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    Captain Singleton

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    other River that run into the Rio Grand Northward, or down to the Gold Coast

      Southward, and so both direct our Way, and shorten the Labour; as also, because,

      if any of the Country was inhabited and fruitful, we should probably find it

      upon the Shore of the Rivers, where alone we could be furnished with Provisions.

      This was good Advice, and too rational not to be taken; but our present Business

      was, what to do to get out of this dreadful Place we were in; behind us was a

      Wast, which had already cost us five Days March, and we had not Provisions for

      five Days left to go back again the same Way. Before us was nothing but Horrour

      as above, so we resolv'd, seeing the Ridge of Hills we were upon had some

      Appearance of Fruitfulness, and that they seemed to lead away to the Northward a

      great Way, to keep under the Foot of them on the East Side, to go on as far as

      we could, and in the mean time to look diligently out for Food.

      Accordingly we moved on the next Morning; for we had no time to lose, and to our

      great Comfort we came in our first Morning's March to very good Springs of fresh

      Water; and least we should have a Scarcity again, we filled all our Bladder

      Bottles, and carried it with us. I should also have observed, that our Surgeon

      who made the salt Water fresh, took the Opportunity of those salt Springs, and

      made us the Quantity of three or four Pecks of very good Salt.

      In our third March we found an unexpected Supply of Food, the Hills being full

      of Hares; they were of a kind something different from ours in England, larger,

      and not so swift of Foot, but very good Meat. We shot several of them, and the

      little tame Leopard, which I told you we took at the Negroe Town that we

      plundered, hunted them like a Dog, and killed us several every Day; but she

      would eat nothing of them unless we gave it her, which indeed in our

      Circumstance was very obliging. We salted them a little, and dried them in the

      Sun whole, and carry'd a strange Parcel along with us, I think it was almost

      three Hundred; for we did not know when we might find any more, either of these,

      or any other Food. We continued our Course under these Hills very comfortably

      eight or nine Days, when we found to our great Satisfaction, the Country beyond

      us began to look with something a better Countenance. As for the West Side of

      the Hills, we never examin'd it till this Day, when three of our Company, the

      rest halting for Refreshment, mounted the Hills again to satisfy their

      Curiosity, but found it all the same; nor could they see any End of it, no not

      to the North, the Way we were going; so the tenth Day finding the Hills made a

      Turn, and led as it were into the vast Desart, we left them, and continued our

      Course North; the Country being very tolerably full of Woods, some Wast, but not

      tediously long; till we came, by our Gunner's Observation, into the Latitude of

      8 Degrees, 5 Minutes, which we were nineteen Days more a performing.

      All this Way we found no Inhabitants, Abundance of wild ravenous Creatures, with

      whom we became so well acquainted now, that really we did not much mind them. We

      saw Lions and Tigers, and Leopards every Night and Morning in Abundance; but as

      they seldom came near us, we let them go about their Business; if they offer'd

      to come near us, we made false Fire with any Gun that was uncharged, and they

      would walk off as soon as they saw the Flash.

      We made pretty good Shift for Food all this Way; for sometimes we killed Hares,

      sometimes some Fowls, but for my Life I cannot give Names to any of them, except

      a kind of Partridge, and another that was like our Turtles. Now and then we

      began to meet with Elephants again in great Numbers, those Creatures delighting

      chiefly in the woody Part of the Country.

      This long continued March fatigued us very much, and two of our Men fell sick,

      indeed so very sick, we thought they would have died; and one of our Negroes

      died suddenly. Our Surgeon said it was an Apoplexy, but he wondered at it, he

      said, for he could never complain of his high Feeding. Another of them was very

      ill, but our Surgeon with much ado perswading him, indeed it was almost forcing

      him, to be let Blood, he recover'd.

      We halted here twelve Days for the sake of our sick Men, and our Surgeon

      perswaded me, and three or four more of us, to be let Blood during the time of

      Rest, which with other things he gave us, contributed very much to our continued

      Health, in so tedious a March, and in so hot a Climate.

      In this March we pitched our matted Tents every Night, and they were very

      comfortable to us, tho' we had Trees and Woods to shelter us also in most

      Places. We thought it very strange, that in all this Part of the Country we yet

      met with no Inhabitants; but the principal Reason as we found afterwards was,

      that we having kept a Western Course first, and then a Northern Course, were

      gotten too much into the Middle of the Country, and among the Desarts: Whereas

      the Inhabitants are principally found among the Rivers, Lakes, and Low-Lands as

      well to the South-West, as to the North.

      What little Rivulets we found here, were so empty of Water, that except some

      Pits, and little more than ordinary Pools, there was scarce any Water to be seen

      in them; and they rather shewed, that during the Rainy Months they had a

      Channel, than that they had really any running Water in them at that time: By

      which it was easy for us to judge, that we had a great Way to go; but this was

      no Discouragement so long as we had but Provisions, and some reasonable Shelter

      from the violent Heat, which indeed I thought was much greater now, than when

      the Sun was just over our Heads.

      Our Men being recovered, we set forward again, very well stored with Provisions

      and Water sufficient, and bending our Course a little to the Westward of the

      North, travelled in Hopes of some favourable Stream which might bear a Canoe;

      but we found none till after twenty Days Travel, including eight Days Rest, for

      our Men being weak we rested very often; especially when we came to Places which

      were proper for our Purpose; where we found Cattel, Fowl, or any thing to kill

      for our Food. In those twenty Days March, we advanced four Degrees to the

      Northward, besides some Meridian Distance Westward, and we met with Abundace of

      Elephants, and with a good Number of Elephants Teeth scatter'd up and down, here

      and there, in the Woody Grounds especially; some of which were very large. But

      they were no Booty to us; our Business was Provisions, and a good Passage out of

      the Country; and it had been much more to our Purpose, to have found a good fat

      Deer, and to have killed it for our Food, than a hundred Ton of Elephants Teeth;

      and yet as you shall presently hear, when we came to begin our Passage by Water,

      we once thought to have built a large Canoe on purpose to have loaded her with

      Ivory, but this was when we knew nothing of the Rivers, nor knew anything how

      dangerous, and how difficult a Passage it was that we were like to have in them,

      nor had considered the Weight of Carriage to lug them to the Rivers where we

      might Embark.

      At the End of twenty Days Travel, as above, in the Latitud
    e of three Degrees,

      sixteen Minutes, we discovered in a Valley, at some Distance from us, a pretty

      tolerable Stream, which we thought deserved the Name of a River, and which run

      its Course N. N. W. which was just what we wanted. As we had fixt our Thoughts

      upon our Passage by Water, we took this for the Place to make the Experiment,

      and bent our March directly to the Valley.

      There was a small Thicket of Trees just in our Way, which we went by, thinking

      no harm, when on a sudden one of our Negroes was very dangerously wounded with

      an Arrow, shot into his Back slanting between his Shoulders. This put us to a

      full Stop, and three of our Men with two Negroes spreading the Wood, for it was

      but a small one, found a Negro with a Bow, but no Arrow, who would have escaped;

      but our Men that discovered him, shot him in Revenge of the Mischief he had

      done; so we lost the Opportunity of taking him Prisoner, which if we had done,

      and sent him home with good Usage, it might have brought others to us in a

      friendly Manner.

      Going a little farther, we came to five Negro Hutts or Houses, built after a

      differing Manner from any we had seen yet; and at the Door of one of them, lay

      seven Elephants Teeth piled up against the Wall or Side of the Hutt, as if they

      had been provided against a Market: Here were no men, but seven or eight Women,

      and near twenty Children: We offered them no Uncivility or any kind, but gave

      them every one a Bit of Silver beaten out thin, as I observed before, and cut

      Diamond fashion, or in the Shape of a Bird; at which the Women were over-joy'd

      and brought out to us several Sorts of Food, which we did not understand, being

      Cakes of a Meal made of Roots, which they bake in the Sun, and which eat very

      well. We went a little Way farther, and pitched our Camp for that Night, not

      doubting but our Civility to the Women would produce some good Effect, when

      their Husbands might come Home.

      Accordingly, the next Morning, the Women, with eleven Men, five young Boys, and

      two good big Girls, came to our Camp; before they came quite to us, the Women

      called aloud, and made an odd screeking Noise, to bring us out, and accordingly

      we came out, when two of the Women, shewing us what we had given them, and

      pointing to the Company behind, made such Signs as we could easily understand

      signified Friendship. When the Men advanced, having Bows and Arrows, they laid

      them down on the Ground, scraped, and threw Sand over their Heads, and turned

      round three times with their Hands laid up upon the Tops of their Heads. This it

      seems, was a solemn Vow of Friendship. Upon this we beckon'd them with our Hands

      to come nearer; then they sent the Boys and Girls to us first, which, it seems

      was to bring us more Cakes of Bread, and some green Herbs, to eat, which we

      receiv'd, and took the Boys up and kissed, them, and the little Girls too; then

      the Men came up close to us, and sat them down on the Ground, making Signs, that

      we should sit down by them, which we did. They said much to one another, but we

      could not understand them, nor could we find any way to make them understand us;

      much less whither we were going, or what we wanted, only that we easily made

      them understand we wanted Victuals; whereupon one of of the Men casting his Eyes

      about him towards a rising Ground that was about half a Mile off, starts up as

      if he was frighted, flies to the Place where they had laid down their Bows and

      Arrows, snatches up a Bow and two Arrows, and run like a race Horse to the

      Place: When he came there, he let fly both his Arrows, and come back again to us

      with the same Speed; we seeing he came with the Bow, but without the Arrows,

      were the more inquisitive, but the Fellow saying nothing to us, beckons to one

      of our Negroes to come to him, and we bid him go; so he led him back to the

      Place, where lay a kind of a Deer, shot with two Arrows, but not quite dead; and

      between them, they brought it down to us. This was for a Gift to us, and was

      very welcome, I assure you, for our Stock was low. These People were all stark

      naked.

      The next Day there came about a Hundred Men to us, and Women, making the same

      aukward Signals of Friendship; and dancing and shewing themselves very well

      pleased, and any thing they had they gave us. How the Man in the Wood came to be

      so butcherly and rude, as to shoot at our Men, without making any Breach first,

      we could not imagine; for the People were simple, plain, and inoffensive, in all

      our other Conversation with them.

      From hence we went down the Bank of the little River I mentioned, and where I

      found we should see whole Nations of Negroes, but whether friendly to us, or

      not, that we could make no Judgment of yet.

      The River was of no Use to us, as to the Design of making Canoes, a great while,

      and we traversed the Country, on the Edge of it about five Days more, when our

      Carpenters finding the Stream encrease, proposed to pitch our Tents, and fall to

      work to make Canoes; but after we had begun the Work, and cut down two or three

      Trees, and spent five Days in the Labour, some of our Men wandring further down

      the River, brought us Word, that the Stream rather decreased than encreased,

      sinking away into the Sands, or drying up by the Heat of the Sun; so that the

      River appeared not able to carry the least Canoe, that could be any way useful

      to us, so we were obliged to give over our Enterprize, and move on.

      In our further Prospect this Way, we march'd three Days full West the Country on

      the North Side, being extraordinary mountainous, and more parched and dry than

      any we had seen yet; whereas, in the Part which looks due West, we found a

      pleasant Valley, running a great way between two great Ridges of Mountains: The

      Hills look'd frightful, being entirely bare of Trees or Grass, and even white

      with the Driness of the Sand; but in the Valley we had Trees, Grass, and some

      Creatures that were fit for Food, and some Inhabitants.

      We past by some of their Hutts or Houses, and saw People about them, but they

      run up into the Hills as soon as they saw us; at the End of this Valley we met

      with a peopled Country, and at first it put us to some doubt, whether we should

      go among them, or keep up towards the Hills Northerly; and as our Aim was

      principally, as before, to make our Way to the River Niger, we enclined to the

      latter, pursuing our Course by the Compass to the N. W. We march'd thus without

      Interruption seven Days more, when we met with a surprizing Circumstance, much

      more desolate and disconsolate than our own, and, which, in time to come, will

      scarce seem credible.

      We did not much seek the conversing, or acquainting our selves with the Natives

      of the Country, except where we found the Want of them for our Provision, or

      their Direction for our Way; so that whereas we found the Country here begin to

      be very populous, especially towards our left Hand, that is, to the South, we

      kept at the more Distance Northerly, still stretching towards the West.

      In this Tract we found something or other to kill and eat, which always supplied

      our Necessity, tho' not so well as we were provided in our first setting
    out;

      being thus, as it were, pushing to avoid the peopled Country, we at last came to

      a very pleasant, agreeable Stream of Water, not big enough to be called a River,

      but running to the N. N. W. which was the very Course we desired to go.

      On the farthest Bank of this Brook we perceiv'd some Hutts of Negroes not many,

      and in a little low Spot of Ground some Maise or Indian Corn growing, which

      intimated presently to us, that there were some Inhabitants on that Side, less

      barbarous than what we had met with in other Places where we had been.

      As we went forward our whole Carravan being in a Body, our Negroes, who were in

      the Front, cry'd out, that they saw a White Man; we were not much surprized at

      first, it being, as we thought, a Mistake of the Fellows, and asked them what

      they meant; when one of them stept to me, and pointing to a Hutt on the other

      Side of the Hill, I was astonished to see a White Man indeed, but stark naked,

      very busy near the Door of his Hutt, and stooping down to the Ground with

      something in his Hand, as if he had been at some Work, and his back being

      towards us, he did not see us.

      I gave Notice to our Negroes to make no Noise, and waited till some more of our

      Men were come up, to shew the Sight to them, that they might be sure I was not

      mistaken, and we were soon satisfied of the Truth; for the Man having heard some

      Noise, started up, and looked full at us, as much surprized, to be sure, as we

      were, but whether with Fear or Hope, we then knew not.

      As he discovered us, so did the rest of the Inhabitants belonging to the Hutts

      about him, and all crouded together, looking at us at a Distance: A little

      Bottom, in which the Brook ran, lying between us, the white Man, and all the

      rest, as he told us afterwards, not knowing well whether they should stay, or

      run away: However, it presently came into my Thoughts, that if there were white

      Men among them, it would be much easier for us to make them understand what we

      meant, as to Peace or War, than we found it with others; so tying a Piece of

      white Rag to the End of a Stick, we sent two Negroes with it to the Bank of the

      Water, carrying the Pole up as high as they could; it was presently understood,

      and two of their Men, and the white Man, came to the Shore on the other Side.

      However, as the white Man spoke no Portuguese, they could understand nothing of

      one another, but by Signs; but our Men made the white Man understand, that they

      had white Men with them too, at which they said the white Man laught. However,

      to be short, our Men came back, and told us they were all good Friends, and in

      about an Hour four of our Men, two Negroes, and the Black Prince went to the

      River Side, were the white Man came to them.

      They had not been half a Quarter of an Hour, but a Negro came running to me, and

      told me the white Man was Inglese, as he called him; upon which I run back,

      eagerly enough you may be sure with him, and found as he said, that he was an

      Englishman; upon which he embraced me very passionately, the Tears running down

      his Face. The first Surprize of his seeing us was over before we came, but any

      one may conceive of it, by the brief Account he gave us afterwards of his very

      unhappy Circumstance; and of so unexpected a Deliverance, such as perhaps never

      happened to any Man in the World; for it was a Million to one odds, that ever he

      could have been relieved; nothing but an Adventure that never was heard or read

      of before, could have suited his Case, unless Heaven by some Miracle that never

      was to be expected, had acted for him.

      He appeared to be a Gentleman, not an ordinary bred Fellow, Seaman, or labouring

      Man; this shewed it self in his Behaviour, in the first Moment of our conversing

      with him, and in spight of all the Disadvantages of his miserable Circumstance.

      He was a middle-aged Man, not above 37 or 38, tho' his Beard was grown exceeding

     


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