The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 480 pages of information about The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders.

The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 480 pages of information about The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders.

Indeed, the captain had assurance enough of our resolutions to go, for that having made such provision to settle there, it did not seem rational that we would choose to remain here at the expense and peril of life, for such it must have been if we had been taken again.  In a word, we went all on shore with the captain, and supped together in Gravesend, where we were very merry, stayed all night, lay at the house where we supped, and came all very honestly on board again with him in the morning.  Here we bought ten dozen bottles of good beer, some wine, some fowls, and such things as we thought might be acceptable on board.

My governess was with us all this while, and went with us round into the Downs, as did also the captain’s wife, with whom she went back.  I was never so sorrowful at parting with my own mother as I was at parting with her, and I never saw her more.  We had a fair easterly wind sprung up the third day after we came to the Downs, and we sailed from thence the 10th of April.  Nor did we touch any more at any place, till, being driven on the coast of Ireland by a very hard gale of wind, the ship came to an anchor in a little bay, near the mouth of a river, whose name I remember not, but they said the river came down from Limerick, and that it was the largest river in Ireland.

Here, being detained by bad weather for some time, the captain, who continued the same kind, good-humoured man as at first, took us two on shore with him again.  He did it now in kindness to my husband indeed, who bore the sea very ill, and was very sick, especially when it blew so hard.  Here we bought in again a store of fresh provisions, especially beef, pork, mutton, and fowls, and the captain stayed to pickle up five or six barrels of beef to lengthen out the ship’s store.  We were here not above five days, when the weather turning mild, and a fair wind, we set sail again, and in two-and-forty days came safe to the coast of Virginia.

When we drew near to the shore, the captain called me to him, and told me that he found by my discourse I had some relations in the place, and that I had been there before, and so he supposed I understood the custom in their disposing the convict prisoners when they arrived.  I told him I did not, and that as to what relations I had in the place, he might be sure I would make myself known to none of them while I was in the circumstances of a prisoner, and that as to the rest, we left ourselves entirely to him to assist us, as he was pleased to promise us he would do.  He told me I must get somebody in the place to come and buy us as servants, and who must answer for us to the governor of the country, if he demanded us.  I told him we should do as he should direct; so he brought a planter to treat with him, as it were, for the purchase of these two servants, my husband and me, and there we were formally sold to him, and went ashore with him.  The captain went with us, and carried us to a certain house, whether it was to be called a tavern or not I know not, but we had a bowl of punch there made of rum, etc., and were very merry.  After some time the planter gave us a certificate of discharge, and an acknowledgment of having served him faithfully, and we were free from him the next morning, to go wither we would.

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The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.