Chapter 3
Captain, well us'd, and
dealt justly and honourably with, as well as charitably, I had not the least
Thankfulness on my Thoughts: When again I was shipwreck'd, ruin'd, and in
Danger of drowning on this Island, I was as far from Remorse, or looking on it
as a Judgment; I only said to my self often, that I was an unfortunate Dog,
and born to be always miserable.
It is true, when I got
on Shore first here, and found all my Ship's Crew drown'd, and my self spar'd,
I was surpriz'd with a Kind of Extasie, and some Transports of Soul, which, had
the Grace of God assisted, might have come up to true Thankfulness; but it
ended where it begun, in a meer common Flight of Joy, or as I may say, being
glad I was alive, without the least Reflection upon the distinguishing
Goodness of the Hand which had preserv'd me, and had singled me out to be
preserv'd, when all the rest were destroy'd; or an Enquiry why Providence had
been thus merciful to me; even just the same common Sort of Joy which Seamen
generally have after they are got safe ashore from a Shipwreck, which they
drown all in the next Bowl of Punch, and forget almost as soon as it is over,
and all the rest of my Life was like it.
Even when I was
afterwards, on due Consideration, made sensible of my Condition, how I was cast
on this dreadful Place, out of the Reach of humane Kind, out of all Hope of
Relief, or Prospect of Redemption, as soon as I saw but a Prospect of living,
and that I should not starve and perish for Hunger, all the Sense of my
Affliction wore off, and I begun to be very easy, apply'd my self to the Works
proper for my Preservation and Supply, and was far enough from being afflicted
at my Condition, as a Judgment from Heaven, or as the Hand of God against me;
these were Thoughts which very seldom enter'd into my Head.
The growing up of the
Corn, as is hinted in my Journal, had at first some little Influence upon me,
and began to affect me with Seriousness, as long as I thought it had something
miraculous in it; but as soon as ever that Part of the Thought was remov'd, all
the Impression which was rais'd from it, wore off also, as I have noted
already.
Even the Earthquake,
tho' nothing could be more terrible in its Nature, or more immediately
directing to the invisible Power which alone directs such Things, yet no sooner
was the first Fright over, but the Impression it had made went off also. I had
no more Sense of God or his Judgments, much less of the present Affliction of
my Circumstances being from his Hand, than if I had been in the most prosperous
Condition of Life.
But now when I began to
be sick, and a leisurely View of the Miseries of Death came to place itself
before me; when my Spirits began to sink under the Burthen of a strong
Distemper, and Nature was exhausted with the Violence of the Feaver; Conscience
that had slept so long, begun to awake, and I began to reproach my self with my
past Life, in which I had so evidently, by uncommon Wickedness, provok'd the
Justice of God to lay me under uncommon Strokes, and to deal with me in so vindictive
a Manner.
These Reflections
oppress'd me for the second or third Day of my Distemper, and in the Violence,
as well of the Feaver, as of the dreadful Reproaches of my Conscience, extorted
some Words from me, like praying to God, tho' I cannot say they were either a
Prayer attended with Desires or with Hopes; it was rather the Voice of meer
Fright and Distress; my Thoughts were confus'd, the Convictions great upon my
Mind, and the Horror of dying in such a miserable Condition rais'd Vapours into
my Head with the meer Apprehensions; and in these Hurries of my Soul, I know
not what my Tongue might express: but it was rather Exclamation, such as, Lord!
what a miserable Creature am I? If I should be sick, I shall certainly die for
Want of Help, and what will become of me! Then the Tears burst out of my Eyes,
and I could say no more for a good while.
In this Interval, the
good Advice of my Father came to my Mind, and presently his Prediction which I
mention'd at the Beginning of this Story, viz. That if I did take this
foolish Step, God would not bless me, and I would have Leisure hereafter to
reflect upon having neglected his Counsel, when there might be none to assist
in my Recovery. Now, said I aloud, My dear Father's Words are come to
pass: God's Justice has overtaken me, and I have none to help or hear me: I
rejected the Voice of Providence, which had mercifully put me in a Posture or
Station of Life, wherein I might have been happy and easy; but I would neither
see it my self, or learn to know the Blessing of it from my Parents; I left
them to mourn over my Folly, and now I am left to mourn under the Consequences
of it: I refus'd their Help and Assistance who wou'd have lifted me into the
World, and wou'd have made every Thing easy to me, and now I have Difficulties
to struggle with, too great for even Nature itself to support, and no
Assistance, no Help, no Comfort, no Advice; then I cry'd out, Lord be my
Help, for I am in great Distress.
This was the first
Prayer, if I may call it so, that I had made for many Years: But 1 return to my
Journal.
June 28. Having been
somewhat refresh'd with the Sleep I had had, and the Fit being entirely off, I
got up; and tho' the Fright and Terror of my Dream was very great, yet I
consider'd, that the Fit of the Ague wou'd return again the next Day, and now
was my Time to get something to refresh and support my self when I should be
ill; and the first Thing I did, I fill'd a large square Case Bottle with Water,
and set it upon my Table, in Reach of my Bed; and to take off the chill or
aguish Disposition of the Water, I put about a Quarter of a Pint of Rum into
it, and mix'd them together; then I got me a Piece of the Goat's Flesh, and
broil'd it on the Coals, but could eat very little; I walk'd about, but was
very weak, and withal very sad and heavy-hearted in the Sense of my miserable
Condition; dreading the Return of my Distemper the next Day; at Night I made my
Supper of three of the Turtle's Eggs, which I roasted in the Ashes, and eat, as
we call it, in the Shell; and this was the first Bit of Meat I had ever ask'd
God's Blessing to, even as I cou'd remember, in my whole Life.
After I had eaten, I
try'd to walk, but found my self so weak, that I cou'd hardly carry the Gun,
(for I never went out without that) so I went but a little Way, and sat down
upon the Ground, looking out upon the Sea, which was just before me, and very
calm and smooth: As I sat here, some such Thoughts as these occurred to me.
What is this Earth and
Sea of which I have seen so much, whence is it produc'd, and what am I, and all
the other Creatures, wild and tame, humane and brutal, whence are we?
Sure we are all made by
some secret Power, who form'd the Earth and Sea, the Air and Sky; and who is
that?
Then it follow'd most
naturally, It is God that has made it all: Well, but then it came on strangely,
if God has made all these Things, He guides and governs them all, and all
Things that concern them; for the Power that could make all Things, must
certainly have Power to guide and direct them.
If so, nothing can
happen in the great Circuit of his Works, either without his Knowledge or
Appointment.
And if nothing happens
without his Knowledge, he knows that I am here, and am in this dreadful
Condition; and if nothing happens without his Appointment, he has appointed all
this to befal me.
Nothing occurr'd to my
Thought to contradict any of these Conclusions; and therefore it rested upon me
with the greater Force, that it must needs be, that God had appointed all this
to befal me; that I was brought to this miserable Circumstance by his
Direction, he having the sole Power, not of me only, but of every Thing that
happen'd in the World. Immediately it follow'd,
Why has God done this to me? What have I done to be
thus us'd?
My Conscience presently
check'd me in that Enquiry, as if I had blasphem'd, and methought it spoke to
me like a Voice; WRETCH! dost thou ask what thou hast done! look back
upon a dreadful mis-spent Life, and ask thy self what thou hast not done?
ask, Why is it that thou wert not long ago destroy'd? Why wert
thou not drown'd in
I was struck dumb with
these Reflections, as one astonish'd, and had not a Word to say, no not to
answer to my self, but rise up pensive and sad, walk'd back to my Retreat, and
went up over my Wall, as if I had been going to Bed, but my Thoughts were sadly
disturb'd, and I had no Inclination to Sleep; so I sat down in my Chair, and
lighted my Lamp, for it began to be dark: Now as the Apprehension of the Return
of my Distemper terrify'd me very much, it occurr'd to my Thought, that the Brasilians
take no Physick but their Tobacco, for almost all Distempers; and I had a Piece
of a Roll of Tobacco in one of the Chests, which was quite cur'd, and some also
that was green and not quite cur'd.
I went, directed by
Heaven no doubt; for in this Chest I found a Cure, both for Soul and Body, I
open'd the Chest, and found what I look'd for, viz. the Tobacco; and
as the few Books, I had sav'd, lay there too, I took out one of the Bibles
which I mention'd before, and which to this Time I had not found Leisure, or so
much as Inclination to look into; I say, I took it out, and brought both that
and the Tobacco with me to the Table.
What Use to make of the
Tobacco, I knew not, as to my Distemper, or whether it was good for it or no;
but I try'd several Experiments with it, as if I was resolv'd it should hit one
Way or other: I first took a Piece of a Leaf, and chew'd it in my Mouth, which
indeed at first almost stupify'd my Brain, the Tobacco being green and strong,
and that I had not been much us'd to it; then I took some and steeped it an
Hour or two in some Rum, and resolv'd to take a Dose of it when I lay down; and
lastly, I burnt some upon a Pan of Coals, and held my Nose close over the Smoke
of it as long as I could bear it, as well for the Heat as almost for Suffocation.
In the Interval of this
Operation, I took up the Bible and began to read, but my Head was too much
disturb'd with the Tobacco to bear reading, at least that Time; only having
open'd the Book casually, the first Words that occurr'd to me were these, Call
on me in the Day of Trouble, and I will deliver, and thou shalt glorify me.
The Words were very apt
to my Case, and made some Impression upon my Thoughts at the Time of reading
them, tho' not so much as they did afterwards; for as for being deliver'd, the
Word had no Sound, as I may say, to me; the Thing was so remote, so
impossible in my Apprehension of Things, that I began to say as the Children of
Israel did, when they were promis'd Flesh to eat, Can God spread a
Table in the Wilderness? so I began to say, Can God himself deliver me
from this Place? and as it was not for many Years that any Hope appear'd, this
prevail'd very often upon my Thoughts: But however, the Words made a great
Impression upon me, and I mused upon them very often. It grew now late, and the
Tobacco had, as I said, doz'd my Head so much, that I inclin'd to sleep; so I
left my Lamp burning in the Cave, least I should want any Thing in the Night,
and went to Bed; but before I lay down, I did what I never had done in all my
Life, I kneel'd down and pray'd to God to fulfil the Promise to me, that if I
call'd upon him in the Day of Trouble, he would deliver me; after my broken and
imperfect Prayer was over, I drunk the Rum in which I had steep'd the Tobacco,
which was so strong and rank of the Tobacco, that indeed I could scarce get it
down; immediately upon this I went to Bed, I found presently it flew up in my
Head violently, but I fell into a sound Sleep, and wak'd no more 'till by the
Sun it must necessarily be near Three a-Clock in the Afternoon the next Day;
nay, to this Hour, I'm partly of the Opinion, that I slept all the next Day and
Night, and 'till almost Three that Day after; for otherwise I knew not how I
should lose a Day out of my Reckoning in the Days of the Week, as it appear'd
some Years after I had done: for if I had lost it by crossing and re-crossing
the Line, I should have lost more than one Day: But certainly I lost a Day in
my Accompt, and never knew which Way.
Be that however one Way
or th' other, when I awak'd I found my self exceedingly refresh'd, and my
Spirits lively and chearful; when I got up, I was stronger than I was the Day
before, and my Stomach better, for I was hungry; and in short, I had no Fit the
next Day, but continu'd much alter'd for the better; this was the 29th.
The 30th was my well Day
of Course, and I went abroad with my Gun, but did not care to travel too far, I
kill'd a Sea Fowl or two, something like a brand Goose, and brought them Home,
but was not very forward to eat them; so I ate some more of the Turtle's Eggs,
which were very good: This Evening I renew'd the Medicine which I had suppos'd
did me good the Day before, viz. the Tobacco steep'd in Rum, only I
did not take so much as before, nor did I chew any of the Leaf, or hold my Head
over the Smoke; however, I was not so well the next Day, which was the first of
July, as I hop'd I shou'd have been; for I had a little Spice of the
cold Fit, but it was not much.
July 2. I renew'd the
Medicine all the three Ways, and doz'd my self with it as at first; and doubled
the Quantity which I drank.
3. I miss'd the Fit for
good and all, tho' I did not recover my full Strength for some Weeks after;
while I was thus gathering Strength, my Thoughts run exceedingly upon this
Scripture, I will deliver thee, and the Impossibility of my
Deliverance lay much upon my Mind in Barr of my ever expecting it: But as I was
discouraging my self with such Thoughts, it occurr'd to my Mind, that I pored
so much upon my Deliverance from the main Affliction, that I disregarded the
Deliverance I had receiv'd; and I was, as it were, made to ask my self such
Questions as these, viz. Have I not been deliver'd, and wonderfully
too, from Sickness? from the most distress'd Condition that could be, and that
as so frightful to me, and what Notice I had taken of it?
Had I done my Part? God
had deliver'd me, but I had not glorify'd him; that is to say, I had not
own'd and been thankful for that as a Deliverance, and how cou'd I expect
greater Deliverance?
This touch'd my Heart
very much, and immediately I kneel'd down and gave God Thanks aloud, for my
Recovery from my Sickness.
July
This was the first Time
that I could say, in the true Sense of the Words, that I pray'd in all my Life;
for now I pray'd with a Sense of my Condition, and with a true Scripture View
of Hope founded on the Encouragement of the Word of God; and from this Time, I
may say, I began to have Hope that God would hear me.
Now I began to construe
the Words mentioned above, Call on me, and I will deliver you, in a
different Sense from what I had ever done before; for then I had no Notion of
any thing being call'd Deliverance, but my being deliver'd from the Captivity I
was in; for tho' I was indeed at large in the Place, yet the Island was
certainly a Prison to me, and that in the worst Sense in the World; but now I
learn'd to take it in another Sense: Now I look'd back upon my past Life with
such Horrour, and my Sins appear'd so dreadful, that my Soul sought nothing of
God, but Deliverance from the Load of Guilt that bore down all my Comfort: As
for my Solitary Life it was nothing; I did not SO much as pray to be deliver'd
from it, or think of it; It was all of no Consideration in Comparison to this:
And I add this Part here, to hint to whoever shall read it, that whenever they
come to a true Sense of things, they will find Deliverance from Sin a much
greater Blessing, than Deliverance from Affliction.
But leaving this Part, I
return to my Journal.
My Condition began now
to be, tho' not less miserable as my Way of living, yet much easier to my Mind;
and my Thoughts being directed, by a constant reading the Scripture, and
praying to God, to things of a higher Nature: I ad a great deal of Comfort
within, which till now I knew nothing of; also, as my Health and Strength
returned, I bestirr'd my self to furnish my self with every thing that I anted,
and make my Way of living as regular as I could.
From the 4th of July
to the 24th, I was chiefly employ'd walking about with my Gun in my Hand, a
little and a little, at a Time, as a Man that was gathering up his Strength
after a Fit of Sickness: For it is hardly to be imagin'd, how low I was, and to
what Weakness I was reduc'd. The Application which I made Use of was perfectly
new, and perhaps what had never cur'd an Ague before, neither can recommend it
to any one to practise, by this Experiment; and tho' it did carry off the Fit,
yet it rather contributed to weakening me; for I had frequent Convulsions in my
Nerves and Limbs for some Time.
I learn'd from it also
this in particular, that being abroad the rainy Season was the most pernicious
thing to my Health that could be, especially in those Rains which came ended
with Storms and Hurricanes of Wind; for as the in which came in the dry Season
was always most accompany'd with such Storms, so I found that Rain was much more
dangerous than the Rain which fell in September and October.
I had been now in this
unhappy Island above 10 Months, all Possibility of Deliverance from this
Condition, seem'd to be entirely taken from me; and I firmly believed, that no
humane Shape had ever set Foot upon that Place: Having now secur'd my
Habitation, as I thought, fully to my Mind, I had a great Desire to make a more
perfect Discovery of the Island, and to see what other Productions I might
find, which I yet knew nothing of.
It was the 15th of July
that I began to take a more particular Survey of the Island it self: I went up
the Creek first, where, as I hinted, I brought my Rafts on Shore; I found after
I came about two Miles up, that the Tide did not flow any higher, and that it
was no more than a little Brook of running Water, and very fresh and good; but
this being the dry Season, there was hardly any Water in some Parts of it, at
least, not enough to run in any Stream, so as it could be perceiv'd.
On the Bank of this
Brook I found many pleasant Savana's, or Meadows; plain, smooth, and
cover'd with Grass; and on the rising Parts of them next to the higher Grounds,
where the Water, as it might be supposed, never overflow'd I found a great deal
of Tobacco, green, and growing to great and very strong Stalk; there were
divers other Plants which I had no Notion of, or Understanding about, and might
perhaps have Vertues of their own, which I could find out.
I searched for the Cassava
Root, which the Indians in all that climate make their Bread of, but I
could find I saw large Plants of Alloes, but did not then understand them. I
saw several Sugar Canes, but wild, and for Cultivation, imperfect. I contented
my self with these Discoveries for this Time, and came back musing with myself
what Course I might take to know the Vertue and Goodness of any of the Fruits
or Plants which I should discover; but could bring it to no Conclusion; for in
short, I had made so little Observation while I wad in the Brasils,
that I knew little of the Plants in the Field, at least very little that might
serve me to any Purpose now in my Distress.
The next Day, the 16th,
I went up the same Way again, and after going something farther than I had gone
the Day before, I found the Brook, and the Savana's began to cease, and
the Country became more woody than before; in this Part I found different
Fruits, and particularly I found Mellons upon the Ground in great Abundance,
and Grapes upon the Trees; the Vines had spread indeed over the Trees, and the
Clusters of Grapes were just now in their Prime, very ripe and rich: This was a
surprising Discovery, and I was exceeding glad of them; but I was warn'd by my
Experience to eat sparingly of them, remembring, that when I was ashore in Barbary,
the eating of Grapes kill'd several of our English Men who were Slaves
there, by throwing them into Fluxes and Feavers: But I found an excellent Use
for these Grapes, and that was to cure or dry them in the Sun, and keep them as
dry'd Grapes or Raisins are kept, which I thought would be, as indeed they
were, as wholesom as agreeable to eat, when no Grapes might be to be had.
I spent all that Evening
there, and went not back to my Habitation, which by the Way was the first
Night, as I might say, I had lain from Home. In the Night I took my first
Contrivance, and got up into a Tree, where I slept well, and the next Morning
proceeded upon my Discovery, travelling near four Miles, as I might judge by
the Length of the Valley, keeping still due North, with a Ridge of Hills on the
South and North-side of me.
At the End of this March
I came to an Opening, where the Country seem'd to descend to the West, and a
little Spring of fresh Water which issued out of the Side of the Hill by me,
run the other Way, that is due East; and the Country appear'd so fresh, so
green, so flourishing, every thing being in a constant Verdure, or Flourish of Spring,
that it looked like a planted Garden.
I descended a little on
the Side of that delicious Vale, surveying it with a secret Kind of Pleasure,
(tho' mixt with my other afflicting Thoughts) to think that this was all my
own, that I was King and Lord of all this Country indefeasibly, and had a Right
of Possession; and if I could convey it, I might have it in Inheritance, as
compleatly as any Lord of a Mannor in England. I saw here Abundance of
Cocoa Trees, Orange, and Lemmon, and Citron Trees; but all wild, and very few
bearing any Fruit, at least not then: However, the green Limes that I gathered,
were not only pleasant to eat, but very wholesome; and I mix'd their Juice
afterwards with Water, which made it very wholesome, and very cool, and
refreshing.
I found now I had
Business enough to gather and carry Home; and I resolv'd to lay up a Store, as
well of Grapes, as Limes and Lemons, to furnish my self for the wet Season,
which I knew was approaching.
In Order to this, I
gather'd a great Heap of Grapes in one Place, and a lesser Heap in another
Place, and a great Parcel of Limes and Lemons in another Place; and taking a
few of each with me, I travell'd homeward, and resolv'd to come again, and
bring a Bag or Sack, or what I could make to carry the rest Home.
Accordingly, having
spent three Days in this Journey, I came Home; so I must now call my Tent and
my Cave: But, before I got thither, the Grapes were spoil'd; the Richness of
the Fruits, and the Weight of the Juice having broken them, and bruis'd them,
they were good for little or nothing; as to the Limes, they were good, but I
could bring but a few.
The next Day, being the
19th, I went back, having made me two small Bags to bring Home my Harvest: But
I was surpriz'd, when coming to my Heap of Grapes, which were so rich and fine
when I gather'd them, I found them all spread about, trod to Pieces, and
dragg'd about, some here, some there, and Abundance eaten and devour'd: By this
I concluded, there were some wild Creatures thereabouts, which had done this;
but what they were, I knew not.
However, as I found
there there was no laying them up on Heaps, and no carrying them away in a
Sack, but that one Way they would be destroy'd, and the other Way they would be
crush'd with their own Weight. I took another Course; for I gather'd a large
Quantity of the Grapes, and hung them up upon the out Branches of the Trees,
that they might cure and dry in the Sun; and as for the Limes and Lemons, I
carry'd as many back as I could well stand under.
When I came Home from
this Journey, I contemplated with great Pleasure the Fruitfulness of that
Valley, and the Pleasantness of the Scituation, the Security from Storms on
that Side the Water, and the Wood, and concluded, that I had pitch'd upon a
Place to fix my Abode, which was by far the worst Part of the Country. Upon the
Whole I began to consider of removing my Habitation; and to look out for a ace
equally safe, as where I now was scituate, if possible, in that pleasant
fruitful Part of the Island.
This Thought run long in
my Head, and I was exceeding fond of it for some Time, the Pleasantness of the
Place tempting me; but when I came to a nearer View of it, and to consider that
I was now by the Sea-Side, where it was at least possible that something might
happen to my Advantage, and by the same ill Fate that brought me hither, might
bring some other unhappy Wretches to the same Place; and tho' it was scarce
probable that any such Thing should ever happen, yet to enclose my self among
the Hills and Woods, in the Center of the Island, was to anticipate my Bondage,
and to render such an Affair not only Improbable, but Impossible; and that
therefore I ought not by any Means to remove.
However, I was so
Enamour'd of this Place, that I spent much of my Time there, for the whole
remaining Part of the Month of July; and tho' upon second Thoughts I
resolv'd as above, not to remove, yet I built me a little kind of a Bower, and
surrounded it at a Distance with a strong Fence, being a double Hedge, as high
as I could reach, well stak'd, and fill'd between with Brushwood; and
here I lay very secure, sometimes two or three Nights together, always going
over it with a Ladder, as before; so that I fancy'd now I had my Country-House,
and my Sea-Coast-House: And this Work took me up to the Beginning of August.
I had but newly finish'd
my Fence, and began to enjoy my Labour, but the Rains came on, and made me
stick close to my first Habitation; for tho' I had made me a Tent like the
other, with a Piece of a Sail, and spread it very well; yet I had not the
Shelter of a Hill to keep me from Storms, nor a Cave behind me to retreat into,
when the Rains were extraordinary.
About the Beginning of August,
as I said, I had finish'd my Bower, and began to enjoy my self. The third of August,
I found the Grapes I had hung up were perfectly dry'd, and indeed, were
excellent good Raisins of the Sun; so I began to take them down from the Trees,
and it was very happy that I did so; for the Rains which follow'd would have
spoil'd them, and I had lost the best Part of my Winter Food; for I had above
two hundred large Bunches of them. No sooner had I taken them all down, and
carry'd most of them Home to my Cave, but it began to rain, and from hence,
which was the fourteenth of August, it rain'd more or less, every Day,
till the Middle of October; and sometimes so violently, that I could
not stir out of my Cave for several Days.
In this Season I was
much surpriz'd with the Increase of my Family; I had been concern'd for the
Loss of one of my Cats, who run away from me, or as I thought had been dead,
and I heard no more Tale or Tidings of her, till to my Astonishment she came
Home about the End of August, with three Kittens; this was
the more strange to me, because tho' I had kill'd a wild Cat, as I call'd it,
with my Gun; yet I thought it was a quite differing Kind from our European
Cats; yet the young Cats were the same Kind of House breed like the old one;
and both my Cats being Females, I thought it very strange: But from these three
Cats, I afterwards came to be so pester'd with Cats, that I was forc'd to kill
them like Vermine, or wild Beasts, and to drive them from my House as much as
possible.
From the fourteenth of August
to the twenty sixth, incessant Rain, so that I could not stir, and was now very
careful not to be much wet. In this Confinement I began to be straitned for
Food, but venturing out twice, I one Day kill'd a Goat, and the last Day, which
was the twenty sixth, found a very large Tortoise, which was a Treat to me, and
my Food was regulated thus; I eat a Bunch of Raisins for my Breakfast, a Piece
of the Goat's Flesh, or of the Turtle for my Dinner broil'd; for to my great
Misfortune, I had no Vessel to boil or stew any Thing; and two or three of the
Turtle's Eggs for my Supper.
During this Confinement
in my Cover, by the Rain, I work'd daily two or three Hours at enlarging my
Cave, and by Degrees work'd it on towards one Side, till I came to the Out-Side
of the Hill, and made a Door or Way out, which came beyond my Fence or Wall,
and so I came in and out this Way; but I was not perfectly easy at lying so
open; for as I had manag'd my self before, I was in a perfect Enclosure,
whereas now I thought I lay expos'd, and open for any Thing to come in upon me;
and yet I could not perceive that there was any living Thing to fear, the
biggest Creature that I had yet seen upon the Island being a Goat.
September
the thirtieth, I was now come to the unhappy Anniversary of my Landing. I cast
up the Notches on my Post, and found I had been on Shore three hundred and
sixty five Days. I kept this Day as a Solemn Fast, Setting it apart to
Religious Exercise, prostrating my self on the Ground with the most serious
Humiliation, confessing my Sins to God, acknowledging his Righteous Judgments
upon me, and praying to him to have Mercy on me, through Jesus Christ; and
having not tasted the least Refreshment for twelve Hours, even till the going
down of the Sun, I then eat a Bisket Cake, and a Bunch of Grapes, and went to
Bed, finishing the Day as I began it.
I had all this Time
observ'd no Sabbath-Day; for as at first I had no Sense of Religion upon my
Mind, I had after some Time omitted to distinguish the Weeks, by making a
longer Notch than ordinary for the Sabbath-Day, and so did not really know what
any Of the Days were; but now having cast up the Days, as above, I found I had
been there a Year; so I divided it into Weeks, and set apart every seventh Day
for a Sabbath; though I found at the End of my Account I had lost a Day or two
in my Reckoning.
A line after this my Ink
began to fail me, and so I contented my self to use it more sparingly, and to
write down only the most remarkable Events of my Life, without continuing a
daily Memorandum of other Things.
The rainy Season, and
the dry Season, began now to appear regular to me, and I learn'd to divide them
so, as to provide for them accordingly. But I bought all my Experience before I
had it; and this I am going to relate, was one of the most discouraging
Experiments that I made at all: I have mention'd that I had sav'd the few Ears
of Barley and Rice, which I had so surprizingly found spring up, as I thought,
of themselves, and believe there was about thirty Stalks of Rice, and about
twenty of Barley; and now I thought it a proper Time to sow it after the Rains,
the Sun being in its Southern Position going from me.
Accordingly I dug up a
Piece of Ground as well as I could with my wooden Spade, and dividing it into
two Parts, I sow'd my Grain; but as I was sowing, it casually occur'd to my
Thoughts, That I would not sow it all at first, because I did not know when was
the proper Time for it; so I sow'd about two Thirds of the Seed, leaving about
a Handful of each.
It was a great Comfort
to me afterwards, that I did so, for not one Grain of that I sow'd this Time
came to any Thing; for the dry Months following, the Earth having had no Rain
after the Seed was sown, it had no Moisture to assist its Growth, and never
came up at all, till the wet Season had come again, and then it grew as if it
had been but newly sown.
Finding my first Seed
did not grow, which I easily imagin'd was by the Drought, I fought for a
moister Piece of Ground to make another Trial in, and I dug up a Piece of
Ground near my new Bower, and sow'd the rest of my Seed in February, a
little before the Vernal Equinox; and this having the rainy Months of
March and April to water it, sprung up very pleasantly, and yielded a very good
Crop; but having Part of the Seed left only, and not daring to sow all that I
had I had but a small Quantity at last, my whole Crop not amounting to above
half a Peck of each kind.
But by this Experiment I
was made Master of my Business, and knew exactly when the proper Season was to
sow; and that I might expect two Seed Times, and two Harvests every Year.
While this Corn was
growing, I made a little Discovery which was of use to me afterwards: As soon
as the Rains were over, and the Weather began to settle, which was about the
Month of November, I made a Visit up the Country to my Bower, where
though I had not been some Months, yet I found all Things just as I left them.
The Circle or double Hedge that I had made, was not only firm and entire; but
the Stakes which I had cut out of some Trees that grew thereabouts, were all
shot out and grown with long Branches, as much as a Willow-Tree usually shoots
the first Year after lopping its Head. I could not tell what Tree to call it,
that these Stakes were cut from. I was surpriz'd, and yet very well pleas'd, to
see the young Trees grow; and I prun'd them, and led them up to grow as much
alike as I could; and it is scarce credible how beautiful a Figure they grew
into in three Years; so that though the Hedge made a Circle of about twenty
five Yards in Diameter, yet the Trees, for such I might now call them, soon
cover'd it; and it was a compleat Shade, sufficient to lodge under all the dry
Season.
This made me resolve to
cut some more Stakes, and make me a Hedge like this in a Semicircle round my
Wall; I mean that of my first Dwelling, which I did; and placing the Trees or
Stakes in a double Row, at about eight Yards distance from my first Fence, they
grew presently, and were at first a fine Cover to my Habitation, and afterward
serv'd for a Defence also, as I shall observe in its Order.
I found now, That the
Seasons of the Year might generally be divided, not into Summer and Winter, as
in Europe; but into the Rainy Seasons, and the Dry Seasons, which were
generally thus,
Half February, March, Half
April,
Rainy, the Sun being then on, or near the Equinox.
Half April, May,
June, July, Half August,
Dry, the Sun being then to the North of the Line.
Half August,
September, Half October,
Rainy, the Sun being then come back.
Half October,
November, December, January, Half February,
Dry, the Sun being then to the South of the Line.
The Rainy Season
sometimes held longer or shorter, as the Winds happen'd to blow; but this was
the general Observation I made: After I had found by Experience, the ill
Consequence of being abroad in the Rain. I took Care to furnish my self with
Provisions before hand, that I might not be oblig'd to go out; and I sat within
Doors as much as possible during the wet Months.
This Time I found much
Employment, (and very suitable also to the Time) for I found great Occasion of
many Things which I had no way to furnish my self with, but by hard Labour and
constant Application; particularly, I try'd many Ways to make my self a Basket,
but all the Twigs I could get for the Purpose prov'd so brittle, that they would
do nothing. It prov'd of excellent Advantage to me now, That when I was a Boy,
I used to take great Delight in standing at a Basketmaker's, in the
Town where my Father liv'd, to see them make their Wicker-ware; and
being as Boys usually are, very officious to help, and a great Observer of the
Manner how they work'd those Things, and sometimes lending a Hand, I had by
this Means full Knowledge of the Methods of it, that I wanted nothing but the
Materials; when it came into my Mind, That the Twigs of that Tree from whence I
cut my Stakes that grew, might possibly be as tough as the Sallow's,
and Willows, and Osiers in England, and I resolv'd
to try.
Accordingly the next
Day, I went to my Country-House, as I call'd it, and cutting some of the
smaller Twigs, I found them to my Purpose as much as I could desire; whereupon
I came the next Time prepar'd with a Hatchet to cut down a Quantity, which I
soon found, for there was great Plenty of them; these I set up to dry within my
Circle or Hedge, and when they were fit for Use, I carry'd them to my Cave, and
here during the next Season, I employ'd my self in making, as well as I
could, a great many Baskets, both to carry Earth, or to carry or lay up
any Thing as I had occasion; and tho' I did not finish them very handsomly, yet
I made them sufficiently serviceable for my Purpose; and thus afterwards I took
Care never to be without them; and as my Wicker-ware decay'd, I made
more, especially, I made strong deep Baskets to place my Corn in, instead of
Sacks, when I should come to have any Quantity of it.
Having master'd this
Difficulty, and employ'd a World of Time about it, I bestirr'd my self to see
if possible how to supply two Wants: I had no Vessels to hold any Thing that
was Liquid, except two Runlets which were almost full of Rum, and some
Glass-Bottles, some of the common Size, and others which were Case-Bottles
square, for the holding of Waters, Spirits, etc. I had not so much as
a Pot to boil any Thing, except a great Kettle, which I sav'd out of the Ship,
and which was too big for such Use as I desir'd it, viz. To make
Broth, and stew a Bit of Meat by it self. The Second Thing I would fain have
had, was a Tobacco-Pipe; but it was impossible to me to make one, however, I
found a Contrivance for that too at last.
I employ'd my self in
Planting my Second Rows of Stakes or Piles and in this Wicker working
all the Summer, or dry Season, when another Business took me up more Time than
it could be imagin'd I could spare.
I mention'd before, That
I had a great Mind to see the whole Island, and that I had travell'd up the
Brook, and so on to where I built my Bower, and where I had an Opening quite to
the Sea on the other Side of the Island; I now resolv'd to travel quite Cross
to the Sea-Shore on that Side; so taking my Gun, a Hatchet, and my Dog, and a
larger Quantity of Powder and Shot than usual, with two Bisket Cakes, and a
great Bunch of Raisins in my Pouch for my Store, I began my Journey; when I had
pass'd the Vale where my Bower stood as above, I came within View of the Sea,
to the West, and it being a very clear Day, I fairly descry'd Land,
whether an Island or a Continent, I could not tell; but it lay very high,
extending from the West, to the W. S. W. at a very great
Distance; by my Guess it could not be less than Fifteen or Twenty Leagues off.
I could not tell what
Part of the World this might be, otherwise than that I know it must be Part of America,
and as I concluded by all my Observations, must be near the Spanish
Dominions, and perhaps was all Inhabited by Savages, where if I should have
landed, I had been in a worse Condition than I was now; and therefore I
acquiesced in the Dispositions of Providence, which I began now to own, and to
believe, order'd every Thing for the best; I say, I quieted my Mind with this,
and left afflicting my self with Fruitless Wishes of being there.
Besides, after some
Pause upon this Affair, I consider'd, that if this Land was the Spanish
Coast, I should certainly, one Time or other, see some Vessel pass or re-pass
one Way or other; but if not, then it was the Savage Coast between the
Spanish Country and Brasils, which are indeed the worst of Savages;
for they are Cannibals, or Men-eaters, and fail not to murther and devour all
the humane Bodies that fall into their Hands.
With these
Considerations I walk'd very leisurely forward, I found that Side of the Island
where I now was, much pleasanter than mine, the open or Savanna Fields
sweet, adorn'd with Flowers and Grass, and full of very fine Woods. I saw
Abundance of Parrots, and fain I would have caught one, if possible to have
kept it to be tame, and taught it to speak to me. I did, after some Pains
taking, catch a young Parrot, for I knock'd it down with a Stick, and having'
recover'd it, I brought it home; but it was some Years before I could make him
speak: However, at last I taught him to call me by my Name very familiarly: But
the Accident that follow'd, tho' it be a Trifle, will be very diverting in its
Place.
I was exceedingly
diverted with this Journey: I found in the low Grounds Hares, as I thought them
to be, and Foxes, but they differ'd greatly from all the other Kinds I had met
with; nor could I satisfy my self to eat them, tho' I kill'd several: But I had
no Need to be ventrous; for I had no Want of Food, and of that which was very
good too; especially these three Sorts, viz.Goats, Pidgeons, and
Turtle or Tortoise; which, added to my Grapes, Leaden-hall Market
could not have furnish'd a Table better than I, in Proportion to the Company;
and tho' my Cafe was deplorable enough, yet I had great Cause for Thankfulness,
that I was not driven to any Extremities for Food; but rather Plenty, even to
Dainties.
I never travell'd in
this Journey above two Miles outright in a Day, or thereabouts; but I took so
many Turns and Returns, to see what Discoveries I could make, that I came weary
enough to the Place where I resolv'd to sit down for all Night; and then I
either repos'd my self in a Tree, or surrounded my self with a Row of Stakes
set upright in the Ground, either from one Tree to another, or so as no wild
Creature could come at me, without Waking me.
As soon as I came to the
Sea Shore, I was surpriz'd to see that I had taken up my Lot on the worst Side
of the Island; for here indeed the Shore was cover'd with innumerable Turtles,
whereas on the other Side I had found but three in a Year and half. Here was
also an infinite Number of Fowls, of many Kinds, some which I had seen, and
some which I had not seen of before, and many of them very good Meat; but such
as I knew not the Names of, except those call'd Penguins.
I could have shot as
many as I pleas'd, but was very sparing of my Powder and Shot; and therefore
had more Mind to kill a she Goat, if I could, which I could better feed on; and
though there were many Goats here more than on my Side the Island, yet it was
with much more Difficulty that I could come near them, the Country being flat
and even, and they saw me much sooner than when I was on the Hill.
I confess this Side of
the Country was much pleasanter than mine, but yet I had not the least
Inclination to remove; for as I was fix'd in my Habitation, it became natural
to me, and I seem'd all the while I was here, to be as it were upon a Journey,
and from Home: However, I travell'd along the Shore of the Sea, towards the East,
I suppose about twelve Miles; and the setting up a great Pole upon the Shore
for a Mark, I concluded I would go Home again; and that the next Journey I took
should be on the other Side of the Island, East from my Dwelling, and so round
till I came to my Post again: Of which in its Place.
I took another Way to
come back than that I went, thinking I could easily keep all the Island so much
in my View, that I could not miss finding my first Dwelling by viewing the
Country; but I found my self mistaken; for being come about two or three Miles,
I found my self descended into a very large Valley; but so surrounded with
Hills, and those Hills cover'd with Wood, that I could not see which was my Way
by any Direction but that of the Sun, nor even then, unless I knew very well
the Position of the Sun at that Time of the Day.
It happen'd to my
farther Misfortune, That the Weather prov'd hazey for three or four Days, while
was in this Valley; and not being able to see the Sun, I wander'd about very
uncomfortably, and at last was oblig'd to find out the Sea Side, look for my
Post, and come back the same Way I went; and then by easy Journies I turn'd
Homeward, the Weather being exceeding hot, and my Gun, Ammunition, Hatchet, and
other Things very heavy.
In this Journey my Dog
surpriz'd a young Kid, and seiz'd upon it, and I running in to take hold of it,
caught it, and sav'd it alive from the Dog: I had a great Mind to bring it Home
if I could; for I had often been musing, Whether it might not be possible to
get a Kid or two, and so raise a Breed of tame Goats, which might supply me
when my Powder and Shot should be all spent.
I made a Collar to this
little Creature, and with a String which I made of some Rope-Yarn, which I
always carry'd about me, I led him along, tho' with some Difficulty, till I
came to my Bower, and there I enclos'd him, and left him; for I was very
impatient to be at Home, from whence I had been absent above a Month.
I cannot express what a
Satisfaction it was to me, to come into my old Hutch, and lye down in my
Hamock- Bed: This little wandring Journey, without settled Place of Abode, had
been so unpleasant to me, that my own House, as I call'd it to my self, was a
perfect Settlement to me, compar'd to that; and it rendred every Thing about me
so comfortable, that I resolv'd I would never go a great Way from it again,
while it should be my Lot to stay on the Island.
I repos'd my self here a
Week, to rest and regale my self after my long Journey; during which, most of
the Time was taken up in the weighty Affair of making a Cage for my Poll, who
began now to be a meer Domestick, and to be mighty well acquainted with me.
Then I began to think of the poor Kid, which I had penn'd in within my little
Circle, and resolv'd to go and fetch it Home, or give it some Food; accordingly
I went, and found it where I left it; for indeed it could not get out, but
almost starv'd for want of Food: I went and cut Bows of Trees, and Branches of
such Shrubs as I could find, and threw it over, and having fed it, I ty'd it as
I did before, to lead it away; but it was so tame with being hungry, that I had
no need to have ty'd it; for it follow'd me like a Dog; and as I continually
fed it, the Creature became so loving, so gentle, and so fond, that it became
from that Time one of my Domesticks also, and would never leave me afterwards.
The rainy Season of the Autumnal
Equinox was now come, and I kept the 30th of Sept. in the same
solemn Manner as before, being the Anniversary of my Landing on the Island,
having now been there two Years, and no more Prospect of being deliver'd, than
the first Day I came there. I spent the whole Day in humble and thankful
Acknowledgments of the many wonderful Mercies which my Solitary Condition was
attended with, and without which it might have been infinitely more miserable.
I gave humble and hearty Thanks that God had been pleas'd to discover to me,
even that it was possible I might be more happy in this Solitary Condition,
than I should have been in a Liberty of Society, and in all the Pleasures of the
World. That he could fully make up to me, the Deficiencies of my Solitary
State, and the want of Humane Society by his Presence, and the Communications
of his Grace to my Soul, supporting, comforting, and encouraging me to depend
upon his Providence here, and hope for his Eternal Presence hereafter.
It was now that I began
sensibly to feel how much more happy this Life I now led was, with all its
miserable Circumstances, than the wicked, cursed, abominable Life I led all the
past Part of my Days; and now I chang'd both my Sorrows and my Joys; my very
Desires alter'd, my Affections chang'd their Gusts, land my Delights were
perfectly new, from what they were at my first Coming, or indeed for the two
Years past.
Before, as I walk'd
about, either on, my Hunting, or for viewing the Country, the Anguish of my
Soul at my Condition, would break out upon me on a sudden, and my very Heart
would die within me, to think of the Woods, the Mountains, the Desarts I was
in; and how I was a Prisoner lock'd up with the Eternal Bars and Bolts of the
Ocean, in an uninhabited Wilderness, without Redemption: In the midst of the
greatest Composures of my Mind, this would break out upon me like a Storm, and
make me wring my Hands, and weep like a Child: Sometimes it would take me in
the middle of my Work, and I would immediately sit down and sigh, and look upon
the Ground for an Hour or -two together; and this was still worse to me; for if
I could burst out into Tears, or vent my self by Words, it would go off, and
the Grief having exhausted it self would abate.
But now I began to
exercise my self with new Thoughts; I daily read the Word of God, and apply'd
all the Comforts of it to my present State: One Morning being very sad, I
open'd the Bible upon these Words, I will never, never leave thee, nor
forsake thee; immediately it occurr'd, That these Words were to me, Why
else should they be directed in such a Manner, just at the Moment when I was
mourning over my Condition, as one forsaken of God and Man? Well then, said I,
if God does not forsake me, of what ill Consequence can it be, or what matters
it, though the World should all forsake me, seeing on the other Hand, if I had
all the World, and should lose the Favour and Blessing of God, there wou'd be
no Comparison in the Loss.
From this Moment I began
to conclude in my Mind, That it was possible for me to be more happy in this
forsaken Solitary Condition, than it was probable I should ever have been in
any other Particular State in the World; and with this Thought I was going to give
Thanks to God for bringing me to this Place.
I know not what it was,
but something shock'd my Mind at that Thought, and I durst not speak the Words:
How canst thou be such a Hypocrite, (said I, even audibly) to pretend to be
thankful for a Condition, which however thou mav'st endeavour to be contented
with, thou would'st rather pray heartily to be deliver'd from; so I stopp'd
there: But though I could not say, I thank'd God for being there; yet I
sincerely gave Thanks to God for opening my Eyes, by whatever afflicting
Providences, to see the former Condition of my Life, and to mourn for my
Wickedness, and repent. I never open'd the Bible, or shut it, but my very Soul
within me, bless'd God for directing my Friend in England, without any
Order of mine, to pack it up among my Goods; and for assisting me afterwards to
save it out of the Wreck of the Ship.
Thus, and in this
Disposition of Mind, I began my third Year: and tho' I have not given the
Reader the Trouble of so particular Account of my Works this Year as the first;
yet in General it may be observ'd, That I was very seldom idle; but having
regularly divided my Time, according to the several daily Employments that were
before me, such as, First, My Duty to God, and the Reading the
Scriptures, which I constantly set apart some Time for thrice every Day. Secondly,
The going Abroad with my Gun for Food, which generally took me up three Hours
in every Morning, when it did not Rain. Thirdly, The ordering, curing,
preserving, and cooking what I had kill'd or catch'd for my Supply; these took
up great Part of the Day; also it is to be considered that the middle of the
Day when the Sun was in the Zenith, the Violence of the Heat was too
great to stir out; so that about four Hours in the Evening was all the Time I could
be suppos'd to work in; with this Exception, That sometimes I chang'd my Hours
of Hunting and Working, and went to work in the Morning, and Abroad with my Gun
in the Afternoon.
To this short Time
allow'd for Labour, I desire may be added the exceeding Laboriousness of my
Work; the many Hours which for want of Tools, want of Help, and want of Skill,
every Thing I did, took up out of my Time: For Example, I was full two and
forty Days making me a Board for a long Shelf, which I wanted in my Cave; whereas
two Sawyers with their Tools, and a Saw-Pit, would have cut six of them out of
the same Tree in half a Day.
My Case was this, It was
to be a large Tree, which was to be cut down, because my Board was to be a
broad one. This Tree I was three Days a cutting down, and two more cutting off
the Bows, and reducing it to a Log, or Piece of Timber. With inexpressible
hacking and hewing I reduc'd both the Sides of it into Chips, till it begun to
be light enough to move; then I turn'd it, and made one Side of it smooth, and
flat, as a Board from End to End; then turning that Side downward, cut the
other Side, till I brought the plank to be about three Inches thick, and smooth
on both Sides. Any One may judge the Labour of my Hands in such a Piece of
Work; but Labour and Patience carry'd me through that and many other Things: I
only observe this in Particular, to shew, The Reason why so much of my Time
went away with so little Work, viz.That what might be a little to be
done with Help and Tools, was a vast Labour, and requir'd a prodigious Time to
do alone, and by hand.
But notwithstanding
this, with Patience and Labour I went through many Things; and indeed every
Thing that my Circumstances made necessary to me to do, as will appear by what
follows.
I was now, in the Months
of November and December, expecting my Crop of Barley and
Rice. The Ground I had manur'd or dug up for them was not great; for as I
observ'd, my Seed of each was not above the Quantity of half a Peck; for I had
lost one whole Crop by sowing in the dry Season; but now my Crop promis'd very
well, when on a sudden I found I was in Danger of losing it all again by
Enemies of several Sorts, which it was scarce possible to keep from it; as
First, The Goats, and wild Creatures which I call'd Hares who tasting the
Sweetness of the Blade, lay in it Night and Day, as soon as it came up, and eat
it so close, that it could get no Time to shoot up into Stalk.
This I saw no Remedy
for, but by making an Enclosure about it with a Hedge, which I did with a great
deal of Toil; and the more, because it requir'd Speed. However, as my Arable
Land was but small, suited to my Crop, I got it totally well fenc'd, in about
three Weeks Time; and shooting some of the Creatures in the Day Time, I set my
Dog to guard it in the Night, tying him up to a Stake at the Gate, where he
would stand and bark all Night long; so in a little Time the Enemies forsook
the Place, and the Corn grew very strong, and well, and began to ripen apace.
But as the Beasts ruined
me before, while my Corn was in the Blade; so the Birds were as likely to ruin
me now, when it was in the Ear; for going along by the Place to see how it
throve, I saw my little Crop surrounded with Fowls of I know not how many
Sorts, who stood as it were watching till I should be gone: I immediately let
fly among them (for I always had my Gun with me) I had no sooner shot, but
there rose up a little Cloud of Fowls, which I had not seen at all, from among
the Corn it self.
This touch'd me
sensibly, for I foresaw, that in a few Days they would devour all my Hopes,
that I should be starv'd, and never be able to raise a Crop at all, and what to
do I could not tell: However I resolv'd not to loose my Corn, if possible, tho'
I should watch it Night and Day. In the first Place, I went among it to see
what Damage was already done, and found they had spoil'd a good deal of it, but
that as it was yet too Green for them, the Loss was not so great, but that the
Remainder was like to be a good Crop if it could be sav'd.
I staid by it to load my
Gun, and then coming away I could easily see the Thieves sitting upon all the
Trees about me, as if they only waited till I was gone away, and the Event
proved it to be so; for as I walk'd off as if I was gone, I was no sooner out
of their sight, but they dropt down one by one into the Corn again. I was so
provok'd that I could not have Patience to stay till more came on, knowing that
every Grain that they eat now, was, as it might be said, a Peck-loaf
to me in the Consequence; but coming up to the Hedge, I fir'd again, and kill'd
three of them. This was what I wish'd for; so I took them up, and serv'd them
as we serve notorious Thieves in England, (viz.) Hang'd them
in Chains for a Terror to others; it is impossible to imagine almost, that this
should have such an Effect, as it had; for the Fowls wou'd not only not come at
the Corn, but in short they forsook all that Part of the Island, and I could
never see a Bird near the Place as long as my Scare-Crows hung there.
This I was very glad of,
you may be sure, and about the latter end of December, which was our
second Harvest of the Year, I reap'd my Crop.
I was sadly put to it
for a Scythe or a Sicle to cut it down, and-all I could do was to make one as
well as I could out of one of the Broad Swords or Cutlasses, which I sav'd
among the Arms out of the Ship. However, as my first Crop was but small I had
no great Difficulty to cut it down; in short, I reap'd it my Way, for I cut
nothing off but the Ears, and carry'd it away in a great Basket which I had
made, and so rubb'd it out with my Hands; and at the End of all my Harvesting,
I found that out of my half Peck of Seed, I had near two Bushels of Rice, and
above two Bushels and half of Barley, that is to say, by my Guess, for
I had no Measure at that time.
However, this was a
great Encouragement to me, and I foresaw that in time, it wou'd please God to
supply me with Bread: And yet here I was perplex'd again, for I neither knew
how to grind or make Meal of my Corn, or indeed how to clean it and part it;
nor if made into Meal, how to make Bread of it, and if how to make it, yet I
knew not how to bake it; these things being added to my Desire of having a good
Quantity for Store, and to secure a constant Supply, I resolv'd not to taste
any of this Crop but to preserve it all for Seed against the next Season, and
in the mean time to employ all my Study and Hours of Working to accomplish this
great Work of Providing my self with Corn and Bread.
It might be truly said,
that now I work'd for my Bread; 'tis a little wonderful, and what I believe few
People have thought much upon, (viz.) the strange multitude of little Things
necessary in the Providing, Producing, Curing, Dressing, Making and Finishing
this one Article of Bread.
I that was reduced to a
meer State of Nature, found this to my daily Discouragement, and was made more
and more sensible of it every Hour, even after I had got the first Handful of
Seed-Corn, which, as I have said, came up unexpectedly, and indeed to a
surprize.
First, I had no Plow to
turn up the Earth, no Spade or Shovel to dig it. Well, this I conquer'd, by
making a wooden Spade, as I observ'd before; but this did my Work in but a
wooden manner, and tho' it cost me a great many Days to make it, yet for want
of Iron it not only wore out the sooner, but made my Work the harder, and made
it be perform'd much worse.
However this I bore
with, and was content to work it out with Patience, and bear with the badness
of the Performance. When the Corn was sow'd, I had no Harrow, but was forced to
go over it my self and drag a great heavy Bough of a Tree over it, to Scratch
it, as it may be call'd, rather than Rake or Harrow it.
When it was growing and
grown, I have observ'd already, how many things I wanted, to Fence it, Secure
it, Mow or Reap it, Cure and Carry it Home, Thrash, Part it from the Chaff, and
Save it. Then I wanted a Mill to Grind it, Sieves to Dress it, Yeast and Salt
to make it into Bread, and an Oven to bake it, and yet all these things I did
without, as shall be observ'd; and yet the Corn was an inestimable Comfort and
Advantage to me too. All this, as I said, made every thing laborious and
tedious to me, but that there was no help for; neither was my time so much Loss
to me, because as I had divided it, a certain Part of it was every Day appointed
to these Works; and as I resolv'd to use none of the Corn for Bread till I had
a greater Quantity by me, I had the next six Months to apply my self wholly by
Labour and Invention to furnish my self with Utensils proper for the performing
all the Operations necessary for the making the Corn (when I had it) fit for my
use.
But first, I was to
prepare more Land, for I had now Seed enough to sow above an Acre of Ground.
Before I did this, I had a Week's-work at least to make me a Spade, which when
it was done was but a sorry one indeed, and very heavy, and requir'd double
Labour to work with it; however I went thro' that, and sow'd my Seed in two
large flat Pieces of Ground, as near my House as I could find them to my Mind,
and fenc'd them in with a good Hedge, the Stakes of which were all cut of that
Wood which I had set before, and knew it would grow, so that in one Year's time
I knew I should have a Quick or Living- Hedge, that would want but little
Repair. This Work was not so little as to take me up less than three Months,
because great Part of that time was of the wet Season, when I could not go
abroad.
Within Doors, that
is, when it rained, and I could not go out, I found Employment on the
following Occasions; always observing, that all the while I was at work I
diverted my self with talking to my Parrot, and teaching him to Speak, and I
quickly learn'd him to know his own Name, and at last to speak it out pretty
loud P O L, which was the first Word I ever heard spoken in the Island by any
Mouth but my own. This therefore was not my Work, but an assistant to my Work,
for now, as I said, I had a great Employment upon my Hands, as follows, (viz.)
I had long study'd by some Means or other, to make my self some Earthen
Vessels, which indeed I wanted sorely, but knew not where to come at them:
However, considering the Heat of the Climate, I did not doubt but if I could
find out any such Clay, I might botch up some such Pot, as might, being dry'd
in the Sun, be hard enough, and strong enough to bear handling, and to hold any
Thing that was dry, and requir'd to be kept so; and as this was necessary in
the preparing Corn, Meal, etc. which was the Thing I was upon, I
resolv'd to make some as large as I could, and fit only to stand like Jarrs to
hold what should be put into them.
It would make the Reader
pity me, or rather laugh at me, to tell how many awkward ways I took to raise
this Paste, what odd mishapen ugly things I made, how many of them fell in, and
how many fell out, the Clay not being stiff enough to bear its own Weight; how
many crack'd by the over violent Heat of the Sun, being set out too hastily;
and how many fell in pieces with only removing, as well before as after they
were dry'd; and in a word, how after having labour'd hard to find the Clay, to
dig it, to temper it, to bring it home and work it; I could not make above two
large earthern ugly things, I cannot call them Jarrs, in about two Months
Labour.
However, as the Sun
bak'd these Two, very dry and hard, I lifted them very gently up, and set them
down again in two great Wicker-Baskets which I had made on purpose for them,
that they might not break, and as between the Pot and the Basket there was a
little room to spare, I stuff'd it full of the Rice and Barley Straw, and these
two Pots being to stand always dry, I thought would hold my dry Corn, and
perhaps the Meal, when the Corn was bruised.
Tho' I miscarried so
much in my Design for large Pots, yet I made several smaller things with better
Success, such as little round Pots, flat Dishes, Pitchers and Pipkins, and any
things my Hand turn'd to, and the Heat of the Sun bak'd them strangely hard.
But all this would not
answer my End, which was to get an earthen Pot to hold what was Liquid, and
bear the Fire, which none of these could do. It happen'd after some time,
making a pretty large Fire for cooking my Meat, when I went to put it out after
I had done with it, I found a broken Piece of one of my Earthen-ware Vessels in
the Fire, burnt as hard as a Stone, and red as a Tile. I was agreeably
suppris'd to see it, and said to my self, that certainly they might be made to
burn whole if they would burn broken.
This set me to studying
how to order my Fire, so as to make it burn me some Pots. I had no Notion of a
Kiln, such as the Potters burn in, or of glazing them with Lead, tho' I had
Some Lead to do it with; but I plac'd three large Pipkins, and two or three
Pots in a Pile one upon another, and plac'd my Fire-wood all round it with a
great Heap of Embers under them, I ply'd the Fire with fresh Fuel round the
out-side, and upon the top, till I saw the Pots in the inside red hot quite
thro', and observ'd that they did not crack at all; when I saw them clear red,
I let them stand in that Heat about 5 or 6 Hours, till I found one of them,
tho' it did not crack, did melt or run, for the Sand which was mixed with the
Clay melted by the violence of the Heat, and would have run into Glass if I had
gone on, so I slack'd my Fire gradually till the Pots began to abate of the red
Colour, and watching them all Night, that I might not let the Fire abate too
fast, in the Morning I had three very good, I will not say handsome Pipkins;
and two other Earthen Pots, as hard burnt as cou'd be desir'd; and one of them
perfectly glaz'd with the Running of the Sand.
After this Experiment, I
need not say that I wanted no sort of Earthen Ware for my Use; but I must needs
say, as to the Shapes of them, they were very indifferent, as any one may
suppose, when I had no way of making them; but as the Children make Dirt-Pies,
Or as a Woman would make Pies, that never learn'd to raise Past.
No Joy at a Thing of so
mean a Nature was ever equal to mine, when I found I had made an Earthen Pot
that would bear the Fire; and I had hardly Patience to stay till they were
cold, before I set one upon the Fire again, with some Water in it, to boil me
some Meat, which it did admirably well; and with a Piece of a Kid, I made Some
very good Broth, though I wanted Oatmeal, and several other Ingredients,
requisite to make it so good as I would have had it been.
My next Concern was, to
get me a Stone Mortar, to stamp or beat some Corn in; for as to the Mill, there
was no thought at arriving to that Perfection of Art, with one Pair of Hands.
To supply this Want I was at a great Loss; for of all Trades in the World I was
as perfectly unqualify'd for a Stone-cutter, as for any whatever; neither had I
any Tools to go about it with. I spent many a Day to find out a great Stone big
enough to cut hollow, and make fit for a Mortar, and could find none at all;
except what was in the solid Rock, and which I had no way to dig or cut out;
nor indeed were the Rocks in the Island of Hardness sufficient, but were all of
a sandy crumbling Stone, which neither would bear the Weight of a heavy Pestle,
or would break the Corn without filling it with Sand; so after a great deal of
Time lost in searching for a Stone, I gave it over, and resolv'd to look out
for a great Block of hard Wood, which I found indeed much easier; and getting
one as big as I had Strength to stir, I rounded it, and form'd it in the
Out-side with my Axe and Hatchet, and then with the Help of Fire, and infinite
Labour, made a hollow Place in it, as the Indians in Brasil make their
Canoes. After this, I made a great heavy Pestle or Beater, of the Wood
call'd the Iron-wood, and this I prepar'd and laid by against I had my next
Crop of Corn, when I propos'd to my self, to grind, or rather pound my into
Meal to make my Bread.
My next Difficulty was
to make a Sieve, or Search,' to dress my Meal, and to part it from the Bran,
and the Husk, without which I did not see it possible I could have any Bread.
This was a most difficult Thing, so much as but to think on; for to be sure I
had nothing like the necessary Thing to make it; I mean fine thin Canvas, or
Stuff, to search the Meal through. And here I was at a full Stop for many
Months; nor did I really know what to do; Linnen I had none left, but what was
meer Rags; I had Goats Hair, but neither knew I how to weave it, or spin it;
and had I known how, here was no Tools to work it with; all the Remedy that I
found for this, was, That at last I did remember I had among the Seamens
Cloaths which were sav'd out of the Ship, some Neckcloths of Callicoe, or
Muslin; and with some Pieces of these, I made three small Sieves, but proper
enough for the Work; and thus I made shift for some Years; how I did
afterwards, I shall shew in its Place.
The baking Part was the
next Thing to be consider'd, and how I should make Bread when I came to have
Corn; for first I had no Yeast; as to that Part, as there was no supplying the
Want, so I did not concern my self much about it: But for an Oven, I was indeed
in great Pain; at length I found out an Experiment for that also, which was
this; I made some Earthen Vessels very broad, but not deep; that is to say,
about two Foot Diameter, and not above nine Inches deep; these I burnt in the
Fire, as I had done the other, and laid them by; and when I wanted to bake, I
made a great Fire upon my Hearth, which I had pav'd with some square Tiles of
my own making, and burning also; but I should not call them square.
When the Fire-wood was
burnt pretty much into Embers, or live Coals, I drew them forward upon this
Hearth, so as to cover it all over, and there I let them lye, till the Hearth
was very hot, then sweeping away all the Embers, I set down my Loaf, or Loaves,
and whelming down the Earthen Pot upon them, drew the Embers all round the
Out-side of the Pot, to keep in, and add to the Heat; and thus, as well as in
the best Oven in the World, I bak'd my Barley Loaves, and became in little Time
a meer Pastry-Cook into the Bargain; for I made my self several Cakes of the
Rice, and Puddings; indeed I made no Pies, neither had I any Thing to put into
them, supposing I had, except the Flesh either of Fowls or Goats.
It need not be wondred
at, if all these Things took me up most Part of the third Year of my Abode
here; for it is to be observ'd, That in the Intervals of these Things, I had my
new Harvest and Husbandry to manage; for I reap'd my Corn in its Season, and carry'd
it Home as well as I could, and laid it up in the Ear, in my large Baskets,
till I had Time to rub it out; for I had no Floor to thrash it on, or
Instrument to thrash it with.
And now indeed my Stock
of Corn increasing, I really wanted to build my Barns bigger. I wanted a Place
to lay it up in; for the Increase of the Corn now yielded me so much, that I
had of the Barley about twenty Bushels, and of the Rice as much, or more;
insomuch, that now I resolv'd to begin to use it freely; for my Bread had been
quite gone a great while; Also I resolved to see what Quantity would be
sufficient for me a whole Year, and to sow but once a Year.
Upon the whole, I found
that the forty Bushels of Barley and Rice, was much more than I could consume
in a Year; so I resolv'd to sow just the same Quantity every Year, that I sow'd
the last, in Hopes that such a Quantity would fully provide me with Bread, etc.
All the while these
Things were doing, you may be sure my Thoughts run many times upon the Prospect
of Land which I had seen from the other Side of the Island, and I was not
without secret Wishes that I were on Shore there, fancying the seeing the main
Land, and in an inhabited Country, I might find some Way or other to convey my
self farther, and perhaps at last find some Means of Escape.
But all this while I
made no Allowance for the Dangers of such a Condition, and how I might fall
into the Hands of Savages, and perhaps such as I might have Reason to think far
worse than the Lions and Tigers of Africa. That if I once came into
their Power, I should run a Hazard more than a thousand to one of being kill'd,
and perhaps of being eaten; for I had heard that the People of the Carribean
Coast were Canibals, or Man-eaters; and I knew by the Latitude that I could not
be far off from that Shore. That suppose they were not Canibals, yet that they
might kill me, as many Europeans who had fallen into their Hands had
been serv'd, even when they had been ten or twenty together; much more I' that
was but one, and could make little or no Defence: All these Things, I say,
which I ought to have consider'd well of, and did cast up in my Thoughts
afterwards, yet took up none of my Apprehensions at first; but my Head run
mightily upon the Thought of getting over to the Shore.
Now I wish'd for my Boy Xury,
and the long Boat, with the Shoulder of Mutton Sail, with which I sail'd above
a thousand Miles on the Coast of Africk; but this was In vain. Then I
thought I would go and look at our Ship's Boat, which, as I have said, was
blown up upon the Shore, a great Way in the Storm, when we were first cast
away. She lay almost where she did at first, but not quite; and was turn'd by
the Force of the Waves and the Winds almost Bottom upward, against a high Ridge
of Beachy rough Sand; but no Water about her as before.
If I had had Hands to
have refitted her, and to have launch'd her into the Water, the Boat would have
done well enough, and I might have gone back into the Brasils with her
easily enough; but I might have foreseen, That I could no more turn her, and
set her upright upon her Bottom, than I could remove the Island: However, I
went to the Woods, and cut Levers and Rollers, and brought them to the Boat,
resolv'd to try what I could do, suggesting to my self, That if I could but
turn her down, I might easily repair the Damage she had receiv'd, and she would
be a very good Boat, and I might go to Sea in her very easily.
I spar'd no Pains
indeed, in this Piece of fruitless Toil, and spent, I think, three or four
Weeks about it; at last finding it impossible to heave it up with my little
Strength, I fell to digging away the Sand, to undermine it, and so to make it
fall down, setting Pieces of Wood to thrust and guide it right in the Fall.
But when I had done
this, I was unable to stir it up again, or to get under it, much less to move
it forward, towards the Water; so I was forc'd to give it over; and yet, though
I gave over the Hopes of the Boat, my desire to venture over for the Main
increased, rather than decreased, as the Means for it seem'd impossible.
This at length put me
upon thinking, Whether it was not possible to make my self a Canoe, or
Periagua, such as the Natives of those Climates make, even without
Tools, or, as I might say, without Hands, viz. of the Trunk of a great
Tree. This I not only thought possible, but easy, and pleas'd my self extreamly
with the Thoughts of making it, and with my having much more Convenience for it
than any of the Negroes or Indians; but not at all
considering the particular Inconveniences which I lay under, more than the
Indians did, viz.Want of Hands to move it, when it was made, into the
Water, a Difficulty much harder for me to surmount, than all the Consequences
of Want of Tools could be to them; for what was it to me, That when I had
chosen a vast Tree in the Woods, I might with much Trouble cut it down, if
after I might be able with my Tools to hew and dub the Out-side into the proper
Shape of a Boat, and burn or cut out the In-side to make it hollow, so to make
a Boat of it: If after all this, I must leave it just there where I found it,
and was not able to launch it into the Water.
One would have thought,
I could not have had the least Reflection upon my Mind of my Circumstance,
while I was making this Boat; but I should have immediately thought how I should
get it into the Sea; but my Thoughts were so intent upon my Voyage over the Sea
in it, that I never once consider'd how I should get it off of the Land; and it
was really in its own Nature more easy for me to guide it over forty five Miles
of Sea, than about forty five Fathom of Land, where it lay, to set it a float
in the Water.
I went to work upon this
Boat, the most like a Fool, that ever Man did, who had any of his Senses awake.
I pleas'd my self with the Design, without determining whether I was ever able
to undertake it; not but that the Difficulty of launching my Boat came often
into my Head; but I put a stop to my own Enquiries into it, by this foolish
Answer which I gave my self, Let's first make it, I'll warrant I'll find
some Way or other to get it along, when 'tis done.
This was a most
preposterous Method; but the Eagerness of my Fancy prevail'd, and to work I
went. I fell'd a Cedar Tree: I question much whether Solomon ever had
such a One for the Building of the Temple at Jerusalem. It was five
Foot ten Inches Diameter at the lower Part next the Stump, and four Foot eleven
Inches Diameter at the End of twenty two Foot, after which it lessen'd for a
while, and then parted into Branches: It was not without infinite Labour that I
fell'd this Tree: I was twenty Days hacking and hewing at it at the Bottom. I
was fourteen more getting the Branches and Limbs, and the vast' spreading Head
of it cut off, which I hack'd and hew'd through with Axe and Hatchet, and
inexpressible Labour: After this, it cost me a Month to shape it, and dub it to
a Proportion, and to something like the Bottom of a Boat, that it might swim
upright as it ought to do. It cost me near three Months more to clear the In-
side, and work it out so, as to make an exact Boat of it: This I did indeed
without Fire, by meer Malett and Chissel, and by the dint of hard Labour, till
I had brought it to be a very handsome Periagua, and big enough to
have carry'd six and twenty Men, and consequently big enough to have carry'd me
and all my Cargo.
When I had gone through
this Work, I was extremely delighted with it. The Boat was really much bigger
than I ever saw a Canoe, or Periagua, that was made of one Tree, in my Life.
Many a weary Stroke it had cost, you may be sure; and there remain'd nothing
but to get it into the Water; and had I gotten it into the Water, I make no
question but I should have began the maddest Voyage, and the most unlikely to
be perform'd, that ever was undertaken.
But all my Devices to
get it into the Water fail'd me; tho' they cost me infinite Labour too. It lay
about one hundred Yards from the Water, and not more: But the first
Inconvenience was, it was up Hill towards the Creek; well, to take away this
Discouragement, I resolv'd to dig into the Surface of the Earth, and so make a
Declivity: This I begun, and it cost me a prodigious deal of Pains; but who
grutches Pains, that have their Deliverance in View: But then this was work'd
through, and this Difficulty manag'd, it was still much at one; for I could no
more stir the Canoe, than I could the other Boat.
Then I measur'd the
Distance of Ground, and resolv'd to cut a Dock, or Canal, to bring the Water up
to the Canoe, seeing I could not bring the Canoe down to the
Water: Well, I began this Work, and when I began to enter into it, and
calculate how deep it was to be dug, how broad, how the Stuff to be thrown out,
I found, That by the Number of Hands I had, being none but my own, it must have
been ten or twelve Years before I should have gone through with it; for the
Shore lay high, so that at the upper End, it must have been at least twenty
Foot Deep; so at length, tho' with great Reluctancy, I gave this Attempt over
also.
This griev'd me
heartily, and now I saw, tho' too late, the Folly of beginning a Work before we
count the Cost; and before we judge rightly of our own Strength to go through
with it.
In the middle of this
Work, I finish'd my fourth Year in this Place, and kept my Anniversary with the
same Devotion, and with as much Comfort as ever before; for by a constant Study,
and serious Application of the Word of God, and by the Assistance of his Grace,
I gain'd a different Knowledge from what I had before. I entertain'd different
Notions of Things. I look'd now upon the World as a Thing remote, which I had
nothing to do with, no Expectation from, and indeed no Desires about: In a
Word, I had nothing indeed to do with it, nor was ever like to have; so I
thought it look'd as we may perhaps look upon it hereafter, viz. as a
Place I had liv'd in, but was come out of it; and well might I say, as Father Abraham
to Dives, Between me and thee is a great Gulph fix'd.
In the first Place, I
was remov'd from all the Wickedness of the World here. I had neither the Lust
of the Flesh, the Lust of the Eye, or the Pride of Life. I had nothing
to covet; for I had all that I was now capable of enjoying: I was Lord of the
whole Mannor; or if I pleas'd, I might call my self King, or Emperor over the
whole Country which I had Possession of. There were no Rivals. I had no
Competitor, none to dispute Sovereignty or Command with me. I might have rais'd
Ship Loadings of Corn; but I had no use for it; so I let as little grow as I
thought enough for my Occasion.
© Bibliomania.com Ltd,