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Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, The
CHAPTER IX - DREADFUL OCCURRENCES IN MADAGASCAR
Daniel Defoe
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       _ I had no more business to go to the East Indies than a man at full
       liberty has to go to the turnkey at Newgate, and desire him to lock
       him up among the prisoners there, and starve him. Had I taken a
       small vessel from England and gone directly to the island; had I
       loaded her, as I did the other vessel, with all the necessaries for
       the plantation and for my people; taken a patent from the
       government here to have secured my property, in subjection only to
       that of England; had I carried over cannon and ammunition, servants
       and people to plant, and taken possession of the place, fortified
       and strengthened it in the name of England, and increased it with
       people, as I might easily have done; had I then settled myself
       there, and sent the ship back laden with good rice, as I might also
       have done in six months' time, and ordered my friends to have
       fitted her out again for our supply--had I done this, and stayed
       there myself, I had at least acted like a man of common sense. But
       I was possessed of a wandering spirit, and scorned all advantages:
       I pleased myself with being the patron of the people I placed
       there, and doing for them in a kind of haughty, majestic way, like
       an old patriarchal monarch, providing for them as if I had been
       father of the whole family, as well as of the plantation. But I
       never so much as pretended to plant in the name of any government
       or nation, or to acknowledge any prince, or to call my people
       subjects to any one nation more than another; nay, I never so much
       as gave the place a name, but left it as I found it, belonging to
       nobody, and the people under no discipline or government but my
       own, who, though I had influence over them as a father and
       benefactor, had no authority or power to act or command one way or
       other, further than voluntary consent moved them to comply. Yet
       even this, had I stayed there, would have done well enough; but as
       I rambled from them, and came there no more, the last letters I had
       from any of them were by my partner's means, who afterwards sent
       another sloop to the place, and who sent me word, though I had not
       the letter till I got to London, several years after it was
       written, that they went on but poorly; were discontented with their
       long stay there; that Will Atkins was dead; that five of the
       Spaniards were come away; and though they had not been much
       molested by the savages, yet they had had some skirmishes with
       them; and that they begged of him to write to me to think of the
       promise I had made to fetch them away, that they might see their
       country again before they died.
       But I was gone a wildgoose chase indeed, and they that will have
       any more of me must be content to follow me into a new variety of
       follies, hardships, and wild adventures, wherein the justice of
       Providence may be duly observed; and we may see how easily Heaven
       can gorge us with our own desires, make the strongest of our wishes
       be our affliction, and punish us most severely with those very
       things which we think it would be our utmost happiness to be
       allowed to possess. Whether I had business or no business, away I
       went: it is no time now to enlarge upon the reason or absurdity of
       my own conduct, but to come to the history--I was embarked for the
       voyage, and the voyage I went.
       I shall only add a word or two concerning my honest Popish
       clergyman, for let their opinion of us, and all other heretics in
       general, as they call us, be as uncharitable as it may, I verily
       believe this man was very sincere, and wished the good of all men:
       yet I believe he used reserve in many of his expressions, to
       prevent giving me offence; for I scarce heard him once call on the
       Blessed Virgin, or mention St. Jago, or his guardian angel, though
       so common with the rest of them. However, I say I had not the
       least doubt of his sincerity and pious intentions; and I am firmly
       of opinion, if the rest of the Popish missionaries were like him,
       they would strive to visit even the poor Tartars and Laplanders,
       where they have nothing to give them, as well as covet to flock to
       India, Persia, China, &c., the most wealthy of the heathen
       countries; for if they expected to bring no gains to their Church
       by it, it may well be admired how they came to admit the Chinese
       Confucius into the calendar of the Christian saints.
       A ship being ready to sail for Lisbon, my pious priest asked me
       leave to go thither; being still, as he observed, bound never to
       finish any voyage he began. How happy it had been for me if I had
       gone with him. But it was too late now; all things Heaven appoints
       for the best: had I gone with him I had never had so many things
       to be thankful for, and the reader had never heard of the second
       part of the travels and adventures of Robinson Crusoe: so I must
       here leave exclaiming at myself, and go on with my voyage. From
       the Brazils we made directly over the Atlantic Sea to the Cape of
       Good Hope, and had a tolerably good voyage, our course generally
       south-east, now and then a storm, and some contrary winds; but my
       disasters at sea were at an end--my future rubs and cross events
       were to befall me on shore, that it might appear the land was as
       well prepared to be our scourge as the sea.
       Our ship was on a trading voyage, and had a supercargo on board,
       who was to direct all her motions after she arrived at the Cape,
       only being limited to a certain number of days for stay, by
       charter-party, at the several ports she was to go to. This was
       none of my business, neither did I meddle with it; my nephew, the
       captain, and the supercargo adjusting all those things between them
       as they thought fit. We stayed at the Cape no longer than was
       needful to take in-fresh water, but made the best of our way for
       the coast of Coromandel. We were, indeed, informed that a French
       man-of-war, of fifty guns, and two large merchant ships, were gone
       for the Indies; and as I knew we were at war with France, I had
       some apprehensions of them; but they went their own way, and we
       heard no more of them.
       I shall not pester the reader with a tedious description of places,
       journals of our voyage, variations of the compass, latitudes,
       trade-winds, &c.; it is enough to name the ports and places which
       we touched at, and what occurred to us upon our passages from one
       to another. We touched first at the island of Madagascar, where,
       though the people are fierce and treacherous, and very well armed
       with lances and bows, which they use with inconceivable dexterity,
       yet we fared very well with them a while. They treated us very
       civilly; and for some trifles which we gave them, such as knives,
       scissors, &c., they brought us eleven good fat bullocks, of a
       middling size, which we took in, partly for fresh provisions for
       our present spending, and the rest to salt for the ship's use.
       We were obliged to stay here some time after we had furnished
       ourselves with provisions; and I, who was always too curious to
       look into every nook of the world wherever I came, went on shore as
       often as I could. It was on the east side of the island that we
       went on shore one evening: and the people, who, by the way, are
       very numerous, came thronging about us, and stood gazing at us at a
       distance. As we had traded freely with them, and had been kindly
       used, we thought ourselves in no danger; but when we saw the
       people, we cut three boughs out of a tree, and stuck them up at a
       distance from us; which, it seems, is a mark in that country not
       only of a truce and friendship, but when it is accepted the other
       side set up three poles or boughs, which is a signal that they
       accept the truce too; but then this is a known condition of the
       truce, that you are not to pass beyond their three poles towards
       them, nor they to come past your three poles or boughs towards you;
       so that you are perfectly secure within the three poles, and all
       the space between your poles and theirs is allowed like a market
       for free converse, traffic, and commerce. When you go there you
       must not carry your weapons with you; and if they come into that
       space they stick up their javelins and lances all at the first
       poles, and come on unarmed; but if any violence is offered them,
       and the truce thereby broken, away they run to the poles, and lay
       hold of their weapons, and the truce is at an end.
       It happened one evening, when we went on shore, that a greater
       number of their people came down than usual, but all very friendly
       and civil; and they brought several kinds of provisions, for which
       we satisfied them with such toys as we had; the women also brought
       us milk and roots, and several things very acceptable to us, and
       all was quiet; and we made us a little tent or hut of some boughs
       or trees, and lay on shore all night. I know not what was the
       occasion, but I was not so well satisfied to lie on shore as the
       rest; and the boat riding at an anchor at about a stone's cast from
       the land, with two men in her to take care of her, I made one of
       them come on shore; and getting some boughs of trees to cover us
       also in the boat, I spread the sail on the bottom of the boat, and
       lay under the cover of the branches of the trees all night in the
       boat.
       About two o'clock in the morning we heard one of our men making a
       terrible noise on the shore, calling out, for God's sake, to bring
       the boat in and come and help them, for they were all like to be
       murdered; and at the same time I heard the fire of five muskets,
       which was the number of guns they had, and that three times over;
       for it seems the natives here were not so easily frightened with
       guns as the savages were in America, where I had to do with them.
       All this while, I knew not what was the matter, but rousing
       immediately from sleep with the noise, I caused the boat to be
       thrust in, and resolved with three fusees we had on board to land
       and assist our men. We got the boat soon to the shore, but our men
       were in too much haste; for being come to the shore, they plunged
       into the water, to get to the boat with all the expedition they
       could, being pursued by between three and four hundred men. Our
       men were but nine in all, and only five of them had fusees with
       them; the rest had pistols and swords, indeed, but they were of
       small use to them.
       We took up seven of our men, and with difficulty enough too, three
       of them being very ill wounded; and that which was still worse was,
       that while we stood in the boat to take our men in, we were in as
       much danger as they were in on shore; for they poured their arrows
       in upon us so thick that we were glad to barricade the side of the
       boat up with the benches, and two or three loose boards which, to
       our great satisfaction, we had by mere accident in the boat. And
       yet, had it been daylight, they are, it seems, such exact marksmen,
       that if they could have seen but the least part of any of us, they
       would have been sure of us. We had, by the light of the moon, a
       little sight of them, as they stood pelting us from the shore with
       darts and arrows; and having got ready our firearms, we gave them a
       volley that we could hear, by the cries of some of them, had
       wounded several; however, they stood thus in battle array on the
       shore till break of day, which we supposed was that they might see
       the better to take their aim at us.
       In this condition we lay, and could not tell how to weigh our
       anchor, or set up our sail, because we must needs stand up in the
       boat, and they were as sure to hit us as we were to hit a bird in a
       tree with small shot. We made signals of distress to the ship, and
       though she rode a league off, yet my nephew, the captain, hearing
       our firing, and by glasses perceiving the posture we lay in, and
       that we fired towards the shore, pretty well understood us; and
       weighing anchor with all speed, he stood as near the shore as he
       durst with the ship, and then sent another boat with ten hands in
       her, to assist us. We called to them not to come too near, telling
       them what condition we were in; however, they stood in near to us,
       and one of the men taking the end of a tow-line in his hand, and
       keeping our boat between him and the enemy, so that they could not
       perfectly see him, swam on board us, and made fast the line to the
       boat: upon which we slipped out a little cable, and leaving our
       anchor behind, they towed us out of reach of the arrows; we all the
       while lying close behind the barricade we had made. As soon as we
       were got from between the ship and the shore, that we could lay her
       side to the shore, she ran along just by them, and poured in a
       broadside among them, loaded with pieces of iron and lead, small
       bullets, and such stuff, besides the great shot, which made a
       terrible havoc among them.
       When we were got on board and out of danger, we had time to examine
       into the occasion of this fray; and indeed our supercargo, who had
       been often in those parts, put me upon it; for he said he was sure
       the inhabitants would not have touched us after we had made a
       truce, if we had not done something to provoke them to it. At
       length it came out that an old woman, who had come to sell us some
       milk, had brought it within our poles, and a young woman with her,
       who also brought us some roots or herbs; and while the old woman
       (whether she was mother to the young woman or no they could not
       tell) was selling us the milk, one of our men offered some rudeness
       to the girl that was with her, at which the old woman made a great
       noise: however, the seaman would not quit his prize, but carried
       her out of the old woman's sight among the trees, it being almost
       dark; the old woman went away without her, and, as we may suppose,
       made an outcry among the people she came from; who, upon notice,
       raised that great army upon us in three or four hours, and it was
       great odds but we had all been destroyed.
       One of our men was killed with a lance thrown at him just at the
       beginning of the attack, as he sallied out of the tent they had
       made; the rest came off free, all but the fellow who was the
       occasion of all the mischief, who paid dear enough for his
       brutality, for we could not hear what became of him for a great
       while. We lay upon the shore two days after, though the wind
       presented, and made signals for him, and made our boat sail up
       shore and down shore several leagues, but in vain; so we were
       obliged to give him over; and if he alone had suffered for it, the
       loss had been less. I could not satisfy myself, however, without
       venturing on shore once more, to try if I could learn anything of
       him or them; it was the third night after the action that I had a
       great mind to learn, if I could by any means, what mischief we had
       done, and how the game stood on the Indians' side. I was careful
       to do it in the dark, lest we should be attacked again: but I
       ought indeed to have been sure that the men I went with had been
       under my command, before I engaged in a thing so hazardous and
       mischievous as I was brought into by it, without design.
       We took twenty as stout fellows with us as any in the ship, besides
       the supercargo and myself, and we landed two hours before midnight,
       at the same place where the Indians stood drawn up in the evening
       before. I landed here, because my design, as I have said, was
       chiefly to see if they had quitted the field, and if they had left
       any marks behind them of the mischief we had done them, and I
       thought if we could surprise one or two of them, perhaps we might
       get our man again, by way of exchange.
       We landed without any noise, and divided our men into two bodies,
       whereof the boatswain commanded one and I the other. We neither
       saw nor heard anybody stir when we landed: and we marched up, one
       body at a distance from another, to the place. At first we could
       see nothing, it being very dark; till by-and-by our boatswain, who
       led the first party, stumbled and fell over a dead body. This made
       them halt a while; for knowing by the circumstances that they were
       at the place where the Indians had stood, they waited for my coming
       up there. We concluded to halt till the moon began to rise, which
       we knew would be in less than an hour, when we could easily discern
       the havoc we had made among them. We told thirty-two bodies upon
       the ground, whereof two were not quite dead; some had an arm and
       some a leg shot off, and one his head; those that were wounded, we
       supposed, they had carried away. When we had made, as I thought, a
       full discovery of all we could come to the knowledge of, I resolved
       on going on board; but the boatswain and his party sent me word
       that they were resolved to make a visit to the Indian town, where
       these dogs, as they called them, dwelt, and asked me to go along
       with them; and if they could find them, as they still fancied they
       should, they did not doubt of getting a good booty; and it might be
       they might find Tom Jeffry there: that was the man's name we had
       lost.
       Had they sent to ask my leave to go, I knew well enough what answer
       to have given them; for I should have commanded them instantly on
       board, knowing it was not a hazard fit for us to run, who had a
       ship and ship-loading in our charge, and a voyage to make which
       depended very much upon the lives of the men; but as they sent me
       word they were resolved to go, and only asked me and my company to
       go along with them, I positively refused it, and rose up, for I was
       sitting on the ground, in order to go to the boat. One or two of
       the men began to importune me to go; and when I refused, began to
       grumble, and say they were not under my command, and they would go.
       "Come, Jack," says one of the men, "will you go with me? I'll go
       for one." Jack said he would--and then another--and, in a word,
       they all left me but one, whom I persuaded to stay, and a boy left
       in the boat. So the supercargo and I, with the third man, went
       back to the boat, where we told them we would stay for them, and
       take care to take in as many of them as should be left; for I told
       them it was a mad thing they were going about, and supposed most of
       them would have the fate of Tom Jeffry.
       They told me, like seamen, they would warrant it they would come
       off again, and they would take care, &c.; so away they went. I
       entreated them to consider the ship and the voyage, that their
       lives were not their own, and that they were entrusted with the
       voyage, in some measure; that if they miscarried, the ship might be
       lost for want of their help, and that they could not answer for it
       to God or man. But I might as well have talked to the mainmast of
       the ship: they were mad upon their journey; only they gave me good
       words, and begged I would not be angry; that they did not doubt but
       they would be back again in about an hour at furthest; for the
       Indian town, they said, was not above half-a mile off, though they
       found it above two miles before they got to it.
       Well, they all went away, and though the attempt was desperate, and
       such as none but madmen would have gone about, yet, to give them
       their due, they went about it as warily as boldly; they were
       gallantly armed, for they had every man a fusee or musket, a
       bayonet, and a pistol; some of them had broad cutlasses, some of
       them had hangers, and the boatswain and two more had poleaxes;
       besides all which they had among them thirteen hand grenadoes.
       Bolder fellows, and better provided, never went about any wicked
       work in the world. When they went out their chief design was
       plunder, and they were in mighty hopes of finding gold there; but a
       circumstance which none of them were aware of set them on fire with
       revenge, and made devils of them all.
       When they came to the few Indian houses which they thought had been
       the town, which was not above half a mile off, they were under
       great disappointment, for there were not above twelve or thirteen
       houses, and where the town was, or how big, they knew not. They
       consulted, therefore, what to do, and were some time before they
       could resolve; for if they fell upon these, they must cut all their
       throats; and it was ten to one but some of them might escape, it
       being in the night, though the moon was up; and if one escaped, he
       would run and raise all the town, so they should have a whole army
       upon them; on the other hand, if they went away and left those
       untouched, for the people were all asleep, they could not tell
       which way to look for the town; however, the last was the best
       advice, so they resolved to leave them, and look for the town as
       well as they could. They went on a little way, and found a cow
       tied to a tree; this, they presently concluded, would be a good
       guide to them; for, they said, the cow certainly belonged to the
       town before them, or the town behind them, and if they untied her,
       they should see which way she went: if she went back, they had
       nothing to say to her; but if she went forward, they would follow
       her. So they cut the cord, which was made of twisted flags, and
       the cow went on before them, directly to the town; which, as they
       reported, consisted of above two hundred houses or huts, and in
       some of these they found several families living together.
       Here they found all in silence, as profoundly secure as sleep could
       make them: and first, they called another council, to consider
       what they had to do; and presently resolved to divide themselves
       into three bodies, and so set three houses on fire in three parts
       of the town; and as the men came out, to seize them and bind them
       (if any resisted, they need not be asked what to do then), and so
       to search the rest of the houses for plunder: but they resolved to
       march silently first through the town, and see what dimensions it
       was of, and if they might venture upon it or no.
       They did so, and desperately resolved that they would venture upon
       them: but while they were animating one another to the work, three
       of them, who were a little before the rest, called out aloud to
       them, and told them that they had found--Tom Jeffry: they all ran
       up to the place, where they found the poor fellow hanging up naked
       by one arm, and his throat cut. There was an Indian house just by
       the tree, where they found sixteen or seventeen of the principal
       Indians, who had been concerned in the fray with us before, and two
       or three of them wounded with our shot; and our men found they were
       awake, and talking one to another in that house, but knew not their
       number.
       The sight of their poor mangled comrade so enraged them, as before,
       that they swore to one another that they would be revenged, and
       that not an Indian that came into their hands should have any
       quarter; and to work they went immediately, and yet not so madly as
       might be expected from the rage and fury they were in. Their first
       care was to get something that would soon take fire, but, after a
       little search, they found that would be to no purpose; for most of
       the houses were low, and thatched with flags and rushes, of which
       the country is full; so they presently made some wildfire, as we
       call it, by wetting a little powder in the palm of their hands, and
       in a quarter of an hour they set the town on fire in four or five
       places, and particularly that house where the Indians were not gone
       to bed.
       As soon as the fire begun to blaze, the poor frightened creatures
       began to rush out to save their lives, but met with their fate in
       the attempt; and especially at the door, where they drove them
       back, the boatswain himself killing one or two with his poleaxe.
       The house being large, and many in it, he did not care to go in,
       but called for a hand grenado, and threw it among them, which at
       first frightened them, but, when it burst, made such havoc among
       them that they cried out in a hideous manner. In short, most of
       the Indians who were in the open part of the house were killed or
       hurt with the grenado, except two or three more who pressed to the
       door, which the boatswain and two more kept, with their bayonets on
       the muzzles of their pieces, and despatched all that came in their
       way; but there was another apartment in the house, where the prince
       or king, or whatever he was, and several others were; and these
       were kept in till the house, which was by this time all in a light
       flame, fell in upon them, and they were smothered together.
       All this while they fired not a gun, because they would not waken
       the people faster than they could master them; but the fire began
       to waken them fast enough, and our fellows were glad to keep a
       little together in bodies; for the fire grew so raging, all the
       houses being made of light combustible stuff, that they could
       hardly bear the street between them. Their business was to follow
       the fire, for the surer execution: as fast as the fire either
       forced the people out of those houses which were burning, or
       frightened them out of others, our people were ready at their doors
       to knock them on the head, still calling and hallooing one to
       another to remember Tom Jeffry.
       While this was doing, I must confess I was very uneasy, and
       especially when I saw the flames of the town, which, it being
       night, seemed to be close by me. My nephew, the captain, who was
       roused by his men seeing such a fire, was very uneasy, not knowing
       what the matter was, or what danger I was in, especially hearing
       the guns too, for by this time they began to use their firearms; a
       thousand thoughts oppressed his mind concerning me and the
       supercargo, what would become of us; and at last, though he could
       ill spare any more men, yet not knowing what exigence we might be
       in, he took another boat, and with thirteen men and himself came
       ashore to me.
       He was surprised to see me and the supercargo in the boat with no
       more than two men; and though he was glad that we were well, yet he
       was in the same impatience with us to know what was doing; for the
       noise continued, and the flame increased; in short, it was next to
       an impossibility for any men in the world to restrain their
       curiosity to know what had happened, or their concern for the
       safety of the men: in a word, the captain told me he would go and
       help his men, let what would come. I argued with him, as I did
       before with the men, the safety of the ship, the danger of the
       voyage, the interests of the owners and merchants, &c., and told
       him I and the two men would go, and only see if we could at a
       distance learn what was likely to be the event, and come back and
       tell him. It was in vain to talk to my nephew, as it was to talk
       to the rest before; he would go, he said; and he only wished he had
       left but ten men in the ship, for he could not think of having his
       men lost for want of help: he had rather lose the ship, the
       voyage, and his life, and all; and away he went.
       I was no more able to stay behind now than I was to persuade them
       not to go; so the captain ordered two men to row back the pinnace,
       and fetch twelve men more, leaving the long-boat at an anchor; and
       that, when they came back, six men should keep the two boats, and
       six more come after us; so that he left only sixteen men in the
       ship: for the whole ship's company consisted of sixty-five men,
       whereof two were lost in the late quarrel which brought this
       mischief on.
       Being now on the march, we felt little of the ground we trod on;
       and being guided by the fire, we kept no path, but went directly to
       the place of the flame. If the noise of the guns was surprising to
       us before, the cries of the poor people were now quite of another
       nature, and filled us with horror. I must confess I was never at
       the sacking a city, or at the taking a town by storm. I had heard
       of Oliver Cromwell taking Drogheda, in Ireland, and killing man,
       woman, and child; and I had read of Count Tilly sacking the city of
       Magdeburg and cutting the throats of twenty-two thousand of all
       sexes; but I never had an idea of the thing itself before, nor is
       it possible to describe it, or the horror that was upon our minds
       at hearing it. However, we went on, and at length came to the
       town, though there was no entering the streets of it for the fire.
       The first object we met with was the ruins of a hut or house, or
       rather the ashes of it, for the house was consumed; and just before
       it, plainly now to be seen by the light of the fire, lay four men
       and three women, killed, and, as we thought, one or two more lay in
       the heap among the fire; in short, there were such instances of
       rage, altogether barbarous, and of a fury something beyond what was
       human, that we thought it impossible our men could be guilty of it;
       or, if they were the authors of it, we thought they ought to be
       every one of them put to the worst of deaths. But this was not
       all: we saw the fire increase forward, and the cry went on just as
       the fire went on; so that we were in the utmost confusion. We
       advanced a little way farther, and behold, to our astonishment,
       three naked women, and crying in a most dreadful manner, came
       flying as if they had wings, and after them sixteen or seventeen
       men, natives, in the same terror and consternation, with three of
       our English butchers in the rear, who, when they could not overtake
       them, fired in among them, and one that was killed by their shot
       fell down in our sight. When the rest saw us, believing us to be
       their enemies, and that we would murder them as well as those that
       pursued them, they set up a most dreadful shriek, especially the
       women; and two of them fell down, as if already dead, with the
       fright.
       My very soul shrunk within me, and my blood ran chill in my veins,
       when I saw this; and, I believe, had the three English sailors that
       pursued them come on, I had made our men kill them all; however, we
       took some means to let the poor flying creatures know that we would
       not hurt them; and immediately they came up to us, and kneeling
       down, with their hands lifted up, made piteous lamentation to us to
       save them, which we let them know we would: whereupon they crept
       all together in a huddle close behind us, as for protection. I
       left my men drawn up together, and, charging them to hurt nobody,
       but, if possible, to get at some of our people, and see what devil
       it was possessed them, and what they intended to do, and to command
       them off; assuring them that if they stayed till daylight they
       would have a hundred thousand men about their ears: I say I left
       them, and went among those flying people, taking only two of our
       men with me; and there was, indeed, a piteous spectacle among them.
       Some of them had their feet terribly burned with trampling and
       running through the fire; others their hands burned; one of the
       women had fallen down in the fire, and was very much burned before
       she could get out again; and two or three of the men had cuts in
       their backs and thighs, from our men pursuing; and another was shot
       through the body and died while I was there.
       I would fain have learned what the occasion of all this was; but I
       could not understand one word they said; though, by signs, I
       perceived some of them knew not what was the occasion themselves.
       I was so terrified in my thoughts at this outrageous attempt that I
       could not stay there, but went back to my own men, and resolved to
       go into the middle of the town, through the fire, or whatever might
       be in the way, and put an end to it, cost what it would;
       accordingly, as I came back to my men, I told them my resolution,
       and commanded them to follow me, when, at the very moment, came
       four of our men, with the boatswain at their head, roving over
       heaps of bodies they had killed, all covered with blood and dust,
       as if they wanted more people to massacre, when our men hallooed to
       them as loud as they could halloo; and with much ado one of them
       made them hear, so that they knew who we were, and came up to us.
       As soon as the boatswain saw us, he set up a halloo like a shout of
       triumph, for having, as he thought, more help come; and without
       waiting to hear me, "Captain," says he, "noble captain! I am glad
       you are come; we have not half done yet. Villainous hell-hound
       dogs! I'll kill as many of them as poor Tom has hairs upon his
       head: we have sworn to spare none of them; we'll root out the very
       nation of them from the earth;" and thus he ran on, out of breath,
       too, with action, and would not give us leave to speak a word. At
       last, raising my voice that I might silence him a little,
       "Barbarous dog!" said I, "what are you doing! I won't have one
       creature touched more, upon pain of death; I charge you, upon your
       life, to stop your hands, and stand still here, or you are a dead
       man this minute."--"Why, sir," says he, "do you know what you do,
       or what they have done? If you want a reason for what we have
       done, come hither;" and with that he showed me the poor fellow
       hanging, with his throat cut.
       I confess I was urged then myself, and at another time would have
       been forward enough; but I thought they had carried their rage too
       far, and remembered Jacob's words to his sons Simeon and Levi:
       "Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it
       was cruel." But I had now a new task upon my hands; for when the
       men I had carried with me saw the sight, as I had done, I had as
       much to do to restrain them as I should have had with the others;
       nay, my nephew himself fell in with them, and told me, in their
       hearing, that he was only concerned for fear of the men being
       overpowered; and as to the people, he thought not one of them ought
       to live; for they had all glutted themselves with the murder of the
       poor man, and that they ought to be used like murderers. Upon
       these words, away ran eight of my men, with the boatswain and his
       crew, to complete their bloody work; and I, seeing it quite out of
       my power to restrain them, came away pensive and sad; for I could
       not bear the sight, much less the horrible noise and cries of the
       poor wretches that fell into their hands.
       I got nobody to come back with me but the supercargo and two men,
       and with these walked back to the boat. It was a very great piece
       of folly in me, I confess, to venture back, as it were, alone; for
       as it began now to be almost day, and the alarm had run over the
       country, there stood about forty men armed with lances and boughs
       at the little place where the twelve or thirteen houses stood,
       mentioned before: but by accident I missed the place, and came
       directly to the seaside, and by the time I got to the seaside it
       was broad day: immediately I took the pinnace and went on board,
       and sent her back to assist the men in what might happen. I
       observed, about the time that I came to the boat-side, that the
       fire was pretty well out, and the noise abated; but in about half-
       an-hour after I got on board, I heard a volley of our men's
       firearms, and saw a great smoke. This, as I understood afterwards,
       was our men falling upon the men, who, as I said, stood at the few
       houses on the way, of whom they killed sixteen or seventeen, and
       set all the houses on fire, but did not meddle with the women or
       children.
       By the time the men got to the shore again with the pinnace our men
       began to appear; they came dropping in, not in two bodies as they
       went, but straggling here and there in such a manner, that a small
       force of resolute men might have cut them all off. But the dread
       of them was upon the whole country; and the men were surprised, and
       so frightened, that I believe a hundred of them would have fled at
       the sight of but five of our men. Nor in all this terrible action
       was there a man that made any considerable defence: they were so
       surprised between the terror of the fire and the sudden attack of
       our men in the dark, that they knew not which way to turn
       themselves; for if they fled one way they were met by one party, if
       back again by another, so that they were everywhere knocked down;
       nor did any of our men receive the least hurt, except one that
       sprained his foot, and another that had one of his hands burned. _