a suspicion that the negroes had betrayed them to
the Spaniards, or, maybe, slain and eaten them.
So these fellows being upbraided, with that altogether
left us, telling us boldly, that if they had eaten
our fellows, we owed them a debt instead of the Spanish
prisoners; and we, in great terror and hunger, went
forward and over the mountains till we came to a little
river which ran northward, which seemed to lead into
the Northern Sea; and there Mr. O.—who,
sirs, I will say, after his first rage was over, behaved
himself all through like a valiant and skilful commander—bade
us cut down trees and make canoes, to go down to the
sea; which we began to do, with great labor and little
profit, hewing down trees with our swords, and burning
them out with fire, which, after much labor, we kindled;
but as we were a-burning out of the first tree, and
cutting down of another, a great party of negroes
came upon us, and with much friendly show bade us flee
for our lives, for the Spaniards were upon us in great
force. And so we were up and away again, hardly
able to drag our legs after us for hunger and weariness,
and the broiling heat. And some were taken (God
help them!) and some fled with the negroes, of whom
what became God alone knoweth; but eight or ten held
on with the captain, among whom was I, and fled downward
toward the sea for one day; but afterwards finding,
by the noise in the woods, that the Spaniards were
on the track of us, we turned up again toward the
inland, and coming to a cliff, climbed up over it,
drawing up the lady and the little maid with cords
of liana (which hang from those trees as honeysuckle
does here, but exceeding stout and long, even to fifty
fathoms); and so breaking the track, hoped to be out
of the way of the enemy.
“By which, nevertheless, we only increased our
misery. For two fell from that cliff, as men
asleep for very weariness, and miserably broke their
bones; and others, whether by the great toil, or sunstrokes,
or eating of strange berries, fell sick of fluxes
and fevers; where was no drop of water, but rock of
pumice stone as bare as the back of my hand, and full,
moreover, of great cracks, black and without bottom,
over which we had not strength to lift the sick, but
were fain to leave them there aloft, in the sunshine,
like Dives in his torments, crying aloud for a drop
of water to cool their tongues; and every man a great
stinking vulture or two sitting by him, like an ugly
black fiend out of the pit, waiting till the poor
soul should depart out of the corpse: but nothing
could avail, and for the dear life we must down again
and into the woods, or be burned up alive upon those
rocks.