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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55199 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55199)
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The True Travels, Adventures, and
-Observations of Captain John Smith into Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, by John Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The True Travels, Adventures, and Observations of Captain John Smith into Europe, Asia, Africa, and America
- From Ann. Dom. 1593 to 1629
-
-Author: John Smith
-
-Release Date: July 25, 2017 [EBook #55199]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TRUE TRAVELS OF CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Burch with scans from the internet archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<P class="image" style="text-align: center; page-break-before: always;"><img src="images/cover.jpg"style="max-width:100%; max-height:100%" alt="cover"></P>
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-<h2 style="page-break-before: always; text-align: left">{Transcriber's Note: Archaic typography which displays the letter "s" in a
-form that resembles the letter "f" has been transposed to the modern "s."
-British, archaic and inconsistent spellings have been left as in the
-original, as have capitalization and italicisation. A few obvious
-typographical errors have been changed. Margin notes are indicated where
-they occur in the text with {MN} and inserted in full at the end of the
-paragraph to which they refer.}</h2>
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-
-<P class="image" style="text-align: center; page-break-before: always;"><img src="images/title.jpg"style="max-width:100%; max-height:100%" alt="title"></P>
-<br><br><br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center; page-break-before: always;">To the Right Honourable</h3>
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center"><i>WILLIAM</i> Earl of <i>PEMBROKE,</i><br>
- Lord Steward of His Majesty's most Honourable Houshold.</h3>
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center"><i>ROBERT</i> Earl of <i>LINDSEY,</i><br>
- Great Chamberlain of <i>England,</i></h3>
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center"><i>HENRY</i> Lord <i>HUNSDON,</i><br>
- Viscount <i>ROCHFORD,</i> Earl of <i>DOVER,</i></h3>
-
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center"><i>And all your Honourable Friends and Well-willers.</i></h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps"><b>My Lords,</b></span></p>
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Sir</span> <i>Robert Cotton,</i> that most Learned Treasurer of Antiquity, having by
-perusal of my General History, and others, found that I had likewise
-undergone divers other as hard hazards in the other Parts of the World,
-requested me to fix the whole Course of my Passages in a Book by it self,
-whose noble Desire I could not but in part satisfie; the rather, because
-they have acted my fatal Tragedies upon the Stage, and racked my Relations
-at their Pleasure. To prevent therefore all future Misprisions, I have
-compiled this true Discourse. Envy hath taxed me to have writ too much,
-and done too little; but that such should know, how little I esteem them,
-I have writ this, more for the satisfaction of my Friends, and all generous
-and well disposed Readers. To speak only of my self were intolerable
-Ingratitude; because, having had so many Co-Partners with me; I cannot
-make a Monument for my self, and leave them unburied in the Fields, whose
-Lives begot me the Title of a Soldier; for as they were Companions with me
-in my Dangers, so shall they be partakers with me in this Tomb.</p>
-
-<p>For my <i>Sea Grammar</i> (caused to be Printed by my worthy Friend, Sir <i>Samuel
-Saltenstall</i>) hath found such good Entertainment abroad, that I have been
-importuned by many noble Persons, to let this also pass the Press. Many of
-the most eminent Warriours, and others, what their Swords did, their Pens
-writ: Though I be never so much their inferiour, yet I hold it no great
-Errour, to follow good Examples; nor repine at them will do the like.</p>
-
-<p>And now, <i>My most Honourable good Lords,</i> I know not to whom I may better
-Present it, than to your Lordships, whose Friendships, as I conceive, are
-as much to each others, as my Duty is to you all; and because you are
-acquainted both with my Endeavours, and Writings, I doubt not, but your
-Honours will as well accept of this, as of the rest, and Patronize it
-under the shadow of your most noble Virtues, which I am ever bound in all
-Duty to Reverence, and under which I hope to have shelter, against all
-Storms that dare threaten,</p>
-
-<p class="list"> <i>Yours Honours to be Commanded,</i>
-
- <span style="font-variant:small-caps; font-size:x-large">John Smith.</span></p>
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-
- <h3 style="text-align: center; page-break-before: always;">THE TRUE<br>
- TRAVELS,<br>
-ADVENTURES,<br>
- AND<br>
- OBSERVATIONS<br>
- OF<br>
- Captain <i>JOHN SMITH,</i></H3>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br>
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. I.</H3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="chap"> <i>His Birth; Apprenticeship; Going into</i> France; <i>His beginning with Ten
- Shillings and three Pence; His Service in the</i> Netherlands; <i>His bad
- Passage into</i> Scotland; <i>His return to</i> Willoughby, <i>and how he lived in
- the Woods.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">He was</span> born in <i>Willoughby</i> in <i>Lincoln-shire,</i> and a Scholar in the two
-Free-Schools of <i>Alford</i> and <i>Louth.</i> His Father antiently descended from
-the ancient <i>Smiths</i> of <i>Crudley</i> in <i>Lancashire;</i> his Mother from the
-<i>Rickards</i> at Great <i>Heck,</i> in <i>York-shire.</i> His Parents dying when he was
-about Thirteen Years of Age, left him a competent Means, which he not
-being capable to manage, little regarded; his Mind being even then set
-upon brave Adventures, sold his Satchel, Books, and all he had, intending
-secretly to get to Sea, but that his Fathers Death stay'd him. But now the
-Guardians of his Estate more regarding it than him, he had liberty enough,
-though no Means, to get beyond the Sea. About the Age of Fifteen Years, he
-was bound an Apprentice to Mr. <i>Thomas Sendalt</i> of <i>Linne,</i> the greatest
-Merchant of all those Parts; but because he would not presently send him
-to Sea, he never saw his Master in Eight Years after. At last he found
-Means to attend Mr. <i>Peregrine Berty</i> into <i>France</i>, second Son to the
-Right Honourable <i>Peregrine</i>, that generous Lord <i>Willoughby,</i> and famous
-Soldier; where coming to his Brother <i>Robert,</i> then at <i>Orleans,</i> now Earl
-of <i>Lindsey</i>, and Lord Great Chamberlain of <i>England;</i> being then but
-little Youths under Tutorage: His Service being needless, within a Month
-or six Weeks they sent him back again to his Friends; who when he came
-from <i>London</i>, they liberally gave him (but out of his own Estate) Ten
-Shillings to be rid of him; such oft is the share of Fatherless Children:
-But those two Honourable Brethren gave him sufficient to return for
-<i>England.</i> But it was the least thought of his Determination, for now
-being freely at liberty in <i>Paris</i>, growing acquainted with one Mr. <i>David
-Hume,</i> who making some use of his Purse, gave him Letters to his Friends
-in <i>Scotland</i> to prefer him to King <i>James.</i> Arriving at <i>Roan,</i> he better
-bethinks himself, seeing his Money near spent, down the River he went to
-<i>Haver de grace,</i> where he first began to learn the Life of a Soldier:
-Peace being concluded in <i>France,</i> he went with Captain <i>Joseph Duxbury</i>
-into the Low-Countries, under whose Colours, having served three or four
-Years, he took his Journey for <i>Scotland,</i> to deliver his Letters. At
-<i>Ancusan</i> he imbark'd himself for <i>Lethe,</i> but as much danger, as
-Shipwreck and Sickness could endure, he had at the Holy Isle in
-<i>Northumberland</i> near Berwick, ( being recovered ) into <i>Scotland</i> he went
-to deliver his Letters. After much kind usage among those honest <i>Scots</i> at
-<i>Ripweth</i> and <i>Broxmoth,</i> but neither Money nor Means to make him a
-Courtier, he returned to <i>Willoughby</i> in <i>Lincoln-shire;</i> where within a
-short time, being glutted with too much Company, wherein he took small
-delight, he retired himself into a little Woody Pasture, a good way from
-any Town, invironed with many hundred Acres of other Woods: Here, by a fair
-Brook he built a Pavillion of Boughs, where only in his Cloths he lay. His
-Study was <i>Machiavil's</i> Art of War, and <i>Marcus Aurelius;</i> his exercise a
-good Horse, with his Lance and Ring; his Food was thought to be more of
-Venison than any thing else; what he wanted his Man brought him. The
-Country wondering at such an Hermite, his Friends perswaded one Seignior
-<i>Theodora Polaloga,</i> Rider to <i>Henry</i> Earl of <i>Lincoln,</i> an excellent Horse
-Man, and a Noble <i>Italian</i> Gentleman, to insinuate into his Woodish
-Acquaintance, whose Languages and good Discourse, and Exercise of Riding
-drew him to stay with him at <i>Tattersall.</i> Long these Pleasures could not
-content him, but he returned again to the Low Countries.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. II.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="cchap"> <i>The notable Villany of four</i> French <i>Gallants, and his revenge;</i> Smith<br>
- <i>thrown over-board; Captain</i> La Roche <i>of Saint</i> Malo <i>relieves him.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Thus</span> when <i>France</i> and <i>Netherlands</i> had taught him to Ride a Horse, and
-use his Arms, with such Rudiments of War, as his tender Years in those
-Martial Schools could attain unto; he was desirous to see more of the
-World, and try his Fortune against the <i>Turks,</i> both repenting and
-lamenting to have seen so many <i>Christians</i> slaughter one another. {MN}
-Opportunity calling him; into the Company of four <i>French</i> Gallants well
-attended, faining to him the one to be a great Lord, the rest his
-Gentlemen, and that they were all devoted that way; over-perswaded him to
-go with them into <i>France,</i> to the Dutchess of <i>Merceur,</i> from whom they
-should not only have Means, but also Letters of Favour to her Noble Duke,
-then General for the Emperour <i>Rolduphus</i> in <i>Hungary;</i> which he did, with
-such ill Weather as Winter affordeth, in the dark Night they arrived in
-the broad shallow In-let of St. <i>Valleries sur Soame</i> in <i>Picardie;</i> His
-<i>French</i> Lord knowing he had good Apparel, and better furnished with Money
-than themselves, so Plotted with the Master of the Ship, to set his and
-their own Trunks ashore, leaving <i>Smith</i> aboard till the Boat could return,
-which was the next day after, towards Evening: The reason he alledged,
-was, the Sea went so high he could come no sooner, and that his Lord was
-gone to <i>Amiens,</i> where they would stay his coming; which treacherous
-Villany, when divers other Soldiers, and Passengers understood, they had
-like to have slain the Master, and had they known how, would have run away
-with the Ship.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>A notable Villany of four</i> French <i>Gallants.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Coming on shoar, he had but one <i>Cavvalue,</i> {MN-1} was forced to sell his
-Cloak to pay for his Passage. One of the Soldiers, called <i>Curzianvere,</i>
-compassionating his Injury, assured him, this great Lord <i>Depreau</i> was
-only the Son of a Lawyer of <i>Mortaigne</i> in base <i>Britany,</i> and his
-Attendants <i>Cursell, La Nelie,</i> and <i>Monserrat,</i> three young Citizens, as
-arrant Cheats as himself; but if he would accompany him, he would bring
-him to their Friends, but in the <i>interim</i> supplied his wants: Thus
-Travelling by <i>Deepe, Cadebeck, Humphla, Pount-demer</i> in <i>Normandy,</i>
-they came to <i>Caen</i> in base <i>Normandy;</i> where both this Noble
-<i>Curzianvere,</i> and the great Prior of the great Abbey of St. <i>Steven</i>
-(where is the ruinous Tomb of <i>William</i> the Conqueror) and many other of
-his Friends kindly welcomed him, and brought him to <i>Montaigne,</i> where he
-found <i>Depreau</i> and the rest, but to small purpose; for Mr. <i>Curzianvere</i>
-was a banished Man, and durst not be seen but to his Friends: yet the
-bruit of their Cozenage occasioned the Lady <i>Collumber,</i> the Baron
-<i>Larshan,</i> the Lord <i>Shasghe,</i> and divers other honourable Persons, to
-supply his wants, and with them to recreate him-self so long as he would;
-But such pleasant pleasures suited little with his poor Estate, and his
-restless Spirit, that could never find content, to receive such Noble
-Favours, as he could neither deserve nor requite: But wandering from Port
-to Port to find some Man of War, spent that he had, and in a Forest, near
-dead with grief and cold, a rich Farmer found him by a fair Fountain,
-under a Tree: This kind Peasant relieved him again to his content, to
-follow his intent. {MN-2} Not long after, as he passed thorow a great Grove
-of Trees, between <i>Pounterson</i> and <i>Dina</i> in <i>Britany,</i> it was his chance
-to meet <i>Cursell,</i> more miserable than himself: His piercing Injuries had
-so small patience, as without any word they both drew, and in a short time
-<i>Cursell</i> fell to the Ground, where, from an old ruinated Tower, the
-Inhabitants seeing them, were satisfied, when they heard <i>Cursell</i> confess
-what had formerly passed; and that how, in the dividing that they had
-stolen from him, they fell by the Ears amongst themselves, that were
-Actors in it; but for his part, he excused himself to be innocent as well
-of the one, as of the other. In regard of his hurt, <i>Smith</i> was glad to be
-so rid of him, directing his course to an honourable Lord, the Earl of
-<i>Ployer,</i> {MN-3} who during the War in <i>France,</i> with his two Brethren,
-Viscount <i>Poomory,</i> and Baron <i>d'Mercy,</i> who had been brought up in
-<i>England;</i> by him he was better refurnished than ever. When they had shewed
-him Saint <i>Malo</i> Mount, Saint <i>Michael, Lambal, Simbreack, Lanion,</i> and
-their own fair Castle of <i>Tuncadeck, Gingan,</i> and divers other places in
-<i>Britany</i> (and their British <i>Cornwaile</i>) taking his leave, he took his
-way to <i>Raynes,</i> the <i>Britains</i> chief City, and so to <i>Nants, Poyters,
-Rochel,</i> and <i>Bourdeaux.</i> The rumour of the strength of <i>Bayon</i> in
-<i>Biskay,</i> caused him to see it; and from thence took his way from <i>Leskar</i>
-in <i>Bicarne,</i> and <i>Paw,</i> in the Kingdom of <i>Navarre</i> to <i>Tolouza</i> in
-<i>Gascoigne, Bezers,</i> and <i>Carcassone, Narbone, Montpelier, Nimes</i> in
-<i>Languedeck,</i> and thorow the Country of <i>Avignion,</i> by <i>Aries</i> to
-<i>Marseilles</i> in <i>Provence,</i> there imbarking himself for <i>Italy;</i> the Ship
-was inforced to <i>Tolonne,</i> and putting again to Sea, ill Weather so grew
-upon them, that they Anchored close aboard the Shoar, under the little Isle
-of St. <i>Mary,</i> against <i>Nice</i> in <i>Savoy.</i> Here the inhuman Provincials, with a
-Rabble of Pilgrims of divers Nations going to <i>Rome,</i> hourly cursing him,
-not only for a <i>Hugonot</i> but his Nation they swore were all Pirats, and so
-vilely railed on his dread Soveraign Queen <i>Elizabeth,</i> and that they never
-should have fair Weather so long as he was aboard them; their Disputations
-grew to that Passion, that they threw him over board, yet God brought him
-to that little Isle, where was no Inhabitants, but a few Kine and Goats.
-The next Morning, he espied two Ships more riding by them, put in by the
-Storm, that fetched him aboard, well refreshed him, and so kindly used
-him, that he was well contented to try the rest of his Fortune with them.
-{MN-5} After he had related unto them his former Discourse, what for
-pity, and the love of the Honourable Earl of <i>Ployer,</i> this Noble
-<i>Britain</i> his Neighbour, Captain <i>la Roche</i> of Saint <i>Malo,</i> regarded and
-entertained him for his well respected Friend. With the next fair Wind,
-they Sailed along by the Coast of <i>Corsica</i> and <i>Sardinia,</i> and crossing
-the Gulf of <i>Tunis,</i> passed by Cape <i>Bona</i> to the Isle of <i>Lempadosa,</i>
-leaving the Coast of <i>Barbary</i> till they came at <i>Cape Rasata,</i> and so
-along the <i>African</i> Shoar, for <i>Alexandria</i> in <i>&AElig;gypt.</i> There delivering
-their Fraught, they went to <i>Seandaroone,</i> rather to view what Ships were
-in the Road, than any thing else: keeping their Course by <i>Cypres,</i> and the
-Coast of <i>Asia,</i> Sailing by <i>Rhodes</i>, the <i>Archipelagus, Candia,</i> and the
-Coast of <i>Grecia,</i> and the Isle of <i>Zefalonia.</i> They lay to and again a
-few days, betwixt the Isle of <i>Corsue,</i> and the Cape of <i>Orranto,</i> in the
-Kingdom of <i>Naples,</i> in the Entrance of the <i>Adriatick</i> Sea.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>A Cavvalue is in value a penny.</i></p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} <i>Here he incountred one of the thieves.</i></p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-3} <i>The Nobleness of the Earl of</i> Plover.</p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-4} <i>An inhuman act of the Provincials in casting him overboard.</i></p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-5} <i>Capt.</i> La Roche <i>relieves him.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. III.</h3>
-<br>
-
-<p class="cchap"> <i>A desperate Sea Fight in the Streights; His Passage to</i> Rome, Naples,
- <i>and the view of</i> Italy.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Betwixt</span> the two <i>Capes</i>, they met with an <i>Argosie</i> of <i>Venice</i>; it seemed
-the Captain desired to speak with them, whose untoward answer was such, as
-slew them a Man; {MN} whereupon the <i>Britain</i> presently gave them the
-Broad-side, then his Stern, and his other Broad-side also, and continued
-the Chase, with his chase Pieces, till he gave them so many Broad-sides
-one after another, that the <i>Argosies</i> Sails and Tackling was so torn, she
-stood to her defence, and made shot for shot; twice in one hour and a half
-the <i>Britain</i> boarded her, yet they cleared themselves, but clapping her
-aboard again, the <i>Argosie</i> fired him, which with much danger to them
-both was presently quenched. This rather augmented the <i>Britain's</i> rage,
-than abated his courage; for having reaccommodated himself again, shot
-her so oft between Wind and Water, she was ready to sink, then they
-yielded; the <i>Britain</i> lost fifteen Men, she twenty, besides divers were
-hurt, the rest went to Work on all hands; some to stop the Leaks, others
-to guard the Prisoners that were chained, the rest to ride her. The Silks,
-Velvets, Cloth of Gold, and Tissue, Piasters, Chicqueens and Sultanies,
-which is Gold and Silver, they unloaded in four and twenty hours, was
-wonderful, whereof having sufficient, and tired with toil, they cast her
-off with her Company, with as much good Merchandize as would have
-fraughted such another <i>Britain</i>, that was but two Hundred Tuns, she four
-or five Hundred.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>A desperate Sea Fight.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>To repair his Defects, he stood for the Coast of <i>Calabria</i>, but hearing
-there was six or seven Galleys at <i>Messina,</i> he departed thence for
-<i>Malta;</i> but the Wind coming fair, he kept his course along the Coast of
-the Kingdom of <i>Sicilia</i>, by <i>Sardinia</i> and <i>Corsica</i>, till he came to the
-Road of <i>Antibo</i> in <i>Peamon,</i> where he set <i>Smith</i> on shoar with five
-Hundred Chicqueens, and a little Box God sent him worth near as much more.
-Here he left this Noble <i>Britain</i>, and embarked himself for <i>Legorn,</i>
-being glad to have such opportunity and means to better his Experience by
-the view of <i>Italy;</i> and having passed <i>Tuskany,</i> and the Country of
-<i>Siena,</i> where he found his dear Friends, the two Honourable Brethren, the
-Lord <i>Willoughby,</i> and his Brother cruelly wounded, in a desperate fray,
-yet to their exceeding great Honour. Then to <i>Viterbo</i> and many other
-Cities he came to <i>Rome,</i> from where it was his chance to see Pope Clement
-the VIII. with many Cardinals, creep up the Holy Stairs, {MN} which they
-say, are those our Savior Christ went up to <i>Pontius Pilate,</i> where blood,
-falling from his Head, being pricked with his Crown of Thorns, the drops
-are marked with Nails of Steel, upon them none dare go but in that manner,
-saying so many <i>Ave-Maries</i> and <i>Pater-Nosters,</i> as is their Devotion, and
-to kiss the Nails of Steel: But on each side, is a pair of such like
-Stairs, upon which you may go, stand, or kneel, but divided from the Holy
-Stairs by two Walls: Right against them is a Chappel, where hangs a great
-Silver Lamp, which burneth continually; yet they say, the Oil neither
-increaseth nor diminisheth. A little distant is the ancient Church of
-Saint <i>John de Lateran,</i> where he saw him say Mass, which commonly he doth
-upon some Friday once a Month. Having saluted Father <i>Parsons,</i> that
-famous <i>English</i> Jesuit, and satisfied himself with the Rarities of
-<i>Rome,</i> he went down the River of <i>Tiber</i> to <i>Civita Vechia,</i> where he
-embarked himself, to satisfie his Eye with the fair City of <i>Naples,</i> and
-her Kingdoms Nobility; returning by <i>Capua, Rome</i> and <i>Siena,</i> he passed
-by that admired City of <i>Florence,</i> the Cities and Countreys of <i>Bolonia,
-Ferrara, Mantua, Padua</i> and <i>Venice,</i> whose Gulf he passed from <i>Malamoco</i>
-and the <i>Adriatic</i> Sea for <i>Ragouza,</i> spending some time to see that
-barren, broken Coast of <i>Albania</i> and <i>Dalmatia,</i> to <i>Capo de Istria,</i>
-Travelling the main of poor <i>Sclavonia</i> by <i>Lubbiano,</i> till he came to
-<i>Grates</i> in <i>Styria,</i> the Seat of <i>Ferdinando,</i> Arch-duke of <i>Austria,</i>
-now Emperour of <i>Almania:</i> where he met an <i>English</i> Man, and an <i>Irish</i>
-Jesuit, who acquainted him with many brave Gentlemen of good Quality,
-especially with the Lord <i>Ebersbaught,</i> with whom, trying such
-Conclusions, as he projected to undertake, preferred him to Baron
-<i>Kisell,</i> General of the Artillery, and he to a worthy Colonel, the Earl
-of <i>Meldritch,</i> with whom, going to <i>Vienna</i> in <i>Austria,</i> under whose
-Regiment, in what Service, and how he spent his time, this ensuing
-Discourse will declare.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The Popes holy stairs brought from</i> Jerusalem, <i>whereon (they say)
- Christ went up to</i> Pontius Pilate.</p>
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. IV.</h3>
-<br>
-
-<p class="cchap"> <i>The Siege of</i> Olumpagh; <i>An excellent Stratagem by</i> Smith; <i>Another<br>
- not much worse.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">After</span> the loss of <i>Caniza,</i> the <i>Turks</i> with Twenty thousand besieged the
-strong Town of <i>Olumpagh</i> so straitly, as they were cut off from all
-intelligence and hope of succour; till <i>John Smith,</i> this <i>English</i>
-Gentleman, acquainted Baron <i>Kisell,</i> General of the Arch-dukes Artillery,
-he had taught the Governour, his worthy Friend, such a Rule, that he would
-undertake to make him know any thing he intended, and have his answer,
-would, they bring him but to some place where he might make the Flame of a
-Torch seen to the Town; <i>Kisell</i> inflamed with this strange Invention,
-<i>Smith</i> made it so plain, that forthwith he gave him Guides, who in the
-dark Night brought him to a Mountain, where he shewed three Torches
-equidistant from the other, which plainly appearing to the Town, the
-Governour presently apprehended, and answered again with three Other fires
-in like manner; each knowing the others being and intent; <i>Smith,</i> though
-distant seven Miles, signified to him these Words: <i>On Thursday at Night I
-will charge on the East, at the Alarum, salley you;</i> Ebersbaught answered,
-<i>he would,</i> and thus it was done: First he writ his Message as brief, you
-see, as could be, then divided the Alphabet into two parts thus;</p>
-
-<p class="list"> <i>A. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. k. l.</i>
- <i>I.&nbsp;I.&nbsp;I. I.&nbsp;&nbsp;I.&nbsp;I.&nbsp;I.&nbsp;&nbsp;I.&nbsp;&nbsp;I.&nbsp;I. I.</i>
-
- <i>m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. v. w. x.</i>
- <i>2.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;2. 2. 2.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;2. 2.</i>
- <i>y. z.</i>
- <i>2. 2.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The siege of</i> Olumpagh.</p>
-
-
-<p>{M-1} The first part from <i>A.</i> to <i>L.</i> is signified by shewing and hiding
-one link, so oft as there is Letters from <i>A.</i> to that Letter you mean;
-the other part from <i>M.</i> to <i>Z.</i> is mentioned by two Lights in like
-manner. The end of a Word is signified by shewing of three Lights, ever
-staying your Light at that Letter you mean, till the other may write it in
-a Paper, and answer by his signal, which is one Light, it is done,
-beginning to count the Letters by the Lights, every time from <i>A.</i> to <i>M.</i>
-by this means also the other returned his answer, whereby each did
-understand other. The Guides all this time having well viewed the Camp,
-returned to <i>Kisel,</i> who, doubting of his power, being but Ten thousand,
-was animated by the Guides, how the <i>Turks</i> were so divided by the River
-in two parts, they could not easily second each other. {MN-2} To which
-<i>Smith</i> added this conclusion; that two or three thousand pieces of Match
-fastened to divers small Lines of an hundred Fathom in length, being armed
-with Powder, might all be fired and stretched at an instant before the
-Alarum, upon the Plain, of <i>Hysnaburg,</i> supported by two Staves, at each
-lines end, in that manner would seem like so many Musketteers; which was
-put in Practice; and being discovered by the <i>Turks,</i> they prepared to
-encounter these false fires, thinking there had been some great Army:
-whilst <i>Kisel</i> with his Ten thousand being entred the <i>Turks</i> quarters,
-who ran up and down as Men amazed, it was not long ere <i>Ebersbaught</i> was
-pell-mell with them in their Trenches; in which distracted confusion, a
-third part of the Turks that besieged that side towards <i>Knowsbruck,</i> were
-slain; many of the rest drowned, but all fled. The other part of the Army
-was so busied to resist the false fires, that <i>Kisel</i> before the Morning
-put two thousand good Soldiers in the Town, and with small loss was
-retired; the Garrison was well relieved with what they found in the
-<i>Turks</i> Quarters, which caused the <i>Turks</i> to raise their Siege and return
-to <i>Caniza:</i> and <i>Kisel</i> with much honour was received at <i>Kerment,</i> and
-occasioned the Author a good Reward and Preferment, to be Captain of Two
-hundred and fifty Horse-men, under the conduct of Colonel <i>Voldo,</i> Earl of
-<i>Meldritch.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>An excellent Stratagem.</i></p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} <i>Another stratagem.</i></p>
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. V.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="chap"> <i>The Siege of</i> Stoll-weissenburg; <i>The effects of</i> Smith's <i>Fire-works;
- A worthy Exploit of Earl</i> Rosworme; <i>Earl</i> Meldritch <i>takes the</i>
- Bashaw <i>Prisoner.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">A General</span> rumour of a general Peace, now spred it self over all the face
-of those tormented Countries: but the <i>Turk</i> intended no such matter, but
-levied Soldiers from all Parts he could. The Emperour also, by the
-assistance of the <i>Christian</i> Princes, provided three Armies, the one led
-by the Arch-duke <i>Matthias,</i> the Emperour's Brother, and his Lieutenant
-Duke <i>Merceur</i> to defend Low <i>Hungary;</i> the second, by <i>Ferdinando</i> the
-Arch-duke of <i>Styria,</i> and the Duke of <i>Mantua</i> his Lieutenant to regain
-<i>Caniza;</i> the third by <i>Gonzago,</i> Governour of High <i>Hungary,</i> to joyn
-with <i>Georgio Buson</i> to make an absolute conquest of <i>Transilvania.</i></p>
-
-<p>Duke <i>Merceur</i> with an Army or Thirty thousand, whereof near Ten thousand
-were <i>French,</i> besieged <i>Stoll-weissenburg,</i> otherwise called <i>Alba
-Regalis,</i> a place so strong by Art and Nature, that it was thought
-impregnable. At his first coming, The <i>Turks</i> sallied upon the <i>German</i>
-Quarter, slew near five hundred, and returned before they were thought on.
-The next Night in like manner, they did near as much to the <i>Bemers,</i> and
-<i>Hungarians;</i> of which, Fortune still presuming, thinking to have found
-the <i>French</i> quarter as careless, Eight or Nine hundred of them were cut
-in pieces and taken Prisoners. In this Encounter Monsieur <i>Grandvile,</i>
-a brave <i>French</i> Colonel, received seven or eight cruel Wounds, yet
-followed the Enemy to the Ports; he came off alive, but within three or
-four days died.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The siege of</i> Alba Regalis.</p>
-
-
-<p>Earl <i>Moldritch,</i> by the Information of of three or four <i>Christians,</i>
-(escaped out of the Town) upon every Alarum, where there was greatest
-Assemblies and throng of People, {MN} caused Captain <i>Smith</i> to put in
-practice his fiery Dragons, he had demonstrated unto him, and the Earl
-<i>Von Sulch</i> at <i>Comora</i> which he thus performed: Having prepared forty or
-fifty round-bellied Earthen Pots, and filled them with hand Gun powder,
-then covered them with Pitch, mingled with Brimstone and Turpentine; and
-quartering as many Musket-bullets, that hung together but only at the
-Center of the division, stuck them round in the mixture about the Pots,
-and covered them again with the same mixture, over that a strong
-Searcloth, then over all, a good thickness of Towze-match, well tempered
-with Oyl of Lin-seed, Camphire, and Powder of Brimstone, these he fitly
-placed in Slings, graduated so near as they could to the places of these
-Assemblies. At mid-night upon the Alarum, it was a fearful sight to see
-the short flaming course of their flight in the Air, but presently after
-their fall, the lamentable noise of the miserable slaughtered <i>Turks</i> was
-most wonderful to hear: Besides, they had fired that Suburb at the Port of
-<i>Buda</i> in two or three places, which so troubled the <i>Turks</i> to quench,
-that had there been any means to have assaulted them, they could hardly
-have resisted the fire, and their Enemies. The Earl <i>Rosworme,</i> contrary
-to the opinion of all Men, would needs undertake to find means to surprize
-the Segeth and Suburb of the City, strongly defended by a muddy Lake,
-which was thought unpassable.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The effect of good fireworks.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>The Duke having planted his Ordnance, battered the other side, {MN-1}
-whilst <i>Rosworme</i> in the dark Night, with every Man a bundle of Sedge and
-Bavins still thrown before them, so laded up the Lake, as they surprised
-that unregarded Suburb before they were discovered: Upon which unexpected
-Alarum, the <i>Turks</i> fled into the City, and the other Suburb not knowing
-the matter, got into the City also, leaving their Suburb for the Duke,
-who, with no great resistance, took it, with many Pieces of Ordnance; the
-City, being of no such strength as the Suburbs, with their own Ordnance
-was so battered, that it was taken by force, with such a merciless
-Execution, as was most pitiful to behold. {MN-2} The <i>Bashaw</i>
-notwithstanding, drew together a Party of Five hundred before his own
-Palace, where he intended to die; but seeing most of his Men slain before
-him, by the valiant Captain, Earl <i>Meldritch,</i> who took him Prisoner with
-his own hands; and with the hazard of himself saved him from the fury of
-other Troops, that did pull down his Palace, and would have rent him in
-pieces, had he not been thus preserved. The Duke thought his Victory much
-honoured with such a Prisoner; took order, he should be used like a
-Prince, and with all expedition gave charge presently to repair the
-Breaches, and the Ruins of this famous City, that had been in the
-possession of the <i>Turks</i> near threescore years.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>A worthy Exploit of Earl</i> Rosworme.</p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} <i>Earl</i> Meldritch <i>takes the</i> Bashaw <i>prisoner.</i></p>
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. VI.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="chap"> <i>A brave Encounter of the</i> Turks <i>Army with the</i> Christians; <i>Duke</i> Merceur
- <i>overthroweth</i> Assan Bashaw; <i>He divides the</i> Christian <i>Army; His
- Nobleness and Death.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps"><i>Mahomet</i></span> the Great <i>Turk</i>, during the Siege, had raised an Army of Sixty
-thousand Men to have relieved it; but hearing it was lost, he sent <i>Assan
-Bashaw,</i> General of his Army, the <i>Bashaw</i> of <i>Buda, Bashaw Amaroz,</i> to
-see if it were possible to regain it; The Duke understanding there could
-be no great experience in such a new levied Army as <i>Assan</i> had, having
-put a strong Garrison into it, and with the brave Colonel <i>Rosworme,
-Culnits, Meldritch,</i> the <i>Rhine Grave, Vahan,</i> and many others, with
-Twenty thousand good Soldiers, set forward to meet the <i>Turk,</i> in the
-Plains of <i>Girk.</i> {MN-1} Those two Armies encountred as they marched,
-where began a hot and bloody Skirmish betwixt them, Regiment against
-Regiment, as they came in order, till the night parted them: Here Earl
-<i>Meldritch</i> was so invironed among those half circular Regiments of
-<i>Turks,</i> they supposed him their Prisoner, and his Regiment lost; but his
-two most couragious Friends, <i>Vahan</i> and <i>Culnits,</i> made such a Passage
-amongst them, that it was a terror to see how Horse and Man lay sprawling
-and tumbling, some one way, some another on the Ground. The Earl there at
-that time made his valour shine more bright than his Armour, which seemed
-then painted with <i>Turkish</i> Blood; he slew the brave <i>Zanzack Bugola,</i> and
-made his Passage to his Friends, but near half his Regiment was slain.
-Captain <i>Smith</i> had his Horse slain under him, and himself sore wounded;
-but he was not long unmounted, for there was choice enough of Horses, that
-wanted Masters. The <i>Turk,</i> thinking the Victory sure against the Duke,
-whose Army, by the Siege and the Garrison, he had left behind him, was
-much weakened, would not be content with one, but he would have all; and
-lest the Duke should return to <i>Alba Regalis,</i> he sent that Night Twenty
-thousand to besiege the City, assuring them, he would keep the Duke or any
-other from relieving them. Two or three days they lay each by other,
-entrenching themselves; the <i>Turks</i> daring the Duke daily to a sett
-Battle, {MN-2} who at length drew out his Army, led by the <i>Rhine-Grave,
-Culnits,</i> and <i>Meldritch</i> who upon their first Encounter, charged with
-that resolute and valiant courage, as disordered not only the foremost
-Squadrons of the <i>Turks,</i> but enforced all the whole Army to retire to the
-Camp, with the loss of five or six thousand, with the <i>Bashaw</i> of <i>Buda,</i>
-and four or five <i>Zanzacks,</i> with divers other great Commanders, Two
-hundred Prisoners, and nine pieces of Ordnance. At that instant appeared,
-as it were, another Army coming out of a Valley over a plain Hill, that
-caused the Duke at that time to be contented, and to retire to his
-Trenches; which gave time to <i>Assan,</i> to reorder his disordered Squadrons:
-Here they lay nine or ten days, and more Supplies repaired to them,
-expecting to try the event in a sett Battle; but the Soldiers on both
-Parties, by reason of their great Wants, and approach of Winter, grew so
-discontented, that they were ready of themselves to break up the Leager;
-the <i>Bashaw</i> retiring himself to <i>Buda,</i> had some of the Rear Troops cut
-off. <i>Amaroz Bashaw</i> hearing of this, found such bad welcome at <i>Alba
-Regalis,</i> and the Town so strongly repaired with so brave a Garrison,
-raised his Siege, and retired to <i>Zigetum.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>A brave encounter of the</i> Turks <i>Army with the</i> Christians.</p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} <i>Duke</i> Merceur <i>overthroweth</i> Assan Bassa.</p>
-
-<p>
-The Duke understanding, that the Archduke <i>Ferdinando,</i> had so resolutely
-besieged <i>Caniza</i> as what by the loss of <i>Alba Regalis,</i> and the <i>Turks</i>
-retreat to <i>Buda,</i> being void of hope of any relief, doubted not, but it
-would become again the <i>Christians.</i> {MN-1}To the furtherance whereof, the
-Duke divided his Army into three parts. The Earl of <i>Rosworme</i> went with
-Seven thousand to <i>Caniza,</i> the Earl of <i>Meldritch</i> with Six thousand he
-sent to assist <i>Georgio Busca</i> against the <i>Transilvanians,</i> the rest went
-with himself to the Garrisons of <i>Strigonium</i> and <i>Komara;</i> having thus
-worthily behaved himself, he arrived at <i>Vienne,</i> where the Arch-dukes and
-the Nobility with as much honour received him, as if he had conquered all
-Hungaria; his very Picture they esteemed would make them fortunate, which
-thousands kept as curiously as a precious relique. To requite this honour,
-preparing himself to return into <i>France,</i> to raise new Forces against the
-next year, with the two Arch-dukes, <i>Matthias</i> and <i>Maximilian,</i> and
-divers others of the Nobility, was with great Magnificence conducted to
-<i>Nurenburg,</i> there by them royally feasted, (how it chanced is not known;)
-{MN-2} but the next Morning he was found dead, and his Brother in Law died
-two days after; whose hearts, after this great Triumph, with much sorrow
-were carried into <i>France.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>Duke</i> Merceur <i>divideth his army.</i></p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} <i>Duke</i> Merceur <i>and his brother in law die suddenly.</i></p>
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. VII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="chap"> <i>The unhappy Siege of</i> Caniza; <i>Earl</i> Meldritch <i>serveth Prince</i>
- Sigismundus; <i>Prince</i> Moyses <i>besiegeth</i> Regall; Smith's <i>three single
- Combats; His Patent from</i> Sigismundus, <i>and Reward.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">The Worthy</span> Lord <i>Rosworme</i> had not worse Journey to the miserable
-Siege of <i>Caniza,</i> (whereby the extremity of an extraordinary continuing
-Tempest of Hail, Wind, Frost and Snow, insomuch that the <i>Christians</i> were
-forced to leave their Tents and Artillery, and what they had; it being so
-cold, that three or four hundred of them were frozen to Death in a Night,
-and two or three thousand lost in that miserable flight in the Snowy
-Tempest, though they did know no Enemy at all to follow them) than the
-Noble Earl of <i>Meldritch</i> had to <i>Transilvania,</i> where hearing of the
-Death of <i>Michael,</i> and the brave Duke <i>Merceur,</i> and knowing the Policy
-of <i>Busca,</i> and the Prince his Royalty, being now beyond all belief of
-Men, in Possession of the best part of <i>Transilvania,</i> perswaded his
-Troops, in so honest a Cause, to assist the Prince against the <i>Turk,</i>
-rather than <i>Busca</i> against the Prince.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The unhappy siege of</i> Caniza.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The Soldiers being worn out with those hard Pays and Travels, upon
-hope to have free liberty to make booty upon what they could get
-Possession of from the <i>Turks,</i> were easily perswaded to follow him
-whithersoever. Now this Noble Earl was a <i>Transilvanian</i> born, and his
-Fathers Country yet Inhabited by the <i>Turks;</i> for <i>Transilvania</i> was yet
-in three Divisions, though the Prince had the Hearts both of Country and
-People; yet the Frontiers had a Garrison amongst the unpassable Mountains,
-some for the Emperour, some for the Prince, and some for the <i>Turk:</i> To
-regain which small Estate, he desired leave of the Prince to try his
-Fortunes, and to make use of that experience, the time of twenty years had
-taught him in the Emperours service, promising to spend the rest of his
-days, for his Countrys defence in his Excellencies Service. The Prince
-glad of so brave a Commander, and so many expert and ancient Soldiers,
-made him Camp Master of his Army, gave him all necessary relief for his
-Troops, and what freedom they desired to plunder the <i>Turks.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>Earl</i> Meldritch <i>serveth with Prince</i> Sigismundus.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} The Earl having made many Incursions into the Land of <i>Zarkan,</i>
-among those Rocky Mountains, where were some <i>Turks,</i> some <i>Tartars,</i> but
-most <i>Bandittoes, Rennegadoes,</i> and such like, which sometimes he forced
-into the Plains of <i>Regall</i> where is a City, not only of Men and
-Fortifications, Strong of it self, but so environed with Mountains, that
-made the Passages so difficult, that in all these Wars, no attempt had
-been made upon it to any purpose: Having satisfied himself with the
-Situation, and the most convenient Passages to bring his Army into it: The
-Earth no sooner put on her green Habit, than the Earl overspread her with
-his armed Troops. To possess himself first of the most convenient Passage,
-which was a narrow Valley betwixt two high Mountains; he sent Colonel
-<i>Veltus</i> with his Regiment; dispersed in Companies to lie in <i>Ambuscado,</i>
-as he had directed them, and in the Morning to drive all the Cattel they
-could find before a Fort in that Passage, whom he supposed would sally,
-seeing but some small Party to recover their prey; which took such good
-success, that the Garrison was cut off by the <i>Ambuscado,</i> and <i>Veltus</i>
-seized on the Skonces, which were abandoned. <i>Meldritch</i> glad of so
-fortunate a beginning, it was six days ere he could with six thousand
-Pioneers make passage for his Ordnance: The <i>Turks</i> having such warning,
-strengthened the Town so with Men and Provision, that they made a scorn of
-so small a number as <i>Meldritch</i> brought with him before the City, which was
-but eight thousand. Before they had pitched their Tents, the <i>Turks</i>
-sallied in such abundance, as for an hour, they had rather a bloody Battel
-than a Skirmish, but with the loss of near Fifteen hundred on both sides.
-The Turks were chased till the Cities Ordnance caused the Earl to retire.
-{M-2} The next day <i>Zachel Moyses,</i> General of the Army, pitched also his
-Tents with nine thousand Foot and Horse, and six and twenty Pieces of
-Ordnance; but in regard of the Situation of this strong Fortress, they did
-neither fear them nor hurt them, being upon the point of a fair
-Promontory, environed on the one side within half a Mile with an un-useful
-Mountain, and on the other side with a fair Plain, where the <i>Christians</i>
-encamped, but so commanded by their Ordnance, they spent near a Month in
-entrenching themselves, and raising their Mounts to plant their Batteries;
-which slow proceedings the <i>Turks</i> oft derided, that their Ordnance were
-at pawn, and how they grew fat for want of Exercise, and fearing lest they
-should depart ere they could assault their City, sent this Challenge to
-any Captain in the Army.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>Earl</i> Meldritch <i>maketh incursions to discover</i> Regall.</p>
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-2} Moyses <i>Besiegeth</i> Regal.</p>
-
-
-<p>That to delight the Ladies, who did long to see some Court-like pastime,
-the Lord <i>Turbashaw</i> did defie any Captain, that had the command of a
-Company, who durst Combate with him for his Head: The matter being
-discussed, it was accepted, but so many Questions grew for the
-undertaking, it was decided by Lots, which fell upon Captain <i>Smith,</i>
-before spoken of.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} Truce being made for that time, the Rampires all beset with fair
-Dames, and Men in Arms, the <i>Christians</i> in <i>Battalia; Turbashaw</i> with a
-noise of Haut-boys entred the Field well mounted and armed; on his
-shoulders were fixed a pair of great Wings, compacted of Eagles Feathers,
-within a ridge of Silver, richly garnished with Gold and precious Stones,
-a <i>Janizary</i> before him, bearing his Lance, on each side another leading
-his Horse; where long he stayed not, ere <i>Smith</i> with a noise of Trumpets,
-only a Page bearing his Lance, passing by him with a courteous Salute,
-took his Ground with such good success, that at the sound of the charge,
-he passed the <i>Turk</i> thorow the sight of his Beaver, Face, Head and all,
-that he fell dead to the Ground, where alighting and unbracing his Helmet,
-cut off his Head, and the <i>Turks</i> took his Body; and so returned without
-any hurt at all. The Head he presented to the Lord <i>Moyses,</i> the General,
-who kindly accepted it, and with joy to the whole Army he was generally
-welcomed.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>Three single combates.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>The Death of this Captain so swelled in the Heart of one <i>Grualgo,</i> his
-vowed Friend, as rather inraged with madness than choler, he directed a
-particular challenge to the Conqueror, to regain his Friends Head, or Idle
-his own, with his Horse and Armour for advantage, which according to his
-desire, was the next day undertaken: as before upon the sound of the
-Trumpets, their Lances flew in pieces upon a clear Passage, but the
-<i>Turk,</i> was near unhorsed. Their Pistols was the next, which marked
-<i>Smith</i> upon the Placard; but the next shot the <i>Turk,</i> was so Wounded in
-the left Arm, that being not able to rule his Horse, and defend himself,
-he was thrown to the ground, and so bruised with the fall, that he lost
-his Head, as his Friend before him, with his Horse and Armour; but his
-Body, and his rich Apparel were sent back to the Town.</p>
-
-<p>Every day the <i>Turks</i> made some Sallies, but few Skirmishes would they
-endure to any purpose. Our Works and Approaches being not yet advanced to
-that heighth and effect, which was of necessity to be performed; to delude
-time, <i>Smith</i> with so many incontradictible perswading Reasons, obtained
-leave, that the Ladies might know he was not so much enamoured of their
-Servants Heads; but if any <i>Turk,</i> of their rank would come to the place
-of Combate to redeem them, should have his also upon the like conditions,
-if he could win it.</p>
-
-<p>The challenge presently was accepted by <i>Bonny Mulgro.</i> The next day, both
-the Champions entring the Field as before, each discharging their Pistol,
-having no Lances, but such martial Weapons as the Defendant appointed, no
-hurt was done; their Battle-Axes was the next, whose piercing Bills made
-sometime the one, sometime the other to have scarce sense to keep their
-Saddles, specially the <i>Christian</i> received such a blow, that he lost his
-Battle axe, and failed not much to have fallen after it, whereat the
-supposed conquering <i>Turk,</i> had a great shout from the Rampires. The
-<i>Turk,</i> prosecuted his advantage to the uttermost of his power; yet the
-other, what by the readiness of his Horse, and his judgement and dexterity
-in such a business, beyond all Mens expectation, by God's assistance, not
-only avoided the <i>Turks</i> violence but having drawn his Faulchion, pierced
-the <i>Turk,</i> so under the Culets, thorow back and body, that altho' he
-alighted from his Horse, he stood not long ere he lost his Head, as the
-rest had done.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. VIII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="chap"> Georgio Busca <i>an</i> Albane, <i>his ingratitude to Prince</i> Sigismundus;
- <i>Prince</i> Moyses <i>his Lieutenant, is overthrown by</i> Busca, <i>General for
- the Emperour</i> Rodulphus; Sigismundus <i>yieldeth his Country to</i>
- Rodulphus; Busca <i>assisteth Prince</i> Rodol <i>in</i> Wallachia.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">This good</span> success gave such great encouragement to the whole Army, that
-with a Guard of six thousand, three spare Horses, before each a <i>Turks</i>
-Head upon a Lance, he was conducted to the Generals Pavilion with his
-Presents. Moyses received both him and them, with as much respect as the
-occasion deserved, embracing him in his Arms, gave him a fair Horse,
-richly furnished, a Scimitar and Belt worth Three hundred Ducats; and
-<i>Meldritch</i> made him Sergeant Major of his Regiment. But now to the Siege,
-having mounted six and twenty pieces of Ordnance, fifty or sixty Foot
-above the Plain, made them so plainly tell his meaning, that within
-fifteen days two Breaches were made, which the <i>Turks</i> as valiantly
-defended as Men could; that day was made a darksome Night, but by the
-light that proceeded from the murdering Muskets, and peace-making Canon,
-whilst their slothful Governour lay in a Castle on the top of a high
-Mountain, and like a Valiant Prince asketh what's the matter, when horror
-and death flood amazed each at other, to see who should prevail to make
-him victorious: {MN} <i>Moyses</i> commanding a general assault upon the
-sloping front of the high Promontory, where the Barons of <i>Budendorfe</i> and
-<i>Oberwin,</i> lost near half their Regiments, by Logs, Bags of Powder,
-and such like, tumbling down the Hill, they were to mount ere they could
-come to the breach; notwithstanding with an incredible courage, they
-advanced to the push of the Pike with the Defendants, that with the like
-courage repulsed, till the Earl <i>Meldritch, Becklefield</i> and <i>Zarvana,</i>
-with their fresh Regiments seconded them with that fury, that the <i>Turks</i>
-retired and fled into the Castle, from whence by a Flag of truce they
-desired composition. The Earl remembring his Fathers Death, battered it
-with all the Ordnance in the Town, and the next day took it: all he found
-could bear Arms, he put to the Sword, and set their Heads upon Stakes
-round about the Walls, in the same manner they had used the <i>Christians,</i>
-when they took it. <i>Moyses</i> having repaired the Rampires, and thrown down
-the Work in his Camp, he put in it a strong Garrison, though the pillage
-he had gotten in the Town was much, having been for a long time an
-impregnable den of Thieves; yet the loss of the Army so intermingled the
-sowre with the sweet, as forced <i>Moyses</i> to seek a farther revenge, that
-he sacked <i>Veratio, Solmos,</i> and <i>Kupronka,</i> and with two thousand
-Prisoners, most Women and Children, came to <i>Esenberg,</i> not far from the
-Princes Palace, where he there Encamped.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} Regal <i>assaulted and taken.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><i>Sigismundus</i> coming to view his Army, was presented with the Prisoners,
-and six and thirty Ensigns; where celebrating thanks to Almighty God in
-triumph of those Victories, he was made acquainted with the service
-<i>Smith</i> had done at <i>Olumpagh, Stoll-Weissenburgh</i> and <i>Regal;</i> for which,
-with great honour, he gave him three <i>Turks</i> Heads in a Shield for his
-Arms, by Patent, under his Hand and Seal, with an Oath ever to wear them
-in his Colours, his Picture in Gold, and three hundred Ducats yearly for a
-Pension.</p>
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<P class="image" style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/smitharms.jpg"style="max-width:100%; max-height:100%" alt="Smith's Arms"></P>
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-<p class="quote"><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Sigismundus Bathori,</span> <i>Dei Gratia, Dux</i> Transilvani&aelig;, Wallachi&aelig;, &amp;
-Vandalorum; <i>Comes</i> Anchard, Salford, Growenda; <i>Cunctis his literis
-significamus qui cas lecturi aut audituri sunt, concessam licentiam aut
-facultatem</i> Johanni Smith, <i>natione</i> Anglo <i>Generoso,</i> 250. <i>militum
-Capitaneo sub Illustrissani &amp; Gravissani</i> Henrici Volda, <i>Comitis de</i>
-Meldri, Salmari&aelig;, &amp; Peldoix <i>primario, ex</i> 1000 <i>equitibus</i> &amp; 1500.
-peditibus bello<i> Ungarico </i>conductione in Provincias supra scriptas sub
-Authoritate nostra: cui servituti omni laude, perpetuaq; memoria dignum
-pr&aelig;buit sese erga nos, ut virum strenuum pugnantem pro aris &amp; focis
-decet. Quare e favore nostro militario ipsum ordine condonavimus, &amp; in
-Sigillum illius tria<i> Turcica </i>Capita defignare &amp; deprimere concessimus,
-que ipso gladio suo ad Urbem<i> Regalem </i>in singulari pr&aelig;lio vicit,
-mactavit, atq; decollavit in<i> Transilvani&aelig; </i>Provincia: Sed fortuna cum
-variabilis ancepsq; sit idem forte fortuito in<i> Wallachi&aelig; </i>Provincia,
-Anno Domini<i> 1602. </i>die Mensis Novemberis<i> 18. </i>cum multis aliis etiam
-Nubilibus &amp; aliis quibusdam militibus captus est a Domino<i> Bascha </i>electo
-ex<i> Cambia </i>regionis<i> Tartari&aelig;, </i>onjus severitate adductus salutum quantem
-potuit qu&aelig;sivit, tantumque effecit, Deo omnipotente adjuvante, ut
-deliberavit se, &amp; ad suos Commilitones revertit; ex quibus ipsum
-liberavimus, &amp; h&aelig;c nobis restimonia habuit ut majori licentia frucretur
-qua dignus esset, jam tendet in patriam suam dulcissonam: Rogamus ergo
-omnes nostros charissunos, confinititmos, Duces, Principes, Comites,
-Barones, Gubernatores Urbium &amp; Navium in cadem Regione &amp; c&aelig;terarum
-Provinciarum in quibus ille refidere conatus fuerit ut idem permittatur
-Capitaneus libere sine obstaculo omni versari. H&aelig;c facientes pergratum
-nobis feceritis. Signatum<i> Lesprizia </i>in<i> Misnia </i>die Mensis<i> Decembris</i>
-9. <i>Anno Domini</i> 1603.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> <i>Cum Privilegio propri&aelig;, Majestatis.</i> <span style="font-variant:small-caps">Sigismundus Bathori.</span></p>
-
-
-<P class="image" style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/sigisseal.jpg"style="max-width:100%; max-height:100%" alt="Sigismundus' Seal"></P>
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="quote">Universis, &amp; singulis, cujuscunq; loci, status, gradut, ordinis, ac
-conditighis ad quos hos pr&aelig;sens scriptum pervenerit,<i> Gulielmus Segar,
-Eques auratus alias dictus Garterus Principalis Rex Armorum</i> Anglicorum,
-Salutum.<i> Sciatis, </i>quod Ego pr&aelig;dictus Garterus, notum, testatumque facio,
-quod Patentitem suprascriptum, cum manu propria pr&aelig;dicti Ducis<i>
-Transilvani&aelig; </i>Subsignatum, &amp; Sigillo suo affixum, Vidi: &amp; Copiam
-veram ejusdem (in perpetuam rei memoriam) transcripsi, &amp; recordavi in
-Archivis, &amp; Registris Officii Armorum. Datum<i> Londini 19. </i>die Augusti,
-Anno Domini<i> 1625. </i>Annoque Regni Domini nostri<i> CAROLI </i>Dei gratia Magn&aelig;<i>
-Britanni&aelig;, Franci&aelig;, &amp; Hibernix </i>Regis, Fidei Defendoris, &amp;c. Prime.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> <span style="font-variant:small-caps">Gulielmus Segar,</span> Garterus.</p>
-<br>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">Sigismundus Bathori,</span> by the Grace of God, Duke of <i>Transilvania,</i>
-<i>Wallachia,</i> and <i>Moldavia,</i> Earl of <i>Anchard, Salford</i> and <i>Growenda;</i> to
-whom this Writing may come or appear. Know that We have given Leave and
-Licence to <i>John Smith</i> an <i>English Gentleman,</i> Captain of 250 Soldiers,
-under the most Generous and Honourable <i>Henry Volda,</i> Earl of <i>Meldritch,
-Salmaria,</i> and <i>Peldoia,</i> Colonel of a thousand Horse, and fifteen hundred
-Foot, in the Wars of <i>Hungary,</i> and in the Provinces aforesaid under our
-Authority; whose Service doth deserve all praise, and perpetual Memory
-towards us, as a Man that did for God and his Country overcome his
-Enemies; Wherefore out of our Love and Favour, according to the Law of
-Arms, We have ordained, and given him in his Shield of Arms, the Figure
-and Description of three Turks Heads, which with his Sword before the Town
-of <i>Regal,</i> in single Combat he did overcome, kill, and cut off, in the
-Province of <i>Transilvania.</i> But Fortune, as she is very variable, so it
-chanced and happened to him in the Province of <i>Wallatchia,</i> in the year
-of Our Lord 1602. the 18th day of <i>November,</i> with many others, as well
-Noble Men as also divers other Soldiers, were taken Prisoners by the Lord
-<i>Bashaw</i> of <i>Cambia,</i> a Country of <i>Tartaria;</i> whose cruelty brought him
-such good Fortune, by the Help and Power of Almighty God, that he
-delivered himself, and returned again to his Company and fellow Soldiers,
-of whom We do discharge him, and this he hath in Witness thereof, being
-much more worthy of a better Reward; and now intends to return to his own
-sweet Country. We desire therefore all Our loving and kind Kinsmen, Dukes,
-Princes, Earls, Barons, Governours of Towns, Cities or Ships, in this
-Kingdom, or any other Provinces he shall come in, that you freely let pass
-this the aforesaid Captain, without any hindrance or molestation, and this
-doing, with all kindness, we are always ready to do the like for you.
-Sealed at <i>Lipswick</i> in <i>Misenland,</i> the ninth of <i>December,</i> in the year
-of our Lord, 1603.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>The same in</i> English.</p>
-
-
-<p class="list"> <i>With the proper privilege of his Majesty.</i> SIGISMUNDUS BATHORI</p>
-
-<p>To all and singular, in what Place, State, Degree, Order, or Condition
-whatsoever, to whom this present Writing shall come: I <i>William Segar,</i>
-Knight, otherwise Garter, and principal King of Arms of <i>England,</i> wish
-health. Know, that I the aforesaid Garter, do witness and approve, that
-this aforesaid Patent, I have seen, Signed, and Sealed, under the proper
-Hand and Seal Manuel of the said Duke of <i>Transilvania,</i> and a true Copy
-of the same, as a thing for perpetual memory, I have Subscribed and
-Recorded in the Register, and Office of the Heralds of Arms. Dated at
-<i>London,</i> the nineteenth day of <i>August,</i> in the year of Our Lord, 1625,
-and in the first year of our Sovereign Lord <i>Charles,</i> by the Grace of
-God, King of great <i>Britain, France,</i> and <i>Ireland,</i> Defender of the
-Faith, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> WILLIAM SEGAR.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. IX.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="chap">Sigismundus <i>sends Ambassadours unto the Emperour. The Conditions
- reassured. He yieldeth up all to</i> Busca, <i>and returneth to</i> Prague.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps"><i>Busca</i></span> having all this time been raising new Forces, was commanded from
-the Emperour again to invade <i>Transilvania,</i> which being one of the
-fruitfullest and strongest Countries in those Parts, was now rather a
-Desart, or the very Spectacle of Desolation; their Fruits and Fields
-overgrown with Weeds, their Churches and battered Palaces, and best
-Buildings, as for fear, hid with Moss and Ivy; being the very Bulwark and
-Rampire of a great part of <i>Europe,</i> most fit by all <i>Christians</i> to have
-been supplied and maintained, was thus brought to ruin by them, it most
-concerned to support it. But alas, what is it, when the Power of Majesty
-pampered in all delights of pleasant Vanity, neither knowing, nor
-considering the labour of the Plough-man, the hazard of the Merchant, the
-oppression of Statesmen, nor feeling the piercing Torments of broken
-Limbs, and inveterate Wounds, the toilsome Marches, the bad Lodging, the
-hungry Diet, and the extream misery that Soldiers endure to secure all
-those Estates, and yet by the spight of malicious detraction, starves for
-want of their Reward and Recompences, whilst the politique Courtier, that
-commonly aims more at his own Honours and Ends, than his Countries good,
-or his Princes Glory, Honour, or Security, as this worthy Prince too well
-could testifie. But the Emperor being certified how weak and desperate
-his Estate was, sent <i>Busca</i> again with a great Army, to try his fortune
-once more in <i>Transilvania.</i> The Prince considering how his Country and
-Subjects were consumed, the small means he had any longer to defend his
-Estate, both against the cruelty of the <i>Turk,</i> and the power of the
-Emperor, and the small care the <i>Polanders</i> had in Supplying him, as they
-had promised, sent to <i>Busca</i> to have truce, till Messengers might be
-sent to the Emperour for some better agreement, wherewith <i>Busca</i> was
-contented. The Ambassadors so prevailed, that the Emperour re-assured
-unto them the conditions he had promised the Prince at their confederacy
-for the Lands in <i>Silesia,</i> with 60000 Ducats presently in hand, and
-50000 Ducats yearly as a Pension. When this conclusion was known to
-<i>Moyses,</i> his Lieutenant then in the Field with the Army, that would do
-any thing, rather than come in subjection to the <i>Germans,</i> he encouraged
-his Soldiers, and without any more ado, marched to encounter <i>Busca,</i> {MN}
-whom he found much better provided than he expected; so that betwixt them,
-in six or seven hours, more than five or six thousand, on both sides, lay
-dead in the field. <i>Moyses</i> thus overthrown, fled to the <i>Turks</i> at
-<i>Temesware,</i> and his Scattered Troops, some one way, some another.
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Busca</i> in <i>Transilvania</i> overthroweth <i>Moyses.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>The Prince understanding of this so sudden and unexpected Accident, only
-accompanied with an hundred of his Gentry and Nobility, went into the
-Camp to <i>Busca,</i> to let him know how ignorant he was of his Lieutenants
-error, that he had done it without his direction or knowledge, freely
-offering to perform what was concluded by his Ambassadors with the
-Emperor; {MN} and so causing all his Garrisons to come out of their strong
-Holds, he delivered all to <i>Busca</i> for the Emperor, and so went to
-<i>Prague,</i> where he was honourably received, and established in his
-Possessions, as his Imperial Majesty had promised. <i>Busca</i> assembling all
-the Nobility, took their Oaths of Allegiance and Fidelity, and thus their
-Prince being gone <i>Transilvania</i> became again subject to the Emperor.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Sigismundis</i> yieldeth his country to <i>Busca.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Now after the Death of <i>Michael,</i> Vavoid of <i>Wallachia,</i> the <i>Turk</i>
-Sent one <i>Jeremy</i> to be their Vavoid or Prince; whose insulting Tyranny
-caused the People to take Arms against him, so that he was forced to flie
-into the Confines of <i>Moldavia;</i> and <i>Busca</i> in the behalf of the Emperor,
-proclaimed the Lord <i>Rodol</i> in his stead. But <i>Jeremy</i> having assembled
-an Army of forty thousand <i>Turks, Tartars,</i> and <i>Moldavians,</i> returned
-into <i>Wallachia. Rodol</i> not yet able to raise such a power, fled into
-<i>Transilvania</i> to <i>Busca,</i> his ancient Friend; who considering well of the
-matter, and how good it would be for his own Security, to have <i>Wallachia</i>
-subject to the Emperor, or at least such an Employment for the remainders
-of the old Regiments of <i>Sigismundus,</i> (of whose Greatness and true
-Affection he was very suspicious) sent them with <i>Rodol</i> to recover
-<i>Wallachia,</i> conducted by the Valiant Captains, the Earl <i>Meldritch,</i> Earl
-<i>Veltus,</i> Earl <i>Nederspolt,</i> Earl <i>Zarvana,</i> the Lord <i>Becklefield</i> the
-Lord <i>Budendorfe,</i> with their Regiments, and divers others of great rank
-and quality, the greatest Friends and Alliances the Prince had; who with
-Thirty thousand, marched along by the River <i>Altus,</i> to the Streights of
-<i>Rebrink,</i> where they entred <i>Wallachia,</i> encamping at <i>Raza; Jeremy</i>
-lying at <i>Argish,</i> drew his Army into his old Camp, in the Plains of
-<i>Peteske,</i> and with his best diligence fortified it, intending to defend
-himself, till more power came to him from the <i>Crim-Tartar.</i> Many small
-Parties that came to his Camp, <i>Rodol</i> cut off, and in the nights would
-cause their Heads to be thrown up and down before the Trenches. Seven of
-their Porters were taken, whom <i>Jeremy</i> commanded to be flayed quick, and
-after hung their Skins upon Poles, and their Carcases and Heads on Stakes
-by them.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Busca</i> assisteth <i>Rodol</i> in <i>Wallachia.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. X.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-<p class="cchap"> <i>The Battle of</i> Rottenton; <i>a pretty Stratagem of Fire-works by</i> Smith.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps"><i>Rodol</i></span> not knowing how to draw the Enemy to Battel, raised his Army,
-burning and spoiling all where he came, and returned again towards
-<i>Rebrink</i> in the night, as if he had fled upon the general rumour of the
-<i>Crim-Tartars</i> coming, which so inflamed the <i>Turks</i> of a happy Victory,
-they urged <i>Jeremy</i> against his Will to follow them. <i>Rodol</i> seeing his
-Plot fell out as he desired, so ordered the matter, that having regained
-the Streights, he put his Army in order, that had been near two days
-pursued with continual Skirmishes in his Rear, {MN-1} which now making
-Head against the Enemy, that followed with their whole Army in the best
-manner they could, was furiously charged with six thousand <i>Heydukes,
-Wallachians,</i> and <i>Moldavians,</i> led by three Colonels, <i>Oversall,
-Dubras</i>, and <i>Calab,</i> to entertain the time till the rest came up;
-<i>Veltus</i> and <i>Nederspolt</i> with their Regiments, entertained them with the
-like courage, till the Zanzacke <i>Hamesbeg,</i> with six thousand more, came
-with a fresh charge, which <i>Meldritch</i> and <i>Budendorfe,</i> rather like
-enraged Lions, than Men, so bravely encountred, as if in them only had
-consisted the Victory; <i>Meldritch's</i> Horse being slain under him, the
-<i>Turks</i> pressed what they could to have taken him Prisoner, but being
-remounted, it was thought with his own hand he slew the valiant Zanzacke,
-whereupon his Troops retiring, the two proud <i>Bashawes, Aladin,</i> and
-<i>Zizimmus,</i> brought up the front of the body of their Battle. <i>Veltus,</i>
-and <i>Nederspolt</i> having breathed, and joyning their Troops with
-<i>Becklefield</i> and <i>Zarvana,</i> with such an incredible courage, charged the
-left flank of <i>Zizimmus,</i> as put them all in disorder, where <i>Zizimmus</i>
-the <i>Bashaw</i> was taken Prisoner, but died presently upon his Wounds.
-<i>Jeremy</i> seeing now the main Battel of <i>Rodol</i> advance, being thus
-constrained, like a Valiant Prince in his front of the Vangard, by his
-example so bravely encouraged his Soldiers, that <i>Rodol</i> found no great
-assurance of the Victory. Thus being joyned in this bloody Massacre, that
-there was Scarce Ground to stand upon, but upon the dead Carcases, which
-in less than an hour, were So mingled, as if each Regiment had singled
-out other. The admired <i>Aladin</i> that day did leave behind him a glorious
-name for his Valour, whose Death, many of his Enemies did lament after the
-Victory, which at that instant fell to <i>Rodol.</i> It was reported, <i>Jeremy</i>
-was also slain; but it Was not so, but fled with the remainder of his Army
-to <i>Moldavia,</i> leaving five and twenty thousand dead in the Field, of both
-Armies. {MN-2} And thus <i>Rodol</i> was seated again in his Soveraignty, and
-<i>Wallachia</i> became subject to the Emperour.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} A battle betwixt <i>Rodol</i> and <i>Jeremy.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>Wallachia</i> subjected to the Emperour.</p>
-
-
-<p>But long he rested not to settle his new Estate, but there came News,
-that certain Regiments of stragling <i>Tartars,</i> were foraging those Parts
-towards <i>Moldavia. Meldritch</i> with thirteen thousand Men was sent against
-them, but when they heard it was the <i>Crim-Tartar,</i> and his two Sons,
-with an Army of thirty thousand; and <i>Jeremy,</i> that had escaped with
-fourteen or fifteen thousand, lay in ambush for them about <i>Langanaw,</i> he
-retired towards <i>Rottenton,</i> a strong Garrison for <i>Rodol;</i> but they were
-so invironed with these hellish numbers, they could make no great hast
-for skirmishing with their Scouts, Foragers, and small Parties that still
-encountred them. But one night amongst the rest, having made a passage
-through a Wood, with an incredible expedition, cutting Trees thwart each
-other to hinder their passage, in a thick Fogg, early in the Morning,
-unexpectedly they met two thousand loaded with Pillage, and two or three
-hundred Horse and Cattel; the most of them were slain and taken Prisoners,
-who told them where <i>Jeremy</i> lay in the passage, expecting the
-<i>Crim-Tartar</i> that was not far from him. <i>Meldritch</i> intending to make
-his passage by force, was advised of a pretty Stratagem, by the English
-<i>Smith,</i> which presently he thus accomplished; for having accommodated
-two or three hundred Trunks with wild-fire, upon the Heads of Lances, and
-charging the Enemy in the night, gave fire to the Trunks, which blazed
-forth such Flames and Sparkles, that it so amazed not only their Horses,
-but their Foot also; that by the means of this flaming Encounter, their
-own Horses turned Tails with such fury, as by their violence overthrew
-<i>Jeremy</i> and his Army, without any loss at all to speak of to <i>Meldritch.</i>
-But of this Victory, long they triumphed not; for being within three
-Leagues of <i>Rottenton,</i> the <i>Tartar,</i> with near forty thousand so beset
-them, that they must either fight, or be cut in pieces flying. Here
-<i>Busca,</i> and the Emperour had their desire; for the Sun no sooner
-displayed his Beams, than the <i>Tartar</i> his Colours; where at mid-day he
-stayed a while, to see the Passage of a tyrannical and treacherous
-imposture, till the Earth did blush with the blood of Honesty, that the
-Sun for shame did hide himself, from so monstrous sight of a cowardly
-Calamity. It was a most brave sight to see the Banners and Ensigns
-streaming in the Air, the glittering of Armour, the variety of Colours,
-the motion of Plumes, the forests of Lances, and the thickness of shorter
-Weapons, till the silent Expedition of the bloody blast from the murdering
-Ordnance, whose roaring Voice is not so soon heard, as felt by the aimed
-at Object, which made among them a most lamentable slaughter.</p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XI.</h3>
-<br>
-<p class="cchap"><i>The names of the</i> English <i>that were slain in the Battel of</i> Rottenton;
- <i>and how<br> Captain</i> Smith <i>was taken Prisoner, and sold for a Slave.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">In the valley</span> of <i>Veristhorne,</i> betwixt the River of <i>Altus,</i> and the
-Mountain of <i>Rottenton,</i> was this bloody Encounter, where the most of the
-dearest Friends of the noble Prince Sigismundus perished. <i>Meldritch</i>
-having ordered his Eleven thousand in the best manner he could, at the
-Foot of the Mountain upon his Flanks, and before his front, he had pitched
-sharp Stakes, their Heads hardned in the fire, and bent against the Enemy,
-as three Battalion of Pikes, amongst the which also, there was digged many
-small holes. {MN-1} Amongst those Stakes was ranged his foot-men, that
-upon the charge was to retire, as there was occasion. The <i>Tartar</i> having
-ordered his 40000 for his best advantage, appointed <i>Mustapha Bashaw</i> to
-begin the Battel, with a general Shout, all their Ensigns displaying,
-Drums beating, Trumpets and Haut-boys sounding. <i>Nederspolt</i> and <i>Mavazo</i>
-with their Regiments of Horse most valiantly encountred, and forced them
-to retire; the <i>Tartar Begoli</i> with his Squadrons, darkning the Skies with
-their flights of numberless Arrows, who was as bravely encountred by
-<i>Veltus</i> and <i>Oberwin,</i> which bloody slaughter continued more than an
-hour, till the matchless multitude of the <i>Tartars</i> so increased, that
-they retired within their Squadrons of Stakes, as was directed. The bloody
-<i>Tartar,</i> as scorning he should stay so long for the Victory, with his
-massie Troops prosecuted the Charge: But it was a wonder to see how Horse
-and Man came to the Ground among the Stakes, whose disordered Troops were
-there so mangled, that the <i>Christians</i> with a loud Shout cried
-<i>Victoria;</i> and with five or six field Pieces, planted upon the rising of
-the Mountain, did much hurt to the Enemy that still continued the Battel
-with that fury, that <i>Meldritch</i> seeing there was no possibility long to
-prevail, joyned his small Troops in one body, resolved directly to make
-his passage, or die in the conclusion; and thus in gross gave a general
-charge, and for more than half an hour, made his way plain before him,
-till the main Battle of the <i>Crim-Tartar,</i> with two Regiments of <i>Turks</i>
-and <i>Jaizaries</i> so overmatched them, that they were overthrown. The night
-approaching, the Earl with some thirteen or fourteen hundred Horse, swam
-the River, some were drowned, all the rest slain or taken Prisoners: And
-thus in this bloody Field, near 30000 lay, some Headless, Armless and
-Legless, all cut and mangled; where breathing their last, they gave this
-knowledge to the World, that for the lives of so few, the <i>Crim-Tartar</i>
-never paid dearer. {MN-2} But now the Countries of <i>Transilvania</i> and
-<i>Wallachia</i> (subjected to the Emperor) and <i>Sigismundus,</i> that brave
-Prince, his Subject and Pensioner, the most of his Nobility, brave
-Captains and Soldiers, became a prey to the cruel devouring <i>Turk:</i> where,
-had the Emperour been as ready to have assisted him, and those three
-Armies led by three such worthy Captains, as <i>Michael, Busca,</i> and Himself,
-and had those three Armies joyned together against the <i>Turk,</i> let all Men
-judge, how happy it might have been for all Christendom: and have either
-regained <i>Bulgaria,</i> or at least have beat him out of <i>Hungaria,</i> where he
-hath taken much more from the Emperour, than hath the Emperour from
-<i>Transilvania.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN-1} <i>the Battle of</i> Rottenton.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>Extracted out of a book, instituted, the Wars of</i> Hungaria,
- Wallachia, <i>and</i> Moldavia, <i>written by</i> Francisco Ferneza, <i>a learned
- Italian, the Princes Secretary, and translated by Mr.</i> Purchas.</p>
-
-
-<p>In this dismal Battel, where <i>Nederspolt, Veltus, Zarvana, Mavazo, Bavel,</i>
-and many other Earls, Barons, Colonels, Captains, brave Gentlemen, and
-Soldiers were slain, give me leave to remember the names of our own
-Country-men, {MN} with him in those Exploits, that as resolutely as the
-best in the defence of Christ and his Gospel, ended their days, as
-<i>Bakersfield, Hardwick, Thomas Milemer, Robert Mollineux, Thomas Bishop,
-Francis Compton, George Davison, Nicholas Williams</i> and one <i>John</i> a Scot,
-did what Men could do, and when they could do no more, left there their
-Bodies in Testimony of their minds; only Ensign <i>Charleton,</i> and Sergeant
-<i>Robinson</i> escaped: But <i>Smith,</i> among the slaughtered dead Bodies, and
-many a gasping Soul, with toil and Wounds lay groaning among the rest,
-till being found by the Pillagers, he was able to live, and perceiving by
-his Armour and Habit, his ransom might be better to them than his Death,
-they led him Prisoner with many others; well they used him till his Wounds
-were cured, and at <i>Axopolis</i> they were all sold for Slaves, like Beasts
-in a Market-place, where every Merchant, viewing their Limbs and Wounds,
-caused other Slaves to struggle with them, to try their strength, he fell
-to the share of <i>Bashaw Bogal,</i> who sent him forthwith to <i>Adrianopolis,</i>
-so for <i>Constantinople</i> to his fair Mistriss for a Slave. By twenty and
-twenty chained by the Necks, they marched in file to this great City,
-where they were delivered to their several Masters, and he to the young
-<i>Charaza Tragabigzanda.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The English Men in this Battel.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>How Captain</i> Smith <i>was sent Prisoner thorow the</i> Black <i>and</i>
- Dissabacca <i>Sea in</i><br> Tartaria; <i>the Description of those seas, and his
- usage.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">This Noble</span> Gentlewoman took sometime occasion to shew him to some Friends,
-or rather to speak with him, because she could speak Italian, would feign
-her self sick when she should go to the <i>Bannians,</i> or weep over the
-Graves, to know how <i>Bogal</i> took him Prisoner; and if he were as the
-<i>Bashaw</i> writ to her, a <i>Bohemian</i> Lord conquered by his Hand, as he had
-many others, which ere long he would present her, whose Ransomes should
-adorn her with the glory of his Conquests.</p>
-
-<p>But when she heard him protest he knew no such matter, nor ever saw
-<i>Bogal,</i> till he bought him at <i>Axopolis,</i> and that he was an
-<i>English-man,</i> only by his Adventures made a Captain in those Countries.
-To try the truth, she found means to find out many who could speak
-<i>English, French, Dutch,</i> and <i>Italian,</i> to whom relating most part of
-these former Passages she thought necessary, which they so honestly
-reported to her, she took (as it seemed) much compassion on him; but having
-no use for him, lest her Mother should sell him, she sent him to her
-Brother, the <i>Timor Bashaw</i> of <i>Nalbrits,</i> In the Country of <i>Cambia,</i> a
-Province in <i>Tartaria.</i></p>
-
-<p>{MN-1} Here now let us remember his passing, in this speculative course
-from <i>Constantinople</i> by <i>Sander, Screw, Panassa, Musa, Lastilla,</i> to
-<i>Varna,</i> an ancient City upon the <i>Black Sea.</i> In all which Journey,
-having little more liberty, than his eyes judgment, since his Captivity,
-he might see the Towns with their short Towers, and a most plain, fertile,
-and delicate Country, especially that most admired place of <i>Greece,</i> now
-called <i>Romania,</i> but from <i>Varna,</i> nothing but the <i>Black Sea</i> Water,
-till he came to the two Capes of <i>Taur</i> and <i>Pergilos,</i> where he passed
-the Streight of <i>Niger,</i> which (as he conjectured) is some ten Leagues
-long, and three broad, betwixt two Low-lands, the Channel is deep, {MN-2}
-but at the entrance of the Sea <i>Dissabacca,</i> there are many great
-Osie-shaulds, and many great black Rocks, which the <i>Turks</i> said were
-Trees, Weeds, and Mud, thrown from the In-land Countries, by the
-Inundations and violence of the Current, and cast there by the Eddy. They
-Sailed by many low Isles, and saw many more of those muddy Rocks, and
-nothing else, but salt Water, till they came betwixt <i>Sufax</i> and
-<i>Curuske,</i> only two white Towns at the entrance of the River <i>Bruapo</i>
-appeared: In six or seven days Sail, he saw four or five seeming strong
-Castles of Stone, with flat tops and Battlements about them, but arriving
-at <i>Cambia,</i> he was (according to their custom) well used. The River was
-there more than half a Mile broad. The Castle was of a large
-Circumference, fourteen or fifteen foot thick, in the Foundation some six
-foot from the Wall, is a <i>Pallizado,</i> and then a Ditch of about forty foot
-broad full of Water. On the West side of it, is a Town, all of low flat
-Houses, which as he conceived, could be of no great strength, yet it keeps
-all them barbarous Countreys about it in admiration and subjection. After
-he had stayed there three days; it was two days more before his Guides
-brought him to <i>Nalbrits,</i> where the <i>Tymor</i> was then resident, in a great
-vast Stone Castle, with many great Courts about it, invironed with high
-Stone Walls, where was quartered their Arms, when they first subjected
-those Countries, which only live to labour for those Tyrannical <i>Turks.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>How he was sent into</i> Tartaria.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The Description of the</i> Dissabacca <i>Sea.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} To her unkind Brother, this kind Lady writ so much for his good
-usage, that he half expected, as much as she intended; for she told him,
-he should there but sojourn to learn the Language, and what it was to be a
-<i>Turk,</i> till time made her Master of her self. But the <i>Tymor,</i> her
-Brother, diverted all this to the worst of Cruelty; for within an hour
-after his arrival, he caused his <i>Drubman</i> to strip him naked, and shave
-his Head and Beard so bare as his Hand, a great Ring of Iron, with a long
-stalk bowed like a Sickle, revitted about his Neck, and a Coat made of
-<i>Ulgries</i> Hair, guarded about with a piece of an undrest Skin. There were
-many more Christian Slaves, and near an hundred <i>Forsados</i> of <i>Turks</i> and
-<i>Moors,</i> and he being the last, was slave of Slaves to them all. Among
-these slavish Fortunes, there was no great choice; for the best was so
-bad, a Dog could hardly have lived to endure, and yet for all their pains
-and labours, no more regarded than a Beast.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} Smith's <i>usage in</i> Tartaria.</p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XIII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The</i> Turks <i>diet; the Slaves diet; the attire of the</i> Tartars; <i>and
- manner of<br> Wars and Religions, &amp;c.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">The <i>Tymor</i></span> and his Friends fed upon Pillaw, which is, boiled Rice
-and Garnances with little bits of Mutton or Buckones, which is Roasted
-pieces of Horse, Bull, Ulgrie, or any Beasts. Samboyses and Muselbit are
-great Dainties, and yet but round Pies, full of all sorts of Flesh, they
-can get chopped with variety of Herbs. Their best Drink is Coffee, of a
-grain they call <i>Coava,</i> boiled with Water; and <i>Sherbeck,</i> which is only
-Honey and Water; Mares Milk, or the Milk of any Beast, they hold
-restorative: but all the Commonalty drink pure Water. {MN-2} Their Bread
-is made of this <i>Coava,</i> which is a kind of black Wheat, and Cuskus a
-small white Seed, like <i>Millia</i> in <i>Biskay:</i> But our common Victuals, the
-entrails of Horse and Ulgries; of this cut in small pieces, they will fill
-a great Cauldron, and being boiled with <i>Cuskus,</i> and put in great Bowls
-in the form of Chaffing-dishes, they sit round about it on the Ground,
-after they have raked it thorow, so oft as they please with their foul
-Fists, the remainder was for the <i>Christian</i> Slaves. Some of this Broth,
-they would temper with <i>Cuskus</i> pounded, and putting the Fire off from the
-Hearth, pour there a Bowl full, then cover it with Coals till it be baked,
-which stewed with the remainder of the Broth, and some small pieces of
-Flesh, was an extraordinary Dainty.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The</i> Tymor's <i>Diet of</i> Cambia, <i>is as the</i> Turks.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The Slaves Diet.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The better sort are attired like <i>Turks,</i> but the plain <i>Tartar</i> hath
-a black Sheeps-skin over his back, and two of the Legs tied about his
-Neck; the other two about his middle, with another over his Belly, and the
-Legs tied in like manner behind him: Then two more, made like a pair of
-Bases, serveth him for Breeches; with a little close Cap to his Skull of
-black Felt, and they use exceeding much of this Felt for Carpets, for
-Bedding, for Coats, and Idols. Their Houses are much worse than your
-<i>Irish,</i> but the In-land Countries have none but Carts and Tents, which
-they ever remove from Countrey to Countrey, as they see occasion, driving
-with them infinite Troops of black Sheep, Cattel and Ulgries, eating all
-up before them as they go.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The attire of those</i> Tartars.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} For the <i>Tartars</i> of <i>Nagi,</i> they have neither Town, nor House, Corn,
-nor Drink, but Flesh and Milk. The Milk they keep in great Skins like
-<i>Burracho's,</i> which though it be never so sower, it agreeth well with
-their strong Stomachs. They live all in <i>Hordias,</i> as doth the
-<i>Crim-Tartars,</i> three or four hundred in a Company, in great Carts fifteen
-or sixteen foot broad, which are covered with small Rods, wattled together
-in the form of a Bird's Nest, turned upwards, and with the Ashes of Bones,
-temper'd with Oil, Camels Hair, and a Clay they have, they loam them so
-well, that no Weather can pierce them, and yet very light. Each <i>Hordia</i>
-hath a <i>Murse,</i> which they obey as their King. Their Gods are infinite.
-One or two thousand of those glittering white Carts drawn with Camels,
-Deer, Bulls, and Ulgries, they bring round in a Ring, where they pitch
-their Camp; and the <i>Murse,</i> with his chief Alliances, are placed in the
-midst. They do much hurt, when they can get any <i>Stroggs,</i> which are great
-Boats used up on the River <i>Volga,</i> (which they call <i>Edle</i>) to them that
-dwell in the Countrey of <i>Perolog,</i> and would do much more, were it not for
-the <i>Muscovites</i> Garrisons that there Inhabit.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The</i> Tartars <i>of</i> Nagi <i>and their manners.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XIIII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The Description of the</i> Crim-Tartars; <i>their Houses and Carts, their
- Idolatry<br> in their Lodgings</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">Now you</span> are to understand, <i>Tartary</i> and <i>Scythia</i> are all one,
-but so large and spacious, few, or none, could ever perfectly describe it,
-nor all the several kinds of those most barbarous People that inhabit it.
-Those we call the <i>Crim-Tartars,</i> border upon <i>Moldavia, Podolia,
-Lithuania,</i> and <i>Russia,</i> are much more regular than the interior parts of
-<i>Scythia.</i> This Great <i>Tartarian</i> Prince, that hath so troubled all his
-Neighbours, they always call <i>Chan,</i> which signifieth Emperour; but we,
-the <i>Crim-Tartar.</i> He liveth for the most part in the best Champion Plains
-of many Provinces; and his removing Court is like a great City of Houses
-and Tents, drawn on Carts, all so orderly placed East and West, on the
-right and left hand of the Prince's House, which is always in the midst
-towards the South, before which, none may pitch their Houses, every one
-knowing their Order and Quarter, as in an Army. {MN-2} The Princes Houses
-are very artificially wrought, both the Foundation, Sides, and Roof of
-Wickers, ascending round to the top like a Dove coat; this they cover with
-white Salt, or white Earth, temper'd with the Powder of Bones, that it
-may shine the whiter; sometimes with black Felt, curiously painted with
-Vines, Trees, Birds, and Beasts; the breadth of the Carts are eighteen or
-twenty Foot, but the house stretcheth four or five Foot over each side,
-and is drawn with ten or twelve, or for more state, twenty Camels and
-Oxen. {MN-3} They have also great Baskets, made of smaller Wickers, like
-great Chests, with a covering of the same, all covered over with black
-Felt, rubbed over with Tallow and Sheep's Milk, to keep out the Rain;
-prettily bedecked with Painting or Feathers; in those they put their
-Houshold Stuff and Treasure, drawn upon other Carts for that purpose. When
-they take down their Houses, they set the door always towards the South,
-and their Carts thirty or forty Foot distant on each side, East and West,
-as if they were two Walls: The Women also have most curious Carts; every
-one of his Wives hath a great one for her self, and so many other for her
-Attendants, that they seem as many Courts as he hath Wives. One great
-<i>Tartar</i> or Nobleman, will have for his particular, more than an hundred
-of those Houses and Carts, for his several Offices and Uses, but set so
-far from each other, they will seem like a great Village. {MN-4} Having
-taken their Houses from the Carts, they place the Master always towards
-the North; over whose head is always an Image like a Puppet, made of Felt,
-which they call his Brother; the Women on his left hand, and over the
-chief Mistriss her Head, such another Brother, and between them a little
-one, which is the keeper of the House; at the good Wives Beds-feet is a
-Kids Skin, stuffed with Wooll, and near it a Puppet looking towards the
-Maids; next the door another, with a dried Cows Udder, for the Women that
-Milk the Kine, because only the Men Milk Mares; {MN-5} every Morning those
-Images in their orders, they besprinkle with that they drink, be it
-Cossmos, or whatsoever, but all the white Mares Milk is reserved for the
-Prince. Then without the door, thrice to the South, every one bowing his
-knee in honour of the Fire; then the like to the East, in honour of the
-Air; then to the West, in honour of the Water; and lastly to the North, in
-behalf of the dead. After the Servant hath done this duty to the four
-quarters of the World, he returns into the House, where his Fellows stand
-waiting, ready with two Cups, and two Basons, to give their Master, and
-his Wife that lay with him that Night, to wash and drink, who must keep
-him company all the day following, and all his other Wives come thither to
-drink, where he keeps his House that day; and all the Gifts presented him
-till night, are laid up in her Chests; and at the door a Bench full of
-Cups, and drink for any of them to make merry.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The description of the</i> Crim-Tartar's <i>Court.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>His Houses and Carts.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-3} <i>Baskets.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-4} <i>Their Idolatry in their Lodgings.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-5} <i>Cosmos is Mares Milk.</i></p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XV.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>Their Feasts, common Diet, Princes Estate, Buildings, Tributes, Laws,
- Slaves,<br> Entertainment of Ambassadors.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">For their Feasts,</span> they have all sorts of Beasts, Birds, Fish, Fruits,
-and Herbs they can get, but the more variety of wild ones is the best; to
-which they have excellent Drink made of Rice, Millet, and Honey, like
-Wine; they have also Wine, but in Summer they drink most Cossmos, that
-standeth ready always at the entrance of the door, and by it a Fidler;
-when the Master of the House beginneth to drink, they all cry, ha, ha, and
-the Fidler plays, then they all clap their Hands and dance, the Men before
-their Masters, the Women before their Mistresses; and ever when he drinks,
-they cry as before; then the Fidler stayeth till they drink all round;
-sometimes they will drink for the Victory; and to provoke one to drink,
-they will pull him by the Ears, and lug and draw him, to stretch and beat
-him, clapping their Hands, stamping with their Feet, and dancing before
-the Champions, offering them Cups, then draw them back again to increase
-their Appetite; and thus continue till they be drunk, or their drink done,
-which they hold an honour, and no Infirmity.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Feasts.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Though the Ground be fertile, they sow little Corn, yet the Gentlemen
-have Bread and Honey-wine; Grapes they have plenty, and Wine privately,
-and good Flesh and Fish; but the common sort stamped Millet, mingled with
-Milk and Water. They call Cassa for Meat, and drink any thing; also any
-Beast unprofitable for service they kill, when they are like to die, or
-however they die, they will eat them, Guts, Liver and all; but the most
-fleshy parts they cut in thin slices, and hang it up in the Sun and Wind
-without salting, where it will dry so hard, it will not putrifie in a long
-time. A Ramm they esteem a great Feast among forty or fifty, which they
-cut in pieces boiled or roasted, puts it in a great Bowl, with Salt and
-Water, for other Sawce they have none; the Master of the Feast giveth
-every one a piece, which he eateth by himself, or carrieth away with him.
-{MN-2} Thus their hard fare makes them so infinite in Cattel, and their
-great number of Captive Women to breed upon, makes them so populous. But
-near the Christian Frontiers, the baser sort make little Cottages of Wood,
-called <i>Vlusi,</i> daubed over with dirt, and Beasts dung covered with sedge;
-yet in Summer they leave them, beginning their Progress in <i>April,</i> with
-their Wives, Children, and Slaves, in their Carted Houses, scarce
-convenient for four or five Persons; driving their Flocks towards
-<i>Precopia,</i> and sometimes into <i>Taurica,</i> or <i>Osow,</i> a Town upon the River
-<i>Tanais,</i> which is great and swift, where the <i>Turk</i> hath a Garrison; and
-in <i>October</i> return again to their Cottages. Their Clothes are the Skins
-of Dogs, Goats, and Sheep, lined with Cotton Cloath, made of their finest
-Wooll, for of their worst they make their Felt, which they use in
-abundance, as well for Shooes and Caps, as Houses, Beds, and Idols; also
-of the coarse Wooll mingled with Horse hair, they make all their Cordage.
-{MN-3} Notwithstanding this wandring life, their Princes sit in great
-State upon Beds, or Carpets, and with great reverence are attended both by
-Men and Women, and richly served in Plates and great Silver Cups,
-delivered upon the Knee, attired in rich Furrs, lined with Plush, or
-Taffity, or Robes of Tissue. These <i>Tartars</i> possess many large and goodly
-Plains, wherein feed innumerable Herds of Horse and Cattel, as well wild
-as tame; which are Elkes, Bisons, Horses, Deer, Sheep, Goats, Swine,
-Bears, and divers others.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>Their common diet.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>How they become populous.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-3} <i>Their Princes State.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} In those Countries are the Ruins of many fair Monasteries, Castles,
-and Cities, as <i>Bacasaray, Salutium, Almassary, Precopia, Cremum, Sedacom,
-Capha,</i> and divers others by the Sea, but all kept with strong Garrisons
-for the Great <i>Turk,</i> {MN-2} who yearly by Trade or Traffick, receiveth
-the chief Commodities those fertile Countries afford, as Bezoar, Rice,
-Furs, Hides, Butter, Salt, Cattel, and Slaves, yet by the spoils they get
-from the secure and idle Christians, they maintain themselves in this
-Pomp. Also their Wives, of whom they have as many as they will, very
-costly, yet in a constant custom with decency.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>Ancient Buildings.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>Commodities for tribute to the</i> Turk.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} They are <i>Mahometans,</i> as are the <i>Turks,</i> from whom they also have
-their Laws, but no Lawyers, nor Attornies, only Judges, and Justices in
-every Village, or Hordia; but Capital Criminals, or matters of moment,
-before the Chan himself, or Privy Councils, of whom they are always heard,
-and speedily discharged; for any may have access at any time to them,
-before whom they appear with great Reverence, adoring their Princes as
-Gods, and their Spiritual Judges as Saints; for Justice is with such
-integrity and Expedition Executed, without Covetousness, Bribery,
-Partiality, and Brawling, that in six Months they have sometimes scarce
-six Causes to hear. About the Princes Court, none but his Guard wear any
-Weapon, but abroad they go very strong, because there are many Bandittos,
-and Thieves.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Good Laws, yet no Lawyers.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} They use the <i>Hungarians, Russians, Wallachians,</i> and <i>Moldavian</i>
-Slaves (whereof they have plenty) as Beasts to every work; and those
-<i>Tartars</i> that serve the Chan, or Noblemen, have only Victuals and
-Apparel, the rest are generally nastly, and idle, naturally miserable, and
-in their Wars better Thieves than Soldiers.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Slaves.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} This Chan hath yearly a Donative from the King of <i>Poland,</i> the Dukes
-of <i>Lithuania, Moldavia,</i> and <i>Nagayon Tartars;</i> their Messengers commonly
-he useth bountifully, and very nobly, but sometimes most cruelly; when any
-of them do bring their Presents, by his Houshold Officers, they are
-entertained in a plain Field, with a moderate proportion of Flesh, Bread
-and Wine, for once; but when they come before him, the <i>Sultans, Tuians,
-Vlans, Marhies,</i> his chief Officers and Councellors attend, one Man only
-bringeth the Ambassadour to the Court Gate, but to the Chan he is led
-between two Councellors; where saluting him upon their bended knees,
-declaring their message, are admitted to eat with him, and presented with
-a great Silver Cup full of Mead from his own hand, but they drink it upon
-their Knees: when they are dispatched, he invites them again, the Feast
-ended, they go back a little from the Palace door, and rewarded with Silk
-Vestures, wrought with Gold down to their Anckles, with an Horse or two,
-and sometimes a Slave of their own Nation; in them Robes presently they
-come to him again, to give him thanks, take their leave, and so depart.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>His Entertainment of Ambassadours.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XVI.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>How he levieth an Army; their Arms and Provision; how he divideth the<br>
- Spoil, and his Service to the Great Turk.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">When he intends</span> any Wars, he must first have leave of the Great
-<i>Turk,</i> whom he is bound to assist when he commandeth, receiving daily for
-himself and chief of his Nobility, Pensions from the <i>Turk,</i> that holds
-all Kings but Slaves, that pay Tribute, or are subject to any: signifying
-his intent to all his Subjects, within a Month commonly he raiseth his
-Army, and every Man is to furnish himself for three Months Victuals, which
-is parched Millet, or ground to Meal, which they ordinarily mingle with
-Water (as is said) hard Cheese or Curds dried, and beaten to powder, a
-little will make much Water like Milk, and dried Flesh, this they put also
-up in Sacks; The Chan and his Nobles have some Bread and <i>Aquavit&aelig;,</i> and
-quick Cattel to kill when they please, wherewith very sparingly they are
-contented. Being provided with expert Guides, and got into the Country he
-intends to Invade, he sends forth his Scouts to bring in what Prisoners
-they can, from whom he will wrest the utmost of their Knowledge fit for
-his purpose; having advised with his Council, what is most fit to be done,
-the Nobility, according to their Antiquity, doth march; then moves he with
-his whole Army: if he find there is no Enemy to oppose him, he adviseth
-how far they shall Invade, commanding every Man (upon pain of his Life) to
-kill all the obvious Rusticks; but not to hurt any Women, or Children.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>How he levieth an Army.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Ten, or fifteen thousand, he commonly placeth, where he findeth most
-convenient for his standing Camp; the rest of his Army he divides in
-several Troops, bearing ten or twelve Miles square before them, and ever
-within three or four days return to their Camp, putting all to Fire and
-Sword, but that they carry with them back to their Camp; and in this
-scattering manner he will invade a Country, and be gone with his Prey,
-with an incredible Expedition. But if he understand of an Enemy, he will
-either fight in Ambuscado, or flie; for he will never fight any Battel if
-he can chuse, but upon treble advantage; yet by his innumerable flights of
-Arrows, I have seen flie from his flying Troops, we could not well judge,
-whether his fighting or flying was most dangerous, so good is his Horse,
-and so expert his Bow-men; but if they be so intangled they must fight,
-there is none can be more hardy, or resolute in their defences.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The manner of his Wars.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Regaining his own Borders, he takes the tenth of the principal
-Captives, Man, Woman, Child, or Beast (but his Captains that take them,
-will accept of some particular Person they best like for themselves) the
-rest are divided amongst the whole Army, according to every Mans Desert
-and Quality; that they keep them, or sell them to who will give most; but
-they will not forget to use all the means they can, to know their Estates,
-Friends, and Quality, and the better they find you, the worse they will
-use you, till you do agree to pay such a Ransom, as they will impose upon
-you; therefore many great Persons have endured much misery to conceal
-themselves, because their Ransoms are so intolerable: their best hope is
-of some Christian Agent, that many times cometh to redeem Slaves, either
-with Money, or Man for Man; those Agents knowing so well the extream
-covetousness of the <i>Tartars,</i> do use to bribe some Jew or Merchant, that
-feigning they will sell them again to some other Nation, are oft redeemed
-for a very small Ransom.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>How he divideth the spoil.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} But to this <i>Tartarian</i> Army, when the <i>Turk,</i> commands, he goeth
-with some small Artillery; and the <i>Nagayans, Precopens, Crims, Osovens,</i>
-and <i>Circassians,</i> are his Tributaries; but the <i>Perigorves, Oczaconians,
-Bialogordens,</i> and <i>Dobrucen Tartars,</i> the <i>Turk</i> by Covenant commands to
-follow him, so that from all those <i>Tartars</i> he hath had an Army of an
-hundred and twenty thousand excellent, swift, stomackfull <i>Tartarian</i>
-Horse for foot they have none. Now the Chan, his Sultans and Nobility, use
-<i>Turkiso, Caramanian, Arabian, Parthian,</i> and other strange <i>Tartarian</i>
-Horses; the swiftest they esteem the best; seldom they feed any more at
-home, than they have present use for; but upon their Plains is a short
-Wood-like Heath, in some Countries like Gail, full of Berries, much better
-than any Grass.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>How the Chan doth serve the Great</i> Turk.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Their Arms are such, as they have surprised or got from the
-<i>Christians</i> or <i>Persians,</i> both Brest-plates, Swords, Scimitars, and
-Helmets; Bows and Arrows they make most themselves, also their Bridles and
-Saddles are indifferent, but the Nobility are very handsome, and well
-armed like the <i>Turks,</i> in whom consisteth their greatest Glory; the
-ordinary sort have little Armour, some a plain young Pole unshaven, headed
-with a piece of Iron for a Lance; some an old <i>Christian</i> Pike, or a
-<i>Turks</i> Cavarine, yet those Tattertimallions will have two or three
-Horses, some four or five, as well for service, as for to eat; which makes
-their Armies seem thrice so many as there are Soldiers. The Chan himself
-hath about his Person, Ten thousand chosen <i>Tartars</i> and <i>Janizaries,</i>
-some small Ordnance, and a white Mares Tail, with a piece of green Taffity
-on a great Pike, is carried before him for a Standard; because they hold
-no Beast so precious as a white Mare, whose Milk is only for the King and
-Nobility, and to Sacrifice to their Idols; but the rest have Ensigns of
-divers Colours.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Arms.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>For all this miserable Knowledge, Furniture, and Equipage, the mischief
-they do in <i>Christendom</i> is wonderful, by reason of their hardness of Life
-and Constitution, Obedience, Agility, and their Emperours Bounty, Honours,
-Grace, and Dignities he ever bestoweth upon those, that have done him any
-memorable Service in the face of his Enemies.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} The Caspian Sea, most Men agree that have passed it, to be in length
-about 200 Leagues, and in breadth an hundred and fifty, environed to the
-East, with the great Desarts of the <i>Tartars</i> of <i>Turkomania;</i> to the
-West, by the <i>Circasses,</i> and the Mountain <i>Caucasus;</i> to the North, by
-the River <i>Volga,</i> and the Land of <i>Nagay;</i> and to the South, by <i>Media,</i>
-and <i>Persia:</i> This Sea is fresh Water in many places, in others as salt as
-the great Ocean; it hath many great Rivers which fall into it, as the
-mighty River of <i>Volga,</i> which is like a Sea, running near Two thousand
-Miles, through many great and large Countries, that send into it many
-other great Rivers; also out of <i>Saberia, Yaick,</i> and <i>Yem,</i> out of the
-great Mountain <i>Caucasus,</i> the River <i>Sirus, Arash,</i> and divers others,
-yet no Sea nearer it than the black Sea, which is at least an hundred
-Leagues distant: In which Country live the <i>Georgians,</i> now part
-<i>Armenians,</i> part <i>Nestorians;</i> it is neither found to increase or
-diminish, or empty it self any way, except it be under Ground, and in some
-places they can find no Ground at Two hundred fathom.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A Description of the</i> Caspian <i>Sea.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Many other most strange and wonderful things are in the Land of <i>Cathay,</i>
-towards the North-east, and China towards the South-east, where are many
-of the most famous Kingdoms in the World, where most Arts, Plenty, and
-Curiosities are in such abundance, as might seem incredible, which
-hereafter I will relate, as I have briefly gathered from such Authors as
-have lived there.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XVII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="chap"><i>How Captain</i> Smith <i>escaped his Captivity; slew the</i> Bashaw <i>of</i>
- Nalbrits <i>in</i> Cambia; <i>his Passage to</i> Russia, Transilvania, <i>and
- the middest of</i> Europe <i>to</i> Africa.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">All the hope</span> he had ever to be delivered from this Thraldom, was
-Only the love of <i>Tragabigzanda,</i> who surely was ignorant of his bad
-usage; for although he had often debated the matter with some Christians,
-that had been there a long time Slaves, they could not find how to make an
-escape, by any reason or possibility; but God beyond Man's Expectation or
-Imagination helpeth his Servants, when they least think of help, as it
-hapned to him. So long he lived in this miserable Estate, as he became
-a Thresher at a grange in a great Field, more than a League from the
-<i>Timor's</i> House; the <i>Bashaw,</i> as he oft used to visit his Granges,
-visited him, and took occasion so to beat, spurn, and revile him, that
-forgetting all reason, he beat out the <i>Timor's</i> Brains with his Threshing
-Bat, for they have no Flails; and seeing his Estate could be no worse than
-it was, clothed himself in his Clothes, hid his Body under the Straw,
-filled his Knapsack with Corn, shut the doors, mounted his Horse, and ran
-into the Desart at all adventure; two or three days, thus fearfully
-wandring he knew not whither, and well it was, he met not any to ask the
-way; being even as taking leave of this miserable World, {MN-2} God did
-direct him to the great way or Castragan, as they call it, which doth
-cross these large Territories, and generally known among them by these
-marks.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>How</i> Smith <i>escaped his Captivity.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>Their Guides in those Countries.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>In every crossing of this great way is planted a Post, and in it so many
-bobs with broad ends, as there be ways, and every bob the Figure painted
-on it, that demonstrateth to what part that way leadeth; as that which
-pointeth towards the <i>Crim's</i> Country, is marked with a half Moon, if
-towards the <i>Georgians</i> and <i>Persia,</i> a black Man, full of white spots, if
-towards <i>China,</i> the Picture of the Sun, if towards <i>Muscovia,</i> the Sign
-of a Cross, if towards the Habitation of any other Prince, the Figure
-whereby his Standard is known. To his dying Spirits thus God added some
-comfort in this melancholy Journey, wherein if he had met any of that vile
-Generation, they had made him their Slave, or knowing the Figure Engraven
-in the Iron about his Neck, (as all Slaves have) he had been sent back
-again to his Master; sixteen days he travelled in this fear and torment,
-after the Cross, till he arrived at <i>&AElig;copolis,</i> upon the River <i>Don,</i> a
-Garrison of the <i>Muscovites.</i> The Governour after due Examination of those
-his hard events, took off his Irons, and so kindly used him, he thought
-himself new risen from the Dead, and the good Lady <i>Calamata,</i> largely
-Supplied all his wants.</p>
-
-<p>{MN-1} This is as much as he could learn of those wild Countries, that the
-Country of <i>Cambia</i> is two days Journey from the Head of the great River
-<i>Bruapo,</i> which springeth from many places of the Mountains of
-<i>Innagachi,</i> that joyn themselves together in the Pool <i>Kerkas</i> which
-they account for the Head, and falleth into the Sea <i>Dissabacca,</i> called
-by some the Lake <i>Maeotas,</i> which receiveth also the River <i>Tanais,</i> and
-all the Rivers that fall from the great Countries of the <i>Circassi,</i> the
-<i>Cartaches,</i> and many from the <i>Tauricaes, Precopes, Cummani, Cossunka,</i>
-and the <i>Crim;</i> through which Sea he Sailed, and up the River <i>Bruapo</i> to
-<i>Nalbrits,</i> and thence through the Desarts of <i>Circassi</i> to <i>&AElig;copolis,</i>
-as is related; where he stayed with the Governour, till the Convoy went to
-<i>Caragnaw;</i> then with his Certificate how he found him, and had examined
-with his friendly Letters, sent him by <i>Zumalack</i> to <i>Caragnaw,</i> whose
-Governour in like manner so kindly used him, that by this means he went
-with a safe conduct to <i>Lesch,</i> and <i>Donko,</i> in <i>Cologoske,</i> and thence to
-<i>Berniske</i>, and <i>Newgrod</i> in <i>Siberia,</i> by <i>Rezechica,</i> upon the River
-<i>Nieper,</i> in the confines of <i>Lithuania;</i> from whence with as much
-kindness, he was convoyed in like manner by <i>Coroski, Duberesko, Duzihell,
-Drohobus,</i> and <i>Ostroge</i> in <i>Volonia; Saslaw,</i> and <i>Lasco</i> in <i>Podolia;
-Halico</i> and <i>Collonia</i> in <i>Polonia;</i> and so to <i>Hermonstat</i> in
-<i>Transilvania.</i> In all this his life, he seldom met with more Respect,
-Mirth, Content and Entertainment; and not any Governour where he came, but
-gave him somewhat as a Present, besides his Charges; seeing themselves as
-subject to the like Calamity. {MN-2} Through those poor continually
-Foraged Countries, there is no passage, but with the Caravans or Convoys;
-for they are Countries rather to be pitied than envied; and it is a wonder
-any should make Wars for them. The Villages are only here and there, a few
-Houses of streight Firr Trees, laid heads and points above one another,
-made fast by notches at the ends, more than a Man's heighth, and with
-broad split Boards, pinned together with woodden Pins, as thatched for
-coverture. In ten Villages you shall scarce find ten Iron Nails, except it
-be in some extraordinary Man's House. For their Towns, <i>&AElig;copolis, Letch,</i>
-and <i>Donko,</i> have Rampires made of that woodden Walled fashion, double,
-and betwixt them Earth and Stones, but so latched with cross Timber, they
-are very strong against any thing but Fire; and about them a deep Ditch,
-and a Palizado of young Firr Trees; but most of the rest have only a great
-Ditch cast about them, and the Ditches Earth, is all their Rampire; but
-round, well environed with Palizadoes. Some have some few small pieces of
-small Ordnance, and Slings, Calievers, and Muskets, but their generallest
-Weapons are the <i>Russe</i> Bows and Arrows; you shall find Pavements over
-Bogs, only of young Firr-Trees, laid cross one over another, for two or
-three hours Journey, or as the Passage requires, and yet in two days
-Travel, you shall scarce see six Habitations. Notwithstanding to see how
-their Lords, Governours, and Captains are civilized, well attired and
-accoutred with Jewels, Sables, and Horses, and after their manner with
-curious Furniture, it is wonderful; but they are all Lords or Slaves,
-which makes them so subject to every Invasion.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The description of</i> Cambia, <i>and his passage to</i> Russia.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>His Observations in his Journey to</i> Transilvania, <i>through the
- midst of</i> Europe.</p>
-
-
-<p>In <i>Transilvania,</i> he found so many good Friends, that but to see, and
-rejoyce himself (after all those Encounters) in his Native Country, he
-would ever hardly have left them, though the mirrour of vertue their
-Prince was absent. Being thus glutted with content, and near drowned with
-Joy, he parted high <i>Hungaria</i> by <i>Fileck, Tocka, Cassovia,</i> and
-<i>Underorowoay,</i> by <i>Ulmicht</i> in <i>Moravia,</i> to <i>Prague</i> in <i>Bohemia;</i> at
-last he found the most gracious Prince <i>Sigismundus,</i> with his Colonel at
-<i>Lipswick</i> in <i>Misenland,</i> who gave him his Pass, intimating the service
-he had done, and the Honours he had received, with fifteen hundred Ducats
-of Gold to repair his Losses: With this he spent some time to visit the
-fair Cities and Countries of <i>Dresden</i> in <i>Saxony, Magdeburgh</i> and
-<i>Brunswick; Cassel</i> in <i>Hessen; Wittenberg, Vilum,</i> and <i>Minekin</i> in
-<i>Bavaria; Augsburg,</i> and her Universities; <i>Hama, Frankford, Mentz,</i> the
-<i>Palatinate; Worms, Spires,</i> and <i>Straburg;</i> passing <i>Nancie</i> in <i>Lorain,</i>
-and <i>France</i> by <i>Paris</i> to <i>Orleans,</i> he went down the River of <i>Loyer,</i>
-to <i>Angiers,</i> and imbarked himself at <i>Nantz</i> in <i>Britain,</i> for <i>Bilbao</i>
-in <i>Biskay</i> to see <i>Burgos-Valladolid,</i> the admired Monastery of the
-<i>Escurial, Madrid, Toledo, Corduba, Cuedyrial, Sivil, Cheries, Cales,</i> and
-St. <i>Lucas</i> in <i>Spain.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XVIII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The Observations of Captain</i> Smith; <i>Mr.</i> Henry Archer, <i>and others in</i><br>
- Barbary.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Being</span> thus satisfied with <i>Europe</i> and <i>Asia,</i> understanding of the Wars
-in <i>Barbary,</i> he went from <i>Gibralter</i> to <i>Ceuta</i> and <i>Tangier,</i> thence to
-<i>Saffee,</i> where growing into Acquaintance with a French Man of War, the
-Captain and some twelve more went to <i>Morocco,</i> to see the ancient
-Monuments of that large renowned City: It was once the principal City in
-<i>Barbary,</i> situated in a goodly plain Country, 14 Miles from the great
-Mount <i>Atlas,</i> and sixty Miles from the <i>Atlantick</i> Sea; but now little
-remaining, but the King's Palace, which is like a City of it self; and the
-Christian Church, on whose flat, {MN-1} square Steeple is a great broach
-of Iron, whereon is placed the three Golden Balls of Africa: The first is
-near three Ells in Circumference, the next above it somewhat less, the
-uppermost the least over them, as it were an half Ball, and over all a
-pretty gilded Pyramid. Against those Golden Balls hath been shot many a
-shot, their Weight is recorded 700 weight of pure Gold, hollow within, yet
-no shot did ever hit them, nor could ever any Conspirator attain that
-Honour as to get them down. They report, the Prince of <i>Morocco</i>
-betrothed himself to the King's Daughter of <i>&AElig;thiopia,</i> he dying before
-their Marriage, she caused those three Golden Balls to be set up for his
-Monument, and vowed Virginity all her Life. {MN-2} The <i>Alfantica</i> is also
-a place of note, because it is invironed with a great Wall, wherein lie
-the Goods of all the Merchants securely guarded. The <i>Inderea</i> is also (as
-it were) a City of it self, where dwell the Jews: The rest for the most
-part is defaced; but by the many Pinnacles and Towers, with Balls on their
-tops, hath much appearance of much sumptuousness and curiosity. There have
-been many famous Universities, which are now but Stables for Fowls, and
-Beasts, and the Houses in most parts lie tumbled one above another; the
-Walls of Earth are with the great fresh Floods washed to the ground; nor
-is there any Village in it, but Tents for Strangers, <i>Larbes</i> and <i>Moors.</i>
-Strange Tales they will tell of a great Garden, wherein were all sorts of
-Birds, Fishes, Beasts, Fruits, and Fountains, which for Beauty, Art and
-Pleasure, exceeded any place known in the World, though now nothing but
-Dung-hills, Pigeon-Houses, Shrubs and Bushes. There are yet many excellent
-Fountains, adorned with Marble, and many Arches, Pillars, Towers, Ports,
-and Temples; but most only reliques of lamentable Ruins and sad
-Desolation.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The three Golden Balls of</i> Africa.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The description of</i> Morocco.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} When <i>Muly Hamet</i> Reigned in <i>Barbary,</i> he had three Sons, <i>Muly
-Sheck, Muly Sidan,</i> and <i>Muly Bufferres,</i> he a most good and noble King,
-that governed well with Peace and Plenty, till his Empress, more cruel
-than any Beast in Africa, poisoned him, her own Daughter, <i>Muly Sheck,</i>
-his eldest Son, born of a Portugal Lady, and his Daughter, to bring <i>Muly
-Sidan,</i> to the Crown now reigning, which was the cause of all those
-brawls, and Wars that followed betwixt those Brothers, their Children, and
-a Saint that started up, but he played the Devil.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A bloody Empress.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} King <i>Muly Hamet</i> was not black, as many suppose, but <i>Molara,</i> or
-tawny, as are the most of his Subjects; every way noble, kind and
-friendly, very rich and pompous in State and Majesty, though he sitteth
-not upon a Throne nor Chair of state, but cross Leg'd upon a rich Carpet,
-as doth the <i>Turk,</i> whose Religion of <i>Mahomet,</i> with an incredible
-miserable Curiosity they observe. His ordinary Guard is at least 5000, but
-in Progress, he goeth not with less than 20000 Horse-men, himself as rich
-in all his Equipage, as any Prince in Christendom, and yet a Contributor
-to the <i>Turk.</i> {MN-2} In all his Kingdom were so few good Artificers, that
-he entertained from <i>England,</i> Gold-smiths, Plummers, Carvers, and
-Polishers of Stone, and Watch-makers, so much he delighted in the
-Reformation of Workmanship, he allowed each of them ten Shillings a day
-standing Fee, Linen, Woollen, Silks, and what they would for Diet and
-Apparel, and Custom-free to transport, or import what they would; for
-there were scarce any of those qualities in his Kingdom, but those, of
-which there are divers of them, living at this present in <i>London.</i>
-Amongst the rest, one Mr. <i>Henry Archer,</i> a Watch-maker, walking in
-<i>Morocco,</i> from the <i>Alfantica</i> to the <i>Juderea,</i> the way being very foul,
-met a great Priest, or a <i>Sante</i> (as they call all great Clergy-men) who
-would have thrust him into the dirt for the way; but Archer not knowing
-what he was, gave him a box on the Ear, presently he was apprehended, and
-condemned to have his Tongue cut out, and his Hand cut off: But no sooner
-it was known at the King's Court, but 300 of his Guard came, and broke
-open the Prison, and delivered him although the Fact was next degree to
-Treason.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>King</i> Muly Hamet <i>or the Great</i> Zeriff <i>of</i> Barbary.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>His great love to English Men.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Concerning this <i>Archer,</i> there is one thing more worth noting: Not
-far from Mount <i>Atlas,</i> a great Lioness in the heat of the day, did use to
-bathe her self, and teach her young Puppies to swim in the River
-<i>Cauzef,</i> of a good breadth; yet she would carry, which some <i>Moors</i>
-perceiving, watched there them one after another over the River;
-opportunity, and when the River was between her and them, stole four of
-her Whelps, which she perceiving, with all the speed she could passed the
-River, and coming near them, they let fall a Whelp (and fled with the
-rest) which she took in her mouth, and so returned to the rest: A Male
-and a Female of those they gave Mr. <i>Archer,</i> who kept them in the King's
-Garden, till the Male killed the Female, then he brought it up as a
-Puppy-dog lying upon his Bed, till it grew so great as a Mastiff, and no
-dog more tame or gentle to them he knew: But being to return for
-<i>England,</i> at <i>Saffee</i> he gave him to a Merchant of <i>Marseillses,</i> that
-presented him to the French King, who sent him to King James, where it was
-kept in the Tower seven Years: After one Mr. <i>John Bull,</i> then Servant to
-Mr. <i>Archer,</i> with divers of his Friends, went to see the Lions, not
-knowing any thing at all of him; yet this rare Beast smelled him before he
-saw him, whining, groaning, and tumbling, with such an expression of
-acquaintance, that being informed by the Keepers how he came thither; Mr.
-<i>Bull</i> so prevailed, the Keeper opened the Grate, and <i>Bull</i> went in: But
-no Dog could fawn more on his Master, than the Lion on him, licking his
-Feet, Hands, and Face, skipping and tumbling to and fro, to the wonder of
-all the beholders; being satisfied with his acquaintance, he made shift to
-get out of the Grate: But when the Lion saw his Friend gone, no Beast by
-bellowing, roaring, scratching, and howling, could express more rage and
-sorrow, nor in four days after would he either eat or drink.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The strange love of a Lion.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} In <i>Morocco,</i> the King's Lions are altogether in a Court, invironed
-with a great high Wall; to those they put a young Puppy-dog: The greatest
-Lion had a sore upon his neck, which this Dog so licked, that he was
-healed: The Lion defended him from the fury of all the rest, nor durst
-they eat till the Dog and he had fed; this Dog grew great, and lived
-amongst them many years after.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Another kind Lion in</i> Morocco.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} <i>Fez</i> also is a most large and plentiful Country, the chief City is
-called <i>Fez,</i> divided into two parts; old <i>Fez</i>, containing about 80
-thousand Households, the other 4000 pleasantly situated upon a River in
-the heart of <i>Barbary,</i> part upon Hills, part upon Plains, full of people,
-and all sorts of Merchandize. The great Temple is called <i>Carucen</i>, in
-breadth seventeen Arches, in length 120, born up with 2500 white Marble
-Pillars: under the chief Arch, where the Tribunal is kept, hangeth a most
-huge Lamp, compassed with 110 lesser, under the other also hang great
-Lamps, and about some, are burning fifteen hundred lights, They say, they
-were all made of the Bells the <i>Arabians</i> brought from <i>Spain.</i> It hath
-three Gates of notable heighth, Priests and Officers so many, that the
-Circuit of the Church, the Yard, and other Houses, is little less than a
-Mile and half in compass, there are in this City 200 Schools, 200 Inns,
-400 Water-Mills, 600 Water-Conduits, 700 Temples and Oratories; but 50 of
-them most stately and richly furnished. Their <i>Alcazer</i> or <i>Burse</i> is
-Walled about, it hath twelve Gates, and fifteen Walks covered with Tents,
-to keep the Sun from the Merchants, and them that come there. The King's
-Palace, both for strength and beauty is excellent, and the Citizens have
-many great Privileges. Those two Countries of <i>Fez</i> and <i>Morocco,</i> are the
-best part of all <i>Barbary,</i> abounding with People, Cattel, and all good
-Necessaries for Man's use. For the rest, as the <i>Larbs,</i> or Mountainers,
-the Kingdoms of <i>Cocow, Algier, Tripoli, Tunis,</i> and <i>&AElig;gypt;</i> there are
-many large Histories of them in divers Languages, especially that writ by
-that most excellent Statesman, <i>John de Leo,</i> who afterwards turned
-Christian. {MN-2} The unknown Countries of <i>Guine</i> and <i>Binn,</i> this six
-and twenty years have been frequented with a few English Ships only to
-Trade, especially the River of <i>Senega,</i> by Captain <i>Brimstead,</i> Captain
-<i>Brockit,</i> Mr. <i>Crump,</i> and divers others. Also the great River of
-<i>Gambia,</i> by Captain <i>Johnson,</i> who is returned in thither again, in the
-Year 1626, with Mr. <i>William Grent,</i> and thirteen or fourteen others, to
-stay in the Country, to discover some way to those rich Mines of <i>Gago</i> or
-<i>Tumbatu,</i> from whence is supposed the <i>Moors</i> of <i>Barbary</i> have their
-Gold, and the certainty of those supposed Descriptions and Relations of
-those interiour parts, which daily the more they are sought into, the more
-they are corrected: For surely, those interiour Parts of Africa, are
-little known to either <i>English, French,</i> or <i>Dutch,</i> though they use much
-the Coast; therefore we will make a little bold with the Observations of
-the <i>Portugals.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The description of</i> Fez.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>A brief description of the most unknown parts of</i> Africa.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XIX.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The strange Discoveries and Observations of the</i> Portugals <i>in</i> Africa.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">The <i>Portugals</i></span> on those Parts have the glory, who first coasting
-along this Western Shoar of <i>Africa,</i> to find passage to the
-<i>East-Indies,</i> within this hundred and fifty years, even from the
-Streights of <i>Gibraltar,</i> about the Cape of <i>Bone Esperance</i> to the
-<i>Persian</i> Gulf, and thence all along the <i>African</i> Coast to the
-<i>Moluccas,</i> have subjected many great Kingdoms, erected many
-Common-wealths, built many great and strong Cities; and where is it they
-have not been by Trade or Force? No not so much as <i>Cape de Verd,</i> and
-<i>Sermleone;</i> but most Bays or Rivers, where there is any Trade to be had,
-especially Gold, or conveniency for Refreshment, but they are scattered;
-living so amongst those Blacks, by time and cunning, they seem to be
-naturalized amongst them. As for the Isles of the <i>Canaries,</i> they have
-fair Towns, many Villages, and many thousands of People rich in
-Commodities.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN}<i>How the</i> Portugals <i>coasted to the</i> East Indies.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <i>Ordoardo Lopez,</i> a noble <i>Portuguse, Anno Dom.</i> 1578, imbarking
-himself for <i>Congo</i> to Trade, where he found such Entertainment, finding
-the King much oppressed with Enemies, he found means to bring in the
-<i>Portugals</i> to assist him, whereby he planted there Christian Religion,
-and spent most of his life to bring those Countries to the Crown of
-<i>Portugal,</i> which he describeth in this manner.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Or</i> Edward.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The Kingdom of <i>Congo</i> is about 600 Miles Diameter any way, the chief
-City called St. <i>Savadore,</i> seated upon an exceeding high Mountain, 150
-Miles from the Sea, very fertile, and Inhabited with more than 100000
-Persons, where is an excellent Prospect over all the plain Countries about
-it, well watered, lying (as it were) in the Center of this Kingdom, over
-all which the <i>Portugals</i> now command, though but an handful in comparison
-of <i>Negroes.</i> They have Flesh and Fruits very plentiful of divers sorts.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The Kingdom of</i> Congo.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} This Kingdom is divided into five Provinces, viz. <i>Bamba, Sundi,
-Pango, Batta</i> and <i>Pembo;</i> but <i>Bamba</i> is the Principal, and can afford
-400000 Men of War. Elephants are bred over all those Provinces, and of
-wonderful greatness; though some report, they cannot kneel, nor lie down,
-they can do both, and have their Joynts as other Creatures for use: With
-their Fore-feet they will leap upon Trees to pull down the Boughs, and are
-of that strength, they will shake a great <i>Cocao</i> Tree for the Nuts, and
-pull down a good Tree with their Tusks, to get the Leaves to eat, as well
-as Sedge and long Grass, <i>Cocao</i> Nuts and Berries, &amp;c. which with their
-Trunk they put in their Mouth, and chew it with their smaller Teeth; in
-most of those Provinces, are many rich Mines, but the <i>Negroes</i> opposed
-the <i>Portugueses</i> for working in them.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Wild Elephants.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The Kingdom of <i>Angola</i> is wonderful populous, and rich in Mines of
-Silver, Copper, and most other Metals; fruitfull in all manner of Food,
-and sundry sorts of Cattel, but Dogs Flesh they love better than any other
-Meat; they use few Clothes, and no Armour; Bows, Arrows, and Clubs are
-their Weapons. But the <i>Portugueses</i> are well armed against those Engines,
-and do buy yearly of those Blacks more than five thousand Slaves, and many
-are People exceeding well proportioned.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The Kingdom of</i> Angola.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} The <i>Anchios</i> are a most valiant Nation, but most strange to all
-about them. Their Arms are Bows; short and small, wrapped about with
-Serpents Skins, of divers Colours, but so smooth, you would think them all
-one with the Wood, and it makes them very strong; their Strings little
-twigs, but exceeding tough and flexible; their Arrows short, which they
-shoot with an incredible quickness. They have short Axes of Brass and
-Copper for Swords; wonderful, loyal and faithful, and exceeding simple,
-yet so active, they skip amongst the Rocks like Goats. {MN-2} They trade
-with them of <i>Nubea,</i> and <i>Congo,</i> for <i>Lamach,</i> which is a small kind of
-Shell-fish, of an excellent azure, colour, Male and Female, but the Female
-they hold most pure; they value them at divers prices, because they are of
-divers sorts, and those they use for Coin, to buy and sell, as we do Gold
-and Silver; nor will they have any other Money in all those Countries, for
-which they give Elephants Teeth; and Slaves for Salt, Silk, Linen Cloth,
-Glass-beads, and such like <i>Portugal</i> Commodities.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The Kingdom of</i> Anchios.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>A strange Memr'y.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} They circumcise themselves, and mark their Faces with sundry slashes
-from their Infancy. They keep a shambles of Man's Flesh, as if it were
-Beef, or other Victuals; for when they cannot have a good Market for their
-Slaves; or their Enemies they take, they kill, and sell them in this
-manner; some are so resolute, in shewing how much they scorn death, they
-will offer themselves and Slaves, to this Butchery to their Prince and
-Friends; and though there be many Nations will eat their Enemies, in
-<i>America</i> and <i>Asia,</i> yet none but those are known to be so mad, as to eat
-their Slaves and Friends also.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A shambles of Men's Flesh.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Religions and Idols they have as many, as Nations and Humours; but the
-Devil hath the greatest part of their Devotions, whom all those Blacks do
-say, is white; for there are no Saints but Blacks.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} But besides those great Kingdoms of <i>Congo, Angola,</i> and <i>Azichi,</i> in
-those unfrequented Parts are the Kingdoms of <i>Lango, Matania, Battua,
-Sofola, Mozambeche, Quivola,</i> the Isle of St. <i>Lawrence, Mombaza,
-Melinda,</i> the Empires of <i>Monomotapa, Monemugi,</i> and <i>Presbyter John,</i>
-with whom they have a kind of Trade, and their Rites, Customs, Climates,
-Temperatures, and Commodities by Relation. Also of great Lakes, that
-deserve the Names of Seas, and huge Mountains of divers sorts, as some
-scorched with heat, some covered with Snow; the Mountains of the Sun, also
-of the Moon, some of Chrystal, some of Iron, some of Silver, and Mountains
-of Gold, with the Original of <i>Nilus;</i> likewise sundry sorts of Cattel,
-Fishes, Fowls, strange Beasts, and monstrous Serpents; for Africa was
-always noted to be a fruitful Mother of such terrible Creatures; who
-meeting at their watering places, which are but Ponds in desart places, in
-regard of the heat of the Country, and their extremities of Nature, make
-strange Copulations, and so ingender those extraordinary Monsters. Of all
-these you may read in the History, of this <i>Edward Lopez,</i> translated into
-English by <i>Abraham Hartwel,</i> and dedicated to <i>John</i> Lord Arch-bishop of
-<i>Canterbury,</i> 1597. But because the Particulars are most concerning the
-conversion of those Pagans, by a good poor Priest, that first converted a
-Noble Man, to convert the King, and the rest of the Nobility; sent for so
-many Priests and Ornaments into <i>Portugal,</i> to Solemnize their Baptisms
-with such Magnificence, which was performed with such strange Curiosities,
-that those poor <i>Negro's</i> adored them as gods, till the Priests grew to
-that Wealth, a Bishop was sent to rule over them, which they would not
-endure, which endangered to spoil all before they could be reconciled. But
-not to trouble you too long with those Rarities of uncertainties; let us
-return again to <i>Barbary,</i> where the Wars being ended, and <i>Befferres</i>
-possessed of <i>Morocco,</i> and his Fathers Treasure, a new bruit arose
-amongst them, that <i>Muly Sidan</i> was raising an Army against him, who after
-took his Brother <i>Befferres</i> Prisoner; but by reason of the uncertainty,
-and the perfidious, treacherous, bloody murthers rather than War, amongst
-those perfidious, barbarous Moors, <i>Smith</i> returned with <i>Merham,</i> and the
-rest to <i>Saffe,</i> and so aboard his Ship, to try some other conclusions at
-Sea.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Divers Nations yet unknown, and the wonders of</i> Africa.</p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XX.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>A brave Sea Fight betwixt to</i> Spanish <i>Men of War, and Captain</i> Merham,<br>
- <i>with</i> Smith.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps"><i>Merham,</i></span> a Captain of a Man of War then in the Road, invited Captain
-<i>Smith,</i> and two or three more of them aboard with him, where he spared
-not any thing he had to express his kindness, to bid them welcome, till it
-was too late to go on Shoar, so that necessity constrained them to stay
-aboard; a fairer Evening could not be, yet ere Midnight, such a Storm did
-arise, they were forced to let slip Cable, and Anchor, and put to Sea;
-spooning before the Wind, till they were driven to the <i>Canaries;</i> in the
-Calms they accommodated themselves, hoping this strange accident might yet
-produce some good event; not long it was before they took a small Bark
-coming from <i>Tenerif,</i> loaded with Wine; three or four more they chased,
-two they took, but found little in them, save a few Passengers, that told
-them of five <i>Dutch</i> Men of War, about the Isles, so that they stood for
-<i>Boiadora,</i> upon the <i>African</i> Shoar, betwixt which and <i>Cape Noa,</i> they
-descryed two Sail. <i>Merham</i> intending to know what they were, hailed them;
-very civilly they danced their Top-sails, and desired the Man of War to
-come aboard them, and take what he would, for they were but two poor
-distressed <i>Biskainers.</i> But <i>Merham</i> the old Fox, seeing himself in the
-Lions paws, sprung his louf, the other tacked after him, and came close up
-to his nether Quarter, gave his Broad-side, and so loufed up to Windward;
-the Vice-Admiral did the like, and at the next bout, the Admiral with a
-noise of Trumpets, and all his Ordnance, Murtherers, and Muskets, boarded
-him on his Broad-side, the other in like manner on his ley Quarter, that
-it was so dark, there was little light, but fire and smoak; long he stayed
-not, before he, fell off, leaving 4 or 5 of his Men sprawling over the
-Grating; after they had battered <i>Merham</i> about an hour, they boarded him
-again as before, and threw four Kedgars or Grapnels in Iron Chains, then
-shearing off, they thought so to have torn down the Grating; but the
-Admiral's Yard was so intangled in their Shrouds, <i>Merham</i> had time to
-discharge two cross barr shot amongst them, and divers Bolts of Iron made
-for that purpose, against his Bow, that made such a Breach, he feared they
-both mould have sunk for Company; so that the <i>Spaniard</i> was as yare in
-slipping his chained Grapnels, as <i>Merham</i> was in cutting the Tackling,
-kept fast their Yards in his Shrouds; the Vice-Admiral presently cleared
-himself, but spared neither his Ordnance nor Muskets to keep <i>Merham</i> from
-getting away, till the Admiral had repaired his Leak; from twelve at noon,
-till six at night, they thus interchanged one volly for another; then the
-Vice-Admiral fell on Stern, staying for the Admiral that came up again to
-him, and all that night stood after <i>Merham,</i> that shaped his course for
-<i>Mamora,</i> but such small way they made, the next Morning they were not
-three Leagues off from <i>Cape Noa.</i> The two <i>Spanish</i> Men of War, for so
-they were, and well appointed, taking it in scorn as it seemed, with their
-Chase, Broad-side, and Stern, the one after the other, within Musket shot,
-plying their Ordnance; and after an hours Work, commanded <i>Merham</i> amain
-for the King of Spain upon fair Quarter; <i>Merham</i> drank to them, and so
-discharged his Quarter Pieces. Which Pride the <i>Spaniard</i> to revenge,
-boarded him again, and many of them were got to the top to unsling the
-Main-Sail, which the Master and some others from the Round-House, caused
-to their cost to come tumbling down; about the Round-House the <i>Spaniards</i>
-so pestred, that they were forced to the great Cablen and blew it up; the
-smoak and fire was so vehement, as they thought the Ship on fire; they in
-the Fore-Castle were no less assaulted, that they blew up a piece of the
-Grating, with a great many of <i>Spaniards</i> more; then they cleared
-themselves with all speed, and <i>Merham</i> with as much Expedition to quench
-the Fire with wet Cloaths and Water, which began to grow too fast. The
-<i>Spaniard</i> still playing upon him with all the shot they could; the open
-Places presently they covered with old Sails, and prepared themselves to
-fight to the last Man. The Angry <i>Spaniard</i> seeing the fire quenched, hung
-out a Flag of truce to have but a Parley; but that desperate <i>Merham</i> knew
-there was but one way with him, and would have none, but the report of his
-Ordnance, which he did know well how to use for his best Advantage. Thus
-they spent the next Afternoon, and half the Night, when the <i>Spaniards</i>
-either lost them or left them. Seven and twenty Men <i>Merham</i> had slain and
-sixteen wounded, and could find they had received 140 great shot. A
-wounded <i>Spaniard</i> they kept alive confessed, they had lost 100 Men in
-the Admiral, which they did fear would sink ere she could recover a Port.
-Thus Re-accommodating their Sails, they failed for <i>Sancta Cruse, Cape
-Goa,</i> and <i>Magadore,</i> till they came again to <i>Safee,</i> and then he
-returned into England.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXI.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="chap"><i>The continuation of the General History of</i> Virginia; <i>the</i> Summer
- Isles, <i>and</i> New England; <i>with their present Estate from</i> 1624. <i>to
- this present</i> 1629.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Concerning</span> these Countries, I would be sorry to trouble you with
-repeating one thing twice, as with their Mapps, Commodities, People,
-Government and Religion yet known; the beginning of these Plantations,
-their Numbers and Names, with the Names of the Adventures, the Yearly
-proceedings of every Governour both here and there. As for the
-Misprisions, Neglect, Grievances, and the causes of all these Rumours,
-losses and crosses that have happened; I refer you to the General History,
-where you shall find all this at large; especially to those Pages where
-you may read my Letter of Advice to the Councel and Company, what of
-necessity must be done, or lose all and leave the Country, Pag. 70. what
-Commodities I sent home, Pag. 163. my Opinion and offer to the Company, to
-feed and defend the Colonies, Pag. 150. my Account to them here of my
-Actions there, Pag. 163. and seven Answers to his Majesty's Commissioners:
-Seven Questions what hath hindered <i>Virginia,</i> and the remedy, Pag. 165.
-How those Noble Gentlemen spent near two Years in perusing all Letters
-came from thence; and the differences betwixt many Factions, both here and
-there, with their Complaints; especially about the <i>Sallery</i> which should
-have been a new Office in <i>London,</i> for the well ordering the sale of
-<i>Tobacco,</i> that 2500 Pounds should Yearly have been raised out of it, to
-pay four or five Hundred Pounds Yearly to the Governour of that Company,
-two or three Hundred to his Deputy; the rest into Stipends of forty or
-fifty Pounds Yearly for their Clerks and other Officers which were never
-there, Pag. 153. but not one Hundred Pounds for all them in <i>Virginia,</i>
-nor any thing for the most part of the Adventures in <i>England,</i> except the
-undertakers for the Lotteries, Setters out of Ships, Adventures of
-Commodities, also their Factors and many other Officers, there imployed
-only by friendship to raise their Fortunes out of the Labours of the true
-Industrious Planters by the Title of their Office, who under the colour of
-sincerity, did pillage and deceive all the rest most cunningly: For more
-than 150000 Pounds have been spent out of the Common Stock, besides many
-thousands have been there Consumed, and near 7000 People that there died,
-only for want of good Order and Government, otherwise long ere this there
-would have been more than 20000 People, where after twenty Years spent
-only in Complement and trying new Conclusions, was remaining scarce 1500,
-with some few Cattel.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Company dissolved, but no Account of any thing; so that his
-Majesty appointed Commissioners to oversee, and give Order for their
-Proceedings. Being thus in a manner left to themselves, since then within
-these four Years, you shall see how wonderfully they have increased beyond
-expectation; but so exactly as I desired, I cannot relate unto you: For
-altho' I have tired my self in seeking and discoursing with those returned
-thence, more than would a Voyage to <i>Virginia;</i> few can tell me any thing,
-but of that Place or Places they have Inhabited, and he is a great
-Traveller that hath gone up and down the River of <i>James</i> Town, been at
-<i>Pamaunk, Smith's</i> Isles, or <i>Accomack;</i> wherein for the most part, they
-keep one tune of their now particular abundance, and their former wants
-having been there, some sixteen Years, some twelve, some six, some near
-twenty, &amp;c. But of their general Estate, or any thing of worth, the most
-of them doth know very little to any purpose.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} Now the most I could understand in general, was from the Relation of
-Mr. <i>Nathaniel Cawsey,</i> that lived there with me, and returned <i>Anno Dom.</i>
-1627. and some others affirm; Sir <i>George Yerely</i> was Governour, Captain
-<i>Francis West,</i> Doctor <i>John Pott,</i> Captain <i>Roger Smith,</i> Captain
-<i>Matthews,</i> Captain <i>Tucker,</i> Mr. <i>Clabourn,</i> and Mr. <i>Farrer,</i> of the
-Council: their Habitations many. The Governour, with two or three of the
-Council, are for most part at <i>James</i> Town, the rest repair thither as
-there is occasion; but every three Months they have a general Meeting, to
-consider of their Publick Affairs.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their estate</i> 1627.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Their Numbers then were about 1500, some say rather 2000, divided
-into seventeen or eighteen several Plantations; the greatest part thereof
-towards the falls, are so inclosed with Pallisadoes they regard not the
-<i>Salvages.</i> and amongst those Plantations above <i>James</i> Town, they have
-now found means to take plenty of Fish, as well with Lines as Nets, and
-where the Waters are the largest, having Means they need not want.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their numbers.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Upon this River they seldom see any <i>Salvages,</i> but in the Woods,
-many times their Fires: yet some few there are, that upon their
-opportunity, have slain some few straglers, which have been revenged with
-the Death of so many of themselves; but no other Attempt hath been made
-upon them this two or three Years.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their condition with the Salvages.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Their Cattel, Namely, Oxen, Kine, Bulls, they imagine to be about
-2000; Goats great store and great increase; the wild Hoggs, which were
-infinite, are destroyed and eaten by the <i>Salvages:</i> but no Family is so
-poor that hath not tame Swine sufficient; and for Poultry, he is a very
-bad Husband, breedeth not an Hundred in a Year, and the Richer sort doth
-daily feed on them.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their increase of Cattel and Poultry.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} For Bread they have plenty, and so good, that those that make it
-well, better cannot be: Divers have much <i>English</i> Corn, especially Mr.
-<i>Abraham Perce,</i> which prepared this Year to sow two Hundred Acres of
-<i>English</i> Wheat, and as much with Barly, feeding daily about the number of
-sixty Persons at his own Charges.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Plenty of Corn.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} For Drink, Some Malt the <i>Indian</i> Corn, others Barly, of which they
-make good Ale, both strong and small, and such plenty thereof, few of the
-Upper Planters drink any Water: but the better sort are well furnished
-with Sack, <i>Aquavit&aelig;,</i> and good <i>English</i> Beer.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Drink.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The Servants commonly feed upon Milk Homili, which is bruised
-<i>Indian</i> Corn pounded, and boiled thick, and Milk for the sawce; but
-boiled with Milk, the best of all will feed oft on it, and leave their
-Flesh; with Milk, Butter and Cheese; with Fish, Bulls-flesh, for they
-seldom kill any other, &amp;c. And every one is so applied to his labour about
-Tobacco and Corn, which doth yield them such Profit, they never regard any
-food from the <i>Salvages,</i> nor have they any Trade or Conference with them,
-but upon meer Accidents and Defiances: And now the Merchants have left it,
-there having gone so many voluntary Ships within these two Years, as have
-furnished them with Apparel, Sack, <i>Aquavit&aelig;,</i> and all necessaries, much
-better than any before.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Servants diet.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} For Arms, There is scarce any Man but he is furnished with a Piece, a
-Jack, a Coat of Male, a Sword or Rapier; and every Holy-day, every
-Plantation doth Exercise their Men in Arms, by which means Hunting and
-Fowling, the most part of them are most Excellent Marks-men.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Arms and Exercise.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} For Discoveries they have made none, nor any other Commodity than
-Tobacco do they apply themselves unto, tho' never any was Planted at
-first. And whereas the Countrey was heretofore held most intemperate and
-contagious by many, now they have Houses, Lodgings, Victuals, and the Sun
-hath Power to Exhale up the moist Vapours of the Earth, where they have
-cut down the Wood, which before it could not, being covered with spreading
-tops of high Trees; they find it much more healthful than before; nor for
-their Numbers, few Countries are less troubled with Death, Sickness, or
-any other Disease, nor where overgrown Women become more fruitful.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Health and Discoveries.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} Since this, Sir <i>George Yerely</i> died 1628, Captain <i>West</i> Succeeded
-him; but about a Year after, returned for <i>England.</i> Now Doctor <i>Poor</i> is
-Governour, and the rest of the Council as before: <i>James</i> Town is yet
-their chief Seat, most of the Wood destroyed, little Corn there Planted,
-but all Converted into Pasture and Gardens, wherein doth grow all manner
-of Herbs and Roots we have in <i>England,</i> in abundance, and as good Grass
-as can be. Here most of their Cattle do feed, their Owners being most some
-one way, some another, about their Plantations, and return again when they
-please, or any Shipping comes in to Trade. Here in the Winter they have
-Hay for their Cattel, but in other Places they Browze upon Wood, and the
-great husks of their Corn, with some Corn in them, doth keep them well.
-{MN-2} Mr. <i>Hutchins</i> saith, they have 2000 Cattle, and about 5000 People,
-but <i>Master Floud, John Davis, William Emerson,</i> and divers others say,
-about 5000 People, and 5000 Kine, Calves, Oxen and Bulls; for Goats, Hoggs
-and Poultry, Corn, Fish, Dear, and many sorts of other wild Beasts; and
-Fowl in their Season, they have so much more than they spend, they are
-able to feed three or four Hundred more than they have; and do oft much
-relieve many Ships, both there, and for their Return; and this last Year
-was there at least two or three and Twenty Sale. They have oft much
-Salt-fish from <i>New England,</i> but fresh Fish enough, when they will take
-it; Peaches in abundance at <i>Kecoughtan;</i> Apples, Pears, Apricocks, Vines,
-Figgs, and other Fruits some have Planted that prospered exceedingly, but
-their Diligence about Tobacco, left them to be spoiled by the Cattel, yet
-now they begin to Revive; {MN-3} Mrs. <i>Pearce,</i> an Honest Industrious
-Woman, hath been there near twenty Years, and now returned, saith, she
-hath a Garden at <i>James</i> Town, containing three or four Acres, where in
-one Year she hath gathered near an Hundred Bushels of excellent Figgs; and
-that of her own Provision she can keep a better House in <i>Virginia,</i> than
-here in <i>London</i> for 3 or 400 Pounds a Year, yet went thither with little
-or nothing. They have some tame Geese, Ducks and Turkies. The Masters now
-do so train up their Servants and Youth in shooting Deer and Fowl, that
-the Youths will kill them as well as their Masters. They have two
-Brew-houses, but they find the <i>Indian</i> Corn so much better than ours,
-they begin to leave sowing it. Their Cities and Towns are only scattered
-Houses, they call Plantations, as are our Country Villages; but no
-Ordnance Mounted. The Forts Captain <i>Smith</i> left a Building, so ruined,
-there is scarce Mention where they were; no Discoveries of any thing more,
-than the curing of Tobacco, by which hitherto, being so present a
-Commodity of Gain, it hath brought them to this abundance; but that they
-are so disjointed, and every one Commander of himself to Plant what he
-will: {MN-4} they are now so well provided, that they are able to subsist;
-and if they would join together, now to work upon Soap, Ashes, Iron,
-Rape-Oil, Mader, Pitch and Tarr, Flax and Hemp; as for their Tobacco,
-there comes from many Places such abundance, and the charge so great, it
-is not worth the bringing home.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The present estate of</i> Virginia 1629.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>Mr.</i> Hutchins. <i>Five thousand people. Five thousand Cattel.
- Goats, Hogs, and Poultry infinite.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-3} <i>Good Hospitality.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-4} <i>Commodities worth making, Black Wallnut, Also for Pikes, Oak for
- Planks, knees for ships, Cypress, for Chests, &amp;c.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>There is gone, and now a going, divers Ships, as Captain <i>Perse,</i> Captain
-<i>Prine,</i> with Sir <i>John Harvey</i> to be their Governour, with two or three
-Hundred People; there is also some from <i>Bristow,</i> and other Parts of the
-West Country a preparing, which I heartily pray to God to Bless, and send
-them a Happy and Prosperous Voyage.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> <i>Nathaniel Causie,</i> Master <i>Hutchins,</i>
- Master <i>Floud, John Davis, William
- Emerson,</i> Master <i>William
- Barnet,</i> Master <i>Cooper,</i> and others.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXII.</h3>
-<br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The proceedings and present estate of the</i> Summer Isles, <i>from</i> Anno
- Dom.<br> 1624, <i>to this present</i> 1629.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">From</span> the <i>Summer Isles,</i> Mr. <i>Ireland,</i> and divers others report, their
-Forts, Ordnance and Proceedings, are much as they were in the Year 1622.
-as you may read in the General History, Pag. 199. Captain <i>Woodhouse</i>
-Governour. There are few sorts of any Fruits in the West Indies, but they
-grow there in abundance; yet the fertility of the Soil in many Places
-decayeth, being Planted every Year, for their Plantains, which is a most
-delicate Fruit, they have lately found a way by Pickling or Drying them,
-to bring them over into <i>England,</i> there being no such Fruit in <i>Europe,</i>
-and wonderful for increase. For Fish, Flesh, Figgs, Wine, and all sorts of
-most excellent Herbs, Fruits and Roots they have in abundance. In this
-Governour's time, a kind of Whale, or rather a Jubarta, was driven on
-Shoar in <i>Southampton</i> Tribe from the West, over an Infinite Number of
-Rocks so bruised, that the Water in the Bay where she lay, was all Oily,
-and the Rocks about it all Bedasht with Parmacitty, congealed like Ice, a
-good quantity we gathered, with which we commonly cured any Boil, Hurt or
-Bruise; some burnt it in their Lamps, which blowing out, the very snuff
-will burn so long as there is any of the Oil remaining, for two or three
-days together. {MN}</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The present Estate of the</i> Summer Isles.</p>
-
-
-<p>The next Governour was Captain <i>Philip Bell,</i> whose time being expired,
-Captain <i>Roger Wood</i> possess'd his Place, a worthy Gentleman of good
-desert, and hath lived a long time in the Country; their Numbers are about
-2 or 3000 Men, Women and Children, who increase there exceedingly; their
-greatest Complaint is want of Apparel, and too much Custom, and too many
-Officers; the Pity is, there are no more Men than Women, yet no great
-Mischief, because there is so much less Pride: the Cattle they have
-increase exceedingly; their Forts are well maintain'd by the Merchants
-here, and Planters there; to be brief, this Isle is an excellent Bit to
-Rule a great Horse.</p>
-
-<p>All the Cohow Birds and Egbirds are gone; seldom any wild Catts seen; no
-Rats to speak off; but the Worms are yet very troublesome; the People very
-healthful, and the Ravens gone; Fish enough, but not so near the shoar as
-it used, by the much beating it; it is an Isle that hath such a Rampire
-and a Ditch, and for the quantity so manned, Victualled, and Fortified, as
-few in the World do exceed it, or is like it.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} The 22d of March, two Ships came from thence; the
-<i>Peter-Bonaventure,</i> near 200 Tunns, and sixteen Pieces of Ordnance; the
-Captain, <i>Thomas Sherwin;</i> the Master, Mr. <i>Edward Some,</i> like him in
-Condition, a Goodly, Lusty, Proper, Valiant Man: The <i>Lydia,</i> wherein was
-Mr. <i>Anthony Thorne,</i> a smaller Ship, were chased by eleven Ships of
-<i>Dunkirk;</i> being thus over-match'd, Captain <i>Sherwin</i> was taken by them in
-<i>Torbay,</i> only his Valiant Master was slain; the Ship with about seventy
-<i>English</i> Men they carried betwixt <i>Dover</i> and <i>Callais</i> to <i>Dunkirk;</i>
-but the <i>Lydia</i> safely recovered <i>Dartmouth.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>An Evil Mischance.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>These Noble Adventures for all thole losses patiently do bear them; but
-they hope the King and State will understand it is worth keeping, tho' it
-afford nothing but Tobacco, and that now worth little or nothing, Custom
-and Fraught pay'd, yet it is worth keeping, and not supplanting; tho'
-great Men feel not those losses, yet Gardiners, Carpenters and Smiths, do
-pay for it.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> From the Relation of <i>Robert
- Chestevan</i> and others.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXIII.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The Proceedings and present Estate of</i> New England, <i>since</i> 1624.<br>
- <i>to this present</i> 1629.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">When</span> I went first to the North part of <i>Virginia,</i> where the Westerly
-Colony had been planted, it had dissolved it self within a Year, and there
-was not one <i>Christian</i> in all the Land. I was set forth at the sole
-Charge of four Merchants of <i>London;</i> the Country being then reputed by
-your Westerlings, a most Rocky Barren, Desolate Desart; {MN-1} but the
-good Return brought from thence, with the Maps and Relations I made of the
-Country, which I made so manifest, some of them did believe me, and they
-were well embraced both by the <i>Londoners</i> and the <i>Westerlings,</i> for whom
-I had promised to undertake it, I thinking to have joined them all
-together, but that might well have been a work of <i>Hercules.</i> Betwixt them
-long there was much contention; the <i>Londoners</i> indeed went bravely
-forward; but in three or four Years, I and my Friends consumed many
-hundred Pounds amongst the <i>Plimothians,</i> who only fed me with delays,
-promises and excuses, but no Performance of any thing to any purpose. In
-the interim, many particular Ships went thither, and finding my Relations
-true, and that I had not taken that I brought home from the <i>French</i> Men,
-as had been reported; yet further, for my Pains to discredit me, and my
-calling it <i>New-England,</i> they obscured, and shadowed it, with the Title
-of <i>Canada,</i> till at my humble suit, it pleased our most Royal King
-<i>Charles,</i> whom God long keep, bless and preserve, then Prince of <i>Wales,</i>
-to confirm it with my Map and Book, by the Title of <i>New England;</i> the
-gain thence returning, did make the same thereof so increase, that thirty,
-forty, or fifty sail went Yearly only to Trade and Fish; but nothing would
-be done for a Plantation, till about some Hundred of your Brownists of
-<i>England, Amsterdam</i> and <i>Leyden,</i> went to <i>New Plimouth,</i> whose humorous
-Ignorances, caused them for more than a Year to endure a wonderful deal of
-misery, with an infinite patience; saying my Books and Maps were much
-better cheap to teach them than my self; {MN-2} many other have used the
-like good Husbandry, that have payed soundly in trying their self-will'd
-conclusions; but those in time doing well, divers others have in small
-handfuls undertaken to go there, to be several Lords and Kings of
-themselves, but most vanished to nothing; notwithstanding the Fishing
-Ships, made such good returns, at last it was ingrossed by twenty
-Patentees, that divided my Map into twenty parts, and cast Lots for their
-shares; but Money not coming in as they expected, procured a Proclamation,
-none should go thither without their Licences to Fish; but for every
-thirty Tuns of Shipping, to pay them five Pounds; besides, upon great
-Penalties, neither to Trade with the Natives, cut down Wood for their
-Stages, without giving satisfaction, though all the Country is nothing but
-Wood, and none to make use of it, with many such other pretences, for to
-make this Country plant it self, by its own Wealth: Hereupon most Men grew
-so discontented, that few or none would go; so that the Patentees, who
-never a one of them had been there, seeing those Projects Would not
-prevail, have since not hindred any to go that would, that within these
-few last years, more have gone thither than ever.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>Considerations about the loss of time.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The effect of negardliness.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Now this Year 1629, a great company of People of good Rank, Zeal,
-Means, and Quality, have made a great Stock, and with six good Ships in
-the Months of April and May, they set Sail from <i>Thames,</i> for the Bay of
-the <i>Massachusets,</i> otherwise called <i>Charles's</i> River; <i>viz.</i> the <i>George
-Bonaventure,</i> of twenty pieces of Ordnance, the <i>Talbot</i> nineteen, the
-<i>Lions-whelp</i> eight, the <i>May-flower</i> fourteen, the <i>Four Sisters</i>
-fourteen, the <i>Pilgrim</i> four, with three hundred and fifty Men, Women, and
-Children; also an hundred and fifteen head of Cattel, as Horse, Mares, and
-neat Beast; one and forty Goats, some Conies, with all Provision for
-Houshold and Apparel; six pieces of great Ordnance for a Fort, with
-Muskets, Pikes, Corselets, Drums, Colours, with all Provision necessary
-for a Plantation, for the good of Man; other Particulars I understand of
-no more, than is writ in the general History of those Countries.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A new Plantation</i> 1629.</p>
-
-
-<p>But you are to understand, that the noble Lord chief Justice <i>Popham,</i>
-Judge <i>Doderege;</i> the Right Honourable Earls of <i>Pembroke, Southampton,
-Salisbury,</i> and the rest, as I take it, they did all think, as I and them
-went with me, did; That had those two Countries been planted, as it was
-intended, that no other Nation should complant betwixt us. If ever the
-King of <i>Spain</i> and we should fall foul, those Countries being so capable
-of all Materials for shipping, by this might have been Owners of a good
-Fleet of Ships, and to have relieved a whole Navy from <i>England</i> upon
-occasion; yea, and to have furnished <i>England</i> with the most Easterly
-Commodities; and now since, seeing how conveniently the <i>Summer Isles</i>
-fell to our shares, so near the <i>West-Indies,</i> we might with much more
-facility than the <i>Dutch</i> Men have invaded the <i>West-Indies,</i> that doth
-now put in practice, what so long hath been advised on, by many an honest
-<i>English</i> States-man.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} Those Countries, Captain <i>Smith</i> oft times used to call his Children
-that never had Mother; and well he might, for few Fathers ever payed
-dearer for so little content; and for those that would truly understand,
-how many strange Accidents hath befallen them and him; how oft up, how oft
-down, sometimes near despair, and ere long flourishing, cannot but
-conceive Gods infinite Mercies and Favours towards them. Had his Designs
-been to have perswaded Men to a Mine of Gold, though few doth conceive
-either the charge or pains in refining it, nor the power nor care to
-defend it; or some new Invention to pass to the South Sea, or some strange
-Plot to invade some strange Monastery, or some portable Country, or some
-chargeable Fleet to take some rich Carocks in the <i>East-Indies;</i> of
-Letters of Mart to rob some poor Merchants; What multitudes of both People
-and Money would contend to be first imployed? But in those noble
-endeavours (now) how few of quality, unless it be to beg some Monopoly;
-and those seldom seek the common good, but the Commons Goods, as you may
-read at large in his general History, <i>pag.</i> 217, 218, 219, his general
-Observations and Reasons for this Plantation; for yet those Countries are
-not so forward, but they may become as miserable as ever, if better
-courses be not taken than is; as this <i>Smith</i> will plainly demonstrate to
-his Majesty, or any other noble Person of Ability, liable generously to
-undertake it; how within a Short time to make <i>Virginia</i> able to resist
-any Enemy, that as yet lieth open to all, and yield the King more Custom
-within these few years, in certain staple Commodities, than ever it did in
-Tobacco; which now not being worth bringing home, the Custom will be as
-uncertain to the King, as dangerous to the Plantation.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Notes of inconveniency.</i></p>
-<br>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXIV.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="chap"><i>A brief Discourse of divers Voyages made unto the goodly Country of</i>
- Guinea <i>and the great River of the</i> Amazons; <i>relating also the
- present Plantation there.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">It is not</span> unknown how that most Industrious and honourable Knight, Sir
-<i>Walter Rawleigh,</i> in the Year of Our Lord 1595, taking the Isle of
-<i>Trinidado,</i> fell with the Coast of <i>Guiana,</i> Northward of the Line 10
-degrees, and coasted the Coast, and searched up the River <i>Oranoco;</i> where
-understanding that twenty several Voyages had been made by the Spaniards;
-in discovering this Coast and River, to find a passage to the great City
-of <i>Mano,</i> called by them the <i>Eldorado,</i> or the Golden City: he did his
-utmost to have found some better Satisfaction than Relations: {MN-1} But
-means failing him, he left his trusty Servant <i>Francis Sparrow</i> to seek
-it, who wandring up and down those Countries, some fourteen or fifteen
-years, unexpectedly returned; I have heard him say, he was led blinded
-into this City by <i>Indians;</i> but little Discourse of any purpose, touching
-the largeness of the report of it; his body seeming as a Man of an
-uncurable Consumption, shortly died here after in <i>England.</i> There are
-above thirty fair Rivers that fall into the Sea, between the River of
-<i>Amazons</i> and <i>Oranoco,</i> which are some nine degrees asunder. {MN-2} In
-the year 1605, Captain <i>Ley</i>, Brother to that noble Knight, Sir <i>Oliver
-Ley,</i> with divers others, planted himself in the River <i>Weapoco,</i> wherein
-I should have been a Party; but he died, and there lies buried, and the
-supply miscarrying, the rest escaped as they could.</p>
-
-<hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} Sparrow <i>left to seek the great city of</i> Mano.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} Captain <i>Charles Ley.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Sir <i>Thomas Roe,</i> known to be a most Noble Gentleman, before he went
-Lord Ambassadour to the Great <i>Mogul,</i> or the Great <i>Turk,</i> spent a year
-or two upon this Coast, and about the River of the <i>Amazons,</i> {MN-2}
-wherein he most imployed Captain <i>Matthew Morton,</i> an expert Sea-man in
-the discovery of this famous River, a Gentleman that was the first shot,
-and mortally supposed wounded to Death, with me in <i>Virginia,</i> yet since
-hath been twice with command in <i>East-Indies;</i> {MN-3} Also Captain
-<i>William White,</i> and divers others worthy and industrious Gentlemen, both
-before and since, hath spent much time and charge to discover it more
-perfectly, but nothing more effected for a Plantation, till it was
-undertaken by Captain <i>Robert Harcote</i> 1609.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} Sir <i>Thomas Roe.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} Captain <i>Morton.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-3} Captain <i>White.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} This worthy Gentleman, after he had by Commission made a discovery
-to his mind, left his Brother <i>Michael Harcote,</i> with some fifty or sixty
-Men in the River <i>Weapoco,</i> and so presently returned to <i>England,</i> where
-he obtained by the favour of Prince <i>Henry</i> a large Patent for all that
-Coast called <i>Guiana,</i> together with the famous River of <i>Amazons,</i> to him
-and his Heirs: but so many troubles here surprized him, though he did his
-best to supply them, he was not able, only some few he sent over as
-Passengers, with certain <i>Dutch</i> Men, but to small purpose. Thus this
-business lay dead for divers years, till Sir <i>Walter Rawleigh,</i>
-accompanied with many valiant Soldiers and brave Gentlemen, went his last
-Voyage to <i>Guiana,</i> amongst the which, was Captain <i>Roger North,</i> Brother
-to the Right Honourable the Lord <i>Dudley North,</i> who upon this Voyage,
-having stayed, and seen divers Rivers upon this Coast, took such a liking
-to those Countries, having had before this Voyage, more perfect and
-particular Information of the excellency of the great River of the
-<i>Amazons,</i> above any of the rest, by certain <i>English</i> Men returned so
-rich, from thence in good Commodities, they would not go with Sir <i>Walter
-Rawleigh</i> in search of Gold; that after his return for <i>England</i>, he
-endeavoured by his best Abilities to interest his Country and State in
-those fair Regions, which by the way of Letters Patents unto divers Noble
-Men and Gentlemen of Quality, erected into a Company and Perpetuity for
-Trade and Plantation, not knowing of the Interest of Captain <i>Harcote.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} Captain <i>Harcote.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Whereupon accompanied with 120 Gentlemen and others, with a Ship, a
-Pinnace and two Shallops, to remain in the Country, he set Sail from
-<i>Plimouth</i> the last of <i>April</i> 1620, and within seven Weeks after he
-arrived well in the <i>Amazons,</i> only with the loss of one old Man: Some
-hundred Leagues they ran up the River to settle his Men, where the sight
-of the Country and People so contented them, that never Men thought
-themselves more happy: Some <i>English</i> and <i>Irish</i> that had lived there
-some eight years, only supplied by the <i>Dutch,</i> he reduced to his Company
-and to leave the <i>Dutch:</i> having made a good Voyage, to the value of more
-than the charge, he returned to <i>England</i> with divers good Commodities,
-besides, Tobacco: So that it may well be conceived, that if this Action
-had not been thus crossed the Generality of <i>England</i> had by this time
-been won and encouraged therein. But the time was not yet come, that God
-would have this great business effected, by reason of the great Power the
-Lord <i>Gundamore,</i> Ambassadour for the King of <i>Spain,</i> had in <i>England,</i>
-to cross and ruin those Proceedings, and so unfortunate Captain <i>North</i>
-was on this business, he was twice committed Prisoner to the Tower, and
-the Goods detained, till they were spoiled, who beyond all others, was by
-much the greatest Adventurer and Loser.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} Captain <i>Roger North.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Notwithstanding all this, those that he had left in the <i>Amazons,</i>
-would not abandon the Country. Captain <i>Thomas Painton,</i> a worthy
-Gentleman; his Lieutenant dead. Captain <i>Charles Parker,</i> Brother to the
-Right Honourable the Lord <i>Morley,</i> lived there six years after; Mr.
-<i>John Christmas,</i> five years; so well, they would not return, although
-they might, with divers other Gentlemen of Quality and others: All thus
-destitute of any supplies from <i>England.</i> But all Authority being
-dissolved, want of Government did more wrong their Proceedings, than all
-other crosses whatsoever. Some relief they had sometime from the <i>Dutch,</i>
-who knowing their Estates, gave what they pleased, and took what they
-list. Two Brothers, Gentlemen, <i>Thomas</i> and <i>William Hixon,</i> who stayed
-three years there, are now gone to stay in the <i>Amazons,</i> in the Ships
-lately sent thither.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Nota bene.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>The business thus remaining in this fort, three private Men left of that
-Company, named Mr. <i>Thomas Warriner, John Rhodes,</i> and <i>Robert Bims,</i>
-having lived there about two years, came for <i>England,</i> and to be free
-from the disorders that did grow in the <i>Amazons,</i> for want of Government
-amongst their Country-men, and to be quiet amongst themselves, made means
-to let themselves out for St. <i>Christophers;</i> their whole number being but
-fifteen Persons that payed for their Passage in a Ship going for
-<i>Virginia,</i> where they remained a year before they were supplied, and then
-that was but four or five Men. Thus this Isle, by this small beginning,
-having no interruption by their own Country, hath not got the start of the
-Continent and main Land of <i>Guinea,</i> which hath been laid apart, and let
-alone until that Captain <i>North,</i> ever watching his best opportunity and
-advantage of time in the State, hath now again pursued, and set on foot
-his former design. Captain <i>Harcote</i> being now willing to surrender his
-Grant, and to joyn with Captain <i>North,</i> in passing a new Patent, and to
-erect a Company for Trade and Plantation in the <i>Amazons,</i> and all the
-Coast and Country of <i>Guinea</i> for ever. Whereupon, they have sent this
-present year in <i>January,</i> and since 1628, four Ships, with near two
-hundred Persons; the first Ship with 112 Men, not one miscarried; the rest
-went since, not yet heard of and are preparing another with their best
-Expedition; and since <i>January</i> is gone from <i>Holland,</i> 100 <i>English</i> and
-<i>Irish,</i> conducted by the old Planters.</p>
-
-<p>This great River lieth under the Line, the two chief Head Lands North and
-South, are about three degrees asunder, the mouth of it is so full of many
-great and small Isles, it is an easie matter for an unexperienced Pilot to
-lose his way. It is held one of the greatest Rivers in <i>America,</i> and as
-most Men think in the World; and cometh down with such a fresh, it maketh
-the Sea fresh, more than thirty Miles from the Shoar. Captain <i>North</i>
-having seated his Men about an hundred Leagues in the Main, sent Captain
-<i>William White,</i> with thirty Gentlemen and others, in a Pinnace of thirty
-Tun, to discover further, which they did some two hundred Leagues, where
-they found the River to divide it self in two parts, till then all full of
-Islands, and a Country most healthful, pleasant and fruitful; for they
-found food enough, and all returned safe and in good health: In this
-discovery, they saw many Towns well inhabited, some with three hundred
-People, some with five, six, or seven hundred; and of some they understood
-to be of so many thousands, most differing very much, especially in their
-Languages: Whereof they suppose by those <i>Indians,</i> they understand are
-many hundreds more, unfrequented till then by any <i>Christian,</i> most of
-them stark naked, both Men, Women and Children, but they saw not any such
-Giant-like Women as the Rivers name importeth. But for those where Captain
-<i>North</i> hath seated his Company, it is not known where Indians were ever
-so kind to any Nation, not sparing any pains, danger or labour, to feed
-and maintain them. The <i>English</i> following their Buildings, Fortifications
-and Sugar-works; for which they have sent most expert Men, and with them
-all things necessary for that purpose; to effect which, they want not the
-help of those kind Indians to produce; and many other good Commodities,
-which (God willing) will ere long make plain and apparent to this Kingdom,
-and all the Adventures and Well-willers to this Plantation, to be well
-worthy the cherishing and following with all alacrity.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXV.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The Beginning and Proceedings of the new Plantation of St.</i> Christopher
- <i>by<br> Captain</i> Warner.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">Master</span> <i>Ralph Merifield</i> and others, having furnished this worthy
-Industrious Gentleman, {MN-1} he arrived at St. <i>Christophers,</i> as is
-said, with fifteen Men, the 28th of <i>January</i> 1623, <i>viz. William Tested,
-John Rhodes, Robert Bints,</i> Mr. <i>Benifield,</i> Sergeant <i>Jones,</i> Mr. <i>Ware,
-William Ryle, Rowland Grascock,</i> Mr. <i>Bond,</i> Mr. <i>Langley,</i> Mr. <i>Weaver,
-Edward Warner,</i> their Captain's Son, and now Deputy Governour, till his
-Father's return, Sergeant <i>Aplon,</i> one Sailor and a Cook: At their
-arrival, they found three <i>French</i> Men, who sought to oppose Captain
-<i>Warner,</i> and to set the <i>Indians</i> upon us; but at last we all became
-Friends, and lived with the <i>Indians</i> a Month, then we built a Fort, and a
-House, and planting Fruits, by <i>September</i> we made a crop of Tobacco;
-{MN-2} but upon the nineteenth of <i>September</i> came a <i>Hericano</i> and blew
-it away, all this while we lived upon Cassada Bread, Potatoes, Plantanes,
-Pines, Turtles, Guanes, and Fish plenty; for drink we had <i>Nicnobby.</i></p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} 1623.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>A Hericano.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The 18th March 1624 arrived Captain <i>Jefferson,</i> with three Men
-Passengers in the <i>Hopewell</i> of <i>London,</i> with some Trade for the
-<i>Indians,</i> and then we had another crop of Tobacco, in the mean time the
-<i>French</i> had planted themselves in the other end of the Isle; with this
-crop Captain <i>Warner</i> returned for <i>England</i> in <i>September</i> 1625.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} 1624.</p>
-
-
-<p>In his absence came in a <i>French</i> Pinnace, under the command of <i>Monsieur
-de Nombe,</i> that told us, the <i>Indians</i> had slain some <i>French</i> Men in
-other of the <i>Caribbe</i> Isles, and that there were six Peryagoes, which
-are huge great Trees, formed as your Canoos, but so laid out on the sides
-with Boards, they will seem like a little Gally: {MN} Six of those, with
-about four or five hundred strange <i>Indians</i> came unto us, we bade them be
-gone, but they would not; whereupon we and the <i>French</i> joyned together,
-and upon the fifth of <i>November</i> set upon them, and put them to flight:
-upon New years Even they came again, found three <i>English</i> going about the
-Isle, whom they slew.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Fight with the</i> Indians.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} Until the fourth of <i>August,</i> we stood upon our Guard, living upon
-the spoil and did nothing. But now Captain <i>Warner</i> arriving again with
-near an hundred People, then we fell to work and planting as before;
-{MN-2} but upon the fourth of September, came such a Hericano, as blew
-down all our Houses, Tobacco, and two Drums into the air we know not
-whither, drove two Ships on Shoar that were both split; all our Provision
-thus lost, we were very miserable, living only on what we could get in the
-wild Woods, {MN-3} we made a small party of French and English to go
-aboard for Provision, but in their returning home, eight <i>French</i> Men were
-slain in the Harbour.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} 1625.</p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>A Hericano.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-3} <i>Eight French Slain.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Thus we continued till near <i>June</i> that the <i>Tortles</i> came in 1627,
-but the French being like to starve, sought to surprize us, and all the
-Cassado, Potatoes, and Tobacco we had planted, but we did prevent them.
-The 26th of <i>October,</i> came in Captain <i>William Smith,</i> in the
-<i>Hope-well,</i> with some Ordnance, Shot and Powder, from the Earl of
-<i>Carlisle,</i> with Captain <i>Pelham</i> and thirty Men; about that time also
-came the <i>Plow,</i> also a small Ship of <i>Bristow,</i> with Captain <i>Warner's</i>
-Wife, and six or seven Women more.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} 1627.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Upon the 25th of <i>November,</i> the <i>Indians</i> set upon the French, for
-some injury about their Women, and slew six and twenty <i>French</i> Men, five
-<i>English,</i> and three <i>Indians.</i> Their Weapons are Bows and Arrows, their
-Bows are never bent, but the string lies flat to the Bow; their Arrows a
-small Reed, four or five foot long, headed some with the poisoned Sting of
-the Tail of a Stingray, some with Iron, some with Wood, but all so
-poisoned, that if they draw but blood, the hurt is incurable.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Three</i> Indians <i>Slain.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The next day came in Captain <i>Charles Saltonstall,</i> a young
-Gentleman, Son of Sir <i>Samuel Saltonstall,</i> who brought with him good
-store of all Commodities to relieve the Plantation; but by reason some
-<i>Hollanders,</i> and others had been there lately before him, who carried
-away with them all the Tobacco, he was forced to put away all his
-Commodities upon trust till the next crop; in the mean time he resolved
-there to stay, and imploy himself and his Company in planting Tobacco,
-hoping thereby to make a Voyage, but before he could be ready to return
-for <i>England,</i> a <i>Hericano</i> happening, his Ship was split, to his great
-loss, being sole Merchant and owner himself, notwithstanding forced to pay
-to the Governour the fifth part of his Tobacco, and for fraught to
-<i>England,</i> three pence a pound, and nine pence a pound custom, which
-amounts together to more than threescore pound in the hundred pound, to
-the great discouragement of him and many others, that intended well to
-those Plantations. Nevertheless he is gone again this present year 1629,
-with a Ship of about three hundred Tuns, and very near two hundred People,
-with Sir <i>William Tuffton</i> Governour for the <i>Barbadoes</i>, and divers
-Gentlemen, and all manner of Commodities fit for a Plantation.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The arrival of many English Ships.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Captain <i>Prinn,</i> Captain <i>Stone,</i> and divers others came in about
-<i>Christmas;</i> so that this last year, there hath been about thirty Sail of
-<i>English, French,</i> and <i>Dutch</i> Ships, and all the <i>Indians</i> forced out of
-the Isle, for they had done much mischief amongst the <i>French,</i> in cutting
-their Throats, burning their Houses, and spoiling their Tobacco; amongst
-the rest <i>Tegramund,</i> a little Child, the King's Son, his Parents being
-slain, or fled, was by great chance saved, and carefully brought to
-<i>England,</i> by Master <i>Merifield,</i> who brought him from thence, and
-bringeth him up as his own Children.</p>
-
-<p>{MN-1} It lieth seventeen degrees Northward of the Line, about an hundred
-and twenty Leagues from the <i>Cape de tres Puntas,</i> the nearest main Land
-in <i>America,</i> it is about eight Leagues in length, and four in breadth;
-an Island amongst 100 Isles in the <i>West Indies,</i> called the <i>Caribbes,</i>
-where ordinarily all them that frequent the <i>West Indies,</i> refresh
-themselves; those, most of them are Rocky, little, and Mountainous, yet
-frequented with the <i>Canibals;</i> many of them inhabited, as Saint
-<i>Domingo,</i> Saint <i>Mattalin,</i> Saint <i>Lucia,</i> Saint <i>Vincent, Granada,</i> and
-<i>Margarita,</i> to the Southward; Northward, none but Saint <i>Christophers,</i>
-and it but lately, yet they will be ranging <i>Marigalanta, Guardalupo,
-Deceado, Mountserat, Antegua, Mevis, Bernardo,</i> Saint <i>Martin,</i> and Saint
-<i>Bartholomew,</i> but the worst of the four Isles possessed by the
-<i>Spaniard,</i> as <i>Portorico</i> or <i>Jamaica,</i> is better than them all; as for
-<i>Hispaniola,</i> and <i>Cuba,</i> they are worthy the Title of two rich Kingdoms,
-the rest not respected by the <i>Spaniards,</i> for want of Harbours, and their
-better choice of good Land, and profit in the main. But Captain <i>Warner,</i>
-having been very familiar with Captain <i>Painton,</i> in the <i>Amazon,</i> hearing
-his information of this St. <i>Christophers;</i> and having made a years trial,
-as it is said, returned for <i>England,</i> joyning with Master <i>Merifield</i> and
-his Friends, got Letters Patents from King James to plant and possess it.
-Since then, the Right Honourable the Earl of <i>Carlisle</i> hath got Letters
-Patents also, not only of that, but all the <i>Caribe</i> Isles about it, who
-is now chief Lord of them, and the <i>English</i> his Tenants that do possess
-them; over whom he appointeth such Governours and Officers as their
-affairs require; and although there be a great Custom imposed upon them,
-considering their other charges, both to feed and maintain themselves; yet
-there is there, and now a going, near upon the number of three thousand
-People; where by reason of the rockiness and thickness of the Woods in the
-Isle, it is difficult to pass, and such a snuff of the Sea goeth on the
-Shoar, ten may better defend, than fifty assault. {MN-2} In this Isle are
-many Springs, but yet Water is scarce again in many places; the Valleys
-and sides of the Hills very fertile, but the Mountains harsh, and of a
-sulphurous composition; all overgrown with <i>Palmetas, Cotten</i> Trees;
-<i>Lignum vit&aelig;,</i> and divers other sorts, but none like any in Christendom,
-except those carried thither; the air very pleasant and healthful, but
-exceeding hot, yet so tempered with cool breaths, it seems very temperate
-to them, that are little used to it; the Trees being always green, the
-days and nights always very near equal in length, always Summer; only they
-have in their Seasons great Gusts and Rains, and sometimes a Hericano,
-which is an over grown, and a most violent storm.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The Description of the Isle.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The Springs; Temper; and Seasons.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} In some of those Isles, are Cattel, Goats, and Hogs, but here none
-but what they must carry; <i>Guanes</i> they have, which is a little harmless
-Beast, like a <i>Crocodile,</i> or <i>Alligator,</i> very fat and good Meat; she
-lays Eggs in the Sand, as doth the Land Crabs, which live here In
-abundance, like Conies in Boroughs, unless about <i>May,</i> when they come
-down to the Sea side, to lay in the Sand, as the other; and all their Eggs
-are hatched by the heat of the Sun.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A strange hatching of eggs for beasts.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} From <i>May</i> to <i>September,</i> they have good store of Tortoises that
-come out of the Sea to lay their Eggs in the Sand, and are hatched as the
-other; they will lay half a peck at a time, and near a bushel ere they
-have done, and are round like Tenis-balls: This Fish is like Veal in
-taste, the Fat of a brownish colour, very good and wholsom. We seek them
-in the Nights, where we find them on shoar, we turn them upon their backs,
-till the next day we fetch them home, for they can never return
-themselves, being so hard, a Cart may go over them, and so big, one will
-suffice forty or fifty Men to dinner. Divers sorts of other Fish they have
-in abundance, and <i>Prawenes</i> most great and excellent, but none will keep
-sweet scarce twelve hours.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Fish.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The best and greatest is a <i>Passer Flaminga,</i> which walking at her
-length, is as tall as a Man; <i>Pigeons</i> and <i>Turtle Doves</i> in abundance;
-some <i>Parrots,</i> wild <i>Hawks,</i> but divers other sorts of good Sea-fowl,
-whose Names we know not.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Birds.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} <i>Cassado</i> is a Root planted in the Ground, of a wonderful Increase,
-and will make very good White-bread, but the Juce Rank Poyson, yet boyled,
-better than Wine; <i>Potatoes, Cabbages,</i> and <i>Radish</i> plenty.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Roots.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Maize, like the <i>Virginia</i> Wheat; we have Pine-Apple, near so big as
-an Hartichock, but the most daintiest taste of any Fruit; <i>Plantains,</i> an
-excellent and most increasing Fruit; Apples, Prickle Pears, and Pease, but
-differing all from ours. There is Pepper that groweth in a little red
-Husk, as big as a Walnut, about four Inches in length, but the long Cods
-are small, and much stronger and better for use, than that from the <i>East
-Indies.</i> There is too sorts of Cotten, the silk Cotten as in the <i>East
-Indies,</i> groweth upon a small stalk, as good for Beds as Down; the other
-upon a shrub, and beareth a Cod bigger than a Walnut, full of Cotten wool:
-Anotto also groweth upon a shrub, with a Cod like the other, and nine or
-ten on a bunch, full of Anotto, very good for Dyers, tho' wild; Sugar
-Canes, not tame, four or five foot high; also Mastick, and Locus-trees;
-great and hard Timber, Gourds, Musk-Melons, Water-Melons, Lettice, Parsly;
-all places naturally bear Purslain of it self; Sope-berries like a Musquet
-Bullet, that washeth as white as Sope; in the middle of the Root is a
-thing like a Sedge, a very good Fruit, we call Pengromes; a Pappaw is as
-great as an Apple, coloured like an Orange, and good to eat, a small hard
-Nut, like a Hazel Nut, grows close to the Ground, and like this grows on
-the Palmetas, which we call a Mucca Nut; Mustard-seed will grow to a great
-Tree, but bears no seed, yet the Leaves will make good Mustard; the
-Mancinel Tree, the Fruit is Poison; good Figs in abundance; but the
-Palmeta serveth to build Forts and Houses, the Leaves to cover them, and
-many other uses; the juice we draw from them, till we suck them to Death,
-(is held restorative) and the top for meat doth serve us as Cabbage; but
-oft we want Powder'd Beef and Bacon, and many other needful necessaries.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Fruits.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="list"> By <i>Thomas Simons, Rowland
- Grascocke, Nicholas Burgh,</i>
- and others.</p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXVI.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The first Planting of the</i> Barbadoes.</p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">The <i>Barbados</i></span> lies South-West and by South, an hundred Leagues from St.
-<i>Christophers,</i> threescore Leagues West and South from <i>Trinidado,</i> and
-some fourscore Leagues from <i>Cape de Salinos,</i> the next part of the main.
-The first Planters brought thither by Captain <i>Henry Powel,</i> were forty
-<i>English,</i> with seven or eight <i>Negros;</i> then he went to <i>Disacuba</i> in the
-main, where he got thirty <i>Indians,</i> Men, Women and Children of the
-<i>Arawacos,</i> Enemies both to the <i>Caribbes</i> and the <i>Spaniards.</i> {MN} The
-Isle is most like a Triangle, each side forty or fifty Miles square, some
-exceeding great Rocks, but the most part exceeding good Ground; abounding
-with an infinite number of Swine, some Turtles, and many sorts of
-excellent Fish; many great Ponds wherein is Duck and Mallard; excellent
-Clay for Pots, Wood and Stone for Building, and a Spring near the midst of
-the Isle of <i>Bitume,</i> which is a liquid mixture like Tarr, that by the
-great Rains falls from the Tops of the Mountains, it floats upon the Water
-in such abundance, that drying up, it remains like great Rocks of Pitch,
-and as good as Pitch for any use.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A Description of the Isle.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The Mancinel Apple, is of a most pleasant sweet smell, of the bigness
-of a Crab, but rank Poyson, yet the Swine and Birds have wit to shun it;
-great store of exceeding great Locus-trees, two or three Fathom about, of
-a great height, that beareth a Cod full of Meal, will make Bread in time
-of necessity. A Tree like a Pine beareth a Fruit so great as a Musk Melon,
-which hath always ripe Fruit Flowers, or Green Fruit, which will refresh
-two or three Men, and very comfortable; Plumb-trees many, the Fruit great
-and Yellow, which but strained into Water in four and twenty hours, will
-be very good drink; wild Figg-trees there are many; all those Fruits do
-fat the Hoggs, yet at sometimes of the Year they are so lean as Carrion;
-Guane-trees bear a Fruit so big as a Pear, good and wholsom; Palmetaes of
-three several sorts; Pappaws, Prickle Pears, good to eat or make drink;
-Cedar Trees very tall and great; Fustick Trees are very great, and the
-wood yellow, good for dying; Soap Berries, the kernel so big as a sloe,
-and good to eat; Pumpeons in abundance; Goads so great as will make good
-great Bottles, and cut in two pieces, good Dishes and Platters; many small
-Brooks of very good Water; <i>Guinea</i> Wheat, Cassado, Pines and Plantains;
-all things we there Plant, do grow exceedingly, so well as Tobacco; the
-Corn, Pease, and Beans, cut but away the Stalk, young sprigs will grow,
-and so bear Fruit for many Years together, without any more Planting; the
-Isle is overgrown with Wood or great Reeds, those Woods which are soft are
-exceeding light and full of Pitch, and those that are hard and great, they
-are as hard to cut as Stone.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
-<p class="quote"> {MN} <i>Fruits and Trees.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Mr. <i>John Powel</i> came thither the 40th of <i>August</i> 1627. with forty
-five Men, where we stayed three Weeks, and then returning, left behind us
-about an Hundred People, and his Son <i>John Powel</i> for his Deputy, as
-Governour; but there have been so many Factions amongst them, I cannot
-from so many variable Relations, give you any certainty for their orderly
-Government: for all those Plenties, much misery they have endured, in
-regard of their weakness at their Landing, and long stay without supplies;
-therefore those that go thither, it were good they carry good Provision
-with them; but the Isle is most healthful, and all things Planted do
-increase abundantly; and by this time there is, and now a going, about the
-number of fifteen or sixteen Hundred People.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their numbers.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>Sir <i>William Curtine,</i> and Captain <i>John Powel,</i> were the first and chief
-Adventurers to the Planting this fortunate Isle; which had been oft
-frequented by Men of War to refresh themselves, and set up their
-Shallopes; being so far remote from the rest of the Isles, they never were
-troubled with any of the <i>Indies.</i> Harbours they have none, but exceeding
-good Rodes, which with a small Charge, might be very well Fortified; it
-doth Ebb and Flow four or five foot, and they cannot perceive that there
-hath ever been any Hericano in that Isle.</p>
-
-<p class="list"> From the Relations of Captain
- <i>John White,</i> and
- Captain <i>Wolverstone.</i></p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXVII.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The first Plantations of the Isle of</i> Mevis.</p>
-
-
-<p>{MN-1} <span style="font-variant:small-caps">Because</span> I have ranged and lived amongst those Islands, what my
-Authors cannot tell me, I think it no great error in helping them to tell
-it my self. In this little Isle of <i>Mevis,</i> more than twenty Years ago, I
-have remained a great time together, to Wood and Water and refresh my Men;
-it is all Woody, but by the Sea-side Southward, there are Sands like
-Downs, where a Thousand Men may quarter themselves Conveniently; but in
-most places the Wood groweth close to the Water side, at a high Water
-mark, and in some places so thick of a soft spungy Wood like a wild
-Fig-tree, you cannot get through it, but by making your way with Hatchets,
-or Fauchions: whether it was the dew of those Trees, or of some others, I
-am not certain, but many of our Men became so tormented with a burning
-swelling all over their Bodies, they seemed like scalded Men, and near Mad
-with Pain; {MN-2} here we found a great Pool wherein bathing themselves
-they found much ease; and finding it fed with a Pleasant small stream that
-came out of the Woods, we found the head half a Mile within the Land
-distilling from many Rocks, by which they were well cured in two or three
-days. Such factions here we had, as commonly attend such Voyages, that a
-pair of Gallows were made, but Captain <i>Smith</i> for whom they were
-intended, could not be perswaded to use them; but not any one of the
-inventors, but their lives by Justice fell into his Power to determine of
-at his Pleasure, whom with much Mercy he favoured, that most basely and
-unjustly have betrayed him.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-1} <i>The Description of the Isle.</i></p>
-
- <p class="quote">{MN-2} <i>The Bath.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} The last Year 1628. Mr. <i>Littleton</i> with some others, got a Patent of
-the Earl of <i>Carlisle</i> to Plant the Isle called the <i>Barbadoes,</i> thirty
-Leagues Northward of St. <i>Christophers;</i> which by report of their
-Informers, and Undertakers, for the excellency of the Pleasantness
-thereof, they called <i>Dulcina,</i> but when they came there, they found it
-such a Barren Rock they left it; altho they were told as much before, they
-would not believe it, perswading themselves those contradicters would get
-it for themselves, was thus by their cunning Opinion, the deceivers of
-themselves; for seeing it lie conveniently for their purpose in a Map,
-they had not Patience to know the goodness or badness, the inconvenience
-nor probability of the Quantity nor Quality; which error doth predominate
-in most of our homebred Adventurers, that will have all things as they
-conceit and would have it; and the more they are contradicted, the more
-hot they are; but you may see by many Examples in the general History, how
-difficult a matter it is, to gather the Truth from amongst so many Foreign
-and several Relations, except you have exceeding good experience both of
-the Countries People, and their Conditions; and those ignorant
-undertakings, have been the greatest hindrance of all those Plantations.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>A great misfortune.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} At last because they would be absolute, they came to <i>Mevis,</i> a
-little Isle by St. <i>Christophers;</i> where they seated themselves, well
-furnished with all necessaries, being about the Number of an Hundred, and
-since increased to an Hundred and fifty Persons, whereof many were old
-Planters of St. <i>Christophers;</i> especially Mr. <i>Anthony Hinton,</i> and Mr.
-<i>Edward Tompson.</i> But because all those Isles for the most part are so
-capable to produce, and in Nature like each other, let this discourse
-serve for the description of them all. Thus much concerning those
-Plantations, which now after all this time, loss and charge, should they
-be abandon'd, suppressed, and dissolved, were most lamentable; and surely
-seeing they all strive so much about this Tobacco, and that the Fraught
-thereof, and other charges are so great, and so open to any Enemy by that
-Commodity they cannot long subsist.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their Numbers.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>And it is a wonder to me to see such Miracles and Mischiefs in Men; how
-greedily they pursue to dispossess the Planters of the Name of Christ
-Jesus, yet say they are Christians, when so much of the World is
-unpossessed; yea, and better Land than they so much strive for, murthering
-so many Christians, burning and spoiling so many Cities, Villages and
-Countries, and subverting so many Kingdoms, when so much lieth wait, or
-only possessed by a few poor Savages, that more serve the Devil for fear,
-than God for love; whose Ignorance we pretend to reform, but Covetousness,
-Humours, Ambition, Faction, and Pride hath so many Instruments, we perform
-very little to any purpose; nor is there either Honour or Profit to be got
-by any that are so vile, to undertake the subversion, or hinderance of any
-honest intended Christian Plantation.</p>
-
-<p>{MN} Now to conclude the Travels and Adventures of Captain <i>Smith;</i> how
-first he Planted <i>Virginia</i> and was let ashoar with about an Hundred Men
-in the wild Woods; how he was taken Prisoner by the Savages, by the King
-of <i>Pamaunke</i> tied to a Tree to be shot to death, led up and down their
-Country to be shewed for a wonder; fatted as he thought, for a Sacrifice
-for their Idol, before whom they conjured him three days, with strange
-Dances and Invocations, then brought him before their Emperor <i>Powhatan,</i>
-that commanded him to be slain; how his Daughter <i>Pocahontas</i> saves his
-life, returned him to <i>James</i> Town, relieved him and his famished Company,
-which was but eight and thirty to possess those large Dominions; how he
-discovered all the several Nations, upon the Rivers falling into the Bay
-of <i>Chisapeacke;</i> flung near to death with a most Poisoned taile of a Fish
-called Stingray: how <i>Powhatan</i> out of his Country took the Kings of
-<i>Pamaunke</i> and <i>Paspahegh</i> Prisoners, forced thirty nine of those Kings to
-pay him contribution, subjected all the Savages: how <i>Smith</i> was blown up
-with Gun-powder, and returned for <i>England</i> to be cured.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Certain exploits of Captain</i> Smith.</p>
-
-
-<p>Also how he brought our New <i>England</i> to the subjection of the Kingdom of
-Great <i>Britain;</i> his fights with the Pirats, left alone amongst a many
-<i>French</i> men of Warr, and his Ship ran from him; his Sea-fights for the
-<i>French</i> against the <i>Spaniards;</i> their bad usage of him; how in <i>France</i>
-in a little Boat he escaped them; was adrift all such a stormy Night at
-Sea by himself, when thirteen <i>French</i> Ships were split, or driven on
-shoar by the Isle of <i>Ree,</i> the General and most of his Men drowned, when
-God, to whom be all Honour and Praise, brought him safe on shoar to all
-their Admirations that escaped; you may read at large in his General
-History of <i>Virginia,</i> the <i>Summer Isles,</i> and <i>New England.</i></p>
-<br>
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
- <h3 class="direct">CHAP. XXVIII.</h3>
-<br><br>
-
-
- <p class="cchap"><i>The bad Life, Qualities and Conditions of Pirates; and how they taught
- the</i><br> Turks <i>and</i> Moors <i>to become men of Warr.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><span style="font-variant:small-caps">As in all Lands</span> where there are many People, there are some Thieves, so in
-all Seas much frequented, there are some Pirates; the most Ancient within
-the Memory of threescore Years, was one <i>Callis,</i> who most refreshed
-himself upon the Coast of <i>Wales; Clinton</i> and <i>Purser</i> his Companions,
-who grew famous till Queen <i>Elizabeth</i> of Blessed Memory, hanged them at
-<i>Wapping; Flemming</i> was as expert and as much sought for as they, yet such
-a Friend to his Country, that discovering the <i>Spanish Armado,</i> he
-voluntarily came to <i>Plimouth,</i> yielded himself freely to my Lord Admiral,
-and gave him notice of the <i>Spaniards</i> coming; which good warning came so
-happily and unexpectedly, that he had his Pardon, and a good Reward; some
-few Pirates there then remained; notwithstanding it is incredible how many
-great and rich Prizes the little Barques of the West Country daily brought
-home, in regard of their small Charge; {MN} for there are so many
-difficulties in a great Navy, by Wind and Weather, Victual, Sickness,
-losing and finding one another, they seldom defray half the charge: But
-for the Grace, State and Defence of the Coast and narrow Seas, a great
-Navy is most necessary, but not to Attempt any far Voyage, except there be
-such a Competent flock, they want not wherewith to furnish and supply all
-things with expedition; but to the purpose.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>The difficulties of a great Navy.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} After the death of our most Gracious Queen Elizabeth of Blessed
-Memory, our Royal King <i>James,</i> who from his Infancy had Reigned in Peace
-with all Nations; had no imployment for those Men of Warr, so that those
-that were Rich relied with that they had; those that were poor and had
-nothing but from hand to Mouth, turned Pirates; some, because they became
-slighted of those for whom they had got much Wealth; some for that they
-could not get their Due; some that had lived bravely, would not abase
-themselves to Poverty; some vainly, only to get a name; others for
-Revenge, Covetousness, or as ill; and as they found themselves more and
-more oppressed, their Passions increasing with discontent, made them turn
-Pirates.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>What occasioneth Pirates.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} Now because they grew hatefull to all <i>Christian</i> Princes, they
-retired to Barbary, where altho' there be not many good Harbours, but
-<i>Tunis, Argier, Sally, Mamora,</i> and <i>Tituane,</i> there are many convenient
-Rodes, or the open Sea, which is their chief Lordship: For their best
-Harbours <i>Massalqueber,</i> the Towns of <i>Oran, Mellila, Tangier,</i> and
-<i>Ceuta,</i> within the Streights, are possessed by the <i>Spaniards;</i> without
-the Streights they have also <i>Arzella</i> and <i>Mazagan; Mamora</i> they have
-likewise lately taken, and Fortified. <i>Ward</i> a poor <i>English</i> Sailer, and
-<i>Dansker</i> a <i>Dutchman,</i> made first here their Marts; when the <i>Moors</i> knew
-scarce how to sail a Ship; <i>Bishop</i> was Ancient and did little hurt; but
-<i>Easton</i> got so much as made himself a Marquess in <i>Savoy;</i> and <i>Ward</i>
-lived like a Bashay in <i>Barbary;</i> those were the first that taught the
-<i>Moors</i> to be Men of War. <i>Gennings, Harris, Tompson,</i> and divers others
-were taken in Ireland, a Coast they much frequented, and died at <i>Wapping.
-Haws, Bough, Smith, Walsingham, Ellis, Collins, Sawkwel, Wollingstone,
-Barrow, Wilson, Sayres,</i> and divers others, all these were Captains
-amongst the Pirates, whom King <i>James</i> Mercifully Pardon'd; and was it not
-strange, a few of those should command the Seas. Notwithstanding the
-<i>Malteses,</i> the Pope, <i>Florentines, Genoeses, French, Dutch</i> and <i>Engish,</i>
-Gallies and Men of War, they Would rob before their Faces, and even at
-their own Ports, yet seldom more than three, four, five, or six in a
-Fleet: many times they had very good Ships, and well Man'd, but commonly
-in such Factions amongst themselves, and so Riotous, Quarrellous,
-Treacherous, Blasphemous and Villainous, it is more than a wonder they
-could so long continue, to do so much Mischief; and all they got, they
-basely consumed it amongst <i>Jews, Turks, Moors,</i> and Whores.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Their chief Rendezvous.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>The best was, they would seldom go to Sea, so long as they could possibly
-live on shoar, being compiled of <i>English, French, Dutch</i> and <i>Moors,</i>
-(but very few <i>Spaniards</i> or <i>Italians</i>) commonly running one from
-another, till they became so disjointed, disordered, debauched, and
-miserable, {MN} that the <i>Turks</i> and <i>Moors</i> began to command them as
-Slaves, and force them to instruct them in their best skill, which many an
-accursed Runnagado, or <i>Christian</i> turned <i>Turk</i> did, till they have made
-those Sally-men or <i>Moors</i> of <i>Barbary</i> so Powerful as they be, to the
-Terror of all the Streights, and many times they take Purchase in the Main
-Ocean, yea sometimes in the narrow Seas in <i>England,</i> and those are the
-most cruel Villains in <i>Turky</i> or <i>Barbary;</i> whose Natives are very Noble,
-and of good Natures, in comparison of them.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Renegados.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>{MN} To conclude, The Misery of a Pirate, (altho' many are sufficient
-Seamen as any) yet in regard of his superfluity, you shall find it such,
-that any wise Man would rather live amongst wild Beasts, than them;
-therefore let all unadvised Persons take heed they entertain that quality;
-and I could how wish Merchants, Gentlemen, and all Setters forth of Ships,
-not to be sparing of a Competent Pay, nor true Payment; for neither
-Soldiers nor Seamen can live without Means, but necessity will force them
-to steal; and when they are once entered into that Trade, they are hardly
-reclaimed. Those Titles of Seamen and Soldiers, have been most worthily
-honoured and esteemed, but now regarded for the most part, but as the
-scum of the World; regain therefore your wonted Reputations and endeavour
-rather to Adventure to those fair Plantations of our English Nation; which
-however in the beginning were scorned contemned, yet now you see how many
-Rich and Gallant People come from thence, who went thither as Poor as any
-Soldier or Sailer, and gets more in one Year, than you by Piracy in seven.
-I intreat you therefore to consider how many Thousands yearly go thither;
-also how many Ships and Sailers are imployed to Transport them, and what
-Custom they Yearly pay to our most Royal King Charles, whole Prosperity
-and his Kingdom's good, I humbly beseech the Immortal God to preserve and
-increase.</p>
-
- <hr width="80%">
-
- <p class="quote">{MN} <i>Advertisements for Wild heads.</i></p>
-<br><br>
-
-
-
- <hr width="80%">
-<br><br><br>
- <h2 class="direct">F I N I S.</h2>
-<br><br>
- <hr width="80%">
-
-
-
-<br><br><br>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The True Travels, Adventures, and
-Observations of Captain John Smith into Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, by John Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The True Travels, Adventures, and Observations of Captain John Smith into Europe, Asia, Africa, and America
- From Ann. Dom. 1593 to 1629
-
-Author: John Smith
-
-Release Date: July 25, 2017 [EBook #55199]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TRUE TRAVELS OF CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Burch with scans from the internet archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-{Transcriber's Note: Archaic typography which displays the letter "s" in a
-form that resembles the letter "f" has been transposed to the modern "s."
-British, archaic and inconsistent spellings have been left as in the
-original, as have capitalization and italicisation. A few obvious
-typographical errors have been changed. Margin notes are indicated where
-they occur in the text with {MN} and inserted in full at the end of the
-paragraph to which they refer.}
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE TRUE
- TRAVELS,
- ADVENTURES,
- AND
- OBSERVATIONS,
- OF
- Captain JOHN SMITH,
- INTO
- EUROPE, ASIA, AFRICA, and AMERICA,
-
- From Ann. Dom. 1593. to 1629.
-
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- * * * * *
-
-
- To the Right Honourable
-
- _WILLIAM_ Earl of _PEMBROKE,_
- Lord Steward of His Majesty's most Honourable Houshold.
-
- _ROBERT_ Earl of _LINDSEY,_
- Great Chamberlain of _England,_
-
- _HENRY_ Lord _HUNSDON,_
- Viscount _ROCHFORD,_ Earl of _DOVER,_
-
-
- _And all your Honourable Friends and Well-willers._
-
-
-
-My Lords,
-
-Sir _Robert Cotton,_ that most Learned Treasurer of Antiquity, having by
-perusal of my General History, and others, found that I had likewise
-undergone divers other as hard hazards in the other Parts of the World,
-requested me to fix the whole Course of my Passages in a Book by it self,
-whose noble Desire I could not but in part satisfie; the rather, because
-they have acted my fatal Tragedies upon the Stage, and racked my Relations
-at their Pleasure. To prevent therefore all future Misprisions, I have
-compiled this true Discourse. Envy hath taxed me to have writ too much,
-and done too little; but that such should know, how little I esteem them,
-I have writ this, more for the satisfaction of my Friends, and all generous
-and well disposed Readers. To speak only of my self were intolerable
-Ingratitude; because, having had so many Co-Partners with me; I cannot
-make a Monument for my self, and leave them unburied in the Fields, whose
-Lives begot me the Title of a Soldier; for as they were Companions with me
-in my Dangers, so shall they be partakers with me in this Tomb.
-
-For my _Sea Grammar_ (caused to be Printed by my worthy Friend, Sir _Samuel
-Saltenstall_) hath found such good Entertainment abroad, that I have been
-importuned by many noble Persons, to let this also pass the Press. Many of
-the most eminent Warriours, and others, what their Swords did, their Pens
-writ: Though I be never so much their inferiour, yet I hold it no great
-Errour, to follow good Examples; nor repine at them will do the like.
-
-And now, _My most Honourable good Lords,_ I know not to whom I may better
-Present it, than to your Lordships, whose Friendships, as I conceive, are
-as much to each others, as my Duty is to you all; and because you are
-acquainted both with my Endeavours, and Writings, I doubt not, but your
-Honours will as well accept of this, as of the rest, and Patronize it
-under the shadow of your most noble Virtues, which I am ever bound in all
-Duty to Reverence, and under which I hope to have shelter, against all
-Storms that dare threaten,
-
- _Yours Honours to be Commanded,_
-
- John Smith.
-
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-
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- * * * * *
-
- THE TRUE
- TRAVELS,
- ADVENTURES,
- AND
- OBSERVATIONS
- OF
- Captain _JOHN SMITH,_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- CHAP. I.
-
-
-
- _His Birth; Apprenticeship; Going into_ France; _His beginning with Ten
- Shillings and three Pence; His Service in the_ Netherlands; _His bad
- Passage into_ Scotland; _His return to_ Willoughby, _and how he lived in
- the Woods._
-
-
-He was born in _Willoughby_ in _Lincoln-shire,_ and a Scholar in the two
-Free-Schools of _Alford_ and _Louth._ His Father antiently descended from
-the ancient _Smiths_ of _Crudley_ in _Lancashire;_ his Mother from the
-_Rickards_ at Great _Heck,_ in _York-shire._ His Parents dying when he was
-about Thirteen Years of Age, left him a competent Means, which he not
-being capable to manage, little regarded; his Mind being even then set
-upon brave Adventures, sold his Satchel, Books, and all he had, intending
-secretly to get to Sea, but that his Fathers Death stay'd him. But now the
-Guardians of his Estate more regarding it than him, he had liberty enough,
-though no Means, to get beyond the Sea. About the Age of Fifteen Years, he
-was bound an Apprentice to Mr. _Thomas Sendalt_ of _Linne,_ the greatest
-Merchant of all those Parts; but because he would not presently send him
-to Sea, he never saw his Master in Eight Years after. At last he found
-Means to attend Mr. _Peregrine Berty_ into _France_, second Son to the
-Right Honourable _Peregrine_, that generous Lord _Willoughby,_ and famous
-Soldier; where coming to his Brother _Robert,_ then at _Orleans,_ now Earl
-of _Lindsey_, and Lord Great Chamberlain of _England;_ being then but
-little Youths under Tutorage: His Service being needless, within a Month
-or six Weeks they sent him back again to his Friends; who when he came
-from _London_, they liberally gave him (but out of his own Estate) Ten
-Shillings to be rid of him; such oft is the share of Fatherless Children:
-But those two Honourable Brethren gave him sufficient to return for
-_England._ But it was the least thought of his Determination, for now
-being freely at liberty in _Paris_, growing acquainted with one Mr. _David
-Hume,_ who making some use of his Purse, gave him Letters to his Friends
-in _Scotland_ to prefer him to King _James._ Arriving at _Roan,_ he better
-bethinks himself, seeing his Money near spent, down the River he went to
-_Haver de grace,_ where he first began to learn the Life of a Soldier:
-Peace being concluded in _France,_ he went with Captain _Joseph Duxbury_
-into the Low-Countries, under whose Colours, having served three or four
-Years, he took his Journey for _Scotland,_ to deliver his Letters. At
-_Ancusan_ he imbark'd himself for _Lethe,_ but as much danger, as
-Shipwreck and Sickness could endure, he had at the Holy Isle in
-_Northumberland_ near Berwick, ( being recovered ) into _Scotland_ he went
-to deliver his Letters. After much kind usage among those honest _Scots_ at
-_Ripweth_ and _Broxmoth,_ but neither Money nor Means to make him a
-Courtier, he returned to _Willoughby_ in _Lincoln-shire;_ where within a
-short time, being glutted with too much Company, wherein he took small
-delight, he retired himself into a little Woody Pasture, a good way from
-any Town, invironed with many hundred Acres of other Woods: Here, by a fair
-Brook he built a Pavillion of Boughs, where only in his Cloths he lay. His
-Study was _Machiavil's_ Art of War, and _Marcus Aurelius;_ his exercise a
-good Horse, with his Lance and Ring; his Food was thought to be more of
-Venison than any thing else; what he wanted his Man brought him. The
-Country wondering at such an Hermite, his Friends perswaded one Seignior
-_Theodora Polaloga,_ Rider to _Henry_ Earl of _Lincoln,_ an excellent Horse
-Man, and a Noble _Italian_ Gentleman, to insinuate into his Woodish
-Acquaintance, whose Languages and good Discourse, and Exercise of Riding
-drew him to stay with him at _Tattersall._ Long these Pleasures could not
-content him, but he returned again to the Low Countries.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. II.
-
-
-
- _The notable Villany of four_ French _Gallants, and his revenge;_ Smith
- _thrown over-board; Captain_ La Roche _of Saint_ Malo _relieves him._
-
-
-Thus when _France_ and _Netherlands_ had taught him to Ride a Horse, and
-use his Arms, with such Rudiments of War, as his tender Years in those
-Martial Schools could attain unto; he was desirous to see more of the
-World, and try his Fortune against the _Turks,_ both repenting and
-lamenting to have seen so many _Christians_ slaughter one another. {MN}
-Opportunity calling him; into the Company of four _French_ Gallants well
-attended, faining to him the one to be a great Lord, the rest his
-Gentlemen, and that they were all devoted that way; over-perswaded him to
-go with them into _France,_ to the Dutchess of _Merceur,_ from whom they
-should not only have Means, but also Letters of Favour to her Noble Duke,
-then General for the Emperour _Rolduphus_ in _Hungary;_ which he did, with
-such ill Weather as Winter affordeth, in the dark Night they arrived in
-the broad shallow In-let of St. _Valleries sur Soame_ in _Picardie;_ His
-_French_ Lord knowing he had good Apparel, and better furnished with Money
-than themselves, so Plotted with the Master of the Ship, to set his and
-their own Trunks ashore, leaving _Smith_ aboard till the Boat could return,
-which was the next day after, towards Evening: The reason he alledged,
-was, the Sea went so high he could come no sooner, and that his Lord was
-gone to _Amiens,_ where they would stay his coming; which treacherous
-Villany, when divers other Soldiers, and Passengers understood, they had
-like to have slain the Master, and had they known how, would have run away
-with the Ship.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A notable Villany of four_ French _Gallants._
-
-
-Coming on shoar, he had but one _Cavvalue,_ {MN-1} was forced to sell his
-Cloak to pay for his Passage. One of the Soldiers, called _Curzianvere,_
-compassionating his Injury, assured him, this great Lord _Depreau_ was
-only the Son of a Lawyer of _Mortaigne_ in base _Britany,_ and his
-Attendants _Cursell, La Nelie,_ and _Monserrat,_ three young Citizens, as
-arrant Cheats as himself; but if he would accompany him, he would bring
-him to their Friends, but in the _interim_ supplied his wants: Thus
-Travelling by _Deepe, Cadebeck, Humphla, Pount-demer_ in _Normandy,_
-they came to _Caen_ in base _Normandy;_ where both this Noble
-_Curzianvere,_ and the great Prior of the great Abbey of St. _Steven_
-(where is the ruinous Tomb of _William_ the Conqueror) and many other of
-his Friends kindly welcomed him, and brought him to _Montaigne,_ where he
-found _Depreau_ and the rest, but to small purpose; for Mr. _Curzianvere_
-was a banished Man, and durst not be seen but to his Friends: yet the
-bruit of their Cozenage occasioned the Lady _Collumber,_ the Baron
-_Larshan,_ the Lord _Shasghe,_ and divers other honourable Persons, to
-supply his wants, and with them to recreate him-self so long as he would;
-But such pleasant pleasures suited little with his poor Estate, and his
-restless Spirit, that could never find content, to receive such Noble
-Favours, as he could neither deserve nor requite: But wandering from Port
-to Port to find some Man of War, spent that he had, and in a Forest, near
-dead with grief and cold, a rich Farmer found him by a fair Fountain,
-under a Tree: This kind Peasant relieved him again to his content, to
-follow his intent. {MN-2} Not long after, as he passed thorow a great Grove
-of Trees, between _Pounterson_ and _Dina_ in _Britany,_ it was his chance
-to meet _Cursell,_ more miserable than himself: His piercing Injuries had
-so small patience, as without any word they both drew, and in a short time
-_Cursell_ fell to the Ground, where, from an old ruinated Tower, the
-Inhabitants seeing them, were satisfied, when they heard _Cursell_ confess
-what had formerly passed; and that how, in the dividing that they had
-stolen from him, they fell by the Ears amongst themselves, that were
-Actors in it; but for his part, he excused himself to be innocent as well
-of the one, as of the other. In regard of his hurt, _Smith_ was glad to be
-so rid of him, directing his course to an honourable Lord, the Earl of
-_Ployer,_ {MN-3} who during the War in _France,_ with his two Brethren,
-Viscount _Poomory,_ and Baron _d'Mercy,_ who had been brought up in
-_England;_ by him he was better refurnished than ever. When they had shewed
-him Saint _Malo_ Mount, Saint _Michael, Lambal, Simbreack, Lanion,_ and
-their own fair Castle of _Tuncadeck, Gingan,_ and divers other places in
-_Britany_ (and their British _Cornwaile_) taking his leave, he took his
-way to _Raynes,_ the _Britains_ chief City, and so to _Nants, Poyters,
-Rochel,_ and _Bourdeaux._ The rumour of the strength of _Bayon_ in
-_Biskay,_ caused him to see it; and from thence took his way from _Leskar_
-in _Bicarne,_ and _Paw,_ in the Kingdom of _Navarre_ to _Tolouza_ in
-_Gascoigne, Bezers,_ and _Carcassone, Narbone, Montpelier, Nimes_ in
-_Languedeck,_ and thorow the Country of _Avignion,_ by _Aries_ to
-_Marseilles_ in _Provence,_ there imbarking himself for _Italy;_ the Ship
-was inforced to _Tolonne,_ and putting again to Sea, ill Weather so grew
-upon them, that they Anchored close aboard the Shoar, under the little Isle
-of St. _Mary,_ against _Nice_ in _Savoy._ Here the inhuman Provincials,
-with a Rabble of Pilgrims of divers Nations going to _Rome,_ hourly
-cursing him, not only for a _Hugonot_ but his Nation they swore were all
-Pirats, and so vilely railed on his dread Soveraign Queen _Elizabeth,_ and
-that they never should have fair Weather so long as he was aboard them;
-their Disputations grew to that Passion, that they threw him over board,
-yet God brought him to that little Isle, where was no Inhabitants, but a
-few Kine and Goats. The next Morning, he espied two Ships more riding by
-them, put in by the Storm, that fetched him aboard, well refreshed him,
-and so kindly used him, that he was well contented to try the rest of his
-Fortune with them. {MN-5} After he had related unto them his former
-Discourse, what for pity, and the love of the Honourable Earl of _Ployer,_
-this Noble _Britain_ his Neighbour, Captain _la Roche_ of Saint _Malo,_
-regarded and entertained him for his well respected Friend. With the next
-fair Wind, they Sailed along by the Coast of _Corsica_ and _Sardinia,_ and
-crossing the Gulf of _Tunis,_ passed by Cape _Bona_ to the Isle of
-_Lempadosa,_ leaving the Coast of _Barbary_ till they came at _Cape
-Rasata,_ and so along the _African_ Shoar, for _Alexandria_ in _AEgypt._
-There delivering their Fraught, they went to _Seandaroone,_ rather to view
-what Ships were in the Road, than any thing else: keeping their Course by
-_Cypres,_ and the Coast of _Asia,_ Sailing by _Rhodes_, the _Archipelagus,
-Candia,_ and the Coast of _Grecia,_ and the Isle of _Zefalonia._ They lay
-to and again a few days, betwixt the Isle of _Corsue,_ and the Cape of
-_Orranto,_ in the Kingdom of _Naples,_ in the Entrance of the _Adriatick_
-Sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _A Cavvalue is in value a penny._
-
- {MN-2} _Here he incountred one of the thieves._
-
- {MN-3} _The Nobleness of the Earl of_ Plover.
-
- {MN-4} _An inhuman act of the Provincials in casting him overboard._
-
- {MN-5} _Capt._ La Roche _relieves him._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. III.
-
-
- _A desperate Sea Fight in the Streights; His Passage to_ Rome, Naples,
- _and the view of_ Italy.
-
-
-Betwixt the two _Capes_, they met with an _Argosie_ of _Venice_; it seemed
-the Captain desired to speak with them, whose untoward answer was such, as
-slew them a Man; {MN} whereupon the _Britain_ presently gave them the
-Broad-side, then his Stern, and his other Broad-side also, and continued
-the Chase, with his chase Pieces, till he gave them so many Broad-sides
-one after another, that the _Argosies_ Sails and Tackling was so torn, she
-stood to her defence, and made shot for shot; twice in one hour and a half
-the _Britain_ boarded her, yet they cleared themselves, but clapping her
-aboard again, the _Argosie_ fired him, which with much danger to them
-both was presently quenched. This rather augmented the _Britain's_ rage,
-than abated his courage; for having reaccommodated himself again, shot
-her so oft between Wind and Water, she was ready to sink, then they
-yielded; the _Britain_ lost fifteen Men, she twenty, besides divers were
-hurt, the rest went to Work on all hands; some to stop the Leaks, others
-to guard the Prisoners that were chained, the rest to ride her. The Silks,
-Velvets, Cloth of Gold, and Tissue, Piasters, Chicqueens and Sultanies,
-which is Gold and Silver, they unloaded in four and twenty hours, was
-wonderful, whereof having sufficient, and tired with toil, they cast her
-off with her Company, with as much good Merchandize as would have
-fraughted such another _Britain_, that was but two Hundred Tuns, she four
-or five Hundred.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A desperate Sea Fight._
-
-
-To repair his Defects, he stood for the Coast of _Calabria_, but hearing
-there was six or seven Galleys at _Messina,_ he departed thence for
-_Malta;_ but the Wind coming fair, he kept his course along the Coast of
-the Kingdom of _Sicilia_, by _Sardinia_ and _Corsica_, till he came to the
-Road of _Antibo_ in _Peamon,_ where he set _Smith_ on shoar with five
-Hundred Chicqueens, and a little Box God sent him worth near as much more.
-Here he left this Noble _Britain_, and embarked himself for _Legorn,_
-being glad to have such opportunity and means to better his Experience by
-the view of _Italy;_ and having passed _Tuskany,_ and the Country of
-_Siena,_ where he found his dear Friends, the two Honourable Brethren, the
-Lord _Willoughby,_ and his Brother cruelly wounded, in a desperate fray,
-yet to their exceeding great Honour. Then to _Viterbo_ and many other
-Cities he came to _Rome,_ from where it was his chance to see Pope Clement
-the VIII. with many Cardinals, creep up the Holy Stairs, {MN} which they
-say, are those our Savior Christ went up to _Pontius Pilate,_ where blood,
-falling from his Head, being pricked with his Crown of Thorns, the drops
-are marked with Nails of Steel, upon them none dare go but in that manner,
-saying so many _Ave-Maries_ and _Pater-Nosters,_ as is their Devotion, and
-to kiss the Nails of Steel: But on each side, is a pair of such like
-Stairs, upon which you may go, stand, or kneel, but divided from the Holy
-Stairs by two Walls: Right against them is a Chappel, where hangs a great
-Silver Lamp, which burneth continually; yet they say, the Oil neither
-increaseth nor diminisheth. A little distant is the ancient Church of
-Saint _John de Lateran,_ where he saw him say Mass, which commonly he doth
-upon some Friday once a Month. Having saluted Father _Parsons,_ that
-famous _English_ Jesuit, and satisfied himself with the Rarities of
-_Rome,_ he went down the River of _Tiber_ to _Civita Vechia,_ where he
-embarked himself, to satisfie his Eye with the fair City of _Naples,_ and
-her Kingdoms Nobility; returning by _Capua, Rome_ and _Siena,_ he passed
-by that admired City of _Florence,_ the Cities and Countreys of _Bolonia,
-Ferrara, Mantua, Padua_ and _Venice,_ whose Gulf he passed from _Malamoco_
-and the _Adriatic_ Sea for _Ragouza,_ spending some time to see that
-barren, broken Coast of _Albania_ and _Dalmatia,_ to _Capo de Istria,_
-Travelling the main of poor _Sclavonia_ by _Lubbiano,_ till he came to
-_Grates_ in _Styria,_ the Seat of _Ferdinando,_ Arch-duke of _Austria,_
-now Emperour of _Almania:_ where he met an _English_ Man, and an _Irish_
-Jesuit, who acquainted him with many brave Gentlemen of good Quality,
-especially with the Lord _Ebersbaught,_ with whom, trying such
-Conclusions, as he projected to undertake, preferred him to Baron
-_Kisell,_ General of the Artillery, and he to a worthy Colonel, the Earl
-of _Meldritch,_ with whom, going to _Vienna_ in _Austria,_ under whose
-Regiment, in what Service, and how he spent his time, this ensuing
-Discourse will declare.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The Popes holy stairs brought from_ Jerusalem, _whereon (they say)
- Christ went up to_ Pontius Pilate.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-
-
- _The Siege of_ Olumpagh; _An excellent Stratagem by_ Smith; _Another
- not much worse._
-
-
-After the loss of _Caniza,_ the _Turks_ with Twenty thousand besieged the
-strong Town of _Olumpagh_ so straitly, as they were cut off from all
-intelligence and hope of succour; till _John Smith,_ this _English_
-Gentleman, acquainted Baron _Kisell,_ General of the Arch-dukes Artillery,
-he had taught the Governour, his worthy Friend, such a Rule, that he would
-undertake to make him know any thing he intended, and have his answer,
-would, they bring him but to some place where he might make the Flame of a
-Torch seen to the Town; _Kisell_ inflamed with this strange Invention,
-_Smith_ made it so plain, that forthwith he gave him Guides, who in the
-dark Night brought him to a Mountain, where he shewed three Torches
-equidistant from the other, which plainly appearing to the Town, the
-Governour presently apprehended, and answered again with three Other fires
-in like manner; each knowing the others being and intent; _Smith,_ though
-distant seven Miles, signified to him these Words: _On Thursday at Night I
-will charge on the East, at the Alarum, salley you;_ Ebersbaught answered,
-_he would,_ and thus it was done: First he writ his Message as brief, you
-see, as could be, then divided the Alphabet into two parts thus;
-
- _A. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. k. l._
- _I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I._
-
- _m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. v. w. x._
- _2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2. 2._
- _y. z._
- _2. 2._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The siege of_ Olumpagh.
-
-
-{M-1} The first part from _A._ to _L._ is signified by shewing and hiding
-one link, so oft as there is Letters from _A._ to that Letter you mean;
-the other part from _M._ to _Z._ is mentioned by two Lights in like
-manner. The end of a Word is signified by shewing of three Lights, ever
-staying your Light at that Letter you mean, till the other may write it in
-a Paper, and answer by his signal, which is one Light, it is done,
-beginning to count the Letters by the Lights, every time from _A._ to _M._
-by this means also the other returned his answer, whereby each did
-understand other. The Guides all this time having well viewed the Camp,
-returned to _Kisel,_ who, doubting of his power, being but Ten thousand,
-was animated by the Guides, how the _Turks_ were so divided by the River
-in two parts, they could not easily second each other. {MN-2} To which
-_Smith_ added this conclusion; that two or three thousand pieces of Match
-fastened to divers small Lines of an hundred Fathom in length, being armed
-with Powder, might all be fired and stretched at an instant before the
-Alarum, upon the Plain, of _Hysnaburg,_ supported by two Staves, at each
-lines end, in that manner would seem like so many Musketteers; which was
-put in Practice; and being discovered by the _Turks,_ they prepared to
-encounter these false fires, thinking there had been some great Army:
-whilst _Kisel_ with his Ten thousand being entred the _Turks_ quarters,
-who ran up and down as Men amazed, it was not long ere _Ebersbaught_ was
-pell-mell with them in their Trenches; in which distracted confusion, a
-third part of the Turks that besieged that side towards _Knowsbruck,_ were
-slain; many of the rest drowned, but all fled. The other part of the Army
-was so busied to resist the false fires, that _Kisel_ before the Morning
-put two thousand good Soldiers in the Town, and with small loss was
-retired; the Garrison was well relieved with what they found in the
-_Turks_ Quarters, which caused the _Turks_ to raise their Siege and return
-to _Caniza:_ and _Kisel_ with much honour was received at _Kerment,_ and
-occasioned the Author a good Reward and Preferment, to be Captain of Two
-hundred and fifty Horse-men, under the conduct of Colonel _Voldo,_ Earl of
-_Meldritch._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _An excellent Stratagem._
-
- {MN-2} _Another stratagem._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. V.
-
-
-
- _The Siege of_ Stoll-weissenburg; _The effects of_ Smith's _Fire-works;
- A worthy Exploit of Earl_ Rosworme; _Earl_ Meldritch _takes the_
- Bashaw _Prisoner._
-
-
-A General rumour of a general Peace, now spred it self over all the face
-of those tormented Countries: but the _Turk_ intended no such matter, but
-levied Soldiers from all Parts he could. The Emperour also, by the
-assistance of the _Christian_ Princes, provided three Armies, the one led
-by the Arch-duke _Matthias,_ the Emperour's Brother, and his Lieutenant
-Duke _Merceur_ to defend Low _Hungary;_ the second, by _Ferdinando_ the
-Arch-duke of _Styria,_ and the Duke of _Mantua_ his Lieutenant to regain
-_Caniza;_ the third by _Gonzago,_ Governour of High _Hungary,_ to joyn
-with _Georgio Buson_ to make an absolute conquest of _Transilvania._
-
-Duke _Merceur_ with an Army or Thirty thousand, whereof near Ten thousand
-were _French,_ besieged _Stoll-weissenburg,_ otherwise called _Alba
-Regalis,_ a place so strong by Art and Nature, that it was thought
-impregnable. At his first coming, The _Turks_ sallied upon the _German_
-Quarter, slew near five hundred, and returned before they were thought on.
-The next Night in like manner, they did near as much to the _Bemers,_ and
-_Hungarians;_ of which, Fortune still presuming, thinking to have found
-the _French_ quarter as careless, Eight or Nine hundred of them were cut
-in pieces and taken Prisoners. In this Encounter Monsieur _Grandvile,_
-a brave _French_ Colonel, received seven or eight cruel Wounds, yet
-followed the Enemy to the Ports; he came off alive, but within three or
-four days died.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The siege of_ Alba Regalis.
-
-
-Earl _Moldritch,_ by the Information of of three or four _Christians,_
-(escaped out of the Town) upon every Alarum, where there was greatest
-Assemblies and throng of People, {MN} caused Captain _Smith_ to put in
-practice his fiery Dragons, he had demonstrated unto him, and the Earl
-_Von Sulch_ at _Comora_ which he thus performed: Having prepared forty or
-fifty round-bellied Earthen Pots, and filled them with hand Gun powder,
-then covered them with Pitch, mingled with Brimstone and Turpentine; and
-quartering as many Musket-bullets, that hung together but only at the
-Center of the division, stuck them round in the mixture about the Pots,
-and covered them again with the same mixture, over that a strong
-Searcloth, then over all, a good thickness of Towze-match, well tempered
-with Oyl of Lin-seed, Camphire, and Powder of Brimstone, these he fitly
-placed in Slings, graduated so near as they could to the places of these
-Assemblies. At mid-night upon the Alarum, it was a fearful sight to see
-the short flaming course of their flight in the Air, but presently after
-their fall, the lamentable noise of the miserable slaughtered _Turks_ was
-most wonderful to hear: Besides, they had fired that Suburb at the Port of
-_Buda_ in two or three places, which so troubled the _Turks_ to quench,
-that had there been any means to have assaulted them, they could hardly
-have resisted the fire, and their Enemies. The Earl _Rosworme,_ contrary
-to the opinion of all Men, would needs undertake to find means to surprize
-the Segeth and Suburb of the City, strongly defended by a muddy Lake,
-which was thought unpassable.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The effect of good fireworks._
-
-
-The Duke having planted his Ordnance, battered the other side, {MN-1}
-whilst _Rosworme_ in the dark Night, with every Man a bundle of Sedge and
-Bavins still thrown before them, so laded up the Lake, as they surprised
-that unregarded Suburb before they were discovered: Upon which unexpected
-Alarum, the _Turks_ fled into the City, and the other Suburb not knowing
-the matter, got into the City also, leaving their Suburb for the Duke,
-who, with no great resistance, took it, with many Pieces of Ordnance; the
-City, being of no such strength as the Suburbs, with their own Ordnance
-was so battered, that it was taken by force, with such a merciless
-Execution, as was most pitiful to behold. {MN-2} The _Bashaw_
-notwithstanding, drew together a Party of Five hundred before his own
-Palace, where he intended to die; but seeing most of his Men slain before
-him, by the valiant Captain, Earl _Meldritch,_ who took him Prisoner with
-his own hands; and with the hazard of himself saved him from the fury of
-other Troops, that did pull down his Palace, and would have rent him in
-pieces, had he not been thus preserved. The Duke thought his Victory much
-honoured with such a Prisoner; took order, he should be used like a
-Prince, and with all expedition gave charge presently to repair the
-Breaches, and the Ruins of this famous City, that had been in the
-possession of the _Turks_ near threescore years.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _A worthy Exploit of Earl_ Rosworme.
-
- {MN-2} _Earl_ Meldritch _takes the_ Bashaw _prisoner._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
-
-
-
- _A brave Encounter of the_ Turks _Army with the_ Christians; _Duke_
- Merceur _overthroweth_ Assan Bashaw; _He divides the_ Christian _Army;
- His Nobleness and Death._
-
-
-_Mahomet_ the Great _Turk_, during the Siege, had raised an Army of Sixty
-thousand Men to have relieved it; but hearing it was lost, he sent _Assan
-Bashaw,_ General of his Army, the _Bashaw_ of _Buda, Bashaw Amaroz,_ to
-see if it were possible to regain it; The Duke understanding there could
-be no great experience in such a new levied Army as _Assan_ had, having
-put a strong Garrison into it, and with the brave Colonel _Rosworme,
-Culnits, Meldritch,_ the _Rhine Grave, Vahan,_ and many others, with
-Twenty thousand good Soldiers, set forward to meet the _Turk,_ in the
-Plains of _Girk._ {MN-1} Those two Armies encountred as they marched,
-where began a hot and bloody Skirmish betwixt them, Regiment against
-Regiment, as they came in order, till the night parted them: Here Earl
-_Meldritch_ was so invironed among those half circular Regiments of
-_Turks,_ they supposed him their Prisoner, and his Regiment lost; but his
-two most couragious Friends, _Vahan_ and _Culnits,_ made such a Passage
-amongst them, that it was a terror to see how Horse and Man lay sprawling
-and tumbling, some one way, some another on the Ground. The Earl there at
-that time made his valour shine more bright than his Armour, which seemed
-then painted with _Turkish_ Blood; he slew the brave _Zanzack Bugola,_ and
-made his Passage to his Friends, but near half his Regiment was slain.
-Captain _Smith_ had his Horse slain under him, and himself sore wounded;
-but he was not long unmounted, for there was choice enough of Horses, that
-wanted Masters. The _Turk,_ thinking the Victory sure against the Duke,
-whose Army, by the Siege and the Garrison, he had left behind him, was
-much weakened, would not be content with one, but he would have all; and
-lest the Duke should return to _Alba Regalis,_ he sent that Night Twenty
-thousand to besiege the City, assuring them, he would keep the Duke or any
-other from relieving them. Two or three days they lay each by other,
-entrenching themselves; the _Turks_ daring the Duke daily to a sett
-Battle, {MN-2} who at length drew out his Army, led by the _Rhine-Grave,
-Culnits,_ and _Meldritch_ who upon their first Encounter, charged with
-that resolute and valiant courage, as disordered not only the foremost
-Squadrons of the _Turks,_ but enforced all the whole Army to retire to the
-Camp, with the loss of five or six thousand, with the _Bashaw_ of _Buda,_
-and four or five _Zanzacks,_ with divers other great Commanders, Two
-hundred Prisoners, and nine pieces of Ordnance. At that instant appeared,
-as it were, another Army coming out of a Valley over a plain Hill, that
-caused the Duke at that time to be contented, and to retire to his
-Trenches; which gave time to _Assan,_ to reorder his disordered Squadrons:
-Here they lay nine or ten days, and more Supplies repaired to them,
-expecting to try the event in a sett Battle; but the Soldiers on both
-Parties, by reason of their great Wants, and approach of Winter, grew so
-discontented, that they were ready of themselves to break up the Leager;
-the _Bashaw_ retiring himself to _Buda,_ had some of the Rear Troops cut
-off. _Amaroz Bashaw_ hearing of this, found such bad welcome at _Alba
-Regalis,_ and the Town so strongly repaired with so brave a Garrison,
-raised his Siege, and retired to _Zigetum._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _A brave encounter of the_ Turks _Army with the_ Christians.
-
- {MN-2} _Duke_ Merceur _overthroweth_ Assan Bassa.
-
-
-The Duke understanding, that the Archduke _Ferdinando,_ had so resolutely
-besieged _Caniza_ as what by the loss of _Alba Regalis,_ and the _Turks_
-retreat to _Buda,_ being void of hope of any relief, doubted not, but it
-would become again the _Christians._ {MN-1}To the furtherance whereof, the
-Duke divided his Army into three parts. The Earl of _Rosworme_ went with
-Seven thousand to _Caniza,_ the Earl of _Meldritch_ with Six thousand he
-sent to assist _Georgio Busca_ against the _Transilvanians,_ the rest went
-with himself to the Garrisons of _Strigonium_ and _Komara;_ having thus
-worthily behaved himself, he arrived at _Vienne,_ where the Arch-dukes and
-the Nobility with as much honour received him, as if he had conquered all
-Hungaria; his very Picture they esteemed would make them fortunate, which
-thousands kept as curiously as a precious relique. To requite this honour,
-preparing himself to return into _France,_ to raise new Forces against the
-next year, with the two Arch-dukes, _Matthias_ and _Maximilian,_ and
-divers others of the Nobility, was with great Magnificence conducted to
-_Nurenburg,_ there by them royally feasted, (how it chanced is not known;)
-{MN-2} but the next Morning he was found dead, and his Brother in Law died
-two days after; whose hearts, after this great Triumph, with much sorrow
-were carried into _France._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _Duke_ Merceur _divideth his army._
-
- {MN-2} _Duke_ Merceur _and his brother in law die suddenly._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
-
-
-
- _The unhappy Siege of_ Caniza; _Earl_ Meldritch _serveth Prince_
- Sigismundus; _Prince_ Moyses _besiegeth_ Regall; Smith's _three single
- Combats; His Patent from_ Sigismundus, _and Reward._
-
-
-{MN} The Worthy Lord _Rosworme_ had not worse Journey to the miserable
-Siege of _Caniza,_ (whereby the extremity of an extraordinary continuing
-Tempest of Hail, Wind, Frost and Snow, insomuch that the _Christians_ were
-forced to leave their Tents and Artillery, and what they had; it being so
-cold, that three or four hundred of them were frozen to Death in a Night,
-and two or three thousand lost in that miserable flight in the Snowy
-Tempest, though they did know no Enemy at all to follow them) than the
-Noble Earl of _Meldritch_ had to _Transilvania,_ where hearing of the
-Death of _Michael,_ and the brave Duke _Merceur,_ and knowing the Policy
-of _Busca,_ and the Prince his Royalty, being now beyond all belief of
-Men, in Possession of the best part of _Transilvania,_ perswaded his
-Troops, in so honest a Cause, to assist the Prince against the _Turk,_
-rather than _Busca_ against the Prince.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The unhappy siege of_ Caniza.
-
-
-{MN} The Soldiers being worn out with those hard Pays and Travels, upon
-hope to have free liberty to make booty upon what they could get
-Possession of from the _Turks,_ were easily perswaded to follow him
-whithersoever. Now this Noble Earl was a _Transilvanian_ born, and his
-Fathers Country yet Inhabited by the _Turks;_ for _Transilvania_ was yet
-in three Divisions, though the Prince had the Hearts both of Country and
-People; yet the Frontiers had a Garrison amongst the unpassable Mountains,
-some for the Emperour, some for the Prince, and some for the _Turk:_ To
-regain which small Estate, he desired leave of the Prince to try his
-Fortunes, and to make use of that experience, the time of twenty years had
-taught him in the Emperours service, promising to spend the rest of his
-days, for his Countrys defence in his Excellencies Service. The Prince
-glad of so brave a Commander, and so many expert and ancient Soldiers,
-made him Camp Master of his Army, gave him all necessary relief for his
-Troops, and what freedom they desired to plunder the _Turks._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Earl_ Meldritch _serveth with Prince_ Sigismundus.
-
-
-{MN-1} The Earl having made many Incursions into the Land of _Zarkan,_
-among those Rocky Mountains, where were some _Turks,_ some _Tartars,_ but
-most _Bandittoes, Rennegadoes,_ and such like, which sometimes he forced
-into the Plains of _Regall_ where is a City, not only of Men and
-Fortifications, Strong of it self, but so environed with Mountains, that
-made the Passages so difficult, that in all these Wars, no attempt had
-been made upon it to any purpose: Having satisfied himself with the
-Situation, and the most convenient Passages to bring his Army into it: The
-Earth no sooner put on her green Habit, than the Earl overspread her with
-his armed Troops. To possess himself first of the most convenient Passage,
-which was a narrow Valley betwixt two high Mountains; he sent Colonel
-_Veltus_ with his Regiment; dispersed in Companies to lie in _Ambuscado,_
-as he had directed them, and in the Morning to drive all the Cattel they
-could find before a Fort in that Passage, whom he supposed would sally,
-seeing but some small Party to recover their prey; which took such good
-success, that the Garrison was cut off by the _Ambuscado,_ and _Veltus_
-seized on the Skonces, which were abandoned. _Meldritch_ glad of so
-fortunate a beginning, it was six days ere he could with six thousand
-Pioneers make passage for his Ordnance: The _Turks_ having such warning,
-strengthened the Town so with Men and Provision, that they made a scorn of
-so small a number as _Meldritch_ brought with him before the City, which
-was but eight thousand. Before they had pitched their Tents, the _Turks_
-sallied in such abundance, as for an hour, they had rather a bloody Battel
-than a Skirmish, but with the loss of near Fifteen hundred on both sides.
-The Turks were chased till the Cities Ordnance caused the Earl to retire.
-{M-2} The next day _Zachel Moyses,_ General of the Army, pitched also his
-Tents with nine thousand Foot and Horse, and six and twenty Pieces of
-Ordnance; but in regard of the Situation of this strong Fortress, they did
-neither fear them nor hurt them, being upon the point of a fair
-Promontory, environed on the one side within half a Mile with an un-useful
-Mountain, and on the other side with a fair Plain, where the _Christians_
-encamped, but so commanded by their Ordnance, they spent near a Month in
-entrenching themselves, and raising their Mounts to plant their Batteries;
-which slow proceedings the _Turks_ oft derided, that their Ordnance were
-at pawn, and how they grew fat for want of Exercise, and fearing lest they
-should depart ere they could assault their City, sent this Challenge to
-any Captain in the Army.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _Earl_ Meldritch _maketh incursions to discover_ Regall.
-
- {MN-2} Moyses _Besiegeth_ Regal.
-
-
-That to delight the Ladies, who did long to see some Court-like pastime,
-the Lord _Turbashaw_ did defie any Captain, that had the command of a
-Company, who durst Combate with him for his Head: The matter being
-discussed, it was accepted, but so many Questions grew for the
-undertaking, it was decided by Lots, which fell upon Captain _Smith,_
-before spoken of.
-
-{MN} Truce being made for that time, the Rampires all beset with fair
-Dames, and Men in Arms, the _Christians_ in _Battalia; Turbashaw_ with a
-noise of Haut-boys entred the Field well mounted and armed; on his
-shoulders were fixed a pair of great Wings, compacted of Eagles Feathers,
-within a ridge of Silver, richly garnished with Gold and precious Stones,
-a _Janizary_ before him, bearing his Lance, on each side another leading
-his Horse; where long he stayed not, ere _Smith_ with a noise of Trumpets,
-only a Page bearing his Lance, passing by him with a courteous Salute,
-took his Ground with such good success, that at the sound of the charge,
-he passed the _Turk_ thorow the sight of his Beaver, Face, Head and all,
-that he fell dead to the Ground, where alighting and unbracing his Helmet,
-cut off his Head, and the _Turks_ took his Body; and so returned without
-any hurt at all. The Head he presented to the Lord _Moyses,_ the General,
-who kindly accepted it, and with joy to the whole Army he was generally
-welcomed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Three single combates._
-
-
-The Death of this Captain so swelled in the Heart of one _Grualgo,_ his
-vowed Friend, as rather inraged with madness than choler, he directed a
-particular challenge to the Conqueror, to regain his Friends Head, or Idle
-his own, with his Horse and Armour for advantage, which according to his
-desire, was the next day undertaken: as before upon the sound of the
-Trumpets, their Lances flew in pieces upon a clear Passage, but the
-_Turk,_ was near unhorsed. Their Pistols was the next, which marked
-_Smith_ upon the Placard; but the next shot the _Turk,_ was so Wounded in
-the left Arm, that being not able to rule his Horse, and defend himself,
-he was thrown to the ground, and so bruised with the fall, that he lost
-his Head, as his Friend before him, with his Horse and Armour; but his
-Body, and his rich Apparel were sent back to the Town.
-
-Every day the _Turks_ made some Sallies, but few Skirmishes would they
-endure to any purpose. Our Works and Approaches being not yet advanced to
-that heighth and effect, which was of necessity to be performed; to delude
-time, _Smith_ with so many incontradictible perswading Reasons, obtained
-leave, that the Ladies might know he was not so much enamoured of their
-Servants Heads; but if any _Turk,_ of their rank would come to the place
-of Combate to redeem them, should have his also upon the like conditions,
-if he could win it.
-
-The challenge presently was accepted by _Bonny Mulgro._ The next day, both
-the Champions entring the Field as before, each discharging their Pistol,
-having no Lances, but such martial Weapons as the Defendant appointed, no
-hurt was done; their Battle-Axes was the next, whose piercing Bills made
-sometime the one, sometime the other to have scarce sense to keep their
-Saddles, specially the _Christian_ received such a blow, that he lost his
-Battle axe, and failed not much to have fallen after it, whereat the
-supposed conquering _Turk,_ had a great shout from the Rampires. The
-_Turk,_ prosecuted his advantage to the uttermost of his power; yet the
-other, what by the readiness of his Horse, and his judgement and dexterity
-in such a business, beyond all Mens expectation, by God's assistance, not
-only avoided the _Turks_ violence but having drawn his Faulchion, pierced
-the _Turk,_ so under the Culets, thorow back and body, that altho' he
-alighted from his Horse, he stood not long ere he lost his Head, as the
-rest had done.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VIII.
-
-
-
- Georgio Busca _an_ Albane, _his ingratitude to Prince_ Sigismundus;
- _Prince_ Moyses _his Lieutenant, is overthrown by_ Busca, _General for
- the Emperour_ Rodulphus; Sigismundus _yieldeth his Country to_
- Rodulphus; Busca _assisteth Prince_ Rodol _in_ Wallachia.
-
-
-This good success gave such great encouragement to the whole Army, that
-with a Guard of six thousand, three spare Horses, before each a _Turks_
-Head upon a Lance, he was conducted to the Generals Pavilion with his
-Presents. Moyses received both him and them, with as much respect as the
-occasion deserved, embracing him in his Arms, gave him a fair Horse,
-richly furnished, a Scimitar and Belt worth Three hundred Ducats; and
-_Meldritch_ made him Sergeant Major of his Regiment. But now to the Siege,
-having mounted six and twenty pieces of Ordnance, fifty or sixty Foot
-above the Plain, made them so plainly tell his meaning, that within
-fifteen days two Breaches were made, which the _Turks_ as valiantly
-defended as Men could; that day was made a darksome Night, but by the
-light that proceeded from the murdering Muskets, and peace-making Canon,
-whilst their slothful Governour lay in a Castle on the top of a high
-Mountain, and like a Valiant Prince asketh what's the matter, when horror
-and death flood amazed each at other, to see who should prevail to make
-him victorious: {MN} _Moyses_ commanding a general assault upon the
-sloping front of the high Promontory, where the Barons of _Budendorfe_ and
-_Oberwin,_ lost near half their Regiments, by Logs, Bags of Powder,
-and such like, tumbling down the Hill, they were to mount ere they could
-come to the breach; notwithstanding with an incredible courage, they
-advanced to the push of the Pike with the Defendants, that with the like
-courage repulsed, till the Earl _Meldritch, Becklefield_ and _Zarvana,_
-with their fresh Regiments seconded them with that fury, that the _Turks_
-retired and fled into the Castle, from whence by a Flag of truce they
-desired composition. The Earl remembring his Fathers Death, battered it
-with all the Ordnance in the Town, and the next day took it: all he found
-could bear Arms, he put to the Sword, and set their Heads upon Stakes
-round about the Walls, in the same manner they had used the _Christians,_
-when they took it. _Moyses_ having repaired the Rampires, and thrown down
-the Work in his Camp, he put in it a strong Garrison, though the pillage
-he had gotten in the Town was much, having been for a long time an
-impregnable den of Thieves; yet the loss of the Army so intermingled the
-sowre with the sweet, as forced _Moyses_ to seek a farther revenge, that
-he sacked _Veratio, Solmos,_ and _Kupronka,_ and with two thousand
-Prisoners, most Women and Children, came to _Esenberg,_ not far from the
-Princes Palace, where he there Encamped.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} Regal _assaulted and taken._
-
-
-_Sigismundus_ coming to view his Army, was presented with the Prisoners,
-and six and thirty Ensigns; where celebrating thanks to Almighty God in
-triumph of those Victories, he was made acquainted with the service
-_Smith_ had done at _Olumpagh, Stoll-Weissenburgh_ and _Regal;_ for which,
-with great honour, he gave him three _Turks_ Heads in a Shield for his
-Arms, by Patent, under his Hand and Seal, with an Oath ever to wear them
-in his Colours, his Picture in Gold, and three hundred Ducats yearly for a
-Pension.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration: Smith's Coat of Arms]
-
-
-
-Sigismundus Bathori, _Dei Gratia, Dux_ Transilvaniae, Wallachiae, &
-Vandalorum; _Comes_ Anchard, Salford, Growenda; _Cunctis his literis
-significamus qui cas lecturi aut audituri sunt, concessam licentiam aut
-facultatem_ Johanni Smith, _natione_ Anglo _Generoso,_ 250. _militum
-Capitaneo sub Illustrissani & Gravissani_ Henrici Volda, _Comitis de_
-Meldri, Salmariae, & Peldoix _primario, ex_ 1000 _equitibus_ & 1500.
-peditibus bello_ Ungarico _conductione in Provincias supra scriptas sub
-Authoritate nostra: cui servituti omni laude, perpetuaq; memoria dignum
-praebuit sese erga nos, ut virum strenuum pugnantem pro aris & focis
-decet. Quare e favore nostro militario ipsum ordine condonavimus, & in
-Sigillum illius tria_ Turcica _Capita defignare & deprimere concessimus,
-que ipso gladio suo ad Urbem_ Regalem _in singulari praelio vicit,
-mactavit, atq; decollavit in_ Transilvaniae _Provincia: Sed fortuna cum
-variabilis ancepsq; sit idem forte fortuito in_ Wallachiae _Provincia,
-Anno Domini_ 1602. _die Mensis Novemberis_ 18. _cum multis aliis etiam
-Nubilibus & aliis quibusdam militibus captus est a Domino_ Bascha _electo
-ex_ Cambia _regionis_ Tartariae, _onjus severitate adductus salutum quantem
-potuit quaesivit, tantumque effecit, Deo omnipotente adjuvante, ut
-deliberavit se, & ad suos Commilitones revertit; ex quibus ipsum
-liberavimus, & haec nobis restimonia habuit ut majori licentia frucretur
-qua dignus esset, jam tendet in patriam suam dulcissonam: Rogamus ergo
-omnes nostros charissunos, confinititmos, Duces, Principes, Comites,
-Barones, Gubernatores Urbium & Navium in cadem Regione & caeterarum
-Provinciarum in quibus ille refidere conatus fuerit ut idem permittatur
-Capitaneus libere sine obstaculo omni versari. Haec facientes pergratum
-nobis feceritis. Signatum_ Lesprizia _in_ Misnia _die Mensis_ Decembris_
-9. _Anno Domini_ 1603.
-
- _Cum Privilegio propriae, Majestatis._ Sigismundus Bathori.
-
-
-[Illustration: Seal of Sigismundus.]
-
-
-
-Universis, & singulis, cujuscunq; loci, status, gradut, ordinis, ac
-conditighis ad quos hos praesens scriptum pervenerit,_ Gulielmus Segar,
-Eques auratus alias dictus Garterus Principalis Rex Armorum_ Anglicorum,
-Salutum._ Sciatis, _quod Ego praedictus Garterus, notum, testatumque facio,
-quod Patentitem suprascriptum, cum manu propria praedicti Ducis_
-Transilvaniae _Subsignatum, & Sigillo suo affixum, Vidi: & Copiam
-veram ejusdem (in perpetuam rei memoriam) transcripsi, & recordavi in
-Archivis, & Registris Officii Armorum. Datum_ Londini 19. _die Augusti,
-Anno Domini_ 1625. _Annoque Regni Domini nostri_ CAROLI _Dei gratia Magnae_
-Britanniae, Franciae, & Hibernix _Regis, Fidei Defendoris, &c. Prime.
-
- Gulielmus Segar, Garterus.
-
-
-
-{MN} Sigismundus Bathori, by the Grace of God, Duke of _Transilvania,_
-_Wallachia,_ and _Moldavia,_ Earl of _Anchard, Salford_ and
-_Growenda;_ to whom this Writing may come or appear. Know that We have
-given Leave and Licence to _John Smith_ an _English Gentleman,_ Captain of
-250 Soldiers, under the most Generous and Honourable _Henry Volda,_ Earl of
-_Meldritch, Salmaria,_ and _Peldoia,_ Colonel of a thousand Horse, and
-fifteen hundred Foot, in the Wars of _Hungary,_ and in the Provinces
-aforesaid under our Authority; whose Service doth deserve all praise, and
-perpetual Memory towards us, as a Man that did for God and his Country
-overcome his Enemies; Wherefore out of our Love and Favour, according to
-the Law of Arms, We have ordained, and given him in his Shield of Arms,
-the Figure and Description of three Turks Heads, which with his Sword
-before the Town of _Regal,_ in single Combat he did overcome, kill, and
-cut off, in the Province of _Transilvania._ But Fortune, as she is very
-variable, so it chanced and happened to him in the Province of
-_Wallatchia,_ in the year of Our Lord 1602. the 18th day of _November,_
-with many others, as well Noble Men as also divers other Soldiers, were
-taken Prisoners by the Lord _Bashaw_ of _Cambia,_ a Country of _Tartaria;_
-whose cruelty brought him such good Fortune, by the Help and Power of
-Almighty God, that he delivered himself, and returned again to his Company
-and fellow Soldiers, of whom We do discharge him, and this he hath in
-Witness thereof, being much more worthy of a better Reward; and now
-intends to return to his own sweet Country. We desire therefore all Our
-loving and kind Kinsmen, Dukes, Princes, Earls, Barons, Governours of
-Towns, Cities or Ships, in this Kingdom, or any other Provinces he shall
-come in, that you freely let pass this the aforesaid Captain, without any
-hindrance or molestation, and this doing, with all kindness, we are always
-ready to do the like for you. Sealed at _Lipswick_ in _Misenland,_ the
-ninth of _December,_ in the year of our Lord, 1603.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The same in_ English.
-
-
- _With the proper privilege of his Majesty._ SIGISMUNDUS BATHORI
-
-To all and singular, in what Place, State, Degree, Order, or Condition
-whatsoever, to whom this present Writing shall come: I _William Segar,_
-Knight, otherwise Garter, and principal King of Arms of _England,_ wish
-health. Know, that I the aforesaid Garter, do witness and approve, that
-this aforesaid Patent, I have seen, Signed, and Sealed, under the proper
-Hand and Seal Manuel of the said Duke of _Transilvania,_ and a true Copy
-of the same, as a thing for perpetual memory, I have Subscribed and
-Recorded in the Register, and Office of the Heralds of Arms. Dated at
-_London,_ the nineteenth day of _August,_ in the year of Our Lord, 1625,
-and in the first year of our Sovereign Lord _Charles,_ by the Grace of
-God, King of great _Britain, France,_ and _Ireland,_ Defender of the
-Faith, &c.
-
- WILLIAM SEGAR.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IX.
-
-
-
- Sigismundus _sends Ambassadours unto the Emperour. The Conditions
- reassured. He yieldeth up all to_ Busca, _and returneth to_ Prague.
-
-
-_Busca_ having all this time been raising new Forces, was commanded from
-the Emperour again to invade _Transilvania,_ which being one of the
-fruitfullest and strongest Countries in those Parts, was now rather a
-Desart, or the very Spectacle of Desolation; their Fruits and Fields
-overgrown with Weeds, their Churches and battered Palaces, and best
-Buildings, as for fear, hid with Moss and Ivy; being the very Bulwark and
-Rampire of a great part of _Europe,_ most fit by all _Christians_ to have
-been supplied and maintained, was thus brought to ruin by them, it most
-concerned to support it. But alas, what is it, when the Power of Majesty
-pampered in all delights of pleasant Vanity, neither knowing, nor
-considering the labour of the Plough-man, the hazard of the Merchant, the
-oppression of Statesmen, nor feeling the piercing Torments of broken
-Limbs, and inveterate Wounds, the toilsome Marches, the bad Lodging, the
-hungry Diet, and the extream misery that Soldiers endure to secure all
-those Estates, and yet by the spight of malicious detraction, starves for
-want of their Reward and Recompences, whilst the politique Courtier, that
-commonly aims more at his own Honours and Ends, than his Countries good,
-or his Princes Glory, Honour, or Security, as this worthy Prince too well
-could testifie. But the Emperor being certified how weak and desperate
-his Estate was, sent _Busca_ again with a great Army, to try his fortune
-once more in _Transilvania._ The Prince considering how his Country and
-Subjects were consumed, the small means he had any longer to defend his
-Estate, both against the cruelty of the _Turk,_ and the power of the
-Emperor, and the small care the _Polanders_ had in Supplying him, as they
-had promised, sent to _Busca_ to have truce, till Messengers might be
-sent to the Emperour for some better agreement, wherewith _Busca_ was
-contented. The Ambassadors so prevailed, that the Emperour re-assured
-unto them the conditions he had promised the Prince at their confederacy
-for the Lands in _Silesia,_ with 60000 Ducats presently in hand, and
-50000 Ducats yearly as a Pension. When this conclusion was known to
-_Moyses,_ his Lieutenant then in the Field with the Army, that would do
-any thing, rather than come in subjection to the _Germans,_ he encouraged
-his Soldiers, and without any more ado, marched to encounter _Busca,_ {MN}
-whom he found much better provided than he expected; so that betwixt them,
-in six or seven hours, more than five or six thousand, on both sides, lay
-dead in the field. _Moyses_ thus overthrown, fled to the _Turks_ at
-_Temesware,_ and his Scattered Troops, some one way, some another.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Busca_ in _Transilvania_ overthroweth _Moyses._
-
-
-The Prince understanding of this so sudden and unexpected Accident, only
-accompanied with an hundred of his Gentry and Nobility, went into the
-Camp to _Busca,_ to let him know how ignorant he was of his Lieutenants
-error, that he had done it without his direction or knowledge, freely
-offering to perform what was concluded by his Ambassadors with the
-Emperor; {MN} and so causing all his Garrisons to come out of their strong
-Holds, he delivered all to _Busca_ for the Emperor, and so went to
-_Prague,_ where he was honourably received, and established in his
-Possessions, as his Imperial Majesty had promised. _Busca_ assembling all
-the Nobility, took their Oaths of Allegiance and Fidelity, and thus their
-Prince being gone _Transilvania_ became again subject to the Emperor.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Sigismundis_ yieldeth his country to _Busca._
-
-
-{MN} Now after the Death of _Michael,_ Vavoid of _Wallachia,_ the _Turk_
-Sent one _Jeremy_ to be their Vavoid or Prince; whose insulting Tyranny
-caused the People to take Arms against him, so that he was forced to flie
-into the Confines of _Moldavia;_ and _Busca_ in the behalf of the Emperor,
-proclaimed the Lord _Rodol_ in his stead. But _Jeremy_ having assembled
-an Army of forty thousand _Turks, Tartars,_ and _Moldavians,_ returned
-into _Wallachia. Rodol_ not yet able to raise such a power, fled into
-_Transilvania_ to _Busca,_ his ancient Friend; who considering well of the
-matter, and how good it would be for his own Security, to have _Wallachia_
-subject to the Emperor, or at least such an Employment for the remainders
-of the old Regiments of _Sigismundus,_ (of whose Greatness and true
-Affection he was very suspicious) sent them with _Rodol_ to recover
-_Wallachia,_ conducted by the Valiant Captains, the Earl _Meldritch,_ Earl
-_Veltus,_ Earl _Nederspolt,_ Earl _Zarvana,_ the Lord _Becklefield_ the
-Lord _Budendorfe,_ with their Regiments, and divers others of great rank
-and quality, the greatest Friends and Alliances the Prince had; who with
-Thirty thousand, marched along by the River _Altus,_ to the Streights of
-_Rebrink,_ where they entred _Wallachia,_ encamping at _Raza; Jeremy_
-lying at _Argish,_ drew his Army into his old Camp, in the Plains of
-_Peteske,_ and with his best diligence fortified it, intending to defend
-himself, till more power came to him from the _Crim-Tartar._ Many small
-Parties that came to his Camp, _Rodol_ cut off, and in the nights would
-cause their Heads to be thrown up and down before the Trenches. Seven of
-their Porters were taken, whom _Jeremy_ commanded to be flayed quick, and
-after hung their Skins upon Poles, and their Carcases and Heads on Stakes
-by them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Busca_ assisteth _Rodol_ in _Wallachia._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. X.
-
-
-
- _The Battle of_ Rottenton; _a pretty Stratagem of Fire-works by_ Smith.
-
-
-_Rodol_ not knowing how to draw the Enemy to Battel, raised his Army,
-burning and spoiling all where he came, and returned again towards
-_Rebrink_ in the night, as if he had fled upon the general rumour of the
-_Crim-Tartars_ coming, which so inflamed the _Turks_ of a happy Victory,
-they urged _Jeremy_ against his Will to follow them. _Rodol_ seeing his
-Plot fell out as he desired, so ordered the matter, that having regained
-the Streights, he put his Army in order, that had been near two days
-pursued with continual Skirmishes in his Rear, {MN-1} which now making
-Head against the Enemy, that followed with their whole Army in the best
-manner they could, was furiously charged with six thousand _Heydukes,
-Wallachians,_ and _Moldavians,_ led by three Colonels, _Oversall,
-Dubras_, and _Calab,_ to entertain the time till the rest came up;
-_Veltus_ and _Nederspolt_ with their Regiments, entertained them with the
-like courage, till the Zanzacke _Hamesbeg,_ with six thousand more, came
-with a fresh charge, which _Meldritch_ and _Budendorfe,_ rather like
-enraged Lions, than Men, so bravely encountred, as if in them only had
-consisted the Victory; _Meldritch's_ Horse being slain under him, the
-_Turks_ pressed what they could to have taken him Prisoner, but being
-remounted, it was thought with his own hand he slew the valiant Zanzacke,
-whereupon his Troops retiring, the two proud _Bashawes, Aladin,_ and
-_Zizimmus,_ brought up the front of the body of their Battle. _Veltus,_
-and _Nederspolt_ having breathed, and joyning their Troops with
-_Becklefield_ and _Zarvana,_ with such an incredible courage, charged the
-left flank of _Zizimmus,_ as put them all in disorder, where _Zizimmus_
-the _Bashaw_ was taken Prisoner, but died presently upon his Wounds.
-_Jeremy_ seeing now the main Battel of _Rodol_ advance, being thus
-constrained, like a Valiant Prince in his front of the Vangard, by his
-example so bravely encouraged his Soldiers, that _Rodol_ found no great
-assurance of the Victory. Thus being joyned in this bloody Massacre, that
-there was Scarce Ground to stand upon, but upon the dead Carcases, which
-in less than an hour, were So mingled, as if each Regiment had singled
-out other. The admired _Aladin_ that day did leave behind him a glorious
-name for his Valour, whose Death, many of his Enemies did lament after the
-Victory, which at that instant fell to _Rodol._ It was reported, _Jeremy_
-was also slain; but it Was not so, but fled with the remainder of his Army
-to _Moldavia,_ leaving five and twenty thousand dead in the Field, of both
-Armies. {MN-2} And thus _Rodol_ was seated again in his Soveraignty, and
-_Wallachia_ became subject to the Emperour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} A battle betwixt _Rodol_ and _Jeremy._
-
- {MN-2} _Wallachia_ subjected to the Emperour.
-
-
-But long he rested not to settle his new Estate, but there came News,
-that certain Regiments of stragling _Tartars,_ were foraging those Parts
-towards _Moldavia. Meldritch_ with thirteen thousand Men was sent against
-them, but when they heard it was the _Crim-Tartar,_ and his two Sons,
-with an Army of thirty thousand; and _Jeremy,_ that had escaped with
-fourteen or fifteen thousand, lay in ambush for them about _Langanaw,_ he
-retired towards _Rottenton,_ a strong Garrison for _Rodol;_ but they were
-so invironed with these hellish numbers, they could make no great hast
-for skirmishing with their Scouts, Foragers, and small Parties that still
-encountred them. But one night amongst the rest, having made a passage
-through a Wood, with an incredible expedition, cutting Trees thwart each
-other to hinder their passage, in a thick Fogg, early in the Morning,
-unexpectedly they met two thousand loaded with Pillage, and two or three
-hundred Horse and Cattel; the most of them were slain and taken Prisoners,
-who told them where _Jeremy_ lay in the passage, expecting the
-_Crim-Tartar_ that was not far from him. _Meldritch_ intending to make
-his passage by force, was advised of a pretty Stratagem, by the English
-_Smith,_ which presently he thus accomplished; for having accommodated
-two or three hundred Trunks with wild-fire, upon the Heads of Lances, and
-charging the Enemy in the night, gave fire to the Trunks, which blazed
-forth such Flames and Sparkles, that it so amazed not only their Horses,
-but their Foot also; that by the means of this flaming Encounter, their
-own Horses turned Tails with such fury, as by their violence overthrew
-_Jeremy_ and his Army, without any loss at all to speak of to _Meldritch._
-But of this Victory, long they triumphed not; for being within three
-Leagues of _Rottenton,_ the _Tartar,_ with near forty thousand so beset
-them, that they must either fight, or be cut in pieces flying. Here
-_Busca,_ and the Emperour had their desire; for the Sun no sooner
-displayed his Beams, than the _Tartar_ his Colours; where at mid-day he
-stayed a while, to see the Passage of a tyrannical and treacherous
-imposture, till the Earth did blush with the blood of Honesty, that the
-Sun for shame did hide himself, from so monstrous sight of a cowardly
-Calamity. It was a most brave sight to see the Banners and Ensigns
-streaming in the Air, the glittering of Armour, the variety of Colours,
-the motion of Plumes, the forests of Lances, and the thickness of shorter
-Weapons, till the silent Expedition of the bloody blast from the murdering
-Ordnance, whose roaring Voice is not so soon heard, as felt by the aimed
-at Object, which made among them a most lamentable slaughter.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XI.
-
-
-
- _The names of the_ English _that were slain in the Battel of_ Rottenton;
- _and how Captain_ Smith _was taken Prisoner, and sold for a Slave._
-
-
-In the valley of _Veristhorne,_ betwixt the River of _Altus,_ and the
-Mountain of _Rottenton,_ was this bloody Encounter, where the most of the
-dearest Friends of the noble Prince Sigismundus perished. _Meldritch_
-having ordered his Eleven thousand in the best manner he could, at the
-Foot of the Mountain upon his Flanks, and before his front, he had pitched
-sharp Stakes, their Heads hardned in the fire, and bent against the Enemy,
-as three Battalion of Pikes, amongst the which also, there was digged many
-small holes. {MN-1} Amongst those Stakes was ranged his foot-men, that
-upon the charge was to retire, as there was occasion. The _Tartar_ having
-ordered his 40000 for his best advantage, appointed _Mustapha Bashaw_ to
-begin the Battel, with a general Shout, all their Ensigns displaying,
-Drums beating, Trumpets and Haut-boys sounding. _Nederspolt_ and _Mavazo_
-with their Regiments of Horse most valiantly encountred, and forced them
-to retire; the _Tartar Begoli_ with his Squadrons, darkning the Skies with
-their flights of numberless Arrows, who was as bravely encountred by
-_Veltus_ and _Oberwin,_ which bloody slaughter continued more than an
-hour, till the matchless multitude of the _Tartars_ so increased, that
-they retired within their Squadrons of Stakes, as was directed. The bloody
-_Tartar,_ as scorning he should stay so long for the Victory, with his
-massie Troops prosecuted the Charge: But it was a wonder to see how Horse
-and Man came to the Ground among the Stakes, whose disordered Troops were
-there so mangled, that the _Christians_ with a loud Shout cried
-_Victoria;_ and with five or six field Pieces, planted upon the rising of
-the Mountain, did much hurt to the Enemy that still continued the Battel
-with that fury, that _Meldritch_ seeing there was no possibility long to
-prevail, joyned his small Troops in one body, resolved directly to make
-his passage, or die in the conclusion; and thus in gross gave a general
-charge, and for more than half an hour, made his way plain before him,
-till the main Battle of the _Crim-Tartar,_ with two Regiments of _Turks_
-and _Jaizaries_ so overmatched them, that they were overthrown. The night
-approaching, the Earl with some thirteen or fourteen hundred Horse, swam
-the River, some were drowned, all the rest slain or taken Prisoners: And
-thus in this bloody Field, near 30000 lay, some Headless, Armless and
-Legless, all cut and mangled; where breathing their last, they gave this
-knowledge to the World, that for the lives of so few, the _Crim-Tartar_
-never paid dearer. {MN-2} But now the Countries of _Transilvania_ and
-_Wallachia_ (subjected to the Emperor) and _Sigismundus,_ that brave
-Prince, his Subject and Pensioner, the most of his Nobility, brave
-Captains and Soldiers, became a prey to the cruel devouring _Turk:_ where,
-had the Emperour been as ready to have assisted him, and those three
-Armies led by three such worthy Captains, as _Michael, Busca,_ and Himself,
-and had those three Armies joyned together against the _Turk,_ let all Men
-judge, how happy it might have been for all Christendom: and have either
-regained _Bulgaria,_ or at least have beat him out of _Hungaria,_ where he
-hath taken much more from the Emperour, than hath the Emperour from
-_Transilvania._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _the Battle of_ Rottenton.
-
- {MN-2} _Extracted out of a book, instituted, the Wars of_ Hungaria,
- Wallachia, _and_ Moldavia, _written by_ Francisco Ferneza, _a learned
- Italian, the Princes Secretary, and translated by Mr._ Purchas.
-
-
-In this dismal Battel, where _Nederspolt, Veltus, Zarvana, Mavazo, Bavel,_
-and many other Earls, Barons, Colonels, Captains, brave Gentlemen, and
-Soldiers were slain, give me leave to remember the names of our own
-Country-men, {MN} with him in those Exploits, that as resolutely as the
-best in the defence of Christ and his Gospel, ended their days, as
-_Bakersfield, Hardwick, Thomas Milemer, Robert Mollineux, Thomas Bishop,
-Francis Compton, George Davison, Nicholas Williams_ and one _John_ a Scot,
-did what Men could do, and when they could do no more, left there their
-Bodies in Testimony of their minds; only Ensign _Charleton,_ and Sergeant
-_Robinson_ escaped: But _Smith,_ among the slaughtered dead Bodies, and
-many a gasping Soul, with toil and Wounds lay groaning among the rest,
-till being found by the Pillagers, he was able to live, and perceiving by
-his Armour and Habit, his ransom might be better to them than his Death,
-they led him Prisoner with many others; well they used him till his Wounds
-were cured, and at _Axopolis_ they were all sold for Slaves, like Beasts
-in a Market-place, where every Merchant, viewing their Limbs and Wounds,
-caused other Slaves to struggle with them, to try their strength, he fell
-to the share of _Bashaw Bogal,_ who sent him forthwith to _Adrianopolis,_
-so for _Constantinople_ to his fair Mistriss for a Slave. By twenty and
-twenty chained by the Necks, they marched in file to this great City,
-where they were delivered to their several Masters, and he to the young
-_Charaza Tragabigzanda._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The English Men in this Battel._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XII.
-
-
-
- _How Captain_ Smith _was sent Prisoner thorow the_ Black _and_
- Dissabacca _Sea in_ Tartaria; _the Description of those seas, and his
- usage._
-
-
-This Noble Gentlewoman took sometime occasion to shew him to some Friends,
-or rather to speak with him, because she could speak Italian, would feign
-her self sick when she should go to the _Bannians,_ or weep over the
-Graves, to know how _Bogal_ took him Prisoner; and if he were as the
-_Bashaw_ writ to her, a _Bohemian_ Lord conquered by his Hand, as he had
-many others, which ere long he would present her, whose Ransomes should
-adorn her with the glory of his Conquests.
-
-But when she heard him protest he knew no such matter, nor ever saw
-_Bogal,_ till he bought him at _Axopolis,_ and that he was an
-_English-man,_ only by his Adventures made a Captain in those Countries.
-To try the truth, she found means to find out many who could speak
-_English, French, Dutch,_ and _Italian,_ to whom relating most part of
-these former Passages she thought necessary, which they so honestly
-reported to her, she took (as it seemed) much compassion on him; but having
-no use for him, lest her Mother should sell him, she sent him to her
-Brother, the _Timor Bashaw_ of _Nalbrits,_ In the Country of _Cambia,_ a
-Province in _Tartaria._
-
-{MN-1} Here now let us remember his passing, in this speculative course
-from _Constantinople_ by _Sander, Screw, Panassa, Musa, Lastilla,_ to
-_Varna,_ an ancient City upon the _Black Sea._ In all which Journey,
-having little more liberty, than his eyes judgment, since his Captivity,
-he might see the Towns with their short Towers, and a most plain, fertile,
-and delicate Country, especially that most admired place of _Greece,_ now
-called _Romania,_ but from _Varna,_ nothing but the _Black Sea_ Water,
-till he came to the two Capes of _Taur_ and _Pergilos,_ where he passed
-the Streight of _Niger,_ which (as he conjectured) is some ten Leagues
-long, and three broad, betwixt two Low-lands, the Channel is deep, {MN-2}
-but at the entrance of the Sea _Dissabacca,_ there are many great
-Osie-shaulds, and many great black Rocks, which the _Turks_ said were
-Trees, Weeds, and Mud, thrown from the In-land Countries, by the
-Inundations and violence of the Current, and cast there by the Eddy. They
-Sailed by many low Isles, and saw many more of those muddy Rocks, and
-nothing else, but salt Water, till they came betwixt _Sufax_ and
-_Curuske,_ only two white Towns at the entrance of the River _Bruapo_
-appeared: In six or seven days Sail, he saw four or five seeming strong
-Castles of Stone, with flat tops and Battlements about them, but arriving
-at _Cambia,_ he was (according to their custom) well used. The River was
-there more than half a Mile broad. The Castle was of a large
-Circumference, fourteen or fifteen foot thick, in the Foundation some six
-foot from the Wall, is a _Pallizado,_ and then a Ditch of about forty foot
-broad full of Water. On the West side of it, is a Town, all of low flat
-Houses, which as he conceived, could be of no great strength, yet it keeps
-all them barbarous Countreys about it in admiration and subjection. After
-he had stayed there three days; it was two days more before his Guides
-brought him to _Nalbrits,_ where the _Tymor_ was then resident, in a great
-vast Stone Castle, with many great Courts about it, invironed with high
-Stone Walls, where was quartered their Arms, when they first subjected
-those Countries, which only live to labour for those Tyrannical _Turks._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _How he was sent into_ Tartaria.
-
- {MN-2} _The Description of the_ Dissabacca _Sea._
-
-
-{MN} To her unkind Brother, this kind Lady writ so much for his good
-usage, that he half expected, as much as she intended; for she told him,
-he should there but sojourn to learn the Language, and what it was to be a
-_Turk,_ till time made her Master of her self. But the _Tymor,_ her
-Brother, diverted all this to the worst of Cruelty; for within an hour
-after his arrival, he caused his _Drubman_ to strip him naked, and shave
-his Head and Beard so bare as his Hand, a great Ring of Iron, with a long
-stalk bowed like a Sickle, revitted about his Neck, and a Coat made of
-_Ulgries_ Hair, guarded about with a piece of an undrest Skin. There were
-many more Christian Slaves, and near an hundred _Forsados_ of _Turks_ and
-_Moors,_ and he being the last, was slave of Slaves to them all. Among
-these slavish Fortunes, there was no great choice; for the best was so
-bad, a Dog could hardly have lived to endure, and yet for all their pains
-and labours, no more regarded than a Beast.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} Smith's _usage in_ Tartaria.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIII.
-
-
-
- _The_ Turks _diet; the Slaves diet; the attire of the_ Tartars; _and
- manner of Wars and Religions, &c._
-
-
-
-{MN-1} The _Tymor_ and his Friends fed upon Pillaw, which is, boiled Rice
-and Garnances with little bits of Mutton or Buckones, which is Roasted
-pieces of Horse, Bull, Ulgrie, or any Beasts. Samboyses and Muselbit are
-great Dainties, and yet but round Pies, full of all sorts of Flesh, they
-can get chopped with variety of Herbs. Their best Drink is Coffee, of a
-grain they call _Coava,_ boiled with Water; and _Sherbeck,_ which is only
-Honey and Water; Mares Milk, or the Milk of any Beast, they hold
-restorative: but all the Commonalty drink pure Water. {MN-2} Their Bread
-is made of this _Coava,_ which is a kind of black Wheat, and Cuskus a
-small white Seed, like _Millia_ in _Biskay:_ But our common Victuals, the
-entrails of Horse and Ulgries; of this cut in small pieces, they will fill
-a great Cauldron, and being boiled with _Cuskus,_ and put in great Bowls
-in the form of Chaffing-dishes, they sit round about it on the Ground,
-after they have raked it thorow, so oft as they please with their foul
-Fists, the remainder was for the _Christian_ Slaves. Some of this Broth,
-they would temper with _Cuskus_ pounded, and putting the Fire off from the
-Hearth, pour there a Bowl full, then cover it with Coals till it be baked,
-which stewed with the remainder of the Broth, and some small pieces of
-Flesh, was an extraordinary Dainty.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The_ Tymor's _Diet of_ Cambia, _is as the_ Turks.
-
- {MN-2} _The Slaves Diet._
-
-
-{MN} The better sort are attired like _Turks,_ but the plain _Tartar_ hath
-a black Sheeps-skin over his back, and two of the Legs tied about his
-Neck; the other two about his middle, with another over his Belly, and the
-Legs tied in like manner behind him: Then two more, made like a pair of
-Bases, serveth him for Breeches; with a little close Cap to his Skull of
-black Felt, and they use exceeding much of this Felt for Carpets, for
-Bedding, for Coats, and Idols. Their Houses are much worse than your
-_Irish,_ but the In-land Countries have none but Carts and Tents, which
-they ever remove from Countrey to Countrey, as they see occasion, driving
-with them infinite Troops of black Sheep, Cattel and Ulgries, eating all
-up before them as they go.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The attire of those_ Tartars.
-
-
-{MN} For the _Tartars_ of _Nagi,_ they have neither Town, nor House, Corn,
-nor Drink, but Flesh and Milk. The Milk they keep in great Skins like
-_Burracho's,_ which though it be never so sower, it agreeth well with
-their strong Stomachs. They live all in _Hordias,_ as doth the
-_Crim-Tartars,_ three or four hundred in a Company, in great Carts fifteen
-or sixteen foot broad, which are covered with small Rods, wattled together
-in the form of a Bird's Nest, turned upwards, and with the Ashes of Bones,
-temper'd with Oil, Camels Hair, and a Clay they have, they loam them so
-well, that no Weather can pierce them, and yet very light. Each _Hordia_
-hath a _Murse,_ which they obey as their King. Their Gods are infinite.
-One or two thousand of those glittering white Carts drawn with Camels,
-Deer, Bulls, and Ulgries, they bring round in a Ring, where they pitch
-their Camp; and the _Murse,_ with his chief Alliances, are placed in the
-midst. They do much hurt, when they can get any _Stroggs,_ which are great
-Boats used up on the River _Volga,_ (which they call _Edle_) to them that
-dwell in the Countrey of _Perolog,_ and would do much more, were it not
-for the _Muscovites_ Garrisons that there Inhabit.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The_ Tartars _of_ Nagi _and their manners._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIIII.
-
-
-
- _The Description of the_ Crim-Tartars; _their Houses and Carts, their
- Idolatry in their Lodgings_
-
-
-{MN-1} Now you are to understand, _Tartary_ and _Scythia_ are all one,
-but so large and spacious, few, or none, could ever perfectly describe it,
-nor all the several kinds of those most barbarous People that inhabit it.
-Those we call the _Crim-Tartars,_ border upon _Moldavia, Podolia,
-Lithuania,_ and _Russia,_ are much more regular than the interior parts of
-_Scythia._ This Great _Tartarian_ Prince, that hath so troubled all his
-Neighbours, they always call _Chan,_ which signifieth Emperour; but we,
-the _Crim-Tartar._ He liveth for the most part in the best Champion Plains
-of many Provinces; and his removing Court is like a great City of Houses
-and Tents, drawn on Carts, all so orderly placed East and West, on the
-right and left hand of the Prince's House, which is always in the midst
-towards the South, before which, none may pitch their Houses, every one
-knowing their Order and Quarter, as in an Army. {MN-2} The Princes Houses
-are very artificially wrought, both the Foundation, Sides, and Roof of
-Wickers, ascending round to the top like a Dove coat; this they cover with
-white Salt, or white Earth, temper'd with the Powder of Bones, that it
-may shine the whiter; sometimes with black Felt, curiously painted with
-Vines, Trees, Birds, and Beasts; the breadth of the Carts are eighteen or
-twenty Foot, but the house stretcheth four or five Foot over each side,
-and is drawn with ten or twelve, or for more state, twenty Camels and
-Oxen. {MN-3} They have also great Baskets, made of smaller Wickers, like
-great Chests, with a covering of the same, all covered over with black
-Felt, rubbed over with Tallow and Sheep's Milk, to keep out the Rain;
-prettily bedecked with Painting or Feathers; in those they put their
-Houshold Stuff and Treasure, drawn upon other Carts for that purpose. When
-they take down their Houses, they set the door always towards the South,
-and their Carts thirty or forty Foot distant on each side, East and West,
-as if they were two Walls: The Women also have most curious Carts; every
-one of his Wives hath a great one for her self, and so many other for her
-Attendants, that they seem as many Courts as he hath Wives. One great
-_Tartar_ or Nobleman, will have for his particular, more than an hundred
-of those Houses and Carts, for his several Offices and Uses, but set so
-far from each other, they will seem like a great Village. {MN-4} Having
-taken their Houses from the Carts, they place the Master always towards
-the North; over whose head is always an Image like a Puppet, made of Felt,
-which they call his Brother; the Women on his left hand, and over the
-chief Mistriss her Head, such another Brother, and between them a little
-one, which is the keeper of the House; at the good Wives Beds-feet is a
-Kids Skin, stuffed with Wooll, and near it a Puppet looking towards the
-Maids; next the door another, with a dried Cows Udder, for the Women that
-Milk the Kine, because only the Men Milk Mares; {MN-5} every Morning those
-Images in their orders, they besprinkle with that they drink, be it
-Cossmos, or whatsoever, but all the white Mares Milk is reserved for the
-Prince. Then without the door, thrice to the South, every one bowing his
-knee in honour of the Fire; then the like to the East, in honour of the
-Air; then to the West, in honour of the Water; and lastly to the North, in
-behalf of the dead. After the Servant hath done this duty to the four
-quarters of the World, he returns into the House, where his Fellows stand
-waiting, ready with two Cups, and two Basons, to give their Master, and
-his Wife that lay with him that Night, to wash and drink, who must keep
-him company all the day following, and all his other Wives come thither to
-drink, where he keeps his House that day; and all the Gifts presented him
-till night, are laid up in her Chests; and at the door a Bench full of
-Cups, and drink for any of them to make merry.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The description of the_ Crim-Tartar's _Court._
-
- {MN-2} _His Houses and Carts._
-
- {MN-3} _Baskets._
-
- {MN-4} _Their Idolatry in their Lodgings._
-
- {MN-5} _Cosmos is Mares Milk._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XV.
-
-
-
- _Their Feasts, common Diet, Princes Estate, Buildings, Tributes, Laws,
- Slaves, Entertainment of Ambassadors._
-
-
-{MN} For their Feasts, they have all sorts of Beasts, Birds, Fish, Fruits,
-and Herbs they can get, but the more variety of wild ones is the best; to
-which they have excellent Drink made of Rice, Millet, and Honey, like
-Wine; they have also Wine, but in Summer they drink most Cossmos, that
-standeth ready always at the entrance of the door, and by it a Fidler;
-when the Master of the House beginneth to drink, they all cry, ha, ha, and
-the Fidler plays, then they all clap their Hands and dance, the Men before
-their Masters, the Women before their Mistresses; and ever when he drinks,
-they cry as before; then the Fidler stayeth till they drink all round;
-sometimes they will drink for the Victory; and to provoke one to drink,
-they will pull him by the Ears, and lug and draw him, to stretch and beat
-him, clapping their Hands, stamping with their Feet, and dancing before
-the Champions, offering them Cups, then draw them back again to increase
-their Appetite; and thus continue till they be drunk, or their drink done,
-which they hold an honour, and no Infirmity.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Feasts._
-
-
-{MN} Though the Ground be fertile, they sow little Corn, yet the Gentlemen
-have Bread and Honey-wine; Grapes they have plenty, and Wine privately,
-and good Flesh and Fish; but the common sort stamped Millet, mingled with
-Milk and Water. They call Cassa for Meat, and drink any thing; also any
-Beast unprofitable for service they kill, when they are like to die, or
-however they die, they will eat them, Guts, Liver and all; but the most
-fleshy parts they cut in thin slices, and hang it up in the Sun and Wind
-without salting, where it will dry so hard, it will not putrifie in a long
-time. A Ramm they esteem a great Feast among forty or fifty, which they
-cut in pieces boiled or roasted, puts it in a great Bowl, with Salt and
-Water, for other Sawce they have none; the Master of the Feast giveth
-every one a piece, which he eateth by himself, or carrieth away with him.
-{MN-2} Thus their hard fare makes them so infinite in Cattel, and their
-great number of Captive Women to breed upon, makes them so populous. But
-near the Christian Frontiers, the baser sort make little Cottages of Wood,
-called _Vlusi,_ daubed over with dirt, and Beasts dung covered with sedge;
-yet in Summer they leave them, beginning their Progress in _April,_ with
-their Wives, Children, and Slaves, in their Carted Houses, scarce
-convenient for four or five Persons; driving their Flocks towards
-_Precopia,_ and sometimes into _Taurica,_ or _Osow,_ a Town upon the River
-_Tanais,_ which is great and swift, where the _Turk_ hath a Garrison; and
-in _October_ return again to their Cottages. Their Clothes are the Skins
-of Dogs, Goats, and Sheep, lined with Cotton Cloath, made of their finest
-Wooll, for of their worst they make their Felt, which they use in
-abundance, as well for Shooes and Caps, as Houses, Beds, and Idols; also
-of the coarse Wooll mingled with Horse hair, they make all their Cordage.
-{MN-3} Notwithstanding this wandring life, their Princes sit in great
-State upon Beds, or Carpets, and with great reverence are attended both by
-Men and Women, and richly served in Plates and great Silver Cups,
-delivered upon the Knee, attired in rich Furrs, lined with Plush, or
-Taffity, or Robes of Tissue. These _Tartars_ possess many large and goodly
-Plains, wherein feed innumerable Herds of Horse and Cattel, as well wild
-as tame; which are Elkes, Bisons, Horses, Deer, Sheep, Goats, Swine,
-Bears, and divers others.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _Their common diet._
-
- {MN-2} _How they become populous._
-
- {MN-3} _Their Princes State._
-
-
-{MN-1} In those Countries are the Ruins of many fair Monasteries, Castles,
-and Cities, as _Bacasaray, Salutium, Almassary, Precopia, Cremum, Sedacom,
-Capha,_ and divers others by the Sea, but all kept with strong Garrisons
-for the Great _Turk,_ {MN-2} who yearly by Trade or Traffick, receiveth
-the chief Commodities those fertile Countries afford, as Bezoar, Rice,
-Furs, Hides, Butter, Salt, Cattel, and Slaves, yet by the spoils they get
-from the secure and idle Christians, they maintain themselves in this
-Pomp. Also their Wives, of whom they have as many as they will, very
-costly, yet in a constant custom with decency.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _Ancient Buildings._
-
- {MN-2} _Commodities for tribute to the_ Turk.
-
-
-{MN} They are _Mahometans,_ as are the _Turks,_ from whom they also have
-their Laws, but no Lawyers, nor Attornies, only Judges, and Justices in
-every Village, or Hordia; but Capital Criminals, or matters of moment,
-before the Chan himself, or Privy Councils, of whom they are always heard,
-and speedily discharged; for any may have access at any time to them,
-before whom they appear with great Reverence, adoring their Princes as
-Gods, and their Spiritual Judges as Saints; for Justice is with such
-integrity and Expedition Executed, without Covetousness, Bribery,
-Partiality, and Brawling, that in six Months they have sometimes scarce
-six Causes to hear. About the Princes Court, none but his Guard wear any
-Weapon, but abroad they go very strong, because there are many Bandittos,
-and Thieves.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Good Laws, yet no Lawyers._
-
-
-{MN} They use the _Hungarians, Russians, Wallachians,_ and _Moldavian_
-Slaves (whereof they have plenty) as Beasts to every work; and those
-_Tartars_ that serve the Chan, or Noblemen, have only Victuals and
-Apparel, the rest are generally nastly, and idle, naturally miserable, and
-in their Wars better Thieves than Soldiers.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Slaves._
-
-
-{MN} This Chan hath yearly a Donative from the King of _Poland,_ the Dukes
-of _Lithuania, Moldavia,_ and _Nagayon Tartars;_ their Messengers commonly
-he useth bountifully, and very nobly, but sometimes most cruelly; when any
-of them do bring their Presents, by his Houshold Officers, they are
-entertained in a plain Field, with a moderate proportion of Flesh, Bread
-and Wine, for once; but when they come before him, the _Sultans, Tuians,
-Vlans, Marhies,_ his chief Officers and Councellors attend, one Man only
-bringeth the Ambassadour to the Court Gate, but to the Chan he is led
-between two Councellors; where saluting him upon their bended knees,
-declaring their message, are admitted to eat with him, and presented with
-a great Silver Cup full of Mead from his own hand, but they drink it upon
-their Knees: when they are dispatched, he invites them again, the Feast
-ended, they go back a little from the Palace door, and rewarded with Silk
-Vestures, wrought with Gold down to their Anckles, with an Horse or two,
-and sometimes a Slave of their own Nation; in them Robes presently they
-come to him again, to give him thanks, take their leave, and so depart.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _His Entertainment of Ambassadours._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVI.
-
-
-
- _How he levieth an Army; their Arms and Provision; how he divideth the
- Spoil, and his Service to the Great Turk._
-
-
-{MN} When he intends any Wars, he must first have leave of the Great
-_Turk,_ whom he is bound to assist when he commandeth, receiving daily for
-himself and chief of his Nobility, Pensions from the _Turk,_ that holds
-all Kings but Slaves, that pay Tribute, or are subject to any: signifying
-his intent to all his Subjects, within a Month commonly he raiseth his
-Army, and every Man is to furnish himself for three Months Victuals, which
-is parched Millet, or ground to Meal, which they ordinarily mingle with
-Water (as is said) hard Cheese or Curds dried, and beaten to powder, a
-little will make much Water like Milk, and dried Flesh, this they put also
-up in Sacks; The Chan and his Nobles have some Bread and _Aquavitae,_ and
-quick Cattel to kill when they please, wherewith very sparingly they are
-contented. Being provided with expert Guides, and got into the Country he
-intends to Invade, he sends forth his Scouts to bring in what Prisoners
-they can, from whom he will wrest the utmost of their Knowledge fit for
-his purpose; having advised with his Council, what is most fit to be done,
-the Nobility, according to their Antiquity, doth march; then moves he with
-his whole Army: if he find there is no Enemy to oppose him, he adviseth
-how far they shall Invade, commanding every Man (upon pain of his Life) to
-kill all the obvious Rusticks; but not to hurt any Women, or Children.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _How he levieth an Army._
-
-
-{MN} Ten, or fifteen thousand, he commonly placeth, where he findeth most
-convenient for his standing Camp; the rest of his Army he divides in
-several Troops, bearing ten or twelve Miles square before them, and ever
-within three or four days return to their Camp, putting all to Fire and
-Sword, but that they carry with them back to their Camp; and in this
-scattering manner he will invade a Country, and be gone with his Prey,
-with an incredible Expedition. But if he understand of an Enemy, he will
-either fight in Ambuscado, or flie; for he will never fight any Battel if
-he can chuse, but upon treble advantage; yet by his innumerable flights of
-Arrows, I have seen flie from his flying Troops, we could not well judge,
-whether his fighting or flying was most dangerous, so good is his Horse,
-and so expert his Bow-men; but if they be so intangled they must fight,
-there is none can be more hardy, or resolute in their defences.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The manner of his Wars._
-
-
-{MN} Regaining his own Borders, he takes the tenth of the principal
-Captives, Man, Woman, Child, or Beast (but his Captains that take them,
-will accept of some particular Person they best like for themselves) the
-rest are divided amongst the whole Army, according to every Mans Desert
-and Quality; that they keep them, or sell them to who will give most; but
-they will not forget to use all the means they can, to know their Estates,
-Friends, and Quality, and the better they find you, the worse they will
-use you, till you do agree to pay such a Ransom, as they will impose upon
-you; therefore many great Persons have endured much misery to conceal
-themselves, because their Ransoms are so intolerable: their best hope is
-of some Christian Agent, that many times cometh to redeem Slaves, either
-with Money, or Man for Man; those Agents knowing so well the extream
-covetousness of the _Tartars,_ do use to bribe some Jew or Merchant, that
-feigning they will sell them again to some other Nation, are oft redeemed
-for a very small Ransom.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _How he divideth the spoil._
-
-
-{MN} But to this _Tartarian_ Army, when the _Turk,_ commands, he goeth
-with some small Artillery; and the _Nagayans, Precopens, Crims, Osovens,_
-and _Circassians,_ are his Tributaries; but the _Perigorves, Oczaconians,
-Bialogordens,_ and _Dobrucen Tartars,_ the _Turk_ by Covenant commands to
-follow him, so that from all those _Tartars_ he hath had an Army of an
-hundred and twenty thousand excellent, swift, stomackfull _Tartarian_
-Horse for foot they have none. Now the Chan, his Sultans and Nobility, use
-_Turkiso, Caramanian, Arabian, Parthian,_ and other strange _Tartarian_
-Horses; the swiftest they esteem the best; seldom they feed any more at
-home, than they have present use for; but upon their Plains is a short
-Wood-like Heath, in some Countries like Gail, full of Berries, much better
-than any Grass.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _How the Chan doth serve the Great_ Turk.
-
-
-{MN} Their Arms are such, as they have surprised or got from the
-_Christians_ or _Persians,_ both Brest-plates, Swords, Scimitars, and
-Helmets; Bows and Arrows they make most themselves, also their Bridles and
-Saddles are indifferent, but the Nobility are very handsome, and well
-armed like the _Turks,_ in whom consisteth their greatest Glory; the
-ordinary sort have little Armour, some a plain young Pole unshaven, headed
-with a piece of Iron for a Lance; some an old _Christian_ Pike, or a
-_Turks_ Cavarine, yet those Tattertimallions will have two or three
-Horses, some four or five, as well for service, as for to eat; which makes
-their Armies seem thrice so many as there are Soldiers. The Chan himself
-hath about his Person, Ten thousand chosen _Tartars_ and _Janizaries,_
-some small Ordnance, and a white Mares Tail, with a piece of green Taffity
-on a great Pike, is carried before him for a Standard; because they hold
-no Beast so precious as a white Mare, whose Milk is only for the King and
-Nobility, and to Sacrifice to their Idols; but the rest have Ensigns of
-divers Colours.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Arms._
-
-
-For all this miserable Knowledge, Furniture, and Equipage, the mischief
-they do in _Christendom_ is wonderful, by reason of their hardness of Life
-and Constitution, Obedience, Agility, and their Emperours Bounty, Honours,
-Grace, and Dignities he ever bestoweth upon those, that have done him any
-memorable Service in the face of his Enemies.
-
-{MN} The Caspian Sea, most Men agree that have passed it, to be in length
-about 200 Leagues, and in breadth an hundred and fifty, environed to the
-East, with the great Desarts of the _Tartars_ of _Turkomania;_ to the
-West, by the _Circasses,_ and the Mountain _Caucasus;_ to the North, by
-the River _Volga,_ and the Land of _Nagay;_ and to the South, by _Media,_
-and _Persia:_ This Sea is fresh Water in many places, in others as salt as
-the great Ocean; it hath many great Rivers which fall into it, as the
-mighty River of _Volga,_ which is like a Sea, running near Two thousand
-Miles, through many great and large Countries, that send into it many
-other great Rivers; also out of _Saberia, Yaick,_ and _Yem,_ out of the
-great Mountain _Caucasus,_ the River _Sirus, Arash,_ and divers others,
-yet no Sea nearer it than the black Sea, which is at least an hundred
-Leagues distant: In which Country live the _Georgians,_ now part
-_Armenians,_ part _Nestorians;_ it is neither found to increase or
-diminish, or empty it self any way, except it be under Ground, and in some
-places they can find no Ground at Two hundred fathom.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A Description of the_ Caspian _Sea._
-
-
-Many other most strange and wonderful things are in the Land of _Cathay,_
-towards the North-east, and China towards the South-east, where are many
-of the most famous Kingdoms in the World, where most Arts, Plenty, and
-Curiosities are in such abundance, as might seem incredible, which
-hereafter I will relate, as I have briefly gathered from such Authors as
-have lived there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVII.
-
-
-
- _How Captain_ Smith _escaped his Captivity; slew the_ Bashaw _of_
- Nalbrits _in_ Cambia; _his Passage to_ Russia, Transilvania, _and
- the middest of_ Europe _to_ Africa.
-
-
-{MN-1} All the hope he had ever to be delivered from this Thraldom, was
-Only the love of _Tragabigzanda,_ who surely was ignorant of his bad
-usage; for although he had often debated the matter with some Christians,
-that had been there a long time Slaves, they could not find how to make an
-escape, by any reason or possibility; but God beyond Man's Expectation or
-Imagination helpeth his Servants, when they least think of help, as it
-hapned to him. So long he lived in this miserable Estate, as he became
-a Thresher at a grange in a great Field, more than a League from the
-_Timor's_ House; the _Bashaw,_ as he oft used to visit his Granges,
-visited him, and took occasion so to beat, spurn, and revile him, that
-forgetting all reason, he beat out the _Timor's_ Brains with his Threshing
-Bat, for they have no Flails; and seeing his Estate could be no worse than
-it was, clothed himself in his Clothes, hid his Body under the Straw,
-filled his Knapsack with Corn, shut the doors, mounted his Horse, and ran
-into the Desart at all adventure; two or three days, thus fearfully
-wandring he knew not whither, and well it was, he met not any to ask the
-way; being even as taking leave of this miserable World, {MN-2} God did
-direct him to the great way or Castragan, as they call it, which doth
-cross these large Territories, and generally known among them by these
-marks.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _How_ Smith _escaped his Captivity._
-
- {MN-2} _Their Guides in those Countries._
-
-
-In every crossing of this great way is planted a Post, and in it so many
-bobs with broad ends, as there be ways, and every bob the Figure painted
-on it, that demonstrateth to what part that way leadeth; as that which
-pointeth towards the _Crim's_ Country, is marked with a half Moon, if
-towards the _Georgians_ and _Persia,_ a black Man, full of white spots, if
-towards _China,_ the Picture of the Sun, if towards _Muscovia,_ the Sign
-of a Cross, if towards the Habitation of any other Prince, the Figure
-whereby his Standard is known. To his dying Spirits thus God added some
-comfort in this melancholy Journey, wherein if he had met any of that vile
-Generation, they had made him their Slave, or knowing the Figure Engraven
-in the Iron about his Neck, (as all Slaves have) he had been sent back
-again to his Master; sixteen days he travelled in this fear and torment,
-after the Cross, till he arrived at _AEcopolis,_ upon the River _Don,_ a
-Garrison of the _Muscovites._ The Governour after due Examination of those
-his hard events, took off his Irons, and so kindly used him, he thought
-himself new risen from the Dead, and the good Lady _Calamata,_ largely
-Supplied all his wants.
-
-{MN-1} This is as much as he could learn of those wild Countries, that the
-Country of _Cambia_ is two days Journey from the Head of the great River
-_Bruapo,_ which springeth from many places of the Mountains of
-_Innagachi,_ that joyn themselves together in the Pool _Kerkas_ which
-they account for the Head, and falleth into the Sea _Dissabacca,_ called
-by some the Lake _Maeotas,_ which receiveth also the River _Tanais,_ and
-all the Rivers that fall from the great Countries of the _Circassi,_ the
-_Cartaches,_ and many from the _Tauricaes, Precopes, Cummani, Cossunka,_
-and the _Crim;_ through which Sea he Sailed, and up the River _Bruapo_ to
-_Nalbrits,_ and thence through the Desarts of _Circassi_ to _AEcopolis,_
-as is related; where he stayed with the Governour, till the Convoy went to
-_Caragnaw;_ then with his Certificate how he found him, and had examined
-with his friendly Letters, sent him by _Zumalack_ to _Caragnaw,_ whose
-Governour in like manner so kindly used him, that by this means he went
-with a safe conduct to _Lesch,_ and _Donko,_ in _Cologoske,_ and thence to
-_Berniske_, and _Newgrod_ in _Siberia,_ by _Rezechica,_ upon the River
-_Nieper,_ in the confines of _Lithuania;_ from whence with as much
-kindness, he was convoyed in like manner by _Coroski, Duberesko, Duzihell,
-Drohobus,_ and _Ostroge_ in _Volonia; Saslaw,_ and _Lasco_ in _Podolia;
-Halico_ and _Collonia_ in _Polonia;_ and so to _Hermonstat_ in
-_Transilvania._ In all this his life, he seldom met with more Respect,
-Mirth, Content and Entertainment; and not any Governour where he came, but
-gave him somewhat as a Present, besides his Charges; seeing themselves as
-subject to the like Calamity. {MN-2} Through those poor continually
-Foraged Countries, there is no passage, but with the Caravans or Convoys;
-for they are Countries rather to be pitied than envied; and it is a wonder
-any should make Wars for them. The Villages are only here and there, a few
-Houses of streight Firr Trees, laid heads and points above one another,
-made fast by notches at the ends, more than a Man's heighth, and with
-broad split Boards, pinned together with woodden Pins, as thatched for
-coverture. In ten Villages you shall scarce find ten Iron Nails, except it
-be in some extraordinary Man's House. For their Towns, _AEcopolis, Letch,_
-and _Donko,_ have Rampires made of that woodden Walled fashion, double,
-and betwixt them Earth and Stones, but so latched with cross Timber, they
-are very strong against any thing but Fire; and about them a deep Ditch,
-and a Palizado of young Firr Trees; but most of the rest have only a great
-Ditch cast about them, and the Ditches Earth, is all their Rampire; but
-round, well environed with Palizadoes. Some have some few small pieces of
-small Ordnance, and Slings, Calievers, and Muskets, but their generallest
-Weapons are the _Russe_ Bows and Arrows; you shall find Pavements over
-Bogs, only of young Firr-Trees, laid cross one over another, for two or
-three hours Journey, or as the Passage requires, and yet in two days
-Travel, you shall scarce see six Habitations. Notwithstanding to see how
-their Lords, Governours, and Captains are civilized, well attired and
-accoutred with Jewels, Sables, and Horses, and after their manner with
-curious Furniture, it is wonderful; but they are all Lords or Slaves,
-which makes them so subject to every Invasion.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The description of_ Cambia, _and his passage to_ Russia.
-
- {MN-2} _His Observations in his Journey to_ Transilvania, _through the
- midst of_ Europe.
-
-
-In _Transilvania,_ he found so many good Friends, that but to see, and
-rejoyce himself (after all those Encounters) in his Native Country, he
-would ever hardly have left them, though the mirrour of vertue their
-Prince was absent. Being thus glutted with content, and near drowned with
-Joy, he parted high _Hungaria_ by _Fileck, Tocka, Cassovia,_ and
-_Underorowoay,_ by _Ulmicht_ in _Moravia,_ to _Prague_ in _Bohemia;_ at
-last he found the most gracious Prince _Sigismundus,_ with his Colonel at
-_Lipswick_ in _Misenland,_ who gave him his Pass, intimating the service
-he had done, and the Honours he had received, with fifteen hundred Ducats
-of Gold to repair his Losses: With this he spent some time to visit the
-fair Cities and Countries of _Dresden_ in _Saxony, Magdeburgh_ and
-_Brunswick; Cassel_ in _Hessen; Wittenberg, Vilum,_ and _Minekin_ in
-_Bavaria; Augsburg,_ and her Universities; _Hama, Frankford, Mentz,_ the
-_Palatinate; Worms, Spires,_ and _Straburg;_ passing _Nancie_ in _Lorain,_
-and _France_ by _Paris_ to _Orleans,_ he went down the River of _Loyer,_
-to _Angiers,_ and imbarked himself at _Nantz_ in _Britain,_ for _Bilbao_
-in _Biskay_ to see _Burgos-Valladolid,_ the admired Monastery of the
-_Escurial, Madrid, Toledo, Corduba, Cuedyrial, Sivil, Cheries, Cales,_ and
-St. _Lucas_ in _Spain._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVIII.
-
-
-
- _The Observations of Captain_ Smith; _Mr._ Henry Archer, _and others in_
- Barbary.
-
-
-Being thus satisfied with _Europe_ and _Asia,_ understanding of the Wars
-in _Barbary,_ he went from _Gibralter_ to _Ceuta_ and _Tangier,_ thence to
-_Saffee,_ where growing into Acquaintance with a French Man of War, the
-Captain and some twelve more went to _Morocco,_ to see the ancient
-Monuments of that large renowned City: It was once the principal City in
-_Barbary,_ situated in a goodly plain Country, 14 Miles from the great
-Mount _Atlas,_ and sixty Miles from the _Atlantick_ Sea; but now little
-remaining, but the King's Palace, which is like a City of it self; and the
-Christian Church, on whose flat, {MN-1} square Steeple is a great broach
-of Iron, whereon is placed the three Golden Balls of Africa: The first is
-near three Ells in Circumference, the next above it somewhat less, the
-uppermost the least over them, as it were an half Ball, and over all a
-pretty gilded Pyramid. Against those Golden Balls hath been shot many a
-shot, their Weight is recorded 700 weight of pure Gold, hollow within, yet
-no shot did ever hit them, nor could ever any Conspirator attain that
-Honour as to get them down. They report, the Prince of _Morocco_
-betrothed himself to the King's Daughter of _AEthiopia,_ he dying before
-their Marriage, she caused those three Golden Balls to be set up for his
-Monument, and vowed Virginity all her Life. {MN-2} The _Alfantica_ is also
-a place of note, because it is invironed with a great Wall, wherein lie
-the Goods of all the Merchants securely guarded. The _Inderea_ is also (as
-it were) a City of it self, where dwell the Jews: The rest for the most
-part is defaced; but by the many Pinnacles and Towers, with Balls on their
-tops, hath much appearance of much sumptuousness and curiosity. There have
-been many famous Universities, which are now but Stables for Fowls, and
-Beasts, and the Houses in most parts lie tumbled one above another; the
-Walls of Earth are with the great fresh Floods washed to the ground; nor
-is there any Village in it, but Tents for Strangers, _Larbes_ and _Moors._
-Strange Tales they will tell of a great Garden, wherein were all sorts of
-Birds, Fishes, Beasts, Fruits, and Fountains, which for Beauty, Art and
-Pleasure, exceeded any place known in the World, though now nothing but
-Dung-hills, Pigeon-Houses, Shrubs and Bushes. There are yet many excellent
-Fountains, adorned with Marble, and many Arches, Pillars, Towers, Ports,
-and Temples; but most only reliques of lamentable Ruins and sad
-Desolation.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The three Golden Balls of_ Africa.
-
- {MN-2} _The description of_ Morocco.
-
-
-{MN} When _Muly Hamet_ Reigned in _Barbary,_ he had three Sons, _Muly
-Sheck, Muly Sidan,_ and _Muly Bufferres,_ he a most good and noble King,
-that governed well with Peace and Plenty, till his Empress, more cruel
-than any Beast in Africa, poisoned him, her own Daughter, _Muly Sheck,_
-his eldest Son, born of a Portugal Lady, and his Daughter, to bring _Muly
-Sidan,_ to the Crown now reigning, which was the cause of all those
-brawls, and Wars that followed betwixt those Brothers, their Children, and
-a Saint that started up, but he played the Devil.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A bloody Empress._
-
-
-{MN-1} King _Muly Hamet_ was not black, as many suppose, but _Molara,_ or
-tawny, as are the most of his Subjects; every way noble, kind and
-friendly, very rich and pompous in State and Majesty, though he sitteth
-not upon a Throne nor Chair of state, but cross Leg'd upon a rich Carpet,
-as doth the _Turk,_ whose Religion of _Mahomet,_ with an incredible
-miserable Curiosity they observe. His ordinary Guard is at least 5000, but
-in Progress, he goeth not with less than 20000 Horse-men, himself as rich
-in all his Equipage, as any Prince in Christendom, and yet a Contributor
-to the _Turk._ {MN-2} In all his Kingdom were so few good Artificers, that
-he entertained from _England,_ Gold-smiths, Plummers, Carvers, and
-Polishers of Stone, and Watch-makers, so much he delighted in the
-Reformation of Workmanship, he allowed each of them ten Shillings a day
-standing Fee, Linen, Woollen, Silks, and what they would for Diet and
-Apparel, and Custom-free to transport, or import what they would; for
-there were scarce any of those qualities in his Kingdom, but those, of
-which there are divers of them, living at this present in _London._
-Amongst the rest, one Mr. _Henry Archer,_ a Watch-maker, walking in
-_Morocco,_ from the _Alfantica_ to the _Juderea,_ the way being very foul,
-met a great Priest, or a _Sante_ (as they call all great Clergy-men) who
-would have thrust him into the dirt for the way; but Archer not knowing
-what he was, gave him a box on the Ear, presently he was apprehended, and
-condemned to have his Tongue cut out, and his Hand cut off: But no sooner
-it was known at the King's Court, but 300 of his Guard came, and broke
-open the Prison, and delivered him although the Fact was next degree to
-Treason.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _King_ Muly Hamet _or the Great_ Zeriff _of_ Barbary.
-
- {MN-2} _His great love to English Men._
-
-
-{MN} Concerning this _Archer,_ there is one thing more worth noting: Not
-far from Mount _Atlas,_ a great Lioness in the heat of the day, did use to
-bathe her self, and teach her young Puppies to swim in the River
-_Cauzef,_ of a good breadth; yet she would carry, which some _Moors_
-perceiving, watched there them one after another over the River;
-opportunity, and when the River was between her and them, stole four of
-her Whelps, which she perceiving, with all the speed she could passed the
-River, and coming near them, they let fall a Whelp (and fled with the
-rest) which she took in her mouth, and so returned to the rest: A Male
-and a Female of those they gave Mr. _Archer,_ who kept them in the King's
-Garden, till the Male killed the Female, then he brought it up as a
-Puppy-dog lying upon his Bed, till it grew so great as a Mastiff, and no
-dog more tame or gentle to them he knew: But being to return for
-_England,_ at _Saffee_ he gave him to a Merchant of _Marseillses,_ that
-presented him to the French King, who sent him to King James, where it was
-kept in the Tower seven Years: After one Mr. _John Bull,_ then Servant to
-Mr. _Archer,_ with divers of his Friends, went to see the Lions, not
-knowing any thing at all of him; yet this rare Beast smelled him before he
-saw him, whining, groaning, and tumbling, with such an expression of
-acquaintance, that being informed by the Keepers how he came thither; Mr.
-_Bull_ so prevailed, the Keeper opened the Grate, and _Bull_ went in: But
-no Dog could fawn more on his Master, than the Lion on him, licking his
-Feet, Hands, and Face, skipping and tumbling to and fro, to the wonder of
-all the beholders; being satisfied with his acquaintance, he made shift to
-get out of the Grate: But when the Lion saw his Friend gone, no Beast by
-bellowing, roaring, scratching, and howling, could express more rage and
-sorrow, nor in four days after would he either eat or drink.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The strange love of a Lion._
-
-
-{MN} In _Morocco,_ the King's Lions are altogether in a Court, invironed
-with a great high Wall; to those they put a young Puppy-dog: The greatest
-Lion had a sore upon his neck, which this Dog so licked, that he was
-healed: The Lion defended him from the fury of all the rest, nor durst
-they eat till the Dog and he had fed; this Dog grew great, and lived
-amongst them many years after.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Another kind Lion in_ Morocco.
-
-
-{MN-1} _Fez_ also is a most large and plentiful Country, the chief City is
-called _Fez,_ divided into two parts; old _Fez_, containing about 80
-thousand Households, the other 4000 pleasantly situated upon a River in
-the heart of _Barbary,_ part upon Hills, part upon Plains, full of people,
-and all sorts of Merchandize. The great Temple is called _Carucen_, in
-breadth seventeen Arches, in length 120, born up with 2500 white Marble
-Pillars: under the chief Arch, where the Tribunal is kept, hangeth a most
-huge Lamp, compassed with 110 lesser, under the other also hang great
-Lamps, and about some, are burning fifteen hundred lights, They say, they
-were all made of the Bells the _Arabians_ brought from _Spain._ It hath
-three Gates of notable heighth, Priests and Officers so many, that the
-Circuit of the Church, the Yard, and other Houses, is little less than a
-Mile and half in compass, there are in this City 200 Schools, 200 Inns,
-400 Water-Mills, 600 Water-Conduits, 700 Temples and Oratories; but 50 of
-them most stately and richly furnished. Their _Alcazer_ or _Burse_ is
-Walled about, it hath twelve Gates, and fifteen Walks covered with Tents,
-to keep the Sun from the Merchants, and them that come there. The King's
-Palace, both for strength and beauty is excellent, and the Citizens have
-many great Privileges. Those two Countries of _Fez_ and _Morocco,_ are the
-best part of all _Barbary,_ abounding with People, Cattel, and all good
-Necessaries for Man's use. For the rest, as the _Larbs,_ or Mountainers,
-the Kingdoms of _Cocow, Algier, Tripoli, Tunis,_ and _AEgypt;_ there are
-many large Histories of them in divers Languages, especially that writ by
-that most excellent Statesman, _John de Leo,_ who afterwards turned
-Christian. {MN-2} The unknown Countries of _Guine_ and _Binn,_ this six
-and twenty years have been frequented with a few English Ships only to
-Trade, especially the River of _Senega,_ by Captain _Brimstead,_ Captain
-_Brockit,_ Mr. _Crump,_ and divers others. Also the great River of
-_Gambia,_ by Captain _Johnson,_ who is returned in thither again, in the
-Year 1626, with Mr. _William Grent,_ and thirteen or fourteen others, to
-stay in the Country, to discover some way to those rich Mines of _Gago_ or
-_Tumbatu,_ from whence is supposed the _Moors_ of _Barbary_ have their
-Gold, and the certainty of those supposed Descriptions and Relations of
-those interiour parts, which daily the more they are sought into, the more
-they are corrected: For surely, those interiour Parts of Africa, are
-little known to either _English, French,_ or _Dutch,_ though they use much
-the Coast; therefore we will make a little bold with the Observations of
-the _Portugals._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The description of_ Fez.
-
- {MN-2} _A brief description of the most unknown parts of_ Africa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIX.
-
-
-
- _The strange Discoveries and Observations of the_ Portugals _in_ Africa.
-
-
-{MN} The _Portugals_ on those Parts have the glory, who first coasting
-along this Western Shoar of _Africa,_ to find passage to the
-_East-Indies,_ within this hundred and fifty years, even from the
-Streights of _Gibraltar,_ about the Cape of _Bone Esperance_ to the
-_Persian_ Gulf, and thence all along the _African_ Coast to the
-_Moluccas,_ have subjected many great Kingdoms, erected many
-Common-wealths, built many great and strong Cities; and where is it they
-have not been by Trade or Force? No not so much as _Cape de Verd,_ and
-_Sermleone;_ but most Bays or Rivers, where there is any Trade to be had,
-especially Gold, or conveniency for Refreshment, but they are scattered;
-living so amongst those Blacks, by time and cunning, they seem to be
-naturalized amongst them. As for the Isles of the _Canaries,_ they have
-fair Towns, many Villages, and many thousands of People rich in
-Commodities.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN}_How the_ Portugals _coasted to the_ East Indies.
-
-
-{MN} _Ordoardo Lopez,_ a noble _Portuguse, Anno Dom._ 1578, imbarking
-himself for _Congo_ to Trade, where he found such Entertainment, finding
-the King much oppressed with Enemies, he found means to bring in the
-_Portugals_ to assist him, whereby he planted there Christian Religion,
-and spent most of his life to bring those Countries to the Crown of
-_Portugal,_ which he describeth in this manner.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Or_ Edward.
-
-
-{MN} The Kingdom of _Congo_ is about 600 Miles Diameter any way, the chief
-City called St. _Savadore,_ seated upon an exceeding high Mountain, 150
-Miles from the Sea, very fertile, and Inhabited with more than 100000
-Persons, where is an excellent Prospect over all the plain Countries about
-it, well watered, lying (as it were) in the Center of this Kingdom, over
-all which the _Portugals_ now command, though but an handful in comparison
-of _Negroes._ They have Flesh and Fruits very plentiful of divers sorts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The Kingdom of_ Congo.
-
-
-{MN} This Kingdom is divided into five Provinces, viz. _Bamba, Sundi,
-Pango, Batta_ and _Pembo;_ but _Bamba_ is the Principal, and can afford
-400000 Men of War. Elephants are bred over all those Provinces, and of
-wonderful greatness; though some report, they cannot kneel, nor lie down,
-they can do both, and have their Joynts as other Creatures for use: With
-their Fore-feet they will leap upon Trees to pull down the Boughs, and are
-of that strength, they will shake a great _Cocao_ Tree for the Nuts, and
-pull down a good Tree with their Tusks, to get the Leaves to eat, as well
-as Sedge and long Grass, _Cocao_ Nuts and Berries, &c. which with their
-Trunk they put in their Mouth, and chew it with their smaller Teeth; in
-most of those Provinces, are many rich Mines, but the _Negroes_ opposed
-the _Portugueses_ for working in them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Wild Elephants._
-
-
-{MN} The Kingdom of _Angola_ is wonderful populous, and rich in Mines of
-Silver, Copper, and most other Metals; fruitfull in all manner of Food,
-and sundry sorts of Cattel, but Dogs Flesh they love better than any other
-Meat; they use few Clothes, and no Armour; Bows, Arrows, and Clubs are
-their Weapons. But the _Portugueses_ are well armed against those Engines,
-and do buy yearly of those Blacks more than five thousand Slaves, and many
-are People exceeding well proportioned.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The Kingdom of_ Angola.
-
-
-{MN-1} The _Anchios_ are a most valiant Nation, but most strange to all
-about them. Their Arms are Bows; short and small, wrapped about with
-Serpents Skins, of divers Colours, but so smooth, you would think them all
-one with the Wood, and it makes them very strong; their Strings little
-twigs, but exceeding tough and flexible; their Arrows short, which they
-shoot with an incredible quickness. They have short Axes of Brass and
-Copper for Swords; wonderful, loyal and faithful, and exceeding simple,
-yet so active, they skip amongst the Rocks like Goats. {MN-2} They trade
-with them of _Nubea,_ and _Congo,_ for _Lamach,_ which is a small kind of
-Shell-fish, of an excellent azure, colour, Male and Female, but the Female
-they hold most pure; they value them at divers prices, because they are of
-divers sorts, and those they use for Coin, to buy and sell, as we do Gold
-and Silver; nor will they have any other Money in all those Countries, for
-which they give Elephants Teeth; and Slaves for Salt, Silk, Linen Cloth,
-Glass-beads, and such like _Portugal_ Commodities.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The Kingdom of_ Anchios.
-
- {MN-2} _A strange Memr'y._
-
-
-{MN} They circumcise themselves, and mark their Faces with sundry slashes
-from their Infancy. They keep a shambles of Man's Flesh, as if it were
-Beef, or other Victuals; for when they cannot have a good Market for their
-Slaves; or their Enemies they take, they kill, and sell them in this
-manner; some are so resolute, in shewing how much they scorn death, they
-will offer themselves and Slaves, to this Butchery to their Prince and
-Friends; and though there be many Nations will eat their Enemies, in
-_America_ and _Asia,_ yet none but those are known to be so mad, as to eat
-their Slaves and Friends also.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A shambles of Men's Flesh._
-
-
-Religions and Idols they have as many, as Nations and Humours; but the
-Devil hath the greatest part of their Devotions, whom all those Blacks do
-say, is white; for there are no Saints but Blacks.
-
-{MN} But besides those great Kingdoms of _Congo, Angola,_ and _Azichi,_ in
-those unfrequented Parts are the Kingdoms of _Lango, Matania, Battua,
-Sofola, Mozambeche, Quivola,_ the Isle of St. _Lawrence, Mombaza,
-Melinda,_ the Empires of _Monomotapa, Monemugi,_ and _Presbyter John,_
-with whom they have a kind of Trade, and their Rites, Customs, Climates,
-Temperatures, and Commodities by Relation. Also of great Lakes, that
-deserve the Names of Seas, and huge Mountains of divers sorts, as some
-scorched with heat, some covered with Snow; the Mountains of the Sun, also
-of the Moon, some of Chrystal, some of Iron, some of Silver, and Mountains
-of Gold, with the Original of _Nilus;_ likewise sundry sorts of Cattel,
-Fishes, Fowls, strange Beasts, and monstrous Serpents; for Africa was
-always noted to be a fruitful Mother of such terrible Creatures; who
-meeting at their watering places, which are but Ponds in desart places, in
-regard of the heat of the Country, and their extremities of Nature, make
-strange Copulations, and so ingender those extraordinary Monsters. Of all
-these you may read in the History, of this _Edward Lopez,_ translated into
-English by _Abraham Hartwel,_ and dedicated to _John_ Lord Arch-bishop of
-_Canterbury,_ 1597. But because the Particulars are most concerning the
-conversion of those Pagans, by a good poor Priest, that first converted a
-Noble Man, to convert the King, and the rest of the Nobility; sent for so
-many Priests and Ornaments into _Portugal,_ to Solemnize their Baptisms
-with such Magnificence, which was performed with such strange Curiosities,
-that those poor _Negro's_ adored them as gods, till the Priests grew to
-that Wealth, a Bishop was sent to rule over them, which they would not
-endure, which endangered to spoil all before they could be reconciled. But
-not to trouble you too long with those Rarities of uncertainties; let us
-return again to _Barbary,_ where the Wars being ended, and _Befferres_
-possessed of _Morocco,_ and his Fathers Treasure, a new bruit arose
-amongst them, that _Muly Sidan_ was raising an Army against him, who after
-took his Brother _Befferres_ Prisoner; but by reason of the uncertainty,
-and the perfidious, treacherous, bloody murthers rather than War, amongst
-those perfidious, barbarous Moors, _Smith_ returned with _Merham,_ and the
-rest to _Saffe,_ and so aboard his Ship, to try some other conclusions at
-Sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Divers Nations yet unknown, and the wonders of_ Africa.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XX.
-
-
-
-
- _A brave Sea Fight betwixt to_ Spanish _Men of War, and Captain_ Merham,
- _with_ Smith.
-
-
-_Merham,_ a Captain of a Man of War then in the Road, invited Captain
-_Smith,_ and two or three more of them aboard with him, where he spared
-not any thing he had to express his kindness, to bid them welcome, till it
-was too late to go on Shoar, so that necessity constrained them to stay
-aboard; a fairer Evening could not be, yet ere Midnight, such a Storm did
-arise, they were forced to let slip Cable, and Anchor, and put to Sea;
-spooning before the Wind, till they were driven to the _Canaries;_ in the
-Calms they accommodated themselves, hoping this strange accident might yet
-produce some good event; not long it was before they took a small Bark
-coming from _Tenerif,_ loaded with Wine; three or four more they chased,
-two they took, but found little in them, save a few Passengers, that told
-them of five _Dutch_ Men of War, about the Isles, so that they stood for
-_Boiadora,_ upon the _African_ Shoar, betwixt which and _Cape Noa,_ they
-descryed two Sail. _Merham_ intending to know what they were, hailed them;
-very civilly they danced their Top-sails, and desired the Man of War to
-come aboard them, and take what he would, for they were but two poor
-distressed _Biskainers._ But _Merham_ the old Fox, seeing himself in the
-Lions paws, sprung his louf, the other tacked after him, and came close up
-to his nether Quarter, gave his Broad-side, and so loufed up to Windward;
-the Vice-Admiral did the like, and at the next bout, the Admiral with a
-noise of Trumpets, and all his Ordnance, Murtherers, and Muskets, boarded
-him on his Broad-side, the other in like manner on his ley Quarter, that
-it was so dark, there was little light, but fire and smoak; long he stayed
-not, before he, fell off, leaving 4 or 5 of his Men sprawling over the
-Grating; after they had battered _Merham_ about an hour, they boarded him
-again as before, and threw four Kedgars or Grapnels in Iron Chains, then
-shearing off, they thought so to have torn down the Grating; but the
-Admiral's Yard was so intangled in their Shrouds, _Merham_ had time to
-discharge two cross barr shot amongst them, and divers Bolts of Iron made
-for that purpose, against his Bow, that made such a Breach, he feared they
-both mould have sunk for Company; so that the _Spaniard_ was as yare in
-slipping his chained Grapnels, as _Merham_ was in cutting the Tackling,
-kept fast their Yards in his Shrouds; the Vice-Admiral presently cleared
-himself, but spared neither his Ordnance nor Muskets to keep _Merham_ from
-getting away, till the Admiral had repaired his Leak; from twelve at noon,
-till six at night, they thus interchanged one volly for another; then the
-Vice-Admiral fell on Stern, staying for the Admiral that came up again to
-him, and all that night stood after _Merham,_ that shaped his course for
-_Mamora,_ but such small way they made, the next Morning they were not
-three Leagues off from _Cape Noa._ The two _Spanish_ Men of War, for so
-they were, and well appointed, taking it in scorn as it seemed, with their
-Chase, Broad-side, and Stern, the one after the other, within Musket shot,
-plying their Ordnance; and after an hours Work, commanded _Merham_ amain
-for the King of Spain upon fair Quarter; _Merham_ drank to them, and so
-discharged his Quarter Pieces. Which Pride the _Spaniard_ to revenge,
-boarded him again, and many of them were got to the top to unsling the
-Main-Sail, which the Master and some others from the Round-House, caused
-to their cost to come tumbling down; about the Round-House the _Spaniards_
-so pestred, that they were forced to the great Cablen and blew it up; the
-smoak and fire was so vehement, as they thought the Ship on fire; they in
-the Fore-Castle were no less assaulted, that they blew up a piece of the
-Grating, with a great many of _Spaniards_ more; then they cleared
-themselves with all speed, and _Merham_ with as much Expedition to quench
-the Fire with wet Cloaths and Water, which began to grow too fast. The
-_Spaniard_ still playing upon him with all the shot they could; the open
-Places presently they covered with old Sails, and prepared themselves to
-fight to the last Man. The Angry _Spaniard_ seeing the fire quenched, hung
-out a Flag of truce to have but a Parley; but that desperate _Merham_ knew
-there was but one way with him, and would have none, but the report of his
-Ordnance, which he did know well how to use for his best Advantage. Thus
-they spent the next Afternoon, and half the Night, when the _Spaniards_
-either lost them or left them. Seven and twenty Men _Merham_ had slain and
-sixteen wounded, and could find they had received 140 great shot. A
-wounded _Spaniard_ they kept alive confessed, they had lost 100 Men in
-the Admiral, which they did fear would sink ere she could recover a Port.
-Thus Re-accommodating their Sails, they failed for _Sancta Cruse, Cape
-Goa,_ and _Magadore,_ till they came again to _Safee,_ and then he
-returned into England.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXI.
-
-
-
- _The continuation of the General History of_ Virginia; _the_ Summer
- Isles, _and_ New England; _with their present Estate from_ 1624. _to
- this present_ 1629.
-
-
-Concerning these Countries, I would be sorry to trouble you with
-repeating one thing twice, as with their Mapps, Commodities, People,
-Government and Religion yet known; the beginning of these Plantations,
-their Numbers and Names, with the Names of the Adventures, the Yearly
-proceedings of every Governour both here and there. As for the
-Misprisions, Neglect, Grievances, and the causes of all these Rumours,
-losses and crosses that have happened; I refer you to the General History,
-where you shall find all this at large; especially to those Pages where
-you may read my Letter of Advice to the Councel and Company, what of
-necessity must be done, or lose all and leave the Country, Pag. 70. what
-Commodities I sent home, Pag. 163. my Opinion and offer to the Company, to
-feed and defend the Colonies, Pag. 150. my Account to them here of my
-Actions there, Pag. 163. and seven Answers to his Majesty's Commissioners:
-Seven Questions what hath hindered _Virginia,_ and the remedy, Pag. 165.
-How those Noble Gentlemen spent near two Years in perusing all Letters
-came from thence; and the differences betwixt many Factions, both here and
-there, with their Complaints; especially about the _Sallery_ which should
-have been a new Office in _London,_ for the well ordering the sale of
-_Tobacco,_ that 2500 Pounds should Yearly have been raised out of it, to
-pay four or five Hundred Pounds Yearly to the Governour of that Company,
-two or three Hundred to his Deputy; the rest into Stipends of forty or
-fifty Pounds Yearly for their Clerks and other Officers which were never
-there, Pag. 153. but not one Hundred Pounds for all them in _Virginia,_
-nor any thing for the most part of the Adventures in _England,_ except the
-undertakers for the Lotteries, Setters out of Ships, Adventures of
-Commodities, also their Factors and many other Officers, there imployed
-only by friendship to raise their Fortunes out of the Labours of the true
-Industrious Planters by the Title of their Office, who under the colour of
-sincerity, did pillage and deceive all the rest most cunningly: For more
-than 150000 Pounds have been spent out of the Common Stock, besides many
-thousands have been there Consumed, and near 7000 People that there died,
-only for want of good Order and Government, otherwise long ere this there
-would have been more than 20000 People, where after twenty Years spent
-only in Complement and trying new Conclusions, was remaining scarce 1500,
-with some few Cattel.
-
-Then the Company dissolved, but no Account of any thing; so that his
-Majesty appointed Commissioners to oversee, and give Order for their
-Proceedings. Being thus in a manner left to themselves, since then within
-these four Years, you shall see how wonderfully they have increased beyond
-expectation; but so exactly as I desired, I cannot relate unto you: For
-altho' I have tired my self in seeking and discoursing with those returned
-thence, more than would a Voyage to _Virginia;_ few can tell me any thing,
-but of that Place or Places they have Inhabited, and he is a great
-Traveller that hath gone up and down the River of _James_ Town, been at
-_Pamaunk, Smith's_ Isles, or _Accomack;_ wherein for the most part, they
-keep one tune of their now particular abundance, and their former wants
-having been there, some sixteen Years, some twelve, some six, some near
-twenty, &c. But of their general Estate, or any thing of worth, the most
-of them doth know very little to any purpose.
-
-{MN} Now the most I could understand in general, was from the Relation of
-Mr. _Nathaniel Cawsey,_ that lived there with me, and returned _Anno Dom._
-1627. and some others affirm; Sir _George Yerely_ was Governour, Captain
-_Francis West,_ Doctor _John Pott,_ Captain _Roger Smith,_ Captain
-_Matthews,_ Captain _Tucker,_ Mr. _Clabourn,_ and Mr. _Farrer,_ of the
-Council: their Habitations many. The Governour, with two or three of the
-Council, are for most part at _James_ Town, the rest repair thither as
-there is occasion; but every three Months they have a general Meeting, to
-consider of their Publick Affairs.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their estate_ 1627.
-
-
-{MN} Their Numbers then were about 1500, some say rather 2000, divided
-into seventeen or eighteen several Plantations; the greatest part thereof
-towards the falls, are so inclosed with Pallisadoes they regard not the
-_Salvages._ and amongst those Plantations above _James_ Town, they have
-now found means to take plenty of Fish, as well with Lines as Nets, and
-where the Waters are the largest, having Means they need not want.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their numbers._
-
-
-{MN} Upon this River they seldom see any _Salvages,_ but in the Woods,
-many times their Fires: yet some few there are, that upon their
-opportunity, have slain some few straglers, which have been revenged with
-the Death of so many of themselves; but no other Attempt hath been made
-upon them this two or three Years.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their condition with the Salvages._
-
-
-{MN} Their Cattel, Namely, Oxen, Kine, Bulls, they imagine to be about
-2000; Goats great store and great increase; the wild Hoggs, which were
-infinite, are destroyed and eaten by the _Salvages:_ but no Family is so
-poor that hath not tame Swine sufficient; and for Poultry, he is a very
-bad Husband, breedeth not an Hundred in a Year, and the Richer sort doth
-daily feed on them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their increase of Cattel and Poultry._
-
-
-{MN} For Bread they have plenty, and so good, that those that make it
-well, better cannot be: Divers have much _English_ Corn, especially Mr.
-_Abraham Perce,_ which prepared this Year to sow two Hundred Acres of
-_English_ Wheat, and as much with Barly, feeding daily about the number of
-sixty Persons at his own Charges.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Plenty of Corn._
-
-
-{MN} For Drink, Some Malt the _Indian_ Corn, others Barly, of which they
-make good Ale, both strong and small, and such plenty thereof, few of the
-Upper Planters drink any Water: but the better sort are well furnished
-with Sack, _Aquavitae,_ and good _English_ Beer.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Drink._
-
-
-{MN} The Servants commonly feed upon Milk Homili, which is bruised
-_Indian_ Corn pounded, and boiled thick, and Milk for the sawce; but
-boiled with Milk, the best of all will feed oft on it, and leave their
-Flesh; with Milk, Butter and Cheese; with Fish, Bulls-flesh, for they
-seldom kill any other, &c. And every one is so applied to his labour about
-Tobacco and Corn, which doth yield them such Profit, they never regard any
-food from the _Salvages,_ nor have they any Trade or Conference with them,
-but upon meer Accidents and Defiances: And now the Merchants have left it,
-there having gone so many voluntary Ships within these two Years, as have
-furnished them with Apparel, Sack, _Aquavitae,_ and all necessaries, much
-better than any before.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Servants diet._
-
-
-{MN} For Arms, There is scarce any Man but he is furnished with a Piece, a
-Jack, a Coat of Male, a Sword or Rapier; and every Holy-day, every
-Plantation doth Exercise their Men in Arms, by which means Hunting and
-Fowling, the most part of them are most Excellent Marks-men.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Arms and Exercise._
-
-
-{MN} For Discoveries they have made none, nor any other Commodity than
-Tobacco do they apply themselves unto, tho' never any was Planted at
-first. And whereas the Countrey was heretofore held most intemperate and
-contagious by many, now they have Houses, Lodgings, Victuals, and the Sun
-hath Power to Exhale up the moist Vapours of the Earth, where they have
-cut down the Wood, which before it could not, being covered with spreading
-tops of high Trees; they find it much more healthful than before; nor for
-their Numbers, few Countries are less troubled with Death, Sickness, or
-any other Disease, nor where overgrown Women become more fruitful.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Health and Discoveries._
-
-
-{MN-1} Since this, Sir _George Yerely_ died 1628, Captain _West_ Succeeded
-him; but about a Year after, returned for _England._ Now Doctor _Poor_ is
-Governour, and the rest of the Council as before: _James_ Town is yet
-their chief Seat, most of the Wood destroyed, little Corn there Planted,
-but all Converted into Pasture and Gardens, wherein doth grow all manner
-of Herbs and Roots we have in _England,_ in abundance, and as good Grass
-as can be. Here most of their Cattle do feed, their Owners being most some
-one way, some another, about their Plantations, and return again when they
-please, or any Shipping comes in to Trade. Here in the Winter they have
-Hay for their Cattel, but in other Places they Browze upon Wood, and the
-great husks of their Corn, with some Corn in them, doth keep them well.
-{MN-2} Mr. _Hutchins_ saith, they have 2000 Cattle, and about 5000 People,
-but _Master Floud, John Davis, William Emerson,_ and divers others say,
-about 5000 People, and 5000 Kine, Calves, Oxen and Bulls; for Goats, Hoggs
-and Poultry, Corn, Fish, Dear, and many sorts of other wild Beasts; and
-Fowl in their Season, they have so much more than they spend, they are
-able to feed three or four Hundred more than they have; and do oft much
-relieve many Ships, both there, and for their Return; and this last Year
-was there at least two or three and Twenty Sale. They have oft much
-Salt-fish from _New England,_ but fresh Fish enough, when they will take
-it; Peaches in abundance at _Kecoughtan;_ Apples, Pears, Apricocks, Vines,
-Figgs, and other Fruits some have Planted that prospered exceedingly, but
-their Diligence about Tobacco, left them to be spoiled by the Cattel, yet
-now they begin to Revive; {MN-3} Mrs. _Pearce,_ an Honest Industrious
-Woman, hath been there near twenty Years, and now returned, saith, she
-hath a Garden at _James_ Town, containing three or four Acres, where in
-one Year she hath gathered near an Hundred Bushels of excellent Figgs; and
-that of her own Provision she can keep a better House in _Virginia,_ than
-here in _London_ for 3 or 400 Pounds a Year, yet went thither with little
-or nothing. They have some tame Geese, Ducks and Turkies. The Masters now
-do so train up their Servants and Youth in shooting Deer and Fowl, that
-the Youths will kill them as well as their Masters. They have two
-Brew-houses, but they find the _Indian_ Corn so much better than ours,
-they begin to leave sowing it. Their Cities and Towns are only scattered
-Houses, they call Plantations, as are our Country Villages; but no
-Ordnance Mounted. The Forts Captain _Smith_ left a Building, so ruined,
-there is scarce Mention where they were; no Discoveries of any thing more,
-than the curing of Tobacco, by which hitherto, being so present a
-Commodity of Gain, it hath brought them to this abundance; but that they
-are so disjointed, and every one Commander of himself to Plant what he
-will: {MN-4} they are now so well provided, that they are able to subsist;
-and if they would join together, now to work upon Soap, Ashes, Iron,
-Rape-Oil, Mader, Pitch and Tarr, Flax and Hemp; as for their Tobacco,
-there comes from many Places such abundance, and the charge so great, it
-is not worth the bringing home.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The present estate of_ Virginia 1629.
-
- {MN-2} _Mr._ Hutchins. _Five thousand people. Five thousand Cattel.
- Goats, Hogs, and Poultry infinite._
-
- {MN-3} _Good Hospitality._
-
- {MN-4} _Commodities worth making, Black Wallnut, Also for Pikes, Oak for
- Planks, knees for ships, Cypress, for Chests, &c._
-
-
-There is gone, and now a going, divers Ships, as Captain _Perse,_ Captain
-_Prine,_ with Sir _John Harvey_ to be their Governour, with two or three
-Hundred People; there is also some from _Bristow,_ and other Parts of the
-West Country a preparing, which I heartily pray to God to Bless, and send
-them a Happy and Prosperous Voyage.
-
- _Nathaniel Causie,_ Master _Hutchins,_
- Master _Floud, John Davis, William
- Emerson,_ Master _William
- Barnet,_ Master _Cooper,_ and others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXII.
-
-
-
- _The proceedings and present estate of the_ Summer Isles, _from_ Anno
- Dom. 1624, _to this present_ 1629.
-
-
-From the _Summer Isles,_ Mr. _Ireland,_ and divers others report, their
-Forts, Ordnance and Proceedings, are much as they were in the Year 1622.
-as you may read in the General History, Pag. 199. Captain _Woodhouse_
-Governour. There are few sorts of any Fruits in the West Indies, but they
-grow there in abundance; yet the fertility of the Soil in many Places
-decayeth, being Planted every Year, for their Plantains, which is a most
-delicate Fruit, they have lately found a way by Pickling or Drying them,
-to bring them over into _England,_ there being no such Fruit in _Europe,_
-and wonderful for increase. For Fish, Flesh, Figgs, Wine, and all sorts of
-most excellent Herbs, Fruits and Roots they have in abundance. In this
-Governour's time, a kind of Whale, or rather a Jubarta, was driven on
-Shoar in _Southampton_ Tribe from the West, over an Infinite Number of
-Rocks so bruised, that the Water in the Bay where she lay, was all Oily,
-and the Rocks about it all Bedasht with Parmacitty, congealed like Ice, a
-good quantity we gathered, with which we commonly cured any Boil, Hurt or
-Bruise; some burnt it in their Lamps, which blowing out, the very snuff
-will burn so long as there is any of the Oil remaining, for two or three
-days together. {MN}
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The present Estate of the_ Summer Isles.
-
-
-The next Governour was Captain _Philip Bell,_ whose time being expired,
-Captain _Roger Wood_ possess'd his Place, a worthy Gentleman of good
-desert, and hath lived a long time in the Country; their Numbers are about
-2 or 3000 Men, Women and Children, who increase there exceedingly; their
-greatest Complaint is want of Apparel, and too much Custom, and too many
-Officers; the Pity is, there are no more Men than Women, yet no great
-Mischief, because there is so much less Pride: the Cattle they have
-increase exceedingly; their Forts are well maintain'd by the Merchants
-here, and Planters there; to be brief, this Isle is an excellent Bit to
-Rule a great Horse.
-
-All the Cohow Birds and Egbirds are gone; seldom any wild Catts seen; no
-Rats to speak off; but the Worms are yet very troublesome; the People very
-healthful, and the Ravens gone; Fish enough, but not so near the shoar as
-it used, by the much beating it; it is an Isle that hath such a Rampire
-and a Ditch, and for the quantity so manned, Victualled, and Fortified, as
-few in the World do exceed it, or is like it.
-
-{MN} The 22d of March, two Ships came from thence; the
-_Peter-Bonaventure,_ near 200 Tunns, and sixteen Pieces of Ordnance; the
-Captain, _Thomas Sherwin;_ the Master, Mr. _Edward Some,_ like him in
-Condition, a Goodly, Lusty, Proper, Valiant Man: The _Lydia,_ wherein was
-Mr. _Anthony Thorne,_ a smaller Ship, were chased by eleven Ships of
-_Dunkirk;_ being thus over-match'd, Captain _Sherwin_ was taken by them in
-_Torbay,_ only his Valiant Master was slain; the Ship with about seventy
-_English_ Men they carried betwixt _Dover_ and _Callais_ to _Dunkirk;_
-but the _Lydia_ safely recovered _Dartmouth._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _An Evil Mischance._
-
-
-These Noble Adventures for all thole losses patiently do bear them; but
-they hope the King and State will understand it is worth keeping, tho' it
-afford nothing but Tobacco, and that now worth little or nothing, Custom
-and Fraught pay'd, yet it is worth keeping, and not supplanting; tho'
-great Men feel not those losses, yet Gardiners, Carpenters and Smiths, do
-pay for it.
-
- From the Relation of _Robert
- Chestevan_ and others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXIII.
-
-
-
- _The Proceedings and present Estate of_ New England, _since_ 1624.
- _to this present_ 1629.
-
-
-When I went first to the North part of _Virginia,_ where the Westerly
-Colony had been planted, it had dissolved it self within a Year, and there
-was not one _Christian_ in all the Land. I was set forth at the sole
-Charge of four Merchants of _London;_ the Country being then reputed by
-your Westerlings, a most Rocky Barren, Desolate Desart; {MN-1} but the
-good Return brought from thence, with the Maps and Relations I made of the
-Country, which I made so manifest, some of them did believe me, and they
-were well embraced both by the _Londoners_ and the _Westerlings,_ for whom
-I had promised to undertake it, I thinking to have joined them all
-together, but that might well have been a work of _Hercules._ Betwixt them
-long there was much contention; the _Londoners_ indeed went bravely
-forward; but in three or four Years, I and my Friends consumed many
-hundred Pounds amongst the _Plimothians,_ who only fed me with delays,
-promises and excuses, but no Performance of any thing to any purpose. In
-the interim, many particular Ships went thither, and finding my Relations
-true, and that I had not taken that I brought home from the _French_ Men,
-as had been reported; yet further, for my Pains to discredit me, and my
-calling it _New-England,_ they obscured, and shadowed it, with the Title
-of _Canada,_ till at my humble suit, it pleased our most Royal King
-_Charles,_ whom God long keep, bless and preserve, then Prince of _Wales,_
-to confirm it with my Map and Book, by the Title of _New England;_ the
-gain thence returning, did make the same thereof so increase, that thirty,
-forty, or fifty sail went Yearly only to Trade and Fish; but nothing would
-be done for a Plantation, till about some Hundred of your Brownists of
-_England, Amsterdam_ and _Leyden,_ went to _New Plimouth,_ whose humorous
-Ignorances, caused them for more than a Year to endure a wonderful deal of
-misery, with an infinite patience; saying my Books and Maps were much
-better cheap to teach them than my self; {MN-2} many other have used the
-like good Husbandry, that have payed soundly in trying their self-will'd
-conclusions; but those in time doing well, divers others have in small
-handfuls undertaken to go there, to be several Lords and Kings of
-themselves, but most vanished to nothing; notwithstanding the Fishing
-Ships, made such good returns, at last it was ingrossed by twenty
-Patentees, that divided my Map into twenty parts, and cast Lots for their
-shares; but Money not coming in as they expected, procured a Proclamation,
-none should go thither without their Licences to Fish; but for every
-thirty Tuns of Shipping, to pay them five Pounds; besides, upon great
-Penalties, neither to Trade with the Natives, cut down Wood for their
-Stages, without giving satisfaction, though all the Country is nothing but
-Wood, and none to make use of it, with many such other pretences, for to
-make this Country plant it self, by its own Wealth: Hereupon most Men grew
-so discontented, that few or none would go; so that the Patentees, who
-never a one of them had been there, seeing those Projects Would not
-prevail, have since not hindred any to go that would, that within these
-few last years, more have gone thither than ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _Considerations about the loss of time._
-
- {MN-2} _The effect of negardliness._
-
-
-{MN} Now this Year 1629, a great company of People of good Rank, Zeal,
-Means, and Quality, have made a great Stock, and with six good Ships in
-the Months of April and May, they set Sail from _Thames,_ for the Bay of
-the _Massachusets,_ otherwise called _Charles's_ River; _viz._ the _George
-Bonaventure,_ of twenty pieces of Ordnance, the _Talbot_ nineteen, the
-_Lions-whelp_ eight, the _May-flower_ fourteen, the _Four Sisters_
-fourteen, the _Pilgrim_ four, with three hundred and fifty Men, Women, and
-Children; also an hundred and fifteen head of Cattel, as Horse, Mares, and
-neat Beast; one and forty Goats, some Conies, with all Provision for
-Houshold and Apparel; six pieces of great Ordnance for a Fort, with
-Muskets, Pikes, Corselets, Drums, Colours, with all Provision necessary
-for a Plantation, for the good of Man; other Particulars I understand of
-no more, than is writ in the general History of those Countries.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A new Plantation_ 1629.
-
-
-But you are to understand, that the noble Lord chief Justice _Popham,_
-Judge _Doderege;_ the Right Honourable Earls of _Pembroke, Southampton,
-Salisbury,_ and the rest, as I take it, they did all think, as I and them
-went with me, did; That had those two Countries been planted, as it was
-intended, that no other Nation should complant betwixt us. If ever the
-King of _Spain_ and we should fall foul, those Countries being so capable
-of all Materials for shipping, by this might have been Owners of a good
-Fleet of Ships, and to have relieved a whole Navy from _England_ upon
-occasion; yea, and to have furnished _England_ with the most Easterly
-Commodities; and now since, seeing how conveniently the _Summer Isles_
-fell to our shares, so near the _West-Indies,_ we might with much more
-facility than the _Dutch_ Men have invaded the _West-Indies,_ that doth
-now put in practice, what so long hath been advised on, by many an honest
-_English_ States-man.
-
-{MN} Those Countries, Captain _Smith_ oft times used to call his Children
-that never had Mother; and well he might, for few Fathers ever payed
-dearer for so little content; and for those that would truly understand,
-how many strange Accidents hath befallen them and him; how oft up, how oft
-down, sometimes near despair, and ere long flourishing, cannot but
-conceive Gods infinite Mercies and Favours towards them. Had his Designs
-been to have perswaded Men to a Mine of Gold, though few doth conceive
-either the charge or pains in refining it, nor the power nor care to
-defend it; or some new Invention to pass to the South Sea, or some strange
-Plot to invade some strange Monastery, or some portable Country, or some
-chargeable Fleet to take some rich Carocks in the _East-Indies;_ of
-Letters of Mart to rob some poor Merchants; What multitudes of both People
-and Money would contend to be first imployed? But in those noble
-endeavours (now) how few of quality, unless it be to beg some Monopoly;
-and those seldom seek the common good, but the Commons Goods, as you may
-read at large in his general History, _pag._ 217, 218, 219, his general
-Observations and Reasons for this Plantation; for yet those Countries are
-not so forward, but they may become as miserable as ever, if better
-courses be not taken than is; as this _Smith_ will plainly demonstrate to
-his Majesty, or any other noble Person of Ability, liable generously to
-undertake it; how within a Short time to make _Virginia_ able to resist
-any Enemy, that as yet lieth open to all, and yield the King more Custom
-within these few years, in certain staple Commodities, than ever it did in
-Tobacco; which now not being worth bringing home, the Custom will be as
-uncertain to the King, as dangerous to the Plantation.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Notes of inconveniency._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXIV.
-
-
-
- _A brief Discourse of divers Voyages made unto the goodly Country of_
- Guinea _and the great River of the_ Amazons; _relating also the
- present Plantation there._
-
-
-It is not unknown how that most Industrious and honourable Knight, Sir
-_Walter Rawleigh,_ in the Year of Our Lord 1595, taking the Isle of
-_Trinidado,_ fell with the Coast of _Guiana,_ Northward of the Line 10
-degrees, and coasted the Coast, and searched up the River _Oranoco;_ where
-understanding that twenty several Voyages had been made by the Spaniards;
-in discovering this Coast and River, to find a passage to the great City
-of _Mano,_ called by them the _Eldorado,_ or the Golden City: he did his
-utmost to have found some better Satisfaction than Relations: {MN-1} But
-means failing him, he left his trusty Servant _Francis Sparrow_ to seek
-it, who wandring up and down those Countries, some fourteen or fifteen
-years, unexpectedly returned; I have heard him say, he was led blinded
-into this City by _Indians;_ but little Discourse of any purpose, touching
-the largeness of the report of it; his body seeming as a Man of an
-uncurable Consumption, shortly died here after in _England._ There are
-above thirty fair Rivers that fall into the Sea, between the River of
-_Amazons_ and _Oranoco,_ which are some nine degrees asunder. {MN-2} In
-the year 1605, Captain _Ley_, Brother to that noble Knight, Sir _Oliver
-Ley,_ with divers others, planted himself in the River _Weapoco,_ wherein
-I should have been a Party; but he died, and there lies buried, and the
-supply miscarrying, the rest escaped as they could.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} Sparrow _left to seek the great city of_ Mano.
-
- {MN-2} Captain _Charles Ley._
-
-
-{MN} Sir _Thomas Roe,_ known to be a most Noble Gentleman, before he went
-Lord Ambassadour to the Great _Mogul,_ or the Great _Turk,_ spent a year
-or two upon this Coast, and about the River of the _Amazons,_ {MN-2}
-wherein he most imployed Captain _Matthew Morton,_ an expert Sea-man in
-the discovery of this famous River, a Gentleman that was the first shot,
-and mortally supposed wounded to Death, with me in _Virginia,_ yet since
-hath been twice with command in _East-Indies;_ {MN-3} Also Captain
-_William White,_ and divers others worthy and industrious Gentlemen, both
-before and since, hath spent much time and charge to discover it more
-perfectly, but nothing more effected for a Plantation, till it was
-undertaken by Captain _Robert Harcote_ 1609.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} Sir _Thomas Roe._
-
- {MN-2} Captain _Morton._
-
- {MN-3} Captain _White._
-
-
-{MN} This worthy Gentleman, after he had by Commission made a discovery
-to his mind, left his Brother _Michael Harcote,_ with some fifty or sixty
-Men in the River _Weapoco,_ and so presently returned to _England,_ where
-he obtained by the favour of Prince _Henry_ a large Patent for all that
-Coast called _Guiana,_ together with the famous River of _Amazons,_ to him
-and his Heirs: but so many troubles here surprized him, though he did his
-best to supply them, he was not able, only some few he sent over as
-Passengers, with certain _Dutch_ Men, but to small purpose. Thus this
-business lay dead for divers years, till Sir _Walter Rawleigh,_
-accompanied with many valiant Soldiers and brave Gentlemen, went his last
-Voyage to _Guiana,_ amongst the which, was Captain _Roger North,_ Brother
-to the Right Honourable the Lord _Dudley North,_ who upon this Voyage,
-having stayed, and seen divers Rivers upon this Coast, took such a liking
-to those Countries, having had before this Voyage, more perfect and
-particular Information of the excellency of the great River of the
-_Amazons,_ above any of the rest, by certain _English_ Men returned so
-rich, from thence in good Commodities, they would not go with Sir _Walter
-Rawleigh_ in search of Gold; that after his return for _England_, he
-endeavoured by his best Abilities to interest his Country and State in
-those fair Regions, which by the way of Letters Patents unto divers Noble
-Men and Gentlemen of Quality, erected into a Company and Perpetuity for
-Trade and Plantation, not knowing of the Interest of Captain _Harcote._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} Captain _Harcote._
-
-
-{MN} Whereupon accompanied with 120 Gentlemen and others, with a Ship, a
-Pinnace and two Shallops, to remain in the Country, he set Sail from
-_Plimouth_ the last of _April_ 1620, and within seven Weeks after he
-arrived well in the _Amazons,_ only with the loss of one old Man: Some
-hundred Leagues they ran up the River to settle his Men, where the sight
-of the Country and People so contented them, that never Men thought
-themselves more happy: Some _English_ and _Irish_ that had lived there
-some eight years, only supplied by the _Dutch,_ he reduced to his Company
-and to leave the _Dutch:_ having made a good Voyage, to the value of more
-than the charge, he returned to _England_ with divers good Commodities,
-besides, Tobacco: So that it may well be conceived, that if this Action
-had not been thus crossed the Generality of _England_ had by this time
-been won and encouraged therein. But the time was not yet come, that God
-would have this great business effected, by reason of the great Power the
-Lord _Gundamore,_ Ambassadour for the King of _Spain,_ had in _England,_
-to cross and ruin those Proceedings, and so unfortunate Captain _North_
-was on this business, he was twice committed Prisoner to the Tower, and
-the Goods detained, till they were spoiled, who beyond all others, was by
-much the greatest Adventurer and Loser.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} Captain _Roger North._
-
-
-{MN} Notwithstanding all this, those that he had left in the _Amazons,_
-would not abandon the Country. Captain _Thomas Painton,_ a worthy
-Gentleman; his Lieutenant dead. Captain _Charles Parker,_ Brother to the
-Right Honourable the Lord _Morley,_ lived there six years after; Mr.
-_John Christmas,_ five years; so well, they would not return, although
-they might, with divers other Gentlemen of Quality and others: All thus
-destitute of any supplies from _England._ But all Authority being
-dissolved, want of Government did more wrong their Proceedings, than all
-other crosses whatsoever. Some relief they had sometime from the _Dutch,_
-who knowing their Estates, gave what they pleased, and took what they
-list. Two Brothers, Gentlemen, _Thomas_ and _William Hixon,_ who stayed
-three years there, are now gone to stay in the _Amazons,_ in the Ships
-lately sent thither.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Nota bene._
-
-
-The business thus remaining in this fort, three private Men left of that
-Company, named Mr. _Thomas Warriner, John Rhodes,_ and _Robert Bims,_
-having lived there about two years, came for _England,_ and to be free
-from the disorders that did grow in the _Amazons,_ for want of Government
-amongst their Country-men, and to be quiet amongst themselves, made means
-to let themselves out for St. _Christophers;_ their whole number being but
-fifteen Persons that payed for their Passage in a Ship going for
-_Virginia,_ where they remained a year before they were supplied, and then
-that was but four or five Men. Thus this Isle, by this small beginning,
-having no interruption by their own Country, hath not got the start of the
-Continent and main Land of _Guinea,_ which hath been laid apart, and let
-alone until that Captain _North,_ ever watching his best opportunity and
-advantage of time in the State, hath now again pursued, and set on foot
-his former design. Captain _Harcote_ being now willing to surrender his
-Grant, and to joyn with Captain _North,_ in passing a new Patent, and to
-erect a Company for Trade and Plantation in the _Amazons,_ and all the
-Coast and Country of _Guinea_ for ever. Whereupon, they have sent this
-present year in _January,_ and since 1628, four Ships, with near two
-hundred Persons; the first Ship with 112 Men, not one miscarried; the rest
-went since, not yet heard of and are preparing another with their best
-Expedition; and since _January_ is gone from _Holland,_ 100 _English_ and
-_Irish,_ conducted by the old Planters.
-
-This great River lieth under the Line, the two chief Head Lands North and
-South, are about three degrees asunder, the mouth of it is so full of many
-great and small Isles, it is an easie matter for an unexperienced Pilot to
-lose his way. It is held one of the greatest Rivers in _America,_ and as
-most Men think in the World; and cometh down with such a fresh, it maketh
-the Sea fresh, more than thirty Miles from the Shoar. Captain _North_
-having seated his Men about an hundred Leagues in the Main, sent Captain
-_William White,_ with thirty Gentlemen and others, in a Pinnace of thirty
-Tun, to discover further, which they did some two hundred Leagues, where
-they found the River to divide it self in two parts, till then all full of
-Islands, and a Country most healthful, pleasant and fruitful; for they
-found food enough, and all returned safe and in good health: In this
-discovery, they saw many Towns well inhabited, some with three hundred
-People, some with five, six, or seven hundred; and of some they understood
-to be of so many thousands, most differing very much, especially in their
-Languages: Whereof they suppose by those _Indians,_ they understand are
-many hundreds more, unfrequented till then by any _Christian,_ most of
-them stark naked, both Men, Women and Children, but they saw not any such
-Giant-like Women as the Rivers name importeth. But for those where Captain
-_North_ hath seated his Company, it is not known where Indians were ever
-so kind to any Nation, not sparing any pains, danger or labour, to feed
-and maintain them. The _English_ following their Buildings, Fortifications
-and Sugar-works; for which they have sent most expert Men, and with them
-all things necessary for that purpose; to effect which, they want not the
-help of those kind Indians to produce; and many other good Commodities,
-which (God willing) will ere long make plain and apparent to this Kingdom,
-and all the Adventures and Well-willers to this Plantation, to be well
-worthy the cherishing and following with all alacrity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXV.
-
-
-
- _The Beginning and Proceedings of the new Plantation of St._ Christopher
- _by Captain_ Warner.
-
-
-Master _Ralph Merifield_ and others, having furnished this worthy
-Industrious Gentleman, {MN-1} he arrived at St. _Christophers,_ as is
-said, with fifteen Men, the 28th of _January_ 1623, _viz. William Tested,
-John Rhodes, Robert Bints,_ Mr. _Benifield,_ Sergeant _Jones,_ Mr. _Ware,
-William Ryle, Rowland Grascock,_ Mr. _Bond,_ Mr. _Langley,_ Mr. _Weaver,
-Edward Warner,_ their Captain's Son, and now Deputy Governour, till his
-Father's return, Sergeant _Aplon,_ one Sailor and a Cook: At their
-arrival, they found three _French_ Men, who sought to oppose Captain
-_Warner,_ and to set the _Indians_ upon us; but at last we all became
-Friends, and lived with the _Indians_ a Month, then we built a Fort, and a
-House, and planting Fruits, by _September_ we made a crop of Tobacco;
-{MN-2} but upon the nineteenth of _September_ came a _Hericano_ and blew
-it away, all this while we lived upon Cassada Bread, Potatoes, Plantanes,
-Pines, Turtles, Guanes, and Fish plenty; for drink we had _Nicnobby._
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} 1623.
-
- {MN-2} _A Hericano._
-
-
-{MN} The 18th March 1624 arrived Captain _Jefferson,_ with three Men
-Passengers in the _Hopewell_ of _London,_ with some Trade for the
-_Indians,_ and then we had another crop of Tobacco, in the mean time the
-_French_ had planted themselves in the other end of the Isle; with this
-crop Captain _Warner_ returned for _England_ in _September_ 1625.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} 1624.
-
-
-In his absence came in a _French_ Pinnace, under the command of _Monsieur
-de Nombe,_ that told us, the _Indians_ had slain some _French_ Men in
-other of the _Caribbe_ Isles, and that there were six Peryagoes, which
-are huge great Trees, formed as your Canoos, but so laid out on the sides
-with Boards, they will seem like a little Gally: {MN} Six of those, with
-about four or five hundred strange _Indians_ came unto us, we bade them be
-gone, but they would not; whereupon we and the _French_ joyned together,
-and upon the fifth of _November_ set upon them, and put them to flight:
-upon New years Even they came again, found three _English_ going about the
-Isle, whom they slew.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Fight with the_ Indians.
-
-
-{MN-1} Until the fourth of _August,_ we stood upon our Guard, living upon
-the spoil and did nothing. But now Captain _Warner_ arriving again with
-near an hundred People, then we fell to work and planting as before;
-{MN-2} but upon the fourth of September, came such a Hericano, as blew
-down all our Houses, Tobacco, and two Drums into the air we know not
-whither, drove two Ships on Shoar that were both split; all our Provision
-thus lost, we were very miserable, living only on what we could get in the
-wild Woods, {MN-3} we made a small party of French and English to go
-aboard for Provision, but in their returning home, eight _French_ Men were
-slain in the Harbour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} 1625.
-
- {MN-2} _A Hericano._
-
- {MN-3} _Eight French Slain._
-
-
-{MN} Thus we continued till near _June_ that the _Tortles_ came in 1627,
-but the French being like to starve, sought to surprize us, and all the
-Cassado, Potatoes, and Tobacco we had planted, but we did prevent them.
-The 26th of _October,_ came in Captain _William Smith,_ in the
-_Hope-well,_ with some Ordnance, Shot and Powder, from the Earl of
-_Carlisle,_ with Captain _Pelham_ and thirty Men; about that time also
-came the _Plow,_ also a small Ship of _Bristow,_ with Captain _Warner's_
-Wife, and six or seven Women more.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} 1627.
-
-
-{MN} Upon the 25th of _November,_ the _Indians_ set upon the French, for
-some injury about their Women, and slew six and twenty _French_ Men, five
-_English,_ and three _Indians._ Their Weapons are Bows and Arrows, their
-Bows are never bent, but the string lies flat to the Bow; their Arrows a
-small Reed, four or five foot long, headed some with the poisoned Sting of
-the Tail of a Stingray, some with Iron, some with Wood, but all so
-poisoned, that if they draw but blood, the hurt is incurable.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Three_ Indians _Slain._
-
-
-{MN} The next day came in Captain _Charles Saltonstall,_ a young
-Gentleman, Son of Sir _Samuel Saltonstall,_ who brought with him good
-store of all Commodities to relieve the Plantation; but by reason some
-_Hollanders,_ and others had been there lately before him, who carried
-away with them all the Tobacco, he was forced to put away all his
-Commodities upon trust till the next crop; in the mean time he resolved
-there to stay, and imploy himself and his Company in planting Tobacco,
-hoping thereby to make a Voyage, but before he could be ready to return
-for _England,_ a _Hericano_ happening, his Ship was split, to his great
-loss, being sole Merchant and owner himself, notwithstanding forced to pay
-to the Governour the fifth part of his Tobacco, and for fraught to
-_England,_ three pence a pound, and nine pence a pound custom, which
-amounts together to more than threescore pound in the hundred pound, to
-the great discouragement of him and many others, that intended well to
-those Plantations. Nevertheless he is gone again this present year 1629,
-with a Ship of about three hundred Tuns, and very near two hundred People,
-with Sir _William Tuffton_ Governour for the _Barbadoes_, and divers
-Gentlemen, and all manner of Commodities fit for a Plantation.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The arrival of many English Ships._
-
-
-Captain _Prinn,_ Captain _Stone,_ and divers others came in about
-_Christmas;_ so that this last year, there hath been about thirty Sail of
-_English, French,_ and _Dutch_ Ships, and all the _Indians_ forced out of
-the Isle, for they had done much mischief amongst the _French,_ in cutting
-their Throats, burning their Houses, and spoiling their Tobacco; amongst
-the rest _Tegramund,_ a little Child, the King's Son, his Parents being
-slain, or fled, was by great chance saved, and carefully brought to
-_England,_ by Master _Merifield,_ who brought him from thence, and
-bringeth him up as his own Children.
-
-{MN-1} It lieth seventeen degrees Northward of the Line, about an hundred
-and twenty Leagues from the _Cape de tres Puntas,_ the nearest main Land
-in _America,_ it is about eight Leagues in length, and four in breadth;
-an Island amongst 100 Isles in the _West Indies,_ called the _Caribbes,_
-where ordinarily all them that frequent the _West Indies,_ refresh
-themselves; those, most of them are Rocky, little, and Mountainous, yet
-frequented with the _Canibals;_ many of them inhabited, as Saint
-_Domingo,_ Saint _Mattalin,_ Saint _Lucia,_ Saint _Vincent, Granada,_ and
-_Margarita,_ to the Southward; Northward, none but Saint _Christophers,_
-and it but lately, yet they will be ranging _Marigalanta, Guardalupo,
-Deceado, Mountserat, Antegua, Mevis, Bernardo,_ Saint _Martin,_ and Saint
-_Bartholomew,_ but the worst of the four Isles possessed by the
-_Spaniard,_ as _Portorico_ or _Jamaica,_ is better than them all; as for
-_Hispaniola,_ and _Cuba,_ they are worthy the Title of two rich Kingdoms,
-the rest not respected by the _Spaniards,_ for want of Harbours, and their
-better choice of good Land, and profit in the main. But Captain _Warner,_
-having been very familiar with Captain _Painton,_ in the _Amazon,_ hearing
-his information of this St. _Christophers;_ and having made a years trial,
-as it is said, returned for _England,_ joyning with Master _Merifield_ and
-his Friends, got Letters Patents from King James to plant and possess it.
-Since then, the Right Honourable the Earl of _Carlisle_ hath got Letters
-Patents also, not only of that, but all the _Caribe_ Isles about it, who
-is now chief Lord of them, and the _English_ his Tenants that do possess
-them; over whom he appointeth such Governours and Officers as their
-affairs require; and although there be a great Custom imposed upon them,
-considering their other charges, both to feed and maintain themselves; yet
-there is there, and now a going, near upon the number of three thousand
-People; where by reason of the rockiness and thickness of the Woods in the
-Isle, it is difficult to pass, and such a snuff of the Sea goeth on the
-Shoar, ten may better defend, than fifty assault. {MN-2} In this Isle are
-many Springs, but yet Water is scarce again in many places; the Valleys
-and sides of the Hills very fertile, but the Mountains harsh, and of a
-sulphurous composition; all overgrown with _Palmetas, Cotten_ Trees;
-_Lignum vitae,_ and divers other sorts, but none like any in Christendom,
-except those carried thither; the air very pleasant and healthful, but
-exceeding hot, yet so tempered with cool breaths, it seems very temperate
-to them, that are little used to it; the Trees being always green, the
-days and nights always very near equal in length, always Summer; only they
-have in their Seasons great Gusts and Rains, and sometimes a Hericano,
-which is an over grown, and a most violent storm.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The Description of the Isle._
-
- {MN-2} _The Springs; Temper; and Seasons._
-
-
-{MN} In some of those Isles, are Cattel, Goats, and Hogs, but here none
-but what they must carry; _Guanes_ they have, which is a little harmless
-Beast, like a _Crocodile,_ or _Alligator,_ very fat and good Meat; she
-lays Eggs in the Sand, as doth the Land Crabs, which live here In
-abundance, like Conies in Boroughs, unless about _May,_ when they come
-down to the Sea side, to lay in the Sand, as the other; and all their Eggs
-are hatched by the heat of the Sun.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A strange hatching of eggs for beasts._
-
-
-{MN} From _May_ to _September,_ they have good store of Tortoises that
-come out of the Sea to lay their Eggs in the Sand, and are hatched as the
-other; they will lay half a peck at a time, and near a bushel ere they
-have done, and are round like Tenis-balls: This Fish is like Veal in
-taste, the Fat of a brownish colour, very good and wholsom. We seek them
-in the Nights, where we find them on shoar, we turn them upon their backs,
-till the next day we fetch them home, for they can never return
-themselves, being so hard, a Cart may go over them, and so big, one will
-suffice forty or fifty Men to dinner. Divers sorts of other Fish they have
-in abundance, and _Prawenes_ most great and excellent, but none will keep
-sweet scarce twelve hours.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Fish._
-
-
-{MN} The best and greatest is a _Passer Flaminga,_ which walking at her
-length, is as tall as a Man; _Pigeons_ and _Turtle Doves_ in abundance;
-some _Parrots,_ wild _Hawks,_ but divers other sorts of good Sea-fowl,
-whose Names we know not.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Birds._
-
-
-{MN} _Cassado_ is a Root planted in the Ground, of a wonderful Increase,
-and will make very good White-bread, but the Juce Rank Poyson, yet boyled,
-better than Wine; _Potatoes, Cabbages,_ and _Radish_ plenty.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Roots._
-
-
-{MN} Maize, like the _Virginia_ Wheat; we have Pine-Apple, near so big as
-an Hartichock, but the most daintiest taste of any Fruit; _Plantains,_ an
-excellent and most increasing Fruit; Apples, Prickle Pears, and Pease, but
-differing all from ours. There is Pepper that groweth in a little red
-Husk, as big as a Walnut, about four Inches in length, but the long Cods
-are small, and much stronger and better for use, than that from the _East
-Indies._ There is too sorts of Cotten, the silk Cotten as in the _East
-Indies,_ groweth upon a small stalk, as good for Beds as Down; the other
-upon a shrub, and beareth a Cod bigger than a Walnut, full of Cotten wool:
-Anotto also groweth upon a shrub, with a Cod like the other, and nine or
-ten on a bunch, full of Anotto, very good for Dyers, tho' wild; Sugar
-Canes, not tame, four or five foot high; also Mastick, and Locus-trees;
-great and hard Timber, Gourds, Musk-Melons, Water-Melons, Lettice, Parsly;
-all places naturally bear Purslain of it self; Sope-berries like a Musquet
-Bullet, that washeth as white as Sope; in the middle of the Root is a
-thing like a Sedge, a very good Fruit, we call Pengromes; a Pappaw is as
-great as an Apple, coloured like an Orange, and good to eat, a small hard
-Nut, like a Hazel Nut, grows close to the Ground, and like this grows on
-the Palmetas, which we call a Mucca Nut; Mustard-seed will grow to a great
-Tree, but bears no seed, yet the Leaves will make good Mustard; the
-Mancinel Tree, the Fruit is Poison; good Figs in abundance; but the
-Palmeta serveth to build Forts and Houses, the Leaves to cover them, and
-many other uses; the juice we draw from them, till we suck them to Death,
-(is held restorative) and the top for meat doth serve us as Cabbage; but
-oft we want Powder'd Beef and Bacon, and many other needful necessaries.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Fruits._
-
-
- By _Thomas Simons, Rowland
- Grascocke, Nicholas Burgh,_
- and others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVI.
-
-
-
- _The first Planting of the_ Barbadoes.
-
-
-The _Barbados_ lies South-West and by South, an hundred Leagues from St.
-_Christophers,_ threescore Leagues West and South from _Trinidado,_ and
-some fourscore Leagues from _Cape de Salinos,_ the next part of the main.
-The first Planters brought thither by Captain _Henry Powel,_ were forty
-_English,_ with seven or eight _Negros;_ then he went to _Disacuba_ in the
-main, where he got thirty _Indians,_ Men, Women and Children of the
-_Arawacos,_ Enemies both to the _Caribbes_ and the _Spaniards._ {MN} The
-Isle is most like a Triangle, each side forty or fifty Miles square, some
-exceeding great Rocks, but the most part exceeding good Ground; abounding
-with an infinite number of Swine, some Turtles, and many sorts of
-excellent Fish; many great Ponds wherein is Duck and Mallard; excellent
-Clay for Pots, Wood and Stone for Building, and a Spring near the midst of
-the Isle of _Bitume,_ which is a liquid mixture like Tarr, that by the
-great Rains falls from the Tops of the Mountains, it floats upon the Water
-in such abundance, that drying up, it remains like great Rocks of Pitch,
-and as good as Pitch for any use.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A Description of the Isle._
-
-
-{MN} The Mancinel Apple, is of a most pleasant sweet smell, of the bigness
-of a Crab, but rank Poyson, yet the Swine and Birds have wit to shun it;
-great store of exceeding great Locus-trees, two or three Fathom about, of
-a great height, that beareth a Cod full of Meal, will make Bread in time
-of necessity. A Tree like a Pine beareth a Fruit so great as a Musk Melon,
-which hath always ripe Fruit Flowers, or Green Fruit, which will refresh
-two or three Men, and very comfortable; Plumb-trees many, the Fruit great
-and Yellow, which but strained into Water in four and twenty hours, will
-be very good drink; wild Figg-trees there are many; all those Fruits do
-fat the Hoggs, yet at sometimes of the Year they are so lean as Carrion;
-Guane-trees bear a Fruit so big as a Pear, good and wholsom; Palmetaes of
-three several sorts; Pappaws, Prickle Pears, good to eat or make drink;
-Cedar Trees very tall and great; Fustick Trees are very great, and the
-wood yellow, good for dying; Soap Berries, the kernel so big as a sloe,
-and good to eat; Pumpeons in abundance; Goads so great as will make good
-great Bottles, and cut in two pieces, good Dishes and Platters; many small
-Brooks of very good Water; _Guinea_ Wheat, Cassado, Pines and Plantains;
-all things we there Plant, do grow exceedingly, so well as Tobacco; the
-Corn, Pease, and Beans, cut but away the Stalk, young sprigs will grow,
-and so bear Fruit for many Years together, without any more Planting; the
-Isle is overgrown with Wood or great Reeds, those Woods which are soft are
-exceeding light and full of Pitch, and those that are hard and great, they
-are as hard to cut as Stone.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Fruits and Trees._
-
-
-{MN} Mr. _John Powel_ came thither the 40th of _August_ 1627. with forty
-five Men, where we stayed three Weeks, and then returning, left behind us
-about an Hundred People, and his Son _John Powel_ for his Deputy, as
-Governour; but there have been so many Factions amongst them, I cannot
-from so many variable Relations, give you any certainty for their orderly
-Government: for all those Plenties, much misery they have endured, in
-regard of their weakness at their Landing, and long stay without supplies;
-therefore those that go thither, it were good they carry good Provision
-with them; but the Isle is most healthful, and all things Planted do
-increase abundantly; and by this time there is, and now a going, about the
-number of fifteen or sixteen Hundred People.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their numbers._
-
-
-Sir _William Curtine,_ and Captain _John Powel,_ were the first and chief
-Adventurers to the Planting this fortunate Isle; which had been oft
-frequented by Men of War to refresh themselves, and set up their
-Shallopes; being so far remote from the rest of the Isles, they never were
-troubled with any of the _Indies._ Harbours they have none, but exceeding
-good Rodes, which with a small Charge, might be very well Fortified; it
-doth Ebb and Flow four or five foot, and they cannot perceive that there
-hath ever been any Hericano in that Isle.
-
- From the Relations of Captain
- _John White,_ and
- Captain _Wolverstone._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVII.
-
-
-
- _The first Plantations of the Isle of_ Mevis.
-
-
-{MN-1} Because I have ranged and lived amongst those Islands, what my
-Authors cannot tell me, I think it no great error in helping them to tell
-it my self. In this little Isle of _Mevis,_ more than twenty Years ago, I
-have remained a great time together, to Wood and Water and refresh my Men;
-it is all Woody, but by the Sea-side Southward, there are Sands like
-Downs, where a Thousand Men may quarter themselves Conveniently; but in
-most places the Wood groweth close to the Water side, at a high Water
-mark, and in some places so thick of a soft spungy Wood like a wild
-Fig-tree, you cannot get through it, but by making your way with Hatchets,
-or Fauchions: whether it was the dew of those Trees, or of some others, I
-am not certain, but many of our Men became so tormented with a burning
-swelling all over their Bodies, they seemed like scalded Men, and near Mad
-with Pain; {MN-2} here we found a great Pool wherein bathing themselves
-they found much ease; and finding it fed with a Pleasant small stream that
-came out of the Woods, we found the head half a Mile within the Land
-distilling from many Rocks, by which they were well cured in two or three
-days. Such factions here we had, as commonly attend such Voyages, that a
-pair of Gallows were made, but Captain _Smith_ for whom they were
-intended, could not be perswaded to use them; but not any one of the
-inventors, but their lives by Justice fell into his Power to determine of
-at his Pleasure, whom with much Mercy he favoured, that most basely and
-unjustly have betrayed him.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN-1} _The Description of the Isle._
-
- {MN-2} _The Bath._
-
-
-{MN} The last Year 1628. Mr. _Littleton_ with some others, got a Patent of
-the Earl of _Carlisle_ to Plant the Isle called the _Barbadoes,_ thirty
-Leagues Northward of St. _Christophers;_ which by report of their
-Informers, and Undertakers, for the excellency of the Pleasantness
-thereof, they called _Dulcina,_ but when they came there, they found it
-such a Barren Rock they left it; altho they were told as much before, they
-would not believe it, perswading themselves those contradicters would get
-it for themselves, was thus by their cunning Opinion, the deceivers of
-themselves; for seeing it lie conveniently for their purpose in a Map,
-they had not Patience to know the goodness or badness, the inconvenience
-nor probability of the Quantity nor Quality; which error doth predominate
-in most of our homebred Adventurers, that will have all things as they
-conceit and would have it; and the more they are contradicted, the more
-hot they are; but you may see by many Examples in the general History, how
-difficult a matter it is, to gather the Truth from amongst so many Foreign
-and several Relations, except you have exceeding good experience both of
-the Countries People, and their Conditions; and those ignorant
-undertakings, have been the greatest hindrance of all those Plantations.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _A great misfortune._
-
-
-{MN} At last because they would be absolute, they came to _Mevis,_ a
-little Isle by St. _Christophers;_ where they seated themselves, well
-furnished with all necessaries, being about the Number of an Hundred, and
-since increased to an Hundred and fifty Persons, whereof many were old
-Planters of St. _Christophers;_ especially Mr. _Anthony Hinton,_ and Mr.
-_Edward Tompson._ But because all those Isles for the most part are so
-capable to produce, and in Nature like each other, let this discourse
-serve for the description of them all. Thus much concerning those
-Plantations, which now after all this time, loss and charge, should they
-be abandon'd, suppressed, and dissolved, were most lamentable; and surely
-seeing they all strive so much about this Tobacco, and that the Fraught
-thereof, and other charges are so great, and so open to any Enemy by that
-Commodity they cannot long subsist.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their Numbers._
-
-
-And it is a wonder to me to see such Miracles and Mischiefs in Men; how
-greedily they pursue to dispossess the Planters of the Name of Christ
-Jesus, yet say they are Christians, when so much of the World is
-unpossessed; yea, and better Land than they so much strive for, murthering
-so many Christians, burning and spoiling so many Cities, Villages and
-Countries, and subverting so many Kingdoms, when so much lieth wait, or
-only possessed by a few poor Savages, that more serve the Devil for fear,
-than God for love; whose Ignorance we pretend to reform, but Covetousness,
-Humours, Ambition, Faction, and Pride hath so many Instruments, we perform
-very little to any purpose; nor is there either Honour or Profit to be got
-by any that are so vile, to undertake the subversion, or hinderance of any
-honest intended Christian Plantation.
-
-{MN} Now to conclude the Travels and Adventures of Captain _Smith;_ how
-first he Planted _Virginia_ and was let ashoar with about an Hundred Men
-in the wild Woods; how he was taken Prisoner by the Savages, by the King
-of _Pamaunke_ tied to a Tree to be shot to death, led up and down their
-Country to be shewed for a wonder; fatted as he thought, for a Sacrifice
-for their Idol, before whom they conjured him three days, with strange
-Dances and Invocations, then brought him before their Emperor _Powhatan,_
-that commanded him to be slain; how his Daughter _Pocahontas_ saves his
-life, returned him to _James_ Town, relieved him and his famished Company,
-which was but eight and thirty to possess those large Dominions; how he
-discovered all the several Nations, upon the Rivers falling into the Bay
-of _Chisapeacke;_ flung near to death with a most Poisoned taile of a Fish
-called Stingray: how _Powhatan_ out of his Country took the Kings of
-_Pamaunke_ and _Paspahegh_ Prisoners, forced thirty nine of those Kings to
-pay him contribution, subjected all the Savages: how _Smith_ was blown up
-with Gun-powder, and returned for _England_ to be cured.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Certain exploits of Captain_ Smith.
-
-
-Also how he brought our New _England_ to the subjection of the Kingdom of
-Great _Britain;_ his fights with the Pirats, left alone amongst a many
-_French_ men of Warr, and his Ship ran from him; his Sea-fights for the
-_French_ against the _Spaniards;_ their bad usage of him; how in _France_
-in a little Boat he escaped them; was adrift all such a stormy Night at
-Sea by himself, when thirteen _French_ Ships were split, or driven on
-shoar by the Isle of _Ree,_ the General and most of his Men drowned, when
-God, to whom be all Honour and Praise, brought him safe on shoar to all
-their Admirations that escaped; you may read at large in his General
-History of _Virginia,_ the _Summer Isles,_ and _New England._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVIII.
-
-
-
- _The bad Life, Qualities and Conditions of Pirates; and how they taught
- the_ Turks _and_ Moors _to become men of Warr._
-
-
-As in all Lands where there are many People, there are some Thieves, so in
-all Seas much frequented, there are some Pirates; the most Ancient within
-the Memory of threescore Years, was one _Callis,_ who most refreshed
-himself upon the Coast of _Wales; Clinton_ and _Purser_ his Companions,
-who grew famous till Queen _Elizabeth_ of Blessed Memory, hanged them at
-_Wapping; Flemming_ was as expert and as much sought for as they, yet such
-a Friend to his Country, that discovering the _Spanish Armado,_ he
-voluntarily came to _Plimouth,_ yielded himself freely to my Lord Admiral,
-and gave him notice of the _Spaniards_ coming; which good warning came so
-happily and unexpectedly, that he had his Pardon, and a good Reward; some
-few Pirates there then remained; notwithstanding it is incredible how many
-great and rich Prizes the little Barques of the West Country daily brought
-home, in regard of their small Charge; {MN} for there are so many
-difficulties in a great Navy, by Wind and Weather, Victual, Sickness,
-losing and finding one another, they seldom defray half the charge: But
-for the Grace, State and Defence of the Coast and narrow Seas, a great
-Navy is most necessary, but not to Attempt any far Voyage, except there be
-such a Competent flock, they want not wherewith to furnish and supply all
-things with expedition; but to the purpose.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _The difficulties of a great Navy._
-
-
-{MN} After the death of our most Gracious Queen Elizabeth of Blessed
-Memory, our Royal King _James,_ who from his Infancy had Reigned in Peace
-with all Nations; had no imployment for those Men of Warr, so that those
-that were Rich relied with that they had; those that were poor and had
-nothing but from hand to Mouth, turned Pirates; some, because they became
-slighted of those for whom they had got much Wealth; some for that they
-could not get their Due; some that had lived bravely, would not abase
-themselves to Poverty; some vainly, only to get a name; others for
-Revenge, Covetousness, or as ill; and as they found themselves more and
-more oppressed, their Passions increasing with discontent, made them turn
-Pirates.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _What occasioneth Pirates._
-
-
-{MN} Now because they grew hatefull to all _Christian_ Princes, they
-retired to Barbary, where altho' there be not many good Harbours, but
-_Tunis, Argier, Sally, Mamora,_ and _Tituane,_ there are many convenient
-Rodes, or the open Sea, which is their chief Lordship: For their best
-Harbours _Massalqueber,_ the Towns of _Oran, Mellila, Tangier,_ and
-_Ceuta,_ within the Streights, are possessed by the _Spaniards;_ without
-the Streights they have also _Arzella_ and _Mazagan; Mamora_ they have
-likewise lately taken, and Fortified. _Ward_ a poor _English_ Sailer, and
-_Dansker_ a _Dutchman,_ made first here their Marts; when the _Moors_ knew
-scarce how to sail a Ship; _Bishop_ was Ancient and did little hurt; but
-_Easton_ got so much as made himself a Marquess in _Savoy;_ and _Ward_
-lived like a Bashay in _Barbary;_ those were the first that taught the
-_Moors_ to be Men of War. _Gennings, Harris, Tompson,_ and divers others
-were taken in Ireland, a Coast they much frequented, and died at _Wapping.
-Haws, Bough, Smith, Walsingham, Ellis, Collins, Sawkwel, Wollingstone,
-Barrow, Wilson, Sayres,_ and divers others, all these were Captains
-amongst the Pirates, whom King _James_ Mercifully Pardon'd; and was it not
-strange, a few of those should command the Seas. Notwithstanding the
-_Malteses,_ the Pope, _Florentines, Genoeses, French, Dutch_ and _Engish,_
-Gallies and Men of War, they Would rob before their Faces, and even at
-their own Ports, yet seldom more than three, four, five, or six in a
-Fleet: many times they had very good Ships, and well Man'd, but commonly
-in such Factions amongst themselves, and so Riotous, Quarrellous,
-Treacherous, Blasphemous and Villainous, it is more than a wonder they
-could so long continue, to do so much Mischief; and all they got, they
-basely consumed it amongst _Jews, Turks, Moors,_ and Whores.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Their chief Rendezvous._
-
-
-The best was, they would seldom go to Sea, so long as they could possibly
-live on shoar, being compiled of _English, French, Dutch_ and _Moors,_
-(but very few _Spaniards_ or _Italians_) commonly running one from
-another, till they became so disjointed, disordered, debauched, and
-miserable, {MN} that the _Turks_ and _Moors_ began to command them as
-Slaves, and force them to instruct them in their best skill, which many an
-accursed Runnagado, or _Christian_ turned _Turk_ did, till they have made
-those Sally-men or _Moors_ of _Barbary_ so Powerful as they be, to the
-Terror of all the Streights, and many times they take Purchase in the Main
-Ocean, yea sometimes in the narrow Seas in _England,_ and those are the
-most cruel Villains in _Turky_ or _Barbary;_ whose Natives are very Noble,
-and of good Natures, in comparison of them.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Renegados._
-
-
-{MN} To conclude, The Misery of a Pirate, (altho' many are sufficient
-Seamen as any) yet in regard of his superfluity, you shall find it such,
-that any wise Man would rather live amongst wild Beasts, than them;
-therefore let all unadvised Persons take heed they entertain that quality;
-and I could how wish Merchants, Gentlemen, and all Setters forth of Ships,
-not to be sparing of a Competent Pay, nor true Payment; for neither
-Soldiers nor Seamen can live without Means, but necessity will force them
-to steal; and when they are once entered into that Trade, they are hardly
-reclaimed. Those Titles of Seamen and Soldiers, have been most worthily
-honoured and esteemed, but now regarded for the most part, but as the
-scum of the World; regain therefore your wonted Reputations and endeavour
-rather to Adventure to those fair Plantations of our English Nation; which
-however in the beginning were scorned contemned, yet now you see how many
-Rich and Gallant People come from thence, who went thither as Poor as any
-Soldier or Sailer, and gets more in one Year, than you by Piracy in seven.
-I intreat you therefore to consider how many Thousands yearly go thither;
-also how many Ships and Sailers are imployed to Transport them, and what
-Custom they Yearly pay to our most Royal King Charles, whole Prosperity
-and his Kingdom's good, I humbly beseech the Immortal God to preserve and
-increase.
-
- * * * * *
-
- {MN} _Advertisements for Wild heads._
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- F I N I S.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The True Travels, Adventures, and
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