of
God. I therefore parted from those amiable ladies with reluctance; after receiving
from them many friendly cautions how to conduct myself, and some valuable
presents.
When I came to Spithead, I found we were destined
for the Mediterranean, with a large fleet,
which was now ready to put to sea. We only waited for the arrival of the admiral,
who soon came on board; and about the beginning of the spring 1759, having
weighed anchor, and got under way, Sailed for the Mediterranean; and in eleven
days, from the Land's End, we got to Gibraltar.
While we were here I used to be often on shore, and got various fruits in great
plenty, and very cheap.
I had frequently told several people, in my
excursions on shore, the story of my being kidnapped with my sister, and of our
being separated, as I have related before; and I had as often expressed my
anxiety for her fate, and my sorrow at having never met her again. One day,
when I was on shore, and mentioning these circumstances to some persons, one of
them told me he knew where my sister was, and, if I would accompany him, he
would bring me to her. Improbable as this story was I believed it immediately,
and agreed to go with him, while my heart leaped for joy: and, indeed, he
conducted me to a black young woman, who was so like my sister, that, at first
sight, I really thought it was her: but I was quickly undeceived; and, on
talking to her, I found her to be of another nation.
While we lay here the Preston came in from the Levant. As soon as she arrived, my master told me I
should now see my old companion, Dick, who had gone in her when she sailed for Turkey.
I was much rejoiced at this news, and expected every minute to embrace him; and
when the captain came on board of our ship, which he did immediately after, I
ran to inquire after my friend; but, with inexpressible sorrow, I learned from
the boat's crew that the dear youth was dead! and that
they had brought his chest, and all his other things, to my master: these he
afterwards gave to me, and I regarded them as a memorial of my friend, whom I
loved, and grieved for, as a brother.
While we were at Gibraltar, I saw a soldier hanging
by his heels, at one of the molesL: I thought this
a strange sight, as I had seen a man hanged in London by his neck. At another time I saw the
master of a frigate towed to shore on a grating, by several of the men of war's
boats, and discharged the fleet, which I understood was a mark of disgrace for
cowardice. On board the same ship there was also a sailor hung up at the
yard-arm.
After lying at Gibraltar for some time, we sailed up
the Mediterranean a considerable way above the Gulf of Lyons;
where we were one night overtaken with a terrible gale of wind, much greater
than any I had ever yet experienced. The sea ran so high that, though all the
guns were well housed, there was great reason to fear their getting loose, the
ship rolled so much; and if they had it must have proved our destruction. After
we had cruised here for a short time, we came to Barcelona, a Spanish sea-port, remarkable for
its silk manufactures. Here the ships were all to be watered; and my master,
who spoke different languages, and used often to interpret for the admiral,
superintended the watering of ours. For that purpose he and the officers of the
other ships, who were on the same service, had tents pitched in the bay; and
the Spanish soldiers were stationed along the shore, I suppose to see that no
depredations were committed by our men.
I used constantly to attend my master; and I was
charmed with this place. All the time we stayed it was like a fair with the
natives, who brought us fruits of all kinds, and sold them to us much cheaper
than I got them in England.
They used also to bring wine down to us in hog and sheep skins, which diverted
me very much. The Spanish officers here treated our officers with great
politeness and attention; and some of them, in particular, used to come often
to my master's tent to visit him; where they would sometimes divert themselves
by mounting me on the horses or mules, so that I could not fall, and setting
them off at full gallop; my imperfect skill in horsemanship all the while
affording them no small entertainment. After the ships were watered, we
returned to our old station of cruizing off Toulon, for the purpose of
intercepting a fleet of French men of war that lay there. One Sunday, in our
cruise, we came off a place where there were two small French frigates lying in
shore; and our admiral, thinking to take or destroy them, sent two ships in
after them—the Culloden and the Conqueror. They soon came up to the Frenchmen;
and I saw a smart fight here, both by sea and land: for the frigates were
covered by batteries, and they played upon our ships most furiously, which they
as furiously returned, and for a long time a constant firing was kept up on all
sides at an amazing rate. At last one frigate sunk; but the people escaped,
though not without much difficulty: and a little after some of the people left
the other frigate also, which was a mere wreck. However, our ships did not
venture to bring her away, they were so much annoyed from the batteries, which raked
them both in going and coming: their topmasts were shot away, and they were
otherwise so much shattered, that the admiral was obliged to send in many boats
to tow them back to the fleet. I afterwards sailed with a man who fought in one
of the French batteries during the engagement, and he told me our ships had
done considerable mischief that day on shore and in the batteries.
After this we sailed for Gibraltar,
and arrived there about August 1759. Here we remained with all our sails
unbent, while the fleet was watering and doing other necessary things. While we
were in this situation, one day the admiral, with most of the principal
officers, and many people of all stations, being on shore, about seven o'clock
in the evening we were alarmed by signals from the frigates stationed for that
purpose; and in an instant there was a general cry that the French fleet was
out, and just passing through the streights. The
admiral immediately came on board with some other officers; and it is
impossible to describe the noise, hurry and confusion throughout the whole
fleet, in bending their sails and slipping their cables; many people and ships'
boats were left on shore in the bustle. We had two captains on board of our
ship who came away in the hurry and left their ships to follow. We shewed lights from the gun-whale to the main topmast-head;
and all our lieutenants were employed amongst the fleet to tell the ships not
to wait for their captains, but to put the sails to the yards, slip their
cables and follow us; and in this confusion of making ready for fighting we set
out for sea in the dark after the French fleet. Here I could have exclaimed
with Ajax,
"Oh Jove! O father! if it be thy will
That we must
perish, we thy will obey,
But let us
perish by the light of day."
They had got the start of us so far that we were not
able to come up with them during the night; but at daylight we saw seven sail
of the line of battle some miles ahead. We immediately chased them till about
four o'clock in the evening, when our ships came up with them; and, though we
were about fifteen large ships, our gallant admiral only fought them with his
own division, which consisted of seven; so that we were just ship for ship. We
passed by the whole of the enemy's fleet in order to come at their commander, Mons. La Clue, who was in
the Ocean, an eighty-four gun ship: as we passed they all fired on us; and at
one time three of them fired together, continuing to do so for some time.
Notwithstanding which our admiral would not suffer a gun to be fired at any of
them, to my astonishment; but made us lie on our bellies on the deck till we
came quite close to the Ocean, who was ahead of them all; when we had orders to
pour the whole three tiers into her at once.
The engagement now commenced with great fury on both
sides: the Ocean immediately returned our fire, and we continued engaged with
each other for some time; during which I was frequently stunned with the
thundering of the great guns, whose dreadful contents hurried many of my
companions into awful eternity. At last the French line was entirely broken,
and we obtained the victory, which was immediately proclaimed with loud huzzas
and acclamations. We took three prizes, La Modeste,
of sixty-four guns, and Le Temeraire and Centaur, of
seventy-four guns each. The rest of the French ships took to flight with all
the sail they could crowd. Our ship being very much damaged, and quite disabled
from pursuing the enemy, the admiral immediately quitted her, and went in the
broken and only boat we had left on board the Newark, with which, and some other ships, he
went after the French. The Ocean, and another large French ship, called the
Redoubtable, endeavouring to escape, ran ashore at Cape Logas,
on the coast of Portugal;
and the French admiral and some of the crew got ashore; but we, finding it
impossible to get the ships off, set fire to them both. About midnight I saw
the Ocean blow up, with a most dreadful explosion. I never beheld a more awful
scene. In less than a minute the midnight for a certain space seemed turned
into day by the blaze, which was attended with a noise louder and more terrible
than thunder, that seemed to rend every element around
us.
My station during the engagement was on the
middle-deck, where I was quartered with another boy, to bring powder to the
aftermost gun; and here I was a witness of the dreadful fate of many of my
companions, who, in the twinkling of an eye, were dashed in pieces, and launched
into eternity. Happily I escaped unhurt, though the shot and splinters flew
thick about me during the whole fight. Towards the latter part of it my master
was wounded, and I saw him carried down to the surgeon; but though I was much
alarmed for him and wished to assist him I dared not leave my post. At this
station my gun-mate (a partner in bringing powder for the same gun) and I ran a
very great risk for more than half an hour of blowing up the ship. For, when we
had taken the cartridges out of the boxes, the bottoms of many of them proving
rotten, the powder ran all about the deck, near the match tub: we scarcely had
water enough at the last to throw on it. We were also, from our employment,
very much exposed to the enemy's shots; for we had to go through nearly the
whole length of the ship to bring the powder. I expected therefore every minute
to be my last; especially when I saw our men fall so thick about me; but,
wishing to guard as much against the dangers as possible, at first I thought it
would be safest not to go for the powder till the Frenchmen had fired their
broadside; and then, while they were charging, I could go and come with my
powder: but immediately afterwards I thought this caution was fruitless; and,
cheering myself with the reflection that there was a time allotted for me to
die as well as to be born, I instantly cast off all fear or thought whatever of
death, and went through the whole of my duty with alacrity; pleasing myself
with the hope, if I survived the battle, of relating it and the dangers I had
escaped to the dear Miss Guerin, and others, when I should return to London.
Our ship suffered very much in this engagement; for,
besides the number of our killed and wounded, she was almost torn to pieces,
and our rigging so much shattered, that our mizen-mast
and main-yard, &c. hung over the side of the ship; so that we were obliged
to get many carpenters, and others from some of the ships of the fleet, to
assist in setting us in some tolerable order; and, notwithstanding, it took us some
time before we were completely refitted; after which we left Admiral Broderick
to command, and we, with the prizes, steered for England. On the passage,
and as soon as my master was something recovered of his wounds, the admiral
appointed him captain of the Ætna fire-ship, on which
he and I left the Namur,
and went on board of her at sea. I liked this little ship very much. I now
became the captain's steward, in which situation I was very happy: for I was
extremely well treated by all on board; and I had leisure to improve myself in
reading and writing. The latter I had learned a little of before I left the Namur, as there was a
school on board. When we arrived at Spithead the Ætna
went into Portsmouth
harbour to refit, which being done, we returned to Spithead and joined a large fleet that was thought to be
intended against the Havannah; but about that time
the king died: whether that prevented the expedition I know not; but it caused
our ship to be stationed at Cowes, in the isle of Wight, till
the beginning of the year sixty-one. Here I spent my time very pleasantly; I
was much on shore all about this delightful island, and found the inhabitants
very civil.
While I was here, I met with a trifling incident,
which surprised me agreeably. I was one day in a field belonging to a gentleman
who had a black boy about my own size; this boy having observed me from his
master's house, was transported at the sight of one of his own countrymen, and
ran to meet me with the utmost haste. I not knowing
what he was about turned a little out of his way at first, but to no purpose:
he soon came close to me and caught hold of me in his arms as if I had been his
brother, though we had never seen each other before. After we had talked
together for some time he took me to his master's house, where I was treated
very kindly. This benevolent boy and I were very happy in frequently seeing
each other till about the month of March 1761, when our ship had orders to fit
out again for another expedition. When we got ready, we joined a very large
fleet at Spithead, commanded by Commodore
Keppel, which was destined against Belle-Isle, and
with a number of transport ships with troops on board to make a descent on the
place. We sailed once more in quest of fame. I longed to engage in new
adventures and see fresh wonders.
I had a mind on which every thing uncommon made its
full impression, and every event which I considered as marvellous.
Every extraordinary escape, or signal deliverance, either of myself or others,
I looked upon to be effected by the interposition of Providence. We had not been above ten days at
sea before an incident of this kind happened; which, whatever credit it may
obtain from the reader, made no small impression on my mind.
We had on board a gunner, whose name was John Mondle; a man of very indifferent morals. This man's cabin
was between the decks, exactly over where I lay, abreast of the quarter-deck
ladder. One night, the 20th of April, being terrified with a dream, he awoke in
so great a fright that he could not rest in his bed any longer, nor even remain
in his cabin; and he went upon deck about four o'clock in the morning extremely
agitated. He immediately told those on the deck of the agonies of his mind, and
the dream which occasioned it; in which he said he had seen many things very
awful, and had been warned by St. Peter to repent, who told him time was short.
This he said had greatly alarmed him, and he was determined to alter his life.
People generally mock the fears of others when they are themselves in safety;
and some of his shipmates who heard him only laughed at him. However, he made a
vow that he never would drink strong liquors again; and he immediately got a
light, and gave away his sea-stores of liquor. After which, his agitation still
continuing, he began to read the Scriptures, hoping to find some relief; and
soon afterwards he laid himself down again on his bed, and endeavoured
to compose himself to sleep, but to no purpose; his mind still continuing in a
state of agony. By this time it was exactly half after seven in the morning: I
was then under the half-deck at the great cabin door; and all at once I heard
the people in the waist cry out, most fearfully—'The Lord have mercy upon us!
We are all lost! The Lord have mercy upon us!' Mr. Mondle hearing the cries, immediately ran out of his cabin;
and we were instantly struck by the Lynne, a forty-gun ship, Captain Clark,
which nearly ran us down. This ship had just put about, and was by the wind,
but had not got full headway, or we must all have perished; for the wind was
brisk. However, before Mr. Mondle had got four steps
from his cabin-door, she struck our ship with her cutwater right in the middle
of his bed and cabin, and ran it up to the combings of the quarter-deck
hatchway, and above three feet below water, and in a minute there was not a bit
of wood to be seen where Mr. Mondle's cabin stood;
and he was so near being killed that some of the splinters tore his face. As
Mr. Mondle must inevitably have perished from this
accident had he not been alarmed in the very extraordinary way I have related,
I could not help regarding this as an awful interposition of Providence for his preservation. The two
ships for some time swinged alongside of each other;
for ours being a fire-ship, our grappling-irons caught the Lynne every way, and
the yards and rigging went at an astonishing rate. Our ship was in such a
shocking condition that we all thought she would instantly go down, and every
one ran for their lives, and got as well as they could on board the Lynne; but
our lieutenant being the aggressor, he never quitted the ship. However, when we
found she did not sink immediately, the captain came on board again, and
encouraged our people to return and try to save her. Many on this came back,
but some would not venture. Some of the ships in the fleet, seeing our
situation, immediately sent their boats to our assistance; but it took us the
whole day to save the ship with all their help. And by using every possible
means, particularly frapping her together with many hawsers, and putting a
great quantity of tallow below water where she was damaged, she was kept
together: but it was well we did not meet with any gales of wind, or we must
have gone to pieces; for we were in such a crazy condition that we had ships to
attend us till we arrived at Belle-Isle, the place of our destination; and then
we had all things taken out of the ship, and she was properly repaired. This
escape of Mr. Mondle, which he, as well as myself,
always considered as a singular act of Providence,
I believe had a great influence on his life and conduct ever afterwards.
Now that I am on this subject I beg leave to relate
another instance or two which strongly raised my belief of the particular
interposition of Heaven, and which might not otherwise have found a place here,
from their insignificance. I belonged for a few days in the year 1758 to the
Jason, of fifty-four guns, at Plymouth;
and one night, when I was on board, a woman, with a child at her breast, fell
from the upper-deck down into the hold, near the keel. Every one thought that
the mother and child must be both dashed to pieces; but, to our great surprise,
neither of them was hurt. I myself one day fell headlong from the upper-deck of
the Ætna down the after-hold, when the ballast was
out; and all who saw me fall cried out I was killed: but I received not the
least injury. And in the same ship a man fell from the mast-head on the deck
without being hurt. In these, and in many more instances, I thought I could
plainly trace the hand of God, without whose permission a
sparrow cannot fall. I began to raise my fear from man to him alone, and
to call daily on his holy name with fear and reverence: and I trust he heard my
supplications, and graciously condescended to answer me according to his holy
word, and to implant the seeds of piety in me, even one of the meanest of his
creatures.
When we had refitted our ship, and all things were
in readiness for attacking the place, the troops on board the transports were
ordered to disembark; and my master, as a junior captain, had a share in the
command of the landing. This was on the 8th of April. The French were drawn up
on the shore, and had made every disposition to oppose the landing of our men,
only a small part of them this day being able to effect it; most of them, after
fighting with great bravery, were cut off; and General Crawford, with a number
of others, were taken prisoners. In this day's engagement we had also our
lieutenant killed.
On the 21st of April we renewed our efforts to land the
men, while all the men of war were stationed along the shore to cover it, and
fired at the French batteries and breastworks from early in the morning till
about four o'clock in the evening, when our soldiers effected
a safe landing. They immediately attacked the French; and, after a sharp
encounter, forced them from the batteries. Before the enemy retreated they blew
up several of them, lest they should fall into our hands. Our men now proceeded
to besiege the citadel, and my master was ordered on shore to superintend the
landing of all the materials necessary for carrying on the siege; in which
service I mostly attended him. While I was there I went about to different
parts of the island; and one day, particularly, my curiosity almost cost me my
life. I wanted very much to see the mode of charging the mortars and letting
off the shells, and for that purpose I went to an English battery that was but
a very few yards from the walls of the citadel. There, indeed, I had an
opportunity of completely gratifying myself in seeing the whole operation, and
that not without running a very great risk, both from the English shells that
burst while I was there, but likewise from those of the French. One of the
largest of their shells bursted within nine or ten
yards of me: there was a single rock close by, about the size of a butt; and I
got instant shelter under it in time to avoid the fury of the shell. Where it
burst the earth was torn in such a manner that two or three butts might easily
have gone into the hole it made, and it threw great quantities of stones and
dirt to a considerable distance. Three shot were also fired at me and another
boy who was along with me, one of them in particular seemed
"Wing'd with red lightning and impetuous rage;"
for with a most dreadful sound
it hissed close by me, and struck a rock at a little distance, which it
shattered to pieces. When I saw what perilous circumstances I was in, I
attempted to return the nearest way I could find, and thereby I got between the
English and the French centinels. An English serjeant, who commanded the outposts, seeing me, and
surprised how I came there, (which was by stealth along the seashore),
reprimanded me very severely for it, and instantly took the centinel
off his post into custody, for his negligence in suffering me to pass the
lines. While I was in this situation I observed at a little distance a French
horse, belonging to some islanders, which I thought I would now mount, for the
greater expedition of getting off. Accordingly I took some cord which I had
about me, and making a kind of bridle of it, I put it round the horse's head,
and the tame beast very quietly suffered me to tie him thus and mount him. As
soon as I was on the horse's back I began to kick and beat him, and try every
means to make him go quick, but all to very little
purpose: I could not drive him out of a slow pace. While I was creeping along,
still within reach of the enemy's shot, I met with a servant well mounted on an
English horse. I immediately stopped; and, crying, told him my case; and begged
of him to help me, and this he effectually did; for, having a fine large whip,
he began to lash my horse with it so severely, that he set off full speed with
me towards the sea, while I was quite unable to hold or manage him. In this
manner I went along till I came to a craggy precipice. I now could not stop my
horse; and my mind was filled with apprehensions of my deplorable fate should
he go down the precipice, which he appeared fully disposed to do: I therefore
thought I had better throw myself off him at once, which I did immediately with
a great deal of dexterity, and fortunately escaped unhurt. As soon as I found
myself at liberty I made the best of my way for the ship, determined I would
not be so fool-hardy again in a hurry.
We continued to besiege the citadel till June, when
it surrendered. During the siege I have counted above sixty shells and carcases in the air at once. When this place was taken I
went through the citadel, and in the bomb-proofs under
it, which were cut in the solid rock; and I thought it a surprising place, both
for strength and building: notwithstanding which our shots and shells had made
amazing devastation, and ruinous heaps all around it.
After the taking of this island our ships, with some
others commanded by Commodore Stanhope in the Swiftsure,
went to Basse-road, where we blocked up a French
fleet. Our ships were there from June till February following; and in that time
I saw a great many scenes of war, and stratagems on both sides to destroy each
others fleet. Sometimes we would attack the French with some ships of the line;
at other times with boats; and frequently we made prizes. Once or twice the
French attacked us by throwing shells with their bomb-vessels: and one day as a
French vessel was throwing shells at our ships she broke from her springs,
behind the isle of I de Re: the tide being complicated, she came within a gun
shot of the Nassau; but the Nassau could not bring a gun to bear upon
her, and thereby the Frenchman got off. We were twice attacked by their
fire-floats, which they chained together, and then let them float down with the
tide; but each time we sent boats with graplings, and
towed them safe out of the fleet.
We had different commanders while we were at this
place, Commodores Stanhope, Dennis, Lord Howe, &c. From hence, before the
Spanish war began, our ship and the Wasp sloop were sent to St. Sebastian in Spain,
by Commodore Stanhope; and Commodore Dennis afterwards sent our ship as a
cartel to Bayonne in FranceM,
after whichN we went in February in 1762 to
Belle-Isle, and there stayed till the summer, when we left it, and returned to Portsmouth.
After our ship was fitted out again for service, in
September she went to Guernsey, where I was
very glad to see my old hostess, who was now a widow, and my former little
charming companion, her daughter. I spent some time here very happily with
them, till October, when we had orders to repair to Portsmouth. We parted from each other with a
great deal of affection; and I promised to return soon, and see them again, not
knowing what all-powerful fate had determined for me. Our ship having arrived
at Portsmouth,
we went into the harbour, and remained there till the
latter end of November, when we heard great talk about peace; and, to our very
great joy, in the beginning of December we had orders to go up to London with our ship to be
paid off. We received this news with loud huzzas, and every other demonstration
of gladness; and nothing but mirth was to be seen throughout every part of the
ship. I too was not without my share of the general joy on this occasion. I
thought now of nothing but being freed, and working for myself, and thereby
getting money to enable me to get a good education; for I always had a great
desire to be able at least to read and write; and while I was on shipboard I
had endeavoured to improve myself in both. While I
was in the Ætna particularly, the captain's clerk
taught me to write, and gave me a smattering of arithmetic as far as the rule
of three. There was also one Daniel Queen, about forty years of age, a man very
well educated, who messed with me on board this ship, and he likewise dressed
and attended the captain. Fortunately this man soon became very much attached
to me, and took very great pains to instruct me in many things. He taught me to
shave and dress hair a little, and also to read in the Bible, explaining many
passages to me, which I did not comprehend. I was wonderfully surprised to see
the laws and rules of my country written almost exactly here; a circumstance
which I believe tended to impress our manners and customs more deeply on my
memory. I used to tell him of this resemblance; and many a time we have sat up
the whole night together at this employment. In short, he was like a father to
me; and some even used to call me after his name; they also styled me the black
Christian. Indeed I almost loved him with the affection of a son. Many things I
have denied myself that he might have them; and when I used to play at marbles
or any other game, and won a few half-pence, or got any little money, which I
sometimes did, for shaving any one, I used to buy him a little sugar or
tobacco, as far as my stock of money would go. He used to say, that he and I
never should part; and that when our ship was paid off, as I was as free as
himself or any other man on board, he would instruct me in his business, by
which I might gain a good livelihood. This gave me new life and spirits; and my
heart burned within me, while I thought the time long till I obtained my
freedom. For though my master had not promised it to me, yet, besides the
assurances I had received that he had no right to detain me, he always treated
me with the greatest kindness, and reposed in me an unbounded confidence; he
even paid attention to my morals; and would never suffer me to deceive him, or
tell lies, of which he used to tell me the consequences; and that if I did so
God would not love me; so that, from all this tenderness, I had never once
supposed, in all my dreams of freedom, that he would think of detaining me any
longer than I wished.
In pursuance of our orders we sailed from Portsmouth for the Thames,
and arrived at Deptford the 10th of December, where we cast anchor just as it
was high water. The ship was up about half an hour, when my master ordered the
barge to be manned; and all in an instant, without having before given me the
least reason to suspect any thing of the matter, he forced me into the barge;
saying, I was going to leave him, but he would take care I should not. I was so
struck with the unexpectedness of this proceeding, that for some time I did not
make a reply, only I made an offer to go for my books and chest of clothes, but
he swore I should not move out of his sight; and if I did he would cut my
throat, at the same time taking his hanger. I began, however, to collect
myself; and, plucking up courage, I told him I was free, and he could not by
law serve me so. But this only enraged him the more; and he continued to swear,
and said he would soon let me know whether he would or not, and at that instant
sprung himself into the barge from the ship, to the astonishment and sorrow of
all on board. The tide, rather unluckily for me, had just turned downward, so
that we quickly fell down the river along with it, till we came among some
outward-bound West Indiamen; for he was
resolved to put me on board the first vessel he could get to receive me. The
boat's crew, who pulled against their will, became quite faint different times,
and would have gone ashore; but he would not let them. Some of them strove then
to cheer me, and told me he could not sell me, and that they would stand by me,
which revived me a little; and I still entertained hopes; for as they pulled
along he asked some vessels to receive me, but they could not. But, just as we
had got a little below Gravesend, we came
alongside of a ship which was going away the next tide for the West Indies; her name was the Charming Sally, Captain
James Doran; and my master went on board and agreed with him for me; and in a little
time I was sent for into the cabin. When I came there Captain Doran asked me if
I knew him; I answered that I did not; 'Then,' said he 'you are now my slave.'
I told him my master could not sell me to him, nor to any one else. 'Why,' said
he,'did not your master buy you?' I confessed he did.
'But I have served him,' said I,'many years, and he
has taken all my wages and prize-money, for I only got one sixpence during the
war; besides this I have been baptized; and by the laws of the land no man has
a right to sell me:' And I added, that I had heard a lawyer and others at
different times tell my master so. They both then said that those people who
told me so were not my friends; but I replied—it was very extraordinary that
other people did not know the law as well as they.
Upon this Captain Doran said I talked too much English; and if I did not behave
myself well, and be quiet, he had a method on board to make me. I was too well
convinced of his power over me to doubt what he said; and my former sufferings
in the slave-ship presenting themselves to my mind, the recollection of them
made me shudder. However, before I retired I told them that as I could not get
any right among men here I hoped I should hereafter in Heaven; and I
immediately left the cabin, filled with resentment and sorrow. The only coat I
had with me my master took away with him, and said if my prize-money had been
10,000 L. he had a right to it all, and would have taken it. I had about nine
guineas, which, during my long sea-faring life, I had scraped together from
trifling perquisites and little ventures; and I hid it that instant, lest my
master should take that from me likewise, still hoping that by some means or
other I should make my escape to the shore; and indeed some of my old shipmates
told me not to despair, for they would get me back again; and that, as soon as
they could get their pay, they would immediately come to Portsmouth to me,
where this ship was going: but, alas! all my hopes
were baffled, and the hour of my deliverance was yet far off. My master, having
soon concluded his bargain with the captain, came out of the cabin, and he and
his people got into the boat and put off; I followed them with aching eyes as
long as I could, and when they were out of sight I threw myself on the deck,
while my heart was ready to burst with sorrow and anguish.
FOOTNOTES
L He
had drowned himself in endeavouring to desert.
M Among others whom we brought from Bayonne,
two gentlemen, who had been in the West Indies, where they sold slaves; and
they confessed they had made at one time a false bill of sale, and sold two
Portuguese white men among a lot of slaves.
N Some people have it, that sometimes shortly
before persons die their ward has been seen; that is, some spirit exactly in
their likeness, though they are themselves at other places at the same time.
One day while we were at Bayonne Mr. Mondle saw one
of our men, as he thought, in the gun-room; and a little after, coming on the
quarter-deck, he spoke of some circumstances of this man to some of the
officers. They told him that the man was then out of the ship, in one of the
boats with the Lieutenant: but Mr. Mondle would not
believe it, and we searched the ship, when he found the man was actually out of
her; and when the boat returned some time afterwards, we found the man had been
drowned at the very time Mr. Mondle thought he saw
him.
CHAPTER V
The author's reflections on his situation—Is deceived by a promise of
being delivered—His despair at sailing for the West Indies—Arrives at
Montserrat, where he is sold to Mr. King—Various interesting instances of
oppression, cruelty, and extortion, which the author saw practised
upon the slaves in the West Indies during his captivity from the year 1763 to
1766—Address on it to the planters
Thus, at the moment I expected all my toils to end,
was I plunged, as I supposed, in a new slavery; in comparison of which all my
service hitherto had been 'perfect freedom;' and whose horrors, always present
to my mind, now rushed on it with tenfold aggravation. I wept very bitterly for
some time: and began to think that I must have done something to displease the
Lord, that he thus punished me so severely. This filled me with painful reflections
on my past conduct; I recollected that on the morning of our arrival at
Deptford I had rashly sworn that as soon as we reached London I would spend the day in rambling and
sport. My conscience smote me for this unguarded expression: I felt that the
Lord was able to disappoint me in all things, and immediately considered my
present situation as a judgment of Heaven on account of my presumption in
swearing: I therefore, with contrition of heart, acknowledged my transgression
to God, and poured out my soul before him with unfeigned repentance, and with
earnest supplications I besought him not to abandon me in my distress, nor cast
me from his mercy for ever. In a little time my grief, spent with its own
violence, began to subside; and after the first confusion of my thoughts was
over I reflected with more calmness on my present condition: I considered that
trials and disappointments are sometimes for our good, and I thought God might
perhaps have permitted this in order to teach me wisdom and resignation; for he
had hitherto shadowed me with the wings of his mercy, and by his invisible but
powerful hand brought me the way I knew not. These reflections gave me a little
comfort, and I rose at last from the deck with dejection and sorrow in my
countenance, yet mixed with some faint hope that the Lord would appear for my
deliverance.
Soon afterwards, as my new master was going ashore,
he called me to him, and told me to behave myself well, and do the business of
the ship the same as any of the rest of the boys, and that I should fare the
better for it; but I made him no answer. I was then asked if I could swim, and
I said, No. However I was made to go under the deck,
and was well watched. The next tide the ship got under way, and soon after
arrived at the Mother Bank, Portsmouth; where
she waited a few days for some of the West India
convoy. While I was here I tried every means I could devise amongst the people
of the ship to get me a boat from the shore, as there was none suffered to come
alongside of the ship; and their own, whenever it was used, was hoisted in
again immediately. A sailor on board took a guinea from me on pretence of
getting me a boat; and promised me, time after time, that it was hourly to come
off. When he had the watch upon deck I watched also; and looked long enough,
but all in vain; I could never see either the boat or my guinea again. And what
I thought was still the worst of all, the fellow gave information, as I
afterwards found, all the while to the mates, of my intention to go off, if I could
in any way do it; but, rogue like, he never told them he had got a guinea from
me to procure my escape. However, after we had sailed, and his trick was made
known to the ship's crew, I had some satisfaction in seeing him detested and
despised by them all for his behaviour to me. I was
still in hopes that my old shipmates would not forget their promise to come for
me to Portsmouth:
and, indeed, at last, but not till the day before we sailed, some of them did
come there, and sent me off some oranges, and other tokens of their regard.
They also sent me word they would come off to me themselves the next day or the
day after; and a lady also, who lived in Gosport, wrote to me that she would come and
take me out of the ship at the same time. This lady had been once very intimate
with my former master: I used to sell and take care of a great deal of property
for her, in different ships; and in return she always shewed
great friendship for me, and used to tell my master that she would take me away
to live with her: but, unfortunately for me, a disagreement soon afterwards
took place between them; and she was succeeded in my master's good graces by
another lady, who appeared sole mistress of the Ætna,
and mostly lodged on board. I was not so great a favourite
with this lady as with the former; she had conceived a pique against me on some
occasion when she was on board, and she did not fail to instigate my master to
treat me in the manner he didO.
However, the next morning, the 30th of December, the
wind being brisk and easterly, the Oeolus frigate,
which was to escort the convoy, made a signal for sailing. All the ships then
got up their anchors; and, before any of my friends had an opportunity to come
off to my relief, to my inexpressible anguish our ship had got under way. What
tumultuous emotions agitated my soul when the convoy got under sail, and I a
prisoner on board, now without hope! I kept my swimming eyes upon the land in a
state of unutterable grief; not knowing what to do, and despairing how to help myself.
While my mind was in this situation the fleet sailed on, and in one day's time
I lost sight of the wished-for land. In the first expressions of my grief I
reproached my fate, and wished I had never been born. I was ready to curse the
tide that bore us, the gale that wafted my prison, and even the ship that
conducted us; and I called on death to relieve me from the horrors I felt and
dreaded, that I might be in that place
"Where
slaves are free, and men oppress no more.
Fool that I
was, inur'd so long to pain,
To trust to hope, or dream of joy again.
Now dragg'd once more beyond the western main,
To groan
beneath some dastard planter's chain;
Where my poor
countrymen in bondage wait
The long
enfranchisement of ling'ring fate:
Hard ling'ring fate! while, ere the
dawn of day,
Rous'd by the lash they go their
cheerless way;
And as their
souls with shame and anguish burn,
Salute with
groans unwelcome morn's return,
And, chiding ev'ry hour the slow-pac'd sun,
Pursue their
toils till all his race is run.
No eye to mark
their suff'rings with a tear;
No friend to
comfort, and no hope to cheer:
Then, like the
dull unpity'd brutes, repair
To stalls as
wretched, and as coarse a fare;
Thank heaven
one day of mis'ry was o'er,
Then sink to
sleep, and wish to wake no moreP."
The turbulence of my emotions however naturally gave
way to calmer thoughts, and I soon perceived what fate had decreed no mortal on
earth could prevent. The convoy sailed on without any accident, with a pleasant
gale and smooth sea, for six weeks, till February, when one morning the Oeolus ran down a brig, one of the convoy, and she
instantly went down and was ingulfed in the dark
recesses of the ocean. The convoy was immediately thrown into great confusion till
it was daylight; and the Oeolus was illumined with
lights to prevent any farther mischief. On the 13th of February 1763, from the
mast-head, we descried our destined island Montserrat;
and soon after I beheld those
"Regions
of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace
And rest can
rarely dwell. Hope never comes
That comes to
all, but torture without end
Still
urges."
At the sight of this land of bondage, a fresh horror
ran through all my frame, and chilled me to the heart.
My former slavery now rose in dreadful review to my mind, and displayed nothing
but misery, stripes, and chains; and, in the first paroxysm of my grief, I
called upon God's thunder, and his avenging power, to direct the stroke of
death to me, rather than permit me to become a slave, and be sold from lord to
lord.
In this state of my mind our ship came to an anchor,
and soon after discharged her cargo. I now knew what it was to work hard; I was
made to help to unload and load the ship. And, to comfort me in my distress in
that time, two of the sailors robbed me of all my money, and ran away from the
ship. I had been so long used to an European climate
that at first I felt the scorching West India
sun very painful, while the dashing surf would toss the boat and the people in
it frequently above high water mark. Sometimes our limbs were broken with this,
or even attended with instant death, and I was day by day mangled and torn.
About the middle of May, when the ship was got ready
to sail for England,
I all the time believing that Fate's blackest clouds were gathering over my
head, and expecting their bursting would mix me with the dead, Captain Doran
sent for me ashore one morning, and I was told by the messenger that my fate
was then determined. With fluttering steps and trembling heart I came to the
captain, and found with him one Mr. Robert King, a quaker, and the first merchant in the place. The
captain then told me my former master had sent me there to be sold; but that he
had desired him to get me the best master he could, as he told him I was a very
deserving boy, which Captain Doran said he found to be true; and if he were to
stay in the West Indies he would be glad to
keep me himself; but he could not venture to take me to London, for he was very sure that when I came
there I would leave him. I at that instant burst out a crying, and begged much
of him to take me to England
with him, but all to no purpose. He told me he had got me the very best master
in the whole island, with whom I should be as happy as if I were in England,
and for that reason he chose to let him have me, though he could sell me to his
own brother-in-law for a great deal more money than what he got from this
gentleman. Mr. King, my new master, then made a reply, and said the reason he
had bought me was on account of my good character; and, as he had not the least
doubt of my good behaviour, I should be very well off
with him. He also told me he did not live in the West Indies, but at Philadelphia, where he was
going soon; and, as I understood something of the rules of arithmetic, when we
got there he would put me to school, and fit me for a clerk. This conversation
relieved my mind a little, and I left those gentlemen considerably more at ease
in myself than when I came to them; and I was very grateful to Captain Doran,
and even to my old master, for the character they had given me; a character
which I afterwards found of infinite service to me. I went on board again, and
took leave of all my shipmates; and the next day the ship sailed. When she
weighed anchor I went to the waterside and looked at her with a very wishful
and aching heart, and followed her with my eyes and tears until she was totally
out of sight. I was so bowed down with grief that I could not hold up my head
for many months; and if my new master had not been kind to me I believe I
should have died under it at last. And indeed I soon found that he fully
deserved the good character which Captain Doran had given me of him; for he
possessed a most amiable disposition and temper, and was very charitable and humane.
If any of his slaves behaved amiss he did not beat or use them ill, but parted
with them. This made them afraid of disobliging him; and as he treated his
slaves better than any other man on the island, so he was better and more
faithfully served by them in return. By his kind treatment I did at last endeavour to compose myself; and with fortitude, though
moneyless, determined to face whatever fate had decreed for me. Mr. King soon
asked me what I could do; and at the same time said he did not mean to treat me
as a common slave. I told him I knew something of seamanship, and could shave
and dress hair pretty well; and I could refine wines, which I had learned on
shipboard, where I had often done it; and that I could write, and understood
arithmetic tolerably well as far as the Rule of Three. He then asked me if I
knew any thing of gauging; and, on my answering that I did not, he said one of
his clerks should teach me to gauge.
Mr. King dealt in all manner of merchandize, and
kept from one to six clerks. He loaded many vessels in a year; particularly to Philadelphia, where he was
born, and was connected with a great mercantile house in that city. He had
besides many vessels and droggers, of different
sizes, which used to go about the island; and others to collect rum, sugar, and
other goods. I understood pulling and managing those boats very well; and this
hard work, which was the first that he set me to, in the sugar seasons used to
be my constant employment. I have rowed the boat, and slaved at the oars, from
one hour to sixteen in the twenty-four; during which I had fifteen pence
sterling per day to live on, though sometimes only ten pence. However this was
considerably more than was allowed to other slaves that used to work with me,
and belonged to other gentlemen on the island: those poor souls had never more
than nine pence per day, and seldom more than six pence, from their masters or
owners, though they earned them three or four pisterinesQ:
for it is a common practice in the West Indies
for men to purchase slaves though they have not plantations themselves, in
order to let them out to planters and merchants at so much a piece by the day,
and they give what allowance they chuse out of this
produce of their daily work to their slaves for subsistence; this allowance is
often very scanty. My master often gave the owners of these slaves two and a
half of these pieces per day, and found the poor fellows in victuals himself,
because he thought their owners did not feed them well enough according to the work
they did. The slaves used to like this very well; and, as they knew my master
to be a man of feeling, they were always glad to work for him in preference to
any other gentleman; some of whom, after they had been paid for these poor
people's labours, would not give them their allowance
out of it. Many times have I even seen these unfortunate wretches beaten for
asking for their pay; and often severely flogged by their owners if they did
not bring them their daily or weekly money exactly to the time; though the poor
creatures were obliged to wait on the gentlemen they had worked for sometimes
for more than half the day before they could get their pay; and this generally
on Sundays, when they wanted the time for themselves. In particular, I knew a
countryman of mine who once did not bring the weekly money directly that it was
earned; and though he brought it the same day to his master, yet he was staked
to the ground for this pretended negligence, and was just going to receive a
hundred lashes, but for a gentleman who begged him off fifty. This poor man was
very industrious; and, by his frugality, had saved so much money by working on
shipboard, that he had got a white man to buy him a boat, unknown to his
master. Some time after he had this little estate the governor wanted a boat to
bring his sugar from different parts of the island; and, knowing this to be a
negro-man's boat, he seized upon it for himself, and
would not pay the owner a farthing. The man on this went to his master, and
complained to him of this act of the governor; but the only satisfaction he
received was to be damned very heartily by his master, who asked him how dared
any of his negroes to have a boat. If the justly-merited ruin of the governor's
fortune could be any gratification to the poor man he had thus robbed, he was
not without consolation. Extortion and rapine are poor providers; and some time
after this the governor died in the King's Bench in England, as I was told, in great
poverty. The last war favoured this poor negro-man,
and he found some means to escape from his Christian master: he came to England;
where I saw him afterwards several times. Such treatment as this often drives
these miserable wretches to despair, and they run away from their masters at
the hazard of their lives. Many of them, in this place, unable to get their pay
when they have earned it, and fearing to be flogged, as usual, if they return
home without it, run away where they can for shelter, and a reward is often
offered to bring them in dead or alive. My master used sometimes, in these
cases, to agree with their owners, and to settle with them himself; and thereby
he saved many of them a flogging.
Once, for a few days, I was let out to fit a vessel,
and I had no victuals allowed me by either party; at last I told my master of
this treatment, and he took me away from it. In many of the estates, on the
different islands where I used to be sent for rum or sugar, they would not
deliver it to me, or any other negro; he was therefore
obliged to send a white man along with me to those places; and then he used to
pay him from six to ten pisterines a day. From being
thus employed, during the time I served Mr. King, in going about the different
estates on the island, I had all the opportunity I could wish for to see the
dreadful usage of the poor men; usage that reconciled me to my situation, and
made me bless God for the hands into which I had fallen.
I had the good fortune to please my master in every
department in which he employed me; and there was scarcely any part of his
business, or household affairs, in which I was not occasionally engaged. I
often supplied the place of a clerk, in receiving and delivering cargoes to the
ships, in tending stores, and delivering goods: and, besides this, I used to
shave and dress my master when convenient, and take care of his horse; and when
it was necessary, which was very often, I worked likewise on board of different
vessels of his. By these means I became very useful to my master; and saved
him, as he used to acknowledge, above a hundred pounds a year. Nor did he
scruple to say I was of more advantage to him than any of his clerks; though
their usual wages in the West Indies are from
sixty to a hundred pounds current a year.
I have sometimes heard it asserted that a negro cannot earn his master the first cost; but nothing can
be further from the truth. I suppose nine tenths of the mechanics throughout
the West Indies are negro slaves; and I well
know the coopers among them earn two dollars a day; the carpenters the same,
and oftentimes more; as also the masons, smiths, and fishermen, &c. and I
have known many slaves whose masters would not take a thousand pounds current
for them. But surely this assertion refutes itself; for, if it be true, why do
the planters and merchants pay such a price for slaves? And, above all, why do
those who make this assertion exclaim the most loudly against the abolition of
the slave trade? So much are men blinded, and to such inconsistent arguments
are they driven by mistaken interest! I grant, indeed, that slaves are some
times, by half-feeding, half-clothing, over-working and stripes, reduced so
low, that they are turned out as unfit for service, and left to perish in the
woods, or expire on a dunghill.
My master was several times offered by different
gentlemen one hundred guineas for me; but he always told them he would not sell
me, to my great joy: and I used to double my diligence and care for fear of
getting into the hands of those men who did not allow a valuable slave the
common support of life. Many of them even used to find fault with my master for
feeding his slaves so well as he did; although I often
went hungry, and an Englishman might think my fare very indifferent; but he
used to tell them he always would do it, because the slaves thereby looked
better and did more work.
While I was thus employed by my master I was often a
witness to cruelties of every kind, which were exercised on my unhappy fellow
slaves. I used frequently to have different cargoes of new negroes in my care
for sale; and it was almost a constant practice with our clerks, and other
whites, to commit violent depredations on the chastity of the female slaves;
and these I was, though with reluctance, obliged to submit to at all times,
being unable to help them. When we have had some of these slaves on board my
master's vessels to carry them to other islands, or to America, I have known our mates to
commit these acts most shamefully, to the disgrace, not of Christians only, but
of men. I have even known them gratify their brutal passion with females not
ten years old; and these abominations some of them practised
to such scandalous excess, that one of our captains discharged the mate and
others on that account. And yet in Montserrat
I have seen a negro man staked to the ground, and cut most shockingly, and then
his ears cut off bit by bit, because he had been connected with a white woman
who was a common prostitute: as if it were no crime in the whites to rob an
innocent African girl of her virtue; but most heinous in a black man only to
gratify a passion of nature, where the temptation was offered by one of a
different colour, though the most abandoned woman of
her species. Another negro man was half hanged, and
then burnt, for attempting to poison a cruel overseer. Thus by repeated
cruelties are the wretched first urged to despair, and then murdered, because
they still retain so much of human nature about them as to wish to put an end
to their misery, and retaliate on their tyrants! These overseers are indeed for
the most part persons of the worst character of any denomination of men in the West Indies. Unfortunately, many humane gentlemen, by not
residing on their estates, are obliged to leave the management of them in the
hands of these human butchers, who cut and mangle the slaves in a shocking
manner on the most trifling occasions, and altogether treat them in every
respect like brutes. They pay no regard to the situation of
pregnant women, nor the least attention to the lodging of the field
negroes. Their huts, which ought to be well covered, and the place dry where
they take their little repose, are often open sheds, built in damp places; so
that, when the poor creatures return tired from the toils of the field, they
contract many disorders, from being exposed to the damp air in this
uncomfortable state, while they are heated, and their pores are open. This
neglect certainly conspires with many others to cause a decrease in the births
as well as in the lives of the grown negroes. I can
quote many instances of gentlemen who reside on their
estates in the West Indies, and then the scene
is quite changed; the negroes are treated with lenity and proper care, by which
their lives are prolonged, and their masters are profited. To the honour of humanity, I knew several gentlemen who managed
their estates in this manner; and they found that benevolence was their true
interest. And, among many I could mention in several of the islands, I knew one
in MontserratR whose slaves looked remarkably
well, and never needed any fresh supplies of negroes;
and there are many other estates, especially in Barbadoes,
which, from such judicious treatment, need no fresh stock of negroes at any
time. I have the honour of knowing a most worthy and
humane gentleman, who is a native of Barbadoes, and
has estates thereS. This gentleman has written a
treatise on the usage of his own slaves. He allows them two hours for
refreshment at mid-day; and many other indulgencies and comforts, particularly
in their lying; and, besides this, he raises more provisions on his estate than
they can destroy; so that by these attentions he saves the lives of his negroes, and keeps them healthy, and as happy as the
condition of slavery can admit. I myself, as shall appear in the sequel,
managed an estate, where, by those attentions, the negroes
were uncommonly cheerful and healthy, and did more work by half than by the
common mode of treatment they usually do. For want, therefore, of such care and
attention to the poor negroes, and otherwise oppressed as they are, it is no
wonder that the decrease should require 20,000 new negroes annually to fill up
the vacant places of the dead.
Even in Barbadoes,
notwithstanding those humane exceptions which I have mentioned, and others I am
acquainted with, which justly make it quoted as a place where slaves meet with
the best treatment, and need fewest recruits of any in the West
Indies, yet this island requires 1000 negroes
annually to keep up the original stock, which is only 80,000. So that the whole
term of a negro's life may be said to be there but sixteen years!T And yet the climate here is
in every respect the same as that from which they are taken, except in being
more wholesome. Do the British colonies decrease in this manner? And yet what a
prodigious difference is there between an English and West
India climate?
While I was in Montserrat I knew a negro man, named Emanuel Sankey,
who endeavoured to escape from his miserable bondage,
by concealing himself on board of a London
ship: but fate did not favour the poor oppressed man;
for, being discovered when the vessel was under sail, he was delivered up again
to his master. This Christian master immediately pinned the wretch down to the
ground at each wrist and ancle, and then took some
sticks of sealing wax, and lighted them, and droped
it all over his back. There was another master who was noted for cruelty; and I
believe he had not a slave but what had been cut, and had pieces fairly taken
out of the flesh: and, after they had been punished thus, he used to make them
get into a long wooden box or case he had for that purpose, in which he shut
them up during pleasure. It was just about the height and breadth of a man; and
the poor wretches had no room, when in the case, to move.
It was very common in several of the islands,
particularly in St. Kitt's, for the slaves to be
branded with the initial letters of their master's name; and a load of heavy
iron hooks hung about their necks. Indeed on the most trifling occasions they
were loaded with chains; and often instruments of torture were added. The iron
muzzle, thumb-screws, &c. are so well known, as not to need a description,
and were sometimes applied for the slightest faults. I have seen a negro beaten till some of his bones were broken, for even
letting a pot boil over. Is it surprising that usage like this should drive the
poor creatures to despair, and make them seek a refuge in death from those
evils which render their lives intolerable—while,
"With shudd'ring horror pale, and eyes aghast,
They view
their lamentable lot, and find
No rest!"
This they frequently do. A negro-man on board a
vessel of my master, while I belonged to her, having been put in irons for some
trifling misdemeanor, and kept in that state for some days, being weary of
life, took an opportunity of jumping overboard into the sea; however, he was
picked up without being drowned. Another, whose life was also a burden to him,
resolved to starve himself to death, and refused to eat any victuals; this
procured him a severe flogging: and he also, on the first occasion which
offered, jumped overboard at Charles Town, but was saved.
Nor is there any greater regard shewn
to the little property than there is to the persons and lives of the negroes. I have already related an instance or two of
particular oppression out of many which I have witnessed; but the following is
frequent in all the islands. The wretched field-slaves, after toiling all the
day for an unfeeling owner, who gives them but little victuals, steal sometimes
a few moments from rest or refreshment to gather some small portion of grass,
according as their time will admit. This they commonly tie up in a parcel;
(either a bit, worth six pence; or half a bit's-worth) and bring it to town, or
to the market, to sell. Nothing is more common than for the white people on
this occasion to take the grass from them without paying for it; and not only
so, but too often also, to my knowledge, our clerks, and many others, at the
same time have committed acts of violence on the poor, wretched, and helpless
females; whom I have seen for hours stand crying to no purpose, and get no
redress or pay of any kind. Is not this one common and crying sin enough to
bring down God's judgment on the islands? He tells us the oppressor and the
oppressed are both in his hands; and if these are not the poor, the
broken-hearted, the blind, the captive, the bruised, which our Saviour speaks of, who are they? One of these depredators
once, in St. Eustatia, came on board of our vessel,
and bought some fowls and pigs of me; and a whole day after his departure with
the things he returned again and wanted his money back: I refused to give it;
and, not seeing my captain on board, he began the common pranks with me; and
swore he would even break open my chest and take my money. I therefore
expected, as my captain was absent, that he would be as good as his word: and
he was just proceeding to strike me, when fortunately a British seaman on
board, whose heart had not been debauched by a West India
climate, interposed and prevented him. But had the cruel man struck me I
certainly should have defended myself at the hazard of my life; for what is
life to a man thus oppressed? He went away, however, swearing; and threatened
that whenever he caught me on shore he would shoot me, and pay for me
afterwards.
The small account in which the life of a negro is
held in the West Indies is so universally
known, that it might seem impertinent to quote the following extract, if some
people had not been hardy enough of late to assert that negroes are on the same
footing in that respect as Europeans. By the 329th Act, page 125, of the
Assembly of Barbadoes, it is enacted 'That if any
negro, or other slave, under punishment by his master, or his order, for
running away, or any other crime or misdemeanor towards his said master,
unfortunately shall suffer in life or member, no person whatsoever shall be
liable to a fine; but if any man shall out of wantonness, or only of
bloody-mindedness, or cruel intention, wilfully kill
a negro, or other slave, of his own, he shall pay into the public treasury
fifteen pounds sterling.' And it is the same in most, if not all, of the West India
islands. Is not this one of the many acts of the islands which call loudly for redress? And do not
the assembly which enacted it deserve the appellation of savages and brutes
rather than of Christians and men? It is an act at once unmerciful, unjust, and
unwise; which for cruelty would disgrace an assembly of those who are called
barbarians; and for its injustice and insanity would shock the morality and
common sense of a Samaide or a Hottentot.
Shocking as this and many more acts of the bloody West India code at first view appear, how is the iniquity
of it heightened when we consider to whom it may be extended! Mr. James Tobin,
a zealous labourer in the vineyard of slavery, gives
an account of a French planter of his acquaintance, in the island of Martinique, who shewed
him many mulattoes working in the fields like beasts of burden; and he told Mr.
Tobin these were all the produce of his own loins! And I myself have known
similar instances. Pray, reader, are these sons and daughters of the French
planter less his children by being begotten on a black woman? And what must be
the virtue of those legislators, and the feelings of those fathers, who
estimate the lives of their sons, however begotten, at no more than fifteen
pounds; though they should be murdered, as the act says, out of wantonness and
bloody-mindedness! But is not the slave trade entirely a war with the heart of
man? And surely that which is begun by breaking down the barriers of virtue
involves in its continuance destruction to every principle, and buries all
sentiments in ruin!
I have often seen slaves, particularly those who
were meagre, in different islands, put into scales
and weighed; and then sold from three pence to six pence or nine pence a pound.
My master, however, whose humanity was shocked at this mode, used to sell such
by the lump. And at or after a sale it was not uncommon to see negroes taken
from their wives, wives taken from their husbands, and children from their
parents, and sent off to other islands, and wherever else their merciless lords
chose; and probably never more during life to see each other! Oftentimes my
heart has bled at these partings; when the friends of the departed have been at
the water side, and, with sighs and tears, have kept their eyes fixed on the
vessel till it went out of sight.
A poor Creole negro I knew
well, who, after having been often thus transported from island to island, at
last resided in Montserrat. This man used to
tell me many melancholy tales of himself. Generally,
after he had done working for his master, he used to employ his few leisure
moments to go a fishing. When he had caught any fish,
his master would frequently take them from him without paying him; and at other
times some other white people would serve him in the same manner. One day he
said to me, very movingly, 'Sometimes when a white man take away my fish I go
to my maser, and he get me my right; and when my maser by strength take away my
fishes, what me must do? I can't go to any body to be righted; then' said the
poor man, looking up above 'I must look up to God Mighty in the top for right.'
This artless tale moved me much, and I could not help feeling the just cause
Moses had in redressing his brother against the Egyptian. I exhorted the man to
look up still to the God on the top, since there was no redress below. Though I
little thought then that I myself should more than once experience such
imposition, and read the same exhortation hereafter, in my own transactions in
the islands; and that even this poor man and I should some time after suffer
together in the same manner, as shall be related hereafter.
Nor was such usage as this confined to particular places
or individuals; for, in all the different islands in which I have been (and I
have visited no less than fifteen) the treatment of the slaves was nearly the
same; so nearly indeed, that the history of an island, or even a plantation,
with a few such exceptions as I have mentioned, might serve for a history of
the whole. Such a tendency has the slave-trade to debauch men's minds, and
harden them to every feeling of humanity! For I will not suppose that the
dealers in slaves are born worse than other men—No; it is the fatality of this
mistaken avarice, that it corrupts the milk of human kindness and turns it into
gall. And, had the pursuits of those men been different, they might have been
as generous, as tender-hearted and just, as they are unfeeling, rapacious and
cruel. Surely this traffic cannot be good, which spreads like a pestilence, and
taints what it touches! which violates that first
natural right of mankind, equality and independency, and gives one man a
dominion over his fellows which God could never intend! For it raises the owner
to a state as far above man as it depresses the slave below it; and, with all
the presumption of human pride, sets a distinction between them, immeasurable
in extent, and endless in duration! Yet how mistaken is the avarice even of the
planters? Are slaves more useful by being thus humbled to the condition of
brutes, than they would be if suffered to enjoy the privileges of men? The
freedom which diffuses health and prosperity throughout Britain answers you—No. When you make men slaves you deprive them of half their
virtue, you set them in your own conduct an example of fraud, rapine, and
cruelty, and compel them to live with you in a state of war; and yet you
complain that they are not honest or faithful! You stupify
them with stripes, and think it necessary to keep them in a state of ignorance;
and yet you assert that they are incapable of learning; that their minds are
such a barren soil or moor, that culture would be lost on them; and that they
come from a climate, where nature, though prodigal of her bounties in a degree
unknown to yourselves, has left man alone scant and unfinished, and incapable
of enjoying the treasures she has poured out for him!—An assertion at once
impious and absurd. Why do you use those instruments of torture? Are they fit
to be applied by one rational being to another? And are ye not struck with
shame and mortification, to see the partakers of your nature reduced so low? But, above all, are there no dangers attending this mode of
treatment? Are you not hourly in dread of an insurrection? Nor would it
be surprising: for when
"No peace
is given
To us enslav'd, but custody severe;
And stripes
and arbitrary punishment
Inflicted—What peace can we return?
But to our
power, hostility and hate;
Untam'd reluctance, and revenge,
though slow,
Yet ever
plotting how the conqueror least
May reap his
conquest, and may least rejoice
In doing what
we most in suffering feel."
But by changing your conduct, and treating your
slaves as men, every cause of fear would be banished. They would be faithful,
honest, intelligent and vigorous; and peace, prosperity, and happiness, would
attend you.
FOOTNOTES:
O Thus was I
sacrificed to the envy and resentment of this woman for knowing that the lady
whom she had succeeded in my master's good graces designed to take me into her
service; which, had I once got on shore, she would not have been able to
prevent. She felt her pride alarmed at the superiority of her rival in being
attended by a black servant: it was not less to prevent this than to be
revenged on me, that she caused the captain to treat me thus cruelly.
P "The Dying
Negro," a poem originally published in 1773. Perhaps it may not be deemed
impertinent here to add, that this elegant and pathetic little poem was
occasioned, as appears by the advertisement prefixed to it, by the following
incident. "A black, who, a few days before had ran away from his master,
and got himself christened, with intent to marry a white woman his
fellow-servant, being taken and sent on board a ship in the Thames, took an
opportunity of shooting himself through the head."
Q These pisterines
are of the value of a shilling.
R Mr. Dubury, and many others, Montserrat.
S Sir Philip Gibbes,
Baronet, Barbadoes.
T Benezet's Account of Guinea, p. 16.
CHAPTER
VI
Some account of Brimstone-Hill in Montserrat—Favourable
change in the author's situation—He commences merchant with three pence—His
various success in dealing in the different islands, and America, and the
impositions he meets with in his transactions with Europeans—A curious
imposition on human nature—Danger of the surfs in the West Indies—Remarkable
instance of kidnapping a free mulatto—The author is nearly murdered by Doctor
Perkins in Savannah
In the preceding chapter I have set before the
reader a few of those many instances of oppression, extortion, and cruelty,
which I have been a witness to in the West Indies:
but, were I to enumerate them all, the catalogue would be tedious and
disgusting. The punishments of the slaves on every trifling occasion are so
frequent, and so well known, together with the different instruments with which
they are tortured, that it cannot any longer afford novelty to recite them; and
they are too shocking to yield delight either to the writer or the reader. I
shall therefore hereafter only mention such as incidentally befel
myself in the course of my adventures.
In the variety of departments in which I was
employed by my master, I had an opportunity of seeing many curious scenes in
different islands; but, above all, I was struck with a celebrated curiosity
called Brimstone-Hill, which is a high and steep mountain, some few miles from
the town of Plymouth in Montserrat.
I had often heard of some wonders that were to be seen on this hill, and I went
once with some white and black people to visit it. When we arrived at the top,
I saw under different cliffs great flakes of brimstone, occasioned by the
steams of various little ponds, which were then boiling naturally in the earth.
Some of these ponds were as white as milk, some quite blue, and many others of
different colours. I had taken some potatoes with me,
and I put them into different ponds, and in a few minutes they were well
boiled. I tasted some of them, but they were very sulphurous;
and the silver shoe buckles, and all the other things of that metal we had
among us, were, in a little time, turned as black as lead.
Some time in the year 1763 kind Providence seemed to appear rather more favourable to me. One of my master's vessels, a Bermudas
sloop, about sixty tons, was commanded by one Captain Thomas Farmer, an
Englishman, a very alert and active man, who gained my master a great deal of
money by his good management in carrying passengers from one island to another;
but very often his sailors used to get drunk and run away from the vessel,
which hindered him in his business very much. This man had taken a liking to
me; and many different times begged of my master to let me go a trip with him
as a sailor; but he would tell him he could not spare me, though the vessel
sometimes could not go for want of hands, for sailors were generally very
scarce in the island. However, at last, from necessity or force, my master was
prevailed on, though very reluctantly, to let me go with this captain; but he
gave great charge to him to take care that I did not run away, for if I did he
would make him pay for me. This being the case, the captain had for some time a
sharp eye upon me whenever the vessel anchored; and as soon as she returned I
was sent for on shore again. Thus was I slaving as it were for life, sometimes
at one thing, and sometimes at another; so that the captain and I were nearly
the most useful men in my master's employment. I also
became so useful to the captain on shipboard, that many times, when he used to
ask for me to go with him, though it should be but for twenty-four hours, to
some of the islands near us, my master would answer he could not spare me, at
which the captain would swear, and would not go the trip; and tell my master I
was better to him on board than any three white men he had; for they used to
behave ill in many respects, particularly in getting drunk; and then they
frequently got the boat stove, so as to hinder the vessel from coming back as
soon as she might have done. This my master knew very well; and at last, by the
captain's constant entreaties, after I had been several times with him, one
day, to my great joy, my master told me the captain would not let him rest, and
asked me whether I would go aboard as a sailor, or stay on shore and mind the
stores, for he could not bear any longer to be plagued in this manner. I was
very happy at this proposal, for I immediately thought I might in time stand
some chance by being on board to get a little money, or possibly make my escape
if I should be used ill: I also expected to get better food, and in greater
abundance; for I had felt much hunger oftentimes, though my master treated his
slaves, as I have observed, uncommonly well. I therefore, without hesitation,
answered him, that I would go and be a sailor if he pleased. Accordingly I was
ordered on board directly. Nevertheless, between the vessel and the shore, when
she was in port, I had little or no rest, as my master always wished to have me
along with him. Indeed he was a very pleasant gentleman, and but for my
expectations on shipboard I should not have thought of leaving him. But the
captain liked me also very much, and I was entirely his right-hand man. I did
all I could to deserve his favour, and in return I
received better treatment from him than any other I believe ever met with in
the West Indies in my situation.
After I had been sailing for some time with this
captain, at length I endeavoured to try my luck and
commence merchant. I had but a very small capital to begin with; for one single
half bit, which is equal to three pence in England, made up my whole stock.
However I trusted to the Lord to be with me; and at one of our trips to St. Eustatia, a Dutch island, I bought a glass tumbler with my
half bit, and when I came to Montserrat I sold
it for a bit, or sixpence. Luckily we made several successive trips to St. Eustatia (which was a general mart for the West Indies,
about twenty leagues from Montserrat); and in
our next, finding my tumbler so profitable, with this one bit I bought two
tumblers more; and when I came back I sold them for two bits, equal to a
shilling sterling. When we went again I bought with these two bits four more of
these glasses, which I sold for four bits on our return to Montserrat; and in
our next voyage to St. Eustatia I bought two glasses
with one bit, and with the other three I bought a jug
of Geneva,
nearly about three pints in measure. When we came to Montserrat
I sold the gin for eight bits, and the tumblers for two, so that my capital now
amounted in all to a dollar, well husbanded and acquired in the space of a
month or six weeks, when I blessed the Lord that I was so rich. As we sailed to
different islands, I laid this money out in various things occasionally, and it
used to turn out to very good account, especially when we went to Guadaloupe, Grenada, and the rest of the French
islands. Thus was I going all about the islands upwards of four years, and ever
trading as I went, during which I experienced many instances of ill usage, and
have seen many injuries done to other negroes in our dealings with Europeans:
and, amidst our recreations, when we have been dancing and merry-making, they,
without cause, have molested and insulted us. Indeed I was more than once
obliged to look up to God on high, as I had advised the poor fisherman some
time before. And I had not been long trading for myself in the manner I have
related above, when I experienced the like trial in company with him as
follows: This man being used to the water, was upon an emergency put on board
of us by his master to work as another hand, on a voyage to Santa Cruz; and at our sailing he had brought
his little all for a venture, which consisted of six bits' worth of limes and
oranges in a bag; I had also my whole stock, which was about twelve bits' worth
of the same kind of goods, separate in two bags; for we had heard these fruits
sold well in that island. When we came there, in some little convenient time he
and I went ashore with our fruits to sell them; but we had scarcely landed when
we were met by two white men, who presently took our three bags from us. We
could not at first guess what they meant to do; and for some time we thought
they were jesting with us; but they too soon let us know otherwise, for they
took our ventures immediately to a house hard by, and adjoining the fort, while
we followed all the way begging of them to give us our fruits, but in vain. They
not only refused to return them, but swore at us, and threatened if we did not
immediately depart they would flog us well. We told them these three bags were
all we were worth in the world, and that we brought them with us to sell when
we came from Montserrat, and shewed them the vessel. But
this was rather against us, as they now saw we were strangers as well as
slaves. They still therefore swore, and desired us to be gone, and even took
sticks to beat us; while we, seeing they meant what
they said, went off in the greatest confusion and despair. Thus, in the very
minute of gaining more by three times than I ever did by any venture in my life
before, was I deprived of every farthing I was worth.
An insupportable misfortune! but how to help ourselves
we knew not. In our consternation we went to the commanding officer of the fort
and told him how we had been served by some of his people; but we obtained not
the least redress: he answered our complaints only by a volley of imprecations
against us, and immediately took a horse-whip, in order to chastise us, so that
we were obliged to turn out much faster than we came in. I now, in the agony of
distress and indignation, wished that the ire of God in his forked lightning
might transfix these cruel oppressors among the dead. Still however we
persevered; went back again to the house, and begged and besought them again
and again for our fruits, till at last some other people that were in the house
asked if we would be contented if they kept one bag and gave us the other two.
We, seeing no remedy whatever, consented to this; and they, observing one bag
to have both kinds of fruit in it, which belonged to my companion, kept that;
and the other two, which were mine, they gave us back. As soon as I got them, I
ran as fast as I could, and got the first negro man I could to help me off; my
companion, however, stayed a little longer to plead; he told them the bag they
had was his, and likewise all that he was worth in the world; but this was of
no avail, and he was obliged to return without it. The poor old man, wringing
his hands, cried bitterly for his loss; and, indeed, he then did look up to God
on high, which so moved me with pity for him, that I gave him nearly one third
of my fruits. We then proceeded to the markets to sell them; and Providence was more favourable to us than we could have expected, for we sold
our fruits uncommonly well; I got for mine about thirty-seven bits. Such a
surprising reverse of fortune in so short a space of time seemed like a dream
to me, and proved no small encouragement for me to trust the Lord in any
situation. My captain afterwards frequently used to take my part, and get me my
right, when I have been plundered or used ill by these tender Christian
depredators; among whom I have shuddered to observe the unceasing blasphemous
execrations which are wantonly thrown out by persons of all ages and
conditions, not only without occasion, but even as if they were indulgences and
pleasure.
At one of our trips to St. Kitt's
I had eleven bits of my own; and my friendly captain lent me five bits more,
with which I bought a Bible. I was very glad to get this book, which I scarcely
could meet with any where. I think there was none sold in Montserrat;
and, much to my grief, from being forced out of the Ætna
in the manner I have related, my Bible, and the Guide to the Indians, the two
books I loved above all others, were left behind.
While I was in this place, St. Kitt's,
a very curious imposition on human nature took place:—A white man wanted to
marry in the church a free black woman that had land and slaves in Montserrat: but the clergyman told him it was against the
law of the place to marry a white and a black in the church. The man then asked
to be married on the water, to which the parson consented, and the two lovers
went in one boat, and the parson and clerk in another, and thus the ceremony
was performed. After this the loving pair came on board our vessel, and my
captain treated them extremely well, and brought them safe to Montserrat.
The reader cannot but judge of the irksomeness of
this situation to a mind like mine, in being daily exposed to new hardships and
impositions, after having seen many better days, and having been as it were in
a state of freedom and plenty; added to which, every part of the world I had
hitherto been in seemed to me a paradise in comparison of the West
Indies. My mind was therefore hourly replete with inventions and
thoughts of being freed, and, if possible, by honest and honourable
means; for I always remembered the old adage; and I trust it has ever been my
ruling principle, that honesty is the best policy; and likewise that other
golden precept—to do unto all men as I would they should do unto me. However,
as I was from early years a predestinarian, I thought
whatever fate had determined must ever come to pass; and therefore, if ever it
were my lot to be freed nothing could prevent me, although I should at present
see no means or hope to obtain my freedom; on the other hand, if it were my
fate not to be freed I never should be so, and all my endeavours
for that purpose would be fruitless. In the midst of these thoughts I therefore
looked up with prayers anxiously to God for my liberty; and at the same time I
used every honest means, and endeavoured all that was
possible on my part to obtain it. In process of time I became master of a few
pounds, and in a fair way of making more, which my friendly captain knew very
well; this occasioned him sometimes to take liberties with me: but whenever he
treated me waspishly I used plainly to tell him my mind, and that I would die
before I would be imposed on as other negroes were, and that to me life had
lost its relish when liberty was gone. This I said although I foresaw my then
well-being or future hopes of freedom (humanly speaking) depended on this man.
However, as he could not bear the thoughts of my not sailing with him, he
always became mild on my threats. I therefore continued with him; and, from my
great attention to his orders and his business, I gained him credit, and through
his kindness to me I at last procured my liberty. While I thus went on, filled
with the thoughts of freedom, and resisting oppression as well as I was able,
my life hung daily in suspense, particularly in the surfs I have formerly
mentioned, as I could not swim. These are extremely violent throughout the West Indies, and I was ever exposed to their howling rage
and devouring fury in all the islands. I have seen them strike and toss a boat
right up an end, and maim several on board. Once in the Grenada islands, when I and about
eight others were pulling a large boat with two puncheons of water in it, a surf struck us, and drove the boat and all in it about
half a stone's throw, among some trees, and above the high water mark. We were
obliged to get all the assistance we could from the nearest estate to mend the
boat, and launch it into the water again. At Montserrat
one night, in pressing hard to get off the shore on board, the punt was overset
with us four times; the first time I was very near being drowned; however the
jacket I had on kept me up above water a little space of time, while I called
on a man near me who was a good swimmer, and told him I could not swim; he then
made haste to me, and, just as I was sinking, he caught hold of me, and brought
me to sounding, and then he went and brought the punt also. As soon as we had
turned the water out of her, lest we should be used ill for being absent, we
attempted again three times more, and as often the horrid surfs served us as at
first; but at last, the fifth time we attempted, we gained our point, at the
imminent hazard of our lives. One day also, at Old Road in Montserrat,
our captain, and three men besides myself, were going in a large canoe in quest
of rum and sugar, when a single surf tossed the canoe an amazing distance from
the water, and some of us even a stone's throw from each other: most of us were
very much bruised; so that I and many more often said, and really thought, that
there was not such another place under the heavens as this. I longed therefore
much to leave it, and daily wished to see my master's promise performed of
going to Philadelphia.
While we lay in this place a very cruel thing happened on board of our sloop
which filled me with horror; though I found afterwards such practices were
frequent. There was a very clever and decent free young mulatto-man who sailed
a long time with us: he had a free woman for his wife, by whom he had a child;
and she was then living on shore, and all very happy. Our captain and mate, and
other people on board, and several elsewhere, even the natives of Bermudas, all
knew this young man from a child that he was always free, and no one had ever
claimed him as their property: however, as might too often overcomes right in
these parts, it happened that a Bermudas captain, whose vessel lay there for a
few days in the road, came on board of us, and seeing the mulatto-man, whose
name was Joseph Clipson, he told him he was not free,
and that he had orders from his master to bring him to Bermudas. The poor man
could not believe the captain to be in earnest; but he was very soon
undeceived, his men laying violent hands on him: and although he shewed a certificate of his being born free in St. Kitt's, and most people on board knew that he served his
time to boat building, and always passed for a free man, yet he was taken
forcibly out of our vessel. He then asked to be carried ashore before the
secretary or magistrates, and these infernal invaders of human rights promised
him he should; but, instead of that, they carried him on board of the other
vessel: and the next day, without giving the poor man any hearing on shore, or
suffering him even to see his wife or child, he was carried away, and probably
doomed never more in this world to see them again. Nor was this the only
instance of this kind of barbarity I was a witness to. I have since often seen
in Jamaica and other islands
free men, whom I have known in America,
thus villainously trepanned and held in bondage. I have heard of two similar
practices even in Philadelphia:
and were it not for the benevolence of the quakers in that city many of the sable race, who now
breathe the air of liberty, would, I believe, be groaning indeed under some
planter's chains. These things opened my mind to a new scene of horror to which
I had been before a stranger. Hitherto I had thought only slavery dreadful; but
the state of a free negro appeared to me now equally so at least, and in some
respects even worse, for they live in constant alarm for their liberty; and
even this is but nominal, for they are universally insulted and plundered
without the possibility of redress; for such is the equity of the West Indian
laws, that no free negro's evidence will be admitted in their courts of
justice. In this situation is it surprising that slaves, when mildly treated,
should prefer even the misery of slavery to such a mockery of freedom? I was
now completely disgusted with the West Indies,
and thought I never should be entirely free until I had left them.
"With
thoughts like these my anxious boding mind
Recall'd those pleasing scenes I
left behind;
Scenes where
fair Liberty in
bright array
Makes darkness
bright, and e'en illumines day;
Where nor
complexion, wealth, or station, can
Protect the
wretch who makes a slave of man."
I determined to make every exertion to obtain my
freedom, and to return to Old England. For this purpose I thought a knowledge
of navigation might be of use to me; for, though I did not intend to run away
unless I should be ill used, yet, in such a case, if I understood navigation, I
might attempt my escape in our sloop, which was one of the swiftest sailing
vessels in the West Indies, and I could be at
no loss for hands to join me: and if I should make this attempt, I had intended
to have gone for England;
but this, as I said, was only to be in the event of my meeting with any ill
usage. I therefore employed the mate of our vessel to teach me navigation, for
which I agreed to give him twenty-four dollars, and actually paid him part of
the money down; though when the captain, some time after, came to know that the
mate was to have such a sum for teaching me, he rebuked him, and said it was a
shame for him to take any money from me. However, my progress in this useful
art was much retarded by the constancy of our work. Had I wished to run away I
did not want opportunities, which frequently presented themselves; and
particularly at one time, soon after this. When we were at the island of Gaurdeloupe
there was a large fleet of merchantmen bound for Old France; and, seamen then
being very scarce, they gave from fifteen to twenty pounds a man for the run.
Our mate, and all the white sailors, left our vessel on this account, and went
on board of the French ships. They would have had me also to go with them, for
they regarded me; and they swore to protect me, if I would go: and, as the
fleet was to sail the next day, I really believe I could have got safe to Europe at that time. However, as my master was kind, I
would not attempt to leave him; and, remembering the old maxim, that 'honesty
is the best policy,' I suffered them to go without me. Indeed my captain was
much afraid of my leaving him and the vessel at that time, as I had so fair an
opportunity: but, I thank God, this fidelity of mine turned out much to my
advantage hereafter, when I did not in the least think of it; and made me so
much in favour with the captain, that he used now and
then to teach me some parts of navigation himself: but some of our passengers,
and others, seeing this, found much fault with him for it, saying it was a very
dangerous thing to let a negro know navigation; thus I was hindered again in my
pursuits. About the latter end of the year 1764 my master bought a larger
sloop, called the Providence,
about seventy or eighty tons, of which my captain had the command. I went with
him into this vessel, and we took a load of new slaves for Georgia and Charles
Town. My master now left me entirely to the captain, though he still wished for
me to be with him; but I, who always much wished to lose sight of the West Indies, was not a little rejoiced at the thoughts of
seeing any other country. Therefore, relying on the goodness of my captain, I
got ready all the little venture I could; and, when
the vessel was ready, we sailed, to my great joy. When we got to our destined
places, Georgia and Charles Town, I expected I should have an opportunity of
selling my little property to advantage: but here, particularly in Charles
Town, I met with buyers, white men, who imposed on me as in other places.
Notwithstanding, I was resolved to have fortitude; thinking no lot or trial is
too hard when kind Heaven is the rewarder. We soon
got loaded again, and returned to Montserrat;
and there, amongst the rest of the islands, I sold my goods well; and in this
manner I continued trading during the year 1764; meeting with various scenes of
imposition, as usual. After this, my master fitted out his vessel for Philadelphia, in the year
1765; and during the time we were loading her, and getting ready for the
voyage, I worked with redoubled alacrity, from the hope of getting money enough
by these voyages to buy my freedom in time, if it should please God; and also
to see the town of Philadelphia,
which I had heard a great deal about for some years past; besides which, I had
always longed to prove my master's promise the first day I came to him. In the
midst of these elevated ideas, and while I was about getting my little
merchandize in readiness, one Sunday my master sent for me to his house. When I
came there I found him and the captain together; and, on my going in, I was
struck with astonishment at his telling me he heard that I meant to run away
from him when I got to Philadelphia:
'And therefore,' said he, 'I must sell you again: you cost me a great deal of
money, no less than forty pounds sterling; and it will not do to lose so much.
You are a valuable fellow,' continued he; 'and I can get any day for you one
hundred guineas, from many gentlemen in this island.' And then he told me of
Captain Doran's brother-in-law, a severe master, who ever wanted to buy me to
make me his overseer. My captain also said he could get much more than a
hundred guineas for me in Carolina.
This I knew to be a fact; for the gentleman that wanted to buy me came off
several times on board of us, and spoke to me to live with him, and said he
would use me well. When I asked what work he would put me to he said, as I was
a sailor, he would make me a captain of one of his rice vessels. But I refused:
and fearing, at the same time, by a sudden turn I saw in the captain's temper,
he might mean to sell me, I told the gentleman I would not live with him on any
condition, and that I certainly would run away with his vessel: but he said he
did not fear that, as he would catch me again; and then he told me how cruelly
he would serve me if I should do so. My captain, however, gave him to
understand that I knew something of navigation: so he thought better of it;
and, to my great joy, he went away. I now told my master I did not say I would
run away in Philadelphia;
neither did I mean it, as he did not use me ill, nor yet the captain: for if
they did I certainly would have made some attempts before now; but as I thought
that if it were God's will I ever should be freed it would be so, and, on the
contrary, if it was not his will it would not happen; so I hoped, if ever I
were freed, whilst I was used well, it should be by honest means; but, as I
could not help myself, he must do as he pleased; I could only hope and trust to
the God of Heaven; and at that instant my mind was big with inventions and full
of schemes to escape. I then appealed to the captain whether he ever saw any
sign of my making the least attempt to run away; and asked him if I did not
always come on board according to the time for which he gave me liberty; and, more
particularly, when all our men left us at Gaurdeloupe
and went on board of the French fleet, and advised me to go with them, whether
I might not, and that he could not have got me again. To my no small surprise,
and very great joy, the captain confirmed every syllable that I had said: and
even more; for he said he had tried different times to see if I would make any
attempt of this kind, both at St. Eustatia and in America, and he
never found that I made the smallest; but, on the contrary, I always came on
board according to his orders; and he did really believe, if I ever meant to
run away, that, as I could never have had a better opportunity, I would have
done it the night the mate and all the people left our vessel at Gaurdeloupe. The captain then informed my master, who had
been thus imposed on by our mate, though I did not know who was my enemy, the
reason the mate had for imposing this lie upon him; which was, because I had
acquainted the captain of the provisions the mate had given away or taken out of
the vessel. This speech of the captain was like life to the dead to me, and
instantly my soul glorified God; and still more so on hearing my master
immediately say that I was a sensible fellow, and he never did intend to use me
as a common slave; and that but for the entreaties of the captain, and his
character of me, he would not have let me go from the stores about as I had
done; that also, in so doing, he thought by carrying one little thing or other
to different places to sell I might make money. That he also intended to
encourage me in this by crediting me with half a puncheon of rum and half a
hogshead of sugar at a time; so that, from being careful, I might have money
enough, in some time, to purchase my freedom; and, when that was the case, I might
depend upon it he would let me have it for forty pounds sterling money, which
was only the same price he gave for me. This sound gladdened my poor heart
beyond measure; though indeed it was no more than the very idea I had formed in
my mind of my master long before, and I immediately made him this reply: 'Sir,
I always had that very thought of you, indeed I had, and that made me so
diligent in serving you.' He then gave me a large piece of silver coin, such as
I never had seen or had before, and told me to get ready for the voyage, and he
would credit me with a tierce of sugar, and another of rum; he also said that
he had two amiable sisters in Philadelphia,
from whom I might get some necessary things. Upon this my noble captain desired
me to go aboard; and, knowing the African metal, he charged me not to say any
thing of this matter to any body; and he promised that the lying mate should
not go with him any more. This was a change indeed; in the same hour to feel
the most exquisite pain, and in the turn of a moment the fullest joy. It caused
in me such sensations as I was only able to express in my looks; my heart was
so overpowered with gratitude that I could have kissed both of their feet. When
I left the room I immediately went, or rather flew, to the vessel, which being
loaded, my master, as good as his word, trusted me with a tierce of rum, and
another of sugar, when we sailed, and arrived safe at the elegant town of Philadelphia. I soon sold
my goods here pretty well; and in this charming place I found every thing
plentiful and cheap.
While I was in this place a very extraordinary
occurrence befell me. I had been told one evening of a wise woman, a Mrs.
Davis, who revealed secrets, foretold events, &c. I put little faith in
this story at first, as I could not conceive that any mortal could foresee the
future disposals of Providence,
nor did I believe in any other revelation than that of the Holy Scriptures;
however, I was greatly astonished at seeing this woman in a dream that night,
though a person I never before beheld in my life; this made such an impression
on me, that I could not get the idea the next day out of my mind, and I then
became as anxious to see her as I was before indifferent; accordingly in the
evening, after we left off working, I inquired where she lived, and being
directed to her, to my inexpressible surprise, beheld the very woman in the
very same dress she appeared to me to wear in the vision. She immediately told
me I had dreamed of her the preceding night; related to me many things that had
happened with a correctness that astonished me; and finally told me I should
not be long a slave: this was the more agreeable news, as I believed it the
more readily from her having so faithfully related the past incidents of my
life. She said I should be twice in very great danger of my life within
eighteen months, which, if I escaped, I should afterwards go on well; so,
giving me her blessing, we parted. After staying here some time till our vessel
was loaded, and I had bought in my little traffic, we sailed from this
agreeable spot for Montserrat, once more to
encounter the raging surfs.
We arrived safe at Montserrat, where we discharged
our cargo; and soon after that we took slaves on board for St. Eustatia,
and from thence to Georgia.
I had always exerted myself and did double work, in order to make our voyages
as short as possible; and from thus over-working myself while we were at Georgia
I caught a fever and ague. I was very ill for eleven days and near dying;
eternity was now exceedingly impressed on my mind, and I feared very much that
awful event. I prayed the Lord therefore to spare me; and I made a promise in
my mind to God, that I would be good if ever I should recover. At length, from
having an eminent doctor to attend me, I was restored again to health; and soon
after we got the vessel loaded, and set off for Montserrat.
During the passage, as I was perfectly restored, and had much business of the
vessel to mind, all my endeavours to keep up my
integrity, and perform my promise to God, began to fail; and, in spite of all I
could do, as we drew nearer and nearer to the islands, my resolutions more and
more declined, as if the very air of that country or climate seemed fatal to
piety. When we were safe arrived at Montserrat,
and I had got ashore, I forgot my former resolutions.—Alas! how
prone is the heart to leave that God it wishes to love! and how strongly do the
things of this world strike the senses and captivate the soul!—After our vessel
was discharged, we soon got her ready, and took in, as usual, some of the poor
oppressed natives of Africa, and other negroes; we then set off again for
Georgia and Charlestown. We arrived at Georgia,
and, having landed part of our cargo, proceeded to Charlestown with the remainder. While we were
there I saw the town illuminated; the guns were fired, and bonfires and other
demonstrations of joy shewn, on account of the repeal
of the stamp act. Here I disposed of some goods on my own account; the white
men buying them with smooth promises and fair words, giving me however but very
indifferent payment. There was one gentleman particularly who bought a puncheon
of rum of me, which gave me a great deal of trouble; and, although I used the
interest of my friendly captain, I could not obtain any thing for it; for,
being a negro man, I could not oblige him to pay me. This vexed me much, not
knowing how to act; and I lost some time in seeking after this Christian; and
though, when the Sabbath came (which the negroes usually make their holiday) I
was much inclined to go to public worship, I was obliged to hire some black men
to help to pull a boat across the water to God in quest of this gentleman. When
I found him, after much entreaty, both from myself and my worthy captain, he at
last paid me in dollars; some of them, however, were copper, and of consequence
of no value; but he took advantage of my being a negro man, and obliged me to
put up with those or none, although I objected to them. Immediately after, as I
was trying to pass them in the market, amongst other white men, I was abused
for offering to pass bad coin; and, though I shewed
them the man I got them from, I was within one minute of being tied up and
flogged without either judge or jury; however, by the help of a good pair of
heels, I ran off, and so escaped the bastinadoes I should have received. I got
on board as fast as I could, but still continued in fear of them until we
sailed, which I thanked God we did not long after; and I have never been
amongst them since.
We soon came to Georgia, where we were to complete
our lading; and here worse fate than ever attended me: for one Sunday night, as
I was with some negroes in their master's yard in the town of Savannah, it
happened that their master, one Doctor Perkins, who was a very severe and cruel
man, came in drunk; and, not liking to see any strange negroes in his yard, he
and a ruffian of a white man he had in his service beset me in an instant, and
both of them struck me with the first weapons they could get hold of. I cried
out as long as I could for help and mercy; but, though I gave a good account of
myself, and he knew my captain, who lodged hard by him, it was to no purpose.
They beat and mangled me in a shameful manner, leaving me near dead. I lost so
much blood from the wounds I received, that I lay quite motionless, and was so
benumbed that I could not feel any thing for many hours. Early in the morning
they took me away to the jail. As I did not return to the ship all night, my
captain, not knowing where I was, and being uneasy that I did not then make my
appearance, he made inquiry after me; and, having found where I was,
immediately came to me. As soon as the good man saw me so cut and mangled, he
could not forbear weeping; he soon got me out of jail to his lodgings, and
immediately sent for the best doctors in the place, who at first declared it as
their opinion that I could not recover. My captain on this went to all the
lawyers in the town for their advice, but they told him they could do nothing
for me as I was a negro. He then went to Doctor
Perkins, the hero who had vanquished me, and menaced him, swearing he would be
revenged of him, and challenged him to fight.—But cowardice is ever the
companion of cruelty—and the Doctor refused. However, by the skilfulness of one Doctor Brady of that place, I began at
last to amend; but, although I was so sore and bad with the wounds I had all
over me that I could not rest in any posture, yet I was in more pain on account
of the captain's uneasiness about me than I otherwise should have been. The
worthy man nursed and watched me all the hours of the night; and I was, through
his attention and that of the doctor, able to get out of bed in about sixteen
or eighteen days. All this time I was very much wanted on board, as I used
frequently to go up and down the river for rafts, and other parts of our cargo,
and stow them when the mate was sick or absent. In about four weeks I was able
to go on duty; and in a fortnight after, having got in all our lading, our
vessel set sail for Montserrat; and in less than three weeks we arrived there
safe towards the end of the year. This ended my adventures in 1764; for I did
not leave Montserrat again till the beginning
of the following year.
END OF THE FIRST VOLUME
They ran the
ship aground: and the fore part stuck fast, and remained unmoveable,
but the hinder part was broken
with the violence of the waves. Acts
xxvii.
41
Howbeit, we
must be cast upon a certain island; Wherefore, sirs,
be of good cheer:
for I believe God, that it shall
be even as it was told me. Acts
xxvii.
26, 25
Now a thing
was secretly brought to me, and mine ear received a little thereof.
In thoughts from the visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men. Job iv. 12, 13
Lo, all these
things worketh God oftentimes with man, to bring back
his soul from the pit,
to be enlightened with the
light of the living. Job
xxxiii.
29, 30
VOLUME II
CHAPTER VII
The author's disgust at the West Indies—Forms schemes to obtain his
freedom—Ludicrous disappointment he and his Captain meet with in Georgia—At
last, by several successful voyages, he acquires a sum of money sufficient to
purchase it—Applies to his master, who accepts it, and grants his manumission,
to his great joy—He afterwards enters as a freeman on board one of Mr. King's
ships, and sails for Georgia—Impositions on free negroes as usual—His venture
of turkies—Sails for Montserrat, and on his passage
his friend, the Captain, falls ill and dies
Every day now brought me nearer my freedom, and I
was impatient till we proceeded again to sea, that I might have an opportunity
of getting a sum large enough to purchase it. I was not long ungratified; for,
in the beginning of the year 1766, my master bought another sloop, named the Nancy, the largest I had
ever seen. She was partly laden, and was to proceed to Philadelphia; our Captain had his choice of
three, and I was well pleased he chose this, which was the largest; for, from
his having a large vessel, I had more room, and could carry a larger quantity
of goods with me. Accordingly, when we had delivered our old vessel, the
Prudence, and completed the lading of the Nancy, having made near three hundred
per cent, by four barrels of pork I brought from Charlestown, I laid in as
large a cargo as I could, trusting to God's providence to prosper my
undertaking. With these views I sailed for Philadelphia. On our passage, when we drew
near the land, I was for the first time surprised at the sight of some whales,
having never seen any such large sea monsters before; and as we sailed by the
land one morning I saw a puppy whale close by the vessel; it was about the
length of a wherry boat, and it followed us all the
day till we got within the Capes. We arrived safe and in good time at Philadelphia, and I sold
my goods there chiefly to the quakers.
They always appeared to be a very honest discreet sort of people, and never
attempted to impose on me; I therefore liked them, and ever after chose to deal
with them in preference to any others. One Sunday morning while I was here, as
I was going to church, I chanced to pass a meeting-house. The doors being open,
and the house full of people, it excited my curiosity to go in. When I entered
the house, to my great surprise, I saw a very tall woman standing in the midst
of them, speaking in an audible voice something which I could not understand.
Having never seen anything of this kind before, I stood and stared about me for
some time, wondering at this odd scene. As soon as it was over I took an
opportunity to make inquiry about the place and people, when I was informed
they were called Quakers. I particularly asked what that woman I saw in the
midst of them had said, but none of them were pleased to satisfy me; so I
quitted them, and soon after, as I was returning, I came to a church crowded
with people; the church-yard was full likewise, and a number of people were
even mounted on ladders, looking in at the windows. I thought this a strange
sight, as I had never seen churches, either in England
or the West Indies, crowded in this manner
before. I therefore made bold to ask some people the meaning of all this, and they told me the Rev. Mr. George Whitfield was
preaching. I had often heard of this gentleman, and had wished to see and hear
him; but I had never before had an opportunity. I now therefore resolved to
gratify myself with the sight, and I pressed in amidst the multitude. When I
got into the church I saw this pious man exhorting the people with the greatest
fervour and earnestness, and sweating as much as I
ever did while in slavery on Montserrat beach.
I was very much struck and impressed with this; I thought it strange I had
never seen divines exert themselves in this manner before, and I was no longer
at a loss to account for the thin congregations they preached to. When we had
discharged our cargo here, and were loaded again, we left this fruitful land
once more, and set sail for Montserrat. My
traffic had hitherto succeeded so well with me, that I thought, by selling my
goods when we arrived at Montserrat, I should
have enough to purchase my freedom. But, as soon as our vessel arrived there,
my master came on board, and gave orders for us to go to St. Eustatia, and discharge our cargo there, and from thence
proceed for Georgia.
I was much disappointed at this; but thinking, as usual, it was of no use to
encounter with the decrees of fate, I submitted without repining, and we went
to St. Eustatia. After we had discharged our cargo
there we took in a live cargo, as we call a cargo of slaves. Here I sold my
goods tolerably well; but, not being able to lay out all my money in this small
island to as much advantage as in many other places, I laid out only part, and the remainder I brought away with me neat. We
sailed from hence for Georgia,
and I was glad when we got there, though I had not much reason to like the
place from my last adventure in Savannah; but I
longed to get back to Montserrat and procure
my freedom, which I expected to be able to purchase when I returned. As soon as
we arrived here I waited on my careful doctor, Mr. Brady, to whom I made the
most grateful acknowledgments in my power for his former kindness and attention
during my illness. While we were here an odd circumstance happened to the
Captain and me, which disappointed us both a good deal. A silversmith, whom we
had brought to this place some voyages before, agreed with the Captain to
return with us to the West Indies, and promised at the same time to give the
Captain a great deal of money, having pretended to take a liking to him, and
being, as we thought, very rich. But while we stayed to load our vessel this
man was taken ill in a house where he worked, and in a
week's time became very bad. The worse he grew the more he used to speak of
giving the Captain what he had promised him, so that he expected something
considerable from the death of this man, who had no wife or child, and he
attended him day and night. I used also to go with the Captain, at his own
desire, to attend him; especially when we saw there was no appearance of his
recovery: and, in order to recompense me for my trouble, the Captain promised
me ten pounds, when he should get the man's property. I thought this would be
of great service to me, although I had nearly money enough to purchase my
freedom, if I should get safe this voyage to Montserrat.
In this expectation I laid out above eight pounds of my money for a suit of
superfine clothes to dance with at my freedom, which I hoped was then at hand.
We still continued to attend this man, and were with him even on the last day
he lived, till very late at night, when we went on board. After we were got to
bed, about one or two o'clock in the morning, the Captain was sent for, and
informed the man was dead. On this he came to my bed,
and, waking me, informed me of it, and desired me to get up and procure a
light, and immediately go to him. I told him I was very sleepy, and wished he
would take somebody else with him; or else, as the man was dead, and could want
no farther attendance, to let all things remain as they were till the next
morning. 'No, no,' said he, 'we will have the money to-night,
I cannot wait till to-morrow; so let us go.' Accordingly I got up and struck a
light, and away we both went and saw the man as dead as we could wish. The
Captain said he would give him a grand burial, in gratitude for the promised
treasure; and desired that all the things belonging to the deceased might be
brought forth. Among others, there was a nest of trunks of which he had kept
the keys whilst the man was ill, and when they were produced we opened them with
no small eagerness and expectation; and as there were a great number within one
another, with much impatience we took them one out of the other. At last, when
we came to the smallest, and had opened it, we saw it was full of papers, which
we supposed to be notes; at the sight of which our hearts leapt for joy; and
that instant the Captain, clapping his hands, cried out, 'Thank God, here it
is.' But when we took up the trunk, and began to examine the supposed treasure
and long-looked-for bounty, (alas! alas! how uncertain and deceitful are all
human affairs!) what had we found! While we thought we were embracing a
substance we grasped an empty nothing. The whole amount that was in the nest of
trunks was only one dollar and a half; and all that the man possessed would not
pay for his coffin. Our sudden and exquisite joy was now succeeded by a sudden
and exquisite pain; and my Captain and I exhibited, for some time, most
ridiculous figures—pictures of chagrin and disappointment! We went away greatly
mortified, and left the deceased to do as well as he could for himself, as we
had taken so good care of him when alive for nothing. We set sail once more for
Montserrat, and arrived there safe; but much
out of humour with our friend the silversmith. When
we had unladen the vessel, and I had sold my venture,
finding myself master of about forty-seven pounds, I consulted my true friend,
the Captain, how I should proceed in offering my
master the money for my freedom. He told me to come on a certain morning, when
he and my master would be at breakfast together. Accordingly, on that morning I
went, and met the Captain there, as he had appointed. When I went in I made my
obeisance to my master, and with my money in my hand, and many fears in my
heart, I prayed him to be as good as his offer to me, when he was pleased to
promise me my freedom as soon as I could purchase it. This speech seemed to
confound him; he began to recoil: and my heart that instant sunk within me.
'What,' said he, 'give you your freedom? Why, where did you get the money? Have
you got forty pounds sterling?' 'Yes, sir,' I answered. 'How did you get it?'
replied he. I told him, very honestly. The Captain then said he knew I got the
money very honestly and with much industry, and that I was particularly careful.
On which my master replied, I got money much faster than he did; and said he
would not have made me the promise he did if he had thought I should have got
money so soon. 'Come, come,' said my worthy Captain, clapping my master on the
back, 'Come, Robert, (which was his name) I think you must let him have his
freedom; you have laid your money out very well; you have received good
interest for it all this time, and here is now the principal at last. I know Gustavus has earned you more than an hundred a-year, and he will still save you money, as he will not
leave you:—Come, Robert, take the money.' My master then said, he would not be
worse than his promise; and, taking the money, told me to go to the Secretary
at the Register Office, and get my manumission drawn up. These words of my
master were like a voice from heaven to me: in an instant all my trepidation
was turned into unutterable bliss; and I most reverently bowed myself with
gratitude, unable to express my feelings, but by the overflowing of my eyes,
while my true and worthy friend, the Captain, congratulated us both with a
peculiar degree of heartfelt pleasure. As soon as the first transports of my
joy were over, and that I had expressed my thanks to these my worthy friends in
the best manner I was able, I rose with a heart full of affection and
reverence, and left the room, in order to obey my master's joyful mandate of
going to the Register Office. As I was leaving the house I called to mind the
words of the Psalmist, in the 126th Psalm, and like him, 'I glorified God in my
heart, in whom I trusted.' These words had been impressed on my mind from the
very day I was forced from Deptford to the present hour, and I now saw them, as
I thought, fulfilled and verified. My imagination was all rapture as I flew to
the Register Office, and, in this respect, like the apostle PeterU,
(whose deliverance from prison was so sudden and extraordinary, that he thought
he was in a vision) I could scarcely believe I was awake. Heavens! who could do justice to my feelings at this moment! Not
conquering heroes themselves, in the midst of a triumph—Not the tender mother
who has just regained her long-lost infant, and presses it to her heart—Not the
weary hungry mariner, at the sight of the desired friendly port—Not the lover,
when he once more embraces his beloved mistress, after she had been ravished
from his arms!—All within my breast was tumult, wildness, and delirium! My feet
scarcely touched the ground, for they were winged with joy, and, like Elijah,
as he rose to Heaven, they 'were with lightning sped as I went on.' Every one I
met I told of my happiness, and blazed about the virtue of my amiable master
and captain.
When I got to the office and acquainted the Register
with my errand he congratulated me on the occasion, and told me he would draw
up my manumission for half price, which was a guinea. I thanked him for his
kindness; and, having received it and paid him, I hastened to my master to get
him to sign it, that I might be fully released. Accordingly he signed the
manumission that day, so that, before night, I who had been a slave in the
morning, trembling at the will of another, was become my own master, and
completely free. I thought this was the happiest day I had ever experienced;
and my joy was still heightened by the blessings and prayers of the sable race,
particularly the aged, to whom my heart had ever been attached with reverence.
* *
* * *
As the form of my manumission has something peculiar
in it, and expresses the absolute power and dominion one man claims over his
fellow, I shall beg leave to present it before my readers at full length:
Montserrat.
To all
men unto whom these presents shall come: I Robert King, of the parish of St.
Anthony in the said island, merchant, send greeting: Know ye, that I the
aforesaid Robert King, for and in consideration of the sum of seventy pounds
current money of the said island, to me in hand paid, and to the intent that a
negro man-slave, named Gustavus Vassa, shall and may become free, have
manumitted, emancipated, enfranchised, and set free, and by these presents do
manumit, emancipate, enfranchise, and set free, the aforesaid negro man-slave,
named Gustavus Vassa, for ever, hereby giving, granting, and releasing unto
him, the said Gustavus Vassa, all right, title, dominion, sovereignty, and
property, which, as lord and master over the aforesaid Gustavus Vassa, I had,
or now I have, or by any means whatsoever I may or can hereafter possibly have
over him the aforesaid negro, for ever. In witness whereof I
the abovesaid Robert King have unto these presents set my hand and seal, this
tenth day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and
sixty-six.
Robert
King.
Signed,
sealed, and delivered in the presence of Terrylegay, Montserrat.
Registered
the within manumission at full length, this eleventh day of July, 1766, in
liber D.
Terrylegay,
Register.
* *
* * *
In short, the fair as well as black people immediately
styled me by a new appellation, to me the most desirable in the world, which
was Freeman, and at the dances I gave my Georgia superfine blue clothes made
no indifferent appearance, as I thought. Some of the sable females, who
formerly stood aloof, now began to relax and appear less coy; but my heart was
still fixed on London,
where I hoped to be ere long. So that my worthy captain and his owner, my late
master, finding that the bent of my mind was towards London, said to me, 'We hope you won't leave us,
but that you will still be with the vessels.' Here gratitude bowed me down; and
none but the generous mind can judge of my feelings, struggling between
inclination and duty. However, notwithstanding my wish to be in London, I obediently
answered my benefactors that I would go in the vessel, and not leave them; and
from that day I was entered on board as an able-bodied sailor, at thirty-six
shillings per month, besides what perquisites I could make. My intention was to
make a voyage or two, entirely to please these my honoured
patrons; but I determined that the year following, if it pleased God, I would
see Old England once more, and surprise my old master, Capt. Pascal, who was
hourly in my mind; for I still loved him, notwithstanding his usage of me, and
I pleased myself with thinking of what he would say when he saw what the Lord
had done for me in so short a time, instead of being, as he might perhaps
suppose, under the cruel yoke of some planter. With these kind
of reveries I used often to entertain myself, and shorten the time till my
return; and now, being as in my original free African state, I embarked on
board the Nancy,
after having got all things ready for our voyage. In this state of serenity we
sailed for St. Eustatia; and, having smooth seas and
calm weather, we soon arrived there: after taking our cargo on board, we
proceeded to Savannah in Georgia, in
August, 1766. While we were there, as usual, I used to go for the cargo up the
rivers in boats; and on this business I have been frequently beset by
alligators, which were very numerous on that coast, and I have shot many of
them when they have been near getting into our boats; which we have with great
difficulty sometimes prevented, and have been very much frightened at them. I
have seen a young one sold in Georgia
alive for six pence. During our stay at this place, one evening a slave
belonging to Mr. Read, a merchant of Savannah,
came near our vessel, and began to use me very ill. I entreated him, with all
the patience I was master of, to desist, as I knew there was little or no law
for a free negro here; but the fellow, instead of taking my advice, persevered
in his insults, and even struck me. At this I lost all temper, and I fell on
him and beat him soundly. The next morning his master came to our vessel as we
lay alongside the wharf, and desired me to come ashore that he might have me
flogged all round the town, for beating his negro slave. I told him he had
insulted me, and had given the provocation, by first striking me. I had told my
captain also the whole affair that morning, and wished him to have gone along
with me to Mr. Read, to prevent bad consequences; but he said that it did not
signify, and if Mr. Read said any thing he would make matters up, and had
desired me to go to work, which I accordingly did. The Captain being on board
when Mr. Read came, he told him I was a free man; and when Mr. Read applied to
him to deliver me up, he said he knew nothing of the matter. I was astonished
and frightened at this, and thought I had better keep where I was than go
ashore and be flogged round the town, without judge or jury. I therefore
refused to stir; and Mr. Read went away, swearing he would bring all the
constables in the town, for he would have me out of the vessel. When he was
gone, I thought his threat might prove too true to my sorrow; and I was
confirmed in this belief, as well by the many instances I had seen of the
treatment of free negroes, as from a fact that had
happened within my own knowledge here a short time before. There was a free
black man, a carpenter, that I knew, who, for asking a gentleman that he worked
for for the money he had earned, was put into gaol; and afterwards this oppressed man was sent from Georgia, with
false accusations, of an intention to set the gentleman's house on fire, and
run away with his slaves. I was therefore much embarrassed, and very
apprehensive of a flogging at least. I dreaded, of all things, the thoughts of
being striped, as I never in my life had the marks of any violence of that
kind. At that instant a rage seized my soul, and for a little I determined to
resist the first man that should offer to lay violent hands on me, or basely
use me without a trial; for I would sooner die like a free man, than suffer
myself to be scourged by the hands of ruffians, and my blood drawn like a
slave. The captain and others, more cautious, advised me to make haste and
conceal myself; for they said Mr. Read was a very spiteful man, and he would
soon come on board with constables and take
me. At first I refused this counsel, being determined to stand my ground; but
at length, by the prevailing entreaties of the captain and Mr. Dixon, with whom
he lodged, I went to Mr. Dixon's house, which was a little out of town, at a
place called Yea-ma-chra. I was but just gone when
Mr. Read, with the constables, came for me, and searched the vessel; but, not
finding me there, he swore he would have me dead or alive. I was secreted about
five days; however, the good character which my captain always gave me as well
as some other gentlemen who also knew me, procured me some friends. At last
some of them told my captain that he did not use me well, in suffering me thus
to be imposed upon, and said they would see me redressed, and get me on board
some other vessel. My captain, on this, immediately went to Mr. Read, and told
him, that ever since I eloped from the vessel his work had been neglected, and
he could not go on with her loading, himself and mate not being well; and, as I
had managed things on board for them, my absence must retard his voyage, and
consequently hurt the owner; he therefore begged of him to forgive me, as he
said he never had any complaint of me before, for the many years that I had
been with him. After repeated entreaties, Mr. Read said I might go to hell, and
that he would not meddle with me; on which my captain came immediately to me at
his lodging, and, telling me how pleasantly matters had gone on, he desired me
to go on board. Some of my other friends then asked him if he had got the
constable's warrant from them; the captain said, No.
On this I was desired by them to stay in the house; and they said they would
get me on board of some other vessel before the evening. When the captain heard
this he became almost distracted. He went immediately for the warrant, and,
after using every exertion in his power, he at last got it from my hunters; but
I had all the expenses to pay. After I had thanked all my friends for their
attention, I went on board again to my work, of which I had always plenty. We
were in haste to complete our lading, and were to carry twenty head of cattle
with us to the West Indies, where they are a
very profitable article. In order to encourage me in working, and to make up
for the time I had lost, my captain promised me the privilege of carrying two
bullocks of my own with me; and this made me work with redoubled ardour. As soon as I had got the vessel loaded, in doing
which I was obliged to perform the duty of the mate as well as my own work, and
that the bullocks were near coming on board, I asked the captain leave to bring
my two, according to his promise; but, to my great surprise, he told me there
was no room for them. I then asked him to permit me to take one; but he said he
could not. I was a good deal mortified at this usage, and told him I had no
notion that he intended thus to impose on me; nor could I think well of any man
that was so much worse than his word. On this we had some disagreement, and I
gave him to understand, that I intended to leave the vessel. At this he
appeared to be very much dejected; and our mate, who had been very sickly, and
whose duty had long devolved upon me, advised him to persuade me to stay: in
consequence of which he spoke very kindly to me, making many fair promises,
telling me that, as the mate was so sickly, he could not do without me, and
that, as the safety of the vessel and cargo depended greatly upon me, he
therefore hoped that I would not be offended at what had passed between us, and
swore he would make up all matters when we arrived in the West Indies; so I
consented to slave on as before. Soon after this, as the bullocks were coming
on board, one of them ran at the captain, and butted him so furiously in the
breast, that he never recovered of the blow. In order to make me some amends
for his treatment about the bullocks, the captain now pressed me very much to
take some turkeys, and other fowls, with me, and gave me liberty to take as
many as I could find room for; but I told him he knew very well I had never
carried any turkeys before, as I always thought they were such tender birds
that they were not fit to cross the seas. However, he continued to press me to
buy them for once; and, what was very surprising to me, the more I was against
it, the more he urged my taking them, insomuch that he ensured me from all
losses that might happen by them, and I was prevailed on to take them; but I
thought this very strange, as he had never acted so with me before.
This, and not being able to dispose of my paper-money in any other way, induced me at length to take four dozen. The
turkeys, however, I was so dissatisfied about that I determined to make no more
voyages to this quarter, nor with this captain; and
was very apprehensive that my free voyage would be the worst I had ever made.
We set sail for Montserrat. The captain and
mate had been both complaining of sickness when we sailed, and as we proceeded
on our voyage they grew worse. This was about November, and we had not been
long at sea before we began to meet with strong northerly gales and rough seas;
and in about seven or eight days all the bullocks were near being drowned, and
four or five of them died. Our vessel, which had not been tight at first, was
much less so now; and, though we were but nine in the whole, including five
sailors and myself, yet we were obliged to attend to the pumps every half or
three quarters of an hour. The captain and mate came on deck as often as they
were able, which was now but seldom; for they declined so fast, that they were
not well enough to make observations above four or five times the whole voyage.
The whole care of the vessel rested, therefore, upon me, and I was obliged to
direct her by my former experience, not being able to work a traverse. The
captain was now very sorry he had not taught me navigation, and protested, if
ever he should get well again, he would not fail to do so; but in about
seventeen days his illness increased so much, that he was obliged to keep his
bed, continuing sensible, however, till the last, constantly having the owner's
interest at heart; for this just and benevolent man ever appeared much
concerned about the welfare of what he was intrusted
with. When this dear friend found the symptoms of death approaching, he called
me by my name; and, when I came to him, he asked (with almost his last breath)
if he had ever done me any harm? 'God forbid I should think so,' I replied, 'I
should then be the most ungrateful of wretches to the best of sorrow by his
bedside, he expired without saying another word; and the day following we
committed his body to the deep. Every man on board loved this man, and
regretted his death; but I was exceedingly affected at it, and I found that I
did not know, till he was gone, the strength of my regard for him. Indeed I had
every reason in the world to be attached to him; for, besides that he was in
general mild, affable, generous, faithful, benevolent, and just, he was to me a
friend and a father; and, had it pleased Providence that he had died but five
months before, I verily believe I should not have obtained my freedom when I
did; and it is not improbable that I might not have been able to get it at any
rate afterwards. The captain being dead, the mate came on the deck, and made
such observations as he was able, but to no purpose. In the course of a few days
more, the few bullocks that remained were found dead; but the turkies I had, though on the deck, and exposed to so much
wet and bad weather, did well, and I afterwards gained near three hundred per
cent, on the sale of them; so that in the event it proved a happy circumstance
for me that I had not bought the bullocks I intended, for they must have
perished with the rest; and I could not help looking on this, otherwise
trifling circumstance, as a particular providence of God, and I was thankful
accordingly. The care of the vessel took up all my time, and engaged my
attention entirely. As we were now out of the variable winds, I thought I
should not be much puzzled to hit upon the islands. I was persuaded I steered
right for Antigua, which I wished to reach, as the nearest to us; and in the
course of nine or ten days we made this island, to our great joy; and the next
day after we came safe to Montserrat. Many were surprised when they heard of my
conducting the sloop into the port, and I now obtained a new appellation, and was called Captain. This elated me not a little, and it was
quite flattering to my vanity to be thus styled by as high a title as any free
man in this place possessed. When the death of the captain became known, he was
much regretted by all who knew him; for he was a man universally respected. At
the same time the sable captain lost no fame; for the success I had met with
increased the affection of my friends in no small measure.
FOOTNOTES
U Acts, chap. xii. ver.
9
CHAPTER VIII
The author, to oblige Mr. King, once more embarks for Georgia in one of
his vessels—A new captain is appointed—They sail, and steer a new course—Three
remarkable dreams—The vessel is shipwrecked on the Bahama
bank, but the crew are preserved, principally by means of the author—He sets
out from the island with the captain, in a small boat, in quest of a ship—Their
distress—Meet with a wrecker—Sail for Providence—Are overtaken again by a
terrible storm, and are all near perishing—Arrive at New Providence—The author,
after some time, sails from thence to Georgia—Meets with another storm, and is
obliged to put back and refit—Arrives at Georgia—Meets new impositions—Two
white men attempt to kidnap him—Officiates as a parson at a funeral
ceremony—Bids adieu to Georgia, and sails for Martinique
As I had now, by the death of my captain, lost my
great benefactor and friend, I had little inducement to remain longer in the West Indies, except my gratitude to Mr. King, which I
thought I had pretty well discharged in bringing back his vessel safe, and
delivering his cargo to his satisfaction. I began to think of leaving this part
of the world, of which I had been long tired, and returning to England, where my
heart had always been; but Mr. King still pressed me very much to stay with his
vessel; and he had done so much for me that I found myself unable to refuse his
requests, and consented to go another voyage to Georgia, as the mate, from his
ill state of health, was quite useless in the vessel. Accordingly a new captain
was appointed, whose name was William Phillips, an old acquaintance of mine;
and, having refitted our vessel, and taken several slaves on board, we set sail
for St. Eustatia, where we stayed but a few days; and
on the 30th of January 1767 we steered for Georgia. Our new captain boasted
strangely of his skill in navigating and conducting a vessel; and in
consequence of this he steered a new course, several points more to the
westward than we ever did before; this appeared to me very extraordinary.
On the fourth of February, which was soon after we
had got into our new course, I dreamt the ship was wrecked amidst the surfs and
rocks, and that I was the means of saving every one on board; and on the night
following I dreamed the very same dream. These dreams however made no
impression on my mind; and the next evening, it being my watch below, I was
pumping the vessel a little after eight o'clock, just before I went off the
deck, as is the custom; and being weary with the duty of the day, and tired at
the pump, (for we made a good deal of water) I began to express my impatience,
and I uttered with an oath, 'Damn the vessel's bottom out.' But my conscience
instantly smote me for the expression. When I left the deck I went to bed, and
had scarcely fallen asleep when I dreamed the same dream again about the ship
that I had dreamt the two preceeding nights. At
twelve o'clock the watch was changed; and, as I had always the charge of the
captain's watch, I then went upon deck. At half after one in the morning the
man at the helm saw something under the lee-beam that the sea washed against,
and he immediately called to me that there was a grampus, and desired me to
look at it. Accordingly I stood up and observed it for some time; but, when I
saw the sea wash up against it again and again, I said it was not a fish but a
rock. Being soon certain of this, I went down to the captain, and, with some
confusion, told him the danger we were in, and desired him to come upon deck
immediately. He said it was very well, and I went up again. As soon as I was
upon deck the wind, which had been pretty high, having abated a little, the
vessel began to be carried sideways towards the rock, by means of the current.
Still the captain did not appear. I therefore went to him again, and told him
the vessel was then near a large rock, and desired he would come up with speed.
He said he would, and I returned to the deck. When I was upon the deck again I
saw we were not above a pistol shot from the rock, and I heard the noise of the
breakers all around us. I was exceedingly alarmed at this; and the captain
having not yet come on the deck I lost all patience; and, growing quite
enraged, I ran down to him again, and asked him why he did not come up, and
what he could mean by all this? 'The breakers,' said I, 'are round us, and the
vessel is almost on the rock.' With that he came on the deck with me, and we
tried to put the vessel about, and get her out of the current, but all to no
purpose, the wind being very small. We then called all hands up immediately;
and after a little we got up one end of a cable, and fastened it to the anchor.
By this time the surf was foaming round us, and made a dreadful noise on the
breakers, and the very moment we let the anchor go the vessel struck against
the rocks. One swell now succeeded another, as it were one wave calling on its
fellow: the roaring of the billows increased, and, with one single heave of the
swells, the sloop was pierced and transfixed among the rocks! In a moment a
scene of horror presented itself to my mind, such as I never had conceived or
experienced before. All my sins stared me in the face; and especially, I
thought that God had hurled his direful vengeance on my guilty head for cursing
the vessel on which my life depended. My spirits at this forsook me, and I
expected every moment to go to the bottom: I determined if I should still be
saved that I would never swear again. And in the midst of my distress, while
the dreadful surfs were dashing with unremitting fury among the rocks, I
remembered the Lord, though fearful that I was undeserving of forgiveness, and
I thought that as he had often delivered he might yet deliver; and, calling to
mind the many mercies he had shewn me in times past,
they gave me some small hope that he might still help me. I then began to think
how we might be saved; and I believe no mind was ever like mine so replete with
inventions and confused with schemes, though how to escape death I knew not.
The captain immediately ordered the hatches to be nailed down on the slaves in
the hold, where there were above twenty, all of whom must unavoidably have
perished if he had been obeyed. When he desired the man to nail down the
hatches I thought that my sin was the cause of this, and that God would charge
me with these people's blood. This thought rushed upon my mind that instant
with such violence, that it quite overpowered me, and I fainted. I recovered
just as the people were about to nail down the hatches; perceiving which, I
desired them to stop. The captain then said it must be done: I asked him why?
He said that every one would endeavour to get into
the boat, which was but small, and thereby we should be drowned; for it would
not have carried above ten at the most. I could no longer restrain my emotion,
and I told him he deserved drowning for not knowing how to navigate the vessel;
and I believe the people would have tossed him overboard if I had given them
the least hint of it. However the hatches were not nailed down; and, as none of
us could leave the vessel then on account of the darkness, and as we knew not
where to go, and were convinced besides that the boat could not survive the
surfs, we all said we would remain on the dry part of the vessel, and trust to
God till daylight appeared, when we should know better what to do.
I then advised to get the boat prepared against
morning, and some of us began to set about it; but some abandoned all care of
the ship and themselves, and fell to drinking. Our boat had a piece out of her
bottom near two feet long, and we had no materials to mend her; however,
necessity being the mother of invention, I took some pump leather and nailed it
to the broken part, and plastered it over with tallow-grease. And, thus
prepared, with the utmost anxiety of mind we watched for daylight, and thought
every minute an hour till it appeared. At last it saluted our longing eyes, and
kind Providence accompanied its approach with what was no small comfort to us;
for the dreadful swell began to subside; and the next thing that we discovered
to raise our drooping spirits, was a small key or island, about five or six
miles off; but a barrier soon presented itself; for there was not water enough
for our boat to go over the reefs, and this threw us again into a sad
consternation; but there was no alternative, we were therefore obliged to put
but few in the boat at once; and, what is still worse, all of us were
frequently under the necessity of getting out to drag and lift it over the
reefs. This cost us much labour and fatigue; and,
what was yet more distressing, we could not avoid having our legs cut and torn
very much with the rocks. There were only four people that would work with me
at the oars; and they consisted of three black men and a Dutch Creole sailor;
and, though we went with the boat five times that day, we had no others to
assist us. But, had we not worked in this manner, I really believe the people
could not have been saved; for not one of the white men did any thing to
preserve their lives; and indeed they soon got so drunk that they were not
able, but lay about the deck like swine, so that we were at last obliged to
lift them into the boat and carry them on shore by force. This want of
assistance made our labour intolerably severe; insomuch, that, by putting on shore so often that day, the
skin was entirely stript off my hands.
However, we continued all the day to toil and strain
our exertions, till we had brought all on board safe to the shore; so that out
of thirty-two people we lost not one. My dream now returned upon my mind with
all its force; it was fulfilled in every part; for our danger was the same I
had dreamt of: and I could not help looking on myself as the principal
instrument in effecting our deliverance; for, owing to some of our people
getting drunk, the rest of us were obliged to double our exertions; and it was
fortunate we did, for in a very little time longer the patch of leather on the
boat would have been worn out, and she would have been no longer fit for
service. Situated as we were, who could think that men should be so careless of
the danger they were in? for, if the wind had but raised the swell as it was
when the vessel struck, we must have bid a final farewell to all hopes of
deliverance; and though, I warned the people who were drinking and entreated
them to embrace the moment of deliverance, nevertheless they persisted, as if
not possessed of the least spark of reason. I could not help thinking, that, if
any of these people had been lost, God would charge me with their lives, which,
perhaps, was one cause of my labouring so hard for
their preservation, and indeed every one of them afterwards seemed so sensible
of the service I had rendered them; and while we were on the key I was a kind
of chieftain amongst them. I brought some limes, oranges, and lemons ashore;
and, finding it to be a good soil where we were, I planted several of them as a
token to any one that might be cast away hereafter. This key, as we afterwards
found, was one of the Bahama islands, which consist of a cluster of large
islands, with smaller ones or keys, as they are called, interspersed among
them. It was about a mile in circumference, with a white sandy beach running in
a regular order along it. On that part of it where we first attempted to land
there stood some very large birds, called flamingoes: these, from the
reflection of the sun, appeared to us at a little distance as large as men;
and, when they walked backwards and forwards, we could not conceive what they
were: our captain swore they were cannibals. This created a great panic among
us; and we held a consultation how to act. The captain wanted to go to a key
that was within sight, but a great way off; but I was against it, as in so
doing we should not be able to save all the people; 'And therefore,' said I,
'let us go on shore here, and perhaps these cannibals may take to the water.'
Accordingly we steered towards them; and when we approached them, to our very
great joy and no less wonder, they walked off one after the other very deliberately;
and at last they took flight and relieved us entirely from our fears. About the
key there were turtles and several sorts of fish in such abundance that we
caught them without bait, which was a great relief to us after the salt
provisions on board. There was also a large rock on the beach, about ten feet
high, which was in the form of a punch-bowl at the top; this we could not help
thinking Providence had ordained to supply us with rainwater; and it was
something singular that, if we did not take the water when it rained, in some
little time after it would turn as salt as sea-water.
Our first care, after refreshment, was to make
ourselves tents to lodge in, which we did as well as we could with some sails
we had brought from the ship. We then began to think how we might get from this
place, which was quite uninhabited; and we determined to repair our boat, which
was very much shattered, and to put to sea in quest of a ship or some inhabited
island. It took us up however eleven days before we could get the boat ready
for sea in the manner we wanted it, with a sail and other necessaries. When we
had got all things prepared the captain wanted me to stay on shore while he
went to sea in quest of a vessel to take all the people off the key; but this I
refused; and the captain and myself, with five more, set off in the boat
towards New Providence. We had no more than
two musket load of gunpowder with us if any thing should happen; and our stock
of provisions consisted of three gallons of rum, four of water, some salt beef,
some biscuit; and in this manner we proceeded to sea.
On the second day of our voyage we came to an island
called Obbico, the largest of the Bahama islands. We
were much in want of water; for by this time our water was expended, and we were
exceedingly fatigued in pulling two days in the heat of the sun; and it being
late in the evening, we hauled the boat ashore to try for water and remain
during the night: when we came ashore we searched for water, but could find
none. When it was dark, we made a fire around us for fear of the wild beasts,
as the place was an entire thick wood, and we took it by turns to watch. In
this situation we found very little rest, and waited with impatience for the
morning. As soon as the light appeared we set off again with our boat, in hopes
of finding assistance during the day. We were now much dejected and weakened by
pulling the boat; for our sail was of no use, and we were almost famished for
want of fresh water to drink. We had nothing left to eat but salt beef, and
that we could not use without water. In this situation we toiled all day in
sight of the island, which was very long; in the evening, seeing no relief, we
made ashore again, and fastened our boat. We then went to look for fresh water,
being quite faint for the want of it; and we dug and searched about for some
all the remainder of the evening, but could not find one drop, so that our
dejection at this period became excessive, and our terror so great, that we
expected nothing but death to deliver us. We could not touch our beef, which
was as salt as brine, without fresh water; and we were in the greatest terror
from the apprehension of wild beasts. When unwelcome night came we acted as on
the night before; and the next morning we set off again from the island in
hopes of seeing some vessel. In this manner we toiled as well as we were able till four o'clock, during which we passed several
keys, but could not meet with a ship; and, still famishing with thirst, went
ashore on one of those keys again in hopes of finding some water. Here we found
some leaves with a few drops of water in them, which we lapped with much
eagerness; we then dug in several places, but without success. As we were
digging holes in search of water there came forth some very thick and black
stuff; but none of us could touch it, except the poor Dutch Creole, who drank
above a quart of it as eagerly as if it had been wine. We tried to catch fish,
but could not; and we now began to repine at our fate, and abandon ourselves to
despair; when, in the midst of our murmuring, the captain all at once cried out
'A sail! a sail! a sail!'
This gladdening sound was like a reprieve to a convict, and we all instantly
turned to look at it; but in a little time some of us began to be afraid it was
not a sail. However, at a venture, we embarked and steered after it; and, in
half an hour, to our unspeakable joy, we plainly saw that it was a vessel. At
this our drooping spirits revived, and we made towards her with all the speed
imaginable. When we came near to her, we found she was a little sloop, about
the size of a Gravesend hoy,
and quite full of people; a circumstance which we could not make out the
meaning of. Our captain, who was a Welchman, swore
that they were pirates, and would kill us. I said, be that as it might, we must
board her if we were to die for it; and, if they should not receive us kindly,
we must oppose them as well as we could; for there was no alternative between
their perishing and ours. This counsel was immediately taken; and I really
believe that the captain, myself, and the Dutchman, would then have faced
twenty men. We had two cutlasses and a musquet, that I brought in the boat; and, in this situation, we
rowed alongside, and immediately boarded her. I believe there were about forty
hands on board; but how great was our surprise, as soon as we got on board, to
find that the major part of them were in the same predicament as ourselves!
They belonged to a whaling schooner that was wrecked
two days before us about nine miles to the north of our vessel. When she was
wrecked some of them had taken to their boats and had left some of their people
and property on a key, in the same manner as we had done; and were going, like
us, to New Providence in quest of a ship, when they met with this little sloop,
called a wrecker; their employment in those seas being to look after wrecks.
They were then going to take the remainder of the people belonging to the
schooner; for which the wrecker was to have all things belonging to the vessel,
and likewise their people's help to get what they could out of her, and were
then to carry the crew to New Providence.
We told the people of the wrecker the condition of
our vessel, and we made the same agreement with them as the schooner's people;
and, on their complying, we begged of them to go to our key directly, because
our people were in want of water. They agreed, therefore, to go along with us
first; and in two days we arrived at the key, to the inexpressible joy of the
people that we had left behind, as they had been reduced to great extremities
for want of water in our absence. Luckily for us, the wrecker had now more
people on board than she could carry or victual for any moderate length of
time; they therefore hired the schooner's people to work on our wreck, and we
left them our boat, and embarked for New Providence.
Nothing could have been more fortunate than our
meeting with this wrecker, for New Providence
was at such a distance that we never could have reached it in our boat. The island of Abbico was much longer than we expected;
and it was not till after sailing for three or four days that we got safe to
the farther end of it, towards New Providence.
When we arrived there we watered, and got a good many lobsters and other
shellfish; which proved a great relief to us, as our provisions and water were
almost exhausted. We then proceeded on our voyage; but the day after we left
the island, late in the evening, and whilst we were yet amongst the Bahama keys, we were overtaken by a violent gale of wind,
so that we were obliged to cut away the mast. The vessel was very near
foundering; for she parted from her anchors, and struck several times on the
shoals. Here we expected every minute that she would have gone to pieces, and
each moment to be our last; so much so that my old captain and sickly useless
mate, and several others, fainted; and death stared us in the face on every
side. All the swearers on board now began to call on
the God of Heaven to assist them: and, sure enough, beyond our comprehension he
did assist us, and in a miraculous manner delivered us! In the very height of
our extremity the wind lulled for a few minutes; and, although the swell was
high beyond expression, two men, who were expert swimmers, attempted to go to
the buoy of the anchor, which we still saw on the water, at some distance, in a
little punt that belonged to the wrecker, which was not large enough to carry
more than two. She filled different times in their endeavours
to get into her alongside of our vessel; and they saw nothing but death before
them, as well as we; but they said they might as well die that way as any
other. A coil of very small rope, with a little buoy, was put in along with
them; and, at last, with great hazard, they got the punt clear from the vessel;
and these two intrepid water heroes paddled away for life towards the buoy of
the anchor. The eyes of us all were fixed on them all the time, expecting every
minute to be their last: and the prayers of all those that remained in their
senses were offered up to God, on their behalf, for a speedy deliverance; and
for our own, which depended on them; and he heard and answered us! These two
men at last reached the buoy; and, having fastened the punt to it, they tied
one end of their rope to the small buoy that they had in the punt, and sent it
adrift towards the vessel. We on board observing this threw out boat-hooks and
leads fastened to lines, in order to catch the buoy: at last we caught it, and
fastened a hawser to the end of the small rope; we then gave them a sign to
pull, and they pulled the hawser to them, and fastened it to the buoy: which
being done we hauled for our lives; and, through the mercy of God, we got again
from the shoals into deep water, and the punt got safe to the vessel. It is
impossible for any to conceive our heartfelt joy at this second deliverance
from ruin, but those who have suffered the same hardships. Those whose strength
and senses were gone came to themselves, and were now as elated as they were
before depressed. Two days after this the wind ceased, and the water became
smooth. The punt then went on shore, and we cut down some trees; and having
found our mast and mended it we brought it on board, and fixed it up. As soon
as we had done this we got up the anchor, and away we went once more for New
Providence, which in three days more we reached safe, after having been above
three weeks in a situation in which we did not expect to escape with life. The
inhabitants here were very kind to us; and, when they learned our situation, shewed us a great deal of hospitality and friendship. Soon
after this every one of my old fellow-sufferers that were
free parted from us, and shaped their course where their inclination led them.
One merchant, who had a large sloop, seeing our condition, and knowing we
wanted to go to Georgia,
told four of us that his vessel was going there; and, if we would work on board
and load her, he would give us our passage free. As we could not get any wages
whatever, and found it very hard to get off the place, we were obliged to
consent to his proposal; and we went on board and helped to load the sloop,
though we had only our victuals allowed us. When she was entirely loaded he
told us she was going to Jamaica
first, where we must go if we went in her. This, however, I refused; but my
fellow-sufferers not having any money to help themselves with, necessity
obliged them to accept of the offer, and to steer that course, though they did
not like it.
We stayed in New Providence about seventeen or
eighteen days; during which time I met with many friends, who gave me
encouragement to stay there with them: but I declined it; though, had not my
heart been fixed on England, I should have stayed, as I liked the place
extremely, and there were some free black people here who were very happy, and
we passed our time pleasantly together, with the melodious sound of the
catguts, under the lime and lemon trees. At length Captain Phillips hired a
sloop to carry him and some of the slaves that he could not sell to Georgia; and I
agreed to go with him in this vessel, meaning now to take my farewell of that
place. When the vessel was ready we all embarked; and I took my leave of New Providence, not without regret. We sailed about four
o'clock in the morning, with a fair wind, for Georgia; and about eleven o'clock
the same morning a short and sudden gale sprung up and blew away most of our
sails; and, as we were still amongst the keys, in a very few minutes it dashed
the sloop against the rocks. Luckily for us the water was deep; and the sea was
not so angry but that, after having for some time laboured
hard, and being many in number, we were saved through God's mercy; and, by
using our greatest exertions, we got the vessel off. The next day we returned
to Providence,
where we soon got her again refitted. Some of the people swore that we had
spells set upon us by somebody in Montserrat; and others that we had witches
and wizzards amongst the poor helpless slaves; and
that we never should arrive safe at Georgia. But these things did not
deter me; I said, 'Let us again face the winds and seas, and swear not, but
trust to God, and he will deliver us.' We therefore once more set sail; and,
with hard labour, in seven day's time arrived safe at
Georgia.
After our arrival we went up to the town of Savannah; and the same
evening I went to a friend's house to lodge, whose name was Mosa,
a black man. We were very happy at meeting each other; and after supper we had
a light till it was between nine and ten o'clock at night. About that time the
watch or patrol came by; and, discerning a light in the house, they knocked at
the door: we opened it; and they came in and sat down, and drank some punch
with us: they also begged some limes of me, as they understood I had some,
which I readily gave them. A little after this they told me I must go to the
watch-house with them: this surprised me a good deal, after our kindness to
them; and I asked them, Why so? They said that all negroes who had light in their houses after nine o'clock
were to be taken into custody, and either pay some dollars or be flogged. Some
of those people knew that I was a free man; but, as the man of the house was
not free, and had his master to protect him, they did not take the same liberty
with him they did with me. I told them that I was a free man, and just arrived
from Providence; that we were not making any noise, and that I was not a
stranger in that place, but was very well known there: 'Besides,' said I, 'what
will you do with me?'—'That you shall see,' replied they, 'but you must go to the
watch-house with us.' Now whether they meant to get money from me or not I was
at a loss to know; but I thought immediately of the oranges and limes at Santa Cruz: and seeing
that nothing would pacify them I went with them to the watch-house, where I remained
during the night. Early the the next morning these
imposing ruffians flogged a negro-man and woman that they had in the
watch-house, and then they told me that I must be flogged too. I asked why? and if there was no law for free men? And told them if there
was I would have it put in force against them. But this only exasperated them
the more; and instantly they swore they would serve me as Doctor Perkins had
done; and they were going to lay violent hands on me; when one of them, more
humane than the rest, said that as I was a free man they could not justify
stripping me by law. I then immediately sent for Doctor Brady, who was known to
be an honest and worthy man; and on his coming to my assistance they let me go.
This was not the only disagreeable incident I met
with while I was in this place; for, one day, while I was a little way out of
the town of Savannah,
I was beset by two white men, who meant to play their usual tricks with me in
the way of kidnapping. As soon as these men accosted me, one of them said to
the other, 'This is the very fellow we are looking for
that you lost:' and the other swore immediately that I was the identical
person. On this they made up to me, and were about to handle me; but I told
them to be still and keep off; for I had seen those kind of tricks played upon
other free blacks, and they must not think to serve me so. At this they paused
a little, and one said to the other—it will not do; and the other answered that
I talked too good English. I replied, I believed I did; and I had also with me
a revengeful stick equal to the occasion; and my mind was likewise good.
Happily however it was not used; and, after we had talked together a little in
this manner, the rogues left me. I stayed in Savannah some time, anxiously trying
to get to Montserrat once more to see Mr. King, my old master, and then to take
a final farewell of the American quarter of the globe. At last I met with a
sloop called the Speedwell, Captain John Bunton,
which belonged to Grenada,
and was bound to Martinique, a French island,
with a cargo of rice, and I shipped myself on board of her. Before I left Georgia a black woman, who had a
child lying dead, being very tenacious of the church burial service, and not
able to get any white person to perform it, applied to me for that purpose.
I told her I was no parson; and besides, that the service over the dead did not
affect the soul. This however did not satisfy her; she still urged me very
hard: I therefore complied with her earnest entreaties, and at last consented
to act the parson for the first time in my life. As she was much respected,
there was a great company both of white and black people at the grave. I then
accordingly assumed my new vocation, and performed the funeral ceremony to the satisfaction of all present; after
which I bade adieu to Georgia,
and sailed for Martinique.
CHAPTER IX
The author arrives at Martinique—Meets with new difficulties—Gets to
Montserrat, where he takes leave of his old master, and sails for England—Meets
Capt. Pascal—Learns the French horn—Hires himself with Doctor Irving, where he
learns to freshen sea water—Leaves the doctor, and goes a voyage to Turkey and
Portugal; and afterwards goes a voyage to Grenada, and another to
Jamaica—Returns to the Doctor, and they embark together on a voyage to the
North Pole, with the Hon. Capt. Phipps—Some account of that voyage, and the
dangers the author was in—He returns to England
I thus took a final leave of Georgia; for
the treatment I had received in it disgusted me very much against the place;
and when I left it and sailed for Martinique I determined never more to revisit
it. My new captain conducted his vessel safer than my former one; and, after an
agreeable voyage, we got safe to our intended port. While I was on this island
I went about a good deal, and found it very pleasant: in particular I admired
the town of St. Pierre,
which is the principal one in the island, and built more like an European town
than any I had seen in the West Indies. In
general also, slaves were better treated, had more holidays, and looked better
than those in the English islands. After we had done our business here, I
wanted my discharge, which was necessary; for it was then the month of May, and
I wished much to be at Montserrat to bid
farewell to Mr. King, and all my other friends there, in time to sail for Old
England in the July fleet. But, alas! I had put a great stumbling block in my
own way, by which I was near losing my passage that season to England. I had lent my captain some
money, which I now wanted to enable me to prosecute my intentions. This I told
him; but when I applied for it, though I urged the necessity of my occasion, I
met with so much shuffling from him, that I began at last to be afraid of
losing my money, as I could not recover it by law: for I have already
mentioned, that throughout the West Indies no
black man's testimony is admitted, on any occasion, against any white person
whatever, and therefore my own oath would have been of no use. I was obliged,
therefore, to remain with him till he might be disposed to return it to me.
Thus we sailed from Martinique for the
Grenades. I frequently pressing the captain for my money to no purpose; and, to
render my condition worse, when we got there, the captain and his owners quarrelled; so that my situation became daily more irksome:
for besides that we on board had little or no victuals allowed us, and I could
not get my money nor wages, I could then have gotten my passage free to Montserrat
had I been able to accept it. The worst of all was, that it was growing late in
July, and the ships in the islands must sail by the 26th of that month. At
last, however, with a great many entreaties, I got my money from the captain,
and took the first vessel I could meet with for St. Eustatia.
From thence I went in another to Basseterre
in St. Kitts, where I arrived on the 19th of July. On the 22d, having met with
a vessel bound to Montserrat, I wanted to go in her; but the captain and others
would not take me on board until I should advertise myself, and give notice of
my going off the island. I told them of my haste to be in Montserrat,
and that the time then would not admit of advertising, it being late in the
evening, and the captain about to sail; but he insisted it was necessary, and
otherwise he said he would not take me. This reduced me to great perplexity;
for if I should be compelled to submit to this degrading necessity, which every
black freeman is under, of advertising himself like a slave, when he leaves an
island, and which I thought a gross imposition upon any freeman, I feared I
should miss that opportunity of going to Montserrat, and then I could not get
to England that year. The vessel was just going off, and no time could be lost;
I immediately therefore set about, with a heavy heart, to try who I could get
to befriend me in complying with the demands of the captain. Luckily I found,
in a few minutes, some gentlemen of Montserrat
whom I knew; and, having told them my situation, I requested their friendly
assistance in helping me off the island. Some of them, on this, went with me to
the captain, and satisfied him of my freedom; and, to my very great joy, he
desired me to go on board. We then set sail, and the next day, the 23d, I arrived
at the wished-for place, after an absence of six months, in which I had more
than once experienced the delivering hand of Providence, when all human means of escaping
destruction seemed hopeless. I saw my friends with a gladness of heart which
was increased by my absence and the dangers I had escaped, and I was received
with great friendship by them all, but particularly by Mr. King, to whom I
related the fate of his sloop, the Nancy, and the causes of her being wrecked.
I now learned with extreme sorrow, that his house was washed away during my
absence, by the bursting of a pond at the top of a mountain that was opposite
the town of Plymouth.
It swept great part of the town away, and Mr. King lost a great deal of
property from the inundation, and nearly his life. When I told him I intended
to go to London that season, and that I had come to visit him before my
departure, the good man expressed a great deal of affection for me, and sorrow
that I should leave him, and warmly advised me to stay there; insisting, as I
was much respected by all the gentlemen in the place, that I might do very
well, and in a short time have land and slaves of my own. I thanked him for
this instance of his friendship; but, as I wished very much to be in London, I declined remaining
any longer there, and begged he would excuse me. I then requested he would be
kind enough to give me a certificate of my behaviour
while in his service, which he very readily complied with, and gave me the
following:
Montserrat,
January 26, 1767.
'The
bearer hereof, Gustavus Vassa, was my slave for upwards of three years, during
which he has always behaved himself well, and discharged his duty with honesty
and assiduity.
Robert
King.
'To
all whom this may concern.'
Having obtained this, I parted from my kind master,
after many sincere professions of gratitude and regard, and prepared for my
departure for London.
I immediately agreed to go with one Capt. John Hamer,
for seven guineas, the passage to London, on board a ship called the Andromache;
and on the 24th and 25th I had free dances, as they are called, with some of my
countrymen, previous to my setting off; after which I took leave of all my
friends, and on the 26th I embarked for London, exceedingly glad to see myself
once more on board of a ship; and still more so, in steering the course I had
long wished for. With a light heart I bade Montserrat farewell, and never had
my feet on it since; and with it I bade adieu to the sound of the cruel whip,
and all other dreadful instruments of torture; adieu to the offensive sight of
the violated chastity of the sable females, which has too often accosted my
eyes; adieu to oppressions (although to me less severe than most of my
countrymen); and adieu to the angry howling, dashing surfs. I wished for a
grateful and thankful heart to praise the Lord God on high for all his mercies!
We had a most prosperous voyage, and, at the end of
seven weeks, arrived at Cherry-Garden stairs. Thus were my longing eyes once
more gratified with a sight of London, after having been absent from it above
four years. I immediately received my wages, and I never had earned seven
guineas so quick in my life before; I had thirty-seven guineas in all, when I
got cleared of the ship. I now entered upon a scene, quite new to me, but full
of hope. In this situation my first thoughts were to look out for some of my
former friends, and amongst the first of those were the Miss Guerins. As soon, therefore, as I had regaled myself I went
in quest of those kind ladies, whom I was very impatient to see; and with some
difficulty and perseverance, I found them at May's-hill, Greenwich. They were most agreeably surprised
to see me, and I quite overjoyed at meeting with them. I told them my history,
at which they expressed great wonder, and freely acknowledged it did their
cousin, Capt. Pascal, no honour. He then visited
there frequently; and I met him four or five days after in Greenwich park. When
he saw me he appeared a good deal surprised, and asked me how I came back? I
answered, 'In a ship.' To which he replied dryly, 'I suppose you did not walk
back to London
on the water.' As I saw, by his manner, that he did not seem to be sorry for
his behaviour to me, and that I had not much reason
to expect any favour from him, I told him that he had
used me very ill, after I had been such a faithful servant to him for so many
years; on which, without saying any more, he turned about and went away. A few days after this I met Capt. Pascal at Miss Guerin's house,
and asked him for my prize-money. He said there was none due to me; for,
if my prize money had been 10,000 L. he had a right to it all. I told him I was
informed otherwise; on which he bade me defiance; and, in a bantering tone,
desired me to commence a lawsuit against him for it: 'There are lawyers
enough,' said he,'that will take the cause in hand,
and you had better try it.' I told him then that I would try it, which enraged
him very much; however, out of regard to the ladies, I remained still, and
never made any farther demand of my right. Some time afterwards these friendly
ladies asked me what I meant to do with myself, and how they could assist me. I
thanked them, and said, if they pleased, I would be their servant; but if not,
as I had thirty-seven guineas, which would support me for some time, I would be
much obliged to them to recommend me to some person who would teach me a
business whereby I might earn my living. They answered me very politely, that
they were sorry it did not suit them to take me as their servant, and asked me
what business I should like to learn? I said, hair-dressing. They then promised
to assist me in this; and soon after they recommended me to a gentleman whom I
had known before, one Capt. O'Hara, who treated me with much kindness, and
procured me a master, a hair-dresser, in Coventry-court, Haymarket, with whom
he placed me. I was with this man from September till the February following.
In that time we had a neighbour in the same court who
taught the French horn. He used to blow it so well that I was charmed with it,
and agreed with him to teach me to blow it. Accordingly he took me in hand, and
began to instruct me, and I soon learned all the three parts. I took great
delight in blowing on this instrument, the evenings being long; and besides
that I was fond of it, I did not like to be idle, and it filled up my vacant
hours innocently. At this time also I agreed with the Rev. Mr. Gregory, who
lived in the same court, where he kept an academy and an evening-school, to
improve me in arithmetic. This he did as far as barter and alligation;
so that all the time I was there I was entirely employed. In February 1768 I
hired myself to Dr. Charles Irving, in Pall-mall, so celebrated for his
successful experiments in making sea water fresh; and here I had plenty of
hair-dressing to improve my hand. This gentleman was an excellent master; he
was exceedingly kind and good tempered; and allowed me in the evenings to
attend my schools, which I esteemed a great blessing; therefore I thanked God
and him for it, and used all my diligence to improve the opportunity. This
diligence and attention recommended me to the notice and care of my three
preceptors, who on their parts bestowed a great deal of pains in my
instruction, and besides were all very kind to me. My wages, however, which
were by two thirds less than I ever had in my life (for I had only 12l. per
annum) I soon found would not be sufficient to defray this extraordinary
expense of masters, and my own necessary expenses; my old thirty-seven guineas
had by this time worn all away to one. I thought it best, therefore, to try the
sea again in quest of more money, as I had been bred to it, and had hitherto
found the profession of it successful. I had also a very great desire to see Turkey, and I
now determined to gratify it. Accordingly, in the month of May, 1768, I told
the doctor my wish to go to sea again, to which he made no opposition; and we
parted on friendly terms. The same day I went into the city in quest of a
master. I was extremely fortunate in my inquiry; for I soon heard of a
gentleman who had a ship going to Italy
and Turkey,
and he wanted a man who could dress hair well. I was overjoyed at this, and
went immediately on board of his ship, as I had been directed, which I found to
be fitted up with great taste, and I already foreboded no small pleasure in
sailing in her. Not finding the gentleman on board, I was directed to his
lodgings, where I met with him the next day, and gave him a specimen of my
dressing. He liked it so well that he hired me immediately, so that I was
perfectly happy; for the ship, master, and voyage, were
entirely to my mind. The ship was called the Delawar,
and my master's name was John Jolly, a neat smart good humoured
man, just such an one as I wished to serve. We sailed
from England
in July following, and our voyage was extremely pleasant. We went to Villa
Franca, Nice, and Leghorn;
and in all these places I was charmed with the richness and beauty of the
countries, and struck with the elegant buildings with which they abound. We had
always in them plenty of extraordinary good wines and rich fruits, which I was
very fond of; and I had frequent occasions of gratifying both my taste and
curiosity; for my captain always lodged on shore in those places, which
afforded me opportunities to see the country around. I also learned navigation
of the mate, which I was very fond of. When we left Italy
we had delightful sailing among the Archipelago islands, and from thence to Smyrna in Turkey.
This is a very ancient city; the houses are built of stone, and most of them
have graves adjoining to them; so that they sometimes present the appearance of
church-yards. Provisions are very plentiful in this city, and good wine less
than a penny a pint. The grapes, pomegranates, and many other fruits, were also
the richest and largest I ever tasted. The natives are well looking and strong
made, and treated me always with great civility. In general I believe they are
fond of black people; and several of them gave me pressing invitations to stay
amongst them, although they keep the franks, or Christians, separate, and do
not suffer them to dwell immediately amongst them. I was astonished in not
seeing women in any of their shops, and very rarely any in the streets; and
whenever I did they were covered with a veil from head to foot, so that I could
not see their faces, except when any of them out of curiosity uncovered them to
look at me, which they sometimes did. I was surprised to see how the Greeks
are, in some measure, kept under by the Turks, as the negroes
are in the West Indies by the white people.
The less refined Greeks, as I have already hinted, dance here in the same
manner as we do in my nation. On the whole, during our stay here, which was
about five months, I liked the place and the Turks extremely well. I could not
help observing one very remarkable circumstance there: the tails of the sheep
are flat, and so very large, that I have known the tail even of a lamb to weigh
from eleven to thirteen pounds. The fat of them is very white and rich, and is
excellent in puddings, for which it is much used. Our ship being at length
richly loaded with silk, and other articles, we sailed
for England.
In May 1769, soon after our return from Turkey, our ship made a delightful voyage to Oporto in Portugal,
where we arrived at the time of the carnival. On our arrival, there were sent
on board to us thirty-six articles to observe, with very heavy penalties if we
should break any of them; and none of us even dared to go on board any other
vessel or on shore till the Inquisition had sent on board and searched for
every thing illegal, especially bibles. Such as were produced, and certain
other things, were sent on shore till the ships were going away; and any person
in whose custody a bible was found concealed was to be imprisoned and flogged,
and sent into slavery for ten years. I saw here many very magnificent sights,
particularly the garden of Eden, where many of the
clergy and laity went in procession in their several orders with the host, and
sung Te Deum. I had a great curiosity to go into some of their churches, but
could not gain admittance without using the necessary sprinkling of holy water
at my entrance. From curiosity, and a wish to be holy, I therefore complied
with this ceremony, but its virtues were lost on me, for I found myself nothing
the better for it. This place abounds with plenty of all kinds of provisions.
The town is well built and pretty, and commands a fine prospect. Our ship
having taken in a load of wine, and other commodities, we sailed for London, and arrived in
July following. Our next voyage was to the Mediterranean.
The ship was again got ready, and we sailed in September for Genoa. This is one of the finest cities I
ever saw; some of the edifices were of beautiful marble, and made a most noble
appearance; and many had very curious fountains before them. The churches were
rich and magnificent, and curiously adorned both in the inside and out. But all
this grandeur was in my eyes disgraced by the galley slaves, whose condition
both there and in other parts of Italy is truly piteous and
wretched. After we had stayed there some weeks, during which we bought many
different things which we wanted, and got them very cheap, we sailed to Naples, a charming city,
and remarkably clean. The bay is the most beautiful I ever saw; the moles for
shipping are excellent. I thought it extraordinary to see grand operas acted
here on Sunday nights, and even attended by their majesties. I too, like these
great ones, went to those sights, and vainly served God in the day while I thus
served mammon effectually at night. While we remained here there happened an
eruption of mount Vesuvius, of which I had a perfect
view. It was extremely awful; and we were so near that the ashes from it used
to be thick on our deck. After we had transacted our business at Naples we sailed with a fair wind once more for Smyrna, where we arrived
in December. A seraskier or officer took a liking to
me here, and wanted me to stay, and offered me two wives; however I refused the
temptation. The merchants here travel in caravans or large companies. I have
seen many caravans from India,
with some hundreds of camels, laden with different goods. The people of these
caravans are quite brown. Among other articles, they brought with them a great
quantity of locusts, which are a kind of pulse, sweet and pleasant to the
palate, and in shape resembling French beans, but longer. Each kind of goods is
sold in a street by itself, and I always found the Turks very honest in their
dealings. They let no Christians into their mosques or churches, for which I
was very sorry; as I was always fond of going to see the different modes of
worship of the people wherever I went. The plague broke out while we were in Smyrna, and we stopped
taking goods into the ship till it was over. She was then richly laden, and we
sailed in about March 1770 for England.
One day in our passage we met with an accident which was near burning the ship.
A black cook, in melting some fat, overset the pan into the fire under the
deck, which immediately began to blaze, and the flame went up very high under
the foretop. With the fright the poor cook became almost white, and altogether
speechless. Happily however we got the fire out without doing much mischief.
After various delays in this passage, which was tedious, we arrived in Standgate creek in July; and, at the latter end of the
year, some new event occurred, so that my noble captain, the ship, and I all
separated.
In April 1771 I shipped myself as a steward with
Capt. Wm.