of Amoy, as well as the Dutch and British, carry them
manufactured goods, opium and arms, receiving, in
return, black pepper, bees’ wax, balato, edible
nests, tortoise-shell, mother-of-pearl, gold dust,
pearls,
etc., and from Manila also a vessel usually
goes once a year with goods; but all act with the
greatest precaution in this dangerous traffic, guarding,
as much as possible, against the insidious acts of
that perfidious government. The great number of
renegades, of all casts, who have successively naturalized
themselves there; the abundance of arms, and the prevailing
opulence, have, in every respect, contributed to render
this Island a formidable and powerful state.
The capital is surrounded with forts and thick walls,
and the famous heights, standing near it, in case
of emergency, afford a secure asylum where the women
can take refuge and the treasures of the sultan and
public be deposited, whilst in the plains below the
contest may be maintained by more than 50,000 combatants,
already very dexterous in the use of the musket and
of a bold and courageous character. The navy
of these Islanders is also very respectable, for,
besides a great number of smaller prows and war-boats,
they have some of a large size, capable of carrying
heavy artillery on their decks, mounted on corresponding
carriages, and not suspended in slings as is the custom
of the people of Mindanao. In a word, Jolo is
an Island governed by a system of administration extremely
vigorous and decisive; dread and superstition sustain
the throne of the tyrant, and the fame of his greatness
frequently brings to his feet the ulemas, or missionaries
of the Koran, even as far as from the furthest margin
of the Red Sea. The prince and people, unanimous
in the implacable odium with which they view all Christians,
cannot be divided or kept on terms of peace; and if
it is really wished to free these seas from the evils
and great dangers with which they are at all times
threatened, it is necessary at once to strike at the
root, by landing and attacking the Jolonese in their
strongholds, and break the charm by which they are
held together.
This, at least, is the constant and unshaken opinion
of all experienced persons and those versed in Philippine
affairs; and if, by the substantial reasons and existing
circumstances, I convince myself sufficiently to openly
recommend war to be undertaken against the Moros and
pushed with the utmost vigor, and more particularly
commencing the work by a formal invasion of Jolo; still,
as I feel myself incompetent to trace a precise plan,
or to discuss the minute details more immediately
connected with the object, I feel it necessary to
confine myself to the pointing out, in general terms,
of the means I judge most conducive to the happy issue
of so arduous but important an enterprise, leaving
the rest to more able and experienced hands.