PREFACE

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The Publishing of this Voyage, is from a Supposition that it contains something useful to those following in the same Track, and that it will be no unprofitable Amusement to others who do not. I shall therefore wave all Apology, and instead, proceed to a Reflection or two, on the Life and Element we occupy.

Andfirst, The Man whose Means of Subsistence irreversibly depends on the Sea, is unhappy because he forsakes his proper Element, his Wife, Children, Country, and Friends, all that can be called pleasant(and of Necessity, not Choice) to tempt unknown Dangers, on that deceitful, trackless Path; Lee Shores, Tempests, Wants of some kind or other, bad Winds, or the rougher Passions of our selves, are continually molesting; and if common Danger under one adopted Parent (Neptune) does not always unite us, yet we are still cooped like Fowls, to the same Diet and Associates.

“Till chang’d at length and to the Place conform’dIn Temper and in Nature we receiveFamiliar the fierce Heat.”Milton. B. II.

“Till chang’d at length and to the Place conform’dIn Temper and in Nature we receiveFamiliar the fierce Heat.”Milton. B. II.

“Till chang’d at length and to the Place conform’d

In Temper and in Nature we receive

Familiar the fierce Heat.”

Milton. B. II.

Tophet[1]with Stink ofSuffolkVaporousObscures the Glim; that visive and olfactive NervesIn us feel dreadful Change.

Tophet[1]with Stink ofSuffolkVaporousObscures the Glim; that visive and olfactive NervesIn us feel dreadful Change.

Tophet[1]with Stink ofSuffolkVaporous

Obscures the Glim; that visive and olfactive Nerves

In us feel dreadful Change.

And to compleat our ill Luck, while we are thus contending with sinister Fate, the Rogues at home perhaps are stealing away the Hearts of our Mistresses and Wives. Are not these a hapless Race thus doomed!

A Sea-Life absolutely considered, had so much of Hardship and Danger, that in KingJohn’s Time a national Synod ordained,no married Persons should go beyond Sea without publishing their mutual Consent; which, I apprehend, proceeded from this Foundation:That it should not be in the power of one to thrust himself on Difficulties and Hazard, that would make the other equally unhappy.TheSaxonsbefore, made a Law, that if a Merchant crossed the wide Sea three times, he shouldbe honoured with the Title ofThane, (Rapin, p. 15.) and the Monarchs of the East shew their Approbation, by still leaving the rough Dominion of it to Christians. There are Circumstances notwithstanding, which may abate the Infelicity, and give real Pleasure: Such chiefly in the Navy, are a Defence of one’s Country, a Livelihood, being better manned and provided against Dangers than Trading Ships; Good-natur’d Officers, a mutual good Treatment, seeing the Wonders of the Deep, and at last, maimed or decrepid, a Retreat to Superannuation, or that noble Foundation ofGreenwich-Hospital; to which of late Years must be added, the Satisfaction Officers receive from that generous Contribution for supporting their Widows, and consequently the Children they may leave behind them.

This charitable Project is governed by the following Articles, established by His present Majesty.

I.

That Widows of Commission and Warrant Officers of the Royal Navy, shall be reputed proper Objects of the Charity, whose Annual Incomes arising from their Real and Personal Estates, or otherwise, do not amount to the following Sums, viz.

And that where any such Widow is possessed of, or interested in any Sum of Money, the Annual Income and Produce thereof, shall be computed and deemed, as annually yielding Three Poundsper Centum,and no more.

II.

That to avoid Partiality and Favour in the Distribution of the Charity, Widows of Officers of the same Rank shall have an equal Allowance, the Proportion of which shall be fixed Annually by the Court of Assistants, according to their Discretion; and that in order thereunto, the said Court may distribute Annually such Part of the Monies, arising by the said Charity, among the Widows, as they think proper; and to lay out such other Part thereof inSouth-SeaAnnuities, or other Government Securities, as to them shall seem meet,for raising a Capital Stock for the general Benefit of the Charity, where the Application is not particularly directed by the Donors.

III.

That in the Distribution of Allowances to poor Widows, the same be proportionate to one another, with respect to the Sum each is to receive, according to the following Division, viz.

The Widow of a Captain or Commander shall receive a Sum One Third more than the Widow of a Lieutenant or Master.

The Widow of a Lieutenant or Master shall receive a Sum One Third more than the Widow of a Boatswain, Gunner, Carpenter, Purser, Surgeon, Second Master of a Yacht, or Master of a Naval Vessel Warranted by the Navy Board.

IV.

That Widows admitted to an Annual Allowance from the Charity, shall begin to enjoy it from the First Day of the Month following the Decease of their Husbands, provided they apply within Twelve Months for the same; otherwise, from the Time of their Application.

V.

That if any Widow, admitted to the Charity, marries again, her Allowance from thenceforth shall cease.

VI.

That in order to prevent Abuses, no Widow shall be admitted to the Benefit of the Charity, who has not been married for the Space of Twelve Months to the Officer by whose Rightshe claims the same, unless the said Officer was killed or drowned in the Sea Service. And if any Officer marries after the Age of Seventy Years, his Widow shall be deemed unqualified to receive the Charity.

VII.

That if the Widow of an Officer lives in the Neighbourhood of any of His Majesty’s Dock-Yards, the Commissioner of the Navy residing there, and some of the Principal Officers of the Yard, or the said Officers of the Yard, where there is no Commissioner, shall inform themselves thoroughly of the Circumstances of the Deceased; and being satisfied that the Widow comes within the Rules of the Charity, shall sign and give her the following Certificate gratis, viz.

These are to certify the Court ofAssistants for managing the Charity for Relief of Poor Widows of Commission and Warrant Officers of the Royal Navy, ThatA. B.died on the _________ and has left the BearerC. B.a Widow; and according to the best Information we can get from others, and do really believe ourselves, is not possessed of a clear annual Income to the Value of ___________ and therefore she appears to us to be entituled to the Benefit of the said Charity under their Direction.

Besides which, the Widow is to make Affidavit, that her Annual Income is not better than is expressed in the said Certificate, and that she was legally married (naming the Time when, and the Place where) to the Officer, in whose Right she claims the Benefit of the Charity.

VIII.

That if the Widow resides in any other Part of his Majesty’s Dominions, a Certificate of the like Nature is to be signed by the Minister of the Parish, a Justice of the Peace, and two or more Officers of the Navy, who are best acquainted with her Circumstances; and she is to make such Affidavit as is before mentioned.

IX.

That all Widows applying for the Benefit of the Charity, are to make Affidavit, that they are unmarried.

X.

That Widows admitted to the Charity shall once in every Year, at the Time that shall be appointed,bring to the Court of Assistants their Affidavits, containing a particular State of their Circumstances, and that they continue unmarried.

XI.

That Widows of Masters and Surgeons are to apply to the Navy Office, and receive from thence a Certificate of the Quality of their Husbands in the Navy, which shall be given themGratis,before they apply to the Court of Assistants, to be admitted to the Charity.

XII.

That no Officer or Servant employed in the Business or Service of this Charity, shall receive any Salary, Reward, or other Gratuity, for his Pains or Service in the Affairs of the said Charity, but thatthe whole Business thereof shall be transactedGratis.

Secondly, Of the different Seas we traverse.

TheMediterranean, from the Climate, Fertility, and Beauty of the Countries bordering on it, claims the Preference, I think, of all Seas; and recompenses more largely the Fatigues of a Voyage. What is peculiar, and makes them more than others pleasant, is,First, the Temperature of their Air, neither too hot nor cold, but a pleasant Mediocrity, that is, Spring or Summer all the Year.Secondly, Being of a moderate Compass: A Man by a little conversing with Maps, fixes an Idea of his Distances, his Stages from Place to Place, and may measure them over in his Head with the same Facility he would a Journey fromLondontoYork.Thirdly, Thus acquainted with the daily Progress,our Approaches please in a Proportion to the Danger and Wants we go from, and the Remedy and Port we go to.Leghorn,Genoa,Naples, &c. have their different Beauties.Fourthly, The confining Lands on theEuropeanandAfricanSide being mountainous, and the Sea interspersed with Islands, gives these Priorities to main Oceans,viz.that you cannot be long out of sight of some Land or other, and those flowing with Milk and Honey, no ordinary Comfort, excepting when they areLeeShores.Secondly, If the Hills be to Windward, they take off the Force of strong Winds, and make a smooth Sea. Andthirdly, The same Hills toLeeward, do by their Height give a Check to Storms; the Air stagnating by their Interposition, I have observed frequently in shore, to become a gentle Gale.

Lastly, The greatest Pleasure of those Seas, is visiting Towns and Countrys that have been worthy History; the most famous do somewhere or other border there, and have given birth to the greatest Men and greatest Actions.Greece, that was the Mother of Arts and Sciences, the Oracle of the World, that brought forth aHomer,Socrates,Alexander, &c. and was one of the four great Empires, stands to those Seas (though changed now toEuropean Turky, by a Progress as wonderful) so doesItaly, the Seat of the last universal Empire. ThatRome, which subjected almost all the Kings and Kingdoms of the known World, gaveBritainLaws, and left every where eternal Monuments of their Power and Magnificence: Here livedVirgil,Horace,Cæsar——Hither some say St.Paulmade his Voyage, having coasted alongCrete, and suffered Shipwreck atMalta,Islands famous here, the one being the Birth-place ofJupiter, the other for a renowned Order of Knights, the professed Defenders of Christianity against theTurk.

Volcanos, Catacombs, Triumphal Arches, and Pillars, Baths, Aqueducts, and Amphitheatres, are peculiar Curiosities ofItaly. There is scarcely a Spot in that delicious Country, but is recorded for some remarkable Occurrence; is memorable for High-ways, Grottos, Lakes, Statues, Monuments, some Victory gained, or Battle lost, the Birth or Death ofCæsaror his Friends. On theAfricanSide, stands or did stand,Carthage,Troy,Tyre,Nice,Ephesus,Antioch,Smyrna; and on that shore was once Christianity firmly planted (no less than 300 Bishops being expelled thence;) but alas how all things change! neither Greatness nor Virtue can exempt fromMortality: Towns, Countries, and Religions, have their Periods.

Thebes,Nineveh, &c. are now no more.

Oppida posse mori,Si quæras Helicen & Burin, Achaidas Urbes,Invenies sub Aquis.

Oppida posse mori,Si quæras Helicen & Burin, Achaidas Urbes,Invenies sub Aquis.

Oppida posse mori,

Si quæras Helicen & Burin, Achaidas Urbes,

Invenies sub Aquis.

They have a determined Time to flourish, decay, and die in. Corn grows whereTroystood:Carthageis blotted out.Greeceand her Republicks (Athens,Sparta,Corinth,) with other fam’dAsianandAfricanCities theTurkishMonarchy has overturned. Their Magnificence, Wealth, Learning, and Worship, is changed into Poverty and Ignorance; andRome, the Mother of all, overrun with Superstition. Who, on the one hand, but feels an inexpressible Pleasure in treading over that Ground, he supposes such Men inhabited,whose Learning and Virtues have been the Emulation of all succeeding Ages? And who again but must mourn such a melancholly Transposition of the Scene, and spend a few funeral Reflections over such extraordinaryExequiæ: Perhaps the Revolution of as many Ages, as has sunk their Glory, may raise it again, or carry it to theNegroesandHottentots, and the present Possessors be debased.

The next pleasant Sailing to theMediterranean, is that part of theAtlantick, Southern, Pacifick, South, orIndianSeas, that are within the Limits of aTrade-Wind; because such Winds are next to invariable, of such moderate Strength as not to raise heavy Seas, or strain a Ship; no Storms at Distance from Land; and equal Days and Nights.

TheAtlantick, and Southern Ocean, without the Limits of thisTrade-Wind, that is, from 30 to60°° of Latitude, are far the worst for Navigation; wide, rough, and boisterous Seas, more subject to Clouds, Storm, and Tempest, variable Weather; long, dark, cold Nights, and less delightful Countries and Climates out ofEurope.

Lastly, Beyond 60 Degrees of Latitude we have little Commerce, and the Seas less frequented; the Countries growing more and more inhospitable, as Latitude and Cold increases towards the Pole; however, Men who have usedGreenland, tell me, those inclement Skies contain no other Vapors, than Mist, Sleet, and Snow; the Sea less ruffled with Winds, which blow for the most part Northerly, towards the Sun,i. e.towards a more rarified Air, seen in those Drifts of Ice from thence, that are found far to the Southward, both on theEuropeanandAmericanside. Another Advantage to cheer the Winter’s Melancholyof Northern Regions, is the Moon’s shining a Length proportioned to the Absence of the Sun; so that where he is entirely lost, she[2]never sets, but with reflected and resplendent Light on Ice and Snow, keeps up their Consolation.

In all Seas are met numerous Incidents and Appearances, worthy our Reflection. I have therefore gone on to Observations more instructive and amusing. If the Solutions are not every where Standard, they may strike out Hints to better Capacities; among those, I can perceivetwomore liable to Objection.

First, ThePythagoreanSoliloquy I set out with (p. 18.) which maybe deemed too foreign for the Subject: To which I answer——A Voyage to Sea is a Type of that dark and unknown one we are to make in Death: Wherefore it is not unnatural with aDeparture from the Land’s End of England, shootinginto anAbyssof Waters, to consider a little on that Life, which lost is aDeparturefrom theWorld’s End, and to launch into a greaterAbyss, Eternity;—The Principle,in what is material of us, I think, highly consonant to Reason, and continues still the Doctrine of the Eastern Sages.

Diversæ autem corpora formæ non sunt nisi diversæ modificationes ejusdem materiæ, &c.

(Keilde legibus naturæ.)

E. G.Vapors condensed to Rain, we see descend on Earth; and both enter and pass into the Seeds andForms of all Plants. From them, either taken alone, or amassed in animal Food, is what constitutes and repairs by a daily Eating, our own Bodies; which if there be any Trust to Sense or Reason, moulds, decays, and turns again to Dust and Air, in order for Regeneration.

What only can destroy this Philosophy (as I observe at that place) and maintain a Resurrection of thesameBody, is Revelation, and the Immortality of the Soul; for Sameness, or Identity then, will not consist in the same individual Particles being united, that makes our Bodies here, (which we are sure are continually fluctuating, and changing while we live;) but on that Consciousness which the immaterial Part will give, though joined to Matter, taken from the Top ofOlympus.

Secondly, The Denial ofCanibalsagainst the Authority ofgraveAuthors,has proceeded from a Persuasion, that the Charge carries the highest Reproach on Humanity, and the Creator of it. My Aim, therefore, was to shew in the best manner I could, that the Accusation every where has probably proceeded fromFearin some, to magnify the Miracle of escaping an inhospitable and strange Country, and fromDesignin others, to justify Dispossession, and arm Colonies with Union and Courage against thesupposed Enemies of Mankind. Conquest and Cruelty, by that means go on with pleasure on the People’s side, who are persuaded they are only subduing of brutish Nature, and exchanging, for their mutual Good,SpiritualforTemporal Inheritances. By particular and private Men, this may have been fixed on a People, to allay some base or villainous Actions of their own, that could not any other way be excused, or bear the Light:And for this, I appeal to the discerning part of our Traders, acquainted withGuinea, whether they do not think the Reports of CapeSt. Mary’s Inhabitants, CapeMont,Montzerado,Drewin, andCallabar, down-right Falsities, and impolitick ones; for the multiplying of Places, like Plots, in a great measure destroys the Use of them.

At theCaribbeesagain, it is full as preposterous; for on small Islands, had their Women bred like Rabbits, they must have been desolated Ages before theEuropeansArrival; unless we can suppose human Flesh was eat only on their Feast-Days; or that they just commenced Monsters upon our Discovery.——La Hontan, or some otherFrenchTranslation I have read, talking ofCanibalsbordering onCanada, flies into a strangeGallicism, and makes them commend the Flesh of aFrenchman(sad Partiality) in Eating, as of finer Taste than that of anEnglishman.

These, withEuropeansneglecting to charge theEast-Indiansthus, who have more Power than simpleAmericansorNegroesto resent the Indignity and Reproach, makes me disbelieve the whole of what I have hitherto heard; and that the trueAnthropophagiare only the diverse Insects infesting us in diverse Countries; thePediculoseKind do not live in hot Climates; instead thereof, they are assaulted with a ravenous Fly calledMuskito; Legions that live wild in the Woods, and seize with every Opportunity, human Flesh, like Lions.

As there is a strict Regard to Truth observed throughout the whole, it is apprehended the following Sheets will be not only amusing, but useful.


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