 Chapter 3, Part 1 of the Eventful History of the Mutiny and Piratical Seizure of HMS Bounty, Its Cause and Consequences. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Barry Eads. The Eventful History of the Mutiny and Piratical Seizure of HMS Bounty by Sir John Barrow. Chapter 3, Part 1. The Mutiny. That, Captain Bly, that is the thing. I am in hell. I am in hell! Fletcher Christian. Horror and doubt distract his troubled thoughts. And from the bottom stir the hell within him. For within him, hell he brings and round about him. Nor from hell, one step no more than from himself, can fly by change of place. Now conscience wakes despair that slumbered, wakes the bitter memory of what he was, what is, and what must be worse. Of worse deeds, worse sufferings must ensue. In the morning of the twenty-eighth April, the northwestern most of the friendly islands, called Tafoa, bearing northeast, I was steering to the westward with a ship in most perfect order, all my plants in a most flourishing condition, all my men and officers in good health, and in short, everything to flatter and ensure my most sanguine expectations. On leaving the deck, I gave directions for the course to be steered during the night. The master had the first watch, the gunner, the middle watch, and Mr. Christian, the morning watch. This was the turn of duty for the night. Just before sunrise, on Tuesday the twenty-eighth, while I was yet asleep, Mr. Christian, officer of the watch, Charles Churchill, ship's corporal, John Mills, gunner's mate, and Thomas Burkett, seaman, came into my cabin, and, seizing me, tied my hands with a cord behind my back, threatening me with instant death if I spoke or made the least noise. I called, however, as loud as I could, in hopes of assistance, but they had already secured the officers who were not of their party by placing sentinels at their doors. There were three men at my cabin door, besides the four within. Christian had only a cutlass in his hand, the others had muskets and bayonets. I was hauled out of bed and forced on deck in my shirt, suffering great pain from the tightness with which they had tied my hands behind my back, held by Fletcher Christian and Charles Churchill, with a bayonet at my breast, and two men, Alexander Smith and Thomas Burkett behind me, with loaded muskets cocked and bayonets fixed. I demanded the reason of such violence, but received no other answer than abuse for not holding my tongue. The master, the gunner, Mr. Elphinstone, the master's mate, and Nelson, were kept confined below, and the four hatchway was guarded by sentinels. The bosin and carpenter, and also Mr. Samuel the clerk, were allowed to come upon deck, for they saw me standing abathe the mizzen mast, with my hands tied behind my back, under a guard, with Christian at their head. The bosin was ordered to hoist the launch out, with a threat, if he did not do it instantly, to take care of himself. When the boat was out, Mr. Hayward and Mr. Hallett, two of the midshipmen, and Mr. Samuel, were ordered into it. I demanded what their intention was in giving this order, and endeavored to persuade the people near me not to persist in such acts of violence. But it was to no effect. Hold your tongue, sir, or you are dead this instant, was constantly repeated to me. The master by this time had sent to request that he might come on deck, which was permitted, but he was soon ordered back again to his cabin. When I exerted myself, in speaking loud, to try if I could rally any with a sense of duty in him, I was saluted with D. Blank N. his eyes, the blank blow his brains out, while Christian was threatened me with instant death if I did not hold my tongue. I continued my endeavors to turn the tide of affairs, when Christian changed the cutlass which he had in his hand for a bayonet that was brought to him, and holding me with a strong grip by the cord that tied my hands, he threatened, with many oaths, to kill me immediately if I would not be quiet. The villains around me had their pieces cocked and bayonets fixed. Particular persons were called on to go into the boat, and were hurried over the side. Once I concluded that with these people I was to be set adrift. I therefore made another effort to bring about a change, but with no other effect than to be threatened with having my brains blown out. The Bosun and Seaman, who were to go in the boat, were allowed to collect wine, canvas, lines, sails, cordage, and eight and twenty gallon cask of water, and Mr. Samuel got one hundred and fifty pounds of bread with a small quantity of rum and wine, also a quadrant and compass, but he was forbidden on pain of death to touch either map, epfamirus, book of astronomical observations, sextant, timekeeper, or any of my surveys or drawings. The mutineers having forced those of the seaman whom they meant to get rid of into the boat, Christian directed a dram to be served to each of his own crew. I then unhappily saw that nothing could be done to affect the recovery of the ship. There was no one to assist me, and every endeavor on my part was answered with threats of death. The officers were next called upon deck, and forced over the side into the boat, while I was kept apart from everyone, abaffed the mizzenmast. Christian armed with a bayonet, holding me by the bandage that secured my hands. The guard round me had their pieces cocked, but on my daring the ungrateful wretches to fire they uncocked them. Isaac Martin, one of the guard over me, I saw had an inclination to assist me, and as he fed me with shaddock, my lips being quite parched, we explained our wishes to each other by our looks. But this being observed, Martin was removed from me. He then attempted to leave the ship, for which purpose he got into the boat, but with many threats they obliged him to return. The armorer, Joseph Coleman, and two of the carpenters, Macintosh and Norman, were also kept, contrary to their inclination, and they begged of me, after I was astern in the boat, to remember that they declared they had no hand in the transaction. Michael Byrne, I am told likewise wanted to leave the ship. It is of no moment for me to recount my endeavors to bring back the offenders to a sense of their duty. All I could do was by speaking to them in general, but it was to no purpose, for I was kept securely bound, and no one except the guard suffered to come near me. To Mr. Samuel, clerk, I am indebted for securing my journals and commission with some material ship papers. Without these I had nothing to certify what I had done, and my honor and character might have been suspected without my possessing a proper document to have defended them. All this he did with great resolution, though guarded and strictly watched. He attempted to save the timekeeper, and a box of my surveys, drawings, and remarks for fifteen years passed, which were numerous. When he was hurried away with, D. blank in your eyes, you are well off to get what you have. It appeared to me that Christian was some time in doubt whether he should keep the carpenter or his mates. At length he determined on the latter, and the carpenter was ordered into the boat. He was permitted, but not without some opposition to take his tool-chest. Each altercation took place among the mutinous crew during the whole business. Some swore, I'll be D. blank D. if he does not find his way home, if he gets anything with him. And when the carpenter's chest was carrying away, D. blank in my eyes, he will have a vessel built in a month, while others laughed at the helpless situation of the boat, being very deep and so little room for those who were in her. As for Christian, he seemed as if meditating destruction on himself and everyone else. I asked for arms, but they laughed at me, and said I was well acquainted with the people among whom I was going, and therefore did not want them. Four cutlasses, however, were thrown into the boat after we were veered astern. The officers and men being in the boat, they only waited for me, of which the master and arms informed Christian, who then said, Come, Captain Bly, your officers and men are now in the boat, and you must go with them. If you attempt to make the least resistance, you will instantly be put to death, and without further ceremony with the tribe of armed ruffians about me, I was forced over the side when they untied my hands. Being in the boat, we were veered astern by a rope, a few pieces of pork were thrown to us, and some clothes, also the cutlasses I have already mentioned, and it was then that the armorer and carpenter called out to me to remember that they had no hand in the transaction. After having undergone a great deal of ridicule and being kept for some time to make sport for these unfeeling wretches, we were at length cast adrift in the open ocean. I had with me in the boat the following persons, names, stations. John Fryer, master, Thomas Ludwight, acting surgeon, David Nelson, botanist, William Peckover, gunner, William Cole, boson, William Purcell, carpenter, William Elphinstone, quartermaster's mate, Thomas Hayward, midshipman, John Hallett, dew, John Norton, quartermaster, Peter Linkletter, dew, Lawrence Labogge, sailmaker, John Smith, cook, Thomas Hall, dew, George Simpson, quartermaster's mate, Robert Tinkler, a boy, Robert Lamb, butcher, Mr. Samuel, clerk, in all 18. They remained in the bounty, named, stations, Fletcher Christian, master's mate, Peter Hayward, midshipman, Edward Young, midshipman, George Stewart, midshipman, Charles Churchill, master at arms, John Mills, gunner's mate, James Morrison, boson's mate, Thomas Burquette, Abel Seaman, Matthew Quintel, dew, John Sumner, dew, John Millward, dew, William McCoy, dew, Henry Hillbrandt, dew, Michael Byrne, dew, William Musbrat, dew, Alexander Smith, dew, John Williams, dew, Thomas Ellison, dew, Isaac Martin, dew, Richard Skinner, dew, Matthew Thompson, dew, William Brown, gardener, Joseph Coleman, armorer, Charles Norman, carpenter's mate, Thomas McIntosh, carpenter's crew, in all 25, in the most able of the ship's company. Christian, the chief of the mutineers, is of a respectable family in the north of England. This was the third voyage he had made with me, and as I found it necessary to keep my ship's company at three watches, I had given him an order to take charge of the third, his abilities being thoroughly equal to the task, and by this means the master and gunner were not at watch and watch. Hayward is also of a respectable family in the north of England, and a young man of abilities as well as Christian. These two had been objects of my particular regard and attention, and I had taken great pains to instruct them, having entertained hopes that as professional men they would have become a credit to their country. Young was well recommended and had the look of an able stout seaman, fell short of what his appearance promised. In the account sent home he is thus described. Edward Young, midshipman, aged 22 years, dark complexion, and a rather bad look, strong maid, has lost several of his foreteeth, and those that remain are all rotten. Stuart was a young man of credible parents in the Orkneys, at which place, on the return of the resolution from the South Seas in 1780, we received so many civilities that, on that account only, I should gladly have taken him with me. But independent of this recommendation, he was a seaman and had always borne a good character. Notwithstanding the roughness with which I was treated, the remembrance of past kindnesses produced some signs of remorse in Christian. When they were forcing me out of the ship, I asked him if this treatment was a proper return for the many instances he had received of my friendship. He appeared disturbed at my question, and answered with much emotion. That, Captain Bly, that is the thing. I am in hell. I am in hell. As soon as I had time to reflect, I felt an inward satisfaction which prevented any depression of my spirits. Conscious of my integrity and anxious solitude for the good of the service in which I had been engaged, I found my mind wonderfully supported, and I began to conceive hopes, notwithstanding so heavy a calamity, that I should one day be able to account to my king and country for the misfortune. A few hours before, my situation had been peculiarly flattering. I had a ship in the most perfect order, and well stored with every necessary both for service and health, by early attention to those particulars I had, as much as lay in my power, provided against any accident in case I could not get through endeavour straights, as well as against what might befall me in them. Add to this the plants had been successfully preserved in the most flourishing state, so that upon the whole the voyage was two-thirds completed, and the remaining part to all appearance in a very promising way, every person on board being in perfect health to establish which was ever amongst the principal objects of my attention. It will very naturally be asked, what could be the reason for such a revolt? In answer to which I can only conjecture that the mutineers had flattered themselves with the hopes of a more happy life among the Othahetians than they could possibly enjoy in England, and this joined to some female connections most probably occasioned the whole transaction. The ship indeed, while within our sight, steered to the west-northwest, but I considered this only as a faint, for when we were sent away, a za for Oth-Tahiti was frequently heard among the mutineers. The women of Oth-Tahiti are handsome, mild, and cheerful in their manners and conversation, possessed of great sensibility, and have sufficient delicacy to make them admired and beloved. The chiefs were so much attached to our people that they rather encourage their stay among them than otherwise, and even made them promises of large possessions. Under these and many other attendant circumstances, equally desirable, it is now perhaps not so much to be wondered at, though scarcely possible to have been foreseen, that a set of sailors, most of them void of connections, should be led away, especially when, in addition to such powerful inducements, they imagined it in their power to fix themselves in the midst of plenty, on one of the finest islands in the world, where they need not labor, and where the allurements of dissipation are beyond anything that can be conceived. The utmost, however, that any commander could have supposed to have happened is, that some of the people would have been tempted to desert. But if it should be asserted that a commander is to guard against an act of mutiny and piracy in his own ship, more than by the common rules of service, it is as much to say that he must sleep locked up, and when awake, be girded with pistols. Desertions have happened, more or less, from most of the ships that have been at the society islands. But it has always been in the commander's power to make the chiefs return their people. The knowledge, therefore, that it was unsafe to desert, perhaps first led mine to consider with what E. so small a ship might be surprised, and that so favorable an opportunity would never offer to them again. The secrecy of this mutiny is beyond all conception. Thirteen of the party, who were with me, had always lived forward among the seamen, yet neither they, nor the mess-mates of Christian, Stuart, Haywood, and Young, had ever observed any circumstance that made them in the least suspect what was going on. To such a close planned act of villainy, my mind being entirely free from any suspicion, it is not wonderful that I fell a sacrifice. Perhaps if there had been marines on board, a sentinel at my cabin door might have prevented it, for I slept with the door always open, that the officer of the watch might have access to me on all occasions, the possibility of a conspiracy being ever the farthest from my thoughts. Had their mutiny been occasioned by any grievances, either real or imaginary, I must have discovered symptoms in their discontent. Which would have put me on my guard, but the ease was far otherwise. Christian in particular I was on the most friendly terms with. That very day he was engaged to have dined with me, and the preceding night he excused himself from supping with me on pretense of being unwell, for which I felt concerned, having no suspicions of his integrity and honor. Such is the story published by Lieutenant Bly immediately on his return to England, after one of the most distressing and perilous passages over nearly four thousand miles of the wide ocean, with eighteen persons in an open boat. The story obtained implicit credit, and though Lieutenant Bly's character never stood high in a navy for suavity of manners or mildness of temper, he was always considered as an excellent seamen, and his veracity stood unimpeached. But in this age of refined liberality, when the most atrocious criminals find their apologists, it is not surprising it should now be discovered when all are dead that could either prove or disprove it, that it was the tyranny of the commander alone and not the wickedness of the ringleader of the mutineers of the bounty that caused that event. We all know, it is said, that mutiny can arise but from one of these two sources, excessive folly or excessive tyranny. Therefore, the logic is admirable. As it is admitted that Bly was no idiot, the inference is obvious. And note six. If this be so, it may be asked to which of the two causes must be ascribed the mutiny at the nor, etc. The true answer will be to neither. Not only continues the writer was the narrative which he published proved to be false in many material bearings by evidence before a court-martial, but every act of his public life after this event, from his successive command of the director, the glaton, and the warrior, to his disgraceful expulsion from New South Wales, was stamped with an insolence and inhumanity and coarseness which fully developed his character. There is no intention in narrating this eventful history to accuse or defend either the character or the conduct of the late Admiral Bly. It is well known his temper was irritable in the extreme, but the circumstance of his having been the friend of Captain Cook, with whom he sailed as a master, of his ever afterwards being patronized by Sir Joseph Banks, of the admiralty promoting him to the rank of commander, appointing him immediately to the Providence, to proceed on the same expedition to Ohtahiti, and of his returning in a very short time to England with complete success, and recommending all his officers for promotion on account of their exemplary conduct, of his holding several subsequent employments in the service, of his having commanded ships of the line in the battles of Copenhagen and Camperdown, and risen to the rank of a flag officer. These may perhaps be considered to speak something in his favor, and be allowed to stand as some proof that with all his failings he had his merits. That he was a man of coarse habits, and entertained very mistaken notions with regard to discipline is quite true. Yet he had many redeeming qualities. The accusation by the writer in question of Bly having falsified his narrative is a very heavy charge, and it is to be feared is not holy without foundation, though it would perhaps be more correct to say that in the printed narrative of his voyage, and the narrative on which the mutineers were tried, there are many important omissions from his original manuscript journal, some of which it will be necessary to notice presently. The same writer further says, we know that the officers fared in every way worse than the men, and that even young Haywood was kept at the masthead no less than eight hours at one spell in the worst weather which they encountered off Cape Horn. Perhaps Haywood may himself be brought forward as authority, if not to disprove, at least to render highly improbable his experiencing any such treatment on the part of his captain. This young officer in his defense says, Captain Bly in his narrative acknowledges that he had left some friends on board the bounty, and no part of my conduct could have induced him to believe that I ought not to be reckoned of the number. Indeed, from his attention to, and very kind treatment of me personally, I should have been a monster of depravity to have betrayed him. The idea alone is sufficient to disturb a mind, where humanity and gratitude have, I hope, ever been noticed as its characteristic features. Bly too has declared in a letter to Haywood's uncle, whole well, after accusing him of ingratitude, that he never once had an angry word from me during the whole course of the voyage, as his conduct always gave me much pleasure and satisfaction. In looking over a manuscript journal kept by Morrison, the Bosensmate, who was tried and convicted as one of the mutineers, but received the king's pardon, the conduct of Bly appears in a very unfavorable point of view. This Morrison was a person from talent and education far above the situation he held in the bounty. He had previously served in the navy as mid-shipman, and, after his pardon, was appointed gunner of the Blenheim, in which he perished with Sir Thomas Trowbridge. In comparing this journal with other documents, the dates and transactions appear to be correctly stated, though the latter may occasionally be somewhat too highly colored. How he contrived to preserve this journal, in the wreck of the Pandora, does not appear, but there can be no doubt of its authenticity. Having been kept among the late Captain Haywood's papers, various passages in it have been corrected either by this officer or some other person, but without altering their sense. It would appear from this important document that the seeds of discord in the unfortunate ship bounty were sown at a very early period of the voyage. It happened, as was the case in all small vessels, that the duties of commander and purser were united in the person of Lieutenant Bly, and it would seem that this proved the cause of very serious discontent among the officers and crew, of the mischief arising out of this union, the following statement of Mr. Morrison may serve as a specimen. At Teneriff, Lieutenant Bly ordered the cheese to be hoisted up and exposed to the air, which was no sooner done than he pretended to miss a certain quantity, and declared that it had been stolen. The Cooper, Henry Hillbrandt, informed him that the cask in question had been opened by the orders of Mr. Samuel, his clerk, who acted also as steward, and the cheese sent on shore to his own house, previous to the bounty leaving the river on her way to Portsmouth. Lieutenant Bly, without making any further inquiry, immediately ordered the allowance of that article to be stopped, both from officers and men, until the deficiency should be made good, and told the Cooper he would give him a D blank D good flogging if he said another word on the subject. It can hardly be supposed that a man of Bly's shrewdness, if disposed to play the rogue, would have placed himself so completely in the hands of the Cooper, in a transaction which, if revealed, must have cost him his commission. Again, on approaching the equator, some decayed pumpkins purchased at Teneriff were ordered to be issued to the crew at the rate of one pound of pumpkin for two pounds of biscuit. The reluctance of the men to accept this proposed substitute on such terms being reported to Lieutenant Bly, he flew upon the deck in a violent raged, turned the hands up, and ordered the first man on the list of each mess to be called by name. At the same time saying, I'll see who will dare to refuse the pumpkin, or anything else I may order to be served out. To which he added, you D blank D infernal scoundrels, I'll make you eat grass, or anything you can catch, before I have done with you. This speech had the desired effect, everyone receiving the pumpkins, even the officers. Next comes a complaint respecting the mode of issuing beef and pork. But when a representation was made to Lieutenant Bly in the quiet and orderly manner prescribed by the twenty-first article of war, he called the crew aft, told them that everything relative to the provisions was transacted by his orders, that it was therefore needless for them to complain, as they would get no redress, he being the fittest judge of what was right or wrong, and that he would flog the first man who should dare attempt to make any complaint in future. To this imperious menace they bowed in silence, and not another murmur was heard from them during the remainder of the voyage to O Tahiti, it being their determination to seek legal redress on the bounty's return to England. Happy would it have been had they kept their resolution, by so doing if the story be true they would amply have been avenged, a vast number of human lives spared, and a world of misery avoided. According to this journalist, the seeds of eternal discord were sown between Lieutenant Bly and some of his officers while in Adventure Bay, Van Damans land, and arriving at Metavia Bay in O Tahiti he is accused of taking the officer's hogs and breadfruit and serving them to the ship's company, and when the master remonstrated with him on the subject he replied that he would convince him that everything became his as soon as it was brought on board, that he would take nine-tenths of every man's property, and let him see who dared to say anything to the contrary. The sailors' pigs were seized without ceremony, and it became a favor for a man to obtain an extra pound of his own meat. The writer then says, the object of our visit to the Society Islands, being at length accomplished, we weighed on the fourth April 1789. Everyone seemed in high spirits and began to talk of home, as though they had just left Jamaica instead of O Tahiti, so far onward did their flattering fancies whack them. On the 23rd we anchored off Anamuka, the inhabitants of which island were very rude, and attempted to take the casks and axes from the party sent to fill water and cut wood. A musket pointed at them produced no other effect than a return of the compliment, by poisoning their clubs or spears with menacing looks, and, as it was Lieutenant Bly's orders, that no person should affront them on any occasion, they were emboldened by meeting with no check to their insolence. They at length became so troublesome that Mr. Christian, who commanded the watering party, found it difficult to carry on his duty, but on acquainting Lieutenant Bly with their behavior he received a volley of abuse, was D blank D as a cowardly rascal, and asked if he were afraid of naked savages, whilst he had weapons in his hand. To this he replied in a respectful manner, the arms are of no effect sir, while your orders prohibit their use. This happened but three days before the mutiny, and the same circumstance is noticed, but somewhat differently, in Bly's MS Journal, where he says, the men cleared themselves and they therefore merit no punishment. As to the officers I have no resource, nor do I ever feel myself safe in the few instances I trust to them. A perusal of all the documents certainly leads to the conclusion that all his officers were of a very inferior description. They had no proper feeling of their own situation, and this, together with the contempt in which they were held by Bly, and which he could not disguise, may account for that perfect indifference, with regard both to the captain and the ship, which was manifested on the day of the mutiny. That sad catastrophe, if the writer of the journal be correct, was hastened if not brought about by the following circumstance, of which Bly takes no notice. In the afternoon of the twenty-seventh, Lieutenant Bly came upon deck, and missing some of the coconuts, which had been piled up between the guns, said they had been stolen, and could not have been taken away without the knowledge of the officers, all of whom were sent for and questioned on the subject. On their declaring that they had not seen any of the people touched them, he exclaimed, then you must have taken them yourselves, and proceeded to inquire of them separately how many they had purchased. On coming to Mr. Christian, that gentleman answered, I do not know, sir, but I hope you do not think me so mean as to be guilty of stealing yours. Mr. Bly replied, yes, you d-blank d-hound, I do. You must have stolen them from me, or you would be able to give a better account of them. Then, turning to the other officers, he said, God d-blank and you, you scoundrels, you are all thieves alike, and combine with the men to rob me. I suppose you will steal my yams next, but I'll sweat you for it, you rascals. I'll make half of you jump overboard before you get through Endeavor Straits. This threat was followed by an order to the clerk to stop the villains grog and give them but half a pound of yams tomorrow. If they steal them, I'll reduce them to a quarter. It is difficult to believe that an officer in his majesty's service could condense and to make use of such language to the meanest of the crew, much less to gentlemen. It is to be feared, however, that there is sufficient ground for the truth of these statements. With regard to the last, it is borne out by the evidence of Mr. Friar, the master, on the court-martial. This officer being asked, what did you suppose to be Mr. Christian's meaning when he said he had been in hell for a fortnight? Answered, from the frequent quarrels they had had and the abuse which he had received from Mr. Bly. Had there been any very recent quarrel? The day before Mr. Bly challenged all the young gentlemen and people with stealing his coconuts. It was on the evening of this day that Lieutenant Bly, according to his printed narrative, says Christian was to have supped with him, but excused himself on account of being unwell and that he was invited to dine with him on the day of the mutiny. CHAPTER III of the eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty, its cause and consequences. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Barry Eads. The eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty by Sir John Burrow. Every one of these circumstances and many others which might be stated from Mr. Morrison's journal are omitted in Bly's published narrative, but many of them are alluded to in his original journal and others that prove distinctly the constant reproofs to which his officers were subject and the bad terms on which they stood with their commander. A few extracts from this journal will sufficiently establish this point. In so early a part of the voyage as their arrival in Adventure Bay, he found fault with his officers and put the carpenter into confinement. Again at Matevia Bay, on the 5th December, Bly says I ordered the carpenter to cut a large stone that was brought off by one of the natives, requesting me to get it made fit for them to grind their hatchets on. But to my astonishment he refused in direct terms to comply, saying I will not cut the stone for it will spoil my chisel, and though there may be law to take away my clothes, there is none to take away my tools. This man having been shown his mutinous and insolent behavior, I was under the necessity of confining him to his cabin. On the 5th January, three men deserted in the cutter, on which occasion Bly says, had the mate of the watch been awake, no trouble of this kind would have happened. I have therefore disrated and turned him before the mast. Such neglectful and worthless petty officers, I believe, never were in a ship as are in this. No orders for a few hours together are obeyed by them, and their conduct in general is so bad that no confidence or trust can be reposed in them. In short, they have driven me to everything but corporal punishment, and that must follow if they do not improve. By Morrison's journal it would appear that corporal punishment was not long delayed, for on the very day he says the midshipman was put in irons and confined from the 5th January to the 23rd March, eleven weeks. On the 17th January, orders being given to clear out the sail room and to air the sails, many of them were found very much mildewed and rotten in many places, on which he observes, if I had any officers to supersede the master and bosun or was capable of doing without them, considering them as common seamen, they should no longer occupy their respective stations. Scarcely any neglect of duty can equal the criminality of this. On the 24th January, the three deserters were brought back and flocked, then put in chains for further punishment. As this affair, he says, was solely caused by the neglect of the officers who had the watch. I was induced to give them all a lecture on this occasion, and endeavour to show them that, however exempt they were at present from the like punishment, yet they were equally subject, by the Articles of War, to a condyne one. He then tells them that it is only necessity that makes him have recourse to reprimand, because there are no means of trying them by court-martial, and adds a remark, not very intelligible, but what he calls an unpleasant one, about such offenders having no feelings of honour or sense of shame. On the 7th March, a native Otehishin, whom Bly had confined in irons, contrived to break the lock of the Bilboa Bolt and make his escape. I had given, says Bly, a written order that the mate of the watch was to be answerable for the prisoners, and to visit and see that they were safe in his watch, but I have such a neglectful set about me, that I believe nothing but condyne punishment can alter their conduct. Verbal orders, in the course of a month, were so forgotten that they would impudently assert no such thing or directions were given, and I have been at last under the necessity to trouble myself with writing what by decent young officers would be complied with as the common rules of the service. Sir Stuart was the mate of the watch. These extracts show the terms on which Bly was with his officers, and these few instances, with others from Morrison's journal, make it pretty clear that though Christian, as fiery and passionate a youth as his commander could well be, and with feelings too acute to bear the foul and operabvious language constantly addressed to him, was the sole instigator of the mutiny. The captain had no support to expect, and certainly received none, from the rest of his officers. That Christian was the sole author appears still more strongly from the following passage in Morrison's journal. When Mr. Bly found he must go into the boat, he begged of Mr. Christian to desist, saying, I'll pawn my honor, I'll give my bond, Mr. Christian, never to think of this if you'll desist, and urged his wife and family. To which Mr. Christian replied, No, Captain Bly, if you had any honor, things had not come to this, and if you had any regard for your wife and family, you should have thought on them before, and not behave so much like a villain. Lieutenant Bly again attempted to speak, but was ordered to be silent. The bosin also tried to pacify Mr. Christian, to whom he replied, It is too late, I have been in hell for this fortnight past, and am determined to bear it no longer, and you know, Mr. Cole, that I have been used like a dog all the voyage. It is pretty evident, therefore, that the mutiny was not, as Bly in his narrative states it to have been, the result of a conspiracy. It will be seen by the minutes of the court marshal, that the whole affair was planned and executed between the hours of four and eight o'clock, on the morning of the 28th April, when Christian had the watch upon deck, that Christian, unable longer to bear the abusive and insulting language, had meditated his own escape from the ship the day before, choosing to trust himself to fate, rather than submit to the constant upgrading to which he had been subject, but the unfortunate business of the coconuts drove him to the commission of the rash and felonious act, which ended, as such criminal acts usually do, in his own destruction, and that of a great number of others, many of whom were wholly innocent. Lieutenant Bly, like most passionate men, whose unruly tempers get the better of their reason, having vented his rage about the coconuts, became immediately calm, and by inviting Christian to sup with him that same evening, evidently wished to renew their friendly intercourse, and happy would it have been for all parties had he accepted the invitation. On the same night, towards ten o'clock, when the master had the watch, Bly came on deck, as was his custom, before retiring to sleep. It was one of those calm and beautiful nights, so frequent and tropical reasons, whose soothing influence can be appreciated only by those who have felt it, when after a scorching day, the air breeze a most refreshing coolness. It was an evening of this sort, when Bly for the last time came upon deck in the capacity of commander. A gentle breeze scarcely rippled the water, and the moon, then in its first quarter, shed its soft light along the surface of the sea. The short and quiet conversation that took place between Bly and the master on this evening, after the irritation of the morning had subsided, only to burst forth again in all the horrors of mutiny and piracy recalls to one's recollection that beautiful passage of Shakespeare, where on the evening of the murder, Duncan, on approaching the castle of Macbeth, observes to Bunqueo. The air, Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself, unto our gentle senses, etc. A passage which Sir Joshua Reynolds considers as a striking instance of what in painting is termed repose. The subject he says of this quiet and easy conversation gives that repose so necessary to the mind after the tumultuous bustle of the preceding scenes, and beautifully contrasts the scene of terror that immediately succeeds. While on this lovely night, Bly and his master were congratulating themselves on the pleasing prospect of fine weather and a full moon to light them through endeavors dangerous straits, the unhappy and diluted Christian was, in all probability, brooding over his wrongs, and meditating on the criminal act he was to perpetrate the following morning. For he has himself stated that he had just fallen asleep about half after three in the morning and was much out of order. The evidence on the court-martial is sufficiently explicit as to the mode in which this act of piracy was committed. By the Journal of James Morrison, the following is the account of the transaction as given by Christian himself to the two midshipmen, Haywood and Stuart, both of whom had been kept below. The moment they were allowed to come upon deck, after the boat in which were Bly and his companions had been turned adrift, he said that finding himself much hurt by the treatment he had received from Lieutenant Bly, he had determined to quit the ship the preceding evening and had informed both in Carpenter and two midshipmen, Stuart and Hayward, of his intention to do so, that by them he was supplied with part of a roasted pig, some nails, beads, and other articles of trade which he put into a bag that was given him by the last name gentleman, that he put this bag into the clue of Robert Tinkler's hammock where it was discovered by that young gentleman when going to bed at night, but the business was smothered and passed off without any further notice. He said he had fastened some staves to a stout plank with which he intended to make his escape, but finding he could not affect it during the first and middle watches as the ship had no way through the water and the people were all moving about. He laid down to rest about half past three in the morning. That when Mr. Stuart called him to relieve the deck at four o'clock he had but just fallen asleep and was much out of order. Upon observing which Mr. Stuart strenuously advised him to abandon his intention, that as soon as he had taken charge of the deck he saw Mr. Hayward, the mate of his watch, lie down on the arm chest to take a nap, and finding that Mr. Hallett, the other midshipman, did not make his appearance, he suddenly formed the resolution of seizing the ship. Disclosing his intention to Matthew Quental and Isaac Martin, both of whom had been flogged by Lieutenant Bly, they called up Charles Churchill, who had also tasted the cat, and Matthew Thompson, both of whom readily joined in the plot, that Alexander Smith, alias John Adams, John Williams, and William McCoy evinced equal willingness and went with Churchill to the armorer of whom they obtained the keys of the arm chest, under pretense of wanting a musket to fire at a shark, then alongside, that finding Mr. Hallett asleep on an arm chest in the main hatchway, they roused and sent him on deck. Charles Norman, unconscious of their proceedings, had in the meantime, awaked Mr. Hayward, and directed his attention to the shark, whose movements he was watching at the moment that Mr. Christian and his Confederates came up the four hatchway after having placed arms in the hands of several men who were not aware of their design. One man, Matthew Thompson, was left in charge of the chest, and he served out arms to Thomas Burkitt and Robert Lamb. Mr. Christian said he then proceeded to secure Lieutenant Bly, the master, gunner, and botanist. When Mr. Christian observes Morrison in his journal, related the above circumstances, I recollected having seen him fasten some staves to a plank lying on the Larberg gangway, as also having heard the bosun say to the carpenter, it will not do tonight. I likewise remembered that Mr. Christian had visited the Four Cockpit several times that evening, although he had very seldom, if ever, frequented the warrant officer's cabins before. If this be a correct statement, and the greater part of it is borne out by evidence on the court-martial, it removes every doubt of Christian being the sole instigator of the mutiny, and that no conspiracy nor preconcerted measures had any existence. But that it was suddenly conceived by a hot-headed young man in a state of great excitement of mind, amounting to a temporary aberration of intellect, caused by the frequent abusive and insulting language of his commanding officer. Waking out of a short half hour's disturbed sleep, to take the command of the deck, finding the two mates of the watch, Hayward and Hallett, asleep, for which they ought to have been dismissed to service instead of being as they were promoted, the opportunity tempting and the ship completely in his power, with a momentary impulse he darted down the fore-hatchway, got possession of the keys of the arm-chest, and made the hazardous experiment of arming such of the men as he thought he could trust and effected his purpose. There is a passage in Captain Beachy's account of Pickcairn Island, which, if correct, would cast a stain on the memory of the unfortunate Stuart, who, if there was one innocent man in the ship, was that man. Captain Beachy says, speaking of Christian, his plan, strange as it must appear for a young officer to adopt, who was fairly advanced in an honorable profession, was to set himself adrift upon a raft, and make his way to the island, Dofoa, then in sight. As quick in the execution as in the design, the raft was soon constructed, various useful articles were got together, and he was on the point of launching it, when a young officer, who afterwards perished in the Pandora, to whom Christian communicated his intention, recommended him, rather than risk his life on so hazardous an expedition, to endeavor to take possession of the ship, which he thought would not be very difficult, as many of the ship's company were not well disposed towards the commander, and would all be very glad to return to Otehiti, and reside among their friends in that island. This daring proposition is even more extraordinary than the premeditated scheme of his companion, and if true, certainly relieves Christian from part of the odium, which has hitherto attached to him as the sole instigator of the mutiny. Relieve him? Not a jot, but on the best authority it may boldly be stated, that it is not true, the authority of Stuart's friend and messmate, the late Captain Haywood. Captain Beachy desirous of being correct in his statement, very properly sent his chapter on Pitcairn's island, for any observations Captain Haywood might have to make on what was said therein regarding the mutiny. Observing in his note, which accompanied it, that this account received from Adams differed materially from a footnote in Marshall's naval biography, to which Captain Haywood returned the following reply. Fifth April, 1830. Dear sir, I have perused the account you received from Adams of the mutiny and the bounty, which does indeed differ very materially from a footnote in Marshall's naval biography by the editor, to whom I verbally detailed the facts which are strictly true. That Christian informed the bosan and the carpenter, messengers Haywood and Stuart, of his determination to leave the ship upon a raft, on the night preceding the mutiny, is certain. But that any one of them, Stuart in particular, should have recommended, rather than risk his life on so hazardous next expedition, that he should try the expedient of taking the ship from the captain, etc., is entirely at variance with the whole character and conduct of the latter, both before and after the mutiny, as well as with the assurance of Christian himself, the very night he quitted Tahiti. That the idea of attempting to take the ship had never entered his distracted mind until the moment he relieved the deck and found his mate and midshipman asleep. At that last interview with Christian he also communicated to me for the satisfaction of his relations, other circumstances connected with that unfortunate disaster, which after their deaths may or may not be laid before the public, and although they can implicate none but himself, either living or dead, they may extenuate, but will contain not a word of his in defense of the crime he committed against the laws of his country, I.M., etc., P. Haywood. Captain Beachy stated only what he had heard from old Adams, who was not always correct in the information he gave to the visitors of his island, but this part of his statement gave great pain to Haywood, who adverted to it on his deathbed, wishing, out of regard for Stuart's memory and his surviving friends, that it should be publicly contradicted, and with this view, the above reply of Captain Haywood is here inserted. The temptations, therefore, which it was supposed, O. Tahiti held out to the deluded men of the bounty, had no more share in the transaction than the supposed conspiracy. It does not appear, indeed, that the cry of Huzzah for O. Tahiti was ever uttered. If this island had been the object of either Christian or the crew, they would not have left it 300 miles behind them, before they perpetrated the act of piracy. But after the deed had been committed, it would be natural enough that they should turn their minds to the lovely island and its fascinating inhabitants, which they had but just quitted, and that in the moment of excitement, some of them should have so called out. But Bly is the only person who has said they did so. If, however, the recollection of the sunny isle and its smiling women had really tempted the men to mutiny, Bly would himself not be free from blame, for having allowed them to indulge for six whole months among this voluptuous and fascinating people. For though he was one of the most active and anxious commanders of his time, the service, as is observed by naval officer, was carried on in those days in a very different spirit, from that which regulates its movements now, otherwise the bounty would never have passed six whole months at one island, stowing away the fruit, during which time the officers and seamen had free access to the shore. Under similar circumstances nowadays, if the fruit happened not to be ready, the ship would have been off, after ten days' relaxation, to survey other islands, or speculate on coral reefs, or make astronomical observations. In short, to do something or other to keep the devil out of the heads of the crew. And note eight. Bly would appear to have been sensible of this on his next expedition in the Providence, for on that occasion he collected more breadfruit plants than on the former, and spent only half the time in doing so. Be that as it may, Bly might naturally enough conclude that the seamen were casting a lingering look behind towards Otehidi. If, says Forster, who accompanied Cook, we fairly consider the different situations of a common sailor on board the Resolution, and of a Tahitian on his island, we cannot blame the former if he attempted to rid himself of the numberless discomforts of a boy drown the world, and prefer an easy life, free from cares, in the happiest climate of the world, to the frequent vicissitudes which are entailed upon the mariner. The most favorable prospects of future success in England, which he might form an idea, could never be so flattering to his senses as the lowly hope of living like the meanest Tahitian. And supposing him to escape the misfortunes incident to seamen, still he must earn his subsistence in England at the expense of labour, and in the sweat of his brow, when the oldest curse on mankind is scarcely felt at Tahiti. Two or three breadfruit trees, which grow almost without any culture, and which flourish as long as he himself can expect to live, supply him with abundant food during three-fourths of the year. The cloth trees, and eddo roots, are cultivated with much less trouble than are cabbages and kitchen herbs. The banana, the royal palm, the golden apple, all thrive with such luxuriance, and require so little trouble that I may venture to call them spontaneous. Most of their days are therefore spent in a round of various enjoyments, where nature has lavished many a pleasing landscape, where the temperature of the air is warm, but continually refreshed by a wholesome breeze from the sea, and where the sky is almost constantly serene. A kind of happy uniformity runs through the whole life of the Tahitians. They rise with the sun, and hasten to rivers and fountains to perform an ablution equally reviving and cleaning. They pass the morning at work, or walk about till the heat of the day increases, when they retreat to their dwellings or repose under some tufted tree. There they amuse themselves with smoothing their hair, and anoint it with fragrant oils, or they blow the flute, or sing to it, or listen to the songs of the birds. At the hour of noon or a little later, they go to dinner. After their meals, they resume domestic amusements, during which the flame of mutual affection spreads in every heart, and unites the rising generation with new and tender ties. The lively jest without any ill nature, the artless tale, the jacun dance, and frugal supper, bring on the evening, and another visit to the river concludes the actions of the day. Thus contented with their simple way of life, and placed in a delightful country, they are free from cares, and happy in their ignorance. Such is the picture drawn of the happy people of Otehidi by a cold, philosophical German doctor, and such, with very little change, Bly found them. As far, however, as the mutiny of his people was concerned, we must wholly discard the idea thrown out by him that the seductions of Otehidi had any share in producing it. It could not have escaped a person of Christian sagacity that certain interrogatories would unquestionably be put by the natives of Otehidi on finding the ship return so soon without her commander, without the breadfruit plants, and with only about half her crew. Questions he knew to which no satisfactory answer could be made, and though at subsequent periods he twice visited that island, it was some time afterwards, and not from choice but necessity. His object was to find a place of concealment, where he might pass the remainder of his days unheard of and unknown, and where it is to be hoped he had time for sincere repentance. The only atonement he could make for the commission of a crime which involved so many human beings in misery and brought others to an untimely end. But of this hereafter. The Eventful History of the Mutiny and Piratical Seizure of HMS Bounty The Open Boat Navigation The boat is lowered with all the haste of hate, with its slight plank between thee and thy fate. Her only cargo such as scant supply as promises the death their hands deny, and just enough of water and of bread to keep some days the dying from the dead. Some cordage, canvas, sails and lines and twine, but treasures all to hermits of the brine were added after to the earnest prayer of those who saw no hope save sea and air, and last that trembling vassal of the pole, the feeling compass navigations soul. The launch is crowded with the faithful few who wait their chief and melancholy crew, but some remained reluctant on the deck of that proud vessel, now a moral wreck, and viewed their captain's fate with piteous eyes, while others scoffed his augured miseries, sneered at the prospect of his pygmy sail and the slight bark so laden and so frail. Christian had intended to send away his captain and associates in the cutter, and ordered that it should be hoisted out for that purpose, which was done, a small, wretched boat that could hold but eight or ten men at the most, with a very small additional weight, and, what was still worse, she was so worm-eaten and decayed, especially in the bottom planks, that the probability was she would have gone down before she had proceeded a mile from the ship. In this rotten carcass of a boat, not unlike that into which Prospero and his lovely daughter were hoist, not rigged nor tackled sail nor mast, the very rats instinctively had quit it. Did Christian intend to cast adrift his late commander and his eighteen innocent companions, or as many of them as she would stow, to find, as they inevitably must have found, a watery grave? But the remonstrances of the master, Bosen and Carpenter, prevailed on him to let those unfortunate men have the launch, into which nineteen persons were thrust, whose weight, together with that of the few articles they were permitted to take, brought down the boat so near to the water, as to endanger her sinking with but a moderate swell of the sea. And to all human appearance, in no state to survive the length of voyage, they were destined to perform over the wide ocean, but which they did most miraculously survive. The first consideration of Lieutenant Bly, and his eighteen unfortunate companions, on being cast adrift in their open boat, was to examine the state of their resources. The quantity of provisions, which they found to have been thrown into the boat, by some few kind-hearted messmates, amounted to one hundred and fifty pounds of bread, sixteen pieces of pork, each weighing two pounds, six quarts of rum, six bottles of wine, with twenty-eight gallons of water, and four empty barricades. Being so near to the island of Tofua, it was resolved to seek there a supply of red fruit and water, to preserve, if possible, the above-mentioned stock in Tyre, but after rowing along the coast, they discovered only some coconut trees, on the top of high precipices, from which, with much danger owing to the surf, and great difficulty in climbing the cliffs, they succeeded in obtaining about twenty nuts. The second day they made excursions into the island, but without success. They met, however, with a few natives, who came down with them to the cove, where the boat was lying, and others presently followed. They made inquiries after the ship, and Bly, unfortunately advised, they should say that the ship had overset and sunk, and that they only were saved. The story might be innocent, but it was certainly indiscreet, to put the people in possession of their defence this situation. However, they brought in small quantities of breadfruit, plantains, and coconuts, but little or no water could be procured. These supplies, scanty as they were, served to keep up the spirits of the men. They no longer, says Bly, regarded me with those anxious looks, which had constantly been directed towards me since we lost sight of the ship. Every countenance appeared to have a degree of cheerfulness, and they all seemed determined to do their best. The number of the natives having so much increased as to line the whole beach, they began knocking stones together, which was known to be the preparatory signal for an attack. With some difficulty on account of the surf, our seamen succeeded in getting the things that were on shore into the boat, together with all the men, except John Norton, quartermaster, who was casting off the stern fast. The natives immediately rushed upon this poor man, and actually stoned him to death. A volley of stones was also discharged at the boat, and everyone in it was more or less hurt. This induced the people to push out to sea, with all the speed they were able to give to the launch, but to their surprise and alarm several canoes, filled with stones, followed close after them, and renewed the attack, against which the only return the unfortunate men in the boat could make, was with the stones of the assailants that lodged in her, a species of warfare in which they were very inferior to the Indians. The only expedient left was to tempt the enemy to desist from the pursuit by throwing overboard some clothes, which fortunately induced the canoes to stop and pick them up, and night coming on they returned to the shore, leaving the party in the boat to reflect on their unhappy situation. The men now entreated their commander to take them towards home, and on being told that no hope of relief could be entertained till they reached Timor, a distance of full twelve hundred leagues, they all readily agreed to be content with an allowance, which, on calculation of their resources, the commander informed them would not exceed one ounce of bread, and a quarter of a pint of water per day. Recommending them, therefore, in the most solemn manner, not to depart from their promise in this respect, we bore away, says Bly, across a sea where the navigation is but little known, in a small boat twenty-three feet long, from stem to stern, deeply laden with eighteen men. I was happy, however, to see that everyone seemed better satisfied with our situation than myself. It was about eight o'clock at night, on the second of May, when we bore away under a reefed lug foresail, and having divided the people into watches, and got the boat into a little order, we returned thanks to God for our miraculous preservation, and in full confidence of his gracious support, I found my mind more at ease than it had been for some time past. At daybreak on the third, the forlorn and almost hopeless navigators saw with alarm the sun to rise fiery and red, a sure indication of a severe gale of wind, and, accordingly, at eight o'clock it blew a violent storm, and the sea ran so very high that the sail was becalmed when between the seas, and too much to have set when on the top of the sea. Yet it is stated that they could not venture to take it in, as they were in very imminent danger and distress, the sea curling over the stern of the boat, and obliging them to bail with all their might. A situation, observes the commander, more distressing, has perhaps seldom been experienced. The bread, being in bags, was in the greatest danger of being spoiled by the wet, the consequence of which, if not prevented, must have been fatal, as the whole party would inevitably be starved to death if they should fortunately escape the fury of the waves. It was determined, therefore, that all superfluous clothes, with some rope and spare sails, should be thrown overboard, by which the boat was considerably lightened. The carpenter's tool-chest was cleared, and the tools stowed in the bottom of the boat, and the bread secured in the chest. All the people being thoroughly wet and cold, a teaspoonful of rum was served out to each person, with a quarter of a breadfruit, which is stated to have been scarcely eatable for dinner. Bly, having determined to preserve sacredly and at the peril of his life, the engagement they entered into, and to make their small stock of provisions last eight weeks, let the daily proportion be ever so small. The sea continuing to run even higher than in the morning, the fatigue of bailing became very great. The boat was necessarily kept before the sea. The men were constantly wet, the night very cold, and at daylight their limbs were so benumbed, that they could scarcely find the use of them. At this time a teaspoonful of rum, served out to each person, was found of great benefit to all. Five small coconuts were distributed for dinner, and everyone was satisfied, and in the evening a few broken pieces of breadfruit were served for supper, after which prayers were performed. On the night of the fourth and morning of the fifth, the gale had abated. The first step to be taken was to examine the state of the bread, a great part of which was found to be damaged and rotten, but even this was carefully preserved for use. The boat was now running among some islands, but after their reception at Tofoa they did not venture to land. On the sixth they still continued to see islands at a distance, and this day for the first time they hooked a fish to their great joy, but, says the Commander, we were miserably disappointed by its being lost in trying to get it into the boat. In the evening each person had an ounce of the damaged bread, and a quarter of a pint of water for supper. Lieutenant Bly observes, it will readily be supposed our lodgings were very miserable and confined for want of room, but he endeavoured to remedy the latter defect by putting themselves at watch and watch, so that one half always sat up, while the other lay down on the boat's bottom, or upon a chest, but with nothing to cover them, except the heavens. Their limbs, he said, were dreadfully cramped, for they could not stretch them out, and the nights were so cold, and they were so constantly wet, that, after a few hours' sleep, they were scarcely able to move. At dawn of the day, on the seventh, being very wet and cold, he says, I served a spoonful of rum and a morsel of bread for breakfast. In the course of this day, they passed close to some rocky aisles, from which two large sailing canoes came swiftly after them, but in the afternoon gave over the chase. They were of the same construction as those of the friendly islands, and the land seen for the last two days was supposed to be the Fiji Islands. But being constantly wet, Bly says, it is with the utmost difficulty I can open a book to write, and I feel truly sensible I can do no more than point out where these lands are to be found, and give some idea of their extent. Heavy rain came on in the afternoon, when every person in the boat did his utmost to catch some water, and thus succeeded in increasing their stock to 34 gallons. Besides quenching their thirst, for the first time they had been able to do so, since they had been at sea. But it seems an attendant consequence of the heavy rain caused them to pass the night very miserably, for being extremely wet, and having no dry things to shift or cover themselves, they experienced cold and shivering, scarcely to be conceived. On the eighth, the allowance issued was an ounce under half of pork, a teaspoon full of rum, half a pint of coconut milk, and an ounce of bread. The rum, though so small in quantity, is stated to have been of the greatest service. In the afternoon they were employed in cleaning out the boat, which occupied them until sunset, before they got everything dry and in order. Here the two, Bly says, I had issued the allowance by guess, but I now made a pair of scales with two coconut shells, and having accidentally some pistol balls in the boat, twenty-five of which weighed one pound or sixteen ounces, I adopted one of these balls as the proportion of weight that each person should receive of bread at the times I served it. I also amused all hands, with describing the situations of New Guinea and New Holland, and gave them every information in my power, that in case any accident should happen to me, those who survived might have some idea of what they were about, and be able to find their way to Tymore, which at present they knew nothing of more than the name, and some not even that. At night I served a quarter of a pint of water, and half an ounce of bread for supper. On the morning of the ninth, a quarter of a pint of coconut milk, and some of the decayed bread were served for breakfast, and for dinner the kernels of four coconuts, with the remainder of the rotten bread, which he says was eatable only by such distressed people as themselves. A storm of thunder and lightning gave them about twenty gallons of water. Being miserably wet and cold, I served to the people a teaspoonful of rum each, to enable them to bear with their distressing situation. The weather continued extremely bad, and the wind increased. We spent a very miserable night without sleep, except such as could be got in the midst of rain. The following day the tenth brought no relief except that of its light. The sea broke over the boat so much, that two men were kept constantly bailing, and it was necessary to keep the boat before the waves, for fear of its filling. The allowance now served regularly to each person, was one twenty-fifth part of a pound of bread, and a quarter of a pint of water, at eight in the morning, at noon, and at sunset. Today was added about half an ounce of pork for dinner, which, though any moderate person would have considered only as a mouthful, was divided into three or four. The morning of the eleventh did not improve. A daybreak I served to every person a teaspoonful of rum, our limbs being so much cramped, that we could scarcely move them. Our situation was now extremely dangerous. The sea frequently running over our stern, which kept us bailing with all our strength. At noon the sun appeared, which gave us as much pleasure, as is felt when it shows itself on a winter's day in England. In the evening of the twelfth it still rained hard, and we again experienced a dreadful night. At length the day came, and showed a miserable set of beings, full of wants, without anything to relieve them. Some complained of great pain in their bowels, and everyone of having almost lost the use of his limbs. The little sleep we got was in no way refreshing, as we were constantly covered with the sea and rain. The weather continuing, and no sun affording the least prospect of getting our clothes dried, I recommended to everyone to strip and wring them through the seawater, by which means they received a warmth that, while wet with rainwater, they could not have. The shipping of seas and constant bailing continued, and though the men were shivering with wet and cold, the commander was under the necessity of informing them, that he could no longer afford them the comfort they had derived from the teaspoonful of rum. On the thirteenth and fourteenth, the stormy weather and heavy sea continued unabated, and on these days they saw distant land, and past several islands. The sight of these islands, it may well be supposed, served only to increase the misery of their situation. They were as men very little better than starving, with plenty in their view, yet to attempt procuring any relief was considered to be attended with so much danger that the prolongation of life, even in the midst of misery, was thought preferable, while they remained hopes of being able to surmount their hardships. The whole day and night of the fifteenth were still rainy, the latter was dark, not a star to be seen, by which the steerage could be directed, and the sea was continually breaking over the boat. On the next day the sixteenth was issued for dinner an ounce of saltpork, in addition to their miserable allowance of one twenty-fifth part of a pound of bread. The night was again truly horrible, with storms of thunder, lightning and rain, not a star visible, so that the steerage was quite uncertain. On the morning of the seventeenth at dawn of day, I found, says the commander, every person complaining, and some of them solicited extra allowance, which I positively refused. Our situation was miserable, always wet and suffering extreme cold in the night, without the least shelter from the weather. The little run we had was of the greatest service. When our nights were particularly distressing, I generally served a teaspoonful or two to each person, and it was always joyful tidings when they heard of my intentions. The night was again a dark and dismal one, the sea constantly breaking over us, and nothing but the wind and waves to direct our steerage. It was my intention, if possible, to make the coast of New Holland to the southward of Endeavour Straits, being sensible that it was necessary to preserve such a situation, as would make a southerly wind a fair one, that we might range along the reefs till an opening should be found into smooth water, and we the sooner be able to pick up some refreshments. On the 18th, the rain abated. When at their commander's recommendation, they all stripped and rung their clothes through the seawater, from which, as usual, they derived much warmth and refreshment, but everyone complained of violent pains in their bones. At night, the heavy rain recommenced, with severe lightning, which obliged them to keep bailing without intermission. The same weather continued through the 19th and 20th, the rain constant, at times a deluge, the men always bailing. The commander, too, found it necessary to issue for dinner only half an ounce of pork. At dawn of day, Lieutenant Bly states, that some of his people seemed half dead, that their appearances were horrible, and I could look, says he, no way, but I caught the eye of someone in distress. Extreme hunger was now too evident, but no one suffered from thirst, nor had we much inclination to drink, that desire perhaps being satisfied through the skin. The little sleep we got was in the midst of water, and we constantly awoke, with severe cramps and pains in our bones. At noon the sun broke out and revived everyone. During the whole of the afternoon of the 21st, we were so covered with rain and salt water, that we could scarcely see. We suffered extreme cold, and everyone dreaded the approach of night. Sleep, though we longed for it, afforded no comfort. For my own part, I almost lived without it. On the 22nd our situation was extremely calamitous. We were obliged to take the course of the sea, running right before it, and watching with the utmost care, as the least error in the helm would in a moment have been our distress. It continued through the day to blow hard, and the foam of the sea kept running over our stern and quarters. The misery we suffered this night exceeded the proceeding. The sea flew over us with great force, and kept us bailing with horror and anxiety. At dawn of day, I found everyone in a most distressed condition, and I began to fear that another such night would put an end to the lives of several. I served an allowance of two teaspoonfuls of rum. After drinking which, and having rung our clothes, and taken our breakfast of bread and water, we became a little refreshed. End of Chapter 4 Part 1 Chapter 4 Part 2 of the eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty. It's caused by the fear of the sea, and the fear of the sea. The eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty. It's caused by the fear of the sea, and the fear of the sea. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For further information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. The eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty by Sir John Barrow. Chapter 4 Part 2 The Open Boat Navigation On the evening of the twenty-fourth, the wind moderated, and the weather looked much better, which rejoiced all hands, so they ate their scanty allowance with more satisfaction than for some time passed. The night also was fair, but being always wet with the sea, we suffered much from the cold. I had the pleasure to see a fine morning produce some cheerful countenances, and for the first time during the last fifteen days we experienced comfort from the warmth of the sun. We stripped and hung up our clothes to dry, which were by this time become so threadbare that they could not keep out either wet or cold. In the afternoon we had many birds about us, which are never seen far from land, such as boobies and noddies. As the sea now began to run fair, and the boat shipped but little water, Lieutenant Bly took the opportunity to examine into the state of their bread, and it was found that, according to the present mode of living, there was a sufficient quantity remaining for twenty-nine days allowance, by which time there was every reason to expect they would be able to reach time or. But as this was still uncertain, and it was possible that, after all, they might be obliged to go to Java, it was determined to proportion the allowance so as to make the stock hold out six weeks. I was apprehensive, he says, that this would be ill-received, and that it would require my utmost resolution to enforce it, for, small as the quantity was, which I intended to take away for our future good, yet it might appear to my people like robbing them of life, and some who were less patient than their companions, I expected would very ill-brook it. However, on my representing the necessity of guarding against delays that might be occasioned by contrary wins or other causes, and promising to enlarge upon the allowance as we got on, they cheerfully agreed to my proposal. It was accordingly settled that every person should receive one twenty-fifth part of a pound of bread for breakfast, and the same quantity for dinner as usual, but that the proportion for supper should be discontinued. This arrangement left them forty-three days consumption. On the twenty-fifth about noon some noddies came so near to the boat that one of them was caught by hand. This bird was about the size of a small pigeon. I divided it, says Bly, with its entrails into eighteen portions, and by a well-known method at sea of who shall have this, it was distributed with the allowance of bread and water for dinner, and eaten up bones and all with salt water for sauce. In the evening several boobies flying very near to us, we had the good fortune to catch one of them. This bird is as large as a duck. They are the most presumptive proof of being near land of any sea-fowl we are acquainted with. I directed the bird to be killed for supper, and the blood to be given to three of the people who were the most distressed for want of food. The body, with the entrails, beak and feet, I divided into eighteen shares, and with the allowance of bread, which I made a merit of granting, we made a good supper compared with our usual fare. On the next day, the twenty-sixth, we caught another booby, so that Providence appeared to be relieving our wants in an extraordinary manner. The people were overjoyed at this addition to their dinner, which was distributed in the same manner as on the preceding evening, giving the blood to those who were the most in want of food. To make the bread a little savoury, most of the men frequently dipped it in salt water, but I generally broke mine into small pieces, and ate it in my allowance of water, out of a coconut shell, with a spoon, economically avoiding to take too large a piece at a time, so that I was as long at dinner as if it had been a much more plentiful meal. The weather was now serene, which, nevertheless, was not without its inconveniences, for it appears they began to feel distress of a different kind, from that which they had hitherto been accustomed to suffer. The heat of the sun was now so powerful that several of the people were seized with a languor and faintness, which made life indifferent. But the little circumstance of catching two boobies in the evening, trifling as it may appear, had the effect of raising their spirits. The stomachs of these birds contained several flying fish and small cuttlefish, all of which were carefully saved to be divided for dinner the next day, which were accordingly divided with their entrails and the contents of their moors into eighteen portions, and as the prize was a very valuable one, it was distributed as before by calling out, Who shall have this? So that today, says the lieutenant, with the usual allowance of bread at breakfast and at dinner, I was happy to see that every person thought he had feasted. From the appearance of the clouds in the evening, Mr. Bly had no doubt that they were then near the land, and the people amused themselves with conversing on the probability of what they would meet with on it. Accordingly, at one in the morning of the twenty-eighth, the person at the helm heard the sound of breakers. It was the barrier reef which runs along the eastern coast of New Holland, through which it now became the anxious object to discover a passage. Mr. Bly says this was now become absolutely necessary without a moment's loss of time. The idea of getting into smooth water and finding refreshments kept up the people's spirits. The sea broke furiously over the reef in every part. Within the water was so smooth and calm that every man already anticipated the heartfelt satisfaction he was about to receive as soon as he should have passed the barrier. At length the break in the reef was discovered a quarter of a mile in width, and through this the boat rapidly passed with a strong stream running to the westward, and came immediately into smooth water, and all the past hardships seemed at once to be forgotten. They now returned thanks to God for his generous protection, and with much content took their miserable allowance of the twenty-fifth part of a pound of bread, and a quarter of a pint of water for dinner. The coast now began to show itself very distinctly, and in the evening they landed on the sandy point of an island. When it was soon discovered there were oysters on the rocks, it being low water. The party sent out to Reconoiter, returned highly rejoiced at having found plenty of oysters and fresh water. By help of a small magnifying glass a fire was made, and among the things that had been thrown into the boat was a tinderbox and a piece of brimstone, so that in future they had the ready means of making fire. One of the men too had been so provident as to bring away with him from the ship a copper pot, and thus with a mixture of oysters, bread and pork, a stew was made, of which each person received a full pint. It is remarked that the oysters grew so fast to the rocks that it was with great difficulty they could be broken off, but they at length discovered it to be the most expeditious way to open them where they were fixed. The general complaints among the people were a dizziness in the head, great weakness in the joints, and violent tenesmas, but none of them are stated to have been alarming, and notwithstanding their sufferings from cold and hunger, all of them retained marks of strength. Mr. Bly had cautioned them not to touch any kind of berry or fruit that they might find, yet it appears they were no sooner out of sight than they began to make free with three different kinds that grew all over the island, eating without any reserve. The symptoms of having eaten too much began at last to frighten some of them. They fancied they were all poisoned, and regarded each other with the strongest marks of apprehension, uncertain what might be the issue of their imprudence. Fortunately the fruit proved to be wholesome and good. This day, 29 May, being, says Lieutenant Bly, the anniversary of the restoration of King Charles II, and the name not being inapplicable to our present situation, for we were restored to fresh life and strength. I named this restoration island, for I thought it probable that Captain Cook might not have taken notice of it. With oysters and palm tops stewed together, the people now made excellent meals, without consuming any of their bread. In the morning of the 30th, Mr. Bly saw with great delight a visible alteration in the men for the better, and he sent them away to gather oysters, in order to carry a stock of them to sea, for he determined to put off again that evening. They also procured fresh water, and filled all their vessels to the amount of nearly 60 gallons. On examining the bread, it was found they still remained about 38 days allowance. Being now ready for sea, every person was ordered to attend prayers, but just as they were embarking, about 20 naked savages made their appearance, running and hallowing, and beckoning the strangers to come to them. But as each was armed with a spear or lance, it was thought prudent to hold no communication with them. They now proceeded to the Northwood, having the continent on their left, and several islands and reefs on their right. On the 31st they landed on one of these islands, which was given the name of Sunday. I sent out two parties, says Bly, one to the Northwood, and the other to the Southwood, to seek for supplies, and others I ordered to stay by the boat. On this occasion, fatigue and weakness so far got the better of their sense of duty, that some of the people expressed their discontent at having worked harder than their companions, and declared that they would rather be without their dinner than go in search of it. One person in particular went so far as to tell me, with a mutinous look, that he was as good a man as myself. It was not possible for one to judge where this might have an end, if not stopped in time. To prevent, therefore, such disputes in future, I determined either to preserve my command or die in the attempt, and, seizing a cutlass, I ordered him to lay hold of another and defend himself, on which he called out that I was going to kill him, and immediately made concessions. I did not allow this to interfere further with the harmony of the boat's crew, and everything soon became quiet. On this island they obtained oysters and clams and dogfish, also a small bean, which Nelson the botanist pronounced to be a species of dolicus. On the first of June they stopped in the midst of some sandy islands, such as are known by the name of keys, where they procured a few clams and beans. Here Nelson was taken very ill with a violent heat in his bowels, a loss of sight, great thirst, and an inability to walk. A little wine which had carefully been saved, with some pieces of bread soaked in it, was given to him in small quantities, and he soon began to recover. The boson and carpenter were also ill, and complained of headache and sickness of the stomach. Others became shockingly distressed with tenesmus, in fact there were few without complaints. A party was sent out by night to catch birds. They returned with only twelve noddies, but it is stated that had it not been for the folly and obstinacy of one of the party, who separated from the others and disturbed the birds, a great many more might have been taken. The offender was Robert Lamb, who acknowledged, when he got to Java, that he had that night eaten nine raw birds, after he separated from his two companions. The birds, with a few clams, were the whole of the supplies afforded at these small islands. On the third of June, after passing several keys and islands, and doubling Cape York, the northeasternmost point of New Holland, at eight in the evening, the little boat and her brave crew once more launched into the open ocean. Miserable, says Lieutenant Bly, as our situation was in every respect, I was secretly surprised to see that it did not appear to affect anyone so strongly as myself. On the contrary, it seemed as if they had embarked on a voyage to Tymore, in a vessel sufficiently calculated for safety and convenience. So much confidence gave me great pleasure, and I may venture to assert that, to this cause, our preservation is chiefly to be attributed. I encouraged everyone with hopes that eight or ten days would bring us to a land of safety, and after praying to God for a continuance of his most gracious protection, I served out an allowance of water for supper, and directed our course to the west-south west. We had been just six days on the coast of New Holland, in the course of which we found oysters, a few clams, some birds, and water. But a benefit, probably not less than this, was that of being relieved from the fatigue of sitting constantly in the boat, and enjoying good rest at night. These advantages certainly preserved our lives, and small as the supply was, I am very sensible how much it alleviated our distresses. Before this time, nature must have sunk under the extremes of hunger and fatigue. Even in our present situation we were most deplorable objects, but the hopes of a speedy relief kept up our spirits. For my own part, incredible as it may appear, I felt neither extreme hunger nor thirst. My allowance contented me, knowing that I could have no more. In his manuscript journal he adds, This perhaps does not permit me to be a proper judge on the story of miserable people like us, being at last driven to the necessity of destroying one another for food, but if I may be allowed, I deny the fact in its greatest extent. I say I do not believe that among us such a thing could happen, but death through famine would be received in the same way as any mortal disease. On the fifth the booby was caught by the hand, the blood of which was divided among three of the men who were weakest, and the bird kept for the next day's dinner, and on the evening of the sixth the allowance for supper was recommended, according to a promise made when it had been discontinued. On the seventh, after a miserably wet and cold night, nothing more could be afforded than the usual allowance for breakfast, but at dinner each person had the luxury of an ounce of dried clams, which consumed all that remained. The sea was running high and breaking over the boat the whole of this day. Mr. Edward, the surgeon, and Lawrence LeBogue, an old, hardy seaman, appeared to be giving way very fast. No other assistance could be given to them than a teaspoonful or two of wine that had been carefully saved for such a melancholy occasion, which was not at all unexpected. On the eighth the weather was more moderate, and a small dolphin was caught, which gave about two ounces to each man. In the night it again blew strong, the boat shipped much water, and they all suffered greatly from wet and cold. The surgeon and LeBogue still continued very ill, and the only relief that could be afforded them was a small quantity of wine, and encouraging them with the hope that a very few days more, at the rate they were then sailing, would bring them to Tymore. On the morning of the tenth, after a very comfortless night, there was a visible alteration for the worse, says Mr. Bly, in many of the people, which gave me great apprehensions. An extreme weakness swelled legs, hollow and ghastly countenances, a more than common inclination to sleep with an apparent debility of understanding, seemed to me the melancholy presages of an approaching dissolution. The surgeon and LeBogue in particular were most miserable objects. I occasionally gave them a few teaspoonfuls of wine out of the little that remained, which greatly assisted them. The hope of being able to accomplish the voyage was our principal support. The boson very innocently told me that he really thought I looked worse than any in the boat. The simplicity with which he uttered such an opinion amused me, and I returned him a better compliment. On the eleventh, Lieutenant Bly announced to his wretched companions that he had no doubt that they had now passed the meridian of the eastern part of Tymore, a piece of intelligence that diffused universal joy and satisfaction. Accordingly at three in the morning of the following day, Tymore was discovered at the distance only of two leagues from the shore. It is not possible for me, says this experienced navigator, to describe the pleasure which the blessing of the sight of this land diffused among us. It appeared scarcely credible to ourselves that, in an open boat, and so poorly provided, we should have been able to reach the coast of Tymore in 41 days after leaving Toffore, having in that time run, by our log, a distance of 3,618 nautical miles, and that notwithstanding our extreme distress, no one should have perished in the voyage. On Sunday the fourteenth, they came safely to Anker in Coupang Bay, where they were received with every mark of kindness, hospitality, and humanity. The houses of the principal people were thrown open for their reception. The poor sufferers, when landed, were scarcely able to walk. Their condition is described as most deplorable. The abilities of a painter could rarely perhaps have been displayed to more advantage than in the delineation of the two groups of figures, which at this time presented themselves to each other. An indifferent spectator, if such could be found, would have been at a loss, which most to admire, the eyes of famines sparkling at immediate relief, or the horror of their preservers at the sight of so many specters, whose ghastly countenances, if the cause had been unknown, would rather have excited terror than pity. Our bodies were nothing but skin and bones, our limbs were full of sores, and we were clothed in rags. In this condition, with the tears of joy and gratitude flowing down our cheeks, the people of Taimaw beheld us with a mixture of horror, surprise, and pity. When, continues the commander, I reflect how providentially our lives were saved at Tofua by the Indians delaying their attack, and that, with scarcely anything to support life, we crossed a sea of more than twelve hundred leagues, without shelter from the inclemency of the weather. When I reflect that in an open boat, with so much stormy weather, we escaped foundering, that not any of us were taken off by disease, that we had the great good fortune to pass the unfriendly natives of other countries without accident, and at last to meet with the most friendly and best of people to relieve our distresses. I say, when I reflect on all these wonderful escapes, the remembrance of such great mercies enables me to bear with resignation and cheerfulness, the failure of an expedition, the success of which I had so much at heart, and which was frustrated at a time when I was congratulating myself on the fairest prospect of being able to complete it in a manner that would fully have answered the intention of His Majesty, and the humane promoters of so benevolent a plan. Having recruited their strength by a residence of two months among the friendly inhabitants of Coupang, they proceeded to the westward on the twentieth of August in a small schooner, which was purchased and armed for the purpose, and arrived on the first of October in Batavia Road, where Mr. Bly embarked in a Dutch packet, and was landed on the Isle of Wight on the fourteenth of March 1790. The rest of the people had passages provided for them in ships of the Dutch East India Company, then about to sail for Europe. All of them, however, did not survive to reach England. Nelson the botanist died at Coupang. Mr. Elphinstone, master's mate, Peter Linkletter, and Thomas Hall Seaman died at Batavia. Robert Lamb, Seaman, the booby-eater, died on the passage, and Mr. Edward the surgeon was left behind, and not afterwards heard of. These six, with John Norton, who was stoned to death, left twelve of the nineteen, forced by the mutineers into the launch, to survive the difficulties and dangers of this unparalleled voyage, and to revisit their native country. With great truth might Bly exclaim with the poet, "'Tis mine to tell their tale of grief their constant peril, and their scant relief, their days of danger, and their nights of pain, their manly courage, even when deemed in vain, the sapping famine, rendering scarce a son known to his mother in the skeleton, the ills that lessened still their little store, and starved even hunger till he wrung no more, the varying frowns and favours of the deep, that now almost engulfs, then leaves to creep with crazy awe and shattered strength along the tide that yields reluctant to the strong. The incessant fever of that arid thirst which welcomes as a well the clouds that burst above their naked bones, and feels delight in the cold drenching of the stormy night, and from the outspread canvas gladly rings a drop to moisten life's all gasping springs. The savage foe escaped, to seek again more hospitable shelter from the main, the ghastly spectres which were doomed at last to tell as true a tale of dangers past, as ever the dark annals of the deep disclosed for man to dread or woman weep. It is impossible not fully to accord with Bly when he says, thus happily ended through the assistance of divine providence, without accident, a voyage of the most extraordinary nature that ever happened in the world, let it be taken either in its extent, duration, or the want of every necessary of life. We may go further, and say it is impossible to read this extraordinary and unparalleled voyage without bestowing the mead of unqualified praise on the able and judicious conduct of its commander, who is in every respect as far as this extraordinary enterprise is concerned, fully entitled to rank with Parry, Franklin and Richardson. Few men indeed were ever placed for so long a period in a more trying, distressing, and perilous situation than he was, and it may safely be pronounced that to his discrete management of the men and their scanty resources, and to his ability as a thorough seaman, eighteen souls were saved from imminent and otherwise inevitable destruction. It was not alone the dangers of the sea in an open boat crowded with people that he had to combat, though they required the most consummate nautical skill to be enabled to contend successfully against them. But the unfortunate situation to which the party were exposed rendered him subject to the almost daily murmuring and caprice of people less conscious than himself of their real danger. From the experience they had acquired at Tofowa of the savage disposition of the people against the defense this boat's crew, a lesson was learned how little was to be trusted, even to the mildest of uncivilized people when a conscious superiority was in their hands. A striking proof of this was experienced in the unprovoked attack made by those amiable people, the Otaihitans, on Captain Wyces' ship, of whose power they had formed no just conception, but having once experienced the full force of it, on no future occasion was any attempt made to repeat the attack. Lieutenant Blythe, fully aware of his own weakness, deemed it expedient, therefore, to resist all desires and temptations to land at any of those islands amongst which they passed in the course of the voyage, while knowing how little could be trusted to the forbearance of savages, unarmed and wholly defenseless as his party were. By the circumstance of being tantalized with the appearance of land, clothed with perennial verger, whose approach was forbidden to men chilled with wet and cold and nearly perishing with hunger, was by no means the most difficult against which the commander had to struggle. It was not the least of my distresses, he observes, to be constantly assailed with the melancholy demands of my people for an increase of allowance, which it grieved me to refuse. He well knew that to reason with men reduced to the last stage of famine, yet denied the use of provisions within their reach, and with the power to seize upon them, in their own hands, would be to no purpose. Something more must be done to ensure even the possibility of saving them from the effect of their own imprudence. The first thing he set about, therefore, was to ascertain the exact state of their provisions, which were found to amount to the ordinary consumption of five days, but which were to be spun out so as to last fifty days. This was at once distinctly stated to the men, and an agreement entered into, and a solemn promise made by all, that the settled allowance should never be deviated from, as they were made clearly to understand that on the strict observance of this agreement rested the only hope of their safety. And this was explained and made so evident to every man at the time it was concluded that they unanimously agreed to it, and by reminding them of this compact, whenever they became clamorous for more, and showing a firm determination not to swerve from it, Lieutenant Bly succeeded in resisting all their solicitations. The rigid adherence to the compact, indoling out their miserable pittance, the constant exposure to wet, the imminent peril of being swallowed up by the ocean, their cramped and confined position, and the unceasing reflection on their miserable and melancholy situation, all these difficulties and sufferings made it not less than miraculous, that this voyage itself a miracle, should have been completed not only without the loss of a man from sickness, but with so little loss of health. With respect to the preservation of our health, says the Commander, during the course of sixteen days of heavy and almost continual rain, I would recommend to every one in a similar situation the method we practised of dipping their clothes in salt water, and to wring them out as often as they became soaked with rain. It was the only resource we had, and I believe was of the greatest service to us, for it felt more like a change of dry clothes than could well be imagined. We had occasion to do this so often, that at length all our clothes were run to pieces. But the great art of all was to divert their attention from the almost hopeless situation in which they were placed, and to prevent despondency from taking possession of their minds, and in order to assist in effecting this some employment was devised for them. Among other things a log-line, an object of interest at all, was measured and marked, and the men were practised in counting seconds correctly, so that the distance run on each day might be ascertained with a nearer approach to accuracy than by mere guessing. These little operations afforded them a temporary amusement, and the log being daily and hourly hove gave them also some employment, and diverted their thoughts for the moment from their melancholy situation. Then every noon when the sun was out, or at other times before and afternoon, and also at night when the stars appeared, Lieutenant Bly never neglected to take observations for the latitude, and to work the day's work for ascertaining the ship's place. The anxiety of the people to hear how they had preceded what progress had been made, and whereabouts they were on the wide ocean, also contributed for the time to drive away gloomy thoughts that but too frequently would intrude themselves. These observations were rigidly attended to, and sometimes made under the most difficult circumstances the sea breaking over the observer, and the boat pitching and rolling so much that he was obliged to be propped up while taking them. In this way, with now and then a little interrupted sleep, about a thousand long and anxious hours were consumed in pain and peril, and a space of sea passed over equal to four thousand five hundred miles, being at the rate of four and one fifth miles an hour, or one hundred miles a day. Lieutenant Bly had expressed his conviction that the six days spent among the Coral Islands, off the coast of New Holland, were the salvation of the whole party, by the refreshing sleep they hear procured by the exercise of walking about, and above all by the nutriment derived from the oysters and clams, the beans and berries they procured while there, for that such, he says, was the exhausted condition of all on their arrival at the barrier reef, that a few days more at sea must have terminated the existence of many of them. This stoppage, however, had likewise been nearly productive of fatal consequences to the whole party. In fact, another mutiny was within an ace of breaking out, which, if not checked at the moment, could only, in their desperate situation, have ended in irretrievable and total destruction. Bly mentions, in his printed narrative, the mutinous conduct of a person to whom he gave a cutlass to defend himself. This affair, as stated in his original manuscript journal, wears a far more serious aspect. The carpenter, Purcell, began to be insolent to a high degree, and at last told me, with a mutinous aspect, he was as good a man as I was. I did not just now see where this was to end, I therefore determined to strike a final blow at it, and either to preserve my command or die in the attempt, and, taking hold of a cutlass, I ordered the rascal to take hold of another and defend himself, when he called out that I was going to kill him, and began to make concessions. I was now only assisted by Mr. Nelson, and the master, Friar, very deliberately called out to the boson to put me under arrest, and was stirring up a greater disturbance, when I declared, if he interfered, when I was in the execution of my duty to preserve order and regularity, and that in consequence any tumult arose, I would certainly put him to death the first person. This had a proper effect on this man, and he now assured me that, on the contrary, I might rely on him to support my orders and directions for the future. This is the outline of a tumult that lasted about a quarter of an hour, and he adds, I was told that the master and carpenter, at the last place, were endeavouring to produce altercations, and were the principal cause of their murmuring there. This carpenter he brought to a court-martial on their arrival in England, on various charges of which he was found guilty in part, and reprimanded. Purcell is said to be at this time in a madhouse.