PHILIP QUARLL. 283 thinking it proper to let them come to a resolution, made at the nearest, who immediately took to his heels; and then to the next, who also did the same, so that they went clearly away, which being all he desired, he returned as soon as he saw them in the long boat, which they rowed to their ship, that lay at anchor some distance from the rocks. These wretches being gone, he returned Heaven thanks for his deliverance ; and, as his bridge had favoured their coming, he pulled it off, and only laid it over when he had a mind to view the sea. ‘There happened nothing the remainder of the year worthy of record; he employed it in his customary occupations. In the mean time, the French marincrs, who probably got money by what they had taken from him the year before, returned much about the same season, and being resolved to take him away, and all they could make anything of, were provided with hands and implements to accomplish their design, as ropes to bind what they could get alive, and guns to shoot what they could not come at; saws and hatchets to cut down logwood and ‘es and shovels to dig up orris-root, and others of ch they imagined the island produced ; likewise flat-bottomed boats to tow in shallow water, where others could not come ; and thus by degrees to load their ship with booty ; but ever-watchful Providence blasted their evil projects, and confounded their devices, at the very instant they thought themselves sure of succt ‘The implements, in a flat-bottomed boat, were towed to the very foot of the rock, and being landed to their satisfaction, the men on board embarked in two more of the same sort of boats, but were no sooner in them than a storm arose, which dashed their slender bottoms to pieces, and washed them into the sea, in which they perished, oversetting also the boat on shore with the load. The storm being over, which lasted from about eight in the morning till twelve at