of John Cockburn, &c. 9 1 



was concerning our Country and Religion j 

 I told him we were Englijhmen, brought up 

 in the Church of England; then, faid he, 

 you are no Chriftians, and fo giving us two 

 Reals of Plate, bid us be gone. 



Presently after this we met the In- 

 dians, who had brought our Fellow r Tra- 

 veller with them from the Wood, where we 

 had left him. He was very ill of an Ague 

 and Fever ; and faid, he efcaped drowning, 

 by rallying of Spirits enough (feeing the 

 Danger* he was in) to fcramble up a Hill, 

 where he fat till the Storm was over; but 

 that the Waters rolled down from other Hills 

 that were above him, with fuch Rapidity, 

 that it was with great Pain, he faved him- 

 felf from being walhed down into the Val- 

 lies, where nothing could have prevented 

 his being drowned, I told him, we were 

 grown very rich now, for that we were 

 Mailers of three Reals. 



Not long after we met with Mr. 

 Rounce, there came a Negroe to us, and 

 laid, we muft go with him to his Matter, 

 which we willingly confenting to, he carried 



us 



