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In the meantime, one of the fellows had had too much to drink, for, coming home, he proposed to one of the girls that they should be married that night. The rest of us thought it would be fine to go to a wedding, so we urged it on him all we could. I went after the license, which cost two dollars, and the other man went after the parson. While we were gone, the groom drank still more and could hardly stand up. But they were married while I stood and held him up. Then we bought some cakes and wine, got hold of a fiddler and danced merrily. Thomas was now so drunk we had to put him to bed. The next morning at six o'clock a message came for us to go aboard. We went up to get Tom and found him still asleep. He could not recollect at all that he had been married. But nothing would do - he had to go, and he did not get home until two years later. I have since met him in Baltimore, and he is living very happily with the wife he got without knowing it. We sailed away from the town, but anchored a few miles down the bay. We had got a taste of land now, and were not anxious to go to sea. Tom wanted to go home to his wife, so we determined we would steal away at night. But, as our boat was hoisted on deck, Tom, as soon as it got dark, was to swim over to another ship whose yawl was in the water and bring it to us. When he got there, he was discovered. The people called out to him and he had to give it up and swim back again. The next morning we went to sea. The weather was bad, and the provisions were not as good as they should have been, so we were all pretty cross. And, with it all, we had a great ass of a cook, who never could get the meals on time, so we had to lose a great deal of our sleep on his account. One day I waited two hours on him and I commenced scolding him about it. He quarreled back, and it ended in a fight. I got him behind a chicken coop and began to beat him but then the mate came running and struck me in the face with a piece of wood. Then the rest of the crew came up and took the part of the mate, so we had quite a skirmish. We won the victory, and after that we made up and everything was all right. We sailed now between the Bahaman Islands, a few very low islands overgrown with bushes. After eight days we sailed in between Cuba, St. Domingo and Jamaica, very irregular, mountainous islands, but they look very beautiful. Everywhere they are overgrown with green trees. We steered now toward the Bluefields river, as there lived a lot of Indians and Negroes with whom the captain meant to trade. At the same time, through an Indian who traded for him, he hoped to get a chance to unload his tobacco and rum, which the Spanish Government did not permit to be imported. On the morning of August 18 we saw Bluefields Bluff, but the wind was from the land and the current of the river so strong we could not enter. So we ran down the coast to St. John's River, where there lived an Englishman by the name of Shepherd, with whom we later had trouble. This man was like a king on the coast. The Indians were fond of him, the Spaniards were afraid of him. He kept two armed vessels which smuggled right before their noses, which shows how weak the Colombian government is. He had almost all the trade to himself and, therefore, it was a thorn in his side that we came down there.
Koch, Christian Diary-08