frequency of these summons, as well as the solicitude with which
they were made,
sufficiently testified the state of the captain's
mind; he endeavored to
conceal it, and would have given no small
alarm to a man who had either not
learned what it is to die, or
known what it is to be
miserable. And my dear wife and child
must
pardon me, if what I did not
conceive to be any great evil
to myself I was not much terrified with the thoughts of happening
to them; in truth, I have often thought they are both too good
and too gentle to be trusted to the power of any man I know, to
whom they could possibly be so trusted.
Can I say then I had no fear? indeed I cannot. Reader, I was
afraid for thee, lest thou shouldst have been deprived of that
pleasure thou art now enjoying; and that I should not live to
draw out on paper that military
character which thou didst peruse
in the
journal of yesterday.
From all these fears we were
relieved, at six in the morning, by
the
arrival of Mr. Morrison, who acquainted us that he was sure
he
beheld land very near; for he could not see half a mile, by
reason of the haziness of the weather. This land he said was, he
believed, the Berry-head, which forms one side of Torbay: the
captain declared that it was impossible, and swore, on condition
he was right, he would give him his mother for a maid. A forfeit
which became afterwards
strictly due and payable; for the
captain, whipping on his night-gown, ran up without his breeches,
and within half an hour returning into the cabin, wished me joy
of our lying safe at
anchor in the bay.
Sunday, July 26.--Things now began to put on an
aspect very
different from what they had
lately worn; the news that the ship
had almost lost its mizzen, and that we had procured very fine
clouted cream and fresh bread and butter from the shore, restored
health and spirits to our women, and we all sat down to a very
cheerful breakfast. But, however pleasant our stay promised to
be here, we were all
desirous it should be short: I resolved
immediately to
despatch my man into the country to purchase a
present of cider, for my friends of that which is called Southam,
as well as to take with me a hogshead of it to Lisbon; for it is,
in my opinion, much more
delicious than that which is the growth
of Herefordshire. I purchased three hogsheads for five pounds
ten shillings, all which I should have
scarce thought worth
mentioning, had I not believed it might be of equal service to
the honest farmer who sold it me, and who is by the neighboring
gentlemen reputed to deal in the very best; and to the reader,
who, from
ignorance of the means of providing better for himself,
swallows at a dearer rate the juice of Middlesex
turnip, instead
of that Vinum Pomonae which Mr. Giles Leverance of Cheeshurst,
near Dartmouth in Devon, will, at the price of forty shillings
per hogshead, send in double casks to any part of the world. Had
the wind been very sudden in shifting, I had lost my cider by an
attempt of a
boatman to exact, according to custom. He required
five shillings for
conveying my man a mile and a half to the
shore, and four more if he stayed to bring him back. This I
thought to be such insufferable impudence that I ordered him to
be immediately chased from the ship, without any answer. Indeed,
there are few inconveniences that I would not rather encounter
than
encourage the
insolent demands of these wretches, at the
expense of my own
indignation, of which I own they are not the
only objects, but rather those who purchase a paltry convenience
by encouraging them. But of this I have already
spoken very
largely. I shall conclude,
therefore, with the leave which this
fellow took of our ship;
saying he should know it again, and
would not put off from the shore to
relieve it in any distress
whatever. It will,
doubtless, surprise many of my readers to
hear that, when we lay at
anchor within a mile or two of a town
several days together, and even in the most
temperate weather, we
should frequently want fresh provisions and herbage, and other
emoluments of the shore, as much as if we had been a hundred
leagues from land. And this too while numbers of boats were in
our sight, whose owners get their
livelihood by rowing people up
and down, and could be at any time summoned by a signal to our
assistance, and while the captain had a little boat of his own,
with men always ready to row it at his command.
This, however, hath been
partly accounted for already by the
imposing
disposition of the people, who asked so much more than
the proper price of their labor. And as to the
usefulness of the
captain's boat, it requires to be a little expatiated upon, as it
will tend to lay open some of the grievances which demand the
utmost regard of our
legislature, as they
affect the most
valuable part of the king's subjects--those by whom the
commerceof the nation is carried into
execution. Our captain then, who
was a very good and
experiencedseaman, having been above thirty
years the master of a
vessel, part of which he had served, so he
phrased it, as
commander of a privateer, and had discharged
himself with great courage and conduct, and with as great
success, discovered the
utmost aversion to the sending his boat
ashore
whenever we lay wind-bound in any of our harbors. This
aversion did not arise from any fear of wearing out his boat by
using it, but was, in truth, the result of experience, that it
was easier to send his men on shore than to recall them. They
acknowledged him to be their master while they remained on
shipboard, but did not allow his power to extend to the shores,
where they had no sooner set their foot than every man became sui
juris, and thought himself at full liberty to return when he
pleased. Now it is not any delight that these fellows have in
the fresh air or verdant fields on the land. Every one of them
would prefer his ship and his
hammock to all the sweets of Arabia
the Happy; but, unluckily for them, there are in every
seaport in
England certain houses whose chief
livelihood depends on
providing
entertainment for the gentlemen of the
jacket. For
this purpose they are always well furnished with those cordial
liquors which do immediately
inspire the heart with gladness,
banishing all careful thoughts, and indeed all others, from the
mind, and
opening the mouth with songs of
cheerfulness and
thanksgiving for the many wonderful blessings with which a
seafaring life overflows.
For my own part, however whimsical it may appear, I
confess I
have thought the strange story of Circe in the Odyssey no other
than an
ingenious allegory, in which Homer intended to
convey to
his countrymen the same kind of
instruction which we intend to
communicate to our own in this digression. As teaching the art
of war to the Greeks was the plain design of the Iliad, so was
teaching them the art of
navigation the no less manifest
intention of the Odyssey. For the
improvement of this, their
situation was most excellently adapted; and
accordingly we find
Thucydides, in the
beginning of his history, considers the Greeks
as a set of pirates or privateers, plundering each other by sea.
This being probably the first
institution of
commerce before the
Ars Cauponaria was invented, and merchants, instead of robbing,
began to cheat and outwit each other, and by degrees changed the
Metabletic, the only kind of
traffic allowed by Aristotle in his
Politics, into the Chrematistic.
By this allegory then I suppose Ulysses to have been the captain
of a merchant-ship, and Circe some good ale-wife, who made his
crew drunk with the spirituous liquors of those days. With this
the
transformation into swine, as well as all other incidents of
the fable, will
notably agree; and thus a key will be found out
for unlocking the whole
mystery, and
forging at least some meaning
to a story which, at present, appears very strange and absurd.
Hence,
moreover, will appear the very near
resemblance between
the sea-faring men of all ages and nations; and here perhaps may
be established the truth and justice of that
observation, which
will occur oftener than once in this
voyage, that all human flesh
is not the same flesh, but that there is one kind of flesh of
landmen, and another of seamen.
Philosophers, divines, and others, who have treated the
gratification of human
appetites with
contempt, have, among other