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A37432 Sir Francis Drake revived who is or may be a pattern to stirre up all heroicke and active spirits of these times to benefit their countrey and eternize their names by like noble attempts : being a summary and true relation of foure severall voyages made by the said Sir Francis Drake to the West-Indies ... / collected out of the notes of the said Sir Francis Drake, Mastet [sic] Philip Nichols, Master Francis Fletcher, preachers, and notes of divers other gentlemen (who went on the said voyages) carefully compared together. Drake, Francis, Sir, d. 1637. World encompassed by Sir Francis Drake.; Nichols, Philip.; Fletcher, Francis, 16th cent.; Bigges, Walter, d. 1586.; R. D. 1653 (1653) Wing D84; Wing W3586; ESTC R1410 171,639 266

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were absent Thence having furnished our selves to our content we continued our course November 1. still Northwest as we had formerly done but in going on we soon espied that we might easily have been deceived and therefore casting about and steering upon another point we found that the generall maps did erre from the truth in setting down the coast of Peru for 12. deg at least to the Northward of the supposed strait no lesse then is the Northwest point of the compasse different from the Northeast perceiving hereby that no man had ever by travell discovered any part of these 12. deg and therefore the setters sorth of such descriptions are not to be trusted much lesse honored in their false and fraudulent conjectures which they use not in this alone but in divers other points of no small importance We found this part of Peru all alongst to the height of Lima which is 12. deg South of the line to be mountenous and very barren without water or wood for the most part except in certain places inhabited by the Spaniards and few others which are very fruitfull and commodious After we were once again thus fallen with the land we continually coasted along til we came to the height of 37. deg or thereabout finding no convenient place of abode nor likelihood to hear any news of our ships we ran off again with an Island which lay in sight named of the Spaniards Mucho by reason of the greatnesse and large circuit thereof At this Island coming to anchor Novem. 25. we found it to be a fruitfull place and well stored with sundry sorts of good things as sheep and other cattell maize which is a kinde of grain whereof they make bread potatoes with such other roots besides that it is thought to be wonderful rich in gold and to want no good thing for the use of mans life The inhabitants are such Indians as by the cruel most extream dealing of the Spaniards have been driven to fly from the maine here to relieve and fortifie themselves With this people our Generall thought it meet to have traffique for frew victuals water and for that cause the very same night of our arrivall there himself with divers of his company went a shoare to whom the people with great courtesie came down bringing with them such fruits and other victuals as they had and two very fat sheep which they gave our Generall for a present In recompence whereof we bestowed upon them again many good and necessary things signifying unto them that the end of his coming was for no other cause but by way of exchang to traffique with them for such things as we needed and they could spare and in particular for such as they had alreadie brought down upon us besides fresh water which we desired of them Herein they held themselves well contented and seemed to be not a little joyfull of our coming appointing where we should the next morning have fresh water at pleasure withall signifying that then also they would bring us down such other things as we desired to serve our turns The next day therefore very early in the morning all things being made ready for traffique as also vessels prepar'd to bring the water our generall taking great care for so necessary provision repaired to the shoare again and setting a land two of his men sent with them their Bar●icoes to the watering place assigned the night before Who having peaceably past on one half of the way were then with no small violence set upon by those traitorous people and suddenly slain and to the end that our generall with the rest of his company should not only be stayed from rescuing them but also might fall if it were possible into their hands in like manner they had layed closely behind the rocks an ambushment of as we guessed about 500 mer armed and wel appointed for such a mischief Who suddenly attempting their purpose the rocks being very dangerous for the boat and the sea-gate exceeding great by shooting their arrows hurt wounded every one of our men before they could free themselves or come to the use of their weapons to do any good The generall himself was shot in the face under his right eye close by his nose the arrow piercing a marvellous way in under basis cerebri with no small danger of his life besides that he was grievously wounded in the head The rest being nine persons in the boat were deadly wounded in divers parts of their bodies if God almost miraculously had not given cure to the same For our chief Surgeon being dead and the other absent by the loss of our vice-admirall and having none left us but a boy whose good will was more then any skil he had we were little better then altogether destitute of such cunning helps as so grievous a state of so many wounded bodies did require Notwithstanding God by the good advice of our Generall and the diligent putting too of every mans help did give such speedy wonderful cure that we had all great comfort thereby and yeilded God the glory thereof The cause of this force and injury by these Ilanders was no other but the deadly hatred which they bear against their civil enemies the Spaniards for the bloudy and most tirannous oppression which they had used towards them And therefore with purpose against them suspecting us to be Spaniards indeed and that the rather by occasion that though command was given to the contrary some of our men in demanding water used the spanish word aqua sought some part of revenge against us Our generall notwithstanding he might have revenged this wrong with little hazard or danger yet more desirous to preserve one of his own men alive then to destroy 100. of his enemies committed the same to God wishing this only punishment to them that they did but know whom they had wronged and that they had done this injury not to an enemy but to a friend not to a Spaniard but to an Englishman who woud rather have been a patron to defend them then any way an instrument of the least wrong that should have beene done unto them The weapons which this people use in their wars are arrows of Reeds with heads of stone very brittle and indented but darts of a great length headed with iron or bone The same day that we receiv'd this dangerous affront in the afternoon we set saile from thence and because we were now nigh the appointed height wherein our ships were to be looked for as also the extremity and crasie state of our hurt men advising us to use expedition to finde some convenient place of repose which might afford them some rest and yeild us necessary supply of fresh victuals for their diet we bent our course as the wind would suffer us directly to run in with the main Where falling with a bay called Philips bay in 32. de or thereabout
by way of traffique and exchange of Merchandise wherof he had store of divers sorts of such things as he wanted Which he thought he might be the bolder to require at his hands both for that the thing was lawfull and that he offered him no prejudice or wrong therein as also because he was entreated ●o repaire to that place by his Viceroy at Mutir who assured him of necessary provision in such manner as now he required the same Before this the Viceroy according to his promise had been with the King signifying unto him what a mighty Prince and Kingdome we belonged unto what good things the King might receive from us not onely now but for hereafter by way of traffique yea what honour and benefit it might be to him to be in league and friendship with so noble and famous a Prince as we served And farther what a discouragement it would be to the Portugals his Enemies to hear and see it In hearing wherof the King was so presently moved to the well liking of the matter that before our Messenger could come half the way he had sent the Viceroy with divers others of his Nobles and Councellors to our Generall with speciall message that he should not only have what things he needed or would require with peace and friendship but that he would willingly entertaine amity with so famous and renowned a Prince as was ours and that if it seemed good in her eyes to accept of it he would sequester the commodities and traffique of his whole Island from others especially from his enemies the Portugals from whom he had nothing but by the Sword and reserve it to the entercourse of our Nation if we would embrace it In token whereof he had now sent to our Generall his Signet and would within short time after come in his owne person with his brethren and Nobles with Boates or Canows into our Ship and be a meanes of bringing her into a safer Harbour While they were delivering their message to us our Messenger was come unto the Court who being met by the way by certaine noble personages was with great solemnity conveyed into the Kings presence at whose hands he was most friendly and graciously entertained and having delivered his errand together with his present unto the King the King seemed to him to judge himselfe blame-worthy that he had not sooner hasted in person to present himselfe to our Generall who came so far and from so great a Prince And presently with all expedition he made ready himselfe with the chiefest of all his States and Councellors to make repair unto us The manner of his coming as it was Princely so truly it seemed to us very strange and marvelous serving at the present not so much to set out his owne royall and kingly state vvhich vvas great as to do honour to her Highnesse to vvhom vve belonged vvherein hovv vvillingly he imployed himselfe the Sequel vvill make manifest First therefore before his coming did he send off three great and large Canovves in each vvhereof vvere certain of the greatest personaegs that vvere about him attired all of them in vvhite Lavvn or cloth of Calecut having over their heads from one end of the Canovv to the other a covering of thin and fine mats born up by a frame made of Reeds under vvhich every man sat in order according to his dignity the hoary heads of many of them set forth the greater reverence due to their persons and manifestly shewed that the King used the advise of a grave and prudent Counsell in his affaires Besides these were divers others young and comely men a great number attired in white as were the other but with manifest differences having their places also under the same covering but in inferior order as their calling required The rest of the men were Souldiers who stood in comely order round about on both sides on the outside of whom againe did sit the rowers in certain galleries which being three on each side all alongst the Canow did lie off from the side therof some three or four Yards one being orderly builded lower then the other in every of vvhich Galleries vvas an equall number of Ba●cks vvhereon did sit the Rowers about the number of fourscore in one Canow In the forepart of each Canow sat two men the one holding a Tabret the other a peece of Brasse whereon they both at once stroke and observing a due time and reasonable space betweene each stroke by the sound thereof directed the Rowers to keepe their stroke with their Oares as on the contrary the Rowers ending their stroke with a song gave warning to the others to strike againe and so continued they their way with marvelous swiftnesse neither were their Canows naked or unfurnished of warlike munition they had each of them at least one small cast piece of about a yard in length mounted upon a stock which was set upright besids every man except the Rowers had his Sword Dagger and Target and some of them some other weapons as Lances Callivers Bowes Arrows and many Darts These Canowes comming neere our Ship in order rowed round about us one after another and the men as they passe by us did us a kind of homage with great solemnity the greatest Personages beginning first with reverend countenance and behaviour to bow their bodies even to the ground which done they put our owne messenger aboard us againe and signified to us that their King who himselfe was comming had sent them before him to conduct our Ship into a better roade desiring a Halfer to be given them forth that they might employ their service as their King commanded in towing our Ship therewith to the place assigned The King himselfe was not far behind but he also with six grave and ancient Fathers in his Canow approching did at once together with them yeeld us a reverend kind of obeysance in far more humble manner then was to be expected he was of a tall stature very corpulent and well set together of a very Princely and gratious countenance his respect amongst his owne was such that neither his Viceroy of Mutir aforenamed nor any other of his Counsellors durst speake unto him but upon their knees not rising againe till they were licenced Whose comming as it was to our Generall no small cause of good liking so was he received in the best manner we could answerable unto his state our Ordnance thundred which we mixed with great store of small shot among which sounding our trumpets and other instruments of musick both of still and loud noise wherwith he was so much delighted that requesting our musick to come into the Boat he joyned his Canow to the same was towed at least a whole hour together with the boat at the sterne of our Ship Besides this our Generall sent him such presents as he thought might both requite his courtesie already received and worke a farther confirmation of that good liking and friendship
threw downe the gates and spardecks to prevent the Spaniards from annoying us with their close fights who then perceiving that we were possessed of their Ship stowed themselves all in hold with their weapons except two or three yonkers who were found afore the beetes when having light out of our Pinnaces vve found no danger of the enemy remaining we cut their Cables at halfe and with our three Pinnaces towed her without the Iland into the sound right afore the Towne without danger of their great shot Meane while the Towne having intelligence hereof by their Watch tooke th' alarme rung out their Bels shot off about thirty Peeces of great Ordinance put all their Men in a readinesse Horse and Foot came down to the very point of the Wood and discharged their Calivers to impeach us if they might in going forth The next morning our Ships tooke two Frigates in vvhich vvere two vvho called themselves the Kings Scrivanos the one of Carthagene th' other of Veragua vvith seven Mariners and two Negroes vvho had beene at Nombre de dios and vvere now bound for Carthagene vvith double Letters of Advice to certifie them that Captaine Drake had beene at Nombre de Dios had taken it and had it not beene that He was hurt with some blessed shot by all likelihold he had sa●kt it he was yet still upon the Coast they should therefore carefully prepare for him After that our Captaine had brought all his Fleet together at the Scrivanos entreaties he vvas content to doe them all 〈◊〉 in setting them and all their Companies 〈◊〉 and so 〈◊〉 thence vvith the Ilands of Saint Bernards about three leagues off the ●own vvhere vve found great store of Fish for our refreshing Here our Captaine considering that he vvas now discovered upon two of the chiefest places of all the Coast and yet not meaning to leave it till he had found the Simerons and made his Voyage as he had conceived which would require some length of time and sure manning of his Pinnaces he determined with himselfe to bu●ne one of his Ships and make of the other a Store-house that his Pinnaces which could not otherwise might be throughly Manned and so he might be able to abide any time But knowing the affection of his Company how loath they vvere to leave either of their Ships being both so good Saylers and so vvell furnished he purposed in himselfe by some Policy to make them most vvilling to effect that he intended And therefore sent for one Thomas Moone vvho vvas Carpenter in the Swanne and taking him into his Cabin chargeth him to conceale for a time a piece of service vvhich he must in any case consent to doe aboord his owne Ship that was in the middle of the second Watch to goe downe secretly into the Well of the Ship and with a great spike-gimlet to bo●re three hoales as neere the Keele as he could and lay something against it that the force of the Water entring might make no great noyse nor be discovered by boyling up Thomas Moone at the hearing hereof being utterly dismayed desired to know what cause there might be to move him to sincke so good a Barke of his owne new and strong and that by his meanes who had beene in two so rich and gainfull Voyages in her with himselfe heretofore If his Brother the Master and the rest of the Company should know of such his fact he thought verily they would kill him But when our Captaine had imparted to him his causes and had perswaded him with promise that it should not be knowne till all of them should be glad of it he undertooke it and did it accordingly The next morning our Captaine tooke his Pinnace very early purposing to goe a fishing for that there is very great store in all the Coast and falling a board the Swanne calleth for his Brother to goe with him who rising suddenly answereth that he would follow presently or if it would please him to stay a very little he would attend him Our Captaine perceiving the feat wrought would not hasten him but in rowing away demanded of them why their Barke was so deepe as making no account of it but by occasion of this demand his Brother sent one downe to the Steward to know whether there were any water in the ship or what other cause might be The Steward hastily stepping downe at his usuall skuttle was wet up to the waste and shifting with more haste to come up againe as if the water had followed him cryed out that the Ship was full of water There was no need to hasten the Company some to Pumpe others to search for the Leake which the Captaine of the Barke seeing they did on all hands very willingly he followed his Brother and certified him of the strange chance befaln them that night that whereas they had not Pumpt twice in six weekes before now they had six foote water in hold therefore he desireth leave from attending him in fishing to intend the search and remedy of the leake and when our Captaine with his Company profered to go to helpe them he answered they had men enough aboard and prayed him to continue his fishing that they might have some part of it for their dinner Thus returning he found his Company had taken great paines but had freed the water very little yet such was their love to the Barke as our Captaine well knew that they ceased not but to the utmost of their strength laboured all that they might till three in the afternoone by which time the Company perceiving that though they had beene relieved by our Captaine himselfe and many of his Company yet they were not able to free above a foot and a halfe of water and could have no likelihood of finding the Leake had now a lesse liking of her then before and greater content to hear of some means for remedy whereupon our Captain consulting with them what they thought best to be done found that they had more desire to have all as he thought fit then judgement to conceive any meanes of remedy And therefore he propounded that himselfe would goe into the Pinnace till he could provide some handsome Frigate and that his Brother should be Captaine in the Admirall and the Master should also be there placed with him instead of this which seeing they could not save he would have fired that the Enemy might never recover her but first all the Pinnaces should be brought aboard her that every one might take out of her whatsoever they lackt or liked This though the company at the first marveiled at yet presently it was put in execution and performed that night our Captaine had his desire and men enough for his Pinnaces The next morning we resolved to seek out some fit place in the sound of Dorrienne where we might safely leave our ship at Anchor not discoverable by the Enemy who thereby might imagine us quite departed from the Coast
Rio Francisco Having thus agreed with Captaine Tetu we sent for the Symerians as before was decreed two of them were brought aboard our Ships to give the French assurance of this agreement As soone as we could furnish our selues and refresh the French Company which was within five or six dayes by bringing them to the Magazine which was the neerest where they were supplyed by us in such sort as they protested they were beholding to us for all their lives taking twenty of the French and fifteene of ours with our Symerons leaving both our Ships in safe Roade we Mand our Frigate and two Pinnaces we had formerly sunke our Lyon shortly after our returne from Panama because we had not Men sufficient to Man her and went towards Rio Francisco which because it had not water enough for our Frigate caused us to leave her at the Cabezas Mand with English and French in the charge of Robert Dohle to stay there without attempting any chase untill the returne of our Pinnaces And then beare to Rio Francisco where our Captaines landed with such Force as aforesaid and charged them that had the charge of the Pinnaces to be there the fourth day next following without any saile And thus knowing that the Cariages went now daily from Panama to Nombre de Dios we proceeded in covert through the Woods towards the High-way that leadeth betweene them It is five leagues accounted by Sea betweene Rio Francisco and Nombre de Dios but that way which we marched by land we found it above seaven league We marched as in our former journey to Panama both for order and silence to the great wonder of the French Captaine and Company who protested they knew not by any meanes how to recover the Pinnaces if the Symerons to whom what our Captaine commanded was a law though they little regarded the French as having no trust in them should leave us our Captain assured him there was no cause of doubt of them of whom he had had such former tryall When we were come vvithin an English mile of the Way vve stayed all night refreshing our selves in great stilnesse in a most convenient place vvhere vve heard the Carpenters being many in number vvorking upon their Ships as they usually doe by reason of the great heat of the day in Nombre de Dios and might heare the Moyles comming from Panama by reason of the advantage of the ground The next morning upon hearing of that great number of Bels the Symerons rejoyced exceedingly as though there could not have befallen them a more joyful accident chiefly having been disappointed before Now they all assured us vve should have more Gold and Silver then all of us could beare away as in truth it fell out For there came three Recoes one of fifty Moyles the other two of seventy each every of vvhich caryed three hundred pound vvaight of Silver vvhich in all amounted to neer thirty Tun. We putting our selus in readinesse vvent down neer the Way to hear the Bels vvhere vve stayed not long but vve saw of vvhat Mettall they vvere made and tooke such hold on the heads of the foremost and hindmost Moyles that all the rest stayed and lay down as their manner is These three Recoes were guarded with forty five Souldiers or thereabouts fifteene to each Reco which caused some exchange of Bullets and Arrowes for a time in which conflict the French Captaine was sore wounded with Hayle shot in the Belly and one Symeron slain But in the end these Souldiers thought it the best way to leave their Moyles with us and to seeke for more helpe abroad in which meane time we tooke some paine to ease some of the Moyles which were heaviest loaden of their carriages And being weary we were content with a few bars and quoits of Gold as we could well carry burying about fifteene tun of Silver partly in the Boroughs which the great Land-crabs had made in the earth and parrly under old trees which are fallen thereabout and partly in the Sand and Gravell of a River not very deepe of water Thus when about this businesse we had spent some two houres and had disposed of all our matters and were ready to March backe the very selfe same way that we came we heard both Horse and Foot comming as it seemed to the Moyles for they never followed us after we were once entred the Woods where the French Captaine by reason of his wound not able to travell farther stayed in hope that some rest would recover him better strength But after we had marched some two leagues upon the French Souldiers complaint that they missed one of their Men also examination being made whether he were slaine or no it was found that he had drunke much Wine and over-lading himselfe with Pillage and hasting to goe before us had lost himselfe in the Woods And as we afterwards knew he was taken by the Spaniards that evening and upon torture discovered unto them where we had hidden our Treasure We continued our March all that and the next day towards Rio Francisco in hope to meet our Pinnaces but when we came thither looking out to Sea we saw seven Spanish Pinnaces which had beene searching all the Coasts thereabout Whereupon we mightily suspected that they had taken or spoyled our Pinnaces for that our Captaine had given so straight charge that they should repaire to this place this after-noone from the Cabezas where they rode whence to our sight these Spaniards Pinnaces did come But the night before there had fallen very much raine with much Westerly Winde vvhich as it enforced the Spaniards to returne home the sooner by reason of the Storme so it kept our Pinnaces that they could not keepe the appointment because the Winde was contrary and blew so strong that with their Oares they could all that day get but halfe the way Notwithstanding if they had followed our Captaines direction in setting forth over night while the wind served they had arrived at the place appointed with farre lesse labour but with farre more danger because that very day at noone the Spanish Shallops mand out of purpose from Nombre de Dios were come to this place to take our Pinnaces imagining where we were after they had heard of our intercepting of the Treasure Our Captaine seeing the Shallops feared least having taken our Pinnaces they had compelled our men by torture to confesse where his Frigate and Ships were Therefore in this distresse and perplexity the Company misdoubting that all meanes of returne to their Country were cut off and that their Treasure then served them to small purpose our Captaine comforted and incouraged us all saying We should venter no farther then he did it was no time now to feare but rather to haste to prevent that which was feared if the Enemy have prevailed against our Pinnaces which God forbid yet they must have time to search them time to examine the Mariners time to
death being much more honorable by it then blameable for any other of his actions fully blotted out what ever stain his fault might seem to bring upon him he left unto our fleet a lamentable example of a goodly Gentleman who in seeking advancement unfit for him cast away himself and unto posterity a monument of I know not what fatal calamity incident to that port and such like actions which might happily afford a new pair of parallels to be added to Plutarchs in that the same place neere about the same time of the year witnessed the execution of 2. gentlemen suffring both for the like cause imployed both in like service entertained both in great place endued both with excellent qualities the one 58. year after the other For on the main our men found a gibbet fallen down made of a spruce mast with mens bones underneath it which they conjectured to be the same gibbet which Magellane commanded to be erected in the yeare 1520. for the execution of John Carthagene the Bishop of Burgos Cosen who by the Kings order was joyned with Magellane in commission and made his Vice-Admirall In the Island as we digged to bury this gentleman we found a great grinding-stone broken in two parts which we took and set fast in the ground the one part at the head the other at the feet building up the middle space with other stones and turfes of earth and engraved in the stones the names of the parties buried there with the time of their departure and a memoriall of our Generals name in Latine that it might the better be understood of all that should come after us These things thus ended and set in order our generall discharging the Mary viz. our Portugal prise beause she was leake and troublesome defaced her and then left her ribs and keel upon the Island where for two moneths together we had pitched our tents And so having wooded watred trimmed our ships dispatched all our other businesses and brought our fleet into the smalest number even 3. only besides our pinnaces that we might the easier keep our selves together be the better furnished with necessaries and be the stronger mand against whatsoever need should be Agust 17. we departed out of this port and being now in great hope of a happy issue to our enterprise which Almighty God hitherto had so blest prospered we set our course for the Straights southwest August 20. we fell with the Cape neere which lies the entrance into the Sraight called by the Spaniards Capo virgin Maria appearing 4. leagues before you come to it with high and steep gray cliffs full of black stars against which the sea beating sheweth as it were the spoutings of Whales having the highest of the cape like cape Vincent in Portugal at this cape our Generall caused his fleet in homage to our soveraign lady the Queens Majesty to strike their top-sailes upon the bunt as a token of his willing and glad mind to shew his dutiful obedience to her highnes whom he acknowledged to have ful interest and right in that new discovery and withall in remembrance of his most honourable friend Sir Christopher Hatton he changed the name of the ship which himself went in from the Pellican to be called the golden Hind which ceremonies being ended together with a sermon teaching true obedience with prayers and giving of thanks for her Majesty and most honorable counsel with the whole body of the commonweale and church of God we continued our course on into the said frete where passing with land in sight on both sides we shortly fell with so narrow a strait as carrying with it much wind often turnings and many dangers-requireth an expert judgment in him that shall passe the same it lyeth W.N.W. and E. south East but having left his strait a stern we seemed to become out of a river of two leagues broade into a large and main sea having the night following an Iland in sight which being in height nothing inferior to the Island ●ogo before spoken of burning like it also aloft in the aire in a wonderfull sort without intermission It hath formerly been received as an undoubted truth that the seas following the course of the first mover from the east to west have a continuall current through this straite but our experience found the contrary the ebbings and flowings here being as orderly in which the water rises and fals more then 5. fathoms upright as on other coasts The 24. of August being Bartholomew day we fell with 3. Islands bearing trianglewise one from another one of them was very faire and large and of a fruitful soile upon which being next unto us and the weather very calm our Generall with his Gentlemen and certain of his Marriners then landed taking possession thereof in her Majesties name and to her use and called the same Elizabeth Island The other two though they were not so large nor so fair to the eye yet were they to us exceeding usefull for in them we found great store of strange birds which could not fly at all nor yet run so fast as that they could escape us with their lives in body they are less then a goose and bigger then a mallard short and thick set together having no feathers but insteed thereof a certain hard and matted down their beakes are not much unlike the bils of crows they lodg and breed upon the land where making earths as the conies do in the ground they lay their egs and bring up their young their feeding and provision to live on is in the sea where they swim in such sort as nature may seem to have granted them no small prerogative in swiftness both to prey upon others and themselves to escape from any others that seek to cease upon them such was the infinite resort of these birds to these Ilands that in the space of 1. day we killed no les then 3000. if the increase be according to the number it is not to be thought that the world hath brought forth a greater blessing in one kind of creature in so small a circuit so necessarily and plentifully serving the use of man they are a very good and wholesome victuall our Generall named these Islands the one Bartholomew according to the day the other Saint Georges in honour of England according to the ancient custome there observed In the Island of Saint George we found the body of a man so long dead before that his bones would not hold together being moved out of the place whereon they lay From these Islands to the entrance into the south sea the frete is very crooked having many turnings as it were shutings up as if there were no passage at al by means whereof we were often troubled with contrary winds so that some of our ships recovering a cape of land entring another reach the rest were forced to alter their course and come to anchor where they might It is true which
twentieth of November the Generall commanded all the Pinnaces with the Boates to use all diligence to imbarke the Army into such Ships as every man belonged The Lieuetenant Generall in like sort commanded Captaine Goring and Lievetenant Tucker with one hundred shot to make a stand in the Market-place untill our Forces were wholly imbarked the Vice-Admirall making stay with his Pinnace and certain Boats in the harbour to bring the said last company aboord the Ships Also the General willed forthwith the Gallie with two Pinnaces to take into them the company of Captaine Barton and the Company of Captaine Bigs under the leading of Captaine Sampson to seeke out such Munition as was hidden in the ground at the Towne of Pray or Play having been promised to be shewed it by a prisoner which was taken the day before The Captaines aforesaid comming to the Play landed their men and having placed the Troope in their best strength Captaine Sampson tooke the Prisoner and willed him to shew that he had promised the which he could not or at least would not but they searching all suspected places found two peeces of Ordinance one of Iron and another of Brasse In the afternoone the General anchored the rest of the Fleet before the Play comming himselfe ashoare willing us to burne the Towne and make all haste aboord the which was done by six of the clocke the same day and our selves imbarked againe the same night and so we put off to Sea Southwest But before our departure from the Towne of Saint Jago we established Orders for the better government of the Army every man Mustered to his Captaine and oaths ministred to acknowledge her Majestie supreame Governour as also every man to doe his uttermost endeavour to advance the service of the Action and to yeeld due obedience unto the directions of the Generall and his Officers By this provident councell and laying downe this good foundation beforehand all things went forward in a due course to the atchieving of our happy enterprise In all the time of our being here neither the Governour for the King of Spaine which is a Portugall neither the Bishop whose authority is great neither any of the Inhabitants of the Town or Island ever came at us which we expected they should have done to intreat us to leave them some part of their needful provisions or at the least to spare the ruining of their Town at our going away The cause of this their unreasonable distrust as I doe take it was the fresh remembrance of the great wrongs they had done to old Master William Haukins of Plimouth in the Voyage he made foure or five yeares before when as they did both breake their promise and murthered many of his Men whereof I judge you have understood and therefore needlesse to be repeated But since they came not at us we left written in sundry places as also in the Spittle-house which building vvas only appointed to be spared the great discontentment and scorne we tooke at this their refraining to come unto us as also at the rude manner of killing and savage kind of handling the dead body of one of our Boyes found by them stragling all alone from whom they had taken his head and heart and had stragled the other bowels about the place in a most ●●●itish and beastly manner In revenge whereof at our departing we consumed with Fire all the houses as well in the Country which we saw as in the Towne of Saint Jago From hence putting over to the West-Indies vve vvere not many dayes at Sea but there began amongst our people such mortality as in few dayes there were dead above two or three hundred men And untill some seven or eight dayes after our comming from Saint Jago there had not dyed any one man of sicknesse in all the Fleet the sicknesse shewed not his infection wherewith so many were stroken untill we were departed thence and then seazed our people with extreame hot burning and continuall ague whereof some very few escaped with life and yet those for the most part not without great alteration and decay of their wits and strength for a long time after In some that dyed were plainly shewed the small sports which are often found upon those that be infective with the Plague we were not above eighteene dayes in passage between the sight of Saint Jago aforesaid and the Island of Dominica being the first Island of the West-Indies that we fell withal the same being inhabited with Savage People which goe all naked their skin coloured with some painting of a reddish tawney very personable and handsome strong men who doe admit little conversation with the Spaniards for as some of our people might understand them they had a Spaniard or twaine prisoners with them neither doe I thinke that there is any safety for any of our Nation or any other to be within the limits of their commandment albeit they used us very kindly for those few houres of time which we spent with them helping our folkes to fill and carry on their bare shoulders fresh Water from the River to our Ships Boats and fetching from their houses great store of Tobacco as also a kind of Bread which they fed on called Cassado very vvhite and savery made of the roots of Cassania In recompence whereof we bestowed liberall rewards of Glasse coloured Beads and other things which we had found at Saint Jago wherewith as it seemed they rested very greatly satisfied and shewing some sorrowfull countenance when they perceived that we would depart From hence we went to another Island Westward of it called Saint Christophers Island wherin we spent some dayes of Christmas to refresh our sicke People and to cleanse and ayre our Ships In which Island were not any People at all that we could hear of In which time by the Generall it was advised and resolved with the consent of the Lievtenant generall the Vice-Admiral and all the rest of the Captains to proceed to the great Island of Hispaniola as well for that we knew our selus then to be in our best strength as also the rather allured thereunto by the glorious fame of the City of Saint Domingo being the ancientest and chiefe inhabited place in all the tract of Countrey there abouts And to proceed in this determination by the way we met a small Frigot bound for the same place the which the Vice-Admirall took and having duly examined the Men that were in her there was one found by whom we were advertized the Haven to be a barred Haven and the shore or Land thereof to be well fortified having a Castle thereupon furnished with great store of Artillery without the danger whereof was no convenient landing place within ten English miles of the City to which the said Pilot tooke upon him to conduct us All things being thus considered on the whole Forces were commanded in the evening to embarke themselves into Pinnaces Boats and other small Barks
Wals right over against you as you enter the said place so as your eye cannot escape the sight of it there is described and painted in a very large Scutchion the armes of the King of Spaine and in the lower part of the said Scutchion there is likewise described a Globe containing in it the whole circuit of the Sea and the Earth vvhereupon is a Horse standing on his hinder part within the Globe and the oher forepart vvithout the Globe lifting up as it were to leape vvith a scrole painted in his mouth wherein was written these words in Latin Non sufficit orbis which is as much to say as the World sufficeth not vvhereof the meaning vvas required to be knowne of some of those of the better sort that came in Commission to treat upon the ransome of the Town who would shake their heads and turne aside their countenance in some smiling sort without answering any thing as being greatly ashamed thereof For by some of our company it was told them that if the Queen of England vvould resolutely prosecute the Wars against the King of Spaine he should be forced to lay aside that proud and unreasonable reaching vaine of his for he should finde more then enough to do to keepe that which he had already as by the present example of their lost Town they might for a beginning perceive well enough Now to the satisfying of some men who marvell greatly that such a famous and goodly builded City so well inhabited of gallant People very bravely apparelled whereof our Souldiers found good store for their relief should afoord no greater Riches then was found there vvherein it is to be understood that the Indian people which were the naturals of this whole Island of Hispaniola the same being neere hand as great as England vvere many yeares since cleane consumed by the Tyranny of the Spaniards which vvas cause that for lacke of people to worke in the Mines the Gold and Silver Mines of this Island are wholly given over and thereby they are faine in this Island to use Copper money whereof vvas found very great quantity The chiefe trade of this place consisteth of Sugar and Ginger which groweth in the Island and Hides of Oxen and Kine which in this waste Countrey of the Island are bred in infinite numbers the soile being very fertile and the said Beasts are fed up to a very large growth and so killed for nothing so much as for their Hides aforesaid We found here great store of strong Wine sweet Oyle Vinegar Olives and other such like provisions as excellent Wheat-meale packed up in Wine pipes and other caske and other commodities likewise as Wollen and Linnen cloth and some Silkes all which provisions are brought out of Spaine and served us for great relief There vvas but a little Plate or Vessel of Silver in comparison of the great Pride in other things of this Towne because in those hot Countries they use much these earthen Dishes finely painted or varnished which they call Parsellina and is had out of the East India and for their drinking they use Glasses altogether whereof they make excellent good and faire in the same place But yet some Plate we found and many other good things as their houshold garniture very Gallant and Rich which had cost them deere although unto us they were of small importance From S. Domingo we put over to the maine or firme Land and going all alongst the Coast we came at the last in sight of Cartagena standing upon the Sea side so near as some of our Barks in passing alongst approched vvith the reach of their Culverin shot which they had planted upon certaine Platformes The harbour mouth lay some three miles toward the Westward of the Town vvhereinto vve entred about three or foure of the Clocke in the afternoone without any resistance of ordinance or other impeachment planted upon the same In the evening we put our selves on Land towards the Harbour mouth under the leading of Master Carleill our Lievtenant Generall who after he had digested us to march forward about the midnight as easily a● foot might fall expresly commanding ●o keepe close by the Sea w●sh of the shore for our best and surest way whereby we were like to goe through and not to misse any more of the way vvhich once we had lost within an houre after our first beginning to March through the slender knowledge of him that tooke upon him to be our Guide whereby the night spent on which otherwise must have been done by resting But as we came within some two miles of the Town their Horsemen which were some hundred met us and taking the ala●um retired to their towneward againe upon the first Volley of our Shot that was given them for the place vvhere we encountered being Woody and bushy even to the water side was unmeet for their service At this instant we might hear some Peeces of Artillery discharged with diverse small shot towards the Harbour which gave us to understand according to the Order set downe in the evening before by our Generall that the Vice-Admirall accompanied with Captaine Venner Captaine White and Captaine Crosse with other Sea Captaines and with diverse Pinnaces and Boates should give some attempt unto the little Fort standing on the entry of the inner Haven neer adjoyning to the town though to small purpose for that the place was strong and the entry very narrow vvas chained over so as there could be nothing gotten by the attempt more then the giving of them an Alarum on that other side of the Haven being a mile and a halfe from the place where we now vvere In which attempt the Vice-Admirall had the Rudder of his Skiffe stroken through with a Saker-shot and little or no harme received elsewhere The Troops being now in their March halfe a mile be hither the towne or lesse the ground we were on grew to be straight and not above fifty paces over having the maine Sea on the side of it and the Harbour vvater or inner Sea as you may terme it on the other side which in this Plot is plainly shewed This straight was fortified clean over with a stone Wall and a ditch without it the said Wall being as orderly built with flancking in every part as can be set down There was onely so much of this straight unwalled as might serve for the issuing of the Horsemen or the passing of the carriage in time of need but this anwalled part was not without a very good Barricado of Wine Buts or Pipes filled vvith earth full and thicke as they might stand on end one by another some part of them standing even within the maine Sea This place of strength was furnished of six great Peeces demi-Culverins and Sakers which shot directly in front upon us as we approached Now without this vvall upon the inner side of the streight they had brought likevvise two great Gallies with their prowesse to the shore
degrees or very neare thereunto Our Pinnaces manned and comming to the shore we marehed up alongst the River side to see what place the Enemie held there for none amongst us had any knowledge thereof at all Here the Generall tooke occasion to march with the companies himselfe in Person the Lieutenant Generall having the Vantguard and going a mile up or somewhat more by the River side we might discerne on the other side of the River over against us a fort which newly had been built by the Spaniards and some mile or three about above the fort was a little Town or village without wals built of woodden houses as this Plot here doth plainly shew we forthwith prepared to have Ordnance for the battery and one Peece was a little before the evening planted and the first shot being made by the Lievtenant Generall himselfe at their Ensigne strake through the Ensigne as we afterwards understood by a Fenchman which came unto us from them One shot more was then made which strake the foot of the fort Wall which was all massive timber of great trees like Mastes The Lievtenant Generall was determined to passe the River this night with foure Companies and there to lodge himselfe intrenched as neare the Fort as that he might play with his Muskets and smallest shot upon any that should appeare and so afterward to bring and plant the battery with him but the helpe of the Marriners for that sudden to make Trenches could not be had which was the cause that this determination was remitted untill the next night In the night the Lievtenant General tooke a little rowing Skiffe and halfe a dozen well armed as Captaine Morgan and Captaine Sampson with some others besides the rowers and went to view what gard the Enemy kept as also to take knowledge of the ground And albeit he went as covertly as might be yet the Enemy taking the Alarum grew fearfull that the whole Force was approaching to the assault and therefore with all speed abandoned the place after the shooting of some of their Peeces They thus gone and he being returned unto us againe but nothing knowing of their flight from their Fort forthwith came a Frenchman being a Phipher who had been prisoner with them in a little Boat playing on his Phiph the tune of the Prince of Orange his song and being called unto by the Guard he told them before he put foot out of the Boat what he was himselfe and how the Spaniards were gone from the Fort offering either to remaine in hands there or else to return to the place with them that would goe Upon this Intelligence the Generall the Lievtenant Generall with some of the Captaines in one Shiffe and the Vice-Admiral with some others in his Skiffe and two or three Pinnaces furnished of Souldiers with them put presently over towards the Fort giving order for the rest of the Pinnaces to follow And in our approach some of the Enemy bolder then the rest having stayed behinde their company shot off two peeces of Ordnance at us but on shore we went and entred the place without finding any man there When the day appeared we found it built all of Timber the Wals being none other but whole Masts or bodies of Trees set upright and close together in manner of a Pale without any Ditch as yet made but who intended with some more time for they had not as yet finished all their work having begun the same some three or foure Moneths before so as to say the truth they had no reason to keepe it being subject both to fire and easie assault The platforme whereon the Ordnance lay was whole bodies of long Pine trees whereof there is great plenty layed a crosse one on another and some little earth amongst There was in it thirteen or fourteen great peeces of brasse Ordnance and a Chest unbroken up having in it the value of some two thousand pounds sterling by estimation of the Kings treasure to pay the Souldiers of that place who were one hundred and fifty Men. The Fort thus won which they called S. John Fort and the day opened we assayed to goe to the Towne but could not by reason of some Rivers and broken ground which was betweene the two places and therefore enforced to imbarke againe into our Pinnaces we went thither upon the great maine River which is called as also the Towne by the name of S. Augustine At our approaching to land there was some that began to shew themselves to bestow some few shot upon us but presently withdrew themselves And in their runing thus away the Serjeant Major finding one of their Horses ready sadled bridled took the same to follow the chase and so overgoing all his Company was by one layed behinde a Bush shot through the head and falling downe therewith was by the same and two or three more stabbed in three or foure places of his body with Swords and Daggers before any could come neere to his reskue His death was much lamented being in very deed an honest wise Gentleman and a Souldier of good experience and of as great courage as any man might be In this place called S. Augustine we understood the King did keepe as is before said one hundred and fifty Souldiers and at another place some dozen leagus beyond to the Northwards called S. Helena he did there likewise keepe one hundred and fifty more serving there for no other purpose then to keepe all other Nations from Inhabiting any part of all that Coast the Government wherof vvas committed to one Pedro Melendez Marquesse Nephew to that Melendez the Admitall vvho had overthrown Master John Hawkins in the Bay of Mexico some fifteen or sixteen years agoe This Governor had charge of both places but vvas at this time in this place and one of the first that left the same Here it vvas resolved in full assembly of Captaines to undertake the enterprize of S. Helena and from thence to seek out the Inhabitation of our English Country-Men in Virginia distant from thence some six degrees Northward When we came thwart of Saint Helena the shols appearing dangerous and we having no Pilot to undertake the entrie it was thought meerest to goe hence alongst For the Admiral had been the same night in four fadome and a halfe three leagues from the shore and yet we understood by the help of a known Pilot there may and doth goe in Ships of greater burthen and draught then any we had in our Fleet. We passed thus alongst the Coast hard aboord the shore which is shallow for a league or two from the shore and the same is low and broken land for the most part The ninth of June upon fight of one speciall great fire which are very ordinary all alongst this coast even from the Cape of Florida hither the Generall sent his Skiffe to the shore where they found some of our English Country men that had been sent thither the year