ON the 6th of September 1810, all hands—twenty-two
belonging to the ship, and thirty-three passengers—being on board, the
Tonquin set sail, and a fresh breeze springing up, soon wafted her to a
distance from the busy shores of New York. We had not proceeded far when
we were joined by the American frigate Constitution, which was to escort
us clear of the coast. On the 7th, in the afternoon, we
passed Sandy Hook lighthouse, and the next day the Constitution
returned, we dismissed our pilot, and were soon out of sight of land,
steering a S.E. course. So far all was bustle and
confusion upon deck, and every place in the ship was in such a topsy-turvy
state, with what sailors call live and dead lumber, that scarcely any one
knew how or where he was to be stowed; and it was in settling this knotty
point that the crusty supremacy of the high-minded captain was first
touched. Captain Jonathan Thorn had been brought up in the American navy,
had signalized himself, and upon the present occasion he stood upon his
own quarter-deck. Matters went on well enough till we came to the
mechanics: these young men had been selected from the most respectable of
their class, had been promised by their employers situations as clerks in
the trade whenever vacancies should occur, and in consequence, serving in
the twofold capacity of clerks and tradesmen, they were entitled, by their
engagements, whilst on board ship to the same treatment as the other
clerks; but behold when the captain came to assign them their place, it
was not in either the second or the third cabin, no, nor in the steerage,
but before the mast among the common sailors. In vain did they
remonstrate, and equally vain was it for them to produce copies of their
engagements; right or wrong, forward they must go; but that was not all;
to the grievance of bad accommodations was added that of an insult to
their feelings, by being compelled, as a further punishment for their
obstinacy, to perform the duties of common seamen both by day and night
After this bit of a row with the captain, they applied for redress to the
partners on board, the very persons with whom they had executed their
agreements. The partners interposed, and in their turn remonstrated with
the captain, but without effect; he remained inexorable. Both parties then
getting into a violent passion, Mr. M'Kay said, "That his people would
defend themselves rather than suffer such treatment." On hearing this, the
captain, suddenly turning round on his heel, defied Mr. M'Kay and his
people, adding, "that he would blow out the brains of the first man who
dared to disobey his orders on board his own ship." In the midst of this
scene, Mr. David Stuart, a good old soul, stept up, and by his gentle and
timely interference put an end to the threatening altercation.
This was
the first specimen we had of the captain's disposition, and it laid the
foundation of a rankling hatred between the partners and himself; which
ended only with the voyage, and not only that, but it soon spread like a
contagion amongst all classes, so that party spirit ran high: the captain
and his people viewing the passengers as the passengers did them, with no
very cordial feelings. Whilst these feuds agitated the great folks at the
head of affairs, we amused ourselves with conjectures as to the issue of
the contest. A new leaf was to be turned over, the captain forbade the
partners the starboard side of the quarter-deck; the clerks, the
quarter-deck altogether; and as for the poor mechanics and Canadians, they
were ruled ever after with a rod of iron. All this time the Ton quin was
speeding her way proudly over the wide bosom of the Atlantic, until the
18th, in the morning, when she was struck with a sudden squall, which
backed all the sails and placed her in a critical position for about two
minutes; her stern going down foremost was almost under water, when all at
once she recovered and relieved our anxiety. The next day two sail were
descried a heed, all hands were mustered on deck, and each had his station
assigned to him in case of coming to close quarters. For some days past
the flying fish appeared in immense numbers, passing frequently through
the ship's rigging, and now and then falling on the deck. We measured one
of them and found its length to be 5 inches, circumference of the body 2
inches; the wings, situate near the gills, resemble in texture the wings
of the bat, and measure, when stretched, 5 inches between the tips. In
their flight they generally rise to 15 or 20 feet above the surface of the
water, and fly about 150 yards at a time. As soon as their wings get dry
they fall again into the water, and only fly to avoid their pursuers. They
are the prey of the dolphin and other large fishes.
On the 6th of
October we made one of the Cape de Verd Islands, on the coast of Africa.
It proved to be Bonavista, in lat. 160 N. and long. 22° 47' W. The land,
covered with a blue haze, appeared broken, barren, and rocky. The weather
was overcast, and we had heavy rain and thunder at the time. Near this
place immense shoals of porpoises kept skipping on the surface of the
water going southwards. They were said to prognosticate the near approach
of bad weather. We found the changes of the weather here very remarkable,
from calm to rough, from foul to fair; clear, cloudy, wet, dry, hazy, and
squally alternately, with the usual finale of mist and rain, and not
unfrequently all these changes within the twenty-four hours.
After
leaving the land, some of the gentlemen iunused themselves one fine
evening with shooting at a mark suspended from the ship's stern, under
which a boat lay secured; soon afterwards, in the dusk of the evening,
smoke was seen to issue from that quarter; the alarm of fire was given,
and in an instant all the people assembled on deck in a state of wild
confusion, some calling out to broach the water-casks, others running to
and fro in search of water, some with mugs, others with decanters, while
the maitre de cuisine was robbed of his broth and dish water—no one, in
the hurry and bustle of the moment, ever thought of dipping the buckets
alongside. At length, to the inexpressible joy of all, it was discovered
that the smoke was occasioned only by the wadding of the guns setting fire
to some old junk which was lying in the boat astern. This gentle warning,
however, put an end to such sport in future. Some angry words took place
between the captain and Mr. Fox, the first mate, on which the latter was
suspended from duty, and ordered below: no other reason could be assigned
for this act but the friendly and sociable terms existing between the mate
and the partners; for by this time such was the ill-feeling between the
captain and the passengers generally, that scarcely a word passed between
them. After three days' confinement Mr. Fox was reinstated.
Just as we
entered the trade winds, a sail appeared about two leagues to leeward; she
gained fast upon us, and dogged us all day, and the next morning was close
under our stern. She appeared to be an armed brig, and pierced for twenty
guns, and looked very suspicious; very few hands, however, were to be seen
on her deck, which might have been a manuvre to decoy us alongside. We
were prepared for combat, at least as far as a good display of numbers on
deck: for to our numbers, and not to either our skill or discipline, did
we chiefly trust, and it is probable this show had the desired effect, for
she soon bore away and we saw her no more.
On the 25th, in long. 26° 24'
W. we crossed the equinoctial line, and here the usual ceremony of ducking
was performed on such of the sailors as had never before entered the
southern hemisphere. The heat was intense, the weather a dead calm, and
the ocean smooth as a sheet of glass. The thermometer stood at 92° in the
shade.
In lat. 3° 17' S. and long. 260 40' W. we spoke a brig from
Liverpool bound to Pernambuco. On nearing this old and ghastly-looking
hulk, which apparently had but few hands on board, we thought ourselves
exceedingly strong compared to her,, and I suppose from the bold front we
presented, put. her in as much bodily fear as the armed brig some days
before did us.
On the 10th of November a violent gale came on, which
lasted for fifty hours without intermission, and did us considerable
damage, our jib and jib- boom being both carried off, and a leak of
considerable extent sprung; but as it was easy of access, we soon got it
stopped again. In the night of the 14th, an alarm of fire was again given;
but after much confusion it ended without serious consequences. Of all
calamities that of fire on board ship seems to be the most terrific, and
every precaution was taken to prevent any accident of the kind, for at
nine o'clock every night all the lights were, by the captain's orders, put
out, and this rule was strictly observed during the voyage. In these
latitudes we saw many turtle, and caught some of them sleeping on the
water, one of which weighed forty-five pounds; we also frequently met with
what the sailors call a Portuguese man-of-war, or sea-bladder, floating on
the surface of the waters.
In lat. 35° S. and 42° 17' W. we experienced
another tempestuous gale, which lasted upwards of forty hours. During this
violent storm the ship laboured hard, and sustained damage. Two new leaks
were observed, and many of the sails blown to rags. Although the top, and
top-gallant masts had been lowered, six of the guns got dismounted, and
kept for some time rolling like thunder on the deck, and the ship in a
constant heavy sea. For seventeen hours she scudded before the wind, and
went in that time two hundred and twenty miles; nothing alarming, however,
took place until eight o'clock in the morning of the second day, when a
very heavy sea broke over the stern, and filled us all with consternation.
This wave, like a rolling mountain, passed over her deck ten feet high,
and broke with a tremendous crash about the mainmast; yet, fortunately, no
lives were lost, for on its near approach we all clung to the rigging and
by that means saved ourselves. On the weather moderating the carpenter was
soon at work, and succeeded effectually in stopping the leaks. On the 20th
our allowance of water, already short by one-half, was lessened to a pint
and a half per man, and on the 2nd of December to a pint each man per
day—then a gallon of brandy was offered for a pint of fresh water! but on
the 5th, when the joyful sight of land was announced, a hogshead of water
was offered in return for a pint of brandy. In the afternoon of this day,
we made the N. W. point of one of the Falkland Islands, the rugged and
solitary features of which presented a truly romantic appearance. Near
this spot are three remarkable peaked rocks, or insular Muffs, of
considerable height, and nearly equal distance from each other. We soon
afterwards came close in with the shore, and beheld a rocky surface with
an aspect of hopeless sterility. Here we came to an anchor; but the
captain not liking the place changed his resolution of taking In water
there.
During the few hours, however, which we spent on shore, while the
ship lay at anchor, one of the sailors, named Johnston, strolled out of.
the way. The captain, nevertheless, gave orders to weigh anchor, declaring
that he would leave the fellow to his fate; but after much entreaty he
consented to wait an hour, adding, that if the man did not return in that
time he should never more set foot on board his ship. A party immediately
volunteered to go in search of the lost tar. This party after beating
about in vain for some time, at last thought of setting fire to the few
tufts of grass which here and there alone decked the surface. This
expedient succeeded, and the man was found, having fallen asleep near the
water's edge. But the hour had unfortunately elapsed, and the loss ot a
few minutes more so enraged the captain, that he not only threatened the
man's life, but maltreated all those who had been instrumental in finding
him. We then set sail, and had much difficulty in effecting a passage
through a narrow strait which lay before us, interrupted in many places by
ledges of rocks, which were literally, covered with seals, penguins, white
and grey geese, ducks, shags, albatrosses, eagles, hawks, and vultures.
After making our way through this intricate pass, we again came to anchor.
On the 7th of December we anchored in Port Egmont Bay, for the purpose of
taking in a supply of water. The bay or inlet of Port Egmont is about a
mile long, and half a mile broad, and sheltered from almost every wind
that blows. All hands now were set to work; two of the mates and
two-thirds of the crew, together with the mechanics and Canadians,
commenced replenishing the water- casks, whilst the other two mates with
the remainder of the people were employed on board repairing the rigging,
and putting everything in a fit condition for a new start. During these
operations the partners and clerks, and frequently the captain also, went
sporting on shore, where wild fowl of all kinds stunned our ears with
their noises, and darkened the air with their numbers, and were generally
so very, tame, or rather stupid, that we often killed them with sticks and
stones, and the sailors in their boats often knocked down the ducks and
penguins with their oars in passing the rocks. The only quadruped we saw
on land was a wolverine of ordinary size, which one of our party shot.
Our tent was pitched on shore, not above four hundred yards from the ship;
this was our sporting rendezvous. On the 10th all the water-casks were'
ready, and the captain on going on board that evening said to Mr.
M'Dougall, that the ship would probably sail the next day. Soon after,
however, Messrs. M'Kay and M'Dougall also went on board, where they passed
the night; but coming ashore the next morning, they told us that the ship
would not sail till the 12th, and that all hands were ordered on board on
that night.
In the mean time Mr. Farnham, one of the clerks bad caught a
grey goose, which he tied to a stone between our hut and the
lauding-place, in order to have some sport with it. Soon afterwards the
captain, happening to come on shore, and seeing the goose, he up with his
gun to shoot at it. Thinking, however, that he had missed it, he instantly
reloaded and fired again, and seeing the goose flutter he ran up to catch
it, when he discovered his mistake, on which we all burst out a laughing.
Nettled at this, he immediately turned round and went on board again.
Meantime, Messrs. M'Dougall and Stuart started across the point after
game; whilst Mr. M'Kay, myself, and some others, went up the bay a little
to repair two old graves which we had discovered in a dilapidated state
the day before. On one of these graves was the following rudely-cut
inscription on a board:-" William Stevens, aged twenty-two years, killed
by a fall from a rock, on the 21st of September 1794 ;" on the other,
"Benjamin Peak died of the smallpox on the 5th of January 1803, ship
Eleonora, Captain Edmund Cole, Providence, Rhode Island."
While we were
thus eagerly employed, little did we suspect what was going on in another
quarter; for, about two o'clock in the afternoon, one of our party called
out, "The ship's off! "—when all of us, running to the top of a little
eminence, beheld, to our infinite surprise and dismay, the Ton quin, under
full sail, steering out of the bay. We knew too well the callous and
headstrong passions of the wayward captain to hesitate a moment in
determining what to do; with hearts, therefore, beating between anxious
hope and despair, some made for the boat, whilst others kept running and
firing over hill and dale to warn Messrs. M'Dougal and Stuart, who had not
yet returned. In half an hour we were all at the water's edge; the ship by
this time was three miles out at sea. We were now nine persons on shore,
and we had to stow, squat, and squeeze ourselves into a trumpery little
boat, scarcely capable of holding half our number. In this dreadful
dilemma, we launched on a rough and tempestuous sea, and, against wind and
tide, followed the ship. The wind blowing still fresher and fresher, every
succeeding wave threatened our immediate destruction. Our boat already
half full of water, and ourselves, as may be supposed, drenched with the
surges passing over her, we gave up all hope of succeeding in the unequal
struggle, and a momentary pause ensued, when we deliberated whether we
should proceed in the perilous attempt or return to land. The ship was now
at least two leagues ahead of us, and just at this time the man who was
bailing out the water in the boat unfortunately let go and lost the pail,
and one of our oars being broken in the struggle to recover it, our
destiny seemed sealed beyond a doubt. A second deliberation ended in the
resolve to reach the ship or perish in the attempt. The weather now grew
more violent; the wind increased; and, what was worst of all, the sun had
just sunk under the horizon, and the fearful night began to spread its
darkness over the turbulent deep. Every ray of hope now vanished: but so
short-sighted is man, that the moment when he least expects it, relief
often comes from an unseen hand; and such was our case; for in an instant
our hopeless anxiety was turned into joy by the ship suddenly making down
to our assistance: but here again we had a new danger to contend with;
for, on coming alongside, we were several times like to be engulfed or
dashed to pieces by the heavy seas and rolling of the ship. The night was
dark; the weather stormy; and death in a thousand forms stared us in the
face. At length, after many ineffectual attempts and much manoeuvring, we
succeeded in getting on board; having been in the boat upwards of six
hours. That the captain's determination was to leave us all to our fate,
there is not the least doubt; for he declared so afterwards, in a letter
written to Mr. Astor from the Sandwich Islands, and he was only prevented
from carrying his purposes into effect by the determined conduct of Mr.
Robert Stuart, who, seizing a brace of pistols, peremptorily told the
captain to order about ship and save the boat; or, he added, "You are a
dead man this instant."
During the night the gale increased almost to a
hurricane, so that two of our sails were torn to pieces, and the
side-rails broke by the labouring of the ship; so we had to lie-to under a
storm-staysail for six hours. The reader is here left to picture to
himself how matters went on after the scene just described. All the former
feuds and squabbles between the captain and passengers sink into
insignificance compared to the recent one. Sullen and silent, both parties
passed and repassed each other in their promenades on deck without
uttering a word; but their looks bespoke the hatred that burnt within. The
partners on the quarter-deck made it now a point to speak nothing but the
Scotch dialect; while the Canadians on the forecastle spoke French—neither
of which did the captain understand; and as both groups frequently passed
hours together, cracking their jokes and chanting their outlandish songs,
the commander seemed much annoyed on these occasions, pacing the deck in
great agitation. Yet all this time the good ship was hastening on her way.
On the 15th we saw Staten Land, whose forked peaks and rugged surface
exhibited much snow. Soon afterwards, Terra del Fuego came in sight; and
on the 19th, at 9 o'clock in the morning, we had a full view of Cape Horn.
But adverse winds meeting us here, we were unable to double it before
Christmas morning, and were carried, in the mean time, as far south as
hit. 580 16'. While in these latitudes, notwithstanding the foggy state of
the weather, we could read common print at all hours of the night on deck
without the aid of artificial light. The sky was generally overcast, and
the weather raw and cold, with frequent showers of hail and snow, but we
saw no ice. Here the snow birds and Cape pigeon frequently flew in great
numbers about the ship. After doubling the Cape, a speckled red and white
fish, about the size of a salmon, was observed before the ship's bow, as
if leading the way. The sailors gave it the name of the pilot-fish.
With
gladdened hearts, we now bent our course northward on the wide Pacific. On
the 19th of January 1811, all hands passed the ordeal of inspection, or as
the sailors more appropriately called it, the "general turn-out;" and as
none could guess what this new manoeuvre portended, we all judged it to be
a relic of man-of-war discipline, which the captain introduced merely to
refresh his memory; but the proceeding must be described :—After
breakfast, all hands were summoned on deck, and there ordered to remain,
while the officers of the ship got up the trunks, chests, hammocks, dirty
shirts, and old shoes belonging to each individual, on deck. They were
then ordered to empty out the contents of the boxes, examine, and expose
the whole to view, each man's paraphernalia separately. While this was
going on, the bystanders were ordered to claim any article belonging to
them in the possession of another. This declaration cleared up the matter,
and set our judgment right as to the captain's motives; but, to the credit
of all, very little stolen property was found— being only three articles,
namely, a pamphlet, a clasp-knife, and a spoon, and even as to them the
theft was not very well proved; but the three individuals implicated were
nevertheless condemned, and placed on what is called the "rogue's mess"
for a month.
On the 24th we again crossed the Equator, and entered the
northern hemisphere, and here the pilot- fish that joined us at Cape Horn
disappeared. Dining a run of upwards of 5,000 miles, our little piscatory
pilot was never once known, by day or night, to intermit preceding the
ship's bow. On the 10th of February, the cloud-capped summit of the
towering Mouna Roa—a pyramidal mountain in Owhyhee, and the loftiest in
the Sandwich Islands— was visible at the distance of 50 miles.
As we
drew near to the land, going at the rate of eight knots an hour, a
Canadian lad named Joseph LaPierre fell overboard. This was an awkward
accident, as all eyes were at the time gazing with admiration on the
scenery of the land. In an instant, however, the sails were backed, boats
lowered, and everything at hand thrown overboard to save the drowning man;
but before he could be picked up the ship had distanced him more than a
mile, and when the boatswain reached the ship with the body, the captain,
in his usual sympathizing mood, peremptorily ordered him about to pick up
all the trumpery which had been thrown into the water. This took a
considerable time. The apparently lifeless body was then hoisted on board,
and every means tried to restore animation, and at last, by rolling the
body in warm blankets, and rubbing it with salt, the lad recovered, after
being thirty-eight minutes in the water, and though unable to swim.
Mr.
Fox, who had again fallen under the captain's displeasure, and who had
been, in consequence, off duty for a week past, was reinstated this
morning. This was no sooner done, however, than the fourth mate, the
captain's own brother, was put into irons. The young Thorn was as factious
and morose a subject as his brother; with this only difference, that he
had less power to do mischief. He had maltreated one of the passengers;
and the captain, in order to show impartiality, awarded him the above
punishment.