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    Captain Singleton

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    Gold, or the Value of any from another, during our whole Voyage till our Return

      quite to Portugal, he should be obliged by us all to restore it again on the

      Penalty of being disarm'd, and turn'd out of the Company, and of having no

      Relief from us on any Account whatsoever. This was to prevent Wagering and

      Playing for Money, which our Men were apt to do by several Means, and at several

      Games, tho' they had neither Cards or Dice.

      Having made this wholesom Agreement, we went chearfully to Work, and shew'd our

      Negroes how to work for us; and working up the Stream on both Sides, and in the

      Bottom of the River, we spent about three Weeks Time dabbling in the Water; by

      which time, as it lay all in our Way, we had gone about six Miles, and not more;

      and still the higher we went, the more Gold we found; till at last, having

      pass'd by the Side of a Hill, we perceived on a sudden, that the Gold stopp'd,

      and that there was not a Bit taken up beyond that Place; it presently occurr'd

      to my Mind, that it must then be from the Side of that little Hill that all the

      Gold we found was work'd down.

      Upon this, we went back to the Hill, and fell to Work with that. We found the

      Earth loose, and of a yellowish loamy Colour, and in some Places, a white hard

      Kind of Stone, which in describing since to some of our Artists, they tell me

      was the Spar which is found by the Oar, and surrounds it in the Mine. However,

      if it had been all Gold, we had no Instrument to force it out; so we passed

      that: But scratching into the loose Earth with our Fingers, we came to a

      surprizing Place, where the Earth for the Quantity of two Bushels, I believe, or

      thereabouts, crumbled down with little more than touching it, and apparently

      shewed us that there was a great deal of Gold in it. We took it all carefully

      up, and washing it in the Water, the loamy Earth wash'd away, and left the Gold

      Dust free in our Hands; and that which was more remarkable, was, that when this

      loose Earth was all taken away, and we came to the Rock or hard Stone, there was

      not one Grain of Gold more to be found.

      At Night we came all together to see what we had got, and it appeared we had

      found in that Day's Heap of Earth, about Seven and Fifty Pound Weight of Gold

      Dust, and about Thirty Four Pound more in all the rest of our Works in the

      River.

      It was a happy Kind of Disappointment to us, that we found a full Stop put to

      our Work; for had the Quantity of Gold been ever so small, yet had any at all

      come, I do not know when we should have given over; for having rummaged this

      Place, and not finding the least Grain of Gold in any other Place, or in any of

      the Earth there, except in that loose Parcel, we went quite back down the small

      River again, working it over and over again, as long as we could find any thing

      how small soever; and we did get six or seven Pound more the second time. Then

      we went into the first River, and tried it up the Stream and down the Stream, on

      the one Side and on the other. Up the Stream we found nothing, no not a Grain;

      down the Stream we found very little, not above the Quantity of Half an Ounce in

      two Miles working; so back we came again to the Golden River, as we justly

      called it, and work'd it up the Stream and down the Stream twice more a-piece,

      and every time we found some Gold, and perhaps might have done so, if we had

      stay'd there till this time; but the Quantity was at last so small, and the Work

      so much the harder, that we agreed by Consent to give it over, lest we should

      fatigue our selves and our Negroes so, as to be quite unfit for our Journey.

      When we had brought all our Purchase together, we had in the whole three Pound

      and a Half of Gold to a Man, Share and Share alike, according to such a Weight

      and Scale as our ingenious Cutler made for us to weigh it by, which he did

      indeed by guess, but which, as he said he was sure was rather more than less,

      and so it prov'd at last; for it was near two Ounces more than Weight in a

      Pound. Besides this, there was seven or eight Pound Weight left, which we agreed

      to leave in his Hands, to work it into such Shapes as we thought fit to give

      away to such People as we might yet meet with, from whom we might have Occasion

      to buy Provisions, or even to buy Friendship, or the like; and particularly we

      gave about a Pound to our Black Prince, which he hammer'd and work'd by his own

      indefatigable Hand, and some Tools our Artificer lent him, into little round

      Bits, as round almost as Beads, tho' not exact in Shape, and drilling Holes

      thro' them, put them all upon a String, and wore them about his black Neck, and

      they look'd very well there I assure you; but he was many Months a-doing it. And

      thus ended our first Golden Adventure.

      We now began to discover what we had not troubled our Heads much about before;

      and that was, that let the Country be good or bad that we were in, we could not

      travel much farther, for a considerable time. We had been now five Months and

      upwards in our Journey, and the Season began to change; and Nature told us, that

      being in a Climate that had a Winter as well as a Summer, tho' of a differing

      Kind from what our own Country produced, we were to expect a wet Season, and

      such as we should not be able to travel in, as well by reason of the Rain it

      self, as of the Floods which it would occasion wherever we should come; and tho'

      we had been no Strangers to those wet Seasons in the Island of Madagascar, yet

      we had not thought much of them since we begun our Travels; for setting out when

      the Sun was about the Solstice, that is, when it was at the greatest Northern

      Distance from us, we had found the Benefit of it in our Travels. But now it drew

      near us apace, and we found it began to rain; upon which we called another

      General Council, in which we debated our present Circumstances, and in

      particular, whether we should go forward, or seek for a proper Place upon the

      Bank of our Golden River, which had been so lucky to us to fix our Camp for the

      Winter.

      Upon the whole, it was resolved to abide where we were; and it was not the least

      Part of our Happiness that we did so, as shall appear in its Place.

      Having resolved upon this, our first Measures were to set our Negroes to Work,

      to make Hutts or Houses for our Habitation; and this they did very dexterously;

      only that we changed the Ground where we had at first intended it, thinking, as

      indeed it happen'd, that the river might reach it upon any sudden Rain. Our Camp

      was like a little Town, in which our Hutts were in the Center, having one large

      one in the Center of them also, into which all our particular Lodgings opened;

      so that none of us went into our Apartments, but thro' a publick Tent where we

      all eat and drank together, and kept our Councils and Society, and our

      Carpenters made us Tables, Benches, and Stools in Abundance, as many as we could

      make use of.

      We had no Need of Chimneys, it was hot enough without Fire; but yet we found our

      selves at last oblig'd to keep a Fire every Night upon a particular Occasion:

      For tho' we had in all other Respects a very pleasant and agreeable Scituation,

      yet we were rather
    worse troubled with the unwelcome Visits of wild Beasts here,

      than in the Wilderness it self; for as the Deer, and other gentle Creatures came

      hither for Shelter and Food, so the Lions, and Tigers, and Leopards, haunted

      these Places continually for Prey.

      When first we discovered this, we were so uneasy at it, that we thought of

      removing our Scituation; but after many Debates about it, we resolved to fortify

      our selves in such a Manner, as not to be in any Danger from it; and this our

      Carpenters undertook, who first palisadoed our Camp quite round with long Stakes

      (for we had Wood enough) which Stakes were not stuck in one by another like

      Pales, but in an irregular Manner; a great Multitude of them so placed, that

      they took up near two Yards in Thickness, some higher, some lower, all sharpened

      at the Top, and about a Foot asunder; so that had any Creature jump'd at them,

      unless he had gone clean over, which it was very hard to do, he would be hung

      upon twenty or thirty Spikes.

      The Entrance into this, had larger Stakes than the rest, placed so before one

      another, as to make three or four short Turnings, which no four-footed Beast

      bigger than a Dog could possibly come in at; and that we might not be attack'd

      by any Multitude together, and consequently be alarm'd in our Sleep, as we had

      been, or be oblig'd to waste our Ammunition, which we were very chary of, we

      kept a great Fire every Night without the Entrance of our Palisade, having a

      Hutt for our two Centinels to stand in free from the Rain, just within the

      Entrance, and right against the Fire.

      To maintain this Fire, we cut a prodigious deal of Wood, and piled it upon a

      Heap to dry, and with the green Boughs made a second Covering over our Hutts, so

      high and thick, that it might cast the Rain off from the first, and keep us

      effectually dry.

      We had scarce finished all these Works, but that the Rain came on so fierce, and

      so continued, that we had little time to stir abroad for Food, except indeed

      that our Negroes, who wore no Clothes, seem'd to make nothing of the Rain, tho'

      to us Europeans in those hot Climates, nothing is more dangerous.

      We continued in this Posture for four Months, that is, from the Middle of June

      to the Middle of October; for tho' the Rains went off, at least the greatest

      Violence of them, about the Equinox, yet as the Sun was then just over our

      Heads, we resolved to stay a while till it was pass'd us a little to the

      Southward.

      During our Encampment here, we had several Adventures with the ravenous

      Creatures of that Country, and had not our Fire been always kept burning, I

      question much whether all our Fence, tho' we strengthen'd it afterwards with

      twelve or fourteen Rows of Stakes more, would have kept us secure. It was always

      in the Night that we had the Disturbance of them, and sometimes they came in

      such Multitudes, that we thought all the Lions, and Tigers, and Leopards, and

      Wolves of Africa were come together to attack us. One Night being clear

      Moonshine, one of our Men being upon the Watch, told us, he verily believed he

      saw Ten Thousand wild Creatures of one Sort or another, pass by our little Camp;

      and ever as they saw the Fire, they sheer'd off, but were sure to howl or roar,

      or whatever it was, when they were past.

      The Musick of their Voices was very far from being pleasant to us, and sometimes

      would be so very disturbing, that we could not sleep for it; and often our

      Centinels would call us, that were awake to come and look at them. It was one

      windy tempestuous Night after a very rainy Day, that we were indeed all called

      up; for such innumerable Numbers of Devilish Creatures came about us, that our

      Watch really thought they would attack us. They would not come on the Side where

      the Fire was; and tho' we thought our selves secure every where else, yet we all

      got up, and took to our Arms. The Moon was near the Full, but the Air full of

      flying Clouds, and a strange Hurricane of Wind to add to the Terror of the

      Night; when looking on the Back Part of our Camp, I thought I saw a Creature

      within our Fortification, and so indeed he was, except his Haunches; for he had

      taken a running Leap, I suppose, and with all his Might had thrown himself clear

      over our Palisadoes, except one strong Pile which stood higher than the rest,

      and which had caught hold of him, and by his Weight he had hang'd himself upon

      it, the Spike of the Pile running into his Hinder-Haunch or Thigh, on the

      Inside, and by that he hung growling and biting the Wood for Rage. I snatcht up

      a Lance from one of the Negroes that stood just by me, and running to him,

      struck it three or four Times into him, and dispatch'd him; being unwilling to

      shoot, because I had a Mind to have a Volley fired among the rest, whom I could

      see standing without as thick as a Drove of Bullocks going to a Fair. I

      immediately called our People out, and shewed them the Object of Terror which I

      had seen, and without any farther Consultation, fired a full Volley among them,

      most of our Pieces being loaden with two or three Sluggs or Bullets a-piece. It

      made a horrible Clutter among them, and in general they all took to their Heels,

      only that we could observe, that some walk'd off with more Gravity and Majesty

      than others, being not so much frighted at the Noise and Fire; and we could

      perceive that some were left upon the Ground struggling as for Life, but we

      durst not stir out to see what they were.

      Indeed they stood so thick, and were so near us, that we could not well miss

      killing or wounding some of them, and we believe they had certainly the Smell of

      us, and of our Victuals we had been killing; for we had killed a Deer, and three

      or four of those Creatures like Goats, the Day before; and some of the Offal had

      been thrown out behind our Camp, and this we suppose drew them so much about us;

      but we avoided it for the future.

      Tho' the Creatures fled, yet we heard a frightful Roaring all Night at the Place

      where they stood, which we supposed was from some that were wounded; and as soon

      as Day came, we went out to see what Execution we had done, and, indeed, it was

      a strange Sight; there were three Tygers and two Wolves quite killed, besides

      the Creature I had killed within onr Palisado, which seem'd to be of an

      ill-gendered kind, between a Tyger and a Leopard. Besides this, there was a

      noble old Lion alive, but with both his Fore Legs broke, so that he could not

      stir away, and he had almost beat himself to Death with struggling all Night;

      and we found, that this was the wounded Soldier that had roared so loud, and

      given us so much Disturbance: Our Surgeon, looking at him, smiled; Now, says he,

      if I could be sure this Lion would be as grateful to me, as one of his Majesty's

      Ancestors was to Andronicus the Roman Slave, I would certainly set both his Legs

      again, and cure him. I had not heard the Story of Andronicus, so he told it me

      at large; but as to the Surgeon, we told him, he had no Way to know whether the

      Lion would do so or not, but to cure him first, and trust to his Honour; but he

      had no Faith; so, to dispatch him, and put him out of his Torment, he
    shot him

      into the Head, and killed him, for which we called him the King-Killer ever

      after.

      Our Negroes found no less than five of these ravenous Creatures wounded and

      dropt at a Distance from our Quarters; whereof, one was a Wolf, one a fine

      spotted young Leopard, and the other were Creatures that we knew not what to

      call them.

      We had several more of these Gentle-folks about us after that, but no such

      general Rendezvous of them as that was, any more; but this ill Effect it had to

      us, that it frighted the Deer and other Creatures from our Neighbourhood, of

      whose Company we were much more desirous, and who were necessary for our

      Subsistence: However, our Negroes went out every Day a-Hunting, as they called

      it, with Bow and Arrow, and they scarce ever failed of bringing us home

      something or other; and particularly we found in this Part of the Country, after

      the Rains had fallen some time, Abundance of Wild-fowl, such as we have in

      England ; Duck, Teal, Widgeon, &c. some Geese, and some Kinds that we had never

      seen before, and we frequently killed them. Also we catched a great Deal of

      fresh Fish out of the River, so that we wanted no Provision; if we wanted any

      thing, it was Salt to eat with our fresh Meat, but we had a little left, and we

      used it sparingly; for, as to our Negroes, they would not taste it, nor did they

      care to eat any Meat that was seasoned with it.

      The Weather began now to clear up, the Rains were down, and the Floods abated,

      and the Sun, which had passed our Zenith, was gone to the Southward a good Way,

      so we prepared to go on of our Way.

      It was the 12th of October or thereabouts, that we began to set forward, and

      having an easy Country to travel in, as well as to supply us with Provisions,

      tho' still without Inhabitants, we made more Dispatch, travelling some times, as

      we calculated it 20 or 25 Miles a Day; nor did we halt any were in eleven Days

      March, one Day excepted, which was to make a Raft to carry us over a small

      River, which having swelled with the Rains was not yet quite down.

      When we were past this River, which by the Way run to the Northward too, we

      found a great Row of Hills in our Way; we saw indeed the Country open to the

      Right at a great Distance, but as we kept true to our Course due West, we were

      not willing to go a great Way out of our Way, only to shun a few Hills; so we

      advanced; but we were surprized, when being not quite come to the Top, one of

      our Company who with two Negroes was got up before us, cry'd out the Sea! the

      Sea! and fell a-dancing and jumping as Signs of Joy.

      The Gunner and I were most surprized at it, because we had but that Morning been

      calculating, that we must have yet above a 1000 Miles to the Sea-side, and that

      we could not expect to reach it till an other rainy Season would be upon us, so

      that when our Man cry'd out the Sea, the Gunner was angry, and said he was mad.

      But we were both in the greatest Surprize imaginable, when coming to the Top of

      the Hill, and tho' it was very high, we saw nothing but Water, either before us,

      or to the right Hand or the left, being a vast Sea without any Bound but the

      Horizon.

      We went down the Hill full of Confusion of Thought, not being able to conceive

      whereabouts we were, or what it must be, seeing by all our Charts the Sea was

      yet a vast Way off.

      It was not above three Miles from the Hills before we came to the Shore, or

      Water-edge of this Sea, and there, to our further Surprize, we found the Water

      fresh and pleasant to drink; so that in short we knew not what Course to take:

      The Sea, as we thought it to be, put a full stop to our Journey, (I mean

      Westward) for it lay just in the Way. Our next Question was which Hand to turn

      to, to the Right or the Left, but this was soon resolved; for as we knew not the

      Extent of it, we considered that our Way, if it had been the Sea really, must be

     
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