French trade. As there was no other way to accomplish
this but by sending a squadron of men-of-war into the
South Sea, and as few of the Spaniards were acquainted
with the navigation of Cape Horn, or could bear the
extreme rigour of the climate, the court of Spain
was obliged to use foreigners on this expedition, and
the four ships sent oat were both manned and commanded
by Frenchmen. The squadron consisted of the
Gloucester,
of 50 guns, and 400 men, the
Ruby, of 50 guns,
and 330 men, both of these formerly English ships
of war, the
Leon Franco, of 60 guns, and 450
men, and a frigate of 40 guns, and 200 men. Monsieur
Martinet, a French officer, was commodore of
this squadron, and commanded the
Pembroke,[1]
and Monsieur
La Jonquiere the Ruby. The
French conducted the navigation round the cape very
well, though in the middle of winter; but the last
ship of the four, which was manned with Spaniards,
could not weather Cape Horn, and was forced back to
the Rio Plata, where she was cast away. As the
Spaniards have little or no trade into any of the cold
climates, and are unused to hard work, it is not to
be wondered that they failed on this occasion, especially
considering the improper season of the year.
The Biscaneers, indeed, are robust enough fellows;
and had the Leon Franco been manned with them, she
had certainly doubled the cape along with the other
three ships; but the Spaniards in general, since acquiring
their possessions in America, have become so delicate
and indolent, that it would be difficult to find an
entire ship’s company capable to perform that
navigation.
[Footnote 1: No such name occurs, in enumerating
the squadron immediately before—E.]
The vast advantage of the trade of Chili by way of
Cape Horn, is so obvious, that his catholic majesty
is obliged by treaty to shut out all the European
nations from it, as well as the English, although
his own subjects make nothing of it, as it very rarely
happens that a Spanish ship ventures to go round Cape
Horn. Owing to this, all European goods sell
enormously dear in Chili and Peru; insomuch, that
I have been told at Lima, that they are often at 400
per cent. profit, and it may be fairly asserted, that
the goods carried from France by Cape Horn are in
themselves 50 per cent. better than those sent in
the Cadiz flota to Carthagena and Vera Cruz,
because the former are delivered in six months, fresh
and undamaged, while the latter are generally eighteen
months before they reach Chili. In the course
of this trade, the French sold their goods, furnished
themselves with provisions, and got home again, all
within twelve or fourteen months.