A Voyage Round the World, Volume I eBook

James Holman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about A Voyage Round the World, Volume I.

A Voyage Round the World, Volume I eBook

James Holman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about A Voyage Round the World, Volume I.
the men were driven without having been able to discharge their guns.  Had the enemy possessed the skill, or the self-denial to have kept their advantage, the colonists must have been utterly destroyed; but such was their avidity for plunder, that, abandoning every thing for the pillage of four houses in the outskirt of the settlement, they so far impeded and confused the main body of their army, that the colonists had time to recover from their panic, and, by keeping up a rapid fire with the brass field-piece, they brought the whole body of the enemy to a stand.  A detachment of musketeers, with E. Johnson at their head, was, meanwhile, despatched round the enemy’s flank, which considerably increased their disorder, and, in about twenty minutes, the main front of the assailants began to recoil, but from the numerous obstacles presented to their rear, the entire absence of discipline, and the difficulty of giving a reversed order, without method, to so large a body, and added to all, the delay arising from their practice of carrying off their dead, their retreat was, for a time, rendered impossible; and the violence used by those in front, to hasten this measure, only increased the difficulties of its accomplishment.  The colonists, perceiving their advantage, quickly regained possession of the western post, and brought their long nine-pounder to rake the whole line of the enemy, who, pressed together into so dense a body, that a child might have walked on their heads from one end to the other, remained thus defenceless, and exposed to the destructive fire that was poured upon them by a cannon of great power, at no more than sixty yards distance; every shot from this tremendous engine did immense execution, and savage yells filled the forest with horrible echoes.  These gradually died away, as the terrified host fell back.  At eight o’clock the well-known signal for their retreat was sounded, and immediately after, small parties were seen running off in different directions.  One large canoe, employed in carrying a party across the mouth of the Montserado, venturing within the range of the long gun, was struck by the shot, and several men killed.

On the part of the settlers it was soon ascertained that considerable injury had been sustained.  One woman who had imprudently, and contrary to express orders, passed the night in a house outside the fortifications, and which happened to be at the point first attacked, received thirteen wounds, and had been placed aside as dead, (after incredible suffering she, however, recovered.) Another, flying from the house with two infant children, received a wound in the head, and was robbed of both her babes; but she herself providentially escaped.  A young married woman, with the mother of five small children, finding their house surrounded, barricaded the door, in the vain hope of resistance.  It was forced, when each of the women seizing an axe, held the barbarians in check several minutes longer; they were, however, speedily overpowered, and the youngest stabbed to the heart:  the mother instinctively springing through the window to preserve her suckling babe, providentially escaped, but the babe recoiling through fright, was left behind and fell into the enemy’s hands.

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A Voyage Round the World, Volume I from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.