A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 10 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 762 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 10.

A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 10 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 762 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 10.

Having returned to the American coast, they fell in with a ship on the 21st of January, which they took after a long chase.  This proved to be the Prince Eugene, on board of which was the Marquis of Villa Roche and all his family, bound from Panama, where he had been president, to Lima.  This was the very ship in which Captain Clipperton had been circumvented and taken in his last voyage in these seas,[237] when he had been very indifferently used by the marquis, who was now at his mercy, and whom he used, notwithstanding, with all civility.  On the 8th March, a priest who was on board the prize, and the boatswain of that ship, desired leave to go on shore at the island of Velas,[238] which was granted on condition that they would induce the inhabitants to bring some bullocks to the shore, to exchange them for such goods as they might think proper to accept in payment.  This they promised, and on the 16th they returned with four bullocks, together with some fowls and fruit as a present to the marquis, but said their alcalde, or governor, would on no account permit them to trade with the English.  They also learnt that Captain Mitchell had been ashore at this place, and had shot some of their cattle, but on 200 men appearing under arms, had been forced to retire.  This story seemed the more probable, as these people had some linen and other articles of clothing belonging to Captain Mitchell’s men.  Next day some letters from the marquis were intercepted, which were by no means conformable to the strict honour to which the Spanish nobility usually pretend, as they were meant to stir up the inhabitants of Velas to surprise the men belonging to Captain Clipperton, and to seize his boat when it went ashore for water.  Upon this Captain Clipperton confined the marquis for some days; yet allowed him and his lady to go ashore on the 20th, leaving their only child as an hostage; and soon after the prize was restored to her captain.

[Footnote 237:  The circumstance here alluded to no where appears in the narratives of any of the former circumnavigations.—­E.]

[Footnote 238:  Perhaps Velas point is here meant, in lat. 10 deg. 9’ N. on the coast of that province of Mexico called Corta Rica.—­E.]

On the 14th April, the marquis and his lady came on board, accompanied by the alcalde, and an agreement being made for their ransom, the lady and child were sent ashore, and the marquis remained as sole hostage.  In the whole of this transaction, Clipperton seems to have been outwitted by the marquis, who lately broke his word, and by this the crew of the Success were provoked to murmur against their captain for trusting him.  On the 20th of April, the Success anchored in the Gulf of Amapala, or Fouseca, in lat. 13 deg.  N. and not being able to water there, repaired to the Island of Tigers,[239] where they procured water with great ease.  They went to the island of Gorgona, in lat. 2 deg. 53’ N. for the same purpose, on the 4th June.  On the 24th of that month they took a prize which had once been in their hands before, now laden with timber and cocoa-nuts; and on the 11th August, anchored with their prize at the island of Lobor de la Mar, in lat. 6 deg. 95’ S. where they set up tents on shore, scrubbed and cleaned their ship’s bottom, and took whatever seemed of any value out of the prize.

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A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 10 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.