<h2><SPAN name="chap34"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
<p class="letter">
An epidemic Fever rages among us—we abandon our Conquests—I am
seized with Distemper—write a Petition to the Captain, which is
rejected—I am in danger of Suffocation through the Malice of Crampley,
and relieved by a Serjeant—my Fever increases—the Chaplain wants to
confess me—I obtain a favourable Crisis—Morgan’s Affection
for me proved—the Behaviour of Mackshane and Crampley towards
me—Captain Oakum is removed into another Ship with his beloved
Doctor—our new Captain described—An Adventure of Morgan</p>
<p>The change of the atmosphere, occasioned by this phenomenon, conspired, with
the stench that surrounded us, the heat of the climate, our own constitutions,
impoverished by bad provisions, and our despair, to introduce the bilious fever
among us, which raged with such violence, that three-fourths of those whom it
invaded died in a deplorable manner; the colour of their skin being, by the
extreme putrefaction of the juices, changed into that of soot.</p>
<p>Our conductors, finding things in this situation, perceived it was high to
relinquish our conquests, and this we did, after having rendered their
artillery useless, and blown up their walls with gunpowder. Just as we sailed
from Bocca Chica, on our return to Jamaica, I found myself threatened with the
symptoms of this terrible distemper; and knowing very well that I stood no
chance for my life, if I should be obliged to be in the cockpit, which by this
time was grown intolerable, even to people in health, by reason of the heat and
unwholesome smell of decayed provision, I wrote a petition to the captain,
representing my case, and humbly imploring his permission to be among the
soldiers in the middle deck, for the benefit of the air: but I might have
spared myself the trouble; for this humane commander refused my request, and
ordered me to continue in the place allotted for the surgeon’s mates, or
else be contented to be in the hospital, which, by the by, was three degrees
more offensive and more suffocating than our own berth below. Another, in my
condition, perhaps, would have submitted to his fate, and died in a pet; but I
could not brook the thought of perishing so pitifully, after I had weathered so
many gales of hard fortune: I therefore, without minding Oakum’s
injunction, prevailed upon the soldiers (whose good-will I had acquired) to
admit my hammock among them; and actually congratulated myself upon my
comfortable situation; which Crampley no sooner understood, than he signified
to the captain my contempt of his orders, and was invested with power to turn
me down again into my proper habitation.</p>
<p>This barbarous piece of revenge incensed me so much against the author, that I
vowed, with bitter imprecations, to call him to a severe account, if ever it
should be in my power; and the agitation of my spirits increased my fever to a
violent degree. While I lay gasping for breath in this infernal abode, I was
visited by a sergeant, the bones of whose nose I had reduced and set to rights,
after they had been demolished by a splinter during our last engagement; he,
being informed of my condition, offered me the use of his berth in the middle
deck, which was enclosed with canvas, and well aired by a port-hole that
remained open within it. I embraced this proposal with joy, and was immediately
conducted to the place, where I was treated, while my illness lasted, with the
utmost tenderness and care by this grateful halberdier, who had no other bed
for himself than a hencoop during the whole passage. Here I lay and enjoyed the
breeze, notwithstanding which my malady gained ground, and at length my life
was despaired of, though I never lost hopes of recovery, even when I had the
mortification to see, from my cabin-window, six or seven thrown overboard every
day, who died of the same distemper. This confidence, I am persuaded, conduced
a great deal to the preservation of my life, especially when joined to another
resolution I took at the beginning, namely, to refuse all medicine, which I
could not help thinking co-operated with the disease, and, instead of resisting
putrefaction, promoted a total degeneracy of the vital fluid. When my friend
Morgan, therefore, brought his diaphoretic bolases, I put them into my mouth,
’tis true, but without any intention of swallowing them: and, when he
went away, spit them out, and washed my mouth with water-gruel. I seemingly
complied in this matter, that I might not affront the blood of Caractacus, by a
refusal which might have intimated a diffidence of his physical capacity, for
he acted as my physician; Doctor Mackshane never once inquiring about me, or
even knowing where I was. When my distemper was at the height, Morgan thought
my case desperate, and, after having applied a blister to the nape of my neck,
squeezed my hand, bidding me, with a woful countenance, recommend myself to Cot
and my Reteemer; then, taking his leave, desired the chaplain to come and
administer some spiritual consolation to me; but, before he arrived, I made
shift to rid myself of the troublesome application the Welshman had bestowed on
my back. The person, having felt my pulse, inquired into the nature of my
complaints, hemmed a little, and began thus: “Mr. Random, God out of his
infinite mercy has been pleased to visit you with a dreadful distemper, the
issue of which no man knows. You may be permitted to recover and live many days
on the face of the earth; and, which is more probable, you may be taken away,
and cut off in the flower of your youth. It is incumbent on you, therefore, to
prepare for the great change, by repenting sincerely of your sins; of this
there cannot be a greater sign, than an ingenuous confession, which I conjure
you to make without hesitation or mental reservation; and, when I am convinced
of your sincerity, I will then give you such comfort as the situation of your
soul will admit of. Without doubt, you have been guilty of numberless
transgressions to which youth is subject, as swearing, drunkenness, whoredom,
and adultery: tell me therefore, without reserve, the particulars of each,
especially of the last, that I may be acquainted with the true state of your
conscience; for no physician will prescribe for his patient until he knows the
circumstances of his disease.”</p>
<p>As I was not under any apprehensions of death, I could not help smiling at the
chaplain’s inquisitive remonstrance, which I told him savoured more of
the Roman than of the Protestant church, in recommending auricular confession;
a thing, in my opinion, not at all necessary to salvation, and which, for that
reason, I declined. This reply disconcerted him a little; however, he explained
away his meaning, in making learned distinctions between what was absolutely
necessary and what was only convenient; then proceeded to ask what religion I
professed. I answered, that I had not as yet considered the difference of
religions, consequently had not fixed on any one in particular, but that I was
bred a Presbyterian. At this word the chaplain expressed great astonishment,
and said, he could not comprehend how a presbyterian was entitled to any post
under the English government. Then he asked if I had ever received the
sacrament, or taken the oaths; to which questions, I replying in the negative,
he held up his hands, assured me he could do me no service, wished I might not
be in a state of reprobation, and returned to his messmates, who were making
merry in the ward-room, round a table well stored with bumbo(2) and wine.</p>
<p class="footnote">
(2)bumbo is a liquor composed of rum, sugar, water, and nutmeg</p>
<p>This insinuation, terrible as it was, had not such an effect upon me as the
fever, which, soon after he had left me, grew outrageous. I began to see
strange chimeras and concluded myself upon the point of being delirious; in the
meantime, being in great danger of suffocation, I started up in a kind of
frantic fit, with an intention to plunge myself into the sea; and, as my friend
the sergeant was not present, would certainly have cooled myself to some
purpose, had I not perceived a moisture upon my thigh, as I endeavoured to get
out of my hammock: the appearance of this revived my hopes, and I had
reflection and resolution enough to take the advantage of this favourable
symptom, by tearing the shirt from my body, and the sheets from my bed, and
wrapping myself in a thick blanket, in which inclosure, for about a quarter of
an hour, felt all the pains of hell: but it was not long before I was
recompensed for my suffering by a profuse sweat, that, bursting from the whole
surface of my skin, in less than two hours, relieved me from all my complaints
except that of weakness; and left me as hungry as a kite. I enjoyed a very
comfortable nap, after which I was regaling myself with the agreeable reverie
of future happiness, when I heard Morgan, on the outside of the curtain, ask
the sergeant if I was alive still? “Alive!” cried the other,
“God forbid he should be otherwise! he has lain quiet these five hours,
and I do not choose to disturb him, for sleep will do him great service.”
“Ay,” said my fellow-mate, “he sleeps so sound (look you),
that he will not waken till the great trump plows—Cot be merciful to his
soul. He has paid his debt like an honest man—ay, and moreover, he is at
rest from all persecutions, and troubles, and afflictions, of which, Cot knows,
and I know, he had his own share—Ochree! Ochree! he was a promising youth
indeed!” So saying he groaned grievously, and began to whine in such a
manner, as persuaded me he had a real friendship for me. The sergeant, alarmed
at his words, came into the berth, and, while he looked upon me, I smiled, and
tipped him the wink: he immediately guessed my meaning and remaining silent,
Morgan was confirmed in his opinion of my being dead; whereupon he approached,
with tears in his eyes, in order to indulge his grief with a sight of the
object: and I counterfeited death so well, by fixing my eyes and dropping my
under-jaw, that he said, “There he lies, no petter than a lump of clay,
Cot help me!” and observed, by the distortion of my face, that I must
have had a strong struggle.</p>
<p>I should not have been able to contain myself much longer, when he began to
perform the last duty of a friend, in closing my eyes and my mouth, upon which
I suddenly snapped at his fingers and discomposed him so much that he started
back, turned pale as ashes, and stared like the picture of horror; although I
could not help laughing at his appearance, I was concerned for his situation,
and stretched out my hand, telling him I hoped to live and eat some salmagundy
of his making in England. It was some time before he could recollect himself so
far as to feel my pulse, and inquire into the particulars of my disease; but
when he found I had enjoyed a favourable crisis, he congratulated me upon my
good fortune; not failing to ascribe it, under Cot, to the blister he had
applied to my back, at his last visit; which, by the bye, said he, must now be
removed and dressed; he was actually going to fetch dressings, when I, feigning
astonishment, said, “Bless me! sure you never applied a blister to
me—there is nothing on my back, I assure you.” But he could not be
convinced till he had examined it, and then endeavoured to conceal his
confusion, by expressing his surprise in finding the skin untouched and the
plaster missing. In order to excuse myself for paying so little regard to his
prescription, I pretended to have been insensible when it was put on, and to
have pulled it off afterwards in a fit of delirium. This apology satisfied my
friend, who, on this occasion, abated a good deal of his stiffness in regard to
punctilio; and as we were now safely arrived at Jamaica, where I had the
benefit of fresh provisions and other refreshments, I recovered strength every
day, and, in a short time, my health and vigour were perfectly re-established.</p>
<p>When I got up at first, and was just able to crawl about the deck with a staff
in my hand, I met Doctor Mackshane, who passed by me with a disdainful look,
and did not vouchsafe to honour me with one word. After him came Crampley, who,
strutting up to me with a fierce countenance, pronounced, “Here’s
fine discipline on-board, when such lazy, skulking sons of bitches as you are
allowed, on pretence of sickness, to lollop at your ease, while your betters
are kept to hard duty!” The sight and behaviour of this malicious
scoundrel enraged me so much that I could scarce refrain from laying my cudgel
across his pate; but when I considered my present feebleness, and the enemies I
had in the ship, who wanted only a pretence to ruin me, I restrained my
passion, and contented myself with telling him, I had not forgot his insolence
and malice, and that I hoped we should meet one day on shore. At this
declaration he grinned, shook his fist, and swore he longed for nothing more
than such an opportunity. Meanwhile our ship was ordered to be heaved down,
victualled, and watered, for her return to England; and our captain, for some
reason or other, not thinking it convenient for him to revisit his native
country at this time, exchanged with a gentleman, who, on the other hand,
wished for nothing so much as to be safe without the tropic: all his care and
tenderness of himself being insufficient to preserve his complexion from the
injuries of the sun and weather.</p>
<p>Our tyrant having left the ship, and carried his favourite Mackshane along with
him, to my inexpressible satisfaction, our new commander came on board in a
ten-oared barge, overshadowed with a vast umbrella, and appeared in everything
the reverse of Oakum, being a tall, thin young man, dressed in this manner: a
white hat, garnished with a red feather, adorned his head, from whence his hair
flowed upon his shoulders, in ringlets tied behind with a ribbon. His coat,
consisting of pink-coloured silk, lined with white, by the elegance of the cut
retired backward, as it were, to discover a white satin waistcoat embroidered
with gold, unbuttoned at the upper part to display a brooch set with garnets,
that glittered in the breast of his shirt, which was of the finest cambric,
edged with right Mechlin: the knees of his crimson velvet breeches scarce
descended so low as to meet his silk stockings, which rose without spot or
wrinkle on his meagre legs, from shoes of blue Meroquin, studded with diamond
buckles that flamed forth rivals to the sun! A steel-hilted sword, inlaid with
gold, and decked with a knot of ribbon which fell down in a rich tassel,
equipped his side; and an amber-headed cane hung dangling from his wrist. But
the most remarkable parts of his furniture were, a mask on his face, and white
gloves on his hands, which did not seem to be put on with an intention to be
pulled off occasionally, but were fixed with a curious ring on the little
finger of each hand.</p>
<p>In this garb, Captain Whiffle, for that was his name, took possession of the
ship, surrounded with a crowd of attendants, all of whom, in their different
degrees, seemed to be of their patron’s disposition; and the air was so
impregnated with perfumes, that one may venture to affirm the climate of Arabia
Felix was not half so sweet-scented. My fellow-mate, observing no surgeon among
his train, thought he had found an occasion too favourable for himself to be
neglected; and, remembering the old proverb, “Spare to speak, and spare
to speed,” resolved to solicit the new captain’s interest
immediately, before any other surgeon could be appointed for the ship. With
this view he repaired to the cabin in his ordinary dress, consisting of a check
shirt and trousers, a brown linen waistcoat, and a nightcap of the same
(neither of them very clean,) which, for his further misfortune, happened to
smell strong of tobacco. Entering without any ceremony into this sacred place,
he found Captain Whiffle reposing upon a couch, with a wrapper of fine chintz
about his body, and a muslin cap bordered with lace about his head; and after
several low congees began in this manner: “Sir, I hope you will forgive,
and excuse, and pardon, the presumption of one who has not the honour of being
known to you, but who is, nevertheless a shentleman porn and pred, and moreover
has had misfortunes, Cot help me, in the world.”</p>
<p>Here he was interrupted by the captain, who, on seeing him, had started up with
great amazement, at the novelty of the apparition; and, having recollected
himself, pronounced with a look and tone signifying disdain, curiosity and
surprise, “Zauns! who art thou?” “I am surgeon’s first
mate on board of this ship,” replied Morgan: “and I most vehemently
desire and beseech you, with all submission, to be pleased to condescend and
vouchsafe to inquire into my character, and my pehaviour, and my deserts,
which, under Cot, I hope, will entitle me to the vacancy of surgeon.” As
he proceeded in his speech, he continued advancing towards the captain, whose
nostrils were no sooner saluted with the aromatic flavour that exhaled from
him, than he cried with great emotion, “Heaven preserve me! I am
suffocated! Fellow, fellow, away with thee! Curse thee, fellow! Get thee gone!
I shall be stunk to death!” At the noise of his outcries, his servants
ran into his apartment, and he accosted them thus: “Villains!
cut-throats! traitors! I am betrayed! I am sacrificed! Will you not carry that
monster away? or must I be stifled with the stench of him? oh, oh!” With
these interjections he sank down upon his settee in a fit: his valet-de-chambre
plied him with a smelling-bottle, one footman chafed his temples with Hungary
water, another sprinkled the floor with spirits of lavender, a third pushed
Morgan out of the cabin; who coming to the place where I was, sat down with a
demure countenance and, according to his custom, when he received any indignity
which he durst not revenge, began to sing a Welsh ditty.</p>
<p>I guessed he was under some agitation of spirits and desired to know the cause;
but, instead of answering me directly, he asked with great emotion, if I
thought him a monster and a stinkard? “A monster and a stinkard!”
said I, with some surprise: “did anybody call you so?” “Cot
is my judge,” replied be, “Captain Fifle did call me both; ay, and
all the waters in the Tawy will not wash it out of my remembrance. I do affirm
and avouch, and maintain, with my soul, and my pody, and my plood, look you,
that I have no smells apout me, but such as a Christian ought to have, except
the effluvia of tobacco, which is a cephalic, odoriferous, aromatic herb; and
he is a son of a mountain goat who says otherwise. As for my being a minister,
let that be as it is: I am as Cot was pleased to create me, which,
peradventure, is more than I shall ever aver of him who gave me that title; for
I will proclaim it before the world, that he is disguised, and transfigured,
and transmogrified, with affectation and whimseys; and that he is more like a
papoon than of the human race.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />