I Become a Brazilian Planter
WE HAD a very good voyage to Brazil and arrived in
the Bay de Todos los Santos, or All Saints’ Bay, in about
twenty-two days after. And now I was once more delivered from the
most miserable of all conditions of life, and what to do next with
myself I was now to consider.
The generous treatment the captain gave me I can
never enough remember; he would take nothing of me for my passage,
gave me twenty ducats for the leopard’s skin, and forty for the
lion’s skin which I had in my boat, and caused everything I had in
the ship to be punctually delivered to me; and what I was willing
to sell he bought, such as the case of bottles, two of my guns, and
a piece of the lump of beeswax, for I had made candles of the rest;
in a word, I made about 220 pieces of eight of all my cargo, and
with this stock I went on shore in Brazil.
I had not been long here, but being recommended to
the house of a good honest man like himself, who had an
ingenio, as they call it, that is, a plantation and a
sugarhouse, I lived with him some time and acquainted myself by
that means with the manner of their planting and making of sugar;
and seeing how well the planters lived and how they grew rich
suddenly, I resolved, if I could get licence to settle there, I
would turn planter among them, resolving in the meantime to find
out some way to get my money which I had left in London remitted to
me. To this purpose, getting a kind of a letter of naturalization,
I purchased as much land that was uncured as my money would reach,
and formed a plan for my plantation and settlement, and such a one
as might be suitable to the stock which I proposed to myself to
receive from England.
I had a neighbour, a Portuguese of Lisbon, but born
of English parents, whose name was Wells, and in much such
circumstances as I was. I call him neighbour, because his
plantation lay next to mine and we went on very sociably together.
My stock was but low, as well as his; and we rather planted for
food than anything else for about two years. However, we began to
increase, and our land began to come into order; so that the third
year we planted some tobacco and made each of us a large piece of
ground ready for planting canes in the year to come; but we both
wanted help, and now I found, more than before, I had done wrong in
parting with my boy Xury.
But alas! for me to do wrong that never did right
was no great wonder: I had no remedy but to go on; I was gotten
into an employment quite remote to my genius and directly contrary
to the life I delighted in and for which I forsook my father’s
house and broke through all his good advice; nay, I was coming into
the very middle station, or upper degree of low life, which my
father advised me to before, and which, if I resolved to go on
with, I might as well have stayed at home and never have fatigued
myself in the world as I had done; and I used often to say to
myself, I could have done this as well in England among my friends
as have gone five thousand miles off to do it among strangers and
savages in a wilderness, and at such a distance as never to hear
from any part of the world that had the least knowledge of
me.
In this manner I used to look upon my condition
with the utmost regret. I had nobody to converse with but now and
then this neighbour; no work to be done, but by the labour of my
hands; and I used to say, I lived just like a man cast away upon
some desolate island that had nobody there but himself. But how
just has it been, and how should all men reflect, that when they
compare their present conditions with others that are worse, Heaven
may oblige them to make the exchange and be convinced of their
former felicity by their experience. I say, how just has it been,
that the truly solitary life I reflected on in an island of mere
desolation should be my lot, who had so often unjustly compared it
with the life which I then led, in which had I continued, I had in
all probability been exceeding prosperous and rich.
I was in some degree settled in my measures for
carrying on the plantation, before my kind friend, the captain of
the ship that took me up at sea, went back; for the ship remained
there in providing his loading, and preparing for his voyage, near
three months; when, telling him what little stock I had left behind
me in London, he gave me this friendly and sincere advice.
‘‘Seignior Inglese,’’ says he, for so he always called me, ‘‘if you
will give me letters, and a procuration here in form to me, with
orders to the person who has your money in London, to send your
effects to Lisbon, to such persons as I shall direct, and in such
goods as are proper for this country, I will bring you the produce
of them, God willing, at my return; but since human affairs are all
subject to changes and disasters, I would have you give orders but
for one hundred pounds sterling, which you say is half your stock,
and let the hazard be run for the first; so that if it come safe,
you may order the rest the same way; and if it miscarry, you may
have the other half to have recourse to for your supply.’’
This was so wholesome advice and looked so friendly
that I could not but be convinced it was the best course I could
take; so I accordingly prepared letters to the gentlewoman with
whom I had left my money and a procuration to the Portuguese
captain, as he desired.
I wrote the English captain’s widow a full account
of all my adventures, my slavery, escape, and how I had met with
the Portugal captain at sea, the humanity of his behaviour, and in
what condition I was now in, with all other necessary directions
for my supply; and when this honest captain came to Lisbon, he
found means by some of the English merchants there to send over not
the order only, but a full account of my story to a merchant at
London, who represented it effectually to her; whereupon she not
only delivered the money but out of her own pocket sent the
Portugal captain a very handsome present for his humanity and
charity to me.
The merchant in London vesting this hundred pounds
in English goods, such as the captain had writ for, sent them
directly to him at Lisbon, and he brought them all safe to me to
Brazil; among which, without my direction (for I was too young in
my business to think of them), he had taken care to have all sorts
of tools, ironwork, and utensils necessary for my plantation, and
which were of great use to me.
When this cargo arrived, I thought my fortune made,
for I was surprised with the joy of it; and my good steward, the
captain, had laid out the five pounds which my friend had sent him
for a present for himself, to purchase and bring me over a servant
under bond for six years’ service, and would not accept of any
consideration, except a little tobacco which I would have him
accept, being of my own produce.
Neither was this all; but my goods being all
English manufactures, such as cloth, stuff, baize, and things
particularly valuable and desirable in the country, I found means
to sell them to a very great advantage; so that I may say I had
more than four times the value of my first cargo, and was now
infinitely beyond my poor neighbour, I mean in the advancement of
my plantation; for the first thing I did, I bought me a Negro slave
and an European servant also; I mean another besides that which the
captain brought me from Lisbon.
But as abused prosperity is oftentimes made the
very means of our greatest adversity, so was it with me. I went on
the next year with great success in my plantation. I raised fifty
great rolls of tobacco on my own ground, more than I had disposed
of for necessaries among my neighbours; and these fifty rolls,
being each of above a hundredweight, were well cured and laid by
against the return of the fleet from Lisbon. And now increasing in
business and in wealth, my head began to be full of projects and
undertakings beyond my reach; such as are indeed often the ruin of
the best heads in business.
Had I continued in the station I was now in, I had
room for all the happy things to have yet befallen me, for which my
father so earnestly recommended a quiet, retired life, and of which
he had so sensibly described the middle station of life to be full
of; but other things attended me, and I was still to be the wilful
agent of all my own miseries; and particularly to increase my fault
and double the reflections upon myself, which in my future sorrows
I should have leisure to make; all these miscarriages were procured
by my apparent obstinate adhering to my foolish inclination of
wandering abroad, and pursuing that inclination, in contradiction
to the clearest views of doing myself good in a fair and plain
pursuit of those prospects and those measures of life which Nature
and Providence concurred to present me with and to make my
duty.
As I had once done thus in my breaking away from my
parents, so I could not be content now but I must go and leave the
happy view I had of being a rich and thriving man in my new
plantation, only to pursue a rash and immoderate desire of rising
faster than the nature of the thing admitted; and thus I cast
myself down again into the deepest gulf of human misery that ever
man fell into, or perhaps could be consistent with life and a state
of health in the world.
To come then by just degrees to the particulars of
this part of my story; you may suppose that, having now lived
almost four years in Brazil and beginning to thrive and prosper
very well upon my plantation, I had not only learned the language,
but had contracted acquaintance and friendship among my fellow
planters, as well as among the merchants at Sao Salvador, which was
our port; and that in my discourse among them, I had frequently
given them an account of my two voyages to the coast of Guinea, the
manner of trading with the Negroes there, and how easy it was to
purchase upon the coast, for trifles (such as beads, toys, knives,
scissors, hatchets, bits of glass, and the like), not only gold
dust, Guinea grains, elephants’ teeth, etc., but Negroes for the
service of Brazil, in great numbers.
They listened always very attentively to my
discourses on these heads, but especially to that part which
related to the buying Negroes, which was a trade at that time not
only not far entered into, but, as far as it was, had been carried
on by the assientos, or permission, of the kings of Spain
and Portugal, and engrossed in the public; so that few Negroes were
bought, and those excessive dear.
It happened, being in company with some merchants
and planters of my acquaintance and talking of those things very
earnestly, three of them came to me the next morning and told me
they had been musing very much upon what I had discoursed with them
of, the last night, and they came to make a secret proposal to me;
and after enjoining me secrecy, they told me that they had a mind
to fit out a ship to go to Guinea; that they had all plantations as
well as I, and were straitened for nothing so much as servants;
that as it was a trade that could not be carried on, because they
could not publicly sell the Negroes when they came home, so they
desired to make but one voyage, to bring the Negroes on shore
privately, and divide them among their own plantations; and in a
word, the question was whether I would go their supercargo in the
ship to manage the trading part upon the coast of Guinea. And they
offered me that I should have my equal share of the Negroes without
providing any part of the stock.
This was a fair proposal, it must be confessed, had
it been made to anyone that had not had a settlement and plantation
of his own to look after which was in a fair way of coming to be
very considerable and with a good stock upon it. But for me that
was thus entered and established and had nothing to do but go on as
I had begun for three or four years more, and to have sent for the
other hundred pounds from England, and who in that time, and with
that little addition, could scarce have failed of being worth three
or four thousand pounds sterling, and that increasing too; for me
to think of such a voyage was the most preposterous thing that ever
man in such circumstances could be guilty of.