Classic Audiobook Collection - Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave by Aphra Behn ~ Full Audiobook [tragedy]
Episode Date: June 9, 2023Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave by Aphra Behn audiobook. Genre: tragedy Aphra Behn was the first woman writer in England to make a living by her pen, and her novel Oroonoko was the first work published ...in English to express sympathy for African slaves. Perhaps based partly on Behn's own experiences living in Surinam, the novel tells the tragic story of a noble slave, Oroonoko, and his love Imoinda. The work was an instant success and was adapted for the stage in 1695 (and more recently by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1999). Behn's work paved the way for women writers who came after her, as Virginia Woolf noted in a Room of One's Own (1928): 'All women together ought to let flowers fall upon the tomb of Aphra Behn, ... for it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds.' For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:17:04) Chapter 02 (00:31:07) Chapter 03 (00:48:34) Chapter 04 (01:02:13) Chapter 05 (01:16:49) Chapter 06 (01:36:34) Chapter 07 (01:50:13) Chapter 08 (02:09:27) Chapter 09 (02:23:42) Chapter 10 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Orinoco, or the royal slave, by Afra Ben.
Part 1.
I do not pretend in giving you the history of this royal slave, to entertain my reader with
adventures of a feigned hero, whose life and fortunes fancy may manage at the poet's pleasure,
nor in relating the truth, designed to adorn it with any accidents, but such as arrived
in earnest to him, and it shall come simply into the world.
Recommended by its own proper merits and natural intrigues, there being enough of reality to support it, and to render it diverting, without the addition of invention.
I was myself an eye-witness to a great part of what you will hear find set down, and what I could not be witness of, I received from the mouth of the chief actor in this history, the hero himself, who gave us the whole transactions of his youth, and though I shall,
commit, for brevity's sake, a thousand little accidents of his life, which, however pleasant
to us, where history was scarce and adventures very rare, yet might prove tedious and heavy
to my reader, in a world where he finds diversions for every minute new and strange.
But we who were perfectly charmed with the character of this great man were curious to
gather every circumstance of his life. The scene of the last part of his adventures,
in a colony in America, called Surinam in the West Indies.
But before I give you the story of this gallant slave, tis fit I tell you the manner of bringing
them to these new colonies, those they make use of there not being natives of the place,
for those we live with in perfect amity without daring to command them, but on the contrary,
caress them with all the brotherly and friendly affection in the world, trading with them for their fish,
venison, buffalo skins, and little rarities, as marmosets, a sort of monkey, as big as a rat or
weasel, but of marvellous and delicate shape, having face and hands like a human creature,
and coocheries, a little beast in the form and fashion of a lion, as big as a kitten, but
so exactly made in all parts like that noble beast, that it is it in miniature.
Then, for little parakeetos, great parrots, macaws, and a thousand other birds and beasts
of wonderful and surprising forms, shapes, and colours.
For skins of prodigious snakes, of which there are some three score yards in length, as is
the skin of one that may be seen at His Majesty's antiquaries, where there are also some rare
flies of amazing forms and colours, presented to him by myself, some as big as my fist, some
less, and all of various excellencies such as art cannot imitate.
Then we trade for feathers, which they order into all shapes, make themselves little short habits
of them, and glorious wreaths for their heads, necks, arms, and legs, whose tinctures are
unconceivable.
I had a set of these presented to me, and I gave him to the King's Theatre, and it was
the dress of the Indian queen, infinitely admired by persons of quality, and was unimilared
Besides these, a thousand little knacks and rarities in nature, and some of art, as their
baskets, weapons, aprons, etc. We dealt with them with beads of all colours, knives, axes,
pins and needles, which they used only as tools to drill holes with in their ears, noses and
lips, where they hang a great many little things, as long beads, bits of tin, brass, or silver
beat thin, and any shining trinket. The beads they weave into aprons about a quarter of an
L long, and of the same breadth, working them very prettily in flowers of several colours, which
apron they wear just before them, as Adam and Eve did the fig leaves, the men wearing
a long stripe of linen which they deal with us for. They thread these beads also on long
cotton threads, and make girdles to tie their aprons too, which come twenty times or more
more about the waist, and then cross like a shoulder-belt both ways, and round their necks
arms and legs.
This adornment, with their long black hair, and the face painted in little specks or flowers
here and there, makes them a wonderful figure to behold.
Some of the beauties, which indeed are finely shaped, as almost all are, and who have pretty features,
are charming and novel, for they have all that is called beauty, except the colour, which
as a reddish yellow, or after a new oiling, which they often use to themselves, they are
of the colour of a new brick, but smooth, soft, and sleek. They are extreme modest and
bashful, very shy and nice of being touched. And though they are all thus naked, if one
lives for ever among them there is not to be seen an indecent action or glance, and being
continually used to see one another so unadorned, so like our first parents before the
fall. It seems as if they had no wishes, there being nothing to heighten curiosity, but
all you can see, you see it once, and every moment see, and where there is no novelty,
there can be no curiosity.
Not but I have seen a handsome young Indian dying for love of a very beautiful young
Indian maid, but all his courtship was to fold his arms, pursue her with his eyes, and
sighs were all his language.
while she, as if no such lover were present, or rather as if she desired none such, carefully
guarded her eyes from beholding him, and never approached him, but she looked down with all
the blushing modesty I have seen in the most severe and cautious of our world.
And these people represented to me an absolute idea of the first state of innocence, before
man knew how to sin.
And to his most evident and plain that simple nature is the most harmless, inoffensive
and virtuous mistress. "'Tis she alone, if she were permitted, that better instructs the
world than all the inventions of man! Religion would here but destroy that tranquility they
possess by ignorance, and laws would but teach him to no offence, of which now they have
no notion. They once made mourning and fasting for the death of the English governor, who had given
his hand to come on such a day to him, and neither came nor sent. Believing, when a man's word was
passed, nothing but death could or should prevent his keeping it, and when they saw he was
not dead, they asked him what name they had for a man who promised a thing he did not do.
The governor told them, such a man was a liar, which was a word of infamy to a gentleman.
Then one of them replied, "'Governor, you are a liar, and guilty of that infamy.'
They have a native justice which knows no fraud, and they understand no
vice or cunning, but when they are taught by the white men.
They have a plurality of wives, which, as they grow old, serve those that succeed
them who are young, but with a servitude easy and respected, and unless they take slaves
in war, they have no other attendants.
Those on that continent where I was had no king, but the oldest war-captain was obeyed with
great resignation.
A war-captain is a man who has led them on to battle with conduct and
and success, of whom I shall have occasion to speak more hereafter, and of some other of their
customs and manners, as they fall in my way.
With these people, as I said, we live in perfect tranquility and good understanding, as it
behoves us to do, they, knowing all the places where to seek the best food of the
country, and the means of getting it, and, for very small and unvaliable trifles, supply us with
that tis impossible for us to get, for they do not only in the woods, and over the savannas,
in hunting, supply the parts of hounds, by swiftly scouring through those almost impassable
places, and by the mere activity of their feet run down the nimblest deer and other eatable beasts.
But in the water one would think they were gods of the rivers, or fellow-citizens of the deep,
so rare in art they have in swimming, diving, and almost living in water, by which they command
the less swift inhabitants of the floods.
And then, for shooting, what they cannot take or
reach with their hands they do with arrows, and have so admirable an aim that they will
split almost in hair, and at any distance that an arrow can reach, they will shoot down
oranges and other fruit, and only touch the stork with the darts point, that they may not
hurt the fruit.
So that they being on all occasions very useful to us, we find it absolutely necessary to
caress him as friends, and not to treat him as slaves, nor dare we do other, their numbers so
far surpassing hours in that continent. Those then whom we make use of to work in our plantations
of sugar, are negroes, black slaves altogether, who are transported thither in this manner.
Those who want slaves make a bargain with a master, or a captain of a ship, and contract
to pay him so much apiece, a matter of twenty pound a head, for as many as he agrees for,
and to pay for him when they shall be delivered on such a plantation. So, then,
that, when there arrives a ship laden with slaves, they have so contracted go aboard, and receive
their number by lot, and perhaps in one lot that may be for ten, there may happen to be three
or four men, the rest women and children. Or be there more or less of either sex, you
are obliged to be contented with your lot.
Coramantean, a country of blacks so called, was one of those places in which they found
the most advantageous trading for these slaves, and this
Mither most of our great traders in that merchandise traffic, for that nation is very warlike
and brave, and having a continual campaign, being always in hostility with one neighbouring
prince or other, they had the fortune to take a great many captives, for all they took
in battle were sold as slaves, at least those common men who could not ransom themselves.
Of these slaves so taken the general only has all the profit, and of these generals are captains
and masters of ship by all their freights.
The King of Coramantean was himself a man of an hundred and odd years old, and had no son,
though he had many beautiful black wives, for most certainly there are beauties that can
charm of that colour.
In his younger years he had had many gallant men to his sons, thirteen of whom died in battle,
conquering when they fell, and he had only left him for his successor one grandchild, son to one
of these dead victors, who, as soon as he could bear a bow in his hand and a quiver at his
back, was sent into the field to be trained up by one of the oldest generals to war,
where, from his natural inclination to arms, and the occasions given him, with the good conduct
of the old general, he became, at the age of seventeen, one of the most expert captains,
and bravest soldiers that ever saw the field of Mars, so that he was adored as the wonder
of all that world and the darling of the soldiers.
Besides, he was adorned with a native beauty, so transcending all those of his gloomy race,
that he struck an awe and reverence even into those that knew not his quality, as he did
into me, who beheld him with surprise and wonder, when afterwards he arrived in our world.
He had scarce arrived at his seventeenth year, when, fighting by his side the general was
killed with an arrow in his eye, which the Prince Orinoco, for so as this gallant moor called,
narrowly avoided. Nor had he, if the general who saw the arrow shot, and perceiving it
aimed at the Prince, had not bowed his head between, on purpose to receive it in his own
body, rather than it should touch that of the Prince, and so saved him.
T'was then, afflicted, as Orinoco was, that he was proclaimed general in the old man's
place, and then it was, at the finishing of that war, which had continued for two years,
that the Prince came to court, where he had hardly been a month together,
from the time of his fifth year to that of seventeen.
And it was amazing to imagine where it was he learned so much humanity,
or to give his accomplishments a just a name,
where twas he got that real greatness of soul,
those refined notions of true honour,
that absolute generosity,
and that softness that was capable of the highest passions of love and gallantry,
whose objects were almost continually fighting men,
or those mangled or dead,
who heard no sounds but those.
of war and groans.
Some part of it we may attribute to the care of a Frenchman of wit and learning,
who finding it turned a very good account to be a sort of royal tutor to this young black,
and perceiving him a very ready, apt, and quick of apprehension,
took a great pleasure to teach him morals, language, and science,
and was for it extremely beloved and valued by him.
Another reason was, he loved when he came from war,
to see all the English gentlemen that traded thither,
and did not only learn their language, but that of the Spaniard also, with whom he traded afterwards
for slaves.
I have often seen and conversed with this great man, and been a witness to many of his mighty
actions, and do assure my reader the most illustrious courts could not have produced
a brave a man, both for greatness of courage and mind, a judgment more solid, a wit more
quick, and a conversation more sweet and diverting.
He knew almost as much as if he had read much.
He had heard of and admired the Romans.
He had heard of the late civil wars in England, and the deplorable death of our great monarch,
and would discourse of it with all the sense and abhorrence of the injustice imaginable.
He had an extreme good and graceful mean, and all the civility of a well-bred great man.
He had nothing of barbarity in his nature, but in all points addressed himself as if his education had been in some European court.
This great and just character of Orinoco gave me an extreme curiosity to see him, especially
when I knew he spoke French and English, and that I could talk with him.
But though I had heard so much of him, I was as greatly surprised when I saw him as if
I had heard nothing of him, so beyond all report I found him.
He came into the room, and addressed himself to me and some other women with best grace
in the world.
He was pretty tall, but of a shape the most exact that can be fancied, the most
most famous staturey could not form the figure of a man more admirably turned from head to
foot. His face was not of that brown, rusty, black, which most of that nation are, but of
perfect ebony, or polished jet. His eyes were the most awful that could be seen in very piercing,
the white of him being like snow, as were his teeth. His nose was rising and Roman, instead of
African and flat. His mouth, the finest shape that could be seen, far from those great
turned lips which are so natural to the rest of the negroes. The whole proportion and air of
his face was so nobly and exactly formed, that, baiting his colour, there could be nothing
in nature more beautiful, agreeable, and handsome. There was no one grace wanting that bears the
standard of true beauty. His hair came down to his shoulders, by the aids of art, which was
by pulling it out with a quill and keeping it combed, of which he took particular care.
nor did the perfections of his mind come short of those of his person, for his discourse was
admirable upon almost any subject, and whoever had heard him speak would have been
convinced of their errors, that all fine wit is confined to the white men, especially to those
of Christendom, and would have confessed that Orinoco was as capable even of reigning well,
and of governing as wisely, had as greater soul, as politic maxims, and was as sensible of power
as any prince civilized in the most refined schools of humanity and learning, or the most
illustrious courts.
End of Part I.
Part two of Orinoco.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the royal slave, by Afra Ben.
Part two.
This prince, such as I have described him, whose soul and body was so
so admirably adorned, was, while yet he was in the court of his grandfather, as I said,
as capable of love as twas possible for a brave and gallant man to be, and in saying that I have
named the highest degree of love, for sure great souls are most capable of that passion.
I have already said the old general was killed by the shot of an arrow by the side of this prince
in battle, and that Orinoco was made general. This old dead hero had only one
one daughter left of his race. Her beauty, that to describe her truly, one need only say she
was female to the noble male, the beautiful black Venus to our young Mars, as charming in her
person as he, and of delicate virtues. I have seen a hundred white men sighing after her, and
making a thousand vows at her feet, all in vain and unsuccessful, and she was indeed too great
for any but a prince of her own nation to adore.
Orenoko, coming from the wars, which were now ended, after he had made his court to his grandfather,
he thought in honour he ought to make a visit to Amoinda, the daughter of his foster-father,
the dead general, and to make some excuses to her, because his preservation was the occasion
of her father's death, and to present her with those slaves that had been taken in this last
battle, as the trophies of her father's victories. When he came, attended by
all the young soldiers of any merit, he was infinitely surprised at the beauty of this fair
queen of night, whose face and person was so exceeding all that he had ever beheld—that
lovely modesty with which she received him—that softness in her look and size, upon
the melancholy occasion of this honour that was done by so great a man as Orinoco, and
a prince of whom she had heard such admirable things—the awfulness wherewith she received him—and
the sweetness of her words and behaviour while he stayed—and the sweetness of her words and behaviour,
gained a perfect conquest over his fierce heart, and made him feel the victor could be subdued.
So that, having made his first compliments, and presented her in a hundred fifty slaves in fetters,
he told her with his eyes that he was not insensible of her charms,
while Immeynda, who wished for nothing more than so glorious a conquest,
was pleased to believe she understood that silent language of newborn love,
and from that moment put on all her additions to beauty.
The prince returned to court with quite another humour than before, and though he did not speak much of the fairer moinder, he had the pleasure to hear all his followers speak of nothing but the charms of that made, insomuch that, even in the presence of the old king, they were extolling her, and heightening, if possible, the beauties they had found in her, so that nothing else was talked of. No other sound was heard in every corner where there were whispers, but—Imoinda, immoinda.
It will be imagined, or an Oako stayed not long before he made his second visit, nor, considering
his quality not much longer, before he told her he adored her.
I have often heard him say that he admired by what strange inspiration he came to talk
things so soft and so passionate, who never knew love, nor was used to the conversation of
women.
But, to use his own words, he said, most happily, some knew, and till then unknown power, instructed
his heart and tongue in the language of love, and at the same time in favour of him inspired
a moinder with a sense of his passion. She was touched with what he said, and returned it in
all such answers as went to his very heart, with a pleasure unknown before. Nor did he use
those obligations ill, that love had done him, but turned all his happy moments to the best
advantage, and as he knew no vice, his flame aimed at nothing but honour, if such a distinction
may be made in love, and especially in that country, where men take to themselves as many as they
can maintain, and where the only crime and sin with woman is to turn her off, to abandon her to
want, shame, and misery. Such ill morals are only practised in Christian countries, where they
prefer the bare name of religion, and without virtue or morality think that sufficient.
But Orinoco was none of those professors, but as he had right notions of honour, 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 always be fine, and always young,
and he should have an eternal idea in his mind of the charm 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 a eternal empire over him, she condescended
to receive him for her husband, or rather, received him as the greatest honour the gods could
do her.
There is a certain ceremony in these cases to be observed, which I forgot to ask how it was
performed, but it was concluded on both sides, that, in obedience to him, the grandfather
was to be the 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 caught
flatterers to insinuate into his heart a thousand tender thoughts for this young beauty, and
he 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 groaned 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 to him, that
that Immoinda was most certainly mistress to the Prince Orinoco.
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 in attendant, who should go and make a present to
Imonda, 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.
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
it was past doubt whether she loved Orinoco 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 Amoinder to do, duty would compel
her to.
He was therefore no sooner got to his apartment, but that he sent the royal veil to
a-monder.
That is the ceremony of invitation.
He sends the lady he has a mind to honour 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 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 a moinder, 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.
Emoinda, 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 her.
his caresses, or by his gods he swore, that happy man whom she was going to name should
die, though it were even Orinoco himself.
"'Therefore,' said he, "'deny this marriage, and swear thyself a maid.'
"'That,' replied Amoynder, "'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 amoeinder, 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 a moinder.
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.
It was not enough to appease him, to tell him his grand,
father 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.
Homoinda is as irrecoverably lost to me,
as if she was snatched by the cold arms of death.
Oh, she is never to be retrieved.
If I would wait didious years,
till fate should bow the old king to his grave,
Even that would not leave me a moinder 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 a moinder being his lawful wife by solemn contract, twas he the injured man.
and might, if he so pleased, take a moinder back, the breach of the law being on his grandfather's
side, and that if he could circumvent him, and redeem her from the O-Tan, which is the palace
of the King's women, a sort of Sorrelio, it was both just and lawful for him to do so.
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
dissolved to believe what most favoured his hope, and to endeavour to learn from a moinders' 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 O-Tan, 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.
End of Part 2
Part 3 of Orinoco
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the royal slave, by Afra Ben. Part 3
While Orinoco 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 only of Orinoco, and sometimes could not forbear speaking of him, though her life were by cussing her husband.
custom, forfeited by owning her passion. But she spoke not of a lover only, but of a prince
dear to him 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 a moinder 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 a moinder, 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 amoeinda, 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 a moinder, he carried him with him, in his train, to the O-Tarn, often to banquet with his mistresses. But as soon as he entered one day into the apartment of Amoinder, 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 chance to look that way.
And I have observed, tis a very great error in those who laugh, when one says, a negro can
change colour, for I have seen him as frequently blush and look pale, and that has
visibly as I ever saw in the most beautiful white. And it is certainly that both these changes
were evident this day in both these lovers. And Amoinder, who saw with some joy the change in
the prince's face and founded 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 Amoinda's
making, she had time to tell the prince, with her angry but loved
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 a moinder no longer doubted, but she was
the only delight and darling of the soul she found pleading in a minute's 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 their wanted, but opportunity to make them both entirely happy.
But when he saw another door opened by Onahal, a former old wife of the kings, who now had charge of a moinder, 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 frenzy 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 upon a carpet, and lay struggling a long time, and only breathing now and then—
Omeynda!
When Honahal had finished her necessary affair within, shutting the door, she came forth, to wait till the
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
Amoinder, 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 Amoinder bore at this moment part in his affliction.
Arboan was of the same opinion, and both together persuaded him to resume his courage.
And all sitting down on the carpet, the prince said so many obliging things to Honahal,
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 him moind to know how faithful he was, what he suffered,
and what he said.
This discourse lasted till the king called, which gave Orinoco a certain satisfaction,
and with the hope Onahal had made him conceive, he assumed to look as gay as it was 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 altogether by his command to dance before him, where a moinder performed her part, with an air and grace so surpassing all the rest as her beauty was above him, 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 our bow on.
This onahal, as I said, was one of the cast mistresses of the old king,
and was these, now past their beauty, that were made guardians, or governants of young and new ones,
and whose business it was to teach them all there's want and arts of love with which they prevailed and charmed hereto-fore 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 honours they robbed 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 she once laid claim, to hear them whisper as
she passes by, that once was a delicate woman. Those abandoned ladies, therefore endeavour
to revenge, all the despites and decays of time, on these flourishing happy ones. And
twas this severity that gave Orinoco a thousand fears he should never prevail with Onahal
to see a moinder. But as I said, she was now retired to a window with her bow-on.
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 O-Tan, 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 therefore agreeable still, even to Abouan's youth, so that he took pleasure in entertaining
her with discourses of love.
He also knew that to make his court to these she favourites 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 favour 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.
A-Bohan failed not that night to tell the Prince of his success, and how advantageous the
service of Onahal might be to his Amour with Amoinda.
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 to you the request
you make in my behalf.
A-Bohan 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 O-Tan.
The wars came on, the time of taking the field approached, and t'was 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 amoeinder, for he believed he could not live, if he were
forced away without being so happy.
T'was 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 O-Tan.
He therefore urged a Bo-on to make the best of this last effort, and to explain himself so
to Honahal, that she, deferring her enjoyment of her young lover no longer, might make
way for the Prince to speak to a moinder.
The whole affair being agreed on between the Prince and a-Bowon, they attended the King,
as the custom was to the O-Tan, where, while the whole company was taken up and beholding
the dancing, and antic postures the woman royal made to divert the kind, Honahal singled
out her bow-on, 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, Abouon, 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, Abouan, 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 a boon."
"'Madam,' replied the half-faning 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 from all 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 him in his.
He would have refused him, crying,
"'Madame, 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 O-Tan, and I will be ready about midnight to receive you.'
"'Twas thus agreed, and she led, and she led, and she led,
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 a moinder, who that day appeared more lovely than ever, being
enlivened with the good tidings on a howl 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 a moinder 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 step 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 was visible
to the whole presence the joy wherewith he received her. He clasped her close to his bosom,
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 a moinder,
fonder of his safety than her own, befriended him, and 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 a moinder 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 ordain for disobedient defenders.
You may well imagine how welcome this news was to Orinoco, 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 O-Tan 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
a bow on, so that ere they departed, they contrived it so that the prince and he should both
come that night to the grove of the O-Tan, which is all oranges and citrons, and 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 Amoynder made a false step on purpose,
to fall into Orinoco'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 he 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 a bow-on along with him, he leaves
his apartment, and was watched to the very gate of the O-Tan, where he was seen to enter, and
where they left him, to carry back the tidings to the king.
And O'O'an were no sooner entered, but O'Nahal led the prince to the apartment of Omoinder,
who not knowing anything of her happiness, was laid in bed.
But O'Nahal only left him in her chamber, to make the best of his opportunity, and took
her dear Abouan 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 O'Nahal.
The prince softly wakened himwinder, 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 endeavouring for so many months.
End of Part three.
Part four of Orinoco.
Libravox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Elizabeth Clet. Orinoco, or the Royal
Slave, by Afraben, Part four. Tis not to be imagined the satisfaction of these two young
lovers, nor the vow 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 honour, 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 honour of receiving the royal veil?—t was 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 had a great noise in the
O-Tan, and unusual voices of men, at which the prince, starting from the arms of the frightened
immoinder, ran to a little battle-axe 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 Orinoco 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 Orinoco, will revenge it with
certain death of him that first enters. Therefore stand back, and know, this place is sacred
to love and me this night. Tomorrow tis the kings."
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
amoeinder, 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,
Abouan and Onahal both pleaded, and both assured him of a liar that should be well enough
to contrived to secure a moindor, so that at last, with a heart sad as death, dying eyes,
and a sighing soul, Orinoco departed, and took his way to the camp. It was not long after
the king in person came to the O-Tan, where beholding a moinder, with rage in his eyes, he
it braided her wickedness and perfidy, and threatening her royal lover, she fell on her face at
his feet, and imploring his pardon for a fault which she had not with her will committed, as
Honahal, 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
was 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 Amoinders 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 him to touch a woman
after having been possessed by a son, a father or a brother, so now he has been—he was
though now he looked on a moinder 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 A-Tan, with Honahal, whom he put into safe hands, with order they should both be
sold off as slaves to another country, either Christian or heathen, twas no matter where.
This cruel sentence, worse than death, they employed might be reversed, but their prayers were
in vain, and it was put in execution accordingly,
and that, with so much secrecy, that none either without or within the O-Tan, 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
had resolved.
He believed now that this 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 Orinoco excused, and to say he had reason for what he did.
And now everybody could assure the king how passionately a Moinder 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 being 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 disoblige, 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 a moinder. Besides, he considered he ought an honour to have killed her for
this offence, if it had been one. He ought to have 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, they,
a thousand times prefer death and implore it, as a moinder did, but could not obtain that
honour.
Seeing therefore it was certain that Orinoco 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 endeavour 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 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 Orinoco, who, impatient
of delay, asked a thousand questions in a breath, and all concerning a moinder.
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 what 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. Orinocca replied with a deep sigh, and a languishing voice,
"'I am armed against their worst efforts, for I know they will tell me a moind
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 a moinder, and how he deigned to ask pardon for his offence, 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.
Orinoco 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 was, twas he was the aggressor, and that death
would be just, and Morga his age would see him righted, and he was contented to leave
his share of glory to youths more fortunate and worthy of that favour 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 and 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 advantage 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 now had no more business for glory, and for the world, it was a trifle not
worth his care.
"'Go,' continued he, sighing, and divided 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 the order, and make them a prey
to the enemy.
He replied he would not give himself the trouble, but wished him to choose the bravest man
amongst him, 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
Orinoco 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 defence. 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 meantime Abouan 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 him to the very tense, killing him. Nor could all our Bo-on's courage,
which that day gained him immortal glory, shame him into a manly defence 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 and 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 leapt from his couch,
and cried, "'Come! If we must die, let us meet death and not.
noblest way, and twill be more like Orinoco, 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,
love-sick slave, to adorn the triumphs of Jamoan, that young Victor, who has already 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 splendour, to strike a reverent
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
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 Orinoco,
having the good fortune to single out Jamoan, he took him prisoner with his own hand,
having wounded him almost to death.
End of Part V of Orinoco.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet
Orinoco or the royal slave by Afra Ben Part 5
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
Orinoco, 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 a bow on, 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 Jemoan's army, which all fled, or were left dead upon the place,
they spent some time in the camp, Orenoko, 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 sport 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 Amoinda's death
had given him. Inasmuch 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 them to mediums, unconcern, but no motives of
beauties, though all endeavoured 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.
Orinoco 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, then 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 Orinoco, with whom he
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 Orinoco, who was more civilised, 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 favour 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 honour done him, entertaining
the prince every day with globes and maps, and mathematical discourses and instruments,
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 favours, besought the Prince to honour 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, the captain,
in his boat, richly adorned with carpets and velvet cushions, rode to the shore to receive
the prince. With another long-boat, where was placed all his music and trumpets, with which
Orinoco was extremely delighted, who met him on the shore, attended by his French governor,
Jamoan, Abouan, 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
it was 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,
were not quite overcome with drinking, rambled at their pleasure for and aft, as their
fancies guided them. So that the captain, who had well laid his design before, gave the word,
and seized on all his guests, they, clapping great iron suddenly on the prince, when he
was leapt 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 defence 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 them the same humour, 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 Orinoco, and to assure him,
he was afflicted for having rashly done so unhospitable a deed, and which could not now be 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
resolved to live. And Orinoco, whose honour was such as he had never violated a word in his
life himself, much less a solemn a separation, 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 offence 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 valour natural to him, and a revenge that would
animate that valour, he might commit some outrage fatal to himself and the king his master,
to whom this vessel did belong.
To this, Orinoco replied, he would engage his honour 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,
said, upon his parole, a man that had no sense or notion of the God that he worshipped.
Orinoco 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 Orinoco.
Let him know, I swear by my honour, 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 oneself, and the world takes no cognizance whether this
this God have revenged him, or not, tis done so secretly and deferred so long, while the man
of no honour 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 honour 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
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 Orinoco'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 favour
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
Orenoco, whereafter many compliments and assurances of what he had already promised,
he receiving from the prince his parole, and his hand, for his good behaviour, dismissed
his irons, and brought him to his own cabin, whereafter having treated and reposed him a while,
for he had neither et 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 him to eat,
and assure him of that liberty on the first opportunity.
Orenoko, 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 him.
But he besought him 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 injury 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 but
brought him, 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 as melancholy, and he would often sigh for a moinder, and think
this a punishment due to his misfortune, in having left that noble maid behind him, that
fateful night, in the O-Tan, when he was 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 Suriname, 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 and fetters, whom I have spoken of.
And having put them, some in one and some in other lots, with women and children, which they call
piccaninies, they sold them off, as slaves, to several merchants and gentlemen, not putting
any two in one lot, because they would separate him far from each other, nor daring to trust
them together, lest rage and courage should put him upon contriving some great action, to the ruin of
the colony.
Orinoco was first seized on, and sold to our overseer, who had the first lot, with several
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 defenceless, 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 him he would make no resistance, he cried,
Come, my fellow-slaves, let us descend, and see if we can meet with more honour and honesty in the next world we shall touch upon.
So he nimbly leapt into the boat, and, showing no more concern, suffered himself to be rowed,
up the river with his seventeen companions.
End of Part V.
Part six of Orinoco.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the royal slave, by Afra Ben.
Part six.
The gentleman that bought him was a young Cornish gentleman whose name was Trefri, 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 Oronoco
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 mean, 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 Orinoco endeavoured
to hide, by only confessing he was above the rank of
common slaves. Trefri 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 do so great a man.
Trefri 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 Orinoco so agreeably with his art and discourse, that he was no
less pleased with Trefri 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 defry 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 honour
he would find the means to re-conduct him to his own country again, assuring him he had a perfect
abhorrence of so dishonourable in 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 it became
of his friends, and how they took their slavery, and Trefrey promised to take care of
about the inquiring after their condition, and that he should have an account of them.
Though, as Orinoco afterwards said, he had little reason to credit the words of Abacari,
yet he knew not why, but he saw a kind of sincerity and awful truth in the face of Trefri,
he saw an honesty in his eyes, and he found him wise, and witty enough to understand honour,
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 sights of slaves, but the fame of Oronoka
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
Trefriar to give him something more befitting a slave, which he did, and took off his robes.
Nevertheless he shone through all, and his ozen-briggs, a sort of brown holland suit he had
on, could not conceal the graces of his looks and mean, 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 behaviour 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 him some
name of their own, their native ones being very likely, very barbarous, and hard to pronounce,
So that Mr. Trefrey gave Oronoco 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 other endeavours, 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. Trefrey, 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 Orinoco 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 neighbouring 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
designed 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 to 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 having all left work, but they all came forth to behold him, and found he was that prince, who had at
several times, sold most of them to these parts, and from a veneration they paid to great
men, especially if they know them, 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. Trefri had told him 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 him 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, which he and the English had much ado to appease, but at last
they prevailed with them, and they prepared all their barbarous music.
and everyone killed and dressed something of his own stock, for every family had 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 honour it with his presence,
which he did, and several English with him, where they all waited on him, some playing,
some dancing before him all the time, according to the manners of their several nations,
and with unwearied industry endeavouring to please and delight him.
While they sat at meet, Mr. Trefri 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.
Trifry, 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 while 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 that the whole country resounded with the fame of clemeny.
For so, said he, we have christened her, but she denies us all with such a noble disdain,
that it is 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 sire,
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 in awe she strikes into the hearts of her
admirers.
"'I do not wonder,' replied the prince, that clemeny 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 Trefrey, 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,
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 honour and virtue in her.
Thus passed they this night, after having received from the slaves all imaginable respect
and obedience.
The next day Trefrey asked Caesar to walk when the heat was allayed, and designedly carried
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 a moinder, he believed he should
tear it from his bosom.
They had no sooner spoke, but a little shocked dog, that Clemeny had presented her, which
But 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 Trefri caught her by the hand, and cried,
"'Clemeny, 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,
him the more to the earth, when he spoke, and gave the prince the leisure to look the
morator. There needed no long gazing, or consideration, to examine who this fair creature
was. He soon saw a moinder 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 overjoy,
if he had not met with the saleh, that he perceived a moinder fall dead in the hands of
Trefri. This awakened him, and he ran to her aid, and caught her in his arms, whereby
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. They 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, it is 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 was 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 amoeinder, and she despised grandeur and pomp, those vanities of her sex,
when she could gaze on Orinoco. 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 Orinoco.
Trefri was infinitely pleased with this novel, and found this clemeny 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, what 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 sea, 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
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 clemeny was a moinder, 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 Japaned, but that it looks as if it were
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
were so carved over the body resemble our ancient pips that are figured in the chronicles,
but these carvings are more delicate. From that happy day Caesar took clemeny 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, she was, and in a very short time
after she was 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 Trefriah for his and Clemeny'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 to the Lord Governor should come, so that he began to suspect them
of falsehood, and that they would delay him until 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 Clemeny were scarce an hour in a day from my lodgings, that they
et with me, and that I obliged him in all things I was capable of.
I entertained them with the loves of the Romans, and great men, 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 endeavouring 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,
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,—it 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 clemeny to return to his own kingdom, which was not so long away, but when he was once
on his void 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, I should be very loath 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 honour 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 labour 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 tame to lazy rest, and,
though all endeavours 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.
End of Part 6.
Part 7 of Orinoco.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the Royal Slave, by Afraben, Part 7.
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
complacence 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, than 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 attendance 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 him 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 he 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 honour designed him which was lieutenant-general of six and thirty islands besides the continent of suriname
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 would 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 their 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 aramatics continually bearing their fragrances. The trees appearing all like nosegays adorn 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 colours, 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 armour, 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 great delight to go in search of.
Though those adventures are oftentimes fatal, and at least dangerous, but while we had
Caesar and 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 wick.
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 him with lofty trees of a thousand
rare forms and colours, 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.
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 outvye 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 pace 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 poor, 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 defence, 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 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 is about the height of a 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
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 yet had 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 a
an opportunity to shoot her where he designed.
T'was some time before he could accomplish it, and to wound her, and not kill her, would
have but 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, too, 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
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 seemed 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 was a very great curiosity which all
the country came to sea, and which gave Caesar occasion of many fine discourses of accidents
in war, and strange escapes.
At other times he would go of 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 him 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.
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, but 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's 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 seized 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, eagle 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."
End of Part 7.
Part 8 of Orinoco.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the Royal Slave, by Afra Ben.
Part 8.
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 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-diverion 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 them, and being, by long living
there, become a perfect Indian in colour, we, who had a mind to surprise them, 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 fishermen, 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, as 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 stuffed 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
them, we took heart in advance, came up to them, and offered them our hands, which they took,
and looked on us round about, calling still for more company, who came swarming out, all
all wondering, and crying out, to peam, 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 them, 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 him 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 them, 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 Tegami, and we shall now know whether these things can speak."
So, advancing to him, some of them gave him their hands, and cried, Amora Tegami, which is
as much as, How do you do, or welcome, friend, and all
or 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 them, we could.
Then they invited us into their houses, and dressed venison and buffalo for us, and,
going out, gathered a leaf of a serumbo leaf, of six yards long, and spread it on the ground
for a tablecloth, and cutting another in pieces, instead of plates, set us on a 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 highly seasoned with pepper. When we had et, my brother and I took out our flutes,
and played to him, which gave him new wonder, and I soon perceived, by an admiration that
it's natural to these people, than by the extreme ignorance and simplicity of them, it were
not difficult to establish any unknown or extravagant religion among them, and to impose
any notions or fictions upon him.
For seeing a kinsman of mind 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 him 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 P.I.
That is, prophet.
They showed us their Indian P.I.
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 leisure de
man 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 stick 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 P.I. 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 them, no fancy can create, no sad dreams can represent so dreadful a spectacle. For my part I took them for hobgoblins or fiends rather than men. But however their shapes appeared, their souls were very humane and noble, but some wanted their nose-goblins.
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, old little aprons before them, 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 colours.
They cried Amora to Gawmi 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 marvelling 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 passed, 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 valour that 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 him. 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 them. 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 Imoinder, 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 rode us asked
him some questions, but they could not understand us, but showed us a long cotton string,
with several knots in 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
them 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 contained 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 Emoinda 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, it would be much 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 him, to feast among him, and sent all his music, and ordered
a great treat for the whole gang, about three hundred negroes, and about an hundred fifty
were able to bear arms, such as they had, which was 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 them and keep
them in good order. The guns, also, unless here and there one, or those newly carried
from England, would do no good or harm, for it is 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
him, of the miseries and ignomies of slavery, counting up all their toils and sufferings
under such loads, burdens and drudgeries as were fit for beasts than men, senseless
brutes than human souls.
He told him 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 and 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-slave, till their blood trickled from all parts of their body—blood
whose every drop ought to be revenged with a life of some of these 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 an honourable battle? And
are we, by the chance of war, become their slaves? This would not anger a noble heart.
This would not animate a soldier's 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 Tuskin, who, bowing at the feet
of Caesar, cried, "'My lord, we have listened with joy and attention to what you have said,
and where we only men, would follow so great a leader throughout the world. But, oh, consider,
we are husbands and parents do, 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 honour 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
had 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 are 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 and these 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 them?—no, twas a trifling excuse to men resolved to die, or overcome. As for bogs,
they are with a little labour 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 terms, 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 valour, 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 hammock 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 stayed for them where they were appointed. The men stayed 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 him, and let him out.
End of Part eight. Part nine of Orinoco. This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
recording by Elizabeth Clert
Ornoco or the Royal Slave
By Afra Ben
Part 9
But as they could not march far that night
On Monday early when the overseers went to call them 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 neighbouring ones, and we had by noon about six hundred men, they called
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 Paramites, as they called those of Parimplantation,
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 it is not impossible but some of the best in the country was of his counsel 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 the sort
of cruel whips they call cat with nine tails. Some,
had rusty, useless guns for show, others old basket-hilt's, whose blades had never seen the
light in this age, and others had long staffs and clubs.
Mr. Trefri went along, rather to be a mediator than a conqueror in such a battle, for
he for sore 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.
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 him, so that night or day they pursued him 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 defence,
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.
Thus, they never stood to Parley, but fell on pell-mell upon the English, and killed some,
and wounded 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 them in the eyes,
and the women and children, seeing their husband 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 amoeinder, 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 parlayed with Caesar, who he found
was resolved to die fighting, and would not be taken.
No more would Tuscan or a moinder.
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 valour 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 laboured
in vain to accomplish that which they would effectually perform, as soon as any ship
arrived that would touch on this 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 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, or the gods, and
they adored, who instructed them in principles so false that honest men could not live amongst
them, that no people professed so much, none performed, so little, that he knew what he had
to do when he dealt with men of honour, but with them a man ought to be eternally on his guard,
and never to eat and drink with Christians, without his weapon of defence 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 endeavouring 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 were such dogs.
But Trefri and Byam pleaded and protested together so much that Trefri, believing the
governor to mean what he said, and speaking very cordially himself, generously put himself
into Caesar's hand, and took him aside, and persuaded him with tears, to live by surrendering
himself, and to name his conditions. Caesar was overcome by his wit and reasons,
and in consideration of a moinder, 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 among the whites. All this was performed,
and Tuscan's pardon was put in, had 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 received 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 is 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
then 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 a moinder, 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 they should then lose a young
slave, and perhaps the mother.
You must know that when the news was brought on Monday morning that Caesar had
be taken 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 then that he would come down and cut all our throats.
This apprehension made all the females of us fly down to the river to be secured, and while
we were away they acted this cruelty, for I suppose I had authority in 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 a moinder
had given him, but it was not so well. But it seems he would have had 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 unexpressible condition.
And I have a thousand times admired how he lived in so much tementing 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 hands in his ill-treatment.
But he told us he could never pardon Byam.
And as for Trefri, 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 defence, but for Byam, who is their leader, their head, and should by his
justice and honour have been an example to him, 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 to
took his counsel like that of a parent, and assured him he would obey him in anything but his
revenge on Byam.
Therefore, he said, 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 Orinoco 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 surgeon 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 nor man, and had no sort of principles
to make them worthy the names of men, but at the very council-table would contradict in
fight with one another, and swear so bloodily that twas terrible to hear and see them.
Some of them 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,—Dam! it might be their own cases, and that
Caesar ought to be made an example to all the negroes, to fright him from daring to threaten
their betters, their lords and masters, and at this rate no man was safe from his own slaves,
and concluded, Naminé Contradicente, that Caesar should be hanged."
Part 10 of Orinoco.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Elizabeth Clet.
Orinoco, or the royal slave, by Afraben.
Part 10.
Trefri then thought it time to use his authority, and told Bayam 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
trusted 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.
Trefri had others as powerful, or more, that interested themselves and seized as life,
and absolutely said he should be defended.
So turning the Governor, and his wise counsel, 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 would perhaps 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 as fits of cowardice, wherein he struggled with love for the victory of his
heart, which took part with his charming amoeinder 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 amoynder 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 born.
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
as 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 Trefri to trust him into the air, believing
a walk would do him good, which was granted him, and taking a moinder with him as he used
to do in his more happy and calmer days, he led her up into a wood, where, after 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 than 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.
If being thus, you may believe the deed was soon resolved on, and is 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 young, lovely, 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 coverlid of nature. Only her face he
left yet bare to look on. But when he found she was dead, and passed 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 a moinder.
A thousand times he turned the fatal knife that did the deed towards 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 a moinder 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 Amoinder
was dead, and that the deaths of those being,
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 bows 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 as they were wont to do. His breath was short, and all his limbs surprised
with the faintness he had never felt before. He had not at in too.
two days, which was one occasion of his feebleness.
But excessive 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.
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 buy him. 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, endeavoured to rise, but found he wanted
strength, yet looking up and seeing his pursuers, he rose, and reeled to an neighbouring 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 it was Caesar
that spoke to him.
So much was he altered.
They asked him what he had done with his wife, for they smelled 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,
"'Oh, monster! That has 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 too feeble to obey my heart, and 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 him, 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 than 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 a 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 him.
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 him 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,
"'Well, 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 struck 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, Tuskin 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 them, 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 surgeon immediately
to him, who dressed his wounds and sewed up his belly, and used means to bring him to
life, which they affected.
We all ran 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 then he 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 amoyne, to imagine we could flatter
him to life again.
But the surgeon assured him he could not live, and then—and then—and he would not
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, sent Trefri, and the surgeons, promised all to take what possible care they
could of the life of Caesar, and I, taking boat, went with other company to come
Colonel Martins, about three days' journey down the river.
But I was no sooner gone than the Governor, taking Trefri, about some pretended earnest business,
a day's journey up the river, having communicated his design to one Bannister, 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 great fire made before him, he
He told him he should die like a dog, as he was.
Caesar replied that this was the first piece of bravery that ever Bannister 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 he ever 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
they'd 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-favoured 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 of 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 dead.
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 Bannister and the governor himself than 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 his great man.
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 immoinder."
End of Part 10. End of Orinoco by Afroben.
