Salt-Petre being very good, and the Sun excessively hot; and here we lived about 
   four Months. 
   The Southern Solstice was over, and the Sun gone back towards the Equinoctial, 
   when we considered of our next Adventure, which was to go over the Sea of 
   Zanquebar, as the Portuguese call it, and to land, if possible, upon the 
   Continent of Africa. 
   We talked with many of the Natives about it, such as we could make our selves 
   intelligible to; but all that we could learn from them was, that there was a 
   great Land of Lions beyond the Sea, but that it was a great Way off; we knew as 
   well as they that it was a long Way, but our People differed mightily about it: 
   Some said it was 150 Leagues, others not above 100. One of our Men that had a 
   Map of the World shewed us by his Scale, that it was not above 80 Leagues. Some 
   said there were Islands all the Way to touch at; some that there were no Islands 
   at all: For my Part, I knew nothing of this Matter one way or another, but heard 
   it all without Concern, whether it was near or far off; however, this we learned 
   from an old Man who was blind, and led about by a Boy, that if we stay'd till 
   the End of August, we should be sure of the Wind to be fair, and the Sea smooth 
   all the Voyage. 
   This was some Encouragement, but staying again was very unwelcome News to us, 
   because that then the Sun would be returning again to the South, which was what 
   our Men were very unwilling to. At last we called a Council of our whole Body; 
   their Debates were too tedious to take Notice of, only to note, that when it 
   came to Captain Bob, (for so they called me ever since I had taken State upon me 
   before one of their great Princes) truly I was on no Side, it was not one 
   Farthing Matter to me, I told them, whether we went or stayed, I had no home, 
   and all the World was alike to me; so I left it entirely to them to determine. 
   In a Word, they saw plainly there was nothing to be done where we were, without 
   Shipping; that if our Business indeed was only to eat and drink, we could not 
   find a better Place in the World; but if our Business was to get away, and get 
   home into our own Country, we could not find a Worse. 
   I confess, I liked the Country wonderfully, and even then had strange Notions of 
   coming again to live there; and I used to say to them very often, that if I had 
   but a Ship of 20 Guns, and a Sloop, and both well Manned, I would not desire a 
   better Place in the World to make my self as rich as a King. 
   But to return to the Consultations they were in about going: Upon the whole, it 
   was resolved to venture over for the Main; and venture we did, madly enough, 
   indeed; for it was the wrong time of the Year to undertake such a Voyage in that 
   Country; for, as the Winds hang Easterly all the Months from September to March, 
   so they generally hang Westerly all the rest of the Year, and blew right in our 
   Teeth, so that as soon as we had, with a kind of a Land Breeze, stretched over 
   about 15 or 20 Leagues, and, as I may say, just enough to lose our selves, we 
   found the Wind set in a steady fresh Gale or Breeze from the Sea, at West W. S. 
   W. or S. W. by W. and never further from the West; so that, in a Word we could 
   make nothing of it. 
   On the other Hand, the Vessel, such as we had would not lye close upon a Wind; 
   if so, we might have stretched away N. N. W. and have met with a great many 
   Islands in our Way, as we found afterwards; but we could make nothing of it, 
   tho' we tried, and by the trying had almost undone us all; for, stretching away 
   to the North, as near the Wind as we could, we had forgotten the Shape and 
   Position of the Island of Madagascar it self; how that we came off at the Head 
   of a Promontory or Point of Land that lies about the Middle of the Island, and 
   that stretches out West a great way into the Sea; and that now being run a 
   Matter of 40 Leagues to the North, the Shore of the Island fell off again above 
   200 Miles to the East, so that we were by this Time in the wide Ocean, between 
   the Island and the Main, and almost 100 Leagues from both. 
   Indeed as the Winds blew fresh at West, as before, we had a smooth Sea, and we 
   found it pretty good going before it, and so taking our smallest Canoe in Tow, 
   we stood in for the Shore with all the Sail we could make. This was a terrible 
   Adventure; for if the least Gust of Wind had come, we had been all lost, our 
   Canoes being deep, and in no Condition to make Way in a high Sea. 
   This Voyage, however, held us eleven Days in all, and at length having spent 
   most of our Provisions, and every Drop of Water we had, we spied Land, to our 
   great Joy, tho' at the Distance of ten or eleven Leagues, and as under the Land, 
   the Wind came off like a Land Breeze, and blew hard against us, we were two Days 
   more before we reached the Shore, having all that while excessive hot Weather, 
   and not a Drop of Water, or any other Liquor, except some Cordial Waters, which 
   one of our Company had a little of left in a Case of Bottles. 
   This gave us a Taste of what we should have done, if we had ventured forward 
   with a scant Wind and uncertain Weather, and gave us a Surfeit of our Design for 
   the Main, at least 'till we might have some better Vessels under us; so we went 
   on Shore again, and pitched our Camp, as before, in as convenient Manner as we 
   could, fortifying our selves against any Surprize; but the Natives here were 
   exceeding courteous, and much civiller than on the South Part of the Island; and 
   tho' we could not understand what they said, or they us, yet we found Means to 
   make them understand that we were Sea-faring Men, and Strangers; and that we 
   were in Distress for want of Provisions. 
   The first Proof we had of their Kindness was, that, as soon as they saw us come 
   on Shore, and begin to make our Habitation, one of their Captains or Kings, for 
   we knew not what to call them, came down with five or six Men and some Women, 
   and brought us five Goats and two young fat Steers, and gave them to us for 
   nothing; and when we went to offer them any thing, the Captain, or the King, 
   would not let any of them touch it, or take my thing of us. About two Hours 
   after came another King or Captain, with forty or fifty Men after him; we began 
   to be afraid of him, and laid Hands upon our Weapons; but he perceiving it, 
   caused two Men to go before him carrying two long Poles in their Hands, which 
   they held upright, as high as they could, which we presently perceiv'd was a 
   Signal of Peace, and these two Poles they set up afterwards sticking them up in 
   the Ground; and when the King and his Men came to these two Poles, they stuck 
   all their Lances up in the Ground, and came on unarmed, leaving their Lances, as 
   also their Bows and Arrows behind them. 
   This was to satisfy us, that they were come as Friends, and we were very glad to 
   see it; for we had no Mind to quarrel with them, if we could help it. The 
   Captain of this Gang seeing some of our Men making up their Hutts, and that they 
   did it but bunglingly, he becken'd to some of his Men to go and help us. 
   Immediately 15 or 16 of them came and mingled among us, and went to Work for us; 
   and, indeed, they were better Workmen tha 
					     					 			n we were, for they run up three or 
   four Hutts for us in a Moment, and much handsomer done than ours. 
   After this they sent us Milk, Plantanes, Pumpkins, and Abundance of Roots and 
   Greens that were very good, and then took their Leave, and would not take any 
   thing from us that we had. One of our Men offer'd the King or Captain of these 
   Men a Dram, which he drank, and was mightily pleased with it, and held out his 
   Hand for another, which we gave him; and, in a Word, after this, he hardly 
   failed coming to us two or three times a Week, always bringing us something or 
   other, and one time sent us seven Head of Black Cattle, some of which we cured 
   and dried as before. 
   And here I cannot but remember one thing' which afterwards stood us in great 
   stead, viz. that the Flesh of their Goats and their Beef also, but especially 
   the former, when we had dried and cured it, looked red, and eat hard and firm, 
   as dry'd Beef in Holland; they were so pleased with it, and it was such a Dainty 
   to them, that at any time after they would Trade with us for it, not knowing, or 
   so much as imagining, what it was; so that for Ten or Twelve Pound Weight of 
   smoked dry'd Beef, they would give us a whole Bullock, or Cow, or any thing else 
   we could desire. 
   Here we observed two Things that were very material to us, even essentially so; 
   first, we found they had a great deal of Earthen-Ware here, which they make use 
   of many ways, as we did: Particularly they had long deep Earthen Pots, which 
   they used to sink into the Ground to keep the Water which they drank cool and 
   pleasant; and the other was, that they had larger Canoes than their Neighbours 
   had. 
   By this we were prompted to enquire if they had no larger Vessels than those we 
   saw there; or if any other of the Inhabitants has not such. They signified 
   presently, that they had no larger Boats than that they shewed us; but that on 
   the other Side of the Island they had larger Boats, and that with Decks upon 
   them, and large Sails; and this made us resolve to Coast round the whole Island 
   to see them; so we prepared and victualled our Canoe for the Voyage, and, in a 
   Word, went to Sea for the third time. 
   It cost us a Month or six Weeks time to perform this Voyage, in which time we 
   went on Shore several times for Water and Provisions, and found the Natives 
   always very free and courteous; but we were surprized one Morning early, being 
   at the Extremity of the Northermost Part of the Island, when one of our Men 
   cried out a Sail, a Sail : We presently saw a Vessel a great Way out at Sea; but 
   after we had looked at it with our Perspective Glasses, and endeavoured all we 
   could to make out what it was, we could not tell what to think of it; for it was 
   neither Ship, Ketch, Gally, Galliot, or like any thing that we had ever seen 
   before: All that we could make of it was, that it went from us standing out to 
   Sea. In a Word, we soon lost Sight of it, for we were in no Condition to chase 
   any thing, and we never saw it again, but by all we could perceive of it, from 
   what we saw of such things afterwards, it was some Arabian Vessel which had been 
   trading to the Coast of Mosambique, or Zanguebar, the same Place where we 
   afterwards went, as you shall hear. 
   I kept no Journal of this Voyage, nor indeed did I all this while understand any 
   thing of Navigation, more than the common Business of a Fore-mast Man; so I can 
   say nothing to the Latitudes or Distances of any Places we were at, how long we 
   were going, or how far we failed in a Day; but this I remember, that being now 
   come round the Island, we sailed up the Eastern Shore due South, as we had done 
   down the Western Shore due North before. 
   Nor do I remember that the Natives differed much from one another, either in 
   Stature or Complexion, or in their Manners, their Habits their Weapons, or 
   indeed in any thing; and yet we could not perceive that they had any 
   Intelligence one with another; but they were extremely kind and civil to us on 
   this Side, as well as on the other. 
   We continued our Voyage South for many Weeks, tho' with several Intervals of 
   going on Shore to get Provisions and Water. At length, coming round a Point of 
   Land which lay about a League farther than ordinary into the Sea, we were 
   agreeably surprized with a Sight, which, no doubt, had been as disagreeable to 
   those concern'd, as it was pleasant to us. This was the Wreck of an European 
   Ship, which had been cast away upon the Rocks, which in that Place run a great 
   Way into the Sea. 
   We could see plainly at Low Water, a great deal of the Ship lay dry; even at 
   High Water, she was not entirely covered; and that at most she did not lye above 
   a League from the Shore. It will easily be believ'd, that our Curiosity led us, 
   the Wind and Weather also permitting, to go directly to her, which we did 
   without any Difficulty, and presently found that it was a Dutch-built Ship, and 
   that she could not have been very long in that Condition, a great deal of the 
   upper Work of her Stern remaining firm, with the Mizen Mast standing. Her Stern 
   seem'd to be jaum'd in between two Ridges of the Rock, and so remained fast, all 
   the Fore-part of the Ship having been beaten to Pieces. 
   We could see nothing to be gotten out of the Wreck that was worth our while; but 
   we resolv'd to go on Shore, and stay sometime thereabouts, to see if perhaps we 
   might get any Light into the Story of her, and we were not without Hopes that we 
   might hear something more particular about her Men, and perhaps find some of 
   them on Shore there, in the same Condition that we were in, and so might 
   encrease our Company. 
   It was a very pleasant Sight to us, when coming on Shore, we saw all the Marks 
   and Tokens of a Ship-Carpenter's Yard; as a Launch Block and Craddles, Scaffolds 
   and Planks, and Pieces of Planks, the Remains of the Building a Ship or Vessel; 
   and, in a Word, a great many things that fairly invited us to go about the same 
   Work, and we soon came to understand, that the Men belonging to the Ship that 
   was lost, had saved themselves on Shore, perhaps in their Boat, and had built 
   themselves a Bark or Sloop, and so were gone to Sea again; and enquiring of the 
   Natives which Way they went, they pointed to the South and South-West, by which 
   we could easily understand that they were gone away to the Cape of Good Hope. 
   No body will imagine we could be so dull as not to gather from hence, that we 
   might take the same Method for our Escapes; so we resolved first in general, 
   that we would try, if possible, to build us a Boat of one Kind or other, and go 
   to Sea as our Fate should direct. 
   In order to this, our first Work was to have the two Carpenters search about to 
   see what Materials the Dutchmen had left behind them that might be of Use; and 
   in particular, they found one that was very useful, and which I was much 
   employ'd about, and that was a Pitch-Kettle, and a little Pitch in it. 
   When we came to set close to this Work, we found it very laborious and 
   difficult, having but few Tools, no Iron Work, no Cordage, no Sails; so that, in 
   short, whatever we built, we were oblig'd to be our own Sm 
					     					 			iths, Rope-Makers, 
   Sail-Makers, and indeed to practice twenty Trades that we knew little or nothing 
   of: However, Necessity was the Spur to Invention, and we did many things which 
   before we thought impracticable, that is to say, in our Circumstances. 
   After our two Carpenters had resolved upon the Dimensions of what they would 
   build, they set us all to Work, to go off in our Boats, and split up the Wreck 
   of the old Ship, and to bring away every thing we could; and particularly, that, 
   if possible, we should bring away the Mizen Mast, which was left standing, which 
   with much Difficulty we effected, after above twenty Days Labour of fourteen of 
   our Men. 
   At the same time we got out a great deal of Iron-Work; as Bolts, Spikes, Nails, 
   &c. all which our Artist, of whom I have spoken already, who was now grown a 
   very dexterous Smith, made us Nails and Hinges for our Rudder, and Spikes such 
   as we wanted. 
   But we wanted an Anchor, and if we had had an Anchor, we could not have made a 
   Cable; so we contented our selves with making some Ropes with the Help of the 
   Natives, of such Stuff as they made their Matts of, and with these we made such 
   a kind of cable or Tow Line, as was sufficient to fasten our Vessel to the 
   Shore, which we contented our selves with for that time. 
   To be short, we spent four Months here, and work'd very hard too; at the End of 
   which time we launch'd our Frigate, which, in a few Words, had many Defects, but 
   yet, all things considered, it was as well as we could expect it to be. 
   In short, it was a kind of a Sloop, of the Burthen of near 18 or 20 Ton, and had 
   we had Masts and Sails; standing, and running Rigging, as is usual in such 
   Cases, and other Conveniences, the Vessel might have carry'd us wherever we 
   could have had a Mind to go; but of all the Materials we wanted, this was the 
   worst, viz. that we had no Tar or Pitch to pay the Seams, and secure the Bottom; 
   and tho' we did what we could with Tallow and Oil, to make a Mixture to supply 
   that Part, yet we could not bring it to answer our End fully; and when we 
   launch'd her into the Water, she was so leaky, and took in the Water so fast, 
   that we thought all our Labour had been lost, for we had much ado to make her 
   swim; and as for Pumps, we had none, nor had we any Means to make one. 
   But at length one of the Natives, a black Negro-man, shewed us a Tree, the Wood 
   of which being put into the Fire, sends forth a Liquid that is as glutinous, and 
   almost as strong as Tar, and of which, by boiling, we made a Sort of Stuff which 
   serv'd us for Pitch, and this answered our End effectually; for we perfectly 
   made our Vessel sound and tight, so that we wanted no Pitch or Tar at all. This 
   Secret has stood me in stead upon many Occasions since that time, in the same 
   Place. 
   Our Vessel being thus finished, out of the Mizen Mast of the Ship, we made a 
   very good Mast to her, and fitted our Sails to it as well as we could; then we 
   made a Rudder and Tiller; and, in a Word, every thing that our present Necessity 
   called upon us for; and having victualled her, and put as much fresh Water on 
   Board as we thought we wanted, or as we knew how to stow (for we were yet 
   without Casks) we put to Sea with a fair Wind. 
   We had spent near another Year in these Rambles, and in this Piece of Work; for 
   it was now, as our Men said, about the Beginning of our February, and the Sun 
   went from us apace, which was much to our Satisfaction, for the Heats were 
   exceeding violent. The Wind, as I said, was fair, for as I have since learnt, 
   the Winds generally spring up to the Eastward, as the Sun goes from them to the 
   North. 
   Our Debate now was, which Way we should go, and never were Men so irresolute; 
   some were for going to the East, and stretching away directly for the Coast of 
   Malabar; but others who considered more seriously the Length of that Voyage, 
   shook their Heads at the Proposal, knowing very well, that neither out