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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26865-8.txt b/26865-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8f28724 --- /dev/null +++ b/26865-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3692 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Corsair King, by Mór Jókai + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Corsair King + +Author: Mór Jókai + +Translator: Mary J. Safford + +Release Date: October 9, 2008 [EBook #26865] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: Cover of The Corsair King] + + + + +The Corsair King + +(A KALOZ KIRALY) + +by Maurus Jókai + +Author of "Black Diamonds," "Manasseh," "The Baron's Sons," "Pretty +Michal," etc. + +Translated by +Mary J. Safford + +[Illustration] + +Boston +L. C. Page & Company +mdcccci + + +Copyright, 1901, by +L. C. Page & Company (Inc.) + +_All rights reserved_ + +The Heintzemann Press Boston + + + + +WORKS OF +MAURUS JÓKAI + +MANASSEH +THE BARON'S SONS +PRETTY MICHAL +THE CORSAIR KING +MIDST THE WILD CARPATHIANS + +L. C. PAGE & COMPANY +200 SUMMER STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + + + +Contents + +CHAPTER PAGE +I. CHOOSING A KING 11 +II. IN HISPANIOLA 50 +III. REVENGE 149 +IV. RETRIBUTION 187 + + + + +The CORSAIR KING + +Chapter I + +Choosing a King + + +The storm had spent itself, the sea was calm again, and on its smooth +surface tossed empty casks and shattered masts,--the monuments of +shipwrecked vessels. The stormy petrels had vanished with the tempest, +and the flying fish were now making their clumsy leaps from wave to +wave,--a sign of fair weather. A brigantine which had outlived the gale +was moving slowly over the almost unrippled surface of the water; all +hands were engaged in repairing the damage occasioned by the storm; +temporary masts were rigged, sails trimmed, the crew worked fairly +hanging in the air; for the ship had heeled far over,--a proof that her +ballast had shifted during the tempest. + +With the exception of the blows of the carpenter's hammer, and the +creaking of the pumps, nothing was heard save the voice of the captain, +who stood leaning against the mainmast trying to ascertain on a chart +the place to which he had been driven by the storm. The movements of the +needle were scrutinized more and more carefully, while from time to +time, the voice of an officer taking soundings, echoed on the air. At +last the captain's finger stopped on a group of islands and he said +quietly: "We are off the Ladrones." At the same moment a sailor on the +mast-head shouted: "Land!" Without the slightest change of expression, +the captain repeated: "The Ladrones." + +Then, folding the chart, he took out a small silver whistle and, blowing +a signal, ordered the mate to summon the crew to investigate the +occurrences of the preceding night. + +The Isles of Thieves were but a few miles distant, they had no cannon, +their sails were tattered, yet the captain spoke as calmly in passing +sentence upon his men as though he were sitting in the utmost security +upon a jury bench. + +"By whose directions were the sick thrown overboard?" he asked, turning +his stern face toward the crew. + +"The doctor ordered it," replied an old seaman. + +"You, Scudamore?" inquired the captain, wheeling round to look a tall +thin man in the face. + +The latter's countenance was one of those which, at the first glance, +appear smooth and gentle, whose features when smiling are even +captivating, until some expression of mockery or greed of vengeance +suddenly transforms the winning glance into an image of horror. + +"You gave the order yourself, Captain Rolls," replied the surgeon, with +a smiling face, and in a tone of marked gentleness, as if the subject +under discussion were some very noble deed, which he declined to +acknowledge merely from exaggerated modesty. "When the ship sprung a +leak, you commanded that all the superfluous ballast should be thrown +overboard. The men first cast out the heavy ballast; then you ordered +them to add whatever else could be spared. Then the cannon went, though +it was a great pity, for we stand in need of them, especially when off +the Ladrones, but even this did not lighten the ship sufficiently. You +again issued orders that everything superfluous must be cast into the +sea. There was nothing left which could be dispensed with except the +bars of silver and the sick. The crew began to discuss which should be +thrown overboard. I answered: 'We shall not be asked for the _men_ when +we reach London, but we shall be for the silver;' and, by my advice, the +silver was saved and the ship weathered the storm." + +"Dr. Scudamore," said the captain, with cool deliberation, "for this +inhuman deed you will be cashiered, kept in irons until we reach London, +and there delivered up to justice." + +"Sail in sight!" shouted the man at the helm, and several of the crew +whispered in terror; "Pirates!" + +Scudamore fixed his green-gray eyes on the captain and, smiling +contemptuously, said in tones which had suddenly grown hoarse. + +"I think it might be advisable to defer my punishment a few hours; you +or some one else might need my services during the interval." + +"That is no affair of yours," returned the captain. "To die without a +doctor or to be thrown into the sea by his orders is much the same +thing." + +"Ha! ha! ha! You see, it might have been better for you in the end, had +you relieved the ship of the sick in the first place, instead of +throwing your guns overboard. But that's _your_ affair." + +Captain Rolls silently nodded to the men to take the doctor below. Then +he gave orders that the bars of silver should be concealed in the hold, +and that every man should go to his post to be prepared for any attack. +He himself, taking his weapons, went to his usual station and, without +changing the vessel's course in the least, ordered all sail to be set. + +Meanwhile the pirate craft was dashing toward the brigantine. The black +flag was already visible, and a cannon ball, whistling close by the +brigantine's rigging, was the first message from the sea-robber. + +Captain Rolls had no cannon with which to answer. The silence was +interpreted by the pirates as fear, and one of their number shouted in a +tone of thunder through his speaking trumpet: + +"Ship ahoy! A word with the captain." + +Instantly a battle-flag fluttered from every mast-head on the +brigantine. + +A terrible uproar arose on the pirate ship; a tall man, with a gray +vest, girdled by a scarlet sash, appeared on deck, issuing orders in +loud, hoarse tones, upon which half the sails were furled, and with a +swift turn the light craft came round before the wind close by the +brigantine, without firing a shot, evidently considering her a sure +prey, which must be spared from harm. + +On the pirate's prow was carved a strange human figure, the symbol of +the ship's name, The Sea Devil, and, which, the pirates humorously +asserted, was the living image of their Captain Davis, whose face had +been so disfigured by the bursting of a shell that it resembled a +death's head. + +The pirates dashed with Satanic recklessness toward the brigantine, +whose defenders still awaited them in motionless silence. But just at +the moment the grappling irons were thrown, Rolls made a sign, and the +thunder of the report of the sailors' arms followed; when the smoke +dispersed, the two vessels were already fast locked together, the fire +had killed several of the pirates; the others, pushing their comrades' +bodies aside, were trying to climb to the brigantine's deck. In an +instant the two crews were fighting man to man with sabres and knives. +One furiously attacked, the other coolly defended; neither feared wounds +or weapons. + +The sailors fought bravely. Captain Rolls remained in his place, with +his eyes fixed on the pirate leader, who had already fired at him three +times without making his foe even turn his head. + +"I'll see whether you are the devil or I!" Davis at last shouted +savagely. "Follow me, you scoundrels," and seizing his sabre between his +teeth, while swinging a huge hammer above his head with his right hand, +he sprang on the deck of the brigantine, felling two of her crew at the +same instant. The pirates, with deafening yells, rushed into the breach +thus made, and the terrified sailors began to yield, more alarmed by the +hideous face of the pirate leader than by the weight of his blows. + +Rolls quietly drew a pistol from his belt. "You won't hit me!" yelled +Davis, gnashing his teeth and trying to startle the captain by rolling +his eye-balls hideously. The latter fired, and whoever was looking at +Davis at the moment saw a bloody star on his forehead where the bullet +entered. The pirate suddenly grasped the handle of his hammer with both +hands and sank lifeless. + +Bewildered by the loss of their leader, the corsairs were on the point +of yielding their vantage ground, when one of their number shouted +triumphantly: "Hurrah, Barthelemy!" and at that moment a fierce yell +arose from the center of the brigantine. While the fight had been raging +on one side, six pirates in a boat had rowed around her and crept +noiselessly to her deck, which they reached just as their captain fell. +These men, too, turned to fly, but one of their number, a young, slender +fellow, with a bronzed face, thick curling locks, and sparkling eyes, +sprang behind Rolls, and, pinioning his arms, wrested his pistol from +his hold and forced him to his knees. + +"Let no one stir or you are all dead men!" shouted the young pirate in +bold, ringing tones, and the sailors, disheartened by the capture of +their commander, laid down their arms before the savage forms thronging +on deck. + +The victory was Barthelemy's; and his comrades' first act was to lift +him on their shoulders, declare him their captain and, with terrible +oaths, swear eternal fealty by death, hell, and the devil. + +A Herculean fellow raised him aloft like a child, and, pointing to the +figures lying weltering in their blood, shouted in a voice of thunder: + +"Who deserves to be your leader better than Robert Barthelemy?" + +"No one! No one!" was the unanimous answer. + +"Will you have him for your leader, captain, king?" + +"Hurrah!" responded the crew. + +"Stop!" cried Barthelemy from the Hercules' shoulder. "I heard some one +shout 'No.'" + +"Who was it?" roared the athlete; "does any one want to jest with +death?" + +"Don't rage, Skyrme, don't rage, my brave giant. Speech is free. Come +forward, Lord Simpson, you oppose my election. Step forward, my valiant +nobleman, and tell us your objection to me!" + +The pirates, amid rude laughter, pushed before Barthelemy a tall, fair +man, who, with his hands thrust into his pockets, eyed the new captain +scornfully from head to foot. + +"Speak fair, noble lord!" said Skyrme, raising his sinewy hand, +threateningly above Simpson's head, "or you'll bite your own tongue." + +"I should do that without your telling me," replied Simpson, +nonchalantly, glancing at his comrades. "You know that my father was +Lord Simpson?" + +"Of course we do!" shouted the others. + +"My father was the sworn foe of Jeffreys, who, after Monmouth's fall, +brought the brave English Protestant nobles to the scaffold. My father +suffered with them. Since that time I have hated the Papists, and do not +want one even for a pirate chief. Not even you, Barthelemy, for you are +a Papist." + +Instead of breaking the speaker's head, Skyrme raised him on his arm +and, amid the loud laughter of the pirates, drew him toward Barthelemy, +with whom he drained the cup of friendship, after Barthelemy had assured +him, on his honor as a pirate, that he had not entered a church since +his christening, and had never been in a priest's presence during his +entire life. The new captain was then formally given the leader's cap +with its scarlet plume, and the whole band then proceeded to the work of +distributing the booty. + +Barthelemy sat on a cask turned upside down, holding on his knees a +black book in which were written in red letters the names of the +pirates, and read them one by one in a loud tone. Often nobody answered +and, at the end of a long pause, some one growled: "Dead," and the name +was instantly erased from the list. + +Just then a pirate brought Captain Rolls, who had been bound hand and +foot, to the mainmast, where he laid him flat on the deck. Barthelemy +raised his hat with the utmost courtesy. + +"Pardon me, captain, that my men have placed you in so uncomfortable a +position. You are a brave soldier and fought well. Unbind this worthy +man." + +"His hands too?" asked a pirate, casting a doubtful glance at his leader +from under his shaggy brows. + +"Yes, Asphlant, especially if the captain will promise to do nothing +against us." + +"I'll promise nothing," replied Rolls. + +"Well, no matter; I told you to unbind his hands at any rate, it will be +our business to see that he doesn't break anybody's head. And now, +captain, be kind enough to declare the contents of your vessel, which +you have so bravely defended. No doubt you have a valuable cargo." + +"You have captured the ship, and can search every corner of her, I shall +guide you nowhere." + +"Right again. Men, go below." + +The pirates instantly leaped down the hatchways and, after spending an +hour in rummaging through every part of the ship, they returned to +Barthelemy with the sorrowful tidings that there was nothing in the +whole vessel except a cask of biscuit and one of water. + +Rolls could not help smiling at the fury of the disappointed men. + +"You could see that I had no guns, and therefore might have inferred +that, if I had been in such straits that I was forced to throw them +overboard, there would be no other ballast in the ship." + +"Devil take it!" roared Asphlant, throwing his cap on the deck, "have so +many brave fellows eaten lead and drunk salt water for the sake of an +empty box, full of rats? you are a cheat, captain. What had you to +defend in this ship?" + +"My honor," replied Rolls proudly. + +"Which, when we have taken it from you, will be of no use to us," said +the giant Skyrme, laughing. "What do you say to that, Moody?" + +The man addressed was a sullen, taciturn fellow, who was sitting on the +bulwark, holding a short pipe between his teeth. The silver whistle +hanging from his button-hole indicated that he was the pirate's +boatswain. + +"What's the use of so much talk?" he rejoined. "Bore a hole in the +bottom of the ark and let the whole crew go under water with her." + +"For heaven's sake, gentlemen!" shrieked a voice among the captured +sailors, and a man, with his hands tied behind his back, threw himself +at Barthelemy's feet and tried to kiss his boots, while his eyes rested +despairingly on the face of the pirate chief. + +"For heaven's sake, you brave, valiant, worthy men! You heroes, you +demi-gods! By heaven, hell, and all that is sacred to you, I beseech you +not to murder me. Kill all my comrades, the scoundrels deserve it for +resisting you; but I have given you no offence, I never held a weapon in +my hand; I was imprisoned during the whole fight and have just been +brought out by these brave, excellent men." + +Some of the pirates stared, others laughed. + +"Gentleman, renowned heroes, worshipped sovereigns of our age, hear me, +I entreat you, by all you hold sacred. I am Dr. Scudamore, a persecuted +man; persecuted as you are; I have nothing to do with these people; I am +the mortal enemy of Captain Rolls. I implore you to distinguish between +me and these people, not to condemn me with them. Oh, I beg you to be +merciful and permit me, kissing the dust off your feet, to consider +myself the humblest of your servants." + +Skyrme averted his face with an expression of loathing, while Moody +kicked at the writhing figure, whom every one was eyeing with the +deepest scorn. + +"Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "it appears that you have condemned +this fellow?" + +"Only accused, not condemned. The judgment lies with the English +courts." + +"Oh, we won't go so far," said Skyrme with a look of amusement; "make +the charge; we'll represent the court of justice. Barthelemy will be +judge, we the sheriffs and constables. Bring forward the complaint, the +court is open." + +Rolls coldly averted his eyes without answering a syllable. + +Scudamore, who was scanning every face with the crafty glance of a man +who fears for his life, hastily interposed. + +"You see, gentlemen, you see the contemptuous face with which he +receives your offer, you see how proudly, how scornfully he looks down +upon you, as if it would be a disgrace to him to recognize such worthy +men as judges. Oh, _I_ will submit to your sentence, I have no desire to +stand before wiser, more just or more distinguished judges. I will tell +with my own lips everything of which I am accused." + +"I forbid you to do so!" cried Rolls vehemently. + +"There, you see for yourselves, gentlemen. He wants to command here +still, here, where you are the rightful possessors. He will not even +permit me to repeat the charge against me! Very natural! He knows that +he, and not I, will be condemned. So listen, gentlemen, listen, for what +I have to tell is an important matter; my crime is that we were bringing +huge bars of silver--" + +"Ho! ho! that begins well," shouted Asphlant, craning his neck to hear +better. + +"On the way a storm rose, the ship sprung a leak, and the captain +ordered all useless ballast to be thrown overboard. There was nothing +left except the sick and the silver, and the question was which should +be cast into the sea?" + +"Well, and you, as the doctor, of course kept the sick," said Skyrme. + +"No indeed, I kept the silver, and now Captain Rolls wants to punish me +for it." + +Barthelemy turned from the man in horror, while Rolls glared at him with +blazing eyes. + +"Oho, captain," cried Asphlant, "so there is silver on your ship! Where +did you hide it, eh?" + +"That I will not tell you." + +"You won't? Oh, the thumb screw will find out. Here, ropes, ropes!" + +"What do you mean?" cried Barthelemy, boldly surveying his companions. +"Are we members of the Inquisition, that we seek to learn truth by +torture? No, my friends; let no one have the right to say that the +pirates use the tools of the auto-da-fé! Should not we, who call +ourselves the heroes of the free sea, honor freedom? If Captain Rolls +will not reveal the hiding-place in his vessel we will take her into +port, pull every plank apart, and find the silver without committing a +deed which would dishonor us." + +The pirates cheered their captain's speech, and began to fasten the +brigantine to their ship. + +Scudamore, who had refrained from disclosing the hiding-place merely +that the pirates might wreak their vengeance on Captain Rolls, now, +perceiving that the latter had escaped, said: + +"Don't trouble yourselves, gentlemen. Why should you drag this miserable +craft after you? Release me and promise to spare my life, and I'll take +you to the spot where the silver is hidden." + +"Loose the doctor's hands from the irons," said Barthelemy signing to +his men. "I'll promise that we will not harm a hair of your head. Show +us the hiding-place." + +Scudamore, finding his hands at liberty, tried to shake hands with each +one of the pirates in turn, but they angrily pushed him back. + +"Hurry up!" cried Asphlant, dealing him a blow, while another pirate, +grasping him with both hands, dragged him along, Scudamore protesting +that he should feel under obligations to the whole company as long as he +lived. + +The pirates soon returned, exultingly bearing the chests of silver on +their shoulders. Barthelemy ordered them to be placed on board their own +vessel, while Scudamore showed the utmost zeal in helping the men, +calling each, meanwhile, his dear, kind friend, a compliment which they +repaid with all sorts of abusive epithets and the command not to touch +their property. + +The last to come on deck was Asphlant, who said with great satisfaction: +"We shall leave nothing here, captain! The ship is entirely empty. Shall +we bore a hole in her bottom? Or will it be better to hang these fellows +in a row on the mainyard, and let the vessel drift where she likes?" + +The loud laughter of the pirates showed their cordial approval of this +proposal. The sailors gave no sign of emotion, while Scudamore tried to +lock arms with one after another of the pirates, constantly asserting +that he had nothing to do with the other party. + +"Silence!" ordered Barthelemy sternly. "You will neither scuttle the +ship nor hang the crew. That might do for miserable Spanish privateers, +pitiful Tunisian cut-throats, but not for us, Englishmen and Frenchmen. +Are we to make ourselves ashamed of the name of pirate, admit that it +has nothing in common with the word honor? Were not the first +inhabitants of Rome also corsairs? Our mission is to place the name of +fillibuster in a new light. Captain Rolls, you and your whole ship's +company are free to go wherever you desire." + +A fierce uproar arose among the robbers. Many approved the captain's +speech, some strove to oppose it. + +Barthelemy stamped his foot violently. "Is there any one who desires to +contradict me?" + +"Yes!" shrieked Moody, stepping in front of him and thrusting the pipe +he held between his teeth so close to the captain's face that it almost +touched his eyes. "I say you are a fool, captain. You are acting against +all the customs of pirates and, if you don't take back your order, I'll +scuttle the ship myself." + +"Do you think so?" said Barthelemy. "Skyrme! Seize this fellow and bind +him to the mainmast." + +The pirates shrank back, startled. Moody was the oldest of the band, +whom no captain had ever ventured to punish. Barthelemy again motioned +to Skyrme, and the latter, rushing upon the chief mate, bound him, in +spite of his struggles, to the mainmast, so that he clasped it with +both arms, his back turned to the crew; but, while pouring forth a +continuous torrent of oaths, he still kept his pipe in his mouth. + +"Is there any one else who wishes to oppose me?" asked the young chief. + +A suppressed murmur ran through the ranks of the pirates, but no one +raised his voice distinctly. + +Barthelemy now turned to Captain Rolls and, taking from his pocket a +piece of paper and a pencil he said: + +"Captain Rolls! I hope you will reach London with your ship in safety. +It is true that you will return her to her owners empty, but that is no +fault of yours, in proof of which I will give you the following +certificate for your justification at home. + + We, free knights of fortune, bear witness in the + presence of all whom it concerns, that Rolls, captain + of the brigantine Neptune, was attacked by us on the + Pacific Ocean, and, having just lost his guns and part + of his rigging in a gale, defended himself against us + in the bravest manner for an hour and a half, and did + not yield until, after losing nine of our best men and + our captain, we completely overwhelmed him and thereby + alone obtained the silver entrusted to his care. + + CAPTAIN ROBERT BARTHELEMY. + +"Add," said Rolls, "that you succeeded in securing the silver only +through Scudamore's treachery." + +"True," replied Barthelemy, adding the sentence. + +"Gentlemen!" interposed Scudamore trembling, "what are you going to do +with me?" + +"Nothing," said Barthelemy. "We promised that we would not harm a hair +of your head." + +"Yes," returned the other mournfully, "but if you release the captain, +and me with him, what is to become of me?" + +"I don't know," returned the corsair-chief, shrugging his shoulders. + +Skyrme laughed aloud. "That's a splendid joke!" + +"For heaven's sake! What shall I say to you?" stammered Scudamore, +throwing himself at Barthelemy's feet. "Oh, gentlemen, don't leave me in +this man's power, he will have no mercy on me. He is a horrible +villain." + +"Ha! ha! ha!" cried Skyrme. "Don't spoil this joke, captain. When you +set the commander of the brigantine free, let him take this fellow with +him; what a fine lot of talk there will be when they call him to account +at home for the service he has rendered us." + +"Gentlemen! Brave men!" shrieked Scudamore clasping Barthelemy's knees. +"Surely you are only jesting with me. It amuses you to drive me to +desperation in this way, but you will not really ruin me. You cannot +forget that I have rendered you an important service, and shall perform +still more. I am a physician; you need one, take me with you. I will be +just such a man, such a devil as all the rest, I'll be no disgrace to +your band. You will never repent having made my acquaintance. I beseech, +I implore you to say a good word to the captain for me. Oh, you good, +brave man, you leader with the face of a hero, give me your hand, that I +may kiss it." + +"Rise," said Barthelemy curtly. "We _do_ need a surgeon, I'll take you." + +"What! a surgeon among us!" growled Moody, who was still bound to the +mast, "a surgeon who, whenever one of our band is wounded in the hand or +foot, will cut it off? A living human saw? A poisoner, who won't let a +man die in peace? I've no use for him. Throw him out of the ship, or +I'll kill him." + +"Not another word, Moody!" cried Barthelemy. "It is my wish, and so it +shall be. You manage the ropes and sails, but you need not trouble +yourself about anything else." + +"I beg you, sir," said Scudamore, "not to vex our valiant captain, you +seem to be such a worthy man, I know I shall have the warmest regard for +you." + +"Come nearer, so that I can see you," said Moody. And when Scudamore +approached near enough for him to reach him with his foot, he gave him +such a kick that he nearly fell over backward. + +"Men!" shouted Barthelemy, "bring me the cat o' nine tails. Give this +man thirty blows on the back. Whoever disobeys me must suffer for it." + +The nine-lashed scourge was instantly brought. "To work at once!" +Barthelemy commanded. "No one is exempt from punishment." + +Moody's eyes fairly started from their sockets with rage, and when the +man bearing the cat o' nine tails approached him, he began to throw +himself frantically to the right and left, but thereby only caused the +blows to fall on him haphazard, till at last one knocked the pipe from +his mouth. + +Barthelemy coolly awaited the end of the punishment, and then called +Scudamore to write his name in the list of pirates. Scudamore seized the +pen with eager joy, and wrote his signature with such horrible glee that +even the robbers were startled, and then, turning to Captain Rolls, +exclaimed scornfully: + +"When you reach London, inform the government of my new occupation." + +Skyrme laid his huge hand on his shoulder and muttered between his +teeth: "You scoundrel, you'll make a first-class devil." + +"At least as good as any of you." + +From that moment, Scudamore felt perfectly at home in his new sphere, +looking at the list with his name enrolled as if it were some diabolical +patent of nobility, and eyeing Captain Rolls with the air of a newly +appointed official surveying his former comrades. + +"Now, Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "you can take possession of your +ship. But that we may not leave our mate here in exchange for your +doctor, loose Moody from the mast." + +Two pirates obeyed the command, avoiding the feet of the chief mate, who +was trying to deal them a severe kick. When he found his hands free, his +first act was to give the nearest liberator a heavy blow, and the second +to pick up his short pipe and put it between his lips. + +"Moody!" said the captain, folding his arms, "I just punished you as +your commander's subordinate; now that it is over we again stand man to +man; if you feel that I have wronged you, take your weapons. I am ready +to give you any satisfaction and, if you desire, will fight with you." + +Moody did not utter a syllable in reply, but hastily threw off his coat, +rolled up his sleeves, loosed his collar and, with sparkling eyes, +eagerly looked about for a weapon. + +"Give him arms," said Barthelemy; "which will you have, pistol or +sabre?" + +"Give me a sword," gasped Moody hoarsely, "we shall be nearer each +other." + +"Make room for this brave man, lads; keep out of the reach of his arm, +for he'll strike at any one. Excuse our fighting in your ship, Captain +Rolls, but satisfaction must be given in the presence of those who +witnessed the offence. Well, Moody, are you ready? Give a signal, when +you are ready." + +Moody, however, required few preparations, and as soon as he seized the +sword, with the flat of whose blade he dealt a severe blow on the back +of the person who handed it, he began to strike furiously around him in +every direction, so that had twelve men stood near he would have mowed +them all down--only he failed to hit the one directly in front of him. + +Barthelemy seemed to be merely toying with him. He scarcely moved his +arm to parry the strokes which his adversary's fury did not suffer him +to calculate. + +"Take care--you are running directly upon my sword--Moody, don't put +your own eyes out. Look, I am not standing where you are aiming. Don't +strike at me so fiercely, I shall think you want to kill me." + +It was a true robber-fray; for the rage of one adversary, the jests of +the other, the rude laughter of the bystanders, the jeering, irritating +remarks do not occur in duels between gentlemen. + +The loud laughter of the pirates enraged the chief mate still more, and +he grew fairly frantic when, glancing aside, he saw among them Dr. +Scudamore, who had spread out his surgical instruments on his knees, and +was gazing at him with a look of diabolical pleasure in his green eyes. +Turning from the captain he rushed directly at the surgeon. + +"Oho, my good fellow, don't run overboard," said Barthelemy, barring his +way, upon which Moody, his face distorted by rage, again attacked him. +Barthelemy avoided the blow and pierced his right arm. The chief mate +instantly picked up his sword with his left hand; the foes again +confronted each other, breast to breast. + +Then Barthelemy, with a clever trick of fence, struck his antagonist's +sword from his grasp and, setting his foot upon it, seized him by the +throat and flung him among his companions. + +Scudamore officiously ran forward to aid the wounded man. + +"Don't come here!" roared Moody hoarsely, "or I'll tear you to pieces +and put you on my wounds, as the ourang outang does leaves." + +The chief mate would not allow his injuries to be bandaged, but though +bleeding profusely, struggled with his companions till they bound one +arm to a beam; and continued to strike about him with the injured one +till that too, was bound, after which he kicked violently and when his +feet were also tied, bit like a mad dog. They were obliged even to gag +him before the doctor could bandage his wounds, and stanch the blood. + +"How bad the old gentleman's teeth are," said Scudamore, with a +malicious twinkle in his eyes. "We shall probably have to pull out some +of them." + +Moody could make no reply to this hideous threat except a roar like a +wild beast's, and could not even bite the hand which the doctor passed +over him. + +Meanwhile Barthelemy had had the brigantine's crew released and told +them that they would find all their weapons in the mate's cabin, whose +key he would give them when he left the Neptune. + +With these words he approached Rolls, bowed courteously, and held out +his hand. After a short pause the latter clasped it, saying: + +"Very well, I will take it, in the hope that we may meet again." + +"I hope this will happen soon. A presentiment tells me that some day I +shall kill you in a victorious battle, Captain Rolls." + +"And one tells me that I shall get you hung, Robert Barthelemy." + +"I thank you for your kind intention. By the way, you have only one keg +of biscuits and a cask of water--that will not supply you until you +reach London. May I offer you some of my store of provisions?" + +"I will accept it, and trust that you will be fully repaid." + +"Oh, it's not worth talking about. I would willingly lend you a few +cannons, that you may not be captured on the way." + +"I advise you not to do so, for if I had even two guns, I would try to +recover my stolen silver." + +"You are a good fellow. We shall meet again somewhere. Till then, +farewell." + +The two captains shook hands with each other. Meanwhile the pirates had +rolled several casks of biscuit and water from their vessel to the +brigantine. Barthelemy gave the sailors the key and, with a bound, +reached the deck of his own ship, the pirates shoved off from the +Neptune and, with three cheers, set sail. Half an hour later, two +vessels were seen moving across the sea in opposite directions, widening +the space between them every moment. + + + + +Chapter II + +In Hispaniola + + +Robert Barthelemy's name became known everywhere on the high seas. +Holland and Portuguese sailors trembled before him; for when they +recognized his vessel and, after a desperate chase, gained the shelter +of a harbor, he followed them, robbed them under the very guns of the +port and, if attacked, ordered the town to be bombarded and its +fortifications given to the flames. + +There was no end to the marvelous tales related about him. + + * * * * * + +On the southern coast of the beautiful Island of Hayti, in a pleasant +valley, stands a small wooden house, whose front is covered with +climbing vines, and whose windows are filled with flowers; doves coo +softly on the gable-roof, and a white cat lies purring on the threshold. + +At both sides of the little house stretch cotton fields, whose green +foliage charms the traveler's eye as, coming from the interior, he sees +toward evening the little cottage in the quiet valley. + +Who lived there? + +One evening just at twilight, a light boat containing three men was +pulled to the shore. One left it, the two others remained. + +The youth who climbed the bank was a handsome fellow, with a bright, +eager face; his complexion was bronzed by exposure to the weather and, +as the wind tossed back his hair, the locks bared a high, broad +forehead. + +He gazed around him with the joyous expression of one who, after a long +absence, again treads his native soil, and to whom every tree and bush +is familiar. + +A rough seaman's cape rested on his shoulders, his head was covered by a +round straw hat, and his white shirt collar turned over a loosely tied +scarf; he was probably a young sailor who, after a long voyage, had +again come near his home and was permitted to pay it a short visit. + +The path was just as he had left it, perhaps a little more uneven than +in the old days; the doves were cooing, and the white cat purred in the +doorway just as of yore. The new-comer approached with noiseless tread, +softly turned the handle of the door, and entered. + +A gray-haired woman sat inside in a large armchair. She was the young +man's grandmother. With her were three girls--two were fair, the third +was dark, with starry eyes and a face like the young dawn. + +All started at his entrance, exclaiming in one breath; "William!" The +two sisters ran to meet him, the grandmother, unable to leave her +chair, only held out her arms, his betrothed bride was the last to greet +him that she might remain the longer in his embrace. + +There was great delight in the little circle, a hundred questions rained +upon him. + +"It is a whole year since we saw you last," said the grandmother, with +tears in her eyes. + +"A whole eternity," murmured his betrothed bride, laying her head on his +shoulder. + +"You won't leave us again, will you?" asked his youngest sister, +clinging to her brother's neck as if she could hold him at her side. + +"I can stay an hour. The ship is in the offing while the sailors are +getting a supply of fresh water on shore." + +"Must you still remain absent from us?" asked the gray-haired woman, +sighing. + +"Unfortunately, yes. I expected to attain my purpose in a shorter time, +but fate is against me; whenever I have thought I was approaching my +goal, I was thrust back. Twice I have acquired some property, but +ill-luck deprived me of it, and I was forced to begin anew." + +"Ill luck?" asked the younger sister, "that means shipwreck and pirates, +doesn't it?" + +"Yes, shipwreck." + +"And not pirates? We have feared them most! How often we have said that +they might capture or kill you, leaving us to weep for you forever." + +The young man smiled. + +"Fear nothing from them, dear. They will not harm me. At the utmost, +they will rob me of my property, and you would receive me kindly, were I +to return penniless, would you not?" + +"Ah, if only you would never go," whispered his beautiful fiancée. + +"Nay, dearest, I cannot let you spend your life here; I wish to see you +in splendor. I long to take you to some great, beautiful city, where you +can have pleasant society, where the sun cannot scorch these fair +features, nor toil roughen these little hands. You will see that it will +yet come to pass." + +"Add: with the help of God!" said the grandmother. "Every enterprise +must begin with God's favor, then it will end with it. Do you still +pray, William?" + +The young man sighed. + +"You once taught me many prayers, grandmother." + +"Do not forget them. _We_ pray for you every day." + +"Yes indeed," said the younger sister. "Grandmother reads from the +prayer-book, and then we repeat a long prayer, in which we name all the +good things we entreat God to grant you and all the evil ones from +which we beseech him to guard you: storms, sickness, shipwreck, hunger, +thirst, sharks, savages, and above all, Robert Barthelemy." + +The young man gazed at her with a smile. "And why from Robert +Barthelemy?" he asked. + +"Because he is a wicked pirate, whom no one can resist, who is in league +with the devil, and who either burns all whom he captures over a slow +fire or else casts them into the sea." + +"That is not true, Barthelemy never tortures any one." + +"Oh, we remember him, too, in our daily prayer." + +"Do you?" + +"Yes indeed. Every day, crossing ourselves three times, we entreat God +to sink to the bottom of the sea the horrible monster, whom we hold in +such fear for your sake." + +"So you all remember Robert Barthelemy at the end of your prayers?" +asked the youth, embracing the girls in turn as they hung weeping and +laughing around his neck. + +"Julietta!" said one, "sing William the song you composed about him and +the pirates." + +"You have composed a song about me and the pirates?" asked the youth. + +Julietta flushed crimson and after withdrawing shyly from his embrace +she sang in a sweet, tremulous voice: + + Far, far away the white dove flies, + In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies, + The dove is my lover so dear, + The hawk is the pirate I fear. + Oh, God, stretch forth Thy mighty arm + My absent lover shield from harm. + Wing the dove's flight, + The black hawk smite; + Back to its nest let the white dove flee, + Whelm the black hawk beneath the sea. + +"Do you understand?" asked the younger sister. "You are the dove, and +the hawk is--Robert Barthelemy." + +The young man showered kisses upon the three beautiful girls, not one of +whom suspected that the dear brother, the still dearer lover, whom they +embraced was--Robert Barthelemy himself. + +Yet it was even so. This quiet little house had sheltered his childhood, +the gray-haired woman had taught him to pray, the merry girls to love. + +Two families had emigrated to this island, one from Ireland, the other +from Corsica; the parents of both speedily succumbed to the foreign +climate, and the two families became united under one roof. Julietta +grew up as William's sister to become finally his affianced wife. + +They were poor, and it pierced the young man to the heart to witness +their penury. He longed for a fairer fortune, and often stood on the +threshold absorbed in watching some ship vanishing across the sea. He +frequently met sailors who came on shore for fresh water, and heard of +their wonderful adventures, of countries with golden sands, of the good +luck of sailors, and when he returned home he brooded in gloomy silence +for hours. + +One day he told his family that he was going to seek his fortune and, +bidding them farewell, embarked on a slave ship. Their tears at his +departure, the memory of how they followed him, renewing their farewell, +how his affianced wife, forgetting her maidenly shyness, convulsively +embraced him, covering his face with tears and kisses, sinking +unconscious on the shore as his boat tossed on the waves toward the +ship--all these things remained forever engraved on William's heart, +though Fate in after days inscribed much more upon it. + +His industry and honesty made him popular upon the ship, first he became +boatswain, then mate, and was already on his way home with the wages he +had saved, already saw in imagination the home, the family for whom he +intended to win a better fate, when the ship was attacked and captured +by pirates. + +William fought single-handed against ten, but in vain, superior numbers +prevailed. Knives already glittered at his throat, when the captain's +hoarse voice shouted: "The lad must not be hurt. Bring him to me alive." + +The pirates seized the youth and bore him to their leader. William +looked at him in horror. It was Davis, the Sea Devil. + +"You are a good fighter," said Davis in his shrill, piercing tones, +"it's a pity that you became an ordinary sailor, you would have been a +splendid pirate. Boys, give him a drink." + +One of the pirates held his calabash filled with rum to William's lips, +but he turned his head away in loathing. To drink from the pirates' cups +means joining the band. + +"Ha! ha!" cried the captain laughing, "You are an obstinate fellow. Have +you ever seen a man tied to the main-mast when the sun is hottest? Or +have you witnessed the jest of sewing a man naked in a raw hide and +exposing him to the sun's rays till the skin on his body shrivels?" + +"You can torture me," William remarked quietly. + +"That is why I shall _not_," answered Davis. "Here, men, release this +fellow and guard him well, for we shall yet make a man of him. Since I +turned pirate, this is the first rascal who has dared to defy me: take +good care of him, he'll be my successor some day." + +William remained on the pirate ship, hoping that it would encounter a +stronger vessel and he would thus be released. + +Not a week passed without a fray, the pirates attacked every vessel that +appeared on the horizon, even when it was larger than their own, and +always conquered; the foe was vanquished or yielded, fortune favored the +robbers. + +At last two ships of war pursued the Sea Devil. William now hoped +confidently for liberation. The foe had eighty guns and two hundred men, +while the pirate had thirty guns and a crew of sixty. + +When the pirates perceived that they could not fly, they boldly attacked +one of the frigates and, at the first fire, sent a red hot ball into the +enemy's powder magazine. The vessel was instantly blown into the air, +her companion set sail and, with cowardly haste, fled from the pirates. + +"So that is the fate of honest folk!" thought William, as the pirates' +shouts of victory echoed around him, and turning to his next neighbor, +he said: + +"Give me a drink from your calabash." + +The man was Skyrme. + +"All right, my lad!" shouted the Hercules, giving the youth a hearty +slap on the shoulder, "I knew this would be the end." + +As he spoke he drew the young man to the captain and, before the eyes of +the whole ship's company, he wrote in the black book the name: Robert +Barthelemy. + + * * * * * + +Sisters, betrothed bride, and grandmother had wept till their hearts +were relieved. The hour had passed, William had returned. He could not +give his family a single shilling, though his ship was full of treasure. +But it was all stolen property, and William could bring nothing stained +with crime beneath the roof where his dear ones dwelt--poor, but pure in +heart. + +The gray-haired grandmother kissed and blessed him, her tears falling on +his head, the girls went with him to the shore and, while Julietta clung +about his neck, the others lingered behind, in order not to disturb the +sweet mysterious whispers of the lovers. + +"When shall you return?" asked the girl. + +"When I can make you happy." + +"Your love alone can do that. You need not sail the sea for my +happiness, it could be gained by seeing you always at my side." + +"That is what children think. I wish we could never outgrow the belief. +But--in the hands of the poor everything is poor, even happiness." + +The young girl shook her head. + +Meanwhile they reached a copse which concealed the shore, and here the +young man stopped. + +"Don't go any farther; my companions are rough sailors, I do not wish +them to disturb our parting. Turn back now. Our grandmother is expecting +you." + +The two sisters, with many kisses, embraces, and tears, turned back, but +Julietta still clung to her departing lover, whispering in stifled +tones. + +"Take me with you." + +The youth trembled from head to foot and gazed with a blanched face at +the young girl, who still clasped him in a convulsive embrace. + +"What are you thinking of? You would come with me--to sea?" + +"I should be happy anywhere with you. I should not fear the storms, the +sight of your face would give me courage. I should be happy if I might +share with you every peril, every privation, which you must now +encounter alone; and if it were not God's will that we should ever +attain our goal, I could at least die with you." + +William's face clouded still more. What love! What self-sacrifice! A +Paradise opened before him. But at the portal of that Paradise stood an +angel with a flaming sword, saying: "Back, your name is Robert +Barthelemy." + +"I have often thought," said the girl trembling, "that some day when you +return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she come to meet me?' +they will lead you to a flowery mound and say: 'She waited long, waited +until her heart broke, she faded away and now rests here'--will you not +then say to yourself: 'Why did I not take her with me?'" + +"Do not talk so! Do not talk so!" exclaimed the lover, in a voice choked +with anguish. "What you ask is impossible. Go back." + +The girl grew as white as a lily, her arms fell from her lover's neck, +her beautiful head drooped upon her breast. + +He caught the fainting figure in his arms and laid it gently on the +grass, pressed a kiss on the colorless face, and then rushed through the +copse like a madman. + + * * * * * + +Barthelemy thrust the scarlet plume in his hat and joined his men; no +tears glittered in his eyes, which now flashed fire; he was once more +the proud, bold, reckless corsair chief. + +The haughty carriage of his head, his steady glance and resolute +movements all belied the gentle, dreamy lover of an hour before. + +The first look from his keen eyes noticed the dissatisfaction on the +faces of the band. During his absence, their mood toward their leader +had changed. Some one had guessed its motive, and the rumor ran that +their captain was entangled by a love affair. + +"What is the matter?" cried Barthelemy, his eyes wandering from face to +face. "Why do you look so sullen? Speak." + +The pirates drew back defiantly. Moody thrust his hands into his +pockets, puffed violently at his short pipe, and gazed at the clouds. + +"Speak, old Lucifer, what has happened to these fellows?" + +"H'm, captain," replied the pirate, folding his arms and leaning with +his back against a beam, "don't you know the pirates' creed? The creed +of loving no one and fearing no one." + +"I know it very well. Do _I_ fear any one?" + +"But you love; and whoever loves, sighs, whoever loves, feels, and +whoever feels is not fit for a pirate." + +"So you think that if I hold a woman dear, I may not be the equal of any +among you?" + +"You could not, captain! Whoever is in love, is always thinking of the +future, and longing, sooner or later, to retire to some quiet nook where +he can be happy, grow old, and die; he is always gaping at the moon, he +scorns his comrades and wants to be better than they. Such a man is not +fit for us. Captain, I never loved any one in my life, never, and these +stout fellows around you have neither father, mother, wife, nor +sweetheart. Such men belong to the sea, men who, when tempests howl and +bullets hiss, do not think of quiet homes and loving maidens. These +flowers do not bloom for us. If a girl embraces and kisses you to-day, +she will deceive and betray you to-morrow. Once we thought of bringing a +cargo of wives from Paris. We chose them from the Salpetričre; at least +we had no cause to fear that we should fall in love with them. Huh! Even +that didn't last long; pirate folk are not used to joking; when they +are angered, instead of beating, they kill. At the end of a month, not +more than two of the women were alive. Such feelings demoralize +pirates." + +"So you believe," replied Barthelemy, looking him full in the face, +"that your hearts are stouter than mine, because they expect nothing. +You will have an opportunity to prove it at once. Take heed. We shall +meet to-night on the high seas a fleet of Portuguese merchant +vessels--forty-two ships under the convoy of two well-equipped men of +war--from the islands of Todos los Santos, laden with gold and goods. If +you want to see a venture that will fill half the world with admiration, +come with me." + +"Surely you won't assert that you'll conquer these forty-two ships?" +asked Skyrme. + +"No, but I will seize the one which has the richest cargo and, in full +view of the whole fleet and the men of war, take her away with us from +amid the forty-one other vessels." + +The pirates gazed doubtfully into Barthelemy's face, uncertain whether +he was jesting or in earnest. + +"This will afford an opportunity to show whose heart is boldest!" said +Barthelemy, "each one of us must cope with a hundred men, and each +individual must perform every minute a miracle at which he himself will +afterwards wonder." + +"Captain," said Asphlant, after a long pause, "that borders on the +impossible." + +"A minute ago you were all boasting of your hard hearts; Moody doesn't +seem to have interpreted your feelings correctly when he said that the +pirate should fear nothing. And _you_ want to teach _me_ courage. Go! +Let whoever fears to accompany me, quit the ship--we are near land--and +return to his mother! If I am left with but three men, I will still do +what I have said, for I am brave, not only while drunk with rum, like +you, but while my face is still wet with the tears of the woman I love." + +The pirates shrank back, shamed, yet perplexed, by the boundless +audacity of their leader. Barthelemy noted the effect of his speech and +turned again to them with words of stirring encouragement. + +"Are you afraid when I lead the way? If I should say: 'Come with me to +the bottom of the sea, we'll attack Neptune and drag him by the beard to +the sunlight, I will lead you!' Would not you follow? If I should say: +'Let us declare war against half the world, sail up the Thames, and set +fire to the Tower, I will lead!' Would you remain behind? If I should +say: 'Earthly strife is pitiful, come with me to Heaven, come with me to +Hell!' Would you not follow even there?" + +The pirates, in a frenzy of enthusiasm, roared: "We'll go with you!" and +stretched their hands to Barthelemy, who clasped them one by one. + +"There, my men, there! We are sons of Fortune, and Fortune favors the +bold. The sea is our slave, the storm our playfellow, death our delight! +What others dare not think, we do." + +"Hurrah! Long live Robert Barthelemy!" roared the whole band, tossing +their caps into the air. + +Twilight was gathering. In the cottage three angels, with clasped hands, +were praying that God would bury in the depths of the ocean that evil +monster, Robert Barthelemy, the terror of all travelers. + + * * * * * + +Darkness had closed in, the myriad stars of night were reflected from +the surface of the sea. Forty-two ships, sailing at nearly equal +distances from one another, appeared on the horizon. The wind was fair, +the crews were sleeping quietly, the men watching from the mast-heads +drowsily announced that a sail was in sight, the captains heard the +words and turning over, fell asleep again. + +The approaching vessel tacked for some time, then steered straight +toward one of the ships in the middle of the fleet, the Triton. + +Her captain was slumbering soundly in his hammock, when the mate entered +and reported the approach of the craft. + +"Salute him," said the commander, peevishly, drawing up the coverlet. + +The approaching vessel stopped, and a boat put off in which sat six men, +who rowed with vigorous strokes to the Triton. No one seemed disturbed +by their approach. On their arrival, three men remained in their seats, +while the three others climbed on deck. + +One of the party inquired for the captain, with whom he had urgent +business. The cabin where he slept was pointed out, and the speaker +entered, the other two men remaining at the door. + +"What is wanted now?" cried the captain angrily, leaning out of the +hammock. To this question the stranger replied quietly: + +"Not another word, sir. I am Robert Barthelemy." + +The captain was rigid with fright. The pirate placed no pistol at his +breast, did not threaten him with death; he merely said: "I am Robert +Barthelemy." + +"What do you desire?" asked the captain with chattering teeth. + +"Nothing at all," answered the pirate, "except an answer to a single +question: can you tell me which of these forty-two ships has the richest +cargo?" + +"You ask which has the richest cargo?" + +"If it is against your principles to answer my question, I will take +your own ship, and if you should make it compatible with honor to +deceive me by false statements, you may rest assured that you shall eat +steel and drink sea-water." + +The pirate's resolute language, the sight of the fierce fellows in the +doorway, speedily brought the captain to terms and he promised to point +out the vessel in question, especially as he felt perfectly sure that, +if the pirates ventured to attack it, they would certainly be defeated. + +"Dress yourself and come with us," said Barthelemy. + +"What? To _your_ ship?" + +"That you may not betray us by a signal to the other ships. No excuses. +I must have the _best_ cargo, unless you want me to content myself with +yours. Forward!" + +The captain yielded, threw on his clothes, and surrounded by the three +pirates, without daring to attract the attention of his own men, he +followed Barthelemy and his companions into the boat, which returned to +the ship. + +Meanwhile the men on board of the other vessels in the fleet quietly +witnessed the strange vessel's intercourse with the Triton, without the +slightest suspicion. + +On reaching the Sea Devil, the abducted captain pointed out to Captain +Barthelemy the vessel he desired, assuring him, on his word of honor, +that it possessed the most valuable cargo, but withholding the fact that +it had forty guns and a crew of one hundred and fifty men. + +The Sea Devil instantly turned and steered toward the ship. + +She was a huge three-master of clumsy build; her elaborately ornamented +prow, the shape of her decks, and her rigging all marked her as an +old-fashioned merchantman. + +The pirate had come so near that one could shout from one ship to the +other. The deepest silence reigned on board the former, the men stood +motionless at their posts beside the ropes, oars, or guns. Suddenly, +when every eye was fixed upon the approaching ship, whose mate watched +the craft with drowsy indifference, not feeling the slightest suspicion, +the captured captain perceived that no one was watching him and, +springing on the bulwark, shouted: "To arms, men!" threw himself into +the sea, and swam rapidly back to his own ship. + +All this was done so quickly and unexpectedly that the pirates, in their +surprise, did not know what course to pursue. + +The attention of the crew had been instantly roused by the captain's +warning shout, and the pirates saw with astonishment the superior force +that opposed them. + +Some looked doubtfully at each other, and all thought that instant +flight was their only refuge. + +Barthelemy gazed scornfully around, and quietly folded his arms. + +"They are only Portuguese," he said contemptuously. + +The corsairs burst into a loud roar of laughter and pressed closer to +the ship, whose defenders, terrified by the sight of the fierce, +laughing faces, discharged their guns without taking correct aim, not +even doing the rigging of the Sea Devil the slightest damage. The +grappling irons of the latter were already flung on her foe, and the +next instant the savage pirates sprang on deck, so overwhelming the crew +by their furious onslaught that, unheeding their officers' commands, +they flung down their weapons and leaped into the sea. + +The battle continued on the deck of the merchantman, whose firing had +alarmed the other forty-one vessels, which now also began to discharge +their guns right and left, but without coming nearer, for they had no +desire to mingle in the fray, and, in the very midst of the fleet, the +pirates killed one half the Portuguese sailors, while losing only two of +their own number. + +Barthelemy became master of the ship, and lashing it to the Sea Devil, +sailed off with both vessels at a wonderful rate of speed. + +The two men-of-war that were guarding the fleet now appeared and gave +chase to the pirate craft. + +Barthelemy fled for a time and, after drawing the two ships far enough +away, he suddenly turned, divided his crew between his own vessel and +the prize, and sailed toward the pursuers. + +The latter seemed startled by this audacity, signalled to each other, +and while the pirates were wondering what was to be the outcome of their +clumsy manoeuvres, they stopped the chase and returned to the fleet, +leaving the Sea Devil to sail joyously over the high seas with her +booty. + + * * * * * + +The pirates landed on the coast of Guiana in a very merry mood. They had +plenty of money; for they had found in the captured ship eight thousand +gold coins, strings of oriental pearls sent by the Emperor of Brazil as +a gift to the Queen of Portugal, and whole chests of valuable goods. + +And was it their intention to put the money at interest, the costly +fabrics in shops to be sold by the yard? No indeed, their custom was to +drink till the last gold coin was squandered. Whoever laid aside his +share of the booty was a traitor, and whoever withdrew with his money to +lead a respectable life, they killed. + +This habit of the pirates was well-known on shore. They came on land +only when they had money and wanted to spend their treasure in the +shortest possible time. On the sea men trembled before them, on shore +they received them with open arms. There are documents proving that on +the islands near Surinam the highest officials vied with one another in +their hospitality to the pirates. + +True the corsairs, in a single fortnight, spent eight thousand gold +moidores, and the women of the city, from the highest lady to the lowest +servant wench, were clad in silks and cashmeres, while the costly pearls +destined for the fair neck of Her Majesty the Queen of Portugal clasped +that of the Regent's wife; indeed there were gala entertainments from +the halls of the governor's residence to the lowest hut, and the pirates +went from one to another, here a gentleman and there a lout, carousing, +dancing, fighting, and love-making all day long. For an entire fortnight +there was neither night nor day, only one continuous revel, a sea of +pleasure whose depths no man could sound. + +Then, when all joys were exhausted, that is, when the last moidore had +slipped through their fingers, the pirates went back to their ships, +rubbed their eyes, and looked about for more work. + +They received tidings of a richly laden brigantine which was approaching +the coast. Towards evening the helmsman saw the ship on the horizon. + +"Caution!" warned Barthelemy. "If they see us, they will have time to +escape. Let the two ships remain here under Lieutenant Kennedy's +command, while forty picked men go on board the sloop with me. Then we +can approach the brigantine unsuspected." + +He himself chose his men, among them Skyrme, Scudamore, the mate Henry +Glasby, Asphlant, Moody, and Simpson, and felt so sure of capturing the +brigantine before morning that, contrary to his custom, he did not see +that the sloop was provided with a sufficient supply of provisions. + +The night was dark and all through the long hours the sloop fairly flew +in the direction where they expected to find the brigantine. According +to Barthelemy's calculation, they would be within gunshot of her at +dawn. + +And lo, when the sun rose and they gazed around the horizon, the +brigantine was nowhere in sight. They tacked right and left, but not a +sail was visible anywhere on the horizon. + +The brigantine had doubtless discovered them and vanished under cover of +the darkness. + +Barthelemy was furious, and, unwilling to return defeated, sought the +brigantine by altering his course hither and thither. For a week he +sailed the seas, constantly struggling with head winds and currents; on +the eighth day his supply of provisions was exhausted and he was forced +to anchor and send a small boat back to his ships for food and +assistance. Barthelemy and his companions remained on the sloop. + +According to the closest estimate the boat would need three days to +reach the ships and the same time to return. So Barthelemy must stay six +days at one point in the ocean. + +A week before they were revelling in luxury, while wine flowed in +rivers, now, under the rays of a scorching sun, they divided their last +biscuit and longed for a drink of water. + +At last Barthelemy thought of lashing some masts together into a raft, +on which he sent two men with a cask to seek land. They were almost +dying of thirst when the raft returned; the men had reached the shore +and filled the cask with muddy water. They also brought a bunch of some +plant which resembled a radish. + +Miry water and radishes! A royal banquet for the pirates! But soon this, +too, was exhausted, the six days had expired, the boat had not returned, +and the adverse tide made it impossible for the raft to reach the shore +a second time. + +The men grew desperate and began to murmur. + +"Worthless fellows!" blustered Moody. "Degenerate pirates, who succumb +to hunger after fasting only three days. The world is going to ruin. +Even pirates turn cowards. It wasn't so when I was young and Olonais was +captain. + +"For a whole week we ate nothing but dry roots, and then we got food +from the governor's table in the heart of Vera Cruz." + +"And you ventured to fight on land?" asked Asphlant, with an incredulous +look. + +"The ground certainly didn't tremble under our feet as it does under +yours when you go ashore; once, twenty of us, under Olonais, pushed +forward to the gates of Havana." + +"I didn't hear that you ever captured the city." + +"We came within an ace of it. Luckily for himself, the governor found +out how few of us there were in the party before we got our hands on his +throat." + +"So you returned whence you came." + +"It's easy enough for you to talk; the governor sent two hundred men +after us in a warship, while we had only two boats. He also sent along +an executioner to hang us to the trees on the coast when we were +caught." + +"So you managed to escape." + +"We waited for them and, after having lured them far enough from Havana, +I and another dare-devil, who, however, did not live to grow old, like +me, slipped overboard and, swimming under the ship with our augers, +bored eight holes in her bottom. Ho! ho! how quickly she sunk, how the +soldiers roared for help, splashed about in the water and held out their +hands for aid. Then Olonais went back with the boats and wherever a +soldier's head rose out of the water he slashed it off with a huge +sabre, all but the executioner, whom he recognized by his red cap and +sent back to the governor with his compliments and the message that he +did not need him." + +"Your captain was a bold fellow, Moody. What became of him?" + +"H'm! H'm! he had a strange end." + +"I suppose he was captured at last." + +"Far stranger than that. In a fight with savages, he was wounded and +taken prisoner. The scoundrels ate the poor man." + +"The boat!" suddenly shouted the man at the helm, and all left the old +pirate and his stories to watch the approaching yawl, which they hailed +with cheers, waving their caps aloft, while the returning men sat +silent, as if they found the meeting less joyful than their comrades. + +Skyrme was the captain of the boat. When he reached the sloop he stepped +on her deck with a downcast, angry face, and answered the questions +poured upon him from all sides: "Have you rum, meat, biscuit?" with +"Nothing," and when, wondering at the reply, the men shook their heads, +Skyrme turned to Barthelemy with quivering lips. + +"Captain, we are deceived, betrayed, lost." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Both the ships you intrusted to Kennedy have disappeared." + +"Impossible." + +"It is true. We searched two days without finding any trace of them; at +last we learned from some fisherman that, as soon as we were out of +sight, they crowded on all sail and went to sea." + +A roar of mingled fury and despair greeted these words; the cheated +pirates, with knives uplifted, vowed to inflict a thousand tortures on +the traitors. Barthelemy was deadly pale. + +"We will meet them," he said hoarsely. "There is not a moment to lose. +Forward my lads." + +"Where?" asked Skyrme despairingly. + +"To sea!" answered Barthelemy proudly, pointing to the offing. + +"Yes, but in this plight, without a mouthful of bread, a drop of water." + +"The first ship will give us both. Woe to those we encounter, they will +fight with fiends." + +"But suppose we should meet no vessel for days?" + +"There are forty of us. If we meet no ship for two days, we will have a +true pirate banquet; whoever draws the fatal lot will yield us his body +for food, his blood for drink. We are supplied for forty days; those who +survive will inherit our need of vengeance. Forward!" + +The savage shouts of the pirates echoed far over the waves as they +boldly steered toward the open sea, and that very day they met two +well-armed sloops coming from the island of Defrada. + +The buccaneers were thirsting for carnage. After a stubborn defence they +captured both vessels, from which they took only the guns and provisions +and then sunk them. + +Again they sailed to and fro for several days without encountering any +craft. Their provisions ran out and, just as they had divided the last +portion of water, they saw on the horizon a Bristol vessel. The sloop +instantly gave chase. The other tried to escape and the pirates pursued +all day, crowding so much sail upon the sloop that she often buried her +deck in the waves. Towards evening the clumsy ship, finding escape +impossible, yielded without resistance. + +The pirates were infuriated by the long pursuit, and the faces of many +plainly revealed their desire to cool their vengeance by giving their +captives a sea-bath. + +Barthelemy climbed on deck, where the crew awaited him with uncovered +heads. + +"Where is your captain?" he shouted. + +The worthy man, who was by no means desirous of renown, had gone below +to his cabin, from which he was dragged and brought before Barthelemy, +to whom he knelt. + +"Stand up, don't kneel. Lift him, that he may stand erect." + +Two pirates were obliged to drag the captain from his knees by main +force, but when he perceived that he would not be allowed to kneel on +deck, he lifted up his feet and knelt in the air, a comical sight which +turned the pirates' rage into laughter. + +"What is your ship's cargo?" asked Barthelemy. + +The captain earnestly begged to be released, protesting that he could +not speak while he was held in such a way, and then, trembling +violently, said that his vessel was loaded with Spanish wine. + +"That word saves you," returned Barthelemy, as the pirates exultingly +flung the captain into the air like a ball, and then ran down to the +hold whence they speedily rolled up two or three iron-bound casks. The +poor captain, sighing heavily, answered in reply to the buccaneers' +query concerning the name of his wine, "Malaga." + +The terrified man kept glancing anxiously toward one of the partitions +in the ship, and the pirates, noticing his fear, broke down the door, +behind which was carefully hidden a supply of the finest brain sausages, +which they brought out hung around their necks like strings of beads. + +This captain was a great gourmand, who had provided himself with the +choicest provisions. The pirates found large coops filled with pheasants +and Calcutta hens, which had been fed on nuts to give their flesh a +better flavor. The rascals pulled out every one of the birds. + +"Where's the barber?" they shouted, "Here's something to bleed!" and +they dragged Scudamore forward to use his valuable surgical instruments +to cut off the heads of the capons. Scudamore gleefully beheaded the +squawking fowl, each one of which the Bristol captain seemed to mourn, +and when he had dispatched the last, he suddenly seized the sighing +sailor by the hair, put his knife to his throat, and would have sent him +after the birds, had not Skyrme dealt him such a blow that he fell +headlong. + +"I supposed _these_ were to follow!" said the doctor with a fiendish +laugh. + +Meanwhile the pirates began to pluck the poultry, and then cut the fowl +up clumsily, lacking the help of Scudamore, who swore by all the imps of +Satan that he didn't enlist to kill animals, but men. + +The beautiful pheasants were flung into three large copper kettles, +white pepper and cod-fish were added, and fires were lighted under the +caldrons. + +"Oh, what barbarians!" sighed the English captain, "To cook cod-fish +with pheasants." + +As soon as the meat was half done they gathered around, flourishing +their knives. The captain was invited to take his seat among them and +share the meal, which he eagerly did, for on discovering that the birds +could no longer be saved, he developed a laudable intention of devouring +enough of them for three men. + +After the repast the wretches brought out the captain's preserved fruit, +stored carefully away for his own use, and ate it before his eyes. + +The rude fellows, accustomed to coarse smoked meat, greedily swallowed +the expensive pistachio nuts and preserved pineapples, while saying +contemptuously that they would much rather have onions. + +And how they drank the noble wine! From the narrow-necked bottles in +which it is usually sold! No, they knocked out the bottoms of the casks +and dipped it up with their hats, or held their mouths under the cock +and drank till they could scarcely rise. Swiftly as the wine poured into +their throats, songs and laughter poured out, the wildest shouts of +revelry which buccaneers ever uttered; even the English captain was +obliged to drink his own wine, and the more he swallowed, the more +firmly he began to believe that he himself was the pirate chief who had +captured and plundered a ship, and advised the men to hang each other, +being affected in precisely the opposite manner from Scudamore, who, +under the influence of the wine, believed himself an honest man who had +been taken prisoner by bandits; the result of which was that the two men +had a violent scuffle, and as the captain proved to be the stronger, +Scudamore lost two of his teeth. + +The former then triumphantly resumed his seat among the pirates, and by +singing several songs aloud, roused their enthusiasm to such a pitch +that Skyrme, starting up, vowed by a sea of wine to drink the Bristol +captain's health in a glass which no man had ever used. + +He kept his word, for, ordering a cask filled with Malvoisie to be +rolled up, he knocked out the head, sprang into it, and there drank the +health of the captain, who almost died with laughter, thinking it vastly +entertaining that a man should sit in the vessel from which he drank +without being afraid of swallowing himself. + + * * * * * + +The carouse on the captured ship lasted uninterruptedly for three days +and nights. On the third day the intoxicated pirates embraced the +drunken captain and, rolling a few casks of wine upon their own sloop as +a remembrance, took leave, urging him, when he reached Barbadoes, to +send them a few rich merchantmen, of which just now they were in great +need. Before he arrived there, however, the captain had entirely +recovered from his intoxication and, remembering, doubtless, his +slaughtered fowl and plundered wine, resolved to send a few ships in +pursuit of the pirates. + +He went to the governor, related his misfortune, and induced him, in the +absence of men-of-war, to fit up a merchant vessel with twenty-four guns +and a sloop with ten, and despatch them under the command of Captains +Rogers and Graves in chase of the bold buccaneers who roved so daringly +in waters so near port. The latter were not yet sober, for they still +had their wine, and when they saw the approaching vessels, believing +that they would prove rich prizes, tacked and stood toward them. + +The ship and sloop allowed them to come close, without answering the +pirates' first fire. + +This made the latter still bolder and, shouting to them to haul down +their flags and surrender, they steered directly toward them. + +But, at the instant they seized their grappling irons to throw on the +ship, her guns suddenly thundered a warning and, instead of an easy +prey, the buccaneers found themselves in the presence of a formidable +foe, which attacked them on both sides with a terrible cannonade. + +The peril instantly sobered the pirates, their confused yells ceased and +nothing was heard except the voice of Barthelemy, who always felt +strongest in the presence of the greatest danger. + +Amid the most furious cannonade, he defended himself against both +assailants, and as soon as a well-aimed broadside had caused momentary +confusion on one of the vessels, he availed himself of it to run out +between them, then, spreading all sail, fled with his foes in full +chase. Both were swift craft. It was impossible for Barthelemy to +escape. + +The cannonade continued, the Sea Devil fighting while flying, the other +two trying, first from the right, then from the left, to sail across her +bows. Suddenly the pirate's fire ceased, Barthelemy had thrown his guns +overboard. + +The pirate sloop was instantly lightened and, at the very moment his +foes believed him hopelessly lost, Barthelemy's craft flew away as +swiftly as a sea-gull, once more at liberty. + +The pursuers, left behind, at last gave up the chase and returned to +port. + +Off went the pirate, like a startled gadfly, to Newfoundland. Twenty-two +ships were in the harbor. The buccaneers had neither guns nor powder, +nothing but fury and knives. + +On reaching the port they beat their drums, blew their trumpets, ran up +the black flag, and the crews of the twenty-two ships fled to the shore. + +The pirates chose the best vessel in the fleet, robbed the others, and +set them on fire. The lesson received at Barbadoes still rankled in +their souls, they must have flames somewhere. So long as they remembered +Barbadoes, not a ship escaped them, and if one from that port fell into +their hands they slaughtered even the mice. + + * * * * * + +Luck changed, Barthelemy's star was in the ascendant, every day brought +treasures and victories. The whole sea was his taxpayer. At last he took +nothing from the captured ships except coined money; and the crews did +not even offer any resistance. With his splendid ship, on whose prow +was a carved and gilded figure of Fortuna, he visited every port in +turn, levying taxes from the vessels anchored in them. They paid +heavily; nay, if rumor could be trusted, safe-conducts could be +purchased from him--in advance. + +The rulers of all countries forbade their subjects to furnish the +pirates with provisions; but that was easily remedied. Ships bound for +Africa sailed at regular intervals, laden with provisions, from the +English colonies. These met the pirate by a concerted agreement, allowed +themselves to be plundered, apparently by force, and yielded up one or +two ships' cargoes. The buccaneers paid well for them. + +Once the young pirate chief ran into the harbor of St. Barthelemy and +went on shore with his whole crew. The inhabitants illuminated their +city, the governor came to meet him with a band of music and ordered +fireworks in their honor, while the ladies gave them a ball. + +The buccaneers knew how to entertain. True, with them dancing was very +apt to close with an orgy, and the orgy to end in a brawl; but fair +women feared kisses as little as broken heads; for the pirates scattered +gold with lavish hands in every direction. + +The pirates were gallants; they wore silk garments, gold lace, and +plumed hats, the chains of two or three gold watches hung from their +pockets, and diamonds and rubies flashed on their fingers. True, the +gold lace was perfumed with rum and brandy, the breath of the flatterers +reeked with the odor of onions and tobacco, pistols and blood-stained +knives were carried in their pockets with the gold watches, and the +hands on which diamonds glittered were black with the smoke of powder. +But fair women did not shrink from these things, for they knew that the +pirates never left a place until the last ring had vanished from their +fingers and the last watch from their pockets. + +The buccaneer obtained nothing by cajolery, he paid cash for everything, +and his hands were as full of gold as his lips of oaths. So why was it +so great a marvel that the governors opened their doors, and those who +ought to have led them to the gallows invited them to their tables. + +The governor of St. Christopher tried to drive Barthelemy out of his +harbor--what did he gain by it? Barthelemy burned his ships and +bombarded his city; the governor of St. Barthelemy was wiser, he +introduced the corsair to his wife and became a rich man. There are as +many customs as there are countries. We should think such proceedings +very strange. + + * * * * * + +The governor's wife was a beautiful Creole, whose eyes fired men's +hearts. Her face was pale, but when the sun of passion glowed upon it, +her cheeks at first flushed faintly with the rose-hue of dawn, then +deepened into crimson. + +To watch the alternation of these tints was the school of madness. + +Everyone was affected by the contagion of this frenzy, save her +husband--and no one more than the pirate chief Barthelemy. + +The husband, a stout, placid man, sat beside Barthelemy at the banquet, +opposite to the fair Creole. Barthelemy was drunk with wine and love. + +"Look at that woman," he said to the husband, extolling his wife: "What +a face! What eyes! What a matchless figure! A goddess who has left her +temple to come to West India! See those eyes! How they sparkle! What +need have we of sun or stars so long as they shine upon us?" + +The husband, on the contrary, paid no heed, but apparently deemed it +wiser to shut his eyes and nod sleepily. + +Barthelemy shook him by the collar. + +"Why are you not my foe, why don't I fling you into the sea, kill you at +once? I would make myself a king to call your wife my queen." + +The husband neither saw nor heard; when Barthelemy loosed his hold he +fell back into his chair and snored. + +Wild songs and the rattling of glasses echoed on all sides; each of the +buccaneers had found a sweetheart, and the voices and laughter of women +mingled with the oaths of the pirates; it seemed to be considered a +special token of tenderness--and many of the corsairs bestowed it,--to +fire their pistols in the room. + +Barthelemy, with a trembling hand, held out his wine-glass to the Creole +who drained it to the health of the corsair king. When she set it down, +he was kneeling at her feet. + +She had a fair round neck, and Barthelemy could not bear to see it +without an ornament, so snatching from his own a diamond chain worth ten +thousand dollars he clasped it round the beautiful woman's throat. Could +he do so without pressing her head against his breast, and when it +rested there, could he help kissing her? + +All the buccaneers joined in such a thundering cheer that the walls +shook, pounded the tables with their fists, and fired salvos of shots. + +The husband slept on like a drowsy bear. Barthelemy clasped the Creole's +slender waist. + +"Come with me," he whispered beseechingly; "I'll buy you from your +husband, I'll give him a million of gold in exchange. If he wants a +fleet, I'll drive hundreds of ships here like a flock of sheep. Come +with me, I will rob Satan of Hades and transform it into a Paradise for +you. I will load you with treasures, overwhelm you with delights, come +with me!" + +"Ay, ay, Captain," shouted Moody from the corner where he sat surrounded +by empty wine bottles, "drain the cup of joy and dash it against the +wall." + +Just at that moment a messenger entered, bringing dispatches for the +governor. + +The pirates gave him no chance to speak. "Don't wake him, don't you see +how sweetly he is sleeping? You would better drink." + +The herald was soon completely intoxicated and, seeing the governor's +wife whispering tenderly to Barthelemy, in the bewilderment of a +drunkard's ideas he carried the despatch to him. + +The latter was about to throw it down when, glancing at the address, +his eye caught the name "Hispaniola." + +The young leader's face suddenly darkened; he tore open the despatch and +with blanched face, read the following lines. + + _Sir_: The slaves in San Domingo rebelled a few days + ago, attacked the cotton plantations along the whole + coast, burned and destroyed them, and pitilessly + murdered the planters, sparing neither man, woman, nor + child. There is not a single dwelling left standing on + the northern coast of Hispaniola. + +Drops of cold perspiration stood on Barthelemy's brow, his eyes stared +fixedly into vacancy, his fingers clenched the paper convulsively; then, +starting up, he flung the Creole aside and dealt the table such a blow +with his clenched fist that the pirates, to a man, instantly became +silent and stared at him in wonder. + +"The carouse is over!" thundered their leader in a terrible voice. +"Hence to the ship, drop toying, and seize your weapons." + +The buccaneers could not yet recover from their bewilderment. The Creole +beauty, with sparkling eyes, pressed nearer to Barthelemy and raised his +hand to her glowing lips. + +Barthelemy's eyes sought Moody. The old pirate had drunk heavily, but +was perfectly sober. + +"You told me to drain the cup of joy to the dregs and then shatter it," +cried the young chief. "I will shatter it ere my lips have touched it." + +Even while speaking, he wrenched his hand from the Creole's clasp, and +drawing his sword, cried: + +"Forward to the coast of Hispaniola." + +Carried away by their leader's passion, the buccaneers joined in a +terrible cheer, and throwing down their glasses, pressed after him with +drunken enthusiasm from the joys of the banquet to wrestle with the fury +of the tempests. + + * * * * * + +The ship reached the shore of Hispaniola. Barthelemy promised his men +the treasures of a whole people, reserving for himself only their blood. + +He did not find a single ship in the harbor; there were only a few +fisher-boats tossing on the waves, from whose owners he learned that the +insurgent slaves, after ravaging the coast, had retired in large numbers +to the interior of the island. + +Barthelemy went on shore and rushed like a madman toward the cottage. + +He soon neared the hill which concealed the little valley, and continued +his way slowly, with a throbbing heart, as if fearing to behold with his +eyes what he already witnessed in his soul. The hill afforded a view of +the cottage. Here he had parted for the last time with his betrothed +bride; here she had sobbed, "Take me with you"; here she had predicted, +"Some day you will return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she +come to meet me?'" + +His very heart shrank. One step more, and he would reach the hill-top--a +weeping-willow obstructed the view and, bending the boughs apart, he +gazed down into the valley. + +It was empty. Bare yellow fields lay dry and withered in the place of +the green plantation, and the site of the cottage was marked by a black +spot. + +Barthelemy stood motionless, with fixed eyes. No sigh escaped his lips, +but he suddenly fell as if lifeless, with his face pressed against the +grass. Perhaps he might have passed into the eternal slumber, had not +sad dreams come and forced him to witness the horrible bloody scenes +enacted when the Satanic band burst into the quiet, lonely cottage, +where the three girls and their grandmother knelt in prayer; he saw the +rabble rush in through door and windows, seizing their victims by the +hair, the thin, gray locks of the poor old grandmother, the luxuriant +raven ones, which he had so often kissed, of his worshipped Julietta. If +he had been lying in his grave, such a dream must have roused him. + +"Ah!" shrieked the pirate struggling back to consciousness, like a +person throwing off a deadly burden from his heart, and gazing around +him, gasping for breath as he wiped the perspiration from his eyes and +brow. "It is well that it was _only_ a dream," he faltered. Then a +glance into the valley proved that it was no delusion, but reality. +Springing to his feet he rushed wildly down into the valley to the ruins +of the hut, called the names of his dear ones, stirred the ashes as if +he might find them there, examined the footprints in the mire to see if +he could discover among them any traces of those of the objects of his +love. But he found nothing except the marks of clumsy negro feet, +nowhere the imprint of the dear, fairy-like ones. They were lost. Not a +vestige of the cottage remained except the charred threshold. Barthelemy +embraced and kissed it, his eyes growing dim with tears. + +"Ah!" he shouted, dashing them from his eyes, "Not water, but oil on the +flames! This is not the time to weep, but to avenge. A pirate's tears +are drops of blood! I will avenge you, my murdered family, on mankind, +on the whole world. Earth, grant me no more rest. Change the wine-cup to +wormwood ere it reaches my lips, and every throb of my heart to hate. I +had a single joy, my soul a single steadfast idea, which came to my +remembrance whenever any one sued to me for mercy, and I granted it. +That was joy. But it is forever torn from my heart, henceforward I will +give quarter to no one. Hear my vow, ye powers of Hell, and tremble--I +will send you as many black fiends as there are grains of dust in this +handful of ashes which I scatter on my head." + +With a terrible imprecation, Barthelemy flung into the air a handful of +ashes which he had clutched and, as they floated slowly down upon his +head, he sank on his knees and, sobbing convulsively, kissed the +threshold. + +"My God, my God, if it was Thy will to punish me, why didst Thou not +dash me against a cliff during the raging of a tempest, why didst Thou +not let me perish by arms, by hunger? Why didst Thou not make me mount +the scaffold? Why didst Thou permit Thy angels to atone for my crimes?" + +He sobbed bitterly, while the ashes he had scattered to bear witness to +his vow, drifted slowly down upon his head. + + * * * * * + +A traveller, driving his mule before him, came through the path leading +from the forest. Barthelemy barred his way. The man started at sight of +the fierce-looking stranger and began to appeal to his patron saint. + +"Whence do you come?" asked the pirate. + +"From La Vega. I bring good news. The insurgents are conquered and +already hang along the coast." + +"Bad news for me! Have none of them escaped?" + +"A few hundred took refuge in a captured ship and fled to Africa." + +"I thank you. You can go on." + +The messenger continued his journey, shaking his head; he could not +understand why any one should regret that the rebels were conquered, or +rejoice because a number of them had escaped. + + * * * * * + +"What has happened to you, captain?" asked Moody, when Barthelemy +returned to the ship. "You are as pale as a corpse." + +"Nothing," replied his commander in a hollow tone. "Only my heart has +died in my breast." + +The pirates asked no further questions. They knew all. Whenever any one +of them left the band, the others kept watch from a distance. They had +seen Barthelemy sitting despairingly beside the ruins of the hut, and +all shrank in timid silence from the pallid man. + +Barthelemy shut himself up in his cabin and, taking a chart, began to +study the course to Africa. His face was gloomy, but ever and anon his +eyes flashed fiercely. Suddenly he heard a knock at the door and angrily +opened it. + +"Who is disturbing me, now?" + +"I, captain," replied Scudamore. "We need your judgment." + +"Go until to-morrow. I will grant no favors to-day." + +"I want no favors from you, only the execution of the law. Three members +of the band took advantage of the time during which we were on shore to +desert and take refuge in the interior of the island. But I sleep with +my eyes open and, though I have but two of them, can watch the whole +hundred men." + +"And me also?" + +"There can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another, whoever +seeks to leave us is a traitor. We want no path for retreat, only for +advance. Whoever has once sworn faith, is ours forever, belongs to hell, +no power can free him, and if he will not live with us he must die." + +"Have you captured the fugitives?" + +"All three, they were only a mile from La Vega when we overtook them." + +"Bring them before me singly." + +Scudamore went in search of the prisoners, with fiendish delight, and +returned dragging the first one by the ear. + +He was a cowardly fellow whom the pirates had forced to join their band. + +"Oh, captain!" he cried falling on his knees before Barthelemy, "if you +believe in God and the angels, let me leave this accursed place. You are +all doomed to hell, permit me to save my soul from the flames of +purgatory. Oh! all you saints of Heaven, have mercy on my sinful head." + +A horrible roar of laughter from the pirates greeted these imploring +words. + +"You shall die," said Barthelemy coldly, motioning to the men to lead +him away. + +"Captain! For heaven's sake, you won't let me die thus, without the +sacrament or extreme unction, to the ruin and eternal perdition of my +soul?" + +"Wait, I'll confess you," said Scudamore with a diabolical laugh, +putting the rope around the doomed man's neck. + +"Oh God, my Creator, is there no one to say a prayer for me? Alas, I +once knew so many and have forgotten them all." + +The pirates, laughing loudly, dragged to the mast the unhappy man, who +began to roar the air of a song whose words he had long since forgotten. +A minute later the song ceased, the man was hanging above. + +The second prisoner was now brought forward. He, too, was only a common +sailor. His companions were forced to bind him hand and foot in order to +drag him before the captain, and he kept up a constant torrent of oaths. + +"Yes, I ran away from you because I loathed this vile, roystering life, +toiling and fighting every day and when, at the risk of death, one +gained a little money, a man had to throw it away. I'll run from you a +hundred times more." + +"Not once," replied Scudamore grinning. He apparently had far more taste +for the hangman's trade than for the physician's. Barthelemy silently +waved his hand, and the pirate hung. + +The third prisoner now appeared, and Barthelemy exclaimed in surprise, +"That is Henry Glasby." + +The former captain of the Fortuna was the third captive. + +Glasby was a handsome young man, with a noble face, whom the pirates +kept among them by force on account of his superior knowledge of +seamanship; his gentle nature and kind heart were known to the whole +band, for he protected all who fell into their hands, as far as lay in +his power, frequently paying their ransom out of his own pocket; his +entreaties had saved many a ship from burning, and he had always kept +aloof from the bacchanalian orgies of his companions, for which reason +they did not hold him in special regard, and always watched him with +suspicious eyes. He had already made one attempt to escape, which had +been pardoned, now he was certainly doomed. After the first expression +of surprise, Barthelemy's face had regained its cold, unmoved composure. +Scudamore awaited the verdict with greedy impatience. + +Glasby stood before Barthelemy with unquailing resolution. + +"You have already pronounced sentence upon two," he said fearlessly. +"There is no reason why you should make me an exception. I have but one +request; send this valueless locket containing my portrait to my +mother,--she lives in Norfolk. It also has a curl of hair belonging to +my betrothed bride, whom I longed to see, and for whom I die." + +Barthelemy trembled and gazed intently at Glasby's face. + +"You have a betrothed bride whom you longed to see?" he said in a +stifled voice, loosing the ropes from his wrists--"go back to her, I +release you--" + +"Captain! Two are hanging already," shouted Scudamore, furious as he saw +the escape of the man whose death he most desired. "The third rope is +waiting for its ornament." + +"It will pull up the man who dares to contradict my judgment!" answered +Barthelemy, gazing fiercely at the defiant faces, and closed the door of +his cabin behind him. + +The whole band remained silent. + +From that moment Barthelemy was completely transformed. His heart was +stone, nothing touched it except a woman's sobs; then he fled, it was +more than he could bear. + +To his men he was stern to the point of injustice, the most trivial +offence did not escape his punishment, every evening he held a court of +justice by which he had those who were accused imprisoned in the ship's +hold, flogged, or shot. Yet there was one person whom he never attacked, +Glasby. He spent whole nights in questioning him about his family life, +his mother, and his betrothed bride, listening with eager attention to +all the details for the hundredth time. He showed mercy to no one, +burning or sinking the captured ships, unmoved by submission or +entreaties, but if a vessel chanced to have a woman on board, and he +heard her voice he would take nothing from the ship and let her pursue +her way uninjured. + + * * * * * + +One day he assembled the crews of both pirate cruisers on the deck of +the Commodore. + +"My lads," he said, "life here is beginning to grow wearisome. Fortune +offers her favors in vain, there is no one on this side of the world +whom we fear; we have plenty of booty, but no fame, for we encounter no +foemen worthy of us. Let us go farther. These Dutch and Portuguese +merchantmen already fear us to such a degree that they almost love us. +Let us go where we are not known, among the English and French, whose +troops sleep secure in their fortresses along the coast, where Fortune +is still a coy maiden who permits her favors to be grasped only by +strong hands. Let us win honor and fame in the places where the wise +law-makers have written a hundred paragraphs against us in their code of +laws, let us tear out the page, and place in its stead the words that +there are no laws for the brave." + +Barthelemy wished to fire his comrades' hearts as he had done in former +days, but he was unsuccessful, the tones which had once thrilled them +were dead; the fire in his soul, one spark of which had sufficed to +kindle theirs, was extinct. Now he could influence them only by his +coldness. + +"Pirates," he went on, folding his arms, "I promised you treasures, you +promised me blood. Let us both keep our word. Our work here is beggarly. +To plunder the ships of peaceful merchants, who surrender their goods +without defence! And of what use are they? We merely give them away. I +will take you to the home of treasures, the coasts of Africa, where +ships laden with gold-dust plough the sea, where the negro kings sleep +on golden sand and the negro warriors fight with golden weapons. We will +plunder _these_ ships, dig the golden sand from under the sleeping +kings, and bury them in it, wrench the precious weapons from the +negroes' hands and give them cheaper ones of iron in their hearts." + +This pleased the pirates who made up the Commodore's crew, and they +responded with murmurs of approval, but the Fortuna's men remained +silent, with sullen, defiant faces. + +Barthelemy noted the different effect he had produced, and wrapping +himself deliberately in his ample cloak, whose folds concealed his +hands, he added: "Perhaps there is some one who does not approve this +plan, let him state what he has against it. He can speak freely, I will +listen." + +The crew of the Fortuna began to gather into groups and whisper +together; at last two men came forward, hitching their trousers, and +stood with resolute faces before the captain. + +"Yes, we don't approve of your plan, captain," said one, and the other +nodded assent, while their comrades murmured approval. + +"You don't approve of it, my children?" asked Barthelemy in his sweetest +tones, "and why?" + +"Because we are not tired of having things go well with us and finding +booty everywhere without danger," said one. + +"Because we don't want to seek unknown risks in unknown gold regions," +added the other. + +"Where there are laws against us." + +"And where royal men-of-war protect commerce." + +"We don't care for fame, but prizes." + +"And we would rather stay here, where people fear us, than go where we +must fear others." + +"If you want blood, we can shed as much here for you as you desire." + +"But we won't go a thousand miles and seek danger merely to avenge you +on the negroes who killed your sweetheart." + +Robert Barthelemy's face blanched to a ghastly pallor. + +"You wish to stay here, my dear children," he replied in a tone of +childlike blandness. "You like it here, and are afraid to go elsewhere. +Why, my dear children, just think it over a moment." + +"We have already thought of it," they answered defiantly. + +"Very well," said Barthelemy, suddenly throwing back his cloak, and the +next instant he had sent a bullet through the heads of both. + +For a moment the others stood petrified with horror, then they turned +furiously upon Barthelemy, their eyes and knives flashing around him. + +"What! You dare to oppose, when I command! Away with you, worthless +rascals!" thundered their young leader in a voice which rose above the +fray, and seizing a piece of stout rope he rushed among them, dealing +blows right and left at the mutineers, who were so amazed by his daring +that, forgetting their rage, they scattered. + +"Put them all in irons. Keep them in confinement on bread and water for +three days! If any one utters a word against me, throw him into the +sea," shouted Barthelemy, and in a moment the Fortuna's crew were +disarmed by the Commodore's men. + +"You are taking a great risk," Glasby whispered to Barthelemy. + +"Oh, I fear neither man nor devil," replied the pirate defiantly. + +The ships sailed for Africa that very day. The time of punishment of the +Fortuna's crew expired on the third, and Barthelemy, to prevent any +attempt at flight, removed all the nautical instruments and all the men +who had any knowledge of navigation to the Commodore. + +Nevertheless the Fortuna vanished one night when they were still four +hundred miles from the African coast. + +As Barthelemy predicted the ship ran on a sandbank in the first storm +which overtook her, and her crew all perished. + +But the leader did not give up his plan; though his strength was +diminished, his courage was unchanged. + +One morning at dawn he saw a mountain peak on the horizon--it was Cape +Corso. "We have reached our destination," said Barthelemy to the +exulting pirates, and began to cruise up and down before the harbor. + + * * * * * + +At that time the French government had a monopoly of the india-rubber +trade and, as the most venomous antidote of monopoly is smuggling, the +coasts of Cayenne were constantly watched by French men-of-war. + +Two of them instantly noticed the suspicious craft and, believing it to +be a smuggler, gave chase. Barthelemy lured them too far from the shore +for the battle to be seen, then, after a short conflict, conquered both, +sank one and, keeping the other, manned it with part of his crew under +the command of Skyrme, and called it the Fox-Hound. + +From the French prisoners he learned that the two most formidable +English war-ships, the Weymouth and Hirondelle had left the coast and +would not return for several months, so they sailed boldly into the +harbor. + +The Onslow, the finest vessel of the Anglo-African Company was lying at +anchor in the port. + +Her captain and officers were on shore, where the governor was giving a +ball in their honor. From the windows of his residence they could see +the pirates assail their ship and, ere they could hasten back to it, the +crew had surrendered. + +The captain of the Onslow, Fennimore Gee, rowed alone to the pirate ship +and, pistol in hand, demanded that Barthelemy should restore his ship +and fight with him like an honest man, instead of attacking by stealth. + +The novel proposition of returning a captured ship to its owner and then +fighting for its possession so pleased Barthelemy that he declared his +willingness to accept it. + +His own men also accepted the challenge, but the Onslow's crew refused +to fight against Barthelemy, and begged him to take them into his band. + +Captain Gee despairingly fired his pistols among the rascally throng, +and appealed to Barthelemy, if he had a drop of honorable blood in his +body, not to stain his fame as a buccaneer by receiving into his band +the worthless fellows who, in the hour of peril, had deserted their +captain. + +"I'll tell you, my worthy captain," said Robert gayly to his opponent, +tossing in the little boat on the waves below. "You are so brave a man +that I could not reconcile my conscience to leaving you without a ship. +Come, I'll give you, in exchange for the Onslow, my own vessel, the +Commodore here. I can vouch for its being a good sailer and valuable, +though I got it very cheap. But from sheer philanthropy, I can't give up +your crew, you would decimate it; the soldiers, however, you shall have, +I don't care what becomes of the land rats." + +So before the eyes of the whole harbor, he exchanged ships with the +English captain, and after having the old name Onslow effaced and Royal +Fortune painted over it in large gilt letters, he set sail with both +his vessels for Calabar. + +By way of pastime, part of the pirates, under Skyrme's command, made +short expeditions on the Fox-Hound to search for any ships that might be +crossing their path. + +One day the Fox-Hound returned to the Royal Fortune, with all sail set, +and reported having noticed on the horizon two suspicious vessels, which +instantly gave chase; they were probably men-of-war, and the Fox-Hound +had escaped only by crowding on all sail, but they were still pursuing. + +"Let them come," said Barthelemy, sweeping the sea with his glass, and +soon discovered on the horizon the two ships which, at that distance, +resembled sea-gulls. + +"Those are not men-of-war," cried Barthelemy, "they look more like +pirates, and are coming toward us with every inch of canvas spread. +They will fare badly." + +"Ha! ha!" laughed Skyrme, "that's all we lack. We have conquered plenty +of merchantmen and war-ships, now we must capture pirates to have the +whole variety." + +The entire crew watched the approaching ships with eager curiosity, +saying to one another, "They think they are attacking a government ship, +how amazed they will be when they reach us!" + +Moody was shading his eyes first with one hand and then the other, +straining them till they fairly started from their sockets. Suddenly he +clapped his hands, threw up his hat, and throwing himself down on the +deck laughed till he was red in the face. + +"Moody! Have you gone crazy?" asked Barthelemy. "The man never laughed +before in his whole life. What ails you, Moody?" + +"Don't you know those ships?" he asked, half raising himself, then flung +himself back in another fit of laughter so uncontrollable that the men +were obliged to seize and hold him before he grew quiet. + +"Speak, old lunatic, what ails you?" + +"When I tell you, you'll all jump out of your skins. Don't you see those +two ships? Don't you recognize them? They are the Sea Devil, and the +Dutch ship which ran away from us, left us starving on the sea, and now +are coming straight into the jaws of our guns! Isn't it enough to drive +a man mad with joy?" + +The awful shout of delight from the pirates drowned Moody's laughter; +with bloodthirsty eagerness they rushed for their weapons, climbed on +the yards to get a better view of the approaching vessels, and shook +their fists at them. + +They had found the traitors who had left their comrades to meet the most +terrible death by starvation, and who now voluntarily came to encounter +their revenge. This thought moved even Barthelemy so much that a burning +flush crimsoned his pale face. His mute lips refused to give utterance +to his feverish joy, but his countenance belied them. + +"Calm yourselves!" he said to his men, "we'll let them come nearer; get +behind the bulwarks, they must be an easy prey, and their hearts shall +stop beating when they suddenly see our faces." + +The buccaneers quietly drew back; their foes came toward them with every +sail spread. Already they could see distinctly on the prow the hideous +figure of the Sea Devil, and as the pirates recognized one man after +another they whispered, gnashing their teeth: "There is so and so!" + +"Keep your weapons ready," Barthelemy commanded in a low tone. + +"We need no knives, we'll tear them to pieces with our nails," said +Asphlant. + +On arriving within gunshot range, the black flag suddenly fluttered from +every masthead of the Sea Devil, and a bullet, hissing between the Royal +Fortune's sails was the challenge to speak. The deepest silence reigned +on Barthelemy's ship. The Sea Devil sailed close up to it, the Dutch +consort remaining a little behind. "Oho! Where is your captain?" shouted +some one on the Sea Devil. + +"That's Kennedy's voice!" whispered Barthelemy giving the signal to +raise the black flag. + +At the moment when, to the horror of the men on the Sea Devil, the black +flag floated from the Royal Fortune's mast, Barthelemy sprang on the +bulwark, shouting in stentorian tones: + +"I am here, you worthless traitors! Do you still know Robert +Barthelemy?" + +The assailants were instantly as silent as if death had stricken them; +Kennedy, in his terror, leaped into a boat and, pushing off from the +ship tried to reach the Dutch vessel, the others flung their weapons +away like madmen and, in the insanity of terror, leaped into the waves. + +They were soon released from their trouble; two volleys poured at the +same moment from the guns of the Royal Fortune and the Fox Hound +shattered the Sea Devil which, amid frightful shrieks of despair, sank +with every man on board. + +Meanwhile Kennedy and a few others had succeeded in reaching the Dutch +ship, which instantly spread every sail in a desperate effort to reach +the land. + +Barthelemy pursued with both his ships. + +The fugitive flung overboard all her ballast and finally even her guns, +by which sacrifice she succeeded in reaching the shore before the other +ships could interpose. + +A throng of Calabrian negroes stood on the land watching the fight. + +Kennedy hastily ordered his men into the boats and escaped to the shore. +"Not even that will save you," said Barthelemy, ordering the largest +boat to be lowered. He had eight guns placed in it, entered himself with +forty of his men, and commanded them to row to the beach. + +Kennedy saw that Barthelemy intended to land and began to tell the +negroes, with loud cries, that he was a monster who had come to conquer +their land and burn their dwellings. They must on no account permit him +to come ashore. + +The shouts of the negroes showed that the pirates had succeeded in +exciting these savages against their former comrades, and the negroes +soon began to greet the boat with a shower of arrows and stones. + +"So much the better," murmured Barthelemy. "Two at one blow: traitors +and negroes. To-day vengeance will reap a harvest, this is the festival +of death. Fire among them." + +The guns of the boat roared, scattering death among the blacks, in whose +ranks the bombs tore wide openings, and, amid this thunder, forty men +landed in the face of ten thousand negroes. + +Kennedy and his companions urged the Calabrians to a desperate defence, +and they rushed with bloodthirsty fury at the buccaneers, hurling a +cloud of arrows and lances. + +Only two or three fell wounded by these missiles, the others moved +forward in close ranks, aiming at the most prominent leaders in the +negro ranks. + +When the latter saw their strongest warriors, who in battle were equal +to a hundred men, fall by invisible weapons sent from a distance before +they could reach their assailants with their battle axes, they began to +retreat in confusion, left their huts and, dragging Kennedy and his men +with them, climbed a steep hill, up which they could not be followed, +and from which no efforts availed to draw them. Barthelemy, with wild +delight, walked over the battle-ground, counting the corpses. They had +all been victims of his revenge for his murdered love. + +"This was blessed work," he murmured. "Hell is blacker by eight hundred +negroes." + +"Captain," said Scudamore, rousing him from his reverie, "our bitterest +enemies have escaped under our eyes. There is but one way to reach and +destroy them in the place where they have sought refuge." + +"What is it?" + +"It would be idle for me to show you, you would not use it, but give me +authority to do as I please for half an hour and I promise to bring you +the heads of all these traitors without sacrificing one of our men." + +"I should like to see that." + +"You will hear it. You need not witness it; it is a stratagem of war +which you could not learn from me. Go back to the ship and wait for my +return." + +This bold language surprised Barthelemy. A sort of intoxication arising +from the bloodshed still held him in thrall, and he allowed himself to +be persuaded to return to the Royal Fortune and let the doctor work his +will. As soon as the captain was out of sight, Scudamore ordered the +pirates to go to the deserted cabins and murder the families of the +fugitives. + +Shouting exultingly, the fierce crew, thirsting for revenge, obeyed; +from the lofty cliff the blacks saw their wives killed, their children +slaughtered, and when all were slain, their homes set on fire and +destroyed amid clouds of smoke that rose to their eyrie. + +Then Scudamore stepped forward and shouted: + +"Now, you black scoundrels, you have seen how we served your families. +The same fate awaits you, down to the last man, if you don't submit and +surrender our friends, whom you dragged away with you." + +Kennedy saw through the stratagem and protested violently. + +"Don't believe a word he says, the whole thing is a fiendish plot, we +are no friends of his, we don't know one another." + +"Kennedy, don't be a coward," said Scudamore reproachfully, "why should +you deny that you agreed to lead these people astray so that they would +run into the mouths of our guns? Be bold, and with the help of your +stout comrades throw them down on our knives; I, a pirate, am worth a +hundred negroes; don't disown me." + +The negroes, with threatening gestures began to surround Kennedy and his +men, who in great terror, tried to defend themselves. + +"Brave friends, don't believe the words of that devil, we never saw him; +those men are our worst enemies." + +"Oh, Kennedy, you disgrace us, how can you disown us when you, too, sail +under the black flag? If we had never seen each other how should I know +that you have, on your left shoulder, the mark of a gallows, branded +there when you were in the pillory?" + +The negroes instantly seized Kennedy, stripped his coat from his +shoulders and, as soon as they had convinced themselves that +Scudamore's words were true, they flung him down and one, raising his +copper axe, set his foot upon his victim's neck. + +"Don't hurt a hair of his head!" shouted Scudamore, feigning fury. The +next instant the axe fell, and Kennedy's head was hurled over the cliff. + +The others followed. + +When the half hour expired, Scudamore returned to Barthelemy and, +pointing to the boat, said: "There are the heads of the traitors!" + + + + +Chapter III + +Revenge + + +The time of the monsoons had come. News of shipwrecks arrived daily. The +elements of the air and sea were ceaselessly contending in a strife +before which the petty quarrels of men were ended. Nothing was heard at +present of Barthelemy. The English and Dutch agencies were perfectly +aware that his ships were anchored in the harbor of Cape Corso. Who +would venture to tempt Providence by putting to sea in such weather? The +heart of the boldest pirate trembles when he sees sky and water +transformed into darkness, illumined only by flashes of lightning. It +would be a devil and not a man who, amid this illumination, would risk a +battle in the midst of peals of thunder and the howling of the gale. + +Barthelemy was resting on the coast; his men were drinking, carousing +and giving banquets. What else could they do in such terrible weather +when, each morning, the sea flung fresh wrecks upon the strand? + +Meanwhile the governments were quietly gathering their ships against the +bold pirates who dared, single-handed, to assail a whole quarter of the +globe; in the harbor of Mydaw alone there were eleven ships waiting only +for the King Solomon with its eighty guns, and the Swallow with its +hundred and ten, to set sail in pursuit of Robert Barthelemy as soon as +the monsoons were over. + + * * * * * + +The tempest was raging, the sea tossed wildly, the black clouds hung so +low that it seemed as if they nearly touched the waves, and the surges +tossed their white foam upward toward the clouds. + +The horizon was a dark violet blue, through which darted flashes of +lightning. A ship was visible far away tossing on the billows, its +closely furled sails and erect masts looking like black crosses. + +It was the King Solomon, a proud warship, with three tiers of decks +supplied with windows, which resembled a three-story house with wings; +but windows and portholes were now tightly closed. + +The rain was pouring, black and white stormy petrels fluttered around +the vessel, and ever and anon the waves tossed aloft one of the sharks +swimming around the ship, which looked down greedily a moment, with its +cold, fixed eyes, at the trembling sailors. + +Every man had his hands full; in the midst stood Captain Trahern; the +boldest of the crew were in the rigging, trying to secure the sails; +others were attempting to rig a jury mast in place of one which had been +carried away. Another group toiled at the pumps, and four men were at +the helm, straining every muscle whenever a wave stronger than usual +dashed against the bow of the ship. In the intervals of rest the sailors +at the helm talked with one another. + +"What a gale! It's impossible for us ever to reach port again." + +"We came near sticking fast in the clouds just now, the waves flung us +up so high." + +"Lord help us! The thunderbolts are falling like ripe pears, one of us +will be hit presently." + +"Hush, don't you see the St. Elmo's fire yonder at the mast-head?" asked +Philip, the helmsman. + +"St. George preserve us!" whispered the others in horror. "That means +evil. The St. Elmo's fire usually appears only on ships devoted to +destruction. See how it dances!" + +"Mind your helm!" shouted the captain, but it was too late; while the +men were staring at the electrical phenomena hovering around the +mast-head, a huge wave approached the ship, a wave which resembled a +transparent mountain-chain in motion. Every effort to put the ship about +proved futile, the vast surge, higher than the highest mast-head, rolled +nearer, its top crested with foam. The men clung to the rigging and +bulwarks. Suddenly the King Solomon rose more rapidly, tossed upward on +the towering wave, and the next moment lay on her side with her masts in +the water and wave after wave sweeping over her decks. In a few minutes +the ship righted again, the water rolling from her as it drips from the +plumage of a swan, and the crew, drenched to the skin, returned to their +tasks. + +"See! The St. Elmo's fire is still shining at the mast-head!" cried +Philip, "if it were not kindled by the devil, that flood of water would +have put it out." + +"Those stormy petrels suspect something wrong, too, they follow us +everywhere." + +"Jack says he saw the spectre ship last night." + +"Is that true, Jack?" + +"Why should I say so, if I hadn't seen it? You were all asleep, I stood +alone at the helm. Suddenly, from the distance, the form of a ship moved +toward us. It seemed scarcely to touch the water, and was sailing +against the wind. Shadows that looked like men were moving about her +deck as if pulling on the ropes, and a misty shape, like the captain, +glided to and fro. Terrified, I hailed the apparition, and suddenly the +whole vision vanished, but I heard distinctly, above the whistling of +the wind and the plashing of the waves, the flapping of the ropes +against the mast of the spectre ship." + +"That means mischief." + +The sailors gazed timidly at the cloud-veiled horizon, as they usually +do when ghost stories are told in their presence. + +"Look, look yonder!" said Philip, suddenly pointing into the gray mist, +"I swear by St. George, I see the spectre ship!" + +His messmates, panting for breath, followed the direction of his finger. +The lightning flashed and they all made the sign of the cross. + +"There it is." + +"What do you see there?" called the captain, noticing the surprise of +his men. + +"The spectre ship, sir," one of them answered at last, trembling. + +Trahern began to scan the vessel through his spy-glass. + +"That's no spectre ship," he said after a short pause. + +"What else could she be, sir? Would any mortal man carry sail in such a +tempest? See how fast she approaches us! She does not heed the shock of +the waves, but flies like a bird." + +"That is no spectre ship," the captain repeated, "they are pirates." + +"Living devils," muttered Philip. + +"It must be Barthelemy," said Trahern. "What a pity that we cannot +approach him, we would capture him at once. But who could fight in such +a storm?" + +The pirate swiftly approached the King Solomon. From time to time the +waves concealed it, but the next instant it rose on their crests, still +advancing. + +"Those crazy fellows actually seem to be trying to meet us," said +Trahern. + +"Those are not men," replied Philip. "If men tried to cut through the +waves in that fashion their ship would be battered to pieces." + +The vessel really seemed to be pursuing the King Solomon; approaching +it on one tack, it made every effort to come alongside, but was +constantly baffled by the force of the waves which, like a stronger +power, constantly tossed the two ships apart, and if they were within +gunshot of each other at one moment, separated them the next by half a +mile. + +"Honest men pray to God at such times," cried Philip. "These do not even +fear the gale. Ha! How that lightning blazed between the ships. The very +fires of Heaven forbid approach." + +The pirate suddenly furled her sails, and the next instant the crew of +the King Solomon saw the large boat lowered. Twenty pirates sprang in +and rowed toward the King Solomon. + +The man-of-war had two hundred men and eighty guns; Trahern could not +imagine what the object of these few people could be. + +The waves tossed the boat to and fro but, spite of wind and water, the +oarstrokes of the twenty men gradually brought it nearer. Then a +gigantic figure stood erect, spite of the terrible tossing of the waves, +and, raising a speaking trumpet to his lips, shouted in deep, ringing +tones, "Captain Trahern, Robert Barthelemy hereby summons you to +surrender at discretion the King Solomon and her crew." + +The speaker was Skyrme. + +Trahern, indignant at the audacity of the pirates, which bordered on +insolence, ordered his men to fire on them. His gunners replied that the +cannon were wet. + +"That is a lie," shouted Trahern, "they are under cover. Take your +weapons and crush these bold dogs." + +"What?" shrieked Philip, "are these mortal men whom we can fight and +kill? Did any one ever see a devil die? I'll fight with no fiends." + +He flung down his arms as he spoke. + +"Nor I, nor I!" shouted the rest of the crew, firing their weapons in +the air and then throwing them down. Trahern found himself abandoned. + +"And you will disgrace yourselves by surrendering to a force ten times +smaller! Men! Come to your senses, these are no ghosts." + +But no power on earth could have induced them to attack the corsairs, +who were already fastening their grappling irons to the ship. + +"Then I will defend the vessel alone," said the captain despairingly +and, seizing a carbine, he discharged it among the buccaneers. + +No one was hit, for his own men had struck up the weapon and would not +let him aim at the assailants the second time. + +A moment later the pirates were masters of the King Solomon. + +The crew dared not resist them; their reputation for being able to +accomplish whatever they desired had spread so far that the trembling +seamen fairly lost their senses when they found themselves in the +presence of people whom they regarded as beings from another world, and, +even when they outstripped them tenfold in numbers, did not venture to +offer any resistance. + +If it were not for the existence of documents which prove it, no one +would believe that twenty pirates, in a boat, amid the raging of a +furious tempest, captured a man-of-war which had eighty guns, two +hundred armed men, and a brave commander. + + * * * * * + +The eleven ships in the harbor of Mydaw were only awaiting the cessation +of the monsoons and the arrival of the King Solomon to sail against +Barthelemy. + +The monsoons were still raging with the utmost fury when Robert +Barthelemy entered the port, bringing the King Solomon in tow. + +Black flags fluttered from every mast of the Royal Fortune and between +her sails was stretched a square banner, on which was a hideous picture, +a skeleton transfixed by a lance, holding an hour-glass in one hand, +with its legs crossed and a bleeding heart at its feet. The Fox-Hound's +standard, on the contrary, bore a man in a scarlet coat of mail, holding +in his hand a flaming sword on whose point was a skull. The flag of St. +George floated at her mast-head. + +Amid the howling of the gale echoed the diabolical beating of drums and +blare of trumpets of the captured band of the King Solomon, to whose +accompaniment the pirates roared an ear-splitting song. So they sailed +into the harbor. + +The eleven ships all surrendered at the first shot. Barthelemy assembled +all the captains on the Royal Fortune and gave them a magnificent +banquet, to which, after some little hesitation, they sat down, with the +exception of one man, Fletcher, who positively declared that he would +not sit at the pirates' table to eat and carouse with them. Barthelemy +permitted him to do as he pleased, and he turned his back upon them. + +Toward the end of the entertainment, when the wine began to excite them, +Barthelemy became kindly disposed, and told the captains that they could +redeem their ships by paying a ransom of eight pounds of gold dust. + +They instantly consented, with the exception of Fletcher who again +refused, saying that he would accept no favors from pirates, and would +not purchase his ship at the cost of his honor; they might do with him +whatever they chose. He spoke like a true Englishman. + +Barthelemy instantly gave orders to fire Fletcher's ship and burn her +with her whole cargo. + +Asphlant undertook to execute the command, but soon returned to report +that the ship's cargo consisted of eighty negro slaves and, as he did +not know whether one could kindle negroes, he had come to ask what to do +with them. + +Barthelemy's eyes flashed with a fiendish delight. + +"Negroes?" he asked, grinding his teeth, "Throw them into the sea, they +must learn to swim." + +Asphlant did not utter a syllable in reply, but went to execute the +order. The revellers continued their carouse. + +From time to time their conversation was interrupted by a blood-curdling +death shriek, which silenced the bacchanalian songs for a moment and +stopped the wine-cup on its way to their lips, but the next instant the +talk was resumed. + +The orgy was closed by an illumination furnished by the flames consuming +Fletcher's ship, which lighted the whole harbor. + +The negroes were chained together in couples, and the harbor swarmed +with sharks. Whenever a pair was thrown into the sea the waves around +were reddened; at each death shriek Barthelemy drained a glass of wine, +muttering: "That is for the cottage in Hispaniola." The negroes were all +murdered, but Barthelemy was not yet drunk. + +The captains left him at a late hour, hoping that they might meet again. +Barthelemy gave each a receipt for the ransom money which, preserved +among other documents in the government archives, ran as follows: + + We, the Knights of Fortune, hereby inform all whom it + may concern, that we have received from Captain ---- of + the ship ---- eight pounds of gold dust as ransom + money, for which we released the said ship. Given under + our hand and seal in the harbor of Mydaw, on the 13th + of January, 1722. + + ROBERT BARTHELEMY (HENRY GLASBY). + + * * * * * + +The storm was subsiding. A calm night followed. The moon rose, shedding +a magical lustre upon the sea. Barthelemy stood on the deck of his ship +with folded arms, gazing at the stars. + +How much wine and blood he had poured to intoxicate himself, but all in +vain. Neither wine nor blood gave him peace and forgetfulness. Ah, he +could win no forgetfulness, that sweet unconsciousness of the soul, but +instead came memory, the anguish of recalling the past. + +The stars exert a magical power over the soul; whoever gazes at them +long has it drawn whither it does not desire, whither it fears to go. + +What did Barthelemy behold in those stars? He saw the years of his +youth, painted in sweet, glimmering pictures, as unlike those of the +present as if either the one or the other must be a dream. + +There were the three girlish figures sporting around him, weaving +garlands for his head, fastening them on with kisses, amid merry +laughter. How softly the palms were whispering! + +They sat together in the little house, the grandmother, in her armchair, +telling marvelous, terrible tales of famous warriors; the young girls +casting timid glances at the windows, where the darkness of the +gathering night appeared, and the fire on the hearth died slowly, while +William's heart began to swell with eager desire to battle with these +unknown perils, and win for himself a name like those of the heroes +glorified by tradition. How softly the palms were whispering! + +The moon shone brilliantly. The moonlight nights of the South are +brighter than the days of the North. His Julietta, clinging to him, +murmured tenderly: "How I love you; we will live and die together." +William's head sank on his breast, and he fancied he clasped in his arms +the whole kingdom of heaven. How softly the palms were whispering! + +The young girl sat on the green shore; her white kerchief fluttered in +the wind as she waited every evening for the ship on which her lover had +sailed, waited with yearning and prayers. How her heart leaped when, on +the distant horizon, she fancied she recognized the slender masts that +appeared before her, and measured in her imagination, a hundred times +over, the space which yawned between them. Her bosom heaved, her soul +burned with joy and, as it came nearer and nearer, she threw kisses-- + + * * * * * + +"What ship is that?" shouted Moody's harsh, strident tones close beside +Barthelemy. + +Roused from his waking dream, he cast a half startled, half angry glance +at the speaker. + +"What ship do you mean?" + +"The one at which you have been looking steadily for half an hour, the +sail appearing yonder on the horizon." + +Barthelemy now, for the first time, noticed a vessel whose outlines had +blended with the ship seen in his dream, and which seemed to be swiftly +approaching. + +"Oho! Off with the Fox-Hound!" he cried. "Forward, my lads!" + +"Not to-night," shouted one of the crew from the other ship, "the Royal +Fortune ought to go. You have drunk enough, we are sober; and even my +grandfather's spook wouldn't fight sober." + +"What talk is this?" + +"The talk that came to us to-night from the rum and sugar, when even the +fish got punch from the Royal Fortune." + +"You rascals, do I manufacture sugar and brandy that you ask me for it? +When the supply is exhausted, get more. Wherever a Portuguese galleon +appears on the horizon, you can find all the sugar you want. Follow her +and drink your fill." + +Meanwhile the vessel had come so near that they could count all her +sails in the bright moonbeams; then she tacked and began to recede. + +"Follow her!" shouted Barthelemy; "See, she has discovered us and wants +to escape. Skyrme, quick, don't let her elude us. Up, up, to the chase +my lads!" + +The Fox-Hound instantly unfurled every sail; the crew of the larger +ship, greedy for prey, rushed on her deck and, aided by a favorable +wind, the pursuit of the unknown ship began, which, overhauled more and +more by the Fox-Hound, soon disappeared with it below the horizon. + + * * * * * + +The fugitive was the Swallow, the formidable English man-of-war, +commanded by two of the bravest captains, David Oyle and--Rolls. + +When Barthelemy had captured all the ships that had been sent against +him, the Swallow sailed out alone to seek and conquer him. + +On reaching the harbor, they saw in the distance the pirate ships, which +were easily recognized, and wanted to attack them at once, but were +obliged first to sail around a large shoal known as the "French +Sand-bank," and the pirates, mistaking this circuit for flight, rushed +in pursuit. + +The Swallow merely sailed far enough out to sea to lure the Fox-Hound to +a point where the cannonading could not be heard on land, and then +allowed herself to be overtaken. + +Suddenly the pirates, with loud shouts, ran up the black flag and dashed +with the speed of an arrow toward the Swallow. Skyrme stood in the bow, +holding his grappling iron ready. + +"Barthelemy and death!" roared the whole band. + +At the same moment the cannon of the British ship, with a terrible +thunder, sent a devastating volley upon the deck of the Fox-Hound, +veiling her in a cloud of smoke. + +As soon as it lifted, the pirates were seen standing as if dazed by the +thunderbolt which had fallen upon them. The deck was strewn with mangled +corpses, the black flag was shot from the mast. Skyrme alone had +retained his presence of mind. + +"Forward, you knaves!" he roared furiously, "what are you staring at? Up +with the flag again, and throw your grappling irons." + +The pirates quickly hauled up the flag, and Skyrme's stentorian voice +shouted: "Forward!" + +A second volley thundered down upon them from the British cannon. The +flag fell a second time, and with it Skyrme, whose legs were torn off by +a cannon ball. The pirates lost their self-control, and rushing to the +man at the helm, forced him to turn and spread their sails for flight. + +"Do not yield," roared Skyrme, clinging to the mast. "Shame and disgrace +upon you! Stick to the ship, and rush upon her decks. Die the death of +heroes!" + +The pirates, with a last outburst of daring, began to urge the +Fox-Hound toward the Swallow, and had almost succeeded in reaching it +with their grappling irons, when a third volley echoed on the air. The +main-mast was shattered and fell with all the rigging, into the sea. + +They were lost. They could fight no longer. + +"Throw the flag into the water that it may not fall into the hands of +the enemy!" gasped Skyrme, only half of whose gigantic body remained. +"Go to the powder room and fire among the kegs!" + +Five pirates, with loaded pistols, instantly leaped below, and at the +end of a minute, with a roar like thunder, a cloud of smoke rose into +the air; otherwise there was no harm done. There was not powder enough +to shatter the ship. The five pirates lay in the hold, burnt and +swearing, as black as if they had been transformed into devils in +advance. The explosion threw the helmsman flat on the deck and, as if +he had no other care on his mind, he screamed for his hat, which had +gone overboard. + +The Englishmen instantly took possession of the wreck, whose deck was +strewn with the dead and wounded. + +The latter were raised and cared for. + +"Don't touch me!" shrieked Skyrme in a frenzy of rage, and seizing a +sabre in each hand he began a desperate struggle. The bravest soldiers +could scarcely succeed in disarming the mangled giant, who, when his +huge hands were chained in order to bind up his wounds, tore off the +bandages with his fetters and, by a last tremendous exertion of +strength, burst them and--died. + +Meanwhile, in order not to waste time, Barthelemy captured a ship coming +from India. Her captain, Jonathan Hill, was a jovial fellow who, +accepting the pirate's invitation, sat down to breakfast with him, +became very friendly after his first glass of wine, and when the second +was emptied, asked the company to drink for a wager, in which contest he +vowed to land them all under the table. + +During this noble rivalry every man was called upon for his favorite +song. Hill had two or three. + +"Now let us have _your_ favorite, Barthelemy!" he said at last, turning +to the pirate chief. + +"I cannot sing," replied Barthelemy. + +"Oho! But you ought at least to learn the one which is being sung +everywhere about you; for instance this: + + "Far, far away the white dove flies, + In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies; + The dove is my lover so dear, + The hawk is the pirate I fear." + +Barthelemy shuddered. + +"Where did you hear that song?" + +"Ha! ha! my friend, from a wonderfully beautiful girl, of whom your +soul must not even dream; it's a pity that she was in love with someone +else." + +"Speak! when? where?" + +"Well, it was a romantic adventure. I had just anchored off the coast of +Hispaniola when the negroes in San Domingo rose against their masters. I +had gone on shore with twenty men to get some fresh water, when I heard +a shriek in the distance. 'Let's go there!' I said to my companions, +'we'll help if there is need'; and seizing our guns we rushed toward the +sound. Three young girls came from behind the hill, pursued by three +hundred negroes. The black rascals, shouting and yelling, were fast +gaining upon them. The girls could not run fast enough, for they were +dragging a large armchair in which sat an old woman. 'Fire!' I shouted, +and we sent a volley among the black devils. They scattered, and before +they could gather again, we had seized the poor hunted women and rushed +to our boats with them. The beautiful girl was as light as a bird, I can +tell you. I could have carried her in my arms to the ends of the earth." + +"Go on," whispered Barthelemy in an almost unintelligible tone. + +"Aha, you are interested in hearing of a beautiful girl? And she thought +of you, too, but how? She wrote the song about you, which is not +particularly flattering. It seems she had a lover, who had gone on a +long voyage and, as she was constantly afraid you would do the poor +fellow some mischief, she added whenever she prayed for him the entreaty +that God would sink Robert Barthelemy in the depths of the sea. Poor +girl, how she loved that man! She asked every sailor we met if he had +seen the ship on which William went. My heart ached for her. I left her +in Dublin. I don't know whether she has found her lover." + +Barthelemy's face had gradually blanched to a corpse-like pallor, his +eyes were fixed on vacancy and a strange smile rested on his ghastly +face. + +"See how the captain is smiling, he has gone crazy!" whispered the +pirates, starting up in alarm. + +"What has happened to you?" exclaimed Hill, striking Barthelemy on the +shoulder. The latter started at the touch, and a look of profound, +unutterable sadness drove the smile from his face. + +Rising from the table, he grasped Hill by the hand, drew him aside, +slipped his arm into his, and walking forward to the bow of the ship, +said in a stifled voice: + +"Captain, this is the last day of my life! I feel, I know it. You must +not ask why. That is my own affair. The pirate has his superstitions as +well as the rest of the world. The sailor knows that he is doomed when +he meets the spectre of the sea. My soul has such a spectre, and I +encountered it to-day. I know not how or where, but I shall fall. In the +hold of the captured King Solomon there are ten thousand pounds sterling +in gold dust; if I fall, take it--as compensation for your stolen +property." + +Hill gazed at him from head to foot, and then returned to the others. + +"Your captain is so drunk that he doesn't know what he is talking +about." + +An hour later most of the pirates lay intoxicated under the tables, only +two or three remaining erect, disputing the wager with Jonathan Hill, +when the man at the helm shouted: + +"Sail in sight!" + +The cry sobered some of the pirates and, staggering forward, they +recognized in the approaching vessel the ship seen the night before. + +A strange dread took possession of them all. They hastily shook their +drunken messmates from their dreams, pointed to the ship, and hurried to +Barthelemy with the tidings. The latter noticed the terror in their +faces, and said coldly: + +"That is certainly the Portuguese sugar maker which fled from the +Fox-Hound yesterday and, in trying to escape into some harbor, has now +run between two fires." + +"That's no Portuguese trader, sir," said one of the pirates in a +trembling voice. "Before I deserted to you, I served on that ship and +know her well. It is the Swallow." + +"Well?" said Barthelemy, smiling scornfully, "and suppose she is, would +my men be too cowardly to meet her?" + +"She has one hundred and ten guns and is one of the best sailers in the +navy." + +"That makes no difference. Who are her captains?" + +"One is named David Oyle--the other Rolls." + +"Rolls!" repeated Barthelemy starting. "So my presentiment was true. Up, +my men! Beat the drums, show the flags, spread every inch of canvas, +prepare for the battle! Fear nothing, the god of war is on our side." + +The buccaneers seized their weapons, the gunners went to their stations, +and Barthelemy withdrew for a few moments to his cabin. + +He soon reappeared, wearing on his head a broad-brimmed hat, with a long +scarlet plume fastened with a ruby buckle; his costume, studded with +gems, was girdled with a Persian shawl; around his neck hung a broad +gold chain, sustaining a glittering diamond cross, and in his belt were +thrust pistols whose handles were set with pearls. So he came forth, +haughty in bearing and magnificently clad, like a bridegroom going to +his marriage banquet. + +The eyes of all the pirates were fixed upon him. Every one had the +firmest belief that nothing was impossible for Barthelemy. + +The latter beckoned to Moody and whispered in his ear: + +"Old comrade, I need not tell you that this will be the hour of greatest +peril which we have ever experienced. We must hold by each other. I have +decided to approach the enemy with all sail set, receiving and returning +his fire. If he dismasts us, we will try to escape to land; if that +fails, we will grapple the enemy and blow both ships into the air." + +"Very well," muttered the old pirate, clenching his pipe between his +teeth. + +"One thing more, Moody. If I should fall, throw my body into the sea. I +want to rest on the bottom of the ocean." + +The pirate bent his head and growled: "Very well." + +Then each man went to his post. Barthelemy drew his sword and, raising +his head proudly, cried: "Raise the anchors." + +The order was obeyed, the wind filled the sails, and the two ships, with +their flags fluttering in the breeze, rapidly approached each other. + +On arriving within a certain distance, both turned suddenly. The Swallow +fired first, sixty guns thundering at the same instant. The Royal +Fortune reserving her fire, did not lose a single sail, and only three +of her men fell. + +"Up and at them!" shouted Barthelemy, "the advantage is ours"; and as he +spoke his forty guns returned the volley of the Swallow, which rocked +heavily under the shock. + +Just at that moment the report of a pistol echoed from the Swallow's +deck and Barthelemy sank lifeless on a cannon. The bullet had pierced +his heart. + +The man at the helm, Stephenson, saw him fall and, not perceiving the +wound, shouted: + +"Don't lie down, captain, but look the danger boldly in the face and +fight as beseems a man." + +Even as he spoke a jet of blood gushed from Barthelemy's breast. + +Stephenson, seeing it, leaped from his post in despair, leaving his +place at the helm, and throwing himself on Barthelemy's body shouted, +sobbing aloud: "He is dead!" + +The cry fairly paralyzed the pirates just at the critical moment; +nameless terror filled their hearts, and all rushed to their captain's +corpse. + +Moody thrust them aside right and left till he reached the body, and +hastily seizing it, he threw it over the bulwark into the sea. + +With Barthelemy, the moving spirit of the pirates fled. Throwing down +their weapons, they surrendered. No man knew exactly what he was doing; +they sank like a headless body. + +Scudamore was the only one who thought of anything. He recognized Rolls +on the other ship and, seizing a lighted slow-match, rushed to the +powder magazine, but met Henry Glasby standing with a drawn sword at the +door. + +"What are you doing here?" he shrieked. + +"Keeping you back," replied Glasby, wrenching the match from his hand +and stamping out the light. + +"Oho! Asphlant, Moody, here!" shouted Scudamore. "Here is a traitor. +Help me break into the powder magazine." + +An uproar followed. Some of the pirates wanted to blow up the ship, +others opposed it, and while the two parties were contending Glasby +poured water into the kegs, so that the powder was useless. + +An hour after the whole crew were prisoners. + + + + +Chapter IV + +Retribution + + +The foaming wine is drained from the cup, nothing remains but the dregs, +which we will also empty. + +During the battle Captain Hill released himself and his ship and, taking +possession of the pirates' money, sailed away. + +The buccaneers, prisoners on board their own ship, were taken to Cape +Corso, but not even this disaster could subdue them. The injured men +would not allow their wounds to be bandaged, and when they were put in +irons, beat their aching, bleeding wounds with their chains, and died +uttering imprecations, reconciled neither to God nor man. The others +sang wild buccaneer songs and irritated their guards with sneering +jests. + +Weighing the ration of bread in his hand one of them said, laughing: +"You want us to dry up to save hemp; we shall get so thin on this fare +that you can hang us by a thread of yarn." + +They were chained together in couples. One began to sing and pray; his +companion gave him a violent thrust in the side. + +"What do you expect to gain by that?" he asked. + +"The Kingdom of Heaven," replied the other humbly. + +"You? The Kingdom of Heaven? You passed that port long ago with the rest +of us. We're sailing for hell. The captain is already waiting for us, +and we shall enter according to our rank, and when we run into harbor +there we'll salute him with a salvo of thirteen shots. Hurrah for +Barthelemy and his luck." + +The poor, penitent sinner did not stop singing and praying, spite of the +oaths of his companion, till the latter, in all seriousness, begged the +captain of the ship to relieve them from this fellow, whose howling +disturbed the good-humor of the others, and who had proved himself +unworthy of such distinguished company; or at any rate, for the +maintenance of order, to take away his prayer-book. + +The most dangerous members of the pirate band were kept prisoners on the +Swallow, and among them were Moody and Asphlant. The latter formed a +plot to escape from their confinement some night, kill both the +captains, and form a still more powerful buccaneer crew. + +One of them, however, deemed it advisable to save himself at the expense +of the others and betrayed the plan. The prisoners had already managed +to file through their chains. Afterwards they were watched day and +night. + +Scudamore had been left on the Royal Fortune, where he was permitted +liberty to move about to care for the wounded pirates, so far as they +would permit. + +One night Scudamore instigated them to free themselves with his aid, and +die fighting rather than be executed. The conspiracy was discovered at +the moment of the outbreak and, that it might not be repeated, on +reaching the land a trial was held at once in order to make short work +of the pirates. + +They were divided into two classes, one containing the officers, the +other the men; the former had ordered everything, the latter had merely +executed their commands. The first was jestingly called the Upper House. +The trial of the Upper House ended badly. All were condemned to death; +among them Moody, Asphlant, Simpson and Scudamore. Only one was +acquitted--Henry Glasby. His noble character was known by reputation; +many owed their lives and property to his intercession; he had often +attempted, at the risk of his life, to escape from the pirates, but was +always captured. The court released him. At last he could join his +promised bride. + + * * * * * + +The end of the notorious band of pirates was noised abroad throughout +the entire world. Three young girls went in turn to every church in +Dublin, offering grateful thanks to Heaven for having heard their +petitions and sunk the terrible corsair king in the sea. Then, in a +whisper, they added: "And protect our beloved William, restore him to +us." + +Robert Barthelemy lay a hundred fathoms beneath the waves amid the coral +and sea-shells. + + +The End + + + + +[Transcriber's Note: The original edition of this text was typeset with +unindented paragraphs, making it sometimes unclear whether a sentence +begins a new paragraph or not. + +The following typographical errors present in the original text have +been corrected. + +In Chapter I, "Scudaamore's treachery" was changed to "Scudamore's +treachery", and "we do need a surgeon" was changed to "We do need a +surgeon". + +In Chapter II, "What eyes?" was changed to "What eyes!", a missing +period was added after "cried the young chief", a quotation mark was +added after "we can approach the brigantine unsuspected", "There can be +no discrimination, captain, We need one another" was changed to "There +can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another", and "to all the +details for the hundreth time" was changed to "to all the details for +the hundredth time". + +In Chapter III, a missing quotation mark was added after "It is the +Swallow."] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Corsair King, by Mór Jókai + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + +***** This file should be named 26865-8.txt or 26865-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/8/6/26865/ + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Corsair King + +Author: Mór Jókai + +Translator: Mary J. Safford + +Release Date: October 9, 2008 [EBook #26865] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 326px;"> +<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="326" height="500" alt="Cover of The Corsair King" title="" /> +</div> + +<h1 style="color: red;">The Corsair King</h1> + +<h2>(A KALOZ KIRALY)</h2> + +<h2><span style="font-size: 80%;">by</span><br /> +<span style="color: red;">Maurus Jókai</span></h2> + +<p style="margin-left: 25%; margin-right: 25%; text-align: center;">Author of "Black Diamonds," "Manasseh," "The Baron's Sons," "Pretty +Michal," etc.</p> + +<h3><span style="font-size: 80%;">Translated by</span><br /> +Mary J. Safford</h3> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 225px;"> +<img src="images/logo.png" width="225" height="263" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="center">Boston<br /> +<span style="color: red;">L. C. Page & Company</span><br /> +mdcccci</p> + +<p class="center"><i>Copyright, 1901, by</i><br /> +<i>L. C. Page & Company (Inc.)</i></p> + +<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p> + +<p class="center">The Heintzemann Press Boston</p> + + +<hr style="width: 25%; margin-bottom: 0.25em;" /> + +<p class="center">WORKS OF<br /> +<span style="font-size: 200%;">MAURUS JÓKAI</span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 75px;"> +<img src="images/decoration.png" width="75" height="72" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="center">MANASSEH<br /> +THE BARON'S SONS<br /> +PRETTY MICHAL<br /> +THE CORSAIR KING<br /> +MIDST THE WILD CARPATHIANS</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 75px;"> +<img src="images/decoration.png" width="75" height="72" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="center">L. C. PAGE & COMPANY<br /> +200 SUMMER STREET, BOSTON, MASS.</p> + +<hr style="width: 25%; margin-top: 0.25em;" /> + +<h2 class="newchapter"><a name="Contents" id="Contents"></a>Contents</h2> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="Table of Contents"> +<tr> +<td class="chapnum"><span style="font-size: 75%; padding-right: 0em;">CHAPTER</span></td> +<td class="chapname"> </td> +<td class="chappage"><span style="font-size: 80%;">PAGE</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="chapnum">I.</td> +<td class="chapname">Choosing a King</td> +<td class="chappage"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">11</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="chapnum">II.</td> +<td class="chapname">In Hispaniola</td> +<td class="chappage"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">50</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="chapnum">III.</td> +<td class="chapname">Revenge</td> +<td class="chappage"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">149</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="chapnum">IV.</td> +<td class="chapname">Retribution</td> +<td class="chappage"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">187</a></td> +</tr> +</table> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p> + +<h1 class="newchapter">The<br /> +CORSAIR<br /> +KING</h1> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>Chapter I</h2> + +<h3>Choosing a King</h3> + + +<p>The storm had spent itself, the sea was calm again, and on its smooth +surface tossed empty casks and shattered masts,—the monuments of +shipwrecked vessels. The stormy petrels had vanished with the tempest, +and the flying fish were now making their clumsy leaps from wave to +wave,—a sign of fair weather. A brigantine which had outlived the gale +was moving slowly over the almost unrippled surface of the water; all +hands were engaged in repairing the damage occasioned by the storm; +temporary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> masts were rigged, sails trimmed, the crew worked fairly +hanging in the air; for the ship had heeled far over,—a proof that her +ballast had shifted during the tempest.</p> + +<p>With the exception of the blows of the carpenter's hammer, and the +creaking of the pumps, nothing was heard save the voice of the captain, +who stood leaning against the mainmast trying to ascertain on a chart +the place to which he had been driven by the storm. The movements of the +needle were scrutinized more and more carefully, while from time to +time, the voice of an officer taking soundings, echoed on the air. At +last the captain's finger stopped on a group of islands and he said +quietly: "We are off the Ladrones." At the same moment a sailor on the +mast-head shouted: "Land!" Without the slightest change of expression, +the captain repeated: "The Ladrones."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>Then, folding the chart, he took out a small silver whistle and, blowing +a signal, ordered the mate to summon the crew to investigate the +occurrences of the preceding night.</p> + +<p>The Isles of Thieves were but a few miles distant, they had no cannon, +their sails were tattered, yet the captain spoke as calmly in passing +sentence upon his men as though he were sitting in the utmost security +upon a jury bench.</p> + +<p>"By whose directions were the sick thrown overboard?" he asked, turning +his stern face toward the crew.</p> + +<p>"The doctor ordered it," replied an old seaman.</p> + +<p>"You, Scudamore?" inquired the captain, wheeling round to look a tall +thin man in the face.</p> + +<p>The latter's countenance was one of those which, at the first glance, +appear smooth and gentle, whose features when smiling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> are even +captivating, until some expression of mockery or greed of vengeance +suddenly transforms the winning glance into an image of horror.</p> + +<p>"You gave the order yourself, Captain Rolls," replied the surgeon, with +a smiling face, and in a tone of marked gentleness, as if the subject +under discussion were some very noble deed, which he declined to +acknowledge merely from exaggerated modesty. "When the ship sprung a +leak, you commanded that all the superfluous ballast should be thrown +overboard. The men first cast out the heavy ballast; then you ordered +them to add whatever else could be spared. Then the cannon went, though +it was a great pity, for we stand in need of them, especially when off +the Ladrones, but even this did not lighten the ship sufficiently. You +again issued orders that everything superfluous must be cast into the +sea. There was nothing left<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> which could be dispensed with except the +bars of silver and the sick. The crew began to discuss which should be +thrown overboard. I answered: 'We shall not be asked for the <i>men</i> when +we reach London, but we shall be for the silver;' and, by my advice, the +silver was saved and the ship weathered the storm."</p> + +<p>"Dr. Scudamore," said the captain, with cool deliberation, "for this +inhuman deed you will be cashiered, kept in irons until we reach London, +and there delivered up to justice."</p> + +<p>"Sail in sight!" shouted the man at the helm, and several of the crew +whispered in terror; "Pirates!"</p> + +<p>Scudamore fixed his green-gray eyes on the captain and, smiling +contemptuously, said in tones which had suddenly grown hoarse.</p> + +<p>"I think it might be advisable to defer my punishment a few hours; you +or some one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> else might need my services during the interval."</p> + +<p>"That is no affair of yours," returned the captain. "To die without a +doctor or to be thrown into the sea by his orders is much the same +thing."</p> + +<p>"Ha! ha! ha! You see, it might have been better for you in the end, had +you relieved the ship of the sick in the first place, instead of +throwing your guns overboard. But that's <i>your</i> affair."</p> + +<p>Captain Rolls silently nodded to the men to take the doctor below. Then +he gave orders that the bars of silver should be concealed in the hold, +and that every man should go to his post to be prepared for any attack. +He himself, taking his weapons, went to his usual station and, without +changing the vessel's course in the least, ordered all sail to be set.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the pirate craft was dashing toward the brigantine. The black +flag was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> already visible, and a cannon ball, whistling close by the +brigantine's rigging, was the first message from the sea-robber.</p> + +<p>Captain Rolls had no cannon with which to answer. The silence was +interpreted by the pirates as fear, and one of their number shouted in a +tone of thunder through his speaking trumpet:</p> + +<p>"Ship ahoy! A word with the captain."</p> + +<p>Instantly a battle-flag fluttered from every mast-head on the +brigantine.</p> + +<p>A terrible uproar arose on the pirate ship; a tall man, with a gray +vest, girdled by a scarlet sash, appeared on deck, issuing orders in +loud, hoarse tones, upon which half the sails were furled, and with a +swift turn the light craft came round before the wind close by the +brigantine, without firing a shot, evidently considering her a sure +prey, which must be spared from harm.</p> + +<p>On the pirate's prow was carved a strange human figure, the symbol of +the ship's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> name, The Sea Devil, and, which, the pirates humorously +asserted, was the living image of their Captain Davis, whose face had +been so disfigured by the bursting of a shell that it resembled a +death's head.</p> + +<p>The pirates dashed with Satanic recklessness toward the brigantine, +whose defenders still awaited them in motionless silence. But just at +the moment the grappling irons were thrown, Rolls made a sign, and the +thunder of the report of the sailors' arms followed; when the smoke +dispersed, the two vessels were already fast locked together, the fire +had killed several of the pirates; the others, pushing their comrades' +bodies aside, were trying to climb to the brigantine's deck. In an +instant the two crews were fighting man to man with sabres and knives. +One furiously attacked, the other coolly defended; neither feared wounds +or weapons.</p> + +<p>The sailors fought bravely. Captain Rolls<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> remained in his place, with +his eyes fixed on the pirate leader, who had already fired at him three +times without making his foe even turn his head.</p> + +<p>"I'll see whether you are the devil or I!" Davis at last shouted +savagely. "Follow me, you scoundrels," and seizing his sabre between his +teeth, while swinging a huge hammer above his head with his right hand, +he sprang on the deck of the brigantine, felling two of her crew at the +same instant. The pirates, with deafening yells, rushed into the breach +thus made, and the terrified sailors began to yield, more alarmed by the +hideous face of the pirate leader than by the weight of his blows.</p> + +<p>Rolls quietly drew a pistol from his belt. "You won't hit me!" yelled +Davis, gnashing his teeth and trying to startle the captain by rolling +his eye-balls hideously. The latter fired, and whoever was looking at +Davis at the moment saw a bloody star<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> on his forehead where the bullet +entered. The pirate suddenly grasped the handle of his hammer with both +hands and sank lifeless.</p> + +<p>Bewildered by the loss of their leader, the corsairs were on the point +of yielding their vantage ground, when one of their number shouted +triumphantly: "Hurrah, Barthelemy!" and at that moment a fierce yell +arose from the center of the brigantine. While the fight had been raging +on one side, six pirates in a boat had rowed around her and crept +noiselessly to her deck, which they reached just as their captain fell. +These men, too, turned to fly, but one of their number, a young, slender +fellow, with a bronzed face, thick curling locks, and sparkling eyes, +sprang behind Rolls, and, pinioning his arms, wrested his pistol from +his hold and forced him to his knees.</p> + +<p>"Let no one stir or you are all dead men!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> shouted the young pirate in +bold, ringing tones, and the sailors, disheartened by the capture of +their commander, laid down their arms before the savage forms thronging +on deck.</p> + +<p>The victory was Barthelemy's; and his comrades' first act was to lift +him on their shoulders, declare him their captain and, with terrible +oaths, swear eternal fealty by death, hell, and the devil.</p> + +<p>A Herculean fellow raised him aloft like a child, and, pointing to the +figures lying weltering in their blood, shouted in a voice of thunder:</p> + +<p>"Who deserves to be your leader better than Robert Barthelemy?"</p> + +<p>"No one! No one!" was the unanimous answer.</p> + +<p>"Will you have him for your leader, captain, king?"</p> + +<p>"Hurrah!" responded the crew.</p> + +<p>"Stop!" cried Barthelemy from the Her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>cules' shoulder. "I heard some one +shout 'No.'"</p> + +<p>"Who was it?" roared the athlete; "does any one want to jest with +death?"</p> + +<p>"Don't rage, Skyrme, don't rage, my brave giant. Speech is free. Come +forward, Lord Simpson, you oppose my election. Step forward, my valiant +nobleman, and tell us your objection to me!"</p> + +<p>The pirates, amid rude laughter, pushed before Barthelemy a tall, fair +man, who, with his hands thrust into his pockets, eyed the new captain +scornfully from head to foot.</p> + +<p>"Speak fair, noble lord!" said Skyrme, raising his sinewy hand, +threateningly above Simpson's head, "or you'll bite your own tongue."</p> + +<p>"I should do that without your telling me," replied Simpson, +nonchalantly, glancing at his comrades. "You know that my father was +Lord Simpson?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>"Of course we do!" shouted the others.</p> + +<p>"My father was the sworn foe of Jeffreys, who, after Monmouth's fall, +brought the brave English Protestant nobles to the scaffold. My father +suffered with them. Since that time I have hated the Papists, and do not +want one even for a pirate chief. Not even you, Barthelemy, for you are +a Papist."</p> + +<p>Instead of breaking the speaker's head, Skyrme raised him on his arm +and, amid the loud laughter of the pirates, drew him toward Barthelemy, +with whom he drained the cup of friendship, after Barthelemy had assured +him, on his honor as a pirate, that he had not entered a church since +his christening, and had never been in a priest's presence during his +entire life. The new captain was then formally given the leader's cap +with its scarlet plume, and the whole band then proceeded to the work of +distributing the booty.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>Barthelemy sat on a cask turned upside down, holding on his knees a +black book in which were written in red letters the names of the +pirates, and read them one by one in a loud tone. Often nobody answered +and, at the end of a long pause, some one growled: "Dead," and the name +was instantly erased from the list.</p> + +<p>Just then a pirate brought Captain Rolls, who had been bound hand and +foot, to the mainmast, where he laid him flat on the deck. Barthelemy +raised his hat with the utmost courtesy.</p> + +<p>"Pardon me, captain, that my men have placed you in so uncomfortable a +position. You are a brave soldier and fought well. Unbind this worthy +man."</p> + +<p>"His hands too?" asked a pirate, casting a doubtful glance at his leader +from under his shaggy brows.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Asphlant, especially if the captain will promise to do nothing +against us."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>"I'll promise nothing," replied Rolls.</p> + +<p>"Well, no matter; I told you to unbind his hands at any rate, it will be +our business to see that he doesn't break anybody's head. And now, +captain, be kind enough to declare the contents of your vessel, which +you have so bravely defended. No doubt you have a valuable cargo."</p> + +<p>"You have captured the ship, and can search every corner of her, I shall +guide you nowhere."</p> + +<p>"Right again. Men, go below."</p> + +<p>The pirates instantly leaped down the hatchways and, after spending an +hour in rummaging through every part of the ship, they returned to +Barthelemy with the sorrowful tidings that there was nothing in the +whole vessel except a cask of biscuit and one of water.</p> + +<p>Rolls could not help smiling at the fury of the disappointed men.</p> + +<p>"You could see that I had no guns, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> therefore might have inferred +that, if I had been in such straits that I was forced to throw them +overboard, there would be no other ballast in the ship."</p> + +<p>"Devil take it!" roared Asphlant, throwing his cap on the deck, "have so +many brave fellows eaten lead and drunk salt water for the sake of an +empty box, full of rats? you are a cheat, captain. What had you to +defend in this ship?"</p> + +<p>"My honor," replied Rolls proudly.</p> + +<p>"Which, when we have taken it from you, will be of no use to us," said +the giant Skyrme, laughing. "What do you say to that, Moody?"</p> + +<p>The man addressed was a sullen, taciturn fellow, who was sitting on the +bulwark, holding a short pipe between his teeth. The silver whistle +hanging from his button-hole indicated that he was the pirate's +boatswain.</p> + +<p>"What's the use of so much talk?" he re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>joined. "Bore a hole in the +bottom of the ark and let the whole crew go under water with her."</p> + +<p>"For heaven's sake, gentlemen!" shrieked a voice among the captured +sailors, and a man, with his hands tied behind his back, threw himself +at Barthelemy's feet and tried to kiss his boots, while his eyes rested +despairingly on the face of the pirate chief.</p> + +<p>"For heaven's sake, you brave, valiant, worthy men! You heroes, you +demi-gods! By heaven, hell, and all that is sacred to you, I beseech you +not to murder me. Kill all my comrades, the scoundrels deserve it for +resisting you; but I have given you no offence, I never held a weapon in +my hand; I was imprisoned during the whole fight and have just been +brought out by these brave, excellent men."</p> + +<p>Some of the pirates stared, others laughed.</p> + +<p>"Gentleman, renowned heroes, wor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>shipped sovereigns of our age, hear me, +I entreat you, by all you hold sacred. I am Dr. Scudamore, a persecuted +man; persecuted as you are; I have nothing to do with these people; I am +the mortal enemy of Captain Rolls. I implore you to distinguish between +me and these people, not to condemn me with them. Oh, I beg you to be +merciful and permit me, kissing the dust off your feet, to consider +myself the humblest of your servants."</p> + +<p>Skyrme averted his face with an expression of loathing, while Moody +kicked at the writhing figure, whom every one was eyeing with the +deepest scorn.</p> + +<p>"Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "it appears that you have condemned +this fellow?"</p> + +<p>"Only accused, not condemned. The judgment lies with the English +courts."</p> + +<p>"Oh, we won't go so far," said Skyrme with a look of amusement; "make +the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> charge; we'll represent the court of justice. Barthelemy will be +judge, we the sheriffs and constables. Bring forward the complaint, the +court is open."</p> + +<p>Rolls coldly averted his eyes without answering a syllable.</p> + +<p>Scudamore, who was scanning every face with the crafty glance of a man +who fears for his life, hastily interposed.</p> + +<p>"You see, gentlemen, you see the contemptuous face with which he +receives your offer, you see how proudly, how scornfully he looks down +upon you, as if it would be a disgrace to him to recognize such worthy +men as judges. Oh, <i>I</i> will submit to your sentence, I have no desire to +stand before wiser, more just or more distinguished judges. I will tell +with my own lips everything of which I am accused."</p> + +<p>"I forbid you to do so!" cried Rolls vehemently.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>"There, you see for yourselves, gentlemen. He wants to command here +still, here, where you are the rightful possessors. He will not even +permit me to repeat the charge against me! Very natural! He knows that +he, and not I, will be condemned. So listen, gentlemen, listen, for what +I have to tell is an important matter; my crime is that we were bringing +huge bars of silver—"</p> + +<p>"Ho! ho! that begins well," shouted Asphlant, craning his neck to hear +better.</p> + +<p>"On the way a storm rose, the ship sprung a leak, and the captain +ordered all useless ballast to be thrown overboard. There was nothing +left except the sick and the silver, and the question was which should +be cast into the sea?"</p> + +<p>"Well, and you, as the doctor, of course kept the sick," said Skyrme.</p> + +<p>"No indeed, I kept the silver, and now Captain Rolls wants to punish me +for it."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>Barthelemy turned from the man in horror, while Rolls glared at him with +blazing eyes.</p> + +<p>"Oho, captain," cried Asphlant, "so there is silver on your ship! Where +did you hide it, eh?"</p> + +<p>"That I will not tell you."</p> + +<p>"You won't? Oh, the thumb screw will find out. Here, ropes, ropes!"</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?" cried Barthelemy, boldly surveying his companions. +"Are we members of the Inquisition, that we seek to learn truth by +torture? No, my friends; let no one have the right to say that the +pirates use the tools of the auto-da-fé! Should not we, who call +ourselves the heroes of the free sea, honor freedom? If Captain Rolls +will not reveal the hiding-place in his vessel we will take her into +port, pull every plank apart, and find the silver without committing a +deed which would dishonor us."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>The pirates cheered their captain's speech, and began to fasten the +brigantine to their ship.</p> + +<p>Scudamore, who had refrained from disclosing the hiding-place merely +that the pirates might wreak their vengeance on Captain Rolls, now, +perceiving that the latter had escaped, said:</p> + +<p>"Don't trouble yourselves, gentlemen. Why should you drag this miserable +craft after you? Release me and promise to spare my life, and I'll take +you to the spot where the silver is hidden."</p> + +<p>"Loose the doctor's hands from the irons," said Barthelemy signing to +his men. "I'll promise that we will not harm a hair of your head. Show +us the hiding-place."</p> + +<p>Scudamore, finding his hands at liberty, tried to shake hands with each +one of the pirates in turn, but they angrily pushed him back.</p> + +<p>"Hurry up!" cried Asphlant, dealing him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> a blow, while another pirate, +grasping him with both hands, dragged him along, Scudamore protesting +that he should feel under obligations to the whole company as long as he +lived.</p> + +<p>The pirates soon returned, exultingly bearing the chests of silver on +their shoulders. Barthelemy ordered them to be placed on board their own +vessel, while Scudamore showed the utmost zeal in helping the men, +calling each, meanwhile, his dear, kind friend, a compliment which they +repaid with all sorts of abusive epithets and the command not to touch +their property.</p> + +<p>The last to come on deck was Asphlant, who said with great satisfaction: +"We shall leave nothing here, captain! The ship is entirely empty. Shall +we bore a hole in her bottom? Or will it be better to hang these fellows +in a row on the mainyard, and let the vessel drift where she likes?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>The loud laughter of the pirates showed their cordial approval of this +proposal. The sailors gave no sign of emotion, while Scudamore tried to +lock arms with one after another of the pirates, constantly asserting +that he had nothing to do with the other party.</p> + +<p>"Silence!" ordered Barthelemy sternly. "You will neither scuttle the +ship nor hang the crew. That might do for miserable Spanish privateers, +pitiful Tunisian cut-throats, but not for us, Englishmen and Frenchmen. +Are we to make ourselves ashamed of the name of pirate, admit that it +has nothing in common with the word honor? Were not the first +inhabitants of Rome also corsairs? Our mission is to place the name of +fillibuster in a new light. Captain Rolls, you and your whole ship's +company are free to go wherever you desire."</p> + +<p>A fierce uproar arose among the robbers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> Many approved the captain's +speech, some strove to oppose it.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy stamped his foot violently. "Is there any one who desires to +contradict me?"</p> + +<p>"Yes!" shrieked Moody, stepping in front of him and thrusting the pipe +he held between his teeth so close to the captain's face that it almost +touched his eyes. "I say you are a fool, captain. You are acting against +all the customs of pirates and, if you don't take back your order, I'll +scuttle the ship myself."</p> + +<p>"Do you think so?" said Barthelemy. "Skyrme! Seize this fellow and bind +him to the mainmast."</p> + +<p>The pirates shrank back, startled. Moody was the oldest of the band, +whom no captain had ever ventured to punish. Barthelemy again motioned +to Skyrme, and the latter, rushing upon the chief mate, bound him, in +spite of his struggles, to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> mainmast, so that he clasped it with +both arms, his back turned to the crew; but, while pouring forth a +continuous torrent of oaths, he still kept his pipe in his mouth.</p> + +<p>"Is there any one else who wishes to oppose me?" asked the young chief.</p> + +<p>A suppressed murmur ran through the ranks of the pirates, but no one +raised his voice distinctly.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy now turned to Captain Rolls and, taking from his pocket a +piece of paper and a pencil he said:</p> + +<p>"Captain Rolls! I hope you will reach London with your ship in safety. +It is true that you will return her to her owners empty, but that is no +fault of yours, in proof of which I will give you the following +certificate for your justification at home.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>We, free knights of fortune, bear witness in the +presence of all whom it concerns, that Rolls, captain +of the brigantine Neptune,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> was attacked by us on the +Pacific Ocean, and, having just lost his guns and part +of his rigging in a gale, defended himself against us +in the bravest manner for an hour and a half, and did +not yield until, after losing nine of our best men and +our captain, we completely overwhelmed him and thereby +alone obtained the silver entrusted to his care.</p> + +<p style="text-align: right;"><span class="smcap">Captain Robert Barthelemy.</span></p> +</div> + +<p>"Add," said Rolls, "that you succeeded in securing the silver only +through Scudamore's treachery."</p> + +<p>"True," replied Barthelemy, adding the sentence.</p> + +<p>"Gentlemen!" interposed Scudamore trembling, "what are you going to do +with me?"</p> + +<p>"Nothing," said Barthelemy. "We promised that we would not harm a hair +of your head."</p> + +<p>"Yes," returned the other mournfully, "but if you release the captain, +and me with him, what is to become of me?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>"I don't know," returned the corsair-chief, shrugging his shoulders.</p> + +<p>Skyrme laughed aloud. "That's a splendid joke!"</p> + +<p>"For heaven's sake! What shall I say to you?" stammered Scudamore, +throwing himself at Barthelemy's feet. "Oh, gentlemen, don't leave me in +this man's power, he will have no mercy on me. He is a horrible +villain."</p> + +<p>"Ha! ha! ha!" cried Skyrme. "Don't spoil this joke, captain. When you +set the commander of the brigantine free, let him take this fellow with +him; what a fine lot of talk there will be when they call him to account +at home for the service he has rendered us."</p> + +<p>"Gentlemen! Brave men!" shrieked Scudamore clasping Barthelemy's knees. +"Surely you are only jesting with me. It amuses you to drive me to +desperation in this way, but you will not really ruin me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> You cannot +forget that I have rendered you an important service, and shall perform +still more. I am a physician; you need one, take me with you. I will be +just such a man, such a devil as all the rest, I'll be no disgrace to +your band. You will never repent having made my acquaintance. I beseech, +I implore you to say a good word to the captain for me. Oh, you good, +brave man, you leader with the face of a hero, give me your hand, that I +may kiss it."</p> + +<p>"Rise," said Barthelemy curtly. "We <i>do</i> need a surgeon, I'll take you."</p> + +<p>"What! a surgeon among us!" growled Moody, who was still bound to the +mast, "a surgeon who, whenever one of our band is wounded in the hand or +foot, will cut it off? A living human saw? A poisoner, who won't let a +man die in peace? I've no use for him. Throw him out of the ship, or +I'll kill him."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>"Not another word, Moody!" cried Barthelemy. "It is my wish, and so it +shall be. You manage the ropes and sails, but you need not trouble +yourself about anything else."</p> + +<p>"I beg you, sir," said Scudamore, "not to vex our valiant captain, you +seem to be such a worthy man, I know I shall have the warmest regard for +you."</p> + +<p>"Come nearer, so that I can see you," said Moody. And when Scudamore +approached near enough for him to reach him with his foot, he gave him +such a kick that he nearly fell over backward.</p> + +<p>"Men!" shouted Barthelemy, "bring me the cat o' nine tails. Give this +man thirty blows on the back. Whoever disobeys me must suffer for it."</p> + +<p>The nine-lashed scourge was instantly brought. "To work at once!" +Barthelemy commanded. "No one is exempt from punishment."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>Moody's eyes fairly started from their sockets with rage, and when the +man bearing the cat o' nine tails approached him, he began to throw +himself frantically to the right and left, but thereby only caused the +blows to fall on him haphazard, till at last one knocked the pipe from +his mouth.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy coolly awaited the end of the punishment, and then called +Scudamore to write his name in the list of pirates. Scudamore seized the +pen with eager joy, and wrote his signature with such horrible glee that +even the robbers were startled, and then, turning to Captain Rolls, +exclaimed scornfully:</p> + +<p>"When you reach London, inform the government of my new occupation."</p> + +<p>Skyrme laid his huge hand on his shoulder and muttered between his +teeth: "You scoundrel, you'll make a first-class devil."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>"At least as good as any of you."</p> + +<p>From that moment, Scudamore felt perfectly at home in his new sphere, +looking at the list with his name enrolled as if it were some diabolical +patent of nobility, and eyeing Captain Rolls with the air of a newly +appointed official surveying his former comrades.</p> + +<p>"Now, Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "you can take possession of your +ship. But that we may not leave our mate here in exchange for your +doctor, loose Moody from the mast."</p> + +<p>Two pirates obeyed the command, avoiding the feet of the chief mate, who +was trying to deal them a severe kick. When he found his hands free, his +first act was to give the nearest liberator a heavy blow, and the second +to pick up his short pipe and put it between his lips.</p> + +<p>"Moody!" said the captain, folding his arms, "I just punished you as +your com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>mander's subordinate; now that it is over we again stand man to +man; if you feel that I have wronged you, take your weapons. I am ready +to give you any satisfaction and, if you desire, will fight with you."</p> + +<p>Moody did not utter a syllable in reply, but hastily threw off his coat, +rolled up his sleeves, loosed his collar and, with sparkling eyes, +eagerly looked about for a weapon.</p> + +<p>"Give him arms," said Barthelemy; "which will you have, pistol or +sabre?"</p> + +<p>"Give me a sword," gasped Moody hoarsely, "we shall be nearer each +other."</p> + +<p>"Make room for this brave man, lads; keep out of the reach of his arm, +for he'll strike at any one. Excuse our fighting in your ship, Captain +Rolls, but satisfaction must be given in the presence of those who +witnessed the offence. Well, Moody, are you ready? Give a signal, when +you are ready."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>Moody, however, required few preparations, and as soon as he seized the +sword, with the flat of whose blade he dealt a severe blow on the back +of the person who handed it, he began to strike furiously around him in +every direction, so that had twelve men stood near he would have mowed +them all down—only he failed to hit the one directly in front of him.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy seemed to be merely toying with him. He scarcely moved his +arm to parry the strokes which his adversary's fury did not suffer him +to calculate.</p> + +<p>"Take care—you are running directly upon my sword—Moody, don't put +your own eyes out. Look, I am not standing where you are aiming. Don't +strike at me so fiercely, I shall think you want to kill me."</p> + +<p>It was a true robber-fray; for the rage of one adversary, the jests of +the other, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> rude laughter of the bystanders, the jeering, irritating +remarks do not occur in duels between gentlemen.</p> + +<p>The loud laughter of the pirates enraged the chief mate still more, and +he grew fairly frantic when, glancing aside, he saw among them Dr. +Scudamore, who had spread out his surgical instruments on his knees, and +was gazing at him with a look of diabolical pleasure in his green eyes. +Turning from the captain he rushed directly at the surgeon.</p> + +<p>"Oho, my good fellow, don't run overboard," said Barthelemy, barring his +way, upon which Moody, his face distorted by rage, again attacked him. +Barthelemy avoided the blow and pierced his right arm. The chief mate +instantly picked up his sword with his left hand; the foes again +confronted each other, breast to breast.</p> + +<p>Then Barthelemy, with a clever trick of fence, struck his antagonist's +sword from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> his grasp and, setting his foot upon it, seized him by the +throat and flung him among his companions.</p> + +<p>Scudamore officiously ran forward to aid the wounded man.</p> + +<p>"Don't come here!" roared Moody hoarsely, "or I'll tear you to pieces +and put you on my wounds, as the ourang outang does leaves."</p> + +<p>The chief mate would not allow his injuries to be bandaged, but though +bleeding profusely, struggled with his companions till they bound one +arm to a beam; and continued to strike about him with the injured one +till that too, was bound, after which he kicked violently and when his +feet were also tied, bit like a mad dog. They were obliged even to gag +him before the doctor could bandage his wounds, and stanch the blood.</p> + +<p>"How bad the old gentleman's teeth are," said Scudamore, with a +malicious twinkle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> in his eyes. "We shall probably have to pull out some +of them."</p> + +<p>Moody could make no reply to this hideous threat except a roar like a +wild beast's, and could not even bite the hand which the doctor passed +over him.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Barthelemy had had the brigantine's crew released and told +them that they would find all their weapons in the mate's cabin, whose +key he would give them when he left the Neptune.</p> + +<p>With these words he approached Rolls, bowed courteously, and held out +his hand. After a short pause the latter clasped it, saying:</p> + +<p>"Very well, I will take it, in the hope that we may meet again."</p> + +<p>"I hope this will happen soon. A presentiment tells me that some day I +shall kill you in a victorious battle, Captain Rolls."</p> + +<p>"And one tells me that I shall get you hung, Robert Barthelemy."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>"I thank you for your kind intention. By the way, you have only one keg +of biscuits and a cask of water—that will not supply you until you +reach London. May I offer you some of my store of provisions?"</p> + +<p>"I will accept it, and trust that you will be fully repaid."</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's not worth talking about. I would willingly lend you a few +cannons, that you may not be captured on the way."</p> + +<p>"I advise you not to do so, for if I had even two guns, I would try to +recover my stolen silver."</p> + +<p>"You are a good fellow. We shall meet again somewhere. Till then, +farewell."</p> + +<p>The two captains shook hands with each other. Meanwhile the pirates had +rolled several casks of biscuit and water from their vessel to the +brigantine. Barthelemy gave the sailors the key and, with a bound, +reached the deck of his own ship, the pirates shoved off from the +Neptune and,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> with three cheers, set sail. Half an hour later, two +vessels were seen moving across the sea in opposite directions, widening +the space between them every moment.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p> + +<h2 class="newchapter"><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>Chapter II</h2> + +<h3>In Hispaniola</h3> + + +<p>Robert Barthelemy's name became known everywhere on the high seas. +Holland and Portuguese sailors trembled before him; for when they +recognized his vessel and, after a desperate chase, gained the shelter +of a harbor, he followed them, robbed them under the very guns of the +port and, if attacked, ordered the town to be bombarded and its +fortifications given to the flames.</p> + +<p>There was no end to the marvelous tales related about him.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>On the southern coast of the beautiful Island of Hayti, in a pleasant +valley, stands a small wooden house, whose front is covered with +climbing vines, and whose windows are filled with flowers; doves<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> coo +softly on the gable-roof, and a white cat lies purring on the threshold.</p> + +<p>At both sides of the little house stretch cotton fields, whose green +foliage charms the traveler's eye as, coming from the interior, he sees +toward evening the little cottage in the quiet valley.</p> + +<p>Who lived there?</p> + +<p>One evening just at twilight, a light boat containing three men was +pulled to the shore. One left it, the two others remained.</p> + +<p>The youth who climbed the bank was a handsome fellow, with a bright, +eager face; his complexion was bronzed by exposure to the weather and, +as the wind tossed back his hair, the locks bared a high, broad +forehead.</p> + +<p>He gazed around him with the joyous expression of one who, after a long +absence, again treads his native soil, and to whom every tree and bush +is familiar.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>A rough seaman's cape rested on his shoulders, his head was covered by a +round straw hat, and his white shirt collar turned over a loosely tied +scarf; he was probably a young sailor who, after a long voyage, had +again come near his home and was permitted to pay it a short visit.</p> + +<p>The path was just as he had left it, perhaps a little more uneven than +in the old days; the doves were cooing, and the white cat purred in the +doorway just as of yore. The new-comer approached with noiseless tread, +softly turned the handle of the door, and entered.</p> + +<p>A gray-haired woman sat inside in a large armchair. She was the young +man's grandmother. With her were three girls—two were fair, the third +was dark, with starry eyes and a face like the young dawn.</p> + +<p>All started at his entrance, exclaiming in one breath; "William!" The +two sisters ran to meet him, the grandmother, unable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> to leave her +chair, only held out her arms, his betrothed bride was the last to greet +him that she might remain the longer in his embrace.</p> + +<p>There was great delight in the little circle, a hundred questions rained +upon him.</p> + +<p>"It is a whole year since we saw you last," said the grandmother, with +tears in her eyes.</p> + +<p>"A whole eternity," murmured his betrothed bride, laying her head on his +shoulder.</p> + +<p>"You won't leave us again, will you?" asked his youngest sister, +clinging to her brother's neck as if she could hold him at her side.</p> + +<p>"I can stay an hour. The ship is in the offing while the sailors are +getting a supply of fresh water on shore."</p> + +<p>"Must you still remain absent from us?" asked the gray-haired woman, +sighing.</p> + +<p>"Unfortunately, yes. I expected to attain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> my purpose in a shorter time, +but fate is against me; whenever I have thought I was approaching my +goal, I was thrust back. Twice I have acquired some property, but +ill-luck deprived me of it, and I was forced to begin anew."</p> + +<p>"Ill luck?" asked the younger sister, "that means shipwreck and pirates, +doesn't it?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, shipwreck."</p> + +<p>"And not pirates? We have feared them most! How often we have said that +they might capture or kill you, leaving us to weep for you forever."</p> + +<p>The young man smiled.</p> + +<p>"Fear nothing from them, dear. They will not harm me. At the utmost, +they will rob me of my property, and you would receive me kindly, were I +to return penniless, would you not?"</p> + +<p>"Ah, if only you would never go," whispered his beautiful fiancée.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>"Nay, dearest, I cannot let you spend your life here; I wish to see you +in splendor. I long to take you to some great, beautiful city, where you +can have pleasant society, where the sun cannot scorch these fair +features, nor toil roughen these little hands. You will see that it will +yet come to pass."</p> + +<p>"Add: with the help of God!" said the grandmother. "Every enterprise +must begin with God's favor, then it will end with it. Do you still +pray, William?"</p> + +<p>The young man sighed.</p> + +<p>"You once taught me many prayers, grandmother."</p> + +<p>"Do not forget them. <i>We</i> pray for you every day."</p> + +<p>"Yes indeed," said the younger sister. "Grandmother reads from the +prayer-book, and then we repeat a long prayer, in which we name all the +good things we entreat God to grant you and all the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> evil ones from +which we beseech him to guard you: storms, sickness, shipwreck, hunger, +thirst, sharks, savages, and above all, Robert Barthelemy."</p> + +<p>The young man gazed at her with a smile. "And why from Robert +Barthelemy?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Because he is a wicked pirate, whom no one can resist, who is in league +with the devil, and who either burns all whom he captures over a slow +fire or else casts them into the sea."</p> + +<p>"That is not true, Barthelemy never tortures any one."</p> + +<p>"Oh, we remember him, too, in our daily prayer."</p> + +<p>"Do you?"</p> + +<p>"Yes indeed. Every day, crossing ourselves three times, we entreat God +to sink to the bottom of the sea the horrible monster, whom we hold in +such fear for your sake."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>"So you all remember Robert Barthelemy at the end of your prayers?" +asked the youth, embracing the girls in turn as they hung weeping and +laughing around his neck.</p> + +<p>"Julietta!" said one, "sing William the song you composed about him and +the pirates."</p> + +<p>"You have composed a song about me and the pirates?" asked the youth.</p> + +<p>Julietta flushed crimson and after withdrawing shyly from his embrace +she sang in a sweet, tremulous voice:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Far, far away the white dove flies,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The dove is my lover so dear,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The hawk is the pirate I fear.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Oh, God, stretch forth Thy mighty arm<br /></span> +<span class="i0">My absent lover shield from harm.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Wing the dove's flight,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The black hawk smite;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Back to its nest let the white dove flee,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Whelm the black hawk beneath the sea.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>"Do you understand?" asked the younger sister. "You are the dove, and +the hawk is—Robert Barthelemy."</p> + +<p>The young man showered kisses upon the three beautiful girls, not one of +whom suspected that the dear brother, the still dearer lover, whom they +embraced was—Robert Barthelemy himself.</p> + +<p>Yet it was even so. This quiet little house had sheltered his childhood, +the gray-haired woman had taught him to pray, the merry girls to love.</p> + +<p>Two families had emigrated to this island, one from Ireland, the other +from Corsica; the parents of both speedily succumbed to the foreign +climate, and the two families became united under one roof. Julietta +grew up as William's sister to become finally his affianced wife.</p> + +<p>They were poor, and it pierced the young man to the heart to witness +their penury. He longed for a fairer fortune, and often<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> stood on the +threshold absorbed in watching some ship vanishing across the sea. He +frequently met sailors who came on shore for fresh water, and heard of +their wonderful adventures, of countries with golden sands, of the good +luck of sailors, and when he returned home he brooded in gloomy silence +for hours.</p> + +<p>One day he told his family that he was going to seek his fortune and, +bidding them farewell, embarked on a slave ship. Their tears at his +departure, the memory of how they followed him, renewing their farewell, +how his affianced wife, forgetting her maidenly shyness, convulsively +embraced him, covering his face with tears and kisses, sinking +unconscious on the shore as his boat tossed on the waves toward the +ship—all these things remained forever engraved on William's heart, +though Fate in after days inscribed much more upon it.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>His industry and honesty made him popular upon the ship, first he became +boatswain, then mate, and was already on his way home with the wages he +had saved, already saw in imagination the home, the family for whom he +intended to win a better fate, when the ship was attacked and captured +by pirates.</p> + +<p>William fought single-handed against ten, but in vain, superior numbers +prevailed. Knives already glittered at his throat, when the captain's +hoarse voice shouted: "The lad must not be hurt. Bring him to me alive."</p> + +<p>The pirates seized the youth and bore him to their leader. William +looked at him in horror. It was Davis, the Sea Devil.</p> + +<p>"You are a good fighter," said Davis in his shrill, piercing tones, +"it's a pity that you became an ordinary sailor, you would have been a +splendid pirate. Boys, give him a drink."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>One of the pirates held his calabash filled with rum to William's lips, +but he turned his head away in loathing. To drink from the pirates' cups +means joining the band.</p> + +<p>"Ha! ha!" cried the captain laughing, "You are an obstinate fellow. Have +you ever seen a man tied to the main-mast when the sun is hottest? Or +have you witnessed the jest of sewing a man naked in a raw hide and +exposing him to the sun's rays till the skin on his body shrivels?"</p> + +<p>"You can torture me," William remarked quietly.</p> + +<p>"That is why I shall <i>not</i>," answered Davis. "Here, men, release this +fellow and guard him well, for we shall yet make a man of him. Since I +turned pirate, this is the first rascal who has dared to defy me: take +good care of him, he'll be my successor some day."</p> + +<p>William remained on the pirate ship, hop<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>ing that it would encounter a +stronger vessel and he would thus be released.</p> + +<p>Not a week passed without a fray, the pirates attacked every vessel that +appeared on the horizon, even when it was larger than their own, and +always conquered; the foe was vanquished or yielded, fortune favored the +robbers.</p> + +<p>At last two ships of war pursued the Sea Devil. William now hoped +confidently for liberation. The foe had eighty guns and two hundred men, +while the pirate had thirty guns and a crew of sixty.</p> + +<p>When the pirates perceived that they could not fly, they boldly attacked +one of the frigates and, at the first fire, sent a red hot ball into the +enemy's powder magazine. The vessel was instantly blown into the air, +her companion set sail and, with cowardly haste, fled from the pirates.</p> + +<p>"So that is the fate of honest folk!" thought William, as the pirates' +shouts of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> victory echoed around him, and turning to his next neighbor, +he said:</p> + +<p>"Give me a drink from your calabash."</p> + +<p>The man was Skyrme.</p> + +<p>"All right, my lad!" shouted the Hercules, giving the youth a hearty +slap on the shoulder, "I knew this would be the end."</p> + +<p>As he spoke he drew the young man to the captain and, before the eyes of +the whole ship's company, he wrote in the black book the name: Robert +Barthelemy.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>Sisters, betrothed bride, and grandmother had wept till their hearts +were relieved. The hour had passed, William had returned. He could not +give his family a single shilling, though his ship was full of treasure. +But it was all stolen property, and William could bring nothing stained +with crime beneath the roof where his dear ones dwelt—poor, but pure in +heart.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>The gray-haired grandmother kissed and blessed him, her tears falling on +his head, the girls went with him to the shore and, while Julietta clung +about his neck, the others lingered behind, in order not to disturb the +sweet mysterious whispers of the lovers.</p> + +<p>"When shall you return?" asked the girl.</p> + +<p>"When I can make you happy."</p> + +<p>"Your love alone can do that. You need not sail the sea for my +happiness, it could be gained by seeing you always at my side."</p> + +<p>"That is what children think. I wish we could never outgrow the belief. +But—in the hands of the poor everything is poor, even happiness."</p> + +<p>The young girl shook her head.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile they reached a copse which concealed the shore, and here the +young man stopped.</p> + +<p>"Don't go any farther; my companions<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> are rough sailors, I do not wish +them to disturb our parting. Turn back now. Our grandmother is expecting +you."</p> + +<p>The two sisters, with many kisses, embraces, and tears, turned back, but +Julietta still clung to her departing lover, whispering in stifled +tones.</p> + +<p>"Take me with you."</p> + +<p>The youth trembled from head to foot and gazed with a blanched face at +the young girl, who still clasped him in a convulsive embrace.</p> + +<p>"What are you thinking of? You would come with me—to sea?"</p> + +<p>"I should be happy anywhere with you. I should not fear the storms, the +sight of your face would give me courage. I should be happy if I might +share with you every peril, every privation, which you must now +encounter alone; and if it were not God's will that we should ever +attain our goal, I could at least die with you."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>William's face clouded still more. What love! What self-sacrifice! A +Paradise opened before him. But at the portal of that Paradise stood an +angel with a flaming sword, saying: "Back, your name is Robert +Barthelemy."</p> + +<p>"I have often thought," said the girl trembling, "that some day when you +return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she come to meet me?' +they will lead you to a flowery mound and say: 'She waited long, waited +until her heart broke, she faded away and now rests here'—will you not +then say to yourself: 'Why did I not take her with me?'"</p> + +<p>"Do not talk so! Do not talk so!" exclaimed the lover, in a voice choked +with anguish. "What you ask is impossible. Go back."</p> + +<p>The girl grew as white as a lily, her arms fell from her lover's neck, +her beautiful head drooped upon her breast.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>He caught the fainting figure in his arms and laid it gently on the +grass, pressed a kiss on the colorless face, and then rushed through the +copse like a madman.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>Barthelemy thrust the scarlet plume in his hat and joined his men; no +tears glittered in his eyes, which now flashed fire; he was once more +the proud, bold, reckless corsair chief.</p> + +<p>The haughty carriage of his head, his steady glance and resolute +movements all belied the gentle, dreamy lover of an hour before.</p> + +<p>The first look from his keen eyes noticed the dissatisfaction on the +faces of the band. During his absence, their mood toward their leader +had changed. Some one had guessed its motive, and the rumor ran that +their captain was entangled by a love affair.</p> + +<p>"What is the matter?" cried Barthelemy,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> his eyes wandering from face to +face. "Why do you look so sullen? Speak."</p> + +<p>The pirates drew back defiantly. Moody thrust his hands into his +pockets, puffed violently at his short pipe, and gazed at the clouds.</p> + +<p>"Speak, old Lucifer, what has happened to these fellows?"</p> + +<p>"H'm, captain," replied the pirate, folding his arms and leaning with +his back against a beam, "don't you know the pirates' creed? The creed +of loving no one and fearing no one."</p> + +<p>"I know it very well. Do <i>I</i> fear any one?"</p> + +<p>"But you love; and whoever loves, sighs, whoever loves, feels, and +whoever feels is not fit for a pirate."</p> + +<p>"So you think that if I hold a woman dear, I may not be the equal of any +among you?"</p> + +<p>"You could not, captain! Whoever is in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> love, is always thinking of the +future, and longing, sooner or later, to retire to some quiet nook where +he can be happy, grow old, and die; he is always gaping at the moon, he +scorns his comrades and wants to be better than they. Such a man is not +fit for us. Captain, I never loved any one in my life, never, and these +stout fellows around you have neither father, mother, wife, nor +sweetheart. Such men belong to the sea, men who, when tempests howl and +bullets hiss, do not think of quiet homes and loving maidens. These +flowers do not bloom for us. If a girl embraces and kisses you to-day, +she will deceive and betray you to-morrow. Once we thought of bringing a +cargo of wives from Paris. We chose them from the Salpetrière; at least +we had no cause to fear that we should fall in love with them. Huh! Even +that didn't last long; pirate folk are not used to joking; when they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> +are angered, instead of beating, they kill. At the end of a month, not +more than two of the women were alive. Such feelings demoralize +pirates."</p> + +<p>"So you believe," replied Barthelemy, looking him full in the face, +"that your hearts are stouter than mine, because they expect nothing. +You will have an opportunity to prove it at once. Take heed. We shall +meet to-night on the high seas a fleet of Portuguese merchant +vessels—forty-two ships under the convoy of two well-equipped men of +war—from the islands of Todos los Santos, laden with gold and goods. If +you want to see a venture that will fill half the world with admiration, +come with me."</p> + +<p>"Surely you won't assert that you'll conquer these forty-two ships?" +asked Skyrme.</p> + +<p>"No, but I will seize the one which has the richest cargo and, in full +view of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> whole fleet and the men of war, take her away with us from +amid the forty-one other vessels."</p> + +<p>The pirates gazed doubtfully into Barthelemy's face, uncertain whether +he was jesting or in earnest.</p> + +<p>"This will afford an opportunity to show whose heart is boldest!" said +Barthelemy, "each one of us must cope with a hundred men, and each +individual must perform every minute a miracle at which he himself will +afterwards wonder."</p> + +<p>"Captain," said Asphlant, after a long pause, "that borders on the +impossible."</p> + +<p>"A minute ago you were all boasting of your hard hearts; Moody doesn't +seem to have interpreted your feelings correctly when he said that the +pirate should fear nothing. And <i>you</i> want to teach <i>me</i> courage. Go! +Let whoever fears to accompany me, quit the ship—we are near land—and +return to his mother! If I am left with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> but three men, I will still do +what I have said, for I am brave, not only while drunk with rum, like +you, but while my face is still wet with the tears of the woman I love."</p> + +<p>The pirates shrank back, shamed, yet perplexed, by the boundless +audacity of their leader. Barthelemy noted the effect of his speech and +turned again to them with words of stirring encouragement.</p> + +<p>"Are you afraid when I lead the way? If I should say: 'Come with me to +the bottom of the sea, we'll attack Neptune and drag him by the beard to +the sunlight, I will lead you!' Would not you follow? If I should say: +'Let us declare war against half the world, sail up the Thames, and set +fire to the Tower, I will lead!' Would you remain behind? If I should +say: 'Earthly strife is pitiful, come with me to Heaven, come with me to +Hell!' Would you not follow even there?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>The pirates, in a frenzy of enthusiasm, roared: "We'll go with you!" and +stretched their hands to Barthelemy, who clasped them one by one.</p> + +<p>"There, my men, there! We are sons of Fortune, and Fortune favors the +bold. The sea is our slave, the storm our playfellow, death our delight! +What others dare not think, we do."</p> + +<p>"Hurrah! Long live Robert Barthelemy!" roared the whole band, tossing +their caps into the air.</p> + +<p>Twilight was gathering. In the cottage three angels, with clasped hands, +were praying that God would bury in the depths of the ocean that evil +monster, Robert Barthelemy, the terror of all travelers.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>Darkness had closed in, the myriad stars of night were reflected from +the surface of the sea. Forty-two ships, sailing at nearly equal +distances from one another, appeared<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> on the horizon. The wind was fair, +the crews were sleeping quietly, the men watching from the mast-heads +drowsily announced that a sail was in sight, the captains heard the +words and turning over, fell asleep again.</p> + +<p>The approaching vessel tacked for some time, then steered straight +toward one of the ships in the middle of the fleet, the Triton.</p> + +<p>Her captain was slumbering soundly in his hammock, when the mate entered +and reported the approach of the craft.</p> + +<p>"Salute him," said the commander, peevishly, drawing up the coverlet.</p> + +<p>The approaching vessel stopped, and a boat put off in which sat six men, +who rowed with vigorous strokes to the Triton. No one seemed disturbed +by their approach. On their arrival, three men remained in their seats, +while the three others climbed on deck.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>One of the party inquired for the captain, with whom he had urgent +business. The cabin where he slept was pointed out, and the speaker +entered, the other two men remaining at the door.</p> + +<p>"What is wanted now?" cried the captain angrily, leaning out of the +hammock. To this question the stranger replied quietly:</p> + +<p>"Not another word, sir. I am Robert Barthelemy."</p> + +<p>The captain was rigid with fright. The pirate placed no pistol at his +breast, did not threaten him with death; he merely said: "I am Robert +Barthelemy."</p> + +<p>"What do you desire?" asked the captain with chattering teeth.</p> + +<p>"Nothing at all," answered the pirate, "except an answer to a single +question: can you tell me which of these forty-two ships has the richest +cargo?"</p> + +<p>"You ask which has the richest cargo?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>"If it is against your principles to answer my question, I will take +your own ship, and if you should make it compatible with honor to +deceive me by false statements, you may rest assured that you shall eat +steel and drink sea-water."</p> + +<p>The pirate's resolute language, the sight of the fierce fellows in the +doorway, speedily brought the captain to terms and he promised to point +out the vessel in question, especially as he felt perfectly sure that, +if the pirates ventured to attack it, they would certainly be defeated.</p> + +<p>"Dress yourself and come with us," said Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>"What? To <i>your</i> ship?"</p> + +<p>"That you may not betray us by a signal to the other ships. No excuses. +I must have the <i>best</i> cargo, unless you want me to content myself with +yours. Forward!"</p> + +<p>The captain yielded, threw on his clothes, and surrounded by the three +pirates, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>out daring to attract the attention of his own men, he +followed Barthelemy and his companions into the boat, which returned to +the ship.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the men on board of the other vessels in the fleet quietly +witnessed the strange vessel's intercourse with the Triton, without the +slightest suspicion.</p> + +<p>On reaching the Sea Devil, the abducted captain pointed out to Captain +Barthelemy the vessel he desired, assuring him, on his word of honor, +that it possessed the most valuable cargo, but withholding the fact that +it had forty guns and a crew of one hundred and fifty men.</p> + +<p>The Sea Devil instantly turned and steered toward the ship.</p> + +<p>She was a huge three-master of clumsy build; her elaborately ornamented +prow, the shape of her decks, and her rigging all marked her as an +old-fashioned merchantman.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>The pirate had come so near that one could shout from one ship to the +other. The deepest silence reigned on board the former, the men stood +motionless at their posts beside the ropes, oars, or guns. Suddenly, +when every eye was fixed upon the approaching ship, whose mate watched +the craft with drowsy indifference, not feeling the slightest suspicion, +the captured captain perceived that no one was watching him and, +springing on the bulwark, shouted: "To arms, men!" threw himself into +the sea, and swam rapidly back to his own ship.</p> + +<p>All this was done so quickly and unexpectedly that the pirates, in their +surprise, did not know what course to pursue.</p> + +<p>The attention of the crew had been instantly roused by the captain's +warning shout, and the pirates saw with astonishment the superior force +that opposed them.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Some looked doubtfully at each other, and all thought that instant +flight was their only refuge.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy gazed scornfully around, and quietly folded his arms.</p> + +<p>"They are only Portuguese," he said contemptuously.</p> + +<p>The corsairs burst into a loud roar of laughter and pressed closer to +the ship, whose defenders, terrified by the sight of the fierce, +laughing faces, discharged their guns without taking correct aim, not +even doing the rigging of the Sea Devil the slightest damage. The +grappling irons of the latter were already flung on her foe, and the +next instant the savage pirates sprang on deck, so overwhelming the crew +by their furious onslaught that, unheeding their officers' commands, +they flung down their weapons and leaped into the sea.</p> + +<p>The battle continued on the deck of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> merchantman, whose firing had +alarmed the other forty-one vessels, which now also began to discharge +their guns right and left, but without coming nearer, for they had no +desire to mingle in the fray, and, in the very midst of the fleet, the +pirates killed one half the Portuguese sailors, while losing only two of +their own number.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy became master of the ship, and lashing it to the Sea Devil, +sailed off with both vessels at a wonderful rate of speed.</p> + +<p>The two men-of-war that were guarding the fleet now appeared and gave +chase to the pirate craft.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy fled for a time and, after drawing the two ships far enough +away, he suddenly turned, divided his crew between his own vessel and +the prize, and sailed toward the pursuers.</p> + +<p>The latter seemed startled by this auda<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>city, signalled to each other, +and while the pirates were wondering what was to be the outcome of their +clumsy manœuvres, they stopped the chase and returned to the fleet, +leaving the Sea Devil to sail joyously over the high seas with her +booty.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The pirates landed on the coast of Guiana in a very merry mood. They had +plenty of money; for they had found in the captured ship eight thousand +gold coins, strings of oriental pearls sent by the Emperor of Brazil as +a gift to the Queen of Portugal, and whole chests of valuable goods.</p> + +<p>And was it their intention to put the money at interest, the costly +fabrics in shops to be sold by the yard? No indeed, their custom was to +drink till the last gold coin was squandered. Whoever laid aside his +share of the booty was a traitor, and whoever withdrew with his money to +lead a respectable life, they killed.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>This habit of the pirates was well-known on shore. They came on land +only when they had money and wanted to spend their treasure in the +shortest possible time. On the sea men trembled before them, on shore +they received them with open arms. There are documents proving that on +the islands near Surinam the highest officials vied with one another in +their hospitality to the pirates.</p> + +<p>True the corsairs, in a single fortnight, spent eight thousand gold +moidores, and the women of the city, from the highest lady to the lowest +servant wench, were clad in silks and cashmeres, while the costly pearls +destined for the fair neck of Her Majesty the Queen of Portugal clasped +that of the Regent's wife; indeed there were gala entertainments from +the halls of the governor's residence to the lowest hut, and the pirates +went from one to another, here a gentleman and there a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> lout, carousing, +dancing, fighting, and love-making all day long. For an entire fortnight +there was neither night nor day, only one continuous revel, a sea of +pleasure whose depths no man could sound.</p> + +<p>Then, when all joys were exhausted, that is, when the last moidore had +slipped through their fingers, the pirates went back to their ships, +rubbed their eyes, and looked about for more work.</p> + +<p>They received tidings of a richly laden brigantine which was approaching +the coast. Towards evening the helmsman saw the ship on the horizon.</p> + +<p>"Caution!" warned Barthelemy. "If they see us, they will have time to +escape. Let the two ships remain here under Lieutenant Kennedy's +command, while forty picked men go on board the sloop with me. Then we +can approach the brigantine unsuspected.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>"</p> + +<p>He himself chose his men, among them Skyrme, Scudamore, the mate Henry +Glasby, Asphlant, Moody, and Simpson, and felt so sure of capturing the +brigantine before morning that, contrary to his custom, he did not see +that the sloop was provided with a sufficient supply of provisions.</p> + +<p>The night was dark and all through the long hours the sloop fairly flew +in the direction where they expected to find the brigantine. According +to Barthelemy's calculation, they would be within gunshot of her at +dawn.</p> + +<p>And lo, when the sun rose and they gazed around the horizon, the +brigantine was nowhere in sight. They tacked right and left, but not a +sail was visible anywhere on the horizon.</p> + +<p>The brigantine had doubtless discovered them and vanished under cover of +the darkness.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>Barthelemy was furious, and, unwilling to return defeated, sought the +brigantine by altering his course hither and thither. For a week he +sailed the seas, constantly struggling with head winds and currents; on +the eighth day his supply of provisions was exhausted and he was forced +to anchor and send a small boat back to his ships for food and +assistance. Barthelemy and his companions remained on the sloop.</p> + +<p>According to the closest estimate the boat would need three days to +reach the ships and the same time to return. So Barthelemy must stay six +days at one point in the ocean.</p> + +<p>A week before they were revelling in luxury, while wine flowed in +rivers, now, under the rays of a scorching sun, they divided their last +biscuit and longed for a drink of water.</p> + +<p>At last Barthelemy thought of lashing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> some masts together into a raft, +on which he sent two men with a cask to seek land. They were almost +dying of thirst when the raft returned; the men had reached the shore +and filled the cask with muddy water. They also brought a bunch of some +plant which resembled a radish.</p> + +<p>Miry water and radishes! A royal banquet for the pirates! But soon this, +too, was exhausted, the six days had expired, the boat had not returned, +and the adverse tide made it impossible for the raft to reach the shore +a second time.</p> + +<p>The men grew desperate and began to murmur.</p> + +<p>"Worthless fellows!" blustered Moody. "Degenerate pirates, who succumb +to hunger after fasting only three days. The world is going to ruin. +Even pirates turn cowards. It wasn't so when I was young and Olonais was +captain.</p> + +<p>"For a whole week we ate nothing but dry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> roots, and then we got food +from the governor's table in the heart of Vera Cruz."</p> + +<p>"And you ventured to fight on land?" asked Asphlant, with an incredulous +look.</p> + +<p>"The ground certainly didn't tremble under our feet as it does under +yours when you go ashore; once, twenty of us, under Olonais, pushed +forward to the gates of Havana."</p> + +<p>"I didn't hear that you ever captured the city."</p> + +<p>"We came within an ace of it. Luckily for himself, the governor found +out how few of us there were in the party before we got our hands on his +throat."</p> + +<p>"So you returned whence you came."</p> + +<p>"It's easy enough for you to talk; the governor sent two hundred men +after us in a warship, while we had only two boats. He also sent along +an executioner to hang us to the trees on the coast when we were +caught."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>"So you managed to escape."</p> + +<p>"We waited for them and, after having lured them far enough from Havana, +I and another dare-devil, who, however, did not live to grow old, like +me, slipped overboard and, swimming under the ship with our augers, +bored eight holes in her bottom. Ho! ho! how quickly she sunk, how the +soldiers roared for help, splashed about in the water and held out their +hands for aid. Then Olonais went back with the boats and wherever a +soldier's head rose out of the water he slashed it off with a huge +sabre, all but the executioner, whom he recognized by his red cap and +sent back to the governor with his compliments and the message that he +did not need him."</p> + +<p>"Your captain was a bold fellow, Moody. What became of him?"</p> + +<p>"H'm! H'm! he had a strange end."</p> + +<p>"I suppose he was captured at last."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>"Far stranger than that. In a fight with savages, he was wounded and +taken prisoner. The scoundrels ate the poor man."</p> + +<p>"The boat!" suddenly shouted the man at the helm, and all left the old +pirate and his stories to watch the approaching yawl, which they hailed +with cheers, waving their caps aloft, while the returning men sat +silent, as if they found the meeting less joyful than their comrades.</p> + +<p>Skyrme was the captain of the boat. When he reached the sloop he stepped +on her deck with a downcast, angry face, and answered the questions +poured upon him from all sides: "Have you rum, meat, biscuit?" with +"Nothing," and when, wondering at the reply, the men shook their heads, +Skyrme turned to Barthelemy with quivering lips.</p> + +<p>"Captain, we are deceived, betrayed, lost."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>"Both the ships you intrusted to Kennedy have disappeared."</p> + +<p>"Impossible."</p> + +<p>"It is true. We searched two days without finding any trace of them; at +last we learned from some fisherman that, as soon as we were out of +sight, they crowded on all sail and went to sea."</p> + +<p>A roar of mingled fury and despair greeted these words; the cheated +pirates, with knives uplifted, vowed to inflict a thousand tortures on +the traitors. Barthelemy was deadly pale.</p> + +<p>"We will meet them," he said hoarsely. "There is not a moment to lose. +Forward my lads."</p> + +<p>"Where?" asked Skyrme despairingly.</p> + +<p>"To sea!" answered Barthelemy proudly, pointing to the offing.</p> + +<p>"Yes, but in this plight, without a mouthful of bread, a drop of water."</p> + +<p>"The first ship will give us both. Woe<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> to those we encounter, they will +fight with fiends."</p> + +<p>"But suppose we should meet no vessel for days?"</p> + +<p>"There are forty of us. If we meet no ship for two days, we will have a +true pirate banquet; whoever draws the fatal lot will yield us his body +for food, his blood for drink. We are supplied for forty days; those who +survive will inherit our need of vengeance. Forward!"</p> + +<p>The savage shouts of the pirates echoed far over the waves as they +boldly steered toward the open sea, and that very day they met two +well-armed sloops coming from the island of Defrada.</p> + +<p>The buccaneers were thirsting for carnage. After a stubborn defence they +captured both vessels, from which they took only the guns and provisions +and then sunk them.</p> + +<p>Again they sailed to and fro for several<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> days without encountering any +craft. Their provisions ran out and, just as they had divided the last +portion of water, they saw on the horizon a Bristol vessel. The sloop +instantly gave chase. The other tried to escape and the pirates pursued +all day, crowding so much sail upon the sloop that she often buried her +deck in the waves. Towards evening the clumsy ship, finding escape +impossible, yielded without resistance.</p> + +<p>The pirates were infuriated by the long pursuit, and the faces of many +plainly revealed their desire to cool their vengeance by giving their +captives a sea-bath.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy climbed on deck, where the crew awaited him with uncovered +heads.</p> + +<p>"Where is your captain?" he shouted.</p> + +<p>The worthy man, who was by no means desirous of renown, had gone below +to his cabin, from which he was dragged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> and brought before Barthelemy, +to whom he knelt.</p> + +<p>"Stand up, don't kneel. Lift him, that he may stand erect."</p> + +<p>Two pirates were obliged to drag the captain from his knees by main +force, but when he perceived that he would not be allowed to kneel on +deck, he lifted up his feet and knelt in the air, a comical sight which +turned the pirates' rage into laughter.</p> + +<p>"What is your ship's cargo?" asked Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>The captain earnestly begged to be released, protesting that he could +not speak while he was held in such a way, and then, trembling +violently, said that his vessel was loaded with Spanish wine.</p> + +<p>"That word saves you," returned Barthelemy, as the pirates exultingly +flung the captain into the air like a ball, and then ran down to the +hold whence they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> speedily rolled up two or three iron-bound casks. The +poor captain, sighing heavily, answered in reply to the buccaneers' +query concerning the name of his wine, "Malaga."</p> + +<p>The terrified man kept glancing anxiously toward one of the partitions +in the ship, and the pirates, noticing his fear, broke down the door, +behind which was carefully hidden a supply of the finest brain sausages, +which they brought out hung around their necks like strings of beads.</p> + +<p>This captain was a great gourmand, who had provided himself with the +choicest provisions. The pirates found large coops filled with pheasants +and Calcutta hens, which had been fed on nuts to give their flesh a +better flavor. The rascals pulled out every one of the birds.</p> + +<p>"Where's the barber?" they shouted, "Here's something to bleed!" and +they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> dragged Scudamore forward to use his valuable surgical instruments +to cut off the heads of the capons. Scudamore gleefully beheaded the +squawking fowl, each one of which the Bristol captain seemed to mourn, +and when he had dispatched the last, he suddenly seized the sighing +sailor by the hair, put his knife to his throat, and would have sent him +after the birds, had not Skyrme dealt him such a blow that he fell +headlong.</p> + +<p>"I supposed <i>these</i> were to follow!" said the doctor with a fiendish +laugh.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the pirates began to pluck the poultry, and then cut the fowl +up clumsily, lacking the help of Scudamore, who swore by all the imps of +Satan that he didn't enlist to kill animals, but men.</p> + +<p>The beautiful pheasants were flung into three large copper kettles, +white pepper and cod-fish were added, and fires were lighted under the +caldrons.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>"Oh, what barbarians!" sighed the English captain, "To cook cod-fish +with pheasants."</p> + +<p>As soon as the meat was half done they gathered around, flourishing +their knives. The captain was invited to take his seat among them and +share the meal, which he eagerly did, for on discovering that the birds +could no longer be saved, he developed a laudable intention of devouring +enough of them for three men.</p> + +<p>After the repast the wretches brought out the captain's preserved fruit, +stored carefully away for his own use, and ate it before his eyes.</p> + +<p>The rude fellows, accustomed to coarse smoked meat, greedily swallowed +the expensive pistachio nuts and preserved pineapples, while saying +contemptuously that they would much rather have onions.</p> + +<p>And how they drank the noble wine! From the narrow-necked bottles in +which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> it is usually sold! No, they knocked out the bottoms of the casks +and dipped it up with their hats, or held their mouths under the cock +and drank till they could scarcely rise. Swiftly as the wine poured into +their throats, songs and laughter poured out, the wildest shouts of +revelry which buccaneers ever uttered; even the English captain was +obliged to drink his own wine, and the more he swallowed, the more +firmly he began to believe that he himself was the pirate chief who had +captured and plundered a ship, and advised the men to hang each other, +being affected in precisely the opposite manner from Scudamore, who, +under the influence of the wine, believed himself an honest man who had +been taken prisoner by bandits; the result of which was that the two men +had a violent scuffle, and as the captain proved to be the stronger, +Scudamore lost two of his teeth.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>The former then triumphantly resumed his seat among the pirates, and by +singing several songs aloud, roused their enthusiasm to such a pitch +that Skyrme, starting up, vowed by a sea of wine to drink the Bristol +captain's health in a glass which no man had ever used.</p> + +<p>He kept his word, for, ordering a cask filled with Malvoisie to be +rolled up, he knocked out the head, sprang into it, and there drank the +health of the captain, who almost died with laughter, thinking it vastly +entertaining that a man should sit in the vessel from which he drank +without being afraid of swallowing himself.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The carouse on the captured ship lasted uninterruptedly for three days +and nights. On the third day the intoxicated pirates embraced the +drunken captain and, rolling a few casks of wine upon their own sloop as +a remembrance, took leave, urg<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>ing him, when he reached Barbadoes, to +send them a few rich merchantmen, of which just now they were in great +need. Before he arrived there, however, the captain had entirely +recovered from his intoxication and, remembering, doubtless, his +slaughtered fowl and plundered wine, resolved to send a few ships in +pursuit of the pirates.</p> + +<p>He went to the governor, related his misfortune, and induced him, in the +absence of men-of-war, to fit up a merchant vessel with twenty-four guns +and a sloop with ten, and despatch them under the command of Captains +Rogers and Graves in chase of the bold buccaneers who roved so daringly +in waters so near port. The latter were not yet sober, for they still +had their wine, and when they saw the approaching vessels, believing +that they would prove rich prizes, tacked and stood toward them.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>The ship and sloop allowed them to come close, without answering the +pirates' first fire.</p> + +<p>This made the latter still bolder and, shouting to them to haul down +their flags and surrender, they steered directly toward them.</p> + +<p>But, at the instant they seized their grappling irons to throw on the +ship, her guns suddenly thundered a warning and, instead of an easy +prey, the buccaneers found themselves in the presence of a formidable +foe, which attacked them on both sides with a terrible cannonade.</p> + +<p>The peril instantly sobered the pirates, their confused yells ceased and +nothing was heard except the voice of Barthelemy, who always felt +strongest in the presence of the greatest danger.</p> + +<p>Amid the most furious cannonade, he defended himself against both +assailants, and as soon as a well-aimed broadside had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> caused momentary +confusion on one of the vessels, he availed himself of it to run out +between them, then, spreading all sail, fled with his foes in full +chase. Both were swift craft. It was impossible for Barthelemy to +escape.</p> + +<p>The cannonade continued, the Sea Devil fighting while flying, the other +two trying, first from the right, then from the left, to sail across her +bows. Suddenly the pirate's fire ceased, Barthelemy had thrown his guns +overboard.</p> + +<p>The pirate sloop was instantly lightened and, at the very moment his +foes believed him hopelessly lost, Barthelemy's craft flew away as +swiftly as a sea-gull, once more at liberty.</p> + +<p>The pursuers, left behind, at last gave up the chase and returned to +port.</p> + +<p>Off went the pirate, like a startled gadfly, to Newfoundland. Twenty-two +ships were in the harbor. The buccaneers had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> neither guns nor powder, +nothing but fury and knives.</p> + +<p>On reaching the port they beat their drums, blew their trumpets, ran up +the black flag, and the crews of the twenty-two ships fled to the shore.</p> + +<p>The pirates chose the best vessel in the fleet, robbed the others, and +set them on fire. The lesson received at Barbadoes still rankled in +their souls, they must have flames somewhere. So long as they remembered +Barbadoes, not a ship escaped them, and if one from that port fell into +their hands they slaughtered even the mice.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>Luck changed, Barthelemy's star was in the ascendant, every day brought +treasures and victories. The whole sea was his taxpayer. At last he took +nothing from the captured ships except coined money; and the crews did +not even offer any resistance. With his splendid ship, on whose prow +was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> a carved and gilded figure of Fortuna, he visited every port in +turn, levying taxes from the vessels anchored in them. They paid +heavily; nay, if rumor could be trusted, safe-conducts could be +purchased from him—in advance.</p> + +<p>The rulers of all countries forbade their subjects to furnish the +pirates with provisions; but that was easily remedied. Ships bound for +Africa sailed at regular intervals, laden with provisions, from the +English colonies. These met the pirate by a concerted agreement, allowed +themselves to be plundered, apparently by force, and yielded up one or +two ships' cargoes. The buccaneers paid well for them.</p> + +<p>Once the young pirate chief ran into the harbor of St. Barthelemy and +went on shore with his whole crew. The inhabitants illuminated their +city, the governor came to meet him with a band of music<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> and ordered +fireworks in their honor, while the ladies gave them a ball.</p> + +<p>The buccaneers knew how to entertain. True, with them dancing was very +apt to close with an orgy, and the orgy to end in a brawl; but fair +women feared kisses as little as broken heads; for the pirates scattered +gold with lavish hands in every direction.</p> + +<p>The pirates were gallants; they wore silk garments, gold lace, and +plumed hats, the chains of two or three gold watches hung from their +pockets, and diamonds and rubies flashed on their fingers. True, the +gold lace was perfumed with rum and brandy, the breath of the flatterers +reeked with the odor of onions and tobacco, pistols and blood-stained +knives were carried in their pockets with the gold watches, and the +hands on which diamonds glittered were black with the smoke of powder. +But fair women did not shrink from these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> things, for they knew that the +pirates never left a place until the last ring had vanished from their +fingers and the last watch from their pockets.</p> + +<p>The buccaneer obtained nothing by cajolery, he paid cash for everything, +and his hands were as full of gold as his lips of oaths. So why was it +so great a marvel that the governors opened their doors, and those who +ought to have led them to the gallows invited them to their tables.</p> + +<p>The governor of St. Christopher tried to drive Barthelemy out of his +harbor—what did he gain by it? Barthelemy burned his ships and +bombarded his city; the governor of St. Barthelemy was wiser, he +introduced the corsair to his wife and became a rich man. There are as +many customs as there are countries. We should think such proceedings +very strange.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The governor's wife was a beautiful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> Creole, whose eyes fired men's +hearts. Her face was pale, but when the sun of passion glowed upon it, +her cheeks at first flushed faintly with the rose-hue of dawn, then +deepened into crimson.</p> + +<p>To watch the alternation of these tints was the school of madness.</p> + +<p>Everyone was affected by the contagion of this frenzy, save her +husband—and no one more than the pirate chief Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>The husband, a stout, placid man, sat beside Barthelemy at the banquet, +opposite to the fair Creole. Barthelemy was drunk with wine and love.</p> + +<p>"Look at that woman," he said to the husband, extolling his wife: "What +a face! What eyes! What a matchless figure! A goddess who has left her +temple to come to West India! See those eyes! How they sparkle! What +need have we of sun or stars so long as they shine upon us?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>The husband, on the contrary, paid no heed, but apparently deemed it +wiser to shut his eyes and nod sleepily.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy shook him by the collar.</p> + +<p>"Why are you not my foe, why don't I fling you into the sea, kill you at +once? I would make myself a king to call your wife my queen."</p> + +<p>The husband neither saw nor heard; when Barthelemy loosed his hold he +fell back into his chair and snored.</p> + +<p>Wild songs and the rattling of glasses echoed on all sides; each of the +buccaneers had found a sweetheart, and the voices and laughter of women +mingled with the oaths of the pirates; it seemed to be considered a +special token of tenderness—and many of the corsairs bestowed it,—to +fire their pistols in the room.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy, with a trembling hand, held out his wine-glass to the Creole +who drained it to the health of the corsair<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> king. When she set it down, +he was kneeling at her feet.</p> + +<p>She had a fair round neck, and Barthelemy could not bear to see it +without an ornament, so snatching from his own a diamond chain worth ten +thousand dollars he clasped it round the beautiful woman's throat. Could +he do so without pressing her head against his breast, and when it +rested there, could he help kissing her?</p> + +<p>All the buccaneers joined in such a thundering cheer that the walls +shook, pounded the tables with their fists, and fired salvos of shots.</p> + +<p>The husband slept on like a drowsy bear. Barthelemy clasped the Creole's +slender waist.</p> + +<p>"Come with me," he whispered beseechingly; "I'll buy you from your +husband, I'll give him a million of gold in exchange. If he wants a +fleet, I'll drive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> hundreds of ships here like a flock of sheep. Come +with me, I will rob Satan of Hades and transform it into a Paradise for +you. I will load you with treasures, overwhelm you with delights, come +with me!"</p> + +<p>"Ay, ay, Captain," shouted Moody from the corner where he sat surrounded +by empty wine bottles, "drain the cup of joy and dash it against the +wall."</p> + +<p>Just at that moment a messenger entered, bringing dispatches for the +governor.</p> + +<p>The pirates gave him no chance to speak. "Don't wake him, don't you see +how sweetly he is sleeping? You would better drink."</p> + +<p>The herald was soon completely intoxicated and, seeing the governor's +wife whispering tenderly to Barthelemy, in the bewilderment of a +drunkard's ideas he carried the despatch to him.</p> + +<p>The latter was about to throw it down<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> when, glancing at the address, +his eye caught the name "Hispaniola."</p> + +<p>The young leader's face suddenly darkened; he tore open the despatch and +with blanched face, read the following lines.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Sir</i>: The slaves in San Domingo rebelled a few days +ago, attacked the cotton plantations along the whole +coast, burned and destroyed them, and pitilessly +murdered the planters, sparing neither man, woman, nor +child. There is not a single dwelling left standing on +the northern coast of Hispaniola.</p></div> + +<p>Drops of cold perspiration stood on Barthelemy's brow, his eyes stared +fixedly into vacancy, his fingers clenched the paper convulsively; then, +starting up, he flung the Creole aside and dealt the table such a blow +with his clenched fist that the pirates, to a man, instantly became +silent and stared at him in wonder.</p> + +<p>"The carouse is over!" thundered their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> leader in a terrible voice. +"Hence to the ship, drop toying, and seize your weapons."</p> + +<p>The buccaneers could not yet recover from their bewilderment. The Creole +beauty, with sparkling eyes, pressed nearer to Barthelemy and raised his +hand to her glowing lips.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy's eyes sought Moody. The old pirate had drunk heavily, but +was perfectly sober.</p> + +<p>"You told me to drain the cup of joy to the dregs and then shatter it," +cried the young chief. "I will shatter it ere my lips have touched it."</p> + +<p>Even while speaking, he wrenched his hand from the Creole's clasp, and +drawing his sword, cried:</p> + +<p>"Forward to the coast of Hispaniola."</p> + +<p>Carried away by their leader's passion, the buccaneers joined in a +terrible cheer, and throwing down their glasses, pressed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> after him with +drunken enthusiasm from the joys of the banquet to wrestle with the fury +of the tempests.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The ship reached the shore of Hispaniola. Barthelemy promised his men +the treasures of a whole people, reserving for himself only their blood.</p> + +<p>He did not find a single ship in the harbor; there were only a few +fisher-boats tossing on the waves, from whose owners he learned that the +insurgent slaves, after ravaging the coast, had retired in large numbers +to the interior of the island.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy went on shore and rushed like a madman toward the cottage.</p> + +<p>He soon neared the hill which concealed the little valley, and continued +his way slowly, with a throbbing heart, as if fearing to behold with his +eyes what he already witnessed in his soul. The hill afforded a view of +the cottage. Here he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> had parted for the last time with his betrothed +bride; here she had sobbed, "Take me with you"; here she had predicted, +"Some day you will return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she +come to meet me?'"</p> + +<p>His very heart shrank. One step more, and he would reach the hill-top—a +weeping-willow obstructed the view and, bending the boughs apart, he +gazed down into the valley.</p> + +<p>It was empty. Bare yellow fields lay dry and withered in the place of +the green plantation, and the site of the cottage was marked by a black +spot.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy stood motionless, with fixed eyes. No sigh escaped his lips, +but he suddenly fell as if lifeless, with his face pressed against the +grass. Perhaps he might have passed into the eternal slumber, had not +sad dreams come and forced him to witness the horrible bloody scenes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> +enacted when the Satanic band burst into the quiet, lonely cottage, +where the three girls and their grandmother knelt in prayer; he saw the +rabble rush in through door and windows, seizing their victims by the +hair, the thin, gray locks of the poor old grandmother, the luxuriant +raven ones, which he had so often kissed, of his worshipped Julietta. If +he had been lying in his grave, such a dream must have roused him.</p> + +<p>"Ah!" shrieked the pirate struggling back to consciousness, like a +person throwing off a deadly burden from his heart, and gazing around +him, gasping for breath as he wiped the perspiration from his eyes and +brow. "It is well that it was <i>only</i> a dream," he faltered. Then a +glance into the valley proved that it was no delusion, but reality. +Springing to his feet he rushed wildly down into the valley to the ruins +of the hut, called the names of his dear ones,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> stirred the ashes as if +he might find them there, examined the footprints in the mire to see if +he could discover among them any traces of those of the objects of his +love. But he found nothing except the marks of clumsy negro feet, +nowhere the imprint of the dear, fairy-like ones. They were lost. Not a +vestige of the cottage remained except the charred threshold. Barthelemy +embraced and kissed it, his eyes growing dim with tears.</p> + +<p>"Ah!" he shouted, dashing them from his eyes, "Not water, but oil on the +flames! This is not the time to weep, but to avenge. A pirate's tears +are drops of blood! I will avenge you, my murdered family, on mankind, +on the whole world. Earth, grant me no more rest. Change the wine-cup to +wormwood ere it reaches my lips, and every throb of my heart to hate. I +had a single joy, my soul a single steadfast idea, which came to my +remembrance when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>ever any one sued to me for mercy, and I granted it. +That was joy. But it is forever torn from my heart, henceforward I will +give quarter to no one. Hear my vow, ye powers of Hell, and tremble—I +will send you as many black fiends as there are grains of dust in this +handful of ashes which I scatter on my head."</p> + +<p>With a terrible imprecation, Barthelemy flung into the air a handful of +ashes which he had clutched and, as they floated slowly down upon his +head, he sank on his knees and, sobbing convulsively, kissed the +threshold.</p> + +<p>"My God, my God, if it was Thy will to punish me, why didst Thou not +dash me against a cliff during the raging of a tempest, why didst Thou +not let me perish by arms, by hunger? Why didst Thou not make me mount +the scaffold? Why didst Thou permit Thy angels to atone for my crimes?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>He sobbed bitterly, while the ashes he had scattered to bear witness to +his vow, drifted slowly down upon his head.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>A traveller, driving his mule before him, came through the path leading +from the forest. Barthelemy barred his way. The man started at sight of +the fierce-looking stranger and began to appeal to his patron saint.</p> + +<p>"Whence do you come?" asked the pirate.</p> + +<p>"From La Vega. I bring good news. The insurgents are conquered and +already hang along the coast."</p> + +<p>"Bad news for me! Have none of them escaped?"</p> + +<p>"A few hundred took refuge in a captured ship and fled to Africa."</p> + +<p>"I thank you. You can go on."</p> + +<p>The messenger continued his journey, shaking his head; he could not +understand why any one should regret that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> rebels were conquered, or +rejoice because a number of them had escaped.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>"What has happened to you, captain?" asked Moody, when Barthelemy +returned to the ship. "You are as pale as a corpse."</p> + +<p>"Nothing," replied his commander in a hollow tone. "Only my heart has +died in my breast."</p> + +<p>The pirates asked no further questions. They knew all. Whenever any one +of them left the band, the others kept watch from a distance. They had +seen Barthelemy sitting despairingly beside the ruins of the hut, and +all shrank in timid silence from the pallid man.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy shut himself up in his cabin and, taking a chart, began to +study the course to Africa. His face was gloomy, but ever and anon his +eyes flashed fiercely. Suddenly he heard a knock at the door and angrily +opened it.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>"Who is disturbing me, now?"</p> + +<p>"I, captain," replied Scudamore. "We need your judgment."</p> + +<p>"Go until to-morrow. I will grant no favors to-day."</p> + +<p>"I want no favors from you, only the execution of the law. Three members +of the band took advantage of the time during which we were on shore to +desert and take refuge in the interior of the island. But I sleep with +my eyes open and, though I have but two of them, can watch the whole +hundred men."</p> + +<p>"And me also?"</p> + +<p>"There can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another, whoever +seeks to leave us is a traitor. We want no path for retreat, only for +advance. Whoever has once sworn faith, is ours forever, belongs to hell, +no power can free him, and if he will not live with us he must die."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>"Have you captured the fugitives?"</p> + +<p>"All three, they were only a mile from La Vega when we overtook them."</p> + +<p>"Bring them before me singly."</p> + +<p>Scudamore went in search of the prisoners, with fiendish delight, and +returned dragging the first one by the ear.</p> + +<p>He was a cowardly fellow whom the pirates had forced to join their band.</p> + +<p>"Oh, captain!" he cried falling on his knees before Barthelemy, "if you +believe in God and the angels, let me leave this accursed place. You are +all doomed to hell, permit me to save my soul from the flames of +purgatory. Oh! all you saints of Heaven, have mercy on my sinful head."</p> + +<p>A horrible roar of laughter from the pirates greeted these imploring +words.</p> + +<p>"You shall die," said Barthelemy coldly, motioning to the men to lead +him away.</p> + +<p>"Captain! For heaven's sake, you won't let me die thus, without the +sacrament<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> or extreme unction, to the ruin and eternal perdition of my +soul?"</p> + +<p>"Wait, I'll confess you," said Scudamore with a diabolical laugh, +putting the rope around the doomed man's neck.</p> + +<p>"Oh God, my Creator, is there no one to say a prayer for me? Alas, I +once knew so many and have forgotten them all."</p> + +<p>The pirates, laughing loudly, dragged to the mast the unhappy man, who +began to roar the air of a song whose words he had long since forgotten. +A minute later the song ceased, the man was hanging above.</p> + +<p>The second prisoner was now brought forward. He, too, was only a common +sailor. His companions were forced to bind him hand and foot in order to +drag him before the captain, and he kept up a constant torrent of oaths.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I ran away from you because I loathed this vile, roystering life, +toiling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> and fighting every day and when, at the risk of death, one +gained a little money, a man had to throw it away. I'll run from you a +hundred times more."</p> + +<p>"Not once," replied Scudamore grinning. He apparently had far more taste +for the hangman's trade than for the physician's. Barthelemy silently +waved his hand, and the pirate hung.</p> + +<p>The third prisoner now appeared, and Barthelemy exclaimed in surprise, +"That is Henry Glasby."</p> + +<p>The former captain of the Fortuna was the third captive.</p> + +<p>Glasby was a handsome young man, with a noble face, whom the pirates +kept among them by force on account of his superior knowledge of +seamanship; his gentle nature and kind heart were known to the whole +band, for he protected all who fell into their hands, as far as lay in +his power, frequently paying their ransom out of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> own pocket; his +entreaties had saved many a ship from burning, and he had always kept +aloof from the bacchanalian orgies of his companions, for which reason +they did not hold him in special regard, and always watched him with +suspicious eyes. He had already made one attempt to escape, which had +been pardoned, now he was certainly doomed. After the first expression +of surprise, Barthelemy's face had regained its cold, unmoved composure. +Scudamore awaited the verdict with greedy impatience.</p> + +<p>Glasby stood before Barthelemy with unquailing resolution.</p> + +<p>"You have already pronounced sentence upon two," he said fearlessly. +"There is no reason why you should make me an exception. I have but one +request; send this valueless locket containing my portrait to my +mother,—she lives in Norfolk. It also has a curl of hair belong<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>ing to +my betrothed bride, whom I longed to see, and for whom I die."</p> + +<p>Barthelemy trembled and gazed intently at Glasby's face.</p> + +<p>"You have a betrothed bride whom you longed to see?" he said in a +stifled voice, loosing the ropes from his wrists—"go back to her, I +release you—"</p> + +<p>"Captain! Two are hanging already," shouted Scudamore, furious as he saw +the escape of the man whose death he most desired. "The third rope is +waiting for its ornament."</p> + +<p>"It will pull up the man who dares to contradict my judgment!" answered +Barthelemy, gazing fiercely at the defiant faces, and closed the door of +his cabin behind him.</p> + +<p>The whole band remained silent.</p> + +<p>From that moment Barthelemy was completely transformed. His heart was +stone, nothing touched it except a woman's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> sobs; then he fled, it was +more than he could bear.</p> + +<p>To his men he was stern to the point of injustice, the most trivial +offence did not escape his punishment, every evening he held a court of +justice by which he had those who were accused imprisoned in the ship's +hold, flogged, or shot. Yet there was one person whom he never attacked, +Glasby. He spent whole nights in questioning him about his family life, +his mother, and his betrothed bride, listening with eager attention to +all the details for the hundredth time. He showed mercy to no one, +burning or sinking the captured ships, unmoved by submission or +entreaties, but if a vessel chanced to have a woman on board, and he +heard her voice he would take nothing from the ship and let her pursue +her way uninjured.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>One day he assembled the crews of both<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> pirate cruisers on the deck of +the Commodore.</p> + +<p>"My lads," he said, "life here is beginning to grow wearisome. Fortune +offers her favors in vain, there is no one on this side of the world +whom we fear; we have plenty of booty, but no fame, for we encounter no +foemen worthy of us. Let us go farther. These Dutch and Portuguese +merchantmen already fear us to such a degree that they almost love us. +Let us go where we are not known, among the English and French, whose +troops sleep secure in their fortresses along the coast, where Fortune +is still a coy maiden who permits her favors to be grasped only by +strong hands. Let us win honor and fame in the places where the wise +law-makers have written a hundred paragraphs against us in their code of +laws, let us tear out the page, and place in its stead the words that +there are no laws for the brave."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>Barthelemy wished to fire his comrades' hearts as he had done in former +days, but he was unsuccessful, the tones which had once thrilled them +were dead; the fire in his soul, one spark of which had sufficed to +kindle theirs, was extinct. Now he could influence them only by his +coldness.</p> + +<p>"Pirates," he went on, folding his arms, "I promised you treasures, you +promised me blood. Let us both keep our word. Our work here is beggarly. +To plunder the ships of peaceful merchants, who surrender their goods +without defence! And of what use are they? We merely give them away. I +will take you to the home of treasures, the coasts of Africa, where +ships laden with gold-dust plough the sea, where the negro kings sleep +on golden sand and the negro warriors fight with golden weapons. We will +plunder <i>these</i> ships, dig the golden sand from under<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> the sleeping +kings, and bury them in it, wrench the precious weapons from the +negroes' hands and give them cheaper ones of iron in their hearts."</p> + +<p>This pleased the pirates who made up the Commodore's crew, and they +responded with murmurs of approval, but the Fortuna's men remained +silent, with sullen, defiant faces.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy noted the different effect he had produced, and wrapping +himself deliberately in his ample cloak, whose folds concealed his +hands, he added: "Perhaps there is some one who does not approve this +plan, let him state what he has against it. He can speak freely, I will +listen."</p> + +<p>The crew of the Fortuna began to gather into groups and whisper +together; at last two men came forward, hitching their trousers, and +stood with resolute faces before the captain.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>"Yes, we don't approve of your plan, captain," said one, and the other +nodded assent, while their comrades murmured approval.</p> + +<p>"You don't approve of it, my children?" asked Barthelemy in his sweetest +tones, "and why?"</p> + +<p>"Because we are not tired of having things go well with us and finding +booty everywhere without danger," said one.</p> + +<p>"Because we don't want to seek unknown risks in unknown gold regions," +added the other.</p> + +<p>"Where there are laws against us."</p> + +<p>"And where royal men-of-war protect commerce."</p> + +<p>"We don't care for fame, but prizes."</p> + +<p>"And we would rather stay here, where people fear us, than go where we +must fear others."</p> + +<p>"If you want blood, we can shed as much here for you as you desire."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>"But we won't go a thousand miles and seek danger merely to avenge you +on the negroes who killed your sweetheart."</p> + +<p>Robert Barthelemy's face blanched to a ghastly pallor.</p> + +<p>"You wish to stay here, my dear children," he replied in a tone of +childlike blandness. "You like it here, and are afraid to go elsewhere. +Why, my dear children, just think it over a moment."</p> + +<p>"We have already thought of it," they answered defiantly.</p> + +<p>"Very well," said Barthelemy, suddenly throwing back his cloak, and the +next instant he had sent a bullet through the heads of both.</p> + +<p>For a moment the others stood petrified with horror, then they turned +furiously upon Barthelemy, their eyes and knives flashing around him.</p> + +<p>"What! You dare to oppose, when I command! Away with you, worthless<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> +rascals!" thundered their young leader in a voice which rose above the +fray, and seizing a piece of stout rope he rushed among them, dealing +blows right and left at the mutineers, who were so amazed by his daring +that, forgetting their rage, they scattered.</p> + +<p>"Put them all in irons. Keep them in confinement on bread and water for +three days! If any one utters a word against me, throw him into the +sea," shouted Barthelemy, and in a moment the Fortuna's crew were +disarmed by the Commodore's men.</p> + +<p>"You are taking a great risk," Glasby whispered to Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I fear neither man nor devil," replied the pirate defiantly.</p> + +<p>The ships sailed for Africa that very day. The time of punishment of the +Fortuna's crew expired on the third, and Barthelemy, to prevent any +attempt at flight, removed all the nautical instruments and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> all the men +who had any knowledge of navigation to the Commodore.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless the Fortuna vanished one night when they were still four +hundred miles from the African coast.</p> + +<p>As Barthelemy predicted the ship ran on a sandbank in the first storm +which overtook her, and her crew all perished.</p> + +<p>But the leader did not give up his plan; though his strength was +diminished, his courage was unchanged.</p> + +<p>One morning at dawn he saw a mountain peak on the horizon—it was Cape +Corso. "We have reached our destination," said Barthelemy to the +exulting pirates, and began to cruise up and down before the harbor.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>At that time the French government had a monopoly of the india-rubber +trade and, as the most venomous antidote of monopoly is smuggling, the +coasts of Cayenne<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> were constantly watched by French men-of-war.</p> + +<p>Two of them instantly noticed the suspicious craft and, believing it to +be a smuggler, gave chase. Barthelemy lured them too far from the shore +for the battle to be seen, then, after a short conflict, conquered both, +sank one and, keeping the other, manned it with part of his crew under +the command of Skyrme, and called it the Fox-Hound.</p> + +<p>From the French prisoners he learned that the two most formidable +English war-ships, the Weymouth and Hirondelle had left the coast and +would not return for several months, so they sailed boldly into the +harbor.</p> + +<p>The Onslow, the finest vessel of the Anglo-African Company was lying at +anchor in the port.</p> + +<p>Her captain and officers were on shore, where the governor was giving a +ball in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> their honor. From the windows of his residence they could see +the pirates assail their ship and, ere they could hasten back to it, the +crew had surrendered.</p> + +<p>The captain of the Onslow, Fennimore Gee, rowed alone to the pirate ship +and, pistol in hand, demanded that Barthelemy should restore his ship +and fight with him like an honest man, instead of attacking by stealth.</p> + +<p>The novel proposition of returning a captured ship to its owner and then +fighting for its possession so pleased Barthelemy that he declared his +willingness to accept it.</p> + +<p>His own men also accepted the challenge, but the Onslow's crew refused +to fight against Barthelemy, and begged him to take them into his band.</p> + +<p>Captain Gee despairingly fired his pistols among the rascally throng, +and appealed to Barthelemy, if he had a drop of honor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>able blood in his +body, not to stain his fame as a buccaneer by receiving into his band +the worthless fellows who, in the hour of peril, had deserted their +captain.</p> + +<p>"I'll tell you, my worthy captain," said Robert gayly to his opponent, +tossing in the little boat on the waves below. "You are so brave a man +that I could not reconcile my conscience to leaving you without a ship. +Come, I'll give you, in exchange for the Onslow, my own vessel, the +Commodore here. I can vouch for its being a good sailer and valuable, +though I got it very cheap. But from sheer philanthropy, I can't give up +your crew, you would decimate it; the soldiers, however, you shall have, +I don't care what becomes of the land rats."</p> + +<p>So before the eyes of the whole harbor, he exchanged ships with the +English captain, and after having the old name Onslow effaced and Royal +Fortune painted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> over it in large gilt letters, he set sail with both +his vessels for Calabar.</p> + +<p>By way of pastime, part of the pirates, under Skyrme's command, made +short expeditions on the Fox-Hound to search for any ships that might be +crossing their path.</p> + +<p>One day the Fox-Hound returned to the Royal Fortune, with all sail set, +and reported having noticed on the horizon two suspicious vessels, which +instantly gave chase; they were probably men-of-war, and the Fox-Hound +had escaped only by crowding on all sail, but they were still pursuing.</p> + +<p>"Let them come," said Barthelemy, sweeping the sea with his glass, and +soon discovered on the horizon the two ships which, at that distance, +resembled sea-gulls.</p> + +<p>"Those are not men-of-war," cried Barthelemy, "they look more like +pirates,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> and are coming toward us with every inch of canvas spread. +They will fare badly."</p> + +<p>"Ha! ha!" laughed Skyrme, "that's all we lack. We have conquered plenty +of merchantmen and war-ships, now we must capture pirates to have the +whole variety."</p> + +<p>The entire crew watched the approaching ships with eager curiosity, +saying to one another, "They think they are attacking a government ship, +how amazed they will be when they reach us!"</p> + +<p>Moody was shading his eyes first with one hand and then the other, +straining them till they fairly started from their sockets. Suddenly he +clapped his hands, threw up his hat, and throwing himself down on the +deck laughed till he was red in the face.</p> + +<p>"Moody! Have you gone crazy?" asked Barthelemy. "The man never laughed +be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>fore in his whole life. What ails you, Moody?"</p> + +<p>"Don't you know those ships?" he asked, half raising himself, then flung +himself back in another fit of laughter so uncontrollable that the men +were obliged to seize and hold him before he grew quiet.</p> + +<p>"Speak, old lunatic, what ails you?"</p> + +<p>"When I tell you, you'll all jump out of your skins. Don't you see those +two ships? Don't you recognize them? They are the Sea Devil, and the +Dutch ship which ran away from us, left us starving on the sea, and now +are coming straight into the jaws of our guns! Isn't it enough to drive +a man mad with joy?"</p> + +<p>The awful shout of delight from the pirates drowned Moody's laughter; +with bloodthirsty eagerness they rushed for their weapons, climbed on +the yards to get a better view of the approaching vessels, and shook +their fists at them.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>They had found the traitors who had left their comrades to meet the most +terrible death by starvation, and who now voluntarily came to encounter +their revenge. This thought moved even Barthelemy so much that a burning +flush crimsoned his pale face. His mute lips refused to give utterance +to his feverish joy, but his countenance belied them.</p> + +<p>"Calm yourselves!" he said to his men, "we'll let them come nearer; get +behind the bulwarks, they must be an easy prey, and their hearts shall +stop beating when they suddenly see our faces."</p> + +<p>The buccaneers quietly drew back; their foes came toward them with every +sail spread. Already they could see distinctly on the prow the hideous +figure of the Sea Devil, and as the pirates recognized one man after +another they whispered, gnashing their teeth: "There is so and so!"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>"Keep your weapons ready," Barthelemy commanded in a low tone.</p> + +<p>"We need no knives, we'll tear them to pieces with our nails," said +Asphlant.</p> + +<p>On arriving within gunshot range, the black flag suddenly fluttered from +every masthead of the Sea Devil, and a bullet, hissing between the Royal +Fortune's sails was the challenge to speak. The deepest silence reigned +on Barthelemy's ship. The Sea Devil sailed close up to it, the Dutch +consort remaining a little behind. "Oho! Where is your captain?" shouted +some one on the Sea Devil.</p> + +<p>"That's Kennedy's voice!" whispered Barthelemy giving the signal to +raise the black flag.</p> + +<p>At the moment when, to the horror of the men on the Sea Devil, the black +flag floated from the Royal Fortune's mast, Barthelemy sprang on the +bulwark, shouting in stentorian tones:</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>"I am here, you worthless traitors! Do you still know Robert +Barthelemy?"</p> + +<p>The assailants were instantly as silent as if death had stricken them; +Kennedy, in his terror, leaped into a boat and, pushing off from the +ship tried to reach the Dutch vessel, the others flung their weapons +away like madmen and, in the insanity of terror, leaped into the waves.</p> + +<p>They were soon released from their trouble; two volleys poured at the +same moment from the guns of the Royal Fortune and the Fox Hound +shattered the Sea Devil which, amid frightful shrieks of despair, sank +with every man on board.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Kennedy and a few others had succeeded in reaching the Dutch +ship, which instantly spread every sail in a desperate effort to reach +the land.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy pursued with both his ships.</p> + +<p>The fugitive flung overboard all her bal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>last and finally even her guns, +by which sacrifice she succeeded in reaching the shore before the other +ships could interpose.</p> + +<p>A throng of Calabrian negroes stood on the land watching the fight.</p> + +<p>Kennedy hastily ordered his men into the boats and escaped to the shore. +"Not even that will save you," said Barthelemy, ordering the largest +boat to be lowered. He had eight guns placed in it, entered himself with +forty of his men, and commanded them to row to the beach.</p> + +<p>Kennedy saw that Barthelemy intended to land and began to tell the +negroes, with loud cries, that he was a monster who had come to conquer +their land and burn their dwellings. They must on no account permit him +to come ashore.</p> + +<p>The shouts of the negroes showed that the pirates had succeeded in +exciting these savages against their former com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>rades, and the negroes +soon began to greet the boat with a shower of arrows and stones.</p> + +<p>"So much the better," murmured Barthelemy. "Two at one blow: traitors +and negroes. To-day vengeance will reap a harvest, this is the festival +of death. Fire among them."</p> + +<p>The guns of the boat roared, scattering death among the blacks, in whose +ranks the bombs tore wide openings, and, amid this thunder, forty men +landed in the face of ten thousand negroes.</p> + +<p>Kennedy and his companions urged the Calabrians to a desperate defence, +and they rushed with bloodthirsty fury at the buccaneers, hurling a +cloud of arrows and lances.</p> + +<p>Only two or three fell wounded by these missiles, the others moved +forward in close ranks, aiming at the most prominent leaders in the +negro ranks.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>When the latter saw their strongest warriors, who in battle were equal +to a hundred men, fall by invisible weapons sent from a distance before +they could reach their assailants with their battle axes, they began to +retreat in confusion, left their huts and, dragging Kennedy and his men +with them, climbed a steep hill, up which they could not be followed, +and from which no efforts availed to draw them. Barthelemy, with wild +delight, walked over the battle-ground, counting the corpses. They had +all been victims of his revenge for his murdered love.</p> + +<p>"This was blessed work," he murmured. "Hell is blacker by eight hundred +negroes."</p> + +<p>"Captain," said Scudamore, rousing him from his reverie, "our bitterest +enemies have escaped under our eyes. There is but one way to reach and +destroy them in the place where they have sought refuge."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>"What is it?"</p> + +<p>"It would be idle for me to show you, you would not use it, but give me +authority to do as I please for half an hour and I promise to bring you +the heads of all these traitors without sacrificing one of our men."</p> + +<p>"I should like to see that."</p> + +<p>"You will hear it. You need not witness it; it is a stratagem of war +which you could not learn from me. Go back to the ship and wait for my +return."</p> + +<p>This bold language surprised Barthelemy. A sort of intoxication arising +from the bloodshed still held him in thrall, and he allowed himself to +be persuaded to return to the Royal Fortune and let the doctor work his +will. As soon as the captain was out of sight, Scudamore ordered the +pirates to go to the deserted cabins and murder the families of the +fugitives.</p> + +<p>Shouting exultingly, the fierce crew,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> thirsting for revenge, obeyed; +from the lofty cliff the blacks saw their wives killed, their children +slaughtered, and when all were slain, their homes set on fire and +destroyed amid clouds of smoke that rose to their eyrie.</p> + +<p>Then Scudamore stepped forward and shouted:</p> + +<p>"Now, you black scoundrels, you have seen how we served your families. +The same fate awaits you, down to the last man, if you don't submit and +surrender our friends, whom you dragged away with you."</p> + +<p>Kennedy saw through the stratagem and protested violently.</p> + +<p>"Don't believe a word he says, the whole thing is a fiendish plot, we +are no friends of his, we don't know one another."</p> + +<p>"Kennedy, don't be a coward," said Scudamore reproachfully, "why should +you deny that you agreed to lead these people<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> astray so that they would +run into the mouths of our guns? Be bold, and with the help of your +stout comrades throw them down on our knives; I, a pirate, am worth a +hundred negroes; don't disown me."</p> + +<p>The negroes, with threatening gestures began to surround Kennedy and his +men, who in great terror, tried to defend themselves.</p> + +<p>"Brave friends, don't believe the words of that devil, we never saw him; +those men are our worst enemies."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Kennedy, you disgrace us, how can you disown us when you, too, sail +under the black flag? If we had never seen each other how should I know +that you have, on your left shoulder, the mark of a gallows, branded +there when you were in the pillory?"</p> + +<p>The negroes instantly seized Kennedy, stripped his coat from his +shoulders and,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> as soon as they had convinced themselves that +Scudamore's words were true, they flung him down and one, raising his +copper axe, set his foot upon his victim's neck.</p> + +<p>"Don't hurt a hair of his head!" shouted Scudamore, feigning fury. The +next instant the axe fell, and Kennedy's head was hurled over the cliff.</p> + +<p>The others followed.</p> + +<p>When the half hour expired, Scudamore returned to Barthelemy and, +pointing to the boat, said: "There are the heads of the traitors!"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p> + +<h2 class="newchapter"><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>Chapter III</h2> + +<h3>Revenge</h3> + + +<p>The time of the monsoons had come. News of shipwrecks arrived daily. The +elements of the air and sea were ceaselessly contending in a strife +before which the petty quarrels of men were ended. Nothing was heard at +present of Barthelemy. The English and Dutch agencies were perfectly +aware that his ships were anchored in the harbor of Cape Corso. Who +would venture to tempt Providence by putting to sea in such weather? The +heart of the boldest pirate trembles when he sees sky and water +transformed into darkness, illumined only by flashes of lightning. It +would be a devil and not a man who, amid this illumination, would risk a +battle in the midst of peals of thunder and the howling of the gale.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>Barthelemy was resting on the coast; his men were drinking, carousing +and giving banquets. What else could they do in such terrible weather +when, each morning, the sea flung fresh wrecks upon the strand?</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the governments were quietly gathering their ships against the +bold pirates who dared, single-handed, to assail a whole quarter of the +globe; in the harbor of Mydaw alone there were eleven ships waiting only +for the King Solomon with its eighty guns, and the Swallow with its +hundred and ten, to set sail in pursuit of Robert Barthelemy as soon as +the monsoons were over.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The tempest was raging, the sea tossed wildly, the black clouds hung so +low that it seemed as if they nearly touched the waves, and the surges +tossed their white foam upward toward the clouds.</p> + +<p>The horizon was a dark violet blue,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> through which darted flashes of +lightning. A ship was visible far away tossing on the billows, its +closely furled sails and erect masts looking like black crosses.</p> + +<p>It was the King Solomon, a proud warship, with three tiers of decks +supplied with windows, which resembled a three-story house with wings; +but windows and portholes were now tightly closed.</p> + +<p>The rain was pouring, black and white stormy petrels fluttered around +the vessel, and ever and anon the waves tossed aloft one of the sharks +swimming around the ship, which looked down greedily a moment, with its +cold, fixed eyes, at the trembling sailors.</p> + +<p>Every man had his hands full; in the midst stood Captain Trahern; the +boldest of the crew were in the rigging, trying to secure the sails; +others were attempting to rig a jury mast in place of one which had been +carried away.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> Another group toiled at the pumps, and four men were at +the helm, straining every muscle whenever a wave stronger than usual +dashed against the bow of the ship. In the intervals of rest the sailors +at the helm talked with one another.</p> + +<p>"What a gale! It's impossible for us ever to reach port again."</p> + +<p>"We came near sticking fast in the clouds just now, the waves flung us +up so high."</p> + +<p>"Lord help us! The thunderbolts are falling like ripe pears, one of us +will be hit presently."</p> + +<p>"Hush, don't you see the St. Elmo's fire yonder at the mast-head?" asked +Philip, the helmsman.</p> + +<p>"St. George preserve us!" whispered the others in horror. "That means +evil. The St. Elmo's fire usually appears only on ships devoted to +destruction. See how it dances!"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>"Mind your helm!" shouted the captain, but it was too late; while the +men were staring at the electrical phenomena hovering around the +mast-head, a huge wave approached the ship, a wave which resembled a +transparent mountain-chain in motion. Every effort to put the ship about +proved futile, the vast surge, higher than the highest mast-head, rolled +nearer, its top crested with foam. The men clung to the rigging and +bulwarks. Suddenly the King Solomon rose more rapidly, tossed upward on +the towering wave, and the next moment lay on her side with her masts in +the water and wave after wave sweeping over her decks. In a few minutes +the ship righted again, the water rolling from her as it drips from the +plumage of a swan, and the crew, drenched to the skin, returned to their +tasks.</p> + +<p>"See! The St. Elmo's fire is still shining at the mast-head!" cried +Philip, "if it were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> not kindled by the devil, that flood of water would +have put it out."</p> + +<p>"Those stormy petrels suspect something wrong, too, they follow us +everywhere."</p> + +<p>"Jack says he saw the spectre ship last night."</p> + +<p>"Is that true, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"Why should I say so, if I hadn't seen it? You were all asleep, I stood +alone at the helm. Suddenly, from the distance, the form of a ship moved +toward us. It seemed scarcely to touch the water, and was sailing +against the wind. Shadows that looked like men were moving about her +deck as if pulling on the ropes, and a misty shape, like the captain, +glided to and fro. Terrified, I hailed the apparition, and suddenly the +whole vision vanished, but I heard distinctly, above the whistling of +the wind and the plashing of the waves, the flapping of the ropes +against the mast of the spectre ship."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>"That means mischief."</p> + +<p>The sailors gazed timidly at the cloud-veiled horizon, as they usually +do when ghost stories are told in their presence.</p> + +<p>"Look, look yonder!" said Philip, suddenly pointing into the gray mist, +"I swear by St. George, I see the spectre ship!"</p> + +<p>His messmates, panting for breath, followed the direction of his finger. +The lightning flashed and they all made the sign of the cross.</p> + +<p>"There it is."</p> + +<p>"What do you see there?" called the captain, noticing the surprise of +his men.</p> + +<p>"The spectre ship, sir," one of them answered at last, trembling.</p> + +<p>Trahern began to scan the vessel through his spy-glass.</p> + +<p>"That's no spectre ship," he said after a short pause.</p> + +<p>"What else could she be, sir? Would any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> mortal man carry sail in such a +tempest? See how fast she approaches us! She does not heed the shock of +the waves, but flies like a bird."</p> + +<p>"That is no spectre ship," the captain repeated, "they are pirates."</p> + +<p>"Living devils," muttered Philip.</p> + +<p>"It must be Barthelemy," said Trahern. "What a pity that we cannot +approach him, we would capture him at once. But who could fight in such +a storm?"</p> + +<p>The pirate swiftly approached the King Solomon. From time to time the +waves concealed it, but the next instant it rose on their crests, still +advancing.</p> + +<p>"Those crazy fellows actually seem to be trying to meet us," said +Trahern.</p> + +<p>"Those are not men," replied Philip. "If men tried to cut through the +waves in that fashion their ship would be battered to pieces."</p> + +<p>The vessel really seemed to be pursuing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> the King Solomon; approaching +it on one tack, it made every effort to come alongside, but was +constantly baffled by the force of the waves which, like a stronger +power, constantly tossed the two ships apart, and if they were within +gunshot of each other at one moment, separated them the next by half a +mile.</p> + +<p>"Honest men pray to God at such times," cried Philip. "These do not even +fear the gale. Ha! How that lightning blazed between the ships. The very +fires of Heaven forbid approach."</p> + +<p>The pirate suddenly furled her sails, and the next instant the crew of +the King Solomon saw the large boat lowered. Twenty pirates sprang in +and rowed toward the King Solomon.</p> + +<p>The man-of-war had two hundred men and eighty guns; Trahern could not +imagine what the object of these few people could be.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>The waves tossed the boat to and fro but, spite of wind and water, the +oarstrokes of the twenty men gradually brought it nearer. Then a +gigantic figure stood erect, spite of the terrible tossing of the waves, +and, raising a speaking trumpet to his lips, shouted in deep, ringing +tones, "Captain Trahern, Robert Barthelemy hereby summons you to +surrender at discretion the King Solomon and her crew."</p> + +<p>The speaker was Skyrme.</p> + +<p>Trahern, indignant at the audacity of the pirates, which bordered on +insolence, ordered his men to fire on them. His gunners replied that the +cannon were wet.</p> + +<p>"That is a lie," shouted Trahern, "they are under cover. Take your +weapons and crush these bold dogs."</p> + +<p>"What?" shrieked Philip, "are these mortal men whom we can fight and +kill? Did any one ever see a devil die? I'll fight with no fiends."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>He flung down his arms as he spoke.</p> + +<p>"Nor I, nor I!" shouted the rest of the crew, firing their weapons in +the air and then throwing them down. Trahern found himself abandoned.</p> + +<p>"And you will disgrace yourselves by surrendering to a force ten times +smaller! Men! Come to your senses, these are no ghosts."</p> + +<p>But no power on earth could have induced them to attack the corsairs, +who were already fastening their grappling irons to the ship.</p> + +<p>"Then I will defend the vessel alone," said the captain despairingly +and, seizing a carbine, he discharged it among the buccaneers.</p> + +<p>No one was hit, for his own men had struck up the weapon and would not +let him aim at the assailants the second time.</p> + +<p>A moment later the pirates were masters of the King Solomon.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>The crew dared not resist them; their reputation for being able to +accomplish whatever they desired had spread so far that the trembling +seamen fairly lost their senses when they found themselves in the +presence of people whom they regarded as beings from another world, and, +even when they outstripped them tenfold in numbers, did not venture to +offer any resistance.</p> + +<p>If it were not for the existence of documents which prove it, no one +would believe that twenty pirates, in a boat, amid the raging of a +furious tempest, captured a man-of-war which had eighty guns, two +hundred armed men, and a brave commander.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The eleven ships in the harbor of Mydaw were only awaiting the cessation +of the monsoons and the arrival of the King Solomon to sail against +Barthelemy.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>The monsoons were still raging with the utmost fury when Robert +Barthelemy entered the port, bringing the King Solomon in tow.</p> + +<p>Black flags fluttered from every mast of the Royal Fortune and between +her sails was stretched a square banner, on which was a hideous picture, +a skeleton transfixed by a lance, holding an hour-glass in one hand, +with its legs crossed and a bleeding heart at its feet. The Fox-Hound's +standard, on the contrary, bore a man in a scarlet coat of mail, holding +in his hand a flaming sword on whose point was a skull. The flag of St. +George floated at her mast-head.</p> + +<p>Amid the howling of the gale echoed the diabolical beating of drums and +blare of trumpets of the captured band of the King Solomon, to whose +accompaniment the pirates roared an ear-splitting song. So they sailed +into the harbor.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>The eleven ships all surrendered at the first shot. Barthelemy assembled +all the captains on the Royal Fortune and gave them a magnificent +banquet, to which, after some little hesitation, they sat down, with the +exception of one man, Fletcher, who positively declared that he would +not sit at the pirates' table to eat and carouse with them. Barthelemy +permitted him to do as he pleased, and he turned his back upon them.</p> + +<p>Toward the end of the entertainment, when the wine began to excite them, +Barthelemy became kindly disposed, and told the captains that they could +redeem their ships by paying a ransom of eight pounds of gold dust.</p> + +<p>They instantly consented, with the exception of Fletcher who again +refused, saying that he would accept no favors from pirates, and would +not purchase his ship at the cost of his honor; they might<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> do with him +whatever they chose. He spoke like a true Englishman.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy instantly gave orders to fire Fletcher's ship and burn her +with her whole cargo.</p> + +<p>Asphlant undertook to execute the command, but soon returned to report +that the ship's cargo consisted of eighty negro slaves and, as he did +not know whether one could kindle negroes, he had come to ask what to do +with them.</p> + +<p>Barthelemy's eyes flashed with a fiendish delight.</p> + +<p>"Negroes?" he asked, grinding his teeth, "Throw them into the sea, they +must learn to swim."</p> + +<p>Asphlant did not utter a syllable in reply, but went to execute the +order. The revellers continued their carouse.</p> + +<p>From time to time their conversation was interrupted by a blood-curdling +death shriek, which silenced the bacchanalian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> songs for a moment and +stopped the wine-cup on its way to their lips, but the next instant the +talk was resumed.</p> + +<p>The orgy was closed by an illumination furnished by the flames consuming +Fletcher's ship, which lighted the whole harbor.</p> + +<p>The negroes were chained together in couples, and the harbor swarmed +with sharks. Whenever a pair was thrown into the sea the waves around +were reddened; at each death shriek Barthelemy drained a glass of wine, +muttering: "That is for the cottage in Hispaniola." The negroes were all +murdered, but Barthelemy was not yet drunk.</p> + +<p>The captains left him at a late hour, hoping that they might meet again. +Barthelemy gave each a receipt for the ransom money which, preserved +among other documents in the government archives, ran as follows:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>We, the Knights of Fortune, hereby inform all whom it +may concern, that we have received from Captain —— of +the ship —— eight pounds of gold dust as ransom +money, for which we released the said ship. Given under +our hand and seal in the harbor of Mydaw, on the 13th +of January, 1722.</p> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Robert Barthelemy</span> (<span class="smcap">Henry Glasby</span>).</p></div> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The storm was subsiding. A calm night followed. The moon rose, shedding +a magical lustre upon the sea. Barthelemy stood on the deck of his ship +with folded arms, gazing at the stars.</p> + +<p>How much wine and blood he had poured to intoxicate himself, but all in +vain. Neither wine nor blood gave him peace and forgetfulness. Ah, he +could win no forgetfulness, that sweet unconsciousness of the soul, but +instead came memory, the anguish of recalling the past.</p> + +<p>The stars exert a magical power over the soul; whoever gazes at them +long has it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> drawn whither it does not desire, whither it fears to go.</p> + +<p>What did Barthelemy behold in those stars? He saw the years of his +youth, painted in sweet, glimmering pictures, as unlike those of the +present as if either the one or the other must be a dream.</p> + +<p>There were the three girlish figures sporting around him, weaving +garlands for his head, fastening them on with kisses, amid merry +laughter. How softly the palms were whispering!</p> + +<p>They sat together in the little house, the grandmother, in her armchair, +telling marvelous, terrible tales of famous warriors; the young girls +casting timid glances at the windows, where the darkness of the +gathering night appeared, and the fire on the hearth died slowly, while +William's heart began to swell with eager desire to battle with these +unknown perils, and win for himself a name like those of the heroes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> +glorified by tradition. How softly the palms were whispering!</p> + +<p>The moon shone brilliantly. The moonlight nights of the South are +brighter than the days of the North. His Julietta, clinging to him, +murmured tenderly: "How I love you; we will live and die together." +William's head sank on his breast, and he fancied he clasped in his arms +the whole kingdom of heaven. How softly the palms were whispering!</p> + +<p>The young girl sat on the green shore; her white kerchief fluttered in +the wind as she waited every evening for the ship on which her lover had +sailed, waited with yearning and prayers. How her heart leaped when, on +the distant horizon, she fancied she recognized the slender masts that +appeared before her, and measured in her imagination, a hundred times +over, the space which yawned between them. Her bosom heaved, her soul +burned with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> joy and, as it came nearer and nearer, she threw kisses—</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>"What ship is that?" shouted Moody's harsh, strident tones close beside +Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>Roused from his waking dream, he cast a half startled, half angry glance +at the speaker.</p> + +<p>"What ship do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"The one at which you have been looking steadily for half an hour, the +sail appearing yonder on the horizon."</p> + +<p>Barthelemy now, for the first time, noticed a vessel whose outlines had +blended with the ship seen in his dream, and which seemed to be swiftly +approaching.</p> + +<p>"Oho! Off with the Fox-Hound!" he cried. "Forward, my lads!"</p> + +<p>"Not to-night," shouted one of the crew from the other ship, "the Royal +Fortune ought to go. You have drunk enough, we<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> are sober; and even my +grandfather's spook wouldn't fight sober."</p> + +<p>"What talk is this?"</p> + +<p>"The talk that came to us to-night from the rum and sugar, when even the +fish got punch from the Royal Fortune."</p> + +<p>"You rascals, do I manufacture sugar and brandy that you ask me for it? +When the supply is exhausted, get more. Wherever a Portuguese galleon +appears on the horizon, you can find all the sugar you want. Follow her +and drink your fill."</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the vessel had come so near that they could count all her +sails in the bright moonbeams; then she tacked and began to recede.</p> + +<p>"Follow her!" shouted Barthelemy; "See, she has discovered us and wants +to escape. Skyrme, quick, don't let her elude us. Up, up, to the chase +my lads!"</p> + +<p>The Fox-Hound instantly unfurled every sail; the crew of the larger +ship, greedy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> for prey, rushed on her deck and, aided by a favorable +wind, the pursuit of the unknown ship began, which, overhauled more and +more by the Fox-Hound, soon disappeared with it below the horizon.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The fugitive was the Swallow, the formidable English man-of-war, +commanded by two of the bravest captains, David Oyle and—Rolls.</p> + +<p>When Barthelemy had captured all the ships that had been sent against +him, the Swallow sailed out alone to seek and conquer him.</p> + +<p>On reaching the harbor, they saw in the distance the pirate ships, which +were easily recognized, and wanted to attack them at once, but were +obliged first to sail around a large shoal known as the "French +Sand-bank," and the pirates, mistaking this circuit for flight, rushed +in pursuit.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>The Swallow merely sailed far enough out to sea to lure the Fox-Hound to +a point where the cannonading could not be heard on land, and then +allowed herself to be overtaken.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the pirates, with loud shouts, ran up the black flag and dashed +with the speed of an arrow toward the Swallow. Skyrme stood in the bow, +holding his grappling iron ready.</p> + +<p>"Barthelemy and death!" roared the whole band.</p> + +<p>At the same moment the cannon of the British ship, with a terrible +thunder, sent a devastating volley upon the deck of the Fox-Hound, +veiling her in a cloud of smoke.</p> + +<p>As soon as it lifted, the pirates were seen standing as if dazed by the +thunderbolt which had fallen upon them. The deck was strewn with mangled +corpses, the black flag was shot from the mast. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>Skyrme alone had +retained his presence of mind.</p> + +<p>"Forward, you knaves!" he roared furiously, "what are you staring at? Up +with the flag again, and throw your grappling irons."</p> + +<p>The pirates quickly hauled up the flag, and Skyrme's stentorian voice +shouted: "Forward!"</p> + +<p>A second volley thundered down upon them from the British cannon. The +flag fell a second time, and with it Skyrme, whose legs were torn off by +a cannon ball. The pirates lost their self-control, and rushing to the +man at the helm, forced him to turn and spread their sails for flight.</p> + +<p>"Do not yield," roared Skyrme, clinging to the mast. "Shame and disgrace +upon you! Stick to the ship, and rush upon her decks. Die the death of +heroes!"</p> + +<p>The pirates, with a last outburst of dar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>ing, began to urge the +Fox-Hound toward the Swallow, and had almost succeeded in reaching it +with their grappling irons, when a third volley echoed on the air. The +main-mast was shattered and fell with all the rigging, into the sea.</p> + +<p>They were lost. They could fight no longer.</p> + +<p>"Throw the flag into the water that it may not fall into the hands of +the enemy!" gasped Skyrme, only half of whose gigantic body remained. +"Go to the powder room and fire among the kegs!"</p> + +<p>Five pirates, with loaded pistols, instantly leaped below, and at the +end of a minute, with a roar like thunder, a cloud of smoke rose into +the air; otherwise there was no harm done. There was not powder enough +to shatter the ship. The five pirates lay in the hold, burnt and +swearing, as black as if they had been transformed into devils in +advance. The explosion threw the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> helmsman flat on the deck and, as if +he had no other care on his mind, he screamed for his hat, which had +gone overboard.</p> + +<p>The Englishmen instantly took possession of the wreck, whose deck was +strewn with the dead and wounded.</p> + +<p>The latter were raised and cared for.</p> + +<p>"Don't touch me!" shrieked Skyrme in a frenzy of rage, and seizing a +sabre in each hand he began a desperate struggle. The bravest soldiers +could scarcely succeed in disarming the mangled giant, who, when his +huge hands were chained in order to bind up his wounds, tore off the +bandages with his fetters and, by a last tremendous exertion of +strength, burst them and—died.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, in order not to waste time, Barthelemy captured a ship coming +from India. Her captain, Jonathan Hill, was a jovial fellow who, +accepting the pirate's invitation, sat down to breakfast with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> him, +became very friendly after his first glass of wine, and when the second +was emptied, asked the company to drink for a wager, in which contest he +vowed to land them all under the table.</p> + +<p>During this noble rivalry every man was called upon for his favorite +song. Hill had two or three.</p> + +<p>"Now let us have <i>your</i> favorite, Barthelemy!" he said at last, turning +to the pirate chief.</p> + +<p>"I cannot sing," replied Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>"Oho! But you ought at least to learn the one which is being sung +everywhere about you; for instance this:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Far, far away the white dove flies,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The dove is my lover so dear,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The hawk is the pirate I fear."<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Barthelemy shuddered.</p> + +<p>"Where did you hear that song?"</p> + +<p>"Ha! ha! my friend, from a wonderfully<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> beautiful girl, of whom your +soul must not even dream; it's a pity that she was in love with someone +else."</p> + +<p>"Speak! when? where?"</p> + +<p>"Well, it was a romantic adventure. I had just anchored off the coast of +Hispaniola when the negroes in San Domingo rose against their masters. I +had gone on shore with twenty men to get some fresh water, when I heard +a shriek in the distance. 'Let's go there!' I said to my companions, +'we'll help if there is need'; and seizing our guns we rushed toward the +sound. Three young girls came from behind the hill, pursued by three +hundred negroes. The black rascals, shouting and yelling, were fast +gaining upon them. The girls could not run fast enough, for they were +dragging a large armchair in which sat an old woman. 'Fire!' I shouted, +and we sent a volley among the black devils. They scattered, and before +they could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> gather again, we had seized the poor hunted women and rushed +to our boats with them. The beautiful girl was as light as a bird, I can +tell you. I could have carried her in my arms to the ends of the earth."</p> + +<p>"Go on," whispered Barthelemy in an almost unintelligible tone.</p> + +<p>"Aha, you are interested in hearing of a beautiful girl? And she thought +of you, too, but how? She wrote the song about you, which is not +particularly flattering. It seems she had a lover, who had gone on a +long voyage and, as she was constantly afraid you would do the poor +fellow some mischief, she added whenever she prayed for him the entreaty +that God would sink Robert Barthelemy in the depths of the sea. Poor +girl, how she loved that man! She asked every sailor we met if he had +seen the ship on which William went. My heart ached for her. I left her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> +in Dublin. I don't know whether she has found her lover."</p> + +<p>Barthelemy's face had gradually blanched to a corpse-like pallor, his +eyes were fixed on vacancy and a strange smile rested on his ghastly +face.</p> + +<p>"See how the captain is smiling, he has gone crazy!" whispered the +pirates, starting up in alarm.</p> + +<p>"What has happened to you?" exclaimed Hill, striking Barthelemy on the +shoulder. The latter started at the touch, and a look of profound, +unutterable sadness drove the smile from his face.</p> + +<p>Rising from the table, he grasped Hill by the hand, drew him aside, +slipped his arm into his, and walking forward to the bow of the ship, +said in a stifled voice:</p> + +<p>"Captain, this is the last day of my life! I feel, I know it. You must +not ask why. That is my own affair. The pirate has his superstitions as +well as the rest of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> world. The sailor knows that he is doomed when +he meets the spectre of the sea. My soul has such a spectre, and I +encountered it to-day. I know not how or where, but I shall fall. In the +hold of the captured King Solomon there are ten thousand pounds sterling +in gold dust; if I fall, take it—as compensation for your stolen +property."</p> + +<p>Hill gazed at him from head to foot, and then returned to the others.</p> + +<p>"Your captain is so drunk that he doesn't know what he is talking +about."</p> + +<p>An hour later most of the pirates lay intoxicated under the tables, only +two or three remaining erect, disputing the wager with Jonathan Hill, +when the man at the helm shouted:</p> + +<p>"Sail in sight!"</p> + +<p>The cry sobered some of the pirates and, staggering forward, they +recognized in the approaching vessel the ship seen the night before.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>A strange dread took possession of them all. They hastily shook their +drunken messmates from their dreams, pointed to the ship, and hurried to +Barthelemy with the tidings. The latter noticed the terror in their +faces, and said coldly:</p> + +<p>"That is certainly the Portuguese sugar maker which fled from the +Fox-Hound yesterday and, in trying to escape into some harbor, has now +run between two fires."</p> + +<p>"That's no Portuguese trader, sir," said one of the pirates in a +trembling voice. "Before I deserted to you, I served on that ship and +know her well. It is the Swallow."</p> + +<p>"Well?" said Barthelemy, smiling scornfully, "and suppose she is, would +my men be too cowardly to meet her?"</p> + +<p>"She has one hundred and ten guns and is one of the best sailers in the +navy."</p> + +<p>"That makes no difference. Who are her captains?"</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>"One is named David Oyle—the other Rolls."</p> + +<p>"Rolls!" repeated Barthelemy starting. "So my presentiment was true. Up, +my men! Beat the drums, show the flags, spread every inch of canvas, +prepare for the battle! Fear nothing, the god of war is on our side."</p> + +<p>The buccaneers seized their weapons, the gunners went to their stations, +and Barthelemy withdrew for a few moments to his cabin.</p> + +<p>He soon reappeared, wearing on his head a broad-brimmed hat, with a long +scarlet plume fastened with a ruby buckle; his costume, studded with +gems, was girdled with a Persian shawl; around his neck hung a broad +gold chain, sustaining a glittering diamond cross, and in his belt were +thrust pistols whose handles were set with pearls. So he came forth, +haughty in bearing and magnificently clad, like a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> bridegroom going to +his marriage banquet.</p> + +<p>The eyes of all the pirates were fixed upon him. Every one had the +firmest belief that nothing was impossible for Barthelemy.</p> + +<p>The latter beckoned to Moody and whispered in his ear:</p> + +<p>"Old comrade, I need not tell you that this will be the hour of greatest +peril which we have ever experienced. We must hold by each other. I have +decided to approach the enemy with all sail set, receiving and returning +his fire. If he dismasts us, we will try to escape to land; if that +fails, we will grapple the enemy and blow both ships into the air."</p> + +<p>"Very well," muttered the old pirate, clenching his pipe between his +teeth.</p> + +<p>"One thing more, Moody. If I should fall, throw my body into the sea. I +want to rest on the bottom of the ocean."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>The pirate bent his head and growled: "Very well."</p> + +<p>Then each man went to his post. Barthelemy drew his sword and, raising +his head proudly, cried: "Raise the anchors."</p> + +<p>The order was obeyed, the wind filled the sails, and the two ships, with +their flags fluttering in the breeze, rapidly approached each other.</p> + +<p>On arriving within a certain distance, both turned suddenly. The Swallow +fired first, sixty guns thundering at the same instant. The Royal +Fortune reserving her fire, did not lose a single sail, and only three +of her men fell.</p> + +<p>"Up and at them!" shouted Barthelemy, "the advantage is ours"; and as he +spoke his forty guns returned the volley of the Swallow, which rocked +heavily under the shock.</p> + +<p>Just at that moment the report of a pis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>tol echoed from the Swallow's +deck and Barthelemy sank lifeless on a cannon. The bullet had pierced +his heart.</p> + +<p>The man at the helm, Stephenson, saw him fall and, not perceiving the +wound, shouted:</p> + +<p>"Don't lie down, captain, but look the danger boldly in the face and +fight as beseems a man."</p> + +<p>Even as he spoke a jet of blood gushed from Barthelemy's breast.</p> + +<p>Stephenson, seeing it, leaped from his post in despair, leaving his +place at the helm, and throwing himself on Barthelemy's body shouted, +sobbing aloud: "He is dead!"</p> + +<p>The cry fairly paralyzed the pirates just at the critical moment; +nameless terror filled their hearts, and all rushed to their captain's +corpse.</p> + +<p>Moody thrust them aside right and left till he reached the body, and +hastily seiz<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>ing it, he threw it over the bulwark into the sea.</p> + +<p>With Barthelemy, the moving spirit of the pirates fled. Throwing down +their weapons, they surrendered. No man knew exactly what he was doing; +they sank like a headless body.</p> + +<p>Scudamore was the only one who thought of anything. He recognized Rolls +on the other ship and, seizing a lighted slow-match, rushed to the +powder magazine, but met Henry Glasby standing with a drawn sword at the +door.</p> + +<p>"What are you doing here?" he shrieked.</p> + +<p>"Keeping you back," replied Glasby, wrenching the match from his hand +and stamping out the light.</p> + +<p>"Oho! Asphlant, Moody, here!" shouted Scudamore. "Here is a traitor. +Help me break into the powder magazine."</p> + +<p>An uproar followed. Some of the pirates wanted to blow up the ship, +others op<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>posed it, and while the two parties were contending Glasby +poured water into the kegs, so that the powder was useless.</p> + +<p>An hour after the whole crew were prisoners.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p> + +<h2 class="newchapter"><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>Chapter IV</h2> + +<h3>Retribution</h3> + + +<p>The foaming wine is drained from the cup, nothing remains but the dregs, +which we will also empty.</p> + +<p>During the battle Captain Hill released himself and his ship and, taking +possession of the pirates' money, sailed away.</p> + +<p>The buccaneers, prisoners on board their own ship, were taken to Cape +Corso, but not even this disaster could subdue them. The injured men +would not allow their wounds to be bandaged, and when they were put in +irons, beat their aching, bleeding wounds with their chains, and died +uttering imprecations, reconciled neither to God nor man. The others +sang wild buccaneer songs and irritated their guards with sneering +jests.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>Weighing the ration of bread in his hand one of them said, laughing: +"You want us to dry up to save hemp; we shall get so thin on this fare +that you can hang us by a thread of yarn."</p> + +<p>They were chained together in couples. One began to sing and pray; his +companion gave him a violent thrust in the side.</p> + +<p>"What do you expect to gain by that?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"The Kingdom of Heaven," replied the other humbly.</p> + +<p>"You? The Kingdom of Heaven? You passed that port long ago with the rest +of us. We're sailing for hell. The captain is already waiting for us, +and we shall enter according to our rank, and when we run into harbor +there we'll salute him with a salvo of thirteen shots. Hurrah for +Barthelemy and his luck."</p> + +<p>The poor, penitent sinner did not stop singing and praying, spite of the +oaths<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span> of his companion, till the latter, in all seriousness, begged the +captain of the ship to relieve them from this fellow, whose howling +disturbed the good-humor of the others, and who had proved himself +unworthy of such distinguished company; or at any rate, for the +maintenance of order, to take away his prayer-book.</p> + +<p>The most dangerous members of the pirate band were kept prisoners on the +Swallow, and among them were Moody and Asphlant. The latter formed a +plot to escape from their confinement some night, kill both the +captains, and form a still more powerful buccaneer crew.</p> + +<p>One of them, however, deemed it advisable to save himself at the expense +of the others and betrayed the plan. The prisoners had already managed +to file through their chains. Afterwards they were watched day and +night.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>Scudamore had been left on the Royal Fortune, where he was permitted +liberty to move about to care for the wounded pirates, so far as they +would permit.</p> + +<p>One night Scudamore instigated them to free themselves with his aid, and +die fighting rather than be executed. The conspiracy was discovered at +the moment of the outbreak and, that it might not be repeated, on +reaching the land a trial was held at once in order to make short work +of the pirates.</p> + +<p>They were divided into two classes, one containing the officers, the +other the men; the former had ordered everything, the latter had merely +executed their commands. The first was jestingly called the Upper House. +The trial of the Upper House ended badly. All were condemned to death; +among them Moody, Asphlant, Simpson and Scudamore. Only one was +acquitted—Henry Glasby.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> His noble character was known by reputation; +many owed their lives and property to his intercession; he had often +attempted, at the risk of his life, to escape from the pirates, but was +always captured. The court released him. At last he could join his +promised bride.</p> + +<hr style='width: 35%;' /> + +<p>The end of the notorious band of pirates was noised abroad throughout +the entire world. Three young girls went in turn to every church in +Dublin, offering grateful thanks to Heaven for having heard their +petitions and sunk the terrible corsair king in the sea. Then, in a +whisper, they added: "And protect our beloved William, restore him to +us."</p> + +<p>Robert Barthelemy lay a hundred fathoms beneath the waves amid the coral +and sea-shells.</p> + + +<p style="text-align: center; margin-top: 2.25em; margin-bottom: 4.5em; font-weight: bold;">The End</p> + + + + +<div class="blockquot"><p>[Transcriber's Note: The original edition of this text was typeset with +unindented paragraphs, making it sometimes unclear whether a sentence +begins a new paragraph or not.</p> + +<p>The following typographical errors present in the original text have +been corrected.</p> + +<p>In Chapter I, "Scudaamore's treachery" was changed to "Scudamore's +treachery", and "we do need a surgeon" was changed to "We do need a +surgeon".</p> + +<p>In Chapter II, "What eyes?" was changed to "What eyes!", a missing +period was added after "cried the young chief", a quotation mark was +added after "we can approach the brigantine unsuspected", "There can be +no discrimination, captain, We need one another" was changed to "There +can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another", and "to all the +details for the hundreth time" was changed to "to all the details for +the hundredth time".</p> + +<p>In Chapter III, a missing quotation mark was added after "It is the +Swallow."]</p></div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Corsair King, by Mór Jókai + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + +***** This file should be named 26865-h.htm or 26865-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/8/6/26865/ + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Corsair King + +Author: Mor Jokai + +Translator: Mary J. Safford + +Release Date: October 9, 2008 [EBook #26865] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: Cover of The Corsair King] + + + + +The Corsair King + +(A KALOZ KIRALY) + +by Maurus Jokai + +Author of "Black Diamonds," "Manasseh," "The Baron's Sons," "Pretty +Michal," etc. + +Translated by +Mary J. Safford + +[Illustration] + +Boston +L. C. Page & Company +mdcccci + + +Copyright, 1901, by +L. C. Page & Company (Inc.) + +_All rights reserved_ + +The Heintzemann Press Boston + + + + +WORKS OF +MAURUS JOKAI + +MANASSEH +THE BARON'S SONS +PRETTY MICHAL +THE CORSAIR KING +MIDST THE WILD CARPATHIANS + +L. C. PAGE & COMPANY +200 SUMMER STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + + + +Contents + +CHAPTER PAGE +I. CHOOSING A KING 11 +II. IN HISPANIOLA 50 +III. REVENGE 149 +IV. RETRIBUTION 187 + + + + +The CORSAIR KING + +Chapter I + +Choosing a King + + +The storm had spent itself, the sea was calm again, and on its smooth +surface tossed empty casks and shattered masts,--the monuments of +shipwrecked vessels. The stormy petrels had vanished with the tempest, +and the flying fish were now making their clumsy leaps from wave to +wave,--a sign of fair weather. A brigantine which had outlived the gale +was moving slowly over the almost unrippled surface of the water; all +hands were engaged in repairing the damage occasioned by the storm; +temporary masts were rigged, sails trimmed, the crew worked fairly +hanging in the air; for the ship had heeled far over,--a proof that her +ballast had shifted during the tempest. + +With the exception of the blows of the carpenter's hammer, and the +creaking of the pumps, nothing was heard save the voice of the captain, +who stood leaning against the mainmast trying to ascertain on a chart +the place to which he had been driven by the storm. The movements of the +needle were scrutinized more and more carefully, while from time to +time, the voice of an officer taking soundings, echoed on the air. At +last the captain's finger stopped on a group of islands and he said +quietly: "We are off the Ladrones." At the same moment a sailor on the +mast-head shouted: "Land!" Without the slightest change of expression, +the captain repeated: "The Ladrones." + +Then, folding the chart, he took out a small silver whistle and, blowing +a signal, ordered the mate to summon the crew to investigate the +occurrences of the preceding night. + +The Isles of Thieves were but a few miles distant, they had no cannon, +their sails were tattered, yet the captain spoke as calmly in passing +sentence upon his men as though he were sitting in the utmost security +upon a jury bench. + +"By whose directions were the sick thrown overboard?" he asked, turning +his stern face toward the crew. + +"The doctor ordered it," replied an old seaman. + +"You, Scudamore?" inquired the captain, wheeling round to look a tall +thin man in the face. + +The latter's countenance was one of those which, at the first glance, +appear smooth and gentle, whose features when smiling are even +captivating, until some expression of mockery or greed of vengeance +suddenly transforms the winning glance into an image of horror. + +"You gave the order yourself, Captain Rolls," replied the surgeon, with +a smiling face, and in a tone of marked gentleness, as if the subject +under discussion were some very noble deed, which he declined to +acknowledge merely from exaggerated modesty. "When the ship sprung a +leak, you commanded that all the superfluous ballast should be thrown +overboard. The men first cast out the heavy ballast; then you ordered +them to add whatever else could be spared. Then the cannon went, though +it was a great pity, for we stand in need of them, especially when off +the Ladrones, but even this did not lighten the ship sufficiently. You +again issued orders that everything superfluous must be cast into the +sea. There was nothing left which could be dispensed with except the +bars of silver and the sick. The crew began to discuss which should be +thrown overboard. I answered: 'We shall not be asked for the _men_ when +we reach London, but we shall be for the silver;' and, by my advice, the +silver was saved and the ship weathered the storm." + +"Dr. Scudamore," said the captain, with cool deliberation, "for this +inhuman deed you will be cashiered, kept in irons until we reach London, +and there delivered up to justice." + +"Sail in sight!" shouted the man at the helm, and several of the crew +whispered in terror; "Pirates!" + +Scudamore fixed his green-gray eyes on the captain and, smiling +contemptuously, said in tones which had suddenly grown hoarse. + +"I think it might be advisable to defer my punishment a few hours; you +or some one else might need my services during the interval." + +"That is no affair of yours," returned the captain. "To die without a +doctor or to be thrown into the sea by his orders is much the same +thing." + +"Ha! ha! ha! You see, it might have been better for you in the end, had +you relieved the ship of the sick in the first place, instead of +throwing your guns overboard. But that's _your_ affair." + +Captain Rolls silently nodded to the men to take the doctor below. Then +he gave orders that the bars of silver should be concealed in the hold, +and that every man should go to his post to be prepared for any attack. +He himself, taking his weapons, went to his usual station and, without +changing the vessel's course in the least, ordered all sail to be set. + +Meanwhile the pirate craft was dashing toward the brigantine. The black +flag was already visible, and a cannon ball, whistling close by the +brigantine's rigging, was the first message from the sea-robber. + +Captain Rolls had no cannon with which to answer. The silence was +interpreted by the pirates as fear, and one of their number shouted in a +tone of thunder through his speaking trumpet: + +"Ship ahoy! A word with the captain." + +Instantly a battle-flag fluttered from every mast-head on the +brigantine. + +A terrible uproar arose on the pirate ship; a tall man, with a gray +vest, girdled by a scarlet sash, appeared on deck, issuing orders in +loud, hoarse tones, upon which half the sails were furled, and with a +swift turn the light craft came round before the wind close by the +brigantine, without firing a shot, evidently considering her a sure +prey, which must be spared from harm. + +On the pirate's prow was carved a strange human figure, the symbol of +the ship's name, The Sea Devil, and, which, the pirates humorously +asserted, was the living image of their Captain Davis, whose face had +been so disfigured by the bursting of a shell that it resembled a +death's head. + +The pirates dashed with Satanic recklessness toward the brigantine, +whose defenders still awaited them in motionless silence. But just at +the moment the grappling irons were thrown, Rolls made a sign, and the +thunder of the report of the sailors' arms followed; when the smoke +dispersed, the two vessels were already fast locked together, the fire +had killed several of the pirates; the others, pushing their comrades' +bodies aside, were trying to climb to the brigantine's deck. In an +instant the two crews were fighting man to man with sabres and knives. +One furiously attacked, the other coolly defended; neither feared wounds +or weapons. + +The sailors fought bravely. Captain Rolls remained in his place, with +his eyes fixed on the pirate leader, who had already fired at him three +times without making his foe even turn his head. + +"I'll see whether you are the devil or I!" Davis at last shouted +savagely. "Follow me, you scoundrels," and seizing his sabre between his +teeth, while swinging a huge hammer above his head with his right hand, +he sprang on the deck of the brigantine, felling two of her crew at the +same instant. The pirates, with deafening yells, rushed into the breach +thus made, and the terrified sailors began to yield, more alarmed by the +hideous face of the pirate leader than by the weight of his blows. + +Rolls quietly drew a pistol from his belt. "You won't hit me!" yelled +Davis, gnashing his teeth and trying to startle the captain by rolling +his eye-balls hideously. The latter fired, and whoever was looking at +Davis at the moment saw a bloody star on his forehead where the bullet +entered. The pirate suddenly grasped the handle of his hammer with both +hands and sank lifeless. + +Bewildered by the loss of their leader, the corsairs were on the point +of yielding their vantage ground, when one of their number shouted +triumphantly: "Hurrah, Barthelemy!" and at that moment a fierce yell +arose from the center of the brigantine. While the fight had been raging +on one side, six pirates in a boat had rowed around her and crept +noiselessly to her deck, which they reached just as their captain fell. +These men, too, turned to fly, but one of their number, a young, slender +fellow, with a bronzed face, thick curling locks, and sparkling eyes, +sprang behind Rolls, and, pinioning his arms, wrested his pistol from +his hold and forced him to his knees. + +"Let no one stir or you are all dead men!" shouted the young pirate in +bold, ringing tones, and the sailors, disheartened by the capture of +their commander, laid down their arms before the savage forms thronging +on deck. + +The victory was Barthelemy's; and his comrades' first act was to lift +him on their shoulders, declare him their captain and, with terrible +oaths, swear eternal fealty by death, hell, and the devil. + +A Herculean fellow raised him aloft like a child, and, pointing to the +figures lying weltering in their blood, shouted in a voice of thunder: + +"Who deserves to be your leader better than Robert Barthelemy?" + +"No one! No one!" was the unanimous answer. + +"Will you have him for your leader, captain, king?" + +"Hurrah!" responded the crew. + +"Stop!" cried Barthelemy from the Hercules' shoulder. "I heard some one +shout 'No.'" + +"Who was it?" roared the athlete; "does any one want to jest with +death?" + +"Don't rage, Skyrme, don't rage, my brave giant. Speech is free. Come +forward, Lord Simpson, you oppose my election. Step forward, my valiant +nobleman, and tell us your objection to me!" + +The pirates, amid rude laughter, pushed before Barthelemy a tall, fair +man, who, with his hands thrust into his pockets, eyed the new captain +scornfully from head to foot. + +"Speak fair, noble lord!" said Skyrme, raising his sinewy hand, +threateningly above Simpson's head, "or you'll bite your own tongue." + +"I should do that without your telling me," replied Simpson, +nonchalantly, glancing at his comrades. "You know that my father was +Lord Simpson?" + +"Of course we do!" shouted the others. + +"My father was the sworn foe of Jeffreys, who, after Monmouth's fall, +brought the brave English Protestant nobles to the scaffold. My father +suffered with them. Since that time I have hated the Papists, and do not +want one even for a pirate chief. Not even you, Barthelemy, for you are +a Papist." + +Instead of breaking the speaker's head, Skyrme raised him on his arm +and, amid the loud laughter of the pirates, drew him toward Barthelemy, +with whom he drained the cup of friendship, after Barthelemy had assured +him, on his honor as a pirate, that he had not entered a church since +his christening, and had never been in a priest's presence during his +entire life. The new captain was then formally given the leader's cap +with its scarlet plume, and the whole band then proceeded to the work of +distributing the booty. + +Barthelemy sat on a cask turned upside down, holding on his knees a +black book in which were written in red letters the names of the +pirates, and read them one by one in a loud tone. Often nobody answered +and, at the end of a long pause, some one growled: "Dead," and the name +was instantly erased from the list. + +Just then a pirate brought Captain Rolls, who had been bound hand and +foot, to the mainmast, where he laid him flat on the deck. Barthelemy +raised his hat with the utmost courtesy. + +"Pardon me, captain, that my men have placed you in so uncomfortable a +position. You are a brave soldier and fought well. Unbind this worthy +man." + +"His hands too?" asked a pirate, casting a doubtful glance at his leader +from under his shaggy brows. + +"Yes, Asphlant, especially if the captain will promise to do nothing +against us." + +"I'll promise nothing," replied Rolls. + +"Well, no matter; I told you to unbind his hands at any rate, it will be +our business to see that he doesn't break anybody's head. And now, +captain, be kind enough to declare the contents of your vessel, which +you have so bravely defended. No doubt you have a valuable cargo." + +"You have captured the ship, and can search every corner of her, I shall +guide you nowhere." + +"Right again. Men, go below." + +The pirates instantly leaped down the hatchways and, after spending an +hour in rummaging through every part of the ship, they returned to +Barthelemy with the sorrowful tidings that there was nothing in the +whole vessel except a cask of biscuit and one of water. + +Rolls could not help smiling at the fury of the disappointed men. + +"You could see that I had no guns, and therefore might have inferred +that, if I had been in such straits that I was forced to throw them +overboard, there would be no other ballast in the ship." + +"Devil take it!" roared Asphlant, throwing his cap on the deck, "have so +many brave fellows eaten lead and drunk salt water for the sake of an +empty box, full of rats? you are a cheat, captain. What had you to +defend in this ship?" + +"My honor," replied Rolls proudly. + +"Which, when we have taken it from you, will be of no use to us," said +the giant Skyrme, laughing. "What do you say to that, Moody?" + +The man addressed was a sullen, taciturn fellow, who was sitting on the +bulwark, holding a short pipe between his teeth. The silver whistle +hanging from his button-hole indicated that he was the pirate's +boatswain. + +"What's the use of so much talk?" he rejoined. "Bore a hole in the +bottom of the ark and let the whole crew go under water with her." + +"For heaven's sake, gentlemen!" shrieked a voice among the captured +sailors, and a man, with his hands tied behind his back, threw himself +at Barthelemy's feet and tried to kiss his boots, while his eyes rested +despairingly on the face of the pirate chief. + +"For heaven's sake, you brave, valiant, worthy men! You heroes, you +demi-gods! By heaven, hell, and all that is sacred to you, I beseech you +not to murder me. Kill all my comrades, the scoundrels deserve it for +resisting you; but I have given you no offence, I never held a weapon in +my hand; I was imprisoned during the whole fight and have just been +brought out by these brave, excellent men." + +Some of the pirates stared, others laughed. + +"Gentleman, renowned heroes, worshipped sovereigns of our age, hear me, +I entreat you, by all you hold sacred. I am Dr. Scudamore, a persecuted +man; persecuted as you are; I have nothing to do with these people; I am +the mortal enemy of Captain Rolls. I implore you to distinguish between +me and these people, not to condemn me with them. Oh, I beg you to be +merciful and permit me, kissing the dust off your feet, to consider +myself the humblest of your servants." + +Skyrme averted his face with an expression of loathing, while Moody +kicked at the writhing figure, whom every one was eyeing with the +deepest scorn. + +"Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "it appears that you have condemned +this fellow?" + +"Only accused, not condemned. The judgment lies with the English +courts." + +"Oh, we won't go so far," said Skyrme with a look of amusement; "make +the charge; we'll represent the court of justice. Barthelemy will be +judge, we the sheriffs and constables. Bring forward the complaint, the +court is open." + +Rolls coldly averted his eyes without answering a syllable. + +Scudamore, who was scanning every face with the crafty glance of a man +who fears for his life, hastily interposed. + +"You see, gentlemen, you see the contemptuous face with which he +receives your offer, you see how proudly, how scornfully he looks down +upon you, as if it would be a disgrace to him to recognize such worthy +men as judges. Oh, _I_ will submit to your sentence, I have no desire to +stand before wiser, more just or more distinguished judges. I will tell +with my own lips everything of which I am accused." + +"I forbid you to do so!" cried Rolls vehemently. + +"There, you see for yourselves, gentlemen. He wants to command here +still, here, where you are the rightful possessors. He will not even +permit me to repeat the charge against me! Very natural! He knows that +he, and not I, will be condemned. So listen, gentlemen, listen, for what +I have to tell is an important matter; my crime is that we were bringing +huge bars of silver--" + +"Ho! ho! that begins well," shouted Asphlant, craning his neck to hear +better. + +"On the way a storm rose, the ship sprung a leak, and the captain +ordered all useless ballast to be thrown overboard. There was nothing +left except the sick and the silver, and the question was which should +be cast into the sea?" + +"Well, and you, as the doctor, of course kept the sick," said Skyrme. + +"No indeed, I kept the silver, and now Captain Rolls wants to punish me +for it." + +Barthelemy turned from the man in horror, while Rolls glared at him with +blazing eyes. + +"Oho, captain," cried Asphlant, "so there is silver on your ship! Where +did you hide it, eh?" + +"That I will not tell you." + +"You won't? Oh, the thumb screw will find out. Here, ropes, ropes!" + +"What do you mean?" cried Barthelemy, boldly surveying his companions. +"Are we members of the Inquisition, that we seek to learn truth by +torture? No, my friends; let no one have the right to say that the +pirates use the tools of the auto-da-fe! Should not we, who call +ourselves the heroes of the free sea, honor freedom? If Captain Rolls +will not reveal the hiding-place in his vessel we will take her into +port, pull every plank apart, and find the silver without committing a +deed which would dishonor us." + +The pirates cheered their captain's speech, and began to fasten the +brigantine to their ship. + +Scudamore, who had refrained from disclosing the hiding-place merely +that the pirates might wreak their vengeance on Captain Rolls, now, +perceiving that the latter had escaped, said: + +"Don't trouble yourselves, gentlemen. Why should you drag this miserable +craft after you? Release me and promise to spare my life, and I'll take +you to the spot where the silver is hidden." + +"Loose the doctor's hands from the irons," said Barthelemy signing to +his men. "I'll promise that we will not harm a hair of your head. Show +us the hiding-place." + +Scudamore, finding his hands at liberty, tried to shake hands with each +one of the pirates in turn, but they angrily pushed him back. + +"Hurry up!" cried Asphlant, dealing him a blow, while another pirate, +grasping him with both hands, dragged him along, Scudamore protesting +that he should feel under obligations to the whole company as long as he +lived. + +The pirates soon returned, exultingly bearing the chests of silver on +their shoulders. Barthelemy ordered them to be placed on board their own +vessel, while Scudamore showed the utmost zeal in helping the men, +calling each, meanwhile, his dear, kind friend, a compliment which they +repaid with all sorts of abusive epithets and the command not to touch +their property. + +The last to come on deck was Asphlant, who said with great satisfaction: +"We shall leave nothing here, captain! The ship is entirely empty. Shall +we bore a hole in her bottom? Or will it be better to hang these fellows +in a row on the mainyard, and let the vessel drift where she likes?" + +The loud laughter of the pirates showed their cordial approval of this +proposal. The sailors gave no sign of emotion, while Scudamore tried to +lock arms with one after another of the pirates, constantly asserting +that he had nothing to do with the other party. + +"Silence!" ordered Barthelemy sternly. "You will neither scuttle the +ship nor hang the crew. That might do for miserable Spanish privateers, +pitiful Tunisian cut-throats, but not for us, Englishmen and Frenchmen. +Are we to make ourselves ashamed of the name of pirate, admit that it +has nothing in common with the word honor? Were not the first +inhabitants of Rome also corsairs? Our mission is to place the name of +fillibuster in a new light. Captain Rolls, you and your whole ship's +company are free to go wherever you desire." + +A fierce uproar arose among the robbers. Many approved the captain's +speech, some strove to oppose it. + +Barthelemy stamped his foot violently. "Is there any one who desires to +contradict me?" + +"Yes!" shrieked Moody, stepping in front of him and thrusting the pipe +he held between his teeth so close to the captain's face that it almost +touched his eyes. "I say you are a fool, captain. You are acting against +all the customs of pirates and, if you don't take back your order, I'll +scuttle the ship myself." + +"Do you think so?" said Barthelemy. "Skyrme! Seize this fellow and bind +him to the mainmast." + +The pirates shrank back, startled. Moody was the oldest of the band, +whom no captain had ever ventured to punish. Barthelemy again motioned +to Skyrme, and the latter, rushing upon the chief mate, bound him, in +spite of his struggles, to the mainmast, so that he clasped it with +both arms, his back turned to the crew; but, while pouring forth a +continuous torrent of oaths, he still kept his pipe in his mouth. + +"Is there any one else who wishes to oppose me?" asked the young chief. + +A suppressed murmur ran through the ranks of the pirates, but no one +raised his voice distinctly. + +Barthelemy now turned to Captain Rolls and, taking from his pocket a +piece of paper and a pencil he said: + +"Captain Rolls! I hope you will reach London with your ship in safety. +It is true that you will return her to her owners empty, but that is no +fault of yours, in proof of which I will give you the following +certificate for your justification at home. + + We, free knights of fortune, bear witness in the + presence of all whom it concerns, that Rolls, captain + of the brigantine Neptune, was attacked by us on the + Pacific Ocean, and, having just lost his guns and part + of his rigging in a gale, defended himself against us + in the bravest manner for an hour and a half, and did + not yield until, after losing nine of our best men and + our captain, we completely overwhelmed him and thereby + alone obtained the silver entrusted to his care. + + CAPTAIN ROBERT BARTHELEMY. + +"Add," said Rolls, "that you succeeded in securing the silver only +through Scudamore's treachery." + +"True," replied Barthelemy, adding the sentence. + +"Gentlemen!" interposed Scudamore trembling, "what are you going to do +with me?" + +"Nothing," said Barthelemy. "We promised that we would not harm a hair +of your head." + +"Yes," returned the other mournfully, "but if you release the captain, +and me with him, what is to become of me?" + +"I don't know," returned the corsair-chief, shrugging his shoulders. + +Skyrme laughed aloud. "That's a splendid joke!" + +"For heaven's sake! What shall I say to you?" stammered Scudamore, +throwing himself at Barthelemy's feet. "Oh, gentlemen, don't leave me in +this man's power, he will have no mercy on me. He is a horrible +villain." + +"Ha! ha! ha!" cried Skyrme. "Don't spoil this joke, captain. When you +set the commander of the brigantine free, let him take this fellow with +him; what a fine lot of talk there will be when they call him to account +at home for the service he has rendered us." + +"Gentlemen! Brave men!" shrieked Scudamore clasping Barthelemy's knees. +"Surely you are only jesting with me. It amuses you to drive me to +desperation in this way, but you will not really ruin me. You cannot +forget that I have rendered you an important service, and shall perform +still more. I am a physician; you need one, take me with you. I will be +just such a man, such a devil as all the rest, I'll be no disgrace to +your band. You will never repent having made my acquaintance. I beseech, +I implore you to say a good word to the captain for me. Oh, you good, +brave man, you leader with the face of a hero, give me your hand, that I +may kiss it." + +"Rise," said Barthelemy curtly. "We _do_ need a surgeon, I'll take you." + +"What! a surgeon among us!" growled Moody, who was still bound to the +mast, "a surgeon who, whenever one of our band is wounded in the hand or +foot, will cut it off? A living human saw? A poisoner, who won't let a +man die in peace? I've no use for him. Throw him out of the ship, or +I'll kill him." + +"Not another word, Moody!" cried Barthelemy. "It is my wish, and so it +shall be. You manage the ropes and sails, but you need not trouble +yourself about anything else." + +"I beg you, sir," said Scudamore, "not to vex our valiant captain, you +seem to be such a worthy man, I know I shall have the warmest regard for +you." + +"Come nearer, so that I can see you," said Moody. And when Scudamore +approached near enough for him to reach him with his foot, he gave him +such a kick that he nearly fell over backward. + +"Men!" shouted Barthelemy, "bring me the cat o' nine tails. Give this +man thirty blows on the back. Whoever disobeys me must suffer for it." + +The nine-lashed scourge was instantly brought. "To work at once!" +Barthelemy commanded. "No one is exempt from punishment." + +Moody's eyes fairly started from their sockets with rage, and when the +man bearing the cat o' nine tails approached him, he began to throw +himself frantically to the right and left, but thereby only caused the +blows to fall on him haphazard, till at last one knocked the pipe from +his mouth. + +Barthelemy coolly awaited the end of the punishment, and then called +Scudamore to write his name in the list of pirates. Scudamore seized the +pen with eager joy, and wrote his signature with such horrible glee that +even the robbers were startled, and then, turning to Captain Rolls, +exclaimed scornfully: + +"When you reach London, inform the government of my new occupation." + +Skyrme laid his huge hand on his shoulder and muttered between his +teeth: "You scoundrel, you'll make a first-class devil." + +"At least as good as any of you." + +From that moment, Scudamore felt perfectly at home in his new sphere, +looking at the list with his name enrolled as if it were some diabolical +patent of nobility, and eyeing Captain Rolls with the air of a newly +appointed official surveying his former comrades. + +"Now, Captain Rolls," said Barthelemy, "you can take possession of your +ship. But that we may not leave our mate here in exchange for your +doctor, loose Moody from the mast." + +Two pirates obeyed the command, avoiding the feet of the chief mate, who +was trying to deal them a severe kick. When he found his hands free, his +first act was to give the nearest liberator a heavy blow, and the second +to pick up his short pipe and put it between his lips. + +"Moody!" said the captain, folding his arms, "I just punished you as +your commander's subordinate; now that it is over we again stand man to +man; if you feel that I have wronged you, take your weapons. I am ready +to give you any satisfaction and, if you desire, will fight with you." + +Moody did not utter a syllable in reply, but hastily threw off his coat, +rolled up his sleeves, loosed his collar and, with sparkling eyes, +eagerly looked about for a weapon. + +"Give him arms," said Barthelemy; "which will you have, pistol or +sabre?" + +"Give me a sword," gasped Moody hoarsely, "we shall be nearer each +other." + +"Make room for this brave man, lads; keep out of the reach of his arm, +for he'll strike at any one. Excuse our fighting in your ship, Captain +Rolls, but satisfaction must be given in the presence of those who +witnessed the offence. Well, Moody, are you ready? Give a signal, when +you are ready." + +Moody, however, required few preparations, and as soon as he seized the +sword, with the flat of whose blade he dealt a severe blow on the back +of the person who handed it, he began to strike furiously around him in +every direction, so that had twelve men stood near he would have mowed +them all down--only he failed to hit the one directly in front of him. + +Barthelemy seemed to be merely toying with him. He scarcely moved his +arm to parry the strokes which his adversary's fury did not suffer him +to calculate. + +"Take care--you are running directly upon my sword--Moody, don't put +your own eyes out. Look, I am not standing where you are aiming. Don't +strike at me so fiercely, I shall think you want to kill me." + +It was a true robber-fray; for the rage of one adversary, the jests of +the other, the rude laughter of the bystanders, the jeering, irritating +remarks do not occur in duels between gentlemen. + +The loud laughter of the pirates enraged the chief mate still more, and +he grew fairly frantic when, glancing aside, he saw among them Dr. +Scudamore, who had spread out his surgical instruments on his knees, and +was gazing at him with a look of diabolical pleasure in his green eyes. +Turning from the captain he rushed directly at the surgeon. + +"Oho, my good fellow, don't run overboard," said Barthelemy, barring his +way, upon which Moody, his face distorted by rage, again attacked him. +Barthelemy avoided the blow and pierced his right arm. The chief mate +instantly picked up his sword with his left hand; the foes again +confronted each other, breast to breast. + +Then Barthelemy, with a clever trick of fence, struck his antagonist's +sword from his grasp and, setting his foot upon it, seized him by the +throat and flung him among his companions. + +Scudamore officiously ran forward to aid the wounded man. + +"Don't come here!" roared Moody hoarsely, "or I'll tear you to pieces +and put you on my wounds, as the ourang outang does leaves." + +The chief mate would not allow his injuries to be bandaged, but though +bleeding profusely, struggled with his companions till they bound one +arm to a beam; and continued to strike about him with the injured one +till that too, was bound, after which he kicked violently and when his +feet were also tied, bit like a mad dog. They were obliged even to gag +him before the doctor could bandage his wounds, and stanch the blood. + +"How bad the old gentleman's teeth are," said Scudamore, with a +malicious twinkle in his eyes. "We shall probably have to pull out some +of them." + +Moody could make no reply to this hideous threat except a roar like a +wild beast's, and could not even bite the hand which the doctor passed +over him. + +Meanwhile Barthelemy had had the brigantine's crew released and told +them that they would find all their weapons in the mate's cabin, whose +key he would give them when he left the Neptune. + +With these words he approached Rolls, bowed courteously, and held out +his hand. After a short pause the latter clasped it, saying: + +"Very well, I will take it, in the hope that we may meet again." + +"I hope this will happen soon. A presentiment tells me that some day I +shall kill you in a victorious battle, Captain Rolls." + +"And one tells me that I shall get you hung, Robert Barthelemy." + +"I thank you for your kind intention. By the way, you have only one keg +of biscuits and a cask of water--that will not supply you until you +reach London. May I offer you some of my store of provisions?" + +"I will accept it, and trust that you will be fully repaid." + +"Oh, it's not worth talking about. I would willingly lend you a few +cannons, that you may not be captured on the way." + +"I advise you not to do so, for if I had even two guns, I would try to +recover my stolen silver." + +"You are a good fellow. We shall meet again somewhere. Till then, +farewell." + +The two captains shook hands with each other. Meanwhile the pirates had +rolled several casks of biscuit and water from their vessel to the +brigantine. Barthelemy gave the sailors the key and, with a bound, +reached the deck of his own ship, the pirates shoved off from the +Neptune and, with three cheers, set sail. Half an hour later, two +vessels were seen moving across the sea in opposite directions, widening +the space between them every moment. + + + + +Chapter II + +In Hispaniola + + +Robert Barthelemy's name became known everywhere on the high seas. +Holland and Portuguese sailors trembled before him; for when they +recognized his vessel and, after a desperate chase, gained the shelter +of a harbor, he followed them, robbed them under the very guns of the +port and, if attacked, ordered the town to be bombarded and its +fortifications given to the flames. + +There was no end to the marvelous tales related about him. + + * * * * * + +On the southern coast of the beautiful Island of Hayti, in a pleasant +valley, stands a small wooden house, whose front is covered with +climbing vines, and whose windows are filled with flowers; doves coo +softly on the gable-roof, and a white cat lies purring on the threshold. + +At both sides of the little house stretch cotton fields, whose green +foliage charms the traveler's eye as, coming from the interior, he sees +toward evening the little cottage in the quiet valley. + +Who lived there? + +One evening just at twilight, a light boat containing three men was +pulled to the shore. One left it, the two others remained. + +The youth who climbed the bank was a handsome fellow, with a bright, +eager face; his complexion was bronzed by exposure to the weather and, +as the wind tossed back his hair, the locks bared a high, broad +forehead. + +He gazed around him with the joyous expression of one who, after a long +absence, again treads his native soil, and to whom every tree and bush +is familiar. + +A rough seaman's cape rested on his shoulders, his head was covered by a +round straw hat, and his white shirt collar turned over a loosely tied +scarf; he was probably a young sailor who, after a long voyage, had +again come near his home and was permitted to pay it a short visit. + +The path was just as he had left it, perhaps a little more uneven than +in the old days; the doves were cooing, and the white cat purred in the +doorway just as of yore. The new-comer approached with noiseless tread, +softly turned the handle of the door, and entered. + +A gray-haired woman sat inside in a large armchair. She was the young +man's grandmother. With her were three girls--two were fair, the third +was dark, with starry eyes and a face like the young dawn. + +All started at his entrance, exclaiming in one breath; "William!" The +two sisters ran to meet him, the grandmother, unable to leave her +chair, only held out her arms, his betrothed bride was the last to greet +him that she might remain the longer in his embrace. + +There was great delight in the little circle, a hundred questions rained +upon him. + +"It is a whole year since we saw you last," said the grandmother, with +tears in her eyes. + +"A whole eternity," murmured his betrothed bride, laying her head on his +shoulder. + +"You won't leave us again, will you?" asked his youngest sister, +clinging to her brother's neck as if she could hold him at her side. + +"I can stay an hour. The ship is in the offing while the sailors are +getting a supply of fresh water on shore." + +"Must you still remain absent from us?" asked the gray-haired woman, +sighing. + +"Unfortunately, yes. I expected to attain my purpose in a shorter time, +but fate is against me; whenever I have thought I was approaching my +goal, I was thrust back. Twice I have acquired some property, but +ill-luck deprived me of it, and I was forced to begin anew." + +"Ill luck?" asked the younger sister, "that means shipwreck and pirates, +doesn't it?" + +"Yes, shipwreck." + +"And not pirates? We have feared them most! How often we have said that +they might capture or kill you, leaving us to weep for you forever." + +The young man smiled. + +"Fear nothing from them, dear. They will not harm me. At the utmost, +they will rob me of my property, and you would receive me kindly, were I +to return penniless, would you not?" + +"Ah, if only you would never go," whispered his beautiful fiancee. + +"Nay, dearest, I cannot let you spend your life here; I wish to see you +in splendor. I long to take you to some great, beautiful city, where you +can have pleasant society, where the sun cannot scorch these fair +features, nor toil roughen these little hands. You will see that it will +yet come to pass." + +"Add: with the help of God!" said the grandmother. "Every enterprise +must begin with God's favor, then it will end with it. Do you still +pray, William?" + +The young man sighed. + +"You once taught me many prayers, grandmother." + +"Do not forget them. _We_ pray for you every day." + +"Yes indeed," said the younger sister. "Grandmother reads from the +prayer-book, and then we repeat a long prayer, in which we name all the +good things we entreat God to grant you and all the evil ones from +which we beseech him to guard you: storms, sickness, shipwreck, hunger, +thirst, sharks, savages, and above all, Robert Barthelemy." + +The young man gazed at her with a smile. "And why from Robert +Barthelemy?" he asked. + +"Because he is a wicked pirate, whom no one can resist, who is in league +with the devil, and who either burns all whom he captures over a slow +fire or else casts them into the sea." + +"That is not true, Barthelemy never tortures any one." + +"Oh, we remember him, too, in our daily prayer." + +"Do you?" + +"Yes indeed. Every day, crossing ourselves three times, we entreat God +to sink to the bottom of the sea the horrible monster, whom we hold in +such fear for your sake." + +"So you all remember Robert Barthelemy at the end of your prayers?" +asked the youth, embracing the girls in turn as they hung weeping and +laughing around his neck. + +"Julietta!" said one, "sing William the song you composed about him and +the pirates." + +"You have composed a song about me and the pirates?" asked the youth. + +Julietta flushed crimson and after withdrawing shyly from his embrace +she sang in a sweet, tremulous voice: + + Far, far away the white dove flies, + In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies, + The dove is my lover so dear, + The hawk is the pirate I fear. + Oh, God, stretch forth Thy mighty arm + My absent lover shield from harm. + Wing the dove's flight, + The black hawk smite; + Back to its nest let the white dove flee, + Whelm the black hawk beneath the sea. + +"Do you understand?" asked the younger sister. "You are the dove, and +the hawk is--Robert Barthelemy." + +The young man showered kisses upon the three beautiful girls, not one of +whom suspected that the dear brother, the still dearer lover, whom they +embraced was--Robert Barthelemy himself. + +Yet it was even so. This quiet little house had sheltered his childhood, +the gray-haired woman had taught him to pray, the merry girls to love. + +Two families had emigrated to this island, one from Ireland, the other +from Corsica; the parents of both speedily succumbed to the foreign +climate, and the two families became united under one roof. Julietta +grew up as William's sister to become finally his affianced wife. + +They were poor, and it pierced the young man to the heart to witness +their penury. He longed for a fairer fortune, and often stood on the +threshold absorbed in watching some ship vanishing across the sea. He +frequently met sailors who came on shore for fresh water, and heard of +their wonderful adventures, of countries with golden sands, of the good +luck of sailors, and when he returned home he brooded in gloomy silence +for hours. + +One day he told his family that he was going to seek his fortune and, +bidding them farewell, embarked on a slave ship. Their tears at his +departure, the memory of how they followed him, renewing their farewell, +how his affianced wife, forgetting her maidenly shyness, convulsively +embraced him, covering his face with tears and kisses, sinking +unconscious on the shore as his boat tossed on the waves toward the +ship--all these things remained forever engraved on William's heart, +though Fate in after days inscribed much more upon it. + +His industry and honesty made him popular upon the ship, first he became +boatswain, then mate, and was already on his way home with the wages he +had saved, already saw in imagination the home, the family for whom he +intended to win a better fate, when the ship was attacked and captured +by pirates. + +William fought single-handed against ten, but in vain, superior numbers +prevailed. Knives already glittered at his throat, when the captain's +hoarse voice shouted: "The lad must not be hurt. Bring him to me alive." + +The pirates seized the youth and bore him to their leader. William +looked at him in horror. It was Davis, the Sea Devil. + +"You are a good fighter," said Davis in his shrill, piercing tones, +"it's a pity that you became an ordinary sailor, you would have been a +splendid pirate. Boys, give him a drink." + +One of the pirates held his calabash filled with rum to William's lips, +but he turned his head away in loathing. To drink from the pirates' cups +means joining the band. + +"Ha! ha!" cried the captain laughing, "You are an obstinate fellow. Have +you ever seen a man tied to the main-mast when the sun is hottest? Or +have you witnessed the jest of sewing a man naked in a raw hide and +exposing him to the sun's rays till the skin on his body shrivels?" + +"You can torture me," William remarked quietly. + +"That is why I shall _not_," answered Davis. "Here, men, release this +fellow and guard him well, for we shall yet make a man of him. Since I +turned pirate, this is the first rascal who has dared to defy me: take +good care of him, he'll be my successor some day." + +William remained on the pirate ship, hoping that it would encounter a +stronger vessel and he would thus be released. + +Not a week passed without a fray, the pirates attacked every vessel that +appeared on the horizon, even when it was larger than their own, and +always conquered; the foe was vanquished or yielded, fortune favored the +robbers. + +At last two ships of war pursued the Sea Devil. William now hoped +confidently for liberation. The foe had eighty guns and two hundred men, +while the pirate had thirty guns and a crew of sixty. + +When the pirates perceived that they could not fly, they boldly attacked +one of the frigates and, at the first fire, sent a red hot ball into the +enemy's powder magazine. The vessel was instantly blown into the air, +her companion set sail and, with cowardly haste, fled from the pirates. + +"So that is the fate of honest folk!" thought William, as the pirates' +shouts of victory echoed around him, and turning to his next neighbor, +he said: + +"Give me a drink from your calabash." + +The man was Skyrme. + +"All right, my lad!" shouted the Hercules, giving the youth a hearty +slap on the shoulder, "I knew this would be the end." + +As he spoke he drew the young man to the captain and, before the eyes of +the whole ship's company, he wrote in the black book the name: Robert +Barthelemy. + + * * * * * + +Sisters, betrothed bride, and grandmother had wept till their hearts +were relieved. The hour had passed, William had returned. He could not +give his family a single shilling, though his ship was full of treasure. +But it was all stolen property, and William could bring nothing stained +with crime beneath the roof where his dear ones dwelt--poor, but pure in +heart. + +The gray-haired grandmother kissed and blessed him, her tears falling on +his head, the girls went with him to the shore and, while Julietta clung +about his neck, the others lingered behind, in order not to disturb the +sweet mysterious whispers of the lovers. + +"When shall you return?" asked the girl. + +"When I can make you happy." + +"Your love alone can do that. You need not sail the sea for my +happiness, it could be gained by seeing you always at my side." + +"That is what children think. I wish we could never outgrow the belief. +But--in the hands of the poor everything is poor, even happiness." + +The young girl shook her head. + +Meanwhile they reached a copse which concealed the shore, and here the +young man stopped. + +"Don't go any farther; my companions are rough sailors, I do not wish +them to disturb our parting. Turn back now. Our grandmother is expecting +you." + +The two sisters, with many kisses, embraces, and tears, turned back, but +Julietta still clung to her departing lover, whispering in stifled +tones. + +"Take me with you." + +The youth trembled from head to foot and gazed with a blanched face at +the young girl, who still clasped him in a convulsive embrace. + +"What are you thinking of? You would come with me--to sea?" + +"I should be happy anywhere with you. I should not fear the storms, the +sight of your face would give me courage. I should be happy if I might +share with you every peril, every privation, which you must now +encounter alone; and if it were not God's will that we should ever +attain our goal, I could at least die with you." + +William's face clouded still more. What love! What self-sacrifice! A +Paradise opened before him. But at the portal of that Paradise stood an +angel with a flaming sword, saying: "Back, your name is Robert +Barthelemy." + +"I have often thought," said the girl trembling, "that some day when you +return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she come to meet me?' +they will lead you to a flowery mound and say: 'She waited long, waited +until her heart broke, she faded away and now rests here'--will you not +then say to yourself: 'Why did I not take her with me?'" + +"Do not talk so! Do not talk so!" exclaimed the lover, in a voice choked +with anguish. "What you ask is impossible. Go back." + +The girl grew as white as a lily, her arms fell from her lover's neck, +her beautiful head drooped upon her breast. + +He caught the fainting figure in his arms and laid it gently on the +grass, pressed a kiss on the colorless face, and then rushed through the +copse like a madman. + + * * * * * + +Barthelemy thrust the scarlet plume in his hat and joined his men; no +tears glittered in his eyes, which now flashed fire; he was once more +the proud, bold, reckless corsair chief. + +The haughty carriage of his head, his steady glance and resolute +movements all belied the gentle, dreamy lover of an hour before. + +The first look from his keen eyes noticed the dissatisfaction on the +faces of the band. During his absence, their mood toward their leader +had changed. Some one had guessed its motive, and the rumor ran that +their captain was entangled by a love affair. + +"What is the matter?" cried Barthelemy, his eyes wandering from face to +face. "Why do you look so sullen? Speak." + +The pirates drew back defiantly. Moody thrust his hands into his +pockets, puffed violently at his short pipe, and gazed at the clouds. + +"Speak, old Lucifer, what has happened to these fellows?" + +"H'm, captain," replied the pirate, folding his arms and leaning with +his back against a beam, "don't you know the pirates' creed? The creed +of loving no one and fearing no one." + +"I know it very well. Do _I_ fear any one?" + +"But you love; and whoever loves, sighs, whoever loves, feels, and +whoever feels is not fit for a pirate." + +"So you think that if I hold a woman dear, I may not be the equal of any +among you?" + +"You could not, captain! Whoever is in love, is always thinking of the +future, and longing, sooner or later, to retire to some quiet nook where +he can be happy, grow old, and die; he is always gaping at the moon, he +scorns his comrades and wants to be better than they. Such a man is not +fit for us. Captain, I never loved any one in my life, never, and these +stout fellows around you have neither father, mother, wife, nor +sweetheart. Such men belong to the sea, men who, when tempests howl and +bullets hiss, do not think of quiet homes and loving maidens. These +flowers do not bloom for us. If a girl embraces and kisses you to-day, +she will deceive and betray you to-morrow. Once we thought of bringing a +cargo of wives from Paris. We chose them from the Salpetriere; at least +we had no cause to fear that we should fall in love with them. Huh! Even +that didn't last long; pirate folk are not used to joking; when they +are angered, instead of beating, they kill. At the end of a month, not +more than two of the women were alive. Such feelings demoralize +pirates." + +"So you believe," replied Barthelemy, looking him full in the face, +"that your hearts are stouter than mine, because they expect nothing. +You will have an opportunity to prove it at once. Take heed. We shall +meet to-night on the high seas a fleet of Portuguese merchant +vessels--forty-two ships under the convoy of two well-equipped men of +war--from the islands of Todos los Santos, laden with gold and goods. If +you want to see a venture that will fill half the world with admiration, +come with me." + +"Surely you won't assert that you'll conquer these forty-two ships?" +asked Skyrme. + +"No, but I will seize the one which has the richest cargo and, in full +view of the whole fleet and the men of war, take her away with us from +amid the forty-one other vessels." + +The pirates gazed doubtfully into Barthelemy's face, uncertain whether +he was jesting or in earnest. + +"This will afford an opportunity to show whose heart is boldest!" said +Barthelemy, "each one of us must cope with a hundred men, and each +individual must perform every minute a miracle at which he himself will +afterwards wonder." + +"Captain," said Asphlant, after a long pause, "that borders on the +impossible." + +"A minute ago you were all boasting of your hard hearts; Moody doesn't +seem to have interpreted your feelings correctly when he said that the +pirate should fear nothing. And _you_ want to teach _me_ courage. Go! +Let whoever fears to accompany me, quit the ship--we are near land--and +return to his mother! If I am left with but three men, I will still do +what I have said, for I am brave, not only while drunk with rum, like +you, but while my face is still wet with the tears of the woman I love." + +The pirates shrank back, shamed, yet perplexed, by the boundless +audacity of their leader. Barthelemy noted the effect of his speech and +turned again to them with words of stirring encouragement. + +"Are you afraid when I lead the way? If I should say: 'Come with me to +the bottom of the sea, we'll attack Neptune and drag him by the beard to +the sunlight, I will lead you!' Would not you follow? If I should say: +'Let us declare war against half the world, sail up the Thames, and set +fire to the Tower, I will lead!' Would you remain behind? If I should +say: 'Earthly strife is pitiful, come with me to Heaven, come with me to +Hell!' Would you not follow even there?" + +The pirates, in a frenzy of enthusiasm, roared: "We'll go with you!" and +stretched their hands to Barthelemy, who clasped them one by one. + +"There, my men, there! We are sons of Fortune, and Fortune favors the +bold. The sea is our slave, the storm our playfellow, death our delight! +What others dare not think, we do." + +"Hurrah! Long live Robert Barthelemy!" roared the whole band, tossing +their caps into the air. + +Twilight was gathering. In the cottage three angels, with clasped hands, +were praying that God would bury in the depths of the ocean that evil +monster, Robert Barthelemy, the terror of all travelers. + + * * * * * + +Darkness had closed in, the myriad stars of night were reflected from +the surface of the sea. Forty-two ships, sailing at nearly equal +distances from one another, appeared on the horizon. The wind was fair, +the crews were sleeping quietly, the men watching from the mast-heads +drowsily announced that a sail was in sight, the captains heard the +words and turning over, fell asleep again. + +The approaching vessel tacked for some time, then steered straight +toward one of the ships in the middle of the fleet, the Triton. + +Her captain was slumbering soundly in his hammock, when the mate entered +and reported the approach of the craft. + +"Salute him," said the commander, peevishly, drawing up the coverlet. + +The approaching vessel stopped, and a boat put off in which sat six men, +who rowed with vigorous strokes to the Triton. No one seemed disturbed +by their approach. On their arrival, three men remained in their seats, +while the three others climbed on deck. + +One of the party inquired for the captain, with whom he had urgent +business. The cabin where he slept was pointed out, and the speaker +entered, the other two men remaining at the door. + +"What is wanted now?" cried the captain angrily, leaning out of the +hammock. To this question the stranger replied quietly: + +"Not another word, sir. I am Robert Barthelemy." + +The captain was rigid with fright. The pirate placed no pistol at his +breast, did not threaten him with death; he merely said: "I am Robert +Barthelemy." + +"What do you desire?" asked the captain with chattering teeth. + +"Nothing at all," answered the pirate, "except an answer to a single +question: can you tell me which of these forty-two ships has the richest +cargo?" + +"You ask which has the richest cargo?" + +"If it is against your principles to answer my question, I will take +your own ship, and if you should make it compatible with honor to +deceive me by false statements, you may rest assured that you shall eat +steel and drink sea-water." + +The pirate's resolute language, the sight of the fierce fellows in the +doorway, speedily brought the captain to terms and he promised to point +out the vessel in question, especially as he felt perfectly sure that, +if the pirates ventured to attack it, they would certainly be defeated. + +"Dress yourself and come with us," said Barthelemy. + +"What? To _your_ ship?" + +"That you may not betray us by a signal to the other ships. No excuses. +I must have the _best_ cargo, unless you want me to content myself with +yours. Forward!" + +The captain yielded, threw on his clothes, and surrounded by the three +pirates, without daring to attract the attention of his own men, he +followed Barthelemy and his companions into the boat, which returned to +the ship. + +Meanwhile the men on board of the other vessels in the fleet quietly +witnessed the strange vessel's intercourse with the Triton, without the +slightest suspicion. + +On reaching the Sea Devil, the abducted captain pointed out to Captain +Barthelemy the vessel he desired, assuring him, on his word of honor, +that it possessed the most valuable cargo, but withholding the fact that +it had forty guns and a crew of one hundred and fifty men. + +The Sea Devil instantly turned and steered toward the ship. + +She was a huge three-master of clumsy build; her elaborately ornamented +prow, the shape of her decks, and her rigging all marked her as an +old-fashioned merchantman. + +The pirate had come so near that one could shout from one ship to the +other. The deepest silence reigned on board the former, the men stood +motionless at their posts beside the ropes, oars, or guns. Suddenly, +when every eye was fixed upon the approaching ship, whose mate watched +the craft with drowsy indifference, not feeling the slightest suspicion, +the captured captain perceived that no one was watching him and, +springing on the bulwark, shouted: "To arms, men!" threw himself into +the sea, and swam rapidly back to his own ship. + +All this was done so quickly and unexpectedly that the pirates, in their +surprise, did not know what course to pursue. + +The attention of the crew had been instantly roused by the captain's +warning shout, and the pirates saw with astonishment the superior force +that opposed them. + +Some looked doubtfully at each other, and all thought that instant +flight was their only refuge. + +Barthelemy gazed scornfully around, and quietly folded his arms. + +"They are only Portuguese," he said contemptuously. + +The corsairs burst into a loud roar of laughter and pressed closer to +the ship, whose defenders, terrified by the sight of the fierce, +laughing faces, discharged their guns without taking correct aim, not +even doing the rigging of the Sea Devil the slightest damage. The +grappling irons of the latter were already flung on her foe, and the +next instant the savage pirates sprang on deck, so overwhelming the crew +by their furious onslaught that, unheeding their officers' commands, +they flung down their weapons and leaped into the sea. + +The battle continued on the deck of the merchantman, whose firing had +alarmed the other forty-one vessels, which now also began to discharge +their guns right and left, but without coming nearer, for they had no +desire to mingle in the fray, and, in the very midst of the fleet, the +pirates killed one half the Portuguese sailors, while losing only two of +their own number. + +Barthelemy became master of the ship, and lashing it to the Sea Devil, +sailed off with both vessels at a wonderful rate of speed. + +The two men-of-war that were guarding the fleet now appeared and gave +chase to the pirate craft. + +Barthelemy fled for a time and, after drawing the two ships far enough +away, he suddenly turned, divided his crew between his own vessel and +the prize, and sailed toward the pursuers. + +The latter seemed startled by this audacity, signalled to each other, +and while the pirates were wondering what was to be the outcome of their +clumsy manoeuvres, they stopped the chase and returned to the fleet, +leaving the Sea Devil to sail joyously over the high seas with her +booty. + + * * * * * + +The pirates landed on the coast of Guiana in a very merry mood. They had +plenty of money; for they had found in the captured ship eight thousand +gold coins, strings of oriental pearls sent by the Emperor of Brazil as +a gift to the Queen of Portugal, and whole chests of valuable goods. + +And was it their intention to put the money at interest, the costly +fabrics in shops to be sold by the yard? No indeed, their custom was to +drink till the last gold coin was squandered. Whoever laid aside his +share of the booty was a traitor, and whoever withdrew with his money to +lead a respectable life, they killed. + +This habit of the pirates was well-known on shore. They came on land +only when they had money and wanted to spend their treasure in the +shortest possible time. On the sea men trembled before them, on shore +they received them with open arms. There are documents proving that on +the islands near Surinam the highest officials vied with one another in +their hospitality to the pirates. + +True the corsairs, in a single fortnight, spent eight thousand gold +moidores, and the women of the city, from the highest lady to the lowest +servant wench, were clad in silks and cashmeres, while the costly pearls +destined for the fair neck of Her Majesty the Queen of Portugal clasped +that of the Regent's wife; indeed there were gala entertainments from +the halls of the governor's residence to the lowest hut, and the pirates +went from one to another, here a gentleman and there a lout, carousing, +dancing, fighting, and love-making all day long. For an entire fortnight +there was neither night nor day, only one continuous revel, a sea of +pleasure whose depths no man could sound. + +Then, when all joys were exhausted, that is, when the last moidore had +slipped through their fingers, the pirates went back to their ships, +rubbed their eyes, and looked about for more work. + +They received tidings of a richly laden brigantine which was approaching +the coast. Towards evening the helmsman saw the ship on the horizon. + +"Caution!" warned Barthelemy. "If they see us, they will have time to +escape. Let the two ships remain here under Lieutenant Kennedy's +command, while forty picked men go on board the sloop with me. Then we +can approach the brigantine unsuspected." + +He himself chose his men, among them Skyrme, Scudamore, the mate Henry +Glasby, Asphlant, Moody, and Simpson, and felt so sure of capturing the +brigantine before morning that, contrary to his custom, he did not see +that the sloop was provided with a sufficient supply of provisions. + +The night was dark and all through the long hours the sloop fairly flew +in the direction where they expected to find the brigantine. According +to Barthelemy's calculation, they would be within gunshot of her at +dawn. + +And lo, when the sun rose and they gazed around the horizon, the +brigantine was nowhere in sight. They tacked right and left, but not a +sail was visible anywhere on the horizon. + +The brigantine had doubtless discovered them and vanished under cover of +the darkness. + +Barthelemy was furious, and, unwilling to return defeated, sought the +brigantine by altering his course hither and thither. For a week he +sailed the seas, constantly struggling with head winds and currents; on +the eighth day his supply of provisions was exhausted and he was forced +to anchor and send a small boat back to his ships for food and +assistance. Barthelemy and his companions remained on the sloop. + +According to the closest estimate the boat would need three days to +reach the ships and the same time to return. So Barthelemy must stay six +days at one point in the ocean. + +A week before they were revelling in luxury, while wine flowed in +rivers, now, under the rays of a scorching sun, they divided their last +biscuit and longed for a drink of water. + +At last Barthelemy thought of lashing some masts together into a raft, +on which he sent two men with a cask to seek land. They were almost +dying of thirst when the raft returned; the men had reached the shore +and filled the cask with muddy water. They also brought a bunch of some +plant which resembled a radish. + +Miry water and radishes! A royal banquet for the pirates! But soon this, +too, was exhausted, the six days had expired, the boat had not returned, +and the adverse tide made it impossible for the raft to reach the shore +a second time. + +The men grew desperate and began to murmur. + +"Worthless fellows!" blustered Moody. "Degenerate pirates, who succumb +to hunger after fasting only three days. The world is going to ruin. +Even pirates turn cowards. It wasn't so when I was young and Olonais was +captain. + +"For a whole week we ate nothing but dry roots, and then we got food +from the governor's table in the heart of Vera Cruz." + +"And you ventured to fight on land?" asked Asphlant, with an incredulous +look. + +"The ground certainly didn't tremble under our feet as it does under +yours when you go ashore; once, twenty of us, under Olonais, pushed +forward to the gates of Havana." + +"I didn't hear that you ever captured the city." + +"We came within an ace of it. Luckily for himself, the governor found +out how few of us there were in the party before we got our hands on his +throat." + +"So you returned whence you came." + +"It's easy enough for you to talk; the governor sent two hundred men +after us in a warship, while we had only two boats. He also sent along +an executioner to hang us to the trees on the coast when we were +caught." + +"So you managed to escape." + +"We waited for them and, after having lured them far enough from Havana, +I and another dare-devil, who, however, did not live to grow old, like +me, slipped overboard and, swimming under the ship with our augers, +bored eight holes in her bottom. Ho! ho! how quickly she sunk, how the +soldiers roared for help, splashed about in the water and held out their +hands for aid. Then Olonais went back with the boats and wherever a +soldier's head rose out of the water he slashed it off with a huge +sabre, all but the executioner, whom he recognized by his red cap and +sent back to the governor with his compliments and the message that he +did not need him." + +"Your captain was a bold fellow, Moody. What became of him?" + +"H'm! H'm! he had a strange end." + +"I suppose he was captured at last." + +"Far stranger than that. In a fight with savages, he was wounded and +taken prisoner. The scoundrels ate the poor man." + +"The boat!" suddenly shouted the man at the helm, and all left the old +pirate and his stories to watch the approaching yawl, which they hailed +with cheers, waving their caps aloft, while the returning men sat +silent, as if they found the meeting less joyful than their comrades. + +Skyrme was the captain of the boat. When he reached the sloop he stepped +on her deck with a downcast, angry face, and answered the questions +poured upon him from all sides: "Have you rum, meat, biscuit?" with +"Nothing," and when, wondering at the reply, the men shook their heads, +Skyrme turned to Barthelemy with quivering lips. + +"Captain, we are deceived, betrayed, lost." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Both the ships you intrusted to Kennedy have disappeared." + +"Impossible." + +"It is true. We searched two days without finding any trace of them; at +last we learned from some fisherman that, as soon as we were out of +sight, they crowded on all sail and went to sea." + +A roar of mingled fury and despair greeted these words; the cheated +pirates, with knives uplifted, vowed to inflict a thousand tortures on +the traitors. Barthelemy was deadly pale. + +"We will meet them," he said hoarsely. "There is not a moment to lose. +Forward my lads." + +"Where?" asked Skyrme despairingly. + +"To sea!" answered Barthelemy proudly, pointing to the offing. + +"Yes, but in this plight, without a mouthful of bread, a drop of water." + +"The first ship will give us both. Woe to those we encounter, they will +fight with fiends." + +"But suppose we should meet no vessel for days?" + +"There are forty of us. If we meet no ship for two days, we will have a +true pirate banquet; whoever draws the fatal lot will yield us his body +for food, his blood for drink. We are supplied for forty days; those who +survive will inherit our need of vengeance. Forward!" + +The savage shouts of the pirates echoed far over the waves as they +boldly steered toward the open sea, and that very day they met two +well-armed sloops coming from the island of Defrada. + +The buccaneers were thirsting for carnage. After a stubborn defence they +captured both vessels, from which they took only the guns and provisions +and then sunk them. + +Again they sailed to and fro for several days without encountering any +craft. Their provisions ran out and, just as they had divided the last +portion of water, they saw on the horizon a Bristol vessel. The sloop +instantly gave chase. The other tried to escape and the pirates pursued +all day, crowding so much sail upon the sloop that she often buried her +deck in the waves. Towards evening the clumsy ship, finding escape +impossible, yielded without resistance. + +The pirates were infuriated by the long pursuit, and the faces of many +plainly revealed their desire to cool their vengeance by giving their +captives a sea-bath. + +Barthelemy climbed on deck, where the crew awaited him with uncovered +heads. + +"Where is your captain?" he shouted. + +The worthy man, who was by no means desirous of renown, had gone below +to his cabin, from which he was dragged and brought before Barthelemy, +to whom he knelt. + +"Stand up, don't kneel. Lift him, that he may stand erect." + +Two pirates were obliged to drag the captain from his knees by main +force, but when he perceived that he would not be allowed to kneel on +deck, he lifted up his feet and knelt in the air, a comical sight which +turned the pirates' rage into laughter. + +"What is your ship's cargo?" asked Barthelemy. + +The captain earnestly begged to be released, protesting that he could +not speak while he was held in such a way, and then, trembling +violently, said that his vessel was loaded with Spanish wine. + +"That word saves you," returned Barthelemy, as the pirates exultingly +flung the captain into the air like a ball, and then ran down to the +hold whence they speedily rolled up two or three iron-bound casks. The +poor captain, sighing heavily, answered in reply to the buccaneers' +query concerning the name of his wine, "Malaga." + +The terrified man kept glancing anxiously toward one of the partitions +in the ship, and the pirates, noticing his fear, broke down the door, +behind which was carefully hidden a supply of the finest brain sausages, +which they brought out hung around their necks like strings of beads. + +This captain was a great gourmand, who had provided himself with the +choicest provisions. The pirates found large coops filled with pheasants +and Calcutta hens, which had been fed on nuts to give their flesh a +better flavor. The rascals pulled out every one of the birds. + +"Where's the barber?" they shouted, "Here's something to bleed!" and +they dragged Scudamore forward to use his valuable surgical instruments +to cut off the heads of the capons. Scudamore gleefully beheaded the +squawking fowl, each one of which the Bristol captain seemed to mourn, +and when he had dispatched the last, he suddenly seized the sighing +sailor by the hair, put his knife to his throat, and would have sent him +after the birds, had not Skyrme dealt him such a blow that he fell +headlong. + +"I supposed _these_ were to follow!" said the doctor with a fiendish +laugh. + +Meanwhile the pirates began to pluck the poultry, and then cut the fowl +up clumsily, lacking the help of Scudamore, who swore by all the imps of +Satan that he didn't enlist to kill animals, but men. + +The beautiful pheasants were flung into three large copper kettles, +white pepper and cod-fish were added, and fires were lighted under the +caldrons. + +"Oh, what barbarians!" sighed the English captain, "To cook cod-fish +with pheasants." + +As soon as the meat was half done they gathered around, flourishing +their knives. The captain was invited to take his seat among them and +share the meal, which he eagerly did, for on discovering that the birds +could no longer be saved, he developed a laudable intention of devouring +enough of them for three men. + +After the repast the wretches brought out the captain's preserved fruit, +stored carefully away for his own use, and ate it before his eyes. + +The rude fellows, accustomed to coarse smoked meat, greedily swallowed +the expensive pistachio nuts and preserved pineapples, while saying +contemptuously that they would much rather have onions. + +And how they drank the noble wine! From the narrow-necked bottles in +which it is usually sold! No, they knocked out the bottoms of the casks +and dipped it up with their hats, or held their mouths under the cock +and drank till they could scarcely rise. Swiftly as the wine poured into +their throats, songs and laughter poured out, the wildest shouts of +revelry which buccaneers ever uttered; even the English captain was +obliged to drink his own wine, and the more he swallowed, the more +firmly he began to believe that he himself was the pirate chief who had +captured and plundered a ship, and advised the men to hang each other, +being affected in precisely the opposite manner from Scudamore, who, +under the influence of the wine, believed himself an honest man who had +been taken prisoner by bandits; the result of which was that the two men +had a violent scuffle, and as the captain proved to be the stronger, +Scudamore lost two of his teeth. + +The former then triumphantly resumed his seat among the pirates, and by +singing several songs aloud, roused their enthusiasm to such a pitch +that Skyrme, starting up, vowed by a sea of wine to drink the Bristol +captain's health in a glass which no man had ever used. + +He kept his word, for, ordering a cask filled with Malvoisie to be +rolled up, he knocked out the head, sprang into it, and there drank the +health of the captain, who almost died with laughter, thinking it vastly +entertaining that a man should sit in the vessel from which he drank +without being afraid of swallowing himself. + + * * * * * + +The carouse on the captured ship lasted uninterruptedly for three days +and nights. On the third day the intoxicated pirates embraced the +drunken captain and, rolling a few casks of wine upon their own sloop as +a remembrance, took leave, urging him, when he reached Barbadoes, to +send them a few rich merchantmen, of which just now they were in great +need. Before he arrived there, however, the captain had entirely +recovered from his intoxication and, remembering, doubtless, his +slaughtered fowl and plundered wine, resolved to send a few ships in +pursuit of the pirates. + +He went to the governor, related his misfortune, and induced him, in the +absence of men-of-war, to fit up a merchant vessel with twenty-four guns +and a sloop with ten, and despatch them under the command of Captains +Rogers and Graves in chase of the bold buccaneers who roved so daringly +in waters so near port. The latter were not yet sober, for they still +had their wine, and when they saw the approaching vessels, believing +that they would prove rich prizes, tacked and stood toward them. + +The ship and sloop allowed them to come close, without answering the +pirates' first fire. + +This made the latter still bolder and, shouting to them to haul down +their flags and surrender, they steered directly toward them. + +But, at the instant they seized their grappling irons to throw on the +ship, her guns suddenly thundered a warning and, instead of an easy +prey, the buccaneers found themselves in the presence of a formidable +foe, which attacked them on both sides with a terrible cannonade. + +The peril instantly sobered the pirates, their confused yells ceased and +nothing was heard except the voice of Barthelemy, who always felt +strongest in the presence of the greatest danger. + +Amid the most furious cannonade, he defended himself against both +assailants, and as soon as a well-aimed broadside had caused momentary +confusion on one of the vessels, he availed himself of it to run out +between them, then, spreading all sail, fled with his foes in full +chase. Both were swift craft. It was impossible for Barthelemy to +escape. + +The cannonade continued, the Sea Devil fighting while flying, the other +two trying, first from the right, then from the left, to sail across her +bows. Suddenly the pirate's fire ceased, Barthelemy had thrown his guns +overboard. + +The pirate sloop was instantly lightened and, at the very moment his +foes believed him hopelessly lost, Barthelemy's craft flew away as +swiftly as a sea-gull, once more at liberty. + +The pursuers, left behind, at last gave up the chase and returned to +port. + +Off went the pirate, like a startled gadfly, to Newfoundland. Twenty-two +ships were in the harbor. The buccaneers had neither guns nor powder, +nothing but fury and knives. + +On reaching the port they beat their drums, blew their trumpets, ran up +the black flag, and the crews of the twenty-two ships fled to the shore. + +The pirates chose the best vessel in the fleet, robbed the others, and +set them on fire. The lesson received at Barbadoes still rankled in +their souls, they must have flames somewhere. So long as they remembered +Barbadoes, not a ship escaped them, and if one from that port fell into +their hands they slaughtered even the mice. + + * * * * * + +Luck changed, Barthelemy's star was in the ascendant, every day brought +treasures and victories. The whole sea was his taxpayer. At last he took +nothing from the captured ships except coined money; and the crews did +not even offer any resistance. With his splendid ship, on whose prow +was a carved and gilded figure of Fortuna, he visited every port in +turn, levying taxes from the vessels anchored in them. They paid +heavily; nay, if rumor could be trusted, safe-conducts could be +purchased from him--in advance. + +The rulers of all countries forbade their subjects to furnish the +pirates with provisions; but that was easily remedied. Ships bound for +Africa sailed at regular intervals, laden with provisions, from the +English colonies. These met the pirate by a concerted agreement, allowed +themselves to be plundered, apparently by force, and yielded up one or +two ships' cargoes. The buccaneers paid well for them. + +Once the young pirate chief ran into the harbor of St. Barthelemy and +went on shore with his whole crew. The inhabitants illuminated their +city, the governor came to meet him with a band of music and ordered +fireworks in their honor, while the ladies gave them a ball. + +The buccaneers knew how to entertain. True, with them dancing was very +apt to close with an orgy, and the orgy to end in a brawl; but fair +women feared kisses as little as broken heads; for the pirates scattered +gold with lavish hands in every direction. + +The pirates were gallants; they wore silk garments, gold lace, and +plumed hats, the chains of two or three gold watches hung from their +pockets, and diamonds and rubies flashed on their fingers. True, the +gold lace was perfumed with rum and brandy, the breath of the flatterers +reeked with the odor of onions and tobacco, pistols and blood-stained +knives were carried in their pockets with the gold watches, and the +hands on which diamonds glittered were black with the smoke of powder. +But fair women did not shrink from these things, for they knew that the +pirates never left a place until the last ring had vanished from their +fingers and the last watch from their pockets. + +The buccaneer obtained nothing by cajolery, he paid cash for everything, +and his hands were as full of gold as his lips of oaths. So why was it +so great a marvel that the governors opened their doors, and those who +ought to have led them to the gallows invited them to their tables. + +The governor of St. Christopher tried to drive Barthelemy out of his +harbor--what did he gain by it? Barthelemy burned his ships and +bombarded his city; the governor of St. Barthelemy was wiser, he +introduced the corsair to his wife and became a rich man. There are as +many customs as there are countries. We should think such proceedings +very strange. + + * * * * * + +The governor's wife was a beautiful Creole, whose eyes fired men's +hearts. Her face was pale, but when the sun of passion glowed upon it, +her cheeks at first flushed faintly with the rose-hue of dawn, then +deepened into crimson. + +To watch the alternation of these tints was the school of madness. + +Everyone was affected by the contagion of this frenzy, save her +husband--and no one more than the pirate chief Barthelemy. + +The husband, a stout, placid man, sat beside Barthelemy at the banquet, +opposite to the fair Creole. Barthelemy was drunk with wine and love. + +"Look at that woman," he said to the husband, extolling his wife: "What +a face! What eyes! What a matchless figure! A goddess who has left her +temple to come to West India! See those eyes! How they sparkle! What +need have we of sun or stars so long as they shine upon us?" + +The husband, on the contrary, paid no heed, but apparently deemed it +wiser to shut his eyes and nod sleepily. + +Barthelemy shook him by the collar. + +"Why are you not my foe, why don't I fling you into the sea, kill you at +once? I would make myself a king to call your wife my queen." + +The husband neither saw nor heard; when Barthelemy loosed his hold he +fell back into his chair and snored. + +Wild songs and the rattling of glasses echoed on all sides; each of the +buccaneers had found a sweetheart, and the voices and laughter of women +mingled with the oaths of the pirates; it seemed to be considered a +special token of tenderness--and many of the corsairs bestowed it,--to +fire their pistols in the room. + +Barthelemy, with a trembling hand, held out his wine-glass to the Creole +who drained it to the health of the corsair king. When she set it down, +he was kneeling at her feet. + +She had a fair round neck, and Barthelemy could not bear to see it +without an ornament, so snatching from his own a diamond chain worth ten +thousand dollars he clasped it round the beautiful woman's throat. Could +he do so without pressing her head against his breast, and when it +rested there, could he help kissing her? + +All the buccaneers joined in such a thundering cheer that the walls +shook, pounded the tables with their fists, and fired salvos of shots. + +The husband slept on like a drowsy bear. Barthelemy clasped the Creole's +slender waist. + +"Come with me," he whispered beseechingly; "I'll buy you from your +husband, I'll give him a million of gold in exchange. If he wants a +fleet, I'll drive hundreds of ships here like a flock of sheep. Come +with me, I will rob Satan of Hades and transform it into a Paradise for +you. I will load you with treasures, overwhelm you with delights, come +with me!" + +"Ay, ay, Captain," shouted Moody from the corner where he sat surrounded +by empty wine bottles, "drain the cup of joy and dash it against the +wall." + +Just at that moment a messenger entered, bringing dispatches for the +governor. + +The pirates gave him no chance to speak. "Don't wake him, don't you see +how sweetly he is sleeping? You would better drink." + +The herald was soon completely intoxicated and, seeing the governor's +wife whispering tenderly to Barthelemy, in the bewilderment of a +drunkard's ideas he carried the despatch to him. + +The latter was about to throw it down when, glancing at the address, +his eye caught the name "Hispaniola." + +The young leader's face suddenly darkened; he tore open the despatch and +with blanched face, read the following lines. + + _Sir_: The slaves in San Domingo rebelled a few days + ago, attacked the cotton plantations along the whole + coast, burned and destroyed them, and pitilessly + murdered the planters, sparing neither man, woman, nor + child. There is not a single dwelling left standing on + the northern coast of Hispaniola. + +Drops of cold perspiration stood on Barthelemy's brow, his eyes stared +fixedly into vacancy, his fingers clenched the paper convulsively; then, +starting up, he flung the Creole aside and dealt the table such a blow +with his clenched fist that the pirates, to a man, instantly became +silent and stared at him in wonder. + +"The carouse is over!" thundered their leader in a terrible voice. +"Hence to the ship, drop toying, and seize your weapons." + +The buccaneers could not yet recover from their bewilderment. The Creole +beauty, with sparkling eyes, pressed nearer to Barthelemy and raised his +hand to her glowing lips. + +Barthelemy's eyes sought Moody. The old pirate had drunk heavily, but +was perfectly sober. + +"You told me to drain the cup of joy to the dregs and then shatter it," +cried the young chief. "I will shatter it ere my lips have touched it." + +Even while speaking, he wrenched his hand from the Creole's clasp, and +drawing his sword, cried: + +"Forward to the coast of Hispaniola." + +Carried away by their leader's passion, the buccaneers joined in a +terrible cheer, and throwing down their glasses, pressed after him with +drunken enthusiasm from the joys of the banquet to wrestle with the fury +of the tempests. + + * * * * * + +The ship reached the shore of Hispaniola. Barthelemy promised his men +the treasures of a whole people, reserving for himself only their blood. + +He did not find a single ship in the harbor; there were only a few +fisher-boats tossing on the waves, from whose owners he learned that the +insurgent slaves, after ravaging the coast, had retired in large numbers +to the interior of the island. + +Barthelemy went on shore and rushed like a madman toward the cottage. + +He soon neared the hill which concealed the little valley, and continued +his way slowly, with a throbbing heart, as if fearing to behold with his +eyes what he already witnessed in his soul. The hill afforded a view of +the cottage. Here he had parted for the last time with his betrothed +bride; here she had sobbed, "Take me with you"; here she had predicted, +"Some day you will return and ask, 'Where is Julietta? Why doesn't she +come to meet me?'" + +His very heart shrank. One step more, and he would reach the hill-top--a +weeping-willow obstructed the view and, bending the boughs apart, he +gazed down into the valley. + +It was empty. Bare yellow fields lay dry and withered in the place of +the green plantation, and the site of the cottage was marked by a black +spot. + +Barthelemy stood motionless, with fixed eyes. No sigh escaped his lips, +but he suddenly fell as if lifeless, with his face pressed against the +grass. Perhaps he might have passed into the eternal slumber, had not +sad dreams come and forced him to witness the horrible bloody scenes +enacted when the Satanic band burst into the quiet, lonely cottage, +where the three girls and their grandmother knelt in prayer; he saw the +rabble rush in through door and windows, seizing their victims by the +hair, the thin, gray locks of the poor old grandmother, the luxuriant +raven ones, which he had so often kissed, of his worshipped Julietta. If +he had been lying in his grave, such a dream must have roused him. + +"Ah!" shrieked the pirate struggling back to consciousness, like a +person throwing off a deadly burden from his heart, and gazing around +him, gasping for breath as he wiped the perspiration from his eyes and +brow. "It is well that it was _only_ a dream," he faltered. Then a +glance into the valley proved that it was no delusion, but reality. +Springing to his feet he rushed wildly down into the valley to the ruins +of the hut, called the names of his dear ones, stirred the ashes as if +he might find them there, examined the footprints in the mire to see if +he could discover among them any traces of those of the objects of his +love. But he found nothing except the marks of clumsy negro feet, +nowhere the imprint of the dear, fairy-like ones. They were lost. Not a +vestige of the cottage remained except the charred threshold. Barthelemy +embraced and kissed it, his eyes growing dim with tears. + +"Ah!" he shouted, dashing them from his eyes, "Not water, but oil on the +flames! This is not the time to weep, but to avenge. A pirate's tears +are drops of blood! I will avenge you, my murdered family, on mankind, +on the whole world. Earth, grant me no more rest. Change the wine-cup to +wormwood ere it reaches my lips, and every throb of my heart to hate. I +had a single joy, my soul a single steadfast idea, which came to my +remembrance whenever any one sued to me for mercy, and I granted it. +That was joy. But it is forever torn from my heart, henceforward I will +give quarter to no one. Hear my vow, ye powers of Hell, and tremble--I +will send you as many black fiends as there are grains of dust in this +handful of ashes which I scatter on my head." + +With a terrible imprecation, Barthelemy flung into the air a handful of +ashes which he had clutched and, as they floated slowly down upon his +head, he sank on his knees and, sobbing convulsively, kissed the +threshold. + +"My God, my God, if it was Thy will to punish me, why didst Thou not +dash me against a cliff during the raging of a tempest, why didst Thou +not let me perish by arms, by hunger? Why didst Thou not make me mount +the scaffold? Why didst Thou permit Thy angels to atone for my crimes?" + +He sobbed bitterly, while the ashes he had scattered to bear witness to +his vow, drifted slowly down upon his head. + + * * * * * + +A traveller, driving his mule before him, came through the path leading +from the forest. Barthelemy barred his way. The man started at sight of +the fierce-looking stranger and began to appeal to his patron saint. + +"Whence do you come?" asked the pirate. + +"From La Vega. I bring good news. The insurgents are conquered and +already hang along the coast." + +"Bad news for me! Have none of them escaped?" + +"A few hundred took refuge in a captured ship and fled to Africa." + +"I thank you. You can go on." + +The messenger continued his journey, shaking his head; he could not +understand why any one should regret that the rebels were conquered, or +rejoice because a number of them had escaped. + + * * * * * + +"What has happened to you, captain?" asked Moody, when Barthelemy +returned to the ship. "You are as pale as a corpse." + +"Nothing," replied his commander in a hollow tone. "Only my heart has +died in my breast." + +The pirates asked no further questions. They knew all. Whenever any one +of them left the band, the others kept watch from a distance. They had +seen Barthelemy sitting despairingly beside the ruins of the hut, and +all shrank in timid silence from the pallid man. + +Barthelemy shut himself up in his cabin and, taking a chart, began to +study the course to Africa. His face was gloomy, but ever and anon his +eyes flashed fiercely. Suddenly he heard a knock at the door and angrily +opened it. + +"Who is disturbing me, now?" + +"I, captain," replied Scudamore. "We need your judgment." + +"Go until to-morrow. I will grant no favors to-day." + +"I want no favors from you, only the execution of the law. Three members +of the band took advantage of the time during which we were on shore to +desert and take refuge in the interior of the island. But I sleep with +my eyes open and, though I have but two of them, can watch the whole +hundred men." + +"And me also?" + +"There can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another, whoever +seeks to leave us is a traitor. We want no path for retreat, only for +advance. Whoever has once sworn faith, is ours forever, belongs to hell, +no power can free him, and if he will not live with us he must die." + +"Have you captured the fugitives?" + +"All three, they were only a mile from La Vega when we overtook them." + +"Bring them before me singly." + +Scudamore went in search of the prisoners, with fiendish delight, and +returned dragging the first one by the ear. + +He was a cowardly fellow whom the pirates had forced to join their band. + +"Oh, captain!" he cried falling on his knees before Barthelemy, "if you +believe in God and the angels, let me leave this accursed place. You are +all doomed to hell, permit me to save my soul from the flames of +purgatory. Oh! all you saints of Heaven, have mercy on my sinful head." + +A horrible roar of laughter from the pirates greeted these imploring +words. + +"You shall die," said Barthelemy coldly, motioning to the men to lead +him away. + +"Captain! For heaven's sake, you won't let me die thus, without the +sacrament or extreme unction, to the ruin and eternal perdition of my +soul?" + +"Wait, I'll confess you," said Scudamore with a diabolical laugh, +putting the rope around the doomed man's neck. + +"Oh God, my Creator, is there no one to say a prayer for me? Alas, I +once knew so many and have forgotten them all." + +The pirates, laughing loudly, dragged to the mast the unhappy man, who +began to roar the air of a song whose words he had long since forgotten. +A minute later the song ceased, the man was hanging above. + +The second prisoner was now brought forward. He, too, was only a common +sailor. His companions were forced to bind him hand and foot in order to +drag him before the captain, and he kept up a constant torrent of oaths. + +"Yes, I ran away from you because I loathed this vile, roystering life, +toiling and fighting every day and when, at the risk of death, one +gained a little money, a man had to throw it away. I'll run from you a +hundred times more." + +"Not once," replied Scudamore grinning. He apparently had far more taste +for the hangman's trade than for the physician's. Barthelemy silently +waved his hand, and the pirate hung. + +The third prisoner now appeared, and Barthelemy exclaimed in surprise, +"That is Henry Glasby." + +The former captain of the Fortuna was the third captive. + +Glasby was a handsome young man, with a noble face, whom the pirates +kept among them by force on account of his superior knowledge of +seamanship; his gentle nature and kind heart were known to the whole +band, for he protected all who fell into their hands, as far as lay in +his power, frequently paying their ransom out of his own pocket; his +entreaties had saved many a ship from burning, and he had always kept +aloof from the bacchanalian orgies of his companions, for which reason +they did not hold him in special regard, and always watched him with +suspicious eyes. He had already made one attempt to escape, which had +been pardoned, now he was certainly doomed. After the first expression +of surprise, Barthelemy's face had regained its cold, unmoved composure. +Scudamore awaited the verdict with greedy impatience. + +Glasby stood before Barthelemy with unquailing resolution. + +"You have already pronounced sentence upon two," he said fearlessly. +"There is no reason why you should make me an exception. I have but one +request; send this valueless locket containing my portrait to my +mother,--she lives in Norfolk. It also has a curl of hair belonging to +my betrothed bride, whom I longed to see, and for whom I die." + +Barthelemy trembled and gazed intently at Glasby's face. + +"You have a betrothed bride whom you longed to see?" he said in a +stifled voice, loosing the ropes from his wrists--"go back to her, I +release you--" + +"Captain! Two are hanging already," shouted Scudamore, furious as he saw +the escape of the man whose death he most desired. "The third rope is +waiting for its ornament." + +"It will pull up the man who dares to contradict my judgment!" answered +Barthelemy, gazing fiercely at the defiant faces, and closed the door of +his cabin behind him. + +The whole band remained silent. + +From that moment Barthelemy was completely transformed. His heart was +stone, nothing touched it except a woman's sobs; then he fled, it was +more than he could bear. + +To his men he was stern to the point of injustice, the most trivial +offence did not escape his punishment, every evening he held a court of +justice by which he had those who were accused imprisoned in the ship's +hold, flogged, or shot. Yet there was one person whom he never attacked, +Glasby. He spent whole nights in questioning him about his family life, +his mother, and his betrothed bride, listening with eager attention to +all the details for the hundredth time. He showed mercy to no one, +burning or sinking the captured ships, unmoved by submission or +entreaties, but if a vessel chanced to have a woman on board, and he +heard her voice he would take nothing from the ship and let her pursue +her way uninjured. + + * * * * * + +One day he assembled the crews of both pirate cruisers on the deck of +the Commodore. + +"My lads," he said, "life here is beginning to grow wearisome. Fortune +offers her favors in vain, there is no one on this side of the world +whom we fear; we have plenty of booty, but no fame, for we encounter no +foemen worthy of us. Let us go farther. These Dutch and Portuguese +merchantmen already fear us to such a degree that they almost love us. +Let us go where we are not known, among the English and French, whose +troops sleep secure in their fortresses along the coast, where Fortune +is still a coy maiden who permits her favors to be grasped only by +strong hands. Let us win honor and fame in the places where the wise +law-makers have written a hundred paragraphs against us in their code of +laws, let us tear out the page, and place in its stead the words that +there are no laws for the brave." + +Barthelemy wished to fire his comrades' hearts as he had done in former +days, but he was unsuccessful, the tones which had once thrilled them +were dead; the fire in his soul, one spark of which had sufficed to +kindle theirs, was extinct. Now he could influence them only by his +coldness. + +"Pirates," he went on, folding his arms, "I promised you treasures, you +promised me blood. Let us both keep our word. Our work here is beggarly. +To plunder the ships of peaceful merchants, who surrender their goods +without defence! And of what use are they? We merely give them away. I +will take you to the home of treasures, the coasts of Africa, where +ships laden with gold-dust plough the sea, where the negro kings sleep +on golden sand and the negro warriors fight with golden weapons. We will +plunder _these_ ships, dig the golden sand from under the sleeping +kings, and bury them in it, wrench the precious weapons from the +negroes' hands and give them cheaper ones of iron in their hearts." + +This pleased the pirates who made up the Commodore's crew, and they +responded with murmurs of approval, but the Fortuna's men remained +silent, with sullen, defiant faces. + +Barthelemy noted the different effect he had produced, and wrapping +himself deliberately in his ample cloak, whose folds concealed his +hands, he added: "Perhaps there is some one who does not approve this +plan, let him state what he has against it. He can speak freely, I will +listen." + +The crew of the Fortuna began to gather into groups and whisper +together; at last two men came forward, hitching their trousers, and +stood with resolute faces before the captain. + +"Yes, we don't approve of your plan, captain," said one, and the other +nodded assent, while their comrades murmured approval. + +"You don't approve of it, my children?" asked Barthelemy in his sweetest +tones, "and why?" + +"Because we are not tired of having things go well with us and finding +booty everywhere without danger," said one. + +"Because we don't want to seek unknown risks in unknown gold regions," +added the other. + +"Where there are laws against us." + +"And where royal men-of-war protect commerce." + +"We don't care for fame, but prizes." + +"And we would rather stay here, where people fear us, than go where we +must fear others." + +"If you want blood, we can shed as much here for you as you desire." + +"But we won't go a thousand miles and seek danger merely to avenge you +on the negroes who killed your sweetheart." + +Robert Barthelemy's face blanched to a ghastly pallor. + +"You wish to stay here, my dear children," he replied in a tone of +childlike blandness. "You like it here, and are afraid to go elsewhere. +Why, my dear children, just think it over a moment." + +"We have already thought of it," they answered defiantly. + +"Very well," said Barthelemy, suddenly throwing back his cloak, and the +next instant he had sent a bullet through the heads of both. + +For a moment the others stood petrified with horror, then they turned +furiously upon Barthelemy, their eyes and knives flashing around him. + +"What! You dare to oppose, when I command! Away with you, worthless +rascals!" thundered their young leader in a voice which rose above the +fray, and seizing a piece of stout rope he rushed among them, dealing +blows right and left at the mutineers, who were so amazed by his daring +that, forgetting their rage, they scattered. + +"Put them all in irons. Keep them in confinement on bread and water for +three days! If any one utters a word against me, throw him into the +sea," shouted Barthelemy, and in a moment the Fortuna's crew were +disarmed by the Commodore's men. + +"You are taking a great risk," Glasby whispered to Barthelemy. + +"Oh, I fear neither man nor devil," replied the pirate defiantly. + +The ships sailed for Africa that very day. The time of punishment of the +Fortuna's crew expired on the third, and Barthelemy, to prevent any +attempt at flight, removed all the nautical instruments and all the men +who had any knowledge of navigation to the Commodore. + +Nevertheless the Fortuna vanished one night when they were still four +hundred miles from the African coast. + +As Barthelemy predicted the ship ran on a sandbank in the first storm +which overtook her, and her crew all perished. + +But the leader did not give up his plan; though his strength was +diminished, his courage was unchanged. + +One morning at dawn he saw a mountain peak on the horizon--it was Cape +Corso. "We have reached our destination," said Barthelemy to the +exulting pirates, and began to cruise up and down before the harbor. + + * * * * * + +At that time the French government had a monopoly of the india-rubber +trade and, as the most venomous antidote of monopoly is smuggling, the +coasts of Cayenne were constantly watched by French men-of-war. + +Two of them instantly noticed the suspicious craft and, believing it to +be a smuggler, gave chase. Barthelemy lured them too far from the shore +for the battle to be seen, then, after a short conflict, conquered both, +sank one and, keeping the other, manned it with part of his crew under +the command of Skyrme, and called it the Fox-Hound. + +From the French prisoners he learned that the two most formidable +English war-ships, the Weymouth and Hirondelle had left the coast and +would not return for several months, so they sailed boldly into the +harbor. + +The Onslow, the finest vessel of the Anglo-African Company was lying at +anchor in the port. + +Her captain and officers were on shore, where the governor was giving a +ball in their honor. From the windows of his residence they could see +the pirates assail their ship and, ere they could hasten back to it, the +crew had surrendered. + +The captain of the Onslow, Fennimore Gee, rowed alone to the pirate ship +and, pistol in hand, demanded that Barthelemy should restore his ship +and fight with him like an honest man, instead of attacking by stealth. + +The novel proposition of returning a captured ship to its owner and then +fighting for its possession so pleased Barthelemy that he declared his +willingness to accept it. + +His own men also accepted the challenge, but the Onslow's crew refused +to fight against Barthelemy, and begged him to take them into his band. + +Captain Gee despairingly fired his pistols among the rascally throng, +and appealed to Barthelemy, if he had a drop of honorable blood in his +body, not to stain his fame as a buccaneer by receiving into his band +the worthless fellows who, in the hour of peril, had deserted their +captain. + +"I'll tell you, my worthy captain," said Robert gayly to his opponent, +tossing in the little boat on the waves below. "You are so brave a man +that I could not reconcile my conscience to leaving you without a ship. +Come, I'll give you, in exchange for the Onslow, my own vessel, the +Commodore here. I can vouch for its being a good sailer and valuable, +though I got it very cheap. But from sheer philanthropy, I can't give up +your crew, you would decimate it; the soldiers, however, you shall have, +I don't care what becomes of the land rats." + +So before the eyes of the whole harbor, he exchanged ships with the +English captain, and after having the old name Onslow effaced and Royal +Fortune painted over it in large gilt letters, he set sail with both +his vessels for Calabar. + +By way of pastime, part of the pirates, under Skyrme's command, made +short expeditions on the Fox-Hound to search for any ships that might be +crossing their path. + +One day the Fox-Hound returned to the Royal Fortune, with all sail set, +and reported having noticed on the horizon two suspicious vessels, which +instantly gave chase; they were probably men-of-war, and the Fox-Hound +had escaped only by crowding on all sail, but they were still pursuing. + +"Let them come," said Barthelemy, sweeping the sea with his glass, and +soon discovered on the horizon the two ships which, at that distance, +resembled sea-gulls. + +"Those are not men-of-war," cried Barthelemy, "they look more like +pirates, and are coming toward us with every inch of canvas spread. +They will fare badly." + +"Ha! ha!" laughed Skyrme, "that's all we lack. We have conquered plenty +of merchantmen and war-ships, now we must capture pirates to have the +whole variety." + +The entire crew watched the approaching ships with eager curiosity, +saying to one another, "They think they are attacking a government ship, +how amazed they will be when they reach us!" + +Moody was shading his eyes first with one hand and then the other, +straining them till they fairly started from their sockets. Suddenly he +clapped his hands, threw up his hat, and throwing himself down on the +deck laughed till he was red in the face. + +"Moody! Have you gone crazy?" asked Barthelemy. "The man never laughed +before in his whole life. What ails you, Moody?" + +"Don't you know those ships?" he asked, half raising himself, then flung +himself back in another fit of laughter so uncontrollable that the men +were obliged to seize and hold him before he grew quiet. + +"Speak, old lunatic, what ails you?" + +"When I tell you, you'll all jump out of your skins. Don't you see those +two ships? Don't you recognize them? They are the Sea Devil, and the +Dutch ship which ran away from us, left us starving on the sea, and now +are coming straight into the jaws of our guns! Isn't it enough to drive +a man mad with joy?" + +The awful shout of delight from the pirates drowned Moody's laughter; +with bloodthirsty eagerness they rushed for their weapons, climbed on +the yards to get a better view of the approaching vessels, and shook +their fists at them. + +They had found the traitors who had left their comrades to meet the most +terrible death by starvation, and who now voluntarily came to encounter +their revenge. This thought moved even Barthelemy so much that a burning +flush crimsoned his pale face. His mute lips refused to give utterance +to his feverish joy, but his countenance belied them. + +"Calm yourselves!" he said to his men, "we'll let them come nearer; get +behind the bulwarks, they must be an easy prey, and their hearts shall +stop beating when they suddenly see our faces." + +The buccaneers quietly drew back; their foes came toward them with every +sail spread. Already they could see distinctly on the prow the hideous +figure of the Sea Devil, and as the pirates recognized one man after +another they whispered, gnashing their teeth: "There is so and so!" + +"Keep your weapons ready," Barthelemy commanded in a low tone. + +"We need no knives, we'll tear them to pieces with our nails," said +Asphlant. + +On arriving within gunshot range, the black flag suddenly fluttered from +every masthead of the Sea Devil, and a bullet, hissing between the Royal +Fortune's sails was the challenge to speak. The deepest silence reigned +on Barthelemy's ship. The Sea Devil sailed close up to it, the Dutch +consort remaining a little behind. "Oho! Where is your captain?" shouted +some one on the Sea Devil. + +"That's Kennedy's voice!" whispered Barthelemy giving the signal to +raise the black flag. + +At the moment when, to the horror of the men on the Sea Devil, the black +flag floated from the Royal Fortune's mast, Barthelemy sprang on the +bulwark, shouting in stentorian tones: + +"I am here, you worthless traitors! Do you still know Robert +Barthelemy?" + +The assailants were instantly as silent as if death had stricken them; +Kennedy, in his terror, leaped into a boat and, pushing off from the +ship tried to reach the Dutch vessel, the others flung their weapons +away like madmen and, in the insanity of terror, leaped into the waves. + +They were soon released from their trouble; two volleys poured at the +same moment from the guns of the Royal Fortune and the Fox Hound +shattered the Sea Devil which, amid frightful shrieks of despair, sank +with every man on board. + +Meanwhile Kennedy and a few others had succeeded in reaching the Dutch +ship, which instantly spread every sail in a desperate effort to reach +the land. + +Barthelemy pursued with both his ships. + +The fugitive flung overboard all her ballast and finally even her guns, +by which sacrifice she succeeded in reaching the shore before the other +ships could interpose. + +A throng of Calabrian negroes stood on the land watching the fight. + +Kennedy hastily ordered his men into the boats and escaped to the shore. +"Not even that will save you," said Barthelemy, ordering the largest +boat to be lowered. He had eight guns placed in it, entered himself with +forty of his men, and commanded them to row to the beach. + +Kennedy saw that Barthelemy intended to land and began to tell the +negroes, with loud cries, that he was a monster who had come to conquer +their land and burn their dwellings. They must on no account permit him +to come ashore. + +The shouts of the negroes showed that the pirates had succeeded in +exciting these savages against their former comrades, and the negroes +soon began to greet the boat with a shower of arrows and stones. + +"So much the better," murmured Barthelemy. "Two at one blow: traitors +and negroes. To-day vengeance will reap a harvest, this is the festival +of death. Fire among them." + +The guns of the boat roared, scattering death among the blacks, in whose +ranks the bombs tore wide openings, and, amid this thunder, forty men +landed in the face of ten thousand negroes. + +Kennedy and his companions urged the Calabrians to a desperate defence, +and they rushed with bloodthirsty fury at the buccaneers, hurling a +cloud of arrows and lances. + +Only two or three fell wounded by these missiles, the others moved +forward in close ranks, aiming at the most prominent leaders in the +negro ranks. + +When the latter saw their strongest warriors, who in battle were equal +to a hundred men, fall by invisible weapons sent from a distance before +they could reach their assailants with their battle axes, they began to +retreat in confusion, left their huts and, dragging Kennedy and his men +with them, climbed a steep hill, up which they could not be followed, +and from which no efforts availed to draw them. Barthelemy, with wild +delight, walked over the battle-ground, counting the corpses. They had +all been victims of his revenge for his murdered love. + +"This was blessed work," he murmured. "Hell is blacker by eight hundred +negroes." + +"Captain," said Scudamore, rousing him from his reverie, "our bitterest +enemies have escaped under our eyes. There is but one way to reach and +destroy them in the place where they have sought refuge." + +"What is it?" + +"It would be idle for me to show you, you would not use it, but give me +authority to do as I please for half an hour and I promise to bring you +the heads of all these traitors without sacrificing one of our men." + +"I should like to see that." + +"You will hear it. You need not witness it; it is a stratagem of war +which you could not learn from me. Go back to the ship and wait for my +return." + +This bold language surprised Barthelemy. A sort of intoxication arising +from the bloodshed still held him in thrall, and he allowed himself to +be persuaded to return to the Royal Fortune and let the doctor work his +will. As soon as the captain was out of sight, Scudamore ordered the +pirates to go to the deserted cabins and murder the families of the +fugitives. + +Shouting exultingly, the fierce crew, thirsting for revenge, obeyed; +from the lofty cliff the blacks saw their wives killed, their children +slaughtered, and when all were slain, their homes set on fire and +destroyed amid clouds of smoke that rose to their eyrie. + +Then Scudamore stepped forward and shouted: + +"Now, you black scoundrels, you have seen how we served your families. +The same fate awaits you, down to the last man, if you don't submit and +surrender our friends, whom you dragged away with you." + +Kennedy saw through the stratagem and protested violently. + +"Don't believe a word he says, the whole thing is a fiendish plot, we +are no friends of his, we don't know one another." + +"Kennedy, don't be a coward," said Scudamore reproachfully, "why should +you deny that you agreed to lead these people astray so that they would +run into the mouths of our guns? Be bold, and with the help of your +stout comrades throw them down on our knives; I, a pirate, am worth a +hundred negroes; don't disown me." + +The negroes, with threatening gestures began to surround Kennedy and his +men, who in great terror, tried to defend themselves. + +"Brave friends, don't believe the words of that devil, we never saw him; +those men are our worst enemies." + +"Oh, Kennedy, you disgrace us, how can you disown us when you, too, sail +under the black flag? If we had never seen each other how should I know +that you have, on your left shoulder, the mark of a gallows, branded +there when you were in the pillory?" + +The negroes instantly seized Kennedy, stripped his coat from his +shoulders and, as soon as they had convinced themselves that +Scudamore's words were true, they flung him down and one, raising his +copper axe, set his foot upon his victim's neck. + +"Don't hurt a hair of his head!" shouted Scudamore, feigning fury. The +next instant the axe fell, and Kennedy's head was hurled over the cliff. + +The others followed. + +When the half hour expired, Scudamore returned to Barthelemy and, +pointing to the boat, said: "There are the heads of the traitors!" + + + + +Chapter III + +Revenge + + +The time of the monsoons had come. News of shipwrecks arrived daily. The +elements of the air and sea were ceaselessly contending in a strife +before which the petty quarrels of men were ended. Nothing was heard at +present of Barthelemy. The English and Dutch agencies were perfectly +aware that his ships were anchored in the harbor of Cape Corso. Who +would venture to tempt Providence by putting to sea in such weather? The +heart of the boldest pirate trembles when he sees sky and water +transformed into darkness, illumined only by flashes of lightning. It +would be a devil and not a man who, amid this illumination, would risk a +battle in the midst of peals of thunder and the howling of the gale. + +Barthelemy was resting on the coast; his men were drinking, carousing +and giving banquets. What else could they do in such terrible weather +when, each morning, the sea flung fresh wrecks upon the strand? + +Meanwhile the governments were quietly gathering their ships against the +bold pirates who dared, single-handed, to assail a whole quarter of the +globe; in the harbor of Mydaw alone there were eleven ships waiting only +for the King Solomon with its eighty guns, and the Swallow with its +hundred and ten, to set sail in pursuit of Robert Barthelemy as soon as +the monsoons were over. + + * * * * * + +The tempest was raging, the sea tossed wildly, the black clouds hung so +low that it seemed as if they nearly touched the waves, and the surges +tossed their white foam upward toward the clouds. + +The horizon was a dark violet blue, through which darted flashes of +lightning. A ship was visible far away tossing on the billows, its +closely furled sails and erect masts looking like black crosses. + +It was the King Solomon, a proud warship, with three tiers of decks +supplied with windows, which resembled a three-story house with wings; +but windows and portholes were now tightly closed. + +The rain was pouring, black and white stormy petrels fluttered around +the vessel, and ever and anon the waves tossed aloft one of the sharks +swimming around the ship, which looked down greedily a moment, with its +cold, fixed eyes, at the trembling sailors. + +Every man had his hands full; in the midst stood Captain Trahern; the +boldest of the crew were in the rigging, trying to secure the sails; +others were attempting to rig a jury mast in place of one which had been +carried away. Another group toiled at the pumps, and four men were at +the helm, straining every muscle whenever a wave stronger than usual +dashed against the bow of the ship. In the intervals of rest the sailors +at the helm talked with one another. + +"What a gale! It's impossible for us ever to reach port again." + +"We came near sticking fast in the clouds just now, the waves flung us +up so high." + +"Lord help us! The thunderbolts are falling like ripe pears, one of us +will be hit presently." + +"Hush, don't you see the St. Elmo's fire yonder at the mast-head?" asked +Philip, the helmsman. + +"St. George preserve us!" whispered the others in horror. "That means +evil. The St. Elmo's fire usually appears only on ships devoted to +destruction. See how it dances!" + +"Mind your helm!" shouted the captain, but it was too late; while the +men were staring at the electrical phenomena hovering around the +mast-head, a huge wave approached the ship, a wave which resembled a +transparent mountain-chain in motion. Every effort to put the ship about +proved futile, the vast surge, higher than the highest mast-head, rolled +nearer, its top crested with foam. The men clung to the rigging and +bulwarks. Suddenly the King Solomon rose more rapidly, tossed upward on +the towering wave, and the next moment lay on her side with her masts in +the water and wave after wave sweeping over her decks. In a few minutes +the ship righted again, the water rolling from her as it drips from the +plumage of a swan, and the crew, drenched to the skin, returned to their +tasks. + +"See! The St. Elmo's fire is still shining at the mast-head!" cried +Philip, "if it were not kindled by the devil, that flood of water would +have put it out." + +"Those stormy petrels suspect something wrong, too, they follow us +everywhere." + +"Jack says he saw the spectre ship last night." + +"Is that true, Jack?" + +"Why should I say so, if I hadn't seen it? You were all asleep, I stood +alone at the helm. Suddenly, from the distance, the form of a ship moved +toward us. It seemed scarcely to touch the water, and was sailing +against the wind. Shadows that looked like men were moving about her +deck as if pulling on the ropes, and a misty shape, like the captain, +glided to and fro. Terrified, I hailed the apparition, and suddenly the +whole vision vanished, but I heard distinctly, above the whistling of +the wind and the plashing of the waves, the flapping of the ropes +against the mast of the spectre ship." + +"That means mischief." + +The sailors gazed timidly at the cloud-veiled horizon, as they usually +do when ghost stories are told in their presence. + +"Look, look yonder!" said Philip, suddenly pointing into the gray mist, +"I swear by St. George, I see the spectre ship!" + +His messmates, panting for breath, followed the direction of his finger. +The lightning flashed and they all made the sign of the cross. + +"There it is." + +"What do you see there?" called the captain, noticing the surprise of +his men. + +"The spectre ship, sir," one of them answered at last, trembling. + +Trahern began to scan the vessel through his spy-glass. + +"That's no spectre ship," he said after a short pause. + +"What else could she be, sir? Would any mortal man carry sail in such a +tempest? See how fast she approaches us! She does not heed the shock of +the waves, but flies like a bird." + +"That is no spectre ship," the captain repeated, "they are pirates." + +"Living devils," muttered Philip. + +"It must be Barthelemy," said Trahern. "What a pity that we cannot +approach him, we would capture him at once. But who could fight in such +a storm?" + +The pirate swiftly approached the King Solomon. From time to time the +waves concealed it, but the next instant it rose on their crests, still +advancing. + +"Those crazy fellows actually seem to be trying to meet us," said +Trahern. + +"Those are not men," replied Philip. "If men tried to cut through the +waves in that fashion their ship would be battered to pieces." + +The vessel really seemed to be pursuing the King Solomon; approaching +it on one tack, it made every effort to come alongside, but was +constantly baffled by the force of the waves which, like a stronger +power, constantly tossed the two ships apart, and if they were within +gunshot of each other at one moment, separated them the next by half a +mile. + +"Honest men pray to God at such times," cried Philip. "These do not even +fear the gale. Ha! How that lightning blazed between the ships. The very +fires of Heaven forbid approach." + +The pirate suddenly furled her sails, and the next instant the crew of +the King Solomon saw the large boat lowered. Twenty pirates sprang in +and rowed toward the King Solomon. + +The man-of-war had two hundred men and eighty guns; Trahern could not +imagine what the object of these few people could be. + +The waves tossed the boat to and fro but, spite of wind and water, the +oarstrokes of the twenty men gradually brought it nearer. Then a +gigantic figure stood erect, spite of the terrible tossing of the waves, +and, raising a speaking trumpet to his lips, shouted in deep, ringing +tones, "Captain Trahern, Robert Barthelemy hereby summons you to +surrender at discretion the King Solomon and her crew." + +The speaker was Skyrme. + +Trahern, indignant at the audacity of the pirates, which bordered on +insolence, ordered his men to fire on them. His gunners replied that the +cannon were wet. + +"That is a lie," shouted Trahern, "they are under cover. Take your +weapons and crush these bold dogs." + +"What?" shrieked Philip, "are these mortal men whom we can fight and +kill? Did any one ever see a devil die? I'll fight with no fiends." + +He flung down his arms as he spoke. + +"Nor I, nor I!" shouted the rest of the crew, firing their weapons in +the air and then throwing them down. Trahern found himself abandoned. + +"And you will disgrace yourselves by surrendering to a force ten times +smaller! Men! Come to your senses, these are no ghosts." + +But no power on earth could have induced them to attack the corsairs, +who were already fastening their grappling irons to the ship. + +"Then I will defend the vessel alone," said the captain despairingly +and, seizing a carbine, he discharged it among the buccaneers. + +No one was hit, for his own men had struck up the weapon and would not +let him aim at the assailants the second time. + +A moment later the pirates were masters of the King Solomon. + +The crew dared not resist them; their reputation for being able to +accomplish whatever they desired had spread so far that the trembling +seamen fairly lost their senses when they found themselves in the +presence of people whom they regarded as beings from another world, and, +even when they outstripped them tenfold in numbers, did not venture to +offer any resistance. + +If it were not for the existence of documents which prove it, no one +would believe that twenty pirates, in a boat, amid the raging of a +furious tempest, captured a man-of-war which had eighty guns, two +hundred armed men, and a brave commander. + + * * * * * + +The eleven ships in the harbor of Mydaw were only awaiting the cessation +of the monsoons and the arrival of the King Solomon to sail against +Barthelemy. + +The monsoons were still raging with the utmost fury when Robert +Barthelemy entered the port, bringing the King Solomon in tow. + +Black flags fluttered from every mast of the Royal Fortune and between +her sails was stretched a square banner, on which was a hideous picture, +a skeleton transfixed by a lance, holding an hour-glass in one hand, +with its legs crossed and a bleeding heart at its feet. The Fox-Hound's +standard, on the contrary, bore a man in a scarlet coat of mail, holding +in his hand a flaming sword on whose point was a skull. The flag of St. +George floated at her mast-head. + +Amid the howling of the gale echoed the diabolical beating of drums and +blare of trumpets of the captured band of the King Solomon, to whose +accompaniment the pirates roared an ear-splitting song. So they sailed +into the harbor. + +The eleven ships all surrendered at the first shot. Barthelemy assembled +all the captains on the Royal Fortune and gave them a magnificent +banquet, to which, after some little hesitation, they sat down, with the +exception of one man, Fletcher, who positively declared that he would +not sit at the pirates' table to eat and carouse with them. Barthelemy +permitted him to do as he pleased, and he turned his back upon them. + +Toward the end of the entertainment, when the wine began to excite them, +Barthelemy became kindly disposed, and told the captains that they could +redeem their ships by paying a ransom of eight pounds of gold dust. + +They instantly consented, with the exception of Fletcher who again +refused, saying that he would accept no favors from pirates, and would +not purchase his ship at the cost of his honor; they might do with him +whatever they chose. He spoke like a true Englishman. + +Barthelemy instantly gave orders to fire Fletcher's ship and burn her +with her whole cargo. + +Asphlant undertook to execute the command, but soon returned to report +that the ship's cargo consisted of eighty negro slaves and, as he did +not know whether one could kindle negroes, he had come to ask what to do +with them. + +Barthelemy's eyes flashed with a fiendish delight. + +"Negroes?" he asked, grinding his teeth, "Throw them into the sea, they +must learn to swim." + +Asphlant did not utter a syllable in reply, but went to execute the +order. The revellers continued their carouse. + +From time to time their conversation was interrupted by a blood-curdling +death shriek, which silenced the bacchanalian songs for a moment and +stopped the wine-cup on its way to their lips, but the next instant the +talk was resumed. + +The orgy was closed by an illumination furnished by the flames consuming +Fletcher's ship, which lighted the whole harbor. + +The negroes were chained together in couples, and the harbor swarmed +with sharks. Whenever a pair was thrown into the sea the waves around +were reddened; at each death shriek Barthelemy drained a glass of wine, +muttering: "That is for the cottage in Hispaniola." The negroes were all +murdered, but Barthelemy was not yet drunk. + +The captains left him at a late hour, hoping that they might meet again. +Barthelemy gave each a receipt for the ransom money which, preserved +among other documents in the government archives, ran as follows: + + We, the Knights of Fortune, hereby inform all whom it + may concern, that we have received from Captain ---- of + the ship ---- eight pounds of gold dust as ransom + money, for which we released the said ship. Given under + our hand and seal in the harbor of Mydaw, on the 13th + of January, 1722. + + ROBERT BARTHELEMY (HENRY GLASBY). + + * * * * * + +The storm was subsiding. A calm night followed. The moon rose, shedding +a magical lustre upon the sea. Barthelemy stood on the deck of his ship +with folded arms, gazing at the stars. + +How much wine and blood he had poured to intoxicate himself, but all in +vain. Neither wine nor blood gave him peace and forgetfulness. Ah, he +could win no forgetfulness, that sweet unconsciousness of the soul, but +instead came memory, the anguish of recalling the past. + +The stars exert a magical power over the soul; whoever gazes at them +long has it drawn whither it does not desire, whither it fears to go. + +What did Barthelemy behold in those stars? He saw the years of his +youth, painted in sweet, glimmering pictures, as unlike those of the +present as if either the one or the other must be a dream. + +There were the three girlish figures sporting around him, weaving +garlands for his head, fastening them on with kisses, amid merry +laughter. How softly the palms were whispering! + +They sat together in the little house, the grandmother, in her armchair, +telling marvelous, terrible tales of famous warriors; the young girls +casting timid glances at the windows, where the darkness of the +gathering night appeared, and the fire on the hearth died slowly, while +William's heart began to swell with eager desire to battle with these +unknown perils, and win for himself a name like those of the heroes +glorified by tradition. How softly the palms were whispering! + +The moon shone brilliantly. The moonlight nights of the South are +brighter than the days of the North. His Julietta, clinging to him, +murmured tenderly: "How I love you; we will live and die together." +William's head sank on his breast, and he fancied he clasped in his arms +the whole kingdom of heaven. How softly the palms were whispering! + +The young girl sat on the green shore; her white kerchief fluttered in +the wind as she waited every evening for the ship on which her lover had +sailed, waited with yearning and prayers. How her heart leaped when, on +the distant horizon, she fancied she recognized the slender masts that +appeared before her, and measured in her imagination, a hundred times +over, the space which yawned between them. Her bosom heaved, her soul +burned with joy and, as it came nearer and nearer, she threw kisses-- + + * * * * * + +"What ship is that?" shouted Moody's harsh, strident tones close beside +Barthelemy. + +Roused from his waking dream, he cast a half startled, half angry glance +at the speaker. + +"What ship do you mean?" + +"The one at which you have been looking steadily for half an hour, the +sail appearing yonder on the horizon." + +Barthelemy now, for the first time, noticed a vessel whose outlines had +blended with the ship seen in his dream, and which seemed to be swiftly +approaching. + +"Oho! Off with the Fox-Hound!" he cried. "Forward, my lads!" + +"Not to-night," shouted one of the crew from the other ship, "the Royal +Fortune ought to go. You have drunk enough, we are sober; and even my +grandfather's spook wouldn't fight sober." + +"What talk is this?" + +"The talk that came to us to-night from the rum and sugar, when even the +fish got punch from the Royal Fortune." + +"You rascals, do I manufacture sugar and brandy that you ask me for it? +When the supply is exhausted, get more. Wherever a Portuguese galleon +appears on the horizon, you can find all the sugar you want. Follow her +and drink your fill." + +Meanwhile the vessel had come so near that they could count all her +sails in the bright moonbeams; then she tacked and began to recede. + +"Follow her!" shouted Barthelemy; "See, she has discovered us and wants +to escape. Skyrme, quick, don't let her elude us. Up, up, to the chase +my lads!" + +The Fox-Hound instantly unfurled every sail; the crew of the larger +ship, greedy for prey, rushed on her deck and, aided by a favorable +wind, the pursuit of the unknown ship began, which, overhauled more and +more by the Fox-Hound, soon disappeared with it below the horizon. + + * * * * * + +The fugitive was the Swallow, the formidable English man-of-war, +commanded by two of the bravest captains, David Oyle and--Rolls. + +When Barthelemy had captured all the ships that had been sent against +him, the Swallow sailed out alone to seek and conquer him. + +On reaching the harbor, they saw in the distance the pirate ships, which +were easily recognized, and wanted to attack them at once, but were +obliged first to sail around a large shoal known as the "French +Sand-bank," and the pirates, mistaking this circuit for flight, rushed +in pursuit. + +The Swallow merely sailed far enough out to sea to lure the Fox-Hound to +a point where the cannonading could not be heard on land, and then +allowed herself to be overtaken. + +Suddenly the pirates, with loud shouts, ran up the black flag and dashed +with the speed of an arrow toward the Swallow. Skyrme stood in the bow, +holding his grappling iron ready. + +"Barthelemy and death!" roared the whole band. + +At the same moment the cannon of the British ship, with a terrible +thunder, sent a devastating volley upon the deck of the Fox-Hound, +veiling her in a cloud of smoke. + +As soon as it lifted, the pirates were seen standing as if dazed by the +thunderbolt which had fallen upon them. The deck was strewn with mangled +corpses, the black flag was shot from the mast. Skyrme alone had +retained his presence of mind. + +"Forward, you knaves!" he roared furiously, "what are you staring at? Up +with the flag again, and throw your grappling irons." + +The pirates quickly hauled up the flag, and Skyrme's stentorian voice +shouted: "Forward!" + +A second volley thundered down upon them from the British cannon. The +flag fell a second time, and with it Skyrme, whose legs were torn off by +a cannon ball. The pirates lost their self-control, and rushing to the +man at the helm, forced him to turn and spread their sails for flight. + +"Do not yield," roared Skyrme, clinging to the mast. "Shame and disgrace +upon you! Stick to the ship, and rush upon her decks. Die the death of +heroes!" + +The pirates, with a last outburst of daring, began to urge the +Fox-Hound toward the Swallow, and had almost succeeded in reaching it +with their grappling irons, when a third volley echoed on the air. The +main-mast was shattered and fell with all the rigging, into the sea. + +They were lost. They could fight no longer. + +"Throw the flag into the water that it may not fall into the hands of +the enemy!" gasped Skyrme, only half of whose gigantic body remained. +"Go to the powder room and fire among the kegs!" + +Five pirates, with loaded pistols, instantly leaped below, and at the +end of a minute, with a roar like thunder, a cloud of smoke rose into +the air; otherwise there was no harm done. There was not powder enough +to shatter the ship. The five pirates lay in the hold, burnt and +swearing, as black as if they had been transformed into devils in +advance. The explosion threw the helmsman flat on the deck and, as if +he had no other care on his mind, he screamed for his hat, which had +gone overboard. + +The Englishmen instantly took possession of the wreck, whose deck was +strewn with the dead and wounded. + +The latter were raised and cared for. + +"Don't touch me!" shrieked Skyrme in a frenzy of rage, and seizing a +sabre in each hand he began a desperate struggle. The bravest soldiers +could scarcely succeed in disarming the mangled giant, who, when his +huge hands were chained in order to bind up his wounds, tore off the +bandages with his fetters and, by a last tremendous exertion of +strength, burst them and--died. + +Meanwhile, in order not to waste time, Barthelemy captured a ship coming +from India. Her captain, Jonathan Hill, was a jovial fellow who, +accepting the pirate's invitation, sat down to breakfast with him, +became very friendly after his first glass of wine, and when the second +was emptied, asked the company to drink for a wager, in which contest he +vowed to land them all under the table. + +During this noble rivalry every man was called upon for his favorite +song. Hill had two or three. + +"Now let us have _your_ favorite, Barthelemy!" he said at last, turning +to the pirate chief. + +"I cannot sing," replied Barthelemy. + +"Oho! But you ought at least to learn the one which is being sung +everywhere about you; for instance this: + + "Far, far away the white dove flies, + In fierce pursuit the black hawk hies; + The dove is my lover so dear, + The hawk is the pirate I fear." + +Barthelemy shuddered. + +"Where did you hear that song?" + +"Ha! ha! my friend, from a wonderfully beautiful girl, of whom your +soul must not even dream; it's a pity that she was in love with someone +else." + +"Speak! when? where?" + +"Well, it was a romantic adventure. I had just anchored off the coast of +Hispaniola when the negroes in San Domingo rose against their masters. I +had gone on shore with twenty men to get some fresh water, when I heard +a shriek in the distance. 'Let's go there!' I said to my companions, +'we'll help if there is need'; and seizing our guns we rushed toward the +sound. Three young girls came from behind the hill, pursued by three +hundred negroes. The black rascals, shouting and yelling, were fast +gaining upon them. The girls could not run fast enough, for they were +dragging a large armchair in which sat an old woman. 'Fire!' I shouted, +and we sent a volley among the black devils. They scattered, and before +they could gather again, we had seized the poor hunted women and rushed +to our boats with them. The beautiful girl was as light as a bird, I can +tell you. I could have carried her in my arms to the ends of the earth." + +"Go on," whispered Barthelemy in an almost unintelligible tone. + +"Aha, you are interested in hearing of a beautiful girl? And she thought +of you, too, but how? She wrote the song about you, which is not +particularly flattering. It seems she had a lover, who had gone on a +long voyage and, as she was constantly afraid you would do the poor +fellow some mischief, she added whenever she prayed for him the entreaty +that God would sink Robert Barthelemy in the depths of the sea. Poor +girl, how she loved that man! She asked every sailor we met if he had +seen the ship on which William went. My heart ached for her. I left her +in Dublin. I don't know whether she has found her lover." + +Barthelemy's face had gradually blanched to a corpse-like pallor, his +eyes were fixed on vacancy and a strange smile rested on his ghastly +face. + +"See how the captain is smiling, he has gone crazy!" whispered the +pirates, starting up in alarm. + +"What has happened to you?" exclaimed Hill, striking Barthelemy on the +shoulder. The latter started at the touch, and a look of profound, +unutterable sadness drove the smile from his face. + +Rising from the table, he grasped Hill by the hand, drew him aside, +slipped his arm into his, and walking forward to the bow of the ship, +said in a stifled voice: + +"Captain, this is the last day of my life! I feel, I know it. You must +not ask why. That is my own affair. The pirate has his superstitions as +well as the rest of the world. The sailor knows that he is doomed when +he meets the spectre of the sea. My soul has such a spectre, and I +encountered it to-day. I know not how or where, but I shall fall. In the +hold of the captured King Solomon there are ten thousand pounds sterling +in gold dust; if I fall, take it--as compensation for your stolen +property." + +Hill gazed at him from head to foot, and then returned to the others. + +"Your captain is so drunk that he doesn't know what he is talking +about." + +An hour later most of the pirates lay intoxicated under the tables, only +two or three remaining erect, disputing the wager with Jonathan Hill, +when the man at the helm shouted: + +"Sail in sight!" + +The cry sobered some of the pirates and, staggering forward, they +recognized in the approaching vessel the ship seen the night before. + +A strange dread took possession of them all. They hastily shook their +drunken messmates from their dreams, pointed to the ship, and hurried to +Barthelemy with the tidings. The latter noticed the terror in their +faces, and said coldly: + +"That is certainly the Portuguese sugar maker which fled from the +Fox-Hound yesterday and, in trying to escape into some harbor, has now +run between two fires." + +"That's no Portuguese trader, sir," said one of the pirates in a +trembling voice. "Before I deserted to you, I served on that ship and +know her well. It is the Swallow." + +"Well?" said Barthelemy, smiling scornfully, "and suppose she is, would +my men be too cowardly to meet her?" + +"She has one hundred and ten guns and is one of the best sailers in the +navy." + +"That makes no difference. Who are her captains?" + +"One is named David Oyle--the other Rolls." + +"Rolls!" repeated Barthelemy starting. "So my presentiment was true. Up, +my men! Beat the drums, show the flags, spread every inch of canvas, +prepare for the battle! Fear nothing, the god of war is on our side." + +The buccaneers seized their weapons, the gunners went to their stations, +and Barthelemy withdrew for a few moments to his cabin. + +He soon reappeared, wearing on his head a broad-brimmed hat, with a long +scarlet plume fastened with a ruby buckle; his costume, studded with +gems, was girdled with a Persian shawl; around his neck hung a broad +gold chain, sustaining a glittering diamond cross, and in his belt were +thrust pistols whose handles were set with pearls. So he came forth, +haughty in bearing and magnificently clad, like a bridegroom going to +his marriage banquet. + +The eyes of all the pirates were fixed upon him. Every one had the +firmest belief that nothing was impossible for Barthelemy. + +The latter beckoned to Moody and whispered in his ear: + +"Old comrade, I need not tell you that this will be the hour of greatest +peril which we have ever experienced. We must hold by each other. I have +decided to approach the enemy with all sail set, receiving and returning +his fire. If he dismasts us, we will try to escape to land; if that +fails, we will grapple the enemy and blow both ships into the air." + +"Very well," muttered the old pirate, clenching his pipe between his +teeth. + +"One thing more, Moody. If I should fall, throw my body into the sea. I +want to rest on the bottom of the ocean." + +The pirate bent his head and growled: "Very well." + +Then each man went to his post. Barthelemy drew his sword and, raising +his head proudly, cried: "Raise the anchors." + +The order was obeyed, the wind filled the sails, and the two ships, with +their flags fluttering in the breeze, rapidly approached each other. + +On arriving within a certain distance, both turned suddenly. The Swallow +fired first, sixty guns thundering at the same instant. The Royal +Fortune reserving her fire, did not lose a single sail, and only three +of her men fell. + +"Up and at them!" shouted Barthelemy, "the advantage is ours"; and as he +spoke his forty guns returned the volley of the Swallow, which rocked +heavily under the shock. + +Just at that moment the report of a pistol echoed from the Swallow's +deck and Barthelemy sank lifeless on a cannon. The bullet had pierced +his heart. + +The man at the helm, Stephenson, saw him fall and, not perceiving the +wound, shouted: + +"Don't lie down, captain, but look the danger boldly in the face and +fight as beseems a man." + +Even as he spoke a jet of blood gushed from Barthelemy's breast. + +Stephenson, seeing it, leaped from his post in despair, leaving his +place at the helm, and throwing himself on Barthelemy's body shouted, +sobbing aloud: "He is dead!" + +The cry fairly paralyzed the pirates just at the critical moment; +nameless terror filled their hearts, and all rushed to their captain's +corpse. + +Moody thrust them aside right and left till he reached the body, and +hastily seizing it, he threw it over the bulwark into the sea. + +With Barthelemy, the moving spirit of the pirates fled. Throwing down +their weapons, they surrendered. No man knew exactly what he was doing; +they sank like a headless body. + +Scudamore was the only one who thought of anything. He recognized Rolls +on the other ship and, seizing a lighted slow-match, rushed to the +powder magazine, but met Henry Glasby standing with a drawn sword at the +door. + +"What are you doing here?" he shrieked. + +"Keeping you back," replied Glasby, wrenching the match from his hand +and stamping out the light. + +"Oho! Asphlant, Moody, here!" shouted Scudamore. "Here is a traitor. +Help me break into the powder magazine." + +An uproar followed. Some of the pirates wanted to blow up the ship, +others opposed it, and while the two parties were contending Glasby +poured water into the kegs, so that the powder was useless. + +An hour after the whole crew were prisoners. + + + + +Chapter IV + +Retribution + + +The foaming wine is drained from the cup, nothing remains but the dregs, +which we will also empty. + +During the battle Captain Hill released himself and his ship and, taking +possession of the pirates' money, sailed away. + +The buccaneers, prisoners on board their own ship, were taken to Cape +Corso, but not even this disaster could subdue them. The injured men +would not allow their wounds to be bandaged, and when they were put in +irons, beat their aching, bleeding wounds with their chains, and died +uttering imprecations, reconciled neither to God nor man. The others +sang wild buccaneer songs and irritated their guards with sneering +jests. + +Weighing the ration of bread in his hand one of them said, laughing: +"You want us to dry up to save hemp; we shall get so thin on this fare +that you can hang us by a thread of yarn." + +They were chained together in couples. One began to sing and pray; his +companion gave him a violent thrust in the side. + +"What do you expect to gain by that?" he asked. + +"The Kingdom of Heaven," replied the other humbly. + +"You? The Kingdom of Heaven? You passed that port long ago with the rest +of us. We're sailing for hell. The captain is already waiting for us, +and we shall enter according to our rank, and when we run into harbor +there we'll salute him with a salvo of thirteen shots. Hurrah for +Barthelemy and his luck." + +The poor, penitent sinner did not stop singing and praying, spite of the +oaths of his companion, till the latter, in all seriousness, begged the +captain of the ship to relieve them from this fellow, whose howling +disturbed the good-humor of the others, and who had proved himself +unworthy of such distinguished company; or at any rate, for the +maintenance of order, to take away his prayer-book. + +The most dangerous members of the pirate band were kept prisoners on the +Swallow, and among them were Moody and Asphlant. The latter formed a +plot to escape from their confinement some night, kill both the +captains, and form a still more powerful buccaneer crew. + +One of them, however, deemed it advisable to save himself at the expense +of the others and betrayed the plan. The prisoners had already managed +to file through their chains. Afterwards they were watched day and +night. + +Scudamore had been left on the Royal Fortune, where he was permitted +liberty to move about to care for the wounded pirates, so far as they +would permit. + +One night Scudamore instigated them to free themselves with his aid, and +die fighting rather than be executed. The conspiracy was discovered at +the moment of the outbreak and, that it might not be repeated, on +reaching the land a trial was held at once in order to make short work +of the pirates. + +They were divided into two classes, one containing the officers, the +other the men; the former had ordered everything, the latter had merely +executed their commands. The first was jestingly called the Upper House. +The trial of the Upper House ended badly. All were condemned to death; +among them Moody, Asphlant, Simpson and Scudamore. Only one was +acquitted--Henry Glasby. His noble character was known by reputation; +many owed their lives and property to his intercession; he had often +attempted, at the risk of his life, to escape from the pirates, but was +always captured. The court released him. At last he could join his +promised bride. + + * * * * * + +The end of the notorious band of pirates was noised abroad throughout +the entire world. Three young girls went in turn to every church in +Dublin, offering grateful thanks to Heaven for having heard their +petitions and sunk the terrible corsair king in the sea. Then, in a +whisper, they added: "And protect our beloved William, restore him to +us." + +Robert Barthelemy lay a hundred fathoms beneath the waves amid the coral +and sea-shells. + + +The End + + + + +[Transcriber's Note: The original edition of this text was typeset with +unindented paragraphs, making it sometimes unclear whether a sentence +begins a new paragraph or not. + +The following typographical errors present in the original text have +been corrected. + +In Chapter I, "Scudaamore's treachery" was changed to "Scudamore's +treachery", and "we do need a surgeon" was changed to "We do need a +surgeon". + +In Chapter II, "What eyes?" was changed to "What eyes!", a missing +period was added after "cried the young chief", a quotation mark was +added after "we can approach the brigantine unsuspected", "There can be +no discrimination, captain, We need one another" was changed to "There +can be no discrimination, captain, we need one another", and "to all the +details for the hundreth time" was changed to "to all the details for +the hundredth time". + +In Chapter III, a missing quotation mark was added after "It is the +Swallow."] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Corsair King, by Mor Jokai + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORSAIR KING *** + +***** This file should be named 26865.txt or 26865.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/8/6/26865/ + +Produced by Steven desJardins and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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