Chapter
21
Here, being detained by
bad weather for some time, the captain, who continued the same kind, good
humour’d man as at first, took us two on shore with him again. He id it now in
kindness to my husband indeed, who bore the sea very ill, and was very sick,
especially when it blew so hard. Here we bought in again a store of fresh
provisions, especially beef, pork, mutton, and fowls, and the captain stayed to
pickle up five or six barrels of beef to lengthen out the ship’s store. We were
here not above five days, when the weather turning mild, and a fair wind, we
set sail again, and in two-and-forty days came safe to the coast of
When we drew near to the
shore, the captain called me to him, and told me that he found by my discourse
I had some relations in the place, and that I had been there before, and so he
supposed I understood the custom in their disposing the convict prisoners when
they arrived. I told him I did not, and that as to what relations I had in the
place, he might be sure I would make myself known to none of them while I was
in the circumstances of a prisoner, and that as to the rest, we left ourselves
entirely to him to assist us, as he was pleased to promise us he would do. He
told me I must get somebody in the place to come and buy us as servants, and
who must answer for us to the governor of the country, if he demanded us. I
told him we should do as she should direct; so he brought a planter to treat
with him, as it were, for the purchase of these two servants, my husband and
me, and there we were formally sold to him, and went ashore with him. The
captain went with us, and carried us to a certain house, whether it was to be
called a tavern or not I know not, but we had a bowl of punch there made of
rum, etc., and were very merry. After some time the planter gave us a
certificate of discharge, and an acknowledgment of having served him
faithfully, and we were free from him the next morning, to go wither we would.
For this piece of
service the captain demanded of us six thousand weight of Tobacco, which he
said he was accountable for to his freighter, and which we immediately bought
for him, and made him a present of 20
It is not proper to
enter here into the particulars of what part of the colony of
The first thing I did of
moment after having gotten all our goods on shore, and placed them in a
storehouse, or warehouse, which, with a lodging, we hired at the small place or
village where we landed—I say, the first thing was to inquire after my mother,
and after my brother (that fatal person whom I married as a husband, as I have
related at large). A little inquiry furnished me with information that Mrs.—,
that is, my mother, was dead; that my brother (or husband) was alive, which I
confess I was not very glad to hear; but which was worse, I found he was
removed from the plantation where he lived formerly, and where I lived with
him, and lived with one of his sons in a plantation just by the place where we
landed, and where we had hired a warehouse.
I was a little surprised
at first, but as I ventured to satisfy myself that he could not know me, I was
not only perfectly easy, but had a great mind to see him, if it was possible to
so do without his seeing me. In order to that I found out by inquiry the plantation
where he lived, and with a woman of that place whom I got to help me, like what
we call a chairwoman, I rambled about towards the place as if I had only
a mind to see the country and look about me. At last I came so near that I saw
the Dwelling-house: I asked the woman whose plantation that was; she
said it belonged to such a man, and looking out a little to our right
hands, ‘there,’ says she, is the gentleman that owns the plantation, and his
father with him.’ ‘What are their Christian names?’ said I. ‘I know
not,’ says she, ‘what the old gentleman’s name is, but the son’s name is
Humphrey; and I believe,’ says she, ‘the father’s is so too.’ You
may guess, if you can, what a confused mixture of joy and fight possessed my
thoughts upon this occasion, for I immediately knew that this was nobody else
but my own son, by that father she showed me, who was my own brother. I had no
mask, but I ruffled my hood so about my face, that I depended upon it that
after above twenty years’ absence, and withal not expecting anything of me in
that part of the world, he would not be able to know anything of me. But I need
not have used all that caution, for the old gentleman was grown dim-sighted by
some distemper which had fallen upon his eyes, and could but just see well
enough to walk about, and not run against a tree or into a ditch. The woman
that was with me had told me that by a mere accident, knowing nothing of what
importance it was to me. As they drew near to us, I said, ‘Does he know
you, Mrs. Owen?’ (so they called the woman). ‘Yes,’ said she, ‘if he
hears me speak, he will know me; but he can’t see well enough to know me or
anybody else’; and so she told me the story of his sight, as I have related.
This made me secure, and so I threw open my hoods again, and let them pass by
me. It was a wretched thing for a mother thus to see her own son, a handsome,
comely young gentleman in flourishing circumstances, and durst not make herself
known to him, and durst not take any notice of him. Let any mother of children that
reads this consider it, and but think with what anguish of mind I restrained
myself; what yearnings of soul I had in me to embrace him, and weep over him;
and how I thought all my entrails turned within me, that my very bowels moved,
and I knew not what to do, as I now know not how to express those agonies! When
he went from me I stood gazing and trembling, and looking after him as long as
I could see him; then sitting down to rest me, but turned from her, and lying
on my face, wept, and kissed the ground that he had set his foot on.
I could not conceal my
disorder so much from the woman but that she perceived it, and thought I was
not well, which I was obliged to pretend was true; upon which she pressed me to
rise, the ground being damp and dangerous, which I did accordingly, and walked
away.
As I was going back
again, and still talking of this gentleman and his son, a new occasion of
melancholy offered itself thus. The woman began, as if she would tell me
a story to divert me: ‘There goes,’ says she, ‘a very odd tale among the
Neighbours where this gentleman formerly live.’ ‘What was that?’ said I.
‘Why,’ says she, ‘that old gentleman going to England, when he was a
young man, fell in love with a young lady there, one of the finest women that
ever was seen, and married her, and brought her over hither to his mother who
was then living. He liver here several years with her,’ continued she,
‘and had several children by her, of which the young gentleman that was with
him now was one; but after some time, the old gentlewoman, his mother, talking
to her of something relating to herself when she was in England, and of
her circumstances in England, which were bad enough, the daughter-in-law
began to be very much surprised and uneasy; and, in short, examining further
into things, it appeared past all contradiction that the old gentlewoman was
her own mother, and that consequently that son was his wife’s own brother,
which struck the whole family with horror, and put them into such confusion
that it had almost ruined them all. The young woman would not live with him;
the son, her brother and husband, for a time went distracted; and at last the
young woman went away for England, and has never been hears of since.’
It is easy to believe
that I was strangely affected with this story, but ’tis impossible to describe
the nature of my disturbance. I seemed astonished at the story, and asked her a
thousand questions about the particulars, which I found she was thoroughly
acquainted with. At last I began to inquire into the circumstances of the
family, how the old gentlewoman, I mean my mother, died, and how she
left what she had; for my mother had promised me very solemnly, that when she
died she would do something for me, and leave it so, as that, if I was living,
I should one way or other come at it, without its being in the power of her
son, my brother and husband, to prevent it. She told me she did not know
exactly how it was ordered, but she had been told that my mother had left a sum
of money, and had tied her plantation for the payment of it, to be made good to
the daughter, if ever she could be heard of, either in England or
elsewhere; and that the trust was left with this son, who was the person that
we saw with his father.
This was news too good
for me to make light of, and, you may be sure, filled my heart with a thousand
thoughts, what Course I should take, how, and when, and in what manner I should
make myself known, or whether I should ever make myself know or no.
Here was a perplexity
that I had not indeed skill to manage myself in, neither knew I what course to
take. It lay heavy upon my mind night and day. I could neither Sleep nor
Converse, so that my husband perceived it, and wondered what ailed me, strove
to divert me, but it was all to no purpose. He pressed me to tell him what it
was troubled me, but I put it off, till at last, importuning me continually, I
was forced to form a story, which yet had a plain truth to lay it upon too. It
old him I was troubled because I found we must shift our quarters and alter our
scheme of settling, for that I found I should be known if I stayed in that part
of the country; for that my mother being dead, several of my relations were
come into that part where we then was, and that I must either discover myself
to them, which in our present circumstances was not proper on many accounts, or
remove; and which to do I knew not, and that this it was that made me so
melancholy and so thoughtful.
He joyn’d with me in
this, that it was by no means proper for me to make myself known to anybody in
the circumstances in which we then were; and therefore he told me he would be
willing to remove to any other part of the country, or even to any other
country if I thought fit. But now I had another difficulty,which was, that if I
removed to any other colony, I put myself out of the way of ever making a due
search after those effects which my mother had left. Again I could never so
much as think of breaking the secret of my former marriage to my new husband;
it was not a story, as I thought, that would bear telling, nor could I tell
what might be the consequences of it; and it was impossible to search into the
bottom of the thing without making it public all over the country, as well who
I was, as what I now was also.
In this perplexity I
continued a great while, and this made my spouse very uneasy; for he found me
perplexed, and yet thought I was not open with him, and did not let him into
every part of my grievance; and he would often say, he wondered what he had
done that I would not trust him with whatever it was, especially if it was
grievous and afflicting. The truth is, he ought to have been trusted with
everything, for no man in the world could deserve better of a wife; but this
was a thing I knew not how to open to him, and yet having nobody to disclose
any part of it to,the Burthen was too heavy for my mind; for let them say what
they please of our sex not being able to keep a secret, my life is a plain
conviction to me of the contrary; but be it our sex, or the man’s sex, a secret
of moment should always have a confidant,a bosom friend, to whom we may
communicate the joy of it, or the grief of it, be it which it will, or it will
be a double weight upon the spirits, and perhaps become even insupportable in
itself; and this I appeal to all human testimony for the truth of.
And this is the cause
why many times men as well as women, and men of the greatest and best qualities
other ways, yet have found themselves weak in this part, and have not been able
to bear the weight of a secret joy or of a secret sorrow, but have been obliged
to disclose it, even for the mere giving vent to themselves, and to unbend the
mind oppressed with the load and weights which attended it; nor was this any
token of Folly or Thoughtlessness at all, but a natural consequence of the
thing; and such people, had they struggled longer with the oppression, would
certainly have told it in their sleep, and disclosed the secret, let it have
been of what fatal nature soever, without regard to the person to whom it might
be exposed. This necessity of nature is a thing which works sometimes with such
vehemence in the minds of those who are guilty of any atrocious villainy, such
as secret murder in particular, that they have been obliged to discover it,
though the consequence would necessarily be their own destruction. Now, thought
it may be true that the divine justice ought to have the glory of all those
discoveries and confessions, yet ’tis as certain that
I could give several
remarkable instances of this in my long conversation with crime and with
criminals. I knew one fellow that, while I was in prison in Newgate, was
one of those they called then night-fliers. I know not what other word
they may have understood it by since, but he was one who by connivance was
admitted to go abroad every evening, when he played his pranks, and furnished
those honest people they call thief-catchers with business to find out the next
day, and restore for a reward what they had stolen the evening before.
This fellow was as sure to tell in his sleep all that he had done, and every
step he had taken, what he had stolen, and where, as sure as if he had engaged
to tell it waking, and that there was no harm or danger in it, and therefore he
was obliged, after he had been out, to lock himself up, or be locked up by some
of the keepers that had him in fee, that nobody should hear him; but, on the
other hand, if he had told all the particulars, and given a full account of his
rambles and success, to any comrade, any brother thief, or to his
employers, as I may justly call them, then all was well with him, and he
slept as quietly as other people.
As the publishing this
account of my life is for the sake of the just moral of very part of it, and
for instruction, caution, warning, and improvement to every reader, so this
will not pass, I hope, for an unnecessary digression concerning some people
being obliged to disclose the greatest secrets either of their own or other
people’s affairs.
Under the certain
oppression of this weight upon my mind, I labour’d in the case I have been
naming; and the only relief I found for it was to let my husband into so much
of it as I thought would convince him of the necessity there was for us to
think of settling in some other part of the world; and the next consideration
before us was, which part of the English settlements we should go to. My
husband was a perfect stranger to the country, and had not yet so much as a
geographical knowledge of the situation of the several places; and I, that,
till I wrote this, did not know what the word geographical signified, had only
a general knowledge from long conversation with people that came from or went
to several places; but this I knew, that Maryland, Pennsylvania, East
and West Jersey, New York, and New England lay all north of Virginia,
and that they were consequently all colder climates, to which for that very
reason, I had an aversion. For that as I naturally loved warm weather, so now I
grew into years I had a stronger inclination to shun a cold climate. I
therefore considered of going to Carolina, which is the only southern
colony of the English on the continent of America, and hither I
proposed to go; and the rather because I might with great ease come from thence
at any time, when it might be proper to inquire after my mother’s effects, and
to make myself known enough to demand them.
With this resolution I
proposed to my husband our going away from where we was, and carrying all our
effects with us to Carolina, where we resolved to settle; for my husband
readily agreed to the first part, viz. that was not at all proper to
stay where we was, since I had assured him we should be known there, and the
rest I effectually concealed from him.
But now I found a new
difficulty upon me. The main affair grew heavy upon my mind still, and I could
not think of going out of the country without somehow or other making
inquiry into the grand affair of what my mother had one for me; nor could I
with any patience bear the thought of going away, and not make myself known to
my old husband (brother), or to my child, his son; only I would fain
have had this done without my new husband having any knowledge of it, or they
having any knowledge of him, or that I had such a thing as a husband.
I cast about innumerable
ways in my thoughts how this might be done. I would gladly have sent my husband
away to
These were therefore
difficulties insurmountable, and such as I knew not what to do in. I had such
strong impressions on my Mind about discovering myself to my brother,
formerly my husband, that I could not withstand them; and the rather,
because it ran constantly in my thoughts, that if I did not do it while he
lived, I might in vain endeavour to convince my son afterward that I was really
the same person, and that I was his mother, and so might both lose the
assistance and comfort of the relation, and the benefit of whatever it was my
mother had left me; and yet, on the other hand, I could never think it proper
to discover myself to them in the circumstances I was in, as well relating to
the having a husband with me as to my being brought over by a legal transportation
as a criminal; on both which accounts it was absolutely necessary to me to
remove from the place where I was, and come again to him, as from another place
and in another figure.
Upon those
considerations, I went on with telling my husband the absolute necessity there
was of our not settling in Potomac River, at least that we should be
presently made public there; whereas if we went to any other place in the
world, we should come in with as much reputation as any family that came to
plant; that, as it was always agreeable to the inhabitants to have families
come among them to plant, who brought substance with them, either to purchase
plantations or begin new ones, so we should be sure of a kind, agreeable
reception, and that without any possibility of a discovery of our
circumstances.
I told him in general,
too, that as I had several relations in the place where we was, and that I
durst not now let myself be known to them, because they would soon come into a
knowledge of the occasion and reason of my coming over, which would be to
expose myself to the last degree, so I had reason to believe that my mother,
who dies here, had left me something, and perhaps considerable, which it might
be very well worth my while to inquire after; but that this too could not be
done without exposing us publicly, unless we went from hence; and then,
wherever we settled, I might come, as it were, to visit and to see my brother
and nephews, make myself known to them, claim and inquire after what was my
due, be received with respect, and at the same time have justice done me with
cheerfulness and good will; whereas, if I did it now, I could expect nothing
but with trouble, such as exacting it by force, receiving it with curses and
reluctance, and with all kinds of affronts, which he would not perhaps bear to
see; that in case of being obliged to legal proofs of being really her
daughter, I might be at loss, be obliged to have recourse to England,
and it may be to fail at last, and so lose it, whatever it might be. With these
arguments, and having thus acquainted my husband with the whole secret so far
as was needful of him, we resolved to go and seek a settlement in some other
colony, and at first thoughts,
In order to this we
began to make inquiry for vessels going to Carolina, and in a very
little while got information, that on the other side the bay, as they call
it, namely, in Maryland, there was a ship which came from Carolina,
laden with rice and other goods, and was going back again thither, and from
thence to Jamaica, with provisions. On this news we hired a sloop to take in
our goods, and taking, as it were, a final farewell of Potomac River, we
went with all our cargo over to
This was a long and
unpleasant voyage, and my spouse said it was worse to him than all the voyage
from
Well, we came to the
place in five days’ sailing; I think they call it Philip’s Point; and
behold, when we came thither, the ship bound to
We immediately went on
shore, but found no conveniences just at that place, either for our being on
shore or preserving our goods on shore, but was directed by a very honest
Quaker, whom we found there, to go to a place about sixty miles east; that is
to say, nearer the mouth of the bay, where he said he lived, and where
we should be accommodated, either to plant, or to wait for any other place to
plant in that might be more convenient; and he invited us with so much kindness
and simply honesty, that we agreed to go, and the Quaker himself went with us.
Here we bought us two
servants, viz. an English woman-servant just come on shore from a
ship of Liverpool, and a Negro man-servant, things absolutely
necessary for all people that pretended to settle in that country. This honest
Quaker was very helpful to us, and when we came to the place that he proposed
to us, found us out a convenient storehouse for our goods, and lodging for
ourselves and our servants; and about two months or thereabouts afterwards, by
his direction, we took up a large piece of land from the governor of that
country, in order to form our plantation, and so we laid the thoughts of going
to Carolina wholly aside, having been very well received here, and
accommodated with a convenient lodging till we could prepare things, and have
land enough cleared, and timber and materials provided for building us a house,
all which we managed by the direction of the Quaker; so that in one year’s time
we had nearly fifty acres of land cleared, part of it enclosed, and some of it
planted with Tobacco, though not much; besides, we had garden ground and corn
sufficient to help supply our servants with roots and Herbs, and Bread.
And now I persuaded my
husband to let me go over the bay again, and inquire after my friends.
He was the willinger to consent to it now, because he had business upon his
hands sufficient to employ him, besides his gun to divert him, which they call
hunting there, and which he greatly delighted in; and indeed we used to look at
one another, sometimes with a great deal of pleasure, reflecting how much
better that was, not than Newgate only, but than the most prosperous of
our circumstances in the wicked trade that we had been both carrying on.
Our affair was in a very
good posture; we purchased of the proprietors of the colony as much land for
But out good fortune did
not end here. I went, as I have said, over the bay, to the place
where my brother, once a husband, lived; but I did not go to the same village
where I was before, but went up another great river, on the east side of the
river Potomac, call’d Rapahannock River, and by this means came
on the back of his plantation, which was large, and by the help of a navigable
creek, or little river, that ran into the Rapahannock, I came very near
it.
I was now fully resolved
to go up point-blank to my brother (husband), and to tell him who I was;
but not knowing what temper I might find him in, or how much out of temper
rather, I might make him by such a rash visit, I resolved to write a letter to
him first, to let him know who I was, and that I was come not to give him any
trouble upon the old relation, which I hoped was entirely forgot, but that I
applied to him as a sister to a brother, desiring his assistance in the case of
that provision which our mother, at her decease, had left for my support, and
which I did not doubt but he would do me justice in, especially considering
that I was come thus far to look after it.
I said some very tender,
kind things in the letter about his son, which I told him he knew to be my own
child, and that as I was guilty of nothing in marrying him, any more than he
was in marrying me, neither of us having then known our being at all related to
one another, so I hoped he would allow me the most passionate desire of once
seeing my one and only child, and of showing something of the infirmities of a
mother in preserving a violent affect for him, who had never been able to
retain any thought of me one way or other.
I did believe that,
having received this letter, he would immediately give it to his son to read, I
having understood his Eyes being so dim, that he could not see to read it; but
it fell out better than so, for as his sight was dim, so he had allowed his son
to open all letters that came to his hand for him, and the old gentleman being
from home, or out of the way when my messenger came, my letter came directly to
my son’s hand, and he opened and read it.
He call’d the messenger
in, after some little stay, and asked him where the person was who gave him the
letter, the Messenger told him the place, which was about seven miles off, so
he bid him stay, and ordering a horse to be got ready, and two servants, away
he came to me with the messenger. Let any one judge the consternation I was in
when my messenger came back, and told me the old gentleman was not at home, but
his son was come along with him, and was just coming up to me. I was perfectly
confounded, for I knew not whether it was peace or war, nor could I tell how to
behave; however, I had but a very few moments to think, for my son was at the
heels of the messenger, and coming up into my lodgings, asked the fellow at the
door something. I suppose it was, for I did not hear it so as to understand
it, which was the gentlewoman that sent him; for the messenger said, ‘There
she is, sir’; at which he comes directly up to me, kisses me, took me in his
arms, and embraced me with so much passion that he could not speak, but I could
feel his breast heave and throb like a child, that cries, but sobs, and cannot
cry it out.
I can neither express
nor describe the joy that touched my very soul when I found, for it was easy
to discover that part, that he came not as a stranger, but as a son to a
mother, and indeed as a son who had never before known what a mother of his own
was; in short, we cried over one another a considerable while, when at last he
broke out first. ‘My dear mother,’ says he, ‘are you still alive? I never
expected to have seen your face.’ As for me, I could say nothing a great
while.
After we had both
recovered ourselves a little, and were able to talk, he told me how things
stood. As to what I had written to his father, he told me he had not showed my
letter to his father, or told him anything about it; that what his grandmother
left me was in his hands, and that he would do me justice to my full
satisfaction; that as to his father, he was old and infirm both in body and
mind; that he was very fretful and passionate, almost blind, and capable of
nothing; and he questioned whether he would know how to act in an affair which
was of so nice a nature as this; and that therefore he had come himself, as
well to satisfy himself in seeing me, which he could not restrain himself from,
as also to put it into my power to make a judgment, after I had seen how things
were, whether I would discover myself to his father or no.
© Bibliomania.com Ltd,