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OF AMBROSE GWINETT.
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should immediately put our treasure on board, with as much of the merchandize as we could conveniently carry off, and make the best of our way to Jamaica, where there was no doubt but we should be well received.

They agreed to the proposal with more alacrity than I thought they would.—We fell immediately to work, and in two days were prepared to sail. But though we put a considerable quantity of bale goods on board, the quantity still in the warehouse was astonishing. I warned the fellows of their capacity, and the danger of deeply loading the ship, but they would not give over till she could hold no more; and then the treasure, packed in chests, each man’s share separate to himself, we put in the cabin.

We weighed anchor the 3d. of August, and for three days we had excellent weather; but the 4th. A storm began to threaten, and the symptoms still increasing, by midnight such a war was raised between heaven and earth, as to that hour, I never was witness of. About three o’clock in the morning we were obliged to heave the ship too under her spare poles, and the sea ran so exceeding high that we could keep no lights on board, tho' the night was so dark that we could scarce see one another at a quarter of a yard distance; the wind still increasing, we sprung the main-mast about six feet from the deck, that nothing could save it. We now began to feel the consequence of too deeply loading the vessel. The first things we threw overboard were our guns, and as our case became more and more desperate, every thing followed them, not excepting our chests of treasure. Thus I was

once more reduced to my original state of poverty. As day-light appeared the storm abated. We then, as well as we were able, erected jury-masts; and

in