The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Captain Singleton

    Previous Page Next Page
    fetch'd an old Dutchman, who had been their Prisoner many Years, and set him to

      speak to us. The Sum and Substance of his Speech was, That the King of the

      Country had sent his General down to know who we were, and what our Business

      was? William stood up in the Stern of the Pinnace, and told him, That as to

      that, he that was an European by his Language and Voice, might easily know what

      we were, and our Condition; the Ship being a-ground upon the Sand, would also

      tell him, that our Business there was that of a Ship in Distress; so William

      desired to know what they came down for with such a Multitude, and with Arms and

      Weapons, as if they came to War with us.

      He answered, they might have good Reason to come down to the Shore, the Country

      being alarmed with the Appearance of Ships of Strangers upon the Coast; and as

      our Vessels were full of Men, and that we had Guns and Weapons, the King had

      sent Part of his military Men, that, in Case of any Invasion upon the Country,

      they might be ready to defend themselves, whatsoever might be the Occasion.

      But, says he, as you are Men in Distress, the King has ordered his General who

      is here also, to give you all the Assistance he can, and to invite you on Shore,

      to receive you with all possible Courtesy. Says William very quick upon him,

      before I give thee an Answer to that, I desire thee to tell me what thou art;

      for by thy Speech thou art an European. He answered presently, he was a

      Dutchman. That I know well, says William, by thy Speech; but art thou a Native

      Dutchman of Holland, or a Native of this Country, that has learnt Dutch by

      conversing among the Hollanders, who we know are settled upon this Island.

      No, says the Old Man, I am a Native of Delft in the Province of Holland in

      Europe.

      Well, says William immediately, but art thou a Christian or a Heathen, or what

      we call a Renegado?

      I am, says he, a Christan, and so they went on in a short Dialogue, as follows.

      Will. Thou art a Dutchman, and a Christian, thou sayest; pray, art thou a

      Freeman or a Servant?

      Dutchm. I am a Servant to the King here, and in his Army.

      Will. But art thou a Voluntier, or a Prisoner?

      Dutchm. Indeed I was a Prisoner at first, but am at Liberty now, and so am a

      Voluntier.

      Will. That is to say, being first a Prisoner thou hast Liberty to serve them;

      but art thou so at Liberty, that thou mayest go away, if thou pleasest, to thine

      own Countrymen?

      Dutchm. I do not say so; my Countrymen live a great Way off, on the North and

      East Parts of the Island, and there is no going to them, without the King's

      express Licence.

      Will. Well, and why dost not thou get a Licence to go away?

      Dutchm. I have never ask'd for it.

      Will. And I suppose, if thou didst, thou knowst thou couldst not obtain it.

      Dutchm. I cannot say much as to that, but why do you ask me all these Questions?

      Will. Why, my Reason is good; if thou art a Christian and a Prisoner, how canst

      thou consent to be made an Instrument to these Barbarians, to betray us into

      their Hands, who are thy Countrymen and Fellow-Christians? Is it not a barbarous

      thing in thee to do so?

      Dutchm. How do I go about to betray you? Do I not give you an Account, how the

      King invites you to come on Shore, and has ordered you to be treated

      courteously, and assisted?

      Will. As thou art a Christian, tho' I doubt it much, dost thou believe the King

      or the General, as thou callest it, means one Word of what he says?

      Dutchm. He promises you by the Mouth of his Great General.

      Will. I don't ask thee what he promises, or by whom; but I ask thee this: Canst

      thou say, that thou believest he intends to perform it?

      Dutchm. How can I answer that? How can I tell what he intends?

      Will. Thou canst tell what thou believest.

      Dutchm. I cannot say but he will perform it; I believe he may.

      Will. Thou art but a double-tongu'd Christian, I doubt: Come, I'll ask thee

      another Question: Wilt thou say, that thou believest it; and that thou wouldst

      advise me to believe it, and put our Lives into their Hands upon these Promises?

      Dutchm. I am not to be your Adviser.

      Will. Thou art perhaps afraid to speak thy Mind, because thou art in their

      Power: Pray, do any of them understand what thou and I say? Can they speak

      Dutch?

      Dutchm. No, not one of them, I have no Apprehensions upon that Account at all.

      Will. Why then answer me plainly, if thou art a Christian: Is it safe for us to

      venture upon their Words, to put our selves into their Hands, and come on Shore?

      Dutchm. You put it very home to me: Pray let me ask you another Question: Are

      you in any Likelihood of getting your Ship off, if you refuse it?

      Will. Yes, yes, we shall get off the Ship, now the Storm is over, we don't fear

      it.

      Dutchm. Then I cannot say it is best for you to trust them.

      Will. Well, it is honestly said.

      Dutchm. But what shall I say to them?

      Will. Give them good Words, as they give us.

      Dutchm. What good Words?

      Will. Why let them tell the King, that we are Strangers, who were driven on his

      Coast by a great Storm; that we thank him very kindly for his Offer of Civility

      to us, which, if we are farther distress'd, we will accept thankfully; but that

      at present we have no Occasion to come on Shore: And besides, that we cannot

      safely leave the Ship in the present Condition she is in, but that we are

      obliged to take Care of her, in order to get her off, and expect in a Tide or

      two more, to get her quite clear, and at an Anchor.

      Dutchm. But he will expect you to come on Shore then to visit him, and make him

      some Present for his Civility.

      Will. When we have got our Ship clear, and stopp'd the Leaks, we will pay our

      Respects to him.

      Dutchm. Nay, you may as well come to him now as then.

      Will. Nay, hold Friend, I did not say we would come to him then: You talk'd of

      making him a Present; that is, to pay our Respects to him, is it not?

      Dutchm. Well, but I will tell him, that you will come on Shore to him when your

      Ship is got off?

      Will. I have nothing to say to that, you may tell him what you think fit.

      Dutchm. But he will be in a great Rage, if I do not.

      Will. Who will he be in a great Rage at?

      Dutchm. At you.

      Will. What Occasion have we to value that?

      Dutchm. Why, he will send all his Army down against you.

      Will. And what if they were all here just now? What dost thou suppose they could

      do to us?

      Dutchm. He would expect they should burn your Ships, and bring you all to him.

      Will. Tell him, if he try, he may catch a Tartar.

      Dutchm. He has a World of Men.

      Will. Has he any Ships?

      Dutchm. No, he has no Ships.

      Will. Nor Boats?

      Dutchm. No, nor Boats.

      Will. Why, what then do you think we care for his Men? What canst thou do now to

      us, if thou hadst a Hundred Thousand with thee?

      Dutchm. O! they might set you on Fire.

      Will. Set us a Firing thou mean'st: That they might indeed; but Set us on Fire,
    r />   they shall not; they may try at their Peril, and we shall make mad Work with

      your Hundred Thousand Men, if they come within Reach of our Guns, I assure thee.

      Dutchm. But what if the King give you Hostages for your Safety?

      Will. Whom can he give but mere Slaves and Servants like thy self, whose Lives

      he no more values, than we an English Hound?

      Dutchm. Whom do you demand for Hostages?

      Will. Himself and your Worship.

      Dutchm. What would you do with him?

      Will. Do with him, as he would do with us, cut his Head off.

      Dutchm. And what would you do to me?

      Will. Do with thee? We would carry thee home into thine own Country; and tho'

      thou deservest the Gallows, we would make a Man and a Christian of thee again,

      and not do by thee as thou wouldst have done by us, betray thee to a Parcel of

      merciless, savage Pagans, that know no God, nor how to shew Mercy to Man.

      Dutchm. You put a Thought in my Head that I will speak to you about to Morrow.

      Thus they went away, and William came on board, and gave us a full Account of

      his Parley with the old Dutchman, which was very diverting, and to me

      instructing, for I had Abundance of Reason to acknowledge William had made a

      better Judgment of things than I.

      It was our good Fortune to get our Ship off that very Night, and to bring her to

      an Anchor at about a Mile and a Half further out, and in deep Water, to our

      great Satisfaction; so that we had no need to fear the Dutchman's King with his

      Hundred Thousand Men; and indeed we had some Sport with them the next Day, when

      they came down, a vast prodigious Multitude of them, very few less in Number, in

      our Imagination, than a Hundred Thousand, with some Elephants; tho' if it had

      been an Army of Elephants, they could have done us no Harm, for we were fairly

      at our Anchor now, and out of their Reach; and indeed we thought our selves more

      out of their Reach, than we really were; and it was ten Thousand to One, that we

      had not been fast a-ground again; for the Wind blowing off Shore, tho' it made

      the Water smooth where we lay, yet it blew the Ebb further out than usual, and

      we could easily perceive the Sand which we touch'd upon before, lay in the Shape

      of a Half Moon, and surrounded us with two Horns of it; so that we lay in the

      Middle or Center of it, as in a round Bay, safe just as we were, and in deep

      Water; but present Death, as it were, on the right Hand, and on the left, for

      the two Horns, or Points of the Sand, reach'd out beyond where our Ship lay near

      two Miles.

      On that Part of the Sand which lay on our East Side, this misguided Multitude

      extended themselves; and being most of them not above their Knees, or most of

      them not above Ancle deep in the Water, they, as it were, surrounded us on that

      Side, and on the Side of the main Land, and a little Way on the other Side of

      the Sand, standing in a Half Circle, or rather three Fifths of a Circle, for

      about six Miles in Length; the other Horn, or Point of the Sand which lay on our

      West Side being not quite so shallow, they could not extend themselves upon it

      so far.

      They little thought what Service they had done us, and how unwillingly, and by

      the greatest Ignorance, they had made themselves Pilots to us, while we having

      not sounded the Place, might have been lost, before we were aware. It is true,

      we might have sounded our new Harbour, before we had ventured out; but I cannot

      say for certain, whether we should or not; for I, for my Part, had not the least

      Suspicion of what our real Case was. However, I say, perhaps before we had

      weigh'd, we should have look'd about us a little. I am sure we ought to have

      done it; for besides these Armies of human Furies, we had a very leaky Ship, and

      all our Pumps could hardly keep the Water from growing upon us, and our

      Carpenters were over-board working to find out, and stop the Wounds we had

      received, heeling her first on one Side, and then on the other; and it was very

      diverting to see how, when our Men heel'd the Ship over to the Side next the

      wild Army that stood on the East Horn of the Sand, they were so amazed between

      Fright and Joy, that it put them into a kind of Confusion, calling to one

      another, hallooing and skreeking in a Manner as it is impossible to describe.

      While we were doing this, for we were in a great Hurry, you may be sure, and all

      Hands at Work, as well at the stopping our Leaks, as repairing our Rigging and

      Sails, which had receiv'd a great deal of Damage, and also in rigging a new

      Main-Top-Mast, and the like: I say, while we were doing all this, we perceived a

      Body of Men, of near a Thousand, move from that Part of the Army of the

      Barbarians, that lay at the Bottom of the sandy Bay, and came all along the

      Water's Edge, round the Sand, till they stood just on our Broadside East, and

      were within about Half a Mile of us. Then we saw the Dutchman come forward

      nearer to us, and all alone, with his white Flag and all his Motions, just as

      before, and there he stood.

      Our Men had but just brought the Ship to Rights again, as they came up to our

      Broadside, and we had very happily found out and stopp'd the worst and most

      dangerous Leak that we had, to our very great Satisfaction; so I ordered the

      Boats to be haul'd up, and Mann'd as they were the Day before, and William to go

      as Plenipotentiary. I would have gone my self, if I had understood Dutch; but as

      I did not, it was to no Purpose, for I should be able to know nothing of what

      was said, but from him at second Hand, which might be done as well afterwards.

      All the Instructions I pretended to give William, was, if possible, to get the

      old Dutchman away, and, if he could, to make him come on board.

      Well, William went just as before; and when he came within about sixty or

      seventy Yards of the Shore, he held up his white Flag, as the Dutchman did, and

      turning the Boat's Broadside to the Shore, and his Men lying upon their Oars,

      the Parley or Dialogue began again thus.

      Will. Well, Friend, what do'st thou say to us now?

      Dutchm. I come of the same mild Errand as I did yesterday.

      Will. What do'st thou pretend to come of a mild Errand, with all these People at

      thy Back, and all the foolish Weapons of War they bring with them? Prithee, what

      dost thou mean?

      Dutchm. The King hastens us to invite the Captain and all his Men, to come on

      Shore, and has ordered all his Men to shew them all the Civility they can.

      Will. Well, and are all those Men come to invite us ashore?

      Dutchm. They will do you no Hurt, if you will come on Shore peaceably.

      Will. Well, and what dost thou think they can do to us, if we will not?

      Dutchm. I would not have them do you any Hurt then neither.

      Will. But prithee, Friend, do not make thy self Fool and Knave too: Do'st not

      thou know that we are out of Fear of all thy Army, and out of Danger of all that

      they can do? What makes thee act so simply as well as so knavishly?

      Dutchm. Why you may think your selves safer than you are: You do not know what

      they may do to you. I can assure you they are able to do you a great deal of

      Harm, and perhaps burn your Ship.

    />   Will. Suppose that were true, as I am sure it is false, you see we have more

      Ships to carry us off, [Side note: 1Kb] pointing to the Sloop.

      Dutchm. We do not value that, if you had ten Ships, you dare not come on Shore

      with all the Men you have, in a hostile Way; we are too many for you.

      Will. Thou dost not even in that speak as thou meanest; and we may give thee a

      Tryal of our Hands, when our Friends come up to us; for thou hearest they have

      discovered us ? [Side note: 1Kb ] .

      Dutchm. Yes, I hear they fire, but I hope your Ship will not fire again; for if

      they do, our General will take it for breaking the Truce, and will make the Army

      let fly a Shower of Arrows at you in the Boat.

      Will. Thou mayest be sure the Ship will fire, that the other Ship may hear them,

      but not with Ball, If thy General knows no better, he may begin when he will;

      but thou mayest be sure we will return it to his Cost.

      Dutchm. What must I do then?

      Will. Do, why go to him, and tell him of it before-hand then; and let him know,

      that the Ship firing is not at him, or his Men, and then come again, and tell us

      what he says.

      Dutchm. No, I will send to him, which will do as well.

      Will. Do as thou wilt; but I believe thou hadst better go thy self; for if our

      Men fire first, I suppose he will be in a great Wrath, and it may be, at thee;

      for, as for his Wrath at us, we tell thee before-hand, we value it not.

      Dutchm. You flight them too much, you know not what they may do.

      Will. Thou makest as if those poor savage Wretches could do mighty things;

      prithee let us see what you can all do, we value it not; thou mayest set down

      thy Flag of Truce when thou pleasest, and begin.

      Dutchm. I had rather make a Truce, and have you all part Friends.

      Will. Thou art a deceitful Rogue thy self; for 'tis plain thou knowest these

      People would only perswade us on Shore, to entrap and surprize us; and yet thou

      that art a Christian, as thou callest thy self, would have us come on Shore, and

      put our Lives into their Hands who know nothing that belongs to Compassion, good

      Usage, or good Manners: How canst thou be such a Villain!

      Dutchm. How can you call me so? What have I done to you, and what would you have

      me do?

      Will. Not act like a Traytor, but like one that was once a Christian, and would

      have been so still, if you had not been a Dutchman.

      Dutchm. I know not what to do not I, I wish I were from them, they are a bloody

      People.

      Will. Prithee make no Difficulty of what thou shouldst do; Canst thou swim?

      Dutchm. Yes, I can swim; but if I should attempt to swim off to you, I should

      have a Thousand Arrows and Javelins sticking in me, before I should get to your

      Boat.

      Will. I'll bring the Boat close to thee, and take thee on board, in spite of

      them all. We will give them but one Volley, and I'll engage they will all run

      away from thee.

      Dutchm. You are mistaken in them, I assure you; they would immediately come all

      running down to the Shore, and shoot Fire-Arrows at you, and set your Boat and

      Ship and all on Fire, about your Ears.

      Will. We will venture that, if thou wilt come off.

      Dutchm. Will you use me honourably when I am among you?

      Will. I'll give thee my Word for it, if thou provest honest.

      Dutchm. Will you not make me a Prisoner?

      Will. I will be thy Surety Body for Body, that thou shalt be a Freeman, and go

      whither thou wilt, tho' I own to thee thou dost not deserve it.

      Just at this time our Ship fired three Guns, to answer the Sloop, and let her

      know we saw her, who immediately, we perceived, understood it, and stood

      directly for the Place; but it is impossible to express the Confusion and filthy

      vile Noise, the Hurry and universal Disorder, that was among that vast Multitude

      of People, upon our Firing of three Guns. They immediately all repaired to their

      Arms, as I may call it; for, to say they put themselves into Order, would be

      saying nothing.

      Upon the Word of Command then they advanced all in a Body to the Sea-side, and

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025