208 THE OCEAN. 
my assistance they must have lost either their canoe 
or their net, or perhaps both, which were their only 
means of subsistence. Having only two boys with me 
in the boat at the time, I desired them to cut the fish 
away, which they refused to do; I then took the 
bight of the net from them, and with the joint en- 
deavours of themselves and my boat’s crew, we suc- 
ceeded in hauling up the net, and to our astonish- 
ment, after great exertions, we raised the saw of the 
fish about eight feet above the surface of the sea. 
It was a fortunate circumstance that the fish came 
up with the belly towards the boat, or it would have 
cut the boat in two. 
“T had abandoned all idea of taking the fish, until, 
by great good luck, it made towards the land, when 
I made another attempt, and having about fifty 
fathoms of rope in the boat, we succeeded in making a 
running bowline-knot round the saw of the fish, and 
this we fortunately made fast on shore. When the 
fish found itself secured, it plunged so violently, that 
I could not prevail on any one to go near it: the ap- 
pearance it presented was truly awful. I immediately 
went alongside the Lima packet, Capt. Singleton, 
and got the assistance of all his ship’s crew. By the 
time they arrived the fish was rather less violent; 
we hauled upon the net again, in which it was still 
entangled, and got another fifty fathoms of line made 
fast to the saw, and attempted to haul it towards the 
shore; but, although mustering thirty hands, we could 
not move it an inch. By this time the negroes be- 
longing to Mr. Danglad’s estate came flocking to our 
assistance, making together with the Spaniards about 
