imposition upon any freeman, I feared I should miss
that opportunity of going to Montserrat, and then I
could not get to England that year. The vessel
was just going off, and no time could be lost; I immediately
therefore set about, with a heavy heart, to try who
I could get to befriend me in complying with the demands
of the captain. Luckily I found, in a few minutes,
some gentlemen of Montserrat whom I knew; and, having
told them my situation, I requested their friendly
assistance in helping me off the island. Some
of them, on this, went with me to the captain, and
satisfied him of my freedom; and, to my very great
joy, he desired me to go on board. We then set
sail, and the next day, the 23d, I arrived at the
wished-for place, after an absence of six months, in
which I had more than once experienced the delivering
hand of Providence, when all human means of escaping
destruction seemed hopeless. I saw my friends
with a gladness of heart which was increased by my
absence and the dangers I had escaped, and I was received
with great friendship by them all, but particularly
by Mr. King, to whom I related the fate of his sloop,
the Nancy, and the causes of her being wrecked.
I now learned with extreme sorrow, that his house
was washed away during my absence, by the bursting
of a pond at the top of a mountain that was opposite
the town of Plymouth. It swept great part of the
town away, and Mr. King lost a great deal of property
from the inundation, and nearly his life. When
I told him I intended to go to London that season,
and that I had come to visit him before my departure,
the good man expressed a great deal of affection for
me, and sorrow that I should leave him, and warmly
advised me to stay there; insisting, as I was much
respected by all the gentlemen in the place, that I
might do very well, and in a short time have land
and slaves of my own. I thanked him for this
instance of his friendship; but, as I wished very
much to be in London, I declined remaining any longer
there, and begged he would excuse me. I then
requested he would be kind enough to give me a certificate
of my behaviour while in his service, which he very
readily complied with, and gave me the following:
Montserrat,
January 26, 1767.
’The bearer hereof, Gustavus
Vassa, was my slave for upwards
of three years, during which he has always behaved
himself
well, and discharged his duty with honesty and
assiduity.
Robert
King.
‘To all whom this may concern.’
Having obtained this, I parted from my kind master,
after many sincere professions of gratitude and regard,
and prepared for my departure for London. I immediately
agreed to go with one Capt. John Hamer, for seven
guineas, the passage to London, on board a ship called
the Andromache; and on the 24th and 25th I had free
dances, as they are called, with some of my countrymen,
previous to my setting off; after which I took leave
of all my friends, and on the 26th I embarked for