C O N S E N T 4?.—V ol. II
C h a p t e r XXVII. Page 291.
Pbe gag& oftfe S q ^ m /^ ^ e ii» g Execution, and African
Fortitude— Dfcription o f an Indigo Plantation — pbe
Spanfo -Bocko, aPunifhment—Pheproops again re-enter
the Woods—The Expedition draw to a Conclufon.
C h 'a p t e r XXVIII. Page 314.
Phe Rebels fly fo r Protection. to Cqyenpe—Phird March to
Gado-Saby—A fecond R e-inf Of cement of Proops arrive
from Holland—Shipwreck o f the Pranfport Paramaribo
—March to Rio Comezvina—Difmal Pi&iire o f Diflrefs
and1 o f Mortality— Pbe Peace o f the Colony rejlored.
C h a p t e r XXIX. 3?age 345.
Some Account o f a remarkable Negrj>.—Phe Proops prepare
fo r Europe—Defcription o f a Coffee Plantation—Plan
o f Reform for the Increafefof Population, and uniyerfal
Happinefs—One more In f ance of ' horrid Barbarity^
- and Example o f Humanity.-—Pbe Begiment embarks.
C h a p t e r XXX. Page 381.
Phe Ships weigh Anchor, and p u t to Sea—Review o f the
Proops—Account of the Foydge-r-Phe Arrival in the Pexel
—Defcription , of the Patnpus near ’ Amjlerdam — Final
Debarkation in the Pown of ’ Bois-le-Due—Phe Death of
Colonel Fourgeoud—End of the Expedition—Short Hijlory
o f the late Scotch Brigade—Cortblujibh. •
N A R R A T I V E
Q F A N
E X P É D I T I O N T O S U R I N A M .
C H A P. XVI.
A Reinforcement0ifre/h Proops arrives from Holland—Encampment
on Mount. Mdgdenbérg,' in .pempatee C reek-
Remarkable Injlance o f Lunacy in a fifegro—Mountains
f —Reautful Views— Phe Sick. fent\ to Europe, a?
T NOW once more return to the principal obje£t ó f my CHAP.
A Journal, v iz. Fourgeoud’s military opération^ I have , XVI* ,
before mentioned, that a fupply of frefh troops was expected
to reinforce our decayed little army^and, on the
30th of January, 1775, the news came to Paramaribo that
the transport fhip Maaftroom, Captain Eeg, was arrived
in the river Surinam, and come to an anchor before the
fortrefs Amfterdam, with Colonel Sèyburgh and two divisions,
confiding together o f one hundred and twenty men,
under his command, two more divilions being expeCted.
The following day I went down with a row-boat to
welcome them; and having dined on board together, the
Vol. II. B fhip