Chapter
19
I lay in the prison near
fifteen weeks after this order for transportation was signed. What the reason
of it was, I know not, but at the end of this time I was put on board of a ship
in the Thames, and with me a gang of thirteen as hardened vile creatures
as ever Newgate produced in my time; and it would really well take up a
history longer than mine to describe the degrees of impudence and audacious
villainy that those thirteen were arrived to, and the manner of their behaviour
in the voyage; of which I have a very diverting account by me, which the
captain of the ship who carried them over gave me the minutes of, and which he
caused his mate to write down at large.
It may perhaps be
thought trifling to enter here into a relation of all the little incidents
which attended me in this interval of my circumstances; I mean, between the
final order of my Transportation and the time of my going on board the ship;
and I am too near the end of my story to allow room for it; but something
relating to me any my Lancashire husband I must not omit.
He had, as I have
observed already, been carried from the master’s side of the ordinary
prison into the press-yard, with three of his comrades, for they found another
to add to them after some time; here, for what reason I knew not, they were
kept in custody without being brought to trial almost three months. It seems
they found means to bribe or buy off some of those who were expected to come in
against them, and they wanted evidence for some time to convict them. After
some puzzle on this account, at first they made a shift to get proof enough
against two of them to carry them off; but the other two, of which my Lancashire
husband was one, lay still in suspense. They had, I think, one positive
evidence against each of them, but the law strictly obliging them to have two witnesses, they could make nothing of it. Yet it seems they
were resolved not to part with the men neither, not doubting but a further
evidence would at last come in; and in order to this, I think publication was
made, that such prisoners being taken, any one that had been robbed by them
might come to the prison and see them.
I took this opportunity
to satisfy my curiosity, pretending that I had been robbed in the Dunstable
coach, and that I would go to see the two highwaymen. But when I came into the
press-yard, I so disguised myself, and muffled my face up so, that he could see
little of me, and consequently knew nothing of who I was; and when I came back,
I said publicly that I knew them very well.
Immediately it was
Rumour’d all over the prison that Moll Flanders would turn evidence
against one of the highwaymen, and that I was to come off by it from the
sentence of transportation.
They heard of it, and
immediately my husband desired to see this Mrs. Flanders that knew him
so well, and was to be an evidence against him; and
accordingly I had leave given to go to him. I dressed myself up as well as the
best clothes that I suffered myself ever to appear in there would allow me, and
went to the press-yard, but had for some time a hood over my face. He said
little to me at first, but asked me if I knew him. I told him, Yes, very well; but as I concealed my face, so I
counterfeited my voice, that he had not the least guess at who I was. He asked
me where I had seen him. I told him between Dunstable and Brickhill;
but turning to the keeper that stood by, I asked if I might not be admitted to
talk with him alone. He said Yes, yes, as much as I
pleased, and so very civilly withdrew.
As soon as he was gone,
I had shut the door, I threw off my hood, and bursting out into tears, ‘My
dear,’ says I, ‘do you not know me?’ He
turned pale, and stood speechless, like one thunderstruck, and, not able to
conquer the surprise, said no more but this, ‘Let me sit down’; and sitting
down by a table, he laid his elbow upon the table, and leaning his head on his
hand, fixed his eyes on the ground as one stupid. I cried so vehemently, on the
other hand, that it was a good while ere I could speak any more; but after I
had given some vent to my passion by tears, I repeated the same words, ‘My
dear, do you not know me?’ At which he answered, Yes,
and said no more a good while.
After some time
continuing in the surprise, as above, he cast up his eyes towards me and
said, ‘How could you be so cruel?’ I did not readily understand what he
meant; and I answered, ‘How can you call me cruel? What have I been cruel to
you in?’ ‘To come to me,’ says he, ‘in such a place as this, is it not to
insult me? I have not robbed you, at least not on the highway.’
I perceived by this that
he knew nothing of the miserable circumstances I was in, and thought that,
having got some intelligence of his being there, I had come to upbraid him with
his leaving me. But I had too much to say to him to be affronted, and told him
in few words, that I was far from coming to insult him, but at best I came to
condole mutually; that he would be easily satisfied that I had no such view,
when I should tell him that my condition was worse than his, and that many
ways. He looked a little concerned at the general expression of my
condition being worse than his, but, with a kind smile, looked a little wildly,
and said, ‘How can that be? When you see me fettered, and in Newgate,
and two of my companions executed already, can you can your condition is worse
than mine?’
‘Come, my dear,’ says
I, ‘we have along piece of work to do, if I should be to related, or you to
hear, my unfortunate history; but if you are disposed to hear it, you will soon
conclude with me that my condition is worse than yours.’ ‘How is that
possible,’ says he again, ‘when I expect to be cast for my life the very
next sessions?’ ‘Yes, says I, ‘’tis very possible, when I shall tell you
that I have been cast for my life three sessions ago, and am under sentence of
death; is not my case worse than yours?’
Then indeed, he stood
silent again, like one struck dumb, and after a while he starts up. ‘Unhappy
couple!’ says he. ‘How can this be possible?’ I took him by the hand.
‘Come, my dear,’ said I, ‘sit down, and let us compare our sorrows. I am
a prisoner in this very house, and in much worse circumstances than you, and
you will be satisfied I do not come to insult you, when I tell you the
particulars.’ Any with this we sat down together, and I told him so much of my story
as I thought was convenient, bringing it at last to my being reduced to great
poverty, and representing myself as fallen into some company that led me to
relieve my distresses by way that I had been utterly unacquainted with, and
that they making an attempt at a tradesman’s house, I was seized upon for
having been but just at the door, the maid- servant pulling me in; that I
neither had broke any lock nor taken anything away, and that notwithstanding
that, I was brought in guilty and sentenced to die; but that the judges, having
been made sensible of the hardship of my circumstances, had obtained leave to
remit the sentence upon my consenting to be transported.
I told him I fared the
worse for being taken in the prison for one Moll Flanders, who was a famous
successful thief, that all of them had heard of, but none of them had ever
seen; but that, as he knew well, was none of my name. But I placed all
to the account of my ill fortune, and that under this name I was dealt with as
an old offender, though this was the first thing they had ever known of me. I
gave him a long particular of things that had befallen me since I saw him, but
I told him if I had seen him since he might thing I had, and then gave him an
account how I had seen him at Brickhill; how furiously he was pursued,
and how, by giving an account that I knew him, and that he was a very honest
gentleman, one Mr.—, the hue-and-cry was stopped, and the high constable
went back again.
He listened most
attentively to all my story, and smiled at most of the
particulars, being all of them petty matters, and infinitely below what he had
been at the head of; but when I came to the story of Brickhill, he was
surprised. ‘And was it you, my dear,’ said he, ‘that gave the check to the
mob that was at our heels there, at Brickhill?’ ‘Yes,’ said I, ‘it
was I indeed.’ And then I told him the particulars which I had observed him
there. ‘Why, then,’ said he, ‘it was you that saved my life at that time,
and I am glad I owe my life to you, for I will pay the debt to you now, and
I’ll deliver you from the present condition you are in, or I will die in the
attempt.’
I told him, by no means;
it was a risk too great, not worth his running the hazard of, and for a life
not worth his saving. ‘Twas no matter for that, he said, it was a life worth
all the world to him; a life that had given him a new life; ‘for,’ says he,
‘I was never in real danger of being taken, but that time, till the last minute
when I was taken.’ Indeed, he told me his danger then lay in his
believing he had not been pursued that way; for they had gone from Hockey
quite another way, and had come over the enclosed country into Brickhill,
not by the road, and were sure they had not been seen
by anybody.
Here he gave me a long
history of his life, which indeed would make a very strange history, and be
infinitely diverting. He told me he took to the road about twelve years before
he married me; that the woman which called him brother was not really his
sister, or any kin to him, but one that belonged to their gang, and who,
keeping correspondence with him, lived always in town, having good store of
acquaintance; that she gave them a perfect intelligence of persons going out of
town, and that they had made several good booties by her correspondence; that
she thought she had fixed a fortune for him when she brought me to him, but
happened to be disappointed, which he really could not blame her for; that if
it had been his good luck that I had had the estate, which she was informed I
had, he had resolved to leave off the road and live a retired, sober live but
never to appear in public till some general pardon had been passed, or till he
could, for money, have got his name into some particular pardon, that so he
might have been perfectly easy; but that, as it had proved otherwise, he was
obliged to put off his equipage and take up the old trade again.
He gave me a long
account of some of his adventures, and particularly one when he robbed the West
Chester coaches near Lichfield, when he got a very great booty; and after
that, how he robbed five Grasiers, in the west, going to Burford
Fair in Wiltshire to buy sheep. He told me he got so much money on those
two occasions, that if he had known where to have found me, he would certainly
have embraced my proposal of going with me to
He told me he wrote two
or three letters to me, directed according to my order, but heard nothing from
me. This I indeed knew to be true, but the letters coming to my hand in the
time of my latter husband, I could do nothing in it, and therefore chose to
give no answer, that so he might rather believe they had miscarried.
Being thus disappointed,
he said, he carried on the old trade ever since, though when he had
gotten so much money, he said, he did not run such desperate risks as he
did before. Then he gave me some account of several hard and desperate
encounters which he had with gentlemen on the road, who parted too hardly with
their money, and showed me some wounds he had received; and he had one or two
very terrible wounds indeed, as particularly one by a pistol bullet, which
broke his arm, and another with a sword, which ran him quite through the body,
but that missing his vitals, he was cured again; one of his comrades having
kept with him so faithfully, and so friendly, as that he assisted him in riding
near eighty miles before his arm was set, and then got a surgeon in a
considerable city, remote from that place where it was done, pretending they
were gentlemen travelling towards Carlisle and that they had been
attacked on the road by highwaymen, and that one of them had shot him into the
arm and broke the bone.
This, he said,
his friend managed so well, that they were not suspected at all, but lay still
till he was perfectly cured. He gave me so many distinct accounts of his
adventures, that it is with great reluctance that I decline the relating them;
but I consider that this is my own story, not his.
I then inquired into the
circumstances of his present case at that time, and what it was he expected
when he came to be tried. He told me that they had no evidence against him, or
but very little; for that of three robberies, which they were all charged with,
it was his good fortune that he was but in one of them, and that there was but
one witness to be had for that fact, which was not sufficient, but that it was
expected some others would come in against him; that he thought indeed, when he
first saw me, that I had been one that came of that errand; but that if
somebody came in against him, he hoped he should be cleared; that he had had
some intimation, that if he would submit to transport himself, he might be
admitted to it without a trial, but that he could not think of it with any
temper, and thought he could much easier submit to be Hang’d.
I blamed him for that,
and told him I blamed him on two accounts; first, because if he was
transported, there might be a hundred ways for him that was a gentleman, and a
bold enterprising man, to find his way back again, and perhaps some ways and
means to come back before he went. He smiled at that part, and said he should
like the last the best of the two, for he had a kind of horror upon his mind at
his being sent over to the plantations, as Romans sent condemned slaves
to work in the mines; that he thought the passage into another state, let it be
what it would, much more tolerable at the gallows, and that this was the
general notion of all the gentlemen who were driven by the exigence of their
fortunes to take the road; that at the place of execution there was at least an
end of all the miseries of the present state, and as for what was to follow, a
man was, in his opinion, as likely to repent sincerely in the last fortnight of
his life, under the pressures and agonies of a jail and the condemned hole, as
he would ever be in the woods and wilderness of America; that servitude
and hard Labour were things gentlemen could never stoop to; that it was but the
way to force them to be their own executioners afterwards, which was much
worse; and that therefore he could not have any patience when he did but think
of being transported.
I used the utmost of my
endeavour to persuade him, and joined that known woman’s rhetoric to it—I mean,
that of tears. I told him the infamy of a public execution was certainly a
greater pressure upon the spirits of a gentleman than any of the mortifications
that he could meet with abroad could be; that he had at least in the other a
chance for his life, whereas here he had none at all; that it was the easiest
thing in the world for him to manage the captain of a ship, who were, generally
speaking, Men of good Humour and some gallantry; and a small matter of conduct,
especially if there was any money to be had, would make way for him to buy
himself off when he came to Virginia.
He looked wistfully at
me, and I thought I guessed at what he meant, that is to say, that he
had no money; but I was mistaken, his meaning was another way. ‘You hinted
just now, my dear,’ said he, ‘that there might be a way of coming back
before I went, by which I understood you that it might be possible to buy it
off here. I had rather give
I told him, as to my
mother, it was next to impossible but that she must be dead many years before;
and as for any other relations that I might have there, I knew them not now;
that since the misfortunes I had been under had reduced me to the condition I
had been in for some years, I had not kept up any correspondence with them; and
that he would easily believe, I should find but a cold reception from them if I
should be put to make my first visit in the condition of a transported felon;
that therefore, if I went thither, I resolved not to see them; but that I had
many views in going there, if it should be my fate, which took off all the
uneasy part of it; and if he found himself obliged to go also, I should easily
instruct him how to manage himself, so as never to go a servant at all,
especially since I found he was not destitute of money, which was the only
friend in such a condition.
He smiled, and said he
did not tell me he had money. I took him up short, and told him I hoped he did
not understand by my speaking, that I should expect any supply from him if he
had money; that, on the other hand, though I had not a great deal, yet I did
not want, and while I had any I would rather add to him than weaken him in that
article, seeing, whatever he had, I knew in the case of transportation he would
have occasion of it all.
He expressed himself in
a most tender manner upon that head. He told me what money he had was not a
great deal, but that he would never hide any of it from me if I wanted it, and
that he assured me he did not speak with any such apprehensions; that he was
only intent upon what I had hinted to him before he went; that here he knew
what to do with himself, but that there he should be the most ignorant,
helpless wretch alive.
I told him he frighted
and terrified himself with that which had no terror in it; that if he had
money, as I was glad to hear he had, he might not only avoid the servitude
supposed to be the consequence of transportation, but begin the world upon a
new foundation, and that such a one as he could not fail of success in, with
the common application usual in such cases; that he could not but call to mind
that is was what I had recommended to him many years before and had proposed it
for our mutual subsistence and restoring our fortunes in the world; and I would
tell him now, that to convince him both of the certainty of it and of my being
fully acquainted with the method, and also fully satisfied in the probability
of success, he should first see me deliver myself from the necessity of going
over at all, and then that I would go with him freely, and of my own choice,
and perhaps carry enough with me to satisfy him that I did not offer it for
want of being able to live without assistance from him, but that I thought our
mutual misfortunes had been such as were sufficient to reconcile us both to
quitting this part of the world, and living where nobody could upbraid us with
what was past, or we be in any dread of a prison, and without agonies of a
condemned hole to drive us to it; this where we should look back on all our
past disasters with infinite satisfaction, when we should consider that our
enemies should entirely forget us, and that we should live as new people in a
new world, nobody having anything to say to us, or we to them.
I press’d this home to
him with so many arguments, and answered all his own passionate objections so
effectually that he embraced me, and told me I treated him with such sincerity
and affection as overcame him; that he would take my advice, and would strive
to submit to his fate in hope of having the comfort of my assistance, and of so
faithful a Counsellor and such a companion in his misery. But still he put me
in mind of what I had mentioned before, namely, that there might be some way to
get off before he went, and that it might be possible to avoid going at all,
which he said would be much better. I told him he should see, and be fully
satisfied, that I would do my utmost in that part too, and if it did not
succeed, yet that I would make good the rest.
We parted after this
long conference with such testimonies of kindness and affection as I thought
were equal, if not superior, to that at our parting at Dunstable; and
now I saw more plainly than before, the reason why he declined coming at that
time any farther with me toward London than Dunstable, and why,
when we parted there, he told me it was not convenient for him to come part of
the way to London to bring me going, as he would otherwise have done. I
have observed that the account of his life would have made a much more pleasing
history than this of mine; and, indeed, nothing in it was more strange than
this part, viz. that he carried on that desperate trade full
five-and-twenty years and had never been taken, the success he had met with had
been so very uncommon, and such that sometimes he had lived handsomely, and
retired in place for a year or two at a time, keeping himself and a man-servant
to wait on him, and had often sat in the coffee-houses and heard the very
people whom he had robbed give accounts of their being robbed, and of the place
and circumstances, so that he could easily remember that it was the same.
In this manner, it
seems, he lived near
He had with the rest of
his misfortunes the good luck not to be actually upon the spot when the robbery
was done which he was committed for, and so none of the persons robbed could
swear to him, or had anything to charge upon him. But it seems as he was taken
with the gang, one hard-mouthed countryman swore home to him, and they were
like to have others come in according to the publication they had made; so that
they expected more evidence against him, and for that reason he was kept in hold.
However, the offer which
was made to him of admitting him to transportation was made, as I understood,
upon the intercession of some great person who pressed him hard to accept of it
before a trial; and indeed, as he knew there were several that might come in
against him, I thought his friend was in the right, and I lay at him night and
day to delay it no longer.
At last, with much
difficulty, he gave his consent; and as he was not therefore admitted to
transportation in court, and on his petition, as I was, so he found himself
under a difficulty to avoid embarking himself as I had said he might have done;
his great friend, who was his intercessor for the Favour of that grant, having
given security for him that he should transport himself, and not return within
the term.
This hardship broke all
my measures, for the steps I took afterwards for my own deliverance were hereby
rendered wholly ineffectual, unless I would abandon him, and leave him to go to
America by himself; than which he protested he would much rather
venture, although he were certain to go directly to the gallows.
I must now return to my
case. The time of my being transported according to my sentence was near at
hand; my governess, who continued my fast friend, had tried to obtain a pardon,
but it could not be done unless with an expense too heavy for my purse,
considering that to be left naked and empty, unless I had resolved to return to
my old trade again, had been worse than my transportation, because there I knew
I could live, here I could not. The good minister stood very hard on another
account to prevent my being transported also; but he was answered, that indeed
my life had been given me at his first solicitations, and therefore he ought to
ask no more. He was sensibly grieved at my going, because, as he said,
he feared I should lose the good impressions which a prospect of death had at
first made on me, and which were since increased by his instructions; and the
pious gentleman was exceedingly concerned about me on that account.
On the other hand, I
really was not so solicitous about it as I was before,
but I industriously concealed my reasons for it from the minister, and to the
last he did not know but that I went with the utmost reluctance and affliction.
It was in the month of
February that I was, with seven other convicts, as they called us,
delivered to a merchant that traded to
We were for that night
clapped under hatches, and kept so close that I thought I should have been
suffocated for want of air; and the next morning the ship weighed, and fell
down the river to a place they call Bugby’s Hole, which was done, as
they told us, by the agreement of the merchant, that all opportunity of escape
should be taken from us. However, when the ship came
thither and cast anchor, we were allowed more liberty, and particularly were
permitted to come up on the deck, but not up on the quarter-deck, that being
kept particularly for the captain and for passengers.
When by the noise of the
men over my head, and the motion of the ship, I perceived that they were under
sail, I was at first greatly surprised, fearing we should go away directly, and
that our friends would not be admitted to see us any more; but I was easy soon
after, when I found they had come to an anchor again, and soon after that we
had notice given by some of the men where we were, that the next morning we should
have the liberty to come up on deck, and to have our friends come and see us if
we had any.
All that night I lay
upon the hard boards of the deck, as the passengers did, but we had afterwards
the liberty of little cabins for such of us as had any bedding to lay in them,
and room to stow any box or trunk for clothes and linen, if we had it (which
might well be put in), for some of them had neither Shirt nor Shift or a Rag of
Linnen or Woollen, but what was on their backs, or a farthing of money to help
themselves; and yet I did not find but they fared well enough in the ship,
especially the women, who got money from the seamen for washing their clothes,
sufficient to purchase any common things that they wanted.
When the next morning we
had the liberty to come up on the deck, I asked one of the officers of the
ship, whether I might not have the liberty to send a letter on shore, to let my
friends know where the ship lay, and to get some necessary things sent to me.
This was, it seems, the Boatswain, a very civil, courteous sort of man, who
told me I should have that, or any other liberty that I desired, that he could
allow me with safety. I told him I desired no other; and he answered that the
ship’s boat would go up to
Accordingly, when the
boat went off, the Boatswain came to me and told me the boat was going off, and
that he went in it himself, and asked me if my letter was ready he would take
care of it. I had prepared myself, you may be sure, pen, ink, and paper
beforehand, and I had gotten a letter ready directed to my governess, and
enclosed another for my fellow-prisoner, which, however, I did not let her know
was my husband, not to the last. In that to my governess, I let her know where
the ship lay, and pressed her earnestly to send me what things I knew she had
got ready for me for my voyage.
When I gave the
Boatswain the letter, I gave him a shilling with it, which I told him was for
the charge of a messenger or porter, which I entreated him to send with the
letter as soon as he came on shore, that if possible I might have an answer
brought back by the same hand, that I might know what was become of my things;
‘for sir,’ says I, ‘if the ship should go away before I have them on
board, I am undone.’
I took care, when I gave
him the shilling, to let him see that I had a little better furniture about me
than the ordinary prisoners, for he saw that I had a purse, and in it a pretty
deal of money; and I found that the very sight of it immediately furnished me
with very different treatment from what I should otherwise have met with in the
ship; for though he was very courteous indeed before, in a kind of natural
compassion to me, as a woman in distress, yet he was more than ordinarily so
afterwards, and procured me to be better treated in the ship than, I say,
I might otherwise have been; as shall appear in its place.
He very honestly had my
letter delivered to my governess’s own hands, and brought me back an answer
from her in writing; and when he gave me the answer, gave me the shilling
again. ‘There,’ says he, ‘there’s your shilling again too, for I
delivered the letter myself.’ I could not tell what to say, I was so surprised
at the thing; but after some pause, I said, ‘Sir, you are too kind; it
had been but reasonable that you had paid yourself coach-hire, then.’
‘No, no,’ says he,
‘I am overpaid. What is the gentlewoman? Your sister.’
‘No, sir,’ says I, ‘she is no relation to me, but she is
a dear friend, and all the friends I have in the world.’ ‘Well,’ says he,
‘there are few such friends in the world. Why, she cried after you like a
child,’ ‘Ay,’ says I again, ‘she would
give a hundred pounds, I believe, to deliver me from this dreadful condition I
am in.’
‘Would she so?’ says he. ‘For half the money I believe I
could put you in a way how to deliver yourself.’ But this he spoke softly, that
nobody could hear.
‘Alas! sir,’ said I, ‘but then that must be such a
deliverance as, if I should be taken again, would cost me my life.’ ‘Nay,’ said
he, ‘if you were once out of the ship, you must look to yourself
afterwards; that I can say nothing to.’ So we dropped the discourse for that
time.
In the meantime, my
governess, faithful to the last moment, conveyed my letter to the prison to my
husband, and got an answer to it, and the next day came down herself to the
ship, bringing me, in the first place, a sea-bed as they call it, and
all its furniture, such as was convenient, but not to let the people think it
was extraordinary. She brought with her a sea-chest—that is, a chest,
such as are made for seamen, with all the conveniences in it, and filled with
everything almost that I could want; and in one of the corners of the chest,
where there was a private drawer, was my bank of money—this is to say, so
much of it as I had resolved to carry with me; for I ordered a part of my stock
to be left behind me, to be sent afterwards in such goods as I should want when
I came to settle; for money in that country is not of much use where all things
are brought for tobacco, much more is it a great loss to carry it from Hence.
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