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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The boy's book of buccaneers, by A.
-Hyatt Verrill
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The boy's book of buccaneers
-
-Author: A. Hyatt Verrill
-
-Release Date: September 9, 2022 [eBook #68949]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This
- file was produced from images generously made available by
- The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY'S BOOK OF
-BUCCANEERS ***
-
-
-
-
- THE BOYS’ BOOK OF BUCCANEERS
-
- BY
-
- A. HYATT VERRILL
-
- AUTHOR OF
- “AN AMERICAN CRUSOE,” “THE BOYS’ OUTDOOR
- VACATION BOOK,” “THE BOYS’ BOOK OF WHALERS,” ETC.
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
-
- NEW YORK
- DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
- 1923
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1923,
- By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
-
- PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. BY
- The Quinn & Boden Company
-
- BOOK MANUFACTURERS
- RAHWAY NEW JERSEY
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
-Chapter I Who and What Were the Buccaneers? 1
-
- Pirates and buccaneers. How the buccaneers originated. The first
- buccaneers. Settlement of Tortuga. How the buccaneers received
- their name. How the first prizes were taken. Originators of
- accident insurance. Pieces of eight and the origin of the dollar.
- Organization of the buccaneers.
-
-
-Chapter II Some Buccaneers and Their Ways 14
-
- Pierre le Grand, the first famous buccaneer. How Le Grand took the
- admiral’s ship. Esquemeling and his chronicles. Bartholomew
- Portugues and his deeds. A remarkable escape. Rock Brasiliano. A
- brutal buccaneer. Brasiliano’s ruse. Francis L’Ollonois the cruel.
- The most bloodthirsty buccaneer. Cruelties of L’Ollonois. How
- L’Ollonois took Maracaibo. The death of L’Ollonois.
-
-
-Chapter III Morgan and His Road to Fame 39
-
- Bravery of Spaniards. Attitude of the buccaneers. Early life of
- Morgan. The truth about Morgan. Queer character of Morgan.
- Treatment of prisoners. Buccaneers and Indians. Port Royal, the
- lair of the buccaneers. Attack on Old Providence. Morgan’s first
- raids. Morgan’s attack on Puerto Príncipe. The buccaneers in Cuba.
- Morgan prepares to attack Porto Bello. The Gold Road. Capture of
- Porto Bello. Morgan’s brutality. An exchange of pleasantries.
-
-
-Chapter IV The Sacking of Maracaibo 64
-
- Morgan gathers a great fleet. Morgan’s treachery. Morgan’s narrow
- escape from destruction. Tortures and butcheries. Morgan is
- blockaded. The buccaneers defeat the Spanish fleet. Morgan’s ruse.
- The buccaneers escape from Maracaibo.
-
-
-Chapter V The Taking of San Lorenzo 81
-
- Morgan’s greatest undertaking. The buccaneers’ greatest fleet. The
- capture of St. Catherine. The governor’s treachery. The buccaneers
- sail for the Chagres. Attack on San Lorenzo. The battle. How
- accident won the day. Valiant Spaniards. Capture of the castle. The
- buccaneers start for Panama. Hardships of the journey. In sight of
- Panama.
-
-
-Chapter VI The Sack of Panama 100
-
- The Jolly Roger. Buccaneers’ standards. How the buccaneers dressed.
- The battle before Old Panama. The buccaneers take the city.
- Morgan’s fury. Burning of Panama. Looting and torturing. Morgan’s
- vengeance. Morgan demands ransoms. Morgan’s gallantry. The return
- to the coast. Division of booty. Morgan deserts his men.
-
-
-Chapter VII The Misfortunes of Monsieur Ogeron 119
-
- The golden altar of San José. Arrest of Morgan. Morgan knighted.
- The ex-buccaneer suppresses piracy. The end of Sir Henry Morgan.
- Ogeron sails for Curaçao. The buccaneers come to grief. How Ogeron
- escaped. Ogeron returns to Puerto Rico. Defeat of the buccaneers.
- Le Sieur Maintenon and his misfortunes. Odd characters among the
- buccaneers. The buccaneer poet. A buccaneer naturalist. The
- divinity student who was a buccaneer. Ringrose the navigator.
-
-
-Chapter VIII A Perilous Undertaking 133
-
- A mad scheme. The plan of Sharp and his fellows. The buccaneers
- start across Darien. A terrible journey. Aid from the Indians. The
- buccaneers sight El Real de Santa Maria. Attack on the town. The
- buccaneers’ chagrin. The buccaneers go on towards Panama. Humanity
- wins its reward. In sight of the town. The Spanish fleet. A daring
- attempt. How the buccaneers took the Spanish fleet. Capture of the
- Santissima Trinidad. Valuable prizes. Dissensions and desertions.
- Trading with the Dons. Messages from the governor. Sawkins
- remembers an old friend. Loss of Captain Sawkins.
-
-
-Chapter IX The “Most Dangerous Voyage” of Captain Sharp 150
-
- More desertions. Captain Sharp tells his plans. An amazing program.
- An awful trip. What happened to Wafer. The transformed galleon
- starts on its cruise. Raids on the coast. At Juan Fernandez. The
- men want religion. Sharp is deposed. Watling and his ways. Sharp’s
- prophecy. The prophecy fulfilled. Watling’s death. Sharp takes
- command. The buccaneers repulsed. Mutinies and deserters. Sharp
- refits the Blessed Trinity. The buccaneers set forth on their most
- dangerous voyage. The buccaneers miss the Straits of Magellan.
- Around the Horn through unchartered seas. Up the Atlantic. At the
- journey’s end. The treasure the buccaneers threw away.
-
-
-Chapter X The Last of the Buccaneers 174
-
- The buccaneers in the South Sea. The cruise of the Revenge. The
- Bachelors’ Delight. Davis and his raids. The cruise of the Cygnet.
- Reunion of old friends. The buccaneers are disappointed. Swan’s
- defeat. Ringrose’s death. Across the Pacific. The buccaneers in
- Madagascar. Townley takes vast treasure. The end of Townley. The
- sack of Guayaquil. Back to the Antilles. Buccaneers in the East
- Indies. Red Legs. A moral pirate. Red Legs’ chivalry. The penalty
- of a scolding wife. Major Stede Bonnet. An unfortunate pirate. End
- of Bonnet. The pirates in the Virgin Islands. Hamlin at St. Thomas.
-
-
-Chapter XI Kidd, the Pirate Who Wasn’t a Pirate 192
-
- Pirate treasure in fact and fancy. The truth about pirate treasure.
- Kidd’s unfounded fame. The true story of Captain Kidd. Trial of
- Captain Kidd. Death of Captain Kidd. A Don Quixote of the sea.
- Prince Rupert of the Rhine. A romantic figure. Shipwreck of Prince
- Rupert’s fleet. The death of Prince Rupert.
-
-
-Chapter XII Picturesque Pirates 208
-
- The “Man with the glove in his hat.” My Lord, the Earl of
- Cumberland. The cruise of The Scourge of Malice. The Earl’s attack
- on Puerto Rico. The English take San Juan. The unseen foe. A losing
- battle. The Earl retreats. The most famous real pirate. Blackbeard.
- A monster in human form. Blackbeard’s courage. Blackbeard’s ways.
- Blackbeard’s castle. Origin of Blackbeard. How Blackbeard became a
- pirate. Blackbeard’s appearance. How Blackbeard amused his men. A
- pirate’s joke. A much-married pirate.
-
-
-Chapter XIII The End of Blackbeard 225
-
- Lieutenant Maynard’s attempt. The attack on the pirates. Maynard
- repulsed. A hand to hand battle. The fight. Maynard and Blackbeard
- fight a duel. A gruesome sight. Blackbeard’s death. The end of the
- pirates. The Lafitte brothers. Who the Lafittes were. The
- Baratarians. Smugglers. The governor’s proclamation. Denounced as
- pirates. Lafitte’s trial. The arrival of the British. Lafitte’s
- patriotism. The governor’s attack. The Baratarians destroyed.
- Lafitte proffers his services to General Jackson. Bravery of
- Lafitte and his men. Pardons. What became of the Lafittes. The end
- of piracy. What we owe the buccaneers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-At dawn the buccaneers sailed away. Frontispiece
-
- FACING PAGE
-Money of the buccaneers’ times 16
-Cruising about in small boats and attacking every Spanish ship
- they saw 17
-He managed to secure two earthen wine jars and plugged their
- necks, with the idea of using them as floats 34
-The buccaneers swarmed over the ship’s rails 35
-Sir Henry Morgan, the most famous of the buccaneers, with one
- of his crew 76
-Burning the galleon 77
-The buccaneers’ fleet 116
-The ruined tower of the cathedral in Old Panama 117
-Near the cathedral are the walls of the ancient fort 117
-Dampier wrote his journal during lulls between battles 140
-Piraguas. It was in boats like these that the earlier buccaneers
- captured their first Spanish ships 141
-Two ships were promptly fired and sunk 168
-The battered, patched old galleon sailed southward around Cape Horn 169
-The merchants bid for the loot brought ashore 188
-All were in the best of spirits, smoking, drinking, spinning
- yarns of the sea 189
-The last of the pirate ships, the Vigilant, as she was originally
- rigged. Now a packet in the West Indies 244
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE BOYS’ BOOK OF BUCCANEERS
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-WHO AND WHAT WERE THE BUCCANEERS?
-
-
-Jack looked up from the book he had been reading. “Father,” he asked,
-“what was a buccaneer? Cousin Fred says buccaneers and pirates were the
-same thing, and Jim says they were not, and in this story they speak of
-pirates and buccaneers both.”
-
-“Fred and Jim are both wrong and both right,” replied Mr. Bickford.
-“Buccaneers were pirates, but pirates were not necessarily buccaneers.
-But nowadays the two are often confused and writers of stories do not
-seem to realize the difference and make it still more confusing. When
-Fred comes over to-night bring him into the library, and I’ll try to
-straighten out the puzzle and tell you about the buccaneers.”
-
-“Say, Fred!” cried Jack, when his cousin came bouncing into Jack’s den
-that evening. “You were way off. Buccaneers were not the same as
-pirates. Dad says so, and he’s going to tell us all about them
-to-night. Come on down to the library.”
-
-“That’ll be dandy,” agreed Fred, enthusiastically. “And of course if
-Uncle Henry says they’re not the same, why they’re not, but I always
-thought they were. I wonder if Captain Kidd was a pirate or a
-buccaneer.”
-
-“Ask Dad, he knows!” laughed Jack, as the two raced downstairs to Mr.
-Bickford’s library.
-
-They found him surrounded by books with odd, old-fashioned, worn
-leather bindings and with some faded and yellowed maps and cuts on the
-table before him.
-
-“Well, boys,” he greeted them, “I suppose you want to know all about
-the buccaneers who sailed the Spanish Main, eh?”
-
-“Yes, and Fred wants to know if Captain Kidd was a pirate or a
-buccaneer,” replied Jack.
-
-“Neither!” laughed his father. “Captain Kidd was, as you boys would
-say, ‘the goat’ of a lot of unprincipled men. But we’re getting ahead
-too fast. We’ll discuss the famous Kidd when we come to him.”
-
-“Well, that gets me!” declared Fred, as the boys found comfortable
-seats in the big leather chairs. “Captain Kidd not a pirate!”
-
-“Pirates,” began Mr. Bickford, leaning back in his chair, “have been
-known ever since men first used boats. The earliest histories mention
-them. There were Phœnician pirates, Greek pirates, Roman pirates, and
-the old Vikings were nothing more or less than pirates. Then there were
-the Malay pirates, the Tripolitan pirates and the Chinese pirates who
-still exist, and we still have harbor pirates, oyster pirates and river
-pirates. A pirate is any one who preys upon shipping or steals
-merchandise in a boat, and he may be and usually is a sneaking,
-cowardly rascal without a redeeming feature. Moreover, a pirate preys
-on any one and every one, and while some pirates, such as the Vikings,
-confined their forays to certain nations and their ships and did not
-molest others, yet most pirates loot, murder and destroy with
-impartiality and fall upon their own countrymen or others alike. But
-the buccaneers were very different. In the first place, buccaneers were
-not known until comparatively recent times and the first buccaneers had
-their origin in 1625.
-
-“At that time England was at war with Spain, and the Spanish Government
-claimed all the New World and decreed that any ships found trading in
-the Caribbean or neighboring waters, or any settlers found upon the
-islands or the Spanish Main, were pirates and would be treated as
-such.”
-
-“But, Dad, what is the Spanish Main?” asked Jack, interrupting.
-
-“I don’t wonder you ask,” replied his father. “To read of it one would
-think it a body of water, for we hear of ‘sailing the Spanish Main.’
-But in reality it was the mainland of South and Central America and
-when the buccaneers spoke of ‘sailing the Spanish Main’ they meant
-skirting the coast. But to continue. Of course the British and French
-claimed many of the West Indies and, despite the dangers, settlers went
-to them. Among the others that were settled was the island of St.
-Kitts, which was settled by both French and English. Although the
-settlers quarreled among themselves, still they managed to exist and
-were becoming fairly prosperous when in 1625 the Spanish vessels swept
-down upon them, burned their plantations and, after killing many of the
-settlers, drove them into the woods. Without homes or means the
-survivors sought to reëstablish themselves, but a few set sail in
-little dugout canoes seeking new lands. In these little craft they
-reached Santo Domingo, which was then known as Hispaniola, and was a
-stronghold of the Spaniards. But it was such a marvelously rich and
-promising country that the fugitive Frenchmen landed and sent back for
-their companions. At first the Dons knew nothing of these new arrivals,
-but as they increased, word of their presence reached the authorities,
-and soldiers were sent to drive them off or destroy them.
-
-“At that time Hispaniola was teeming with wild cattle, wild hogs, wild
-horses and wild dogs, descendants of the animals introduced by the
-Spaniards, and the Frenchmen occupied most of their time hunting and
-killing these creatures. Their hides were valuable, and their meat was
-preserved by drying it over fires or transforming it into a product
-known to the Spaniards as ‘bucan.’ Thus the Frenchmen became known as
-‘bucaniers,’ from which the name ‘buccaneer’ was derived. So you see
-the buccaneers were not pirates at all at that time, and the name has
-no connection with piracy.
-
-“Owing to their occupation, the buccaneers became expert shots, good
-woodsmen, hardy, reckless and daring, and they hated the Dons like
-poison. But they could not stand against the Spanish troops and so,
-taking to their canoes, they fled to the island of Tortuga, off the
-northern coast of what is now Haiti. Here there were a few Spanish
-settlers, but they were so outnumbered by the buccaneers that they made
-no objection to their new neighbors. The Dons, however, had no
-intention of letting the buccaneers alone and sent expeditions to drive
-them off. Then the buccaneers started a merry game of puss in the
-corner. When the Dons arrived at Tortuga the buccaneers slipped over to
-the mainland, and when the Spaniards sought them there they sneaked
-back to the island. By this time they had been joined by many English,
-a few Portuguese and a number of Dutch, and feeling their numbers were
-sufficient to make a stand, they proceeded to fortify Tortuga. They
-selected a high rocky hill on the summit of which was a deep depression
-and with infinite labor converted this into a fort, mounted cannon and
-stored a supply of wood and ammunition. Then they destroyed the only
-approach—a narrow defile—and the fort could only be reached by means of
-ladders lowered from the parapets.
-
-“For a long time the Dons left them alone, realizing the impossibility
-of taking the fort, and the little settlement prospered and grew. The
-French sent out a governor and there at the very threshold of the Dons’
-richest possession the handful of buccaneers lived and plied their
-trade. But although they were composed of half a dozen different races,
-one and all hated the Spaniards and soon, not content with
-buccaneering, they became ambitious and with reckless bravery set out
-in small canoes with the intention of capturing Spanish ships. It seems
-incredible that these rough, untrained hunters could seize a heavily
-armed ship swarming with sailors and soldiers, but nevertheless they
-did. Lying in wait in the track of ships they would pull to the first
-Spanish galleon that appeared and, while their expert marksmen would
-pick off the Spanish gunners and the helmsman, they would dash
-alongside, so close that the cannon could not bear upon them. Jamming
-the ship’s rudder with their boat, they would swarm up and over the
-bulwarks, pistols and swords in hand and knives in teeth and, yelling
-like demons, would rush the crew, cutting, slashing, shooting and
-stabbing. Seldom did they fail, and thus having secured ships and guns,
-to say nothing of treasure, they would sail back to their lair, flushed
-with victory. Then, having good ships and plenty of heavy guns, they
-transformed their prizes into privateers and set sail in search of more
-Spanish ships to conquer.
-
-“You must remember that at this time England and France were at war
-with Spain, and hence the buccaneers were in no sense pirates. Many of
-them were given commissions to prey on the Dons as privateers, and
-their acts were considered a legitimate part of warfare and were
-encouraged and fostered by the officials.
-
-“And having gone thus far they realized that organization was
-necessary. Hence a sort of association was formed, or perhaps we might
-call it a society, which they called ‘Brethren of the Main’ and laws,
-rules and agreements were drawn up, to which, oddly enough, the
-buccaneers were wonderfully faithful.
-
-“Another interesting thing is the fact that these buccaneers were the
-originators of life and accident insurance. Before a ship set out a
-council was held, and papers were drawn up stating how large a share of
-the loot each man should have for his services, aside from his ‘lay’ of
-loot, and how much should be paid for the death of a man or injuries
-received. Thus the loss of a right arm was valued at six hundred pieces
-of eight or six slaves; a left arm was valued at five hundred pieces of
-eight or five slaves; a right leg, five hundred pieces of eight or five
-slaves; a left leg, four hundred pieces of eight or four slaves; an eye
-or a finger, one hundred pieces of eight or one slave.”
-
-“Please, Dad,” cried Jack. “Do tell us what a piece of eight is before
-you go on. We read about them and about doubloons and onzas, but no one
-seems to know what they are.”
-
-“That’s a question well put,” replied Mr. Bickford. “A piece of eight
-was a silver coin of eight reals. As a real was nominally twelve and
-one-half cents, or half a peseta of twenty-five centavos, the piece of
-eight was nominally a dollar of one hundred centavos. The doubloon was
-one hundred reals, or about ten dollars, and was a gold coin, while the
-onza, or double doubloon, was two hundred reals, or about twenty
-dollars, and was also of gold. But as the peseta is really worth only
-twenty cents in present values the piece of eight is worth eighty
-cents, and if you go to any money exchange you can buy Spanish silver
-‘dollars,’ as they are called, for eighty cents, which are genuine
-‘pieces of eight.’ For smaller coins, the old Dons and buccaneers used
-what were called ‘cross money.’ These were irregular-shaped slugs cut
-from the pieces of eight and with the lettering hammered out, leaving
-only the cross-shaped center of the Spanish shield to prove the coin
-was minted silver of a definite value. Sometimes, if the piece did not
-bear this cross, the priests stamped a cross upon it to prove its
-genuineness—a sort of hall mark so to speak. These odd cross money
-coins are still in use in remote parts of Panama and, although no two
-are exactly alike in size or shape, the natives recognize them as
-quarters, eighths or sixteenths of a piece of eight, or in other words,
-as half reals, one-real and two-real pieces. And speaking of these old
-coins, did you ever know that the piece of eight was the grandfather of
-our own dollar, and was the forerunner of the metric system, and that
-our symbol for the dollar came from the sign used to designate the
-piece of eight?”
-
-“No, indeed,” declared Fred. “Do tell us about that.”
-
-“In the old days,” smiled Mr. Bickford, as he continued, “nearly all
-countries used the piece of eight as the standard of exchange and
-barter. It was used in the American colonies, but after the United
-States were formed it was decided to mint a standard coin for the new
-republic. As the piece of eight was the recognized standard, the new
-coin was made of the same weight and value to avoid trouble and
-confusion in trade and commerce. All the accounts had been kept in
-pieces of eight, the symbol for which was a figure eight with a line
-through it like this, $, and which may have originally been a figure
-eight with a line through it or, as some claim, a conventional Pillar
-of Hercules such as appeared on the pieces of eight, and so the
-accountants and clerks found it easier to use the same symbol with the
-addition of another line to designate dollars than to evolve a new
-symbol. So you see our dollar sign is really a modification of the old
-sign for the piece of eight.”
-
-“Gosh! I’ll be more interested in dollar signs now,” declared Jack,
-“and every time I see one I’ll remember what a piece of eight was.”
-
-“As I was saying,” went on his father, “the agreements and papers were
-drawn up, a captain was chosen, the buccaneers made forays into the
-Spanish territory and stole what cattle and hogs and other supplies
-they required, and the ships set forth to capture Spanish prizes and
-raid the towns on the Spanish Main.
-
-“The crews were rough, reckless, daredevils of every race; soldiers of
-fortune who had drifted to Tortuga and joined the Brethren, and as they
-had everything to gain and nothing to lose they exhibited bravery, took
-risks and performed deeds which have never been equaled. But they were
-not real pirates by any means—except in the eyes of the Spaniards. They
-never molested French or British ships, they were openly welcomed and
-aided in the French or British islands, and even when peace was
-declared and the buccaneers still continued to prey upon the Dons, the
-authorities winked at them and gave them refuge. But in time
-dissensions arose between the English, the Dutch and the French
-buccaneers at Tortuga, and the various nationalities separated and each
-took separate spots for their strongholds. The Virgin Islands were
-favorite lairs, for the Danish and Dutch owners were safe from their
-attacks by sheltering the freebooters, who spent money as recklessly as
-they won it, and the buccaneers had stringent rules, and the death
-penalty was inflicted upon any man who molested the persons or
-properties of the friendly islanders. The British buccaneers made Port
-Royal, Jamaica, their stronghold, and that town became famed as the
-richest and wickedest city in the world. Another lair was a little
-island in Samaná Bay in Santo Domingo, and the Cayman Islands south of
-Cuba, the Bay Islands off Honduras and several islands off the Coast of
-Venezuela also became nests for the freebooters.
-
-“At first, of course, all the buccaneers were equal. There were none
-who knew more of buccaneering than the others, all pooled their
-resources and the captains were elected by vote or won their place
-through owning a ship or having captured one. But gradually certain men
-won fame and prestige for their cruelty, their daring or their success,
-and rapidly rose to recognized leadership and became famous as
-buccaneer chiefs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-SOME BUCCANEERS AND THEIR WAYS
-
-
-“Now, having learned why the buccaneers were so called and how they
-came into existence, we’ll take up a more interesting matter, and I’ll
-try to tell you something of the men themselves, of the most famous
-buccaneers and of their deeds,” continued Mr. Bickford.
-
-“Certain famous buccaneers’ names are almost household words—such as
-Morgan, Montbars, L’Ollonois and your friend Captain Kidd, who, as I
-said, was no buccaneer—but others, who did even braver and more
-terrible things and were the most noted of buccaneers in their day, are
-almost unknown to the world to-day. Among these was Pierre Le Grand,
-Brasiliano, Bartholomew Portugues, Sawkins, Sharp, Davis, Red Legs,
-Cook, Dampier, Mansvelt, Prince Rupert and many others.”
-
-“But you’ve forgotten Drake and Hawkins and Blackbeard,” put in Jack.
-
-“None of those men were buccaneers,” his father declared. “Drake and
-Hawkins were privateers—Drake being Admiral of Queen Elizabeth’s
-navy—and won their fame in the destruction of the Spanish Armada. Later
-they attacked and took towns on the Spanish Main and destroyed Spanish
-ships, but they were neither pirates nor buccaneers. In fact, they were
-both dead before buccaneers became of any importance as sea rovers. On
-the other hand, Blackbeard was an ordinary pirate—a sea robber who made
-no attempt to discriminate between friend and foe and scuttled and
-robbed ships of his own countrymen as readily as those of other
-nationalities. But as he was an interesting character and was among the
-last of the important or dangerous pirates of the Caribbean I will tell
-you something of his life and career later.
-
-“The first buccaneer to rise to any fame was Pierre Le Grand, or as he
-was oftener called, Peter the Great, a native of Dieppe in Normandy. Le
-Grand’s first and only achievement, and the one which brought him fame,
-was the taking of the Vice Admiral of the Spanish fleet near Cape
-Tiburon in Haiti. With a small boat manned by twenty-eight of the rough
-buccaneers Le Grand set forth in search of prizes and cruised among the
-Bahamas, but for many days saw no ship. Provisions were running low,
-his men were grumbling and he had about decided to give up in despair
-when they sighted a huge Spanish ship which had become separated from
-the rest of the convoy. Setting sail they headed for the vessel and at
-twilight were very close. In order to force his men to their utmost, Le
-Grand ordered one of his crew to bore holes in the bottom of the boat
-and then, running their tiny craft alongside the Don, and armed only
-with swords and pistols, the buccaneers swarmed over the sides of the
-doomed ship. Taken absolutely by surprise, for the Spaniards had not
-dreamed that the handful of ragged men in a tiny sail boat intended to
-attack them, the crew of the ship, nevertheless, resisted stoutly. But
-they were ruthlessly cut down and while some of the buccaneers drove
-the Spaniards across the deck, others with Le Grand at their head,
-dashed into the cabin where the unsuspecting Vice Admiral was enjoying
-a quiet game of cards with his officers.
-
-“As Le Grand leaped across the room and placed his pistol at the
-Admiral’s breast the dumbfounded Spaniard exclaimed, ‘Lord bless us!
-Are these devils or what?’
-
-“But he soon realized that whatever they were his ship was in their
-hands and that he and his men were prisoners. Le Grand, however, was
-neither a brutal nor a bloodthirsty wretch, as were many of his
-successors, and, having impressed as many of the Spanish seamen into
-his service as he required, he set the others, including the Admiral
-and the officers, ashore, and set sail with his prize for France. So
-great was the booty he secured by this one coup that he gave up
-buccaneering and settled down in France for life.
-
-“But his deed fired the buccaneers on Tortuga with dreams of easily
-acquired prizes and riches, and soon a host of the rough hunters and
-woodsmen were cruising about in small boats and attacking every Spanish
-ship they saw. Indeed, many, unable to secure sailboats, actually went
-a-pirating in tiny dugout canoes, and so daring and reckless were they
-that, despite their handicaps, they took two huge galleons laden with
-plate within the first month, as well as many smaller vessels. Now that
-they had seaworthy ships and plenty of wealth at their disposal they
-became bolder and bolder, and were soon not only cruising the Caribbean
-Sea, and taking ships, but were attacking the fortified and wealthy
-towns along the Central and South American coast with success. And let
-me mention here that it was very seldom that the buccaneers made use of
-the larger ships in their piratical raids. The smaller vessels were
-faster, they were more easily handled, and when necessity arose they
-could slip through narrow, shoal channels through which the Spanish
-men-of-war could not follow. The buccaneers’ vessels seldom carried
-over six guns, many had but two or three, but they swarmed with men
-armed to the teeth, and the buccaneers depended far more upon a dashing
-attack and hand-to-hand fights than upon cannon fire.”
-
-“Excuse me, Dad,” interrupted Jack, “but are there books that tell all
-these things?”
-
-“Yes, Jack,” replied Mr. Bickford. “And the best and most complete is a
-book called ‘The Buccaneers of America.’ It was written by a buccaneer,
-a man named Esquemeling, who took part in nearly all the most famous of
-the buccaneers’ raids and served with Morgan, L’Ollonois and many other
-buccaneer chiefs. His own history is almost as interesting as that of
-any of the men of whom he wrote. He was a Hollander by birth, but went
-to Tortuga as a clerk for the West India Company of France. The
-company, however, found that although the buccaneers were quite willing
-to purchase goods it was quite another matter when it came to paying
-for them, and as a result, the West India Company abandoned their
-agency in Tortuga and gave orders that all their goods and chattels on
-the island should be sold for what they would bring. This included
-servants of the company as well, and Esquemeling found himself sold for
-a slave for thirty pieces of eight. His master was a cruel, tyrannical
-man and abused his Dutch slave shamefully, although offering to let him
-buy his freedom for three hundred pieces of eight. Esquemeling,
-however, as he says himself, ‘was not master of one in the whole
-world.’ Finally Esquemeling became weak and ill from abuse and
-inadequate food, and his cruel master, fearing the man would die and he
-would be out of pocket and without a slave as well, disposed of the
-sick Hollander for seventy pieces of eight. His new master was a
-surgeon and a kindly man and, having doctored Esquemeling and restored
-him to health and strength, at the end of a year he gave him his
-liberty, exacting only the promise that Esquemeling should pay him one
-hundred pieces of eight when in a position to do so. Being, as he
-himself says, ‘at liberty but like unto Adam when he was first created,
-that is, naked and destitute of all human necessities,’ and with no
-means of earning a livelihood, Esquemeling threw in his lot with the
-buccaneers and he remained with them for a number of years. Being by
-profession a clerk, Esquemeling kept the logs and accounts of the
-buccaneers and also a journal of his own in which he recorded all the
-details and events of his adventurous life. His work is, in fact, the
-only authentic account of these men, and his quaint phraseology and
-droll remarks are very amusing. I have the book here, boys, and you’ll
-find it more interesting and absorbing than any story or fiction of the
-buccaneers that ever was written.
-
-“The first buccaneer of note with whom Esquemeling sailed was
-Bartholomew Portugues, so called as he was a native of Portugal.
-Portugues left Jamaica in a small ship of four small carronades with a
-crew of thirty men, and went cruising off Cuba. A few days later he met
-a heavily armed galleon bound to Havana from Cartagena and at once
-attacked her. Although the Spaniard carried a crew of over seventy, in
-addition to passengers, and was armed with twenty heavy cannon, yet
-Portugues assaulted the Dons without hesitation and after a desperate
-battle in which nearly fifty Spaniards were killed and wounded, the
-buccaneers took the galleon with a loss of only ten men killed and four
-wounded. Owing to contrary winds Portugues could not return directly to
-either Tortuga or Jamaica and so set sail for Cape San Antonio at the
-western extremity of Cuba. There he made necessary repairs to his prize
-and secured a supply of fresh water. As they were setting sail the
-buccaneers were surprised by three great Spanish ships and, greatly
-outnumbered, were taken prisoners and stripped of the booty they had so
-recently secured, a treasure of over ten thousand pieces of eight, in
-addition to valuable merchandise. We can imagine the chagrin of the
-buccaneers at this turn of fate and no doubt they gave themselves up
-for lost. But luck was with them. Two days after they had been made
-prisoners a great storm arose, the vessels became separated and the one
-containing the buccaneers was driven to Campeche in Yucatan. When the
-residents learned that Portugues and his fellows were captives on board
-there was great rejoicing, and the authorities sent off to the ship
-demanding that the buccaneers be delivered to them. After a
-consultation, however, it was decided safer to leave the prisoners
-aboard and in preparation for a general hanging a number of gibbets
-were erected on shore. These were in plain view of the buccaneers, and
-Portugues resolved to make a desperate effort to escape and to cheat
-the expectant Dons of the grewsome spectacle. He managed to secure two
-earthen wine jars and, having plugged their necks with the idea of
-using them as floats, he waited patiently for darkness. But the sentry,
-who hitherto had been a careless, sleepy fellow, was unusually alert,
-and seeing this, Portugues seized a knife which he had surreptitiously
-obtained and, to quote Esquemeling, ‘gave him such a mortal stab as
-suddenly deprived him of life and the possibility of making any noise.’
-Then the buccaneer captain leaped into the sea and aided by his
-extemporized water-wings managed to gain the shore. But his troubles
-had only begun. At once the hue and cry of his escape was raised, and
-for three days Portugues concealed himself in a hollow tree without
-food while the Dons searched all about. At last, abandoning their hunt,
-the Spaniards returned to the town, and Portugues set out afoot for the
-Gulf of Triste, where he hoped to find other buccaneers to aid him in
-rescuing his comrades.
-
-“It is almost impossible to imagine what this meant or the seemingly
-insurmountable hardships the buccaneer captain deliberately faced, and
-it is also a most striking example of the faithfulness of the
-buccaneers to one another, which was one of the chief causes why they
-were so successful. Remember, Portugues was unarmed, for he had left
-the knife in the sentry’s back, he was without food, he had been half
-starved by his captors, and yet he calmly set out on a one hundred and
-fifty mile tramp through the jungle and along the jagged rocks of the
-seacoast; through a country infested by mosquitoes and stinging
-insects, by savage hostile Indians, and through swamps reeking with
-malaria. Every settlement and town had to be avoided, as they were all
-filled with his enemies, the Spaniards, and throughout that long and
-terrible journey the buccaneer subsisted entirely upon the few
-shellfish he found along the shore and upon the roots of forest herbs.
-
-“Moreover, several large and many small rivers crossed his route and
-not being able to swim his case seemed hopeless. But while searching
-about the banks of the first large stream, looking for a possible ford,
-he found an old plank with a few large spikes in it. After tremendous
-efforts he managed to withdraw these nails and with infinite patience
-whetted them against stones until he secured a sharp knifelike edge.
-Just think of that, boys, when you read of modern hardships endured by
-men left to their own resources in a forest. Imagine rubbing a ship’s
-spike back and forth upon a stone until it has been transformed into a
-knife!
-
-“But the preparation of the nails, incredible as it sounds, was not the
-worst of his labors. With these crude implements the buccaneer actually
-hacked off branches of trees, cut vines and pliant reeds and with these
-constructed a raft with which he crossed the stream. At every large
-river he repeated the work and eventually arrived safely at the Gulf of
-Triste fourteen days after escaping from the ship. Here, as he had
-expected, he found a buccaneer vessel with a captain whom he knew and,
-telling of his comrades’ plight, he begged the captain to lend him a
-boat and twenty men to go to his men’s rescue. This the captain gladly
-did, and eight days later, Portugues was back at Campeche. So small was
-the boat that the Spaniards never dreamed that its occupants were
-enemies or buccaneers, but thought it a craft from shore bringing off
-cargo, and they watched it approach without the least fear or
-preparations for defense.
-
-“Thus the buccaneers completely surprised the Dons and after a short,
-sharp struggle were in possession of the ship and had released the
-imprisoned buccaneers—or rather most of them, for the Dons had hanged a
-few.
-
-“Realizing that other Spanish vessels might appear and attack him with
-overwhelming force at any time, Portugues at once set sail in the ship
-wherein he had so long been a helpless captive, and once more in
-possession of his booty with vast riches in addition. Steering a course
-for Jamaica he was off the Isle of Pines when the fickle fate which
-always followed him once more turned her back and the ship went upon
-the reefs of the Jardines. The ship was a total loss and sunk with all
-her treasure, while Portugues and his comrades barely escaped with
-their lives in a canoe. Although they managed to reach Jamaica without
-misfortune, luck had deserted Portugues for all time and while he tried
-time after time to recoup his fortunes all his efforts were in vain. He
-became an ordinary seaman and was soon forgotten.
-
-“Another buccaneer whose exploits were as remarkable as Portugues’ and
-whose most notable exploits also took place in Yucatan, was a Dutchman
-who was nicknamed Rock Brasiliano, owing to his long residence in
-Brazil. As an ordinary mariner he joined the buccaneers in Jamaica and
-soon so distinguished himself by his bravery and resourcefulness that
-when, after a dispute with his captain, he deserted the ship, he was
-chosen chief by a number of his fellows and, securing a small vessel,
-he set forth to capture a prize. Within a few days he seized a large
-Spanish ship with a vast treasure aboard which he carried into Jamaica
-in triumph. This exploit at once brought him fame and men flocked to
-his service. But, unlike Portugues, who seems to have been a very
-decent and respectable sort of rascal, Brasiliano was a drunken, brutal
-scallawag. As Esquemeling says, ‘Neither in his domestic or private
-affairs had he good behavior or government over himself.’ When drunk,
-as he always was when ashore, his favorite amusement was to race up and
-down the streets, beating, stabbing or shooting all whom he met, very
-much as our Western ‘bad men’ used to ‘shoot up’ a town in the old
-days.
-
-“Moreover, Brasiliano was unspeakably bloodthirsty and cruel. Whenever
-he captured Spaniards he put them to the most horrible tortures, and in
-order to force them to reveal the hiding places of their treasures he
-would flay them alive, tear them limb from limb or roast them on spits
-over slow fires. As a result, he became a feared and dreaded man, and
-the mere mention of his name caused the Dons to shudder and to huddle
-within their stockades. Nevertheless Brasiliano was a brave, a
-resourceful and a most remarkable man and performed some most
-noteworthy exploits. On one occasion he was cruising off the coast of
-Yucatan when a violent storm drove his ship upon the rocks, and he and
-his men escaped with only their muskets and a slender stock of
-ammunition. They landed on a desolate, uninhabited stretch of coast
-midway between Campeche and the Gulf of Triste and, quite undeterred by
-their plight, commenced an overland march towards the Gulf exactly as
-Portugues had done. But they had not proceeded far when they were
-surprised by a cavalcade of over one hundred Spanish horsemen. Despite
-the fact that the buccaneers numbered less than thirty, yet they had no
-thought of either retreat or surrender, but at once prepared to meet
-the oncoming cavalry. Expert marksmen as they were, a Don fell for
-every bullet fired and for an hour the handful of buccaneers kept the
-Spaniards at bay until, finding the cost too heavy, the cavalry
-retreated towards the town. Killing the wounded and stripping the dead
-of their arms and equipment, the buccaneers continued on the journey
-mounted on the horses of the dead Dons, the total loss of Brasiliano’s
-forces being but two killed and two wounded. Quite encouraged by their
-success, the buccaneers approached a little port and saw a boat lying
-at anchor in the harbor and protecting a fleet of canoes that were
-loading logwood. With little trouble the buccaneers captured the canoes
-and with wild shouts and yells bore down upon the little gunboat. The
-Spaniards aboard, terrified at sight of the buccaneers, surrendered
-after a short fight, but, to the buccaneers’ chagrin, they found
-scarcely any provisions on their prize. This did not trouble them long,
-however, and promptly killing the Spaniards’ horses they dressed them,
-salted the meat and, thus equipped, sailed forth to capture more
-vessels. In this they were highly successful, and in a few weeks
-Brasiliano sailed into Port Royal with nearly one hundred thousand
-pieces of eight and much merchandise. But the buccaneers invariably
-wasted all their hard-won money recklessly. It was not uncommon for one
-of them to spend several thousand pieces of eight in a single night of
-drinking, gambling and carousing and so, within a few days, Brasiliano
-and his men were forced to go to sea again. Having had good fortune at
-Yucatan, he set sail for Campeche, but fifteen days after his arrival
-on the coast he was captured with several of his men while spying on
-the city and harbor in a canoe. They were at once cast into a dungeon
-to await execution, but Brasiliano was by no means at the end of his
-resources. By some method he managed to secure writing materials and
-composed a most wonderful letter purporting to be written by another
-buccaneer chief and in which the supposed author threatened dire
-reprisals on any Spaniard captured by the buccaneers if Brasiliano and
-his men were harmed. This epistle was delivered to the Governor—though
-how on earth Brasiliano managed it no one knows—and His Excellency,
-having had plenty of experience with buccaneers, was so frightened at
-its contents that he at once liberated his prisoners, only exacting an
-oath that they would abandon buccaneering. Then, to insure their
-keeping their promise, he sent them as sailors on a galleon bound for
-Spain. With their wages from the trip they at once returned to Jamaica
-and, regardless of pledges, were soon harassing and murdering the Dons
-right and left.
-
-“But neither Portugues or Brasiliano could compare in cruelty, daring,
-bloodthirstiness or rascality with Francis L’Ollonois. In his youth
-L’Ollonois was transported to the West Indies as a bond servant, or
-virtually a slave, and, winning his freedom, made his way to Tortuga
-and joined the buccaneers.
-
-“So unspeakably cruel and bestially inhuman was this Frenchman that
-even his fellow buccaneers sickened of his ways and Esquemeling speaks
-of him as ‘that infernal wretch’ or ‘that despicable and execrable
-pirate.’ For a time after joining the Brethren of the Main, L’Ollonois
-served as a common seaman, but his courage and reckless daring soon
-brought him to the attention of Monsieur de la Place, the governor of
-Tortuga, who was heartily in sympathy with the buccaneers. The governor
-therefore provided L’Ollonois with a ship and outfitted him, the
-agreement of course being that La Place should have a share of the
-booty taken. Within a very short time L’Ollonois had taken several
-vessels and immense riches, while his awful cruelties made him a
-dreaded and famed character throughout the Caribbean. Indeed, so
-merciless was he that the Dons, rather than surrender to the monster,
-would leap into the sea or blow out their own brains, knowing that
-quick death by any means was preferable to the tortures they would
-endure at L’Ollonois’ hands. His first disaster occurred when his ship
-was wrecked on the coast of Yucatan. The men all escaped, but were
-immediately attacked by the Spaniards, who killed the greater portion
-of the buccaneers and wounded L’Ollonois. Seeing no means of escape the
-captain smeared himself with blood and sand and crawling among the dead
-bodies lay motionless. The Dons were completely fooled and, not
-recognizing L’Ollonois and thinking him merely a dead sailor, left the
-field after a brief search for the buccaneer chief, whereupon he made
-for the woods and lived upon roots until his wounds healed. Then,
-having stolen garments from a Spaniard whom he killed, the rascal
-walked calmly into Campeche. Here he conversed with several slaves and,
-promising them liberty in return for their services, he succeeded in
-getting a large canoe and with the slaves to help he reached Tortuga in
-safety. In the meantime the Spaniards were rejoicing at thought of the
-dread L’Ollonois being killed, for his men, who had been made
-prisoners, told the Dons that he had fallen in the battle.
-
-“His next raid was on the town of Cayos in Cuba, and word of his
-approach was sent post-haste to the governor at Havana. We can readily
-imagine the amazement and terror of His Excellency when this dreaded
-buccaneer, who was supposed to be safely dead at Campeche, bobbed up
-alive and well at Cuba. At first the governor could not believe it, but
-nevertheless he dispatched a ship with ten guns and with a crew of
-eighty to attack the buccaneers and commanded the captain not to dare
-to return unless he had totally destroyed the pirates. In addition, he
-sent aboard a negro as a hangman with instructions that every buccaneer
-taken alive should be hanged, with the exception of L’Ollonois, who was
-to be brought alive to Havana. No doubt the governor wished to make
-sure of the buccaneer chieftain’s death this time, but fate decreed
-otherwise. Instead of trying to escape, the buccaneers, when they
-learned of the warship coming to attack them, set forth in two canoes
-and unexpectedly bore down on the Spanish ship as she lay at anchor in
-the Estera River. It was two o’clock in the morning when they drew near
-the doomed vessel, and the watch, seeing the canoes and not dreaming
-that they contained buccaneers, hailed them and asked if they had seen
-any pirates. To this the buccaneers replied that they had seen no
-pirates or anything like them. The watch thus satisfied was turning
-away when the canoes dashed close and the buccaneers swarmed over the
-ship’s rails. Taken completely by surprise, still the Dons put up a
-gallant fight and for some time the battle raged desperately. But, as
-usual, the buccaneers, though but twenty-one all told, triumphed and
-drove the surviving Spaniards into the hold. Then, stationing his men
-by the hatchway with drawn swords, L’Ollonois ordered the prisoners to
-come up one at a time, and as fast as they appeared his men struck off
-their heads. The last to appear was the negro hangman who begged
-piteously for mercy, but L’Ollonois, after torturing him to confession
-of various matters, murdered him like the rest. Only one man was spared
-and to him L’Ollonois gave a note addressed to the governor in which he
-informed His Excellency of the fate of his men and assured him that he
-would never give quarter to any Spaniard and only hoped to be able to
-torture and kill His Excellency as well.
-
-“With the ship captured from the Spaniards, L’Ollonois cruised along
-the Spanish Main, took several ships and returned to Tortuga with the
-idea of fitting out a large company of ships and boldly attacking the
-Spanish towns and cities, as well as their vessels. The fleet he
-gathered together consisted of eight ships, the largest carrying ten
-guns, and with six hundred and sixty buccaneers. But long before they
-reached the South American coast they were flushed with success. Near
-Porto Rico they captured a ship of sixteen guns laden with cacao and
-with treasure consisting of forty thousand pieces of eight and over ten
-thousand dollars’ worth of jewels, and near the island of Saona they
-took the payship of the Dons and obtained nearly four tons of
-gunpowder, many muskets and twelve thousand pieces of eight. It would
-be tiresome to describe in detail their arrival at Maracaibo, their
-taking of the forts and their capture of the town. The Spaniards
-resisted valiantly, but were beaten back and then commenced a series of
-orgies, of cruelties and of inhumanities which are almost without an
-equal. The people, as soon as they realized the town would fall to
-L’Ollonois and his freebooters, took to the outlying country, and these
-refugees the buccaneers hunted down and dragged before their chief. In
-order to make them confess where they had hidden their
-valuables—although L’Ollonois had already obtained vast plunder—they
-were put on the rack, broken on the wheel, cut to pieces, flayed alive
-and subjected to every cruelty and torture the corsairs could devise.
-For fifteen days the buccaneers occupied the town and butchered and
-tortured the inhabitants until, convinced that no more loot could be
-secured, they left Maracaibo, sailed up the Lake and took the town of
-Gibraltar. Here they were ambushed and many killed, but in comparison
-to the losses of the Dons the buccaneers suffered little, losing but
-forty men killed and about fifty wounded, while over five hundred
-Spaniards were killed and several hundred taken prisoners. Many of the
-captives died from starvation or illness under the buccaneers’
-treatment, many more were butchered for pure sport and hundreds were
-put to the torture. Then, not satisfied, L’Ollonois threatened to burn
-the town unless he was paid ten thousand pieces of eight and when this
-was not instantly forthcoming he actually set fire to the place.
-However, the money being eventually paid, the buccaneers had the
-decency to aid the inhabitants in putting out the conflagration, for,
-oddly enough, they usually kept to their promises, and after eighteen
-days set sail for Maracaibo again. Here they demanded a payment of
-thirty thousand pieces of eight under penalty of having the town
-destroyed, and the poor harassed and cowed Dons managed to raise the
-sum and with heartfelt thanks saw the fleet sail away. When Tortuga was
-reached and a division of spoils made it was found that over two
-hundred thousand pieces of eight had been taken in addition to immense
-stores of silks, gold and silver plate and jewels.
-
-“Hardly had he landed when L’Ollonois prepared for another raid and
-with seven hundred men set sail with six ships for Honduras. Here the
-beastly buccaneer chief tortured and killed and robbed to his heart’s
-content, but finding comparatively little loot and thinking the
-inhabitants had secreted their wealth, he became mad with fury and
-outdid all his former inhuman acts. On one occasion, when a prisoner
-insisted that he did not know the route to a certain town, L’Ollonois
-slashed open the fellow’s breast with his sword, tore out his still
-throbbing heart and bit and gnawed at it with his teeth, as Esquemeling
-says, ‘like a ravenous wolf,’ and threatened to serve the other
-prisoners in the same manner unless they showed him the way to San
-Pedro. This they did, but the Spaniards had placed ambuscades and the
-buccaneers were compelled to fight savagely every inch of the way.
-Finally the Dons agreed to deliver the town if the buccaneers would
-grant quarter for two hours, but no sooner was the time up than
-L’Ollonois hurried his men after the people, robbed them of what they
-had and slaughtered them without mercy. But L’Ollonois was too bestial
-and cruel even for his own men. A short time after the sack of San
-Pedro, dissensions arose and the party divided, the majority of the
-buccaneers leaving with Moses Vanclein to raid the coast towns of Costa
-Rica and Panama. From that time on L’Ollonois had nothing but ill luck
-and soon afterwards his ship was wrecked off Cape Gracias à Dios. With
-the remains of the wreck, the buccaneers set to work to construct a
-small boat, and to sustain themselves, planted gardens. For six months
-they were marooned until the boat was completed, and L’Ollonois, with
-part of his crew, set out for the San Juan River in Nicaragua. But fate
-had turned against him which as Esquemeling naïvely remarks, ‘had long
-time been reserved for him as a punishment due to the multitude of
-horrible crimes which in his wicked life he had committed.’ Attacked by
-the Spaniards and their Indian allies, he was forced to retreat with
-heavy loss and, still hoping to retrieve his fortunes, headed southward
-for the coasts of Darien. And here the villain met with the end he so
-richly deserved. He was taken by the savage Indians of the district,
-was torn to pieces while alive and his limbs cast into a fire. Finally,
-that no trace or memory of him might remain, the savages scattered his
-ashes in the air.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MORGAN AND HIS ROAD TO FAME
-
-
-“Ugh!” exclaimed Jack, as his father ceased speaking. “Wasn’t he the
-most awful creature! Gosh, I always thought the buccaneers were brave
-men and heroes.”
-
-“There is no question of their bravery,” replied Mr. Bickford, “and
-L’Ollonois was an exceptionally cruel villain. But as a rule the
-buccaneers were no more cruel or bloodthirsty than the Spaniards or
-even their more respectable countrymen. You must remember that human
-standards have changed a great deal since the days of the buccaneers.
-In their time human life was held very cheaply. The theft of a few
-cents’ worth of merchandise was punishable by death. Men and women had
-their ears cut off, their tongues pierced or their eyes put out for
-most trivial crimes, and torture by rack, wheel or fire was considered
-a perfectly legitimate means of securing confessions of guilt from
-suspected persons. We must not therefore judge the buccaneers too
-harshly. To us they appear inhuman monsters, but in their days they
-were no worse than the usual run of men. Moreover, you must remember
-that their crews were made up of the roughest, toughest element.
-Renegades, fugitives from justice, criminals, cut-throats and thieves,
-and that they looked upon the Spaniards as natural enemies and worthy
-of no more pity or consideration than wild beasts. Finally, consider
-the temptation that ever spurred them on and excited their passions and
-their worst instincts. Gold and riches were to be had for the taking,
-the Dons were legitimate prey, and they were beyond the pale of the
-law, if not actually protected by the authorities. Take a crowd of
-sailors to-day, give them arms and a ship, and license to kill, rob and
-destroy, and you would find them as reckless, as cruel and as devilish
-as the old buccaneers, if not more so. And much of their success
-depended upon the reputation they had for cruelty. The very mention of
-some of the more famous pirates’ names would create a panic among the
-Dons and make victory comparatively easy, and for this reason the
-buccaneers practiced cruelties that were absolutely uncalled for, but
-which they looked upon as a part of their profession.”
-
-“It seems to me the Spaniards were awful cowards,” said Fred, as his
-uncle paused. “They were always licked by the buccaneers, although
-there were more of them.”
-
-“That’s a great mistake,” Mr. Bickford assured him. “In nearly every
-case the Spaniards showed marvelous bravery and courage in resisting
-the buccaneers and in several instances their courage was absolutely
-heroic. Very often they refused to surrender until every man fell, and
-time and time again their commanders committed suicide when they found
-that resistance was hopeless. But they were fearfully handicapped. The
-buccaneers knew beforehand just what to expect and the strength of the
-garrisons, they usually attacked at night and they invariably surprised
-the Dons. The Spaniards had no idea how many men were attacking, and
-they were packed together in forts, stockades or towns, while the
-buccaneers could scatter, could seek the shelter of trees or buildings
-and were constantly on the move. Finally, the buccaneers were expert
-marksmen, trained woodsmen and were absolutely reckless of life and
-limb while, in addition, the Spaniards knew that the more valiantly
-they resisted the less quarter they would receive in the end. Perhaps
-there are no better examples of the Spaniards’ bravery than that shown
-by the garrisons of Porto Bello and of San Lorenzo, which were taken by
-Sir Henry Morgan, the most famous of the buccaneers.”
-
-“Oh, do tell us about him!” cried the two boys in unison.
-
-“Very well,” laughed Mr. Bickford. “But I’m afraid your ideals will be
-rudely shattered when you learn the truth of Morgan, and before I tell
-you of his most famous exploits let me ask you a question. Have you any
-idea how long Morgan was a buccaneer or how long his career of fame
-lasted?”
-
-“Why, no,” replied Jack. “I never thought about it, but I suppose it
-was years and years.”
-
-“I thought he was a buccaneer all his life,” declared Fred.
-
-Mr. Bickford smiled. “Nearly all the famous buccaneers led short lives
-and merry ones,” he said. “But of them all I think the famous Morgan’s
-career was the shortest. From the time he first came into notice as a
-corsair until he dropped out of sight was barely five years, and all
-his most famous or rather infamous exploits took place within a space
-of three years.”
-
-“Jiminy, he must have been a fast worker!” exclaimed Jack.
-
-“Yes, he was what you might call a ‘hustler,’” laughed his father. “And
-it undoubtedly was the speed with which he carried out his nefarious
-projects that made him successful to a large extent. But like many
-another famous man, Morgan’s deeds have been greatly exaggerated, and
-his real character was very different from that we are accustomed to
-attribute to him, for romance, imagination and fiction have, through
-the passing years, surrounded him with a halo of false gallantry,
-bravery and decency. In reality Morgan was an ignorant, unprincipled,
-ruthless, despicable character, utterly selfish and heartless,
-dishonorable and with scarcely a redeeming trait, aside from personal
-courage. But like many of the buccaneers he displayed most remarkable
-and contradictory traits at times. It is said that whenever a priest or
-minister fell into his clutches he compelled the clergyman to hold
-divine services on the ship, and that on more than one occasion, he
-shot down his own men for not attending service or for disrespectful
-behavior during a religious ceremony. What became of the unfortunate
-clerics after Morgan was done with them is not recorded, but the
-chances are that he compelled them to walk the plank or put an end to
-their careers in some equally summary manner, for that was ‘Harry
-Morgan’s way,’ as he was fond of saying.”
-
-“But tell me, Dad,” asked Jack, “did the buccaneers always kill or
-torture their prisoners?”
-
-“No,” his father assured him. “As a rule they treated their prisoners
-with consideration. Some of the more bloodthirsty tortured and
-butchered them out of hand, but in most cases the prisoners were either
-held for ransom or were set ashore or turned loose in boats. It was, in
-a way, to the buccaneers’ advantage to give quarter, for they knew that
-in case any of their number fell into the Spaniards’ hands they would
-be treated according to the way they had treated Spanish captives—or
-perhaps worse—for the Dons were past masters in the art of devising
-most atrocious tortures.
-
-“And before I tell you of Morgan and his deeds let me point out one or
-two other matters which will help you to understand much that would
-otherwise puzzle you boys and which is little known. In several
-places—as in the Isle of Pines off Cuba—the Spaniards were friendly
-with the buccaneers and gladly aided them, while the corsairs made it a
-point always to pacify and maintain friendly relations with the
-Indians. This was a most important matter for them. All along the South
-and Central American coasts were Indian tribes, and the buccaneers
-depended very largely upon the red men for provisions, canoes and
-guides. The Indians hated the Dons and willingly joined the buccaneers
-against them, and even the most savage tribesmen usually welcomed the
-freebooters and helped them in every way. Moreover, they knew the
-country and were most valuable as guides and pilots, and there are
-innumerable records of the buccaneers showing the greatest forbearance
-towards the savages. Even when they were attacked by Indians with whom
-they had not established relations they refrained from retaliating, but
-either propitiated the natives or moved bag and baggage from the
-locality, and the most severe punishment was meted out to the
-buccaneers by their leaders if they molested the Indians or interfered
-with them in any way. As a result, many of their greatest triumphs were
-made possible by their Indian allies.
-
-“But to return to Morgan. He was, by birth, a Welshman, the son of a
-well-to-do farmer, but his imagination being fired by tales of
-adventure in the West Indies he ran away from home and reached Bristol
-with the intention of shipping on a vessel bound to Barbados. But young
-Morgan knew little of what was to befall him. According to a common
-custom of those days the master of the ship sold him as a bond servant,
-or in other words a slave, as soon as the ship reached Barbados, and
-the embryo buccaneer found himself far worse off than as a farmer’s boy
-in Wales. Nevertheless, he served his time, secured his liberty and
-made his way to Jamaica, which was then the headquarters of the English
-buccaneers.
-
-“And now let me digress a bit and explain how a British colony happened
-to be a notorious lair of the buccaneers. You remember that I told you
-about Tortuga and how the British and French freebooters had disputes
-and dissensions and that the English corsairs transferred their
-headquarters to Port Royal, Jamaica. At that time, you must remember,
-Spain and England were at war, and the British authorities gladly gave
-commissions as privateers to the buccaneer leaders. Thus they were
-looked upon, not as pirates, but as auxiliaries of the British navy,
-and even after peace was declared and they continued to prey upon the
-Spaniards, the authorities winked at them. They brought vast sums to
-the island ports, spent it recklessly and freely, and disposed of the
-merchandise they had taken for a mere song. As a result, the ports
-prospered and became rich through their dealings with the buccaneers;
-merchants and traders did a lively business, shipyards and outfitting
-shops sprang into existence; drinking places, gambling houses and every
-form of vice catered to the corsairs and thrived amazingly, and every
-one prospered. The buccaneers thus had safe refuges where they could
-spend their loot, refit their ships and organize their expeditions, and
-they were careful not to molest or injure the inhabitants or their
-property. Indeed, Jamaica’s prosperity was largely built upon the trade
-with the corsairs, and not until infamous Port Royal was utterly
-destroyed by an earthquake on June 7, 1692, and the ‘wickedest city in
-the world’ slid bodily into the sea, with all its riches and over three
-thousand of its inhabitants, did it cease to be a clearing house, a
-gigantic ‘fence’ and a haven for the buccaneers. Then the few
-survivors, frightened, feeling that the wrath of God and His vengeance
-for their wickedness had been visited upon them, moved across the bay
-and founded the present city of Kingston and paved the way for a
-respectable and honest development of the island.”
-
-“Gosh, I should think some one would go down there and get back all
-that treasure!” exclaimed Fred.
-
-“It’s rather strange that no one has attempted it,” said Mr. Bickford.
-“The water is not deep—in calm weather the outlines of the ruins may
-still be traced under the sea—and the native colored folk tell weird
-tales of ghostly pirate ships tacking back and forth at dead of night,
-striving to find the lost port; of the bells of the pirates’ church
-tolling through storms from beneath the waves, and of spectral figures
-walking the beach and gazing seaward as though awaiting ships that
-never come.”
-
-“Did the buccaneers have a church?” cried Jack in surprise.
-
-“I don’t wonder you ask,” replied his father. “Yes, that was one of the
-odd things about them. Altogether the buccaneers were most paradoxical
-rascals. With all their villainies many of them were deeply religious
-at times and there are instances—as I shall tell you later—of crews
-actually mutinying because their captains made them work on Sunday and
-did not hold services aboard their ships. They seemed to feel that
-their notoriously wicked stronghold at Port Royal was not complete
-without a church and so they built one. They fitted it with bells taken
-from some raided church of the Dons, they provided altar pieces,
-vestments, candelabra and holy vessels of gold and silver, chalices set
-with priceless jewels, even paintings and tapestries torn and looted
-from the desecrated churches and cathedrals of the Spanish towns, and
-attended services in a house of God made a mockery and a blasphemy by
-its fittings won by blood and fire and the murder of innocent men,
-women and children.
-
-“And it was to this den of iniquity, this world-famed lair of the
-buccaneers, that young Morgan came after gaining his liberty in
-Barbados. Perhaps he had no idea of turning corsair and intended to get
-honest employment or even to make his way back to his father’s farm in
-Wales. But whatever his purpose may have been he found no ready means
-of earning a livelihood and enlisted as a seaman on a buccaneer ship.
-He was an apt pupil and was thrifty, and after the first two or three
-voyages he had saved enough money from his share of plunder to purchase
-a ship, or rather a controlling interest in one. He now was a
-full-fledged buccaneer captain and in his own vessel set sail for
-Yucatan, where he took several prizes and returned triumphantly to
-Jamaica. Here he met an old corsair named Mansvelt, who was busy
-organizing an expedition to pillage the towns along the Main, and
-Mansvelt, seeing in Morgan a most promising young villain, offered him
-the post of Vice Admiral of his fleet. With fifteen ships and five
-hundred men, Mansvelt and Morgan sailed away from Port Royal and swept
-down on the island of Old Providence—then known as St. Catherine—off
-the Costa Rican coast, and which at the time was strongly garrisoned by
-the Spaniards. After a short battle the island surrendered, and the
-buccaneers, after plundering the place, destroying the forts and
-burning the houses, sailed off with their holds crowded with prisoners.
-These they put safely ashore near Porto Bello and then cruised along
-the coasts of Panama and Costa Rica. The Dons, however, were everywhere
-on the lookout and every town swarmed with troops. Realizing that an
-attempt to take the places would be well nigh useless the buccaneers
-returned to St. Catherine, where they had left one hundred of their
-men, to find that the buccaneer in charge—Le Sieur Simon—had repaired
-the forts and defenses until the place was well nigh impregnable.
-Mansvelt’s idea was to retain the island as a basis for piratical raids
-against the mainland, but he realized that he could not expect to hold
-it with his handful of men, so he set out for Jamaica to enlist the aid
-of the governor. His Excellency, however, frowned on the proposal. Not
-that he was unwilling to aid his buccaneer friends, but he realized
-that any such overt act must reach the ears of His Majesty the King
-and, moreover, he could ill spare the necessary men and guns from the
-garrison at Jamaica. Not despairing of carrying out his project,
-Mansvelt made for Tortuga with the idea of getting help from the
-French, but before he arrived he died. Meanwhile the buccaneers at St.
-Catherine realized their reënforcements were not forthcoming and
-decided to abandon the place, but before this could be done they were
-attacked by a superior force of Spaniards and surrendered. Evidently,
-too, the wily Governor of Jamaica had been thinking over the matter and
-surreptitiously dispatched a party of men and a number of women in a
-British ship to St. Catherine. Never suspecting that the isle had
-fallen into the Dons’ hands they sailed boldly in and were made
-prisoners and were transported to Porto Bello and Panama, where the men
-were forced to labor like slaves at constructing fortifications.
-
-“Morgan now, by Mansvelt’s death, was in command of the fleet, and with
-the idea of carrying out his former chief’s intentions he wrote letters
-to various prominent merchants in New England and Virginia, asking for
-funds and supplies to enable him to retain possession of St. Catherine.
-Before replies were received, however, he had word of the recapture of
-the island by the Spaniards and, abandoning this project, set out for
-Cuba. His original idea was to attack Havana, but deeming his force of
-twelve ships and seven hundred men too small for this he decided upon
-Puerto Príncipe—now known as Camagüey—as the town to ravage. This town,
-which had originally been upon the northern coast of Cuba, had been
-moved inland to escape the raids of the buccaneers, but this fact did
-not deter Morgan in the least. Landing upon the coast, Morgan and his
-men started overland, but unknown to them a Spanish prisoner on one of
-the ships had managed to escape and, swimming ashore, had made his way
-to the town and had warned the inhabitants. As a result, the people
-were up in arms, the roads were barricaded, and the buccaneers were
-forced to approach through the jungle.
-
-“After a short but bloody battle the buccaneers gained the town, but
-the Dons, barricaded in their houses, kept up a galling fire until
-Morgan sent word that unless they surrendered he would burn the city
-and cut the women and children to pieces before the Spaniards’ eyes.
-This threat had its effect, and the Dons at once surrendered. Thereupon
-Morgan immediately imprisoned all the Spaniards in the churches without
-food or drink, and proceeded to pillage, drink and carouse. These
-diversions they varied by dragging forth the half-starved prisoners and
-torturing them to make them divulge the hiding places of their wealth,
-but fortunately for the poor people, the majority of women and children
-perished for want of food before Morgan and his men could wreak more
-terrible deaths upon them. Finally, finding nothing more could be
-secured, Morgan informed the survivors of the citizens that unless they
-paid a large ransom he would transport them to Jamaica to be sold as
-slaves and would burn the town. The Dons promised to do their best, but
-finally, feeling convinced that they could not raise the sum and that
-to remain longer in the vicinity might result in disaster, Morgan
-consented to withdraw upon delivery of five hundred head of cattle.
-These being furnished, he compelled the prisoners to drive the beasts
-to the coast and to butcher, dress and salt them and load the meat
-aboard his ships. While this was going on Morgan exhibited one of his
-odd kinks of character which were always creeping out. One of the
-French buccaneers was busily cutting up and salting an ox for his own
-use when an English corsair came up and calmly took possession of the
-marrow bones. Words and insults resulted, a challenge was issued and a
-duel arranged, but as they reached the spot selected for the fight the
-Englishman drew his cutlass and stabbed the Frenchman in the back,
-killing him treacherously. Instantly the other French buccaneers
-started an insurrection, but before it had gone far Morgan interposed,
-ordered the offending Englishman chained and promised to have him
-hanged when they reached Jamaica, which he did.
-
-“The taking of Puerto Príncipe, although a notable exploit, was,
-nevertheless, a most unprofitable venture, the entire booty obtained
-amounting to barely fifty thousand pieces of eight. As a result, the
-men were so dissatisfied that the French buccaneers refused to follow
-Morgan farther. Morgan’s next exploit was the most daring that the
-buccaneers had ever attempted, for it was nothing more or less than an
-attack upon the supposedly impregnable forts of Porto Bello, the
-Atlantic terminus of the Gold Road across the Isthmus of Panama.”
-
-“Please, Dad, what was the Gold Road?” asked Jack, as his father
-paused.
-
-“The Gold Road,” answered his father, “was the roughly paved highway
-leading from the old city of Panama on the Pacific to Nombre de Dios
-and Porto Bello on the Caribbean. If you will look at the map here you
-will see Porto Bello situated about twenty-five miles east of Colón
-with Nombre de Dios just beyond. Nombre de Dios, however, was abandoned
-after its capture by Sir Francis Drake, and the terminus of the road
-became Porto Bello. To-day the place is of no importance—a small
-village of native huts—but the ruins of the old castles and forts are
-still standing in a good state of preservation, and the place is
-historically very interesting. Moreover, just off the port Sir Francis
-Drake’s body was buried at sea. But to resume. The Gold Road was the
-only route from the Pacific to the Atlantic and over it all the vast
-treasures won by the Spaniards from the west coasts of North, South and
-Central America and Mexico were transported on mule-back to be shipped
-to Spain. Over it were carried the millions in gold, silver and jewels
-of the Incas; over it was carried the output of countless fabulously
-rich mines, incalculable wealth in pearls from the islands off Panama,
-emeralds from Colombia, bullion and plate, the stupendous wealth
-wrested by the ruthless Dons from Indian princes, princesses and kings;
-such a treasure as the world had never seen before. In long mule trains
-the vast wealth was carried over the Gold Road through the jungle,
-escorted by armed men, accompanied by shackled slaves, and in Porto
-Bello it was stored in the great stone treasure house to await the
-galleons and their armed convoy to carry it to Spain. Naturally, with
-such incredible fortunes stored in Porto Bello, the Spaniards used
-every effort and spared no expense to make the place so impregnable
-that there was no chance of its falling to the buccaneers, and in all
-New Spain, aside from Havana, there was no spot more strongly fortified
-and garrisoned than Porto Bello. The defenses consisted of two immense
-castles or forts, several batteries and outlying bastions and a
-garrison of nearly four hundred men, all seasoned veterans and heavily
-armed. To attack this formidable spot Morgan had nine vessels, several
-of them small boats, and a total force of four hundred and sixty men.
-No buccaneer had dreamed of attacking Porto Bello since the completion
-of its defenses—although in 1602 it had been taken and sacked by
-William Parker—but Morgan counted on a complete surprise, an assault
-made under cover of darkness from the land side and conducted by one of
-his men who had once been a prisoner in Porto Bello.
-
-“Arriving at the River Naos, they traveled upstream a short distance
-and then struck out through the forest. As they neared the city, Morgan
-sent the former prisoner of the Spaniards, with several men, to kill or
-capture the sentry at the outlying fort, and, creeping upon him, they
-made him a prisoner before he could give an alarm and brought him bound
-and gagged to Morgan. Under threat of torture and death if he gave an
-alarm, the fellow was marched before the buccaneers and, without being
-seen, they surrounded the first fort. Their prisoner was then ordered
-to call to the garrison, tell them an overwhelming force had surrounded
-them and advise them to surrender or otherwise they would be butchered
-without mercy. The garrison, however, spurned the advice and instantly
-commenced firing into the darkness. Although their shots did little
-damage, yet they served to arouse the city and prepare the other forces
-for the attack. With wild yells and shouts the battle was on, and
-although the Dons fought most valiantly the outlying fort fell to the
-buccaneers, and Morgan, as good as his word, put every living occupant
-to death, thinking this would terrorize the other garrisons. In order
-to do this the more effectually, Morgan shut the survivors, men and
-officers together, in a store-room and, rolling in several kegs of
-powder, blew the entire company to bits. Then, like fiends, he and his
-men rushed towards the city. All was confusion, despite the warning the
-Spaniards had received, and the inhabitants, who had not had time to
-reach the protection of the forts, rushed screaming hither and thither,
-casting their valuables into wells and cisterns, hiding in corners and
-filled with terror. Bursting into the cloisters, the buccaneers dragged
-out the monks and nuns and urging them with blows and pricks of their
-swords, forced them to raise the heavy scaling ladders to the walls of
-the forts, Morgan thinking that the Dons would not fire upon the
-religious men and women. But in this he was mistaken. The Governor, who
-throughout had been stoutly defending the castle, had held his own and
-had wrought terrific execution upon the buccaneers. Time after time the
-corsairs rushed forward through the storm of bullets and round shot,
-striving to reach the castle doors, but each time the Dons hurled
-grenades, burning tar, hot oil and molten lead upon them and drove them
-back. And when Morgan threatened to force the nuns and priests to place
-the ladders the brave old Governor replied that ‘never would he
-surrender while he lived,’ and that he ‘would perform his duty at any
-costs.’ Despite the piteous appeals of the friars and the nuns as they
-were beaten forward to the walls, the Governor gave no heed and ordered
-his men to shoot them down as though they were buccaneers. Carrying
-fireballs and grenades which they heaved among the garrison, the
-buccaneers poured over the parapets. Knowing all was lost, the soldiers
-threw down their arms and begged for quarter, but the courageous
-Governor, sword in hand, backed against a wall and prepared to resist
-until the last. Even the buccaneers were won by his bravery and offered
-quarter if he would surrender, but his only answer was to taunt them
-and shout back that, ‘I would rather die a valiant soldier than be
-hanged as a coward.’
-
-“So struck was Morgan by the man’s heroism that he ordered his men to
-take him alive, and over and over again they closed in upon him. But he
-was a magnificent swordsman; before his thrusts and blows the
-buccaneers fell wounded and dead, and deaf to the entreaties of his
-wife and children, the brave man fought on. At last, finding it
-impossible to make him prisoner, Morgan ordered him to be shot down,
-and the brave old Don fell, with his blood-stained sword, among the
-ring of buccaneers he had killed. The castle was now in Morgan’s hands,
-and, gathering together the wounded Spaniards, he callously tossed them
-into a small room, ‘to the intent their own complaints might be the
-cure of their hurts, for no other was afforded them,’ as Esquemeling
-puts it.
-
-“Then, devoting themselves to a wild orgy of feasting and drinking, the
-buccaneers gave themselves up to debauchery and excesses until, as
-Esquemeling points out, they were so maudlin that ‘fifty men might
-easily have taken the city and killed all the buccaneers.’ But
-unfortunately the fifty men were not available, and on the following
-day as usual the buccaneers proceeded to loot the town and torture the
-people into confessions of the hiding places of their riches. Many died
-on the rack or were torn to pieces, and while the buccaneers were
-practicing every devilish cruelty they could invent, word of the taking
-of Porto Bello had been carried by fugitives to the governor of Panama.
-He immediately prepared to equip an expedition to attack the
-buccaneers, but before it arrived Morgan was getting ready to leave,
-having been in possession of Porto Bello fifteen days. Before
-departing, however, he sent word to the Governor General, demanding a
-ransom of one hundred thousand pieces of eight if he did not wish Porto
-Bello burned and destroyed. Instead of sending the ransom, the Governor
-dispatched a force of armed men to attack the buccaneers. This Morgan
-had expected, and, stationing a hundred of his men in ambush in a
-narrow pass, he put the Spaniards to rout and repeated his threats to
-the people of the unfortunate town. By hook and by crook the
-inhabitants managed to raise the huge sum, and Morgan commenced his
-evacuation in accordance with his promise.
-
-“As he was doing so a messenger arrived from the Governor General
-bearing a letter requesting Morgan to send him ‘some small pattern of
-the arms wherewith he had, by such violence, taken a great city.’
-Evidently the Governor imagined that the buccaneers possessed some
-novel or marvelous arms, for he could not believe that the place had
-fallen to the English through ordinary means. Morgan received the
-messenger courteously and with a flash of grim humor handed him a
-pistol and a few bullets, telling him to carry them to the Governor and
-to inform him that ‘he desired him to accept that slender pattern of
-arms wherewith he had taken Porto Bello and to keep them for a
-twelvemonth, after which time he would come in person to Panama and
-fetch them away.’
-
-“Evidently, too, the haughty old Governor had a sense of humor, for ere
-Morgan sailed away the messenger returned, bearing a message of thanks
-from the Governor, a gold ring which he was requested to accept with
-His Excellency’s compliments and a letter stating that Morgan ‘need not
-give himself the trouble of visiting Panama, for he could promise that
-he should not speed as well there as he had at Porto Bello.’
-
-“With the vast loot he had won, a treasure amounting to a quarter of a
-million pieces of eight, thousands of bales of silks, vast stores of
-merchandise and fabulous sums in bullion, plate and jewels, Morgan left
-the harried shores of Panama and set sail for Port Royal, where he
-arrived in safety and was welcomed and lauded as the greatest buccaneer
-of them all.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE SACKING OF MARACAIBO
-
-
-“But I thought Morgan was Governor of Jamaica and a ‘Sir,’” said Jack.
-
-“He was. I’m coming to that presently,” replied his father. “Of course,
-Morgan, having taken Porto Bello and thus won the greatest fame,
-buccaneers flocked to him, begging for a chance to join him on his next
-expedition. Indeed, he could have easily raised a force of several
-thousand men, but Morgan, despite his faults, was a wise man, a born
-leader and an experienced buccaneer and he knew that too large a force
-would be a disadvantage. But realizing that he could command any number
-of ships and men, he foresaw the possibility of accomplishing such
-feats as no buccaneer had ever before undertaken. Naming the Island of
-La Vaca, or Cow Island, south of Santo Domingo, as a rendezvous, Morgan
-and his old captains set sail and there awaited the coming of the
-buccaneers. And from every lair they flocked to his standard. French
-and English, Dutch and Danes, from Tortuga Samaná, the Virgins and the
-Caymans, they sped to join their fortunes with Morgan. Even the
-Governor of Jamaica sent forth a ship, a brand-new vessel from New
-England mounting thirty-six guns, the largest buccaneer ship that had
-ever borne down upon the hapless Dons. Next in size to her was a French
-ship, a vessel of twenty-four iron guns and twelve brass carronades
-which happened to be lying at anchor at the island. Upon her Morgan
-cast envious eyes and used every argument to induce her captain to join
-with him. The French, however, were distrustful of the English and
-flatly refused. And then the redoubtable Morgan showed his teeth and
-proved himself the cowardly, underhand, treacherous rascal that he was
-in reality. It seemed that some time previously this big French vessel
-had been short of provision at sea and, meeting a British buccaneer,
-had secured supplies, giving in payment not ready cash but bills of
-exchange on Jamaica and Tortuga. Knowing of this, Morgan, finding he
-could not induce the French captain to join him, seized upon the
-incident as a means to carry out his nefarious ends. Inviting the
-French commander and his officers to dine aboard his ship, Morgan
-received them hospitably, but no sooner were they seated than he and
-his men whipped out pistols, seized the Frenchmen and bound them as
-prisoners. Stating that he had seized them as pirates for having taken
-provisions from a British ship without pay, he informed the unhappy
-Frenchmen that he intended to hang them and to confiscate their ship as
-warning to others. But fate intervened and brought a just and speedy
-retribution upon Morgan and his men for their treacherous act. Having
-thus possessed himself of the French flagship, Morgan called a council
-at which it was agreed to go to Saona Island and wait for the plate
-fleet from Spain. Then, as usual, the buccaneers boarded their ships
-and held a farewell feast in celebration of their coming voyage,
-drinking, carousing and, as was customary, discharging their guns in
-salute to one another. Half drunk, hilarious and careless, the men did
-not notice that a gun discharged upon the big flagship of the fleet
-dropped a bit of smoldering wadding onto the deck. There was a terrific
-explosion and the vessel was blown to bits, destroying three hundred
-and fifty English buccaneers and the unfortunate French prisoners who
-were confined in the hold. Only thirty members of the crew, including
-Morgan, escaped, they having been within the cabin at the high poop of
-the vessel and away from the main force of the explosion.
-
-“But instead of being a wholesome lesson to Morgan and his fellows,
-this accident only enraged them, and, claiming that their ship had been
-blown up by the French prisoners—despite the fact that they were
-manacled and far from the magazine—they at once seized all the French
-ships in the harbor and sent them with their crews as prisoners to
-Jamaica, with word that they had been found with papers authorizing
-them to commit piracy against the British. In reality the papers were
-merely permits from the Governor of Barracoa permitting the French to
-trade in Spanish ports and to ‘cruise against English pirates,’ the
-clause being inserted as a cloak to cover the reason for the permits.
-But despite their protests and the fact that they had repeatedly aided
-the English buccaneers against the Dons, Morgan’s influence was such
-that the Frenchmen were imprisoned and several were hanged when they
-reached Jamaica.
-
-“Morgan’s brutality was still further shown when, eight days after the
-explosion, he sent out boats to gather up the bodies of the buccaneers
-which were now floating about, not, as Esquemeling assures us, ‘with
-the design of affording them Christian burial, but only to obtain the
-spoil of their clothes and attire.’ Rings were cut from their dead
-fingers, earrings torn from their ears, their weapons and garments
-stripped from the corpses and the naked bodies cast back for the
-sharks. Then, the loot from their dead comrades having been auctioned
-off, the buccaneers set sail with fifteen ships—the largest carrying
-fourteen guns—and nine hundred and sixty men.
-
-“Sending some of his ships and men to plunder the farms and villages of
-Santo Domingo for provisions and cattle, Morgan continued to Saona. But
-his men met with reverses on the island, many of the buccaneers were
-killed, and though they escaped they were empty-handed and dared not
-return to Morgan with their tale of reverses. Impatient at the delay,
-Morgan at last decided to go on without them, and, with his fleet
-reduced to eight ships and a force of five hundred men, he started for
-the Gulf of Maracaibo.
-
-“Since it had been looted by L’Ollonois, Maracaibo and its neighboring
-city of Gibraltar had prospered and grown immensely rich, the
-fortifications had been greatly strengthened and a Spanish fleet was
-constantly cruising near to prevent raids by the buccaneers. Arriving
-off the port at night, Morgan drew close to the harbor bar unseen and
-opened fire at daybreak. From morn until night the battle raged until,
-feeling that they could not hold out another day, the garrison
-evacuated the fort at nightfall and left a slow match leading to the
-magazine in the hopes of blowing up the buccaneers if they entered. In
-this they were very nearly successful, but Morgan himself discovered
-the burning fuse and stamped it out when within six inches of the
-explosives.
-
-“Finding his ships could not enter the shallow harbor, Morgan embarked
-in boats and canoes and after terrific fighting silenced one fort after
-another and took the town. Then began an awful scene of butchery and
-torture. All that L’Ollonois had done in the stricken town before was
-repeated a hundredfold. The people, rounded up and shackled, were
-broken on the wheel, torn to pieces on the rack, spread-eagled and
-flogged to a pulp. Burning fuses were placed between their fingers and
-toes. Wet rawhide thongs were twisted about their heads and allowed to
-dry until, as they shrunk, the wretches’ eyes burst from their skulls
-and many were cut to pieces a bit at a time or flayed alive. Those who
-had no treasures whose hiding place they could divulge died under their
-torments, and those who confessed were too far gone to recover. For
-three terrible weeks this awful work went on, the buccaneers sparing
-neither young nor old, men, women or children, and daily scouring the
-countryside to bring new victims to the torture chambers. Then,
-satisfied he had every cent that it was possible to secure, Morgan
-loaded his remaining prisoners on his ships and sailed for Gibraltar as
-L’Ollonois had done. He had sent prisoners ahead, demanding the
-surrender of the town and threatening to torture and butcher every
-living soul if resistance were made, but notwithstanding this the
-inhabitants and the garrison put up a stiff fight. Finding he could not
-take the place by assault, Morgan started his men overland through the
-woods, and the people, realizing the buccaneers would take the place,
-fled with what valuables they could gather into the country, first
-having spiked the guns and destroyed the powder in the forts. As a
-result the buccaneers entered the city without a shot fired and found
-no living soul save one half-witted man. Despite the fact that he was a
-demented, helpless creature the buccaneers ruthlessly placed him on the
-rack until he begged for mercy and promised to guide his tormentors to
-his riches. Following him, they were led to a tumble-down house
-containing nothing of any value with the exception of three pieces of
-eight—all the poor man’s earthly possessions. The buccaneers, however,
-had gotten a crazy idea that the fellow was a rich man masquerading as
-a dunce, and when in reply to their question he announced that his name
-was ‘Don Sebastian Sanchez’ and ‘I am brother to the Governor,’ instead
-of being convinced that he was crazy, the buccaneers believed his
-ridiculous words and tortured him anew. Despite his shrieks and
-heart-rending appeals he was racked, his limbs were stretched by cords
-passed over pulleys and with immense weights attached to them, he was
-scorched to a crisp by burning palm leaves passed over his face and
-body, and not till the miserable wretch had died after half an hour of
-this fiendish torment did the buccaneers cease their efforts to wring
-from him the secret of his supposed wealth.
-
-“The next day the buccaneers captured a poor farmer and his two
-daughters and threatened them with torture, but the cowering wretches
-agreed to lead the buccaneers to the hiding places of the inhabitants.
-Seeing their enemies coming, the Spaniards fled still farther, and the
-disgruntled Englishmen hanged the peasant and his daughters to trees by
-the wayside. The buccaneers then set diligently at work, scouring the
-countryside for prisoners. In one spot they captured a slave, and,
-promising him freedom and vast amounts of gold if he would show them
-the hiding places of the Dons, he readily agreed and led them to a
-secluded house where the buccaneers made prisoners of a number of
-Spaniards. Then, to make sure that their slave guide would not dare
-desert them, the buccaneers forced him to murder a number of the
-helpless Dons before the eyes of the others. This party of Spaniards
-totaled nearly two hundred and fifty and these the buccaneers examined
-one at a time, torturing those who denied knowledge of treasure. One
-man, over seventy years old, a Portuguese by birth, was reported by the
-treacherous slave to be rich. This the old fellow stoutly denied,
-claiming that his total wealth was but one hundred pieces of eight and
-that this had been stolen from him two days previously. In spite of
-this and his age, the buccaneers, under Morgan’s personal orders, broke
-both his arms and then stretched him between stakes by cords from his
-thumbs and great toes. Then, while suspended in this way, the inhuman
-monsters beat upon the cords with sticks. Not content with this, they
-placed a two hundred pound stone upon his body, passed blazing palm
-leaves over his face and head, and then, finding no confession could be
-wrung from him they carried him to the church and lashed him fast to a
-pillar where he was left for several days with only a few drops of
-water to keep him alive. How any mortal could have survived—much less
-an aged man—is miraculous, but live he did and finally consented to
-raise five hundred pieces of eight to buy his liberty. The buccaneers,
-however, scoffed at this, beat him with cudgels and told him it would
-take five thousand pieces of eight to save his life. Finally he
-bargained for freedom for one thousand pieces, and a few days later,
-the money having been paid, he was set at liberty, though, as
-Esquemeling tells us, ‘so horribly maimed in body that ’tis scarce to
-be believed he survived many weeks after.’
-
-“But even these fearful and disgusting torments were mild as compared
-to some that Morgan inflicted on the men and women in his mad lust to
-wring their riches from them. Dozens were crucified, others were staked
-out by pointed sticks driven through them into the earth; others were
-bound with their feet in fires, others roasted alive. For five long,
-awful weeks they continued their unspeakable atrocities until, finding
-further efforts useless, and fearing that his retreat to sea would be
-cut off, Morgan left the stricken town, carrying a number of prisoners
-for hostages.
-
-“At Maracaibo they learned that Spanish warships had arrived and that
-three armed vessels were blockading the harbor mouth. The largest of
-these carried forty guns, the second thirty and the smallest
-twenty-four. That the buccaneers, with no heavy guns and with only
-small vessels, could escape seemed impossible, but Morgan once more
-showed himself the resourceful commander and sent a Spanish prisoner to
-the Admiral in command of the ships demanding a free passage to sea as
-well as a ransom if Maracaibo was not to be burned. To this the Admiral
-replied contemptuously, telling Morgan that, provided he would
-surrender all the plunder and prisoners he had taken, he would allow
-him and his men to depart, but otherwise would totally destroy them and
-give no quarter. This letter Morgan read aloud to his men, asking them
-whether they preferred to fight or lose their plunder. The reply was
-unanimously that they had rather fight till their last drop of blood
-rather than abandon what they had won. Then one of the men suggested
-that they fit up a fire ship, disguise her by logs of wood dressed as
-men on deck and with dummy cannon at the ports, and let her drift down
-on the Spanish vessels. Although all approved the idea, still Morgan
-decided to try guile and diplomacy—with a deal of bluff—before
-resorting to strenuous measures. Consequently he dispatched another
-messenger to the Admiral, offering to quit Maracaibo without firing it
-or exacting ransom, and agreeing to liberate all the prisoners if he
-and his men were allowed to pass. But the doughty old Spanish commander
-would have none of this and replied that unless Morgan surrendered
-according to the original terms within two days he would come and take
-him.
-
-“Finding cajolery useless, Morgan at once hustled about to make the
-most of his time and to try to escape by force. A ship taken at
-Gibraltar was loaded with brimstone, powder, palm leaves soaked in
-pitch and other combustibles. Kegs of powder were placed under the
-dummy guns and dressed and armed logs were posed upon the decks to
-resemble buccaneers. Then all the male prisoners were loaded into one
-boat; all the women, the plate and the jewels into another; the
-merchandise and things of lesser value in a third. Then, all being
-ready, the little fleet set forth with the fireship in the lead. It was
-on the 30th of April, 1669, that the buccaneers started from Maracaibo
-on this desperate, dare-devil effort to escape, and night was falling
-as they sighted the three Spanish warships riding at anchor in the
-middle of the entry to the lake. Unwilling to proceed farther, Morgan
-anchored his boats, maintained a sharp watch and at daybreak hoisted
-anchors and headed directly for the Spanish ships. Realizing that
-Morgan was actually about to attempt to battle with them, the Dons
-hoisted anchors and prepared to attack. Manned by its courageous if
-villainous crew, the fireship crashed straight into the Spanish
-flagship and instantly its men threw grappling irons, binding their
-combustible vessel to the warship and then, touching match to fuses,
-took to the small boats. Before the Dons realized what had happened the
-fireship was a blazing mass; the powder exploding threw flaming tar and
-brimstone far and near; and in an incredibly short space of time the
-Spanish flagship was a seething, roaring furnace and, blowing in two,
-sank to the bottom of the lake. Meanwhile the second warship, fearing a
-like fate, was run ashore by its crew and was set afire by the
-Spaniards to prevent her falling into the buccaneer’s hands, while the
-third ship was captured by Morgan’s men.
-
-“But Morgan and his men were not out of the trap yet. The forts
-controlled the harbor entrance and, flushed with their easy victory
-over the ships, the buccaneers landed and attacked the castle. But they
-failed miserably in this and after heavy losses withdrew to their
-boats.
-
-“The following day Morgan, having made a prisoner of a Spanish pilot
-and learning from him that the sunken ships carried vast riches, left a
-portion of his men to recover what they could and sailed back to
-Maracaibo with the captured warship. Here, being once more in a
-position to dictate terms, he sent a demand to the Admiral, who had
-escaped and was in the castle, demanding thirty thousand pieces of
-eight and five hundred head of cattle as his price for sparing the town
-and his prisoners. He finally consented to accept twenty thousand
-pieces of eight with the cattle, however, and the following day this
-was paid. But Morgan was shrewd and refused to deliver the prisoners
-until he was out of danger and had cleared the harbor, and with his
-captives set sail. To his delight he found that his men had recovered
-nearly twenty thousand pieces of eight in coins and bullion from the
-sunken ships, but he was still doubtful of being able to pass the
-forts. He thereupon notified his prisoners that unless they persuaded
-the Governor to guarantee him safe passage he would hang all the
-captives on his ships. In view of this dire threat a committee of the
-prisoners went to His Excellency, beseeching him to grant Morgan’s
-demands. But Don Alonso was no weakling. His reply was to the effect
-that, had they been as loyal to their King in hindering the buccaneer’s
-entry as he intended to be in preventing their going out that they
-would not have found themselves in such troubles. Very crestfallen the
-poor fellows returned with the ill news. But for once Morgan was not as
-ruthless as was his wont and forgot all about his threat to execute the
-blameless captives. He, however, sent word to Don Alonso that if he was
-not permitted to pass he would get by without a permit and, feeling
-that he might fail, he at once proceeded to divide the booty. This
-totaled over a quarter of a million pieces of eight in money, vast
-quantities of plate and jewels, silks, merchandise of various kinds and
-many slaves.
-
-“All being properly divided, the question arose as to how the little
-flotilla would pass to sea under the heavy guns of the castle, but this
-Morgan accomplished by a most brilliant ruse. On the day before he
-planned to make his dash he loaded his canoes with men and had them
-paddled towards the shore as if intending to land them. Here, among the
-low-hanging foliage, the boats waited for a while and then, with all
-but two or three men lying flat in the bottoms of the canoes, they
-paddled back to the ships. This was repeated over and over again, and
-the Spaniards, seeing canoes full of men coming ashore and apparently
-empty craft returning, were convinced that Morgan intended to make an
-attack on the land side of the fort. In order to defend themselves the
-Dons moved practically all their guns and the greater part of their men
-to the landward side of the castle, exactly as Morgan had foreseen.
-Then, as night fell, Morgan weighed anchor and without setting sail let
-his ships drift down with the ebb tide. Not until they were under the
-walls of the fort were sails hoisted and all speed made towards the
-harbor mouth.
-
-“With shouts and cries the Dons gave the alarm and madly they ran and
-scurried to get their guns back in position, but the wind was fresh and
-fair and before the first shot was fired the buccaneers were almost out
-of range. A few balls tore through the sails, a few round shot
-splintered the bulwarks and the high poops, and a few men fell, but the
-damage was of little moment. Out of reach of the guns, Morgan brought
-his ships to, and, loading his prisoners into small boats, sent them
-ashore. Then, with a parting shot of seven guns in a broadside, Morgan
-spread sails once more and headed for Jamaica.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE TAKING OF SAN LORENZO
-
-
-“Well, he certainly was clever for all his cruelty,” said Fred. “But
-what a beast he was. Seems to me he was the worst of all the
-buccaneers. Even L’Ollonois had some good points.”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Mr. Bickford. “Morgan could have made a name for himself
-as a great general, or an admiral, perhaps, if he had turned his
-talents to honest purposes. But he was too much of a rascal and too
-unprincipled to succeed for long, even in piracy. When he returned from
-taking Maracaibo he believed there was nothing he could not
-successfully carry out and he began to consider taking even richer and
-more strongly fortified spots than those he had ravished.
-
-“At that time the three richest cities in the New World were Cartagena,
-Panama and Vera Cruz, and of these the richest was Panama. To Panama
-all the wealth and treasure from the western coasts of South and
-Central America and Mexico and the Orient were brought, as well as the
-fortunes in pearls from the pearl islands, and from Panama, as I have
-already explained, the riches were carried over the Gold Road to Porto
-Bello.
-
-“But while Panama was so rich, yet it had been free from attacks by
-buccaneers owing to its position. It was on the Pacific and in order to
-reach it the buccaneers would be compelled either to sail around Cape
-Horn; cross the Isthmus overland, or ascend the Chagres River and then
-go overland. To cross by the Gold Road meant that the forts at Porto
-Bello would have to be taken, and even after that the buccaneers would
-be exposed to ambuscades and constant attacks and might well have their
-retreat cut off. At the mouth of the Chagres was a most powerful
-fort—San Lorenzo—commanding the river mouth, while Panama itself was
-very strongly fortified and protected. It seemed impossible that the
-buccaneers could ever reach the place and yet that was just what Morgan
-planned to do.
-
-“Although it seemed a harebrained scheme, yet so famed had Morgan
-become that men flocked to his call, clamoring to go on the hazardous
-expedition, and Morgan appointed the Island of Tortuga as the
-rendezvous. Here flocked the sea rovers from far and near. They came in
-ships, boats, canoes and even tramped overland across hostile
-Hispaniola (Santo Domingo) to join him, until the greatest crowd of
-buccaneers and the greatest gathering of buccaneer ships the world had
-ever seen were assembled at Tortuga on October 24, 1670.
-
-“To provision the fleet, Morgan equipped four ships with four hundred
-men and dispatched them to La Rancheria near the present port of Rio de
-la Hacha in Colombia. His plan was for them to raid the coast towns,
-seize what maize and cattle were required and come back with supplies
-and salted meat, thus obtained free of cost. In this the ships were
-more than successful, for, at the end of five weeks, they returned
-laden with maize and beef and with a huge amount of loot, for they had
-taken a Spanish ship, had seized the town and had robbed it and the
-inhabitants, and had resorted to all their customary barbarities to
-wring the last piece of eight from the people.
-
-“Everything was now in readiness, and Morgan set sail for Cape Tiburón,
-Haiti, where vessels from Jamaica were to join him. These brought his
-force up to thirty-seven ships and two thousand fighting men, exclusive
-of sailors and boys, by far the greatest buccaneer force that ever had
-set sail to ravish the Spanish cities. Morgan’s flagship carried
-twenty-two large and six small guns, there were several ships of
-twenty, eighteen and sixteen guns and the smallest mounted four.
-Finding it impossible to command such a huge fleet by himself, Morgan
-divided it into two squadrons with a vice admiral, commanders and
-captains for each, and to these he issued elaborate commissions to act
-against the Spaniards, for all the world as though he were the King of
-England.
-
-“The next matter to attend to was the agreement as to compensation for
-death or accidents, and the trip was considered so hazardous that the
-amounts to be paid were double the usual sums. Then the fleet set sail
-for Old Providence or, as the buccaneers called it, St. Catherine, for
-in order to be sure that his retreat was not cut off, Morgan realized
-he must destroy this heavily fortified spot and leave a garrison of his
-own in charge. Moreover, he knew that outlaws and brigands were
-imprisoned there, and that these men, if released, would join his
-forces and would be invaluable as guides in crossing the Isthmus of
-Panama.
-
-“On the 29th of December, 1670, they reached St. Catherine, which
-Morgan expected to take easily. However, since his former attack under
-Mansvelt, the Dons had greatly strengthened the forts. Landing about
-one thousand men, Morgan attempted to take the place by land, but the
-Spaniards kept up a galling fire, the buccaneers were without
-provisions—as they had expected to live off their enemies—and at night
-a pouring rain came on, drenching the buccaneers to the skin. At this
-time, so tired, hungry and miserable were the men that, had the Dons
-but known it, they could easily have wiped out the buccaneers with a
-force of less than one hundred men, and no doubt had they done so
-Panama would have been saved. The rain continued incessantly the next
-day and the buccaneers were able to do nothing. So starved and
-desperate were they that when an old horse was discovered in a field
-they instantly killed it and fought over it like wolves, devouring even
-the offal. By this time the men began to grumble, and even suggested
-giving up and became mutinous. Morgan, seeing that unless something was
-done at once his expedition would be a failure, resorted to his old
-game of bluff, and sent a canoe with a flag of truce to the Governor,
-demanding the surrender of the island and threatening to give no
-quarter unless it was done at once. So terrified were the Dons that the
-Governor merely asked two hours to consider and at the end of that time
-sent to Morgan and offered to deliver the place provided Morgan would
-agree to carry out a deception by which it would appear that the
-Governor was overpowered.
-
-“The proposition was that Morgan should come at night and open an
-attack on St. Jerome fort, while at the same time his fleet approached
-Santa Teresa fort and landed men at the battery of St. Matthew. The
-Governor was then to pass from one fort to the other and purposely fall
-into the buccaneer’s hands. He was then to pretend that the English
-forced him to betray his men and was to lead the buccaneers into St.
-Jerome. But he stipulated that no bullets should be used in the
-buccaneers’ guns and guaranteed that his men would fire into the air.
-To this treacherous scheme Morgan agreed and the island was of course
-taken in a sham battle. But within a short time His Excellency bitterly
-repented of his deed. The buccaneers looted right and left, they tore
-down houses to make fires for cooking the stolen poultry and livestock
-and they made prisoners of all the Spaniards on the island. These
-totaled four hundred and fifty, including one hundred and ninety
-soldiers and eight bandits who at once joined Morgan’s force. As there
-was nothing in the way of valuables in the place the people escaped the
-customary tortures, and, shutting the women in the churches, Morgan
-ordered the men into the country to secure provisions.
-
-“Having accumulated a vast supply of food, many tons of powder, immense
-quantities of arms and many cannon, Morgan prepared to attack San
-Lorenzo at the Chagres mouth. He had no mind to risk his own precious
-neck in this desperate venture, however; but making himself comfortable
-at St. Catherine, he dispatched four ships with about four hundred men
-under Captain Brodely, a notorious buccaneer who had served with Morgan
-under Mansvelt. Anchoring his ships about three miles from the mouth of
-the Chagres, Brodely landed his men and attempted to attack the castle
-by land. But despite their brigand guides the buccaneers discovered
-that it was impossible to approach the fort under cover, the country
-having been cleared for a long distance about the fort, while in
-addition the deep mangrove swamps made progress next to impossible. But
-the buccaneers dared not turn back and face Morgan, and so, although
-fully exposed to the fire from the fort, they rushed across the open
-space with drawn swords in one hand and fireballs in the other, but the
-firing was terrific. The Dons had erected heavy palisades outside of
-the fortress walls, and presently the buccaneers were compelled to
-retreat. At nightfall, however, they made another assault, throwing
-their fire balls at the palisades, attempting to scale them and
-fighting like demons. But they were beaten off again and again, and
-their case seemed hopeless when, by the merest accident, fate played
-into their hands. In the heat of the assault, one of the buccaneers was
-struck by an arrow in the back, which completely penetrated his body.
-Mad with pain, the fellow drew the missile out through his breast,
-wrapped a bit of rag around it and, dropping it into his musket, fired
-it back into the fort.
-
-“But the buccaneer’s hasty and unthinking act won the day for the
-corsairs. The cotton rag about the arrow caught fire from the powder,
-it fell unnoticed upon some palm-thatched houses within the fort, and
-ere the Dons realized what had happened the buildings were ablaze.
-Madly the Spaniards strove to quench the flames, but the fire was
-beyond control, it reached a magazine, and there was terrific
-explosion. During the confusion and panic that ensued the buccaneers
-rushed to the palisades and, piling inflammable material about them,
-soon had them burning furiously. Presently the stakes began to fall,
-carrying down masses of earth that had been piled between them, and
-over these the yelling buccaneers swarmed to the assault. Under a rain
-of stink pots and fire balls, boiling oil and molten lead hurled at
-them by the garrison, the English fell everywhere, and at last, seeing
-they could not gain the inner works, they withdrew once more.
-
-“But despite their losses they were elated, for the palisades were
-blazing everywhere and by midnight they were entirely consumed. When
-morning dawned only the charred and fallen stakes remained and great
-masses of earth had filled the ditch. The commandant, however, had
-stationed his men upon these mounds and both sides kept up an incessant
-fire of musketry. Within the castle the flames still raged, for the
-only available water in the fort was contained in a huge cistern in the
-lower part of the castle. Moreover, a party of the buccaneers was
-detailed to snipe the Spaniards fighting the fire and carrying water,
-while the others, hiding as best they could, picked off the men at the
-guns and those guarding the fallen palisades. Noticing one spot where
-the Governor himself was stationed in command of twenty-five picked
-troops, Captain Brodely led a sudden charge and succeeded in taking the
-breach.
-
-“Even the buccaneers were amazed at the valiant resistance they met,
-and, in his chronicles of the battle, Esquemeling particularly calls
-attention to the courageousness of the Dons. Once within the walls,
-however, the battle was practically won and, fighting hand to hand with
-pistols, pikes, daggers, swords and even stones, the British and the
-Spaniards battled furiously. Not a Spaniard asked for quarter; the
-Governor fell, fighting to the last, with a bullet through his brain,
-and when finally the few survivors saw that their cause was hopeless
-they leaped from the parapets into the river rather than surrender. And
-when the buccaneers found themselves masters of the fortress they
-discovered that of the three hundred and fourteen soldiers who had
-formed the garrison only thirty remained alive, and of these over
-twenty were seriously wounded, while not a single living officer was to
-be found.
-
-“The buccaneers, however, were greatly troubled, despite their hard-won
-victory—which had cost them nearly two hundred men—for the prisoners
-informed them that a party of volunteers had managed to steal from the
-fort, had passed through the buccaneers’ lines and had carried word of
-the attack and of Morgan’s coming to Panama. All plans of a surprise
-were now hopeless and realizing that quick work was necessary Captain
-Brodely at once sent a ship to St. Catherine bearing word to Morgan of
-the taking of San Lorenzo.
-
-“Hastily lading his ships with provisions and the unfortunate prisoners
-he had taken, Morgan left a garrison of his own men in the strongest
-fort, burned the town, destroyed the other forts, cast the cannon into
-the sea and set sail for the Chagres. Eight days after the fall of the
-castle he arrived, but his men were so elated at seeing the British
-flag flying from the castle that they succeeded in running four of the
-ships onto a bar at the river’s mouth. One of these was Morgan’s
-flagship, and while all the goods and persons on the vessels were saved
-the ships were a total loss. As soon as he landed, Morgan ordered his
-St. Catherine prisoners to be put to work repairing the fort and
-setting up new palisades and, leaving a force of five hundred men at
-the fort and with one hundred and fifty more upon his ships, Morgan set
-sail up the Chagres in small boats with a force of two thousand two
-hundred men. Thinking to be able to supply himself and his men with
-provisions taken from the Spaniards, Morgan carried practically no
-supplies and this very nearly caused the utter failure of his
-expedition.
-
-“It was on the 18th of January, 1671, that Morgan left San Lorenzo in
-his five boats and thirty-two canoes, with several pieces of light
-artillery and all the pomp of a military organization, even to drummers
-and trumpeters. The first day they covered barely twenty miles,
-reaching a spot known as Los Bracos. But already the men were suffering
-from hunger and being cramped and crowded in the small boats. Landing,
-they went in search of food, but the Dons, having been forewarned, had
-fled, carrying with them or destroying everything edible, and the
-buccaneers were ‘forced to stay their bellies with a pipe of tobacco.’
-
-“The following day they continued to Cruz de Juan Gallego, but, finding
-the river very low and choked by fallen trees, they were here compelled
-to forsake the boats and march overland, leaving one hundred and sixty
-men to guard the boats and their retreat. After a long march they
-reached a spot on the river where canoes could be used, and with
-infinite labor the company was transported up stream to Cedro Bueno.
-The buccaneers were by now on the verge of starvation, but there was
-nothing to do but keep on, and at noon on the fourth day they
-discovered a settlement. But not a soul was there and not a morsel to
-eat, save a few crumbs of bread and a number of leather bags. Famished,
-the buccaneers fell upon the leathern sacks and devoured them. For an
-account of this I can do no better than read you Esquemeling’s
-narrative. He says: ‘Thus they made a huge banquet of the bags of
-leather which doubtless would have been more grateful unto them if
-divers quarrels had not arisen concerning who should have the greatest
-share. They conjectured that five hundred Spaniards had been there,
-more or less, and these they were now infinitely desirous to meet,
-intending to devour some of them rather than perish. Whom they would
-certainly in that occasion have roasted or boiled had they been able to
-take them. Some persons who were never out of their mothers’ kitchens
-may ask how these pirates could eat, swallow and digest those pieces of
-leather so hard and dry. To whom I only answer: That could they once
-experiment with hunger, or rather famine, they would certainly find the
-manner, by their own necessity, as the pirates did. For these first
-took the leather and sliced it in pieces. Then did they beat it between
-stones and rub it, often dipping it in the water of the river to render
-it supple and tender. Lastly they scraped off the hair and roasted or
-broiled it over a fire. And thus being cooked they cut it in small
-morsels and eat it, helping it down with frequent gulps of water, which
-by good fortune they had near at hand.’
-
-“And when night fell on the close of the fourth day and not a scrap of
-food had been found in any of the deserted settlements and camps, the
-pirate who had had the foresight to retain a small piece of leather was
-indeed a happy man, for the others went supperless to sleep.
-
-“At noon of the fifth day they reached Barbacoas, where in a cave, the
-buccaneers, to their intense joy, discovered two sacks of meal, two
-jars of wine and some bananas. These Morgan divided among the men who
-were suffering the most, and somewhat encouraged they proceeded on that
-terrible march. On the sixth day the men proceeded very slowly, partly
-from weakness and partly owing to the rough character of the land, and
-to keep themselves alive they devoured grasses, leaves and roots. But
-at noon they found a barrel of corn at a deserted plantation and
-without waiting devoured it dry and raw. Hardly an hour later they met
-an ambuscade of Indians, and feeling confident that they would be
-victors and would secure plentiful provisions they threw away the
-precious corn. But to their chagrin the Indians, after discharging a
-shower of arrows, disappeared like shadows in the forest, leaving no
-food and nothing to mark their presence save half a dozen dead
-buccaneers.
-
-“On the seventh day the buccaneers prepared and cleaned their arms,
-expecting to meet resistance just ahead, and then, crossing the river,
-they hurried forward to the village of La Cruz. As they approached they
-saw smoke rising above the trees, and, convinced that this meant the
-place was occupied, they made all haste towards it. Judge of their
-disgust when they found the village deserted and in flames, with, as
-Esquemeling humorously remarks, ‘nothing wherewith to refresh
-themselves unless it were good fires to warm themselves, which they
-wanted not.’
-
-“But a search revealed something to eat—a few stray dogs and cats which
-they butchered and devoured raw and bleeding, and hardly had they
-completed this horrid repast when a party of the men found a sack of
-bread and sixteen jars of wine in the ruins of a stable. Scarcely had
-they commenced to eat and drink, however, when they were taken
-violently ill, and they at once decided the wine had been poisoned,
-although, as their chronicler very wisely says, it was more probable
-that it was ‘their huge want of sustenance in that whole voyage and the
-manifold sorts of trash they had eaten.’
-
-“Whatever the cause, it compelled the expedition to remain there for an
-entire day. This village, then called La Cruz, was on the site of the
-present Las Cruces, the head of navigation on the Chagres and from
-which a branch of the Gold Road led to Panama about twenty-five miles
-distant. On the eighth day, Morgan sent forward a scouting party of two
-hundred men to find the best route and to learn of any ambuscades. This
-they did to their sorrow when, at Quebrada Obscura, they were met with
-a hurricane of arrows shot by Indians from hiding places in the deep
-forest on the summits of the cañon’s walls. A number of the buccaneers
-were killed and many wounded and a few Indians fell, but seeing such
-overwhelming numbers of the British approaching they soon took to their
-heels, and the buccaneers passed on and entered the savanna country.
-
-“Here they suffered greatly, being compelled to pass the night in the
-open in a pouring rain and enduring agonies from biting insects and
-mosquitoes. On the morning of the ninth day they came to a steep hill
-from the summit of which they saw the Pacific gleaming in the sun and
-with two ships sailing from Panama to Taboga. Elated at finding
-themselves so near their goal they hurried down the slope and in a
-little meadow discovered a number of cattle, horses and asses. Hastily
-butchering and dressing these they kindled huge fires, half cooked the
-still warm flesh over the flames and gorged themselves like beasts.
-Indeed, to once more quote Esquemeling, ‘they more resembled cannibals
-than Europeans at this banquet, the blood many times running down from
-their beards to their middles.’
-
-“Continuing, they came at evening in sight of a party of two hundred
-Spaniards, who challenged them and then retreated, and before nightfall
-they saw the tower of the cathedral of Old Panama looming against the
-sky. Sounding their trumpets, beating their drums, throwing hats in
-air; leaping and shouting with joy, the buccaneers, knowing the end of
-their awful march was over, pitched their camp for the night in
-preparation of an assault on the morrow.
-
-“But the buccaneers were not to rest in peace. Fifty horsemen appeared,
-taunting and insulting the English just out of gunshot, and soon the
-big cannon of the forts began to thunder and roar and the shot fell all
-about the buccaneers’ camp. Soon thereafter a party of fully two
-hundred cavalry galloped across the fields from the town, and presently
-the buccaneers discovered that they were completely surrounded and,
-from being the besiegers they had been transformed into the besieged.
-
-“But having done so much and survived, the rough corsairs gave no
-thought or worry to this and ‘began every one to open his satchel and
-without napkin or plate fell to eating very heartily the remaining
-pieces of bulls’ and horses’ flesh which they had reserved since noon.
-This being done they laid themselves down upon the grass with great
-repose and huge satisfaction, expecting only with impatience the
-dawning of the next day.’ Thus does Esquemeling describe that fateful
-evening, the close of the day which foreshadowed the doom of the
-richest city of New Spain and which ere another sun set would be a
-blazing funeral pyre and a bloody shambles with the shrieks and screams
-of tortured beings rending the air and rising loud above the roaring of
-the flames.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE SACK OF PANAMA
-
-
-“There’s something I’d like to ask, Uncle Henry,” said Fred, as Mr.
-Bickford paused in his narrative and reached for an old book. “You
-spoke of the British flag flying from San Lorenzo. I thought the
-pirates always used a black flag with a skull and bones.”
-
-“And, Dad, how did they dress?” asked Jack. “Did they wear uniforms or
-did they dress like the pictures of pirates, with big earrings and
-handkerchiefs about their heads and their sashes stuck full of pistols
-and knives?”
-
-“Those are questions well taken,” replied Mr. Bickford, “and really
-important if we are to understand the truth about the buccaneers and
-their lives. The ‘Jolly Roger’ was never the emblem of the ‘Brethren of
-the Main,’ as they called themselves, but later, after the buccaneers
-were dispersed and a few had turned out-and-out pirates, the black flag
-with its symbol of death became a recognized pirate standard. But in
-the heydey of the buccaneers, when they attacked only Spanish ships and
-Spanish cities, they fought under the colors of their
-countries—British, French or Dutch, as the case might be, and very
-often, in one fleet, there would be ships under the various flags. In
-addition, each prominent buccaneer leader had his own colors—much as
-merchant shipowners have their house flags—which were flown on all the
-ships under the leader. The flag might be of almost any conventional
-design, but it was known and recognized by all the buccaneers.
-
-“Thus, Bartholomew Sharp’s flag was a blood-red burgee bearing a bunch
-of white and green ribbons; Sawkins’ colors were a red flag striped
-with yellow; Peter Harris flew a plain green ensign; John Coxon used a
-plain red burgee; Cook used a red flag striped with yellow and bearing
-a hand with a sword; Hawkins’ was appropriately a red flag with a black
-hawk upon it and so on. In garments, the buccaneers were not by any
-means uniform or particular. The rank and file of sailors dressed in
-rough clothes, as a rule, like the ordinary seamen of their times, in
-loose knee trousers or ‘shorts,’ coarse shirts and low, heavy shoes on
-their bare feet and with knitted caps or bandannas on their heads. Many
-wore the costume of the real buccaneers of the woods—rawhide shoes and
-leg coverings, leather jackets and trousers and palm hats, while the
-majority wore any odds and ends they could pick up. After a foray they
-often togged themselves out in the garments of their victims—brocades,
-silks and satins, gold lace and plumed hats, often stiff and caked with
-the life-blood of their late owners. But the ordinary buccaneer was a
-spendthrift drunkard ashore and any finery he possessed usually went to
-pay for his debaucheries before he had been on land twenty-four hours,
-after which he was left half naked. The leaders or captains, however,
-dressed like dandies. To be sure, their wardrobes were often made up of
-miscellaneous pieces looted from the wealthy Spaniards, and, like their
-men, they were not over particular as to the condition they were in,
-but they were more or less thrifty, had plenty of ready cash and spent
-small fortunes in buying the most brilliant and costly costumes and
-trappings. Here, for example, is a description of the costume worn by
-Morgan. ‘A fine linen shirt brave with Italian lace with velvet
-waistcoat of scarlet, much laced with gold and a plum-colored greatcoat
-reaching to his knees and with great gold buttons fashioned from
-doubloons and trimmed with heavy braid of gold. Upon his legs, breeches
-of saffron silk, belaced like unto his shirt and ruffled, and hose of
-sky-blue silk. Soft top boots of red cordovan with huge buckles of
-silver beset with gems and his hat of Sherwood green belaced with gold
-and gemmed, and wherein was placed a crimson plume draping onto his
-shoulder. His periwig was lustrous brown and at his side he bore a
-Toledo rapier, jeweled at the hilt, on a belt of gray shagreen buckled
-with gold, and bore also a staff, gold headed and tasseled.’ Quite a
-striking figure, surely, reminding us of one of the ‘three musketeers.’
-And here is the description of another buccaneer chieftain: ‘A long
-surtout of green satin with wide skirts slit far up the arms to give
-his muscles play. Breeches wide and short of bullock-blood satin and
-hose of canary silk.’ So you see the pirate or buccaneer of fiction is
-by no means typical of the real thing. However, in one respect they
-were all much alike. When on the ‘warpath,’ as we may say, they wore
-all the pistols and daggers they could stow in belts or sashes, they
-invariably carried heavy curved cutlasses with peculiar scallop
-shell-shaped hilts and, in addition, they carried muskets slung over
-their shoulders with horns of powder and pouches of bullets. Moreover,
-men and officers alike were inordinately fond of gewgaws and jewelry,
-and rings in ears were almost universal, as they were with all seamen
-of their time and for years later.
-
-“And now let us return to Morgan and his men encamped on the plain
-before ‘ye goodlye and statlye citie of Panama.’
-
-“Early the next day—the tenth after leaving San Lorenzo—Morgan
-marshaled his men upon the plain and with drums beating and trumpets
-blaring, marched like a miniature army towards the doomed city. It was
-soon evident that to follow the high road would cost the buccaneers
-dearly, and at his guides’ suggestion Morgan made a detour, in order to
-approach the city through the woods. This was totally unexpected by the
-Spaniards and in order to check the buccaneers’ advance the troops were
-compelled to leave their forts and guns and meet the enemy in the open.
-The Spanish numbered four regiments of foot soldiers, totaling
-twenty-four hundred; two squadrons of cavalry, amounting to four
-hundred men, and a large number of slaves who were driving a herd of
-two thousand wild bulls which they expected would charge the buccaneers
-and cause consternation among them.
-
-“Reaching a low hill, the English looked with amazement at the
-overwhelming forces sent to meet them and for the first time their
-confidence began to waver. As Esquemeling puts it, ‘Yea, few there were
-but wished themselves at home or at least free from the obligation of
-that engagement wherein they perceived their lives must be narrowly
-concerned.’ But they had come too far, had undergone too many
-hardships, and had the richest city of the New World too near, to
-falter or turn back and, knowing no quarter would be given them, they
-swore a solemn oath to fight until death.
-
-“Dividing his men into three troops, Morgan then ordered the best
-marksmen, to the number of two hundred, to scatter and advance and pick
-off the Spaniards before the main body of buccaneers charged. The Dons
-at once attempted a charge of cavalry, but the rains had softened the
-ground and had transformed it to a quagmire; they could not maneuver
-properly and the accurate fire from the buccaneer sharpshooters brought
-them down by scores. Notwithstanding this, the Spaniards fought
-courageously and the infantry tried again and again to force their way
-through the buccaneers in order to support the cavalry. Then the bulls
-were urged forward; with cracking whips and shouts from the slaves they
-were stampeded towards the buccaneers, and like an avalanche they came
-plunging on, a sea of wildly tossing horns, thundering hoofs and
-foaming nostrils. But the buccaneers were the last men in the world to
-be demoralized by cattle. They had made hunting savage wild bulls their
-profession and with shouts, trumpets and waving hats they turned the
-stampede to one side while the few bulls that kept on and dashed among
-the British were shot down or hamstrung ere they did the least damage.
-
-“The battle had now raged for two hours; practically all the Spanish
-cavalry were killed or unhorsed, and the infantry, discouraged and
-demoralized, fired one last volley and then, throwing down their
-muskets, fled to the city. Many were not able to gain the town and
-tried to conceal themselves in the woods, but these the buccaneers
-hunted down and butchered wherever found.
-
-“Upon the field the Dons had left six hundred slain, in addition to
-several hundred wounded, and the buccaneers had lost, between killed
-and wounded, nearly half as many. Weary with their long tramp overland
-and the battle, the English were in no condition to follow up their
-victory, but Morgan forced them on and after a short rest they resumed
-their march towards the city. The approach, however, was directly under
-the fire of the cannon in the forts and with the great guns roaring
-constantly and the buccaneers falling at every step the English kept
-doggedly on until, after three hours of fighting, they were in
-possession of the city.
-
-“Madly they rushed hither and thither, ruthlessly cutting down and
-pistoling all they met, men, women and children, broaching rum casks,
-looting shops and houses, destroying for mere lust and wantonness
-until, after a great deal of difficulty, Morgan got his men under
-control and, assembling them in the market place, gave strict orders
-that none should touch or drink any liquor owing to the fact, so he
-said, that he had won a confession by torture from prisoners that all
-the wine had been poisoned. In reality, he undoubtedly foresaw that,
-should his men become drunk, they would fall easy victims to the
-Spaniards and that the Dons thus might retake the city.
-
-“Morgan, however, was in a frenzy, an overpowering passion, a
-demoniacal rage, for the people, having been warned of his coming, had
-carried off the bulk of the riches in the city. The most precious altar
-pieces, the wonderful gold altar of San José church, the chests of
-coins, the bullion and plate, vast fortunes in gems and the most
-valuable merchandise had all been loaded hurriedly onto ships which had
-sailed away, no one knew whither, long before the buccaneers arrived.
-There were to be sure, boats within the harbor, but it was low tide—the
-tide in the Pacific rises and falls for nearly twenty feet—the boats
-were high and dry, and Morgan could not even send a craft in chase of
-the fleeing treasure ships.
-
-“Beside himself with rage, Morgan secretly ordered the city fired and
-in a moment the place was a hell of raging flames. Morgan, in order to
-excite his men the more, and to bring greater revenge upon the
-Spaniards, claimed that the Dons had started the blaze, but there is no
-question that he was the culprit, for Esquemeling, who was present,
-does not hesitate to make the statement. Morgan, however, had
-overstepped his mark; even his men fought valiantly side by side with
-the Spaniards to extinguish the flames, but to no avail. In half an
-hour an entire street was a smoldering heap of ruins and as most of the
-city consisted of flimsy houses of native cedar and of thatched and
-wattled huts it burned like tinder. And here let me point out that the
-accepted ideas of this old city of Panama are very erroneous. Because
-the ruins left standing are of stone, the public, and many historians,
-have assumed that it was a city of stone buildings. This, however, was
-not the case. Esquemeling particularly states that, ‘all the houses of
-the city were built of cedar, being of curious and magnificent
-structure and richly adorned within, especially with hangings and
-paintings, being two thousand of magnificent and prodigious building
-with five thousand of lesser quality.’ Moreover, in the official
-description of the city, preserved in the Archives of Seville, it is
-stated that the houses were of wood, and they were divided into two
-classes,—those with and those without floors, the latter being greatly
-in the majority. Thus it is easily seen how a fire would sweep the city
-and wipe it out of existence in a few hours, leaving only the solidly
-built stone buildings remaining. Of these there were a number,
-including eight monasteries, two churches and a hospital, the
-cathedral, the slave market, the governor’s palace, the treasury and
-the forts. One of the finest buildings was the slave exchange owned by
-Genoese slave merchants, and within this, when the town fell to the
-buccaneers, were over two hundred, cowering, helpless slaves. Guarding
-the doors that none might escape, Morgan ordered the place burnt and
-for hours the screams and shrieks of the manacled, helpless blacks and
-Indians drowned all other sounds as the poor creatures were slowly
-roasted to death.
-
-“For four weeks the city burned, while the buccaneers camped within the
-charred ruins, but taking great care not to become separated, as they
-well knew that large numbers of the Spaniards were lurking near, fully
-armed and ready to take advantage of the least carelessness on the part
-of the invaders.
-
-“In the meantime, the buccaneers searched the ruins for loot, explored
-the wells and cisterns and recovered large amounts of hidden treasure
-and valuables which had survived the flames. Meanwhile, too, Morgan
-sent out five hundred heavily armed men to scour the surrounding
-country and bring in all prisoners and valuables they could find, and
-two days later they returned, bringing over two hundred captives. Each
-day new parties were sent out and constantly they returned bearing more
-loot and additional captives until the countryside for miles about was
-a desolate uninhabited waste.
-
-“Then, to wring confessions of where the miserable folk had secreted
-their valuables, Morgan commenced such a series of devilish tortures
-and inhumanities as the world had probably never seen before or since.
-One poor wretch who was a mere serving man was captured while wearing a
-pair of his master’s ‘taffety breeches’ which he had donned in the
-confusion of the attack. Moreover, hanging to the trousers was a small
-key, and these things convinced the buccaneers that the fellow was
-well-to-do and that the key belonged to some secret chest containing
-his wealth. In vain the fellow protested that he knew nothing of it,
-that the garments and the key were his master’s and that he was merely
-a servant. Paying no heed to his screams, the buccaneers placed him on
-the rack and stretched him until his arms were pulled from their
-sockets. Still the man protested his ignorance and the inhuman monsters
-twisted a thong about his forehead until his eyes popped from their
-orbits. Even this awful torture was, of course, without result, and
-stringing him up by the thumbs, they flogged him within an inch of his
-life, sliced off his ears and nose, singed his bleeding sightless
-features with burning straw and, still unsuccessful in their attempts
-to learn the supposed secret of his treasure, they ordered a slave to
-run him through with a lance. There is no need to describe other
-examples of Morgan’s fiendishness. He spared neither young nor old, men
-or women, and the priests and nuns were treated with even greater
-cruelty than any others. Only the most prominent and important men and
-women were free from tortures, and these Morgan herded together to
-hold, under threat of death or worse, for ransom.
-
-“For three weeks the buccaneers occupied the ruined city, torturing,
-slaying, committing every devilishness imaginable, until even Morgan’s
-men sickened with the sights and a large portion of them planned to
-steal away in a ship and desert their leader. Morgan, however, heard of
-the plot, destroyed all the ships and ordered preparations made to
-leave the city and return to San Lorenzo. But before he left he sent
-certain prisoners to outlying districts demanding ransoms for those he
-held, and for days wealth flowed in from friends of the captives and
-many were freed. Still, hundreds remained, and on the 14th of February,
-1671, Morgan and his men left the city, and, with one hundred and
-seventy-two pack mules laden with booty and six hundred prisoners, he
-started on the long and terrible overland trip.
-
-“Never did heaven look down upon a more pitiable, awful spectacle than
-that presented by the buccaneers with their captives. Surrounded by the
-armed buccaneers, the prisoners—many of them tender, high-bred ladies
-and young children—were forced over the rough trail and across rivers.
-‘Nothing,’ says Esquemeling, ‘was to be heard save the lamentations,
-cries, shrieks and doleful sighs of those who were persuaded that
-Morgan designed to transport them to his own country as slaves.’ Given
-barely enough food and water to sustain life, many of them wounded, all
-terrified and frightened, they were forced on by blows, curses, prods
-with swords or rawhide lashes. Women, unable to endure, fell upon their
-knees and implored Morgan to permit them to go back to their loved ones
-to live in huts of straw as they had no houses left, but to one and all
-he replied, with a laugh, that he came not to hear lamentations and
-cries but to gain money. Often, the women and children would stagger
-and fall, and if unable to rise were pistoled or run through, the
-others staggering over their dead bodies. And yet, in the midst of this
-awful march, Morgan exhibited that strange paradoxical nature of his
-and performed a gallant and commendable act. It happened that among the
-prisoners was a lady who belonged on the island of Taboga, a most
-lovely and virtuous woman according to Esquemeling, and to her
-buccaneer guards she stated, amid her sobs and shrieks, that she had
-sent two priests to secure her ransom, but that having obtained the
-money they had used it to secure the release of their own friends. This
-tale reached Morgan’s ears and instantly he halted his men, made an
-investigation and finding it true at once released the woman, made her
-a present of the amount of her ransom, swept off his plumed hat, bent
-his knee and kissed her finger-tips and, with expressions of deepest
-sorrow for her state, sent her happily on her way with an armed escort.
-Then, to even scores, he made prisoners of the treacherous priests,
-and, as Esquemeling tells us, ‘used them according to the deserts of
-their incompassionate intrigues.’
-
-“By the time La Cruz was reached on March 5, 1671, the bulk of the
-captives who still lived had been ransomed, and, embarking with those
-remaining and with a number of new prisoners taken at La Cruz, Morgan
-and his men started down the Chagres.
-
-“When midway to San Lorenzo, Morgan again halted, ordered every one
-searched to be sure they had concealed no booty and, to show his
-fairness, insisted that he too must be searched, ‘even to the soles of
-his boots.’ Then once more they resumed their way, and on March 9th
-reached the mouth of the Chagres and the fortress.
-
-“Soon after he arrived, Morgan loaded a boat with the prisoners he had
-taken at St. Catherine and sent them to Porto Bello with a demand that
-a ransom should be paid for the evacuation of San Lorenzo without its
-being destroyed. This time, however, Morgan’s bluff was called, and a
-message was returned stating that not a farthing would be paid and
-Morgan could do as he pleased with the castle.
-
-“Meantime, the loot was divided—Morgan doing the dividing—and at once
-grumblings and complaints arose and the men openly accused Morgan of
-keeping far more than his agreed share. And there is little wonder that
-they did, for, despite the immense booty taken, Morgan gave but two
-hundred pieces of eight to each man!
-
-“Then Morgan showed his yellow streak and, sneaking secretly aboard his
-ship, while at his orders his men were demolishing the fort, he sailed
-away, leaving the buccaneers to follow as best they might. With
-scarcely any provisions, with no commander of experience, the deserted
-buccaneers were in a sad state. As Esquemeling quaintly says, ‘Morgan
-left us all in such a miserable condition as might well serve for a
-lively representation of what reward attends wickedness at the latter
-end of life.’ As a matter of fact, they separated, took to sea in the
-remaining ships and scattered to the four winds, carrying on a
-desultory and more or less successful buccaneering life on their own
-account. Thus, by treachery, Morgan possessed himself of his men’s
-hard-won loot, he double-crossed and deserted the men who, rough and
-villainous as they were, had stood by him through thick and thin and
-had made his most famous deed possible, and his career as a buccaneer
-was over.
-
-“But the monuments to his awful deeds remain. Above the placid Chagres’
-mouth old Fort San Lorenzo still frowns down. Its quaint sentry boxes
-jut from the battered walls; the great guns lie rusting and corroded in
-the crumbling embrasures; piles of round shot are overgrown with weeds
-and vines; the cisterns where the Dons dipped the water to quench the
-flames caused by that blazing arrow are still there. Within the
-dungeons are rusty leg irons, manacles and heavy chains; the patched
-walls, where Morgan’s toiling prisoners repaired the breaches of his
-buccaneers’ attack, are plainly visible; and the deep trench, half
-filled with the piles of dirt whereon the gallant Governor made his
-last stand, are there for all to see.
-
-“And across the Isthmus—by the shores of the Pacific—looms the lonely,
-ruined tower of the cathedral in Old Panama. Near it are the walls of
-the ancient fort, the gaunt arches of a burned monastery, the solid
-massive walls of the slave mart wherein those cowering wretches were
-roasted at Morgan’s orders and, spanning a little stream, is the stone
-bridge over which the buccaneers fought and fell as they took the city.
-Half hidden in the jungle are the treasure vaults that once held
-incalculable fortunes in plate and gold, in ingots and jewels, in
-pieces of eight, onzas and doubloons. Among the shrubbery one may still
-pick up bits of glass and china, hinges and locks, buttons and stray
-coins, even an occasional pistol barrel or sword hilt, all warped,
-misshapen, melted by the flames that wiped Old Panama from the map when
-Morgan, in his rage, fired the richest city of New Spain and left death
-and destruction, smoldering ruins and distorted bleeding corpses to
-testify to the most wanton, ruthless deed ever perpetrated by a
-buccaneer.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE MISFORTUNES OF MONSIEUR OGERON
-
-
-“Gosh, I’m glad the Spaniards fooled Morgan and got most of their
-things away!” exclaimed Jack. “What became of the treasure, Dad; did
-they bring it back after Morgan left?”
-
-“No one knows what became of the bulk of it,” replied his father. “One
-or two of the ships were never heard from. They were probably wrecked
-or perhaps their crews mutinied and made off with the valuables. One
-vessel was driven ashore on the coasts of Darien and the treasure went
-down with it. The priceless cargoes of others were buried in
-out-of-the-way spots and no one has ever discovered them as far as
-known, while a few of the ships returned after the buccaneers had gone.
-Of course the town was in ruins and, realizing that the situation was
-too exposed, the Dons moved a few miles to the west and built the
-present city of Panama, using the stones and bricks from the ruins in
-making the more important buildings. And here let me tell you a little
-story—a most romantic and fascinating tale that throws some light on
-the question of what became of the treasures the Spaniards saved from
-Morgan’s clutches.
-
-“In the old city the richest and most famed church was that of San
-José. Like all the churches, it received its tithe or share of all gold
-and riches passing through Panama, but the brothers who owned San José
-saw fit to use their share to fashion a huge altar of beaten gold, a
-marvelous, glorious structure unequalled in all the world and which
-became famed far and wide. Indeed it is said that it was mainly the
-stories of the golden altar of San José and the heavily jeweled
-vestments and images in the church that led Morgan to sack the town.
-When word of the taking of San Lorenzo reached Panama, the priests of
-San José church hurriedly removed the far-famed altar piecemeal and
-loading it onto a ship sailed away. Months later, when the new city was
-being built, the priests returned and busied themselves in building a
-new San José church near the harbor shores in the new city. But they
-were evidently no longer rich. The church was a tiny, obscure,
-unattractive affair half hidden among other buildings, as it still
-stands to-day, at the corner of Avenue A and 8th Street in Panama City.
-And within the church, in place of the wonderful altar of beaten gold,
-they erected a plain white altar—the poorest of all among the churches
-in the city. Time went on. There were slave uprisings, fires,
-rebellions against Spain and insurrections. The country was turbulent
-and unsettled, but the brothers of San José church had nothing to tempt
-robbers, bandits or revolutionists and they and their little stucco
-church were left in peace. Even the fires that swept the town and
-destroyed many of the larger churches spared the little affair on
-Avenue A. Then came the Americans and the Canal; Panama won her
-independence, Uncle Sam sanitized the city, established law and order,
-and bloody, unsettled days were a thing of the past.
-
-“Then for days the priests of San José church busied themselves with
-mysterious doings behind closed doors and at last, lo and behold, where
-the white altar had stood, once more gleamed the ancient altar of gold!
-Through all the years the friars had guarded their secret well. Under
-its coating of white paint the famed altar had been hidden with never a
-suspicion of its existence and now that it was safe the white paint had
-been cleaned off and once more the glorious altar of precious metal
-glowed and scintillated in the sunlight pouring upon it through the
-stained glass windows. It is one of the sights of Panama of to-day, but
-few know of its existence, still fewer know of its history and in the
-little church on a back street few tourists realize that there stands
-the most wonderful and the only real treasure salvaged from the ancient
-city destroyed by the buccaneers.
-
-“And now, boys, let us go back to Morgan and follow his career after he
-returned to Jamaica from the looting of Panama. While he had been away,
-peace between Spain and England had been declared, and the King of
-England, hearing that Jamaica’s Governor encouraged the buccaneers and
-even shared in their raids, appointed a new governor and ordered the
-old one to appear before the Crown and explain his behavior. Thus, when
-Morgan arrived at Jamaica, he found himself declared a pirate and
-placed under arrest along with the ex-governor. And with his
-discredited official friend the buccaneer chieftain was transported to
-England to stand trial for piracy.
-
-“No one knows exactly what arguments Morgan used or how he managed it;
-but he was a glib talker, a man of great personal magnetism and,
-moreover, had vast riches at his disposal, and doubtless he employed
-all these resources to the best of his ability. At any rate, instead of
-being hung as he richly deserved, he was knighted by the king, was
-appointed Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica and sent back to the island
-with instructions to suppress piracy. Maybe the King had method in his
-madness and thought that if it took a thief to catch a thief it would
-be well to have a pirate to catch pirates. And in this he was not
-mistaken. Morgan, having already won the enmity of his former comrades
-and being discredited as a buccaneer, turned upon the corsairs, and
-with all the cruelty and unscrupulousness he had exhibited when
-attacking the Dons, he hunted down the buccaneers, hanged them without
-trial and sent expeditions out to destroy them. But he was such an
-utterly unprincipled and dastardly wretch that he could not play fair
-even as a reformed buccaneer. While destroying buccaneers with one hand
-he was aiding them with the other and secretly was providing funds and
-help for his brother and a few chosen friends in their piratical
-ventures. Owing to rumors of this and complaints of his tyrannical
-rule, the King at last recalled him and Morgan, sailing from Jamaica,
-passed into oblivion. Very little is known of what became of him. Some
-claim he settled down in England and lived quietly upon the proceeds of
-his robberies; others say he settled in the West Indies, and there is
-even a rumor that he was assassinated by one of his old shipmates.
-Whatever his end, he died unknown, unhonored, hated for a traitor, a
-most atrocious scallawag; after a meteoric career of but five years and
-the only buccaneer who was ever made a ‘Sir.’
-
-“Now for a change, let me tell you of a buccaneer who found the
-Spaniards more than a match for him and met his Waterloo at the hands
-of the Dons. This was no less a personage than the Governor of Tortuga,
-Monsieur Bertram Ogeron. After Morgan’s raid on Panama, in 1673 to be
-exact, war broke out between the French and Dutch, and this gave an
-excuse to the French buccaneers of Tortuga to attack their former
-friends of the Dutch West Indies. Governor Ogeron, who was quite a
-famed buccaneer, built and fitted out a large armed vessel which he
-named the Ogeron in honor of himself and, manning it with five hundred
-buccaneers, prepared to swoop down on the island of Curaçao. But when
-nearing Porto Rico and sailing through the Mona Passage between that
-island and Santo Domingo, a violent storm drove his ship upon the
-Guadanillas rocks, completely destroying it. Fortunately, or perhaps
-unfortunately as it turned out, all the men escaped in boats to the
-main island of Porto Rico. Almost at once they were discovered by the
-Spaniards who recognized them as French buccaneers, and the castaways
-being unarmed and helpless they were immediately made prisoners.
-Although the French begged for mercy and quarter, the atrocities they
-had committed in the past were still fresh in their captors’ minds and,
-finding buccaneers at their mercy, they proceeded to wreak vengeance.
-In a short time they had tortured and killed the majority of the
-captives and then, securely binding those left alive, they started to
-drive them across the island to San Juan as slaves. Throughout all
-this, Ogeron had remained unknown to the Dons, pretending to be a
-half-witted fool, and his men, to all the Dons’ queries, insisted that
-their commander had been drowned. Thinking him a poor demented fellow
-the Spaniards left him free and obtained no little amusement from his
-crazy capers and insane behavior. Indeed, they found him so diverting
-that they treated him with kindness, fed him from their own meals,
-while the other buccaneers were given barely enough to sustain life,
-and allowed him full liberty. Also among the buccaneers was another
-favored man, a surgeon, who was also left free in order that he might
-use his services for the Dons’ benefit, and the two at once plotted to
-escape and, returning to Tortuga, bring an expedition to Porto Rico to
-rescue their fellows. Watching their chance, they took to the woods and
-made towards the coast. This they reached safely, but found themselves
-almost as badly off as before, for there was not a scrap of food to eat
-and no chance of getting shelter or making their way to Tortuga. But
-they were resourceful men and, wandering along the shore, they
-succeeded in capturing a number of fish in the shoal water. Then, by
-rubbing sticks together, they obtained fire, roasted the fish and the
-next day proceeded to cut down trees with the intention of making a
-raft. Fortunately they had brought along a small hatchet, their only
-tool and weapon, and with this they undertook their herculean job. They
-were thus busily at work when, to their delight, they saw a canoe
-approaching and, hiding in the bushes, they watched it as it drew
-towards the beach and discovered that it contained two men,—poor
-fishermen,—a Spaniard and a mulatto. Picking up several calabashes, the
-mulatto stepped from the little craft and started up the beach,
-evidently intent on securing water. Stealing stealthily after him the
-buccaneers, to quote Esquemeling’s words, ‘assaulted him and,
-discharging a great blow on his head with the hatchet, they soon
-deprived him of life.’ Hearing his cries, the Spaniard started to
-escape, but was quickly overtaken and butchered. Then, securing a
-plentiful supply of water in the dead man’s calabashes, they set sail
-and a few days later arrived safely at a buccaneers’ lair in Samaná
-Bay, Santo Domingo.
-
-“Here Ogeron told his story, gathered together all the buccaneers he
-could find and with a number of ships and several hundred men started
-on his voyage of rescue and vengeance. The Dons, however, saw his fleet
-approaching and prepared to give the buccaneers a warm welcome.
-Unsuspecting, the buccaneers fell into an ambuscade, great numbers were
-killed and the survivors who did not manage to escape to their ships,
-were made prisoners. Ogeron himself escaped and shamed and beaten
-returned to Tortuga, abandoning all hopes of rescuing his unfortunate
-comrades. In the meantime, the Dons slaughtered the wounded Frenchmen,
-cut off a few heads and limbs of the corpses to prove to their first
-prisoners the fate of their friends who had attempted their rescue, and
-drove the poor fellows on towards the capital. Here in San Juan they
-were put to work at building the massive fortress of San Cristóbal
-while a few were transported to Havana as laborers on the
-fortifications there. But the Dons took no chances with them. Although
-but a handful of half-starved, shackled slaves yet the buccaneers’
-reputation was such that the Spaniards kept them constantly under
-guard, confining them in separate cells at night, for, to once more
-quote Esquemeling’s quaint phraseology, ‘the Spaniards had had divers
-proofs of their enterprises on other occasions which afforded them
-sufficient cause to use them after this manner.’
-
-“And to make assurance doubly sure, each time a ship sailed for Spain
-parties of the prisoners were placed on board, transported to Europe
-and set at liberty. The buccaneers, however, had an almost uncanny
-faculty of getting together, even when widely separated, and ere long
-all the prisoners had met in France and were soon back in their old
-haunt at Tortuga ready for another foray. But they had had enough of
-Ogeron as a leader and joining Le Sieur Maintenon sailed for Trinidad
-which they sacked and ransomed for ten thousand pieces of eight and
-then set forth for the conquest of Caracas. Here, once more, they met
-defeat, for while they took the port of La Guaira they were
-ignominiously beaten back on the awful trail over the mountains to
-Caracas. Many were killed, more were made prisoners and only a handful
-of survivors escaped and returned, broken and penniless, to Tortuga.”
-
-“Well, I’m glad the Dons did beat them,” declared Fred. “Seems to me
-the buccaneers had it their own way too often.”
-
-“Yes, that is true,” assented Mr. Bickford, “but you must bear in mind
-that only the successes of the buccaneers were recorded as a general
-thing. No doubt they were defeated repeatedly and nothing said of the
-matter, and if the Spaniards’ story were told it might read very
-differently. Now that I have told you of Morgan, of the ruthless
-buccaneers, such as Portugues, L’Ollonois and their kind, let me tell
-you of the most remarkable expedition ever undertaken by the
-buccaneers; a trip without a parallel in history and which, for sheer
-daredevil bravery, indomitable courage, splendid seamanship and
-wonderful adventures is worthy of a place in the history of the
-greatest navigators and discoverers of the world. Moreover, this ‘most
-dangerous voyage,’ as the buccaneer historian calls it, was of real
-value to the world, as it resulted in scientific discoveries and data,
-in geographical knowledge and facts about the Indians which otherwise
-might never have been recorded.”
-
-“It seems funny to think of buccaneers being interested in science or
-geography or such things,” said Jack, as his father searched through a
-volume for the chapter he desired. “How did it happen, Dad?”
-
-“One of the members of the expedition was a man named Dampier,” replied
-his father. “He was the son of an English farmer and at seventeen was
-apprenticed as a boy aboard a merchant ship sailing to the West Indies.
-Deserting the ship, he tried his fortunes as a logwood cutter, but
-finding this held little chance for either riches or excitement, he
-joined the buccaneers. But Dampier was at heart a naturalist and an
-author. He was fond of study, was a keen observer and wherever he went
-he invariably wrote notes recording all he had seen and made excellent
-maps and sketches. One would hardly expect the career of a buccaneer to
-favor literary work and yet Dampier managed to write an excellent book
-while on a buccaneer ship. Often he would be obliged to drop pen and
-paper in the middle of a chapter in order to help his comrades battle
-with a Spanish ship or take a town, but he kept it up with fanatical
-persistence, carried his manuscript and his writing materials with him
-wherever he went and left most valuable records. What a queer picture
-he must have presented as he sat on a gun carriage busily jotting down
-notes on natural history or making sketches of the rugged wooded shores
-of some buccaneers’ lair, which he always speaks of as ‘a particular
-draught of my own composure,’ while, beside his ink horn, was his
-loaded pistol and his trusty cutlass ready for any emergency. His copy
-he kept in a joint of bamboo, which, he says, ‘I stopt at both ends,
-closing it with Wax so as to keep out any water. In this way I
-preserved my Journal and other writings from being wet, tho’ I was
-often forced to swim.’
-
-“And along with the author-naturalist, Dampier, was many another odd
-character. There was Foster, who spent his hours between battles
-composing sentimental poetry and who wrote ‘Soneyettes of Love’ aboard
-a buccaneer ship; Richard Jobson, a divinity student and chemist, who
-carried along with his sword and pistols a well-thumbed Greek Testament
-which he translated aloud for the edification of his piratical mates,
-and, lastly, Ringrose, the pilot and navigator, whose carefully kept
-log has given us the true history of this ‘most dangerous voyage and
-bold assaults of Captain Bartholomew Sharp.’”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-A PERILOUS UNDERTAKING
-
-
-“Among the buccaneers who ravished the Caribbean and the Spanish Main,
-but who had not joined Morgan in his endeavors, were Captain
-Bartholomew Sharp, Peter Harris, Richard Sawkins, Captain Cook,
-Alleston, Row and Macket. As a whole, they were far superior men to
-Morgan and his kind, although no less daring, and in March, 1680, these
-various buccaneer leaders chanced to meet at a favorite lair of the
-corsairs, Bocas del Toro, on the Atlantic coast of what is now Panama.
-Deploring the lack of rich cities to sack and the difficulty of taking
-the Spanish galleons, now guarded by armed convoys, and cursing the
-fate that had decreed peace between Spain and England, the disgruntled
-buccaneer captains sought for new fields for their activities.
-
-“Morgan’s raid on Panama had proved that there were rich pickings on
-the Pacific, but the relentless persecution of the buccaneers by the
-British authorities in the Caribbean made life uncomfortable for them,
-and after a deal of discussion it was agreed that the Pacific coasts
-held the best promise of fortunes to be won. But to talk of raiding the
-Dons’ towns and seizing their ships on the Pacific was one thing and to
-do it was quite a different matter. To sail around the Horn was a long
-and tedious voyage beset with greatest dangers and to cross by the Gold
-Road or the Chagres, while possible, was not only perilous, but would
-be but repeating Morgan’s raid. Then, into their presence, came one
-Bournano, a French buccaneer, who reported that while peace had been
-established between the savage Indians of Darien and the Spaniards, yet
-the Indians were still friendly to the buccaneers and hated the Dons.
-Indeed, Bournano stated further that the Indians had promised to lead
-him and his men to a rich town called Tocamora and that he had agreed
-to return to raid the place as soon as he could secure more ships and
-men.
-
-“This exactly suited the assembled buccaneers; it was unanimously
-agreed to join fortunes with the Frenchman, and, supplying their ships
-with sea turtles and maize, the captains set sail for Darien. The fleet
-consisted of nine vessels with four hundred and seventy-seven men and
-without adventure they arrived at the San Blas Islands. Here the
-Indians welcomed them, for the San Blas tribe had, from time
-immemorial, been allies of the corsairs, but when they learned of the
-buccaneers’ purpose they frowned upon it. Tocamora, they said, was in a
-mountainous country; the way was long and rough, it was in an
-uninhabited district where food was scarce, and the place was not as
-rich as had been reported. Instead, the Indians suggested that the
-buccaneers should cross the Isthmus, take the outlying city of El Real
-de Santa Maria, which was the depot for all the gold from the
-incredibly rich mines of Darien, and then proceed to attack the new
-city of Panama. It was a wild, harebrained, daring and almost hopeless
-scheme, but it appealed to the buccaneers and, aside from Captain Row
-and Bournano, all agreed to follow the Indians’ advice.
-
-“On April 5, 1680, the buccaneers landed on the mainland three hundred
-and thirty-one strong, and, leaving a few men and Captains Alleston and
-Macket to guard the ships, the dauntless buccaneers started on their
-terrible march, carrying for provisions but three cakes of cassava each
-and all heavily armed.
-
-“Following their Indian guides, the buccaneers divided into six
-companies and entered the jungle. The very first day their hardships
-began. So impenetrable was the forest that it was necessary to hew a
-way every yard, there were rivers to cross, swamps to wade through, and
-clouds of mosquitoes made life miserable. The first day four men gave
-up and returned to the coast, but the others, of whom, as I have said,
-Dampier was a member, kept doggedly on. Through pouring rain, climbing
-precipitous mountains, swimming rivers, the buccaneers proceeded on
-their way and at the close of the second day had covered nearly
-eighteen miles. Often, as Ringrose tells us, they were obliged to cross
-the same river over and over again, but at noon of the third day they
-came to a village of the wild Kuna Indians. Ringrose and Dampier
-describe the Indians very well, speaking particularly of the painted
-wooden crowns, the red caps and the gold nose rings worn by the chiefs,
-exactly as they are to-day. The Indians were friendly, they supplied
-the buccaneers fruit and provisions, and the footsore corsairs spent
-the day resting in the Indians’ huts. On the tenth of April a river
-large enough to be navigable by canoes was reached, and Captains Sharp,
-Coxon, Cook and Ringrose, with seventy men, embarked in fourteen
-dugouts. But they soon found that gliding down the Chukunaque River was
-by no means a relief from the overland tramp. Fallen trees and bars
-filled the stream; at every few yards the buccaneers were compelled to
-haul their craft bodily over the obstructions, and, being separated
-from their comrades, they began to fear the Indians intended to cut
-them off and betray them to the Spaniards. On April 13th they reached
-the junction of the Tuira and Chukunaque Rivers, and in the afternoon
-of the same day they were overjoyed to see their missing companions who
-had come through the jungle in safety. Throughout this awful trip,
-Dampier had preserved his writings in his ‘joyente of bamboo,’
-carefully jotting down, despite all difficulties, his observations of
-bird and animal life, notes on plants and descriptions of the Indians
-and their lives. But the difficulties of the crossing were practically
-over. In sixty-eight canoes the three hundred and twenty-seven men
-embarked with fifty Indians and swept swiftly down stream towards
-unsuspecting El Real. Camping a scant half mile above the town, the
-buccaneers prepared to attack at dawn and were awakened by the drums of
-the garrison. Priming their pistols and muskets, the buccaneers marched
-on the village, which was surrounded by a twelve-foot palisade, but the
-corsairs made short work of this and took the town with a loss of but
-two men wounded. Within were two hundred and sixty men, but the
-buccaneers soon learned, to their chagrin, why no resistance had been
-made. The gold, brought from the mines, and, which they had hoped to
-gain, had been taken the day before to Panama—a treasure of three
-hundred pounds of bullion—and there was utterly nothing worth taking in
-the place, which was a mere outpost of straw and palm-thatched huts.
-Unlike Morgan and his fellows, Sharp and his men treated the Dons
-humanely and even prevented their Indian allies from butchering the
-captives, a diversion they had started the moment they had entered the
-place. Disappointed at their ill luck, the buccaneers were more than
-ever determined to attack Panama, and, choosing Captain Coxon as
-commander, the buccaneers, deserted by all but three Indians, prepared
-for the most hazardous venture ever attempted. Cut off, as they were,
-from retreat by the long journey through the jungle, in a hostile
-country, without provisions or ships, yet these fearless, indomitable
-men were about to hurl themselves upon the most strongly fortified town
-on the Pacific, and attack a city of thousands with less than three
-hundred and twenty men, for twelve of their number had left and had
-gone back with the Indians after taking El Real.
-
-“On April 17, 1680, the buccaneers embarked in thirty-six canoes and
-slipping down river with the ebb tide entered the great Gulf of San
-Miguel. Soon the party became separated, and Ringrose’s canoe was
-wrecked. Without food or clothing other than the few rags on their
-bodies and with no shoes on their feet, the buccaneers set forth afoot.
-By good fortune they met Indians, secured canoes, and, sending their
-prisoners back free, they continued on their way. The very next night,
-seeing fires on shore, the weary fellows thought they had found their
-missing comrades and hastily landed, only to fall into the hands of a
-party of Spaniards. But here the humane actions of the buccaneers were
-rewarded. The Dons, learning who their captives were, and hearing from
-a prisoner how the British had saved them from massacre by the Indians,
-fed and clothed the buccaneers and gave them their liberty.
-
-“The next morning, to every one’s unspeakable delight, the other
-parties were met. Several small sailboats were also captured, and now,
-once more well equipped and confident, the entire party gathered at
-Chepillo Island and prepared for their descent on Panama, about thirty
-miles distant. And here, too, the buccaneers suddenly, for ‘reasons
-which I can not dive into,’ as Ringrose puts it, threw aside their
-former humanity and ordered the Indians to butcher the few remaining
-Spanish prisoners. Luckily, the captives managed to escape, however,
-and only one was killed. Rowing stealthily along the shores under cover
-of the night, and drenched by torrential rains, the buccaneers came at
-dawn within sight of the city to find two great ships and three smaller
-men-of-war anchored in the bay and ready to resist the buccaneers. Here
-were unexpected troubles. They had counted on taking the place by
-surprise, on being led into the city by a captive whose life they had
-saved, and, instead, their presence was known and five powerful armed
-ships swarming with Spaniards were prepared for them. And, to make
-matters worse, a large part of their men were absent. During the night
-and the storm they had become separated, the largest of the boats, in
-command of Captain Sharp, had put into outlying islands for water, and
-the heavier piraguas were far astern of the lighter canoes. These, five
-in number and with one piragua, contained but sixty-eight out of the
-three hundred odd buccaneers, and these were weary with their long row
-and in no condition to fight. But there was no time for indecision. The
-three Spanish war vessels were already bearing down upon the
-buccaneers, and although so near that Ringrose says they feared they
-would be run down, yet the English fell to their oars and, pulling
-desperately into the wind, evaded the Dons’ ships and got to windward.
-Realizing that the sooner they struck the better, the buccaneers turned
-their boats and, pulling directly towards the huge Spanish ships,
-picked off the helmsmen and the gunners with their muskets. With their
-vessels aback, unable to maneuver, the Dons were, for the moment,
-helpless, and while their broadsides threw round shot and chain shot
-among the buccaneers and killed a number, the light swift boats were
-hard targets to hit, and before a second broadside could be fired they
-were under the vessels’ side where the cannons could not reach them.
-Then the battle raged thick and fast. Picking off the Dons whenever
-they showed their heads above the bulwarks, cutting sheets and braces
-with their shots, the buccaneers forced their tiny craft under the
-warships’ sterns, jammed the rudders, and, sinking their own craft to
-make sure the men must do or die, they swarmed up ropes, chains and
-quarter galleries onto the Spaniards’ decks.
-
-“Ringrose and his party attacked the Admiral’s ship, and leaping over
-the bulwarks cut down the Admiral, swept like demons among the Spanish
-crew, cutting, slashing, shooting and converting the decks to a bloody
-shambles. Not until two-thirds of the crew were killed did the Dons
-surrender, however. With the flagship in their hands, Captain Coxon
-took charge and at once sent two canoes of buccaneers to aid Sawkins,
-who had thrice been beat back from the decks of the other warship.
-Hardly had the reënforcements arrived when two explosions took place on
-the ship and in the confusion the buccaneers swarmed onto the ship’s
-deck and took the vessel without resistance, for not one Spaniard was
-left alive and uninjured aboard! But on every ship the slaughter was
-terrific. Of the original crew of eighty-six on the flagship, only
-twenty-five men remained alive and only eight of these were able to
-stand. Indeed, even Ringrose and his fellows, hardened to slaughter and
-bloodshed as they were, were amazed at the butchery they had wrought,
-and, in their journals, Ringrose and Dampier state that ‘blood ran down
-the decks in whole streams and not one place upon the ships was found
-that was free of blood.’ And yet this victory, this awful carnage, had
-been carried out by sixty-eight buccaneers in frail canoes and small
-boats, truly a most marvelous feat of daring and bravery, and, more
-remarkable yet, the buccaneers’ losses amounted to but eighteen killed
-and twenty-two wounded!
-
-“With the two men-of-war in their possession the buccaneers at once
-sailed for the big galleons, but, to their surprise, found them
-absolutely deserted, every member of their crews having been placed
-aboard the warships in their attack upon the buccaneers. But before
-deserting their ships the Dons had made every effort to prevent any
-possibility of their falling into the buccaneers’ hands. The largest
-galleon, which was called the Santissima Trinidad (Blessed Trinity) had
-been set afire and scuttled, but the buccaneers’ victory was so rapidly
-won that they reached her in time, extinguished the fire, stopped the
-leak and transferred their wounded to her. The battle had begun soon
-after sunrise and by noon the last shot had been fired, the fleet was
-in the hands of the buccaneers, and the standards of Sawkins, Sharp,
-Coxon and the others were floating from the mastheads in place of the
-gold and scarlet banners of Spain.
-
-“Never in the annals of the buccaneers had such a victory been won;
-never had there been a sharper, bloodier battle, and even the captive
-Spanish captains were loud in their praise and admiration of the valor
-of the English. ‘Captain Peralta declared,’ says Ringrose, that ‘surely
-you Englishmen are the valiantest men in the world, who designed always
-to fight open whilst other nations invented all ways imaginable to
-barricade themselves and fight as close as they could, and yet,
-notwithstanding, you killed more of your enemies than they of you.’
-
-“And there, resting upon a gun still hot from recent fighting, Dampier
-drew his paper and ink-horn from his bamboo joint and on the
-blood-stained deck proceeded to make one of his ‘particular draughts’
-of the harbor and to write an account of the brave and exciting deeds
-through which he had just passed.
-
-“It was, of course, out of the question for the buccaneers to attempt
-to take Panama, for the defenses were powerful, it was surrounded with
-an immense, heavily armed wall, it swarmed with soldiers, as well as
-its thousands of citizens, and the large ships could not approach
-within cannon shot. But the buccaneers had little cause to complain.
-They had taken five ships, the largest, the Holy Trinity, a galleon of
-four hundred tons, and while the cargoes consisted of sugar, skins,
-soap and flour of little value, still, with good ships under their
-command, the buccaneers were in a position to take prizes and raid
-towns. To retain all five ships was not practical and, accordingly, two
-were promptly fired and sunk. Those saved were the Trinity; a
-sugar-laden ship of about two hundred tons, which was taken over by
-Cook; and a fifty-ton piragua in command of Coxon. Coxon was
-disgruntled, having been accused of backwardness in the fight, and
-three days after the battle he left the buccaneers with twenty of his
-sympathizers and sailed away to Darien to march back to the Atlantic
-and his ship, taking with him the Indian guides.
-
-“A day or two later, Captain Sharp arrived, having taken a small
-Spanish bark while on his search for water, and shortly afterwards
-Captain Harris turned up, also with a prize. During Sharp’s absence,
-Sawkins had been elected commandant, and, having turned loose all but
-their most important prisoners, the buccaneers proceeded to Taboga
-Island to repair and refit the captured ships.
-
-“While there the buccaneers were visited by a number of Spanish
-merchants from Panama who brought various supplies and goods to sell to
-the buccaneers, for, incredible as it may seem, the corsairs had a most
-remarkable habit of dealing fairly with tradesmen, even though they
-were slaughtering and robbing others. To these Spanish merchants the
-buccaneers disposed of much of the material they had found on the
-ships, and Ringrose informs us that they paid excellent prices,
-offering two hundred pieces of eight for each slave the English could
-spare. You may wonder why unprincipled robbers and cut-throats like the
-buccaneers should dispose of their goods when they could have so easily
-possessed themselves of their visitors’ money without giving anything
-in return, but it was one of their codes of honor to deal fairly under
-such conditions and there is no record that they ever used violence or
-robbed a visitor or one who came to them on a friendly mission.
-
-“While at Taboga, several ships were captured by the buccaneers, one of
-which proved a rich prize, as it contained two thousand jars of wine,
-fifty kegs of gunpowder and fifty-one thousand pieces of eight. Also,
-from this ship, the English learned of a galleon due from Lima with
-over one hundred thousand pieces of eight, and, rubbing their hands
-with satisfaction, the buccaneers proceeded to make ready to receive
-her.
-
-“Meanwhile, the governor of Panama sent a message to Sawkins asking
-why, in time of peace, British had attacked Spaniards and for what
-reason the buccaneers had come to Panama. To this Sawkins facetiously
-replied that they had come ‘to assist the King of Darien, who was true
-Lord of Panama,’ and that ‘having come so far they should have some
-satisfaction.’ Adding that ‘should His Excellency be pleased to send
-five hundred pieces of eight for each man and one thousand for each
-commander and would promise not further to annoy the Indians, but give
-them full liberty, then the buccaneers would depart peacefully,
-otherwise they would remain to get what they might!’ And here also
-occurred another of the odd incidents which showed the buccaneers’
-strange natures and point of view. One of the Spanish merchants brought
-word to Captain Sawkins that the Bishop of Panama had formerly been the
-Bishop of Santa Marta and had been a captive of Sawkins when the latter
-took the place. Thereupon Sawkins sent the Bishop two loaves of sugar
-with his best wishes. In return, the Bishop sent a gold ring and his
-compliments and also a second message from the Governor. This time His
-Excellency wished to know from whom the buccaneers had commissions and
-to whom he should complain of the damages they had done. Evidently
-Sawkins was a humorous man, for he replied that, ‘As yet the company
-are not all together, but when they are they will visit His Excellency
-in Panama and bring their commissions in the muzzles of their guns, at
-which time you shall read them as plain as the flame of powder can make
-them.’ But such interchanges of pleasantries did not serve to satisfy
-the impatient men, and provisions were getting woefully low. In vain
-their commanders urged that they await the arrival of the plate ship
-from Peru. They demanded action and food and at last, finding open
-mutiny would break out if he refused, Sawkins hoisted sail and, leaving
-Taboga, cruised westward along the coast in search of towns to sack and
-vessels to capture. In this they were quite successful. They took
-Otoque Island, looted the pearl catch from Coiba and attacked Puebla
-Nueva. But they met with disaster as well. Two of their vessels
-foundered, with a loss of twenty-two men, and on the attack upon Puebla
-Nueva brave Captain Sawkins met his death, and the buccaneers were
-beaten off.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE “MOST DANGEROUS VOYAGE” OF CAPTAIN SHARP
-
-
-“Say, that beat anything that Morgan did!” exclaimed Jack. “And yet, I
-never even heard of Sharp or Sawkins and the rest.”
-
-“Very true,” replied his father. “Many of the most remarkable deeds and
-adventures of the buccaneers and many of the most noted leaders have
-been practically forgotten. Fiction has kept alive such men as Morgan,
-while others, who were far more worthy of being perpetuated, are
-unknown to the world at large. As I said before, Sharp and his men
-outdid every other buccaneer and yet not one person in a thousand ever
-heard of them or the ‘most dangerous voyage.’”
-
-“But it seems to me they were really pirates,” said Fred. “They knew
-the war was over and it was a low, mean trick to tell the Indians to
-kill the prisoners after the Spaniards had treated them so well.”
-
-“Of course they were pirates,” agreed his uncle. “As I told you in the
-beginning, the buccaneers were pirates—even though pirates were not
-always buccaneers—and the buccaneers freely admitted the fact. Indeed,
-Esquemeling, Ringrose and the other chroniclers always wrote of
-themselves and their fellows as pirates. And as far as letting the
-Indians butcher the captives was concerned, you must remember that
-Ringrose’s party were the ones who received the favors from the Dons
-and he was merely a pilot or navigator and had no say in regard to the
-orders given by the captains. Moreover, the ‘reasons he could not dive
-into’ were perhaps sufficient to warrant the leaders’ orders. But to
-return to the doings of the buccaneers after their defeat at Puebla
-Nueva. Sawkins was liked and respected by all the men; he was brave,
-courteous, fair and, for a buccaneer, very honorable, and when he was
-killed and Bartholomew Sharp was given command of the expedition many
-men refused to continue with the latter. They had joined the venture
-under Sawkins, they did not care to be under any one else and they
-disliked Sharp. Moreover, the new commander announced that it was his
-intention to fit the Blessed Trinity as a buccaneer ship, to cruise
-along the west coast of South America, ravishing the Spanish towns, and
-to return to the Caribbean by sailing through the Straits of Magellan
-and completely circumnavigating South America. Even the hardy and
-daredevil buccaneers were amazed at this. It was a venture fraught with
-the greatest hazard, a voyage such as no buccaneer had ever undertaken,
-and there were those who openly expressed the opinion that Sharp must
-have gone mad to think of it.
-
-“And there is little wonder that they thought him insane. Imagine a
-lone ship—and a half-burned, far from seaworthy galleon at that—going
-pirating in the Pacific where every town, every man, every ship was an
-enemy; where there was not a friendly harbor in which to lie; where
-Spanish warships were numerous; where there was no buccaneers’ lair in
-which to refit or provision and secure men, and where the buccaneers
-were completely cut off, separated by thousands of miles, from their
-own countrymen. And then, even if the ship and its crew survived, think
-of the thousands of perils to be faced at every turn in attempting to
-navigate the almost unknown Antarctic seas and to round South America
-and sail for thousands of miles across the Atlantic to the West Indies.
-It was a scheme so wild, so dangerous and so unheard of that nearly
-one-third of the men refused to stand by Sharp, and nearly seventy men
-declared their intention of braving the perils and hardships of a
-return march through the jungles of Darien rather than attempt the
-voyage. Among these deserters was Dampier; Wafer, the surgeon; Jobson
-of the Greek Testament, and others. Ringrose himself freely admits in
-his ‘log’ that he was minded to accompany them and would have done so
-had he not been more afraid of the jungle and the Indians than of the
-proposed voyage. It is fortunate for us that he stuck to the ship, for
-otherwise we would have no record of that marvelous cruise.
-
-“And the deserters had anything but an easy time of it, and often, ere
-they reached the Caribbean and their own ships, they heartily wished
-that they had remained with Captain Sharp.
-
-“Bad as the crossing had been before, it was now a thousand times
-worse. It was the height of the rainy season; it poured incessantly day
-and night; the forest was little more than a vast morass and the rivers
-were swollen, raging torrents. The Indians refused to guide the men,
-owing partly to the weather conditions and partly as they were
-disgusted at having been cheated out of their revenge on the Dons and
-the joy of butchering them, and the buccaneers were in a sad plight. In
-vain they offered beads, cloth, hatchets and similar articles of trade
-for guides. They were in despair until one of the men, evidently
-familiar with women’s ways, dug a sky-blue petticoat from among his
-loot and slipped it quickly over the head of the chief’s wife. His ruse
-worked like a charm. The wife added her arguments to those of the
-buccaneers, and the chief, throwing up his hands in despair, agreed to
-lead the buccaneers across the Isthmus. But even with their Indian
-guide their plight was pitiable. They plunged through deep swamps,
-fought their way through wicked, thorn-covered jungles, hacked and
-hewed a pathway through the forest, swam swollen rivers, were drenched
-with rain, infested with ticks, tortured by mosquitoes and almost
-starved. For days at a time they could not light a fire; they had no
-shelters; the clothes were torn from their bodies; their sodden shoes
-fell from their blistered, bleeding feet. Sometimes a whole day’s labor
-would result in less than two miles of progress and their best time was
-but five or six miles a day. For twenty-three days they endured every
-hardship and torture, traveling one hundred and ten miles and losing
-their way a hundred times despite their Indian guide. On the morning of
-the eighth day they reached a river so wide and swift none dared to
-attempt it, and after a deal of argument it was decided to choose a man
-by lot to swim the torrent with a line. The lot fell upon one George
-Gayney. Unfortunately for him he was an avaricious fellow and insisted
-on carrying his share of loot—three hundred pieces of eight—in a bag
-lashed to his back. When midway across he was whirled about by the
-current, he became entangled in the rope and was carried under and
-drowned. But another took his place, the rope was gotten across and,
-half-drowned, the party reached the opposite bank. A few days later
-they found poor Gayney’s body with the bag of coins still lashed to his
-back, but so miserable and spent were the men that they did not even
-bother to secure the silver but left the corpse there upon the river’s
-bank, money and all. Another unfortunate was the surgeon, Wafer. By an
-accidental discharge of some powder he received a serious wound in the
-leg and, unable to walk, was left with some Indians to recover. While
-convalescing he used his skill for the Indians’ benefit, and the
-redmen, impressed by what they considered magic, treated him like a
-god. To show their gratitude and esteem they stripped him of his ragged
-garments, painted him from head to foot with every color of the rainbow
-and enthroned him in a regal hut. But Wafer had no mind to pass his
-remaining days as an Indian witch doctor or medicine man. Watching his
-opportunity he stole away, and garbed only in his coat of paint,
-sneaked off through the forest towards the coast. Months later, after
-untold hardships, he came in sight of the sea, and, without thinking of
-his appearance, rushed toward a party of buccaneers who fortunately
-were at hand nearby. For an instant the buccaneers gaped in amazement,
-utterly at a loss to understand who the nude, gorgeously painted
-creature was, and not until he shouted to them in English did they
-realize that it was the long-lost surgeon, Wafer. Never had buccaneer
-appeared before in such guise; they roared with laughter, and many were
-the rude jests and coarse jokes passed at the doctor’s expense. But
-poor Jobson, the divinity student, was less fortunate. He too had been
-overcome and left behind, and while he eventually managed to rejoin his
-comrades he was too far spent to recover and a few days later he died,
-his Greek Testament still clasped in his hand. But aside from Gayney
-and Jobson no lives were lost, and a few days after reaching the
-Caribbean shores the buccaneers were rescued by a French buccaneer,
-Captain Tristian, along with the loot they had carried throughout their
-awful journey, and Dampier’s ‘joyente of bamboo’ which the
-naturalist-buccaneer had preserved unharmed and within which was the
-closely written journal wherein he had daily set down every event of
-interest or note.
-
-“Meanwhile, back at Coiba Island, Sharp and his companions were
-preparing for their momentous undertaking. Stripping the other vessels
-of all fittings and arms, Sharp scuttled and burned them and proceeded
-to equip the Blessed Trinity for a pirate ship. Her high and ornately
-gilded poop was in the way, and with axes and hatchets the buccaneers
-hacked and chopped away the galleries and moldings, knocked off a tier
-or two of cabins and, hastily boarding it up, mounted guns with their
-grim muzzles protruding from what once had been the stained glass
-windows. Ports were cut in bulwarks and topsides, the decks were
-stripped of all unnecessary gear, the rigging was overhauled, and the
-ship with the holy name was ready for her most unholy work. At Coiba
-they laid in a supply of turtles, salted deer meat, and water, and on
-the afternoon of June 6, 1679, they sailed forth from Coiba Island on
-their marvelous voyage.
-
-“It is not necessary to relate in detail all that took place
-thereafter. They cruised along the coast, captured all the ships they
-saw and either sunk them or, cutting away all but one mast, filled them
-with their prisoners and set them adrift to sink or sail as the fates
-decreed. Sharp at times showed intense cruelty, and whenever priests
-were taken he ordered them butchered out of hand and often tossed them
-overboard while still living. Ringrose says, ‘Such cruelties, though I
-abhorred very much in my heart, yet here was I forced to hold my tongue
-as having no authority to oversway them.’ And they captured many a
-town, too. Arica, Hilo, Coquimbo, La Serena, were attacked, sacked and
-burned; but the buccaneers often came near to destruction also. Only by
-luck did they escape, and at La Serena the Dons, under cover of
-darkness, swam to the Trinity on inflated hides, placed combustibles
-and explosives between the rudder and the stern post of the ship and
-fired them. Just in time the buccaneers discovered the source of the
-blaze and prevented the loss of ship and all within her. Fearing their
-numerous prisoners would plot successfully against them, the
-buccaneers, after this, set all the Dons ashore and, finding it
-necessary to refit, sailed to Juan Fernandez island.
-
-“It was now December, and the buccaneers spent a wild and riotous
-Christmas upon the isle, firing salutes, building bonfires, singing and
-shouting, drinking and carousing; frightening the seals and the birds
-with their wild cries, startling the goats with their ribald laughter;
-gambling and making merry, for which we can scarcely blame them, for it
-was the first holiday they had had since leaving Coiba, five months
-before.
-
-“And here at Juan Fernandez dissensions among the men once more arose.
-Some were for going home at once; others wished to remain longer, while
-all declared they would sail no longer under Sharp for the
-reason—incredible as it may seem—that he had failed to observe the
-Sabbath! So here on Juan Fernandez the ungodly pirates deposed their
-commander because he was not sufficiently religious and in his stead
-elected a hoary old buccaneer named John Watling. Sharp, naturally
-resenting this, was quickly silenced by being cast, willynilly, into
-the hold, where he had ample chance to think over his wicked past and
-moralize on the psychology of men who would slit a friar’s throat one
-moment and clamor for prayers and divine services the next.
-
-“Under their new captain the Sabbath was rigorously observed, and
-Ringrose writes, speaking of the first Sunday under Watling’s command,
-‘This day was the first Sunday that ever we kept by command and consent
-since the loss and death of our valiant commander, Captain Sawkins. Our
-generous-hearted commander threw the dice overboard, finding them in
-use on the said day.’
-
-“Under Watling, the Trinity sailed to Iquique and there captured
-several prisoners, among them an aged Indian from whom they sought to
-obtain information of Arica, which they planned to raid the second
-time. Evidently, from what transpired, Captain Sharp had seen the error
-of his ways and had made up his mind to be a most moral pirate in
-future. Having been released from the hold, he was on deck when the
-Indian prisoner was questioned, and he protested most vehemently
-against Watling’s orders to shoot the prisoner because, so the
-buccaneers imagined, he had not told them the truth. Finding his pleas
-for the Indian in vain, Sharp dipped his hands in a basin of water and
-dramatically declared, ‘Gentlemen, I am clear of the blood of this old
-man. And I will warrant you a hot day for this piece of cruelty
-whenever we come to fight at Arica.’
-
-“And verily did the buccaneers learn to their sorrow how they had
-misjudged the Indian and how true was Sharp’s prophecy, for Arica had
-been strongly fortified and garrisoned, just as the captive had
-related; the buccaneers were ignominiously defeated with heavy loss;
-Captain Watling and a number of other officers were killed, and the
-beaten and decimated buccaneers clamored loudly for Bartholomew Sharp
-once more to take command. Sharp, however, refused at first to listen
-to them, having had enough of their fickle natures, but finding that,
-unless he or some one took charge immediately all would be destroyed,
-he at last consented, and after severe fighting managed to get the
-survivors to their ship, although the surgeons were left behind. In
-fact the buccaneers had the closest shave of all their lives at Arica.
-Not only were they beaten back, killed and wounded by scores, and
-forced to retreat to the outlying country in disorder, but the Dons
-were on the point of destroying their boats when they were rallied by
-Sharp, and only by a sharp hand-to-hand struggle did the English
-succeed in recovering them. Now, however, the men looked upon Sharp
-with reverence and awe, for not only had he saved their lives, but with
-the superstition of sailors, they remembered his prophecy, believed he
-had occult power and cursed the late Watling right and left for having
-destroyed the Indian prisoner and disregarded Sharp’s warning.
-
-“The buccaneers were now greatly reduced in numbers. They had lost
-twenty-eight killed and eighteen desperately wounded, as well as about
-a dozen who had fallen into the Spaniards’ hands, and of the original
-one hundred and forty men who had set sail on the wild adventure in the
-Trinity a bare seventy now remained who were in condition to work or
-fight. But lack of men did not trouble Sharp in the least. Heading
-northward, they ravished city after city, leaving a trail of blood and
-smoke behind them, and at last put into the Gulf of Nicoya, battered,
-weatherbeaten and vastly in need of repairs to both themselves and
-their ship. But when off San Miguel dissensions had once more arisen,
-and forty-seven more of the men deserted and headed overland across
-Darien as had those who had gone before. Their experiences were much
-the same as those others, although as the rainy season had not come on
-they were more fortunate, but they had many narrow escapes and many
-adventures nevertheless.
-
-“With his forces now reduced to less than fifty men Sharp put into the
-Gulf, took prizes of the ships there, raided the villages and by good
-luck succeeded in making prisoners of some shipwrights and carpenters
-who were engaged in building ships for the Spaniards. These artizans he
-impressed into his service and at once proceeded to put the battered
-Blessed Trinity into condition for the long and dangerous voyage around
-South America and up the Atlantic to the Antilles. For, despite losses,
-desertions and all, Sharp and the remaining buccaneers were determined
-to carry out their original plans. They had now been in the Pacific for
-over a year, carrying terror far and wide, swooping upon every town or
-village they could find, capturing vessels and ever managing to escape
-in their shot-torn, dingy old galleon, and now Sharp planned to make
-her as staunch and seaworthy as possible with the materials and labor
-at his command. With almost superhuman efforts the deck was taken up
-and relaid, new planking was put in her shattered sides, the masts were
-all shortened and the ship was rerigged and refitted from truck to
-water line. Then Sharp graciously thanked his captive carpenters and
-presented them with a vessel he had captured as a reward for their
-services. Then, freeing all the prisoners and most of the slaves they
-had taken, the buccaneers set sail for the Gulf of Dulce, where the
-ship was careened and cleaned, it having been impossible to do this at
-Nicoya. The condition that the craft was in can be imagined as she had
-not been cleaned, either outside or in, since she had fallen into the
-buccaneers’ hands—and the Lord only knows when before that. Ringrose
-states that, ‘when we came to cleanse her hold both myself and several
-others were struck blind with the filth and nastiness of it.’
-
-“But at last it was done and the Trinity sailed forth from the Gulf of
-Dulce and started on her long deferred voyage to the distant Caribbean.
-And as they sailed, many a rich prize fell to those upon the one-time
-galleon. Within ten days after starting, a ship was taken with over
-forty thousand pieces of eight and, by a strange coincidence, this
-proved to be the same ship from which they had won so much treasure and
-wine in Panama harbor over a year before. Ship after ship they took,
-but ever freeing all prisoners and turning them loose in the vessels
-after they had been looted, for Sharp had no mind to burden himself
-with hungry mouths which were of no use to him. Down the coast they
-sailed, avoiding conflicts ashore,—although, truth to tell, there was
-little to be got after having raided the coast twice within the
-twelvemonth,—until finally, leaving the last settlements and inhabited
-lands astern, they bore through cold and stormy seas towards the tip of
-the continent. They stopped in at Tierra del Fuego, found and mapped
-uncharted, storm-lashed isles, hunted penguins and seals, and battered
-by mountainous waves, buffeted by ice-laden gales, crept ever farther
-south, searching for the entrance to the Strait of Magellan.
-
-“And remember that they had only the crudest instruments with which to
-navigate, only a rough quadrant for finding their latitude, and no
-means whatever, save dead reckoning, for determining their longitude.
-Their ship, despite their efforts to put it in seaworthy shape, was
-leaky, strained and filled with patched shot holes, and they were in
-one of the stormiest parts of the world in the wildest season of the
-year. Often their sails were torn to ribbons or carried away, the ship
-was sheathed in ice, and after tedious beating through storm and sleet
-for days they would be driven back in a night farther than they had
-gained in a week. Let me quote a few passages from Ringrose’s log and
-you will get a better idea of what that handful of grim buccaneers in
-the Blessed Trinity underwent. Here, for example, under date of
-November 10th, he says, ‘Day being come the wind increased and at noon
-blew our mainsail to pieces. Hereupon we were forced to lower the yard
-and unbend the sail, lying under mizzen. But that too gave way and all
-the rest of the day we lay a hull in dark weather, foggy and windy,
-with a huge sea that oftentime rolled over us.’ The next day he
-reports, ‘All last night we had furious weather with seas higher and
-higher.’ On November 16th the fore shrouds gave way; for several days
-hereafter it was ‘so foggy we could not see the stem from the stern’;
-they narrowly escaped running into icebergs and, to make matters worse,
-their provisions had run low and the men were on the most scanty
-rations. Several of the crew were frostbitten; others were so benumbed
-with the intense cold they could not stand, and at last they realized
-that they could not find the sought-for Straits and that there was
-nothing for it but to stand on to the eastward through uncharted polar
-seas in the hopes of rounding Cape Horn.
-
-“Day after day they kept on, bending on new sails as fast as they were
-carried away; splicing and repairing rigging as it parted; half
-starved, numb with cold, often unable to secure a sight to learn where
-they were, but ever grimly heading east and north and blindly plunging
-into the long, green, storm-swept seas.
-
-“And at last they found they were making northing, the tempests were
-less severe, the weather was appreciably warmer, and they realized,
-with heartfelt joy, that they had rounded the Cape and actually were in
-the Atlantic. By the 7th of December they were well north of Cape
-Horn—off the mouth of Rio de la Plata, in fact—but they had sighted no
-land since leaving Tierra del Fuego and had not the least idea how many
-scores or hundreds of miles they might be from either the South
-American or the African coast.
-
-“Now the awful struggles the ship had undergone began to tell, and she
-sprang more leaks, until the men, on less than quarter rations, were
-compelled to toil day and night at the pumps. Yet they were cheered,
-for the weather was constantly becoming warmer and fairer, and though
-several men died from the result of frost bites and exposure, the
-others took heart. But it was maddening for them to see porpoises,
-dolphins, bonitos and sea birds about their ship and yet be unable to
-obtain them to eke out their perilously low supply of food. The fish
-would not take the hook, the birds gave them no chance to shoot, and
-the haggard, dull-eyed, tattered men watched with hungry eyes the
-bountiful supply of food quite beyond their reach.
-
-“Since leaving the tropics in the Pacific not a mouthful of meat, save
-a few oily penguins and a seal or two, had passed their lips. The only
-meat upon the ship was a sow which had been taken aboard as a suckling
-pig in the far-off Gulf of Nicoya, and on Christmas Day this was
-slaughtered for the men’s dinner. Starvation was staring them in the
-face, but on January 5th they captured a hundred-and-twenty-pound
-albicore and great was the rejoicing. Two days later they took an even
-larger one, and now they discovered that their water casks had sprung
-leaks and that only a few pannikins of the precious liquid remained.
-Only a quart a day was allowed to a man, and sweltering under the
-equatorial sun, baffled with light winds and calms, the men’s plight
-was pitiable. In order to keep afloat they toiled ceaselessly at the
-pumps, falling exhausted on the sizzling decks, cursing and moaning,
-crying for water, and several dying raving mad.
-
-“But now they were well north of the equator. Somewhere ahead, Ringrose
-felt sure, were the Caribbean isles they longed to see, and Captain
-Sharp offered a reward to the first man to sight land.
-
-“On the 28th of January the glad cry came ringing from the masthead
-and, straining their eyes, the half dead men saw the faint and hazy
-outline of land upon the horizon. Then cheer after cheer rose from
-those thirst-cracked throats, the men forgot their troubles, their
-hunger, their ceaseless toil, for all recognized the welcome bit of
-earth as the island of Barbados.
-
-“Marvelous indeed had been Ringrose’s navigation. Had he been equipped
-with a modern sextant, with the latest nautical almanacs and the most
-perfect chronometer, he could not have done better. By sheer dead
-reckoning for his longitude, and by his crude instruments to find his
-latitude, he had won within ten miles of the goal for which he had
-made—truly an almost incredible piece of seamanship.
-
-“Weather-beaten, patched, her rigging frayed and spliced; her masts
-awry, her sails mended and discolored, with gaping holes in her
-bulwarks, with the charred marks of fire still upon her hacked-off poop
-and with her crew more like ghosts than living men, the Blessed Trinity
-headed for Bridgetown with the frayed and faded British ensign at her
-peak and Sharp’s red banner with its green and white ribbons at her
-masthead.
-
-“But the homesick, sea-weary buccaneers were not to set foot upon the
-green shores of Barbados, for within the bay lay a British frigate.
-Sharp realized that, in the eyes of the law, he and his men were
-pirates, and so, with clanging pumps, the Trinity swept by the island,
-while the wondering folk ashore gazed in amazement at this strange
-ship, this vision that, gaunt and gray and battered, slipped by like a
-wraith, and to their superstitious minds savored of the Flying
-Dutchman. But the buccaneers’ ‘most dangerous voyage’ was almost at an
-end. At Antigua, two days later, Ringrose and thirteen of the men went
-ashore and secured passage on the Lisbon Merchant for England, while
-Sharp and the others sailed to Nevis. There the ‘great sea artist and
-admirable captain,’ as Ringrose calls him, presented his men with the
-ship and sailed for Bristol.
-
-“Thus ended that most memorable voyage, that venture which had taken
-the buccaneers across Darien, up and down the length of South America
-twice, and around Cape Horn and back to the Antilles in a captured
-Spanish galleon. Two years had passed since they had plunged into the
-jungles of Darien; two years without sight of fellow countrymen or news
-of home; two years in enemies’ seas and enemies’ country, and welcome
-indeed was the sight of the verdant British islands and of Englishmen
-once more.”
-
-“What became of Captain Sharp and Ringrose?” asked Jack. “Gosh, that
-was a wonderful voyage. It ought to be more famous than Morgan’s.”
-
-“Sharp and a number of his men were tried for piracy when they arrived
-in England,” replied Mr. Bickford. “But they were acquitted. The
-specific charge brought against them was the taking of the San Rosario
-and the killing of her captain, but it was proved that the Spaniards
-fired the first shot and the men were freed on a plea of self-defense.
-Their fellows, who after Sharp’s departure made their way to Jamaica,
-were less fortunate. Two of the three were acquitted, but the third
-pleaded guilty and was hanged. Ringrose himself settled down for a
-well-earned, quiet life, but the love of the sea and the call of
-adventure was too great. In 1683 he joined with his old comrades Wafer,
-Dampier and Swan and went back to the Pacific, piloting the ship Cygnet
-around Cape Horn. He was killed a few years later in a battle with the
-Dons on the west coast of Central America, but that is another story.”
-
-“But, Dad, you didn’t tell us how much loot they got in all that time,”
-complained Jack.
-
-“It’s not recorded,” replied his father. “Owing to the long voyage the
-treasure was divided up after every raid or prize. But the greatest
-treasure they took they threw away.”
-
-“How on earth was that?” asked Fred.
-
-His uncle chuckled. “I often think what a bitter pill it must have been
-for Sharp and the others to swallow,” replied Mr. Bickford. “The San
-Rosario—the ship for the taking of which the men were tried—had very
-little treasure aboard her, apparently. She was laden with huge ingots
-of what the buccaneers supposed was tin and this was thrown overboard,
-one of the buccaneers retaining a single ingot as a keepsake. Imagine
-the chagrin of the men when, during their trial, they learned that the
-supposed tin was solid silver! They had cast into the sea, as
-worthless, more riches than they had won on their entire venture!”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE LAST OF THE BUCCANEERS
-
-
-“Gosh, that was a good joke on the buccaneers,” laughed Jack. “Now do
-tell us more about Ringrose, Dad. He must have been a fine fellow. Just
-as soon as you get through I’m going to borrow that log of his and read
-it from beginning to end.”
-
-“Me, too,” cried Fred with enthusiasm. “And I’m going to read
-Esquemeling.”
-
-“You’ll find both Esquemeling’s and Ringrose’s log most interesting,”
-said Mr. Bickford, “and you’ll be amused at the map. See here—this is
-the chart by which Ringrose steered the Trinity. See how the Amazon and
-the Rio de la Plata are pictured as one huge estuary of the sea, making
-part of Brazil and all of Uruguay and Paraguay into a great island.
-Very little was known of South America in those days, although, as you
-will notice, the West Indies and Central America were accurately
-shown.”
-
-“Golly, I don’t see how they ever did get around,” declared Fred, as
-the two boys studied the ancient chart. “Hadn’t any one else ever
-sailed around the Horn before?”
-
-“Yes,” replied his uncle. “Vasco da Gama had done so, and Drake and
-Magellan had gone through the Straits, but no buccaneer had ever
-attempted it and none had sailed from the Pacific around into the
-Atlantic. But the success of Sharp’s voyage and Ringrose’s experiences
-led the way for many a later buccaneer raid into the South Sea, as they
-called the Pacific. Buccaneering was no longer a safe profession in the
-Caribbean, for any buccaneers caught were tried and hanged as pirates,
-but the South Seas were out of England’s jurisdiction and offered a
-fine field. It is unnecessary to go into details of all the
-buccaneering, or perhaps I might say pirating, cruises that were made
-to the Pacific, but it is well to learn a little of the more noteworthy
-ones, especially as our old friends Dampier, Wafer and Ringrose took
-prominent parts in them.
-
-“The first buccaneers to sail for the ‘South Sea’ after Sharp’s
-exploits became known, set forth from Chesapeake Bay in August, 1683.
-Their ship was the Revenge, of eighteen guns and seventy men, in charge
-of Captain John Davis, who had won considerable fame as a pirate by
-sacking St. Augustine, Florida. With Davis went Cook, who had
-accompanied Sharp, as well as Wafer, the surgeon, who had received such
-unappreciated honors at the hands of the Darien Indians. Off the coast
-of Sierra Leone they seized a Danish ship of thirty-six guns and,
-finding her a much better vessel than their own, at once transferred
-their belongings to the prize and scuttled the Revenge. Then, renaming
-their new ship the Bachelors’ Delight, the corsairs headed for Cape
-Horn and reached Juan Fernandez without mishap. Here they fell in with
-another buccaneer ship, the Nicholas, and together the two cruised
-northward to the Gulf of Nicoya, taking many prizes and attacking, with
-considerable success, the smaller towns on the South America coast. In
-the Gulf of Nicoya Cook died and Davis was left as sole
-commander-in-chief. Those on the Nicholas, however, were bent on
-pirating through the East Indies and shortly after Cook’s death parted
-from the Bachelors’ Delight and set off on their own account, leaving a
-grewsome trail through the South Seas and along the African coast on
-their way to England. Davis and his company confined their activities
-to the American coast until they met the Cygnet at the Island of La
-Plata. The latter, which had been fitted out as a trader in London, had
-soon abandoned peaceable pursuits and had become a full-fledged pirate
-with our old friend Ringrose as navigator or pilot and Dampier, the
-naturalist-author, as quarter-master, with an old buccaneer named Swan
-in command. The two ships at once agreed to keep together and we may be
-sure there were wildly hilarious times when Dampier, Ringrose, Wafer
-and the others once more met, here in this out-of-the-world spot in the
-Pacific. Remembering the rich pickings they had had under Sharp, the
-veterans urged attacks on Paita, Guayaquil, Panama and other towns as
-they had done in the Trinity. But the Dons had grown wise; corsairs
-were no longer rare or unexpected upon the Pacific, and a warm
-reception met the buccaneers at every town they visited. They took many
-prizes nevertheless, and we may be quite sure that no more cargoes of
-‘tin’ were cast into the sea.
-
-“For several weeks they blockaded Panama, and while off this port they
-were reënforced by Captains Grogniet and L’Escayer, French buccaneers,
-who with two hundred Frenchmen and one hundred and eighty English had
-crossed the Isthmus. Shortly after, Captain Townley with one hundred
-and eighty buccaneers arrived by the same route, and a little later two
-hundred and sixty more French appeared. With a total force of nine
-hundred and sixty men, which Davis divided among ten captured ships,
-the buccaneers felt they were strong enough to withstand anything and
-impatiently awaited the arrival of the plate fleet from Lima.
-
-“But when, on May 28, 1685, the long-expected treasure fleet hove in
-sight the buccaneers’ hearts fell. For the Dons had been warned and
-instead of helpless galleons carrying the vast fortune in gold and
-bullion, the pirates saw, to their consternation, that the plate was
-convoyed by six great Spanish warships, six smaller sloops of war and
-two fire ships. The buccaneers had no mind to commit suicide and after
-firing a few defiant-shots at long range they very wisely pulled up
-anchors and sailed away, leaving the triumphant Dons to discharge their
-precious cargo in peace.
-
-“Arriving at the Island of Quibo, the buccaneers met still another
-party of pirates and almost at once dissensions arose between the
-French and British corsairs. As a result, Davis and his men sailed
-north, plundered Leon and Rio Lexa in Nicaragua, and, learning that a
-plate ship was due from Manila, they cruised along the coasts of Mexico
-and Central America awaiting its arrival. But they were not content to
-wait patiently and must needs raid the coastal towns, with the result
-that over sixty of Swan’s men were cut off and completely wiped out by
-a Spanish ambuscade. This was the most severe blow the pirates had ever
-received on the South Sea, and among the killed were several officers
-and the pilot, Basil Ringrose.
-
-“Disappointed at missing the galleon and furious at the loss of his
-men, Swan accused Davis of negligence and a severe quarrel arose among
-the buccaneers. This ended in Swan setting sail for the Philippines,
-where his men mutinied and the unfortunate captain and thirty-six
-others were marooned, the Cygnet sailing on without them. Among the
-mutineers was Dampier, still, no doubt, keeping his journal in his
-‘joyente of bamboo,’ and very interestingly he wrote of the Celebes,
-Timor, New Holland and Australia. At the Nicobar Islands Dampier had
-had enough of pirating, and with a few companions, deserted the Cygnet
-and by hook or crook managed to reach England in safety, where he
-devoted the rest of his life to publishing his journals and his
-‘special draughts’ for the edification of his less adventurous
-countrymen.
-
-“It was lucky he did so, for the ship, thoroughly unseaworthy, barely
-succeeded in reaching Madagascar before she foundered. Here some of the
-men settled down and took service with the native chiefs while others,
-in time, reached home.
-
-“In the meantime, Townley had also left Swan and had set out to rejoin
-his erstwhile French allies, with whom he took vast treasure at Quibo,
-Grenada and Lavelia, although Townley lost his life at the last place.
-
-“The Bachelors’ Delight continued to cruise up and down the coast of
-Peru for the next two years, sacking many towns, seizing innumerable
-ships and accumulating vast plunder, which Davis is reputed to have
-hidden on the Galápagos Islands.
-
-“But the Dons were becoming heartily sick of the nuisance of the
-English pirates, and early in 1687, sent a powerful fleet to destroy
-them. A terrific battle resulted, a running fight being kept up for
-seven days, and, though many of the pirates were killed, the ship
-managed to escape. The buccaneers, however, had had a wholesome lesson,
-and when, a few days later, they again met Townley’s men they decided
-to revenge themselves for their loss by one last raid. This fell on
-Guayaquil, which was taken and sacked, and then, realizing even the
-South Sea was becoming too hot for them, the pirates refitted at the
-Galápagos and sailed around Cape Horn to the Virgin Islands, where they
-arrived in 1688, after five years of pirating in the Pacific.”
-
-“Gosh, I never knew before that there were buccaneers in the
-Philippines and Madagascar and all those places,” said Jack. “Say, they
-went all over the world, didn’t they?”
-
-“You forget,” his father reminded him, “that they were no longer
-buccaneers in the true sense of the word. They had degenerated to
-common pirates and attacked any ship they met, except British, and they
-were not by any means overpunctilious in that respect. Early in the
-eighteenth century,—soon after the Cygnet’s wreck, in fact?—Madagascar
-became a favorite pirates’ lair and they even set up an independent
-kingdom, or rather republic, there. Had they possessed a leader such as
-Morgan, Mansvelt or Sharp, no doubt they would have maintained a colony
-which might have established British dominion over a vast area, but
-they were always quarreling among themselves and never succeeded in
-anything for long.”
-
-“But what became of them all?” asked Fred. “They never seemed to get
-killed off or hung.”
-
-“Some settled down in the West Indies, others in England or Europe and
-others in the American colonies, and led respectable lives under
-fictitious names among people who never suspected who they were. At
-times, though, they were recognized, brought to trial or hung or
-managed to slip away and find new homes. Many a well-to-do planter in
-the West Indies; many a wealthy merchant and shipowner in the New
-England colonies, made the beginnings of his fortune by pirating. And
-many of them, of whom the world never hears, led most romantic and
-adventurous lives. For example, there was Red Legs. He was a most
-picturesque character—not a pirate by choice, but by force of
-circumstances, and I’m happy to say that he eventually became a highly
-respected and charitable man. Indeed, I have actually stopped in the
-house he built and occupied after he gave up piracy.”
-
-“Oh, do tell about him!” cried Jack. “Gee—that’s a great name—Red Legs!
-I’ll bet he was a peach of a pirate.”
-
-“He was,” asserted Mr. Bickford, with a smile. “But I must pass over
-his career very briefly, for there were many other interesting
-buccaneers and pirates I have not mentioned as yet.
-
-“Red Legs was originally a slave—one of those unfortunates who were
-taken during Cromwell’s time, and, because they wore kilts—being Irish
-and Scotch, they were nicknamed ‘red-legs.’ At that time it was
-customary to ship prisoners and malefactors as slaves to the West
-Indies, where they were sold for fifteen hundred pounds of sugar each.
-They were marked or branded like cattle, compelled to labor with the
-blacks and were treated far more cruelly than the negro slaves. Many of
-them were shipped to Barbados and their descendants may still be seen
-there and are still called ‘red-legs.’ A few have become well-to-do,
-but the majority are miserable, ragged, degenerate folk who have never
-recovered from the effects of their ancestors’ servitude.
-
-“The future pirate ‘Red Legs,’ however, fell into good hands—a planter
-who secretly sympathized with the prisoners’ cause,—and he was well
-educated and was practically adopted by his owner. When still a mere
-lad, however, his owner died and he was sold to a cruel master who made
-life miserable for him. As a result, he decided to stow away on some
-ship bound for a Dutch island, but in the darkness, when swimming to
-the vessel, he became confused and by chance clambered onto the deck of
-a buccaneer ship. As a result, he was compelled to join the pirates and
-took part in their raids. But he was no pirate at heart. He could never
-bear the sight of tortures or brutality and resented the treatment of
-captive women. Once, in a quarrel over a female prisoner whom the
-captain was maltreating, the ex-slave killed his commander and, to his
-amazement, was elected captain himself. As a buccaneer chief he
-performed some really amazing deeds. He took the Island of Margarita
-and the vast fortune in pearls awaiting transportation to Spain. He
-sacked Santa Ysobel in Mexico, and he became one of the most notorious
-West Indian corsairs, although he was famed for the fact that he never
-permitted cruelties or the butchering of prisoners. Eventually he tired
-of the life and settled in Nevis with an old crony. Here he was
-discovered and cast into prison, but was freed by the earthquake that
-destroyed the town and, clinging to a floating bit of wreckage, escaped
-the fate of thousands of the citizens. Eventually he made his way to
-Dominica, settled down again and spent the remaining days of his life
-in peace, a most worthy citizen. But ever he must have lived in deadly
-fear of discovery or betrayal. His house was built like a fortress with
-moats, heavy walls and underground vaults, while the balustrade to his
-verandah was most fittingly fashioned from old musket barrels.”
-
-“Well, he was really a good pirate,” declared Jack. “Were there any
-others like him?”
-
-“Not exactly,” replied his father. “But men often took to piracy for
-most peculiar reasons. For example, there was Major Stede Bonnet, also
-a native of Barbados. But unlike Red Legs, Major Bonnet, far from being
-a slave, was a most honored and well-to-do member of the colony. He was
-a gentleman by birth, well educated, possessed a large fortune and was
-an army officer. However, there was one fly in the gallant Major’s
-ointment. He had a nagging, scolding wife. But not until in 1716, when
-the Major began acting most strangely, did tongues begin to wag over
-him or his household. At that date Major Bonnet suddenly purchased a
-sloop, fitted her with ten guns and engaged a crew of seventy men.
-Then, indeed, did speculation become rife. To all inquiries the Major
-replied ‘wait’ and the mystery deepened as the shipwrights rigged the
-craft, and upon its stern appeared the name ‘Revenge.’ Then one dark
-night, the Revenge slipped out of the harbor and disappeared, but in a
-few months came tidings of her that were a nine days’ wonder in
-Barbados. Major Stede had turned pirate! The Revenge was cruising off
-the American coast, taking prizes right and left; she had become the
-terror of Philadelphia, Salem, Norfolk and other coast towns, and the
-Major, to add insult to injury had made Gardiner’s Island in Long
-Island Sound his headquarters. Evidently pirating had appealed to the
-Major as a peaceful life beside the nagging tongue of Mrs. Bonnet.
-
-“But the poor, hen-pecked Major’s career did not last long. He fell in
-with Teach, otherwise known as Blackbeard, who pretended to be an ally
-and then ruthlessly robbed the amateur pirate, and, a little later, the
-Major was captured off the Carolina coast. He managed to escape in a
-canoe, but the reward of seventy pounds sterling offered for him, dead
-or alive, soon brought results. He was retaken, tried at Charleston and
-hanged. After the long-winded lecture and flowery-worded harangue that
-the presiding judge inflicted upon the poor condemned man the Major
-must have really welcomed hanging, and as he did not even plead the
-‘discomforts to be found in the married state’ as extenuating
-circumstances for his misdeeds the execution was carried out at once.”
-
-“That would have been funny if the poor Major hadn’t been hanged,” said
-Jack. “But please tell us about Blackbeard. Was he a buccaneer?”
-
-“I’ll tell you of him presently,” replied Mr. Bickford, “but let us
-follow up the history of the buccaneers in its proper sequence first.
-As I have said, the buccaneers, as such, were practically destroyed
-when Morgan was made Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica and waged a
-relentless war on his former associates. But to drive the corsairs from
-all their lairs in the Islands and about the Spanish Main was too big a
-job even for Morgan and the British king. To be sure they were driven
-from Jamaica, but the French still held Tortuga; there was a fortified
-island where they foregathered in Samaná Bay in Santo Domingo, and on
-many a small outlying bay and islet they were comparatively safe. Then
-there were the Dutch Islands and the Virgins. These last were
-particular favorites of the buccaneers. They belonged to France,
-Sweden, Denmark, Holland and England and always they had been neutral
-ground for the freebooters. Here in these tiny out-of-the-way spots
-they could careen and refit, could carouse ashore and were safe from
-pursuit. The people looked upon them as friends; they spent money
-freely, and in return for the privileges and security afforded them,
-they never molested the inhabitants or their property. Many a buccaneer
-has swung to his own yardarm for an insult to some Virgin Islander;
-many a man was pistoled by his captain for attempting to make free with
-Virgin Islander’s property, and in the Virgin Island ports—in St.
-Martin, St. Barts, St. John, Anegada and even in St. Thomas the
-remnants of the Brethren of the Main found snug lairs.
-
-“Many of the little islands were surrounded with dangerous reefs, where
-large ships could not enter, but whose secret channels were known to
-the buccaneers, and at almost all of them the corsairs erected forts
-and mounted guns. Montbars, the ‘Exterminator,’ as he was called, made
-his headquarters at Saint Bartholomew or St. Barts as it is more
-commonly called, others selected St. Martin, others Virgin Gorda and
-still more Anegada. All about here are names redolent of the
-buccaneers, such as Norman Island, Dead Man’s Chest, Rum Island,
-Dutchman’s Cap, Broken Jerusalem, while we also find such places as Sir
-Francis Drake’s Bay, Rendezvous Bay, Privateers’ Bay, Gallows Bay,
-Doubloon Cove, etc.
-
-“Most of the freebooters at Anegada were destroyed or driven off by
-expeditions sent from Jamaica by Morgan, for Anegada, like Virgin Gorda
-and Tortola, were British; but the buccaneers, who, you must remember,
-were now out-and-out pirates and had been declared so by England and
-France, were still comparatively safe in the Dutch and Danish isles.
-Indeed, the Danish officials were quite openly in league with the
-pirates, and one governor of St. Thomas, Adolf Esmit—who, by the way,
-had been a buccaneer himself—was closely identified with a most
-notorious pirate, Jean Hamlin.
-
-“It was in 1682—about the time Sharp returned from his ‘dangerous
-voyage’—that Hamlin took as a prize the French ship, La Trompeuse,
-refitted her as a corsair and made a swift and successful piratical
-cruise through the Caribbean. Despite all protests of the British,
-Hamlin made his headquarters at St. Thomas, where he was entertained by
-the governor—with whom, no doubt, he shared his loot—and was afforded
-every courtesy and aid in fitting for another raid. For over a year
-Hamlin wrought havoc with British, French, Spanish and Dutch shipping
-with equal impartiality, finally culminating in a wholesale capture of
-seventeen Dutch and British ships off the coast of Africa.
-
-“Returning from this foray the pirates were loudly welcomed in St.
-Thomas; the merchants bid for the loot brought ashore, and Hamlin made
-merry with his good friend, the governor. But word of the corsair’s
-whereabouts had been carried to the neighboring British Islands.
-Governor Stapelton, of Antigua, despatched the H.M.S. Francis under
-stout old Captain Carlisle to St. Thomas, and three days after Hamlin’s
-triumphant arrival at the island the British frigate sailed into the
-harbor.
-
-“It was useless for the pirates to attempt to escape or to resist.
-Their ship was under the guns of the frigate scarcely a pistol shot
-away and, hastily scrambling into their boats and firing a few guns to
-‘save their faces,’ the pirate captain and his men rowed for shore and
-sought protection under the wings of the governor. Carlisle wasted no
-time in formalities and, despite the fact that he was in the waters of
-Denmark, promptly fired the pirate ship and blew her to bits.
-
-“Of course Governor Esmit protested, claiming he had already seized the
-Trompeuse in the name of the Danish king, but Captain Carlisle snapped
-his fingers—figuratively speaking—in the Danes’ faces, asked them what
-they were going to do about it and sailed away, well satisfied with a
-good deed well done. In the meantime, Esmit provided the pirates with a
-new vessel, but realizing that complications might arise, he suggested,
-in a friendly way, that henceforth some more isolated, out-of-the-way
-spot would be better adapted to piratical uses.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-KIDD, THE PIRATE WHO WASN’T A PIRATE
-
-
-“Whew, I didn’t know they had pirates and buccaneers right up here
-around home!” exclaimed Fred. “Think of pirates in Long Island Sound!”
-
-“Of course there were,” declared Jack. “If there weren’t, how do you
-suppose Captain Kidd could have buried his treasure up here?”
-
-“That’s so,” admitted his cousin. “But I always thought he pirated down
-in the West Indies and just brought his treasure up here to hide it. Do
-you suppose he really did bury anything up this way, Uncle Henry?”
-
-Mr. Bickford laughed. “No, most of those stories are purely
-imagination,” he replied. “There isn’t a stretch of coast from Canada
-to South America that hasn’t got its tale of buried pirate treasure. If
-they all were true there’d be more valuables hidden by the pirates than
-all the corsairs ever took.”
-
-“Didn’t the buccaneers and pirates really bury treasure, then?” asked
-Jack. “You said that Davis was supposed to have hidden his loot on the
-Galápagos Islands.”
-
-“Undoubtedly they did,” his father assured him. “The buccaneer leaders
-were far more thrifty than their men, and as there were no banking
-facilities in the haunts of the pirates and no safe hiding places in
-the towns, I have not the least doubt that they did bury vast
-quantities of their booty. But, also, I have no doubt but that they
-eventually dug most of it up again. The majority of the buccaneer and
-pirate captains retired from the profession and settled down to a life
-of peace and plenty, as I have said, and there is no reason why they
-should have left their treasure hidden away. Of course those who were
-suddenly killed might have had money and valuables secreted at the time
-of their death, but there were far greater fortunes hidden by the
-Spaniards than by the pirates. No doubt thousands and thousands of
-dollars’ worth of money, plate and jewels were buried or hidden by the
-Dons to prevent their falling into the buccaneers’ hands and were never
-recovered. Very often the owners were killed or made prisoners and the
-secret of the treasure died with them, or they died a natural death
-without digging up their buried riches.
-
-“Of course a great deal of hidden treasure has been found of which the
-world never hears. In most countries the government claims a large
-share of such finds and naturally the finder, having no desire to share
-his unexpected fortune, keeps mum when he discovers it. There are
-countless cases of poor negroes and others in the West Indies suddenly
-becoming well-to-do without apparent reason. From time to time ancient
-coins appear at money changers and now and then we hear of treasure
-being found. But as a rule, the sums discovered are not large and are
-found by accident.
-
-“And with few exceptions there is every reason to believe that the
-valuables were hidden by their lawful owners or were lost or
-accidentally buried. For example, there was the man Gayney, who was
-drowned in Darien and who had three hundred pieces of eight on his
-person. Any one might find that and think it was buried treasure and
-never imagine it was the loot carried on a man’s back. At other times,
-boats loaded with valuables were wrecked or sunk and the treasure lost.
-Then, years later, it is found in the sand of the shore and the finders
-think of it as buried treasure. Moreover, wherever the pirates
-foregathered they naturally lost more or less money and if, by chance,
-some one picks up a few doubloons or pieces of eight in such places it
-always starts a tale of buried loot. At Anegada, St. John, St. Martin
-and, in fact, every other buccaneers’ old haunt, pieces of money are
-picked up from time to time and from these finds the tales of buried
-treasure have originated. In all the reliable histories and chronicles
-of the buccaneers and pirates I have never found any statement or hint
-that would lead one to think that it was customary for the corsairs to
-bury or hide their loot. All the tales of pirate captains burying
-treasure at dead of night and shooting the men who dug the holes are
-pure fiction with no fact on which to base them.
-
-“But there is no question that vast amounts of treasure lie at the
-bottom of the sea in the Caribbean and elsewhere. Port Royal, Jamaica,
-slipped bodily into the sea with all its treasure—and there was
-undoubtedly vast sums in money and jewels in the place—and not a cent
-has ever been salvaged. Jamestown, in Nevis, was also submerged by an
-earthquake and all the riches it contained still lie at the bottom of
-the sea. Countless ships, attacked by the buccaneers, sank before the
-pirates could loot them and went to the bottom with their valuables,
-and many a buccaneers’ and pirates’ vessel was lost with thousands of
-dollars worth of treasure. The floor of the Caribbean is dotted with
-such wrecks. In some cases the men escaped and told of the loss, and
-the places where the ships went down are known, but in many cases the
-vessels with all their treasure and crew merely disappeared and no one
-knows their fate. It was thus with Grammont, a famous French buccaneer,
-who, in 1686, plundered and burnt Campeche and secured a vast treasure.
-But he and his ship were never heard from and beyond a doubt the
-immense fortune in gold, silver and precious stones lies somewhere
-among the rotted timbers of his ship at the bottom of the Caribbean.”
-
-“Well, it doesn’t sound as if treasure hunting would be very
-profitable,” remarked Jack.
-
-“Far more money has been spent in searching for treasure than ever was
-lost,” declared Mr. Bickford. “There was the Peruvian treasure supposed
-to have been hidden on Cocos Island—a vast fortune in church plate,
-holy vessels and coin which was taken away to prevent it falling into
-the hands of the enemy. Innumerable expeditions have set out to find it
-but none have succeeded, although many have claimed to possess maps of
-the spot. But during the years that have passed, the island has
-altered, there have been landslides, and, if we are to believe the most
-reliable reports, the treasure lies buried under thousands of tons of
-rock and earth that has fallen from the mountainside. And as far as
-known the treasures that were lost when the Dons hurriedly sent it away
-from Old Panama to prevent it falling into Morgan’s hands has never
-been found. Some day some one may stumble upon it, but the chances are
-that it will remain lost to the world forever.”
-
-“Then all these stories about Captain Kidd’s treasure are just yarns,”
-said Fred regretfully. “And you said he wasn’t even a pirate.”
-
-“If Captain Kidd had possessed one-hundredth of the treasure he is
-supposed to have buried he would have been the most successful pirate
-who ever lived,” declared Mr. Bickford. “There is nothing to prove that
-Captain Kidd ever had any considerable treasure and the little he had
-was secreted on Gardiner’s Island and recovered by the men who employed
-Kidd and for whom it was intended. No, your old hero Kidd was not a
-pirate nor a buccaneer. On the contrary, he was a much maligned man, a
-weak, rather cowardly chap, who was the tool of unscrupulous
-adventurers and paid the penalty for crimes that never were proved
-against him. And yet, strangely enough, he became noted as the most
-famous of all pirates and his name is a household word and the epitome
-of piracy. It is one of the most astounding examples of unwarranted
-fame and misconception on record, and so firmly fixed in the mind of
-the public is the erroneous idea that Kidd was the most notorious of
-pirates that not one person in a thousand will listen to reason or pay
-the least heed to documentary evidence or historical records proving he
-was no pirate at all.
-
-“It is the hardest thing in the world to down tradition and oddly
-enough the more false tradition is the harder it seems to be to correct
-it. Despite everything, Kidd will, no doubt, continue to remain the
-favorite pirate of romance and story, and to the end of time Kidd’s
-treasure will still, in imagination, be buried here, there and
-everywhere along the coasts.
-
-“We scarcely ever hear of ‘Blackbeard’s treasure,’ of ‘Morgan’s
-treasure’ or of ‘Bonnet’s treasure,’ although each and every one of
-those rascals was a pirate and took vast sums and may have buried their
-loot for all we know. But always it is Kidd’s treasure, although the
-poor fellow never had any to bury.
-
-“As a matter of fact, Captain William Kidd was a respectable and honest
-sea captain, a native of Greenock, and was so highly respected for his
-integrity that he was given a commission to suppress piracy by King
-William the Third of England. The commission was addressed to ‘our
-trusty and well-beloved Captain William Kidd of the ship Adventure,
-galley’ and was dated 1695. The royal warrant went on to authorize Kidd
-to destroy and hunt down ‘divers wicked and ill-disposed persons who
-were committing many and great pyraces to the great danger and hurt of
-our loving subjects.’
-
-“Kidd, being impecunious, was backed by several rich and influential
-persons in Massachusetts and New York, among them Lord Belmont, the
-governor of Barbados, who saw in the capture of pirates and the taking
-of their ill-gotten loot a chance for large profits.
-
-“The Adventure set forth on her mission in May, 1696, with a crew of
-one hundred and fifty-five men and cruised here, there and everywhere
-searching for piratical prey. Unfortunately pirates seemed very scarce,
-Kidd’s crew became mutinous and clamored for excitement, and the next
-thing that was known, word came to the authorities that the Adventure
-had attacked and taken a Moorish ship called the Queda Merchant.
-Furthermore, reports had it that Kidd had taken possession of the
-prize, had transferred his men, guns and other possessions to the Queda
-and, having sunk the Adventure, had gone a-pirating in the Moorish
-ship. At once he was branded as a pirate and a price put upon his head.
-All unwittingly Kidd sailed into Santo Domingo in his prize and there
-learned that he was looked upon as a pirate and was wanted by the
-authorities.
-
-“Without hesitation, Kidd purchased a sloop, left the Queda in port and
-sailed as fast as possible to Boston to explain matters. He was, of
-course, rather doubtful of his reception and before throwing himself on
-the mercies of the authorities he secreted the few valuables he had on
-Gardiner’s Island, sent word to his sponsors, and after a consultation
-in which they agreed to stand by him and clear him of the charge of
-piracy, he gave himself up.
-
-“Kidd’s explanation was frank and simple. He claimed his crew, a gang
-of thugs and cut-throats, had mutinied, had made him prisoner and of
-their own volition had captured the prize, and that the Adventure,
-being rendered unseaworthy in the action, had been abandoned, and the
-men and their belongings transferred to the Moorish ship. He also
-testified that his men had threatened to shoot him if he did not accede
-to their wishes and that during the time of the capture of the ship he
-had been locked in his cabin. He was questioned as to what became of
-the valuables, supposedly worth seventy thousand pounds sterling, which
-were on the Queda and in reply swore that the men had taken it and made
-away with it. In the end, to make a long story short, the trial
-simmered down to a charge against the unfortunate Captain of having
-killed a gunner named Moore, who was a member of the Adventure’s crew.
-Kidd frankly admitted he had killed the fellow by striking him over the
-head with a bucket, as Moore had been mutinous and had led the men in
-their scheme to turn pirates. Throughout these preliminary hearings,
-Kidd’s wealthy sponsors had deserted him. They saw that they would
-become involved; and poor Kidd found himself without friends or money
-and even deprived of the rights to produce documentary evidence of his
-statements. Heavily manacled, he was sent to England and tried on the
-charge of piracy and murder at Old Bailey in May, 1701.
-
-“The trial was a rank travesty of justice from the beginning. Papers
-and letters favorable to Kidd were refused as evidence; his erstwhile
-friends perjured themselves to save their own names; counsel was denied
-him and only his faithful wife stood by him. In addition to Kidd, nine
-of his crew were also charged with piracy, these being the men who had
-remained faithful to their captain, and although all testified in
-Kidd’s behalf and substantiated his story, Kidd and six of the men were
-condemned to be hanged in chains. At Execution Dock the maligned,
-helpless captain and his fellows were strung up without mercy on May
-23rd, and their dead bodies suspended in chains along the river side,
-where, for years, the bones swayed and rattled in the winds as a grim
-warning to all pirates.
-
-“But the execution was a bungling and awful thing. Kidd, standing with
-the noose about his neck, was pestered, browbeaten and cajoled to
-confess, but stoutly maintained his innocence. As he was swung off, the
-rope broke and the poor, tortured, groaning man was again hoisted to
-the scaffold where, despite his suffering, a minister and others
-exhorted him to confess his crimes and reveal the hiding places of his
-treasure. But between pitiful groans and pleas for a speedy death, Kidd
-still maintained that he had no treasure and had told only the truth.
-Finally, despairing of wringing a confession from one who had nothing
-to confess, he was hanged until dead. His entire estate, consisting of
-less than seven thousand pounds, was confiscated and presented to the
-Greenwich Hospital, where, by all that was right and just, it should
-have proved a curse rather than a blessing.
-
-“No one ever knew what became of the Queda or her treasure, but, no
-doubt, as Kidd claimed, she was scuttled by the mutinous crew and the
-loot divided between them was scattered to the four winds. Upon that
-slender mystery of the disappearance of the valuables of the Queda were
-built all the tales of Captain Kidd’s buried treasure, and upon the
-farce of a trial and the conviction of the unfortunate seaman for
-killing a mutinous gunner in self-defense, was reared the undying fame
-of Captain Kidd.”
-
-“Gee, that was a shame!” declared Jack. “I feel really sorry for poor
-old Captain Kidd. Think of Morgan being knighted and honored after all
-he did and Kidd being hung for nothing.”
-
-“You must bear in mind that times had changed since Morgan’s day,” said
-Mr. Bickford. “The romantic, picturesque buccaneers were a thing of the
-past, and England and her colonies were waging a relentless war on
-pirates. In a way we must not be too hard on the authorities for their
-treatment of Kidd. They were intent on discouraging piracy and
-doubtless felt that, even if there was a question of Kidd’s guilt, his
-death would be a wholesome warning to any seamen who felt inclined to
-turn pirates. But it certainly is a wonderful example of the irony of
-fate to think of Kidd winning undying fame as a bold and ruthless
-pirate when—even if he were guilty—he could not have been charged with
-taking more than one ship, while others, who destroyed hundreds and
-ravaged the seas for years, have been totally forgotten. There was not
-even anything romantic, daring or appealing to the imagination in
-Kidd’s career. In contrast, consider the most romantic corsair who ever
-pirated in the Caribbean, a veritable knight errant of the seas, a
-scion of royalty, known as Prince Rupert of the Rhine.”
-
-“Why, I never ever heard of him!” exclaimed Fred. “What did he do?”
-
-“Of course you never heard of him,” said Mr. Bickford. “That is why I
-mentioned him, just as an example of how a man who should have been
-famous remains unknown and forgotten and a man like Kidd, with no claim
-to fame, lives on forever. Prince Rupert was a most romantic and
-fascinating character, a real Don Quixote, ever getting into one scrape
-after another, living a series of incredible adventures that would have
-put the famous D’Artagnan to shame; a dashing, impetuous gallant young
-prince who, according to historians, was ‘very sparkish in his dress’
-and ‘like a perpetual motion.’ Young, handsome, a dashing cavalier, as
-ready with his sword as with his purse, he championed every romantic or
-hopeless cause, threw himself into any wild scheme or fray where a lady
-was concerned or some one was in distress, and was no sooner out of one
-trouble than he was head over heels into another. But he was ever
-resourceful, ever light hearted and ever a great favorite with the
-ladies. In his youth, he was cast into prison in Linz, but, despite his
-plight, he managed to learn drawing, made love to the governor’s
-daughter and so won her heart that his escape was made easy.
-
-“Later, he decided that the land held too few opportunities for his
-restless, romantic spirit, and with a handful of choice companions he
-took to sea in command of a fleet of three ships. These were the
-Swallow, his own vessel, the Defiance, under command of his brother,
-Prince Maurice, and the Honest Seaman.
-
-“Gay with pennants and bunting, the little argosy set sail from Ireland
-in 1648, and with the gallant young Prince, dressed in his gayest
-silks, satins and laces, upon the high poop of the Swallow, the three
-tiny vessels set off on their voyage to do their bit towards
-championing the cause of their king in the far-off Caribbean.
-
-“For five years they sailed. Battling right nobly with the Dons,
-escaping annihilation a thousand times, beset by tempest and storm and
-meeting enough adventures at every turn to satisfy even the Prince’s
-ardent soul. A book might be written on the romantic, harebrained,
-reckless deeds performed by that hot-blooded young scion of royalty,
-but in the end, in a terrific hurricane, Prince Rupert’s fleet was
-driven on the treacherous reefs off Anegada. Prince Maurice in the
-Defiance was lost, the Honest Seaman was battered to pieces and her few
-survivors reached the low, desolate land more dead than alive, but the
-Swallow, by chance or Providence, managed to escape by driving through
-a narrow entrance in the jagged reef to the sheltered water within.
-Battered and leaking, badly crippled, the poor Swallow was far from
-seaworthy when the storm was over and the gay Prince, saddened and
-sorrowful at the loss of his brother and his men, sailed dolefully for
-England. He was a changed man thereafter and settled down to a very
-quiet life in a little house at Spring Gardens. All his brave deeds
-were forgotten, even his name passed into oblivion and in 1682 he died,
-almost unknown, in his English home.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-PICTURESQUE PIRATES
-
-
-“I’d like to read all about him,” said Jack. “I’ll bet he had an
-exciting life. I’ll never hear of Captain Kidd without thinking of
-Prince Rupert by contrast.”
-
-“You’ll find the whole story in this book,” said his father. “But
-you’ll always find these old volumes dry reading in a way. They pass
-over the most exciting events very casually, as if they were matters of
-course, but you’ll be amused at the quaint language and naïve remarks.”
-
-“Weren’t there any other old buccaneers who were as romantic and
-gallant as Prince Rupert?” asked Fred.
-
-“He was not strictly a buccaneer,” his uncle corrected him. “Nor was he
-really a pirate. His deeds took place before the buccaneers were really
-organized, and ostensibly he was more of a privateer than a pirate. In
-a way he was in the same category as Drake and Hawkins, and the same is
-true of another most romantic figure who ravaged the Caribbean and was
-a thorn in the side of the Spaniards. Perhaps he should not be included
-among stories of buccaneers, but he was such a picturesque figure that
-a brief account of him may interest you boys.”
-
-“Yes, do tell us about him,” cried Jack. “Even if he wasn’t really a
-buccaneer.”
-
-“He was also a member of the British nobility,” continued Mr. Bickford.
-“The Earl of Cumberland, a graduate of Oxford with the degree of M.A.,
-a wealthy peer, romantic, picturesque, a courtier, a noted gambler and
-a man of tremendous personal strength and courage. In his youth he had
-taken part in the attack on the Spanish Armada under Drake and had been
-made a Knight of the Garter and was a great favorite with Queen
-Elizabeth. In fact, through some favor, the queen had presented the
-Earl with one of her gloves—a claret-colored, diamond-studded thing
-which the dashing adventurer invariably wore tucked through the band of
-his broad-brimmed plumed hat. It became his crest, his badge, and far
-and wide, to friends and enemies alike, he became famed as ‘the man
-with the glove in his hat.’
-
-“Like Prince Rupert, Lord Cumberland found too few opportunities for
-his love of adventure ashore and so turned to the sea and the Indies
-for excitement. No doubt he found it in plenty, for he became a terror
-to the Dons, took many prizes, accumulated vast wealth and seemed to
-bear a charmed life. Again and again he returned to England to settle
-down, but ever the life of the sea rover appealed too strongly to him,
-and donning his hat with its jeweled glove, he would up and away to
-some new daredevil adventure.
-
-“Finally, in March, 1598, he set sail from Plymouth harbor with twenty
-ships, all his own, for the greatest attack on the Dons in the
-Caribbean that had ever been organized. His flagship bore the curious
-name of The Scourge of Malice, and the Earl’s bold scheme was to attack
-the supposedly impregnable port of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Drake and
-Hawkins had tried it, but had been driven off, and the reckless
-devil-may-care ‘man with the glove in his hat’ saw, in a raid on Puerto
-Rico a fine chance for adventure such as his heart craved.
-
-“Having captured a few prizes in mid-ocean, the fleet arrived at
-Dominica in May, and the Earl allowed his men shore liberty and a good
-rest before continuing on his daredevil foray. Being totally unexpected
-by the Dons, the Earl’s ship approached unseen at dead of night, and
-six hundred men were silently landed about two miles to the east of
-Morro Castle. Dividing his force into two parties and following the
-road, Cumberland led his men close to the city walls and at break of
-day rushed the sleepy sentries and the gates. Shouting and yelling,
-brandishing cutlasses, firing pistols, the wild horde of Englishmen
-appeared to the frightened, surprised Spaniards like fiends suddenly
-sprung from the earth. Terrorized, they retreated to the inmost
-fastnesses of the town before they rallied and, realizing the dreaded
-British were upon them, turned to face their foes. But it was too late.
-The English were in the streets, and although the Dons fought manfully
-and many fell on both sides, the Earl’s men were victorious, and within
-two hours the city was in their hands.
-
-“And mightily well pleased was My Lord as, with his own men in charge
-of the walls and grim old fortress, he strutted about the city
-appraising the valuables, the rich merchandise, the ships in the
-harbor, which were his to pick and choose from. Never before had San
-Juan fallen to an enemy, and the Earl had every reason to be filled
-with pride at his great deed. The city was rich and prosperous, the
-Morro was one of the strongest fortifications in the New World, and the
-‘man with the glove in his hat’ felt that he had mightily added to
-England’s power by securing this stronghold as a fortified base from
-which to harass the hated Dons. But he had counted without an enemy
-that lurked unseen and unsuspected near at hand. He had subdued the
-Dons, but there was another foe ready to attack him that no bravery, no
-arms could subdue. The dreaded Yellow Fever crept stealthily among the
-British, and ere Cumberland realized what had occurred his men were
-dying by scores daily. Here was an enemy he could not fight, a foe
-invisible and more deadly than the Spaniards, and in almost no time
-Cumberland’s force was more than half destroyed. Filled with terror at
-this dread death stalking among his men, realizing that to remain meant
-destruction for all, the Earl hurriedly embarked the few remaining
-Englishmen aboard his ships, and beaten, discouraged and disheartened,
-sailed away from the town he had so gloriously won. He had not gone
-empty-handed, however. The city had been thoroughly pillaged, much of
-it had been burnt, the ships in the harbor had been destroyed and
-Cumberland’s fortune had been increased tremendously. But he had had
-enough of the corsair’s life. He settled down to pass the remaining
-years of his life in peace; but we may feel sure that often, as he
-glanced at the flopping, white-plumed hat with its little red glove, he
-breathed a sigh of regret that his days of a sea rover were over; that
-never again would he leap over a galleon’s side with cutlass in one
-hand and pistol in the other, while men shouted for St. George and San
-Iago and blood flowed and cannons roared and blade clashed on blade and
-pistols flashed as Don and Briton battled.”
-
-“Seems to me those old fellows were a lot more picturesque than the
-real buccaneers,” said Fred. “Why don’t people write more stories about
-them, Dad? I never read of Prince Rupert or the Earl of Cumberland in
-any story; but books are full of Morgan and those fellows.”
-
-“Probably because less is known about them,” replied his father. “And
-partly, too, as they lived and fought before the West Indies and the
-Spanish Main became as well known as in Morgan’s day. You must remember
-that we hear very little of L’Ollonois, Brasiliano, Portugues, or the
-earlier buccaneers. New England, you know, was not settled until 1638,
-and most of the famous buccaneers were those whose deeds were committed
-after the American colonies were trading extensively with the West
-Indies. Morgan, you remember, sent to merchants of New England for help
-in fitting out his fleet, and Davis and his fellows sailed for the
-South Sea from the Chesapeake. To the inhabitants of New England and
-Virginia the buccaneers seemed comparative neighbors, and hence the
-tales of their careers came fresh and vividly to them, whereas it took
-weeks or months for stories to reach England.
-
-“But don’t imagine that it was only the older pirates who were
-picturesque. Perhaps the most picturesque and fascinatingly wicked
-pirate who ever lived—although he hadn’t a redeeming feature—was among
-the last of the really famous corsairs of the Caribbean. If ever there
-was a dime-novel, story-book pirate it was he—Blackbeard.”
-
-“Hurrah! I was hoping you’d tell us about him!” cried Jack. “Was he
-really as bad as the stories make out?”
-
-“A great deal worse,” Mr. Bickford assured him. “No imagination could
-invent anything to equal Blackbeard’s innate deviltry.
-
-“He combined all the worst traits of every buccaneer and pirate who
-ever lived. He was a double-dyed, out-and-out rascal; a ruffian, a thug
-and a brutal, inhuman bully. The most despicable buccaneer who ever
-raided a Spanish town or boarded a galleon would have despised him, for
-he held no shred of honor or principle; he cheated his friends and his
-own men and was a veritable monster in human form. Nevertheless, it
-cannot be denied that he was courageous; that he never shirked danger;
-that he never asked or expected his men to go where he would not lead,
-and, moreover, he was a most striking and picturesque rascal.”
-
-“I saw somewhere that he had a castle in St. Thomas,” said Fred, as Mr.
-Bickford paused to refresh his memory with data from a book on the
-table. “Did he live there, Uncle Henry?”
-
-“Not as far as known,” replied Mr. Bickford. “It is true that there is
-an ancient tower-like building above the town of Charlotte Amalia at
-St. Thomas, and which is called ‘Blackbeard’s Castle,’ and that the
-natives claim it was once the home of the noted pirate. But there is
-also a similar edifice known as ‘Bluebeard’s Castle’ on a neighboring
-hilltop. It’s just about as probable that old Bluebeard lived in one as
-that Blackbeard dwelt in the other. No doubt Blackbeard visited St.
-Thomas, but there is not a bit of historical data to prove he ever
-lived there. It’s a shame to destroy the island’s claim to association
-with the notorious old pirate, but as a matter of record his so-called
-castle was built by Charles Baggaert, a Dane, about 1660. To be sure,
-that would not have prevented it from being used by Blackbeard, for he
-lived at a much later date, but Blackbeard’s favorite haunts were the
-Bahamas and the coasts of the Carolinas, and he would have had no
-earthly reason for stopping ashore at St. Thomas. However, whatever the
-truth of his ‘castle’ may be, the rest of Blackbeard’s life story is
-well known and is substantiated by historical records.
-
-“Blackbeard’s real name was Edward Teach and, like many another pirate
-and sea rover, he was a native of Bristol, England. Had Teach been born
-a few years earlier no doubt he would have become a famous buccaneer
-and a dangerous rival of Morgan and his fellows, but Master Teach came
-into the world after buccaneering as a profession had fallen into
-disrepute. Hence it fell to his lot to become an ordinary seaman on
-honest merchant ships, which was far from satisfactory to the ambitions
-of young Teach. As a result, when his ship dropped anchor in Jamaica,
-one day in 1716, Teach promptly deserted and, falling in with a number
-of questionable characters, joined their company in a pirating venture.
-
-“Evidently the embryo pirate believed thoroughly in the old adage that
-‘what’s worth doing at all is worth doing well,’ and he threw himself
-heart and soul into his chosen profession. Efficiency seemed to be his
-middle name, to use a slang expression, and within two years from the
-time he deserted the merchant service he had risen to the very highest
-pinnacle as a pirate chieftain. In fact, I might go further and,
-without exaggeration or question, say that within that short period
-Teach had become the world’s greatest pirate, a pirate never equaled or
-excelled for pure devilish bloodthirstiness and villainy, and, if the
-facts were known, most of the lurid stories and the romances of piracy
-have been founded on the deeds of Blackbeard. Even the popular
-conception of much-maligned Kidd is based on Blackbeard, for he was the
-culmination of piratical scoundrelism, the ideal pirate of
-blood-and-thunder fiction, the most highly depraved cutthroat who ever
-walked a ship’s decks.
-
-“And he was a thorough believer in keeping up his reputation and well
-knew the effect of appearances upon the public. Naturally a most
-repulsive-looking man,—a huge, long-armed, broad-shouldered, brutal
-creature,—he added to his ugliness by cultivating an enormous
-coal-black beard and allowing his hair to grow until it covered his
-shoulders like a mane. His beard he braided into innumerable little
-pigtails, twisting in bits of bright-hued ribbons, and when attacking a
-prize or boarding a ship he added to his wild and savage aspect by
-tucking burning slow matches into the mass of black hair and beard that
-framed his villainous, leering face.
-
-“But his actual deeds would have been sufficient to inspire horror and
-dread without the theatrical accessories of black whiskers and slow
-matches. He was a past master in the art of devilish cruelty; he gave
-no quarter; he took ships of any nation that happened to come his way,
-and when prizes were scarce he varied the monotony of life by robbing
-and murdering his own men and his fellow pirates. Had Teach drifted
-into other and more peaceful walks of life he might have become a great
-inventor, for he had an inordinate bump of curiosity and was forever
-carrying out experiments which, while most interesting to him, were
-most unpleasant to others. Once he marooned seventeen of his crew upon
-a tiny barren islet, to learn, so he declared, how long human beings
-could survive without food or water; but unfortunately for his
-curiosity, and most opportunely for the marooned subjects of his test,
-Major Stede Bonnet—of whom I have already told you—chanced to sail that
-way and rescued the unfortunate seventeen from their desert isle.
-
-“He possessed a weird and grewsome sense of humor too, and we may be
-very sure that life was never dull or monotonous aboard his ship. On
-one occasion, when for days no prize had been sighted and the pirate
-craft rolled with slatting sails upon an oily sea under the blazing
-tropic sun, Teach, hatless and shoeless, appeared on deck and announced
-with a roar and an oath that he had devised a scheme for killing time
-and amusing themselves. It was, indeed, a novel idea, and one quite in
-keeping with Blackbeard’s character, for it was nothing less than, to
-quote his words, ‘to make a little hell of our own and see who is best
-fitted for our hereafter.’ It was useless for the men to protest, for
-any artificial inferno that Teach could devise would, they knew, be
-mild in comparison to that which they would bring upon themselves
-should they refuse to follow out their captain’s wishes.
-
-“Urging the fellows into the hold by no gentle means, Teach leaped in
-with them, and then, setting fire to several pots of brimstone, pitch
-and other inflammable things, the pirate chief drew the hatches shut.
-There in the close, unventilated hold they sat upon the ballast,
-choking, coughing, suffocating in the noxious fumes until,
-half-roasted, nauseated, almost asphyxiated, the men could endure no
-longer and, rushing to the hatch, threw it open and crawled on deck.
-Not until all the others had gained the open air did Blackbeard emerge
-triumphant, and throughout his life he was never tired of boasting of
-his endurance, and took the greatest pride in recalling that his men
-declared that, when he came forth, he had looked like a half-hanged
-man.
-
-“In fact, this remark by a thoughtless member of his crew set Teach to
-thinking and, his curiosity being aroused, he suggested that another
-and even more interesting test should be made to see who could come the
-nearest to being hung without dying. But at this his men drew the line;
-they had no desire to choke and kick while dangling with a noose about
-their necks, even to satisfy their captain’s curiosity. In vain Teach
-pointed out that sooner or later they’d be hung, most probably, and
-that they might as well become accustomed to the sensation at once.
-Without avail he argued that by so doing they might become so inured to
-hanging that it would hold no terrors for them. One and all refused
-point-blank, and Teach, realizing that to be suspended from his yardarm
-alone would prove nothing and that his men might try his endurance a
-bit too far, and also realizing that he could not string up his entire
-crew by himself, reluctantly gave up the idea and, cursing the men
-fluently as cowards, busied his mind thinking up other amusements.
-
-“Such pleasantries were of almost daily occurrence, and his crew and
-his friends thought themselves lucky indeed if they got off with
-nothing more serious than his brimstone test. One night, for example,
-he was entertaining two cronies, one his sailing master and the other
-the pilot who had just brought the ship into port. All were in the best
-of spirits, smoking, drinking, spinning yarns of the sea in the tiny,
-stuffy cabin, when Blackbeard, without the least warning, suddenly
-whipped out a brace of pistols, cocked them, crossed his hands, and
-before his amazed guests knew what he was about, he blew out the candle
-and fired his weapons in the direction of the astounded and terrified
-men. The sailing master was shot through the knee—although, as you will
-learn later, it was a most fortunate thing for him—and lamed for life,
-and indignantly the pilot and sailing master demanded of Teach what he
-meant by such behavior.
-
-“Having cursed them fluently for several minutes, Blackbeard roared
-with boisterous laughter, and replied good-naturedly that ‘if I didn’t
-kill one of you now and then you’d forget who I was.’
-
-“And yet, despite his brutality, his murderous ways, his utter
-depravity, Teach apparently was a great favorite with the ladies. At
-any rate, he was married fourteen times—although history fails to
-mention divorces—his last wife being, according to those who knew, ‘a
-beautiful young creature of sixteen.’ It certainly would be interesting
-to know by what manner of courtship the villainous old wretch could win
-the hearts of innocent young girls, but perchance in his love-making he
-was as gentle and as ardent as he was brutal and devilish in his
-piracy.
-
-“For two years Teach ravaged the Caribbean and the coast of the
-Atlantic states, sailing as far north as Massachusetts and the coast of
-Maine, and making his headquarters either in the Bahamas or in the
-waters of Pamlico Sound, North Carolina. Indeed, there was more than
-good reason to suspect that the governor of Carolina was hand and glove
-with Teach, and that the pirate paid a goodly tribute to the executive
-in return for freedom from molestation while in the Carolina waters.
-
-“But at last Blackbeard’s activities became too great to be borne
-longer by the long-suffering mariners and merchants of the colonies.
-They rose and demanded his apprehension or destruction, and the
-Governor of Virginia thereupon offered a reward of one hundred pounds
-sterling ‘for one Edward Teach, otherwise known as Blackbeard, pirate,’
-dead or alive, and forty pounds for each and every other pirate. One
-hundred pounds in those days was a fortune, and Teach, reading a copy
-of the proclamation, swelled with pride to think that his fame and
-notoriety were such as to bring forth such an offer. But he had no fear
-whatever of any one claiming it. His mere name was enough to drive
-every one scurrying to safety, he had perfect confidence in his ability
-to look out for himself, and he took the whole matter as a bit of a
-joke.
-
-“Indeed, he thought so lightly of it that he boldly sailed into Pamlico
-Sound, came to anchor in a little cove at Ocracoke Inlet, and there
-fell in with an old friend, a merchant skipper, with whom he spent the
-night drinking and swapping yarns of old days before Teach had gone
-a-pirating.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE END OF BLACKBEARD
-
-
-“As is often the case, Teach, just when he felt himself safest, was in
-the most imminent peril. The munificent reward offered for his death or
-capture had proved a tempting bait, and a brave young naval officer,
-Lieutenant Maynard of H.M.S. Pearl, had made up his mind to pocket that
-one hundred pounds and several of the forty pound rewards as well.
-Gathering together a few brave and tried friends and old shipmates,
-Maynard manned a small sloop, loaded it with a plentiful supply of arms
-and ammunition and, having learned of Blackbeard’s whereabouts, set
-sail for Ocracoke. Long before the gallant lieutenant came within sight
-of the pirates’ lair, however, Teach had word of his coming, but this
-only amused the black-whiskered corsair. It would serve to enliven a
-dull day, and he and his men looked forward with pleasurable
-anticipation to Maynard’s arrival.
-
-“But the villainous pirate little knew the manner of man who was coming
-to attack him. As the day dawned, those on the pirate ship saw the
-sloop approaching, and, realizing that his situation in the exposed
-anchorage was not well adapted to defensive tactics, Blackbeard cut his
-cable, hoisted the black flag and allowed his vessel to drift upon the
-mudflats with the tide. This was a tactful move, for Maynard’s craft
-drew too much water to come to grips with the pirate, and as neither
-vessel carried cannon, the battle would have to be a hand-to-hand
-combat, and the pirates would have every advantage, as their enemies
-would be compelled to board them. But the lieutenant had no intention
-of giving the pirates any advantage he could avoid. He was out to get
-Blackbeard, dead or alive, and he meant to succeed. Throwing over his
-ballast, together with anchors, fittings, water casks and spare spars,
-Maynard lightened his sloop until she could pass over the flats, and
-then, hoisting sail, he bore down upon the stranded pirate craft.
-
-“Blackbeard, with lighted fuses glowing in his hair and beard, drawn
-cutlass and pistols in hand, leaped upon the rail, ‘hailed him in a
-rude manner and cursed most horribly,’ as the old accounts tell us, and
-then, in a bit of bravado, raised a glass of grog and in full view of
-his enemies drank to ‘the damnation of the attackers.’
-
-“Even with the lightened sloop, Maynard found, however, that he could
-not come to grips with Teach’s vessel, and so, piling his men into
-small boats, the lieutenant headed for the stranded pirate, intending
-to board her. But long before they could gain the vessel’s sides they
-were met with such a galling musketry fire that they were compelled to
-retreat with twenty-nine men killed and wounded.
-
-“This was, indeed, a wretched beginning, but Maynard was a resourceful
-man and, ordering his men below decks, so that only himself and the
-helmsman remained in sight, he allowed his sails to flap and swing as
-though he had no men able to handle the sloop and with the slowly
-rising tide crept constantly closer to the pirates.
-
-“Thinking they had won the day and that Maynard’s men were utterly done
-for, Teach and his crew roared out boisterous songs and taunts and
-prepared to leap onto the sloop’s decks and butcher the two remaining
-men and any wounded who might be lying about. A moment later the two
-vessels touched. With a terrible oath and a savage yell, Blackbeard
-sprang through the smoke to the sloop’s decks with his shouting crew at
-his heels, and with swirling, gleaming cutlasses they rushed towards
-Maynard and his helmsman. Then, up from their hiding place in the hold,
-poured the sloop’s crew, and instantly the battle raged fast and
-furiously. The pirates, surprised, gave back a bit, the lieutenant’s
-men fought like furies, and back and forth across the bloody decks the
-battle surged. Teach had singled out Maynard and, whipping out pistols,
-both fired at the same instant. Blackbeard’s shot missed, but the
-bullet from the lieutenant’s pistol found its mark in the pirate’s
-face. With blood streaming from the wound and dripping from the braided
-ends of his long beard, eyes blazing with fury, and yelling with anger
-and pain, the pirate threw aside his useless pistol and leaped at the
-lieutenant with swinging cutlass. But Maynard was a splendid swordsman.
-As Blackbeard, cursing and shouting that he would hack the other’s
-heart from his body, leaped forward, the officer’s sword met his, steel
-clanged on steel, and the pirate found himself balked, held off, driven
-back.
-
-“It was a terrible duel,—the struggle of enormous brute strength
-against skill,—and with terrific slashing blows and savage lunges
-Blackbeard strove to break down the other’s guard, to disarm him or to
-snap his blade. Here and there across the decks they fought and swayed
-and panted, stumbling over dead and wounded men, slipping in pools of
-blood, bumping into fighting knots of pirates and seamen. Both were
-bleeding from a dozen wounds, both were near exhaustion, both were
-spent, and both knew that it was but a question of moments ere one
-would fall. And then, with a tremendous blow, Blackbeard brought his
-heavy cutlass swinging down, the lighter blade of the officer’s snapped
-at the hilt, and with a blood-curdling, triumphant yell the pirate
-swung his cutlass up, whirled it about his head and aimed a
-death-dealing blow at Maynard’s head. Quick as a flash the lieutenant
-leaped aside, the stroke fell short, and Maynard escaped with the loss
-of three fingers lopped off by that terrible blow.
-
-“Before the pirate could raise his weapon again one of Maynard’s men
-had leaped forward, his cutlass fell upon the back of Blackbeard’s
-neck, almost severing the head from the body, and with a crimson
-fountain spouting from the awful gash the pirate turned and cut his
-assailant to the chin with a single blow. But despite his ghastly wound
-the pirate chieftain was still standing, still defiant, still fighting.
-All about, the decks were a shambles, his men were lying dead and
-wounded, half a dozen of Maynard’s men were attacking him. Kicking off
-his shoes to get a better foot-hold on the bloody deck, bellowing like
-a maddened bull, blood streaming from over twenty-five wounds, with his
-half-severed head lolling hideously upon his chest, but still defiant,
-Blackbeard backed against the bulwarks and slashed and lunged, keeping
-his enemies at bay until, as his life blood poured over his chest and
-beard and trickled to the decks, his muscles weakened and his blows
-grew less. Then, suddenly whipping a pistol from his belt, he made one
-last desperate effort to shoot down the lieutenant. But before he could
-press the trigger, before a man could strike the weapon up, his knees
-sagged, his eyelids closed, and with a gurgling, awful moan he sank
-lifeless to the deck.
-
-“Few of the pirates remained alive, none were unwounded. Those who had
-the strength leaped overboard, attempting to escape, but all were
-captured; Blackbeard and his men were wiped out and the only member of
-the pirates who had escaped was the sailing master, Israel Hands.
-Nursing the bullet wound in his knee, which had been so playfully
-inflicted by Blackbeard, he was safe ashore. Doubtless he most heartily
-gave thanks for his dead captain’s form of humor and blessed the wound
-that gave him a stiff leg for life.
-
-“Maynard’s losses, too, were tremendous; many of his men had been
-killed, scarcely one had escaped without serious wounds, but they
-forgot their hurts, for they were triumphant. Thirteen pirate prisoners
-were safe in irons in the sloop’s hold, the grewsome, awful head of the
-redoubtable Blackbeard was lashed to the tip of the bowsprit, and,
-hoisting sail, Maynard set forth for Bath Town, North Carolina, to
-claim his well-earned reward and exhibit his bloody trophy. There the
-thirteen prisoners were promptly hanged, Teach’s black-whiskered,
-blood-clotted head, with the burnt-out fuses still in the tangled hair,
-was placed in the market square, and the promised rewards were duly
-paid to the courageous lieutenant and his daring men.”
-
-“Jiminy!” exclaimed Fred. “That must have been some fight! Was that the
-end of the pirates?”
-
-“Practically,” replied Mr. Bickford. “Teach was the last pirate of
-note. There were a few who still lurked in the Caribbean, but the
-Atlantic coasts and the West Indies were getting too hot for them. Such
-rascals, as Low, England, Roberts and Avery, transferred their
-activities to more out-of-the-way spots, to Africa, Madagascar and the
-Indian Ocean, and the last of the West Indian pirates were dispersed
-and destroyed by Lieutenant, afterwards Commodore, Porter, who also
-wiped out the Tripolitan pirates.”
-
-“But how about Lafitte and his pirates?” asked Jack. “I thought they
-lived until the time of the war of 1812 and helped General Jackson at
-the battle of New Orleans.”
-
-“So they did,” replied his father. “But Lafitte and his brother were
-not really pirates. That is, no real acts of piracy were ever proved
-against them, although they were denounced as such. In reality the
-Lafittes were smugglers, but their career was so picturesque and
-romantic that their story may be quite fittingly included in that of
-the buccaneers and pirates.
-
-“The two brothers, Jean and Pierre Lafitte, were born in France, and
-came to New Orleans in the spring of 1809. They were brilliant, witty,
-well educated, attractive men, and spoke several languages fluently.
-The two started a blacksmith shop, which they operated by slaves, and
-from the first the brothers appeared to have plenty of money. At that
-time there was a strip of territory, stretching for a distance of about
-sixty miles from the mouth of the Mississippi to Bayou Lafourche, which
-was in almost undisputed possession of a colony of smuggler-pirates
-known as the ‘Baratarians,’ from the fact that their headquarters were
-on the Bay of Barataria, a body of water with a narrow opening
-protected from the Gulf by a low, narrow island about six miles long
-known as Grande-Terre.
-
-“Some of these Baratarians possessed letters of marque from France, as
-well as from the Republic of New Grenada (now Colombia), authorizing
-them to prey upon Spanish shipping, but like the pirates of old they
-had the reputation of lacking discrimination and of attacking any
-vessel that they could overpower. Whatever the truth of their piratical
-tendencies may have been, there was no question that they were
-smugglers on a large scale, and not long after the Lafittes arrived in
-Louisiana they joined their lot with these Baratarians.
-
-“Jean occupied a position as a sort of agent and banker for the
-smugglers, but he was far too clever and ambitious to remain long in
-such a subordinate capacity, and soon was the head and brains of the
-whole organization. To this state he won both by superior intelligence
-and force of arms, for both Lafittes were adept swordsmen and expert
-pistol shots, and when a fellow called Grambo, a burly leader among the
-Baratarians, had the temerity to question Jean Lafitte’s leadership the
-latter promptly whipped out a pistol and shot him through the heart.
-
-“Hitherto the Baratarians had been divided into factions, and there
-were constant dissensions and quarrels among them, but under Lafitte’s
-management all were united, and so daring and brazenly did they carry
-on their operations that within three years from the time the Lafitte
-brothers stepped ashore at New Orleans there was more commerce entering
-and leaving Barataria Bay than the port of New Orleans. Great
-warehouses rose above the low sand dunes of Grande-Terre; cargoes of
-slaves were weekly auctioned in the big slave market; from far and near
-merchants and dealers flocked to the smugglers’ stronghold to barter
-and trade, and it was evidently but a question of time before the
-Lafittes and their Baratarian friends would control all the import
-trade of the Mississippi Valley.
-
-“Becoming alarmed at the magnitude of operations, the federal
-government decided to break up the smugglers, and revenue cutters were
-dispatched to the bay. But the Baratarians’ spies were vigilant, word
-of the raid was brought, and the discomfited government officers
-returned empty-handed, without having accomplished anything worth
-while. Indeed, it was a common rumor in New Orleans that even the
-United States officials were in league with the Lafittes, and the
-wealthy, charming Frenchmen came and went, spent their money freely in
-New Orleans, drove about in splendid carriages and with magnificent
-horses, maintained expensive establishments, and snapped their slender,
-jeweled fingers at the authorities.
-
-“It was the greatest, most flagrant smuggling enterprise ever carried
-on in the history of the world, and at last Governor Claiborne of
-Louisiana decided to take drastic measures to suppress it. The
-penalties of the law for smuggling were evidently not severe enough to
-meet the case, and so, in 1813, the governor issued a proclamation in
-which he declared the Baratarians pirates, warned the citizens not to
-deal with them, and threatened to hang every one he could lay hands on.
-
-“But His Excellency might have saved his breath and his paper. Twirling
-gold-headed canes, decked in valuable jewels, attired in the most
-expensive and beautifully tailored clothes, the Lafitte brothers
-strolled nonchalantly through the streets and, surrounded by admirers,
-read with interest and amusement the official placards in which they
-were denounced as pirates. Then, to add insult to injury, they tacked
-up posters, advertising a slave auction to be held at Barataria,
-alongside the irate governor’s proclamations!
-
-“Beside himself with anger, but realizing he was unable to cope
-single-handed with the situation; Governor Claiborne issued a
-supplementary proclamation offering five hundred dollars reward for the
-apprehension of either of the Lafitte brothers. Only one man, as far as
-known, attempted to earn the reward, and instead of the five hundred
-dollars he received a bullet through the lungs which promptly relieved
-him of all desire or necessity for money or anything else of a worldly
-nature.
-
-“The governor was desperate. No one would raise a finger against the
-so-called ‘pirates,’ they openly defied the state, and he asked the
-Legislature for an appropriation to raise a company of volunteers to
-attack the stronghold of the Lafittes. Unfortunately the increase of
-the smugglers’ business had so depleted the state treasury that there
-were no funds available; but at last the governor succeeded in
-obtaining an indictment for piracy against the two Lafittes and the
-Baratarian leaders. Armed with this, the governor managed to have
-Pierre arrested.
-
-“But the executive had forgotten that money talks. For a fee of $20,000
-each, Jean Lafitte retained the two most prominent lawyers in the
-state, Edward Livingston and John R. Grymes, the latter resigning as
-District Attorney to defend the Lafittes. During the trial his
-successor taunted him with this and as a result Grymes challenged him
-and shot him through the hip, crippling him for life.
-
-“There was no question of how the trial would result. Pierre was freed,
-Jean was cleared and the indictment against him dismissed and the
-triumphant lawyers were invited by the brothers to visit their
-headquarters at Barataria and collect their fees. Livingston, a New
-Yorker, declined, but Grymes, who was a Virginian, accepted, and the
-tale is still told in New Orleans of the princely entertainment, the
-magnificent feast and the whole-souled hospitality accorded the
-attorney by the Lafittes and their outlaw friends. Finally he was sent
-back to New Orleans in an almost regally appointed yawl laden with
-boxes containing the two lawyers’ fees in Spanish doubloons and pieces
-of eight.
-
-“Meanwhile the war between England and the United States had been going
-on for nearly two years. It had been felt but little on the shores of
-the Gulf, however, and the Baratarians, and even the more law-abiding
-citizens, scarcely knew that there was a conflict. But in September,
-1814, the smuggler-pirate colony was started by the sudden appearance
-of an armed British brig off their island haunt. Hastily ordering out
-his private cutter, Jean Lafitte boarded the war vessel, invited the
-officers ashore and feasted them right royally. Then, as the merry
-party sat back and puffed at their fine Havanas the smuggler chieftain
-was presented with a letter from the British commandant at Pensacola.
-It was an offer of a high commission in the British army and a fee of
-$30,000, provided Lafitte would use his forces in assisting the British
-in their proposed invasion of Louisiana.
-
-“The Frenchman hesitated, replied that it would take him some time to
-decide upon such an important matter and asked for ten days in which to
-consider it. This was willingly granted, the officers were escorted
-back to their ship and, well satisfied with their progress, they
-prepared to await Lafitte’s reply, which they felt convinced would be
-favorable. But even before they had stepped upon their ship’s decks a
-messenger had been despatched post-haste by Lafitte to the Louisiana
-Legislature. Not only did the messenger carry a complete account of the
-British plans of invasion as divulged by the officers, but he also
-carried the letter from the English commandant and a letter from
-Lafitte offering the services of himself and his men in the defense of
-the state.
-
-“Instantly Governor Claiborne called a council of the army, navy and
-militia officers and showed them Lafitte’s communication. The officials
-could not believe that Lafitte—outlaw and smuggler and so-called
-pirate—could possess any sentiments of patriotism, and one and all
-declared that, in their opinions, the papers were forgeries and that
-Lafitte had submitted them in order to prevent the authorities from
-interfering with his plans.
-
-“As a result, an expedition was organized, and, under command of
-Commodore Patterson and Colonel Ross, set out to attack the
-Baratarians. Supposing, as was natural, that the approaching forces had
-been sent to combine with them against the British, the smugglers were
-taken completely by surprise; many were killed and captured and their
-headquarters were destroyed. Only the two Lafittes and a few followers
-escaped and a vast quantity of loot was seized by the victorious
-troops. Among this booty was found the jewelry of a Creole lady who had
-left New Orleans several years before and had never been heard from,
-and this circumstantial evidence of piracy was the sole and only thing
-ever produced to prove that the Lafittes or the Baratarians could be
-considered pirates. Upon that one incident all the tales of piracy by
-the Lafittes have been built up and, like Captain Kidd’s, their fame
-has grown from nothing. Despite the scurvy treatment accorded Lafitte
-by the governor, he still remained true to his adopted country and
-instead of joining the British—and he could scarcely have been blamed
-if he had—he remained with his brother and the other fugitives in
-hiding until General Andrew Jackson arrived to take supreme command at
-New Orleans. Then, risking life and liberty, he came forth again,
-offered his services and those of his men to the nation and was
-promptly accepted. General Jackson placed Lafitte in command of the
-redoubts along the river with a part of his men and detailed the others
-to the battery at New Orleans. Throughout that memorable battle the
-Baratarians and the Lafittes fought with such furious and whole-hearted
-bravery that they were lauded in the general orders issued after the
-victory, and at General Jackson’s suggestion all were granted full
-pardons.
-
-“After the battle, a great ball was given by the army and naval
-officers and great was the rejoicing, and at this brilliant function
-Jean Lafitte appeared for the last time. Among the honored guests was
-General Coffee, and the pompous General and the dandy Frenchman were
-brought together for an introduction. At first, as the orderly
-mentioned Lafitte’s name, the General hesitated and glanced
-superciliously over the smiling stranger. Lafitte stepped forward, drew
-himself up proudly and announced: ‘Lafitte, the pirate.’ Instantly the
-General thrust out his hand and grasped the other’s cordially.
-
-“Never again were the Lafittes seen in New Orleans or their old haunts.
-Rumors came from time to time, wild tales were told of their doings,
-but there was little to bear them out. It was, however, generally
-accepted as a fact beyond dispute that they went to an island near
-Galveston, secured commissions as privateers from a South American
-Republic and preyed upon Spanish shipping to their own considerable
-profit.
-
-“About that time, too, a United States cruiser was attacked by unknown
-corsairs in the Gulf and looted of an enormous sum in bullion and this
-was laid to the Lafittes. As a result, the Galveston settlement was
-attacked and destroyed, but no signs of the famous Lafittes were found.
-Perhaps they had never been there, perhaps they managed to escape. They
-completely disappeared and where they passed the remainder of their
-lives, where they died has never been discovered. Once it was reported,
-that they had sailed to the Argentine and had entered the service of
-the Buenos Ayres government. Again it was stated that they had
-established a pirate lair in Yucatan. There were stories of their
-having settled on Ruatan Island off Honduras, where they conducted
-wrecking and piratical undertakings, but definite news, actual proofs,
-were never forthcoming.
-
-“We can scarcely believe that men who had proved their patriotism and
-their valor, men who had shown their honor and their loyalty as had the
-Lafittes, would countenance an attack upon a United States ship. It
-does not seem like them to have degenerated into rascally cut-throats
-and wreckers. To my mind, it is far more probable that they returned to
-their beloved France or settled down under new names in some quiet
-tropical land and there passed the remainder of their lives like the
-accomplished gentlemen they were. No one will ever know. We can only
-surmise. But with the passing of these romantic, picturesque brothers
-went the last of the more famous pirates. And—as I said before—there
-was nothing to prove that they were pirates after all.”
-
-“Golly, I never knew the buccaneers and pirates were so interesting,”
-declared Fred, as Mr. Bickford ceased speaking. “I always loved to read
-stories about them, but they’re a lot more interesting than the
-stories.”
-
-“Yes,” agreed his uncle. “It’s a splendid example of the truth of the
-time-worn saying that ‘truth is stranger than fiction.’ And did you
-ever stop to think, boys, that if it hadn’t been for the buccaneers
-there might not—probably would not—have been any United States?”
-
-“Why, no!” cried Jack.
-
-“How could that be?” demanded Fred.
-
-“Very few people realize that we owe the buccaneers a tremendous debt
-of gratitude or that they played a most important part in the history
-of America. They may have been ruthless, cruel, bloodthirsty,
-unprincipled cut-throats, but if it had not been for the buccaneers the
-chances are that what is now the United States would have been a colony
-of Spain or a Spanish-American republic. It was very largely owing to
-the buccaneers that England retained her supremacy in the West Indies.
-She was far too busy with wars at home to look after her American
-possessions; Spain controlled South and Central America, Florida and
-the Southwest, and her sea power was tremendous. But the buccaneers
-kept the Dons in check, they compelled Spain to devote all her energies
-and her warships to protecting her cities and her plate ships, and,
-with the sea rovers everywhere in the Caribbean, the Dons could not
-expand their holdings and were hard put to it to hold what they had. It
-is no exaggeration to say that the buccaneers had a greater effect on
-maintaining England’s hold in America than all the British Crown’s
-forces. And the British navy was not at all blind to the services of
-the buccaneers. When the English attacked Jamaica and wrested it from
-Spain the buccaneers took a most important part and in many another sea
-battle, and land attack as well, the British navy and army were mighty
-glad of the buccaneers’ help. Whatever their sins and their misdeeds
-may have been, we cannot overlook the fact that they had a most
-important place in the scheme of things, that they helped make history
-and that they are entitled to a big niche in the hall of fame of
-pioneers, colonizers and fighters of America. And there is no need to
-fear that they will ever be forgotten. As long as there is red blood in
-the veins of men and boys; as long as human beings have pulses that
-will quicken to tales of heroism and bravery and mighty deeds, the
-swashbuckling, daredevil, picturesque buccaneers, and even the pirates
-who came after, will live on. The names of kings and queens may be
-forgotten. Famous admirals and generals may have passed into oblivion.
-Great battles and tremendous victories, treaties of peace and
-declarations of war; the conquests of countries; the subjugation of
-kingdoms may fade from memory, and yet, every schoolboy is familiar
-with the names of Morgan, L’Ollonois, Montbars, Hawkins and the other
-chieftains of the buccaneers. They were characters who can never die.”
-
-“Gee, I’m kind of sorry they have all gone,” declared Jack, as his
-father ceased speaking. “It would be great to see a real buccaneer or a
-real pirate ship.”
-
-Mr. Bickford smiled. “I’m afraid you’ll never see a buccaneer,” he
-said. “But you might see a pirate ship.”
-
-“Oh, do you really mean there are any pirates’ ships left?” cried Fred.
-
-“I can’t say, positively,” replied his uncle. “But there was one a very
-short time ago. She was doing duty as a packet between the Virgin
-Islands and her name was the Vigilant. She was a trim, speedy little
-schooner—the typical ‘low black craft with rakish masts’ of story and
-fiction and had had a most adventurous and romantic career. She was
-built at Baltimore and was originally intended as a privateer for use
-in the Revolution. But the war was over before she was launched and she
-served as a smuggler, a slaver and a pirate, changing hands frequently.
-At that time she was rigged as a topsail schooner and was called the
-Nonesuch, and at one time she was even a man-of-war. That happened when
-Denmark and Spain were at war and a Spanish cruiser was harassing
-Danish commerce, always escaping by fleeing to waters too shoal for the
-Danish war vessels. The Vigilant was pressed into service, disguised as
-a merchantman, and lured the Spaniard on until at close quarters, when
-she suddenly showed her real character in true pirate fashion, and,
-throwing grappling irons, the armed crew of the schooner swarmed over
-the Spaniard’s side, killed the captain and officers, overpowered the
-crew and captured the ship. It was the last engagement of the gallant
-little schooner—a fitting end to her career—and ever since she has done
-duty as an honest merchantman. I have seen her many times, have even
-sailed on her, and, for all I know to the contrary, she may still be
-plowing the blue Caribbean in the haunts of the buccaneers as staunch,
-fast and seaworthy as when the Jolly Roger flew from many a masthead.”
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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