END OF A FIRST PART, 869 apply themselves to planting; which | afterwards performed, And the fellows proved very honest and diligent after they were mastered, and had their properties set apart for them. IT sent them also from the Brazils five cows, three of them being big with calf, some sheep, and some hogs; which, when T came again, were considerably increased. But all these things, with an account how three hundred Carib- bees came and invaded them, and ruined their plantations, and how they fought with that whole number twice, and were at first de- feated and three of them killed; but at last a storm destroying their enemy’s canoes, they famiahed or destroyed almost all the rest, and renewed and recovered the possession of their plantation, and still lived upon the island : All these things, with some very surprising incidents in some new adventures of my own, for ten years more, Timay perhaps give a further account of hereafter,