Footnote 104: [(return)]

Le Pers, printed in Margry, op. cit.

Footnote 105: [(return)]

Dampier writes that "Privateers are not obliged to any ship, but free to go ashore where they please, or to go into any other ship that will entertain them, only paying for their provision." (Edition 1906, i. p. 61).

Footnote 106: [(return)]

Labat, op. cit., tom. i. ch. 9.

Footnote 107: [(return)]

Labat, op. cit., tom. vii. ch. 17.

Footnote 108: [(return)]

Ibid., tom. ii. ch. 17.

Footnote 109: [(return)]

Gibbs: British Honduras, p. 25.

Footnote 110: [(return)]

A Spaniard, writing from S. Domingo in 1635, complains of an English buccaneer settlement at Samana (on the north coast of Hispaniola, near the Mona Passage), where they grew tobacco, and preyed on the ships sailing from Cartagena and S. Domingo for Spain. (Add. MSS., 13,977, f. 508.)

Footnote 111: [(return)]

A piece of eight was worth in Jamaica from 4s. 6d. to 5s.

Footnote 112: [(return)]

Exquemelin, ed. 1684, Part I. pp. 21-22.

Footnote 113: [(return)]

Dutertre, op. cit., tom. i. ch. vi.