Upon those Views I began to consider about putting the few Rags I had,which I call'd Cloaths,into some Order;I had worn out all the Wast-coats I had,and my Business was now to try if I could not make Jackets out of the great Watch-Coats which I had by me,and with such other Materials as I had,so I set to Work a Taylering,or rather indeed a Botching,for I made most piteous Work of it. However,I made shift to make two or three new Wastcoats,which I hoped wou'd serve me a great while;as for Breeches or Drawers,I made but a very sorry shift indeed,till afterward.
I have mentioned that I saved the Skins of all the Creatures that I kill'd,I mean four-footed ones,and I had hung them up stretch'd out with Sticks in the Sun,by which means some of them were so dry and hard that they were fit for little but others it seems were very useful. The first thing I made of these was a great Cap for my Head,with the Hair on the out Side to shoor off the Rain;and this I perform'd so well,that after this I made me a Suit of Cloaths wholly of these Skins,that is to say,a Wastcoat,and Breeches open at Knees,and both loose,for they were rather wanting to keep me cool than to keep me warm. I must not omit to acknowledge that they were wretchedly made;for if I was a bad Carpenter,I was a worse Tayler. However,they were such as I made very good shift with;and when I was abroad,if it happen'd to rain,the Hair of my Wastcoat and Cap being outermost,I was kept very dry.
After this I spent a great deal of Time and Pains to make me an Umbrella;I was indeed in great want of one,and had a great Mind to make one;I had seen them made in the Brasils,where they are very useful in the great Heats which are there. And I felt the Heats every jot as great here,and greater too,being nearer the Equinox;besides,as I was oblig'd to be much abroad,it was a most useful thing to me,as well for the Rains as the Heats. I took a world of Pains at it,and was a great while before I could make any thing likely to hold;nay,after I thought I had hit the Way,I spoil'd 2 or 3 before I made one to my Mind;but at last I made one that answer'd indifferently well:The main Difficulty I found was to make it to let down. I could make it to spread,but if it did not let down too,and draw in,it was not portable for me any Way but just over my Head,which wou'd not do. However,at last,as I said,I made one to answer,and covered it with Skins,the Hair upwards,So that it cast off the Rains like a Penthouse,and kept off the Sun so effectually,that I could walk out in the hottest of the Weather with greater Advantage than I could before in the coolest,and when I had no need of it,cou'd close it and carry it under my Arm.
Thus I liv'd mighty comfortably,my Mind being entirely composed by resigning to the Will of God,and throwing my self wholly upon the Disposal of his Providence. This made my Life better than sociable,for when I began to regret the want of Conversation,I would ask my self whether thus conversing mutually with my own Thoughts,and,as I hope I may say,with even God himself by Ejaculations,was not better than the utmost Enjoyment of humane Society in the World.
I cannot say that after this,for five Years,any extraordinary thing happened to me,but I liv'd on in the same Course,in the same Posture and Place,just as before;the chief things I was employ'd in,besides my yearly Labour of planting my Barley and Rice,and curing my Raisins,of both which I always kept up just enough to have sufficient Stock of one Year's Provisions beforehand. I say,besides this yearly Labour,and my daily Labour of going out with my Gun,I had one Labour to make me a Canoe,which at last I finished. So that by digging a Canal to it of six Foot wide,and four Foot deep,I brought it into the Creek,almost half a Mile. As for the first,which was so vastly big,as I made it without considering before-hand,as I ought to do,how I should be able to launch it;so never being able to bring it to the Water,or bring the Water to it,I was oblig'd to let it lye where it was,as a Memorandum to teach me to be wiser next Time:Indeed,the next Time,tho' I could not get a Tree proper for it,and in a Place where I could not get the Water to it,at any less Distance,than as I have said,near half a Mile;yet as I saw it was practicable at last,I never gave it over:and though I was near two Years about it,yet I never grutch'd my Labour,in Hopes of having a Boat to go off to Sea at last.
However,though my little Periagua was finish'd;yet the Size of it was not at all answerable to the Design which I had in View,when I made the first;I mean,Of venturing over to the Terra Firma,where it was above forty Miles broad;accordingly,the Smallness of my Boat assisted to put an End to that Design,and now I thought no more of it:But as I had a Boat,my next Design was to make a Tour round the Island;for as I had been on the other Side,in one Place,crossing as I have already describ'd it,over the Land;so the Discoveries I made in that little Journey,made me very eager to see other Parts of the Coast;and now I had a Boat,I thought of nothing but sailing round the Island.
For this Purpose,that I might do every Thing with Discretion and Consideration,I fitted up a little Mast to my Boat,and made a Sail to it,out of some of the Pieces of the Ship's Sail,which lay in store;and of which I had a great Stock by me.
Having fitted my Mast and Sail,and try'd the Boat,I found she would sail very well:Then I made little Lockers,or Boxes,at either End of my Boat,to put Provisions,Necessaries and Ammunition,etc. into,to be kept dry,either from Rain,or the Sprye of the Sea;and a little long hollow Place I cut in the In-side of the Boat,where I could lay Gun,making a Flap to hang down over it to keep it dry.