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A58039 A token for mariners containing many famous and wonderful instances of God's providence in sea dangers and deliverances, in mercifully preserving the lives of his poor creatures, when, in humane probability, at the point of perishing by shipwrack, famine, or other accidents. much enlarg'd, with the addition of many new relations, one whereof happening this present year, and never before printed. Mostly attested by the persons themselves. Also The seaman's preacher, being a sermon on the right improvement of such mercies. And prayers for seamen on all occasions. Janeway, James, 1636?-1674.; Ryther, John, 1634?-1681, attributed name. 1698 (1698) Wing R2445; ESTC R222746 69,767 178

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of Affliction into the Wine of Consolation The Commander of the Vessel knows the Major and replys readily and chearfully Major Gibbons not one hair of your head shall perish nor any of your Ships Company if it lye in my power either to supply you or preserve you O the Wisdom of God that hath ways we know not of to Relieve in the greatest straits and cause himself to be seen in the Mount The Commander of this French Pyrat was one that some years before Major Gibbons had shown signal Kindness to when his life was in danger at Boston in New England Thus the Lord appeared a God hearing Prayers in Extremitys which appearances are not to be forgotten in succeeding Generations O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and for his wonderful works to the Children of men Secondly About the year 1636. there arising a storm and tempest of troubles in the Church of Scotland five Ministers eminent for Piety Learning and their Honourable success in the Ministry were so hard born under by a prevailing Party imposing upon their Consciences that they were forced to Embarque themselves for America three of their names were Mr. Levinston Mr. Mackleland and Mr. Blaire with two more whom my Author could not call to mind These good men Say●●d half the Channel over about 500. Leagues where they met with great distress of weather which broke off the Rudder of their Ship and occasioned a desperate leak to spring in her which exposed them to eminent danger but they in this distress endeavour to hang on their Rudder again but often were they frustrated in their attempt to a total despair of effecting it They also laboured with the like unsuccessfulness to find out and stop the leak this poor Ships Crew had laboured also by pumping to keep the Ship above water until all their few hands were feeble and all their hearts faint so that as so many dispairing persons of life they cease all endeavours and yield themselves to death expecting every moment to be Entombed in the belly of the devouring deeps during the time of this their great distress the Ministers kept on their course as at other times of Worship viz the reading of a Chapter in course and taking observations from it with Prayers and Preaching which they did by turns at the crisis of this deplorable case it fell to be the Lott of Mr. Mackleland to perform this Exercise a man Austeer in his life reserved in his speech and of great Piety who was often observed to let fall many remarkable Prophetical Expressions of future events the Chapter that at that time came to be read in course by him was the 3● of Exodus which he had read all along until he came to the 12th verse where he made a full stop the verses run thus And Moses besought the Lord his God and said Lord why doth thy Wrath wax hot against thy people which thou hast brought out of the Land of Egypt with great Power and a mighty hand Wherefore should the Egyptians say for mischief did he bring them out to slay them in the Mountains and to consume them from the face of the Earth Turn from thy severe Wrath and repent of this Evil against thy People upon the reading of these verses over again he declared to them the Case which Moses was here interceeding for compared with his Expostulation in the 12 verse did parallel their case and considering the happy event of that Argument which Moses used mentioned in the 14 verse which runs thus and the Lord Repented of the Evil which he thought to doe unto his People he could not but comfortably hope that they might have the same Effect Nay he goes further and his Spirit raised into a peremptory prediction that he durst assure them from his great Lord and Master that not one hair of their heads should fall to the ground after this he went to Prayer urging God with the same Argument and then rose up comfortably assuring his stedfastness in believing the same he advises the Sea-men and the Company in the Ship to refresh themselves by taking some meat the long fasting and hard labour having much infeebled them Then he encouraged them to make another Attempt to fasten the Rudder without which they could not possible make towards any point for shore He after advised them to clear the ship as well as they could from water by pumping which they did happily Effect the Leak being stopt providentially of it self whether it was some noak of a plank started by the destress of weather which occasioned the Leak and by the surges of the Sea clapt into the place again or what it was else could not be known But however this lookes like life from the dead to these poor men who had received but a little before a sentence of Death in themselves that they might trust in him who raiseth the Dead Soon after this God who had heard in Heaven great Tears and Prayers Commands the Wind Tack about to the West and to blow so strong a gale that they were forced to bear up before it and it continued so long that it brought them back to the North of Ireland where they continued some time although but short they were very instrumental in the Converting of many souls which seed-plot remains to this day and soon after they passed into Scotland This Relation was given by several Ministers of the North of Ireland also the Reader may take notice the Author of that Book called the Fullfilling of the Scriptures pag. 487. mentions this remarkable Providence though not so largely with these two additional but very considerable circumstances first That a poor Sea-man was made the instrument to preserve the same Vessel by fastening the Rudder whose company they had all shun'd others having given it over Secondly Several Passengers being Aboard who shipt themselves for America upon only external accounts expecting a fat soyle and outward advantage in that place and not as the others upon the account of Conscience to enjoy the purity of Ordinances they did all dye upon the Sea save one being five in number And who is so blind as cannot see here the out stretched Arm of an Omnipotent God commanding deliverance for his poor distressed persecuted praying believing Servants and also for all them that Sayled with them O who would not Pray at Sea and trust in him who raises the dead in the saddest of their Extremities and distress and speaks forth much of the power and goodness of God calling upon all to trust in him let the dangers and straits be never so great 3. A Vessel of ours about the year 1636. being at New-found Land a Fishing being somewhat of the latest in the year until the Ice came in great flakes and being ready to hoise Sayle for the return home they sent out in the Boat six of the men to weigh their Anchor but while they were about it a sad Providence
John Blackleach from New England a very honest Man who gave account that in his then Voyage his Son being Master of the Vessel and himself Merchant their Men at Sea did Mutiny at which occasion he and his Son was forced to stand on their Guard for some time casting his care on the Lord But whilst under this trouble being in the Long-Reach in or near the Latitude of Barbadoes they all did see a Great Ship which stood toward them and while they were Looking on her to see how fast she came towards them she being pretty near vanish'd away which struck the Men with Great Fear and made them humble themselves to the Good Old Man and desired his Prayers for them 16. In the Month of November 1669 the Ship Prosperous of Bristol ●ailed from thence being bound for Galloway in Ireland but was forced into Bruts-Bay in Cornwal where the Ship brake in pieces six Persons being Drowned others wonderfully cast on Shore and bruised amongst the rest John Denny a Skinner of Bristol was cast a Shore by a Great Sea being much bruised and almost Dead and was by some stript naked and laid amongst the other Dead Folk that were taken up being only cover'd with some Straw or Rubbish But by Providence an Old Man looking on the Dead People did perceive some Life in the said Denny and the Lord open'd his heart that he stript himself of his own Shirt and some Cloaths and put on him and took him from amongst the Dead through his Labour and Love by God's blessing the said Denny is now well and liveth at Bristol This my Author had from John Denny's own Mouth 17. In the Year 1671 I being at Boston in new-New-England I oft went to see an Acquaintance of mine one Abraham Darby a sober honest Man a Master of a Vessel who relates the following Story which he attesteth to be Truth That some few years ago he the said Darby being Master of a small Ketch was bound from Barbadoes to Virginia he having an Irish Woman a Servant on● Board to be deliver'd in Virginia but she was a vile Person and having often offended at last was punish'd for which she said they should not carry her to Virginia tho the Wind was very fair and carried them in sounding of the Capps of Virginia That they had bent one Cable to the Anckor thinking soon to get in but she still said they should not then the Wind sprang up of a sudden in a meer fret which forced them many days off and their Provisions near spent it being if I mistake not in Mar●h then the Wind came fair again a fresh Gaile and they before it in hopes to gain their passage but on a sudden there came a Great Sea that cast the Vessel on her side she having but little beside Ballast in her that her Goods and things in hold shifteth But it pleased God they clapt the Helm a weather and she wore and all hands as could in the Hold brought her to rights and the Wind continued fair till they came near the place that it took them short before and then took them as before that they were forc'd off again for many days having then but two or three pieces of Beefe and no Bread nor I think above a Gallon of fresh Water But after some time the Wind came fair they making Sail to get back it being fine weather there came a great Sea and laid her down again and carried her Mast away and a part of the Partners that hould the Mast that as she lay on one side the Sea rush'd into her but the Master with his Bed and Rug stopt the force till it pleased God they had shifted the things in the hould and brought her to rights again now these poor Souls were left as a Wrack in the Ocean and neither Victuals nor Drink but strong Water and Sugar to help them but finding a Spar or Oars in the hould made shift to get out a smal Sail I had like to have omitted that whilst they had any Food they would have given this wicked Woman a part but she would not Eat any thing then it pleased God to send a fine Gale and they got on the Cost of New-England and sounding round about forty Fathom Water and very calme then they chopt to an Anckor there and that Night got two or three Fish wherewith they Refreshed themselves but the Woman would not Eat but could get no more and finding a fine Gale weighed Anckor and thought to have got within Cape-Cod not being far of but the Wind came fresh against them and drove them off again to Sea and then 't was ●alm and about that time the Woman ●ad fasted about 21 Days and yet could Curse and Damn and say She should not go Ashore but that Night the Master and some others being on the Deck spied a Great Black Thing Rise out of the Sea to their thinking much bigger than the Ketch the Sea being Light all about and the Woman in the Hold made a Great Noyse and when she had given a Great Screach or Groan this Great Black Thing Vanish'd the Water seeming like Fire all round and made a Great Sea and Noise And when the Men came to them selves they looking for the Woman found her Dead and after they had ●●ung her over-Board they had a brave Wind and Weather and got safe to Plimouth in new-New-England 18. At new-New-England in the year 1671 〈◊〉 spoke with John Grafting of Sal●m and others of good Repute who told me not ●ong before the said Grafting suffered Shipwrack amongst the Leward Islands 〈◊〉 the Name of the Place I forget the Ship or Ketch being broken to pieces himself ●nd Mate and one or two were cast with ●he Sea ashore amongst the Rocks most wonderfully not knowing of each other till by Providence they met amongst the Rocks it being an Island without Inhabitants if I mistake not and they bruised yet the Lord provided for them in a wonderful manner and not only there but in their getting off that place and bringin● them safe to their Friends and Relation● in Salem in new-New-England where Praise● was returned to the Lord who wonderfully preserves the Children of Men. hope this ere long will be enlarged from the Party himself 19. I being well Acquainted with on● Jeffery Howard a Marriner who is a Man of Good Repute he told me as followeth● That about Twelve or Fourteen year● since he was coming through the City o● Salisbury he was looking on the Stree● Rivers and spies something move on th● Water but looking earnestly saw it to have Life steps in and got it out and found it to be a Man-child only inrapt a● it came into the World from its Mother and it was put to Nurse and now is become a fine Youth 20. At Bristol a place well known no● many years ago a Man fell into the River● near about the marsh and not being seen was carri'd down with
any thing And thus Providence train'd them up in the School of Faith but further she gave an account of one Remarkable thing In the last day of the week upon a time it proved a very stormy Day and they being abroad a hunting for some support could get nothing The Husband and Son comes home very much troubled and the men that were gon into the Woods they could get nothing and they being very much troubled one took up a Resolution not to come home knowing their Captain would not suffer them to go and hunt on the Lords Day on the other hand they thought he would wounder what was become of them and fear lest evil had befallen them so they alter their Resolution to come home but empty of any Reliefe this very Evening before the Sabbath in this perplexety of thoughts there flys over their Heads three gray Geese a wonder it was for such Geese that were never seen before nor after O says she to her Husband that we had some of them against to morrow observing they lighted in a Bottome she acquaints her Husband he says they have no shot left O says she here is a Porrenger melt it or cut it into peices which he did for expedition and charged his Peice and at the first shot kill'd them all These things and many more my Author had from her own Mouth after her marvellous Preservation O that men would Praise the Lord for his wonderful Works to the Children of Men. 8. We have a very wonderful Deliverance recorded an honest poor man in Maulden in Essex one Gregory Crow who with his man and boy was in his Boat going to fetch Fullers-Earth but by the way meeting with a Stom his Boat was driven upon a banck of sand and there sunk The men were glad to hang upon the Mast but poor Crow seeing his New-Testament in the water which he prized highly caught it up and took it into his Bosom the tyde being gone they were left upon the sand at least ten miles from land now in this great Distresse they made their Prayers to the Lord that he would send some means of Deliverance For now within half an hour it would be flood but in this little time before Flood they found a Chest wherein was five pounds six Shillings eight pence but honest Crow cast it into the Sea again saying If the Lord will please to save our lives he will provide us a little food and so they went again up the Mast where they to Admiration hung by the Arms and Leggs for ten hours together only the Boy was so weary and beaten with the Waves that he fell off and was drowned now their fears encrease upon them and they know not what to do But Crow advises his man to cut down the Mast and when the F●ood comes again to fit upon it and so sayes he it may please God to drive us to some Ship this Councel was taken they commit themselves to God upon this Mast and thus continu'd Tuesday Night Wednesday and Wednesday Night in which time the man was so tir'd out with Hunger Watching and Cold that he dyed now was Crow left alone in this sad and deplorable Condition who pray'd now the more earnestly for some Succor and Relief but durst not Sleep lest the Sea should beat him off the Mast and when this distress'd miserable object was almost spent his flesh sodden with Sea water and his eyes almost closed up with the Salt now in his Extremity the Lord makes it his opportunity and s●●eps in by his Providence persents a Ship going for Antwerp observe here the Finger of God The Wind not being favourable was driven out of the way and espying something a far off in the Sea but supposeing it to be some Fisher-boy steer'd from it Crow seeing this held up his Cap and shaked it over his head whereby at length they were mov'd to go to him and so they took him in when he came into the Ship being half dead careful of his New Testament he pluckt it out of his Bosome and gave it to some to dry They in the Ship were careful of him and with great difficulty recover'd him and carryed him with them to Antwerp where the fame of his being miraculously deliver'd drew many to see him and relieve him with necessaries Fox's Book of Martyrs 9. A Ship of Holland being driven against her will came to a Place call'd Zembla where the Pole is elevated Seventy Six degrees they among many delays and great dangers scarce reach'd the Aurange Islands for now they were set fast in a Consolidated body of continu'd Ice which threatn'd them every moment at last being reduc'd to their ultimate hope they resolve to return the same way they came but now they find the Ship quite frozen up not far from shore and now they think they should winter in Zembla and waite for a better Season wherefore taking out Boards and Plancks they built for themselves and their Stuffe a poor shelter and by a good Providence the Tide had thrown up a good quantity of Timber they not knowing from whence it came it proved a great advantage to them during their abode here they had continual fights with Bears which sometimes were driven away with making great out-crys other whiles with Shot● they found their flesh unwholesome for food For in this place the Maritine wild Beasts are the food to the wild Beasts of the land the fat of the Bears they made use of to burn for lights in the night these poor creatures were at last after all other Humane Benefits left by the Sun in this Barren Country and left amongst none but wild Beasts The vast Mountains of Snow with great difficulty they remove lest the Habitation should be overwhelm'd and if at any time they went forth their jawes were so benum'd they could scarce recover their former heat now the Bears in the dark being dull of fight did not venture out to disturbe them but multitudes of Foxes which they took in Traps and made of them both Victuals and Rayment and yet after all these dangers and difficultys God preserved them though indeed some of them dyed they were 12 of them The chief of them was one Jacob Hamskerk who returned afterwards to Amsterdam Gro●ius in his Annalls 10. In the year 1616 a flemming named Pickman well known in England and Holland for the art he had in getting out of the Sea the great Guns of that Spanish Fleet that was forced upon the Coast of Ireland and Scotland in the year 1588. coming from Dronthem in Norway laden with Boards was overtaken by a Calm during which the current of the Sea carryed him on a Rock or a little Island towards the extremity of Scotland where he was in some danger of being cast away to avoide a wrack he commanded some of his men to go into the shallop and to tow off the Ship these having done so would needs go upon a
certain Rock to seek for eggs but as soon as they were got up into it they espy'd a man whence they imagine there were others lay there about and that he had made an Escape thither to avoid some Pirats which might Surprize their Ship so that they made all the hast they could to the Shallop and return'd to the Ship but the Calme continuing and the current of the Sea driving the Vessel against the Island they were forc'd to get into the Long-boat and Tow her off again the man they saw before was in the mean time come to the brink of the Island and made signes to them with his hands entreating them to come nearer and falling on his Knees and joyning his Hands together he beg'd Relief from them at last coming near the Island they saw something more like a Ghost than a living Person a body stark Naked black hairy of a meager and deform'd Countenance hollow and distorted Eyes which raised such Compassion in them that they proffer'd to take him into their Boat at last with some difficulty they took him in they found upon the Island no Grass nor Trees nothing for Food nor any shelter but the ruins of a boat wherewith he had made himself an Hut under which he might be cover'd from Rain and injuries of the Weather when they came to ask him who he was and how he came into that un-inhabited place he reply'd to them he was an English Man and that a year before he was to go from England to Dublin in Ireland in the Passage-Boat and that they were taken by a French-Pyrate who by a Storm that immediately arose was forc'd to let go the Passage-Boat left us to the mercy of the Waves which carryed us between Ireland and Scotland into the main Sea expecting to be cast away every minute as at last we were For the Bark being split against the Rock where you took me in I escaped with one of my Comrades into the Island in a more wretched condition than if swallow'd up by the Sea who then had been deliver'd out of the Extremities we were in for want of meat and drink of some of the boards of our Boat we made the Hutt you saw and we took some Sea-mews which we set a drying in the Wind and Sun and so eat them raw we found also in the crevices of the Rock by the Sea-side some Eggs Thus were we kept from starving but what we thought most insupportable was Thirst for there was no Water but what fell from Heaven we liv'd thus six weeks comforting one another and finding some ease in our common misfortune till that being left alone it began to grow insupportable to me for one day awaking in the morning and missing my Comrade I fell into such a Despair that I had some though● of casting my self head-long and so put a final period to that Affliction whereof I had but endur'd the one half while I had a Friend suffering with me I know not what became of him but I am of that opinion that he fell into the Sea seeking for Eggs I left with him my Knife with which we kill'd the Sea-Doggs and the Mews upon which we lived so I was forc'd to get out of my Hut a great Nail which I made a shift to sharpen upon the Rock that it serv'd me for a Knife I was also forc'd to lade a little stick with a little Sea-dogg fat and put it out of a crevice of my Hut and so got some Mews to keep me from starving I liv'd in this condition and solitude Eleven Months and was resolv'd to end my days in it when God sent you to deliver me out of the greatest misery that ever man was in and this Sea-man after this misery and miraculous preservation liv'd to return to England Ambasadors Travels A Remarkable Providence of God in wonderfully preserving of Eleven or Thirteen poor distressed mens lives 11. In the year 68. a Ketch Sailed from Salom in New-England for the Barbadoes and when they came into the Latitude of 35. it began to look like foul weather so they took in their Top-sail and because it was towards night they struck down the Main sail and Rafed it and all this time there was but a little wind which was remarkable if the ensuing story be observ'd but still it looked like bad weather so they sent up one to Tallow tho Mast and made no great hast to set Sayll the man at the Top thinks he sees some black thing float upon the Sea and looking upon it very fixtly he conceives it to be a Boat and so calls to the men below so they hasten'd to hoise Sayl and make towards it and when they came to them there was a Long-boat with a 11 or 13 men my Author could not absolutely remember the just number which poor distressed Creatures had been bound for Virginia and the ship in which they were prov'd very Leaky and so exceedingly encreas'd that in a very little time she was ready to sink so all hands hasten'd to get out the boat but the Master stept into the Cabbin to fetch a Compass and took some Canvas a Sayl-needle and twine which he thought might be useful to them in their Need and Extremity but while ●his poor industrious man was endeavouring to be useful to some other mens lives he was in danger to lose his own for the boat was put off and the ship sinking so he crys to them in this distress if they would leave him and let him there Perish so they came back and took him in they had in their boat a Capstone-bar which they made use of for a Mast and the piece of Canvas for a Sayl and so Sayled afore the wind and had no kind of Food and now comes dreadful and inexpressible distress upon them making them wish for death it self to give them a deliverance now all hopes of Relief fail'd them thus they continu'd five days some grew Lame others Feeble and all much dishearten'd by despair of Life and now upon the 6th day they had concluded to cast Lotts for their lives who should dye to preserve others and they put their Resolution into Execution and that poor Creature upon whom the Lott fell begs for time but alas what will a Reprieve be in this case where there is no hope of Relief but O what difficult work is it to dye what a strait was here Live he could not and Dye he could not well a little time is defer'd and behold a wonder-working God appears now for him and for them all before night they espy'd this Ketch which rais'd them all to Admiration but they had fears in this distress that the Ketch did not see them but when they perceiv'd the Ketch made to them O what a new life did it put into these dying men so they all got safe Aboard And see here the goodness of God In one hour after there arose a most dreadful Storm which
that time in the same Peril or Latitude that Night the Cabbin-Boy Dreams a Dream that such a Ship thereabouts was Foundred and every Soul lost except such an Old Man naming his Name who was saved on a piece of a Ship and floating in the Sea which Dream the Boy in the Morning confidently tells to the Company and his Master at last the Boy began to shew more Confidence affirming it as if it must be true insomuch he receiv'd some Checks from his Master but however at last the Boy grew so restless that he running up from one Mast to another sometimes at Fore-top-mast-head and then on the Main-top-mast-head looking abroad that at last crying out aloud Alow there I see him I see him under our Lee-bon thus confidently affirming it some of the Men stept up and spy'd something at a distance no bigger than a Crow to appearance floating and advised the Master of it who presently commanded the Helm to be born up and stood away to it and when they came near found it to be the Old Man as the Boy said so they hoyst out their Boat and took him in who then was speechless and almost spent but by the care of the Master and the Chyrurgion with God's Blessing recover'd and gave a verbal account of his Misfortune and yet wonderful deliverance together with Satan's Temptation as before recited which Ship in due time Arriv'd safe at her Port in New-found-Land where this Man was well Landed a-shore For Confirmation I had this and heard it related at my Father's House in Salom in new-New-England by Mr. John Blackledge a Merchant who is a Person of a sober life and in Fellowship there who then came from New-found-land and did affirm that he spake with the Man himself whom God wrought this wonderful deliverance for he being then at New-found-Land when the said Ship Arriv'd there and the Man went first ashore 25. Anno Christi 1630. May the first the Moscory Merchants of London sent a Ship called the Salutation of London for Greenland which arriv'd there in safety the Eleventh of June following together with two other Ships all which were commanded by Captaiu William Goodler The Ship wherein the Captain was stayed at Bell-sound This of the Salutation at the Foreland And the Captain meeting with store of Whales quickly made a Great Voyage and so sent for the Salutation to take in part of his Train-Oyl By the way as they went to him meeting with Cross-Winds the Master set-Eight of his Men on Shore to kill some Venison in a place where there used to be good store These Men taking with them a Brace of Dogs a Snaphance two Lances and a Tinder-box went on shore and that day they laid Fourteen Good Deer upon the Ground And then being weary and the Night coming on they betook themselves to Rest intending the next day to make an end of their Hunting and so to return to their Ship But the next day proved Foggy and there was much Ice between the Shore and the Ship and the Wind coming Southerly the Ship was ●ain to stand so far off into the Sea to be clear of the Ice that they lost the sight of her and the Weather growing thicker and thicker they thought fit to Hunt along the Shoar to Green-Harbour and there to stay aboard the Ship till their own Ship should come into the Port. In this passage they killed Eight Deer more and so having laden their Shallop with Venison they kept on their course to Green Harbour But when they came thither they found to their Great Astonishment that the Ship was departed Being thus frustrated of their Expectation and having but three days to the uttermost expiration of their limitted time for their departure out of that Country they thought it their best course to make all speed possible to Bell-Sound to their Captain and lest delay should prove dangerous they lightned their Shallop by heaving their Venison over-board into the Sea and so they hasted all they might and that night got half-way But the dark Fog increasing they were forced to cove in a point of Land till the next day at Noon At which time the Weather being clearer they hasted forward but having no Compass to direct their course by they wandred up and down so long till the Ships were departed This filled them with fear and astonishment knowing that neither Christian nor Heathen had ever Inhabited those desolate Climates Yea they had heard that the Merchants had endeavour'd with proffers of Great Rewards and of sufficient Furniture and Provision of all things necessary to hire some to undertake to Winter in those parts but could never meet with any that would adventure their lives in so hazardous an undertaking They had heard also that the Company of Moscovy Merchants had once procur'd the Reprieve of some Malefactors condemned to death here in England unto whom they promised Pardon together with Rewards and Provision of Cloaths Victuals and all other Necessaries if they would stay one Winter there But when they came thither and took a view of the desolateness of the place they conceiv'd such horrour and fear in their hearts that they chose rather to return for England and there to satisfie the Law with the loss of their lives than to stay in so desolate and darksom a Country They remembred also a more terrible Example of Nine Good and Able Men left there formerly by the same Master that had now left them who all died miserably upon the place and whose bodies were fearfully disfigured by the Savage Bears and Hungry Foxes which are the only Inhabitants of that comfortless Country All which made them like amazed Men to stand one looking upon another every one fore-seeing the future Calamities both of himself and of his Fellows and that which much encreased their horrour was their want of all necessary provision for the life of Man having neither Cloaths to keep them warm and for shift or food to prevent the Miseries of cruel Famine nor a house wherein to shroud themselves from the extremity of Cold. But after a space knowing that delay in extremities is the Mother of all danger they began to conceive hope out of the depth of despair and therefore they consulted together of the likeliest course for their preservation in that place and resolved upon the opportunity of the next fair weather to go to Green-Harbour to kill some Venison for part of their winter Provision which accordingly ther did but found not so many Deer as they expected yet the first day they killed Seven and Four Bears to boot which they also intended to eat The next day they killed Six Deer more and as they returned they killed Six more and then the weather proving foul and cold they laded their Shallop with the Dear and Bears and finding another Shallop left there as usually they do from year to year they laded it with Graves of Whales that had been boiled there that