A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 9 - By Robert Kerr












































 -  But they were told,
that they must first demand of the emperor, and whatever he ordained
should be obeyed; but - Page 145
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But They Were Told, That They Must First Demand Of The Emperor, And Whatever He Ordained Should Be Obeyed; But That, In The Meantime, He Did Not Consider The English To Be Their Slaves.

This was the grand occasion on which they grounded their quarrel against us, and meant to have killed us all.

But I trust in God and his majesty, by the solicitations of our right honourable and right worshipful employers, that his majesty will not suffer his true and loyal subjects to lose their lives, ships, and goods by this thievish and unthankful rabble, who are assembled in these parts of the world, and who make a daily practice to rob and steal from all, whether friends or foes: And I trust that you will become a solicitor in this so just cause, against so inveterate an enemy.

[Footnote 64: This Captain Jordaine is said to have been treacherously slain in the time of a treaty - Purch.]

[Footnote 65: And who was the happy instrument of their own delivery, from what they accounted slavery, but the English nation? - Purch.]

This Adam Westarwood, their lord-commander, set my life to sale; offering fifty dollars to any one that would kill me, and thirty dollars for every other Englishman that they could slay: But hitherto God hath preserved me and the rest in this place; for though they have wounded two or three of our men, none have died. This villainous proceeding[66] of their lord-commander was secretly told me by some of their own people, who advised me and the rest of us to take heed to our safety. They also informed me of the noble parentage of this their lord-commander Westarwood, telling me that his father is a close-stool maker at Amsterdam, or thereabouts; and that the best of their captains are the sons of shoemakers, carpenters, or brewers.

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