on receiving 1500 dollars, reserving right to take
any thing out of her that might be useful to us; and
at ten next night he brought me the agreed sum, being
the weight of 1300 dollars in ingots of virgin silver,
called
pinnas by the Spaniards, and the rest
in coined dollars. He also made great enquiry
for English commodities, for which he offered high
prices, complaining that the French only supplied them
with paltry goods and mere trifles, for which they
carried off vast sums. He added, that he supposed
the English merchants were all asleep, or too rich,
as they did not come near them: And, although
their ports were not so open as in other parts of
the world, they yet know how to manage matters tolerably
well; and that their governors, being generally Europeans,
who seldom remained above three years in the country,
used any means to improve their time, and could easily
be gained so as to act very obligingly. He said
much more as to the blindness of the English, in suffering
the French pedlars to carry on, uninterruptedly, the
most considerable branch of traffic in the world.
Before leaving me, he desired me to carry his ship
two or three leagues out to sea, and then to turn
her adrift, on purpose to deceive the governor and
the king’s officers; and, if I would meet him
at
Hilo (
Ilo,) about twenty-five leagues
to the north-westwards, he would purchase from me any
coarse goods I had to dispose of, which might be done
there with all imaginable secrecy. At this time
also, the master of the small bark came off in a
balsa.
This is an odd sort of an embarkation, consisting of
two large seal skins, separately blown up, like bladders,
and made fast to pieces of wood. On this he brought
off two jars of brandy and forty dollars; which, considering
his mean appearance, was as much as I could expect.
One part of his cargo was valuable, being a considerable
quantity of excellent dried fish.
The port of Arica, formerly so famous for the
great quantities of silver shipped from thence, is
now much diminished in its riches, and appears mostly
a heap of ruins, except the church of St Mark, and
two or three more, which still look tolerably well.
What helps to give it a very desolate appearance is,
that the houses near the sea are only covered with
mats. Being situated on the sea-shore, in an open
roadstead, it has no fortifications of any kind to
defend or command the anchorage, the Spaniards thinking
it sufficiently secured by the heavy surf, and the
rocky bottom near the shore, which threaten inevitable
destruction to any European boats, or other embarkation,
except what is expressly contrived for the purpose,
being the balsas already mentioned. To
obstruct the landing of an enemy, the Spaniards had
formerly a fort and entrenchments, flanking the storecreeks;
but being built of unburnt bricks, it is now fallen
to ruins. In 1680, when Dampier was here, being
repulsed before the town, the English landed at the