2520 lines
154 KiB
Plaintext
2520 lines
154 KiB
Plaintext
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1688
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OROONOKO: OR, THE ROYAL SLAVE
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by Mrs. Aphra Behn
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OROONOKO: OR, THE ROYAL SLAVE
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[1688]
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I do not pretend, in giving you the history of this Royal Slave,
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to entertain my reader with adventures of a feigned hero, whose life
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and fortunes fancy may manage at the poet's pleasure; nor in
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relating the truth, design to adorn it with any accidents but such
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as arrived in earnest to him: and it shall come simply into the world,
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recommended by its own proper merits and natural intrigues; there
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being enough of reality to support it, and to render it diverting,
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without the addition of invention.
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I was myself an eye-witness to a great part of what you will find
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here set down; and what I could not be witness of, I received from the
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mouth of the chief actor in this history, the hero himself, who gave
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us the whole transactions of his youth: and though I shall omit, for
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brevity's sake, a thousand little accidents of his life, which,
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however pleasant to us, where history was scarce and adventures very
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rare, yet might prove tedious and heavy to my reader, in a world where
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he finds diversions for every minute, new and strange. But we who were
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perfectly charmed with the character of this great man were curious to
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gather every circumstance of his life.
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The scene of the last part of his adventures lies in a colony in
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America, called Surinam, in the West Indies.
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But before I give you the story of this gallant slave, 'tis fit I
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tell you the manner of bringing them to these new colonies; those they
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make use of there not being natives of the place: for those we live
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with in perfect amity, without daring to command 'em; but, on the
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contrary, caress 'em with all the brotherly and friendly affection
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in the world; trading with them for their fish, venison, buffalo's
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skins, and little rarities; as marmosets, a sort of monkey, as big
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as a rat or weasel, but of marvelous and delicate shape, having face
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and hands like a human creature; and cousheries, a little beast in the
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form and fashion of a lion, as big as a kitten, but so exactly made in
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all parts like that noble beast that it is it in miniature. Then for
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little paraketoes, great parrots, mackaws, and a thousand other
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birds and beasts of wonderful and surprising forms, shapes, and
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colors. For skins of prodigious snakes, of which there are some
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threescore yards in length; as is the skin of one that may be seen
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at his Majesty's Antiquary's; where are also some rare flies, of
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amazing forms and colors, presented to 'em by myself; some as big as
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my fist, some less; and all of various excellencies, such as art
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cannot imitate. Then we trade for feathers, which they order into
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all shapes, make themselves little short habits of 'em and glorious
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wreaths for their heads, necks, arms, and legs, whose tinctures are
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unconceivable. I had a set of these presented to me, and I gave 'em to
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the King's Theater, and it was the dress of the Indian Queen,
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infinitely admired by persons of quality; and was unimitable.
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Besides these, a thousand little knacks and rarities in nature; and
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some of art, as their baskets, weapons, aprons, etc. We dealt with 'em
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with beads of all colors, knives, axes, pins, and needles; which
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they used only as tools to drill holes with in their ears, noses,
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and lips, where they hang a great many little things; as long beads,
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bits of tin, brass or silver beat thin, and any shining trinket. The
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beads they weave into aprons about a quarter of an ell long, and of
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the same breadth; working them very prettily in flowers of several
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colors; which apron they wear just before 'em, as Adam and Eve did the
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fig-leaves; the men wearing a long stripe of linen, which they deal
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with us for. They thread these beads also on long cotton threads,
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and make girdles to tie their aprons to, which come twenty times, or
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more, about the waist, and then cross, like a shoulder-belt, both
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ways, and round their necks, arms, and legs. This adornment, with
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their long black hair, and the face painted in little specks or
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flowers here and there, makes 'em a wonderful figure to behold. Some
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of the beauties, which indeed are finely shaped, as almost all are,
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and who have pretty features, are charming and novel; for they have
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all that is called beauty, except the color, which is a reddish
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yellow; or after a new oiling, which they often use to themselves,
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they are of the color of a new brick, but smooth, soft, and sleek.
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They are extreme modest and bashful, very shy, and nice of being
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touched. And though they are all thus naked, if one lives forever
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among 'em there is not to be seen an undecent action, or glance: and
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being continually used to see one another so unadorned, so like our
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first parents before the Fall, it seems as if they had no wishes,
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there being nothing to heighten curiosity; but all you can see, you
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see at once, and every moment see; and where there is no novelty,
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there can be no curiosity. Not but I have seen a handsome young Indian
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dying for love of a very beautiful young Indian maid; but all his
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courtship was to fold his arms, pursue her with his eyes, and sighs
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were all his language: while she, as if no such lover were present, or
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rather as if she desired none such, carefully guarded her eyes from
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beholding him; and never approached him but she looked down with all
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the blushing modesty I have seen in the most severe and cautious of
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our world. And these people represented to me an absolute idea of
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the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin. And 'tis
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most evident and plain that simple Nature is the most harmless,
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inoffensive, and virtuous mistress. 'Tis she alone, if she were
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permitted, that better instructs the world than all the inventions
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of man. Religion would here but destroy that tranquillity they possess
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by ignorance; and laws would but teach 'em to know offense, of which
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now they have no notion. They once made mourning and fasting for the
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death of the English Governor, who had given his hand to come on
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such a day to 'em, and neither came nor sent; believing, when a
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man's word was past, nothing but death could or should prevent his
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keeping it: and when they saw he was not dead, they asked him what
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name they had for a man who promised a thing he did not do. The
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Governor told them, such a man was a liar, which was a word of
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infamy to a gentleman. Then one of 'em replied, "Governor, you are a
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liar, and guilty of that infamy." They have a native justice, which
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knows no fraud; and they understand no vice, or cunning, but when they
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are taught by the white men. They have plurality of wives; which, when
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they grow old, serve those that succeed 'em, who are young, but with a
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servitude easy and respected; and unless they take slaves in war, they
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have no other attendants.
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Those on that continent where I was had no king; but the oldest
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war-captain was obeyed with great resignation.
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A war-captain is a man who has led them on to battle with conduct
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and success; of whom I shall have occasion to speak more hereafter,
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and of some other of their customs and manners, as they fall in my
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way.
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With these people, as I said, we live in perfect tranquillity and
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good understanding, as it behoves us to do; they knowing all the
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places where to seek the best food of the country, and the means of
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getting it; and for very small and unvaluable trifles, supply us
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with that 'tis impossible for us to get: for they do not only in the
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woods, and over the savannahs, in hunting, supply the parts of hounds,
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by swiftly scouring through those almost impassable places, and by the
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mere activity of their feet run down the nimblest deer and other
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eatable beasts; but in the water, one would think they were gods of
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the rivers, or fellow-citizens of the deep; so rare an art they have
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in swimming, diving, and almost living in water; by which they command
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the less swift inhabitants of the floods. And then for shooting,
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what they cannot take, or reach with their hands, they do with arrows;
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and have so admirable an aim that they will split almost an hair,
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and at any distance that an arrow can reach: they will shoot down
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oranges and other fruit, and only touch the stalk with the dart's
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point, that they may not hurt the fruit. So that they being on all
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occasions very useful to us, we find it absolutely necessary to caress
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'em as friends, and not to treat 'em as slaves, nor dare we do
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other, their numbers so far surpassing ours in that continent.
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Those then whom we make use of to work in our plantations of sugar
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are negroes, black slaves altogether, who are transported thither in
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this manner.
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Those who want slaves make a bargain with a master or a captain of a
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ship, and contract to pay him so much apiece, a matter of twenty pound
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a head, for as many as he agrees for, and to pay for 'em when they
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shall be delivered on such a plantation: so that when there arrives
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a ship laden with slaves, they who have so contracted go aboard, and
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receive their number by lot; and perhaps in one lot that may be for
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ten, there may happen to be three or four men, the rest women and
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children. Or be there more or less of either sex, you are obliged to
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be contented with your lot.
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Coramantien, a country of blacks so called, was one of those
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places in which they found the most advantageous trading for these
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slaves, and thither most of our great traders in that merchandise
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traffic; for that nation is very warlike and brave: and having a
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continual campaign, being always in hostility with one neighboring
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prince or other, they had the fortune to take a great many captives:
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for all they took in battle were sold as slaves; at least those common
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men who could not ransom themselves. Of these slaves so taken, the
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general only has all the profit; and of these generals our captains
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and masters of ships buy all their freights.
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The King of Coramantien was himself a man of an hundred and odd
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years old, and had no son, though he had many beautiful black wives:
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for most certainly there are beauties that can charm of that color. In
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his younger years he had had many gallant men to his sons, thirteen of
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whom died in battle, conquering when they fell; and he had only left
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him for his successor one grandchild, son to one of these dead
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victors, who, as soon as he could bear a bow in his hand, and a quiver
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at his back, was sent into the field to be trained up by one of the
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oldest generals to war; where, from his natural inclination to arms,
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and the occasions given him, with the good conduct of the old general,
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he became, at the age of seventeen, one of the most expert captains
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and bravest soldiers that ever saw the field of Mars: so that he was
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adored as the wonder of all that world, and the darling of the
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soldiers. Besides, he was adorned with a native beauty, so
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transcending all those of his gloomy race that he struck an awe and
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reverence even into those that knew not his quality; as he did into
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me, who beheld him with surprise and wonder, when afterwards he
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arrived in our world.
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He had scarce arrived at his seventeenth year, when, fighting by his
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side, the general was killed with an arrow in his eye, which the
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Prince Oroonoko (for so was this gallant Moor called) very narrowly
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avoided; nor had he, if the general who saw the arrow shot, and
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perceiving it aimed at the prince, had not bowed his head between,
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on purpose to receive it in his own body, rather than it should
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touch that of the prince, and so saved him.
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'Twas then, afflicted as Oroonoko was, that he was proclaimed
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general in the old man's place: and then it was, at the finishing of
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that war, which had continued for two years, that the prince came to
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court, where he had hardly been a month together, from the time of his
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fifth year to that of seventeen; and 'twas amazing to imagine where it
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was he learned so much humanity: or, to give his accomplishments a
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juster name, where 'twas he got that real greatness of soul, those
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refined notions of true honor, that absolute generosity, and that
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softness that was capable of the highest passions of love and
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gallantry, whose objects were almost continually fighting men, or
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those mangled or dead, who heard no sounds but those of war and
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groans. Some part of it we may attribute to the care of a Frenchman of
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wit and learning, who, finding it turn to very good account to be a
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sort of royal tutor to this young black, and perceiving him very
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ready, apt, and quick of apprehension, took a great pleasure to
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teach him morals, language, and science; and was for it extremely
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beloved and valued by him. Another reason was, he loved when he came
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from war, to see all the English gentlemen that traded thither; and
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did not only learn their language, but that of the Spaniard also, with
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whom he traded afterwards for slaves.
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I have often seen and conversed with this great man, and been a
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witness to many of his mighty actions; and do assure my reader, the
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most illustrious courts could not have produced a braver man, both for
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greatness of courage and mind, a judgment more solid, a wit more
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quick, and a conversation more sweet and diverting. He knew almost
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as much as if he had read much: he had heard of and admired the
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Romans: he had heard of the late Civil Wars in England, and the
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deplorable death of our great monarch; and would discourse of it
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with all the sense and abhorrence of the injustice imaginable. He
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had an extreme good and graceful mien, and all the civility of a
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well-bred great man. He had nothing of barbarity in his nature, but in
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all points addressed himself as if his education had been in some
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European court.
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This great and just character of Oroonoko gave me an extreme
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curiosity to see him, especially when I knew he spoke French and
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English, and that I could talk with him. But though I had heard so
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much of him, I was as greatly surprised when I saw him as if I had
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heard nothing of him; so beyond all report I found him. He came into
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the room, and addressed himself to me and some other women with the
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best grace in the world. He was pretty tall, but of a shape the most
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exact that can be fancied: the most famous statuary could not form the
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figure of a man more admirably turned from head to foot. His face
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was not of that brown rusty black which most of that nation are, but
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of perfect ebony, or polished jet. His eyes were the most awful that
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could be seen, and very piercing; the white of 'em being like snow, as
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were his teeth. His nose was rising and Roman, instead of African
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and flat. His mouth the finest shaped that could be seen; far from
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those great turned lips which are so natural to the rest of the
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negroes. The whole proportion and air of his face was so nobly and
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exactly formed that, bating his color, there could be nothing in
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nature more beautiful, agreeable, and handsome. There was no one grace
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wanting that bears the standard of true beauty. His hair came down
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to his shoulders, by the aids of art, which was by pulling it out with
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a quill, and keeping it combed; of which he took particular care.
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Nor did the perfections of his mind come short of those of his person;
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for his discourse was admirable upon almost any subject: and whoever
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had heard him speak would have been convinced of their errors, that
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all fine wit is confined to the white men, especially to those of
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Christendom; and would have confessed that Oroonoko was as capable
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even of reigning well, and of governing as wisely, had as great a
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soul, as politic maxims, and was as sensible of power, as any prince
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civilized in the most refined schools of humanity and learning, or the
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most illustrious courts.
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This prince, such as I have described him, whose soul and body
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were so admirably adorned, was (while yet he was in the court of his
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grandfather, as I said) as capable of love as 'twas possible for a
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brave and gallant man to be; and in saying that, I have named the
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highest degree of love: for sure great souls are most capable of
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that passion.
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I have already said, the old general was killed by the shot of an
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arrow by the side of this prince in battle; and that Oroonoko was made
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general. This old dead hero had one only daughter left of his race,
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a beauty, that to describe her truly, one need say only, she was
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female to the noble male; the beautiful black Venus to our young Mars;
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as charming in her person as he, and of delicate virtues. I have
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seen a hundred white men sighing after her, and making a thousand vows
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at her feet, all in vain, and unsuccessful. And she was indeed too
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great for any but a prince of her own nation to adore.
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Oroonoko coming from the wars (which were now ended), after he had
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made his court to his grandfather he thought in honor he ought to make
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a visit to Imoinda, the daughter of his foster-father, the dead
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general; and to make some excuses to her, because his preservation was
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the occasion of her father's death; and to present her with those
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slaves that had been taken in this last battle, as the trophies of her
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father's victories. When he came, attended by all the young soldiers
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of any merit, he was infinitely surprised at the beauty of this fair
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Queen of Night, whose face and person was so exceeding all he had ever
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beheld, that lovely modesty with which she received him, that softness
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in her look and sighs, upon the melancholy occasion of this honor that
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was done by so great a man as Oroonoko, and a prince of whom she had
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heard such admirable things; the awfulness wherewith she received him,
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and the sweetness of her words and behavior while he staid, gained a
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perfect conquest over his fierce heart, and made him feel the victor
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could be subdued. So that having made his first compliments, and
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presented her an hundred and fifty slaves in fetters, he told her with
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his eyes that he was not insensible of her charms; while Imoinda,
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who wished for nothing more than so glorious a conquest, was pleased
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to believe she understood that silent language of new-born love;
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and, from that moment, put on all her additions to beauty.
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The prince returned to court with quite another humor than before;
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and though he did not speak much of the fair Imoinda, he had the
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pleasure to hear all his followers speak of nothing but the charms
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of that maid, insomuch that, even in the presence of the old king,
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they were extolling her, and heightening, if possible, the beauties
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they had found in her: so that nothing else was talked of, no other
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sound was heard in every corner where there were whisperers, but
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Imoinda! Imoinda!
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'Twill be imagined Oroonoko staid not long before he made his second
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visit; nor, considering his quality, not much longer before he told
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her he adored her. I have often heard him say that he admired by
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what strange inspiration he came to talk things so soft, and so
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passionate, who never knew love, nor was used to the conversation of
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women; but (to use his own words) he said, most happily, some new and,
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till then, unknown power instructed his heart and tongue in the
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language of love, and at the same time, in favor of him, inspired
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Imoinda with a sense of his passion. She was touched with what he
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said, and returned it all in such answers as went to his very heart,
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with a pleasure unknown before. Nor did he use those obligations
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ill, that love had done him, but turned all his happy moments to the
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best advantage; and as he knew no vice, his flame aimed at nothing but
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honor, if such a distinction may be made in love; and especially in
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that country, where men take to themselves as many as they can
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maintain; and where the only crime and sin with woman is to turn her
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off, to abandon her to want, shame, and misery: such ill morals are
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only practised in Christian countries, where they prefer the bare name
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of religion; and, without virtue or morality, think that sufficient.
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But Oroonoko was none of those professors; but as he had right notions
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of honor, so he made her such propositions as were not only and barely
|
||
|
such; but, contrary to the custom of his country, he made her vows she
|
||
|
should be the only woman he would possess while he lived; that no
|
||
|
age or wrinkles should incline him to change; for her soul would be
|
||
|
always fine, and always young; and he should have an eternal idea in
|
||
|
his mind of the charms she now bore; and should look into his heart
|
||
|
for that idea, when he could find it no longer in her face.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After a thousand assurances of his lasting flame, and her eternal
|
||
|
empire over him, she condescended to receive him for her husband; or
|
||
|
rather, received him as the greatest honor the gods could do her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is a certain ceremony in these cases to be observed, which I
|
||
|
forgot to ask how 'twas performed; but 'twas concluded on both sides
|
||
|
that, in obedience to him, the grandfather was to be first made
|
||
|
acquainted with the design: for they pay a most absolute resignation
|
||
|
to the monarch, especially when he is a parent also.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the other side, the old king, who had many wives and many
|
||
|
concubines, wanted not court-flatterers to insinuate into his heart
|
||
|
a thousand tender thoughts for this young beauty; and who
|
||
|
represented her to his fancy as the most charming he had ever
|
||
|
possessed in all the long race of his numerous years. At this
|
||
|
character, his old heart, like an extinguished brand, most apt to take
|
||
|
fire, felt new sparks of love, and began to kindle; and now grown to
|
||
|
his second childhood, longed with impatience to behold this gay thing,
|
||
|
with whom, alas! he could but innocently play. But how he should be
|
||
|
confirmed she was this wonder, before he used his power to call her to
|
||
|
court (where maidens never came, unless for the king's private use) he
|
||
|
was next to consider; and while he was so doing, he had intelligence
|
||
|
brought him that Imoinda was most certainly mistress to the Prince
|
||
|
Oroonoko. This gave him some chagrin: however, it gave him also an
|
||
|
opportunity, one day, when the prince was a-hunting, to wait on a
|
||
|
man of quality, as his slave and attendant, who should go and make a
|
||
|
present to Imoinda, as from the prince; he should then, unknown, see
|
||
|
this fair maid, and have an opportunity to hear what message she would
|
||
|
return the prince for his present, and from thence gather the state of
|
||
|
her heart, and degree of her inclination. This was put in execution,
|
||
|
and the old monarch saw, and burned: he found her all he had heard,
|
||
|
and would not delay his happiness, but found he should have some
|
||
|
obstacle to overcome her heart; for she expressed her sense of the
|
||
|
present the prince had sent her, in terms so sweet, so soft and
|
||
|
pretty, with an air of love and joy that could not be dissembled,
|
||
|
insomuch that 'twas past doubt whether she loved Oroonoko entirely.
|
||
|
This gave the old king some affliction; but he salved it with this,
|
||
|
that the obedience the people pay their king was not at all inferior
|
||
|
to what they paid their gods; and what love would not oblige Imoinda
|
||
|
to do, duty would compel her to.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was therefore no sooner got to his apartment but he sent the
|
||
|
royal veil to Imoinda; that is the ceremony of invitation: he sends
|
||
|
the lady he has a mind to honor with his bed, a veil, with which she
|
||
|
is covered, and secured for the king's use; and 'tis death to disobey;
|
||
|
besides, held a most impious disobedience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
'Tis not to be imagined the surprise and grief that seized the
|
||
|
lovely maid at this news and sight. However, as delays in these
|
||
|
cases are dangerous, and pleading worse than treason; trembling, and
|
||
|
almost fainting, she was obliged to suffer herself to be covered and
|
||
|
led away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They brought her thus to court; and the king, who had caused a
|
||
|
very rich bath to be prepared, was led into it, where he sat under a
|
||
|
canopy, in state, to receive this longed-for virgin; whom he having
|
||
|
commanded should be brought to him, they (after disrobing her) led her
|
||
|
to the bath, and making fast the doors, left her to descend. The king,
|
||
|
without more courtship, bade her throw off her mantle, and come to his
|
||
|
arms. But Imoinda, all in tears, threw herself on the marble, on the
|
||
|
brink of the bath, and besought him to hear her. She told him, as
|
||
|
she was a maid, how proud of the divine glory she should have been, of
|
||
|
having it in her power to oblige her king; but as by the laws he could
|
||
|
not, and from his royal goodness would not, take from any man his
|
||
|
wedded wife; so she believed she should be the occasion of making
|
||
|
him commit a great sin if she did not reveal her state and
|
||
|
condition, and tell him she was another's, and could not be so happy
|
||
|
to be his.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The king, enraged at this delay, hastily demanded the name of the
|
||
|
bold man that had married a woman of her degree without his consent.
|
||
|
Imoinda, seeing his eyes fierce, and his hands tremble (whether with
|
||
|
age or anger, I know not, but she fancied the last), almost repented
|
||
|
she had said so much, for now she feared the storm would fall on the
|
||
|
prince; she therefore said a thousand things to appease the raging
|
||
|
of his flame, and to prepare him to hear who it was with calmness: but
|
||
|
before she spoke, he imagined who she meant, but would not seem to
|
||
|
do so, but commanded her to lay aside her mantle, and suffer herself
|
||
|
to receive his caresses, or, by his gods he swore, that happy man whom
|
||
|
she was going to name should die, though it were even Oroonoko
|
||
|
himself. "Therefore," said he, "deny this marriage, and swear
|
||
|
thyself a maid." "That," replied Imoinda, "by all our powers I do; for
|
||
|
I am not yet known to my husband." "'Tis enough," said the king, "'tis
|
||
|
enough both to satisfy my conscience and my heart." And rising from
|
||
|
his seat, he went and led her into the bath; it being in vain for
|
||
|
her to resist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this time, the prince, who was returned from hunting, went to
|
||
|
visit his Imoinda, but found her gone; and not only so, but heard
|
||
|
she had received the royal veil. This raised him to a storm; and in
|
||
|
his madness, they had much ado to save him from laying violent hands
|
||
|
on himself. Force first prevailed, and then reason: they urged all
|
||
|
to him that might oppose his rage; but nothing weighed so greatly with
|
||
|
him as the king's old age, uncapable of injuring him with Imoinda.
|
||
|
He would give way to that hope, because it pleased him most, and
|
||
|
flattered best his heart. Yet this served not altogether to make him
|
||
|
cease his different passions, which sometimes raged within him, and
|
||
|
softened into showers. 'Twas not enough to appease him, to tell him
|
||
|
his grandfather was old, and could not that way injure him, while he
|
||
|
retained that awful duty which the young men are used there to pay
|
||
|
to their grave relations. He could not be convinced he had no cause to
|
||
|
sigh and mourn for the loss of a mistress he could not with all his
|
||
|
strength and courage retrieve. And he would often cry, "O, my friends!
|
||
|
were she in walled cities, or confined from me in fortifications of
|
||
|
the greatest strength; did enchantments or monsters detain her from
|
||
|
me; I would venture through any hazard to free her: but here, in the
|
||
|
arms of a feeble old man, my youth, my violent love, my trade in arms,
|
||
|
and all my vast desire of glory, avail me nothing. Imoinda is as
|
||
|
irrecoverably lost to me as if she were snatched by the cold arms of
|
||
|
death. Oh! she is never to be retrieved. If I would wait tedious
|
||
|
years, till fate should bow the old king to his grave, even that would
|
||
|
not leave me Imoinda free; but still that custom that makes it so vile
|
||
|
a crime for a son to marry his father's wives or mistresses would
|
||
|
hinder my happiness; unless I would either ignobly set an ill
|
||
|
precedent to my successors, or abandon my country, and fly with her to
|
||
|
some unknown world who never heard our story."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But it was objected to him that his case was not the same; for
|
||
|
Imoinda being his lawful wife by solemn contract, 'twas he was the
|
||
|
injured man, and might, if he so pleased take Imoinda back, the breach
|
||
|
of the law being on his grandfather's side; and that if he could
|
||
|
circumvent him, and redeem her from the otan, which is the palace of
|
||
|
the king's women, a sort of seraglio, it was both just and lawful
|
||
|
for him so to do.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This reasoning had some force upon him, and he should have been
|
||
|
entirely comforted, but for the thought that she was possessed by
|
||
|
his grandfather. However, he loved so well that he was resolved to
|
||
|
believe what most favored his hope, and to endeavor to learn from
|
||
|
Imoinda's own mouth, what only she could satisfy him in, whether she
|
||
|
was robbed of that blessing which was only due to his faith and
|
||
|
love. But as it was very hard to get a sight of the women (for no
|
||
|
men ever entered into the otan but when the king went to entertain
|
||
|
himself with some one of his wives or mistresses; and 'twas death,
|
||
|
at any other time, for any other to go in), so he knew not how to
|
||
|
contrive to get a sight of her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Oroonoko felt all the agonies of love, and suffered under a
|
||
|
torment the most painful in the world, the old king was not exempted
|
||
|
from his share of affliction. He was troubled for having been
|
||
|
forced, by an irresistible passion, to rob his son of a treasure, he
|
||
|
knew, could not but be extremely dear to him; since she was the most
|
||
|
beautiful that ever had been seen, and had besides all the sweetness
|
||
|
and innocence of youth and modesty, with a charm of wit surpassing
|
||
|
all. He found that, however she was forced to expose her lovely person
|
||
|
to his withered arms, she could only sigh and weep there, and think of
|
||
|
Oroonoko; and oftentimes could not forbear speaking of him, though her
|
||
|
life were, by custom, forfeited by owning her passion. But she spoke
|
||
|
not of a lover only, but of a prince dear to him to whom she spoke;
|
||
|
and of the praises of a man who, till now, filled the old man's soul
|
||
|
with joy at every recital of his bravery, or even his name. And
|
||
|
'twas this dotage on our young hero that gave Imoinda a thousand
|
||
|
privileges to speak of him, without offending; and this
|
||
|
condescension in the old king, that made her take the satisfaction
|
||
|
of speaking of him so very often.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Besides, he many times inquired how the prince bore himself: and
|
||
|
those of whom he asked, being entirely slaves to the merits and
|
||
|
virtues of the prince, still answered what they thought conduced
|
||
|
best to his service; which was, to make the old king fancy that the
|
||
|
prince had no more interest in Imoinda, and had resigned her willingly
|
||
|
to the pleasure of the king; that he diverted himself with his
|
||
|
mathematicians, his fortifications, his officers, and his hunting.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This pleased the old lover, who failed not to report these things
|
||
|
again to Imoinda, that she might, by the example of her young lover,
|
||
|
withdraw her heart, and rest better contented in his arms. But,
|
||
|
however she was forced to receive this unwelcome news, in all
|
||
|
appearance with unconcern and content, her heart was bursting
|
||
|
within, and she was only happy when she could get alone, to vent her
|
||
|
griefs and moans with sighs and tears.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What reports of the prince's conduct were made to the king, he
|
||
|
thought good to justify as far as possibly he could by his actions;
|
||
|
and when he appeared in the presence of the king, he showed a face not
|
||
|
at all betraying his heart: so that in a little time, the old man,
|
||
|
being entirely convinced that he was no longer a lover of Imoinda,
|
||
|
he carried him with him, in his train, to the otan, often to banquet
|
||
|
with his mistresses. But as soon as he entered, one day, into the
|
||
|
apartment of Imoinda, with the king, at the first glance from her
|
||
|
eyes, notwithstanding all his determined resolution, he was ready to
|
||
|
sink in the place where he stood; and had certainly done so but for
|
||
|
the support of Aboan, a young man who was next to him; which, with his
|
||
|
change of countenance, had betrayed him, had the king chanced to
|
||
|
look that way. And I have observed, 'tis a very great error in those
|
||
|
who laugh when one says, "A negro can change color": for I have seen
|
||
|
'em as frequently blush, and look pale, and that as visibly as ever
|
||
|
I saw in the most beautiful white. And 'tis certain that both these
|
||
|
changes were evident, this day, in both these lovers. And Imoinda, who
|
||
|
saw with some joy the change in the prince's face, and found it in her
|
||
|
own, strove to divert the king from beholding either, by a forced
|
||
|
caress, with which she met him; which was a new wound in the heart
|
||
|
of the poor dying prince. But as soon as the king was busied in
|
||
|
looking on some fine thing of Imoinda's making, she had time to tell
|
||
|
the prince, with her angry, but love-darting eyes, that she resented
|
||
|
his coldness, and bemoaned her own miserable captivity. Nor were his
|
||
|
eyes silent, but answered hers again, as much as eyes could do,
|
||
|
instructed by the most tender and most passionate heart that ever
|
||
|
loved: and they spoke so well, and so effectually, as Imoinda no
|
||
|
longer doubted but she was the only delight and darling of that soul
|
||
|
she found pleading in 'em its right of love, which none was more
|
||
|
willing to resign than she. And 'twas this powerful language alone
|
||
|
that in an instant conveyed all the thoughts of their souls to each
|
||
|
other; that they both found there wanted but opportunity to make
|
||
|
them both entirely happy. But when he saw another door opened by
|
||
|
Onahal (a former old wife of the king's, who now had charge of
|
||
|
Imoinda), and saw the prospect of a bed of state made ready, with
|
||
|
sweets and flowers for the dalliance of the king, who immediately
|
||
|
led the trembling victim from his sight, into that prepared repose;
|
||
|
what rage! what wild frenzies seized his heart! which forcing to
|
||
|
keep within bounds, and to suffer without noise, it became the more
|
||
|
insupportable, and rent his soul with ten thousand pains. He was
|
||
|
forced to retire to vent his groans, where he fell down on a carpet,
|
||
|
and lay struggling a long time, and only breathing now and then, "O
|
||
|
Imoinda!" When Onahal had finished her necessary affair within,
|
||
|
shutting the door, she came forth, to wait till the king called; and
|
||
|
hearing someone sighing in the other room, she passed on, and found
|
||
|
the prince in that deplorable condition, which she thought needed
|
||
|
her aid. She gave him cordials, but all in vain; till finding the
|
||
|
nature of his disease, by his sighs, and naming Imoinda, she told
|
||
|
him he had not so much cause as he imagined to afflict himself: for if
|
||
|
he knew the king so well as she did, he would not lose a moment in
|
||
|
jealousy; and that she was confident that Imoinda bore, at this
|
||
|
moment, part in his affliction. Aboan was of the same opinion, and
|
||
|
both together persuaded him to reassume his courage; and all sitting
|
||
|
down on the carpet, the prince said so many obliging things to
|
||
|
Onahal that he half-persuaded her to be of his party: and she promised
|
||
|
him she would thus far comply with his just desires, that she would
|
||
|
let Imoinda know how faithful he was, what he suffered, and what he
|
||
|
said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This discourse lasted till the king called, which gave Oroonoko a
|
||
|
certain satisfaction; and with the hope Onahal had made him
|
||
|
conceive, he assumed a look as gay as 'twas possible a man in his
|
||
|
circumstances could do: and presently after, he was called in with the
|
||
|
rest who waited without. The king commanded music to be brought, and
|
||
|
several of his young wives and mistresses came all together by his
|
||
|
command, to dance before him; where Imoinda performed her part with an
|
||
|
air and grace so surpassing all the rest as her beauty was above
|
||
|
'em, and received the present ordained as a prize. The prince was
|
||
|
every moment more charmed with the new beauties and graces he beheld
|
||
|
in this fair one; and while he gazed, and she danced, Onahal was
|
||
|
retired to a window with Aboan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Onahal, as I said, was one of the cast-mistresses of the old
|
||
|
king; and 'twas these (now past their beauty) that were made guardians
|
||
|
or governantes to the new and the young ones, and whose business it
|
||
|
was to teach them all those wanton arts of love with which they
|
||
|
prevailed and charmed heretofore in their turn; and who now treated
|
||
|
the triumphing happy ones with all the severity as to liberty and
|
||
|
freedom that was possible, in revenge of their honors they rob them
|
||
|
of; envying them those satisfactions, those gallantries and
|
||
|
presents, that were once made to themselves, while youth and beauty
|
||
|
lasted, and which they now saw pass, as it were regardless by, and
|
||
|
paid only to the bloomings. And, certainly, nothing is more afflicting
|
||
|
to a decayed beauty than to behold in itself declining charms that
|
||
|
were once adored; and to find those caresses paid to new beauties,
|
||
|
to which once she laid claim; to hear them whisper, as she passes
|
||
|
by, that once was a delicate woman. Those abandoned ladies therefore
|
||
|
endeavor to revenge all the despites and decays of time, on these
|
||
|
flourishing happy ones. And 'twas this severity that gave Oroonoko a
|
||
|
thousand fears he should never prevail with Onahal to see Imoinda. But
|
||
|
as I said, she was now retired to a window with Aboan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This young man was not only one of the best quality, but a man
|
||
|
extremely well made, and beautiful; and coming often to attend the
|
||
|
king to the otan, he had subdued the heart of the antiquated Onahal,
|
||
|
which had not forgot how pleasant it was to be in love. And though she
|
||
|
had some decays in her face, she had none in her sense and wit; she
|
||
|
was there agreeable still, even to Aboan's youth: so that he took
|
||
|
pleasure in entertaining her with discourses of love. He knew also
|
||
|
that to make his court to these she-favorites was the way to be great;
|
||
|
these being the persons that do all affairs and business at court.
|
||
|
He had also observed that she had given him glances more tender and
|
||
|
inviting than she had done to others of his quality. And now, when
|
||
|
he saw that her favor could so absolutely oblige the prince, he failed
|
||
|
not to sigh in her ear, and to look with eyes all soft upon her, and
|
||
|
gave her hope that she had made some impressions on his heart. He
|
||
|
found her pleased at this, and making a thousand advances to him:
|
||
|
but the ceremony ending, and the king departing, broke up the
|
||
|
company for that day, and his conversation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Aboan failed not that night to tell the prince of his success, and
|
||
|
how advantageous the service of Onahal might be to his amour with
|
||
|
Imoinda. The prince was overjoyed with this good news, and besought
|
||
|
him if it were possible to caress her so as to engage her entirely,
|
||
|
which he could not fail to do, if he complied with her desires: "For
|
||
|
then," said the prince, "her life lying at your mercy, she must
|
||
|
grant you the request you make in my behalf." Aboan understood him,
|
||
|
and assured him he would make love so effectually that he would defy
|
||
|
the most expert mistress of the art to find out whether he
|
||
|
dissembled it, or had it really. And 'twas with impatience they waited
|
||
|
the next opportunity of going to the otan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wars came on, the time of taking the field approached; and 'twas
|
||
|
impossible for the prince to delay his going at the head of his army
|
||
|
to encounter the enemy; so that every day seemed a tedious year,
|
||
|
till he saw his Imoinda: for he believed he could not live if he
|
||
|
were forced away without being so happy. 'Twas with impatience,
|
||
|
therefore, that he expected the next visit the king would make; and
|
||
|
according to his wish it was not long.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The parley of the eyes of these two lovers had not passed so
|
||
|
secretly but an old jealous lover could spy it; or rather, he wanted
|
||
|
not flatterers who told him they observed it: so that the prince was
|
||
|
hastened to the camp, and this was the last visit he found he should
|
||
|
make to the otan; he therefore urged Aboan to make the best of this
|
||
|
last effort, and to explain himself so to Onahal that she, deferring
|
||
|
her enjoyment of her young lover no longer, might make way for the
|
||
|
prince to speak to Imoinda.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The whole affair being agreed on between the prince and Aboan,
|
||
|
they attended the king, as the custom was, to the otan; where, while
|
||
|
the whole company was taken up in beholding the dancing, and antic
|
||
|
postures the woman-royal made, to divert the kind, Onahal singled
|
||
|
out Aboan, whom she found most pliable to her wish. When she had him
|
||
|
where she believed she could not be heard, she sighed to him, and
|
||
|
softly cried, "Ah, Aboan! when will you be sensible of my passion? I
|
||
|
confess it with my mouth, because I would not give my eyes the lie;
|
||
|
and you have but too much already perceived they have confessed my
|
||
|
flame: nor would I have you believe that, because I am the abandoned
|
||
|
mistress of a king, I esteem myself altogether divested of charms. No,
|
||
|
Aboan, I have still a rest of beauty enough engaging, and have learned
|
||
|
to please too well, not to be desirable. I can have lovers still,
|
||
|
but will have none but Aboan." "Madam," replied the half-feigning
|
||
|
youth, "you have already, by my eyes, found you can still conquer; and
|
||
|
I believe 'tis in pity of me you condescend to this kind confession.
|
||
|
But, Madam, words are used to be so small a part of our
|
||
|
country-courtship that 'tis rare one can get so happy an opportunity
|
||
|
as to tell one's heart; and those few minutes we have are forced to be
|
||
|
snatched for more certain proofs of love than speaking and sighing;
|
||
|
and such I languish for."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He spoke this with such a tone that she hoped it true, and could not
|
||
|
forbear believing it; and being wholly transported with joy for having
|
||
|
subdued the finest of all the king's subjects to her desires, she took
|
||
|
from her ears two large pearls, and commanded him to wear 'em in
|
||
|
his. He would have refused 'em, crying, "Madam, these are not the
|
||
|
proofs of your love that I expect; 'tis opportunity, 'tis a lone
|
||
|
hour only, that can make me happy." But forcing the pearls into his
|
||
|
hand, she whispered softly to him; "Oh! do not fear a woman's
|
||
|
invention, when love sets her a-thinking." And pressing his hand,
|
||
|
she cried, "This night you shall be happy. Come to the gate of the
|
||
|
orange-grove, behind the otan, and I will be ready about midnight to
|
||
|
receive you." 'Twas thus agreed, and she left him, that no notice
|
||
|
might be taken of their speaking together.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ladies were still dancing, and the king, laid on a carpet,
|
||
|
with a great deal of pleasure was beholding them, especially
|
||
|
Imoinda, who that day appeared more lovely than ever, being
|
||
|
enlivened with the good tidings Onahal had brought her, of the
|
||
|
constant passion the prince had for her. The prince was laid on
|
||
|
another carpet at the other end of the room, with his eyes fixed on
|
||
|
the object of his soul; and as she turned or moved, so did they: and
|
||
|
she alone gave his eyes and soul their motions. Nor did Imoinda employ
|
||
|
her eyes to any other use than in beholding with infinite pleasure the
|
||
|
joy she produced in those of the prince. But while she was more
|
||
|
regarding him than the steps she took, she chanced to fall; and so
|
||
|
near him, as that leaping with extreme force from the carpet, he
|
||
|
caught her in his arms as she fell: and 'twas visible to the whole
|
||
|
presence, the joy wherewith he received her. He clasped her close to
|
||
|
his bosom, and quite forgot that reverence that was due to the
|
||
|
mistress of a king, and that punishment that is the reward of a
|
||
|
boldness of this nature. And had not the presence of mind of Imoinda
|
||
|
(fonder of his safety than her own) befriended him, in making her
|
||
|
spring from his arms, and fall into her dance again, he had at that
|
||
|
instant met his death; for the old king, jealous to the last degree,
|
||
|
rose up in rage, broke all the diversion, and led Imoinda to her
|
||
|
apartment, and sent out word to the prince to go immediately to the
|
||
|
camp; and that if he were found another night in court, he should
|
||
|
suffer the death ordained for disobedient offenders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You may imagine how welcome this news was to Oroonoko, whose
|
||
|
unseasonable transport and caress of Imoinda was blamed by all men
|
||
|
that loved him: and now he perceived his fault, yet cried that for
|
||
|
such another moment he would be content to die.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All the otan was in disorder about this accident; and Onahal was
|
||
|
particularly concerned because on the prince's stay depended her
|
||
|
happiness; for she could no longer expect that of Aboan: so that ere
|
||
|
they departed, they contrived it so that the prince and he should both
|
||
|
come that night to the grove of the otan, which was all of oranges and
|
||
|
citrons, and that there they would wait her orders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They parted thus with grief enough till night, leaving the king in
|
||
|
possession of the lovely maid. But nothing could appease the
|
||
|
jealousy of the old lover; he would not be imposed on, but would
|
||
|
have it that Imoinda made a false step on purpose to fall into
|
||
|
Oroonoko's bosom, and that all things looked like a design on both
|
||
|
sides; and 'twas in vain she protested her innocence: he was old and
|
||
|
obstinate, and left her more than half assured that his fear was true.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The king, going to his apartment, sent to know where the prince was,
|
||
|
and if be intended to obey his command. The messenger returned, and
|
||
|
told him, he found the prince pensive, and altogether unprepared for
|
||
|
the campaign; that he lay negligently on the ground, and answered very
|
||
|
little. This confirmed the jealousy of the king, and he commanded that
|
||
|
they should very narrowly and privately watch his motions; and that he
|
||
|
should not stir from his apartment but one spy or other should be
|
||
|
employed to watch him: so that the hour approaching wherein he was
|
||
|
to go to the citron-grove and taking only Aboan along with him, he
|
||
|
leaves his apartment, and was watched to the very gate of the otan;
|
||
|
where he was seen to enter, and where they left him, to carry back the
|
||
|
tidings to the king.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oroonoko and Aboan were no sooner entered but Onahal led the
|
||
|
prince to the apartment of Imoinda; who, not knowing anything of her
|
||
|
happiness, was laid in bed. But Onahal only left him in her chamber,
|
||
|
to make the best of his opportunity, and took her dear Aboan to her
|
||
|
own; where he showed the height of complaisance for his prince,
|
||
|
when, to give him an opportunity, he suffered himself to be caressed
|
||
|
in bed by Onahal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The prince softly wakened Imoinda, who was not a little surprised
|
||
|
with joy to find him there; and yet she trembled with a thousand
|
||
|
fears. I believe he omitted saying nothing to this young maid that
|
||
|
might persuade her to suffer him to seize his own, and take the rights
|
||
|
of love. And I believe she was not long resisting those arms where she
|
||
|
so longed to be; and having opportunity, night, and silence, youth,
|
||
|
love, and desire, he soon prevailed, and ravished in a moment what his
|
||
|
old grandfather had been endeavoring for so many months.
|
||
|
|
||
|
'Tis not to be imagined the satisfaction of these two young
|
||
|
lovers; nor the vows she made him, that she remained a spotless maid
|
||
|
till that night, and that what she did with his grandfather had robbed
|
||
|
him of no part of her virgin-honor; the gods, in mercy and justice,
|
||
|
having reserved that for her plighted lord, to whom of right it
|
||
|
belonged. And 'tis impossible to express the transports he suffered,
|
||
|
while he listened to a discourse so charming from her loved lips;
|
||
|
and clasped that body in his arms, for whom he had so long languished:
|
||
|
and nothing now afflicted him but his sudden departure from her; for
|
||
|
he told her the necessity, and his commands, but should depart
|
||
|
satisfied in this, that since the old king had hitherto not been
|
||
|
able to deprive him of those enjoyments which only belonged to him, he
|
||
|
believed for the future he would be less able to injure him: so
|
||
|
that, abating the scandal of the veil, which was no otherwise so
|
||
|
than that she was wife to another, he believed her safe, even in the
|
||
|
arms of the king, and innocent; yet would he have ventured at the
|
||
|
conquest of the world, and have given it all, to have had her
|
||
|
avoided that honor of receiving the royal veil. 'Twas thus, between
|
||
|
a thousand caresses, that both bemoaned the hard fate of youth and
|
||
|
beauty, so liable to that cruel promotion: 'twas a glory that could
|
||
|
well have been spared here, though desired and aimed at by all the
|
||
|
young females of that kingdom.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But while they were thus fondly employed, forgetting how time ran
|
||
|
on, and that the dawn must conduct him far away from his only
|
||
|
happiness, they heard a great noise in the otan, and unusual voices of
|
||
|
men; at which the prince, starting from the arms of the frighted
|
||
|
Imoinda, ran to a little battle-ax he used to wear by his side; and
|
||
|
having not so much leisure as to put on his habit, he opposed
|
||
|
himself against some who were already opening the door: which they did
|
||
|
with so much violence that Oroonoko was not able to defend it; but was
|
||
|
forced to cry out with a commanding voice, "Whoever ye are that have
|
||
|
the boldness to attempt to approach this apartment thus rudely, know
|
||
|
that I, the Prince Oroonoko, will revenge it with the certain death of
|
||
|
him that first enters. Therefore, stand back, and know, this place
|
||
|
is sacred to love and me this night; to-morrow 'tis the king's."
|
||
|
|
||
|
This he spoke with a voice so resolved and assured that they soon
|
||
|
retired from the door; but cried, "'Tis by the king's command we are
|
||
|
come; and being satisfied by thy voice, O Prince, as much as if we had
|
||
|
entered, we can report to the king the truth of all his fears, and
|
||
|
leave thee to provide for thy own safety, as thou art advised by thy
|
||
|
friends."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At these words they departed, and left the prince to take a short
|
||
|
and sad leave of his Imoinda; who, trusting in the strength of her
|
||
|
charms, believed she should appease the fury of a jealous king, by
|
||
|
saying she was surprised, and that it was by force of arms he got into
|
||
|
her apartment. All her concern now was for his life, and therefore she
|
||
|
hastened him to the camp, and with much ado prevailed on him to go.
|
||
|
Nor was it she alone that prevailed; Aboan and Onahal both pleaded,
|
||
|
and both assured him of a lie that should be well enough contrived
|
||
|
to secure Imoinda. So that at last, with a heart sad as death, dying
|
||
|
eyes, and sighing soul, Oroonoko departed, and took his way to the
|
||
|
camp.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not long after, the king in person came to the otan; where
|
||
|
beholding Imoinda, with rage in his eyes, he upbraided her
|
||
|
wickedness and perfidy; and threatening her royal lover, she fell on
|
||
|
her face at his feet, bedewing the floor with her tears, and imploring
|
||
|
his pardon for a fault which she had not with her will committed; as
|
||
|
Onahal, who was also prostrate with her, could testify: that,
|
||
|
unknown to her, he had broke into her apartment, and ravished her. She
|
||
|
spoke this much against her conscience; but to save her own life,
|
||
|
'twas absolutely necessary she should feign this falsity. She knew
|
||
|
it could not injure the prince, he being fled to an army that would
|
||
|
stand by him against any injuries that should assault him. However,
|
||
|
this last thought, of Imoinda's being ravished, changed the measures
|
||
|
of his revenge; and whereas before he designed to be himself her
|
||
|
executioner, he now resolved she should not die. But as it is the
|
||
|
greatest crime in nature amongst 'em to touch a woman after having
|
||
|
been possessed by a son, a father, or a brother, so now he looked on
|
||
|
Imoinda as a polluted thing, wholly unfit for his embrace; nor would
|
||
|
he resign her to his grandson, because she had received the royal
|
||
|
veil: he therefore removes her from the otan, with Onahal; whom he put
|
||
|
into safe hands, with order they should be both sold off as slaves
|
||
|
to another country, either Christian or heathen, 'twas no matter
|
||
|
where.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This cruel sentence, worse than death, they implored might be
|
||
|
reversed; but their prayers were vain, and it was put in execution
|
||
|
accordingly, and that with so much secrecy that none, either without
|
||
|
or within the otan, knew anything of their absence or their destiny.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The old king nevertheless executed this with a great deal of
|
||
|
reluctancy; but he believed he had made a very great conquest over
|
||
|
himself when he had once resolved, and had performed what he resolved.
|
||
|
He believed now that his love had been unjust; and that he could not
|
||
|
expect the gods, or Captain of the Clouds (as they call the unknown
|
||
|
Power), would suffer a better consequence from so ill a cause. He
|
||
|
now begins to hold Oroonoko excused; and to say, he had reason for
|
||
|
what he did: and now everybody could assure the king how
|
||
|
passionately Imoinda was beloved by the prince; even those confessed
|
||
|
it now who said the contrary before his flame was not abated. So
|
||
|
that the king being old, and not able to defend himself in war, and
|
||
|
having no sons of all his race remaining alive, but only this, to
|
||
|
maintain him on his throne; and looking on this as a man disobliged,
|
||
|
first by the rape of his mistress, or rather wife, and now by
|
||
|
depriving him wholly of her, he feared, might make him desperate,
|
||
|
and do some cruel thing, either to himself or his old grandfather
|
||
|
the offender, he began to repent him extremely of the contempt he had,
|
||
|
in his rage, put on Imoinda. Besides, he considered he ought in
|
||
|
honor to have killed her for this offense, if it had been one. He
|
||
|
ought to have had so much value and consideration for a maid of her
|
||
|
quality as to have nobly put her to death, and not to have sold her
|
||
|
like a common slave; the greatest revenge, and the most disgraceful of
|
||
|
any, and to which they a thousand times prefer death, and implore
|
||
|
it; as Imoinda did, but could not obtain that honor. Seeing
|
||
|
therefore it was certain that Oroonoko would highly resent this
|
||
|
affront, he thought good to make some excuse for his rashness to
|
||
|
him; and to that end, he sent a messenger to the camp, with orders
|
||
|
to treat with him about the matter, to gain his pardon, and to
|
||
|
endeavor to mitigate his grief; but that by no means he should tell
|
||
|
him she was sold, but secretly put to death: for he knew he should
|
||
|
never obtain his pardon for the other.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the messenger came, he found the prince upon the point of
|
||
|
engaging with the enemy; but as soon as he heard of the arrival of the
|
||
|
messenger, he commanded him to his tent, where he embraced him, and
|
||
|
received him with joy: which was soon abated by the downcast looks
|
||
|
of the messenger, who was instantly demanded the cause by Oroonoko;
|
||
|
who, impatient of delay, asked a thousand questions in a breath, and
|
||
|
all concerning Imoinda. But there needed little return; for he could
|
||
|
almost answer himself of all he demanded from his sighs and eyes. At
|
||
|
last the messenger, casting himself at the prince's feet, and
|
||
|
kissing them with all the submission of a man that had something to
|
||
|
implore which he dreaded to utter, he besought him to hear with
|
||
|
calmness what he had to deliver to him, and to call up all his noble
|
||
|
and heroic courage, to encounter with his words, and defend himself
|
||
|
against the ungrateful things he must relate. Oroonoko replied, with a
|
||
|
deep sigh, and a languishing voice, "I am armed against their worst
|
||
|
efforts- for I know they will tell me Imoinda is no more- and after
|
||
|
that, you may spare the rest." Then, commanding him to rise, he laid
|
||
|
himself on a carpet, under a rich pavilion, and remained a good
|
||
|
while silent, and was hardly heard to sigh. When he was come a
|
||
|
little to himself, the messenger asked him leave to deliver that
|
||
|
part of his embassy which the prince had not yet divined, and the
|
||
|
prince cried, "I permit thee." Then he told him the affliction the old
|
||
|
king was in, for the rashness he had committed in his cruelty to
|
||
|
Imoinda; and how he deigned to ask pardon for his offense, and to
|
||
|
implore the prince would not suffer that loss to touch his heart too
|
||
|
sensibly, which now all the gods could not restore him, but might
|
||
|
recompense him in glory, which he begged he would pursue; and that
|
||
|
death, that common revenger of all injuries, would soon even the
|
||
|
account between him and a feeble old man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oroonoko bade him return his duty to his lord and master, and to
|
||
|
assure him, there was no account of revenge to be adjusted between
|
||
|
them: if there were, 'twas he was the aggressor, and that death
|
||
|
would be just, and, maugre his age, would see him righted; and he
|
||
|
was contented to leave his share of glory to youths more fortunate and
|
||
|
worthy of that favor from the gods; that henceforth he would never
|
||
|
lift a weapon, or draw a bow, but abandon the small remains of his
|
||
|
life to sighs and tears, and the continual thoughts of what his lord
|
||
|
and grandfather had thought good to send out of the world, with all
|
||
|
that youth, that innocence and beauty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After having spoken this, whatever his greatest officers and men
|
||
|
of the best rank could do, they could not raise him from the carpet,
|
||
|
or persuade him to action and resolutions of life; but commanding
|
||
|
all to retire, he shut himself into his pavilion all that day, while
|
||
|
the enemy was ready to engage: and wondering at the delay, the whole
|
||
|
body of the chief of the army then addressed themselves to him, and to
|
||
|
whom they had much ado to get admittance. They fell on their faces
|
||
|
at the foot of his carpet, where they lay, and besought him with
|
||
|
earnest prayers and tears to lead them forth to battle and not let the
|
||
|
enemy take advantages of them; and implored him to have regard to
|
||
|
his glory, and to the world, that depended on his courage and conduct.
|
||
|
But he made no other reply to all their supplications but this, that
|
||
|
he had now no more business for glory; and for the world, it was a
|
||
|
trifle not worth his care: "Go," continued he, sighing, "and divide it
|
||
|
amongst you, and reap with joy what you so vainly prize, and leave
|
||
|
me to my more welcome destiny."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They then demanded what they should do, and whom he would constitute
|
||
|
in his room, that the confusion of ambitious youth and power might not
|
||
|
ruin their order, and make them a prey to the enemy. He replied, he
|
||
|
would not give himself the trouble- but wished 'em to choose the
|
||
|
bravest man amongst 'em, let his quality or birth be what it would:
|
||
|
"for, O my friends!" said he, "it is not titles make men brave or
|
||
|
good; or birth that bestows courage and generosity, or makes the owner
|
||
|
happy. Believe this, when you behold Oroonoko the most wretched, and
|
||
|
abandoned by Fortune, of all the creation of the gods." So turning
|
||
|
himself about, he would make no more reply to all they could urge or
|
||
|
implore.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The army, beholding their officers return unsuccessful, with sad
|
||
|
faces and ominous looks, that presaged no good luck, suffered a
|
||
|
thousand fears to take possession of their hearts, and the enemy to
|
||
|
come even upon them, before they would provide for their safety, by
|
||
|
any defense: and though they were assured by some, who had a mind to
|
||
|
animate them, that they should be immediately headed by the prince,
|
||
|
and that in the mean time Aboan had orders to command as general;
|
||
|
yet they were so dismayed for want of that great example of bravery
|
||
|
that they could make but a very feeble resistance; and at last,
|
||
|
downright fled before the enemy, who pursued 'em to the very tents,
|
||
|
killing 'em. Nor could all Aboan's courage, which that day gained
|
||
|
him immortal glory, shame 'em into a manly defense of themselves.
|
||
|
The guards that were left behind about the prince's tent, seeing the
|
||
|
soldiers flee before the enemy, and scatter themselves all over the
|
||
|
plain in great disorder, made such outcries as roused the prince
|
||
|
from his amorous slumber, in which he had remained buried for two
|
||
|
days, without permitting any sustenance to approach him. But, in spite
|
||
|
of all his resolutions, he had not the constancy of grief to that
|
||
|
degree as to make him insensible of the danger of his army; and in
|
||
|
that instant he leaped from his couch, and cried, "Come, if we must
|
||
|
die, let us meet death the noblest way; and 'twill be more like
|
||
|
Oroonoko to encounter him at an army's head, opposing the torrent of a
|
||
|
conquering foe, than lazily on a couch, to wait his lingering
|
||
|
pleasure, and die every moment by a thousand racking thoughts; or be
|
||
|
tamely taken by an enemy, and led a whining lovesick slave to adorn
|
||
|
the triumphs of Jamoan, that young victor, who already is entered
|
||
|
beyond the limits I have prescribed him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
While he was speaking, he suffered his people to dress him for the
|
||
|
field; and sallying out of his pavilion, with more life and vigor in
|
||
|
his countenance than ever he showed, he appeared like some divine
|
||
|
power descended to save his country from destruction: and his people
|
||
|
had purposely put on him all things that might make him shine with
|
||
|
most splendor, to strike a reverend awe into the beholders. He flew
|
||
|
into the thickest of those that were pursuing his men; and being
|
||
|
animated with despair, he fought as if he came on purpose to die,
|
||
|
and did such things as will not be believed that human strength
|
||
|
could perform; and such as soon inspired all the rest with new courage
|
||
|
and new order. And now it was that they began to fight indeed; and so,
|
||
|
as if they would not be outdone even by their adored hero; who turning
|
||
|
the tide of the victory, changing absolutely the fate of the day,
|
||
|
gained an entire conquest: and Oroonoko having the good fortune to
|
||
|
single out Jamoan, he took him prisoner with his own hand, having
|
||
|
wounded him almost to death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Jamoan afterwards became very dear to him, being a man very
|
||
|
gallant, and of excellent graces, and fine parts; so that he never put
|
||
|
him amongst the rank of captives, as they used to do, without
|
||
|
distinction, for the common sale, or market, but kept him in his own
|
||
|
court, where he retained nothing of the prisoner but the name, and
|
||
|
returned no more into his own country; so great an affection he took
|
||
|
for Oroonoko, and by a thousand tales and adventures of love and
|
||
|
gallantry flattered his disease of melancholy and languishment:
|
||
|
which I have often heard him say, had certainly killed him but for the
|
||
|
conversation of this prince and Aboan, and the French governor he
|
||
|
had from his childhood, of whom I have spoken before, and who was a
|
||
|
man of admirable wit, great ingenuity, and learning; all which he
|
||
|
had infused into his young pupil. This Frenchman was banished out of
|
||
|
his own country, for some heretical notions he held: and though he was
|
||
|
a man of very little religion, he had admirable morals and a brave
|
||
|
soul.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the total defeat of Jamoan's army, which all fled, or were
|
||
|
left dead upon the place, they spent some time in the camp; Oroonoko
|
||
|
choosing rather to remain a while there in his tents than to enter
|
||
|
into a palace or live in a court where he had so lately suffered so
|
||
|
great a loss. The officers therefore, who saw and knew his cause of
|
||
|
discontent, invented all sorts of diversions and sports to entertain
|
||
|
their prince: so that what with those amusements abroad, and others at
|
||
|
home, that is, within their tents, with the persuasions, arguments,
|
||
|
and care of his friends and servants that he more peculiarly prized,
|
||
|
he wore off in time a great part of that chagrin, and torture of death
|
||
|
of despair, which the first effects of Imoinda's death had given
|
||
|
him; insomuch as having received a thousand kind embassies from the
|
||
|
king, and invitation to return to court, he obeyed, though with no
|
||
|
little reluctancy: and when he did so, there was a visible change in
|
||
|
him, and for a long time he was much more melancholy than before.
|
||
|
But time lessens all extremes, and reduces 'em to mediums and
|
||
|
unconcern: but no motives of beauties, though all endeavored it, could
|
||
|
engage him in any sort of amour, though he had all the invitations
|
||
|
to it, both from his own youth and others' ambitions and designs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oroonoko was no sooner returned from this last conquest, and
|
||
|
received at court with all the joy and magnificence that could be
|
||
|
expressed to a young victor, who was not only returned triumphant, but
|
||
|
beloved like a deity, than there arrived in the port an English ship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The master of it had often before been in these countries, and was
|
||
|
very well known to Oroonoko, with whom he had trafficked for slaves,
|
||
|
and had used to do the same with his predecessors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This commander was a man of a finer sort of address and
|
||
|
conversation, better bred, and more engaging, than most of that sort
|
||
|
of men are; so that he seemed rather never to have been bred out of
|
||
|
a court than almost all his life at sea. This captain therefore was
|
||
|
always better received at court than most of the traders to those
|
||
|
countries were; and especially by Oroonoko, who was more civilized,
|
||
|
according to the European mode, than any other had been, and took more
|
||
|
delight in the white nations, and, above all, men of parts and wit. To
|
||
|
this captain he sold abundance of his slaves; and for the favor and
|
||
|
esteem he had for him, made him many presents, and obliged him to stay
|
||
|
at court as long as possibly he could. Which the captain seemed to
|
||
|
take as a very great honor done him, entertaining the prince every day
|
||
|
with globes and maps, and mathematical discourses and instruments;
|
||
|
eating, drinking, hunting, and living with him with so much
|
||
|
familiarity that it was not to be doubted but he had gained very
|
||
|
greatly upon the heart of this gallant young man. And the captain in
|
||
|
return of all these mighty favors, besought the prince to honor his
|
||
|
vessel with his presence, some day or other at dinner, before he
|
||
|
should set sail: which he condescended to accept, and appointed his
|
||
|
day. The captain, on his part, failed not to have all things in a
|
||
|
readiness, in the most magnificent order he could possibly: and the
|
||
|
day being come, the captain, in his boat, richly adorned with
|
||
|
carpets and velvet cushions, rowed to the shore to receive the prince;
|
||
|
with another long-boat, where was placed all his music and trumpets,
|
||
|
with which Oroonoko was extremely delighted; who met him on the shore,
|
||
|
attended by his French governor, Jamoan, Aboan, and about an hundred
|
||
|
of the noblest of the youths of the court. And after they had first
|
||
|
carried the prince on board, the boats fetched the rest off; where
|
||
|
they found a very splendid treat, with all sorts of fine wines; and
|
||
|
were as well entertained as 'twas possible in such a place to be.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The prince, having drunk hard of punch and several sorts of wine, as
|
||
|
did all the rest (for great care was taken they should want nothing of
|
||
|
that part of the entertainment), was very merry, and in great
|
||
|
admiration of the ship, for he had never been in one before; so that
|
||
|
he was curious of beholding every place where he decently might
|
||
|
descend. The rest, no less curious, who were not quite overcome with
|
||
|
drinking, rambled at their pleasure fore and aft, as their fancies
|
||
|
guided 'em: so that the captain, who had well laid his design
|
||
|
before, gave the word, and seized on all his guests; they clapping
|
||
|
great irons suddenly on the prince, when he was leaped down into the
|
||
|
hold to view that part of the vessel; and locking him fast down,
|
||
|
secured him. The same treachery was used to all the rest; and all in
|
||
|
one instant, in several places of the ship, were lashed fast in irons,
|
||
|
and betrayed to slavery. That great design over, they set all hands to
|
||
|
work to hoist sail; and with as treacherous as fair a wind they made
|
||
|
from the shore with this innocent and glorious prize, who thought of
|
||
|
nothing less than such an entertainment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some have commended this act, as brave in the captain; but I will
|
||
|
spare my sense of it, and leave it to my reader to judge as he
|
||
|
pleases. It may be easily guessed in what manner the prince resented
|
||
|
this indignity, who may be best resembled to a lion taken in a toil;
|
||
|
so he raged, so he struggled for liberty, but all in vain: and they
|
||
|
had so wisely managed his fetters that he could not use a hand in
|
||
|
his defense to quit himself of a life that would by no means endure
|
||
|
slavery; nor could he move from the place where he was tied to any
|
||
|
solid part of the ship against which he might have beat his head,
|
||
|
and have finished his disgrace that way. So that being deprived of all
|
||
|
other means, he resolved to perish for want of food; and pleased at
|
||
|
last with that thought, and toiled and tired by rage and
|
||
|
indignation, he laid himself down, and sullenly resolved upon dying,
|
||
|
and refused all things that were brought him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This did not a little vex the captain, and the more so because he
|
||
|
found almost all of 'em of the same humor; so that the loss of so many
|
||
|
brave slaves, so tall and goodly to behold, would have been very
|
||
|
considerable. He therefore ordered one to go from him (for he would
|
||
|
not be seen himself) to Oroonoko, and to assure him, he was
|
||
|
afflicted for having rashly done so unhospitable a deed, and which
|
||
|
could not be now remedied, since they were far from shore; but since
|
||
|
he resented it in so high a nature, he assured him he would revoke his
|
||
|
resolution, and set both him and his friends ashore on the next land
|
||
|
they should touch at; and of this the messenger gave him his oath,
|
||
|
provided he would resolve to live. And Oroonoko, whose honor was
|
||
|
such as he never had violated a word in his life himself, much less
|
||
|
a solemn asseveration, believed in an instant what this man said;
|
||
|
but replied, he expected, for a confirmation of this, to have his
|
||
|
shameful fetters dismissed. This demand was carried to the captain;
|
||
|
who returned him answer that the offense had been so great which he
|
||
|
had put upon the prince that he durst not trust him with liberty while
|
||
|
he remained in the ship, for fear lest by a valor natural to him,
|
||
|
and a revenge that would animate that valor, he might commit some
|
||
|
outrage fatal to himself and the king his master, to whom this
|
||
|
vessel did belong. To this Oroonoko replied, he would engage his honor
|
||
|
to behave himself in all friendly order and manner, and obey the
|
||
|
command of the captain, as he was lord of the king's vessel and
|
||
|
general of those men under his command.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was delivered to the still doubting captain, who could not
|
||
|
resolve to trust a heathen, he said, upon his parole, a man that had
|
||
|
no sense or notion of the God that he worshiped. Oroonoko then
|
||
|
replied, he was very sorry to hear that the captain pretended to the
|
||
|
knowledge and worship of any gods, who had taught him no better
|
||
|
principles than not to credit as he would be credited. But they told
|
||
|
him, the difference of their faith occasioned that distrust: for the
|
||
|
captain had protested to him upon the word of a Christian, and sworn
|
||
|
in the name of a great God; which if he should violate, he would
|
||
|
expect eternal torment in the world to come. "Is that all the
|
||
|
obligation he has to be just to his oath?" replied Oroonoko. "Let
|
||
|
him know, I swear by my honor; which to violate would not only
|
||
|
render me contemptible and despised by all brave and honest men, and
|
||
|
so give myself perpetual pain, but it would be eternally offending and
|
||
|
displeasing all mankind; harming, betraying, circumventing, and
|
||
|
outraging all men. But punishments hereafter are suffered by one's
|
||
|
self; and the world takes no cognizance whether this God have revenged
|
||
|
'em, or not, 'tis done so secretly, and deferred so long: while the
|
||
|
man of no honor suffers every moment the scorn and contempt of the
|
||
|
honester world, and dies every day ignominiously in his fame, which is
|
||
|
more valuable than life. I speak not this to move belief, but to
|
||
|
show you how you mistake, when you imagine that he who will violate
|
||
|
his honor will keep his word with his gods." So, turning from him with
|
||
|
a disdainful smile, he refused to answer him, when he urged him to
|
||
|
know what answer he should carry back to his captain; so that he
|
||
|
departed without saying any more.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The captain pondering and consulting what to do, it was concluded
|
||
|
that nothing but Oroonoko's liberty would encourage any of the rest to
|
||
|
eat, except the Frenchman, whom the captain could not pretend to
|
||
|
keep prisoner, but only told him he was secured because he might act
|
||
|
something in favor of the prince, but that he should be freed as
|
||
|
soon as they came to land. So that they concluded it wholly
|
||
|
necessary to free the prince from his irons, that he might show
|
||
|
himself to the rest; that they might have an eye upon him, and that
|
||
|
they could not fear a single man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This being resolved, to make the obligation the greater, the captain
|
||
|
himself went to Oroonoko; where, after many compliments and assurances
|
||
|
of what he had already promised, he receiving from the prince his
|
||
|
parole, and his hand, for his good behavior, dismissed his irons,
|
||
|
and brought him to his own cabin; where, after having treated and
|
||
|
reposed him a while (for he had neither eat nor slept in four days
|
||
|
before), he besought him to visit those obstinate people in chains,
|
||
|
who refused all manner of sustenance; and entreated him to oblige
|
||
|
'em to eat, and assure 'em of that liberty on the first opportunity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oroonoko, who was too generous not to give credit to his words,
|
||
|
showed himself to his people, who were transported with excess of
|
||
|
joy at the sight of their darling prince; falling at his feet, and
|
||
|
kissing and embracing him; believing, as some divine oracle, all he
|
||
|
assured 'em. But he besought 'em to bear their chains with that
|
||
|
bravery that became those whom he had seen act so nobly in arms; and
|
||
|
that they could not give him greater proofs of their love and
|
||
|
friendship, since 'twas all the security the captain (his friend)
|
||
|
could have, against the revenge, he said, they might possibly justly
|
||
|
take, for the injuries sustained by him. And they all, with one
|
||
|
accord, assured him, they could not suffer enough, when it was for his
|
||
|
repose and safety.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After this, they no longer refused to eat, but took what was brought
|
||
|
'em, and were pleased with their captivity, since by it they hoped
|
||
|
to redeem the prince, who, all the rest of the voyage, was treated
|
||
|
with all the respect due to his birth, though nothing could divert his
|
||
|
melancholy; and he would often sigh for Imoinda, and think this a
|
||
|
punishment due to his misfortune, in having left that noble maid
|
||
|
behind him, that fatal night, in the otan, when he fled to the camp.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Possessed with a thousand thoughts of past joys with this fair young
|
||
|
person, and a thousand griefs for her eternal loss, he endured a
|
||
|
tedious voyage, and at last arrived at the mouth of the river of
|
||
|
Surinam, a colony belonging to the King of England, and where they
|
||
|
were to deliver some part of their slaves. There the merchants and
|
||
|
gentlemen of the country going on board, to demand those lots of
|
||
|
slaves they had already agreed on; and, amongst those, the overseers
|
||
|
of those plantations where I then chanced to be: the captain, who
|
||
|
had given the word, ordered his men to bring up those noble slaves
|
||
|
in fetters, whom I have spoken of; and having put 'em, some in one,
|
||
|
and some in other lots, with women and children (which they call
|
||
|
pickaninnies) they sold 'em off, as slaves, to several merchants and
|
||
|
gentlemen; not putting any two in one lot, because they would separate
|
||
|
'em far from each other; nor daring to trust 'em together, lest rage
|
||
|
and courage should put 'em upon contriving some great action, to the
|
||
|
ruin of the colony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oroonoko was first seized on, and sold to our overseer, who had
|
||
|
the first lot, with seventeen more of all sorts and sizes, but not one
|
||
|
of quality with him. When he saw this, he found what they meant;
|
||
|
for, as I said, he understood English pretty well; and being wholly
|
||
|
unarmed and defenseless, so as it was in vain to make any
|
||
|
resistance, he only beheld the captain with a look all fierce and
|
||
|
disdainful, upbraiding him with eyes that forced blushes on his guilty
|
||
|
cheeks, he only cried in passing over the side of the ship, "Farewell,
|
||
|
Sir, 'tis worth my sufferings to gain so true a knowledge both of
|
||
|
you and of your gods by whom you swear." And desiring those that
|
||
|
held him to forbear their pains, and telling 'em he would make no
|
||
|
resistance, he cried, "Come, my fellow-slaves, let us descend, and see
|
||
|
if we can meet with more honor and honesty in the next world we
|
||
|
shall touch upon." So he nimbly leaped into the boat, and showing no
|
||
|
more concern, suffered himself to be rowed up the river, with his
|
||
|
seventeen companions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gentleman that bought him was a young Cornish gentleman whose
|
||
|
name was Trefry; a man of great wit and fine learning, and was carried
|
||
|
into those parts by the Lord-Governor, to manage all his affairs.
|
||
|
He, reflecting on the last words of Oroonoko to the captain, and
|
||
|
beholding the richness of his vest, no sooner came into the boat but
|
||
|
he fixed his eyes on him; and finding something so extraordinary in
|
||
|
his face, his shape and mien, a greatness of look, and haughtiness
|
||
|
in his air, and finding he spoke English, had a great mind to be
|
||
|
inquiring into his quality and fortune: which, though Oroonoko
|
||
|
endeavored to hide, by only confessing he was above the rank of common
|
||
|
slaves, Trefry soon found he was yet something greater than he
|
||
|
confessed; and from that moment began to conceive so vast an esteem
|
||
|
for him that he ever after loved him as his dearest brother, and
|
||
|
showed him all the civilities due to so great a man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trefry was a very good mathematician and a linguist; could speak
|
||
|
French and Spanish; and in the three days they remained in the boat
|
||
|
(for so long were they going from the ship to the plantation) he
|
||
|
entertained Oroonoko so agreeably with his art and discourse that he
|
||
|
was no less pleased with Trefry than he was with the prince; and he
|
||
|
thought himself, at least, fortunate in this, that since he was a
|
||
|
slave, as long as he would suffer himself to remain so he had a man of
|
||
|
so excellent wit and parts for a master. So that before they had
|
||
|
finished their voyage up the river, he made no scruple of declaring to
|
||
|
Trefry all his fortunes, and most part of what I have here related,
|
||
|
and put himself wholly into the hands of his new friend, whom he found
|
||
|
resenting all the injuries were done him, and was charmed with all the
|
||
|
greatnesses of his actions; which were recited with that modesty,
|
||
|
and delicate sense, as wholly vanquished him, and subdued him to his
|
||
|
interest. And he promised him on his word and honor he would find
|
||
|
the means to re-conduct him to his own country again; assuring him, he
|
||
|
had a perfect abhorrence of so dishonorable an action, and that he
|
||
|
would sooner have died than have been the author of such a perfidy. He
|
||
|
found the prince was very much concerned to know what became of his
|
||
|
friends, and how they took their slavery; and Trefry promised to
|
||
|
take care about the inquiring after their condition, and that he
|
||
|
should have an account of 'em.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though, as Oroonoko afterwards said, he had little reason to
|
||
|
credit the words of a Backearay, yet he knew not why, but he saw a
|
||
|
kind of sincerity and awful truth in the face of Trefry; he saw an
|
||
|
honesty in his eyes, and he found him wise and witty enough to
|
||
|
understand honor: for it was one of his maxims, A man of wit could not
|
||
|
be a knave or villain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In their passage up the river they put in at several houses for
|
||
|
refreshment; and ever when they landed, numbers of people would
|
||
|
flock to behold this man: not but their eyes were daily entertained
|
||
|
with the sight of slaves, but the fame of Oroonoko was gone before
|
||
|
him, and all people were in admiration of his beauty. Besides, he
|
||
|
had a rich habit on, in which he was taken, so different from the
|
||
|
rest, and which the captain could not strip him of, because he was
|
||
|
forced to surprise his person in the minute he sold him. When he found
|
||
|
his habit made him liable, as he thought, to be gazed at the more,
|
||
|
he begged Trefry to give him something more befitting a slave, which
|
||
|
he did, and took off his robes: nevertheless he shone through all, and
|
||
|
his osenbrigs (a sort of brown Holland suit he had on) could not
|
||
|
conceal the graces of his looks and mien; and he had no less
|
||
|
admirers than when he had his dazzling habit on: the royal youth
|
||
|
appeared in spite of the slave, and people could not help treating him
|
||
|
after a different manner, without designing it. As soon as they
|
||
|
approached him, they venerated and esteemed him; his eyes insensibly
|
||
|
commanded respect, and his behavior insinuated it into every soul.
|
||
|
So that there was nothing talked of but this young and gallant
|
||
|
slave, even by those who yet knew not that he was a prince.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I ought to tell you that the Christians never buy any slaves but
|
||
|
they give 'em some name of their own, their native ones being likely
|
||
|
very barbarous, and hard to pronounce; so that Mr. Trefry gave
|
||
|
Oroonoko that of Caesar; which name will live in that country as
|
||
|
long as that (scarce more) glorious one of the great Roman: for 'tis
|
||
|
most evident he wanted no part of the personal courage of that Caesar,
|
||
|
and acted things as memorable, had they been done in some part of
|
||
|
the world replenished with people and historians that might have given
|
||
|
him his due. But his misfortune was to fall in an obscure world,
|
||
|
that afforded only a female pen to celebrate his fame; though I
|
||
|
doubt not but it had lived from others' endeavors if the Dutch, who
|
||
|
immediately after his time took that country, had not killed,
|
||
|
banished, and dispersed all those that were capable of giving the
|
||
|
world this great man's life much better than I have done. And Mr.
|
||
|
Trefry, who designed it, died before he began it, and bemoaned himself
|
||
|
for not having undertook it in time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the future, therefore, I must call Oroonoko Caesar; since by
|
||
|
that name only he was known in our Western World, and by that name
|
||
|
he was received on shore at Parham-House, where he was destined a
|
||
|
slave. But if the King himself (God bless him) had come ashore,
|
||
|
there could not have been greater expectation by all the whole
|
||
|
plantation, and those neighboring ones, than was on ours at that time;
|
||
|
and he was received more like a governor than a slave:
|
||
|
notwithstanding, as the custom was, they assigned him his portion of
|
||
|
land, his house, and his business up in the plantation. But as it
|
||
|
was more for form than any design to put him to his task, he endured
|
||
|
no more of the slave but the name, and remained some days in the
|
||
|
house, receiving all visits that were made him, without stirring
|
||
|
towards that part of the plantation where the negroes were.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last, he would needs go view his land, his house, and the
|
||
|
business assigned him. But he no sooner came to the houses of the
|
||
|
slaves, which are like a little town by itself, the negroes all having
|
||
|
left work, but they all came forth to behold him, and found he was
|
||
|
that prince who had, at several times, sold most of 'em to these
|
||
|
parts; and from a veneration they pay to great men, especially if they
|
||
|
know 'em, and from the surprise and awe they had at the sight of
|
||
|
him, they all cast themselves at his feet, crying out, in their
|
||
|
language, "Live, O King! Long live, O King!" and kissing his feet,
|
||
|
paid him even divine homage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several English gentlemen were with him, and what Mr. Trefry had
|
||
|
told 'em was here confirmed; of which he himself before had no other
|
||
|
witness than Caesar himself: but he was infinitely glad to find his
|
||
|
grandeur confirmed by the adoration of all the slaves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Caesar, troubled with their over-joy and over-ceremony, besought 'em
|
||
|
to rise, and to receive him as their fellow-slave; assuring them he
|
||
|
was no better. At which they set up with one accord a most terrible
|
||
|
and hideous mourning and condoling, which he and the English had
|
||
|
much ado to appease: but at last they prevailed with 'em, and they
|
||
|
prepared all their barbarous music, and everyone killed and dressed
|
||
|
something of his own stock (for every family has their land apart,
|
||
|
on which, at their leisure times, they breed all eatable things),
|
||
|
and clubbing it together, made a most magnificent supper, inviting
|
||
|
their Grandee Captain, their Prince, to honor it with his presence;
|
||
|
which he did, and several English with him, where they all waited on
|
||
|
him, some playing, others dancing before him all the time, according
|
||
|
to the manners of their several nations, and with unwearied industry
|
||
|
endeavoring to please and delight him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While they sat at meat, Mr. Trefry told Caesar that most of these
|
||
|
young slaves were undone in love with a fine she-slave, whom they
|
||
|
had had about six months on their land; the prince, who never heard
|
||
|
the name of love without a sigh, nor any mention of it without the
|
||
|
curiosity of examining further into that tale, which of all discourses
|
||
|
was most agreeable to him, asked how they came to be so unhappy as
|
||
|
to be all undone for one fair slave. Trefry, who was naturally
|
||
|
amorous, and loved to talk of love as well as anybody, proceeded to
|
||
|
tell him they had the most charming black that ever was beheld on
|
||
|
their plantation, about fifteen or sixteen years old, as he guessed;
|
||
|
that for his part he had done nothing but sigh for her ever since
|
||
|
she came; and that all the white beauties he had seen never charmed
|
||
|
him so absolutely as this fine creature had done; and that no man,
|
||
|
of any nation, ever beheld her that did not fall in love with her; and
|
||
|
that she had all the slaves perpetually at her feet; and the whole
|
||
|
country resounded with the fame of Clemene. "For so," said he, "we
|
||
|
have christened her: but she denies us all with such a noble disdain
|
||
|
that 'tis a miracle to see that she who can give such eternal
|
||
|
desires should herself be all ice and unconcern. She is adorned with
|
||
|
the most graceful modesty that ever beautified youth; the softest
|
||
|
sigher- that, if she were capable of love, one would swear she
|
||
|
languished for some absent happy man; and so retired as if she
|
||
|
feared a rape even from the god of day, or that the breezes would
|
||
|
steal kisses from her delicate mouth. Her task of work, some sighing
|
||
|
lover every day makes it his petition to perform for her; which she
|
||
|
accepts blushing, and with reluctancy, for fear he will ask her a look
|
||
|
for a recompense, which he dares not presume to hope; so great an
|
||
|
awe she strikes into the hearts of her admirers. "I do not wonder,"
|
||
|
replied the prince, "that Clemene should refuse slaves, being, as
|
||
|
you say, so beautiful; but wonder how she escapes those that can
|
||
|
entertain her as you can do: or why, being your slave, you do not
|
||
|
oblige her to yield." "I confess," said Trefry, "when I have,
|
||
|
against her will, entertained her with love so long as to be
|
||
|
transported with my passion even above decency, I have been ready to
|
||
|
make use of those advantages of strength and force nature has given
|
||
|
me: but oh! she disarms me with that modesty and weeping, so tender
|
||
|
and so moving that I retire, and thank my stars she overcame me."
|
||
|
The company laughed at his civility to a slave, and Caesar only
|
||
|
applauded the nobleness of his passion and nature, since that slave
|
||
|
might be noble, or, what was better, have true notions of honor and
|
||
|
virtue in her. Thus passed they this night. after having received from
|
||
|
the slaves all imaginable respect and obedience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next day, Trefry asked Caesar to walk when the heat was allayed,
|
||
|
and designedly carried him by the cottage of the fair slave; and
|
||
|
told him, she whom he spoke of last night lived there retired.
|
||
|
"But," says he, "I would not wish you to approach; for I am sure you
|
||
|
will be in love as soon as you behold her." Caesar assured him he
|
||
|
was proof against all the charms of that sex; and that if he
|
||
|
imagined his heart could be so perfidious to love again, after
|
||
|
Imoinda, he believed he should tear it from his bosom. They had no
|
||
|
sooner spoke but a little shock-dog, that Clemene had presented her,
|
||
|
which she took great delight in, ran out; and she, not knowing anybody
|
||
|
was there, ran to get it in again, and bolted out on those who were
|
||
|
just speaking of her: when seeing them, she would have run in again,
|
||
|
but Trefry caught her by the hand, and cried, "Clemene, however you
|
||
|
fly a lover, you ought to pay some respect to this stranger" (pointing
|
||
|
to Caesar). But she, as if she had resolved never to raise her eyes to
|
||
|
the face of a man again, bent 'em the more to the earth, when he
|
||
|
spoke, and gave the prince the leisure to look the more at her.
|
||
|
There needed no long gazing, or consideration, to examine who this
|
||
|
fair creature was; he soon saw Imoinda all over her; in a minute he
|
||
|
saw her face, her shape, her air, her modesty, and all that called
|
||
|
forth his soul with joy at his eyes, and left his body destitute of
|
||
|
almost life: it stood without motion, and for a minute knew not that
|
||
|
it had a being; and, I believe, he had never come to himself, so
|
||
|
oppressed he was with over-joy, if he had not met with this allay,
|
||
|
that he perceived Imoinda fall dead in the hands of Trefry. This
|
||
|
awakened him, and he ran to her aid, and caught her in his arms, where
|
||
|
by degrees she came to herself; and 'tis needless to tell with what
|
||
|
transports, what ecstasies of joy, they both a while beheld each
|
||
|
other, without speaking; then snatched each other to their arms;
|
||
|
then gazed again, as if they still doubted whether they possessed
|
||
|
the blessing they grasped: but when they recovered their speech,
|
||
|
'tis not to be imagined what tender things they expressed to each
|
||
|
other; wondering what strange fate had brought them again together.
|
||
|
They soon informed each other of their fortunes, and equally
|
||
|
bewailed their fate; but at the same time they mutually protested that
|
||
|
even fetters and slavery were soft and easy, and would be supported
|
||
|
with joy and pleasure while they could be so happy to possess each
|
||
|
other, and be able to make good their vows. Caesar swore he
|
||
|
disdained the empire of the world, while he could behold his
|
||
|
Imoinda; and she despised grandeur and pomp, those vanities of her
|
||
|
sex, when she could gaze on Oroonoko. He adored the very cottage where
|
||
|
she resided, and said, that little inch of the world would give him
|
||
|
more happiness than all the universe could do; and she vowed, it was a
|
||
|
palace while adorned with the presence of Oroonoko.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trefry was infinitely pleased with this novel, and found this
|
||
|
Clemene was the fair mistress of whom Caesar had before spoke; and was
|
||
|
not a little satisfied that Heaven was so kind to the prince as to
|
||
|
sweeten his misfortunes by so lucky an accident; and leaving the
|
||
|
lovers to themselves, was impatient to come down to Parham-House
|
||
|
(which was on the same plantation) to give me an account of what had
|
||
|
happened. I was as impatient to make these lovers a visit, having
|
||
|
already made a friendship with Caesar, and from his own mouth
|
||
|
learned what I have related; which was confirmed by his Frenchman, who
|
||
|
was set on shore to seek his fortune, and of whom they could not
|
||
|
make a slave, because a Christian; and he came daily to Parham-Hill to
|
||
|
see and pay his respects to his pupil prince. So that concerning and
|
||
|
interesting myself in all that related to Caesar, whom I had assured
|
||
|
of liberty as soon as the Governor arrived, I hasted presently to
|
||
|
the place where these lovers were, and was infinitely glad to find
|
||
|
this beautiful young slave (who had already gained all our esteems,
|
||
|
for her modesty and her extraordinary prettiness) to be the same I had
|
||
|
heard Caesar speak so much of. One may imagine then we paid her a
|
||
|
treble respect; and though from her being carved in fine flowers and
|
||
|
birds all over her body, we took her to be of quality before, yet when
|
||
|
we knew Clemene was Imoinda, we could not enough admire her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had forgot to tell you that those who are nobly born of that
|
||
|
country are so delicately cut and raised all over the fore-part of the
|
||
|
trunk of their bodies that it looks as if it were japanned, the
|
||
|
works being raised like high point round the edges of the flowers.
|
||
|
Some are only carved with a little flower, or bird, at the sides of
|
||
|
the temples, as was Caesar; and those who are so carved over the
|
||
|
body resemble our ancient Picts that are figured in the chronicles,
|
||
|
but these carvings are more delicate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From that happy day Caesar took Clemene for his wife, to the general
|
||
|
joy of all people; and there was as much magnificence as the country
|
||
|
would afford at the celebration of this wedding: and in a very short
|
||
|
time after she conceived with child, which made Caesar even adore her,
|
||
|
knowing he was the last of his great race. This new accident made
|
||
|
him more impatient of liberty, and he was every day treating with
|
||
|
Trefry for his and Clemene's liberty, and offered either gold or a
|
||
|
vast quantity of slaves, which should be paid before they let him
|
||
|
go, provided he could have any security that he should go when his
|
||
|
ransom was paid. They fed him from day to day with promises, and
|
||
|
delayed him till the Lord-Governor should come; so that he began to
|
||
|
suspect them of falsehood, and that they would delay him till the time
|
||
|
of his wife's delivery, and make a slave of that too: for all the
|
||
|
breed is theirs to whom the parents belong. This thought made him very
|
||
|
uneasy, and his sullenness gave them some jealousies of him; so that I
|
||
|
was obliged, by some persons who feared a mutiny (which is very
|
||
|
fatal sometimes in those colonies that abound so with slaves, that
|
||
|
they exceed the whites in vast numbers), to discourse with Caesar, and
|
||
|
to give him all the satisfaction I possibly could. They knew he and
|
||
|
Clemene were scarce an hour in a day from my lodgings; that they eat
|
||
|
with me, and that I obliged 'em in all things I was capable of. I
|
||
|
entertained them with the loves of the Romans, and great me, which
|
||
|
charmed him to my company; and her, with teaching her all the pretty
|
||
|
works that I was mistress of, and telling her stories of nuns, and
|
||
|
endeavoring to bring her to the knowledge of the true God: but of
|
||
|
all discourses, Caesar liked that the worst, and would never be
|
||
|
reconciled to our notions of the Trinity, of which he ever made a
|
||
|
jest; it was a riddle, he said, would turn his brain to conceive,
|
||
|
and one could not make him understand what faith was. However, these
|
||
|
conversations failed not altogether so well to divert him that he
|
||
|
liked the company of us women much above the men, for he could not
|
||
|
drink, and he is but an ill companion in that country that cannot.
|
||
|
So that obliging him to love us very well, we had all the liberty of
|
||
|
speech with him, especially myself, whom he called his Great Mistress;
|
||
|
and indeed my word would go a great way with him. For these reasons
|
||
|
I had opportunity to take notice to him that he was not well pleased
|
||
|
of late, as he used to be; was more retired and thoughtful; and told
|
||
|
him, I took it ill he should suspect we would break our words with
|
||
|
him, and not permit both him and Clemene to return to his own kingdom,
|
||
|
which was not so long a way but when he was once on his voyage he
|
||
|
would quickly arrive there. He made me some answers that showed a
|
||
|
doubt in him, which made me ask what advantage it would be to doubt.
|
||
|
It would but give us a fear of him, and possibly compel us to treat
|
||
|
him so as I should be very loth to behold: that is, it might
|
||
|
occasion his confinement. Perhaps this was not so luckily spoke of me,
|
||
|
for I perceived he resented that word, which I strove to soften
|
||
|
again in vain. However, he assured me that, whatsoever resolutions
|
||
|
he should take, he would act nothing upon the white people; and as for
|
||
|
myself, and those upon that plantation where he was, he would sooner
|
||
|
forfeit his eternal liberty, and life itself, than lift his hand
|
||
|
against his greatest enemy on that place. He besought me to suffer
|
||
|
no fears upon his account, for he could do nothing that honor should
|
||
|
not dictate; but he accused himself for having suffered slavery so
|
||
|
long: yet he charged that weakness on love alone, who was capable of
|
||
|
making him neglect even glory itself; and, for which, now he
|
||
|
reproaches himself every moment of the day. Much more to this effect
|
||
|
he spoke, with an air impatient enough to make me know he would not be
|
||
|
long in bondage; and though he suffered only the name of a slave,
|
||
|
and had nothing of the toil and labor of one, yet that was
|
||
|
sufficient to render him uneasy; and he had been too long idle, who
|
||
|
used to be always in action, and in arms. He had a spirit all rough
|
||
|
and fierce, and that could not be tamed to lazy rest; and though all
|
||
|
endeavors were used to exercise himself in such actions and sports
|
||
|
as this world afforded, as running, wrestling, pitching the bar,
|
||
|
hunting and fishing, chasing and killing tigers of a monstrous size,
|
||
|
which this continent affords in abundance, and wonderful snakes,
|
||
|
such as Alexander is reported to have encountered at the River of
|
||
|
Amazons, and which Caesar took great delight to overcome; yet these
|
||
|
were not actions great enough for his large soul, which was still
|
||
|
panting after more renowned actions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before I parted that day with him, I got, with much ado, a promise
|
||
|
from him to rest yet a little longer with patience, and wait the
|
||
|
coming of the Lord-Governor, who was every day expected on our
|
||
|
shore: he assured me he would, and this promise he desired me to
|
||
|
know was given perfectly in complaisance to me, in whom he had an
|
||
|
entire confidence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After this, I neither thought it convenient to trust him much out of
|
||
|
our view, nor did the country, who feared him; but with one accord
|
||
|
it was advised to treat him fairly, and oblige him to remain within
|
||
|
such a compass, and that he should be permitted, as seldom as could
|
||
|
be, to go up to the plantations of the negroes; or, if he did, to be
|
||
|
accompanied by some that should be rather in appearance attendants
|
||
|
than spies. This care was for some time taken, and Caesar looked
|
||
|
upon it as a mark of extraordinary respect, and was glad his
|
||
|
discontent had obliged 'em to be more observant to him; he received
|
||
|
new assurance from the overseer, which was confirmed to him by the
|
||
|
opinion of all the gentlemen of the country, who made their court to
|
||
|
him. During this time that we had his company more frequently than
|
||
|
hitherto we had had, it may not be unpleasant to relate to you the
|
||
|
diversions we entertained him with, or rather he us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My stay was to be short in that country; because my father died at
|
||
|
sea, and never arrived to possess the honor designed him (which was
|
||
|
Lieutenant-General of six and thirty islands, besides the Continent of
|
||
|
Surinam) nor the advantages he hoped to reap by them: so that though
|
||
|
we were obliged to continue on our voyage, we did not intend to stay
|
||
|
upon the place. Though, in a word, I must say thus much of it; that
|
||
|
certainly had his late Majesty, of sacred memory, but seen and known
|
||
|
what a vast and charming world he had been master of in that
|
||
|
continent, he would never have parted so easily with it to the
|
||
|
Dutch. 'Tis a continent whose vast extent was never yet known, and may
|
||
|
contain more noble earth than all the universe beside; for, they
|
||
|
say, it reaches from east to west one way as far as China, and another
|
||
|
to Peru: it affords all things both for beauty and use; 'tis there
|
||
|
eternal spring, always the very months of April, May, and June; the
|
||
|
shades are perpetual, the trees bearing at once all degrees of
|
||
|
leaves and fruit, from blooming buds to ripe autumn: groves of
|
||
|
oranges, lemons, citrons, figs, nutmegs, and noble aromatics
|
||
|
continually bearing their fragrancies. The trees appearing all like
|
||
|
nosegays adorned with flowers of different kinds; some are all
|
||
|
white, some purple, some scarlet, some blue, some yellow; bearing at
|
||
|
the same time ripe fruit, and blooming young, or producing every day
|
||
|
new. The very wood of all these trees has an intrinsic value above
|
||
|
common timber; for they are, when cut, of different colors, glorious
|
||
|
to behold, and bear a price considerable, to inlay withal. Besides
|
||
|
this, they yield rich balm and gums; so that we make our candles of
|
||
|
such an aromatic substance as does not only give a sufficient light,
|
||
|
but, as they burn, they cast their perfumes all about. Cedar is the
|
||
|
common firing, and all the houses are built with it. The very meat
|
||
|
we eat, when set on the table, if it be native, I mean of the country,
|
||
|
perfumes the whole room; especially a little beast called an
|
||
|
armadillo, a thing which I can liken to nothing so well as a
|
||
|
rhinoceros; 'tis all in white armor, so jointed that it moves as
|
||
|
well in it as if it had nothing on: this beast is about the bigness of
|
||
|
a pig of six weeks old. But it were endless to give an account of
|
||
|
all the divers wonderful and strange things that country affords,
|
||
|
and which we took a very great delight to go in search of; though
|
||
|
those adventures are oftentimes fatal, and at least dangerous: but
|
||
|
while we had Caesar in our company on these designs, we feared no
|
||
|
harm, nor suffered any.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As soon as I came into the country, the best house in it was
|
||
|
presented me, called St. John's Hill. It stood on a vast rock of white
|
||
|
marble, at the foot of which the river ran a vast depth down, and
|
||
|
not to be descended on that side; the little waves, still dashing
|
||
|
and washing the foot of this rock, made the softest murmurs and
|
||
|
purlings in the world; and the opposite bank was adorned with such
|
||
|
vast quantities of different flowers eternally blowing, and every
|
||
|
day and hour new, fenced behind 'em with lofty trees of a thousand
|
||
|
rare forms and colors, that the prospect was the most ravishing that
|
||
|
sands can create. On the edge of this white rock, towards the river,
|
||
|
was a walk or grove of orange- and lemon-trees, about half the
|
||
|
length of the Mall here; flowery and fruit-bearing branches met at the
|
||
|
top, and hindered the sun, whose rays are very fierce there, from
|
||
|
entering a beam into the grove; and the cool air that came from the
|
||
|
river made it not only fit to entertain people in, at all the
|
||
|
hottest hours of the day, but refreshed the sweet blossoms, and made
|
||
|
it always sweet and charming; and sure, the whole globe of the world
|
||
|
cannot show so delightful a place as this grove was. Not all the
|
||
|
gardens of boasted Italy can produce a shade to outvie this, which
|
||
|
nature had joined with art to render so exceeding fine; and 'tis a
|
||
|
marvel to see how such vast trees, as big as English oaks, could
|
||
|
take footing on so solid a rock, and in so little earth as covered
|
||
|
that rock: but all things by nature there are rare, delightful, and
|
||
|
wonderful. But to our sports.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sometimes we would go surprising, and in search of young tigers in
|
||
|
their dens, watching when the old ones went forth to forage for
|
||
|
prey; and oftentimes we have been in great danger, and have fled apace
|
||
|
for our lives, when surprised by the dams. But once, above all other
|
||
|
times, we went on this design, and Caesar was with us; who had no
|
||
|
sooner stolen a young tiger from her nest, but going off, we
|
||
|
encountered the dam, bearing a buttock of a cow, which she had torn
|
||
|
off with her mighty paw, and going with it towards her den: we had
|
||
|
only four women, Caesar, and an English gentleman, brother to Harry
|
||
|
Martin, the great Oliverian; we found there was no escaping this
|
||
|
enraged and ravenous beast. However, we women fled as fast as we could
|
||
|
from it; but our heels had not saved our lives if Caesar had not
|
||
|
laid down his club, when he found the tiger quit her prey to make more
|
||
|
speed towards him; and taking Mr. Martin's sword, desired to stand
|
||
|
aside, or follow the ladies. He obeyed him; and Caesar met this
|
||
|
monstrous beast of mighty size and vast limbs, who came with open jaws
|
||
|
upon him; and fixing his awful stern eyes full upon those of the
|
||
|
beast, and putting himself into a very steady and good aiming
|
||
|
posture of defense, ran his sword quite through her breast down to her
|
||
|
very heart, home to the hilt of the sword: the dying beast stretched
|
||
|
forth her paw, and going to grasp his thigh, surprised with death in
|
||
|
that very moment, did him no other harm than fixing her long nails
|
||
|
in his flesh very deep, feebly wounded him, but could not grasp the
|
||
|
flesh to tear off any. When he had done this, he hollowed to us to
|
||
|
return: which, after some assurance of his victory, we did, and
|
||
|
found him lunging out the sword from the bosom of the tiger, who was
|
||
|
laid in her blood on the ground; he took up the club, and with an
|
||
|
unconcern that had nothing of the joy or gladness of a victory, he
|
||
|
came and laid the whelp at my feet. We all extremely wondered at his
|
||
|
daring, and at the bigness of the beast, which was about the height of
|
||
|
an heifer, but of mighty great and strong limbs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another time being in the woods, he killed a tiger which had long
|
||
|
infested that part, and borne away abundance of sheep and oxen, and
|
||
|
other things that were for the support of those to whom they belonged:
|
||
|
abundance of people assailed this beast, some affirming they had
|
||
|
shot her with several bullets quite through the body, at several
|
||
|
times; and some swearing they shot her through the very heart, and
|
||
|
they believed she was a devil rather than a mortal thing. Caesar had
|
||
|
often said he had a mind to encounter this monster, and spoke with
|
||
|
several gentlemen who had attempted her; one crying, "I shot her
|
||
|
with so many poisoned arrows," another with his gun in this part of
|
||
|
her, and another in that; so that he, remarking all these places where
|
||
|
she was shot, fancied still he should overcome her by giving her
|
||
|
another sort of a wound than any had yet done, and one day said (at
|
||
|
the table), "What trophies and garlands, ladies, will you make me,
|
||
|
if I bring you home the heart of this ravenous beast, that eats up all
|
||
|
your lambs and pigs?" We all promised he should be rewarded at all our
|
||
|
hands. So taking a bow, which he chose out of a great many, he went up
|
||
|
into the wood, with two gentlemen, where he imagined this devourer
|
||
|
to be; they had not passed very far in it but they heard her voice,
|
||
|
growling and grumbling, as if she were pleased with something she
|
||
|
was doing. When they came in view, they found her muzzling in the
|
||
|
belly of a new-ravished sheep, which she had torn open; and seeing
|
||
|
herself approached, she took fast hold of her prey with her fore-paws,
|
||
|
and set a very fierce raging look on Caesar, without offering to
|
||
|
approach him, for fear at the same time of losing what she had in
|
||
|
possession. So that Caesar remained a good while, only taking aim, and
|
||
|
getting an opportunity to shoot her where he designed: 'twas some time
|
||
|
before he could accomplish it; and to wound her, and not kill her,
|
||
|
would but have enraged her the more, and endangered him. He had a
|
||
|
quiver of arrows at his side, so that if one failed, he could be
|
||
|
supplied; at last, retiring a little, he gave her opportunity to
|
||
|
eat, for he found she was ravenous, and fell to as soon as she saw him
|
||
|
retire, being more eager of her prey than of doing new mischiefs: when
|
||
|
he going softly to one side of her, and hiding his person behind
|
||
|
certain herbage that grew high and thick, he took so good aim that, as
|
||
|
he intended, he shot her just into the eye, and the arrow was sent
|
||
|
with so good a will, and so sure a hand, that it stuck in her brain,
|
||
|
and made her caper, and become mad for a moment or two; but being
|
||
|
seconded by another arrow, she fell dead upon the prey. Caesar cut her
|
||
|
open with a knife, to see where those wounds were that had been
|
||
|
reported to him, and why she did not die of 'em. But I shall now
|
||
|
relate a thing that, possibly, will find no credit among men;
|
||
|
because 'tis a notion commonly received with us that nothing can
|
||
|
receive a wound in the heart and live: but when the heart of this
|
||
|
courageous animal was taken out, there were seven bullets of lead in
|
||
|
it, the wound seamed up with great scars, and she lived with the
|
||
|
bullets a great while, for it was long since they were shot. This
|
||
|
heart the conqueror brought up to us, and 'twas a very great curiosity
|
||
|
which all the country came to see; and which gave Caesar occasion of
|
||
|
many fine discourses of accidents in war and strange escapes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At other times he would go a-fishing; and discoursing on that
|
||
|
diversion, he found we had in that country a very strange fish, called
|
||
|
a numb eel (an eel of which I have eaten) that, while it is alive,
|
||
|
it has a quality so cold that those who are angling, though with a
|
||
|
line of ever so great a length, with a rod at the end of it, it shall,
|
||
|
in the same minute the bait is touched by this eel, seize him or her
|
||
|
that holds the rod with a numbness that shall deprive 'em of sense for
|
||
|
a while; and some have fallen into the water, and others dropped as
|
||
|
dead on the banks of the rivers where they stood, as soon as this fish
|
||
|
touches the bait. Caesar used to laugh at this, and believed it
|
||
|
impossible a man could lose his force at the touch of a fish; and
|
||
|
could not understand that philosophy, that a cold quality should be of
|
||
|
that nature; however, he had a great curiosity to try whether it would
|
||
|
have the same effect on him it had on others, and often tried, but
|
||
|
in vain. At last, the sought-for fish came to the bait, as he stood
|
||
|
angling on the bank; and instead of throwing away the rod, or giving
|
||
|
it a sudden twitch out of the water, whereby he might have caught both
|
||
|
the eel and have dismissed the rod before it could have too much power
|
||
|
over him for experiment-sake, he grasped it but the harder, and
|
||
|
fainting fell into the river; and being still possessed of the rod,
|
||
|
the tide carried him, senseless as he was, a great way, till an Indian
|
||
|
boat took him up; and perceived, when they touched him, a numbness
|
||
|
seize them, and by that knew the rod was in his hand; which with a
|
||
|
paddle (that is, a short oar) they struck away, and snatched it into
|
||
|
the boat, eel and all. If Caesar was almost dead, with the effect of
|
||
|
this fish, he was more so with that of the water, where he had
|
||
|
remained the space of going a league, and they found they had much ado
|
||
|
to bring him back to life; but at last they did, and brought him home,
|
||
|
where he was in a few hours well recovered and refreshed, and not a
|
||
|
little ashamed to find he should be overcome by an eel, and that all
|
||
|
the people who heard his defiance would laugh at him. But we cheered
|
||
|
him up; and he being convinced, we had the eel at supper, which was
|
||
|
a quarter of an ell about, and most delicate meat; and was of the more
|
||
|
value, since it cost so dear as almost the life of so gallant a man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
About this time we were in many mortal fears about some disputes the
|
||
|
English had with the Indians; so that we could scarce trust ourselves,
|
||
|
without great numbers, to go to any Indian towns or place where they
|
||
|
they abode, for fear they should fall upon us, as they did immediately
|
||
|
after my coming away; and the place being in the possession of the
|
||
|
Dutch, they used them not so civilly as the English: so that they
|
||
|
cut in pieces all they could take, getting into houses, and hanging up
|
||
|
the mother and all her children about her; and cut a footman, I left
|
||
|
behind me, all in joints, and nailed him to trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This feud began while I was there; so that I lost half the
|
||
|
satisfaction I proposed, in not seeing and visiting the Indian
|
||
|
towns. But one day, bemoaning of our misfortunes upon this account,
|
||
|
Caesar told us we need not fear, for if we had a mind to go, he
|
||
|
would undertake to be our guard. Some would, but most would not
|
||
|
venture: about eighteen of us resolved, and took barge; and after
|
||
|
eight days, arrived near an Indian town: but approaching it, the
|
||
|
hearts of some of our company failed, and they would not venture on
|
||
|
shore; so we polled, who would, and who would not. For my part, I
|
||
|
said, if Caesar would, I would go. He resolved; so did my brother
|
||
|
and my woman, a maid of good courage. Now, none of us speaking the
|
||
|
language of the people, and imagining we should have a half
|
||
|
diversion in gazing only, and not knowing what they said, we took a
|
||
|
fisherman that lived at the mouth of the river, who had been a long
|
||
|
inhabitant there, and obliged him to go with us. But because he was
|
||
|
known to the Indians, as trading among 'em, and being, by long
|
||
|
living there, become a perfect Indian in color, we, who had a mind
|
||
|
to surprise 'em, by making them see something they never had seen
|
||
|
(that is, white people), resolved only myself, my brother, and woman
|
||
|
should go: so Caesar, the fisherman, and the rest, hiding behind
|
||
|
some thick reeds and flowers that grew in the banks, let us pass on
|
||
|
towards the town, which was on the bank of the river all along. A
|
||
|
little distant from the houses, or huts, we saw some dancing, others
|
||
|
busied in fetching and carrying of water from the river. They had no
|
||
|
sooner spied us but they set up a loud cry, that frighted us at first;
|
||
|
we thought it had been for those that should kill us, but it seems
|
||
|
it was of wonder and amazement. They were all naked; and we were
|
||
|
dressed, so as is most commode for the hot countries, very
|
||
|
glittering and rich; so that we appeared extremely fine: my own hair
|
||
|
was cut short, and I had a taffety cap, with black feathers on my
|
||
|
head; my brother was in a stuff-suit, with silver loops and buttons,
|
||
|
and abundance of green ribbon. This was all infinitely surprising to
|
||
|
them; and because we saw them stand still till we approached 'em, we
|
||
|
took heart and advanced, came up to 'em, and offered 'em our hands;
|
||
|
which they took, and looked on us round about, calling still for
|
||
|
more company; who came swarming out, all wondering, and crying out
|
||
|
Tepeeme: taking their hair up in their hands, and spreading it wide to
|
||
|
those they called out to; as if they would say (as indeed it
|
||
|
signified), Numberless wonders, or not to be recounted, no more than
|
||
|
to number the hair of their heads. By degrees they grew more bold, and
|
||
|
from gazing upon us round, they touched us, laying their hands upon
|
||
|
all the features of our faces, feeling our breasts and arms, taking up
|
||
|
one petticoat, then wondering to see another; admiring our shoes and
|
||
|
stockings, but more our garters, which we gave 'em, and they tied
|
||
|
about their legs, being laced with silver lace at the ends; for they
|
||
|
much esteem any shining things. In fine, we suffered 'em to survey
|
||
|
us as they pleased, and we thought they would never have done admiring
|
||
|
us. When Caesar, and the rest, saw we were received with such
|
||
|
wonder, they came up to us; and finding the Indian trader whom they
|
||
|
knew (for 'tis by these fishermen, called Indian traders, we hold a
|
||
|
commerce with 'em; for they love not to go far from home, and we never
|
||
|
go to them), when they saw him, therefore, they set up a new joy,
|
||
|
and cried in their language, Oh! here's our Tiguamy, and we shall
|
||
|
now know whether those things can speak. So advancing to him, some
|
||
|
of 'em gave him their hands, and cried, Amora Tiguamy; which is as
|
||
|
much as, How do you do? or, Welcome, Friend: and all, with one din,
|
||
|
began to gabble to him, and asked if we had sense and wit? If we could
|
||
|
talk of affairs of life and war, as they could do? If we could hunt,
|
||
|
swim, and do a thousand things they use? He answered 'em, we could.
|
||
|
Then they invited us into their houses, and dressed venison and
|
||
|
buffalo for us; and, going out, gathered a leaf of a tree called a
|
||
|
sarumbo leaf, of six yards long, and spread it on the ground for a
|
||
|
table-cloth and cutting another in pieces, instead of plates, set us
|
||
|
on little low Indian stools, which they cut out of one entire piece of
|
||
|
wood, and paint in a sort of Japan-work. They serve every one their
|
||
|
mess on these pieces of leaves; and it was very good, but too
|
||
|
high-seasoned with pepper. When we had eat, my brother and I took
|
||
|
out our flutes, and played to 'em, which gave 'em new wonder; and I
|
||
|
soon perceived, by an admiration that is natural to these people,
|
||
|
and by the extreme ignorance and simplicity of 'em, it were not
|
||
|
difficult to establish any unknown or extravagant religion among them,
|
||
|
and to impose any notions or fictions upon 'em. For seeing a kinsman
|
||
|
of mine set some paper on fire with a burning-glass, a trick they
|
||
|
had never before seen, they were like to have adored him for a god,
|
||
|
and begged he would give 'em the characters or figures of his name,
|
||
|
that they might oppose it against winds and storms: which he did,
|
||
|
and they held it up in those seasons, and fancied it had a charm to
|
||
|
conquer them, and kept it like a holy relic. They are very
|
||
|
superstitious, and called him the great Peeie, that is, Prophet.
|
||
|
They showed us their Indian Peeie, a youth of about sixteen years old,
|
||
|
as handsome as Nature could make a man. They consecrate a beautiful
|
||
|
youth from his infancy, and all arts are used to complete him in the
|
||
|
finest manner, both in beauty and shape. He is bred to all the
|
||
|
little arts and cunning they are capable of; to all the legerdemain
|
||
|
tricks and sleight-of-hand, whereby he imposes upon the rabble; and is
|
||
|
both a doctor in physic and divinity: and by these tricks makes the
|
||
|
sick believe he sometimes eases their pains, by drawing from the
|
||
|
afflicted part little serpents, or odd flies, or worms, or any strange
|
||
|
thing; and though they have besides undoubted good remedies for almost
|
||
|
all their diseases, they cure the patient more by fancy than by
|
||
|
medicines, and make themselves feared, loved, and reverenced. This
|
||
|
young Peeie had a very young wife, who, seeing my brother kiss her,
|
||
|
came running and kissed me. After this they kissed one another, and
|
||
|
made it a very great jest, it being so novel; and new admiration and
|
||
|
laughing went round the multitude, that they never will forget that
|
||
|
ceremony, never before used or known. Caesar had a mind to see and
|
||
|
talk with their war-captains, and we were conducted to one of their
|
||
|
houses; where we beheld several of the great captains, who had been at
|
||
|
council: but so frightful a vision it was to see 'em, no fancy can
|
||
|
create; no sad dreams can represent so dreadful a spectacle. For my
|
||
|
part, I took 'em for hobgoblins, or fiends, rather than men: but
|
||
|
however their shapes appeared, their souls were very humane and noble;
|
||
|
but some wanted their noses, some their lips, some both noses and
|
||
|
lips, some their ears, and others cut through each cheek, with long
|
||
|
slashes, through which their teeth appeared: they had several other
|
||
|
formidable wounds and scars, or rather dismemberings. They had
|
||
|
comitias, or little aprons before 'em; and girdles of cotton, with
|
||
|
their knives naked stuck in it; a bow at their back, and a quiver of
|
||
|
arrows on their thighs; and most had feathers on their heads of divers
|
||
|
colors. They cried Amora Tiguamy to us, at our entrance, and were
|
||
|
pleased we said as much to them: they seated us, and gave us drink
|
||
|
of the best sort, and wondered as much as the others had done
|
||
|
before, to see us. Caesar was marveling as much at their faces,
|
||
|
wondering how they should all be so wounded in war; he was impatient
|
||
|
to know how they all came by those frightful marks of rage or
|
||
|
malice, rather than wounds got in noble battle. They told us by our
|
||
|
interpreter that when any war was waging, two men, chosen out by
|
||
|
some old captain whose fighting was past, and who could only teach the
|
||
|
theory of war, were to stand in competition for the generalship, or
|
||
|
great war-captain; and being brought before the old judges, now past
|
||
|
war, they are asked, What they dare do, to show they are worthy to
|
||
|
lead an army? When he who is first asked, making no reply, cuts off
|
||
|
his nose, and throws it contemptibly on the ground; and the other does
|
||
|
something to himself that he thinks surpasses him, and perhaps
|
||
|
deprives himself of lips and an eye: so they slash on till one gives
|
||
|
out, and many have died in this debate. And it's by a passive valor
|
||
|
they show and prove their activity; a sort of courage too brutal to be
|
||
|
applauded by our black hero; nevertheless, he expressed his esteem
|
||
|
of 'em.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this voyage Caesar begat so good an understanding between the
|
||
|
Indians and the English that there were no more fears or
|
||
|
heart-burnings during our stay, but we had a perfect, open, and free
|
||
|
trade with 'em. Many things remarkable, and worthy reciting, we met
|
||
|
with in this short voyage; because Caesar made it his business to
|
||
|
search out and provide for our entertainment, especially to please his
|
||
|
dearly adored Imoinda, who was a sharer in all our adventures; we
|
||
|
being resolved to make her chains as easy as we could, and to
|
||
|
compliment the prince in that manner that most obliged him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we were coming up again, we met with some Indians of strange
|
||
|
aspects; that is, of a larger size, and other sort of features, than
|
||
|
those of our country. Our Indian slaves that rowed us asked 'em some
|
||
|
questions; but they could not understand us, but showed us a long
|
||
|
cotton string, with several knots on it, and told us they had been
|
||
|
coming from the mountains so many moons as there were knots: they were
|
||
|
habited in skins of a strange beast, and brought along with 'em bags
|
||
|
of gold-dust; which, as well as they could give us to understand, came
|
||
|
streaming in little small channels down the high mountains, when the
|
||
|
rains fell; and offered to be the convoy to anybody or persons that
|
||
|
would go to the mountains. We carried these men up to Parham, where
|
||
|
they were kept till the Lord-Governor came: and because all the
|
||
|
country was made to be going on this golden adventure, the Governor,
|
||
|
by letters, commanded (for they sent some of the gold to him) that a
|
||
|
guard should be set at the mouth of the River of Amazons (a river so
|
||
|
called, almost as broad as the River of Thames) and prohibited all
|
||
|
people from going up that river, it conducting to those mountains of
|
||
|
gold. But we going off for England before the project was further
|
||
|
prosecuted, and the Governor being drowned in a hurricane, either
|
||
|
the design died or the Dutch have the advantage of it: and 'tis to
|
||
|
be bemoaned what his Majesty lost by losing that part of America.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though this digression is a little from my story, however, since
|
||
|
it contains some proofs of the curiosity and daring of this great man,
|
||
|
I was content to omit nothing of his character.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was thus for some time we diverted him; but now Imoinda began
|
||
|
to show she was with child, and did nothing but sigh and weep for
|
||
|
the captivity of her lord, herself, and the infant yet unborn; and
|
||
|
believed, if it were so hard to gain the liberty of two, 'twould be
|
||
|
more difficult to get that for three. Her griefs were so many darts in
|
||
|
the great heart of Caesar, and taking his opportunity, one Sunday,
|
||
|
when all the whites were overtaken in drink, as there were abundance
|
||
|
of several trades, and slaves for four years, that inhabited among the
|
||
|
negro houses; and Sunday being their day of debauch (otherwise they
|
||
|
were a sort of spies upon Caesar), he went, pretending out of goodness
|
||
|
to 'em, to feast among 'em, and sent all his music, and ordered a
|
||
|
great treat for the whole gang, about three hundred negroes, and about
|
||
|
an hundred and fifty were able to bear arms, such as they had, which
|
||
|
were sufficient to do execution with spirits accordingly: for the
|
||
|
English had none but rusty swords, that no strength could draw from
|
||
|
a scabbard; except the people of particular quality, who took care
|
||
|
to oil 'em, and keep 'em in good order: the guns also, unless here and
|
||
|
there one, or those newly carried from England, would do no good or
|
||
|
harm; for 'tis the nature of that country to rust and eat up iron,
|
||
|
or any metals but gold and silver. And they are very unexpert at the
|
||
|
bow, which the negroes and the Indians are perfect masters of.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Caesar, having singled out these men from the women and children,
|
||
|
made an harangue to 'em, of the miseries and ignominies of slavery;
|
||
|
counting up all their toils and sufferings, under such loads, burdens,
|
||
|
and drudgeries as were fitter for beasts than men; senseless brutes,
|
||
|
than human souls. He told 'em, it was not for days, months, or
|
||
|
years, but for eternity; there was no end to be of their
|
||
|
misfortunes: they suffered not like men who might find a glory and
|
||
|
fortitude in oppression; but like dogs, that loved the whip and
|
||
|
bell, and fawned the more they were beaten: that they had lost the
|
||
|
divine quality of men, and were become insensible asses, fit only to
|
||
|
bear: nay, worse; an ass, or dog, or horse, having done his duty could
|
||
|
lie down in retreat, and rise to work again, and while he did his
|
||
|
duty, endured no stripes; but men, villainous, senseless men, such
|
||
|
as they, toiled on all the tedious week till Black Friday: and then,
|
||
|
whether they worked or not, whether they were faulty or meriting,
|
||
|
they, promiscuously, the innocent with the guilty, suffered the
|
||
|
infamous whip, the sordid stripes, from their fellow-slaves, till
|
||
|
their blood trickled from all parts of their body; blood, whose
|
||
|
every drop ought to be revenged with a life of some of those tyrants
|
||
|
that impose it. "And why," said he, "my dear friends and
|
||
|
fellow-sufferers, should we be slaves to an unknown people? Have
|
||
|
they vanquished us nobly in fight? Have they won us in honorable
|
||
|
battle? And are we by the chance of war become their slaves? This
|
||
|
would not anger a noble heart; this would not animate a soldiers soul:
|
||
|
no, but we are bought and sold like apes or monkeys, to be the sport
|
||
|
of women, fools, and cowards; and the support of rogues and runagates,
|
||
|
that have abandoned their own countries for rapine, murders, theft,
|
||
|
and villainies. Do you not hear every day how they upbraid each
|
||
|
other with infamy of life, below the wildest savages? And shall we
|
||
|
render obedience to such a degenerate race, who have no one human
|
||
|
virtue left, to distinguish them from the vilest creatures? Will
|
||
|
you, I say, suffer the lash from such hands?" They all replied with
|
||
|
one accord, "No, no, no; Caesar has spoke like a great captain, like a
|
||
|
great king."
|
||
|
|
||
|
After this he would have proceeded, but was interrupted by a tall
|
||
|
negro of some more quality than the rest, his name was Tuscan; who
|
||
|
bowing at the feet of Caesar, cried, "My Lord, we have listened with
|
||
|
joy and attention to what you have said; and, were we only men,
|
||
|
would follow so great a leader through the world. But oh! consider
|
||
|
we are husbands, and parents too, and have things more dear to us than
|
||
|
life; our wives and children, unfit for travel in those unpassable
|
||
|
woods, mountains, and bogs. We have not only difficult lands to
|
||
|
overcome, but rivers to wade, and mountains to encounter; ravenous
|
||
|
beasts of prey."- To this Caesar replied that honor was the first
|
||
|
principle in Nature, that was to be obeyed; but as no man would
|
||
|
pretend to that, without all the acts of virtue, compassion,
|
||
|
charity, love, justice, and reason, he found it not inconsistent
|
||
|
with that to take equal care of their wives and children as they would
|
||
|
of themselves; and that he did not design, when he led them to freedom
|
||
|
and glorious liberty, that they should leave that better part of
|
||
|
themselves to perish by the hand of the tyrant's whip: but if there
|
||
|
were a woman among them so degenerate from love and virtue, to
|
||
|
choose slavery before the pursuit of her husband, and with the
|
||
|
hazard of her life to share with him in his fortunes that such a one
|
||
|
ought to be abandoned, and left as a prey to the common enemy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To which they all agreed- and bowed. After this, he spoke of the
|
||
|
impassable woods and rivers; and convinced them, the more danger the
|
||
|
more glory. He told them that he had heard of one Hannibal, a great
|
||
|
captain, had cut his way through mountains of solid rocks; and
|
||
|
should a few shrubs oppose them, which they could fire before 'em? No,
|
||
|
'twas a trifling excuse to men resolved to die, or overcome. As for
|
||
|
bogs, they are with a little labor filled and hardened; and the rivers
|
||
|
could be no obstacle, since they swam by nature, at least by custom,
|
||
|
from the first hour of their birth: that when the children were weary,
|
||
|
they must carry them by turns, and the woods and their own industry
|
||
|
would afford them food. To this they all assented with joy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tuscan then demanded what he would do. He said they would travel
|
||
|
towards the sea, plant a new colony, and defend it by their valor; and
|
||
|
when they could find a ship, either driven by stress of weather, or
|
||
|
guided by Providence that way, they would seize it, and make it a
|
||
|
prize, till it had transported them to their own countries: at least
|
||
|
they should be made free in his kingdom, and be esteemed as his
|
||
|
fellow-sufferers, and men that had the courage and the bravery to
|
||
|
attempt, at least, for liberty; and if they died in the attempt, it
|
||
|
would be more brave than to live in perpetual slavery.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They bowed and kissed his feet at this resolution, and with one
|
||
|
accord vowed to follow him to death; and that night was appointed to
|
||
|
begin their march. They made it known to their wives, and directed
|
||
|
them to tie their hamaca about their shoulders, and under their arm,
|
||
|
like a scarf, and to lead their children that could go, and carry
|
||
|
those that could not. The wives, who pay an entire obedience to
|
||
|
their husbands, obeyed, and staid for 'em where they were appointed:
|
||
|
The men staid but to furnish themselves with what defensive arms
|
||
|
they could get; and all met at the rendezvous, where Caesar made a new
|
||
|
encouraging speech to 'em, and led 'em out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But as they could not march far that night, on Monday early, when
|
||
|
the overseers went to call 'em all together to go to work, they were
|
||
|
extremely surprised, to find not one upon the place, but all fled with
|
||
|
what baggage they had. You may imagine this news was not only suddenly
|
||
|
spread all over the plantation, but soon reached the neighboring ones;
|
||
|
and we had by noon about 600 men, they call the militia of the
|
||
|
country, that came to assist us in the pursuit of the fugitives: but
|
||
|
never did one see so comical an army march forth to war. The men of
|
||
|
any fashion would not concern themselves, though it were almost the
|
||
|
common cause; for such revoltings are very ill examples, and have very
|
||
|
fatal consequences oftentimes, in many colonies: but they had
|
||
|
respect for Caesar, and all hands were against the Parhamites (as they
|
||
|
called those of Parham Plantation) because they did not in the first
|
||
|
place love the Lord-Governor; and secondly, they would have it that
|
||
|
Caesar was ill used, and baffled with: and 'tis not impossible but
|
||
|
some of the best in the country was of his council in this flight, and
|
||
|
depriving us of all the slaves; so that they of the better sort
|
||
|
would not meddle in the matter. The Deputy-Governor, of whom I have
|
||
|
had no great occasion to speak, and who was the most fawning,
|
||
|
fair-tongued fellow in the world, and one that pretended the most
|
||
|
friendship to Caesar, was now the only violent man against him; and
|
||
|
though he had nothing, and so need fear nothing, yet talked and looked
|
||
|
bigger than any man. He was a fellow whose character is not fit to
|
||
|
be mentioned with the worst of the slaves. This fellow would lead
|
||
|
his army forth to meet Caesar, or rather to pursue him. Most of
|
||
|
their arms were of those sort of cruel whips they call cat with nine
|
||
|
tails; some had rusty useless guns for show; others old
|
||
|
basket-hilts, whose blades had never seen the light in this age; and
|
||
|
others had long staffs and clubs. Mr. Trefry went along, rather to
|
||
|
be a mediator than a conqueror in such a battle; for he foresaw and
|
||
|
knew, if by fighting they put the negroes into despair, they were a
|
||
|
sort of sullen fellows, that would drown or kill themselves before
|
||
|
they would yield: and he advised that fair means was best: but Byam
|
||
|
was one that abounded his own wit, and would take his own measures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not hard to find these fugitives; for as they fled, they were
|
||
|
forced to fire and cut the woods before 'em: so that night or day they
|
||
|
pursued 'em by the light they made, and by the path they had
|
||
|
cleared. But as soon as Caesar found he was pursued, he put himself in
|
||
|
a posture of defense, placing all the women and children in the
|
||
|
rear; and himself, with Tuscan by his side, or next to him, all
|
||
|
promising to die or conquer. Encouraged thus, they never stood to
|
||
|
parley, but fell on pell-mell upon the English, and killed some, and
|
||
|
wounded a great many they having recourse to their whips, as the
|
||
|
best of their weapons. And as they observed no order, they perplexed
|
||
|
the enemy so sorely, with lashing 'em in the eyes; and the women and
|
||
|
children seeing their husbands so treated, being of fearful cowardly
|
||
|
dispositions, and hearing the English cry out, "Yield, and live! Yield
|
||
|
and be pardoned!" they all run in amongst their husbands and
|
||
|
fathers, and hung about them, crying out, "Yield! and leave Caesar
|
||
|
to their revenge"; that by degrees the slaves abandoned Caesar, and
|
||
|
left him only Tuscan and his heroic Imoinda, who, grown big as she
|
||
|
was, did nevertheless press near her lord, having a bow and a quiver
|
||
|
full of poisoned arrows, which she managed with such dexterity that
|
||
|
she wounded several, and shot the Governor into the shoulder; of which
|
||
|
wound he had like to have died, but that an Indian woman, his
|
||
|
mistress, sucked the wound, and cleansed it from the venom: but
|
||
|
however, he stirred not from the place till he had parleyed with
|
||
|
Caesar, who he found was resolved to die fighting, and would not be
|
||
|
taken; no more would Tuscan or Imoinda. But he, more thirsting after
|
||
|
revenge of another sort, than that of depriving him of life, now
|
||
|
made use of all his art of talking and dissembling, and besought
|
||
|
Caesar to yield himself upon terms which he himself should propose,
|
||
|
and should be scarcely assented to, and kept by him. He told him, it
|
||
|
was not that he any longer feared him, or could believe the force of
|
||
|
two men, and a young heroine, could overthrow all them, and with all
|
||
|
the slaves now on their side also; but it was the vast esteem he had
|
||
|
for his person, the desire he had to serve so gallant a man, and to
|
||
|
hinder himself from the reproach hereafter of having been the occasion
|
||
|
of the death of a prince whose valor and magnanimity deserved the
|
||
|
empire of the world. He protested to him, he looked upon this action
|
||
|
as gallant and brave, however tending to the prejudice of his lord and
|
||
|
master, who would by it have lost so considerable a number of
|
||
|
slaves; that this flight of his should be looked on as a heat of youth
|
||
|
and a rashness of a too forward courage, and an unconsidered
|
||
|
impatience of liberty, and no more; and no more; and that he labored
|
||
|
in vain to accomplish that which they would effectually perform as
|
||
|
soon as any ship arrived that would touch on his coast: "So that if
|
||
|
you will be pleased," continued he, "to surrender yourself, all
|
||
|
imaginable respect shall be paid you; and yourself, your wife, and
|
||
|
child, if it be born here, shall depart free out of our land." But
|
||
|
Caesar would hear of no composition; though Byam urged, if he
|
||
|
pursued and went on in his design, he would inevitably perish,
|
||
|
either by great snakes, wild beasts, or hunger; and he ought to have
|
||
|
regard to his wife, whose condition required ease, and not the
|
||
|
fatigues of tedious travel, where she could not be secured from
|
||
|
being devoured. But Caesar told him there was no faith in the white
|
||
|
men, or the gods they adored; who instructed them in principles so
|
||
|
false that honest men could not live amongst them; though no people
|
||
|
professed so much, none performed so little: that he knew what he
|
||
|
had to do when he dealt with men of honor, but with them a man ought
|
||
|
to be eternally on his guard, and never to eat and drink with
|
||
|
Christians, without his weapon of defense in his hand; and, for his
|
||
|
own security, never to credit one word they spoke. As for the rashness
|
||
|
and inconsiderateness of his action, he would confess the Governor
|
||
|
is in the right; and that he was ashamed of what he had done, in
|
||
|
endeavoring to make those free who were by nature slaves, poor
|
||
|
wretched rogues, fit to be used as Christian's tolls; dogs,
|
||
|
treacherous and cowardly, fit for such masters, and they wanted only
|
||
|
but to be whipped into the knowledge of the Christian gods, to be
|
||
|
the vilest of all creeping things; to learn to worship such deities as
|
||
|
had not power to make them just, brave, or honest. In fine, after a
|
||
|
thousand things of this nature, not fit here to be recited, he told
|
||
|
Byam he had rather die than live upon the same earth with such dogs.
|
||
|
But Trefry and Byam pleaded and protested together so much that
|
||
|
Trefry, believing the Governor to mean what he said, and speaking very
|
||
|
cordially himself, generously put himself into Caesar's hands, and
|
||
|
took him aside, and persuaded him, were with tears, to live, by
|
||
|
surrendering himself, and to name his conditions. Caesar was
|
||
|
overcome by his wit and reasons, and inconsideration of Imoinda: and
|
||
|
demanding what he desired, and that it should be ratified by their
|
||
|
hands in writing, because he had perceived that was the common way
|
||
|
of contract between man and man amongst the whites; all this was
|
||
|
performed, and Tuscan's pardon was put in, and they surrendered to the
|
||
|
Governor, who walked peaceably down into the plantation with them,
|
||
|
after giving order to bury their dead. Caesar was very much toiled
|
||
|
with the bustle of the day, for he had fought like a fury; and what
|
||
|
mischief was done, he and Tuscan performed alone; and gave their
|
||
|
enemies a fatal proof that they durst do anything, and feared no
|
||
|
mortal force.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But they were no sooner arrived at the place where all the slaves
|
||
|
receive their punishments of whipping but they laid hands on Caesar
|
||
|
and Tuscan, faint with heat and toil; and surprising them, bound
|
||
|
them to two several stakes, and whipped them in a most deplorable
|
||
|
and inhuman manner, rending the very flesh from their bones,
|
||
|
especially Caesar, who was not perceived to make any moan, or to alter
|
||
|
his face, only to roll his eyes on the faithless Governor, and those
|
||
|
he believed guilty, with fierceness and indignation; and to complete
|
||
|
his rage, he saw every one of those slaves, who but a few days
|
||
|
before adored him as something more than mortal, now had a whip to
|
||
|
give him some lashes, while he strove not to break his fetters; though
|
||
|
if he had, it were impossible: but he pronounced a woe and revenge
|
||
|
from his eyes, that darted fire, which was at once both awful and
|
||
|
terrible to behold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they thought they were sufficiently revenged on him, they
|
||
|
untied him, almost fainting with loss of blood, from a thousand wounds
|
||
|
all over his body; from which they had rent his clothes, and led him
|
||
|
bleeding and naked as he was, and loaded him all over with irons,
|
||
|
and them rubbed his wounds, to complete their cruelty, with Indian
|
||
|
pepper, which had like to have made him raving mad; and, in this
|
||
|
condition made him so fast to the ground that he could not stir, if
|
||
|
his pains and wounds would have given him leave. They spared
|
||
|
Imoinda, and did not let her see this barbarity committed towards
|
||
|
her lord, but carried her down to Parham, and shut her up; which was
|
||
|
not in kindness to her, but for fear she should die with the sight, or
|
||
|
miscarry, and then they should lose a young slave, and perhaps the
|
||
|
mother.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You must know that when the news was brought on Monday morning
|
||
|
that Caesar had betaken himself to the woods, and carried with him all
|
||
|
the negroes, we were possessed with extreme fear, which no persuasions
|
||
|
could dissipate, that he would secure himself till night, and them,
|
||
|
that he would come down and cut all our throats. This apprehension
|
||
|
made all the females of us fly down the river to be secured; and while
|
||
|
we were away, they acted this cruelty; for I suppose I had authority
|
||
|
and interest enough there, had I suspected any such thing, to have
|
||
|
prevented it: but we had not gone many leagues but the news overtook
|
||
|
us, that Caesar was taken and whipped like a common slave. We met on
|
||
|
the river with Colonel Martin, a man of great gallantry, wit, and
|
||
|
goodness, and whom I have celebrated in a character of my new
|
||
|
comedy, by his own name, in memory of so brave a man. He was wise
|
||
|
and eloquent, and, from the fineness of his parts, bore a great sway
|
||
|
over the hearts of all the colony. He was a friend to Caesar, and
|
||
|
resented this false dealing with him very much. We carried him back to
|
||
|
Parham, thinking to have made an accommodation; when he came, the
|
||
|
first news we heard was that the Governor was dead of a wound
|
||
|
Imoinda had given him; but it was not so well. But it seems, he
|
||
|
would have the pleasure of beholding the revenge he took on Caesar;
|
||
|
and before the cruel ceremony was finished, he dropped down; and
|
||
|
then they perceived the wound he had on his shoulder was by a
|
||
|
venomed arrow, which, as I said, his Indian mistress healed, by
|
||
|
sucking the wound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We were no sooner arrived but we went up to the plantation to see
|
||
|
Caesar; whom we found in a very miserable and unexpressable condition;
|
||
|
and I have a thousand times admired how he lived in so much tormenting
|
||
|
pain. We said all things to him that trouble, pity, and good-nature
|
||
|
could suggest, protesting our innocency of the fact, and our
|
||
|
abhorrence of such cruelties; making a thousand professions and
|
||
|
services to him, and begging as many pardons for the offenders, till
|
||
|
we said so much that he believed we had no hand in his ill
|
||
|
treatment: but told us, he could never pardon Byam; as for Trefry,
|
||
|
he confessed he saw his grief and sorrow for his suffering, which he
|
||
|
could not hinder, but was like to have been beaten down by the very
|
||
|
slaves, for speaking in his defense: but for Byam, who was their
|
||
|
leader, their head- and should, by his justice and honor, have been
|
||
|
and example to 'em- for him he wished to live to take a dire revenge
|
||
|
of him; and said, "It had been well for him if he had sacrificed me
|
||
|
instead of giving me the contemptible whip." He refused to talk
|
||
|
much; but begging us to give him our hands, he took them, and
|
||
|
protested never to lift up his to do us any harm. He had a great
|
||
|
respect for Colonel Martin, and always took his counsel like that of a
|
||
|
parent; and assured him he would obey him in anything but his
|
||
|
revenge on Byam. "Therefore," said he, "for his own safety, let him
|
||
|
speedily dispatch me; for if I could dispatch myself, I would not,
|
||
|
till that justice were done to my injured person, and the contempt
|
||
|
of a soldier. No, I would not kill myself, even after a whipping,
|
||
|
but will be content to live with that infamy, and be pointed at by
|
||
|
every grinning slave, till I have completed my revenge; and then you
|
||
|
shall see that Oroonoko scorns to live with the indignity that was put
|
||
|
on Caesar." All we could do could get no more words from him; and we
|
||
|
took care to have him put immediately into a healing bath, to rid
|
||
|
him of his pepper, and ordered a chirurgeon to anoint him with healing
|
||
|
balm, which he suffered, and in some time he began to be able to
|
||
|
walk and eat. We failed not to visit him every day, and to that end
|
||
|
had him brought to an apartment at Parham.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Governor had no sooner recovered, and had heard of the menaces
|
||
|
of Caesar, but he called his council, who (not to disgrace them, or
|
||
|
burlesque the government there) consisted of such notorious villains
|
||
|
as Newgate never transported; and, possibly, originally were such
|
||
|
who understood neither the laws of God or man, and had no sort of
|
||
|
principles to make them worthy the name of men; but at the very
|
||
|
council-table would contradict and fight with one another, and swear
|
||
|
so bloodily that 'twas terrible to hear and see 'em. (Some of 'em were
|
||
|
afterwards hanged when the Dutch took possession of the place,
|
||
|
others sent off in chains). But calling these special rulers of the
|
||
|
nation together, and requiring their counsel in this weighty affair,
|
||
|
they all concluded that (damn 'em) it might be their own cases; and
|
||
|
that Caesar ought to be made an example to all the negroes, to
|
||
|
fright 'em from daring to threaten their betters, their lords and
|
||
|
masters: and at this rate no man was safe from his own slaves; and
|
||
|
concluded, nemine contradicente, that Caesar should be hanged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trefry then thought it time to use his authority, and told Byam
|
||
|
his command did not extend to his lord's plantation; and that Parham
|
||
|
was as much exempt from the law as Whitehall; and that they ought no
|
||
|
more to touch the servants of the lord (who there represented the
|
||
|
King's person) than they could those about the King himself; and
|
||
|
that Parham was a sanctuary; and though his lord were absent in
|
||
|
person, his power was still in being there, which he had entrusted
|
||
|
with him, as far as the dominions of his particular plantations
|
||
|
reached, and all that belonged to it: the rest of the country, as Byam
|
||
|
was lieutenant to his lord, he might exercise his tyranny upon. Trefry
|
||
|
had others as powerful, or more, that interested themselves in
|
||
|
Caesar's life, and absolutely said he should be defended. So turning
|
||
|
the Governor, and his wise council, out of doors (for they sat at
|
||
|
Parham-House), we set a guard upon our lodging-place, and would
|
||
|
admit none but those we called friends to us and Caesar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Governor having remained wounded at Parham till his recovery was
|
||
|
completed, Caesar did not know but he was still there, and indeed, for
|
||
|
the most part, his time was spent there: for he was one that loved
|
||
|
to live at other people's expense, and if he were a day absent, he was
|
||
|
ten present there; and used to play and walk, and hunt and fish with
|
||
|
Caesar, So that Caesar did not at all doubt, if he once recovered
|
||
|
strength, but he should find an opportunity of being revenged on
|
||
|
him; though, after such a revenge, he could not hope to live: for if
|
||
|
he escaped the fury of the English mobile, who perhaps would have been
|
||
|
glad of the occasion to have killed him, he was resolved not to
|
||
|
survive his whipping; yet he had some tender hours, a repenting
|
||
|
softness, which he called his fits of cowardice, wherein he
|
||
|
struggled with love for the victory of his heart, which took part with
|
||
|
his charming Imoinda there: but, for the most part, his time was
|
||
|
passed in melancholy thoughts and black designs. He considered, if
|
||
|
he should do this deed, and die either in the attempt or after it,
|
||
|
he left his lovely Imoinda a prey, or at best a slave to the enraged
|
||
|
multitude; his great heart could not endure that thought. "Perhaps,"
|
||
|
said he, "she may be first ravaged by every brute; exposed first to
|
||
|
their nasty lusts, and then a shameful death." No, he could not live a
|
||
|
moment under that apprehension, too insupportable to be borne. These
|
||
|
were his thoughts, and his silent arguments with his heart, as he told
|
||
|
us afterwards: so that now resolving not only to kill Byam, but all
|
||
|
those he thought had enraged him; pleasing his great heart with the
|
||
|
fancied slaughter he should make over the whole face of the
|
||
|
plantation; he first resolved on a deed that (however horrid it
|
||
|
first appeared to us all) when we had heard his reasons, we thought it
|
||
|
brave and just. Being able to walk, and, as he believed, fit for the
|
||
|
execution of his great design, he begged Trefry to trust him into
|
||
|
the air, believing a walk would do him good; which was granted him:
|
||
|
and taking Imoinda with him as he used to do in his more happy and
|
||
|
calmer days, he led her up into a wood, where (after with a thousand
|
||
|
sighs, and long gazing silently on her face, while tears gushed, in
|
||
|
spite of him, from his eyes) he told her his design, first of
|
||
|
killing her, and then his enemies, and next himself, and the
|
||
|
impossibility of escaping, and therefore he told her the necessity
|
||
|
of dying. He found the heroic wife faster pleading for death that he
|
||
|
was to propose it, when she found his fixed resolution; and, on her
|
||
|
knees, besought him not to leave her a prey to his enemies. He
|
||
|
(grieved to death, yet pleased at her noble resolution) took her up,
|
||
|
and embracing of her with all the passion and languishment of a
|
||
|
dying lover, drew his knife to kill this treasure of his soul, this
|
||
|
pleasure of his eyes; while tears trickled down his cheeks, hers
|
||
|
were smiling with joy she should die by so noble a hand, and be sent
|
||
|
into her own country (for that's their notion of the next world) by
|
||
|
him she so tenderly loved, and so truly adored in this: for wives have
|
||
|
a respect for their husbands equal to what any other people pay a
|
||
|
deity; and when a man finds any occasion to quit his wife, if he
|
||
|
love her, she dies by his hand; if not, he sells her, or suffers
|
||
|
some other to kill her. It being thus, you may believe the deed was
|
||
|
soon resolved on; and 'tis not to be doubted but the parting, the
|
||
|
eternal leave-taking of two such lovers, so greatly born, so sensible,
|
||
|
so beautiful, so young, and so fond, must be very moving, as the
|
||
|
relation of it was to be afterwards.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All that love could say in such cases being ended, and all the
|
||
|
intermitting irresolutions being adjusted, the lovely, young, and
|
||
|
adored victim lays herself down before the sacrificer; while he,
|
||
|
with a hand resolved, and a heart breaking within, gave the fatal
|
||
|
stroke, first cutting her throat, and then severing her yet smiling
|
||
|
face from that delicate body, pregnant as it was with the fruits of
|
||
|
tenderest love. As soon as he had done, he laid the body decently on
|
||
|
leaves and flowers, of which he made a bed, and concealed it under the
|
||
|
same cover-lid of Nature; only her face he left yet bare to look on:
|
||
|
but when he found she was dead, and past all retrieve, never more to
|
||
|
bless him with her eyes and soft language, his grief swelled up to
|
||
|
rage; he tore, he raved, he roared like some monster of the wood,
|
||
|
calling on the loved name of Imoinda. A thousand times he turned the
|
||
|
fatal knife that did the deed toward his own heart, with a
|
||
|
resolution to go immediately after her; but dire revenge, which was
|
||
|
now a thousand times more fierce in his soul than before, prevents
|
||
|
him: and he would cry out, "No, since I have sacrificed Imoinda to
|
||
|
my revenge, shall I lose that glory which I have purchased so dear, as
|
||
|
the price of the fairest, dearest, softest creature that ever Nature
|
||
|
made? No, no!" Then at her name grief would get the ascendant of rage,
|
||
|
and he would lie down by her side, and water her face with showers
|
||
|
of tears, which never were wont to fall from those eyes; and however
|
||
|
bent he was on his intended slaughter, he had not power to stir from
|
||
|
the sight of this dear object, now more beloved and more adored than
|
||
|
ever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He remained in this deplorable condition for two days, and never
|
||
|
rose from the ground where he had made her sad sacrifice; at last
|
||
|
rousing from her side, and accusing himself of living too long, now
|
||
|
Imoinda was dead, and that the deaths of those barbarous enemies
|
||
|
were deferred too long, he resolved now to finish the great work;
|
||
|
but offering to rise, he found his strength so decayed that he
|
||
|
swayed to and fro, like boughs assailed by contrary winds; so that
|
||
|
he was forced to lie down again, and try to summon all his courage
|
||
|
to his aid. He found his brains turned round, and his eyes were dizzy,
|
||
|
and objects appeared not the same to him they were wont to do; his
|
||
|
breath was short, and all his limbs surprised with a faintness he
|
||
|
had never felt before. He had not eat in two days, which was one
|
||
|
occasion of his feebleness, but excess of grief was the greatest,
|
||
|
yet still he hoped he should never recover vigor to act his design,
|
||
|
and lay expecting it yet six days longer; still mourning over the dead
|
||
|
idol of his heart and striving every day to rise, but could not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In all this time you may believe we were in no little affliction for
|
||
|
Caesar and his wife: some were of opinion he was escaped, never to
|
||
|
return; others thought some accident had happened to him: but however,
|
||
|
we failed not to send out a hundred people several ways, to search for
|
||
|
him. A party of about forty went that way he took, among whom was
|
||
|
Tuscan, who was perfectly reconciled to Byam. They had not gone very
|
||
|
far into the wood but they smelt an unusual smell, as of a dead
|
||
|
body; for stinks must be very noisome that can be distinguished
|
||
|
among such a quantity of natural sweets as every inch of that land
|
||
|
produces: so that they concluded they should find him dead, or some
|
||
|
body that was so; they passed on towards it, as loathsome as it was,
|
||
|
and made such rustling among the leaves that lie thick on the
|
||
|
ground, by continual falling, that Caesar heard he was approached: and
|
||
|
though he had, during the space of these eight days, endeavored to
|
||
|
rise, but found he wanted strength, yet looking up, and seeing his
|
||
|
pursuers, he rose, and reeled to a neighboring tree, against which
|
||
|
he fixed his back; and being within a dozen yards of those that
|
||
|
advanced and saw him, he called out to them, and bid them approach
|
||
|
no nearer, if they would be safe. So that they stood still, and hardly
|
||
|
believing their eyes, that would persuade them that it was Caesar that
|
||
|
spoke to 'em, so much was he altered; they asked him what he had
|
||
|
done with his wife, for they smelt a stink that almost struck them
|
||
|
dead. He, pointing to the dead body, sighing, cried, "Behold her
|
||
|
there." They put off the flowers that covered her, with their
|
||
|
sticks, and found she was killed, and cried out, "O monster! that hast
|
||
|
murdered thy wife." Then asking him why he did so cruel a deed; he
|
||
|
replied, he had no leisure to answer impertinent questions. "You may
|
||
|
go back," continued he, "and tell the faithless Governor he may
|
||
|
thank Fortune that I am breathing my last; and that my arm is to
|
||
|
feeble to obey my heart, in what it had designed him." But his
|
||
|
tongue faltering, and trembling, he could scarce end what he was
|
||
|
saying. The English, taking advantage of his weakness, cried, "Let
|
||
|
us take him alive by all means." He heard 'em; and, as if he had
|
||
|
revived from a fainting, or a dream, he cried out, "No, Gentlemen, you
|
||
|
are deceived; you will find no more Caesars to be whipped; no more
|
||
|
find a faith in me: feeble as you think me, I have strength yet left
|
||
|
to secure me from a second indignity." They swore all anew; and he
|
||
|
only shook his head, and beheld them with scorn. Then they cried out
|
||
|
"Who will venture on this single man? Will nobody?" They stood all
|
||
|
silent while Caesar replied, "Fatal will be the attempt to the first
|
||
|
adventurer, let him assure himself" (and, at that word, held up his
|
||
|
knife in a menacing posture). "Look ye, ye faithless crew," said he,
|
||
|
"'tis not life I seek, nor am I afraid of dying" (and at that word,
|
||
|
cut a piece of flesh from his own throat, and threw it at 'em), "yet
|
||
|
still I would live if I could, till I had perfected my revenge. But
|
||
|
oh! it cannot be; I feel life gliding from my eyes and heart; and if I
|
||
|
make not haste, I shall fall a victim to the shameful whip." At
|
||
|
that, he ripped up his own belly, and took his bowels and pulled 'em
|
||
|
out, with what strength he could; while some, on their knees
|
||
|
imploring, besought him to hold his hand. But when they saw him
|
||
|
tottering, they cried out, "Will none venture on him?" A bold
|
||
|
Englishman cried, "Yes, if he were the Devil" (taking courage when
|
||
|
he saw him almost dead), and swearing a horrid oath for his farewell
|
||
|
to the world, he rushed on him. Caesar with his armed hand met him
|
||
|
so fairly as stuck him to the heart, and he fell dead at his feet.
|
||
|
Tuscan, seeing that, cried out, "I love thee, O Caesar! and
|
||
|
therefore will not let thee die, if possible," and running to him,
|
||
|
took him in his arms: but, at the same time, warding a blow that
|
||
|
Caesar made at his bosom, he received it quite through his arm; and
|
||
|
Caesar having not the strength to pluck the knife forth, though he
|
||
|
attempted it, Tuscan neither pulled it out himself, nor suffered it to
|
||
|
be pulled out, but came down with it sticking in his arm; and the
|
||
|
reason he gave for it was, because the air should not get into the
|
||
|
wound. They put their hands across, and carried Caesar between six
|
||
|
of 'em, fainting as he was, and though they thought dead, or just
|
||
|
dying; and they brought him to Parham, and laid him on a couch, and
|
||
|
had the chirurgeon immediately to him, who dressed his wounds, and
|
||
|
sowed up his belly, and used means to bring him to life, which they
|
||
|
effected. We ran all to see him; and, if before we thought him so
|
||
|
beautiful a sight, he was now so altered that his face was like a
|
||
|
death's-head blacked over, nothing but teeth and eye-holes: for some
|
||
|
days we suffered nobody to speak to him, but caused cordials to be
|
||
|
poured down his throat; which sustained his life, and in six or
|
||
|
seven days he recovered his senses: for you must know that wounds
|
||
|
are almost to a miracle cured in the Indies; unless wounds in the
|
||
|
legs, which they rarely ever cure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he was well enough to speak, we talked to him, and asked him
|
||
|
some questions about his wife, and the reasons why he killed her;
|
||
|
and he then told us what I have related of that resolution, and of his
|
||
|
parting, and he besought us we would let him die, and was extremely
|
||
|
afflicted to think it was possible he might live: he assured us, if we
|
||
|
did not dispatch him, he would prove very fatal to a great many. We
|
||
|
said all we could to make him live, and gave him new assurances; but
|
||
|
he begged we would not think so poorly of him, or of his love to
|
||
|
Imoinda, to imagine we could flatter him to life again: but the
|
||
|
chirurgeon assured him he could not live, and therefore he need not
|
||
|
fear. We were all (but Caesar) afflicted at this news, and the sight
|
||
|
was ghastly: his discourse was sad; and the earthy smell about him was
|
||
|
so strong that I was persuaded to leave the place for some time (being
|
||
|
myself very sickly, and very apt to fall into fits of dangerous
|
||
|
illness upon any extraordinary melancholy). The servants, and
|
||
|
Trefry, and the chirurgeons, promised all to take what possible care
|
||
|
they could of the life of Caesar; and I, taking boat, went with
|
||
|
other company to Colonel Martin's, about three days' journey down
|
||
|
the river. But I was no sooner gone than the Governor, taking
|
||
|
Trefry, about some pretended earnest business, a day's journey up
|
||
|
the river, having communicated his design to one Banister, a wild
|
||
|
Irishman, and one of the council, a fellow of absolute barbarity,
|
||
|
and fit to execute any villainy, but rich; he came up to Parham, and
|
||
|
forcibly took Caesar, and had him carried to the same post where he
|
||
|
was whipped; and causing him to be tied to it, and a great fire made
|
||
|
before him, he told him he should die like a dog, as he was. Caesar
|
||
|
replied, this was the first piece of bravery that ever Banister did,
|
||
|
and he never spoke sense till he pronounced that word; and, if he
|
||
|
would keep it, he would declare, in the other world, that he was the
|
||
|
only man, of all the whites, that ever he heard speak truth. And
|
||
|
turning to the men that had bound him, he said, "My friends, am I to
|
||
|
die, or to be whipped?" And they cried, "Whipped! no, you shall not
|
||
|
escape so well." And then he replied, smiling, "A blessing on thee";
|
||
|
and assured them they need not tie him, for he would stand fixed
|
||
|
like a rock, and endure death so as should encourage them to die;
|
||
|
"But, if you whip me," said he, "be sure you tie me fast."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had learned to take tobacco; and when he was assured he should
|
||
|
die, he desired they would give him a pipe in his mouth, ready
|
||
|
lighted; which they did. And the executioner came, and first cut off
|
||
|
his members, and threw them into the fire; after that, with an
|
||
|
ill-favored knife, they cut off his ears and his nose and burned them;
|
||
|
he still smoked on, as if nothing had touched him; then they hacked
|
||
|
off one of his arms, and still he bore up, and held his pipe; but at
|
||
|
the cutting off the other arm, his head sunk, and his pipe dropped,
|
||
|
and he gave up the ghost, without a groan or a reproach. My mother and
|
||
|
sister were by him all the while, but not suffered to save him; so
|
||
|
rude and wild were the rabble, and so inhuman were the justices who
|
||
|
stood by to see the execution, who after paid dearly enough for
|
||
|
their insolence. They cut Caesar in quarters, and sent them to several
|
||
|
of the chief plantations: one quarter was sent to Colonel Martin,
|
||
|
who refused it, and swore he had rather see the quarters of
|
||
|
Banister, and the Governor himself, that those of Caesar, on his
|
||
|
plantations; and that he could govern his negroes without terrifying
|
||
|
and grieving them with frightful spectacles of a mangled king.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus died this great man, worthy of a better fate, and a more
|
||
|
sublime wit than mine to write his praise: yet, I hope, the reputation
|
||
|
of my pen is considerable enough to make his glorious name to
|
||
|
survive all the ages, with that of the brave, the beautiful, and the
|
||
|
constant Imoinda.
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE END
|
||
|
.
|