To 1776
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-1773-to-1776-190 |
| Words | 385 |
He
was scarce come out, when another party beset the house, and
came so quick, that he had but just time to get in again;
and the maid, not having flax enough at hand, covered the
door with foul linen. When these also had wearied them
selves with searching, and went away, he put on his boots
and great coat, took a gun and a rug, (it being a sharp frost,)
and crept into a little marsh near the house. A third party
came quickly, swearing he must be about the house, and they
would have him if he was alive. Hearing this, he stole away
with full speed, and lay down near the sea-shore, between two
hillocks, covering himself with sea-weeds. They came so
near that he heard one of them swear, “If I find him, I will
hang him on the next tree.” Another answered, “I will not
stay for that: I will shoot him the moment I see him.”
After some time, finding they were gone, he lifted up his
head, and heard a shrill whistle from a man fifty or sixty yards
off. He soon knew him to be a deserter from the rebel army. He asked Mr. H. what he designed to do; who answered,
“Go in my boat to the English ships, which are four or five
and twenty miles off.” But the rebels had found and burnt the
boat. So, knowing their life was gone if they stayed till the
morning, they got into a small canoe, (though liable to overset
with a puff of wind,) and set off from shore. Having rowed two
or three miles, they stopped at a little island, and made a fire,
being almost perished with cold. But they were quickly alarmed,
by a boat rowing toward the shore. Mr. Hatton, standing up,
said, “We have a musket and a fusee. If you load one, as
fast as I discharge the other, I will give a good account of them
w
174 REv. J. WESLEY’s [Feb. 1780. all.” He then stepped to the shore, and bade the rowers stop,
and tell him who they were; declaring he would fire among
them, if any man struck another stroke. Upon their answering,
he found they were friends, being six more deserters from the
rebel army.