A Voyage to Cacklogallinia - With a Description of the Religion, Policy, Customs and Manners of That Country  by Captain Samuel Brunt
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page 24 of 122 (19%)
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			  I am Captain, I will be Captain, and let the boldest of ye disobey 
			my Commands. This resolute Procedure quash'd the Mutineers, and he ever after kept a strict Command, and was esteemed a gallant Man. Two Days after this, we fell in with a _Spanish Garde de Costa_, and Two Sloops; they boarded, and with very little Resistance, took the Ship, tho' she had Fourscore Hands on board, and our Sloop but Ninety. She was mounted with Twenty Guns, but her great Shot did us but little Damage. The two Sloops were _English_, going to the Bay of _Campechy_ with Provisions, which we wanted very much. They were taken but the Day before by the _Spaniards_, and tho' they endeavoured to get off, when they saw we had carried the Frigate, yet our Sloop wrong'd 'em so much, that we soon came up with, and took them. There were Twelve _Englishmen_ on board the Prize, Four of which took on with us. Our Captain now quitted his Sloop, went on board the Ship, which he called the _Basilisk_, and left the Three Sloops to the _Spaniards_. The Eight _English_, who refused to take on with him, he kept on board, promising to set them on shore on the East End of _Jamaica_ in few Days, but refused them one of the Sloops, which they desired; I suppose, fearing, at their Arrival, some Man of War might be sent in Search of him, or, may be, hoping to bring them over, for, it's certain he had no Design to land them as he promis'd. Our Ship's Crew was now extreamly jocund, for they had Provisions for at least Three Months, with what they took out of the _English_ Sloops, and, in Money, they found upwards of an Hundred and Sixty Thousand Pieces of Eight, and Two Thousand Gold Quadruples. We lost but Three Men  | 
		
			
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